Academic literature on the topic 'Queen's University (Kingston, Ontario)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Queen's University (Kingston, Ontario)"

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Moore, Kieran M., Bronwen L. Edgar, and Donald McGuinness. "Implementation of an automated, real-time public health surveillance system linking emergency departments and health units: rationale and methodology." CJEM 10, no. 02 (March 2008): 114–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1481803500009817.

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ABSTRACTIn September 2004, Kingston, Frontenac, Lennox and Addington (KFL&A) Public Health, in collaboration with the Public Health Division of the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, Queen's University, the Public Health Agency of Canada, Kingston General Hospital and Hotel Dieu Hospital, began a 2-year pilot project to implement and evaluate an emergency department (ED) chief complaint syndromic surveillance system. Our objective was to evaluate a comprehensive and readily deployable real-time regional syndromic surveillance program and to determine its ability to detect gastrointestinal or respiratory outbreaks well in advance of traditional reporting systems. In order to implement the system, modifications were made to the University of Pittsburgh's Real-time Outbreak and Disease Surveillance (RODS) system, which has been successfully integrated into public health systems, and has enhanced communication and collaboration between them and EDs. This paper provides an overview of a RODS-based syndromic surveillance system as adapted for use at a public health unit in Kingston, Ontario. We summarize the technical specifications, privacy and security considerations, data capture, classification and management of the data streams, alerting and public health response. We hope that the modifications described here, including the addition of unique data streams, will provide a benchmark for future Canadian syndromic surveillance systems.
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&NA;. "Sonographic Detection of Stress Fractures: Correlation with Radionuclide Bone Scintigraphy. Kingston General Hospital, Queen's University, Kingstown, Ontario, Canada." Ultrasound Quarterly 19, no. 4 (December 2003): 203. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00013644-200312000-00019.

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Pollard, A., J. G. Pharoah, and M. D. Matovic. "CFD 2006 held at Queen's University at Kingston, Ontario, Canada, 15–19 July 2006." International Journal of Computational Fluid Dynamics 22, no. 1-2 (January 2008): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10618560801907359.

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Belyea, Scott. "A Century of Snatching." Ontario History 108, no. 1 (July 24, 2018): 24–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1050610ar.

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This paper examines nineteenth-century body snatching in Kingston, Ontario, focusing on the roles of the medical students, the local medical profession, and community reactions. Drawing primarily on newspapers and documents from the Queen’s University Medical Faculty and the Kingston General Hospital, this chronological and thematic analysis explores the socio-medical evolution of the practice. The results invite reconsideration of earlier body snatching narratives in Canada.
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Schroeter, H. O., and W. E. Watt. "Practical simulation of sediment transport in urban runoff." Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering 16, no. 5 (October 1, 1989): 704–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/l89-105.

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A model for simulating sediment transport in urban areas has been developed based on the concept of "equivalent solids reservoirs." The processes of erosion, deposition, and routing have been represented by simple algorithms, which are applied to typical urban drainage elements (surfaces, gutters, pipes, and detention ponds). Input requirements are limited and include two sediment characteristics (particle size and relative density), scour and deposition parameters, and initial sediment loadings. Hydraulic properties of the drainage elements and the inflow hydrograph to each element are also required. This sediment transport submodel is an integral part of Q'URM, the Queen's University Urban Runoff Model. It has been developed and calibrated on the basis of data from a stormwater quality sampling program on the Calvin Park basin in Kingston, Ontario, and verified on the basis of data from an independent study of runoff quality in the Malvern basin in Burlington, Ontario. Key words: urban hydrology, sediment transport, simulation, measurement.
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McMurray, Lindsey, Andrew Koch Hall, Jessica Rich, Stefan Merchant, and Timothy Chaplin. "The Nightmares Course: A Longitudinal, Multidisciplinary, Simulation-Based Curriculum to Train and Assess Resident Competence in Resuscitation." Journal of Graduate Medical Education 9, no. 4 (August 1, 2017): 503–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.4300/jgme-d-16-00462.1.

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ABSTRACT Background Postgraduate medical education programs would benefit from a robust process for training and assessment of competence in resuscitation early in residency. Objective To describe and evaluate the Nightmares Course, a novel, competency-based, transitional curriculum and assessment program in resuscitation medicine at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Methods First-year residents participated in the longitudinal Nightmares Course at Queen's University during the 2015–2016 academic year. An expert working group developed the entrustable professional activity and curricular design for the course. Formative feedback was provided following each simulation-based session, and we employed a summative objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) utilizing a modified Queen's Simulation Assessment Tool. A generalizability study and resident surveys were performed to evaluate the course and assessment process. Results A total of 40 residents participated in the course, and 23 (58%) participated in the OSCE. Eight of 23 (35%) did not meet the predetermined competency threshold and required remediation. The OSCE demonstrated an acceptable phi coefficient of 0.73. The approximate costs were $240 per Nightmares session, $10,560 for the entire 44-session curriculum, and $3,900 for the summative OSCE. Conclusions The Nightmares Course demonstrated feasibility and acceptability, and is applicable to a broad array of postgraduate medical education programs. The entrustment-based assessment detected several residents not meeting a minimum competency threshold, and directed them to additional training.
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Kaufman, Amy. "Everyday Justice in Pre-Confederation Canada: The Ledger of Thomas Burrowes, JP of Kingston Mills." Papers of The Bibliographical Society of Canada 58 (February 27, 2021): 121–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/pbsc.v58i0.33253.

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This essay combines close bibliographical analysis of the 1856–66 ledger of Thomas Burrowes, Justice of the Peace for Kingston Mills in what is now Ontario, with a wide-ranging discussion of what the document can reveal about its owner and about the practice of everyday justice in a small mill town in the years leading up to Canadian Confederation. It considers the effect of reading about law in manuscript versus printed form. It follows the intriguing evidence contained within the ledger to consider its possible uses by subsequent owners after Burrowes’s death, tracing the ledger in its circular journey from Kingston Mills to the Queen’s University Archives in Kingston via Detroit and Indiana.
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Stackhouse, John G. "The Historiography of Canadian Evangelicalism: A Time to Reflect." Church History 64, no. 4 (December 1995): 627–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3168842.

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Once in a while, an occasion turns out to be historic, historical, and historiographical. Such an occasion was the conference on the Canadian Evangelical Experience held at Queen's University at Kingston, Ontario, early in May 1995. This four-day conference devoted to the history of evangelicalism in Canada (thus “historical”) was the first of its kind in this country, and marked the emergence of a critical mass of scholarship in this field (thus “historic”). It has become a considerable enough mass, in fact, that this review will confine itself to published books and particularly those published in the last ten years. It is a “critical” mass, furthermore, in that the conference raised explicitly and implicitly serious questions about the writing of Canadian evangelical history, some of which this essay will discuss (thus “historiographical”).
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Verry, René. "Don't Take Touch for Granted: An Interview with Susan Lederman." Teaching of Psychology 25, no. 1 (January 1998): 64–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15328023top2501_21.

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Susan Lederman (SL) is an invited member of the International Council of Research Fellows for the Braille Research Center and a Fellow of he Canadian Psychology Association. She was also an Associate of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research in the Robotics and Artificial Intelligence Programme for 8 years. A Professor in the Departments of Psychology and Computing & Information Science at Queen's University at Kingston (Ontario, Canada), she has written and coauthored numerous articles on tactile psychophysics, haptic perception and cognition, motor control, and haptic applications in robotics, teleoperation, and virtual environments. She is currently the coorganizer of the Annual Symposium a Haptic Interfaces for Teleoperation and Virtual Environment Systems. René Verry (RV) is a psychology professor at Millikin University (Decatur, IL), where she teaches a variety of courses in the experimental core, including Sensation and Perception. She chose the often-subordinated somatic senses as the focus of her interview, and recruited Susan Lederman as our research specialist.
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Gazendam, Aaron, and Erica Pascoal. "The Creation and Implementation of an Electronic Exercise Prescription at an Ontario Family Health Team." Undergraduate Journal of Service Learning & Community-Based Research 3 (November 22, 2014): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.56421/ujslcbr.v3i0.151.

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Recent evidence shows that 85% of Canadian adults do not meet the recommended physical activity (PA) guidelines set forth by the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology (Colley et al. 2011). In Kingston, Ontario, Canada 66% of males and 50% of females are overweight or obese, which may be associated with decreased PA levels among the Kingston community as compared to previous years (Vital Signs 2012). There is unequivocal evidence regarding the importance of physical activity in the prevention of a wide variety of diseases and obesity. Regular PA is inversely related to the occurrence of obesity, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and other common lifestyle related diseases. CSEP’s suggested 150minutes of weekly PA is a guideline to help Canadians achieve the health benefits and disease prevention associated with regular PA (Haskell et al. 2007). At Queen’s University, located in Kingston, senior students in the School of Kinesiology and Health Studies have been given a chance to make an impact on the PA levels of Kingston residents through the Community-Based Physical Activity Promotion course. By connecting students with a community-based group or organization, the year-long course provides an opportunity for students to practically apply the theories, evidence, and skills discussed in course seminars to the promotion of community PA involvement.
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Books on the topic "Queen's University (Kingston, Ontario)"

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1886-1967, Lyman John, and Agnes Etherington Art Centre, eds. John Lyman, 1886-1967: Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. Kingston, Ont: Agnes Etherington Art Centre, 1986.

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Smallman, Beverley N. Queen's biology: An academic history of innocence lost and fame gained, 1858-1965. Kingston, ONT: Queen's University. Dept. of Biology, 1992.

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1920-, Good H. M., West A. S, and Queen's University (Kingston, Ont.). Dept. of Biology, eds. Queen's Biology: An academic history of innocence lost and fame gained, 1858-1965. Kingston, Ont: Dept. of Biology, Queen's University, 1991.

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Centre, Agnes Etherington Art. April/Davey/Grauerholz: 6 April-29 September 1985, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. Kingston, Ont: The Centre, 1985.

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Sewell, Richard. Paratactic images: 7 September-3 November 1985, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Kingston, Ont., Canada: The Centre, 1985.

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Germaine Koh: Personal : 5 July to 24 August 1997, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. Kingston, Ont., Canada: The Centre, 1997.

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London, Naomi. Necessary grief: Naomi London : grieving equipment : 23 July-15 October, 1995, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. Kingston, Ontario: The Centre, 1995.

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Schreier, Michael. Michael Schreier: Street portraits, Ottawa, 1980-83 : 13 July-1 September 1985, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. Kingston, Ont: The Centre, 1986.

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Grenville, Bruce. The allegorical image in recent Canadian painting: 15 June-11 August 1985, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Kingston, Ont., Canada: The Centre, 1985.

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10

Canadian Industrial Relations Association. Conference. Women and industrial relations : proceedings of the 28th Conference of the Canadian Industrial Relations Association, June 2-3-4, 1991, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario =: Les relations industrielles et les femmes : rapport du 28e Congrès de l'Association canadienne des relations industrielles, 1991, 2-3-4 juin, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. Sainte-Foy, Qué: Association canadienne des relations industrielles = Canadian Industrial Relations Association, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Queen's University (Kingston, Ontario)"

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"Whither IT? A look at IT in 2005 School of Business, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada." In Make or Break Issues in IT Management, 179–96. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780080510682-14.

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"The Civil Polity of Peter Paxton: J. A. W. Gunn, Queen's University, Kingston." In The Intellectual Revolution of the Seventeenth Century (Routledge Revivals), 155–72. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203145210-16.

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