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RCN Statement On Lord Ara Darzi
Commenting on news that Lord Ara Darzi will stand down as a government minister, Dr Peter Carter, Chief Executive of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), paid tribute to his contribution to the health service. He said:

Among Older People, Lessening Social Activity Linked To Decline In Motor Functions Such As Dexterity And Strength
A new study from the US suggests that the less socially active an older person is, the higher the chances that their motor ability such as strength
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Brits Are Europe's Angriest People, Says New Poll But All We Do Is Bite Our Lips, Says British Association Of Anger Management, United Kingdom
A poll commissioned by comedy channel Gold and to be revealed shows that we Britons are the angriest people in Europe, losing our cool on average four times a day and topping even the Italians and French. And what do we believe makes us most angry? Queue jumpers.
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Seeking Solutions To The Chronic Nursing Shortage In Canada And The US

The Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing at The University of Western Ontario has announced a $2 million research chair to address issues surrounding the chronic shortage of registered nurses in Canada and the United States. Dr. Heather Laschinger, Ph.D., was named the first Arthur Labatt Family Nursing Research Chair in Human Re Optimization. A study by the Canadian Nurses Association found the country will be short 78,000 registered nurses (RNs) within two years, and the number is expected to grow to 113,000 by 2016. The American Nurses Association says the shortage in the US will be more than one million nurses by the end of this decade. The Arthur Labatt Family Nursing Research Chair in Human Re Optimization will lead a broad research agenda examining issues related to the education and retention of nurses and factors that contribute to their success in a variety of health care settings, and support related teaching initiatives. The Chair"s research will focus on the causes and consequences of the current professional nursing workforce shortage, with a view to optimizing health human res in nursing to ensure high quality health care. Laschinger says she"s thrilled to be selected for this new research chair. "The Chair will extend my ongoing research, which for the past 15 years has examined how best to empower nurses for excellence in professional practice in work environments that promote the health of both nurses and their patients," says the Associate Director, Nursing Research and Distinguished University Professor. "This will provide an opportunity to develop new directions for investigating ways to optimize nurses" scope of practice within current evolving interprofessional practice environments and to examine best educational practices that prepare new graduates for optimal role functioning in these challenging work settings." "Research excellence is critically important and I see this appointment as a way of advancing research in our strong School of Nursing. This Chair is focused in a timely, and critically important area for the Faculty and our society," says Jim Weese, Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences. "I congratulate Dr. Laschinger on being the inaugural Arthur Labatt Family Nursing Research Chair in Human Re Optimization and I know that the outcomes of her research will continue to make a difference in the area." The Research Chair is part of a $10 million gift from Arthur and Sonia Labatt announced last year. Kathy Wallis University of Western Ontario


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