330 results
Search Results
2. New patterns of family formation in Italy. Which tools for which interpretations?
- Author
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Micheli GA
- Subjects
- Behavior, Demography, Developed Countries, Europe, Italy, Politics, Population, Research, Social Behavior, Family, Family Characteristics, Fertility, Life Style, Models, Theoretical, Population Dynamics, Psychology, Social Adjustment, Social Change, Social Values, Warfare
- Published
- 1996
3. Human Development in Times of Social Change: Theoretical Considerations and Research Needs
- Author
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Pinquart, Martin and Silbereisen, Rainer K.
- Abstract
Although social change is diverse and ubiquitous, there is to date little research on the impact of social change on individual development, nor on the variables that may mediate and moderate this impact. This lack is, in part, based on insufficient consideration of psychological theories that may be applied to social change, but particularly on the lack of specific theories on psychological consequences of social change. In addition, methodological problems in measuring the complexity of social change have limited research on the consequences of social change on human development. With a focus on the effects of the breakdown of the communist system in Eastern Germany and Eastern Europe on individual development, the present paper analyses how prominent psychological theories can be applied to research on human development in times of social change, namely, Bronfenbrenner's ecological paradigm, the transactional stress theory, and recent developments of lifespan theories of control and coping. A behavioural model is introduced that analyses developmental consequences of individual's coping with social change. Finally, we discuss methodological implications for studying social change and set out future research needs. (Contains 1 figure.)
- Published
- 2004
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4. Immigrant women in Australia: resources, family and work.
- Author
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Evans MD
- Subjects
- Australia, Behavior, Culture, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Economics, Europe, Family Characteristics, Health Workforce, Marriage, Pacific Islands, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Research, Emigration and Immigration, Employment, Ethnicity, Income, Psychology, Social Class, Socioeconomic Factors, Statistics as Topic, Transients and Migrants, Women's Rights
- Published
- 1984
5. Dementia: challenges for social work education in Europe.
- Author
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Keating, Frank
- Subjects
SOCIAL work education ,AGE distribution ,AGING ,DEMENTIA ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIAL case work ,SOCIAL workers ,STUDENTS ,STUDENT attitudes ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,TEACHING methods ,PATIENT-centered care ,OLD age ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Dementia has been identified as a global challenge across the spectrum of health and social care (World Health Organisation. (2012) Dementia: A public health priority. Geneva: WHO). This paper will explore the implications of this for social work education and the challenges it poses. There is a lack of this focus on social work with older people and people with dementia (pwd) in social work education. Based on calls for an infusion of content on ageing and dementia in social work curricula, paper proposes that we should adopt a person-centred philosophy alongside gerontological social work competencies to achieve this. The specific aim of this paper, therefore, is to explore how we can use these ideas as teaching tools to engage social work students in the discourse on dementia and to develop appropriate skills to work with pwd, their families and carers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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6. Integrity and the corruption debate in sport: where is the integrity?
- Author
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Gardiner, Simon, Parry, Jim, and Robinson, Simon
- Subjects
MISCONDUCT in sports ,CORRUPTION ,INTEGRITY ,DIALOGUE ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Research question:The paper is based on the contention that ‘integrity’ is a significantly under-theorised and under-conceptualised value within sports particularly in its use by a range of organisations fighting corruption in sport, which constitute what can be termed the ‘sports integrity industry’. The ‘sports integrity industry’ reveals: different narratives about integrity amongst the different groups; a lack of integration between the different views of integrity in sport; and the danger of imposing a corporate model of (behavioural-based) integrity. Research methods:The approach adopted in the research is two-fold. Initially, a brief examination will be made of the use of the term integrity by a range of bodies within Europe and wider internationally as part of the sports integrity industry. This identifies different level of depth and sophistication of the meanings given to the term. The second part of the paper clears the conceptual ground, examining the different philosophical and psychological views of integrity. Results and findings:This analysis will distinguish moral and behavioural integrity and examine the theoretical basis for the different understandings of integrity that have been developed in literature around business and public sector activities. The paper concludes that as far as effective engagement with corruption, sport needs to look beyond its own experience and be conscious of the wider debate concerning integrity. Implications:There is an urgent need for the development of the concept and practice of integrity and effective governance in sport that recognises the inherent integrity of sport itself; personal integrity; organisational integrity and procedural integrity in sports events. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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7. A critical examination of the health promoting prison two decades on.
- Author
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Woodall, James
- Subjects
POLICY sciences ,CORPORATE culture ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH policy ,NEEDS assessment ,PRISON psychology ,MEDICAL care of prisoners ,SOCIAL psychology ,HEALTH & social status ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Two decades since the WHO Regional Office for Europe outlined and published a report on health promotion in prison, which stimulated further debate on the concept of the ‘health promoting prison’, this paper discusses the extent to which the concept has translated into practice and the extent to which success has been achieved. This paper primarily focuses on why there has been a gap between the strategic philosophy of health promotion in prison and practical implementation, suggesting that factors such as ‘lifestyle drift’ and public and political opinion have played a part. A further argument is made in relation to the overall commitment of European countries and more broadly WHO in their support of settings-based health promotion in this context. It is proposed that there has been a weakening of commitment over time with a worrying ‘negative trajectory’ of support for health promoting prisons. The paper argues that despite these challenges, the opportunities and potential to address the needs of those who are often most vulnerable and excluded is colossal and acting to tackle this should be a greater priority. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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8. Belief systems enforcing female genital mutilation in Europe.
- Author
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Alhassan, Yussif Nagumse, Barrett, Hazel, Brown, Katherine E., and Kwah, Kayleigh
- Subjects
FEMALE genital mutilation ,HEALTH attitudes ,PARENTS ,RELIGION ,HUMAN sexuality ,SOCIAL norms ,SOCIAL skills ,SOCIALIZATION ,PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,SOCIAL support ,NOMADS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose - Despite numerous studies on FGM, little is known about belief systems that support FGM in the EU. The purpose of this paper is to explore the dynamic nature of belief systems and enforcement mechanisms that perpetuate FGM among three African migrant communities in the EU. Design/methodology/approach - This paper is based on data collected through community-based participatory action research in three communities: Eritrean and Ethiopian community in Palermo, Italy; Guinea Bissauan community in Lisbon, Portugal; and Senegalese and Gambian community in Banyoles, Spain. A total of 24 FGDs and 70 in-depth narrative interviews were conducted for the research. Findings - The research finds that belief systems supporting the practice of FGM among African migrants in the European diaspora are similar to those in their home countries. Beliefs structured around religion, sexuality, decency, marriage and socialisation are particularly significant in perpetuating FGM in the study migrant communities. These are enforced through sanctions and social expectations from the migrants' home and host communities. Research limitations/implications - Members of the migrant communities that were the focus of this research are ethnically diverse; therefore it is possible that differences in the practice of and views on FGM by various ethnicities may have been masked. Also, due to close linkages between the migrants and their home countries it was hard to delineate beliefs that are specific to the host countries. In addition, it was difficult to assess the level of education of the migrants and how this may have impacted on their beliefs due to their contrasting and inconsistent educational backgrounds. Originality/value - This paper provides evidence to show that the practice of FGM among migrants in the EU is driven by both social norms and individual (parent) behaviour and therefore there is a need for interventions to focus on individual behaviour change and social norm transformation techniques. It also suggests that beliefs around FGM have remained socially significant among migrants despite their exposure to European culture because such beliefs are used to promote the moral standards of girls, marriageability of women, respectability of families, and the assertion of cultural and religious identity in the migrants' new environment. The paper further underscores the role of migrants' European context as well as the home country in strengthening beliefs that perpetuate FGM in the EU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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9. A qualitative study: health professionals' perceptions toward psychiatric palliative care for people with serious mental illness.
- Author
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Baird, Donna S.
- Subjects
PATIENT autonomy ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RESEARCH methodology ,GROUNDED theory ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,QUALITY of life ,THEMATIC analysis ,JUDGMENT sampling ,MENTAL illness ,PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
Purpose: People with mental disorders experience higher rates of disability and mortality disproportionately than the general population. Until recently, psychiatric palliative care (PPC) for people with serious mental illness (SMI) was not explored as a treatment option. This paper aims to explore the feasibility of PPC as a supportive care model for people with serious mental illness. Design/methodology/approach: Fifteen health-care professionals' in the USA and Europe participated in semi-structured phone interviews regarding PPC for people with SMI. The Qualitative Analysis Guide of Leuven (QUAGOL) was used to conduct thematic analysis of the data. Findings: PPC was identified as a supportive care model that could improve quality of life and enhance patient autonomy for people with SMI. While PPC was endorsed as a possible new standard of care, it is imperative that the model be piloted to determine its efficacy as a viable treatment option among adults. Originality/value: There are limited studies that investigate the perceptions of health professionals' regarding the use of PPC as a treatment option for people with SMI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Recent Research on the Psychological Effects of Unemployment.
- Author
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Dooley, David and Catalano, Ralph
- Subjects
UNEMPLOYMENT ,PSYCHOLOGY ,RESEARCH ,ECONOMICS ,METHODOLOGY - Abstract
Economic turbulence in the early 1980s stimulated not only popular and governmental concern about the effects of unemployment, but also extensive research on the topic. This journal issue presents 10 representative reports of such recent research from the United States and Europe. Of the two principal methodologies used in this field, aggregate time-series analysis and individual-level surveys, this issue is limited to the individual-level literature. Two papers provide a social psychological and human developmental orientation to the topic. Then, six papers address the psychological costs of unemployment, four based on population surveys and two dealing with plant closings. Finally, two papers describe policy responses being considered or implemented in North America and Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
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11. In search of traces of the mandrake myth: the historical, and ethnobotanical roots of its vernacular names.
- Author
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Dafni, Amots, Blanché, Cesar, Khatib, Salekh Aqil, Petanidou, Theodora, Aytaç, Bedrettin, Pacini, Ettore, Kozuharova, Ekaterina, Geva-Kleinberger, Aharon, Shahvar, Soli, Dajic, Zora, Klug, Helmut W., and Benítez, Guillermo
- Subjects
HISTORICAL linguistics ,INTELLECT ,PLANT anatomy ,TERMS & phrases ,RESEARCH funding ,RELIGION & medicine ,MYTHOLOGY ,PLANT roots ,PHYTOCHEMICALS ,DOGS ,ETHNOLOGY ,HALLUCINOGENIC drugs ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PLANT extracts ,RITES & ceremonies ,MEDICINAL plants ,FOLKLORE ,NARCOTICS ,WITCHCRAFT ,APHRODISIACS - Abstract
Background: Mandrake (Mandragora spp.) is one of the most famous medicinal plant in western cultures since Biblical times and throughout written history. In many cultures, mandrake is related to magic and witchcraft, which is said to have a psychosomatic effect (especially when mandrake contains narcotic compounds) in addition to the pharmacological influence, as occurs with other narcotic magical plants. Due to its unique properties and related myths, it is not surprising that this plant has many names in many languages. Methods: This paper presents an attempt to reconstruct the historical, ethnobotanical, and folkloristic roots of 292 vernacular names of Mandragora spp. in forty-one languages. We used the plant's morphological data, philology, myths and legends, medicinal properties and uses, as well as historical evidence and folkloric data, to explain meaning, origin, migration, and history of the plant's names. Results: The names were classified into the following main categories: Derivatives of mandragora (19 languages), alraun (7) and of yabroukh (5). The salient groups of the plant's vernacular names are related to: Anthropomorphism (33 names in 13 languages); Similarity to other plants (28/9); Supernatural agents (28/9); Narcotic effects (21/8); Leaves, fruits, and seeds (21/8); Aphrodisiac properties (17/10); Use of a dog (15/9); Gallows (14/5); Black magic, sorcery, witchcraft (13/8), and Medicinal use (11/7). Conclusions: This frequency distribution of the mandrake's vernacular names reflects its widespread reputation as related to the doctrine of signatures, beliefs in its supernatural, natural, and mythic powers, and to a lesser extent, its uses in magic and medicine. A spatiotemporal analysis of the mandrake's names supports the old idea that the pulling ceremonies for this plant originated in the Near East and that various other myths related to this plant may have originated in different places and periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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12. Navigating behavioral energy sufficiency. Results from a survey in Swiss cities on potential behavior change.
- Author
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Seidl, Roman, Moser, Corinne, and Blumer, Yann
- Subjects
ENERGY consumption ,POWER resources ,ENERGY conservation ,CLIMATE change ,ELECTRICITY - Abstract
Many countries have some kind of energy-system transformation either planned or ongoing for various reasons, such as to curb carbon emissions or to compensate for the phasing out of nuclear energy. One important component of these transformations is the overall reduction in energy demand. It is generally acknowledged that the domestic sector represents a large share of total energy consumption in many countries. Increased energy efficiency is one factor that reduces energy demand, but behavioral approaches (known as “sufficiency”) and their respective interventions also play important roles. In this paper, we address citizens’ heterogeneity regarding both their current behaviors and their willingness to realize their sufficiency potentials—that is, to reduce their energy consumption through behavioral change. We collaborated with three Swiss cities for this study. A survey conducted in the three cities yielded thematic sets of energy-consumption behavior that various groups of participants rated differently. Using this data, we identified four groups of participants with different patterns of both current behaviors and sufficiency potentials. The paper discusses intervention types and addresses citizens’ heterogeneity and behaviors from a city-based perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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13. Relational identities on EU borderlands: the case of Poles in Belarus and Belarusians in Poland.
- Author
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Wallace, Claire and Patsiurko, Natalka
- Subjects
ETHNICITY ,MINORITIES ,BORDERLANDS ,POLISH people -- Foreign countries ,PSYCHOLOGY of Minorities ,BELARUSIANS ,EASTERN European history, 1989- ,HISTORY of the European Union ,HISTORY ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The paper argues that the well-known triadic relationship between kin state, resident state and national minority needs to take into account a fourth dimension: that of European institutions. This is illustrated through a study of relational identities on the EU’s Eastern border where the reconfiguration of ethnic relations followed the end of the iron curtain and EU accession. It considers two neighbouring ethnic minorities. One minority is part of the EU – the Belarusians in Poland – and the other is not part of the EU – the Poles in Belarus. The paper argues that the intersection of these four relational dimensions result in contrasting kinds of ethnic identification for the two minority groups leading to either fluidification or solidification under different circumstances. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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14. Police Psychology in Singapore: The Red Dot Experience.
- Author
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Khader, Majeed, Ang, Jansen, Maan, Diong, Li, Poh, Min, Toh, A., Jayagowry, Misir, Carolyn, and Fen, Ho
- Subjects
POLICE psychology ,APPLIED psychology ,POLICE morale - Abstract
Despite developments in police psychology in North America and Europe, little is known about developments in other parts of the world. Yet, this knowledge will reinforce the development of the field of police psychology internationally and strengthen its scientific theories, practices and programs. This paper therefore traces the development of police psychology in Singapore for over two decades across four waves of development. This paper also describes the developments in three areas of police psychology (services to police officers, police operations and the police organization) and details the various police psychological services programs and services in Singapore. The paper concludes with a discussion on strategic concerns for police psychologists worldwide, arguing that there is a need to discuss the 'what works, when and where?' in police psychology, when it is applied across the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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15. GODARD AND THE LANGUAGE OF CINEMA.
- Author
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Şerban, Silviu
- Subjects
MOTION pictures ,PHILOSOPHY of language ,PSYCHOLOGY ,FILMMAKING - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to gain a deeper understanding of the nexus between the poetics of Godard's use of time, Godard's cinematic language of accumulation, the European art cinema of Godard, and the diversity of Godard's films. The paper generates insights about Godard's fascination with the interactivity between individual and environment, cinema as a largely psychological phenomenon, and Godard's relationship with filmmaking originality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
16. Geographical imaginaries of the 'New Europe' and the 'East' in a business context: the case of Italian investors in Slovakia, Romania, and Ukraine.
- Author
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Sellar, Christian
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations & culture ,INVESTMENT analysis ,DECISION making ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,EUROPEANIZATION ,CROSS-cultural communication ,CROSS-cultural differences ,INVESTORS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
A large literature in cultural geography, history, and sociology has discussed the different, constantly shifting, and mutually defining constructions of 'Europe,' 'Eastern Europe,' and more recently the 'New Europe,' focusing mostly on examples from the media, politics, and sometimes the arts. However, the literature has done little to analyze the construction of notions of Europe, and the role they play, in the realm of business. This paper begins to explore the connection between cultural understandings of Europe and investment decisions. Specifically, it follows a group of investors from Italy, showing the 'cultural clashes' they encountered in setting up business operations in Slovakia, Romania, and Ukraine. The paper is developed in three steps. First, the relevant cultural and economic geographical literatures are reviewed. Second, the historical progression of Italian investment since the 1990s is discussed in relation to broader economic changes in Italy and the New Europe. Third, investors' changing perceptions of the 'New Europe' are discussed in the framework of the consolidation of Italian investments in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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17. Waiting for a European Identity ... Reflections on the Process of Identification with Europe.
- Author
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Duchesne, Sophie
- Subjects
IDENTITY politics ,SELF-perception ,POLITICAL psychology ,EUROPEANS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper questions the introduction, in the mid-1990s, of the concept of European identity for the analysis of citizens' attitudes towards European integration. It argues that this notion was imported from social psychology without appropriate theoretical adaptation to the political democratic nature of the social group that a European polity would be. As a consequence, the current notion of European identity does not contribute very much to an understanding of the long-standing national and social differences of citizens' attitude towards the EU. The paper argues that for the time being, the identification process with a work-in-progress European polity should be conceived following three principles: First, European identity refers to a democratic community, that is, a special kind of social group whose vocation is self government. Thus, the link between citizens matters as much as differentiation with the others. Second, European identity is very definitively a work in progress. Lastly, it is developing in industrial societies, characterised by growing individualism but also remaining strong national identities. Building on Tilly's concept of identity and major works on national identity, this paper suggests a concept of identification with Europe that acknowledges the complexity of competitive processes at stake in identity change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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18. Ambition and Jealousy: Income Interactions in the ‘Old’ Europe versus the ‘New’ Europe and the United States.
- Author
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SENIK, CLAUDIA
- Subjects
WELL-being ,INCOME ,JEALOUSY ,AMBITION ,SOCIAL conditions in the United States, 1980- ,SOCIAL conditions in Europe ,ECONOMICS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Using individual-level data from a large number of countries, this paper examines how self-reported subjective well-being depends on own income and reference income, where reference income is defined as the income of one's professional peers. It uncovers a divide between ‘old’—low-mobility—European countries on the one hand, and ‘new’ European post-Transition countries and the United States on the other. The relative importance of comparisons (‘jealousy’) versus information (‘ambition’) seems to depend on the degree of mobility and uncertainty in the considered countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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19. Council of Europe regulations relevant to intervening in psychic capacities.
- Author
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Gadd, Elaine
- Subjects
PSYCHIC ability ,PARAPSYCHOLOGY ,MEDICAL ethics ,PSYCHOLOGY ,CHILD psychology - Abstract
Copyright of Poiesis & Praxis is the property of Springer Nature 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.)
- Published
- 2004
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20. Biomedical practices from a patient perspective. Experiences of Polish female migrants in Barcelona, Berlin and London.
- Author
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Main, Izabella
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,CHILDBIRTH ,COMMUNICATION ,PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PEDIATRICS ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,CULTURAL pluralism ,RESEARCH funding ,WOMEN ,ETHNOLOGY research ,FIELD research ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper focuses on the diversity in patients' experience of biomedicine and contrasts it with the normative view characteristic of health professionals. Ethnographic fieldwork among Polish migrant women in London, Barcelona and Berlin included interviews about their experiences with local healthcare and health professionals. Themes drawn from the narratives are differences between the cities in terms of communication between patients and health professionals, respect for patients' choices and dignity, attitudes to pregnancy and birth (different levels of medicalization), and paediatric care. It is argued that patients continuously negotiate among their own views and expectations based on previous experiences and knowledge from personal communication; internet forums and publications; and the offer of medical services in the countries of their settlement. Patients experience pluralism of therapeutic traditions within and outside bio-medicine. In turn, representatives of bio-medicine are rarely aware of other medical practices and beliefs and this leads to various misunderstandings. By highlighting the pluralism of medical practices in European countries and the increasing mobility of patients, this case study has useful implications for medical anthropologists and health professionals in a broader Western context, such as raising sensitivity to different communication strategies and a diversity of curing traditions and expectations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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21. Development of a cross-cultural deprivation index in five European countries.
- Author
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Guillaume, Elodie, Pornet, Carole, Dejardin, Olivier, Launay, Ludivine, Lillini, Roberto, Vercelli, Marina, Marí-Dell'Olmo, Marc, Fernández Fontelo, Amanda, Borrell, Carme, Ribeiro, Ana Isabel, de Pina, Maria Fatima, Mayer, Alexandra, Delpierre, Cyrille, Rachet, Bernard, and Launoy, Guy
- Subjects
POLICY sciences ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,NEEDS assessment ,POVERTY ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOLOGY of the sick ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HEALTH equity ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background Despite a concerted policy effort in Europe, social inequalities in health are a persistent problem. Developing a standardised measure of socioeconomic level across Europe will improve the understanding of the underlying mechanisms and causes of inequalities. This will facilitate developing, implementing and assessing new and more effective policies, and will improve the comparability and reproducibility of health inequality studies among countries. This paper presents the extension of the European Deprivation Index (EDI), a standardised measure first developed in France, to four other European countries--Italy, Portugal, Spain and England, using available 2001 and 1999 national census data. Methods and results The method previously tested and validated to construct the French EDI was used: first, an individual indicator for relative deprivation was constructed, defined by the minimal number of unmet fundamental needs associated with both objective (income) poverty and subjective poverty. Second, variables available at both individual (European survey) and aggregate (census) levels were identified. Third, an ecological deprivation index was constructed by selecting the set of weighted variables from the second step that best correlated with the individual deprivation indicator. Conclusions For each country, the EDI is a weighted combination of aggregated variables from the national census that are most highly correlated with a country-specific individual deprivation indicator. This tool will improve both the historical and international comparability of studies, our understanding of the mechanisms underlying social inequalities in health and implementation of intervention to tackle social inequalities in health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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22. Implementing the health promoting school in Denmark: a case study.
- Author
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Nordin, Lone Lindegaard
- Subjects
BREAKFASTS ,FOCUS groups ,HEALTH education ,HEALTH promotion ,INTERVIEWING ,CASE studies ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH evaluation ,STUDENT health ,SURVEYS ,TEACHERS ,VOLUNTEERS ,QUALITATIVE research ,HEALTH education teachers ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to provide insight into teachers’ practice in implementing school-based health promotion. Design/methodology/approach – This qualitative research was designed as a multiple case study. The study involved five schools, 233 pupils in the age 12-16 and 23 teachers. The primary data generation method were focus groups. Findings – According to the national guidelines the health education in primary schools in Denmark should be based on the critical approach to health education developed within the European Network of Health Promoting Schools. However, the study showed that teachers’ implementation of the guidelines in practice was closer to traditional health education, which focuses only lifestyle change, than to critical health education which also explores the underlying conditions for health. Research limitations/implications – The study explored teachers’ implementation practices, and the individual and institutional factors that influence the practice. This paper restricts itself to examining teachers’ practice against the national curriculum guidelines. Practical implications – The teachers were not sufficiently familiar with the curriculum guidelines or the critical approach to health education. The inclusion of the national curriculum and the principles of critical health education in the initial and in-service professional development of teachers is an urgent priority if this gap is to be reduced. Originality/value – This paper contributes to the debate related to the potentials and barriers for implementing of health promotion interventions in a school context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Reporting biases in self-assessed physical and cognitive health status of older Europeans.
- Author
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Spitzer, Sonja and Weber, Daniela
- Subjects
DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,AGE groups ,COGNITIVE ability ,RETIREMENT age ,COGNITIVE neuroscience ,CULTURAL education - Abstract
This paper explores which demographic characteristics substantially bias self-reported physical and cognitive health status of older Europeans. The analysis utilises micro-data for 19 European countries from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe to compare performance-tested outcomes of mobility and memory with their self-reported equivalents. Relative importance analysis based on multinomial logistic regressions shows that the bias in self-reported health is mostly due to reporting heterogeneities between countries and age groups, whereas gender contributes little to the discrepancy. Concordance of mobility and cognition measures is highly related; however, differences in reporting behaviour due to education and cultural background have a larger impact on self-assessed memory than on self-assessed mobility. Southern as well as Central and Eastern Europeans are much more likely to misreport their physical and cognitive abilities than Northern and Western Europeans. Overall, our results suggest that comparisons of self-reported health between countries and age groups are prone to significant biases, whereas comparisons between genders are credible for most European countries. These findings are crucial given that self-assessed data are often the only information available to researchers and policymakers when asking health-related questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. EUSKOR: End-to-end coreference resolution system for Basque.
- Author
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Soraluze, Ander, Arregi, Olatz, Arregi, Xabier, and Díaz de Ilarraza, Arantza
- Subjects
BASQUE language ,ERROR analysis in mathematics ,LINGUISTIC analysis ,NEUROLINGUISTICS ,SIEVES ,MASS media - Abstract
This paper describes the process of adapting the Stanford Coreference resolution module to the Basque language, taking into account the characteristics of the language. The module has been integrated in a linguistic analysis pipeline obtaining an end-to-end coreference resolution system for the Basque language. The adaptation process explained can benefit and facilitate other languages with similar characteristics in the implementation of their coreference resolution systems. During the experimentation phase, we have demonstrated that language-specific features have a noteworthy effect on coreference resolution, obtaining a gain in CoNLL score of 7.07 with respect to the baseline system. We have also analysed the effect that preprocessing has in coreference resolution, comparing the results obtained with automatic mentions versus gold mentions. When gold mentions are provided, the results increase 11.5 points in CoNLL score in comparison with results obtained when automatic mentions are used. The contribution of each sieve is analysed concluding that morphology is essential for agglutinative languages to obtain good performance in coreference resolution. Finally, an error analysis of the coreference resolution system is presented which have revealed our system’s weak points and help to determine the improvements of the system. As a result of the error analysis, we have enriched the Basque coreference resolution adding new two sieves, obtaining an improvement of 0.24 points in CoNLL F
1 when automatic mentions are used and of 0.39 points when the gold mentions are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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25. Europe's Many Souls: Exploring Cultural Complexes and Identities.
- Author
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Wright, Susanna
- Subjects
CULTURAL identity ,SOUL ,PSYCHOLOGY ,VENDETTA - Abstract
I Europe's Many Souls i is the seventh book in the series edited by Thomas Singer entitled I Analytical Psychology and Contemporary Culture i . Following introductory chapters from Singer and Rasche, contributions by sixteen authors continue the exploration of their concept of "cultural complexes". As Rasche remarks 'when we talk about cultural complexes, we are also talking about identity, at least some of the time' (Rasche & Singer 2016, p. 22), and perhaps because group identity and differentiation are so fundamental to individual identity formation and sense of self, the more a cultural complex is challenged, the more rigid it may become. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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26. Against the proportionality principle: Experimental findings on bargaining over losses.
- Author
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Gaertner, Wulf, Bradley, Richard, Xu, Yongsheng, and Schwettmann, Lars
- Subjects
LABOR economics ,MONEY supply ,COLLECTIVE bargaining ,LEGACIES ,PUBLIC finance ,BARGAINING power - Abstract
The outcomes of bargaining over losses, the subject of this paper, have rarely been studied. But experimental studies of related situations, such as those involving bankruptcies or bequests in which the sum of the legal claims that can be made against a bank or firm or estate are greater than their values, have produced strong support for the proportionality principle. To test whether this principle would find support in other situations involving losses we designed an experimental game in which four players start out with differing initial endowments of real money. They are then informed that a certain amount of this resource has to be given back to the experimenter. How should the loss be shared among the agents? This game was run at different locations and under different treatments over a period of almost three years. We found that the proportionality principle was rarely proposed and even less frequently accepted as a solution to this problem. One of the main reasons for this result was that the two players with the smallest endowments opposed most of the proposals which asked them to contribute at least some positive amount of their own initial resource. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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27. ‘We’re passengers sailing in the same ship, but we have our own berths to sleep in’: Evaluating patient and public involvement within a regional research programme: An action research project informed by Normalisation Process Theory.
- Author
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Keenan, Julia, Poland, Fiona, Boote, Jonathan, Howe, Amanda, Wythe, Helena, Varley, Anna, Vicary, Penny, Irvine, Lisa, and Wellings, Amander
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ACTION research ,SOCIAL science research ,SAILING ships ,THEORY ,PUBLIC health research ,MARINE terminals - Abstract
Background: Patient and public involvement (PPI) is a requirement for UK health and social care research funding. Evidence for how best to implement PPI in research programmes, such as National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaborations for Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRCs), remains limited. This paper reports findings from an action research (AR) project called IMPRESS, which aims to strengthen PPI within CLAHRC East of England (EoE). IMPRESS combines AR with Normalisation Process Theory (NPT) to explore PPI within diverse case study projects, identifying actions to implement, test and refine to further embed PPI. Methods: We purposively selected CLAHRC EoE case study projects for in-depth analysis of PPI using NPT. Data were generated from project PPI documentation, semi-structured qualitative interviews with researchers and PPI contributors and focus groups. Transcripts and documents were subjected to abductive thematic analysis and triangulation within case. Systematic across case comparison of themes was undertaken with findings and implications refined through stakeholder consultation. Results: We interviewed 24 researchers and 13 PPI contributors and analysed 28 documents from 10 case studies. Three focus groups were held: two with researchers (n = 4 and n = 6) and one with PPI contributors (n = 5). Findings detail to what extent projects made sense of PPI, bought in to PPI, operationalised PPI and appraised it, thus identifying barriers and enablers to fully embedded PPI. Conclusion: Combining NPT with AR allows us to assess the embeddedness of PPI within projects and programme, to inform specific local action and report broader conceptual lessons for PPI knowledge and practice informing the development of an action framework for embedding PPI in research programmes. To embed PPI within similar programmes teams, professionals, disciplines and institutions should be recognised as variably networked into existing PPI support. Further focus and research is needed on sharing PPI learning and supporting innovation in PPI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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28. Psychology of athletes' dual careers: A state-of-the-art critical review of the European discourse.
- Author
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Stambulova, Natalia B. and Wylleman, Paul
- Subjects
- *
ATHLETES , *PROFESSIONAL peer review , *PHILOSOPHY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *SPORTS , *SPORTS psychology , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *WORK , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *CULTURAL awareness , *LITERATURE reviews , *NARRATIVES - Abstract
(a) To provide a state-of-the-art critical review of European dual career (DC) research (2015–2018, English language), (b) to position the current DC (psychological) research within the athlete career sport psychology discourse and within the European DC discourse, and (c) to identify research gaps and future challenges. These objectives were formulated after an appraisal of nine existing review-type papers contributed to the European DC discourse. This review has been informed by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta Analyses (Moher, Liberati, Tetzlaff, Altman, & The PRISMA group, 2010) and recommendations on presenting results of the state-of-the-art critical review by Grant and Booth (2009). Following an extensive literature search across several databases, 42 research papers were used for appraisal, synthesis, and critical analysis of the current DC research. Major tenets of the cultural praxis of athletes' careers (Stambulova & Ryba, 2013a , b ; 2014) were used as a critical lens in the analysis. DC research contributes to and connects the European DC discourse and the athlete career sport psychology discourse. DC in sport and work, DC "costs", DC development environments, DC athletes' mental health and well-being, DC support and training of the support providers constitute the major gaps in current DC research. Filling these gaps presents future challenges for DC research to adequately support practice and policy making within the European DC discourse. • Forty two peer-reviewed dual career (DC) articles from 2015–18 were reviewed. • Mapping and narrative syntheses revealed progress and gaps in current DC research. • Tenets of cultural praxis of athletes' careers were used as a lens for critical reflections. • European DC discourse and athlete career (psychology) discourse were found to overlap. • DC term has been established, and a holistic lifespan perspective informed most studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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29. The Cross-Cultural Competence Inventory: Validity and psychometric properties of the Polish adaptation.
- Author
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Barzykowski, Krystian, Majda, Anna, Przyłęcki, Paweł, and Szkup, Małgorzata
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SELF-esteem ,RESEARCH ,PERFORMANCE ,CULTURAL intelligence ,MEDICAL personnel ,STATISTICAL reliability ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
Background: Due to changes in Polish society resulting from a significant inflow of immigrants to Poland, the need to develop the cultural competences of various professional groups who have contact with immigrants in their work has increased. These groups should include healthcare professionals, especially because of the significant increase in the number of culturally diverse patients. Therefore, medical education in Poland has had to rapidly adapt to this novel situation. For instance, the teaching process should be now more focused on the development and evaluation of the cultural competences of prospective health care workers. However, there is still a lack of standardized, valid and reliable instruments to assess cross-cultural competences among healthcare professionals. The purpose of the present paper was to describe, for the first time, the translation, adaptation, and psychometric evaluation of the Polish version of the Cross-Cultural Competence Inventory. Methods: Across two studies, we examined psychometric properties of the Cross-Cultural Competence Inventory (CCCI) such as reliability (i.e. internal consistency, test-retest reliability, factor structure) and validity (i.e. theoretical, criteria, convergent). In the first study, 408 participants (75% were healthcare professionals) completed the Polish version of the CCCI and the Positive/Negative Attitude Towards Culturally Divergent People Questionnaire. In the second study, 317 participants (97% were healthcare professionals) completed the CCCI twice, with an interval of at least 22 days. In addition, across two study sessions, participants completed questionnaires constructed to measure (a) cultural intelligence, (b) need for cognitive closure, (c) emphatic sensitiveness, (d) emotional intelligence, (e) self-esteem, (f) social desirability, and (g) personality. Finally, to additionally examine the theoretical validity, 36 professional cross-cultural competence trainers completed the CCCI during a one-session study. Results: Our findings confirm the reliability and validity of the CCCI. More precisely, in study 1 we proved the theoretical validity and reliability (i.e. internal consistency) of the CCCI. While the assumed structure did not fit the data well, all items were significantly related to the general factor, thus providing strong support for the usage of the total score of the CCCI. In study 2, we additionally estimated the test-retest reliability and theoretical, criterion and convergent validity. Across two studies we were able to successfully confirm these psychometric properties. The reliability was satisfactory and ranged from .83 to .86. We also observed a high and significant positive correlation between CCCI and the Cultural Intelligence Scale, which measures a concept similar to the one measured by CCCI. In addition, a significant relationship between intercultural competences (CCCI) and other variables such as personality, empathic sensitivity, emotional intelligence, self-esteem (positive correlations) and the need for cognitive closure (mainly negative correlation) were demonstrated. Conclusions: The obtained results support the usage of the CCCI questionnaire in scientific research, such as, for example, among healthcare professionals (nurses, doctors) and students of medical fields (nursing, medicine). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
30. Antitest-Revolte? Zum Für und Wider der Testdiagnostik.
- Author
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Tischler, Lars
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,SOCIAL participation ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,FOREIGN students ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Praxis der Kinderpsychologie und Kinderpsychiatrie is the property of Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG 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.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Increases in wellbeing in the transition to retirement for the unemployed: catching up with formerly employed persons.
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PONOMARENKO, VALENTINA, LEIST, ANJA K., and CHAUVEL, LOUIS
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UNEMPLOYMENT & psychology ,EMPLOYMENT ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,AGING ,LABOR market ,RETIREMENT ,SATISFACTION ,SURVEYS ,WELL-being ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper examines the extent to which wellbeing levels change in the transition to retirement depending on transitioning from being employed, unemployed or economically inactive. Whereas transitioning from employment to unemployment has been found to cause a decrease in subjective wellbeing with more time spent in unemployment, it is not clear how transitioning from unemployment to retirement affects wellbeing levels. We use the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe to monitor the life satisfaction of respondents who retire in between two waves. We portray wellbeing scores before and after retirement and then identify the change in life satisfaction during the retirement transition using a First Difference model. Results indicate that being unemployed before retirement is associated with an increase in life satisfaction, but presents mainly a catching-up effect compared to employed persons transitioning to retirement. These results are still significant if we control for selection into unemployment and country differences. Retirement from labour market inactivity does not lead to significant changes in wellbeing. As the wellbeing of unemployed persons recovers after transitioning to retirement, especially the currently unemployed population should be supported to prevent detrimental consequences of economically unfavourable conditions and lower wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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32. The role of income inequality and social policies on income-related health inequalities in Europe.
- Author
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Jutz, Regina
- Subjects
HEALTH & psychology ,INCOME ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,NATIONAL health services ,SELF-evaluation ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SECONDARY analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Introduction: The aim of the paper is to examine the role of income inequality and redistribution for income-related health inequalities in Europe. This paper contributes in two ways to the literature on macro determinants of socio-economic inequalities in health. First, it widens the distinctive focus of the research field on welfare state regimes to quantifiable measures such as social policy indicators. Second, looking at income differences completes studies on socio-economic health inequalities, which often analyse health inequalities based on educational differences. Methods: Using data from the European Values Study (2008/2009), 42 European countries are available for analysis. Country characteristics are derived from SWIID, Eurostat, and ILO and include indicators for income inequality, social policies, and economic performance. The data is analysed by using a two-step hierarchical estimation approach: At the first step--the individual level--the effect of household income on self-assessed health is extracted and introduced as an indicator measuring income-related health inequalities at the second step, the country-level. Results: Individual-level analyses reveal that income-related health inequalities exist all across Europe. Results from country-level analyses show that higher income inequality is significantly positively related to higher health inequalities while social policies do not show significant relations. Nevertheless, the results show the expected negative association between social policies and health inequalities. Economic performance also has a reducing influence on health inequalities. In all models, income inequality was the dominating explanatory effect for health inequalities. Conclusions: The analyses indicate that income inequality has more impact on health inequalities than social policies. On the contrary, social policies seemed to matter to all individuals regardless of socio-economic position since it is significantly positively linked to overall population health. Even though social policies are not significantly related to health inequalities, the power of public redistribution to impact health inequalities should not be downplayed. Social policies as a way of public redistribution are a possible instrument to reduce income inequalities which would in turn lead to a reduction in health inequalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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33. The migration experience of Greece and the impact of the economic crisis on its migrant and native populations.
- Author
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Cavounidis, Jennifer
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CITIZENSHIP ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,MENTAL health ,PHYSICAL fitness ,POVERTY ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,NOMADS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background This paper provides the socio-economic context of the MIGHEAL study, the results of which are presented in this special issue. The aim of the MIGHEAL study was to compare the physical and mental health of the native and migrant populations of Greece in the wake of the economic crisis that commenced in 2008. Methods The background of the migrant population of Greece is described, drawing on population censuses of Greece and data on residence permits held by foreigners. Then the migrant and native populations are compared with respect to several socio-economic outcomes, using Eurostat data on unemployment and the risk of poverty. Results The settled migrant population of Greece is largely of Central and Eastern European origin, resulting from the massive migrant inflowsthat started at the beginning of the 1990s after the collapse of socialist regimes in the area. Before the economic crisis, migrant unemployment was lower than that of natives, but after its onset, the unemployment of migrants surpassed that of natives. Prior to the crisis, migrants were already subject to greater risk of poverty than natives, but the gap widened considerably subsequent to the crisis. Conclusion The Greek institutional framework has restricted access to citizenship for both first- and second-generation migrants while conditions for permit renewal are onerous, rendering citizenship an important factor differentiating socio-economic outcomes. The different outcomes observed among the native and migrant populations after the onset of the Greek economic crisis create concerns regarding health inequalities between the two populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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34. Life satisfaction of migrants, stayers and returnees: reaping the fruits of migration in old age?
- Author
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BAYKARA-KRUMME, HELEN and PLATT, LUCINDA
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COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH ,INCOME ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,LONELINESS ,RELIGION ,SATISFACTION ,SPOUSES ,SURVEYS ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,NOMADS ,HEALTH & social status ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper evaluates the effects of migration on life satisfaction in later life. We compare the life satisfaction of older migrants with that of non-migrants and return migrants of a similar age and originating from the same regions in Turkey. Turks constitute one of the largest migrant groups in Europe, and the growing population of older Turkish migrants display greater risks of loneliness and material disadvantage compared to native-born populations in Europe. However, compared to their non-migrant peers from the country of origin, older migrants may experience gains from migration that are reflected in their life satisfaction. Using the 2000 Families Study, a large survey of Turkish migrants from the peak labour migration period and their non-migrant comparators, we investigate whether life satisfaction of migrants and stayers differs and the possible causes of any differences. We find that both migrants and return migrants experience higher life satisfaction in old age than stayers. However, the gap cannot be explained by the classical determinants of life satisfaction such as income, health, partner and friends, or religiosity, nor by the better outcomes of the migrants’ children. We discuss possible reasons for this migration satisfaction advantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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35. HIV serostatus knowledge and serostatus disclosure with the most recent anal intercourse partner in a European MSM sample recruited in 13 cities: results from the Sialon-II study.
- Author
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Marcus, Ulrich, Schink, Susanne Barbara, Sherriff, Nigel, Jones, Anna-Marie, Gios, Lorenzo, Folch, Cinta, Berglund, Torsten, Nöstlinger, Christiana, Niedźwiedzka-Stadnik, Marta, Dias, Sonia F., Gama, Ana F., Naseva, Emilia, Alexiev, Ivailo, Staneková, Danica, Toskin, Igor, Pitigoi, Daniela, Rafila, Alexandru, Klavs, Irena, Mirandola, Massimo, and Sialon II Network
- Subjects
HIV infections ,HIV ,HIV status ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,HIV prevention ,HIV infection transmission ,HIV seroconversion ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,METROPOLITAN areas ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,HUMAN sexuality ,VIRAL antibodies ,DISCLOSURE ,SAFE sex ,EVALUATION research ,SEXUAL partners ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Knowledge of HIV status can be important in reducing the risk of HIV exposure. In a European sample of men-who-have-sex-with-men (MSM), we aimed to identify factors associated with HIV serostatus disclosure to the most recent anal intercourse (AI) partner. We also aimed to describe the impact of HIV serostatus disclosure on HIV exposure risks.Methods: During 2013 and 2014, 4901 participants were recruited for the bio-behavioural Sialon-II study in 13 European cities. Behavioural data were collected with a self-administered paper questionnaire. Biological specimens were tested for HIV antibodies. Factors associated with HIV serostatus disclosure with the most recent AI partner were examined using bivariate and multilevel multivariate logistic regression analysis. We also describe the role of serostatus disclosure for HIV exposure of the most recent AI partner.Results: Thirty-five percent (n = 1450) of the study participants reported mutual serostatus disclosure with their most recent AI partner or disclosed having HIV to their partner. Most of these disclosures occurred between steady partners (74%, n = 1077). In addition to the type of partner and HIV diagnosis status, other factors positively associated with HIV serostatus disclosure in the multilevel multivariate logistic regression model were recent testing, no condom use, and outness regarding sexual orientation. Disclosure rates were lowest in three south-eastern European cities. Following condom use (51%, n = 2099), HIV serostatus disclosure (20%, n = 807) was the second most common prevention approach with the most recent AI partner, usually resulting in serosorting. A potential HIV exposure risk for the partner was reported by 26% (111/432) of HIV antibody positive study participants. In 18% (20/111) of exposure episodes, an incorrect HIV serostatus was unknowingly communicated. Partner exposures were equally distributed between steady and non-steady partners.Conclusions: The probability of HIV exposure through condomless AI is substantially lower after serostatus disclosure compared to non-disclosure. Incorrect knowledge of one's HIV status contributes to a large proportion of HIV exposures amongst European MSM. Maintaining or improving condom use for anal intercourse with non-steady partners, frequent testing to update HIV serostatus awareness, and increased serostatus disclosure particularly between steady partners are confirmed as key aspects for reducing HIV exposures amongst European MSM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
36. Scarred from the past or afraid of the future? Unemployment and job satisfaction across European labour markets.
- Author
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Lange, Thomas
- Subjects
JOB satisfaction surveys ,LABOR market ,UNEMPLOYMENT & psychology ,JOB security ,EMPLOYEE attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being ,PROBIT analysis ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,PERSONALITY & occupation ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Previous research has shown that both past unemployment and anticipated future unemployment have a detrimental impact on employees' attitudes and behaviours, which may affect organisational performance. Surprisingly, however, very little is known about the relative impact of past unemployment compared with current job insecurity. Although it is possible that both effects operate simultaneously, this paper – focused on employees' job satisfaction and utilising a set of cross-sectional data derived from the European Social Survey 2006–2007 – reports on a strongly pronounced insecurity effect: anticipated unemployment substantially reduces employees' job satisfaction. Interestingly, inclusion of the perceived risk of future unemployment as a separate predictor variable in ordered probit regressions relegates the experience of past unemployment to a statistically insignificant coefficient and thus weakens the ‘scarring’ hypothesis. These results hold true even when several socio-demographic characteristics and proxies for individual personality traits are controlled. Implications for organisations and human resource practitioners and scope for future research endeavours conclude the analysis of the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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37. RISK AND RESILIENCE IN CHILDREN OF PRISONERS: A RESEARCH REVIEW.
- Author
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CHRISTMANN, KRIS, TURLIUC, MARIA NICOLETA, and MAIREAN, CORNELIA
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CHILDREN of prisoners ,MENTAL health ,CHILD psychology ,IMPRISONMENT ,SOCIAL support ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Scientific Annals of the 'Al. I. Cuza' University, Iasi. Sociology & Social Work / Analele Stiintifice ale Universitatii 'Al. I. Cuza' Iasi Sociologie si Asistenta Sociala is the property of Alexandru Ioan Cuza University 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.)
- Published
- 2012
38. Do Europeans View their Homes as Castles? Homeownership and Poverty Perception throughout Europe.
- Author
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Watson, Duncan and Webb, Robert
- Subjects
HOME ownership ,ECONOMIC security ,POVERTY & psychology ,INCOME inequality ,EQUALITY & economics ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The paper investigates the notion that homeownership affects poverty perception. This is investigated by utilising a logit model to analyse various characteristics of homeowners in 11 different European nations. Overall, the analysis fails to reject the notion that homeowners throughout Europe are less likely to perceive themselves as living in poverty, but no evidence is found that homeownership is more valued in nations with high owner-occupancy rates. However, support is found for the notion that homeownership is used as a form of security in countries that experience greater income inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Situating Situationism: Wandering around New Babylon with Mille Plateaux.
- Author
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Kavanaugh, Leslie
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY ,UTOPIAS - Abstract
This paper explores the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari with respect to art, space, and politics. Specifically, I wish to suggest an affinity between their philosophy and the work of the Dutch artist Constant, who was one of the originators of the Situationist International movement in post-war Europe. Deleuze and Guattari's ideas of re-territorialization, constructivism, and nomadology find a resonance with Constant's project of New Babylon, a project he worked on for more than twenty years. Recently, many scholarly works have assessed the intellectual legacy of the Situationist International. Given the solid foundation of this historical work, this paper proposes instead to extend the argument in the direction of the philosophy that would be later proposed in What is Philosophy? and Mille Plateaux. In contrast to a purely historical account, this paper juxtaposes several of Deleuze and Guattari's ideas in an encounter with Constant that aims for a bleeding over, or migration, of relevant themes into new productive territories. With regards to the politics of place, to begin, this paper briefly sketches out the historical position of the Situationist International in Europe, and specific proposals for a project called New Babylon by Constant, an early member of the group. Then a discussion of the political grounding of any possible notion of utopia is followed by a comparison between Deleuze and Guattari's notion of 'constructivism' and Constant's notion of 'construction.' In conclusion, this paper asks what are the possible consequences or implications of a utopian notion of nomadism upon contemporary life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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40. Current perspectives on assessment and therapy with survivors of torture: the use of a cognitive behavioural approach.
- Author
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Regel, Stephen and Berliner, Peter
- Subjects
BEHAVIOR therapy ,TORTURE victims ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,MENTAL health services ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Increasing numbers of refugees are presenting to mental health services in Europe and Scandinavia and pose significant clinical challenges for practitioners. The most clinically challenging to engage in a psychotherapeutic context are survivors of torture and politically organized violence. Much of the literature on therapeutic work with torture survivors has tended to focus on psychodynamic approaches. There have also been attempts to describe other approaches, such as the use of testimony, with some attempts to study and describe cognitive behavioural approaches in torture survivors. It has been demonstrated that cognitive behavioural therapy is effective for PTSD, as recommended by the NICE (2005) guidelines for the assessment and management of PTSD in primary and secondary care. This paper will review and critique the current literature on therapy with refugees and survivors of torture. Through case examples, the use of CBT will be illustrated as an effective treatment intervention for this group. It will be demonstrated that the model can have effective clinical outcomes and provide a practical, problem-orientated approach to working with survivors of torture and political violence. This paper will also describe the use of assessment and treatment approaches using CBT principles, demonstrating the flexibility and applicability of the model. It also demonstrates the utility of CBT in different cultural contexts, despite perceived cultural limitations. Implications for assessment and practice in a cross-cultural setting will be discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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41. International Psychometric Validation of an EORTC Quality of Life Module Measuring Cancer Related Fatigue (EORTC QLQ-FA12).
- Author
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Weis, Joachim, Tomaszewski, Krzysztof A., Hammerlid, Eva, Arraras, Juan Ignacio, Conroy, Thierry, Lanceley, Anne, Schmidt, Heike, Wirtz, Markus, Singer, Susanne, Pinto, Monica, Alm El-Din, Mohamed, Compter, Inge, Holzner, Bernhard, Hofmeister, Dirk, Wei-Chu Chie, Czeladzki, Marek, Harle, Amelie, Jones, Louise, Ritter, Sabrina, and Flechtner, Hans-Henning
- Subjects
QUALITY of life ,CANCER fatigue ,CANCER treatment ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,TUMOR treatment ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EMOTIONS ,FACTOR analysis ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MENTAL fatigue ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,TUMORS ,EVALUATION research ,DISEASE complications ,PSYCHOLOGICAL factors ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: The European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Group has developed a new multidimensional instrument measuring cancer-related fatigue to be used in conjunction with the quality of life core questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30). The module EORTC QLQ-FA13 assesses physical, cognitive, and emotional aspects of cancer-related fatigue.Methods: The methodology follows the EORTC guidelines for phase IV validation of modules. This paper focuses on the results of the psychometric validation of the factorial structure of the module. For validation and cross-validation confirmatory factor analysis (maximum likelihood estimation), intraclass correlation and Cronbach alpha for internal consistency were employed. The study involved an international multicenter collaboration of 11 European and non-European countries.Results: A total of 946 patients with various tumor diagnoses were enrolled. Based on the confirmatory factor analysis, we could approve the three-dimensional structure of the module. Removing one item and reassigning the factorial mapping of another item resulted in the EORTC QLQ-FA12. For the revised scale, we found evidence supporting good local (indicator reliability ≥ 0.60, factor reliability ≥ 0.82) and global model fit (GFI t1|t2 = 0.965/0.957, CFI t1|t2 = 0.976/0.972, RMSEA t1|t2 = 0.060/0.069) for both measurement points. For each scale, test-retest reliability proved to be very good (intraclass correlation: R t1-t2 = 0.905-0.921) and internal consistency proved to be good to high (Cronbach alpha = .79-.90).Conclusion: Based on the former phase III module, the multidimensional structure was revised as a phase IV module (EORTC FA12) with an improved scale structure. For a comprehensive validation of the EORTC FA12, further aspects of convergent and divergent validity as well as sensitivity to change should be determined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
42. Doubly estranged: racism, the body and reflection.
- Author
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Garratt, Lindsey
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,HUMAN body & society ,SOCIAL alienation ,INTROSPECTION ,PSYCHOLOGY of boys ,SELF-consciousness (Sensitivity) ,RACISM ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper introduces the concept of “double estrangement”. Drawing on a large qualitative dataset it will argue that young migrant group boys in Dublin’s north inner city suffer from a break with their embodied selves as they are pushed between habitual and reflective action. The dual elements of “double estrangement” will be outlined, firstly, through the contention that visible difference and dispositions of the body mark minority boys out as not belonging within peer exchanges in three primary schools. Secondly, by arguing this has the effect of heightening a boy’s self-consciousness of their body as an object of value estranging them from their habitual embodied being. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Family adaptation to cerebral palsy in adolescents: A European multicenter study.
- Author
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Guyard, Audrey, Michelsen, Susan I., Arnaud, Catherine, and Fauconnier, Jerome
- Subjects
- *
BEHAVIOR disorders in adolescence , *CEREBRAL palsy treatment , *PEOPLE with cerebral palsy , *MENTAL illness , *CAREGIVERS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *CEREBRAL palsy , *FAMILIES & psychology , *ADAPTABILITY (Personality) , *PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers , *COMPARATIVE studies , *HEALTH attitudes , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *EVALUATION research , *SEVERITY of illness index , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background and Aim: Factors promoting family adaptation to child's disability are poorly studied together. The aim of the study was to describe the family adaptation to disability and to identify determinants associated with using a global theoretical model.Materials and Methods: 286 families of teenagers [13-17 years] with cerebral palsy (CP) from 4 European disability registers were included and visited at home. Face to face interviews were performed in order to measure parental distress, perceived impact in various dimensions of family life, family resources and stressors. Relationships were modelled with structural equations.Results: 31.8% of parents living with an adolescent with CP showed clinically significant high stress requiring professional assistance. The main stressors were the level of motor impairment and behavioural disorders in adolescent. A good family functioning was the best protective factor. Respite in care and a parents' positive attitude were significantly related to less parental distress. Material support, socioeconomical level, marital status or parental qualifications did not appear to be significant protector factors.Conclusions: Particular attention must be paid not only on physical condition but also on adolescent psychological problems to improve family adaptation. Families at risk of experiencing severe distress should be targeted early and proactive caregiver interventions on the whole family should be performed.What This Paper Adds: Family is a dynamic system: facing disability, it tries to recover its balance with available resources and its perception of the situation. Literature highlights potential stressors and protecting factors that could affect the disabled child's family adaptation but few papers study a global model including most of these factors. This study validated a global theoretical model of family adaptation to disability at adolescence. It identified behaviour disorders and motor impairment level as main stressors, family functioning as the largest protecting factors, and equipment and financial support as non significant protective factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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44. Health-related quality of life in patients with psoriasis: a systematic review of the European literature.
- Author
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Obradors, Montse, Blanch, Carles, Comellas, Marta, Figueras, Montse, and Lizan, Luis
- Subjects
QUALITY of life ,PSORIASIS ,META-analysis ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,SYMPTOMS ,PATIENTS ,SICKNESS Impact Profile ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose: To summarize the data published over the last 5 years in the European Union related to the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients with psoriasis and its conditioning factors.Methods: International electronic databases and gray literature were searched to identify studies conducted on patient-reported outcomes in patients with psoriasis, published in Europe between January 1, 2009 and December 31, 2013. Bibliographic references were hand-searched. Editorials, letters, commentaries, opinion papers, and studies related to specific treatments were excluded.Results: A total of 46 studies met the inclusion criteria, 27 of them reporting data related to HRQoL or its conditioning factors. The publications reviewed highlighted the substantial negative impact of psoriasis on patients' HRQoL. Most of the studies that analyzed the relationship between HRQoL and sociodemographic characteristics described a relation between gender (female) and age (young patients) and poorer HRQoL. An association between HRQoL impairment and visibility of skin lesions and disease activity and severity was also established. Skin discomfort and pruritus were identified as elements that negatively influenced HRQoL. Use of biological agents had a positive impact on HRQoL and on treatment satisfaction, a better HRQoL being seen in patients treated with systemic therapies and biologics.Conclusions: HRQoL has been broadly addressed in patients with psoriasis in Europe. Several disease- and patient-related factors contributed to its deterioration. Therapeutic measures with proven effectiveness in controlling disease symptoms and reducing PASI should be considered in patients with a severe disease who have a poorer HRQoL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Advances in Selection and Assessment in Europe.
- Author
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Nikolaou, Ioannis, Anderson, Neil, and Salgado, Jesus
- Subjects
EMPLOYEE selection ,PSYCHOLOGY ,GRADUATES ,PERSONNEL management - Abstract
The article focuses on employee selection research in Europe and its recent advancement. The author stated that in the field of industrial, work and organizational psychology, the recruitment and selection of employees has become a big area of research with many psychology graduates employed in human resource field.
- Published
- 2012
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46. A qualitative evaluation of home-based contraceptive and sexual health care for teenage mothers.
- Author
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Hayter, Mark, Jones, Catriona, Owen, Jenny, and Harrison, Christina
- Subjects
SEXUAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,TEENAGE mothers ,TEENAGE pregnancy ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy ,UNPLANNED pregnancy ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
AimThis paper reports on the findings from a qualitative study exploring the experiences of teenage mothers using a nurse-led, home-based contraceptive service designed to prevent repeat unplanned pregnancies. The aim was to understand if, and how the service was effective in equipping teenage mothers to make informed choices about contraception, thus preventing a second pregnancy.BackgroundUnplanned teenage pregnancy remains a significant focus of health and social policy in the United Kingdom (UK). Despite the long-term pattern of declining conception rates, the UK continues to report higher rates than comparable countries elsewhere in Europe. Current estimates suggest that approximately one fifth of births amongst under 18’s are repeat pregnancies (Teenage Pregnancy Independent Advisory Group, 2009). Services that are designed to reduce second unplanned pregnancies are an important element in promoting teenage sexual health. However, there has been no UK research that explores this kind of service and the experiences of service users.MethodsWe conducted a qualitative interview study. From 2013–2014 we interviewed 40 teenage mothers who had engaged with the nurse-led, home-based contraceptive service.FindingsThe data demonstrates that the service was effective in preventing repeat pregnancies in a number of cases. Among the aspects of the service which were found to contribute to its effectiveness were privacy, convenience, flexibility, appropriately timed access, the non-judgemental attitude of staff and ongoing support. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. European hospital managers' perceptions of patient-centred care.
- Author
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Taylor, Angelina and Groene, Oliver
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CORPORATE culture ,HEALTH facility administration ,HEALTH services administrators ,INTERVIEWING ,LEADERSHIP ,MEDICAL personnel ,PATIENT satisfaction ,ETHNOLOGY research ,QUALITATIVE research ,PATIENT-centered care ,PSYCHOLOGY ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Purpose: The spotlight has recently been placed on managers' responsibility for patient-centred care as a result of Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust failings. In previous research, clinicians reported that managers do not have an adequate structured plan for implementing patient-centred care. The purpose of this paper is to assess the perceptions of European hospital management with respect to factors affecting the implementation of a patient-centred approach.Design/methodology/approach: In total, 15 semi-structured interviews were conducted with hospital managers (n=10), expert country informants (n=2), patient organisations (n=2) and a user representative (n=1) from around Europe. Participants were purposively and snowball sampled. Interviews were analysed using framework analysis.Findings: Most participants felt that current levels of patient-centred care are inadequate, but accounted that there were a number of macro, meso and micro challenges they faced in implementing this approach. These included budget constraints, political and historical factors, the resistance of clinicians and other frontline staff. Organisational culture emerged as a central theme, shaped by these multi-level factors and influencing the way in which patient-centred care was borne out in the hospital. Participants proposed that the needs of patients might be better met through increasing advocacy by patient organisations and greater staff contact with patients.Originality/value: This study is the first of its kind to obtain management views from around Europe. It offers an insight into different models of how patient-centred care is realised by management. It indicates that managers see the value of a patient-centred approach but that they feel restricted by a number of factors at multiple levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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48. Being Muslim and being Irish after 9/11: self-conceptions of place in Irish society.
- Author
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Lynch, Orla and Veale, Angela
- Subjects
MUSLIMS ,IRISH social conditions ,PLACE (Philosophy) ,SELF-perception -- Social aspects ,IRISH national character ,MUSLIM identity ,YOUTH culture ,ISLAM ,TERRORISM ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 & society ,YOUTH ,PSYCHOLOGY ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
There has been a significant, well-established if somewhat invisible Muslim population in Ireland since the 1950s. An increase in immigration during the Celtic tiger years along with the hysteria of 9/11 caused a rapid visibilization of this population. Muslims became synonymous with extremism and terrorism, but also fell victim to racist constructions emerging from the economic decline. The experience of Muslim youth since 9/11 has been well researched in the UK and Europe, however there has been little empirical work conducted with Ireland’s Muslim communities. In the literature, it is assumed that the British experience is replicated for Muslim youth in Ireland – this is not the case. This paper examines the lived experience of Irish Muslim youth given the visibilization of Islam after 9/11 and their ensuing experiences of Irishness. An analysis of ethnographic data reveals the idiosyncratic experiences of these youth growing up in the shadow of a discriminatory and Islamophobic narrative on extremism and terrorism and an evolving immigrant landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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49. The effect of perceived cultural and material threats on ethnic preferences in immigration attitudes.
- Author
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Ben-Nun Bloom, Pazit, Arikan, Gizem, and Lahav, Gallya
- Subjects
SOCIAL attitudes ,EMIGRATION & immigration & psychology ,THREAT (Psychology) ,ETHNICITY ,LIKES & dislikes ,IMMIGRANTS ,EUROPEANS ,SENSORY perception & society ,PSYCHOLOGY ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
This paper shows that cultural and material threats exist side by side, serving different psychological functions, and that they manifest in differential attitudes towards immigrants from different ethnic or racial origins. While culturally threatened individuals prefer immigrants akin to themselves, as opposed to those from different races and cultures, the materially threatened prefer immigrants who are different from themselves who can be expected not to compete for the same resources. We test our hypotheses using multilevel structural equation modelling, based on data from twenty countries in the 2002 wave of the European Social Survey. The disaggregation of these two types of perceived threat reveals responsiveness to the race of immigrants that is otherwise masked by pooling the two threat dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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50. Exploring career decision-making styles across three European countries.
- Author
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Bimrose, Jenny and Mulvey, Rachel
- Subjects
ADULTS ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,COGNITION ,DECISION making ,EMOTIONS ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Career decisions are amongst the most important we make. Unsurprisingly, much published research exists on this particular aspect of career behaviour. However, the overwhelming majority of studies have been carried out on young people making initial career decisions. This paper extends our understanding by examining how mid-career adults in three European countries (Denmark, France and Italy) actually make career decisions. Characteristic patterns of behaviour recur when individuals approach points of transition or of crisis; each of these transitioning styles is illustrated by an iconic case. Emergent findings support the growing body of evidence that challenges the dominant policy and practice orthodoxy, which places rationality at the centre of the process, by recognising the importance of emotion and context. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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