Academic literature on the topic '(Hammersmith and Fulham)'

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Journal articles on the topic "(Hammersmith and Fulham)"

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McClinton, Sarah. "HIV Services In Hammersmith And Fulham: Ten Years On." Journal of Integrated Care 6, no. 2 (April 1998): 85–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/14769018199800016.

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Flannigan, C. B., G. R. Glover, S. T. Feeney, J. K. Wing, P. E. Bebbington, and S. W. Lewis. "Inner London Collaborative Audit of Admissions in Two Health Districts." British Journal of Psychiatry 165, no. 6 (December 1994): 734–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.165.6.734.

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BackgroundThere is pressure on acute admission services in inner-city areas. Two deprived London districts with markedly different acute bed ratios but similar sociodemographic backgrounds were compared to test the hypothesis that more facilities mean better service.MethodAn instrument for auditing the use of short-stay hospital beds was constructed to collect information concerning admissions to, and short-stay patients in, the chosen districts during a three-month period.ResultsThere was a higher admission rate and substantially greater use of beds per unit population in south Southwark than in Hammersmith & Fulham. Much of the difference was attributable to a higher rate of admission of patients with affective disorders in south Southwark.ConclusionsThe results are not explained by variations in population need, longer in-patient stay, or poorer aftercare leading to early relapse. The question of whether there is over-provision of services compared with real need in south Southwark, or under-provision (particularly for people with affective disorders) in Hammersmith & Fulham, is considered but left open for discussion following a study of ethnic issues and the reasons for admission.
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Flannigan, C. B., G. R. Glover, J. K. Wing, S. W. Lewis, P. E. Bebbington, and S. T. Feeney. "Inner London Collaborative Audit of Admission in Two Health Districts." British Journal of Psychiatry 165, no. 6 (December 1994): 750–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.165.6.750.

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BackgroundIn this series, rates of admission and daily bed use in south Southwark were 30% higher than in Hammersmith & Fulham, principally because of a higher rate of admission for affective disorders. Factors associated with compulsory admission did not differ between the districts. This final paper examines the severity of symptoms, the reasons given for admission and factors relevant to the judgement to admit, in order to test the hypothesis that more resources mean better service.MethodSampling and data collection methods were described in the first paper.ResultsIn both districts, major reasons for admission were self-neglect and risk of self-harm, poor adaptive functioning, and poor acceptance of medication. In south Southwark, a group of patients had affective disorders and less severe symptoms but a stated risk of suicide. Rates for, and severity of, schizophrenia were similar in the two districts. Social and preventive reasons for admission were given more frequently in south Southwark, where patients had more often been in contact with services before admission. Staff there, but not in Hammersmith & Fulham, suggested that many could have benefited from alternative forms of residential care.ConclusionsA ‘buffer’ of hospital beds in south Southwark may have allowed a more acceptable service, particularly for affective disorders. The possibility that this buffer could be replaced by a wider range of residential accommodation, including hostels away from the District General Hospital, is discussed. Ten recommendations are listed.
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Tickell, Adam. "Creative finance and the local state: the Hammersmith and Fulham swaps affair." Political Geography 17, no. 7 (September 1998): 865–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0962-6298(98)00027-4.

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Hedley, Steve. "Restitution–mistake of law–reform in haste, repent at leisure." Cambridge Law Journal 58, no. 1 (March 1999): 1–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008197399281019.

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INKleinwort Benson v. Lincoln City Council [1998] 3 W.L.R. 1095 the House of Lords heard consolidated appeals arising out of the failure of interest rate swap transactions entered into between various banks and local authorities. Having paid out considerable sums under the swap arrangements, the banks were disconcerted to find them declared ultra vires and void (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham L.B.C. [1992] 2 A.C. 1). The Lords have now held that sums paid by the banks may be recovered back, by action in restitution for mistake. In so holding, they have abrogated the rule that a mistake of law is not actionable, and denied (at least on these facts) any defence that the parties acted on the basis of “settled law”.
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Pretorius, Inge-Martine, and Tamar Karni-Sharon. "An audit and evaluation of the Hammersmith & Fulham CAMHS Child Psychotherapy Outreach Service at the Randolph Beresford Early Years Centre." Infant Observation 15, no. 2 (August 2012): 165–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13698036.2012.692855.

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Tibber, Marc S., James B. Kirkbride, Stanley Mutsatsa, Isobel Harrison, Thomas R. E. Barnes, Eileen M. Joyce, and Vyv Huddy. "Are socioenvironmental factors associated with psychotic symptoms in people with first-episode psychosis? A cross-sectional study of a West London clinical sample." BMJ Open 9, no. 9 (September 2019): e030448. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030448.

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ObjectivesTo determine whether neighbourhood-level socioenvironmental factors including deprivation and inequality predict variance in psychotic symptoms after controlling for individual-level demographics.DesignA cross-sectional design was employed.SettingData were originally collected from secondary care services within the UK boroughs of Ealing, Hammersmith and Fulham, Wandsworth, Kingston, Richmond, Merton, Sutton and Hounslow as part of the West London First-Episode Psychosis study.ParticipantsComplete case analyses were undertaken on 319 participants who met the following inclusion criteria: aged 16 years or over, resident in the study’s catchment area, experiencing a first psychotic episode, with fewer than 12 weeks’ exposure to antipsychotic medication and sufficient command of English to facilitate assessment.Outcome measuresSymptom dimension scores, derived from principal component analyses of the Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms and Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms, were regressed on neighbourhood-level predictors, including population density, income deprivation, income inequality, social fragmentation, social cohesion, ethnic density and ethnic fragmentation, using multilevel regression. While age, gender and socioeconomic status were included as individual-level covariates, data on participant ethnicity were not available.ResultsHigher income inequality was associated with lower negative symptom scores (coefficient=−1.66, 95% CI −2.86 to –0.46, p<0.01) and higher levels of ethnic segregation were associated with lower positive symptom scores (coefficient=−2.32, 95% CI −4.17 to –0.48, p=0.01) after adjustment for covariates.ConclusionsThese findings provide further evidence that particular characteristics of the environment may be linked to specific symptom clusters in psychosis. Longitudinal studies are required to begin to tease apart the underlying mechanisms involved as well as the causal direction of such associations.
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Dar, A., R. Wiltshire, and P. N. Wright. "55 The Case for A Best-Interest Meeting Decision Toolkit to Guide Preferred Place of Care and Interventions For Community Dwelling Older People Who Lack Mental Capacity." Age and Ageing 50, Supplement_1 (March 2021): i12—i42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afab030.16.

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Abstract Introduction The Hammersmith and Fulham Community Independence Service (CIS), runs a “virtual ward” to allow people to remain independent in their own homes where possible. Place-of-care decisions made for community-dwelling older people who lack capacity are formulated in a best-interest meeting (BIM), involving health and social care professionals, family and carers. Often BIMs centre around beliefs and wishes of the patient or family but fail to objectively evaluate risks and mitigants of staying at home versus placement. We observed that BIMs were not being held on a consistent basis, and when held lacked the necessary structure for an effective decision-making forum. Even experienced professionals find it difficult to chair BIMs because of the complexity of the decision-making process. Not all involved parties may be represented. We found BIMs more likely to be held, attended and effective when structured to identify the major relevant considerations. Method The CIS “virtual ward” team developed a BIM decision toolkit, comprising: a check-list of risks and mitigants for home versus care home; a list of required attendees; who should document and chair the meeting; and who should action the interventions raised. From 6th January to 25th October 2019, BIMs were held for 48 patients on the CIS “virtual ward”. Results 234 interventions were carried out following toolkit-led BIMs. 1 month after BIM, 34 of 44 patients’ wishes (77%) were honoured (3 not recorded, 1 died). 3 months after BIM, 23 of 31 patients’ wishes (74%) were honoured (15 not recorded, 2 died). Case studies are included in the presentation. Conclusion We developed a toolkit to support decision-making for older community dwellers who lack capacity regarding their place of care. The toolkit assures standardisation and structure to minimise bias, whilst recognising personal beliefs and preferences. It enables any member of the multidisciplinary team to hold and lead a BIM, to reliably identify appropriate interventions and care plans which may not otherwise have been implemented or recognised. The majority of the patients reviewed using the BIM toolkit remained in their preferred place of care well after the team’s interventions. Further evaluation is required to compare CIS BIM toolkit-based outcomes against other community services which do not use this toolkit, and appraise the toolkit in a hospital setting.
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Lea, Jhon, Roger Matthews, and Jock Young. "La Intervención multiagencial frente al delito y la constatación del apoyo público. El "Hammersmith and Fultham Survey"." Delito y Sociedad 1, no. 2 (November 8, 2003): 3–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.14409/dys.v1i2.94.

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Stevenson, Christine. "Bernard Cashman, Private charity and the public purse. The development of Bedford General Hospital: 1794–1988, Bedford, For the North Bedfordshire Health Authority, 1988, 8vo, pp. xxvii, 206, illus., £7.95 [plus £1.00 p&p if ordered from Mr T. Devine, Divisional Supplies Dept., Britannia Place, Bedford MK42 9DNM, (paperback). - T. G. Davies, Deeds not words: a history of the Swansea General and Eye Hospital 1817–1948, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1988, 8vo, pp. xv, 259, illus., £7.95. - Arthur Lewis Wyman, Medicine in the Parish of Fulham from the fourteenth century: Fulham Hospital 1884, London, Fulham and Hammersmith Historical Society, 1988, 8vo, pp. x, 160, illus., £5.00 + .50 p & p from Miss E. J. Willson, Hon. Secretary, 56 Palewell Park, London SW14 8JH." Medical History 34, no. 3 (July 1990): 349–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025727300052637.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "(Hammersmith and Fulham)"

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Rough, Barbara Anne. "The structure and development of commercial gardening businesses in Fulham and Hammersmith, Middlesex, c. 1680-1861." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2018. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/282872.

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This dissertation responds to Joan Thirsk's call for historians to undertake a closer investigation of commercial gardening. It adopts a micro-historical approach, to address two questions, 'What was a gardener?', and 'What was a garden business?'' Based in the parish of Fulham (including the hamlet of Hammersmith), Middlesex, the parish with the largest acreage of commercial gardening in England in 1796, the study applies nominal linkage to a variety of sources to understand more fully the gardeners, garden businesses, and gardening families between 1680 and 1861. The dissertation exploits sources with occupational descriptors, including livery company apprentice registers, bankruptcies and insolvencies, clandestine marriage registers, Bank of England accounts, and fire insurance policies, not used previously for a statistical examination of gardening. Quantitative data are set in a rich context using qualitative sources such as newspapers, Old Bailey proceedings and property surveys. Tracing occupational terms through the sources shows that records created by parish and government bodies relied on a few customary terms, each encompassing several different functions in gardening, for much longer than commercial documents, demonstrating how reliance on one source can be misleading. In this study I argue that occupational descriptors in gardening reflected the focus, but failed to capture the entirety, of what was produced in a garden business. From the early eighteenth century garden businesses should not be viewed simply as a market garden or nursery; they cultivated a diversity of horticultural products, but are also found to have had a variety of other agricultural interests and economic pursuits, introducing new products and responding to new opportunities: gardeners did not only garden. Contrary to the claims of some historians this was not just an early phase in the transition from agriculture to specialist gardening but persisted into the nineteenth century. This study contributes not only to the history of commercial gardening but also to wider debates in agricultural and business history. From four land-use maps, dated between 1747 and 1843/5 the changing acreage and locations of gardens have been identified, and the first graphical representation of the land use in the parish from the tithe apportionment schedules is presented. The complex interaction between competing land uses is examined providing new findings about how the garden industry adapted in the face of pressures from urban development and other agricultural needs. Examination of the occupational structure of the industry has been approached through several sources. Very few gardeners were apprenticed, but some families continued to obtain training as gardeners and commercial advantages through one of five different livery companies, as well as the Gardeners' Company. The parish registers give the first tentative estimate of the size of the industry, while registers of clandestine marriages suggest that gardeners were a significant proportion of the middling sort in Fulham in the early eighteenth century. Comparison of gardening occupations in the 1841, 1851 and 1861 census enumerators' books provide insights into the structure of the industry but also reveal the inconsistent application of terminology, resulting in the reliability and validity of some of the data being questioned. The implication is that only the 1851 census gives an accurate occupational structure for gardening industry. The findings of previous studies that most gardeners rented their land have been confirmed. On the bishop of London's estate the rents were low during the eighteenth century, but few gardeners were his head lessees and therefore able to benefit. Gardeners had a range of wealth, sufficient for some to have a comfortable living as part of the middling sort while a few had accrued greater wealth from gardening. Garden businesses rarely became bankrupt or insolvent and mainly when there were general economic downturns. Businesses were left predominantly to widows or sons, with the intention of keeping businesses operating and resulting in the establishment of garden business dynasties. The wealth of some businesses demonstrates the benefit of trans-generational transfer, others fared well enough for their business to continue on a smaller scale, but many names came and went from Fulham and Hammersmith commercial gardens in one generation.
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Markwick, Marion. "Feminist perspectives on contemporary inner city neigbourhood change : gender and gentrification in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham." Thesis, Roehampton University, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.308400.

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Books on the topic "(Hammersmith and Fulham)"

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Archer, John. Nature conservation in Hammersmith and Fulham. London: London Ecology Unit, 1993.

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Parkinson, Michael. Visiting, living & working in Hammersmith & Fulham. Gloucester: British Publishing, 1992.

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Wales, Great Britain Audit Commission for Local Authorities and the National Health Service in England and. Hammersmith & Fulham: A report of the review of social services in Hammersmith & Fulham Borough Council. London: Audit Commission, 1998.

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Alexander, Kate. HIV and housing in Hammersmith and Fulham. London: Hammersmith and Fulham Housing Services, 1995.

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Great Britain. Department for Education. Her Majesty's Inspectorate. Aspects of community education in the London borough of Hammersmith and Fulham: A report. London: Department for Education, 1992.

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Alan, Brooks. Office/B1 developments in Hammersmith and Fulham 1991. London: Hammersmith & Fulham Research and Information Services, 1991.

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Brooks, Alan. 1991 census: Ethnic groups in Hammersmith and Fulham. London: London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham Environment Department, Research and Urban Regeneration Group, 1994.

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G, Jackaman Peter, and Hammersmith & Fulham Public Libraries., eds. Law: A guide to the collection of Hammersmith & Fulham. 2nd ed. (London?): Hammersmith & Fulham Libraries, 1987.

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Hasker, Leslie. Hammersmith and Fulham Through 1500 Years: A brief History. [London]: Fulham & Hammersmith Historical Society, 1992.

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Improvement, Commission for Health. Inspection of safeguards for children - Hammersmith & Fulham NHS Organisations, October2002. London: Stationery Office, 2002.

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