Results 201 to 210 of about 4,667 (257)

Spatial and Volumetric Characteristics of Glioblastoma: Associations With Clinical Presentation and Survival

open access: yesAnnals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Objective We aim to comprehensively analyze how regional tumor and edema characteristics are associated with clinical presentations and survival outcomes in a large cohort of glioblastoma patients. Methods Patients with IDH‐wildtype glioblastoma who received brain MRI from 2010 to 2023 were included.
Daniel J. Zhou   +16 more
wiley   +1 more source

Institutionalized and the non-institutionalized elderly

Social Science & Medicine, 1982
A survey covering all the elderly over 65 years of age at home and in institutions was made in a rural town of Japan in order to reveal the physical and socio-psychological factors which were related to their current placement status. The proportion of those over 65 in this town is 13%, of which 53% are living either alone or with spouse only, which ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The institutionalization of a concept

Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health, 2002
AbstractGovernment involvement with psychiatry creates potentially great opportunities, as hitherto neglected problems receive attention and funding. When seriously harmful behaviour is involved, however, such opportunity can be limited or lost. Parallel consideration of legal restraints on those people with serious disorder who commit harm to others ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Induction as an institutionalized and institutionalizing practice

Society and Business Review, 2010
PurposeInduction and institutions may have followed the same tracks for a long period of time, but their interaction is scarcely analyzed. On the one hand, induction prepares newcomers to work in an organization that is completely new to them. On the other hand, institutions apparently need induction processes to maintain themselves in the same time ...
Jérôme Méric, Rémi Jardat
openaire   +1 more source

Institutionalism in law

2018
‘Institutionalism’ is the name for an approach to the theory of law worked out in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by a number of scholars from continental Europe, working mainly in independence from each other. Their common characteristics can be stated only in rather generic and negative terms.
openaire   +2 more sources

INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF MEDIATION

Family Court Review, 2004
Mediation has evolved, grown, and been accepted within our society from preschools to doctoral programs and in courts, legislatures, and private industry. The passage of the Uniform Mediation Act, the birth of the Association of Conflict of Resolution, and the involvement of government bodies in the regulation of mediators indicate the importance of ...
openaire   +1 more source

INSTITUTIONALIZING (IN)EQUALITY:

2021
Daniel J. Delgado, Keja Valens
openaire   +1 more source

Institutionalism

2010
Abstract This article explores the role of institutional theory, and institutional analysis more broadly, in British political science. Institutional analysis presents some interesting paradoxes about examining and realizing British politics, and this article develops several of these and investigates their implications.
openaire   +1 more source

Institutionalism and institutionalization

The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry, 2000
openaire   +1 more source

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