Search
Skip to Search Results- 42Alberta Centre for Active Living
- 11GAPSSHRC
- 3Berry, T. R.
- 2Naylor, P. J.
- 2Nicoladis, Elena
- 2Wharf-Higgins, J.
- 43Alberta Centre for Active Living
- 26Alberta Centre for Active Living/WellSpring
- 18Toolkit for Grant Success
- 18Toolkit for Grant Success/Successful Grants (Toolkit for Grant Success)
- 15Alberta Centre for Active Living/Research Update (Alberta Centre for Active Living)
- 2Alberta Centre for Active Living/Fact Sheets (Alberta Centre for Active Living)
-
When Pictures Waste a Thousand Words: Analysis of the 2009 H1N1 Pandemic on Television News
Download2014-10-24
Jardine, Cindy, Bubela, Tania, Luth, Westerly
OBJECTIVES: Effective communication by public health agencies during a pandemic promotes the adoption of recommended health behaviours. However, more information is not always the solution. Rather, attention must be paid to how information is communicated. Our study examines the television news,...
-
2011
Scott, Shannon D., Austin, Wendy J., Olmstead, Deborah L
It is considered the right of children to have their pain managed effectively. Yet, despite extensive research findings, policy guidelines and practice standard recommendations for the optimal management of paediatric pain, clinical practices remain inadequate. Empirical evidence definitively...
-
2016-10-14
SSHRC Awarded IG 2017: In everyday conversation, we need to rapidly find referents for pronouns when we process language. This process is guided by what is said, but also by where and how it is said. How do children learn to understand pronouns in real time conversation? This project will...
-
2018-10-29
SSHRC Awarded PG2 2019: When history education in Canada was first designed at the end of the 19th century, it was part of a nation-building project shaped by competing interests of Anglophone Canada and Francophone Québec. Indigenous peoples and their histories were completely omitted,...
-
Spring 2002
Alberta Centre for Active Living
Four articles on topics such as the effect of physical activity on fibromyalgia, breast cancer, and osteoporosis. One article also focuses on older Aboriginal women.