Sentences with phrase «by human wellbeing»

Not exact matches

Recognition by other human beings figures centrally among our dignity needs, and being either included or excluded from various forms of human relations has significant consequences for our wellbeing.
The team advances the case for «mindfully observing» employees and found that human resources professionals and supervisors can advance health, wellbeing, and performance while averting danger and violence by identifying and managing high - risk employees, anticipating their needs and providing support and resources.
This is a point that Salford University's School of the Built Environment would certainly endorse, because a recent study conducted by the Salford team revealed that the built environment has a big impact on the learning progress, human performance and wellbeing.
Topics like grit and curiosity have formed a firm research base within Positive Psychology, a field in which the objective is to explore the science of optimal human functioning by investigating concepts such as; happiness, wellbeing, human strengths, and flourishing (Gable & Haidt, 2005).
It lends more authority to animal advocates by placing intrinsic value on animal wellbeing, instead of framing it from the human perspective.
She founded Sama Dog: Wellbeing for Dogs + Their Humans to merge her passion for spiritual living with her especially deep and soulful connection to canines, which was awakened after being saved from drowning in the backyard pool at age 3 by the family dog.
In the downstairs gallery, a spectacular array of novel ways of living encompasses nature, culture and the human self in the form of a futuristic garden by the London collective Wayward Plants, a practising potter's studio conceived by the American artist Theaster Gates, and Pedro Reyes» Sanatorium, a functioning wellbeing centre where visitors can experience therapies that include hitting a dummy whose face is a balloon on which you have drawn the face of the person you feel most oppressed by.
Now that the scientific consensus on climate change has been established by the IPCC, perhaps the time has come to reasonably and sensibly address the ominously looming threats to human wellbeing, biodiversity and environmental health that are posed by global warming.
Evidently, concerns like long - term human wellbeing, biodiversity preservation and the integrity of Earth's body are momentarily at odds with powerful economic and political forces which relentlessly and unrealistically maintain an economic system marked by unrestricted and increasing per capita consumption, unbridled and expanding economic globalization, and continuous and rapid growth of the human population.
There she presented a paper (co-written by Dale Jamieson and Michael Oppenheimer) on the complexities that arise when scientists become «sentinels» identifying threats to human and ecological wellbeing.
«With millions of people forced to move each year by rapid - onset climate - related hazards and slow - onset environmental degradation, social wellbeing, human rights, economies and even state stability are at risk... at the highest level, climate change is being assessed as a risk to national security and potentially to global stability.»
Objectives: IIASA's mission is to provide insights and guidance to policymakers worldwide by finding solutions to global and universal problems through applied systems analysis in order to improve human and social wellbeing and to protect the environment.
The motion was brought by members of the BMA's Retired Members Forum as well as several local committees and follows an editorial published in the British Medical Journal in March that called for divestment from fossil fuels because of the «scale and immediacy of the threat to human survival, health and wellbeing» posed by unmitigated climate change.
By way of example, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that «[e] veryone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and wellbeing of himself and of his family, including... medical care.»
For present purposes, Art 1 of the First Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights (the Convention) provides that people should not be deprived of their possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by Art 8 of the Convention that there should be no interference with the right to enjoy a private family life and home except as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of the economic wellbeing of the country.
• Demonstrated expertise in monitoring patients» post-surgical vital signs to ensure their stability and wellbeing • Deep insight into operating equipment such as cardiac monitors and pulse oximeters and quickly diagnosing problems and responding promptly • Proficient in handling pain management by ensuring a thorough comprehension of pain medications and safe ways of administering them • Adept at handling patient - controlled analgesia pumps and IVs and epidural anesthesia to ensure patient comfort • Qualified to monitor patients for adverse reactions to anesthesia and pain management medications by employing deep insight into anesthesia and how it affects the human body • Hands - on experience in handling critical care procedures post-surgery to ensure increased patient safety and comfort • Proven ability to manage post-operative pain by administering pain medication and assisting patients recover from the effects of anesthesia • Competent at handling patients with post-operative nausea and vomiting by ensuring that steps are taken to ward off respiratory pneumonia and other life threatening conditions • Unmatched ability to assess patients» conditions in post-surgical environments and implement post-surgical treatment plans to ensure increased chances of patient recovery and comfort
This research is reviewed by Sharon Bzostek and Audrey Beck, «Family Structure and Child Health Outcomes in Fragile Families,» Working Paper 08 -11-FF (Princeton: Center for Research on Child Wellbeing, 2008); and by Robert Wood, Brian Goesling, and Sarah Avellar, «The Effects of Marriage on Health: A Synthesis of Recent Research Evidence,» report prepared by Mathematica Policy Research for U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, 2007.
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