Dictionary
care factor
noun
The degree to which somebody cares about something.
Exact(8)
The idea of the Care Factor was simple – during the morning sessions the jobseekers attended informal sessions delivered by frontline workers to give them a taste of what care industry is all about.
Sharon Brydon from Jobcentre Plus said: "By working in partnership, and bringing together candidates and employers through events such as the Care Factor, we hope to attract more people and the right people to care sector roles in the future".
That's one reason why we teamed up with Jobcentre Plus and employers in the North East Partnership to create the first Care Factor event in Newcastle offering jobseekers from across Northumberland, Tyne and Wear a chance to find out more about careers in the care sector.
He went on to say he had "no idea" what to attribute the starters' poor performance to, but described their play as "selfish," and implied they approached the game with indifference by emphasizing that the bench had a "care factor" that was missing from the starting unit.
However, when we estimated the differences in variance between 10 RCF litters (estimated across 7 days and 4 different dams/litter) for the amount of received care (factor: litter) by Levene test, we found significant differences neither for NURSING (Levene's 9,60 = 1.14, p = NS) nor for GP/L (Levene's 9,60 = 1.46, p = NS).
The PBI contains the care factor and the protection factor.
(♀GP18_40s) The level of compassion and I think … the care factor would diminish.
The "Care" factor reflected perceived sensitivity, warmth, emotional responsiveness, trust, physical and capacity for companionship.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com