574 research outputs found

    Incidence and associations of hemiplegic shoulder pain poststroke: prospective population-based study

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    Abstract not availableZoe Adey-Wakeling, Hisatomi Arima, Maria Crotty, James Leyden, Timothy Kleinig, Craig S. Anderson, Jonathon Newbury on behalf of the SEARCH Study Collaborativ

    The global food chain

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    Jonathon Porritt is Founder Director of Forum for the Future www.forumforthefuture.org.uk; Chairman of the UK Sustainable Development Commission www.sd-commission.org.uk; and author of Capitalism as if the World Matters (Earthscan, 2007)

    AUT756787_Lay_Abstract – Supplemental material for Prospective cohort study of vitamin D and autism spectrum disorder diagnoses in early childhood

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    Supplemental material, AUT756787_Lay_Abstract for Prospective cohort study of vitamin D and autism spectrum disorder diagnoses in early childhood by Yamna Ali, Laura N Anderson, Sharon Smile, Yang Chen, Cornelia M Borkhoff, Christine Koroshegyi, Gerald Lebovic, Patricia C Parkin, Catherine S Birken, Peter Szatmari and Jonathon L Maguire; on behalf of the TARGet Kids! Collaboration in Autism</p

    A conceptual review of interprofessional expertise in child safeguarding

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    It is increasingly accepted that practitioners across a range of professional fields must work together in order to promote children's welfare and protect them from harm. However, it has also become apparent that interprofessional working is a challenging area of practice that cannot simply be prescribed through protocols and procedures, nor acquired as a set of technical competences. This article develops the concept of interprofessional expertise in order to explain how practitioners become more proficient at working with others to manage complex child welfare issues. Key principles are outlined with reference to relevant theoretical frameworks, including models of skill acquisition. The article concludes by discussing some potential implications for future research and contemporary developments in child safeguarding practice

    Allylic C—H activation to access anti-1,3-amino alcohol motifs

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    1,3-Amino alcohols are common motifs in a variety of biologically active molecules including antivirals, antibiotics, antifungals, and various alkaloids. Due to their prevalence and utility as synthetic intermediates, a variety of methods have been developed to access these motifs in a diastereoselective fashion, which are outlined in detail herein. This thesis documents a novel approach to access anti-1,3-amino alcohols through an intramolecular palladium (II)/sulfoxide-oxazoline catalyzed C—H functionalization between a terminal olefin and an N-tosyl carbamate, generating anti-1,3-oxazinanones. These motifs can be further elaborated upon, making this method ideal for the late stage diversification of complex molecules and pharmaceuticals. This new method can be carried out in the presence of reactive functionality that is not well tolerated by existing methods.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'Closed Access', the embargo will last until 2020-05-01The student, Jonathon Young, accepted the attached license on 2018-04-25 at 09:29.The student, Jonathon Young, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2018-04-25 at 09:40.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2018-04-25 at 14:08.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #12470 on 2018-08-31 at 17:30:26Made available in DSpace on 2018-09-04T20:47:30Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 YOUNG-THESIS-2018.pdf: 17381393 bytes, checksum: e7e97dc99ab1ce290a64d3a5a9836002 (MD5) LICENSE.txt: 4211 bytes, checksum: 6e0b64d3ab5cba30177cd6924932d927 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2018-04-25Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 107460 Lift date: 2020-09-04T20:47:38Z Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemEmbargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 107460 Lift date: 2020-09-04T20:50:11Z Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemLimited Restriction Lifted for Item 107460 on 2020-09-05T09:15:26Z

    Data and script for Van Berkel et al: Can starlings use a reliable cue of future food deprivation to adaptively modify foraging and fat reserves?

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    Supporting materials for: Can starlings use a reliable cue of future food deprivation to adaptively modify foraging and fat reserves? Menno van Berkela, Melissa Batesona, Daniel Nettlea and Jonathon Dunna* aCentre for Behaviour and Evolution & Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK *Author for correspondence (email: [email protected]; telephone: (+44)7730015855; postal address: Institute of Neuroscience, Henry Wellcome Building, The Medical School, Framlington Place, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, NE2 4HH). R script and 3 .csv files.</p

    Just nature recovery: a framework for centring multispecies and multi-dimensional justice in land management

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    A rising interest in nature recovery has expanded the focus of conservation beyond protected areas to encompass a range of terrestrial and marine areas, from forests, fields, and farms to cities, coasts and oceans. These expansions create new practical and theoretical contestations regarding how, why, and for whom nature recovery projects should be pursued. Such contestations are particularly pronounced in Scotland, a country with a long history of struggles over land rights, widespread loss of natural habitats, and highly unequal land ownership patterns. This paper examines how different framings of justice, and different approaches to nature recovery, interact to either retrench or redress past and present injustices in a range of Scottish examples. We argue that multispecies conceptions of justice that eschew humancentric framings provide a normative basis for recovering nature, while multidimensional framings of justice as distributive, procedural and recognitional help specify a range of requirements for social change. Both frames highlight injustices in current trajectories and the need for alternative approaches to deliver a just transition in nature recovery. We outline a three-step process for further research on justice issues and for developing policy recommendations. This entails 1) historicising contexts, 2) considering both multispecies and multi-dimensional understandings of justice, and 3) uncovering alternative nature recovery strategies that might more explicitly foreground justice considerations

    Random Bodies: PRAXIS: Random International

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