Présentation de Danielle Chagnon, directrice générale de la Grande Bibliothèque, à la suite de son séjour à Kuala Lumpur en août 2018 dans le cadre du congrès de l'IFLA.
Présentation de Danielle Chagnon, directrice générale de la Grande Bibliothèque, à la suite de son séjour à Kuala Lumpur en août 2018 dans le cadre du congrès de l'IFLA.
The document summarizes a presentation given by John Middleton on health inequalities in Sandwell, England. It discusses the history of public health in Sandwell, the current state of health inequalities across its towns, and the impact of economic factors like precarious work and job loss on health. Maps show higher rates of heart disease in more deprived towns in Sandwell.
This document discusses the evolution of public involvement in the UK health system and outlines plans for Local Involvement Networks (LINks) going forward. It summarizes that LINks aim to promote public involvement in commissioning, providing, and scrutinizing local health services. Early lessons from LINks pilots indicate the importance of governance, geography, identifying issues of concern, and defining success criteria. The NHS Centre for Involvement supports public involvement and helps organizations implement changes based on public input.
The Bradford District obesity and overweight scrutiny review collected background information through written evidence and public hearings over 2005. They also held an open event for voluntary organizations, surveyed 2,500 residents, and met with major supermarkets to discuss key issues like leadership, working with partners, research, and implementing decisions. Public engagement activities included Councillors participating in fitness activities, an open meeting in Keighley, and a workshop on obesity in South Asian communities.
The Parker Morris standards from 1967-1980 stated that heating systems in dwellings should maintain indoor temperatures of 13°C in kitchens and circulation spaces, and 18°C in living and dining rooms when the outdoor temperature is -1°C. Excess winter deaths are higher among lower social groups and those living in rented accommodation or social housing. Financial incentives have been proposed and trialled to encourage healthier behaviors like smoking cessation and weight loss. Working with businesses could provide further incentives through discounts or savings programs. Support may also be offered to sex workers to reduce health risks and facilitate career changes.
The document discusses the Next Stage Review timeline for the NHS, including Lord Darzi's vision for a fair, personalized, effective, and safe health system. It outlines drivers for change like financial pressures, changing expectations, and inequalities. It envisions integrated primary care providers offering coordinated care through multiple access points. Specialist care would be provided in community settings with comprehensive services designed around patient needs. Outcomes-focused, population-based models using risk stratification, proactive care management, and funding following the patient through a personalized year-of-care approach are presented.
This document discusses the arguments for and against increased choice in healthcare. It acknowledges that while choice is important, it can also exacerbate health inequalities if not implemented properly. The document outlines proposals by the government to increase choice in various areas of healthcare. However, it notes that for choice to be effective and fair, measures need to be taken to ensure all consumers can make choices, providers are equally accessible, and the healthcare system supports those with fewer opportunities to choose.
This document discusses concerns about increasing privatization and for-profit involvement in the UK's National Health Service (NHS). It focuses on evidence that privatization can lead to risk selection, fragmentation of care, less community orientation, and rising transaction costs. The presentation examines political factors driving privatization policy and questions whether privatization will truly increase efficiency as claimed, given evidence it may increase costs. It argues for more transparency and accountability in health policy decisions.
HWBs are expected to (1) accredit and assess CCGs, approve their plans and budgets, and refer disagreements to the national board. (2) Develop joint strategic needs assessments and understand the impact of cost-cutting locally. (3) Champion public health and reduce inequalities. However, getting diverse stakeholders including GPs, councils, users, and the national board to agree will be challenging. HWBs must seek evidence-based, long-term solutions while building trust between sectors.
PCaW is an independent charity founded in 1993 that provides confidential advice to employees concerned about wrongdoing in their workplace. It also trains organizations on accountability, whistleblowing and risk management, and campaigns for public policy and whistleblowing laws. PCaW promotes a tiered disclosure model that emphasizes internal reporting but recognizes wider accountability, and signals a culture change in whistleblowing.
Créer à partir d'archives : demarche et techniques d’un projet exploratoireSimon Côté-Lapointe
Présentation d'un bilan des étapes, techniques et réflexions liées au projet « Archives et création » consistant à créer des vidéos expérimentales à partir d’archives d’institutions québécoises.
The document summarizes a presentation given by John Middleton on health inequalities in Sandwell, England. It discusses the history of public health in Sandwell, the current state of health inequalities across its towns, and the impact of economic factors like precarious work and job loss on health. Maps show higher rates of heart disease in more deprived towns in Sandwell.
This document discusses the evolution of public involvement in the UK health system and outlines plans for Local Involvement Networks (LINks) going forward. It summarizes that LINks aim to promote public involvement in commissioning, providing, and scrutinizing local health services. Early lessons from LINks pilots indicate the importance of governance, geography, identifying issues of concern, and defining success criteria. The NHS Centre for Involvement supports public involvement and helps organizations implement changes based on public input.
The Bradford District obesity and overweight scrutiny review collected background information through written evidence and public hearings over 2005. They also held an open event for voluntary organizations, surveyed 2,500 residents, and met with major supermarkets to discuss key issues like leadership, working with partners, research, and implementing decisions. Public engagement activities included Councillors participating in fitness activities, an open meeting in Keighley, and a workshop on obesity in South Asian communities.
The Parker Morris standards from 1967-1980 stated that heating systems in dwellings should maintain indoor temperatures of 13°C in kitchens and circulation spaces, and 18°C in living and dining rooms when the outdoor temperature is -1°C. Excess winter deaths are higher among lower social groups and those living in rented accommodation or social housing. Financial incentives have been proposed and trialled to encourage healthier behaviors like smoking cessation and weight loss. Working with businesses could provide further incentives through discounts or savings programs. Support may also be offered to sex workers to reduce health risks and facilitate career changes.
The document discusses the Next Stage Review timeline for the NHS, including Lord Darzi's vision for a fair, personalized, effective, and safe health system. It outlines drivers for change like financial pressures, changing expectations, and inequalities. It envisions integrated primary care providers offering coordinated care through multiple access points. Specialist care would be provided in community settings with comprehensive services designed around patient needs. Outcomes-focused, population-based models using risk stratification, proactive care management, and funding following the patient through a personalized year-of-care approach are presented.
This document discusses the arguments for and against increased choice in healthcare. It acknowledges that while choice is important, it can also exacerbate health inequalities if not implemented properly. The document outlines proposals by the government to increase choice in various areas of healthcare. However, it notes that for choice to be effective and fair, measures need to be taken to ensure all consumers can make choices, providers are equally accessible, and the healthcare system supports those with fewer opportunities to choose.
This document discusses concerns about increasing privatization and for-profit involvement in the UK's National Health Service (NHS). It focuses on evidence that privatization can lead to risk selection, fragmentation of care, less community orientation, and rising transaction costs. The presentation examines political factors driving privatization policy and questions whether privatization will truly increase efficiency as claimed, given evidence it may increase costs. It argues for more transparency and accountability in health policy decisions.
HWBs are expected to (1) accredit and assess CCGs, approve their plans and budgets, and refer disagreements to the national board. (2) Develop joint strategic needs assessments and understand the impact of cost-cutting locally. (3) Champion public health and reduce inequalities. However, getting diverse stakeholders including GPs, councils, users, and the national board to agree will be challenging. HWBs must seek evidence-based, long-term solutions while building trust between sectors.
PCaW is an independent charity founded in 1993 that provides confidential advice to employees concerned about wrongdoing in their workplace. It also trains organizations on accountability, whistleblowing and risk management, and campaigns for public policy and whistleblowing laws. PCaW promotes a tiered disclosure model that emphasizes internal reporting but recognizes wider accountability, and signals a culture change in whistleblowing.
Créer à partir d'archives : demarche et techniques d’un projet exploratoireSimon Côté-Lapointe
Présentation d'un bilan des étapes, techniques et réflexions liées au projet « Archives et création » consistant à créer des vidéos expérimentales à partir d’archives d’institutions québécoises.
Archives, bibliothèques, musées: une approche interdisciplinaire à la gestion des archives électroniques et à la valorisation du patrimoine digital (Lugano, 4 septembre 2014, Congrès BIS Bibliothèque Information Suisse).
RDA - Vers le web sémantique. Etat de la question à la Bibliothèque nationale...Michèle Furer-Benedetti
Conférence de la Bibliothèque de l'Université de Genève et de la BCU Lausanne, mardi 4 novembre 2014 à Genève, mercredi 5 novembre 2014 à Lausanne, Suisse
Similaire à Lessard denis le traitement des archives des centres d’artistes autogérés_2 (11)
3. • Ressources humaines et financières limitées
• Absence de tradition en gestion des
documents et des archives
4.
5. • Les documents : un seul et même cycle de vie
• Intégration du records management et du
traitement des archives
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15. • Diagnostic de la situation de gestion des
documents et des archives
• Traitement des archives historiques de Skol
• Exposition Sortons les archives, Skol
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21. • Conférence à Halifax, Nouvelle-Écosse;
Toronto et Sherbrooke, Québec
• Symposium Artists’ Records in the Archives,
New York
http://www.nycarchivists.org/proceedings
• Atelier d’introduction à la gestion des
documents et des archives, RCAAQ,
Québec et Montréal
• Forum des archivistes français, Angers
22. • Conservation des archives des centres
d’artistes
• Il est possible d’accomplir des choses avec des
ressources limitées
• Un travail par petites étapes
• Patience et confiance