Academic literature on the topic 'Greif Inc'

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Journal articles on the topic "Greif Inc"

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Jackson, Debra, and Kim Usher. "Understanding expressions of public grief: ‘Mourning sickness’, ‘grief-lite’, or something more?" International Journal of Mental Health Nursing 24, no. 2 (April 2015): 93–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/inm.12127.

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Madron-Williams, Lisa C. "Helping children cope with grief, Alan Wolfelt, Muncie, Indiana, Accelerated Development Inc., 1983, 176 pages, $15.95." Journal of Traumatic Stress 9, no. 1 (1996): 151–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jts.2490090114.

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Aleshin, I. M., and K. I. Kholodkov. "Evergreen framework for GREIS-formatted GNSS data manipulation applications." Sovremennye problemy distantsionnogo zondirovaniya Zemli iz kosmosa 16, no. 1 (2019): 35–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.21046/2070-7401-2019-16-1-35-45.

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Jacobs, Dale. "The 1976 Project: On Comics and Grief, or How Our Lives Intersect with What We Study." Inks: The Journal of the Comics Studies Society 5, no. 3 (2021): 325–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ink.2021.0026.

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Largajolli, Anna, Nele Plock, Bhargava Kandala, Akshita Chawla, Seth H. Robey, Kenny Watson, Raj Thatavarti, et al. "1010. Cross-Species Translation of Correlates of Protection for COVID-19 Vaccine Candidates Using Quantitative Tools." Open Forum Infectious Diseases 8, Supplement_1 (November 1, 2021): S595—S596. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab466.1204.

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Abstract Background Several COVID-19 vaccines have been authorized, and the need for rapid, further modification is anticipated. This work uses a Model-Based Meta-Analysis (MBMA) to relate, across species, immunogenicity to peak viral load (VL) after challenge and to clinical efficacy. Together with non-clinical and/or early clinical immunogenicity data (ECID), this enables prediction of a candidate vaccine’s clinical efficacy. The goal of this work was to enable the accelerated development of vaccine candidates by supporting Go/No-Go and study design decisions, and the resulting MBMA can be instrumental in decisions not to progress candidates to late stage development. Methods A literature review with pre-specified inclusion/exclusion criteria enabled creation of a database including nonclinical serum neutralizing titers (SN), peak VL after challenge with SARS-CoV-2 (VL), along with data from several clinical vaccine candidates. Rhesus Macaque (RM) and golden hamster (GH) were selected (due to availability and consistency of data) for MBMA modeling. For both RM and GH, peak post-challenge VL in lung and nasal tissues were used as surrogates for clinical disease and were related to pre-challenge SN via the MBMA. The VL predictions from the RM MBMA were scaled to incidence rates in humans, with a scaling factor between RM and human SN estimated using early Phase 3 efficacy data. This enabled clinical efficacy predictions based on ECID. To qualify the model’s predictive power, efficacies of COVID-19 vaccine candidates were compared to those predicted from the MBMA and their respective Ph1/2 SN data. More recently available clinical data enable building a clinical MBMA; comparing this to the RM MBMA further supports SN as predictive. Results The MBMA analyses identified a sigmoidal decrease in VL (increasing protection) with increase in SN in all three species, with more SN needed (in both RM and GH) for protection in nasal swabs than in BAL (see figure). The comparison between predicted and reported clinical efficacies demonstrated the model’s predictive power across vaccine platforms. RM and GH MBMA Protection Models and Translational Prediction with Observed Efficacies Sizes of circles indicate relative weight of the data in the respective quantitative model. Model and data visualizations have been harmonized (across tissue-types) separately for each of RM and GH using VACHER (Lommerse, et al., CPT:PSP, in press). Conclusion By quantifying adjustments needed between species and assays, translational MBMA can inform development decisions by using nonclinical SN and VL, and ECID to predict protection from COVID-19. Disclosures Anna Largajolli, PhD, Certara (Employee) Nele Plock, PhD, Certara (Employee, Shareholder)Merck & Co., Inc. (Independent Contractor) Bhargava Kandala, PhD, Merck & Co., Inc. (Employee, Shareholder) Akshita Chawla, PhD, Merck & Co., Inc. (Employee, Shareholder) Seth H. Robey, PhD, Merck & Co., Inc. (Employee, Shareholder) Kenny Watson, PhD, Certara (Employee, Shareholder) Raj Thatavarti, MS, Certara (Employee, Shareholder) Sheri Dubey, PhD, Merck & Co., Inc. (Employee, Shareholder) S. Y. Amy Cheung, PhD, Certara (Employee, Shareholder) Rik de Greef, MSc, Certara (Employee, Shareholder) Jeffrey R. Sachs, PhD, Merck & Co., Inc. (Employee, Shareholder)
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Martineau, Luc. "Décisions rendues par le Conseil canadien des relations du travail." Relations industrielles 36, no. 3 (April 12, 2005): 671–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/029188ar.

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Le devoir de représentation juste édicté par l'article 136.1 du Code protège les membres de l'unité de négociation contre l'arbitraire, la discrimination, la mauvaise foi et aussi la négligence de leur agent négociateur lorsque ces atteintes sont d'une nature patente, apparente et très sérieuse. Par ailleurs, le Conseil n 'accepte pas que, même dans les cas de congédiements, l'agent négociateur se sente obligé à cause de son devoir, de pousser jusqu'à la limite extrême le grief d'un membre, pour la seule raison qu'il paye des cotisations syndicales, et sans tenir compte de la valeur intrinsèque du grief. En effet, imposer une norme de conduite aussi rigide à l'agent négociateur, irait à rencontre de cet autre devoir d'un syndicat qui est celui d'administrer d'une façon raisonnable les ressources mises à sa disposition par les cotisations syndicales de tous ses membres. Dans un pareil contexte, avant de conclure à une violation de l'article 136.1, le Conseil analysera dans chaque dossier, premièrement, la nature de la plainte logée; deuxièmement, la nature de l'agent négociateur; et troisièmement, la démarche de cet agent négociateur dans l'administration de son devoir vis-à-vis le membre plaignant de l'unité de négociation. Après avoir effectué cette analyse, le Conseil a rejeté deux plaintes alléguant que l'article 136.1 avait été violé lors du refus de poursuivre des griefs de congédiement à l'arbitrage. Dans les deux cas, le Conseil a jugé que la preuve ne démontrait pas de l'arbitraire, de la discrimination, de la négligence ou de la mauvaise foi de la part de l'agent négociateur vis-à-vis du membre plaignant. André Cloutier et Union des employés du Transport local et autres, local 931 et Cast North America Ltd. Jean Laplante et Union des employés du Transport local et autres, local 932 et A. & F. Baillargeon Express Inc. Dossiers 745-860 et 745-774; deux décisions du 4 juin 1981 (nos 319 et 320); Panel du Conseil; Me Marc Lapointe, président, Me Paul Emile Chiasson et M. Victor Gannon, membres.
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Nadeau, Denis. "Rodrigue Blouin, Fernand Morin, Droit de l’arbitrage de grief, 4 édition, Montréal, Les Éditions Yvon Blais Inc., 1994, 694 pages, ISBN 2-89073-977-5." Revue générale de droit 26, no. 4 (1995): 597. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1035897ar.

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Ware, Orrin D., and John G. Cagle. "Informal Caregiving Networks for Hospice Patients With Cancer and Their Impact on Outcomes: A Brief Report." American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine® 36, no. 3 (July 31, 2018): 235–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1049909118792011.

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This prospective study investigates informal care networks and their impact on hospice outcomes. Primary caregivers (N = 47) were the main source of data from 2 time points: within a week of enrollment in hospice and bereavement. Data were also collected from 42 secondary caregivers. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) determined correspondence between primary and secondary caregivers regarding informal care network size. Correlations were used to test associations between variables. Nonparametric paired sample tests were used to analyze change in anger and guilt. The ICC found poor correspondence (−0.13) between primary and secondary caregivers’ network descriptions. Correlational analyses found a strong/moderate negative association between quality of dying (QOD) and grief ( r = −0.605, P < .05). Study participants reported increased anger (0.4, P < .05, range 1-5) and guilt (0.4, P < .05, range 1-5), particularly among caregivers with high levels of support. Findings suggest that improving QOD may facilitate postdeath coping for caregivers.
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Gassmann, B. "Economics and management of food processing. Herausgegeben von W. Smith Greig. 521 Seiten, 21 Abb., 107 Tab. Avi Publ. Co., Inc., Westport, Connecticut, USA, 1984. Preis: 57.50 $." Food / Nahrung 29, no. 7 (1985): 692. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/food.19850290709.

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Mitkowski, N. A., and N. Jackson. "Subanguina radicicola, the Root-Gall Nematode Infecting Poa annua in New Brunswick, Canada." Plant Disease 87, no. 10 (October 2003): 1263. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis.2003.87.10.1263c.

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Poa annua frequently is found as the dominant turfgrass species on golf course putting greens grown in the range of cool-season grasses. While not intentionally established, it is an aggressive weed in stands of bentgrasses (Agrostis spp.). When significant encroachment of P. annua occurs, it often is maintained indefinitely. In May 2003, P. annua putting greens at the Riverside Country Club in Rothesay, New Brunswick, Canada showed signs of an unidentified disease. Putting greens were slow to green up and large chlorotic patches were evident across affected areas. When roots were examined, extensive galling was observed. Galls were slender and often twisted in appearance. Upon dissection of washed galls, hundreds of eggs were exuded into the surrounding water droplet, and mature male and female nematodes were observed. Further morphological examination of males, females, and juvenile nematodes demonstrated that they were Subanguina radicicola (Greef 1872) Paramanov 1967 (1,2). Each P. annua plant had an average of four galls (with a range of two to nine) primarily located within the uppermost centimeter of the soil. Of 18 P. annua putting greens, four were affected by the nematode and displayed the same damage symptoms. S. radicicola has been identified from American beachgrass in Rhode Island and from P. annua in Oregon, but to our knowledge, this is the first report of the nematode affecting P. annua on a golf course in eastern North America. References: (1) W. F. Mai and P. Mullin. Plant-Parasitic Nematodes: A Pictorial Key to Genera. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York, 1996. (2) G. Thorne. Principles of Nematology. McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., New York, 1961
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Greif Inc"

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Ng, Heng Cheong Edmund. "The grief support of bereaved family members in Evangelical Churches in Peninsular Malaysia." Thesis, Bangor University, 2012. https://research.bangor.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/the-grief-support-of-bereaved-family-members-in-evangelical-churches-in-peninsular-malaysia(49a2e922-a7df-41bd-a675-66fa5248918e).html.

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Churches are expected to care and support their bereaved family members as their seasons of grief are often a difficult time in their lives with significant spiritual implications. This dissertation seeks to establish if there is a gap in the bereaved's expectations and experiences of the pastoral care they received and the actual care and support their churches extended to them, by interviewing both the pastors and the bereaved from evangelical churches in Peninsular Malaysia. All the Pastors interviewed believe that their church has a pastoral responsibility towards their bereaved. On the bereaved's side, 95% of them believe that the church should care and support them in their time of bereavement. However, the findings revealed that while the churches are adequate and effective in performing the bereavement services, the same cannot be said with regards to the longer term care and support of the bereaved. In particular, while most pastors do visit the bereaved once or twice in the first month of the deaths, many churches rely on their cell group structure as the first line of care and support for the bereaved and seldom monitor its adequacy and effectiveness unless something is brought up to their attention. However, it is also found that most of the bereaved do not freely open up to their cell groups and at the same time, they do not voice their concerns and dissatisfactions to the church leadership. This resulted in a gap that is risking neglect in the churches' pastoral responsibility towards the bereaved. One significant consequence is that more than 50% of the bereaved Christians turn to non-Christian family members, relatives and friends for comfort and support. Unfortunately, only 33% of the Pastors interviewed see the need to improve on the adequacy and effectiveness of their grief support services. Bridging this gap will involve transforming the pastors' attitudes, committing to longer term home visitations, improving on the effectiveness of grief counselling encounters with the bereaved and structuring the other aspects of grief support. To lighten the burden of the pastors and leaders, suitable church volunteers can be mobilised and trained for grief support as a faithful practice within the body of Christ. Meanwhile, the same services can be extended to the community as a witness for God and hence participate in His mission in this world.
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Davidson, Lucy. "Caught in the complex web of words : a Foucauldian discourse analysis of Counselling Psychologists' accounts of grief work." Thesis, University of Roehampton, 2015. https://pure.roehampton.ac.uk/portal/en/studentthesis/caught-in-the-complex-web-of-words(b2916be6-7e2c-4989-98d8-7124325b8724).html.

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Hale, David. "Death and commemoration in late medieval Wales." Thesis, University of South Wales, 2018. https://pure.southwales.ac.uk/en/studentthesis/death-and-commemoration-in-late-medieval-wales(7d14b42e-a69b-4968-9398-aad3b96748e0).html.

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This study examines the attitudes to, and commemoration of, death in Wales in the period between the end of the thirteenth century and the middle of the sixteenth century by analysis of the poetical work produced during this period. In so doing, this is placed in the wider context of death and commemoration in Europe. Although there are a number of memorial tombs and some evidence of religious visual art in Wales which has survived from the late medieval period, in comparison with that to be found in many other European countries, this is often neither so commonplace nor so imposing. However, the poetry produced during this period very much reflects the visual material that was produced in other parts of Europe. The poetry shows that the Welsh gentry at that time were familiar with many of the themes surrounding death and commemoration so obvious in European visual art such as the macabre and the fate of both the body and the soul after death. With war, famine and disease being so commonplace during the Middle Ages, and the late medieval period witnessing the effects of the Black Death, it is, perhaps, little wonder that macabre imagery and concerns about the fate of the soul were so often produced in European visual art of the time. These concerns are reflected in the Welsh poetry of the period with several poets composing quite vivid poetry describing the fate of the body as a decomposing corpse after death or allusions to the personification of Death appearing to claim its victims. The tension that many felt between the role of God on Judgement Day and God as Redeemer is also apparent in a number of the poems composed at this time. This study shows how important the role of the poet was amongst the gentry in Wales during the late medieval period, a role which ensured that the patrons of the poets were immortalised in words rather than by physical memorials. It also highlights the importance of poetical works of the period as an important primary source for historical research. Many of the poems give a contemporaneous account of important events of the period such as symptoms of plague victims which confirm that the Black Death was indeed the bubonic form of the plague.
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Bibiloni, Esteva Maria del Mar. "Estudi de la prevalença de l'obesitat juvenil a les illes Balears." Doctoral thesis, Universitat de les Illes Balears, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/84114.

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(6639902), Caleb Milne. "Even The Sky." Thesis, 2019.

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Books on the topic "Greif Inc"

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Nelson, JoAnne. Good grief! good grief! Seattle, Wash: Comprehensive Health Education Foundation, 1993.

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Winston, Lolly. Good grief. New York: Warner Books, 2004.

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Winston, Lolly. Good Grief. New York: Grand Central Publishing, 2004.

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Wray, T. J. Grief Dreams. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., 2005.

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Lawrence, Don Harold. Glimpses into grief. Memphis, TN: Monument Press, 2010.

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K, Huggard Sandra, ed. Coping with grief. New York: Rosen Pub. Group, 1991.

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Winston, Lolly. Good grief: A novel. New York: Warner Books, 2005.

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Winston, Lolly. Good grief: A novel. Waterville, Me: Thorndike Press, 2004.

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Hare, Jan. Understanding the grief of children. [Corvallis, Or.]: Oregon State University Extension Service, 1992.

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Hare, Jan. Understanding the grief of children. [Corvallis, Or.]: Oregon State University Extension Service, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Greif Inc"

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Geidel, Olaf. "Greiz: Kreiskrankenhaus Greiz." In Geschichte der Akademischen Lehrstätten, Lehrer, Lehrerinnen und Kliniken der Hals-Nasen-Ohren-Heilkunde, Kopf- und Hals-Chirurgie in Deutschland, 324. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-64687-8_107.

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Riendeau, Debra. "Grief." In Clinical Case Studies in Home Health Care, 421–35. West Sussex UK: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118785744.ch40.

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van Wielink, Jakob, Leo Wilhelm, and Denise van Geelen-Merks. "Grief." In Loss, Grief, and Attachment in Life Transitions, 108–41. 1 Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Death, dying, and bereavement: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429277757-7.

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Lengelle, Reinekke. "Early Grief." In Writing the Self in Bereavement, 8–27. 1 Edition. | New York City : Routledge, 2020.: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003124009-2.

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Wolf, Andreas, and Henrik Schunk. "Zukunft der Greif- und Handhabungstechnik." In Greifer in Bewegung, 318–27. München: Carl Hanser Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3139/9783446439931.005.

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Wolf, Andreas, and Henrik Schunk. "ZUKUNFT DER GREIF- UND HANDHABUNGSTECHNIK." In Greifer in Bewegung, 319–27. München, Germany: Carl Hanser Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-446-43993-1_5.

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DiBiase, Rita J. "Complicated Grief." In Case Studies in Palliative and End-of-Life Care, 300–308. West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118704707.ch36.

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Mims, Rachel, and Jacqueline Jones. "Disenfranchised Grief." In The International Handbook of Art Therapy in Palliative and Bereavement Care, 318–30. New York, NY: Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315110530-33.

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Hubertus, Justine, Katharina Schneider, Katharina Barcatta, Anna-Lynn Schlund, Lena Schwind, Vera Hilger, Jan Hamborg, and Charlotte Ries. "Causes of Grief." In Grief in Schools, 69–133. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-64297-9_4.

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Boroson, Barbara. "Grief and Loss." In Disability in the Family, 11–32. New York: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003322450-2.

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Conference papers on the topic "Greif Inc"

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Allen, Gemma. "P-32 Exploring loss and grief with people with intellectual disabilities." In A New World – Changing the landscape in end of life care, Hospice UK National Conference, 3–5 November 2021, Liverpool. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/spcare-2021-hospice.53.

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Stukalov-Stone, Lyndsey. "P-26 Precious time: Therapeutic Anticipatory Grief Resource for Children and Families." In A New World – Changing the landscape in end of life care, Hospice UK National Conference, 3–5 November 2021, Liverpool. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/spcare-2021-hospice.47.

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Fox, C. "Exact MAP states and expectations from perfect sampling: Greig, porteous and seheult revisited." In The twentieth international workshop on bayesian inference and maximum entropy methods in science and engineering. AIP, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1381890.

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Teague, Phyllis, Laura Charles, Tracy Ray, Ramona Gallegos, and Jason Crenshaw. "The five stages of IT grief: Sandia IT's response to the global pandemic." In Proposed for presentation at the National Laboratories IT Summit 2020 held October 13-16, 2020 in virtual, virtual, United States. US DOE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1825828.

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Xygkou, Anna, Panote Siriaraya, Alexandra Covaci, Holly Gwen Prigerson, Robert Neimeyer, Chee Siang Ang, and Wan-Jou She. "The "Conversation" about Loss: Understanding How Chatbot Technology was Used in Supporting People in Grief." In CHI '23: CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3544548.3581154.

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Lawson, Lynsey. "P-248 Grief is as individual as a fingerprint. One size doesn’t fit all!" In Dying for change: evolution and revolution in palliative care, Hospice UK 2019 National Conference, 20–22 November 2019, Liverpool. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2019-huknc.270.

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Patterson, Lisa. "P-30 Life’s questions training manuals: hospices, schools and communities talking death, loss and grief." In A New World – Changing the landscape in end of life care, Hospice UK National Conference, 3–5 November 2021, Liverpool. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/spcare-2021-hospice.51.

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Reports on the topic "Greif Inc"

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Lykins, Amy, Joey Tognela, Kylie Robinson, Rosie Ryan, and Phillip Tully. The mental health effects of eco-anxiety – a systematic review of quantitative research. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, January 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2023.1.0025.

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Review question / Objective: The aim of the review is to synthesise findings from quantitative studies that investigate ecological grief, eco-anxiety, and climate-anxiety in relation to self-reported mental health. Population of interest: The general adult population aged 18 years. Exposure (risk factor): The exposure is defined as the presence of any ecological grief, eco-anxiety, and/or climate-anxiety that is quantified either before, concurrently, or after a mental health symptom (e.g. depression, and/or anxiety - see Outcomes). As ecological grief, eco-anxiety, and climate-anxiety are relatively new concepts that lack a standard definition, we will include validated and emerging unvalidated self-report measures of these constructs, as well as closely related constructs; solastalgia, eco- and climate-grief, eco- and climate-guilt, eco- and climate-distress, eco- and climate-despair, eco- and climate-worry. Ineligible exposures are detrimental environmental events (e.g. flood, bushfire, drought) or climatic conditions (e.g. ambient temperatures) or distress related to psychosocial impacts of environmental events (e.g. loss of income or housing due to landslide). Comparator: The general adult population aged 18+ without ecological grief, eco-anxiety, and/or climate-anxiety or related constructs as defined above in Exposure. Outcome: The primary outcomes are mental health symptoms quantified by validated self-report measures of depression, anxiety, stress.
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MacFarlane, Andrew. 2021 medical student essay prize winner - A case of grief. Society for Academic Primary Care, July 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.37361/medstudessay.2021.1.1.

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As a student undertaking a Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship (LIC)1 based in a GP practice in a rural community in the North of Scotland, I have been lucky to be given responsibility and my own clinic lists. Every day I conduct consultations that change my practice: the challenge of clinically applying the theory I have studied, controlling a consultation and efficiently exploring a patient's problems, empathising with and empowering them to play a part in their own care2 – and most difficult I feel – dealing with the vast amount of uncertainty that medicine, and particularly primary care, presents to both clinician and patient. I initially consulted with a lady in her 60s who attended with her husband, complaining of severe lower back pain who was very difficult to assess due to her pain level. Her husband was understandably concerned about the degree of pain she was in. After assessment and discussion with one of the GPs, we agreed some pain relief and a physio assessment in the next few days would be a practical plan. The patient had one red flag, some leg weakness and numbness, which was her ‘normal’ on account of her multiple sclerosis. At the physio assessment a few days later, the physio felt things were worse and some urgent bloods were ordered, unfortunately finding raised cancer and inflammatory markers. A CT scan of the lung found widespread cancer, a later CT of the head after some developing some acute confusion found brain metastases, and a week and a half after presenting to me, the patient sadly died in hospital. While that was all impactful enough on me, it was the follow-up appointment with the husband who attended on the last triage slot of the evening two weeks later that I found completely altered my understanding of grief and the mourning of a loved one. The husband had asked to speak to a Andrew MacFarlane Year 3 ScotGEM Medical Student 2 doctor just to talk about what had happened to his wife. The GP decided that it would be better if he came into the practice - strictly he probably should have been consulted with over the phone due to coronavirus restrictions - but he was asked what he would prefer and he opted to come in. I sat in on the consultation, I had been helping with any examinations the triage doctor needed and I recognised that this was the husband of the lady I had seen a few weeks earlier. He came in and sat down, head lowered, hands fiddling with the zip on his jacket, trying to find what to say. The GP sat, turned so that they were opposite each other with no desk between them - I was seated off to the side, an onlooker, but acknowledged by the patient with a kind nod when he entered the room. The GP asked gently, “How are you doing?” and roughly 30 seconds passed (a long time in a conversation) before the patient spoke. “I just really miss her…” he whispered with great effort, “I don’t understand how this all happened.” Over the next 45 minutes, he spoke about his wife, how much pain she had been in, the rapid deterioration he witnessed, the cancer being found, and cruelly how she had passed away after he had gone home to get some rest after being by her bedside all day in the hospital. He talked about how they had met, how much he missed her, how empty the house felt without her, and asking himself and us how he was meant to move forward with his life. He had a lot of questions for us, and for himself. Had we missed anything – had he missed anything? The GP really just listened for almost the whole consultation, speaking to him gently, reassuring him that this wasn’t his or anyone’s fault. She stated that this was an awful time for him and that what he was feeling was entirely normal and something we will all universally go through. She emphasised that while it wasn’t helpful at the moment, that things would get better over time.3 He was really glad I was there – having shared a consultation with his wife and I – he thanked me emphatically even though I felt like I hadn’t really helped at all. After some tears, frequent moments of silence and a lot of questions, he left having gotten a lot off his chest. “You just have to listen to people, be there for them as they go through things, and answer their questions as best you can” urged my GP as we discussed the case when the patient left. Almost all family caregivers contact their GP with regards to grief and this consultation really made me realise how important an aspect of my practice it will be in the future.4 It has also made me reflect on the emphasis on undergraduate teaching around ‘breaking bad news’ to patients, but nothing taught about when patients are in the process of grieving further down the line.5 The skill Andrew MacFarlane Year 3 ScotGEM Medical Student 3 required to manage a grieving patient is not one limited to general practice. Patients may grieve the loss of function from acute trauma through to chronic illness in all specialties of medicine - in addition to ‘traditional’ grief from loss of family or friends.6 There wasn’t anything ‘medical’ in the consultation, but I came away from it with a real sense of purpose as to why this career is such a privilege. We look after patients so they can spend as much quality time as they are given with their loved ones, and their loved ones are the ones we care for after they are gone. We as doctors are the constant, and we have to meet patients with compassion at their most difficult times – because it is as much a part of the job as the knowledge and the science – and it is the part of us that patients will remember long after they leave our clinic room. Word Count: 993 words References 1. ScotGEM MBChB - Subjects - University of St Andrews [Internet]. [cited 2021 Mar 27]. Available from: https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/subjects/medicine/scotgem-mbchb/ 2. Shared decision making in realistic medicine: what works - gov.scot [Internet]. [cited 2021 Mar 27]. Available from: https://www.gov.scot/publications/works-support-promote-shared-decisionmaking-synthesis-recent-evidence/pages/1/ 3. Ghesquiere AR, Patel SR, Kaplan DB, Bruce ML. Primary care providers’ bereavement care practices: Recommendations for research directions. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2014 Dec;29(12):1221–9. 4. Nielsen MK, Christensen K, Neergaard MA, Bidstrup PE, Guldin M-B. Grief symptoms and primary care use: a prospective study of family caregivers. BJGP Open [Internet]. 2020 Aug 1 [cited 2021 Mar 27];4(3). Available from: https://bjgpopen.org/content/4/3/bjgpopen20X101063 5. O’Connor M, Breen LJ. General Practitioners’ experiences of bereavement care and their educational support needs: a qualitative study. BMC Medical Education. 2014 Mar 27;14(1):59. 6. Sikstrom L, Saikaly R, Ferguson G, Mosher PJ, Bonato S, Soklaridis S. Being there: A scoping review of grief support training in medical education. PLOS ONE. 2019 Nov 27;14(11):e0224325.
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3

Patton, Desmond, and Catalina Vallejo. Examining Violence and Black Grief on Social Media: An Interview with Desmond Upton Patton. Just Tech, Social Science Research Council, February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35650/jt.3020.d.2022.

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As part of our “What Is Just Tech?” series, we invited several social researchers—scholars, practitioners, artists, and activists—to respond to a simple yet fundamental question: “What is just technology?” This interview was conducted by Just Tech program officer Catalina Vallejo, who spoke with Desmond Upton Patton, Professor of Social Work at Columbia University and Just Tech Advisory Board member. Patton (he/him) studies how gang-involved youth conceptualize threats on social media and the extent to which social media may shape or facilitate youth and gang violence. He is the founding director of SAFElab, which centers young people’s perspectives in computational and social work research on violence, trains future social work scholars, and actively engages in violence prevention and intervention. In their conversation, Vallejo and Patton spoke about social media as an amplifier of violence, the importance of lived experience informing computational research, and misunderstandings about Black grief.
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4

Andriessen, Karl, Karolina Krysinska, Kairi Kõlves, and Nicola Reavley. Suicide Postvention Report. The Sax Institute, September 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.57022/txtp7812.

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Suicide postvention comprises a concerted response to, and provision of care for, people bereaved by suicide including those impacted by the suicide of a family member, friend or person in their social network. Currently, various forms of postvention services are available, such as group support, grief counselling, outreach by agencies and online support. Despite the devastating and lasting effects, a suicide can have on the bereaved and the number of people affected, little is known of what helps bereaved individuals. This review examines what suicide postvention models have been shown to be effective to reduce distress in family, friends and communities following a suicide along with what service components contribute to effectiveness.
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5

Janger, Jürgen, and Anna Strauss-Kollin. Analyse der Leistungsfähigkeit des österreichischen Innovationssystems. Rat für Forschung und Technologieentwicklung, September 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.22163/fteval.2020.609.

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Der Bericht nimmt eine möglichst umfassende und systematische Bewertung der Leistungsfähigkeit des österreichischen Innovationssystems im internationalen Vergleich vor. Von 14 groben Bereichen des Innovationssystems zeigen sich gegenüber den führenden Ländern der EU die Bereiche Finanzierung von Forschung und Entwicklung, internationale Verflechtung, Standortattraktivität und Unternehmens-FTI überdurchschnittlich; die Bereiche Forschung, Technologie und Innovation (FTI) in Klima und Umwelt, Digitalisierung sowie innovationsintensive Gründungen sind stark unterdurchschnittlich. Etwas unterdurchschnittlich sind die Bereiche Effizienz, tertiäre Bildung, sekundäres Bildungssystem, Geschlechtergleichstellung, Regulierung und Steuern sowie Forschung an Hochschulen und außeruniversitären Einrichtungen. Als generelles Muster zeigt sich, dass sich Österreich in der Regel (mit Ausnahmen) über dem EU-Durchschnitt, in vielen Fällen unter jenem der Innovation Leader, und fast immer unter dem Niveau der globalen Top-3-Länder befindet. Ein Benchmarking-Fokus auf die EU und die führenden Innovationsländer der EU greift zu kurz – Innovationsleistung sollte zunehmend im globalen Kontext verglichen werden, um Innovationsleistung sowie Wettbewerbsfähigkeit umfassend abzubilden.
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6

Clarke, Alison, Sherry Hutchinson, and Ellen Weiss. Psychosocial support for children. Population Council, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/hiv14.1003.

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Masiye Camp in Matopos National Park, and Kids’ Clubs in downtown Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, are examples of a growing number of programs in Africa and elsewhere that focus on the psychological and social needs of AIDS-affected children. Given the traumatic effects of grief, loss, and other hardships faced by these children, there is increasing recognition of the importance of programs to help them strengthen their social and emotional support systems. This Horizons Report describes findings from operations research in Zimbabwe and Rwanda that examines the psychosocial well-being of orphans and vulnerable children and ways to increase their ability to adapt and cope in the face of adversity. In these studies, a person’s psychosocial well-being refers to his/her emotional and mental state and his/her network of human relationships and connections. A total of 1,258 youth were interviewed. All were deemed vulnerable by their communities because they had been affected by HIV/AIDS and/or other factors such as severe poverty.
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7

Gückelhorn, Cathrin, Olaf Struck, Matthias Dütsch, and Gesine Stephan. Bonuszahlungen an Manager : Eine Szenarienanalyse zu Gerechtigkeitsurteilen von Beschäftigten. Otto-Friedrich-Universität, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.20378/irb-6429.

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Bonuszahlungen im Top-Management haben in den letzten Jahren zugenommen – genauso wie die öffentliche und politische Debatte darüber. Vor diesem Hintergrund geht der Aufsatz der Frage nach, wann Beschäftigte Bonuszahlungen an Manager als gerecht bzw. ungerecht einschätzen. Hierzu greift der Artikel auf Theorien und Ansätze der empirischen organisationalen Gerechtigkeitsforschung zurück. Datengrundlage ist eine repräsentative telefonische Befragung, in der die Teilnehmenden hypothetische Szenarien in Form von Vignetten bewerteten. Die Auswertungen zeigen, dass Situationsmerkmale im Vergleich mit soziodemografischen Merkmalen der Befragten einen starken Einfluss auf die Gerechtigkeitsurteile haben. Eine korrespondierende Erfolgsbeteiligung der Belegschaft kann demnach zur Akzeptanz von Bonuszahlungen führen. Geringere Einflüsse gehen hingegen von einer Berücksichtigung der Belegschaftsinteressen bei Entscheidungen des Managements, umfangreichen Informationen, dem Unternehmenserfolg sowie der Bonushöhe aus. Die Verantwortung des Top-Managements sowie ein Hinweis auf die Branchenüblichkeit der Bonuszahlungen besitzen keinen Einfluss. Insgesamt liefert der Beitrag damit neue Erkenntnisse zu Fragen der sozialen Gerechtigkeitund gibt Anregungen zur fairen Ausgestaltung von Bonuskomponenten.
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8

Bereavement, Grief, and Loss – Ask The Expert (recording). ACAMH, February 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.13056/acamh.22641.

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For this session we welcomed Dr. Tina Rae to share her knowledge and insights into the complex subject of bereavement, grief and loss. In this session, loss will be considered in its broader sense; taking into consideration the impacts of the pandemic and other global crises that are affecting families and young people.
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