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  2. Collaborative partnership - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative_partnership

    As an example, the University of Massachusetts Boston College of Nursing and Health Sciences, and the Dana Farber Harvard Cancer Center Nursing Services identified a shortage of minority nurses and a failure of sufficient numbers of minority nurses to graduate from doctoral programs that threatened the viability of nursing education programs ...

  3. Nurse-Family Partnership - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nurse-Family_Partnership

    Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP) is a non-profit organization operating in the United States that connects mothers pregnant with their first child with registered nurses, [2] who provide home visits until the child's second birthday. NFP intervention has been associated with improvements in maternal health, child health, and economic security.

  4. Social partners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_partners

    Social partners have a vital role to play in reaching out to workers and owners of enterprises and in particular those of SMEs and the informal economy, and in general, increasing the representation of their membership to ensure deeper and broader benefits of association, representation and leadership, including in the field of public policy advocacy, its formulation and implementation.

  5. Business partnering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_partnering

    The term financial business partnering is used to describe finance executives working alongside various business departments including operations, human resources, sales and marketing, among others, providing financial information, tools, analysis and insight, which allows companies to make more informed decisions while driving business ...

  6. Partnership accounting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partnership_accounting

    The partnership agreement may specify that partners should be compensated for services they provide to the partnership and for capital invested by partners. For example, one partner contributed more of the assets, and works full-time in the partnership, while the other partner contributed a smaller amount of assets and does not provide as much ...

  7. Partnership - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partnership

    A partnership is an agreement where parties agree to cooperate to advance their mutual interests. The partners in a partnership may be individuals, businesses, interest-based organizations, schools, governments or combinations. Organizations may partner to increase the likelihood of each achieving their mission and to amplify their reach.

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  9. Nursing Times - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nursing_Times

    Nursing Times editor John Gilbert said: ‘The scandal of nurses leaving the profession in pain and with their lives and careers in tatters must end.’ Nursing Times launched Open Learning in 1991, the distance learning package for enrolled nurse conversion. Another high-profile campaign was 1995’s ‘Nursing Times Says Nurses Need 3% Pay Up ...