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This book is written by a team of speech and language therapists
from The Wolfson Neurorehabilitation Centre. It is intended for
practitioners working with patients who have acquired communication
disorders resulting from brain injury: aphasia,
cognitive-communication disorder, dysarthria, apraxia. The authors
believe that a therapeutic programme should have it's foundations
in the linguistic, non-verbal, neurological and neurospsychological
perspective of the patient's difficulties. The approach the team
has developed consists of several different strangs of therapy,
with each strand representing an element of the rehabilitation
process: assessment; goal planning; specific individualised
treatment; education; friends and family; and psychosocial
adjustment. This book describes these strands, illustrates in a
user-friendly way how each one relates to therapy, and fives some
practical ideas of how practitioners might work within them. Each
chapter begins with the guiding principles and evidence bases that
underlie the rationale for one particular strand of therapy. They
then follow examples of practice and case studies of a real-life
example of each strand. This book describes a speech and language
therapy service that aims to be responsive to patients' needs and
develops tailor-made intervention programmes that arer unique to
each individual. It includes downloadable resources containing
assessments and practical tools.
This synopsis covers evidence for the effects of conservation
interventions for native farmland wildlife. It is restricted to
evidence captured on the website www.conservationevidence.com. It
includes papers published in the journal Conservation Evidence,
evidence summarized on our database and systematic reviews collated
by the Collaboration for Environmental Evidence. It is the thrid
volume in the series Synopses of Conservation Evidence. Evidence
was collected from all European countries west of Russia, but not
those south of France, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary and Romania. A
list of interventions to conserve wildlife on farmland was
developed collaboratively by a team of thirteen experts. A number
of interventions that are not currently agri-environment options
were added during this process, such as 'Provide nest boxes for
bees (solitary or bumblebees)' and 'Implement food labelling
schemes relating to biodiversity-friendly farming'. Interventions
relating to the creation or management of habitats not considered
commercial farmland (such as lowland heath, salt marsh and farm
woodland) were removed. The list of interventions was organized
into categories based on the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature (IUCN) classifications of direct threats and
conservation actions. Interventions that fall under the threat
category 'Agriculture' are grouped by farming system, with separate
sections for interventions that apply to arable or livestock farms,
or across all farming types.
This synopsis covers evidence for the effects of conservation
interventions for native farmland wildlife. It is restricted to
evidence captured on the website www.conservationevidence.com. It
includes papers published in the journal Conservation Evidence,
evidence summarized on our database and systematic reviews collated
by the Collaboration for Environmental Evidence. It is the thrid
volume in the series Synopses of Conservation Evidence. Evidence
was collected from all European countries west of Russia, but not
those south of France, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary and Romania. A
list of interventions to conserve wildlife on farmland was
developed collaboratively by a team of thirteen experts. A number
of interventions that are not currently agri-environment options
were added during this process, such as 'Provide nest boxes for
bees (solitary or bumblebees)' and 'Implement food labelling
schemes relating to biodiversity-friendly farming'. Interventions
relating to the creation or management of habitats not considered
commercial farmland (such as lowland heath, salt marsh and farm
woodland) were removed. The list of interventions was organized
into categories based on the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature (IUCN) classifications of direct threats and
conservation actions. Interventions that fall under the threat
category 'Agriculture' are grouped by farming system, with separate
sections for interventions that apply to arable or livestock farms,
or across all farming types.
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