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Table 2 - Difference in concepts, language and values between the recovery and the traditional medical model of mental illness

in A Vision for a Recovery Model in Irish Mental Health Services
by unknown authors 2005
"... In PAGE 15: ... The competencies which staff need to acquire include: understanding recovery principles equality and social inclusion self-determination supporting the service user and family Recovery and the Medical Model In the literature the recovery model is often juxtaposed with the medical model which term is used as an umbrella term for traditional medical thinking. Roberts (2004) speaking of the recovery perspective and the traditional medical model of mental illness states that these two perspectives, their values and language, stand in significant tension with one another (see Table2 ). While a certain creative tension between approaches is often useful in promoting debate and sharpening and fine tuning theoretical positions, the polarisation of these two approaches is likely to prove ultimately unhelpful and an integrated perspective, respecting the contribution of each is likely to provide a way forward for the development of effective services.... ..."

Table 2A. History of the Present Illness and Past Medical History History of Present Illness How much? How quickly? What apos;s changed? Items of special concern:

in CHANGES IN BEHAVIOR
by Jeffrey Victoroff Md, Michael Herbst Md, Rosabel Young Md
"... In PAGE 6: ... 295 Table2 B. Examination Mental status vital signs: responsiveness, orientation, agitation Aphasia screen: 1.... In PAGE 6: .... Recall quot;tuna, Paris, strength quot; after 3-5 m. 2. Month apos;s backwards Self-reported mood, delusions, hallucinations Features of the physical and elementary neurological examination of special relevance to the assessment of behavior Table2 C. Decisions in the Laboratory Evaluation Electrolytes (any major change can cause delirium; low sodium particularly lowers the seizure threshold) Blood count (eg, megaloblastic anemia hints at B12 deficiency; hematocrit lt;24 may contribute to delirium) Liver function tests (eg, for hepatic encephalophathy) Ca, Ph, Mg (deficits lower the seizure threshold; parathyroid disease produces dementia) Thyroid function tests (to rule out the most common endocrine dementia) B12 (to rule out subacute combined degeneration) Serum VDRL (helps rule out neurosyphilis; positives generally require CSF exam) EKG (cardiac dysfunction may compromise brain perfusion or hint at metabolic disorders) Neuroimaging (rule out eg strokes, tumors, hydrocephalus) Lumbar puncture (in acute delirium to r/o infection or subarachnoid blood; in dementia usually only when syphilis serology is +) EEG (when seizures, metabolic encephalopathy, herpes, or Creutzfeldt-Jakob are suspected) The Chief Complaint And History Of Present Illness quot;What seems to be the problem? quot; you might say.... In PAGE 9: ... This is most common among those with prior behavior problems in whom change is harder to detect - a developmentally delayed child or adult who becomes subtly toxic on their anticonvulsant, or a schizophrenic who develops a tumor-induced aphasia in the last three weeks about whom it apos;s remarked, quot;Oh, he apos;s always said things that were hard to follow. quot; What apos;s Changed? Note, even though we will eventually address the CNS locale, this is not the neurology attending apos;s medical-student-tormenting question, quot;Where apos;s the lesion? quot; This is the simple question, quot;What apos;s different? quot; The following questions may facilitate a focused review of systems, recalled with the useful mnemonic: THIS IS MADD! (see Table2 A). The advantage of reviewing these issues is self-evident; we are searching for the bounds of the problem, and any hint we can get of etiology or localization.... ..."

Table 2B. Examination Mental status vital signs: responsiveness, orientation, agitation Aphasia screen:

in CHANGES IN BEHAVIOR
by Jeffrey Victoroff Md, Michael Herbst Md, Rosabel Young Md
"... In PAGE 5: ... As in pediatrics, our history taking now becomes a delicate balancing of information you may get from the caregiver, who can be an ally with varying sophistication and agendas, and from the patient, whose very responses to historical questions instantly become part of the exam. Key Elements Of The Rapid Neurobehavioral Evaluation Table2 A. History of the Present Illness and Past Medical History History of Present Illness How much? How quickly? What apos;s changed? Items of special concern: T Recent trauma? H Headache? I Incontinence? S Sleep disturbance? I Irritability? S Sensory change, including numbness, or special senses such as vision and hearing? M Motor changes such as slowing or tremor? A Appetite loss? D Delusions? D Depression? Past Medical History Items of special concern: 1.... In PAGE 6: .... Recall quot;tuna, Paris, strength quot; after 3-5 m. 2. Month apos;s backwards Self-reported mood, delusions, hallucinations Features of the physical and elementary neurological examination of special relevance to the assessment of behavior Table2 C. Decisions in the Laboratory Evaluation Electrolytes (any major change can cause delirium; low sodium particularly lowers the seizure threshold) Blood count (eg, megaloblastic anemia hints at B12 deficiency; hematocrit lt;24 may contribute to delirium) Liver function tests (eg, for hepatic encephalophathy) Ca, Ph, Mg (deficits lower the seizure threshold; parathyroid disease produces dementia) Thyroid function tests (to rule out the most common endocrine dementia) B12 (to rule out subacute combined degeneration) Serum VDRL (helps rule out neurosyphilis; positives generally require CSF exam) EKG (cardiac dysfunction may compromise brain perfusion or hint at metabolic disorders) Neuroimaging (rule out eg strokes, tumors, hydrocephalus) Lumbar puncture (in acute delirium to r/o infection or subarachnoid blood; in dementia usually only when syphilis serology is +) EEG (when seizures, metabolic encephalopathy, herpes, or Creutzfeldt-Jakob are suspected) The Chief Complaint And History Of Present Illness quot;What seems to be the problem? quot; you might say.... In PAGE 9: ... This is most common among those with prior behavior problems in whom change is harder to detect - a developmentally delayed child or adult who becomes subtly toxic on their anticonvulsant, or a schizophrenic who develops a tumor-induced aphasia in the last three weeks about whom it apos;s remarked, quot;Oh, he apos;s always said things that were hard to follow. quot; What apos;s Changed? Note, even though we will eventually address the CNS locale, this is not the neurology attending apos;s medical-student-tormenting question, quot;Where apos;s the lesion? quot; This is the simple question, quot;What apos;s different? quot; The following questions may facilitate a focused review of systems, recalled with the useful mnemonic: THIS IS MADD! (see Table2 A). The advantage of reviewing these issues is self-evident; we are searching for the bounds of the problem, and any hint we can get of etiology or localization.... ..."

TABLE Ill-B

in The World Ba
by Dean T, J. Dexte, Richard C

TABLE Ill CONCRETESIIEARWALLPFRMEADILITY

in OF THISOOCU;ti[~TJs UHLI$IIM
by Iu O Concrctcshear Wallsubjected, To Simulatedseismicloading, Charles R. Fmwr, Los Alamosnationallaboratory

Table 2: Query and Number of Retrieved Documents

in On the Parallel Implementation of Sparse Matrix Information Retrieval Engine
by Ankit Jain, Nazli Goharian
"... In PAGE 2: ... We believe that the number of retrieved results for a query could be an indicator of the behavior of the parallel system, as the retrieved results are proportional to the amount of work for query processing. Table2 shows the number of retrieved results for each of these three queries. The following are two sample queries used in our experiments: lt;top gt; lt;num gt; Number: 362 lt;title gt; human smuggling lt;/top gt; lt;top gt; lt;num gt; Number: 383 lt;title gt; mental illness drugs lt;/top gt; Table 2: Query and Number of Retrieved Documents ... ..."

Table 4: Distribution of women workers by illnesses reported Illnesses Total Percent of the

in Abstract Gender, Information Technology and Health: The Case of Women Workers in Export Zones in the Philippines
by Leilanie Lu
"... In PAGE 5: ...3 Burns 44 7.0 For illnesses and health problems ( Table4 ), the most prevalent were headache, coughs and colds. The more work-specific health problems included body aches, eye problems and skin allergy which were reported at 18.... ..."

TABLE Ill. OPERATIONAL PERFORMANCE MEASURES

in The operational analysis of queueing network models
by Peter J. Denning, Jeffrey P. Buzen 1978
Cited by 29

Table 1. The Mental Tasks and their Labels

in Modeling of Human Physiological Parameters in an E-Laboratory by SOM Neural Networks
by A. A. Bielskis, V. Denisov, G. Kučinskas, O. Ramašauskas, N. Romas
"... In PAGE 2: ... Subject 5 completed three sessions. The mental tasks and their labels are described in Table1 . The recorded EEG Data from [15] was preprocessed by constructing separate arrays of different length vectors.... In PAGE 2: ... The recorded EEG Data from [15] was preprocessed by constructing separate arrays of different length vectors. The last attrib- ute of each vector in every array was a label A through E interpreting a mental task performed by a subject in accor- dance with the Table1 . The arrays were constructed for vectors of 15th order representing a sampling interval of 0.... In PAGE 2: ... 5. It allows interpreting the clus- ters by giving them the names A, B, C, D, and E of the mental tasks described in Table1 . For data interpretation during a process of constructing a courseware in an e- laboratory, the results of visual indication of some mental states can be used.... ..."

TABLE 4 Iterations to convergence for matrix RWG; n = 635; B1=RAND(n;s), B2 = In;s.

in Iterative Methods for Complex Symmetric Systems With Multiple Right-Hand Sides
by V. Simoncini, E. Gallopoulos 1993
Cited by 4
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