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'Nae too bad': job satisfaction and staff morale in Scottish residential child care
Published 2005-03-01Article -
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Exploring advance care planning discourses in scottish dementia policies: A critical discourse analysis
Published 2025-01-01Get full text
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STEP 1: The Scottish Trauma & Orthopaedics Equality Project: demographics and working patterns of a national workforce
Published 2025-01-01“…Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2025;6(1):103–108.…”
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Who Cares? Scotland: 25 years and still moving forward....
Published 2003-02-01“…These groups enabled young people to comment on care services and the adults to promote their views to relevant people in the Scottish Office and Regional Councils.…”
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Book review: Residential Child Care: Collaborative Practice. Ian Milligan and Irene Stevens
Published 2007-03-01Article -
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Exploring a role for performance management in residential child care
Published 2007-08-01“…While agencies such as the Scottish Commission for the Regulation of Care and the Scottish Social Services Council have a role in setting and monitoring standards, it is argued that their activities are not focused enough to ensure that the mistakes highlighted in inquiries will not be repeated. …”
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Considering best practice standards for routine whole-genome sequencing for TB care and control
Published 2024-10-01Get full text
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We Walk: a person-centred, dyadic behaviour change intervention to promote physical activity through outdoor walking after stroke—an intervention development study
Published 2022-06-01“…This study established intervention components and structure and identified operational issues critical to future success. Future research will pilot and refine We Walk and evaluate acceptability, feasibility, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness.Trial registration number ISRCTN34488928.…”
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Hospitalisation rates for epilepsy, asthma and insulin-dependent diabetes in 796 190 school-aged children and young people with and without intellectual disabilities: a record-link...
Published 2025-02-01“…Scotland’s Pupil Census, 2008–2013, was used to identify pupils with and without intellectual disabilities and was linked with the Prescribing Information Service to identify pupils with epilepsy, asthma and insulin-dependent diabetes, and the Scottish Morbidity Records-01 to identify hospital admissions.Setting The general child population of Scotland.Participants School pupils aged 4–19 years; 18 278 with intellectual disabilities and 777 912 without intellectual disabilities.Outcomes Overall, emergency and non-emergency hospitalisations for epilepsy, asthma and/or diabetes; and length of stay.Results Epilepsy and asthma were more prevalent in pupils with intellectual disabilities (8.8% and 8.9%, respectively, compared with 0.8% and 6.9% among pupils without intellectual disabilities, p<0.001), whereas insulin-dependent diabetes was not (0.5% prevalence). …”
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