Results 261 to 270 of about 616,551 (309)
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Women’s wellbeing at work

Post Reproductive Health
NHS Sussex developed and piloted the ‘Women’s Wellbeing at Work’ initiative for staff. Webinars and group consultations were carried out by specialist GPs to support and promote staff wellbeing. Aspects of cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention, the NHS cervical screening programme, the NHS breast screening programme, menopause and bone health were ...
Suneeta Kochhar, Zoe Schaedel
openaire   +2 more sources

Nurses as Working Women

AORN Journal, 2001
ABSTRACTWomen today make up nearly half of the nation's workforce. A number of these women have children at home, and women also often are responsible for providing care to older adult family members or friends. The different roles assigned to women in today's society are burdensome, particularly for nurses who deal with the stress of managed care ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Working with Women in ICTD

Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development, 2017
The fifth Sustainable Development Goal instituted by the United Nations in 2015 presents a call for gender equality, targeting the elimination of "discrimination, violence, and exploitation against women". We present an analysis of recent conversations within the Information and Communication Technology and Development (ICTD) community aiming to ...
Jasmine Hentschel   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Women, work, and health

American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 1997
The U.S. Bureau of National Affairs has conducted several surveys asking women to rate the seriousness of 11 hazards thought to affect female workers. In 1995 the women respondents ranked them in the following order: 1) stress, 2) repetitive motions, 3) AIDS, 4) violence, 5) VDTs, 6) indoor air pollution, 7) hepatitis, 8) injury on the job, 9 ...
M, Hatch, J, Moline
openaire   +2 more sources

Women working with women.

Journal of post anesthesia nursing, 1995
More women than ever before are working outside their homes. Many of these women are caught in a conflict between internal needs, desires, and beliefs and external demands. Work can become merely a means to an end, a burden to be endured, or a satisfying aspect of our lives. Some strategies for creating and defining ourselves for ourselves are offered.
openaire   +1 more source

The “Invisible Work” of Women

2020
This chapter explores how Chinese cultural expressions of charity, based on interpersonal relationships ( guanxi ) and native place ( tongxiang ) ties, came to mix and interact with contrasting traditions of Christian charity practiced in a ...
openaire   +1 more source

Pregnant Women at Work

Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1983
G, Chamberlain, J, Garcia
openaire   +4 more sources

Women's Work and Women's Work Cultures

Anthropology of Work Review, 1991
William Askins, Sharryn Kasmir
openaire   +1 more source

Shared mechanisms underlie the control of working memory and attention

Nature, 2021
Matthew F Panichello, Timothy J Buschman
exaly  

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