111 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. 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
4. 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
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. 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
- View/download PDF
6. 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
7. 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
- Full Text
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8. 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
9. 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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- View/download PDF
10. 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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11. 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
- Full Text
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12. ‘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
- Subjects
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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13. 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
- Subjects
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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14. 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
- Subjects
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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15. 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
- Full Text
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16. 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
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Sexual and gender-based violence in the European asylum and reception sector: a perpetuum mobile?
- Author
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Keygnaert, Ines, Dias, Sonia F., Degomme, Olivier, Devillé, Walter, Kennedy, Patricia, Kováts, András, De Meyer, Sara, Vettenburg, Nicole, Roelens, Kristien, and Temmerman, Marleen
- Subjects
RISK of violence ,ACTION research ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SEX crimes ,SEX distribution ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis software ,UNDOCUMENTED immigrants ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Refugees, asylum seekers and undocumented migrants are at risk of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) and subsequent ill-health in Europe; yet, European minimum reception standards do not address SGBV. Hence, this paper explores the nature of SGBV occurring in this sector and discusses determinants for ‘Desirable Prevention’. Methods: Applying community-based participatory research, we conducted an SGBV knowledge, attitude and practice survey with residents and professionals in eight European countries. We conducted logistic regression using mixed models to analyse the data in R. Results: Of the 562 respondents, 58.3% reported cases of direct (23.3%) or peer (76.6%) victimization. Our results indicate that when men were involved, it most likely concerned sexual perpetration (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 4.09, confidence interval [CI]: 1.2; 13.89) and physical victimization (aOR: 2.57, CI: 1.65; 4), compared with females, who then rather perpetrated emotional violence (aOR: 1.85, CI: 1.08; 3.13) and underwent sexual victimization (aOR: 7.14, CI: 3.33; 16.67). Compared with others, asylum seekers appeared more likely to perpetrate physical (aOR 7.14, CI: 4; 12.5) and endure socio-economic violence (aOR: 10, CI: 1.37; 100), whereas professionals rather bore emotional (aOR: 2.01, CI: 0.98; 4.12) and perpetrated socio-economic violence (aOR: 25.91, CI: 13.41; 50.07). When group perpetration (aOR: 2.13, CI: 1.27; 3.58) or victimization (aOR: 1.84, CI: 1.1; 3.06) occurred, it most likely concerned socio-economic violence. Conclusion: Within the European asylum reception sector, residents and professionals of both sexes experience SGBV victimization and perpetration. Given the lack of prevention policies, our findings call for urgent Desirable Prevention programmes addressing determinants socio-ecologically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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18. DEVELOPING AN INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS FRAMEWORK IN STUDYING BUREAUCRATIC BEHAVIOUR IN GOVERNMENT AGENCIES FROM CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE.
- Author
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Albescu, Andrada-Maria
- Subjects
EUROPEAN politics & government ,BUREAUCRACY ,GOVERNMENT agency reorganization ,PUBLIC officers ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to develop a comprehensive institutional analysis framework in studying bureaucratic behaviour in government agencies. Although the purpose is to outline a general framework for research, the focus will be on taking into account the specifics of the agencification process in states from Central and Eastern Europe. The paper is divided into three sections. In the first section I compare various neoinstitutionalist approaches in terms of analysing the processes and transformations in the institutional environment concerning government agencies as semi-autonomous bodies in state organization. I argue that the approach which has a greater potential in explaining the processes and transformations in the institutional environment in government agencies is rational choice institutionalism. The second section of this paper is focused on presenting several traditional bureaucratic models in studying bureaucratic behaviour, from the traditional approach to public choice ones, in order to determine their possible contribution in analysing officials behaviour in semiautonomous agencies. Using these and the institutional analysis framework sugested in the first section of this paper I will focus on developing a model for studying bureaucratic behaviour in government agencies. The final section of the paper will be focused on the possibility of using the institutional analysis framework for studying bureaucratic behaviour in government agencies in Central and Eastern Europe and the challenges presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
19. 20 Years of European Society for Traumatic Stress.
- Author
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Lueger-Schuster, Brigitte
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY ,PROFESSIONAL associations ,TRAUMATIC neuroses ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,EMPLOYEES ,ANNIVERSARIES ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The author reflects on the 20th anniversary of the European Society for Traumatic Stress (ESTSS). The author describes the circumstances across Europe when the society was founded in 1993. The author shares how most of the past presidents of ESTSS met in Bergen, Norway. An overview of the papers written by past presidents of ESTSS for the "European Journal of Psychotraumatology" is presented.
- Published
- 2013
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20. Master's level mental health nursing competencies, a prerequisite for equal health among service users in mental health care.
- Author
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Jormfeldt, Henrika, Skärsäter, Ingela, Doyle, Louise, Higgins, Agnes, Keogh, Brian, Ellilä, Heikki, Lahti, Mari, Meade, Oonagh, Stickley, Theodore, Sitvast, Jan, and Kilkku, Nina
- Subjects
BEHAVIOR modification ,CLINICAL competence ,CURRICULUM ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MASTER of arts degree ,MENTAL health services ,MENTAL illness ,NURSES ,NURSES' attitudes ,NURSING ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing ,PSYCHOTHERAPY patients ,QUALITY assurance ,SOCIAL stigma ,TEAMS in the workplace ,GRADUATE nursing education ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,MASTERS programs (Higher education) ,PATIENT-centered care ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose: This discussion paper aims to explore the need of a clarified definition of master's level mental health nursing competencies in terms of knowledge, skills and attitudes in a European context. Mental health service users have, in spite of their right to equal overall health, higher rates of physical illness and are more likely to experience premature death than the general population. Implementation of a holistic concept of health comprising mental, physical and social aspects of health in mental health services has previously proved to be challenging. Methods: Master's level mental health nursing competencies in recent literature are discussed and illuminated in terms of knowledge, skills and attitudes in order to enable the promotion of equal overall health among service users in mental health services. Results: The discussion show contents, values and utility of master's level mental health nursing competencies in mental health services and contribute to reduced role ambiguity by distinguishing master's level responsibilities from undergraduate nursing tasks and obligations of other professionals in mental health care. Conclusion: This discussion paper shapes implications for developments in master's level mental health nursing education curricula. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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21. Role and Impact of Intellectual Factor in the 18th-20th Centuries' European Conception of 'Jews as Jews': A Revisitation.
- Author
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Wuriga, Rabson
- Subjects
INTELLECTUALS ,ANTISEMITISM ,EUROPEAN Jews ,RACE ,RACISM ,PSYCHOLOGY ,HISTORY of antisemitism - Abstract
Abstract: The paper advances an argument that European intellectual community played a role that influenced attitudes and policies of anti-Semitic conception of Jews as Jews. It goes on to explore various ideas propounded by some famous thinkers and scientists that dominated the 18th-20th centuries Europe: such as classification of races, systematic and mathematical order of things, rights of man, categorization of races, autonomous reason, metaphysics of eating, etc. The paper also argues that European conception of Jews exerted pressure intended to cause assimilation of Jews into host-nations. Consequently, European Jewry conceded to this pressure and was imbibed into European racial fantasies on matters of colour and/or race. Such concession to this pressure led to situations whereby many Jewish benefitted from race categorization as white than non-white races -- as a result they were caught up in acts of racism and Semitic anti-Semitism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
22. The Depression Network (DeNT) Study: methodology and sociodemographic characteristics of the first 470 affected sibling pairs from a large multi-site linkage genetic study.
- Author
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Farmer, Anne, Breen, Gerome, Brewster, Shyama, Craddock, Nick, Gill, Mike, Korszun, Ania, Maier, Wolfgang, Middleton, Lefkos, Mors, Ole, Owen, Mike, Perry, Julia, Preisig, Martin, Rietschel, Marcella, Reich, Theodore, Jones, Lisa, Jones, Ian, and McGuffin, Peter
- Subjects
MENTAL depression genetics ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,CAUCASIAN race ,SIBLINGS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: The Depression Network Study (DeNt) is a multicentre study designed to identify genes and/or loci linked to and/or associated with susceptibility to unipolar depression in Caucasian families. This study presents the method and socio-demographic details of the first 470 affected sibling pairs recruited from 8 different sites in Europe and the United States of America. Methods: Probands fulfilling either the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 4th edition (DSM-IV) or the International Classification of Diseases 10th edition (ICD-10) criteria for recurrent unipolar depression of moderate or severe degree and who had at least one similarly affected sibling were eligible for the study. Detailed clinical and psychological assessments were undertaken on all subjects including an interview using the Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry. Blood samples were collected from all participants to extract DNA for linkage analysis. Results: The different sites used different recruitment strategies depending on local health care organisation but despite this there was remarkable similarity across sites for the subjects recruited. Although the Bonn site had significantly older subjects both for age of onset and age at interview, for the sample as a whole, subjects were interviewed in their mid-40s and had experienced the onset of their recurrent depression in their 20s. Preliminary genome screening was able to include 929 out of the 944 subjects (98.4%) typed at 932 autosomal and 544 X chromosome markers Conclusions: This paper describes the methodology and the characteristics of the subjects from the 414 families included in the first wave of genotyping from the multi-site DeNT study. Ultimately the study aims to collect affected sibling pairs from approximately 1200 families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
23. Health-related quality of life in patients with advanced prostate cancer: a multinational perspective.
- Author
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Cleary, P., Morrissey, G., Oster, G., and Cleary, P D
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ANTIANDROGENS ,PROSTATE tumors ,PROSTATE tumors treatment ,UROLOGICAL surgery ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH status indicators ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PAIN ,PHYSICAL fitness ,PSYCHOANALYTIC interpretation ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SOCIAL adjustment ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PSYCHOLOGY ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
To explore the value of antiandrogen therapy for advanced prostate cancer, two clinical trials of similar design were recently conducted in six countries throughout Europe. A total of 550 patients with previously untreated metastatic prostate cancer were randomized either to treatment with an antiandrogen or castration. While time to treatment failure, objective tumour response and survival were expected to be similar between study treatments, their effects on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) were expected to differ and were therefore a focus of concern in this trial. To assess these effects, we developed a brief self-administered patient questionnaire covering 10 domains of HRQOL (general health perceptions, pain, emotional well-being, vitality, social functioning, physical capacity, sexual interest, sexual functioning, activity limitation and bed disability), which we translated from English into several other languages. In this paper, we describe the development, content and translation of this survey instrument and report on its reliability and validity in six countries based on data collected for the first 487 patients to complete questionnaires at study entry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
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24. Outstanding women psychologists mainly from Europe – What helped and what limited them in their scientific careers? Guidelines for gender equity programs in academia .
- Author
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Pastwa-Wojciechowska, Beata and Chybicka, Aneta
- Subjects
GENDER inequality ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,CAREER development ,WOMEN leaders ,GENDER stereotypes ,INDUSTRIAL psychologists ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The manuscript is based on a series of structured interviews with female scientists from around the world who have made significant contributions to psychology and have an impact on their cultural areas. The authors interviewed female scientists and researchers from a similar age group, but from different regions of the world, to capture the factors influencing careers of interlocutors from a similar period and enabling cultural inference. Both the universal and the cultural barriers faced by female scientists/researchers in career development and the factors that have contributed to success in psychology are discussed. Universal and cultural factors served in this manuscript as a guideline for gender equality programs in academia to overcome gender stereotypes, support early career development, support women in reaching leadership positions, and enhance women’s visibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
25. Increasing social participation of older people: are there different barriers for those in poor health? Introduction to the special section.
- Author
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Galenkamp, Henrike and Deeg, Dorly
- Subjects
HEALTH status indicators ,MENTAL health ,QUALITY of life ,SOCIAL participation ,VOLUNTEER service ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The authors look into the impact of older people with poor health in Europe on the frequency of their social participation. They analyze the areas of social participation such as volunteering, informal caregiving, and religious participation. They also talk about the concept of multimorbidity and its significance on the elderly's participation in social leisure activities.
- Published
- 2016
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26. A qualitative study about perceptions of European automotive sector's contribution to lower greenhouse gas emissions.
- Author
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Morgadinho, Luís, Oliveira, Carla, and Martinho, Ana
- Subjects
- *
AUTOMOBILE industry , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *AUTOMOBILE industry & the environment , *STAKEHOLDERS , *QUALITATIVE research , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper discusses the perceptions of some of the key stakeholders related with the European automotive manufacturers, automotive related industries – oil, tyres, electric batteries and information technology industries – and academia, about the technological contributions to lower greenhouse gas emissions of individual passenger vehicles. A qualitative approach, based on semi-structured interviews, was used in order to identify and explore possible relationships, causes, effects and dynamic processes. Technological and behavioural aspects were identified as crucial for the decrease of fossil fuels consumption and hence reducing carbon dioxide emissions. It was concluded that there is a strong focus on lowering the greenhouse gas and carbon dioxide emissions in the automotive sector and related industries concerning innovation process; furthermore there is a need for major stakeholders, including policy makers, to look at sustainable mobility using a more holistic and inclusive approach to achieve an effective delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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27. A Latent Class Cluster Analysis of Farmers' Attitudes Towards Contract Design in the Dairy Industry.
- Author
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Schlecht, Stephanie and Spiller, Achim
- Subjects
FARMERS ,DAIRY products industry ,DAIRY farming ,CONSUMER preferences ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
ABSTRACT As a result of a number of recent developments, such as the milk strike in several European countries in 2008 and the planned expiration of the European milk quota scheme in 2015, it is necessary to redesign contractual relationships in the dairy industry. However, fostering acceptance of new stipulations (e.g., volume control, pricing systems) requires that the attitudes of farmers be taken into consideration. Thus, in this article, the authors analyze how dairy farmers' attitudes vary towards both contracting in general and specific contract attributes. Using a survey of 161 dairy farm managers, the research question is addressed by means of a latent class cluster analysis. Three clusters are identified. Their attitudes are heterogeneous, ranging from suppliers who are clearly convinced of the value of contractual relationships to farmers who reject contracts explicitly. Results may be utilized to match the preferences of farmers regarding contracts with modified dairy marketing contracts. [EconLit Classification: Q130]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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28. The reach of commercially motivated junk news on Facebook.
- Author
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Burger, Peter, Kanhai, Soeradj, Pleijter, Alexander, and Verberne, Suzan
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PRESS ,INFORMATION science ,POLITICAL science ,COGNITIVE science ,COGNITIVE psychology - Abstract
Commercially motivated junk news–i.e. money-driven, highly shareable clickbait with low journalistic production standards–constitutes a vast and largely unexplored news media ecosystem. Using publicly available Facebook data, we compared the reach of junk news on Facebook pages in the Netherlands to the reach of Dutch mainstream news on Facebook. During the period 2013–2017 the total number of user interactions with junk news significantly exceeded that with mainstream news. Over 5 Million of the 10 Million Dutch Facebook users have interacted with a junk news post at least once. Junk news Facebook pages also had a significantly stronger increase in the number of user interactions over time than mainstream news. Since the beginning of 2016 the average number of user interactions per junk news post has consistently exceeded the average number of user interactions per mainstream news post. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
29. Behavioural challenges of minorities: Social identity and role models.
- Author
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Vecci, Joseph and Želinský, Tomáš
- Subjects
GROUP identity ,ROLE models ,STEREOTYPES ,SOCIAL groups ,SOCIAL science research ,MINORITIES - Abstract
We present a lab-in-the-field experiment and surveys of marginalised Roma children in Slovakia to examine whether reminding Roma of their ethnicity reduces their performance in a cognitive task. Research on social identity and stereotypes has documented that when individuals feel that their social group is negatively stereotyped in a domain, their performance declines, which can reinforce discrimination. In an effort to break the cycle of negative stereotypes, we remind Roma subjects of either Roma or non-Roma role models. We find that the activation of a Roma’s ethnicity reduces cognitive performance. In contrast, Roma exposed to Roma role models outperform those reminded of their ethnicity and of non-Roma role models. We then attempt to understand the channels through which social identity and role models affect performance. We show that priming the identity of a Roma has a direct effect on confidence, decreasing performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
30. Evaluating the institutionalisation of diversity outreach in top universities worldwide.
- Author
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Buenestado-Fernández, Mariana, Álvarez-Castillo, José Luis, González-González, Hugo, and Espino-Díaz, Luis
- Subjects
EQUALITY ,WOMEN in politics ,SOCIAL justice ,INSTITUTIONAL ownership (Stocks) ,HIGHER education ,CONTENT analysis ,QUALITATIVE chemical analysis - Abstract
The participation of diverse demographics in higher education has risen over the last half-century; meanwhile, different political and social tiers have been assigning a more active role to institutions in terms of equality and social justice. This change in circumstances has led to the roll out of processes to institutionalise diversity outreach. This study was conducted for the clear purpose of assessing the current institutionalisation status of diversity outreach in 127 key universities from the Academic Ranking of World Universities based on the opinions of diversity outreach managers and the information published on institutional websites, in turn measuring compliance with various indicators. A qualitative analysis of the institutional statements, the goals sought through strategic plans and the definitions of diversity itself was also conducted. The evidence reveals the early stage of the institutionalisation process in universities on account of the low percentage obtained for the proposed indicators. Furthermore, the study failed to exhibit significant differences in this process in terms of the institutional ownership or position held in the ranking; however, more prominent progress was noted in the North-American region when geographical differences were taken into account, likely as a result of the historical background in the advocacy for equal opportunities. Lastly, a change of approach to the conceptualisation of diversity is suggested in favour of equality and social justice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Linden (Tilia cordata) associated bumble bee mortality: Metabolomic analysis of nectar and bee muscle.
- Author
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Lande, Claire, Rao, Sujaya, Morré, Jeffrey T., Galindo, Gracie, Kirby, Julie, Reardon, Patrick N., Bobe, Gerd, and Stevens, Jan Frederik
- Subjects
LINDENS ,BUMBLEBEES ,NECTAR ,BEE pollen ,BEES ,MULTIPLE correspondence analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
Linden (Tilia spp.), a profusely flowering temperate tree that provides bees with vital pollen and nectar, has been associated with bumble bee (Bombus spp.) mortality in Europe and North America. Bee deaths have been attributed, with inadequate evidence, to toxicity from mannose in nectar or starvation due to low nectar in late blooming linden. Here, we investigated both factors via untargeted metabolomic analyses of nectar from five T. cordata trees beneath which crawling/dead bumble bees (B. vosnesenskii) were observed, and of thoracic muscle of 28 healthy foraging and 29 crawling bees collected from linden trees on cool mornings (< 30°C). Nectar contained the pyridine alkaloid trigonelline, a weak acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, but no mannose. Principal component analysis of muscle metabolites produced distinct clustering of healthy and crawling bees, with significant differences (P<0.05) in 34 of 123 identified metabolites. Of these, TCA (Krebs) cycle intermediates were strongly represented (pathway analysis; P<0.01), suggesting that the central metabolism is affected in crawling bees. Hence, we propose the following explanation: when ambient temperature is low, bees with energy deficit are unable to maintain the thoracic temperature required for flight, and consequently fall, crawl, and ultimately, die. Energy deficit could occur when bees continue to forage on linden despite limited nectar availability either due to loyalty to a previously energy-rich source or trigonelline-triggered memory/learning impairment, documented earlier with other alkaloids. Thus, the combination of low temperature and nectar volume, resource fidelity, and alkaloids in nectar could explain the unique phenomenon of bumble bee mortality associated with linden. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Honey bees (Apis mellifera spp.) respond to increased aluminum exposure in their foraging choice, motility, and circadian rhythmicity.
- Author
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Chicas-Mosier, Ana M., Dinges, Christopher W., Agosto-Rivera, Jose L., Giray, Tugrul, Oskay, Devrim, and Abramson, Charles I.
- Subjects
HONEYBEES ,POLLINATION by bees ,POLLINATORS ,ALUMINUM ,ANIMAL behavior ,SUBSPECIES ,BOTANY - Abstract
Aluminum is increasingly globally bioavailable with acidification from industrial emissions and poor mining practices. This bioavailability increases uptake by flora, contaminating products such as fruit, pollen, and nectar. Concentrations of aluminum in fruit and pollen have been reported between 0.05 and 670mg/L in North America. This is particularly concerning for pollinators that ingest pollen and nectar. Honey bees represent a globally present species experiencing decline in Europe and North America. Region specific decline may be a result of differential toxicity of exposure between subspecies. We find that European honey bees (Apis mellifera mellifera) may have differential toxicity as compared to two allopatric Mediterranean subspecies (Apis mellifera carnica and Apis mellifera caucasica) which showed no within subspecies exposure differences. European honey bees were then used in a laboratory experiment and exposed to aluminum in their daily water supply to mimic nectar contamination at several concentrations. After approximately 3 weeks of aluminum ingestion these bees showed significantly shorter captive longevity than controls at concentrations as low as 10.4mg/L and showed a possible hormetic response in motility. We also compared European honey bees to Africanized/European hybrid bees (Apis mellifera mellifera/scutellata hybrid) in short-term free-flight experiments. Neither the European honey bee nor the hybrid showed immediate foraging deficits in flight time, color choice, or floral manipulation after aluminum exposure. We conclude that European honey bees are at the greatest risk of aluminum related decline from chronic ingestion as compared to other subspecies and offer new methods for future use in honey bee toxicology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Youth and forecasting of sustainable development pillars: An adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system approach.
- Author
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Petković, Jasna, Petrović, Nataša, Dragović, Ivana, Stanojević, Kristina, Radaković, Jelena Andreja, Borojević, Tatjana, and Kljajić Borštnar, Mirjana
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,ELICITATION technique ,ADAPTIVE fuzzy control ,MEMBERSHIP functions (Fuzzy logic) ,SET theory ,YOUTH - Abstract
Sustainable development goals are used as a guidance for strategies development on local, regional and national levels. The importance of including young people in this complex process is recognized in all relevant documents (i.e. Agenda 21), however it is not an easy task to elicit opinions and preferences from the youth. Furthermore, the assessment of the sustainable development goals itself presents a challenge for the noisy data and nonlinear relationships in data. Popular approach is fuzzy set models where expert knowledge is presented with comprehensible rules; however expert knowledge elicitation takes a long time too. Several studies proposed an adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system approach that combines the fuzzy set theory to model expert knowledge with neural networks for inferring rules and membership functions from data to assess the sustainable development performance. We base our assumptions that ANFIS can be used to predict the importance of sustainable development pillars from the demographic data of young people. For this purpose, we have conducted an online survey on sustainable development goals opinions and importance of young people in Serbia. The sample of 386 respondents has been split into a training sample of 300 instances (to generate membership functions and fuzzy rules) and a testing sample of 86 instances to predict the importance of the three pillars. We have conducted a trace-driven simulation test to validate the results of the proposed ANFIS model. Results of the study provided insights into how the young people in Serbia assess the importance of sustainable development goals. Secondly, the results suggest that ANFIS can be applied to predict values of importance of the three sustainable development pillars with the relative error of Rel Err < 5%. It must be noted that the considered model could be further improved by using training samples with more data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Can nonresponse bias and known methodological differences explain the large discrepancies in the reported prevalence rate of violence found in Swedish studies?
- Author
-
Simmons, Johanna and Swahnberg, Katarina
- Subjects
INTIMATE partner violence ,VIOLENCE against women ,VIOLENCE ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,EMPIRICAL research ,DISEASE prevalence ,RAPE - Abstract
Introduction: The reported prevalence rate of violence varies considerably between studies, even when conducted in similar populations. The reasons for this are largely unknown. This article considers the effects of nonresponse bias on the reported prevalence rate of interpersonal violence. We also single out violence perpetrated in intimate relationships and compare our results to previous Swedish studies. The aim was to explore the reasons for the large discrepancies in the prevalence rates found between studies. Material and method: This is a cross sectional study of a random population sample. The NorVold Abuse Questionnaire (NorAQ), covering emotional, physical, and sexual violence, was answered by 754 men (response rate 35%) and 749 women (response rate 38%). Nonresponse bias was investigated in six ways, e.g., findings were replicated in two samples and we explored non-responders’ reasons for declining participation. Also, the prevalence rate of intimate partner violence was compared to four previous studies conducted in Sweden, considering the methodological differences. Results and discussion: The only evidence of nonresponse bias found was for differences between the sample and the background population concerning the sociodemographic characteristics. However, the magnitude of that effect is bleak in comparison with the large discrepancies found in the prevalence rates between studies concerning intimate partner violence, e.g., emotional violence women: 11–41% and men: 4–37%; sexual and/or physical violence women: 12–27% and men: 2–21%. Some of the reasons behind these differences were obvious and pertained to differences in the definition and operationalization of violence. However, a considerable proportion of the difference could not easily be accounted for. Conclusion: It is not reasonable that so little is known about the large discrepancies in the prevalence rate for what is supposedly the same concept, i.e., intimate partner violence. This study is a call for more empirical research on methods to investigate violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Relationship between living alone and common mental disorders in the 1993, 2000 and 2007 National Psychiatric Morbidity Surveys.
- Author
-
Jacob, Louis, Haro, Josep Maria, and Koyanagi, Ai
- Subjects
MULTIVARIABLE testing ,LIVING alone ,MEDIATION (Statistics) ,MENTAL illness ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DISEASES ,MEDIATION ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Given the high prevalence of common mental disorders (CMDs) and individuals living alone in the United Kingdom, the goal of this study using English nationally representative data was to examine the association between living alone and CMDs, and to identify potential mediating factors of this association. The data were drawn from the 1993, 2000 and 2007 National Psychiatric Morbidity Surveys. CMDs were assessed using the Clinical Interview Schedule-Revised (CIS-R), a questionnaire focusing on past week neurotic symptoms. The presence of CMDs was defined as a CIS-R total score of 12 and above. Multivariable logistic regression and mediation analyses were conducted to analyze the association between living alone and CMDs, and to identify mediators in this association. The prevalence of CMDs was higher in individuals living alone than in those not living alone in all survey years. Multivariable analysis showed a positive association between living alone and CMDs in all survey years (1993: odds ratio [OR] = 1.69; 2000: OR = 1.63; and 2007: OR = 1.88). Overall, loneliness explained 84% of the living alone-CMD association. Living alone was positively associated with CMDs. Interventions addressing loneliness among individuals living alone may be particularly important for the mental wellbeing of this vulnerable population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Self-perfection or self-selection? Unraveling the relationship between job-related training and adults’ literacy skills.
- Author
-
Gauly, Britta and Lechner, Clemens M.
- Subjects
ADULT literacy ,JOB descriptions ,ABILITY ,ACCOUNTING education ,TRAINING - Abstract
Can participation in job-related training contribute to the formation and maintenance of adults’ literacy skills? Although evidence suggests that participation in training is related to higher literacy skills, it remains unclear whether this association reflects a causal effect of training participation on literacy (training effects), results from the self-selection of more high-skilled individuals into training (selection effects), or is due to other sources of endogeneity (e.g., omitted variable bias). To unravel these possibilities, we used data from the Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC) and its German follow-up, PIAAC-Longitudinal (PIAAC-L). As these unique data offer repeated measures of literacy skills, spaced three years apart, in a large and representative sample, they allowed us to disentangle training effects from selection effects and to account for potential endogeneity. Analyses revealed that, even after taking account of formal education and a host of job characteristics, individuals with higher literacy skills were more likely to participate in training. By contrast, no evidence for effects of training on literacy skills emerged in any of our models, which comprised lagged-dependent, fixed effects, and instrumental-variable models. These findings suggest that, rather than job-related training contributing to literacy development, individuals with higher literacy skills are more likely to participate in training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Exploring women’s preferences for birth settings in England: A discrete choice experiment.
- Author
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Fletcher, Benjamin Rupert, Rowe, Rachel, Hollowell, Jennifer, Scanlon, Miranda, Hinton, Lisa, and Rivero-Arias, Oliver
- Subjects
CHILDBIRTH at home ,LABOR (Obstetrics) ,PREGNANT women ,CONSUMER preferences ,CONTINUUM of care - Abstract
Objective: To explore pregnant women’s preferences for birth setting in England. Design: Labelled discrete choice experiment (DCE). Setting: Online survey. Sample: Pregnant women recruited through social media and an online panel. Methods: We developed a DCE to assess women’s preferences for four hypothetical birth settings based on seven attributes: reputation, continuity of care, distance from home, time to see a doctor, partner able to stay overnight, chance of straightforward birth and safety for baby. We used a mixed logit model, with setting modelled as an alternative-specific constant, and conducted a scenario analysis to evaluate the impact of changes in attribute levels on uptake of birth settings. Main outcome measures: Women’s preferences for birth setting. Results: 257 pregnant women completed the DCE. All birth setting attributes, except ‘time to see doctor’, were significant in women’s choice (p<0.05). There was significant heterogeneity in preferences for some attributes. Changes to levels for ‘safety for the baby’ and ‘partner able to stay overnight’ were associated with larger changes from baseline uptake of birth setting. If the preferences identified were translated into the real-world context up to a third of those who reported planning birth in an obstetric unit might choose a midwifery unit assuming universal access to all settings, and knowledge of the differences between settings. Conclusions: We found that ‘safety for the baby’, ‘chance of a straightforward birth’ and ‘can the woman’s partner stay overnight following birth’ were particularly important in women’s preferences for hypothetical birth setting. If all birth settings were available to women and they were aware of the differences between them, it is likely that more low risk women who currently plan birth in OUs might choose a midwifery unit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Impact of a progressive stepped care approach in an improving access to psychological therapies service: An observational study.
- Author
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Boyd, Lisa, Baker, Emma, and Reilly, Joe
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC observation ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,BIBLIOTHERAPY - Abstract
England’s national Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme advocates stepped care as its organizational delivery of psychological therapies to common mental health problems. There is limited evidence regarding the efficacy of stepped care as a service delivery model, heterogeneity of definition and differences in model implementation in both research and routine practice, hence outcome comparison in terms of effectiveness of model is difficult. Despite sound evidence of the efficacy of low intensity interventions there appears to be a perpetuation of the notion that severity and complexity should only be treated by a high intensity intervention through the continuation of a stratified care model. Yet no psychotherapy treatment is found to be more superior to another, and not enough is known about what works for whom to aid the matching of treatment decision. In the absence of understanding precise treatment factors optimal for recovery, it may be useful to better understand the impact of a service delivery model, and whether different models achieve different outcomes. This study aims to contribute to the discussion regarding the stepped care definition and delivery, and explores the impact on clinical outcomes where different types of stepped care have been implemented within the same service. An observational cohort study analysed retrospective data (n = 16,723) over a 4 year period, in a single IAPT service, where delivery changed from one type of stepped care model to another. We compared the outcomes of treatment completers with a stratified care model and a progression care model. We also explored the assumption that patients who score severe on psychological measures, and therefore are potentially complex, would achieve better outcomes in a stratified model. Outcomes in each model type were compared, alongside baseline factor variables. A significant association was observed between a recovery outcome and model type, with patients 1.5 times more likely to recover in the progression delivery model. The potential implications are that with a progression stepped care model of service delivery, more patients can be treated with a lower intensity intervention, even with initial severe presentations, ensuring that only those that need high intensity CBT or equivalent are stepped up. This could provide services with an effective clinical model that is efficient and potentially more cost effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The relative age effect in European elite soccer: A practical guide to Poisson regression modelling.
- Author
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Doyle, John R. and Bottomley, Paul A.
- Subjects
POISSON regression ,REGRESSION analysis ,PHYSICAL sciences ,SOCCER ,SOCIAL sciences ,AGE discrimination in employment - Abstract
Many disciplines of scholarship are interested in the Relative Age Effect (RAE), whereby age-banding confers advantages on older members of the cohort over younger ones. Most research does not test this relationship in a manner consistent with theory (which requires a decline in frequency across the cohort year), instead resorting to non-parametric, non-directional approaches. In this article, the authors address this disconnect, provide an overview of the benefits associated with Poisson regression modelling, and two managerially useful measures for quantifying RAE bias, namely the Indices of Discrimination and Wastage. In a tutorial-like exposition, applications and extensions of this approach are illustrated using data on professional soccer players competing in the top two tiers of the “Big Five” European football leagues in the search to identify paragon clubs, leagues, and countries from which others may learn to mitigate this form of age-discrimination in the talent identification process. As with OLS regression, Poisson regression may include more than one independent variable. In this way we test competing explanations of RAE; control for unwanted sources of covariation; model interaction effects (that different clubs and countries may not all be subject to RAE to the same degree); and test for non-monotonic versions of RAE suggested in the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Knowledge and perceptions of type 2 diabetes among Ghanaian migrants in three European countries and Ghanaians in rural and urban Ghana: The RODAM qualitative study.
- Author
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de-Graft Aikins, Ama, Dodoo, Francis, Awuah, Raphael Baffour, Owusu-Dabo, Ellis, Addo, Juliet, Nicolaou, Mary, Beune, Erik, Mockenhaupt, Frank P., Danquah, Ina, Bahendeka, Silver, Meeks, Karlijn, Klipstein-Grobusch, Kirstin, Afrifa-Anane, Ernest, Smeeth, Liam, Stronks, Karien, and Agyemang, Charles
- Subjects
TYPE 2 diabetes ,REPRESENTATION theory ,COLLECTIVE representation ,SOCIAL theory ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIALIZATION - Abstract
African migrants in Europe and continental Africans are disproportionately affected by type 2 diabetes (T2D). Both groups develop T2D at a younger age, and have higher morbidity and mortality from T2D and complications, compared to European populations. To reduce risk, and avoidable disability and premature deaths, culturally congruent and context specific interventions are required. This study aimed to: (a) assess perceptions and knowledge of T2D among Ghanaian migrants in Europe and their compatriots in Ghana and (b) identify specific perceptions and knowledge gaps that might predispose migrants to higher risk of diabetes. Data was gathered through 26 focus groups with 180 individuals, aged 21 to 70, from Amsterdam, Berlin and London and rural and urban Ashanti Region, Ghana. Thematic analysis of the data was informed by Social Representations Theory, which focuses on the sources, content and functions of social knowledge. Three key insights emerged from analysis. First, there was general awareness, across migrant and non-migrant groups, of T2D as a serious chronic condition with life threatening complications, and some knowledge of biomedical strategies to prevent diabetes (e.g healthy eating) and diabetes complications (e.g medication adherence). However, knowledge of T2D prevention and reduction of diabetes complications was not comprehensive. Secondly, knowledge of biomedical diabetes theories and interventions co-existed with theories about psychosocial and supernatural causes of diabetes and the efficacy of herbal and faith-based treatment of diabetes. Finally, migrants’ knowledge was informed by both Ghanaian and European systems of T2D knowledge suggesting enculturation dynamics. We discuss the development of culturally congruent and context-specific T2D interventions for the research communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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41. What factors explain socioeconomic inequalities in adults' television-related sitting time?
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Mackenbach, Joreintje D, Groot, Rosa de, Lakerveld, Jeroen, Cocker, Katrien De, Cardon, Greet, Bourdeaudhuij, Ilse De, and Compernolle, Sofie
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AGE distribution ,COGNITION ,EMPLOYMENT ,LONGITUDINAL method ,REGRESSION analysis ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL skills ,TELEVISION ,HOME environment ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,HEALTH equity ,SEDENTARY lifestyles ,SCREEN time ,SEXUAL partners ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background There are considerable socioeconomic inequalities in television-related sitting time, but there is little evidence for the explanatory mechanisms. We used a cohort of Belgian adults (25–60 years) and older adults (≥65 years) to examine the social cognitive, home environmental and health-related factors contributing to socioeconomic differences in television-related sitting. Methods We included 301 adults and 258 older adults (total n = 559). Linear regression analyses were used to examine the associations of education and occupational status with television-related sitting time, adjusted for age and gender. We assessed the explanatory power of social cognitive, home environmental and health-related factors using the traditional 'change-in-estimation method'. Results Those with low and medium education, respectively, engaged in 54 and 28 minutes per day more television-related sitting time than those with high education. We found no association between occupational status and television-related sitting time. Social cognitive factors explained 54% of the difference in television-related sitting time between those with low and high education, while home environmental factors only explained 6%, and health-related variables explained 10% of these differences. Conclusion We found no occupational inequalities in television-related sitting time. Social cognitive variables such as attitude and modelling of the partner explained a large part of the educational inequalities in television-related sitting time. If confirmed by future studies, a focus on social cognition may help reduce sedentary behaviours in low-educated adults and diminish inequalities in sedentary behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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42. Supporting evidence-informed policy and scrutiny: A consultation of UK research professionals.
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Walker, Lindsay A., Lawrence, Natalia S., Chambers, Chris D., Wood, Marsha, Barnett, Julie, Durrant, Hannah, Pike, Lindsey, O’Grady, Gerard, Bestmann, Sven, and Kythreotis, Andrew P.
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INFORMATION services ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PUBLIC officers ,COGNITIVE science ,COGNITIVE psychology ,ARENAS - Abstract
Access to reliable and timely information ensures that decision-makers can operate effectively. The motivations and challenges of parliamentarians and policy-makers in accessing evidence have been well documented in the policy literature. However, there has been little focus on research-providers. Understanding both the demand- and the supply-side of research engagement is imperative to enhancing impactful interactions. Here, we examine the broader experiences, motivations and challenges of UK-based research professionals engaging with research-users relevant to policy-making and scrutiny in the UK using a nationwide online questionnaire. The context of the survey partly involved contributing to the UK Evidence Information Service (EIS), a proposed rapid match-making service to facilitate interaction between parliamentary arenas that use evidence and research-providers. Our findings reveal, at least for this sub-sample who responded, that there are gender-related differences in policy-related experience, motivations, incentives and challenges for research professionals to contribute to evidence-informed decision-making through initiatives such as the EIS. Male and female participants were equally likely to have policy experience; however, males reported both significantly broader engagement with the research-users included in the survey and significantly higher levels of engagement with each research-user. Reported incentives for engagement included understanding what the evidence will be used for, guidance on style and content of contribution, and acknowledgement of contributions by the policymaker or elected official. Female participants were significantly more likely to select the guidance-related options. The main reported barrier was workload. We discuss how academia-policy engagement initiatives can best address these issues in ways that enhance the integration of research evidence with policy and practice across the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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43. School’s out forever? Heavy metal preferences and higher education.
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Hällsten, Martin, Edling, Christofer, and Rydgren, Jens
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HEAVY metals ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,HIGHER education ,CONSUMER preferences - Abstract
Objectives: Cultural behaviors are theoretically linked to future life chances but empirical literature is scant. We use heavy metal as an example of cultural identities due to its high salience. We first assess the social morphology of metal preferences in terms of socio-economic and socio-structural positions, and then asses the short term outcomes of being a heavy metal fan on education and health behaviors. Methods: The analysis was based on a representative random stratified sample of 23-year-olds of native Swedish, Iranian, and Yugoslavian background in contemporary Sweden (n = 2,232). Linear probability models with multiple imputation were used to calculate preferences for metal music and the association of metal preferences with subsequent outcomes. Results: In contrast to many prior studies, we find that the preference for heavy metal is not structured by social background or neighborhood context in Swedish adolescents. Poor school grades tend to make them more prone to like metal, but net of previous grades, social background, personality, personal network, and neighborhood characteristics, metal fans have substantially lower transition rates into higher education. Discussion: The study suggest that metal preferences appears rather unsystematically with few important predictors, and is linked to lower education attainments in the short run. While these findings are specific to heavy metal as a certain type of culture and to Swedish adolescents, we suggest that they are indicative of how cultural consumption may play a role for life-chances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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44. Are there disparities in different domains of physical activity between school-aged migrant and non-migrant children and adolescents? Insights from Germany.
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Reimers, Anne K., Brzoska, Patrick, Niessner, Claudia, Schmidt, Steffen C. E., Worth, Annette, and Woll, Alexander
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PHYSICAL activity ,CHILDREN of migrant laborers ,TEENAGERS ,INTIMATE partner violence - Abstract
Background: Large proportions of the populations in many European countries, including Germany, are migrants. Migrant children and adolescents tend to be less physically active than their non-migrant peers. However, current research is limited as it does not sufficiently consider different domains of physical activity. Using a representative dataset, the present study examines the patterns of sports participation and other domains of physical activity among migrant and non-migrant children and adolescents residing in Germany. Methods: Nationwide data from the Motorik-Modul (MoMo) Study is used. Five different domains of physical activity participation (sports clubs, outside of sports clubs, extra-curricular physical activity, physical activity, outdoor play and active commuting to school) were compared between children and adolescents with no, one-sided and two-sided migration background using logistic regression adjusted for demographic factors. Interaction terms were included in order to examine whether difference between the three groups differ by age and gender. Results: Information on n = 3,323 children and adolescents was available. As compared to non-migrants, children and adolescents with a two-sided migration background had a 40% (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 0.60, 95%-CI: 0.44–0.81), those with a one-sided migration background a 26% (aOR = 0.74, 95%-CI: 0.55-<1.00) lower chance of participating in sport club activities. In contrast, children and adolescents with a two-sided migration background were at 65% higher chance of participating in extra-curricular physical activity than non-migrants (OR = 1.65, 95%-CI: 1.15–2.36). Conclusion: The study shows that differences in levels of physical activity between migrant and non-migrant children and adolescents are less pronounced than previous research has suggested. In particular, it reveals that migrants are only disadvantaged regarding participation in sports clubs whereas they fare better with respect to extra-curricular physical activity. Interventions should therefore address barriers migrant children and adolescents encounter in the access to sport clubs while maintaining their high level of extra-curricular physical activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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45. Standard expected years of life lost (SEYLL) due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in Poland from 1999 to 2014.
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Dziankowska-Zaborszczyk, Elzbieta, Bryla, Marek, Ciabiada-Bryla, Beata, and Maniecka-Bryla, Irena
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OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,LIFE - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of the study is to analyze the standard expected years of life lost (SEYLL) due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in Poland from 1999 to 2014 by sex and place of residence. Methods: The number of deaths due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (J40 –J44 and J47 according to ICD-10) over the period 1999 to 2014 was analyzed based on data obtained from the Central Statistical Office in Poland. Standard expected years of life lost due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were calculated by sex and place of residence according to the living population (SEYLL
p ) and the number of deaths caused by the disease (SEYLLd ). Changes in the calculated measures were evaluated using joinpoint models. The annual percentage change (APC) and the average annual percentage change (AAPC) were also calculated. Results: The study revealed that COPD contributed to 1.8% of the total number of deaths which occurred between 1999 and 2014. The greatest decrease in the analyzed measures was observed among males from rural areas (p<0.05) (SEYLL: AAPC = -1.6; 95%CI: -3.0;-0.2; SEYLLp : AAPC = -2.0; 95%CI: -3.4;-0.6; SEYLLd : AAPC = -1.1; 95%CI: -1.2;-0.9). A statistically significant increase in the SEYLL and SEYLLp indices was observed among female city dwellers (SEYLL: AAPC = 2.4; 95%CI:0.7;4.0 and SEYLLp : AAPC = 2.4; 95%CI: 0.8;4.1). Conclusions: All studied measures were higher in the male group than in the female group, regardless of the place of residence. A male who died of COPD in Poland in 2014 potentially lost 14.9 years of life, whereas a female lost 14.2 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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46. Older people's views and expectations about the competences of health and social care professionals: a European qualitative study.
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Soares, Célia Casaca, Marques, António Manuel, Clarke, Pat, Klein, Regina, Koskinen, Liisa, Krasuckiene, Daine, Lamsodiene, Evelina, Piscalkiene, Viktorija, and Küçükgüçlü, Özlem
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CLINICAL competence ,JOB performance ,COMMUNICATION ,CONSUMER attitudes ,DISCOURSE analysis ,EMOTIONS ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL personnel ,POPULATION geography ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL skills ,SOCIAL workers ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Adapting and providing quality services for people as they age is a common challenge across Europe. The perspective of older people is fundamental in a person-centred care approach. Expanding research at the European level that explicitly includes their views can offer a relevant contribution to the development of evidence-based guidelines that can be shared in education and training across health and social care professions. This study aimed to identify common meaningful dimensions of professional competence in health and social care emphasised by older people from six countries in different regions of Europe according to their experiences. A qualitative approach was chosen with a total of 95 semi-structured interviews conducted in Austria, Finland, Lithuania, Portugal, Turkey and UK, following a common topic guide. Participants in this study were aged 60 and above, and recruitment considered age, gender, level of education and living arrangements. Results identified a set of universal skills and practices that according to older people, health and social care professionals should meet. Competences at the interpersonal level were central in older people's discourses, and its core dimensions are anchored in relational, communication and socio-emotional skills of professionals. These findings reinforce the aspiration of establishing best practices in care that relies on the harmonisation of a competence framework that can be shared in the training and education of health and social care professionals across Europe and that voices older people's preferences, expectations and needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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47. impact of depressive symptoms on exit from paid employment in Europe: a longitudinal study with 4 years follow-up.
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Porru, Fabio, Burdorf, Alex, and Robroek, Suzan J W
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MENTAL depression risk factors ,RETIREMENT & psychology ,EMPLOYMENT ,AGING ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DECISION making ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,EMPLOYEE attitudes ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MANAGEMENT ,POPULATION geography ,PUBLIC health ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,SURVEYS ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background Mental health problems are a risk factor for loss of paid employment. This study investigates (i) the relation between depressive symptoms and different involuntary pathways of labour force exit and (ii) explores gender and geographical differences in this relation. Methods The study population consisted of 5263 individuals in paid employment aged between 50 years and the country-specific retirement age from 11 European countries participating in the longitudinal Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). Self-reported depressive symptoms at baseline were assessed using the EURO-D. Employment status was derived from interviews after 2 and 4 years. Cox proportional hazards regression analyses were used to investigate the association between depressive symptoms and labour force exit via disability benefit and unemployment. Population attributable fractions (PAFs) were calculated to estimate the contribution of depressive symptoms to these pathways of labour force exit. Results Both men and women with a EURO-D score ≥4 had a >2-fold increased risk of a disability benefit (HR: 2.46, 95%CI 1.68–3.60) after adjustment for demographics and work-related characteristics. Among men depressive symptoms elevated the risk of becoming unemployed at follow-up (HR 1.55; 95%CI: 0.94–2.57). The PAF was 0.18 for disability benefit and 0.04 for unemployment, and varied across European regions. Conclusions Individuals with depressive symptoms are at increased risk of losing paid employment, which in turn may aggravate their symptoms. Targeting depressive symptoms with public health and occupational policies should be considered to reduce the burden of mental diseases in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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48. Depression symptoms as mediators of inequalities in self-reported health: the case of Southern European elderly.
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Leão, T and Perelman, J
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SELF-evaluation ,MENTAL depression ,AGE distribution ,CHRONIC diseases ,EDUCATION ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH status indicators ,LIFE skills ,SEX distribution ,WOMEN ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,STATISTICAL significance ,HEALTH equity ,CROSS-sectional method ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background Inequalities in the distribution of self-reported health (SRH) have been widely reported. Its higher expressivity among women, elderly and least educated groups has been partly attributed to differences in their health perceptions. However, this subjectivity may be masking the burden of mental illness in these groups. Thus, we sought to understand if depression symptoms mediate inequalities in SRH. Methods SHARE waves 4 and 6, pertaining to Spain, Italy and Portugal, were used (n
2011 = 8517, n2015 = 11 046). Inequalities in SRH were calculated, comparing the risk amongst education level, gender and age groups, adjusting for chronic diseases, functional limitations and country fixed effects. We then tested depression symptoms as mediators. Results Depression symptoms were associated with poor SRH (odds ratio (OR)2011 = 1.379, OR2015 = 1.384, P < 0.001). Their inclusion reduced the magnitude of the association between SRH and education, annulled the statistical significance for age, and reversed the gender effect. As expected, chronic diseases and functional limitations remained significant predictors of poor SRH. Conclusions Depression symptoms, together with chronic diseases and functional limitations, explain the poorer SRH of the least educated, female and older groups in the Southern European population. Therefore, tackling inequalities in SRH must require focusing on mental health issues, which disproportionately affect the most vulnerable groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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49. Addressing vaccination hesitancy in Europe: a case study in state–society relations.
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Kieslich, Katharina
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IMMUNIZATION ,ATTENTION ,COALITIONS ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,PRACTICAL politics ,SOCIAL sciences ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In light of recent outbreaks of diseases such as measles in Europe, policymakers and public health practitioners are seeking strategies to address anti-vaccination attitudes and to increase immunization rates. Identifying effective strategies that will not further alienate vaccination sceptics raises challenges that go to the heart of relations between the state and society. Drawing on accounts of state–society relations, this article discusses how the problem of vaccination hesitancy might be explained from a political science perspective. Discourse-analytical approaches emphasize the importance of storylines, politics and social context in explaining a range of phenomena. Given the number and strength of prevailing discourses in groups with anti-vaccination sentiments, the literature on discourse coalitions can offer perspectives on the challenges that arise in designing strategies to address vaccine hesitancy. Paying closer attention to individual reasons why parents are vaccine hesitant might allow for designing strategies that are more suited to address concerns. However, given the pervasiveness of the discourses of anti-vaccination movements, challenges in reaching citizens who are sceptical of vaccines will remain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The association between diabetes and depressive symptoms varies by quality of diabetes care across Europe.
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Graham, Eva A, Thomson, Katie H, and Bambra, Clare L
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MENTAL depression risk factors ,DIABETES complications ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PEOPLE with diabetes ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL quality control ,QUALITY of life ,REGRESSION analysis ,SURVEYS ,CROSS-sectional method ,HEALTH & social status ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background Depressive symptoms are more common in adults with diabetes and may arise from the physical and psychosocial burden of disease. Better quality of diabetes care may be associated with a reduced disease burden and fewer depressive symptoms. Methods This cross-sectional study included 34 420 participants from 19 countries in the European Social Survey Round 7 (2014–2015). Countries were grouped into quartiles based on their quality of diabetes care as measured in the Euro Diabetes Index 2014. Individual-level depressive symptoms were measured using the 8-item Center for Epidemiologic Studies—Depression Scale. Negative binomial regression was used to compare the number of depressive symptoms between adults with and without diabetes in each quartile of diabetes care quality. Analyses included adjustment for covariates and survey weights. Results In countries with the highest quality of diabetes care, having diabetes was associated with only a 3% relative increase in depressive symptoms (95% CI 1.00–1.05). In countries in the second, third and fourth (lowest) quartiles of diabetes care quality, having diabetes was associated with a 13% (95% CI 1.08–1.17), 13% (1.08–1.19) and 22% (1.14–1.31) relative increase in depressive symptoms, respectively. Conclusion The association between diabetes and depressive symptoms appears stronger in European countries with lower quality of diabetes care. Potential pathways for this association include the financial aspects of diabetes care, access to services and differential exposure to the social determinants of heath. Further research is needed to unpack these mechanisms and improve the quality of life of people with diabetes across Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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