Paulhas worked in mental health nursing and nurse education for 34 years, with his time in practice being spent in community and specialist forensic mental health settings for children and adolescents. Following completion of his mental health and adult nurse training in the 1980s, Paul worked in a number of senior clinical nurse specialist roles before being appointed as a Senior Lecturer in 2004 at Birmingham City University. He also completed the ENB specialist practitioner award in child and adolescent mental health nursing at Birmingham City University.
Within this period Paul has also completed an MSc in addictions counselling (Birmingham University 2000-01), an M(Ed) completed at Birmingham City University in 2003/4, and is currently in the process of submitting his PhD for external examination. Paul's thesis has examined the professional socialization experiences of a group of mental health student nurses and the factors influencing the centrality of care in this process.
As a Senior Lecturer at Birmingham City University Paul was appointed as the pathway leader for the child and adolescent mental health nursing program in 2008. Since this time he has developed a range of teaching and learning resources focusing on child and adolescent mental health, and developed close links with clinicians engaged in this specialism.
Paul teaches pre- and post-registration mental health nursing programmes. He has a particular interest in child and adolescent mental health, as well as research focusing on student support and the construction of professional role identity.
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A second year's call data to NHS Direct are presented to evaluate their usefulness for influenza surveillance. During the winter of 2000-01, age-group-specific data relating to the 'cold/flu' algorithm were collected from six NHS Direct sites (population coverage: 16 million). The total number of calls was collected from all 23 NHS Direct sites on a daily basis. Despite the winter of 2000-01 having been a season of low activity for influenza in the United Kingdom, NHS Direct data demonstrated a peak in the 'cold/flu' calls as a proportion of the total calls (3.1% [672 'cold/flu' calls] during week 06/01). This coincided with the peak recorded by routine influenza surveillance systems. There was also an earlier peak in the proportion of 'cold/flu' calls (3.3% during weeks 52/00 [789 'cold/flu' calls] and 01/01 [749 'cold/flu' calls]) which may have been due to other respiratory infections, the lack of specificity of the definition of NHS Direct 'cold/flu' calls and an increase in 'out-of-hours' calls to NHS Direct at the time. Despite limitations, the timeliness of NHS Direct data, the total population coverage of the service and the ability to provide local information on 'cold/flu' calls make the call data suitable for further surveillance during the winter of 2001-02. It is hoped that as NHS Direct reaches a 'steady state' in terms of population coverage and uniformity of clinical support systems, it will be possible to begin to construct 'baselines' for the respiratory disease related call data.
On the court, Vanderbilt's record in 2000-01 might have been 15-15, and the Commodores finished last in the SEC East. But that was pretty much expected. As we saw when we looked at 1999-00, Jan van Breda Kolff had left behind a strong senior class but very little behind it thanks to poor recruiting and attrition; this was the year that those issues started to come to light. Stallings recruited a six-man freshman class and was forced to play them, but while the results weren't spectacular, there were reasons to be positive about the future.
And the thin roster returning was exacerbated further. Of the ten scholarship players on the 1999-00 team, three graduated, and the two freshmen on that team -- Jones and Lekwauwa -- both were gone as well. Jones got dismissed from the team for the nebulous "violation of team rules," and later resurfaced at Murray State; Lekwauwa essentially quit the team to concentrate on academics but stayed at Vanderbilt and ultimately got his degree. Jones cost the team depth, though Lekwauwa might have had some potential to be more than just a depth guy.
Still, when all was said and done, there were five Vanderbilt teams under Stallings that were worse than this one. Given the fact that six of the eleven players on scholarship were freshmen, the recruiting class was (if I'm remembering correctly; recruiting information from this time period is hard to come by) not all that highly thought of, and one of those freshmen didn't even play due to injury -- this actually seems like quite an accomplishment. Spoiler alert: the 2001-02 and 2002-03 teams, when this class was supposedly maturing (at least, that was the thought in 2000-01) and Stallings was getting more of his own players in the program, were actually a bit worse.
As said above, recruiting info from before about 2002 is tough to find. Hoop Scoop rated Stallings' first recruiting class 65th in the country, but that ranking didn't include Plavich -- a onetime Georgia Tech signee who flipped after Bobby Cremins got fired.
We do know that Billy Richmond was a consensus top 100 recruit, and was regarded as a big deal as he was the first Vanderbilt signee out of Memphis in about 20 years. (Spoiler alert: Stallings quickly learned there was a reason C.M. Newton and Eddie Fogler didn't recruit Memphis, and it wasn't because they were incompetent at their jobs. Richmond was also the last Vanderbilt signee out of Memphis -- not counting, of course, Derrick Byars, who was a transfer and also not at all representative of most prospects out of that city.) Scott Hundley and Matt Freije both won the Mr. Basketball award in their home states, and Freije had at least some interest from Kentucky, though I can't find any indication that Kentucky ever offered him a scholarship. Lakey, whose other offers were mostly from West Coast mid-majors, was probably the closest thing to a questionable take in this class, but he worked out fine. Martin Schnedlitz was a different matter; he never contributed at all, but that was mostly because he was never the same after tearing his ACL during his senior year of high school.
So the 2000-01 season, in which Vanderbilt was pretty much a unanimous pick to finish last in the East -- Georgia had been bad the year before but returned basically everyone, and Kentucky, Florida, and Tennessee were all talented (though Tennessee would underachieve; this was, of course, Jerry Green's last season there) -- Stallings was basically trying to figure out which of the newcomers were keepers. And by the end of the year, there was at least one obvious answer.
The most striking takeaway from the 2000-01 team? No player started every game, and literally every scholarship player on the roster started at least once, with seven players starting ten or more games. Nine players -- everyone except Coulibaly -- averaged at least ten minutes per game, and only Chuck Moore averaged over 30 minutes.
To be sure, some of that had to do with injuries -- Greg LaPointe was dealing with the same back problems that plagued him in 1999-00, and you'll notice that five players missed at least one game. But even if you narrow it just to SEC play, the same things hold true: nine players averaged ten minutes or more, and everybody started at least once. As much as anything else, Stallings spent most of 2000-01 experimenting to see what worked and figuring out where all those newcomers fit into the program going forward, and at the very least there was one future star in Freije. As a freshman, Freije might have already been Vanderbilt's best player (at least when LaPointe was particularly gimpy.)
On the other hand, Billy Richmond already looked like he wasn't worth the hype. The Win Shares stat exposes that in spite of his scoring average (a fair 8.8 ppg), Richmond just wasn't very good as a freshman; he was basically a missed-shot-and-turnover machine who played a bigger role in the offense than he probably should have. Considering how his career went at Memphis after getting dismissed from Vanderbilt prior to the 2001-02 season, I don't think Vanderbilt missed out on much.
As for the rest of the freshman class, Lakey looked like he would be a solid supporting player, Hundley would be a capable bench guy, and Plavich would be fine once his jumper started falling. On the whole, the 2000 recruiting class was solid if unspectacular. Of note, 2000-01 would be the last time until 2012-13 that Vanderbilt would get shut out of the All-SEC teams.
When I saw that Vanderbilt went 15-15 but 4-12 in the SEC, I kind of assumed that we'd played a crap nonconference schedule and then reality set in once SEC play hit -- but that wasn't really true. Western Kentucky went 24-7, and Vandy beat them on the road. There was also a home win over St. Joseph's, who made the second round of the tournament, and somehow a road win over Florida, who finished the season in the top 10.
What's more, most of the losses were close. From the looks of it, only the game at Mississippi State and the SEC Tournament game against Alabama were really blowouts; and in the eight-game losing streak to end the season, four games were decided by five points or less. This looked more like a young team that needed to learn how to win than anything else. But, spoiler alert, things would get worse before they got better; the 2001-02 and (especially) 2002-03 teams would regress.
Top-ranked Florida overcame sluggish conditions and gusty winds to shoot a final round 287 (+7) and win the 27th annual SunTrust Gator Invitational by 11 strokes over Alabama-Birmingham Sunday afternoon at the University Golf Course.
Florida earned its fourth tournament victory in six tournaments this season -- the most by a Gator squad since the 2000-01 team also claimed four victories. Florida hasn't won more than four tournaments in a season since the 1995-96 team won six.
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