Results 291 to 300 of about 1,445,751 (341)
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Information security - who cares?

Fifth International Conference on Power System Management and Control, 2002
This paper is asking "who cares" about information security-but may perhaps be better stated as "who should care". It is likely that there is no simple answer to this question-and that responsibility for information security needs to be taken by several parties within the utility.
openaire   +1 more source

Long Term Secure Care in Tasmania

Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 1992
The aim was to determine the requirement in Tasmania for long term (greater than 28 days) secure ward beds, and to characterise the patients who use them. There was complete enumeration over an 18 month period. The results included that 3.6 long term secure beds were used per 100,000 general population. Compared to those who were discharged during the
S A, Pridmore, I H, Jones
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Securing future cancer care

British Journal of Nursing, 2022
Libby, Potter, Vanessa, Taylor
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Patient perceptions of medium secure care

Medicine, Science and the Law, 2007
Research into patients' experience of medium secure psychiatric services is in its infancy despite growing interest in user involvement in mental health care as a whole. The work reported here aimed to provide an opportunity for patients to reflect upon their understanding of their route into secure psychiatric provision and their time spent in one ...
Sharon, Riordan, Martin, Humphreys
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Commercial network security---does anyone care?

Proceedings of the eighth symposium on Data communications - SIGCOMM '83, 1983
Since World War II, the US government has had a comprehensive way to deal with communication security. Under pressure from commercial interests, the government moved in the 70's to make some communication security technology available in the form of the D ata E ncryption S
openaire   +1 more source

Palliative care within secure forensic environments

Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 2003
The principles and philosophy of palliative care can be implemented successfully in secure forensic environments. While incarcerated, many inmates will suffer from a variety of life‐limiting illnesses requiring palliative care. There are a number of resources available for the development and implementation of programs within secure forensic ...
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Security in the care home

Nursing and Residential Care, 2008
Residents and staff should be able to live and work in a safe and secure enivornment. Adrian Ashurst discusses the important role that care home staff play in maximizing a care home's security.
openaire   +1 more source

Imagining risk, care and security

Anthropological Theory, 2007
This article envisions insurance through the ways in which it comes to inhabit the dailiness of people's lives. Insurance is usually constituted as a technology of risk. Rather than holding risk and insurance to the bare provisions of finance and financial forms, this article tangles with the affective attachments that grow out of insurance ...
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‘Securing’ nursing care

Mental Health Practice, 1999
Les Storey, Richard Bradshaw
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Medical Care and Family Security.

Journal of Health and Human Behavior, 1964
Henrietta Dabney   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

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