11 results on '"Holzer, A."'
Search Results
2. Strengths and Weaknesses in the Swedish and Swiss Education Systems: A Comparative Analysis Based on PISA Data
- Author
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Fredriksson, Ulf, Holzer, Thomas, McCluskey-Cavin, Huguette, and Taube, Karin
- Abstract
Sweden and Switzerland are among the wealthiest countries in the world, but also two countries with different approaches to how to provide welfare. Sweden has followed a social democratic welfare model and Switzerland a liberal model. This has implications for how the education systems have been organised. The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) study makes it possible to compare the achievements of students in reading and mathematics. Students in Switzerland are significantly better than Swedish students in mathematics. In reading, Swedish students are significantly better than Swiss students. In both countries, girls are better readers than boys. The gender difference in reading is larger in Sweden than in Switzerland. Boys are better than girls in mathematics. The gender difference in mathematics is smaller in Sweden than in Switzerland. The difference in reading between natives and non-natives is considerably lower in Sweden than in Switzerland. Sweden is among those countries where the variance between schools is very low. In Switzerland the variation in student performance among schools is higher than the average in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. Both education systems may be regarded to be of high quality in an international perspective. The Swedish system has, with the exception of the gender gap in reading, produced a system that seems to have a higher degree of equity than the Swiss system.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Motivation and personality factors of Generation Z high school students aspiring to study human medicine.
- Author
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Holzer, Barbara M, Ramuz, Oriane, Minder, Christoph E, and Zimmerli, Lukas
- Subjects
PERSONALITY ,HIGH school students ,GENERATION Z ,GOAL (Psychology) ,HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
Background: A new generation of medical students, Generation Z (Gen Z), is becoming the predominant population in medical schools and will join the workforce in a few years' time. Medicine has undergone serious changes in high-income countries recently. Therefore, it is unclear how attractive the medical profession still is for high school students of Gen Z. The aim of this study was to investigate what motivation leads Gen Z students in their choice to study human medicine, and how they see their professional future. Our study was guided by motivation theory and the influence of personality traits and other personal factors on students' choice of university major. Methods: In a cross-sectional online survey, we included third- and fourth-year high school students in Northern Switzerland. We examined the importance of criteria when choosing a university major: personality traits, career motivation, life goals, and other considerations influencing the choice of human medicine versus other fields of study. Results Of 1790 high school students, 456 (25.5%) participated in the survey (72.6% women, mean age 18.4 years); 32.7% of the respondents aspired to major in medicine at university. For all respondents, the foremost criterion for selecting a field of study was 'interest in the field,' followed by 'income' and 'job security.' High school students aiming to study human medicine attached high importance to 'meaningful work' as a criterion; supported by 36.2% of those students answering that helping and healing people was a core motivation to them. They also scored high on altruism (p < 0.001 against all groups compared) and intrinsic motivation (p < 0.001) and were highly performance- (p < 0.001) and career-minded (p < 0.001). In contrast, all the other groups except the law/economics group had higher scores on extraprofessional concerns. Conclusions: Swiss Gen Z students aspiring to study human medicine show high intrinsic motivation, altruism, and willingness to perform, sharing many values with previous generations. Adequate work-life balance and job security are important issues for Gen Z. Regarding the current working conditions, the ongoing shortage of physicians, and recent findings on physicians' well-being, the potential for improvement and optimization is high. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Mentoring questionnaire for health profession students in Switzerland: validation study.
- Author
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Rogan, Slavko, Rufener, Adrian, Holzer, Monika, and Luginbuehl, Helena
- Subjects
QUESTIONNAIRES ,CHI-squared test ,COLLEGE students ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FACTOR analysis ,HEALTH occupations students ,RESEARCH methodology ,MENTORING ,PROBABILITY theory ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,CROSS-sectional method ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose:This study aims to determine the validity of a mentoring programme questionnaire that should to be used for future evaluations in bachelor degree courses at the Bern University of Applied Sciences. Material and methods:One hundred and twenty-nine students were finally included in this study. Explorative factor analysis and confirmatory factor analysis was conducted and model fit was discussed. Results:The model fit shows a good RMSEA value of .064 and a good CFI value of .946. A non-significant chi-square value could be determined (χ2 = 45.76, df =30,N = 129,p = .063). Conclusion:The current study determines a feasible model fit and suggests applying the mentoring programme questionnaire in bachelor degree courses at the Bern University of Applied Sciences Health with relatively good construct validity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Assessing adherence to multiple medications and in daily life among patients with multimorbidity.
- Author
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Inauen, Jennifer, Bierbauer, Walter, Lüscher, Janina, König, Claudia, Tobias, Robert, Ihle, Andreas, Zimmerli, Lukas, Holzer, Barbara M., Battegay, Edouard, Siebenhüner, Klarissa, Kliegel, Matthias, and Scholz, Urte
- Subjects
CLINICAL drug trials ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHRONIC diseases ,PATIENT compliance ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SELF-evaluation ,COMORBIDITY ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,STATISTICAL significance ,POLYPHARMACY ,DATA analysis software ,DIARY (Literary form) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: Chronic conditions often require multiple medication intake. However, past research has focused on assessing overall adherence or adherence to a single index medication only. This study explored adherence measures for multiple medication intake, and in daily life, among patients with multiple chronic conditions (i.e. multimorbidity). Design: Eighty-four patients with multimorbidity and multiple-medication regimens completed three monthly panel questionnaires. A randomly assigned subsample additionally completed a 30-day daily diary. Main outcome measure: The Non-Adherence Report; a brief self-report measure of adherence to each prescribed medication (NAR-M), and in daily life. We further assessed the Medication Adherence Report Scale (MARS), and a subsample of participants were randomised to electronic adherence monitoring. Results: The NAR-M indicated M = 94.7% adherence at Time 1 (SD = 9.3%). The NAR-M was significantly correlated with the MARS (r
t1 = .52, rt2 = .57, and rt3 = .65; p < .001), and in tendency with electronically assessed adherence (rt2 = .45, rt3 = .46, p < .10). Variance components analysis indicated that between-person differences accounted for 10.2% of the variance in NAR-M adherence rates, whereas 22.9% were attributable to medication by person interactions. Conclusion: This study highlights the importance and feasibility of studying adherence to multiple medications differentially, and in daily life. Future studies may use these measures to investigate within-person and betweenmedication differences in adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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6. Patients' satisfaction with community treatment: a pilot cross-sectional survey adopting multiple perspectives.
- Author
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Urben, S., Gloor, A., Baier, V., Mantzouranis, G., Graap, C., Cherix‐Parchet, M., Henz, C., Dutoit, F., Faucherand, A., Senent, E., and Holzer, L.
- Subjects
PATIENT satisfaction ,STATISTICAL correlation ,FOSTER children ,FOSTER home care ,FOSTER parents ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EVALUATION of medical care ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,SURVEYS ,TELEPHONES ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,PILOT projects ,DATA analysis ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Accessible summary Patients' satisfaction is scarcely studied within the context of community treatment for adolescents. Thus, this study adopts a multiple perspective on patients' satisfaction (including service users as well as staff members)., The results highlighted that all informants (patients, foster carers in foster homes and professional caregivers from community treatment teams) perceived the patients to be satisfied, with foster carers reporting the highest patient satisfaction rate., Considering the patient satisfaction rate from multiple perspectives provides complementary understandings., Clinical outcomes and, specifically, a reduction in emotional difficulties were related to patient's satisfaction, but only from the patients' perspective., Abstract Community treatment ( CT) teams in Switzerland provide care to patients who are unable to use regular child and adolescent mental health services (i.e. inpatient and outpatients facilities). No study has considered patients' self-rated satisfaction alongside with staff members' perspectives on patient satisfaction. Thus, adopting a cross-sectional survey design, we collected patients' satisfaction using the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire ( CSQ-8), rated by multiple informants (patients, foster carers in foster homes and professional caregivers from CT teams). Professional caregivers assessed clinical outcomes using the Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Children and Adolescents. The results indicated that all informants were satisfied with the community treatment teams. The satisfaction scores were not correlated across informants; however, the alleviation of emotional symptoms was correlated with patients' satisfaction. This study indicated that the use of a combined approach including the views of service users and professionals gives important complementary information. Finally, in our sample, lower emotional symptoms were linked to enhanced patient satisfaction. This study demonstrated the importance of considering multiple perspectives to obtain the most accurate picture of patients' satisfaction. Second, focusing on the reduction of emotional symptoms might lead to a higher degree of patients' satisfaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Prevalence of chronic medical conditions in Switzerland: exploring estimates validity by comparing complementary data sources.
- Author
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Zellweger, Ueli, Bopp, Matthias, Holzer, Barbara M., Djalali, Sima, and Kaplan, Vladimir
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DISEASE prevalence ,CHRONIC diseases ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,HYPERTENSION ,DATA analysis ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Background Prevalence estimates of chronic medical conditions and their multiples (multimorbidity) in the general population are scarce and often rather speculative in Switzerland. Using complementary data sources, we assessed estimates validity of population-based prevalence rates of four common chronic medical conditions with high impact on cardiovascular health (diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia, obesity). Methods We restricted our analyses to patients 15-94 years old living in the German speaking part of Switzerland. Data sources were: Swiss Health Survey (SHS, 2007, n = 13,580); Family Medicine ICPC Research using Electronic Medical Record Database (FIRE, 2010-12, n = 99,441); and hospital discharge statistics (MEDSTAT, 2009-10, n = 883,936). We defined chronic medical conditions based on use of drugs, diagnoses, and measurements. Results After a careful harmonization of the definitions, a high degree of concordance, especially regarding the age- and gender-specific distribution patterns, was found for diabetes mellitus (defined as drug use or diagnosis in SHS, drug use or diagnosis or blood glucose measurement in FIRE, and ICD-10 codes E10-14 as secondary diagnosis in MEDSTAT) and for hypertension (defined as drug use alone in SHS and FIRE, and ICD-10 codes I10-15 or I67.4 as secondary diagnosis in MEDSTAT). A lesser degree of concordance was found for dyslipidemia (defined as drug use alone in SHS and FIRE, and ICD-10 code E78 in MEDSTAT), and for obesity (defined as BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 derived from self-reported height and weight in SHS, from measured height and weight or diagnosis of obesity in FIRE, and ICD-10 code E66 as secondary diagnosis in MEDSTAT). MEDSTAT performed well for clearly defined diagnoses (diabetes, hypertension), but underrepresented systematically more symptomatic conditions (dyslipidemia, obesity). Conclusion Complementary data sources can provide different prevalence estimates of chronic medical conditions in the general population. However, common age and sex patterns indicate that a careful harmonization of the definition of each chronic medical condition permits a high degree of concordance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Prävalenz von Multimorbidität in der Schweiz -- Definitionen und Datenquellen.
- Author
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Bopp, M. and Holzer, B. M.
- Subjects
- *
DISEASE prevalence , *PUBLIC health , *CHRONIC diseases , *DATA analysis , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
Despite insufficient data, multimorbidity is in Switzerland an emerging issue on the agenda of public health and medical institutions. In this article the most current issues for and obstacles towards valid prevalence figures are discussed. Available Swiss data sources which could be used for estimating prevalence of multimorbidity are illustrated. The biggest current challenge for the international research community is to create a uniform definition of multimorbidity concerning the types and a minimal number of included chronic conditions. Furthermore, to obtain valid and internationally comparable prevalence estimates in the future, methodological approaches regarding data assessment and the development of a measurement for the burden of multimorbidity should be broadly discussed in order to come to a consensus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The Impact of Legislative Deterrence Measures on the Number of Asylum Applications in Switzerland (1986-1995).
- Author
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Holzer, Thomas, Schneider, Gerald, and Widmer, Thomas
- Subjects
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EMIGRATION & immigration , *REFUGEES , *NONCITIZENS , *SOCIAL groups - Abstract
In the late eighties and early nineties, almost all Western European nations adopted an increasingly restrictive policy towards the growing number of asylum seekers. We develop a push-and-pull model and evaluate whether these newly created deterrence measures had a significant impact on the number of asylum applications in Switzerland. The statistical tests in the form of Box-Tiao intervention analyses shows that states are only partially able to control global migration. We particularly demonstrate that only one of the unilateral measures adopted by the Swiss government reached the main goal and led to a substantial reduction in the number of applications in 1990. Further, legal reforms did not affect the number of asylum requests of refugees fleeing from a violent conflict in the neighborhood of the host country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Strengths and Weaknesses in the Swedish and Swiss Education Systems: a comparative analysis based on PISA data.
- Author
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FREDRIKSSON, ULF, HOLZER, THOMAS, McCLUSKEY-CAVIN, HUGEUTTE, and TAUBE, KARIN
- Subjects
GENDER differences in education ,GENDER differences in mathematical ability ,READING ability testing - Abstract
Sweden and Switzerland are among the wealthiest countries in the world, but also two countries with different approaches to how to provide welfare. Sweden has followed a social democratic welfare model and Switzerland a liberal model. This has implications for how the education systems have been organised. The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) study makes it possible to compare the achievements of students in reading and mathematics. Students in Switzerland are significantly better than Swedish students in mathematics. In reading, Swedish students are significantly better than Swiss students. In both countries, girls are better readers than boys. The gender difference in reading is larger in Sweden than in Switzerland. Boys are better than girls in mathematics. The gender difference in mathematics is smaller in Sweden than in Switzerland. The difference in reading between natives and non-natives is considerably lower in Sweden than in Switzerland. Sweden is among those countries where the variance between schools is very low. In Switzerland the variation in student performance among schools is higher than the average in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. Both education systems may be regarded to be of high quality in an international perspective. The Swedish system has, with the exception of the gender gap in reading, produced a system that seems to have a higher degree of equity than the Swiss system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. PU and NP analysis of soil and sediment samples with ICP-MS
- Author
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Röllin, S., Sahli, H., Holzer, R., Astner, M., and Burger, M.
- Subjects
- *
SOIL testing , *PLUTONIUM isotopes , *RADIOISOTOPES , *INDUCTIVELY coupled plasma mass spectrometry , *CHROMATOGRAPHIC analysis ,NEPTUNIUM isotopes - Abstract
Abstract: A method to analyse Pu and Np was optimised to achieve low detection limits and high sample throughput. Soil and sediment samples were ashed and digested with a borate fusion. After dissolving the melt in nitric acid, Pu and Np were separated on a TEVA extraction chromatopraphy column. It was measured with a sector field ICP-MS. Detection limits in soils and sediments as low as 1×10−15 g/g for Pu and Np were achieved. The method was applied to reference materials, soil profiles from Switzerland and sediment samples from the river Yenisei (RU), where radioactive nuclides have been discharged. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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