Most Popular Books by Tracey Adams

Tracey Adams is the author of The Lost Horse (2004), Working in Canada (2021), A Runner's Journey (2025), Tracey Adams (2002), A Quality of Care Assessment of the Management of Obstetric Haemorrhage in the Peninsula Maternal and Neonatal Services (2009).

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The Lost Horse

release date: Jan 01, 2004
The Lost Horse
A retelling of the tale about a Chinese man who owned a marvelous horse and who believed that things were not always as bad, or as good, as they might seem.

Working in Canada

release date: Oct 11, 2021
Working in Canada
The most accessible and intersectional exploration of the role of work in Canadian society.

A Runner's Journey

release date: Feb 15, 2025
A Runner's Journey
I didn''t begin taking running serioulsy until I went to college, and it was then that I developed a love, a passion and maybe even an obsession for running. Running gave me an adrenaline rush. I loved the physical and health benefits it gave me, Running was an outlet for me...Until it became too much of a good thing!

A Quality of Care Assessment of the Management of Obstetric Haemorrhage in the Peninsula Maternal and Neonatal Services

release date: Jan 01, 2009

Old Strategies, New Game

release date: Jan 01, 1999
Old Strategies, New Game
This thesis examines the pressures that are being placed on the health care system, focusing particularly on long term care facilities in Nova Scotia. As the title implies, this thesis explores how strategies developed in the private business sector are being implemented in the public health care system. It looks at what those strategies are, how they are being applied, who is affected by them, who gains from them, and why these strategies are being implemented now. In order to answer these questions ideas and concepts are borrowed from three theorists: Max Weber, George Ritzer and Karl Marx. By combining different aspects of each of their works, we gain a better understanding of what is really going on behind the decisions being made surrounding long term care facilities. Directly linked to the decision-making process are the effects that those decisions have. Ten women, all health care employees, who have experienced the effects of private sector strategies which are infiltrating their work worlds were interviewed and their responses were described and compared in an exploratory fashion. There is no simple solution offered to solve all the problems faced by the caregivers. However, a better understanding of what is going on in the health care system and a greater awareness of the struggles faced by those working within the system can only help to make us, and those with the decision-making power, better able to make decisions in the best interests of residents and caregivers.

The Symmetry of Asymmetry

release date: Jan 01, 2004

The Role of Sphingosine-1-phosphate in Macrophage Recruitment and Function in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma

release date: Jan 01, 2019
The Role of Sphingosine-1-phosphate in Macrophage Recruitment and Function in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma
Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Currently, approximately 40% of DLBCL patients treated with standard of care therapies, which include a combination of immunotherapy (Rituximab; R) and chemotherapy (CHOP), will have disease that is refractory or will relapse. Tumour-associated macrophages can phagocytose opsonised DLBCL tumour cells and are therefore centrally important in determining therapeutic outcomes for patients treated with R-CHOP. Recent data from our lab and from others suggests that the modulation of sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) signalling may therapeutically benefit some patients with this tumour. In this study, the effects of S1P on macrophage functions relevant to DLBCL were investigated. Using in vitro phagocytosis assays, S1P signalling through the major receptor, S1PR1, suppressed the phagocytosis of rituximab-opsonised DLBCL cells. However, chemotherapy potently induced monocyte recruitment to DLBCL tumours in vivo and S1PR1 is a primary mediator of monocyte migration both in vitro and in vivo. This work suggests that S1PR1 signalling inhibitors could improve the therapeutic efficacy of rituximab-based therapies for DLBCL patients. However, these drugs should be given only after chemotherapy and before rituximab administration so as to maximise the S1P-mediated recruitment of therapeutic macrophages to the tumour site.

Employment in the Chemicals Manufacturing Sector

release date: Jan 01, 1998

Employment in the Transportation Equipment Sector

release date: Jan 01, 1998

Caregiver, Physician, and Nurse Preferences of Nutritional Support in Bone Marrow Transplant Unit

release date: Jan 01, 2011
Caregiver, Physician, and Nurse Preferences of Nutritional Support in Bone Marrow Transplant Unit
Objective: This study looked at caregivers'', physicians'', and nurses'' preferences of types of nutrition support. Many cancer patients are given enteral or parenteral nutrition support because they cannot obtain nutrients orally.Design: This is a qualitative study which examined caregivers'', physicans'', and nurses'' preferred type of nutrition support, feelings toward each type, goals regarding nutrition, and how the medical team could help meet those goals. Subjects: A total of 71 caregivers, physicians, and nurses from the hematopoietic stem cell transplant unit at St. Jude Children''s Research Hospital were surveyed, of which were 17 males and 54 females. The ages ranged from 22 to 59 years old.Results: The results showed the majority of caregivers preferred parenteral nutrition over enteral nutrition, while most healthcare professionals preferred enteral nutrition over parenteral nutrition.Conclusion: Most caregivers do not know enough about the different types of nutritonal support to choose a preference.

The Role of Sphingosine-1-phosphate on Macrophage Recruitment and Function in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma

release date: Jan 01, 2019

New Jobs, New Workers? Organizational Restructuring and Management Hiring Decisions

release date: Jan 01, 2010
New Jobs, New Workers? Organizational Restructuring and Management Hiring Decisions
Recent studies of work have argued that organizational restructuring and the introduction of technology are altering the nature and experience of work. In this paper, we examine whether recent change has affected managerial perceptions of the characteristics and abilities required of workers. Drawing on interviews with human resource managers in three industries (chemicals production, transportation equipment manufacturing, health services) in Southwestern Ontario, we conclude that management across these industries is indeed seeking a "new" kind of worker, and is placing new demands on their workers. Implications of these changes for employment and for workers are discussed.
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