Showing 301 - 320 results of 1,108 for search '"fear"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 301

    A qualitative study exploring experiences of treatment in paediatric rheumatology - children’s, young people’s, parents’ and carers’ perspectives by Kassie Gracella Putri, Sunil Sampath, Charlotte Lucy Richardson, Alice McCloskey, Adam Pattison Rathbone

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Behaviours were influenced through somatic factors (pain, function), social factors (advice from health professionals, encouragement from friends, family and teachers, practicality of using treatment in relation to school, work and finance) and cognitive factors (fear of needles, fear of specific medications, beliefs about necessity). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 302

    Evaluating combinations of rainfall datasets and optimization techniques for improved hydrological predictions using the SWAT+ model by Mahesh R. Tapas, Randall Etheridge, Thanh-Nhan-Duc Tran, Manh-Hung Le, Brian Hinckley, Van Tam Nguyen, Venkataraman Lakshmi

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…Study Region: This study focuses on the Cape Fear and Tar-Pamlico watersheds in North Carolina, which are characterized by diverse hydrological conditions, varied land use, soil types, and hydrological characteristics. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  3. 303
  4. 304

    COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among health workers in rural Uganda: A mixed methods study by Ouni, Patrick Diox, Namulondo, Racheal, Wanume, Benon, Okia, David, Olupot, Peter, Nantale, Ritah, Matovu, Joseph K.B., Napyo, Agnes, Lubaale, Yovani A. Moses, Nshakira , Nathan f, Mukunya, David

    Published 2024
    “…Similar factors were associated with vaccine hesitancy when we used the vaccine hesitancy score. Fear of side effects, distrust in vaccine stakeholders, and lack of trust in the vaccine were barriers to COVID-19 vaccination among health workers. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 305

    « All London was one grey temple of an awful rite » : Londres dans The Hill of Dreams d’Arthur Machen (1907) by Sophie Mantrant

    Published 2013-03-01
    “…In The Hill of Dreams, the Little People (Twylidd Tweg) undergo a metamorphosis, as it were, appearing in the guise of the labouring classes. Fear of the proletariat is thus expressed in a typically Machenian idiom.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 306

    Opportunities and Potentials of Mobility as a Service After the Corona Pandemic by Benedikt Scheier, Benjamin Frieske, Kathrin Viergutz

    Published 2021-05-01
    “…Abstract The pandemic represents a break in the positive development of public transport. The users’ fear of infection could have a lasting negative effect on public transport. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 307

    La criminalité à Londres au xixe siècle : le cas des cambriolages chez les particuliers by Tri Tran

    Published 2005-12-01
    “…The many articles published in the police press, as well as in more serious newspapers, reinforced their fear. However, official statistics tend to show that this impression was not grounded and that crime was contained by the police and the courts after the early 1840s, although the population of London was expanding. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 308

    After the Hurricanes Have Gone: Stress and Decision Making When Living Alone by Carolyn S. Wilken

    Published 2005-09-01
    “…Of course these strategies won't make all the fear go away, but by following these suggestions you can regain control over your life—no matter what your age. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 309

    La gestion des déchets urbains au Liban entre politiques publiques et privées by Nada Chbat

    Published 2011-08-01
    “…The second obstacle is financial (the necessary means to finance this sector) and the third is social (the localization of the waste/discharges and the contrasted nature of their social representations : from fear to utility). The establishment of sustainable and satisfactory urban cleanliness supposes, beyond the strictly technical questions, first an awareness of the necessity of new cooperation between public and private actors.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 310

    Interrelation of Self-Report, Behavioural and Electrophysiological Measures Assessing Pain-Related Information Processing by Oliver Dittmar, Rüdiger Krehl, Stefan Lautenbacher

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…INTRODUCTION: A number of variables reflecting attentional and emotional mechanisms of processing pain-related information have recently attracted interest, ie, fear of pain, pain catastrophizing, hypervigilance and attentional bias to pain. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 311

    THE PANDEMIC AND HOMILETICS 101: A REFLECTION by S. Hoezee

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…The dual challenges of no longer being able to preach to a physically present congregation and of preaching during a time of significant fear, stress, and sorrow revealed to many preachers aspects of preaching of which they had not previously been aware. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 312

    After the Hurricanes Have Gone: Stress and Decision Making When Living Alone by Carolyn S. Wilken

    Published 2005-09-01
    “…Of course these strategies won't make all the fear go away, but by following these suggestions you can regain control over your life—no matter what your age. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 313

    La nuit entre histoire et littérature by Alain Cabantous

    Published 2020-07-01
    “…Even if sources of this kind present the historian with methodological problems, the use of this documentation cannot be neglected when trying to understand the nocturnal, given that theatre, poetry and inexpensive books have spread and given root to a repellent and crime-generating representation of nocturnal time generally associated with violence of all kinds, with fear, and with death. But the comparative approach to night between France and England not only reveals different sensibilities, but also shows that night was an original creative wellspring that spread, among a broad Western European public, its terrifying models of night, conveyed no less by Elizabethan theatre than by tomb poetry or gothic novels.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 314

    The Hound of the Baskervilles : Histoire, fantasme et genèse de la narration policière by Christophe Gelly

    Published 2004-12-01
    “…More precisely, we deal with the main fantasy conveyed through the text, i.e. the fear of being devoured by the frightful Hound embodying the Baskerville legend, and we try to identify the grounds and the impact of such a fantasy. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 315

    Cywilizacyjny wymiar inwazji Federacji Rosyjskiej na Ukrainę by Adam Zamojski

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…Koneczny believed that under the influence of the Asiatic borrowings, Moscow became a representative of the Turanian model of civilization, within which authoritarianism reigns and power is based on fear and violence. It is experienced today by Ukraine struggling not only for sovereignty, but also for belonging to the Latin civilization circle.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 316

    Cohabitation sociale et ordre public aux Champs-Élysées :Gestion et appropriation du carré des jeux (1700-1830) by Véronique Laporte

    Published 2011-08-01
    “…Whether they be aristocrats or schoolboys, the same apprehension comes out: the fear of gatherings. This is the why the authorities attempted to reduce the crowds on the Champs-Élysées by controlling the number and the nature of the games practiced in that public place.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 317

    Recording of Falls in Elderly Fallers in Northern Greece and Evaluation of Aging Health-Related Factors and Environmental Safety Associated with Falls: A Cross-Sectional Study by Dimitrios Lytras, Evaggelos Sykaras, Paris Iakovidis, Konstantinos Kasimis, Ioannis Myrogiannis, Anastasios Kottaras

    Published 2022-01-01
    “…Regular eye examinations, management of vertigo, improvement of the balance and strength of the lower limbs, and reduction of fear of impending falls are the intrinsic factors that help prevent falls the most.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 318

    Does electronic data collection perform better than paper-based data collection in health research fieldwork? A participatory action research in Zanzibar by Ving Fai Chan, Fatma Omar, Eden Mashayo, Ai Chee Yong, Christine Graham, Ronnie Graham, Omar Juma Othman, Jamison Jones, Kajal Shah

    Published 2024-07-01
    “…From November 2022 to October 2023, 14 data collection team members participated in (1) a consultative workshop with a fishbone analysis to understand their hesitance to use electronic data collection tools for fieldwork (Plan); (2) developing implementation and evaluation plan for the paper-based method (Do); (3) assessing the proportion of errors and challenges faced using paper-based method (Study); and (4) codeveloping, implementing and assessing an electronic data collection tool (Act).Results Stakeholders were hesitant to use electronic data collection tools because of fear of lost data due to poor internet, insufficient competency with technology due to lack of training, unfamiliarity with technology in general and fear of lost wages. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 319

    Does Differential Habitat Selection Facilitate Coexistence Between Badgers and Hedgehogs? by Katie A. Lee, Antonio Uzal, Louise K. Gentle, Philip J. Baker, Richard J. Delahay, Anthony Sévêque, Robert S. Davis, Richard W. Yarnell

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Previous studies have shown spatial separation between these species and attributed this to hedgehogs experiencing a ‘landscape of fear’, but little is known about the potential role of differential habitat use. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 320

    Falls and balance impairment; what and how has this been measured in adults with joint hypermobility? A scoping review by Yiduo Wang, Paul H. Strutton, Caroline M. Alexander

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…When surveyed, they commonly fell and had a fear of falling. Conclusions It is unclear whether the participants represent the population of people with hypermobility. …”
    Get full text
    Article