AI Drug Adherence | Gambling | Immunotherapy | Drug-Stents

AI Drug Adherence | Gambling | Immunotherapy | Drug-Stents

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Silent_Edge (@Silent_Edge) / Twitter
Silent_Edge (@Silent_Edge) / Twitter
The latest Tweets from Silent_Edge (@Silent_Edge). Unaffiliated fair critic of all things interesting to me. Italian westerns, video games, sports, movies, tv, contrarian and common thoughts. SEA
·twitter.com·
Silent_Edge (@Silent_Edge) / Twitter
Jeff Yang on Twitter
Jeff Yang on Twitter
The Trumpies are taking this wellRIP those nuggets pic.twitter.com/xLYYpbbeWX— Jeff Yang (@originalspin) January 20, 2021
·twitter.com·
Jeff Yang on Twitter
Jeff Yang on Twitter
Jeff Yang on Twitter
The Trumpies are taking this wellRIP those nuggets pic.twitter.com/xLYYpbbeWX— Jeff Yang (@originalspin) January 20, 2021
·twitter.com·
Jeff Yang on Twitter
valerie soe on Twitter
valerie soe on Twitter
polling well in newsmax 😄 https://t.co/KXiLZTK2Im— valerie soe (@vsoe) January 20, 2021
·twitter.com·
valerie soe on Twitter
Video Compressor | Reduce Video File Size Online
Video Compressor | Reduce Video File Size Online
A fast online video compressor to reduce video file size. You can compress video to a desired file size or a quality level. Supports MP4, FLV, MKV and more.
·freeconvert.com·
Video Compressor | Reduce Video File Size Online
YouTube
YouTube
·accounts.google.com·
YouTube
YouTube
YouTube
·accounts.google.com·
YouTube
Evidence-Based Management
Evidence-Based Management
Executives routinely dose their organizations with strategic snake oil: discredited nostrums, partial remedies, or untested management miracle cures. In many cases, the facts about what works are out there—so why don’t managers use them?
·hbr.org·
Evidence-Based Management
Evidence-Based Management
Evidence-Based Management
Executives routinely dose their organizations with strategic snake oil: discredited nostrums, partial remedies, or untested management miracle cures. In many cases, the facts about what works are out there—so why don’t managers use them?
·google.com·
Evidence-Based Management
Frontiers | Surface Acting, Emotional Exhaustion, and Employee Sabotage to Customers: Moderating Roles of Quality of Social Exchanges | Psychology
Frontiers | Surface Acting, Emotional Exhaustion, and Employee Sabotage to Customers: Moderating Roles of Quality of Social Exchanges | Psychology
Using the conservation of resources theory and social exchange theory as our conceptual frameworks, the current study examined how employee surface acting relates to their sabotage to customers through the mediating role of emotional exhaustion and explored the moderating roles of coworker exchange (CWX) and leader-member exchange (LMX). We collected two-wave time-lagged data from 540 clinical nurses and found that emotional exhaustion mediated the positive relationship between surface acting and employee sabotage to customers. In addition, we found that CWX buffered the positive effect of surface acting on emotional exhaustion, while LMX buffered the positive effect of emotional exhaustion on employee sabotage to customers, such that the effects were weaker when CWX and LMX were higher, respectively. These findings shed light on the effect of surface acting on employee harmful behaviors, the potential underlying mechanism, and boundary conditions to mitigate the negative consequences of surface acting.
·frontiersin.org·
Frontiers | Surface Acting, Emotional Exhaustion, and Employee Sabotage to Customers: Moderating Roles of Quality of Social Exchanges | Psychology
Surface Acting, Emotional Exhaustion, and Employee Sabotage to Customers: Moderating Roles of Quality of Social Exchanges
Surface Acting, Emotional Exhaustion, and Employee Sabotage to Customers: Moderating Roles of Quality of Social Exchanges
Using the conservation of resources theory and social exchange theory as our conceptual frameworks, the current study examined how employee surface acting relates to their sabotage to customers through the mediating role of emotional exhaustion and explored the moderating roles of coworker exchange (CWX) and leader-member exchange (LMX). We collected two-wave time-lagged data from 540 clinical nurses and found that emotional exhaustion mediated the positive relationship between surface acting and employee sabotage to customers. In addition, we found that CWX buffered the positive effect of surface acting on emotional exhaustion, while LMX buffered the positive effect of emotional exhaustion on employee sabotage to customers, such that the effects were weaker when CWX and LMX were higher, respectively. These findings shed light on the effect of surface acting on employee harmful behaviors, the potential underlying mechanism, and boundary conditions to mitigate the negative consequences of surface acting.
·google.com·
Surface Acting, Emotional Exhaustion, and Employee Sabotage to Customers: Moderating Roles of Quality of Social Exchanges
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·google.com·
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·google.com·
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Gambling as social practice: a complementary approach for reducing harm? | Harm Reduction Journal | Full Text
Gambling as social practice: a complementary approach for reducing harm? | Harm Reduction Journal | Full Text
Background Gambling is now a well-recognised public health issue and forms the focus of extensive harm reduction initiatives. Recent developments in policy, practice and technology, such relaxation of regulations, the increasing influence of global gambling corporations, and the development of devices such as mobile phone apps and fixed odds betting terminals (FOBTs) mean that the landscape is a complex, dynamic, and fast moving one. Gambling is now practiced using new technologies, in various spaces and places, and features in a range of social surroundings. Therefore, research is needed to inform appropriate gambling harm reduction strategies that can respond to this complex domain. Yet, research and policy approaches to the reduction of gambling harm are predominantly framed through psychological and economic models of individual behaviour, addiction, and ‘rational’ action. This is beginning to change, with a growing corpus of socio-cultural approaches to gambling research now emerging. Method In this article, we argue the case of recognising gambling as a social practice, the performance of which draws upon multiple elements such as technology and materials, spaces and places, language and discourse, and structures and agency. We call for a practice theory approach to gambling research that joins efforts to move beyond individual gamblers and their behaviour, to also acknowledge the interaction of multiple elements shaping gambling practices. To achieve this, we suggest that research methods such as visual ethnography can be helpful. Conclusion We set out how a social practice perspective to gambling research can generate different insights and help inform more nuanced and appropriate gambling harm reduction initiatives.
·harmreductionjournal.biomedcentral.com·
Gambling as social practice: a complementary approach for reducing harm? | Harm Reduction Journal | Full Text
Gambling as social practice: a complementary approach for reducing harm?
Gambling as social practice: a complementary approach for reducing harm?
Background Gambling is now a well-recognised public health issue and forms the focus of extensive harm reduction initiatives. Recent developments in policy, practice and technology, such relaxation of regulations, the increasing influence of global gambling corporations, and the development of devices such as mobile phone apps and fixed odds betting terminals (FOBTs) mean that the landscape is a complex, dynamic, and fast moving one. Gambling is now practiced using new technologies, in various spaces and places, and features in a range of social surroundings. Therefore, research is needed to inform appropriate gambling harm reduction strategies that can respond to this complex domain. Yet, research and policy approaches to the reduction of gambling harm are predominantly framed through psychological and economic models of individual behaviour, addiction, and ‘rational’ action. This is beginning to change, with a growing corpus of socio-cultural approaches to gambling research now emerging. Method In this article, we argue the case of recognising gambling as a social practice, the performance of which draws upon multiple elements such as technology and materials, spaces and places, language and discourse, and structures and agency. We call for a practice theory approach to gambling research that joins efforts to move beyond individual gamblers and their behaviour, to also acknowledge the interaction of multiple elements shaping gambling practices. To achieve this, we suggest that research methods such as visual ethnography can be helpful. Conclusion We set out how a social practice perspective to gambling research can generate different insights and help inform more nuanced and appropriate gambling harm reduction initiatives.
·google.com·
Gambling as social practice: a complementary approach for reducing harm?