scholarly journals EDUCAÇÃO PERMANENTE E CLÍNICA AMPLIADA: UM NOVO PARADIGMA DE CUIDADO/CONTINUING EDUCATION AND EXPANDED CLINIC: A NEW PARADIGM OF CARE

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 4624-4629
Author(s):  
Hayanne Christine Teixeira Paz Azanki ◽  
Camila Elias da Silva Gonçalves ◽  
João Vitor Parreira Costa ◽  
Valéria da Costa Marque Vuolo
2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 62-70
Author(s):  
Sally J. Placksin

This article introduces the author's emerging new paradigm (“perinatal participation”) that re-imagines postpartum support by helping expectant parents have more peace of mind, confidence, self-compassion, and emotional wellbeing over the course of their perinatal journeys, with special focus on feeling more prepared for all that happens after baby arrives. The author's work rests on the shoulders of her 1992 book, Mothering the New Mother: Women's Feelings and Needs After Childbirth. Perceiving a new urgent need to support expectant parents three decades later (the need to alleviate the high stress levels in expectant parents she was talking to) the author explored filtering the expectant and new parent's experience through what she calls a “peace-of-mind lens.”


2000 ◽  
Vol 179 ◽  
pp. 177-183
Author(s):  
D. M. Rust

AbstractSolar filaments are discussed in terms of two contrasting paradigms. The standard paradigm is that filaments are formed by condensation of coronal plasma into magnetic fields that are twisted or dimpled as a consequence of motions of the fields’ sources in the photosphere. According to a new paradigm, filaments form in rising, twisted flux ropes and are a necessary intermediate stage in the transfer to interplanetary space of dynamo-generated magnetic flux. It is argued that the accumulation of magnetic helicity in filaments and their coronal surroundings leads to filament eruptions and coronal mass ejections. These ejections relieve the Sun of the flux generated by the dynamo and make way for the flux of the next cycle.


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