Publications by authors named "H M Barr"

Aerobic exercise has been shown to impact corticospinal excitability (CSE), however the mechanism(s) by which this occurs is unclear. Some evidence suggests an increase in blood lactate concentration resulting from exercise may be what is driving these changes in corticospinal excitability. The extent of literature examining this effect and whether it is consistent across the literature is unknown.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers have developed a simple method to prevent crack formation in wrinkled surfaces made from plasma-oxidized polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), which is important for practical applications.
  • By using a combination of high heat transfer coefficients and thin PDMS layers, they achieved consistent, crack-free results across various materials, including glass, plastics, and metals.
  • Their studies confirm an effective heat transfer threshold of approximately 800 W/(m K) for maintaining functional surface patterns without cracks during typical plasma treatment.
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In this first of three papers, we seek to understand how the new "integrated care" global policy directive, pursuing greater alignment for health and social care systems, will be translated into preparation for practice concerning interprofessional education (IPE) from pre-to-post registration level and for continuing professional development. We ask questions about the implications for leaders and practitioners in the field of IPE and collaborative practice (CP). In seeking to understand this new global policy directive, we explore the plethora of definitions, concepts and perspectives, continuously evolving and at times counterproductive as they try to synthesize complexity, to describe how health and social care systems and practitioners work together.

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In the first of three articles we shared our understanding of integrated care and traced the evolution of interprofessional learning from organic to strategic and systemic, prepared to play its part in the implementation of integrated care. In this third article, joined by Lee-Ann Fenge, we focus on the role of the social worker in integrating care and clarifying their roles in collaboration with other professions. We distinguish between social work as a profession and social care as a field of practice, which includes many professions as well as other occupations.

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In the first of three articles, we scanned global and national sources to help understand the concept and scope of integrated care. New policy directives seek closer working relationships between health and social care systems and practitioners to tackle modern challenges relating to the ageing population, poverty, disadvantage, and mental health. We identified that the practitioner workforce has not been fully considered or prepared for large shifts in working practices, often bringing new practitioners' roles to address local needs in newly managed interprofessional working systems for integrated care.

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