Showing 381 - 400 results of 31,911 for search '"Melbourne IT"', query time: 0.38s Refine Results
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    Translation into Chinese of: "Changes to publication requirements made at the XVIII International Botanical Congress in Melbourne - what does e-publication mean for you?".... by Sandra Knapp, John McNeill, Nicholas J. Turland, Nicholas J. Turland

    Published 2011-09-01
    “…The XVIII IBC was held in Melbourne, Australia; the Nomenclature Section met on 18-22 July 2011 and its decisions were accepted by the Congress at its plenary session on 30 July. …”
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    Translation into Chinese of: "Changes to publication requirements made at the XVIII International Botanical Congress in Melbourne - what does e-publication mean for you?".... by Sandra Knapp, John McNeill, Nicholas J. Turland, Nicholas J. Turland

    Published 2011-09-01
    “…The XVIII IBC was held in Melbourne, Australia; the Nomenclature Section met on 18-22 July 2011 and its decisions were accepted by the Congress at its plenary session on 30 July. …”
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    Article
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    Self-reported medication side effects in an older cohort living independently in the community - the Melbourne Longitudinal Study on Healthy Ageing (MELSHA): cross-sectional analysis of prevalence and risk factors by Browning Colette, Wang Wei C, Thomson Jennifer A, Kendig Hal L

    Published 2010-06-01
    “…</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The Melbourne Longitudinal Study on Healthy Ageing (MELSHA), collected information on those aged 65 years or older living independently in the community and commenced in 1994. …”
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  9. 389

    Does sexuality matter? A cross-sectional study of drug use, social injecting, and access to injection-specific care among men who inject drugs in Melbourne, Australia by Sophia E. Schroeder, A. L. Wilkinson, D. O’Keefe, A. Bourne, J. S. Doyle, M. Hellard, P. Dietze, A. Pedrana

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…Health promotion should utilise opportunities to connect men who inject drugs in Melbourne to injecting-specific primary health care.…”
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  10. 390

    A statistical downscaling approach for generating high spatial resolution health risk maps: a case study of road noise and ischemic heart disease mortality in Melbourne, Australia by Ivan C. Hanigan, Timothy B. Chaston, Ben Hinze, Martine Dennekamp, Bin Jalaludin, Yohannes Kinfu, Geoffrey G. Morgan

    Published 2019-09-01
    “…Estimated noise related IHD deaths were relatively few in Melbourne in 2011, likely because road traffic is one of many noise sources and the current noise model underestimates exposures. …”
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  11. 391

    Oguma Eiji e David Askew, tradotto da, A Genealogy of ‘Japanese’ Self-images (Melbourne, Trans Pacific Press, 2002, 435 pp. ISBN-13: 9781876843045) by Elisa Vitali

    Published 2019-11-01
    “…Oguma Eiji e David Askew, tradotto da, A Genealogy of ‘Japanese’ Self-images (Melbourne, Trans Pacific Press, 2002, 435 pp. ISBN-13: 9781876843045) di Elisa Vitali…”
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  12. 392

    Does a Community Care programme reach a high health need population and high users of acute care hospital services in Melbourne, Australia? An observational cohort study by Cylie Williams, Kelly-Ann Bowles, Brendan Shannon, Nadine Andrew, Tanya Ravipati, Elise Deighton

    Published 2023-09-01
    “…We aimed to describe the characteristics of the programme participants and identify factors associated with enrolment into the programme.Design This observational cohort study was conducted using routinely collected data from the National Centre for Healthy Ageing data platform.Setting The study was carried out at Peninsula Health, a health service provider serving a population in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.Participants We included all adults with unplanned ED presentation or hospital admission to Peninsula Health between 1 November 2016 and 31 October 2017, the programme’s first operational year.Outcome measures Community Care programme enrolment was the primary outcome. …”
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    Feasibility and acceptability of multiple methods of recording injecting drug use episode data among people who inject drugs in Melbourne, Australia: a pilot evaluation study protocol by Alexis Roth, Peter Higgs, Paul Dietze, Nick Scott, Daniel O’Keefe, Filip Djordjevic, Ashleigh Cara Stewart, Dylan Vella-Horne, Zoe Gleeson, Damian Pavlyshyn, Matthew Gill, Rebekka Petrovic, Ben Cocchiaro

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The In-The-Moment-Expanded (ITM-Ex) study will evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of multiple novel data collection methods to capture in situ drug injecting data.Methods and analysis ITM-Ex will purposively recruit 50 participants from an existing longitudinal cohort (SuperMIX study) of people who inject drugs in Melbourne, Australia. Over a 4-week study period, participants will be asked to complete baseline/endline spirometry, continuously wear a heart rate monitoring device, complete short-form ecological momentary assessment (EMA) questionnaires for every injecting episode during the study period and return previously used needles/syringes for drug residue testing. …”
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    Translation into French of: “Changes to publication requirements made at the XVIII International Botanical Congress in Melbourne – what does e-publication mean for you?”.... by Sandra Knapp, John McNeill, Nicholas J. Turland, Nicholas J. Turland

    Published 2012-03-01
    “…The XVIII IBC was held in Melbourne, Australia; the Nomenclature Section met on 18-22 July 2011 and its decisions were accepted by the Congress at its plenary session on 30 July. …”
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    Article
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    How structural and symbolic violence during resettlement impacts the social and mental wellbeing of forced migrant women: the lived experiences of Arabic speaking survivors of IPV resettled in Melbourne, Australia by Jeanine Hourani, Yara Jarallah, Karen Block, Linda Murray, Jasmin Chen, Maria Hach, Cathy Vaughan

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…This article adopts an ecological framework of violence and qualitative methods with mental health service providers and survivors of IPV to understand the intersections of different forms of violence and their impact on mental health as they relate to the lived experiences of Arabic-speaking forced migrant survivors currently residing in Melbourne, Australia. Our research has three key findings: (1) that forced migrant women living in Melbourne, Australia experience intersecting forms of violence during resettlement (2) Structural and symbolic violence against forced migrant women persists regardless of marital status (3) Autonomy and independence plays a vital role in the mental health and wellbeing of forced migrant women. …”
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