The four links pages are still out there and recent interest prompted a review. Given the total number of links included, it is no surprise how url domains are taken over - vape, fitness... It felt good using a links checker and finding and deleting these 'broken' sites and some that are plain dead-ends: the 'domain for sale'. There may be a few more to sort in there...
The pages are archaic in terms of approach - they are not responsive but the format is fine on a desktop and should work on a tablet. The pages started in 1997-98, you don't do this now! People search in real-time for what they need. Besides not everyone may agree with the subjects I have included and the domain in which I have placed them? What is missing?
The intention is to indicate as with another resource the potential scope of Hodges' model in the knowledge and subjects that can be encompassed. I'm not sure of the longer term future of these pages, as I look to new hosting for Drupal.
Over the coming months I will emphasise research, TEL - technology enhanced learning, e-learning and Drupal resources.
Keen to reduce the maintenance overhead, two rows have been removed and categories moved about. As a result there are a couple of 'vacant' columns in there.
In the future I need to investigate the full ramifications of SEO search engine optimization. I receive many requests offering SEO services, and to add links. Given the demanding update task if I can add a few paid links this will help me fund conference travels and studies. ...
As I return to revising my latest essay I'll let you grab a drink and browse, enjoy...(?)
Sunday, 31 August 2014
Saturday, 30 August 2014
Welcome to the QUAD to be archived by The British Library
The old website is archived on the Internet Archive Wayback Machine going back to 1999 and so is W2tQ.
The British Library also has a web archive, UK based of course. The website's there and now I've news that Welcome to the QUAD will be too.
The British Library also has a web archive, UK based of course. The website's there and now I've news that Welcome to the QUAD will be too.
In a 'paperless NHS' - let's not forget...
The benefits of information technology across all sectors are well recognised when they are realised:
As we head towards a paperless NHS let's not forget that health care is both an art and a science.
Links:
The Digital Challenge (due for an update?)
Digitising the NHS by 2018 - One Year On. techUK report | March 2014.
What of the impact of the pending election 2015? Time inconsistency problem:
The NHS needs a 'Bank of England moment' HSJ.
drawMD Pediatrics - Patient Education by Drawing on Medical Artwork for Healthcare Providers
Medical-Artist
individual
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creativity usability readiness to hand context | information storage and retrieval, access, efficiency, space, security, information sharing, patient safety, legibility |
digital inclusion | cost, savings, governance, reporting (locally, nationally, internationally), policy integration |
As we head towards a paperless NHS let's not forget that health care is both an art and a science.
Links:
The Digital Challenge (due for an update?)
Digitising the NHS by 2018 - One Year On. techUK report | March 2014.
What of the impact of the pending election 2015? Time inconsistency problem:
The NHS needs a 'Bank of England moment' HSJ.
drawMD Pediatrics - Patient Education by Drawing on Medical Artwork for Healthcare Providers
Medical-Artist
Labels:
applications,
diagrams,
e-learning,
education,
Health Art and Science,
health literacy,
informatics,
learning,
media,
NHS,
paperless,
patient-centred care,
patients,
policy,
records,
sociotechnical,
technology
Friday, 29 August 2014
Technology Enhanced Learning: A Medical Student Conference, Belfast, 3rd October 2014
Abstract submissions are open for the Technology Enhanced Learning: A Medical Student Conference being held on Friday 3rd October in Riddel Hall, Queen’s University, Stranmillis, Belfast. The team welcome abstracts reporting on innovations in technology enhanced learning within medical education. This could include the development of electronic materials as well as medical education research. Further details on abstract submissions including the categories and the types of presentation opportunities can be found on the QUB website.
Deadline for receipt of abstract submissions: Wednesday 17th September.
Bookings are also open for this event through the Higher Education Academy’s website for students and educators to join the team in Belfast for a celebration of student engagement in the area of technology enhanced learning within medical education. The day will showcase student presentation poster presentations and demonstrations. In addition there will be a keynote from Jane Hart from the Centre for Learning & Performance Technologies and a group discussion on the future of technology enhanced learning in medical education. Prizes will be awarded for best poster and best presentation.
For further information about the event please go to the QUB event page or contact Karen Murphy from the School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences.
Labels:
abstract,
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e-learning,
education,
engagement,
future,
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learning,
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Northern Ireland,
poster,
presentation,
prize,
students,
technology enhanced learning
Thursday, 28 August 2014
Compare and contrast potential - Energy for Change Index and Hodges' model
The biopsychosocial model is quite all encompassing used as it is to help explain and represent pain, explain human development and balance the physical excesses of psychiatry.
For all its scope the biopsychosocial model is two domains short of Hodges' model.
Hodges' model is dated though, a child of the mid-1980s. The biopsychosocial model predates Hodges' and as models of nursing have fallen out of favour in terms of the attention they receive the biopsychosocial is subjected to critique as per:
Whilst the energy for change domains have a specific derivation and (instrumental) purpose I would suggest that a possible strength for Hodges' might lie in the notion (which it is) that there is an underlying conceptual structure from which the domains arise. This structure might support the model's application in time, as well as assuring its longevity and the stamina of its champion.
My prompt: Land, M., et al. (2014) Pedal to the metal to improve the NHS. HSJ, 124, 6389, 26-27.
Image: (please see title and image link)
For all its scope the biopsychosocial model is two domains short of Hodges' model.
Hodges' model is dated though, a child of the mid-1980s. The biopsychosocial model predates Hodges' and as models of nursing have fallen out of favour in terms of the attention they receive the biopsychosocial is subjected to critique as per:
Ghaemi, S.N. (2009). The rise and fall of the biopsychosocial model. Br J Psychiatry.195(1):3–4.A cursory check reveals a diverse and current literature on the biopsychosocial model. If this is positive for the general role of 'models' in health and social care education and learning then there is another encouraging source in the five energies for change with its five domains, as per the figure:
Hatala, A.R. (2012). The status of the “biopsychosocial” model in health psychology: Towards an integrated approach and a critique of cultural conceptions. Open Journal of Medical Psychology, 1, 51-62. doi: 10.4236/ojmp.2021.14009
The five energy domains |
- Spiritual
- Social
- Physical
- Psychological
- Intellectual
Whilst the energy for change domains have a specific derivation and (instrumental) purpose I would suggest that a possible strength for Hodges' might lie in the notion (which it is) that there is an underlying conceptual structure from which the domains arise. This structure might support the model's application in time, as well as assuring its longevity and the stamina of its champion.
My prompt: Land, M., et al. (2014) Pedal to the metal to improve the NHS. HSJ, 124, 6389, 26-27.
Image: (please see title and image link)
Labels:
#NHSChange,
audit,
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Hodges' model,
HSJ,
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models,
motivation,
NHS,
research,
structures,
workforce
Wednesday, 27 August 2014
Global Research Nurses competition: win attendance to UK research nursing conference
The Global Research Nurses’ network is pleased to announce the second competition for nurses working in clinical research …
THE WINNER WILL BE INVITED TO ATTEND THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF NURSING INTERNATIONAL NURSING RESEARCH CONFERENCE IN NOTTINGHAM, UK, 20th – 22nd APRIL 2015, ALL EXPENSES PAID.
SECOND PRIZE – ONE YEAR’S SUBSCRIPTION TO 2 ONLINE JOURNALS:
THE JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING & THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
To enter, research nurses should write a 1,000-1,500 word article to discuss the role of the research nurse: “Using examples from research projects that you have worked on discuss what skills nurses contribute to a clinical research team.”
Full information and criteria, as well as information on how to upload your entry, can be found at https://globalresearchnurses.tghn.org/extra/competition-2015/
Entries must be received by 31st October 2014. Please share this opportunity widely!
Thanks and kind regards
Tamzin
Tamzin Furtado
Project Manager
The Global Health Network
HIFA profile (and source): Tamzin Furtado is Project Manager of Global Health Trials, UK. Professional interests: Global health, clinical trials. tamzin.furtado AT ndm.ox.ac.uk
THE WINNER WILL BE INVITED TO ATTEND THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF NURSING INTERNATIONAL NURSING RESEARCH CONFERENCE IN NOTTINGHAM, UK, 20th – 22nd APRIL 2015, ALL EXPENSES PAID.
SECOND PRIZE – ONE YEAR’S SUBSCRIPTION TO 2 ONLINE JOURNALS:
THE JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING & THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
To enter, research nurses should write a 1,000-1,500 word article to discuss the role of the research nurse: “Using examples from research projects that you have worked on discuss what skills nurses contribute to a clinical research team.”
Full information and criteria, as well as information on how to upload your entry, can be found at https://globalresearchnurses.tghn.org/extra/competition-2015/
Entries must be received by 31st October 2014. Please share this opportunity widely!
Thanks and kind regards
Tamzin
Tamzin Furtado
Project Manager
The Global Health Network
HIFA profile (and source): Tamzin Furtado is Project Manager of Global Health Trials, UK. Professional interests: Global health, clinical trials. tamzin.furtado AT ndm.ox.ac.uk
Labels:
#research2015,
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competition,
conference,
education,
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funding,
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innovation,
journal,
media,
nursing,
prize,
projects,
RCN,
research,
skills and knowledge,
UK
Monday, 25 August 2014
Heat maps and hotbeds in Hodges' model
individual
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Prof. Paul McCrone, Lintern (2014). |
Sources:
Image: http://www.usability.gov/sites/default/files/images/eye-tracking-full-option1.jpg
Lintern, S. (2014) Analysis reveals mental health trust funding cuts, Health Service Journal. 124, 6411, 4-5.
Thursday, 14 August 2014
Paper: Low-cost strategies to improve dementia care
An interest in health and science invites some thought about chaos, complexity and catastrophe theory. These suggest quite a cold - mechanistic - perspective of reality. So trying to think of clinical and nursing examples beyond fluid dynamics, the heart muscle... to more socially oriented applications demands some creative thinking.
In my work within intermediate support in the community for decades my colleagues and I come across cases were husband, wife, partner have looked their significant other to the nth degree. That degree can include hiding the extent of a person's cognitive problems from other family members. Suddenly there is a real catastrophe as the carer is taken acutely ill and hospitalised.
Left at home soon the dependency is revealed. Trying to negotiate care at home can then be a real challenge.
Alternately, when people living with dementia are hospitalised for physical reasons another host of challenges arise.
I've a relative who works over at Warrington General Hospital and it's great to be able to help highlight a paper written by Michelle Beavan their dementia champion and published in Nursing Times:
Beavan M (2014) Low-cost strategies to improve dementia care. Nursing Times; 110: online issue.
In my work within intermediate support in the community for decades my colleagues and I come across cases were husband, wife, partner have looked their significant other to the nth degree. That degree can include hiding the extent of a person's cognitive problems from other family members. Suddenly there is a real catastrophe as the carer is taken acutely ill and hospitalised.
Left at home soon the dependency is revealed. Trying to negotiate care at home can then be a real challenge.
Alternately, when people living with dementia are hospitalised for physical reasons another host of challenges arise.
I've a relative who works over at Warrington General Hospital and it's great to be able to help highlight a paper written by Michelle Beavan their dementia champion and published in Nursing Times:
Beavan M (2014) Low-cost strategies to improve dementia care. Nursing Times; 110: online issue.
Labels:
anxiety,
attitude,
awareness,
communication,
dementia,
economics,
environment,
evidence based care,
hospitals,
mental health,
NHS,
nursing,
nursing times,
orientation,
papers,
person-centred,
physical health,
training
Tuesday, 12 August 2014
Disobedient Objects
individual
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The Victoria and Albert Museum 26 July 2014 – 1 February 2015
Disobedient Objects:
From Suffragette teapots to protest robots, this exhibition is the first to examine the powerful role of objects in movements for social change. It demonstrates how political activism drives a wealth of design ingenuity and collective creativity that defy standard definitions of art and design.
Image source: Inflatable cobblestone, action of Eclectic Electric Collective in cooperation with Enmedio collective during the General Strike in Barcelona 2012.
© Oriana Eliçabe/Enmedio.info
Labels:
activism,
arts,
choice,
communication,
creativity,
crime,
design,
dialogue,
economics,
exhibition,
freedom,
government,
human rights,
images,
law,
policy,
politics,
social justice,
society,
UK
Saturday, 9 August 2014
HIFA Voices Database - launched 12 August 2014
The HIFA Voices database will bring together the experiential knowledge of HIFA members: more than 12,000 professionals from over 2500 organisations in 170 countries, ranging from senior executives at the World Health Organization in Geneva to community health workers in rural Gambia. Our common vision is a world where every person and every health professional has access to the information they need to protect their own health and the health of those for whom they are responsible. HIFA Voices will be launched on 12 August 2014.
HIFA Voices harnesses the practical expertise of providers and users of healthcare information, together with relevant health information sciences literature. This helps us to understand the healthcare information needs of different users in different contexts and how these needs can be more effectively addressed. Further information about HIFA Voices.
Read the blog about HIFA Voices on the ElsevierConnect website, and the press release from mPowering Frontline Health Workers and Intel Corporation.
We are currently seeking further financial and technical support to enable us to develop HIFA Voices through 2015 and beyond. Please contact us for details.
My source: HIFA2015 list.
HIFA Voices harnesses the practical expertise of providers and users of healthcare information, together with relevant health information sciences literature. This helps us to understand the healthcare information needs of different users in different contexts and how these needs can be more effectively addressed. Further information about HIFA Voices.
Read the blog about HIFA Voices on the ElsevierConnect website, and the press release from mPowering Frontline Health Workers and Intel Corporation.
We are currently seeking further financial and technical support to enable us to develop HIFA Voices through 2015 and beyond. Please contact us for details.
My source: HIFA2015 list.
Labels:
access,
data,
ecosystem,
education,
funding,
global health,
health,
health literacy,
healthcare,
HIFA2015,
informatics,
information,
knowledge and skills,
learning,
media,
open data,
practice,
sciences,
technology,
WHO
Thursday, 7 August 2014
Health and Social Care Policy: Always - from a distance
individual
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"Cura te ipsum." - "Take care of your own self."
mental health | physical |
social | policy |
Additional link:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cura_te_ipsum
Latin source: Mediawatch, tpm the philosophers' magazine, 2nd quarter 2014, p.14.
(which cites: http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/cura-te-ipsum/ )
Tuesday, 5 August 2014
Trade winds and time: The Clock of the South
S
INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
E --------------------------------------- W
SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
individual
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INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
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C/o BBC: Bolivian Congress clock changed to turn anti-clockwise
The clock displayed on the Bolivian Congress building, located in the city of La Paz, has been re-set to run in reverse.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-28040065
Its hands turn left and the numbers have been inverted to go from one to twelve to the left.
It's the latest measure taken by the government of President Evo Morales to promote the indigenous identity of the Andean country. ...
Additional link:
World Economic Forum
updated 26 August 2014
BBC Radio 4 20:00: Whatever Happened to Global Governance?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04f9rdr
Original image source:
http://bubblear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/clock1-1110x400.jpg
Labels:
activism,
agriculture,
axes,
commercial,
culture,
dialogue,
economics,
equality,
global,
globalization,
group,
identity,
individual,
Latin America,
media,
policy,
politics,
power,
sustainability,
time
Monday, 4 August 2014
why - { Ctrl Alt Del } ?
individual
INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
humanistic ------------------------------------------- mechanistic
SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
group
Alt | Del |
Why? | Ctrl |
Ctrl provides the power to decide what/who is 'Alt' and What/Who is 'Del' -eted.
The masses are left to ask why?
My source: Peter Kurilecz - RECORDS-MANAGEMENT-UK at JISCMAIL.AC.UK
A Fresh Start: Ctrl + Alt + Delete - Neatoramahttp://m.neatorama.com/2014/08/01/A-Fresh-Start-Ctrl-Alt-Delete/#!buNWwY
One of the programmers’ pet peeves was that whenever the computer encountered a coding glitch, they had to manually restart the entire system. Turning the machine back on automatically initiated a series of memory tests, which stole valuable time. “Some days, you’d be rebooting every five minutes as you searched for the problem,” Bradley says. The tedious tests made the coders want to pull their hair out.So Bradley created a keyboard shortcut that triggered a system reset without the memory tests. He never dreamed that the simple fix would make him a programming hero, someone who’d someday be hounded to autograph keyboards at conferences. And he didn’t foresee the command becoming such an integral part of the user experience.
Additional link: The Holographic Principle
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap090913.html
Labels:
art,
choice,
group,
history,
Hodges' model,
human rights,
ideas,
individual,
interface,
meaning,
media,
memory,
policy,
politics,
power,
programming,
reflection,
science,
software,
technology
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