The Amazing Magic-Formula Of Any Oxygenase
We hope that this will provide insights into the effectiveness of frameworks such as A4R and the social values framework. If the results of our study indicate the effectiveness of these frameworks, we hope that this may encourage decision-makers such as commissioners to consider A4R conditions and social values more systematically than is currently visible at a local level. Acknowledgments The authors thank the participants of the King's College London (KCL) and University College London (UCL) Social Values in Health Priority Setting Workshops for their comments on a draft of this manuscript. The authors especially thank Professor Albert Weale, CBE, and Dr Benedict Rumbold for their valuable comments and suggestions on various drafts of this paper. Footnotes Collaborators: Professor Albert Weale, CBE, Department of Political Science, University College London, London and Dr Sarah Clark. Contributors: KK conceptualised the study protocol. PL developed the decision-making audit tool (DMAT), together with our collaborators. KK is the main data manager and will lead on the data collection and analysis. She produced the first draft of this manuscript. Both authors contributed to the writing of the manuscript, and read and approved the final manuscript. Funding: This work is supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) South London at King��s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (grant number IS_CLA_0113_1002). Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health. MK0683 concentration Competing interests: None declared. Ethics approval: The King's College London Biomedical Sciences, Dentistry, Medicine and Natural and Mathematical Sciences Research Ethics Subcommittee (BDM RESC, BDM/14/15�C20). Provenance and peer review: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.""In the UK, care homes are the main providers of long-term care for older people. Approximately 17?500 care homes are home to about 487?000 older people, the majority women aged 80 years or older.1 It is estimated that as many as 80% of residents may have dementia, though this is not always documented.2 For the purposes of this paper, ��care home�� and ��long-term care�� refers to residential care provided to older people, who require help with personal care and who are unable to be supported in their own home for reasons of frailty, lack of mental capacity and/or functional limitations. It includes settings that have on-site nursing provision and those that do not. In the UK, this care is provided by a combination of for profit and not-for-profit providers. It is a sector that is diverse, varying in size, ownership, funding sources, focus and organisational culture.