15 results
Search Results
2. COVID‐19 and nursing research across five countries/regions: Commonalities and recommendations.
- Author
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Im, Eun‐Ok, Sakashita, Reiko, Oh, Eui Geum, Tsai, Hsiu‐Min, Chen, Ching‐Min, Lin, Chia‐Chin, and McCauley, Linda
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DISCUSSION ,NURSING research ,CONTENT analysis ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
With the recent impact by the COVID‐19 pandemic, nursing research has gone through unexpected changes across the globe. The purpose of this special report is to present the commonalities in the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on nursing research across four countries, including the United States, South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan, and one region, that is, Hong Kong, and to make recommendations for future nursing research during the immediate postpandemic period and future pandemic situations. To identify the commonalities, seven researchers/leaders from the five countries/regions had discussions through 3 days of an international workshop. The content for this discussion paper derived from: (a) the exemplars/cases of the COVID‐19 impact on the research process, (b) researchers/leaders' presentations on the COVID‐19 impact, and (c) memos from the workshop. The materials were analyzed using a simple content analysis. The commonalities included: (a) "a heavy emphasis on teaching and fluctuating productivity," (b) "increased funding opportunities and governmental support," (c) "gendered experience complicated by professional differences," (d) "delays and changes/modifications in research process," (e) "limited research settings and difficulties in getting access," and (f) "increased online dissemination activities with positive changes in the image of nursing." With all collective wisdom that nurse researchers have obtained during the COVID‐19 pandemic, nursing research will evolve again for the successful future of the nursing discipline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. Current Trends in Nursing Research Across Five Locations: The United States, South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and Hong Kong.
- Author
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Im, Eun‐Ok, Sakashita, Reiko, Lin, Chia‐Chin, Lee, Tae‐Hwa, Tsai, Hsiu‐Min, and Inouye, Jillian
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CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONTENT analysis ,INFORMATION technology ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,LABOR supply ,HEALTH policy ,NURSING research ,CULTURAL pluralism ,ADULT education workshops ,PROFESSIONAL standards ,POPULATION health ,CONTINUING education units ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Purpose: Despite the importance of research in the discipline of nursing, current trends in nursing research have rarely been discussed across countries. The purpose of this article was to identify current trends in nursing research across five countries, including the United States, South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and Hong Kong, in order to provide directions for future global nursing research. Organizing Construct: A discussion article. Methods: To identify the current trends, seven leaders from the five countries had discussions through a series of workshops and conference presentations. After the most recent conference, all the leaders reflected for a month on their presentations and compiled the exemplars and cases from their experience and the existing literature in individual countries into a table. The tables and supporting references were collected at the completion of the reflection period. Then, the PowerPoint (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA, USA) slideshows of the conference presentations by the leaders and the collected tables were analyzed using a content analysis. Findings: Six themes reflecting the current trends in nursing research were extracted: (a) demographic alterations; (b) increasing diversities and globalization; (c) technology innovation; (d) individualized or personal care and population health initiatives; (e) health policies and regulations; and (f) nursing workforce changes. Conclusions: Future directions for nursing research across the countries were proposed: (a) cost‐effectiveness research; (b) implementation science; (c) data science; (d) training of the future generation of nurse researchers; (e) population health; and (f) team science. Clinical Relevance: This topic could be applied to any clinical settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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4. Caregiving and future planning perspectives of siblings of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities: Insights from South Korea, Japan and Taiwan.
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Lee, Chung Eun, Hagiwara, Mayumi, Chiu, Chun‐Yu, and Takishima, Mayu
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SIBLINGS ,CAREGIVER attitudes ,DEVELOPMENTAL disabilities ,POPULATION geography ,SURVEYS ,EXPERIENCE ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: As individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities age, their siblings are more likely to assume caregiving responsibilities. However, little is known about experiences of East Asian siblings with respect to their caregiving and future‐planning within their own country, as well as other East Asian countries. Methods: Using a national survey, this study explored experiences of 576 siblings across South Korea, Japan and Taiwan. Results: A common factor across the three countries was that siblings were less engaged in advocacy and future‐planning activities and felt less competent to play the role of caregiving. Korean siblings reported more negative views about disability, while Japanese siblings reported less engagement in future‐planning and Taiwanese siblings reported greater involvement in caregiving. Conclusion: Based on 'universalism without uniformity', it is recommended to develop culturally sensitive sibling‐targeted intervention based on each country's context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Long‐Term Care Insurance Adoption in East Asia: Politics, Ideas, and Institutions.
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Maags, Christina
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LONG-term care insurance ,INSTITUTIONAL isomorphism ,POLITICAL competition ,POLICY diffusion ,SOCIAL services ,INSTITUTIONAL logic - Abstract
Copyright of Politics & Policy is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2020
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6. Comparison of legislative management for new psychoactive substances control among Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan.
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Feng, Ling‐Yi, Wada, Kiyoshi, Chung, Heesun, Han, Eunyoung, and Li, Jih‐Heng
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PHARMACEUTICAL policy ,DRUG control ,INTERNATIONAL obligations ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,CHEMICAL structure - Abstract
For decades, the three United Nations drug conventions have served as the basis for member states' obligations and international cooperation on drug control. However, the emergence of new psychoactive substances (NPSs) poses a new risk to public health and a challenge to drug policy because of their unknown toxicological effects and easy modification of chemical structures to shun legal control. So far, there is no international consensus on legislative control of NPSs. Therefore, we compared the legislative management on NPS control among Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan. Drug‐related information was obtained from the authorities of these three countries. The results indicate that despite geographic proximity and similar legal attitudes toward illegal drug use, the legislative criteria, and responses for NPS control in these three countries were quite different. Ketamine has been the major used NPS in Taiwan but seldom found in South Korea and Japan. The difference in the number of controlled NPSs in Taiwan (91) and South Korea (245) might be due to the implementation of temporary designation systems and analog controls in South Korea. The recent surge of newly controlled NPSs in Japan was because of the promulgation of designated drug regulation and subsequent control of "dangerous drugs." Although NPS use has become a potential social and medical problem among these three countries, the outcomes of NPS legislation control remain to be scrutinized. To minimize harm from NPS use, development of legislative mechanism(s) on NPS scheduling is the first step for early identification and control of NPS problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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7. Population Pharmacokinetics of Paliperidone Palmitate (Once‐Monthly Formulation) in Japanese, Korean, and Taiwanese Patients With Schizophrenia.
- Author
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Shimizu, Hiroko, Neyens, Martine, De Meulder, Marc, Gopal, Srihari, Tsukamoto, Yuko, Samtani, Mahesh N., and Remmerie, Bart
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PEOPLE with schizophrenia ,PHARMACOKINETICS ,KOREANS ,BODY mass index ,TAIWANESE people - Abstract
The paliperidone pharmacokinetics after intramuscular administration of once‐monthly paliperidone palmitate in Japanese patients were studied in 3 phase 1 studies and in 2 phase 3 studies performed in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan. These data (Japanese, n = 509; Korean, n = 31; Taiwanese, n = 47) were used to describe the paliperidone palmitate pharmacokinetics in Japanese, to compare with non‐Japanese, and to validate the historical population pharmacokinetic (Pop‐PK) model for paliperidone palmitate, developed using data from studies in patients with schizophrenia outside Japan. The final historical Pop‐PK model, including all significant patient covariates of Japanese studies, was used to simulate paliperidone plasma concentration–time data using nonlinear mixed effects, followed by comparison with actual data. Visual predictive checks displayed considerable overlap between predicted and actual plasma concentrations; the majority of observations were within the 90% prediction interval. Japanese, Korean, and Taiwanese patients had comparable plasma concentrations. Covariate distributions demonstrated comparatively lower median body mass index in Japanese, Korean, and Taiwanese patients versus rest‐of‐world population. Prediction errors for the data set used for external validation were within cutoff values, confirming accuracy/precision of the model. Paliperidone pharmacokinetics were adequately predicted for Japanese studies using the historical Pop‐PK model, confirming its robustness. Pharmacokinetics in Japanese, Korean, and Taiwanese patients with schizophrenia were comparable with rest‐of‐world population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. Bonding and bridging social capital and their associations with self‐evaluated community resilience: A comparative study of East Asia.
- Author
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Lee, Juheon
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COMMUNITIES ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,NATURAL disasters ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SELF-evaluation ,SOCIAL networks ,TRUST ,SOCIAL capital ,COMMUNITY support ,MEMBERSHIP - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to test key social capital indicators in a disaster context by considering the bonding and bridging types of social capital. Using the East Asian Social Survey, this study chooses three behavioural/cognitive elements of social capital—social trust, voluntary association membership, and personal networks—and divides them into bonding and bridging social capital, in‐group and out‐group trust, homogeneous and heterogeneous membership, and strong and weak ties to test their effects on self‐evaluated community resilience to natural hazards. The results showed that social trust and personal networks had strong positive effects, but the effect of voluntary association membership was positive in societies with high rates of membership (Japan and South Korea) and negative in a society with a low rate of membership (Taiwan). Furthermore, while bonding social capital generally showed a stronger effect than bridging social capital in East Asia, a society with more frequent and intense disasters (Japan) showed a strong effect of heterogenous membership on self‐evaluated community resilience. This study connects two aspects of social capital studies—the elements and the types of social capital—and the findings imply that the relationship between social capital and community resilience may have some mediator variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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9. Bibliometric study of research productivity in occupational therapy and physical therapy/physiotherapy in four Western countries and five Asian countries/regions.
- Author
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Man, David W.K., Tsang, Walter S.F., Lu, Erin Yiqing, and Tsang, Hector W.H.
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BIBLIOMETRICS ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy ,PHYSICAL therapy research ,RESEARCH ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Introduction: High‐quality research is the foundation of occupational therapy and physical therapy/physiotherapy. A bibliometric study on the research productivity of occupational therapy and physical therapy/physiotherapy scholars in different Western and Asian countries/regions could provide a snapshot of current research achievement in rehabilitation science. Method: On the basis of an understanding of the leading role of rehabilitation research in Western countries and a recognition of achievements made by Asian occupational therapy and physical therapy/physiotherapy scholars, the current bibliometric study examined the research productivity of occupational therapy and physical therapy/physiotherapy professors and associate professors from four Western countries (Australia, Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom) and five Asian countries/regions (Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea). The h‐indices of these scholars were retrieved online and aggregated to quantify the research productivity of institutions and countries/regions. Results: Australia, Canada, Hong Kong and the United States were identified as countries/regions with higher research productivity in occupational therapy and physical therapy/physiotherapy. The institutions were ranked on the basis of the median h‐indices of their professors and associate professors; the top 20 productive institutions with occupational therapy programmes had a median h‐index of 17.5 or higher, whereas the benchmark of the top 20 institutions with physical therapy/physiotherapy programmes was 25. Conclusion: Professors and associate professors in Australia, Canada, Hong Kong and the United States are productive in occupational therapy and physical therapy/physiotherapy research. The number of faculty members and university connections are regarded as important for research achievement. Recommendations for various levels of collaboration are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. Prevalence of behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia in cognitively impaired elderly residents of long‐term care facilities in East Asia: a cross‐sectional study.
- Author
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Makimoto, Kiyoko, Kang, Younhee, Kobayashi, Sayuri, Liao, Xiao‐yan, Panuthai, Sirirat, Sung, Huei‐chuan, Suzuki, Mizue, Terada, Saya, and Yamakawa, Miyae
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COGNITION disorders diagnosis ,DIAGNOSIS of dementia ,DEMENTIA risk factors ,DEMENTIA ,APATHY ,COGNITION disorders ,COMPARATIVE studies ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,NURSING home patients ,SURVEYS ,DISABILITIES ,DISEASE prevalence ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the prevalence of behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) in cognitively impaired elderly residents of long‐term care facilities in East Asia and to explore the factors associated with these patterns. Methods: This was a cross‐sectional survey of BPSD in cognitively impaired elderly residents of long‐term care facilities in Japan, South Korea, China, Taiwan, and Thailand. The Mini‐Mental State Examination, Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR), and Neuropsychiatric Inventory, Nursing Home version (NPI‐NH), were used to assess cognitive status, dementia severity, and BPSD, respectively. NPI‐NH subscale severity scores were multiplied by frequency scores to obtain the subscale scores and aggregated into two groups based on score (clinically insignificant = 1– 3; clinically significant ≥4). Results: Data from 662 people were analyzed. Median age, median Mini‐Mental State Examination scores, and median CDR scores differed significantly among the seven study sites. The prevalence of BPSD varied from 64% in Taiwan to 100% in dementia care units in Japan, and the median total NPI‐NH scores ranged from 2 in Taiwan to 14 in dementia care units in Japan. After stratification of the sample by dementia severity and clinical significance of NPI‐NH scores, differences in the prevalence of clinically significant BPSD were mostly observed among facilities dedicated to dementia patients in the CDR 1 group. In the CDR 3 group, the prevalence of some clinically significant BPSD, such as apathy, was high even among study sites with low median total NPI‐NH scores. Conclusions: Our findings may suggest referral and selection biases in the study sites. Future prospective studies are needed to address the impact of environmental and care factors on the occurrence of BPSD in Asian countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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11. REDISTRIBUTIVE LAND REFORM AND STRUCTURAL CHANGE IN JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA, AND TAIWAN.
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İşcan, Talan B
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AGRICULTURAL productivity ,LAND reform ,LABOR supply ,PUBLIC lands ,AGRICULTURE - Abstract
Redistributive land reforms implemented in post-WWII Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan have often been considered a substantial stimulus for these countries' subsequent economic growth. Before the reforms, there were a small number of large landlords and many small tenant cultivators, but after the reforms, tenancy effectively disappeared. This article assesses the impact of reforms on structural change and income per capita, and shows that reforms were responsible for at least half of the actual reallocation of labor out of agriculture in each of these countries in the aftermath of the reforms. By contrast, their impact on income per capita was small. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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12. Better way to measure ageing in East Asia that takes life expectancy into account.
- Author
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Scherbov, Sergei, Sanderson, Warren C, and Gietel‐Basten, Stuart
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AGING ,ASIANS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DEPENDENCY (Psychology) ,LIFE expectancy ,RESEARCH funding ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aim The aim of the study was to improve the measurement of ageing taking into account characteristics of populations and in particular changes in life expectancy. Method Using projected life tables, we calculated prospective old age dependency ratios ( POADRs) to 2060, placing the boundary to old age at a moving point with a fixed remaining life expectancy ( RLE) for all countries of East Asia. Results POADRs grow less rapidly than old age dependency ratios ( OADRs). For example, in the Republic of Korea, the OADR is forecast to increase from around 0.1 in 1980 to around 0.8 in 2060, while the POADR is forecast to increase from around 0.1 to 0.4 over the same period. Conclusion Policy makers may wish to take into account the fact that the increases in measures of ageing will be slower when those measures are adjusted for changes in life expectancy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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13. Prevalence of dementia in East Asia: a synthetic review of time trends.
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Wu, Yu‐Tzu, Brayne, Carol, and Matthews, Fiona E.
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DEMENTIA research ,DISEASE prevalence ,POPULATION aging - Abstract
Objective This study aims to synthesise evidence on time trends of dementia prevalence in East Asian countries including Japan, China, South Korea and Taiwan and assess the impact of the societal changes on future prevalence. Method Relevant reviews and recent nationwide studies in East Asia were identified to investigate changes in prevalence of dementia over time taking into account the potential impact of methodological factors and study designs. Results The robust evidence that has been interpreted to suggest a substantial increasing trend over time is less compelling once fundamental differences in study methods and populations across individual surveys are considered. In Japan, longitudinal studies in small areas suggest the potential increase of prevalence after 2000. Increasing trends in China, South Korea and Taiwan over the last 20-30 years are based on the literature review without adjustment for methodological differences. Economic development and huge societal changes alongside the rise of non-communicable disease in East Asia could lead to increasing prevalence of dementia in the future once those cohorts with high risk of dementia reached their older age. Conclusion Current evidence is not sufficient to suggest increasing trends of dementia prevalence in East Asia. Longitudinal studies with representative samples and stable methodology are needed to provide fundamental information of the epidemiology of dementia and identify important risk factors in East Asian societies. © 2015 The Authors. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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14. Trends and Determinants of Social Expenditure in Korea, Japan and Taiwan.
- Author
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Hong, Ijin
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TRENDS ,WELFARE state ,ECONOMICS & politics ,PUBLIC welfare ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,PUBLIC spending - Abstract
Social expenditure analyses have always been a central topic of research for welfare states in Western Europe, with more institutional approaches added to such studies later in time. Research on welfare states in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, on the contrary, has a shorter history, and attention has been paid more on understanding politico-economic institutions on a case-by-case basis, instead of focusing on social expenditure causes and dynamics. This study aims to contribute to the literature with an up-to-date comparative perspective in the study of public social expenditures in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, in a two-fold way. First, after discussing briefly the state of art of research on welfare in East Asia, descriptive data on public social expenditure trends in Korea, Japan and Taiwan are presented in comparison with industrialized welfare states in the West. Second, a pooled cross-sectional regression analysis for panel data is run to uncover the determinants of social expenditure in Korea, Japan and Taiwan. A new comparative dataset has been constructed by merging secondary data on public social expenditures and socio-economic and political variables made publicly available by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and the Taiwanese national government. Results seem to suggest that there is a serious need of better conceptualizing political determinants of welfare expenditures in East Asia, since they will probably represent the most important field for welfare development in these countries in years to come. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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15. East Asian Childbearing Patterns and Policy Developments.
- Author
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Frejka, Tomas, Jones, Gavin W., and Sardon, Jean-Paul
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HUMAN fertility ,BIRTH rate ,POPULATION statistics ,WORK-life balance ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
Childbearing behavior in East Asian countries has changed rapidly during the past half century from an average of five to seven children per family, to replacement-level fertility, and subsequently to unprecedentedly low levels, the lowest in the world. This article analyzes fertility trends in Hong Kong, Japan, singapore, south Korea, and Taiwan using cohort fertility data and methods, then examines social and economic causes of the childbearing trends, and surveys policies pursued to reverse the fertility trends. Postponement of childbearing started in the 1970s with continuously fewer delayed births being 'recuperated,' which resulted in ultra-low fertility. A rapid expansion of education and employment among women in a patriarchal environment has generated a stark dilemma for women who would like to combine childbearing with a career. Policy responses have been slow, with a more serious attempt to address issues in recent years. Thus far public and private institutions are not devoting sufficient attention to generating broad social change supportive of parenting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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