Academic literature on the topic 'London Community Cricket Association'

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Journal articles on the topic "London Community Cricket Association"

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Davis, Gavin A., Michael Makdissi, Paul Bloomfield, Patrick Clifton, Charlotte Cowie, Ruben Echemendia, Eanna C. Falvey, et al. "Concussion Guidelines in National and International Professional and Elite Sports." Neurosurgery 87, no. 2 (March 31, 2020): 418–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuros/nyaa057.

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Abstract The Berlin statement on sport-related concussion was published in 2017 using evidence-based recommendations. We aimed to examine (1) the implementation of, distribution and education based on the Berlin recommendations, and the development of sport-specific protocols/guidelines among professional and elite sports, (2) the implementation of guidelines at the community level, (3) translation of guidelines into different languages, and (4) research activities. Senior medical advisers and chief medical officers from Australian Football League, All Japan Judo Federation, British Horseracing Authority, Cricket Australia, Fédération Equestre Internationale, Football Association, Gaelic Athletic Association, International Boxing Association, Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board, Major League Baseball, National Football League, National Hockey League, National Rugby League, and World Rugby completed a questionnaire. The results demonstrated that all 14 sporting organizations have published concussion protocols/guidelines based on the Berlin recommendations, including Recognize, Removal from play, Re-evaluation, Rest, Recovery, and Return to play. There is variable inclusion of Prolonged symptoms. Prevention and Risk reduction and Long-term effects are addressed in the guidelines, rules and regulations, and/or sport-specific research. There is variability in education programs, monitoring compliance with guidelines, and publication in other languages. All sporting bodies are actively involved in concussion research. We conclude that the Berlin recommendations have been included in concussion protocols/guidelines by all the sporting bodies, with consistency in the essential components of the recommendations, whilst also allowing for sport- and regional-specific variations. Education at the elite, community, and junior levels remains an ongoing challenge, and future iterations of guidelines may consider multiple language versions, and community- and junior-level guidelines.
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Bunyan, Paul. "Hallmarks of the Political in Community Organizing: An Arendtian Perspective." VOLUNTAS: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations 32, no. 4 (June 22, 2021): 910–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11266-021-00372-4.

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AbstractDrawing upon Hannah Arendt’s adherence to existential phenomenology, the article advances a political understanding and interpretation of community organizing. Arendt, it is maintained, offers valuable insight into political phenomena which are constitutive of community organizing. Four aspects, in particular, are highlighted—what I refer to as the four “A”s of association, action, appearance and authenticity—understood in existentialist, phenomenological, ontological and ultimately political terms, as primary ways of being-together-politically. The first part of the article examines Arendt’s existential phenomenological approach in shaping her understanding of the political. This provides the theoretical basis for examining in the second part of the article, phenomena which are constitutive of community organizing, highlighting how association, action, appearance and authenticity form distinctive political characteristics of community organizing as an approach. At different points, brief reference is made to the work of London Citizens, the largest broad-based organization in the UK, in order to illustrate the connections between Arendtian thought and community-based organizing.
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Surtees, P. G., and J. C. Duffy. "Binary and rate measures of life event experience: Their association with illness onset in Edinburgh and London community surveys." Journal of Affective Disorders 16, no. 2-3 (March 1989): 139–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0165-0327(89)90068-2.

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Parker, Sandra. "Building Community Information Networks: Strategies and Experiences20002Sheila Pantry. Building Community Information Networks: Strategies and Experiences. London: Library Association 1999. , ISBN: 1‐85604‐337‐1 £34.95 (softback)." Library Management 21, no. 9 (December 2000): 501–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/lm.2000.21.9.501.2.

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Soomro, G. Mustafa, Tom Burns, and Azeem Majeed. "Socio-economic deprivation and psychiatric referral and admission rates – an ecological study in one London borough." Psychiatric Bulletin 26, no. 5 (May 2002): 175–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.26.5.175.

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AIMS AND METHODWe retrospectively investigated the association between the Jarman and Townsend indices of deprivation and referral rates to community mental health teams (CMHTs) and in-patient admissions rates, including the contribution of general practice factors to these rates. The samples consisted of all community/out-patient referrals and admissions to four CMHTs over 1 year.RESULTSLow positive correlation was found between community/out-patient referral rates for all diagnoses and psychosis with the Jarman index, and between both the indices and admission rates for all diagnoses and non-psychosis. Referrals from general practitioners (GPs) varied nearly 40-fold and were not related to either indices, fundholding status or having practice manager or practice nurse.CLINICAL IMPLICATIONSOverall, the Jarman index appears to be a more useful index for planning psychiatric service provision. However, because of the small correlation with referral and admission rates, deprivation indices in themselves would be of limited value, as there may be other relevant factors that require investigating. GP characteristics investigated did not predict referral rates.
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Poo, S. X., C. S. W. Tham, C. Smith, J. Lee, T. Cairns, J. Galliford, S. Hamdulay, et al. "IgG4-related disease in a multi-ethnic community: clinical characteristics and association with malignancy." QJM: An International Journal of Medicine 112, no. 10 (June 21, 2019): 763–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcz149.

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Abstract Background Immunoglobulin-G4-related disease (IgG4-RD) is a recently recognized fibro-inflammatory condition that can affect multiple organs. Despite growing interest in this condition, the natural history and management of IgG4-RD remain poorly understood. Aim To describe the clinical characteristics, treatment and outcomes of IgG4-RD in a multi-ethnic UK cohort, and investigate its possible association with malignancy. Design Retrospective analysis of case-note and electronic data. Methods Cases were identified from sub-specialty cohorts and a systematic search of an NHS trust histopathology database using ‘IgG4’ or ‘inflammatory pseudotumour’ as search terms. Electronic records, imaging and histopathology reports were reviewed. Results In total, 66 identified cases of IgG4-RD showed a similar multi-ethnic spread to the local population of North West London. The median age was 59 years and 71% of patients were male. Presenting symptoms relating to mass effect of a lesion were present in 48% of cases and the mean number of organs involved was 2.4. Total of 10 patients had reported malignancies with 6 of these being haematological. 83% of those treated with steroids had good initial response; however, 50% had relapsing-remitting disease. Rituximab was administered in 11 cases and all achieved an initial serological response. Despite this, seven patients subsequently relapsed after a mean duration of 11 months and four progressed despite treatment. Conclusions We report a large UK-based cohort of IgG4-RD that shows no clear ethnic predisposition and a wide range of affected organs. We discuss the use of serum IgG4 concentrations as a disease marker in IgG4-RD, the association with malignant disease and outcomes according to differing treatment regimens.
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O'Hara, Peter, Traolach S. Brugha, Alain Lesage, and John Wing. "New findings on tardive dyskinesia in a community sample." Psychological Medicine 23, no. 2 (May 1993): 453–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033291700028543.

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SynopsisIn a geographically defined area sample of 141 long-term psychiatric patients in day care in south London, the relationship between tardive dyskinesia (TD) and other aspects of illness, treatment, and social and psychological functioning were studied. The results are compared with previous findings. TD was significantly associated with parkinsonian symptoms and with the number of years in contact with the psychiatric services. There was a trend, in affective disorder only, towards an association with current neuroleptic dose. The patients with affective disorder also had higher rates of TD than patients with schizophrenia and paranoid psychosis. History of treatment with ECT correlated negatively with TD among those with schizophrenia, and positively among those with affective disorder. As in other studies, duration of neuroleptic treatment did not correlate with the presence or absence of TD. In contrast to some previous reports, age and cognitive status were not related to TD status. Possible reasons for this are discussed.
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Kalman, Les. "Identifying the Spatial Distribution of Dental Outreach Program in London, Ontario." Journal of Oral Health and Community Dentistry 11, no. 1 (January 2017): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.5005/jp-journals-10062-0001.

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ABSTRACT The impact of oral health on total health and personal well-being has been well documented. Unfortunately, many individuals suffer from the effects of poor oral health and cannot seek dental care due to financial limitations. The Dental Outreach Community Service (DOCS) program at the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University, functions to provide free dentistry to those individuals within an educational context. This report looks at the spatial distribution of family income and the spatial representation of the DOCS program in London, Ontario, between 2008 and 2015. A DOCS spatial distribution map has been generated to illustrate the association. How to cite this article Kalman L. Identifying the Spatial Distribution of Dental Outreach Program in London, Ontario. J Oral Health Comm Dent 2017;11(1):1-4.
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Clapham, David. "PROBLEMS AND POTENTIALS OF SHELTERED HOUSING." Ageing and Society 17, no. 2 (March 1997): 209–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0144686x96006368.

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Alex Marsh and Moyra Riseborough, Making Ends Meet: Older People, Housing Association Costs and the Affordability of Rented Housing, National Federation of Housing Associations, London, 1995, 93 pp., no price, ISBN 0 862 97307 4.Anthea Tinker, Fay Wright and Hannah Zeilig, Difficult to Let Sheltered Housing, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1995, 174 pp., £17.50, ISBN 0 113 21964 4.Moyra Riseborough (ed.), Opening-up the Resources of Sheltered Housing to the Wider Community, Anchor Studies 3, Anchor Housing Association, Oxford, 1995, 32 pp., £7.50, ISBN 0 906 17827 4.Bill Randall, Staying Put: The Best Move I'll Never Make, Anchor Housing Association, Oxford, 1995, unpaginated, £5.99, ISBN 0 906 17829 0.For the last twenty years sheltered housing has dominated debates about housing and old age in Britain. There have recently been signs that its pre-eminent position may be threatened by the wider agenda stimulated by the community care reforms. But just when we thought the whole debate had run out of steam, back comes sheltered housing to dominate the policy debate and to re-capture the attention of housing officers. The nature of the debate now differs: gone are the heated discussions over whether sheltered housing is the answer to all our problems; rather, the key question is what to do with the increasing number of ‘difficult-to-let’ sheltered housing flats. Does this mean that the sceptics (including myself) were right all along and that sheltered housing really was ill-thought out and over-provided? After all, the main defence against these charges was that it was popular. Have older people turned against it too?
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Sellen, Daniel W., Alison E. Tedstone, and Jacqueline Frize. "Food insecurity among refugee families in East London: results of a pilot assessment." Public Health Nutrition 5, no. 5 (December 2002): 637–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/phn2002340.

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AbstractObjective:To identify child hunger and examine its association with family factors, receipt of benefits, housing conditions and social support among recently arrived refugee families with young children.Design:Structured and semi-structured questionnaire administered to a service-based, purposive sample of caregivers.Setting:East London, United Kingdom.Subjects:Thirty households with children <5 years old, resident in the UK for <2 years.Results:All households sampled were food-insecure, and 60% of index children were experiencing hunger as defined on the Radimer/Cornell scale. Child hunger was significantly associated with recent arrival, marginally significantly associated with receipt of fewer benefits and younger parenthood, and not associated with maternal education or self-efficacy score, household size or composition, or measures of social support.Conclusions:A community-based, participatory approach for rapid assessment of the prevalence, extent and causes of child hunger among newly arrived asylum seekers recently arrived in Britain is feasible, and preliminary results suggest a programmatic need for a broader, population-based assessment of food insecurity in this rapidly growing population group.
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Books on the topic "London Community Cricket Association"

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Lewison, Helen. Maternity services liaison committees: A forum for change : a joint briefing paper from the Greater London Association of Community Health Councils (GLACHC) and the National Childbirth Trust (NCT). London: GLACHC, 1994.

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Chambers, John. Sports development: A case study of the London Community Cricket Association (LCCA). 1994.

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David, Lipscombe, and Greater London Association of Community Health Councils., eds. Losing patients: A report on priority groups for the Greater London Association of Community Health Councils. London: GLACHC, 1987.

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Richard, Wiles, Health Rights, and Greater London Association of Community Health Councils., eds. A Health service for London: A report on the conference organised by Health Rights and the Greater London Association of Community Health Councils : held on 11 November 1991. London: Health Rights, 1992.

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José, Parry, Parry Noel, and Leisure Studies Association, eds. Leisure, the arts and the community: Papers from a conference held by the LeisureStudies Association : 4-6 April 1986 City University/Gresham College Barbican, London. Eastbourne: LSA Publications, 1986.

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Geddis, Sue. Participatory research with tenants in public housing: "working together for change". 1997.

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Baron, Alan, John Hassard, Fiona Cheetham, and Sudi Sharifi. Hospices, Communities, and Care. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198813958.003.0004.

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In any discussion about culture, image, and identity in an organizational setting it is important to understand something of the wider social, political, and historical context. This chapter sets the scene for the primary research in the case study Hospice by giving the reader an insight into the development of the modern hospice movement and how this history contextualizes the positioning and perceptions of the hospice in society and the wider healthcare economy. In so doing, the chapter discusses, inter alia: the work of the founder of the modern hospice movement, Dame Cicely Saunders; the opening of the first hospice of the modern era, St Christopher’s Hospice in London in 1967; the notion of hospice as a ‘community’ of care; and the continued association of hospices and patients with a cancer diagnosis.
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Butler, Lise. Michael Young, Social Science, and the British Left, 1945-1970. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198862895.001.0001.

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In the mid-twentieth century the social sciences significantly expanded, and played a major role in shaping British intellectual, political, and cultural life. Central to this shift was the left-wing policy maker and sociologist Michael Young. In the 1940s Young was a key architect of the Labour Party’s 1945 election manifesto, Let Us Face the Future. He became a sociologist in the 1950s, publishing a classic study of the London working class, Family and Kinship in East London, with Peter Willmott in 1957, and the 1958 dystopian satire, The Rise of the Meritocracy, about a future society in which status was determined entirely by intelligence. Young also founded dozens of organizations, including the Institute of Community Studies, the Consumers’ Association, and the Open University. Moving between politics, academia, and activism, Young believed that the social sciences could help policy makers and politicians understand human nature and build better social and political institutions. This book examines the relationship between social science and public policy in left-wing politics between the end of the Second World War and the end of the first Wilson government through the figure of Michael Young. It shows how Young and other researchers and policy makers challenged Labour values like full employment and nationalization, and argued that the Labour Party should put more emphasis on relationships, family, and community. Showing that the social sciences were embedded in the politics of the post-war left, this book argues that historians and scholars should take their role in British politics and political thought seriously.
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Book chapters on the topic "London Community Cricket Association"

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Wall, Oisín. "Basaglia and the British anti-psychiatrists, 1960–70." In Basaglia's International Legacy: From Asylum to Community, 23–42. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198841012.003.0002.

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The London psychiatrists R.D. Laing, Aaron Esterson, and David Cooper were among Basaglia’s most prominent contemporaries. In 1967, they came to be grouped under the umbrella term ‘the anti-psychiatrists’, coined by Cooper. As such, in discussion they often fall under the same school of thought as Basaglia. However, this chapter highlights the fundamental differences between the British anti-psychiatric project and Basaglia’s Democratic Psychiatry, given its focus on political upheaval as well as patient care. It explores the various efforts of Laing, Cooper, and Esterson to demolish staff–patient boundaries through the Philadelphia Association Ltd, which they formed with their patients. The chapter contends that, although they shared a desire to wrest patients away from harmful institutions, Basaglia sought to do so as an ‘employee’, aiming to destroy the psychiatric institution from within, whereas his British counterparts considered themselves revolutionaries, part of an effort to overhaul society as a whole, external to psychiatry.
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Conference papers on the topic "London Community Cricket Association"

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Carrigan, R., R. Anderson, I. Tipping, J. Archer, and C. Daniels. "154 Working in partnership in the community: our experience and outcomes of the london ambulance service calls to st luke's hospice (harrow and brent) single point of access service." In The APM’s Annual Supportive and Palliative Care Conference, In association with the Palliative Care Congress, “Towards evidence based compassionate care”, Bournemouth International Centre, 15–16 March 2018. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2018-aspabstracts.181.

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Lea, Richard H. "Development of New International Standards for Composite Piping Systems for the Marine and Offshore Oil and Gas Industries." In ASME 2001 Engineering Technology Conference on Energy. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/etce2001-17037.

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Abstract The development of international standards for composite piping systems that are used in the Marine and Offshore Oil & Gas Industries is a recognized customer need. These industries are global in nature. It is not uncommon to see project specifications written in London and Houston, fabrication of the vessel hull in a Korean yard, topsides construction in Indonesia and project location off the coast of West Africa. Operator supplied specifications could come from The Netherlands, France, Norway as well as numerous other countries. In addition, certifying agencies such as ABS, Lloyds or DNV could be involved that must follow international maritime rules and regulations. A concerted effort has been made within the past five years to address these issues. Operators worldwide have come together with composite pipe manufacturers, engineering firms and certifying agencies to develop international standards that address these issues. Anyone considering the use of composite piping in the Marine and/or Offshore Oil & Gas Industries should consider the ASTM and ISO Standards that are in the final stages of development. ASTMF-1173 Rewrite is a purchasing document that is being balloted at the present time. It was developed by ASTM F25.13.03 workgroup. ISO WD 15840 is the international version of ASTM F-1173 Rewrite. It has been circulated to the international community for comments. It was developed by ISO/TC8/SC3/WG4. ISO WD 14692 is a rewrite of original United Kingdom Offshore Operators Association (UKOOA) document that was adopted in March 1994. It has been circulated to the international community for comments and is in it’s final stage of development. It was developed by ISO/TC 67/SC 6/WG 5. This document is an engineering specification and recommended practice document. When finalized and passed by the various committees ISO 15840 and ISO 14692 should be used in conjunction with each other. They are compatible documents based on performance criteria. It is the opinion of many who have been in the composite pipe business for over 20 years that these are the most important documents ever developed by our industry. They are grossly overdue. However, while standards are a recognized customer need, standards that are not fully understood by operators, piping engineers and installation teams can be dangerous and misinterpreted. Knowledge of the unique properties of composite materials must be a perquisite to those using these standards. Standards that are not fully understood in the hands of the uneducated is a formula for disaster.
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