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Reinforcements : how to get people to help you / Heidi Grant- Halvorson Boston, Massachusetts : Harvard Business Review Press, 2018 200 pages. : illustrations ; 21 cm. Ký hiệu phân loại (DDC): 153.852 We all need help--especially in today's uber-collaborative workplaces. Here's the good news: humans are naturally wired to want to help each other. Now here's the bad: asking for help makes most of us wildly uncomfortable. As a result, we do a poor job of calling in the reinforcements we need, leaving confused or even offended colleagues in our wake. This pragmatic book explains the research on what psychologists call social intelligence. To elicit helpful behavior from their colleagues, you need to do two things: 1) Remove the obstacles that stand in the way of them helping you; 2) Trigger one or more of the motivations that make people want to help. Whether you're a first-time manager or a seasoned leader, getting people to do things for you is what management is. This book will help you do so, and do it in a way that leaves your helpers feeling good about pitching in. Số bản sách:
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Searching and using online medical information among mothers of Infants in Hanoi, 2019 / Nguyen Quoc Khanh, An Hoang Ngan, [...et al] // Tạp chí Nghiên cứu Y học . - Hanoi Medical University. - p. 109-117. - ISSN: 2354-080X
Ký hiệu phân loại (DDC): 618 Present about the aim of this study was to identify the factors related to searching and using online medical information among mothers of infants. This was a cross-section study of 219 mothers at 2 vaccination centers of Hanoi Medical University in Vietnam. Subjects were surveyed by a set of direct interview questions. More than half of the subjects were under 30 years old [(Mean = 30.16; SD = 4.06)]. Almost all participants did not agree with discussing health issues in online forums; if they had health issues, they felt the need to seek help from a doctor via message on Facebook or Zalo. Mothers wanted to discuss with doctors, professionals, friends, and relatives on online media; they were confident that they could find useful online information to make medical decisions. Factors related to finding and using online medical information included the following: age, ethnicity, employment (public officers), education level, income, and whether infant was first child or not. Health care professionals should support mothers to make medical decisions by communicating with patients as much as possible, provide reliable medical information for patients, and introduce them how to find accurate, comprehensive and understandable online medical information Số bản sách:
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