67300 lines
3.6 MiB
67300 lines
3.6 MiB
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@incollection{ WOS:000410833100005,
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Author = {Dunn, Leith L. and Samuels, Ayanna T.},
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Editor = {Robinson, L and Schulz, J and Dunn, HS},
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Title = {GENDER EQUITY AND ACCESS IN THE CARIBBEAN ICT SECTOR},
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Booktitle = {COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES ANNUAL: DIGITAL EMPOWERMENT:
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OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES OF INCLUSION IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE
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CARIBBEAN},
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Series = {Studies in Media and Communications},
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Year = {2017},
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Volume = {12},
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Pages = {65-91},
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Abstract = {Purpose - This study examines the problem of unequal access to the
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Caribbean ICT industry on the part of women, and considers causes,
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consequences and possible solutions. The latter includes integrating
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gender perspectives in ICT policies and programmes to increase access
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for all to education and employment opportunities for national
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development.
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Methodology/approach - Mixed Methods research techniques (questionnaire
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surveys, elite interviews and focus group discussions) were used to
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collect data from national stakeholders in Jamaica and St Lucia.
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Findings - Despite policy commitments to gender equality and the
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deployment of ICTs to promote development, significant gaps persist
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between policy and practice. Results show that disadvantages in ICT
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access for women result in gender differences in sector involvement.
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Gender socialisation and the resulting discrimination in education and
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employment undermine commitments to inclusive development. Consequences
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include untapped opportunities for innovation, efficiency and business
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along the ICT value chain relating to development.
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Research limitations - Case studies only represent Anglophone Caribbean
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and may not reflect all subregional contexts.
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Practical implications - The paper demonstrates the value of collecting,
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analysing and using data disaggregated by sex to identify needs of
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vulnerable groups relating to inclusive development.
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Social implications - Equitable access to ICTs for women through
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training, community Internet-access-points, and support to
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establish/expand Micro Small and Medium-sized Enterprises will enable
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women to combine paid and unpaid family caregiving work and to
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participate in the ICT value chain.
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Originality/value - There is a dearth of gender-based analysis of ICT
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policymaking in the Caribbean. The paper contributes theoretical,
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methodological and policy analysis geared towards understanding and
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promoting inclusive access and gender equality in ICTs for sustainable
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development in the Caribbean.},
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Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
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Language = {English},
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Affiliation = {Dunn, LL (Corresponding Author), Univ West Indies Mona, Inst Gender \& Dev Studies, Mona Unit, Kingston, Jamaica.
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Dunn, Leith L., Univ West Indies Mona, Inst Gender \& Dev Studies, Mona Unit, Kingston, Jamaica.
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Samuels, Ayanna T., World Bank, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
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Samuels, Ayanna T., Caribbean Dev Bank, St Michael, Barbados.
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Samuels, Ayanna T., Univ West Indies Consulting Co, Kingston, Jamaica.},
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DOI = {10.1108/S2050-206020160000012005},
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ISSN = {2050-2060},
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ISBN = {978-1-78635-481-5; 978-1-78635-482-2},
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Keywords = {Gender-sensitive research; gender mainstreaming; females; ICT policy;
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Caribbean development; ICT4D},
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Web-of-Science-Categories = {Communication; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Sociology},
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Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
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Times-Cited = {0},
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|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
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Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
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Unique-ID = {WOS:000410833100005},
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DA = {2023-09-28},
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}
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@article{ WOS:000400653800002,
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Author = {Patton, Dana and Costich, Julia F. and Lidstromer, Niklas},
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Title = {Paid Parental Leave Policies and Infant Mortality Rates in OECD
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Countries: Policy Implications for the United States},
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Journal = {WORLD MEDICAL \& HEALTH POLICY},
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Year = {2017},
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Volume = {9},
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Number = {1},
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Pages = {6-23},
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Month = {MAR},
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Abstract = {Infant mortality is an important indicator of a nation's overall health
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and well-being because of its association with education, availability
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and accessibility of health services, and income inequality. In this
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paper, we examine the effect of job-protected paid parental leave on
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infant and post-neonatal mortality rates in 19 OECD countries from 1960
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to 2012. We utilize a generalized least squares model controlling for a
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host of variables traditionally examined in studies of infant mortality
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rates, as well as year fixed effects, country fixed effects, and country
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time trends. We find a statistically significant association between
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job-protected paid parental leave and a reduction in both infant
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mortality rates and post-neonatal mortality rates. The findings are
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particularly relevant for policymakers in the United States, the only
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industrialized democracy in the world that does not provide
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job-protected paid parental leave to working women and men.},
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Type = {Article},
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Language = {English},
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Affiliation = {Patton, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Alabama, Polit Sci, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 USA.
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Patton, Dana, Univ Alabama, Polit Sci, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 USA.
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Costich, Julia F., Kentucky Injury Prevent \& Res Ctr, Dept Hlth Serv Management, Lexington, KY USA.
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Costich, Julia F., Kentucky Injury Prevent \& Res Ctr, Lexington, KY USA.
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Lidstromer, Niklas, GlobeDoc GmbH, Zug, Switzerland.},
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DOI = {10.1002/wmh3.214},
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ISSN = {1948-4682},
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Keywords = {paid parental leave; infant mortality rate; OECD countries},
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Keywords-Plus = {CHILD HEALTH; MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; POPULATION HEALTH; PROGRAMS; MODELS;
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CARE},
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Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
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Author-Email = {dana.patton@ua.edu},
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ORCID-Numbers = {Lidstromer, Niklas/0000-0003-2701-5029},
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Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
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Times-Cited = {11},
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Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
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Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
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Unique-ID = {WOS:000400653800002},
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DA = {2023-09-28},
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}
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@article{ WOS:000510412700001,
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Author = {Konstantinidis, Nikitas},
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Title = {Military conscription, external security, and income inequality: The
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missing link},
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Journal = {JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL POLITICS},
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Year = {2020},
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Volume = {32},
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Number = {2},
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Pages = {312-347},
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Month = {APR},
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Abstract = {This article seeks to analyze the political economy of military
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conscription policy and its relationship with a country's external
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security environment. National security is modeled as a non-rivalrous
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and non-excludable public good, whose production technology consists of
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either centrally conscripted or competitively recruited military labor.
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Conscription is construed as an implicit discretionary tax on citizens'
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labor endowment. Based on this, I propose a simple political economy
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model of pure public goods provision financed by two policy instruments:
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a lump-sum income tax and a conscription tax. Constraint optimization of
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a quasi-linear utility function gives rise to three general classes of
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preferences: high- and low-skilled citizens will prefer an all-volunteer
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army, albeit of different size, whereas medium-skilled citizens will
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favor positive levels of conscription. These derived preferences allow
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me to tease out an explicit relationship between military manpower
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procurement policy, a country's level of external threat, and its
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pre-tax income inequality levels. One of my key findings is that more
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egalitarian countries are more likely to use conscription as a military
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manpower procurement mechanism.},
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Type = {Article},
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Language = {English},
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Affiliation = {Konstantinidis, N (Corresponding Author), IE Univ, Sch Global \& Pubic Affairs, C Pedro de Valdivia 21, Madrid 28006, Spain.
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Konstantinidis, Nikitas, IE Univ, Sch Global \& Pubic Affairs, C Pedro de Valdivia 21, Madrid 28006, Spain.},
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DOI = {10.1177/0951629819895595},
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EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2020},
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Article-Number = {0951629819895595},
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ISSN = {0951-6298},
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EISSN = {1460-3667},
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Keywords = {Military conscription; national security; public goods; income
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inequality; conscription tax},
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Keywords-Plus = {DRAFT; PARTIES; SUPPORT; MODEL; ARMY; END; WAR},
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Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science},
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Author-Email = {nikitas.konstantinidis@ie.edu},
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ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baltutyte, Gerda/AGH-5630-2022
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Konstantinidis, Nikitas/P-6869-2016},
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ORCID-Numbers = {Konstantinidis, Nikitas/0000-0002-3132-1216},
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Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
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Times-Cited = {0},
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|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
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|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
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Unique-ID = {WOS:000510412700001},
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DA = {2023-09-28},
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|
}
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@article{ WOS:000182983200008,
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Author = {Blane, D},
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Title = {The use of quantitative medical sociology},
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Journal = {SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH \& ILLNESS},
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Year = {2003},
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Volume = {25},
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Number = {SI},
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Pages = {115-130},
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Abstract = {The present article reviews, in relation to quantitative work on the
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social structure, papers published in Sociology of Health and Illness
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during its first 25 years. Each issue published during the years
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1979-2002 has been examined; and quantitative papers, relating to
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various aspects of the social structure, have been identified. Such
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papers are found to have formed a minor but substantively significant
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theme within the Journal. These contributions situate the journal
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between sociology and social epidemiology. Articles in the Journal, for
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example, have been part of sociological debates about the measurement of
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social class, and of social epidemiological debates about the
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relationship between income distribution and population health. The
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contribution of Sociology of Health and Illness to a number of such
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debates is reviewed. The article concludes that the present situation,
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in particular the intellectual crisis in social epidemiology and social
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science investment in large data sets, gives the Journal the chance to
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build on this distinguished tradition by encouraging, through its
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publication policy, the further development of quantitative medical
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sociology.},
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Type = {Article},
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Language = {English},
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Affiliation = {Blane, D (Corresponding Author), Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol \& Med, Dept Social Sci \& Med, St Dunstans Rd, London W6 8RP, England.
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Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol \& Med, Dept Social Sci \& Med, London W6 8RP, England.},
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ISSN = {0141-9889},
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Keywords = {measurement of social class; income distribution; socio-geography;
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ethnicity; domestic labour; unemployment; health inequalities;
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lifecourse},
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Keywords-Plus = {SOCIOECONOMIC MORTALITY DIFFERENTIALS; SOCIAL-CLASS DIFFERENCES; HEALTH
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INEQUALITIES; STRUCTURAL FACTORS; LIFETIME EXPOSURE; PAID EMPLOYMENT;
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CAMBRIDGE-SCALE; ILL-HEALTH; EXPLANATIONS; INCOME},
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Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
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Biomedical; Sociology},
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|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000182983200008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
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@article{ WOS:000543556000001,
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Author = {Trezzini, Bruno and Schuller, Victoria and Schupbach, Sabrina and
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Bickenbach, Jerome},
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Title = {Environmental barriers to and facilitators of labour market
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participation as experienced by disabled people living in Switzerland},
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Journal = {DISABILITY \& SOCIETY},
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Year = {2021},
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Volume = {36},
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Number = {6},
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Pages = {925-951},
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Month = {JUN 28},
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Abstract = {Forming part of a larger project on how disabled people exercise active
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citizenship in nine European countries, this study examined factors that
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enhance or hamper disabled peoples' opportunities to participate fully
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and on equal terms with others in the domain of work. Twenty-six,
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gender-balanced life course interviews with persons living in
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Switzerland and representing four impairment groups and three age
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cohorts were conducted. Applying qualitative content analysis, we found
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that over the entire work life course environmental factors such as
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support structures and attitudes were most salient (as compared to
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personal factors and impairment effects), and that facilitating and
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impeding factors cut across impairment groups and age cohorts. To
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achieve parity of participation and to enhance people with disabilities'
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active citizenship and opportunities to access, and flourish in, the
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labour market, society has to both recognize their rights and provide
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sufficient economic resources to remove existing barriers.Points of
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interest Having a paid job is an important aspect and sign of a person's
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social participation and inclusion. We collected personal stories of
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disabled people living in Switzerland to identify the barriers and
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support they experienced in finding and maintaining a suitable paid job.
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Most of the barriers identified were environmental and could have been
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addressed by workplace adjustments and policy changes. The diversity of
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the disabled interviewees was reflected in the barriers and support they
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experienced. However, the presence or absence of support from family
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members, job counsellors, employers and work colleagues played an
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important role across different types of disabilities. Recognizing and
|
|
understanding the barriers that disabled people experience with regard
|
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to paid employment will help to develop appropriate social responses and
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|
individual strategies for self-help.},
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Type = {Article},
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Language = {English},
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Affiliation = {Trezzini, B (Corresponding Author), Guido A Zach Str 4, CH-6207 Nottwil, Switzerland.
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Trezzini, Bruno; Schuller, Victoria; Schupbach, Sabrina; Bickenbach, Jerome, Swiss Parapleg Res, Nottwil, Switzerland.
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Trezzini, Bruno; Bickenbach, Jerome, Univ Lucerne, Dept Hlth Sci \& Med, Luzern, Switzerland.},
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DOI = {10.1080/09687599.2020.1768053},
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EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2020},
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ISSN = {0968-7599},
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EISSN = {1360-0508},
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Keywords = {active citizenship; parity of participation; work and employment;
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barriers and facilitators; lived experience; qualitative research},
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Keywords-Plus = {INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES; ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP; SOCIAL-JUSTICE;
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|
EMPLOYMENT; WORK; PHOTOVOICE; POLICY; PERSPECTIVE; REFLECTIONS;
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WHEELCHAIR},
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Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
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Author-Email = {bruno.trezzini@paraplegie.ch},
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ORCID-Numbers = {Bickenbach, Jerome/0000-0003-3070-4407},
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|
Number-of-Cited-References = {87},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000543556000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
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@article{ WOS:000238854300003,
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Author = {Rothstein, Bo and Uslaner, Eric M.},
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Title = {All for all - Equality, corruption, and social trust},
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Journal = {WORLD POLITICS},
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Year = {2005},
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Volume = {58},
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Number = {1},
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Pages = {41+},
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Month = {OCT},
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Abstract = {The importance of social trust has become widely accepted in the social
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sciences. A number of explanations have been put forward for the stark
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variation in social trust among countries. Among these, participation in
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voluntary associations received most attention. Yet there is scant
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evidence that participation can lead to trust. In this article, the
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authors examine a variable that has not gotten the attention it deserves
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in the discussion about the sources of generalized trust, namely,
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equality. They conceptualize equality along two dimensions: economic
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equality and equality of opportunity. The omission of both these
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dimensions of equality in the social capital literature is peculiar for
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several reasons. First, it is obvious that the countries that score
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highest on social trust also rank highest on economic equality, namely,
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the Nordic countries, the Netherlands, and Canada. Second, these
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countries have put a lot of effort in creating equality of opportunity,
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not least in regard to their policies for public education, health care,
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labor market opportunities, and (more recently) gender equality The
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argument for increasing social trust by reducing inequality has largely
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been ignored in the policy debates about social trust. Social capital
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|
research has to a large extent been used by several governments and
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policy organizations to send a message to people that the bad things in
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their society are caused by too little volunteering. The policy
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implications that follow from the authors' research is that the low
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levels of trust and social capital that plague many countries are caused
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by too little government action to reduce inequality. However, many
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countries with low levels of social trust and social capital may be
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stuck in what is known as a social trap. The logic of such a situation
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|
is the following. Social trust will not increase because massive social
|
|
inequality, prevails, but the public policies that could remedy this
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situation cannot be established precisely because there is a genuine
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lack of trust. This lack of trust concerns both ``other people{''} and
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the government institutions that are needed to implement universal
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policies.},
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Type = {Article},
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Language = {English},
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Affiliation = {Rothstein, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Gothenburg, Qual Govt Inst, Gothenburg, Sweden.
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Univ Gothenburg, Qual Govt Inst, Gothenburg, Sweden.
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Univ Maryland, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.},
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|
DOI = {10.1353/wp.2006.0022},
|
|
ISSN = {0043-8871},
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|
EISSN = {1086-3338},
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|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {International Relations; Political Science},
|
|
Author-Email = {bo.rothstein@pol.qu.se
|
|
euslaner@gypt.umd.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {85},
|
|
Times-Cited = {727},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {264},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000238854300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
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@article{ WOS:000321080200003,
|
|
Author = {Deuchert, Eva and Kauer, Lukas and Zannol, Flurina Meisen},
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Title = {Would You Train Me with My Mental Illness? Evidence from a Discrete
|
|
Choice Experiment},
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Journal = {JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH POLICY AND ECONOMICS},
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Year = {2013},
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Volume = {16},
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Number = {2},
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Pages = {67-80},
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Month = {JUN},
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|
Abstract = {Background: Mental illness is the prime reason for the inflow into
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|
disability insurance in many countries. The integration of persons with
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|
a disability into the regular labor market is costly and in the case of
|
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mentally ill persons, particularly difficult. Supported Education and
|
|
Employment - a rehabilitation method that directly places patients in a
|
|
realistic work environment - has been shown to be effective in
|
|
increasing competitive employment. However, it has not yet been widely
|
|
implemented.
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|
Aims of the Study: We evaluate ex-ante the willingness to participate in
|
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Supported Education and Employment and the barriers to do so from the
|
|
employer's perspective.
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Methods: We conducted a discrete choice experiment implemented in an
|
|
online survey. The survey was carried out among all Swiss companies
|
|
which provide standard dual-track vocational education and training for
|
|
commercial occupations in Eastern Switzerland. We presented respondents
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|
(employees who are responsible for vocational training and/or for the
|
|
selection of applicants) with a sample of five hypothetical profiles.
|
|
These profiles vary along different medical diagnoses, different illness
|
|
related (dys-)functions, and other characteristics that may be
|
|
associated with a company's willingness to accept the candidate (such as
|
|
school performance, motivation, and illness related absences).
|
|
Respondents were asked whether or not they would train this person.
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|
Results: 22\% of the profiles are accepted. However, our results
|
|
demonstrate that the hypothetical bias - which is the difference between
|
|
individual saying what they would do in a hypothetical setting and what
|
|
they will do when they have the opportunity - is severe. Correcting for
|
|
this bias using follow-up scales ({''}Are you sure?{''}) reduces the
|
|
overall acceptance in our sample to 9\%. Keeping in mind the response
|
|
rate to our survey of 35\%, overall acceptance may be as low as 3\%.
|
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Non-cognitive dysfunctions (e.g. non-adherence to regulations,
|
|
difficulties with contacts with others) that are related to mental
|
|
disorders, are the main deterrents. Patients with psychotic disorders
|
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are particularly disadvantaged.
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Implications for Health Policy: Although there are no direct costs to
|
|
the employer, a wide introduction of Supported Vocational Education and
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|
Training is likely to fail at the current stage with the unwillingness
|
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of companies to train people with special needs. There may be additional
|
|
incentives needed, for example in form of subsidies or legal
|
|
requirements. Even though our experiment has been tailored to the Swiss
|
|
system, our results may also be relevant in other countries with similar
|
|
dual-track education systems.},
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|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
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Affiliation = {Deuchert, E (Corresponding Author), Univ St Gallen, Ctr Disabil \& Integrat, Rosenbergstr 51, CH-9000 St Gallen, Switzerland.
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Deuchert, Eva; Kauer, Lukas, Univ St Gallen, Ctr Disabil \& Integrat, Dept Econ, CH-9000 St Gallen, Switzerland.
|
|
Zannol, Flurina Meisen, Univ Appl Sci St Gallen, Dept Social Work, Rorschach, Switzerland.},
|
|
ISSN = {1091-4358},
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|
Keywords-Plus = {WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; LABOR-MARKET OUTCOMES; NONCOGNITIVE SKILLS;
|
|
HYPOTHETICAL BIAS; DISABILITY STATUS; EMPLOYERS; HEALTH; WORK;
|
|
REHABILITATION; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {eva.deuchert@unisg.ch},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Deuchert, Eva/IXD-1412-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kauer, Lukas/0000-0003-1754-6942},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000321080200003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000619749900006,
|
|
Author = {RamPrakash, Rajalakshmi and Lingam, Lakshmi},
|
|
Title = {Why is women's utilization of a publicly funded health insurance low?: a
|
|
qualitative study in Tamil Nadu, India},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {FEB 12},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundThe continuing impetus for universal health coverage has given
|
|
rise to publicly funded health insurance schemes in lower-middle income
|
|
countries. However, there is insufficient understanding of how universal
|
|
health coverage schemes impact gender equality and equity. This paper
|
|
attempts to understand why utilization of a publicly funded health
|
|
insurance scheme has been found to be lower among women compared to men
|
|
in a southern Indian state. It aims to identify the gender barriers
|
|
across various social institutions that thwart the policy objectives of
|
|
providing financial protection and improved access to inpatient care for
|
|
women.MethodsA qualitative study on the Chief Minister's Comprehensive
|
|
Health Insurance Scheme was carried out in urban and rural impoverished
|
|
localities in Tamil Nadu, a southern state in India. Thirty-three women
|
|
and 16 men who had a recent history of hospitalization and 14
|
|
stakeholders were purposefully interviewed. Transcribed interviews were
|
|
content analyzed based on Naila Kabeer's Social Relations Framework
|
|
using gender as an analytical category.ResultsWhile unpacking the
|
|
navigation pathways of women to utilize publicly funded health insurance
|
|
to access inpatient care, gender barriers are found operating at the
|
|
household, community, and programmatic levels. Unpaid care work,
|
|
financial dependence, mobility constraints, and gender norms emerged as
|
|
the major gender-specific barriers arising from the household.
|
|
Exclusions from insurance enrollment activities at the community level
|
|
were mediated by a variety of social inequities. Market ideologies in
|
|
insurance and health, combined with poor governance by State, resulted
|
|
in out-of-pocket health expenditures, acute information asymmetry,
|
|
selective availability of care, and poor acceptability. These gender
|
|
barriers were found to be mediated by all four institutions-household,
|
|
community, market, and State-resulting in lower utilization of the
|
|
scheme by women.ConclusionsHealth policies which aim to provide
|
|
financial protection and improve access to healthcare services need to
|
|
address gender as a crucial social determinant. A gender-blind health
|
|
insurance can not only leave many pre-existing gender barriers
|
|
unaddressed but also accentuate others. This paper stresses that
|
|
universal health coverage policy and programs need to have an explicit
|
|
focus on gender and other social determinants to promote access and
|
|
equity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {RamPrakash, R (Corresponding Author), Loyola Coll Campus, Loyola Inst Business Adm, Chennai 600034, Tamil Nadu, India.
|
|
RamPrakash, Rajalakshmi, Loyola Coll Campus, Loyola Inst Business Adm, Chennai 600034, Tamil Nadu, India.
|
|
Lingam, Lakshmi, Inst Social Sci, VN Purav Marg, Mumbai 400088, Maharashtra, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-021-10352-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {350},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender; Publicly funded health insurance (PFHI); Universal health
|
|
coverage (UHC); Social relations (SR) framework; India; Gender analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EQUITY; CARE; INTERVIEWS; RESOURCE; GENDER; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {rajalaksh@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {RamPrakash, Rajalakshmi/0000-0001-6785-5239},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000619749900006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000475278900001,
|
|
Author = {Carmichael, Fiona and Darko, Christian K. and Vasilakos, Nicholas},
|
|
Title = {Health and Well-being of Young People in Ethiopia, India, Peru and
|
|
Vietnam: Life Course Impacts},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {56},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {964-983},
|
|
Month = {MAY 3},
|
|
Abstract = {Using data from four waves of the Young Lives longitudinal survey, we
|
|
follow the lives of 3,064 eight-year-old children over 12 years in four
|
|
developing countries (Ethiopia, India, Peru and Vietnam) to explore the
|
|
links between children's lives and their health and wellbeing in early
|
|
adulthood. We apply a novel combination of sequence analysis with
|
|
clustering and difference-in-differences estimation techniques to
|
|
identify links between health and wellbeing outcomes in early adulthood
|
|
and six distinct clusters grouping similar life course pathways. The
|
|
latter are characterised by family living conditions, economic status
|
|
and experience of critical life events (including economic shocks). Our
|
|
results indicate that there were significant differences in health and
|
|
wellbeing between children in the most advantaged and less advantaged
|
|
clusters. These wellbeing gaps all narrowed over time but only
|
|
completely closed for one cluster. In contrast, only some of the initial
|
|
health gaps narrowed. These results suggest that policy aimed at
|
|
improving health and wellbeing outcomes in early adulthood needs to
|
|
focus on supporting disadvantaged young children.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vasilakos, N (Corresponding Author), Univ East Anglia, Norwich Business Sch, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
|
|
Carmichael, Fiona; Darko, Christian K., Univ Birmingham, Birmingham Business Sch, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Vasilakos, Nicholas, Univ East Anglia, Norwich Business Sch, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/00220388.2019.1626835},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-0388},
|
|
EISSN = {1743-9140},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKET; SEQUENCE-ANALYSIS; BIRTH-WEIGHT; ADULTHOOD; TRAJECTORIES;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; WORK; TRANSITIONS; ATTAINMENT; BEHAVIOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {n.vasilakos@uea.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Vasilakos, Nicholas/0000-0003-3279-2885
|
|
Carmichael, Fiona/0000-0002-7932-2410
|
|
Darko, Christian/0000-0002-1665-2594},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000475278900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000798115800003,
|
|
Author = {Giannotti, Mariana and Tomasiello, Diego B. and Bittencourt, Taina A.},
|
|
Title = {The bias in estimating accessibility inequalities using gravity-based
|
|
metrics},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {101},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Accessibility measures have been extensively used to explore the
|
|
outcomes of the spatial distribution of transport, jobs, and population
|
|
groups in cities. Despite its wide use, identifying the population
|
|
groups that most benefit from accessibility is not straightforward and
|
|
different metrics might result in different conclusions. The present
|
|
work aims to analyze the potential bias of using gravity-based measures
|
|
based on revealed mobilities to identify job accessibility inequalities.
|
|
By looking at two large and very different regions, the municipality of
|
|
Sa similar to o Paulo (SP) and the Greater London Area (GLA), we argue
|
|
that distance decay functions built from current trip behaviors should
|
|
be carefully used in evaluations of accessibility inequalities because
|
|
it may underestimate disparities between socio-occupational groups and
|
|
also result in a misleading interpretation of impedance factors. Two
|
|
distinct approaches were implemented to support those claims. We first
|
|
estimate group-specific distance decay functions, considering only
|
|
travel time. Secondly, we consider both travel time and travel cost
|
|
relative to income to estimate zone-specific and city-specific distance
|
|
decay functions for each one of the study areas. The population of both
|
|
cases studies was stratified according to the NS-SEC standard to select
|
|
the highest and the lowest socio-occupational groups and to explore job
|
|
accessibility inequalities. It was found that higherlevel and
|
|
lower-level socio-occupational groups of SP and GLA present striking
|
|
differences in terms of travel times and relative travel costs, with SP
|
|
being more unequal. By applying the distance decay function of the
|
|
lowest level socio-occupational group to the calculations of the job
|
|
accessibility of the highest level group, and by adding travel cost to
|
|
the analysis, we highlight inconsistencies between gravity-based
|
|
accessibility calculations and theory, as trips taken by different
|
|
groups can be mistakenly associated with willingness to travel. From a
|
|
policy perspective, our findings emphasize that accessibility
|
|
inequalities in large urban centers, especially in the Global South, can
|
|
be underestimated if revealed mobilities are considered to represent the
|
|
willingness to travel and by not taking into account the relative cost
|
|
of travel.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Giannotti, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Sao Paulo, Ctr Metropolitan Studies, Lab Geospatial Anal Polytech Sch, BR-05508070 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.
|
|
Giannotti, Mariana; Tomasiello, Diego B.; Bittencourt, Taina A., Univ Sao Paulo, Ctr Metropolitan Studies, Lab Geospatial Anal Polytech Sch, BR-05508070 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2022.103337},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {103337},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-6923},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-1236},
|
|
Keywords = {Accessibility measures; Inequalities; Public transport},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB ACCESSIBILITY; TRANSPORT ACCESSIBILITY; SPATIAL EQUITY; SAO-PAULO;
|
|
EDUCATION; COST; TIME; CITY; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Geography; Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {mariana.giannotti@usp.br},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000798115800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000358165600004,
|
|
Author = {Bampasidou, Maria and Flores, Carlos A. and Flores-Lagunes, Alfonso and
|
|
Parisian, Daniel J.},
|
|
Editor = {Polachek, SW and Tatsiramos, K},
|
|
Title = {THE ROLE OF DEGREE ATTAINMENT IN THE DIFFERENTIAL IMPACT OF JOB CORPS ON
|
|
ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS},
|
|
Booktitle = {FACTORS AFFECTING WORKER WELL-BEING: THE IMPACT OF CHANGE IN THE LABOR
|
|
MARKET},
|
|
Series = {Research in Labor Economics},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Pages = {113-156},
|
|
Abstract = {Job Corps is the United State's largest and most comprehensive training
|
|
program for disadvantaged youth aged 16-24 years old. A randomized
|
|
social experiment concluded that, on average, individuals benefited from
|
|
the program in the form of higher weekly earnings and employment
|
|
prospects. At the same time, ``young adults{''} (ages 20-24) realized
|
|
much higher impacts relative to ``adolescents{''} (ages 16-19).
|
|
Employing recent nonparametric bounds for causal mediation, we
|
|
investigate whether these two groups' disparate effects correspond to
|
|
them benefiting differentially from distinct aspects of Job Corps, with
|
|
a particular focus on the attainment of a degree (GED, high school, or
|
|
vocational). We find that, for young adults, the part of the total
|
|
effect of Job Corps on earnings (employment) that is due to attaining a
|
|
degree within the program is at most 41\% (32\%) of the total effect,
|
|
whereas for adolescents that part can account for up to 87\% (100\%) of
|
|
the total effect. We also find evidence that the magnitude of the part
|
|
of the effect of Job Corps on the outcomes that works through components
|
|
of Job Corps other than degree attainment (e.g., social skills, job
|
|
placement, residential services) is likely higher for young adults than
|
|
for adolescents. That those other components likely play a more
|
|
important role for young adults has policy implications for more
|
|
effectively servicing participants. More generally, our results
|
|
illustrate how researchers can learn about particular mechanisms of an
|
|
intervention.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bampasidou, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
|
|
Bampasidou, Maria, Univ Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
|
|
Flores, Carlos A., Calif Polytech State Univ San Luis Obispo, Dept Econ, San Luis Obispo, CA 93407 USA.
|
|
Flores-Lagunes, Alfonso; Parisian, Daniel J., SUNY Binghamton, Dept Econ, Binghamton, NY 13902 USA.
|
|
Flores-Lagunes, Alfonso, IZA, Bonn, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/S0147-912120140000040004},
|
|
ISBN = {978-1-78441-149-7; 978-1-78441-150-3},
|
|
Keywords = {Job Corps training program; degree attainment; causal mediation;
|
|
nonparametric bounds},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BOUNDS; IDENTIFICATION; WAGES; AVERAGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bampasidou, Maria/ITV-5484-2023},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000358165600004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000594634100010,
|
|
Author = {Rahman, Motiur and Howard, George and Qian, Jingjing and Garza, Kimberly
|
|
and Abebe, Ash and Hansen, Richard},
|
|
Title = {Disparities in the appropriateness of medication use: Analysis of the
|
|
REasons for Geographic And Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS)
|
|
population-based cohort study},
|
|
Journal = {RESEARCH IN SOCIAL \& ADMINISTRATIVE PHARMACY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Pages = {1702-1710},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Prior work has identified disparities in the quality and
|
|
outcomes of healthcare across socioeconomic subgroups. Medication use
|
|
may be subject to similar disparities.
|
|
Objective: To assess the association between demographic and
|
|
socioeconomic factors (gender, age, race, income, education, and rural
|
|
or urban residence) and appropriateness of medication use.
|
|
Methods: US adults aged >= 45 years (n = 26,798) from the REasons for
|
|
Geographic And Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study were
|
|
included in the analyses, of which 13,623 participants aged >= 65 years
|
|
(recruited 2003-2007). Potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) use in
|
|
older adults and drug-drug interactions (DDIs) were identified through
|
|
2015 Beers Criteria and clinically significant drug interactions list by
|
|
Ament et al., respectively as measures of medication appropriateness.
|
|
Multivariable logistic regression was used to assess the association of
|
|
disparity parameters with PIM use and DDIs. Interactions between race
|
|
and other disparity variables were investigated.
|
|
Results: Approximately 87\% of the participants aged >= 65 years used at
|
|
least one drug listed in the Beers Criteria, and 3.8\% of all
|
|
participants used two or more drugs with DDIs. Significant gender-race
|
|
interaction across prescription-only drug users revealed that white
|
|
females compared with white males (OR = 1.33, 95\% CI 1.20-1.48) and
|
|
black males compared with white males (OR = 1.60, 95\% CI 1.41-1.82)
|
|
were more likely to receive PIM. Individuals with lower income and
|
|
education also were more likely to use PIM in this sub-group. Females
|
|
were less likely than males (female vs. male: OR = 0.55, 95\% CI
|
|
0.48-0.63) and individuals resided in small rural areas as opposed to
|
|
urban areas (small rural vs. urban: OR = 1.37, 95\% CI 1.07-1.76) were
|
|
more likely to have DDIs.
|
|
Conclusion: Demographic and socioeconomic disparities in PIM use and
|
|
DDIs exist. Future studies should seek to better understand factors
|
|
contributing to the disparities in order to guide development of
|
|
interventions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rahman, M; Hansen, R (Corresponding Author), Auburn Univ, Harrison Sch Pharm, 2316 Walker Bldg, Auburn, AL 36849 USA.
|
|
Rahman, Motiur; Qian, Jingjing; Garza, Kimberly; Hansen, Richard, Auburn Univ, Harrison Sch Pharm, Dept Hlth Outcomes Res \& Policy, Auburn, AL 36849 USA.
|
|
Howard, George, Univ Alabama Birmingham, Dept Biostat, Ryals Sch Publ Hlth, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.
|
|
Abebe, Ash, Auburn Univ, Dept Math \& Stat, Auburn, AL 36849 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.sapharm.2020.02.008},
|
|
ISSN = {1551-7411},
|
|
EISSN = {1934-8150},
|
|
Keywords = {REGARDS; Potentially inappropriate medication; Drug-drug interaction;
|
|
Socioeconomic disparity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POTENTIALLY INAPPROPRIATE MEDICATIONS; UPDATED BEERS CRITERIA;
|
|
HEALTH-CARE; UNITED-STATES; DISEASE; DRUG; MORTALITY; BLACKS; WHITES;
|
|
STOPP},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {mzr0042@auburn.edu
|
|
rah0019@auburn.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Abebe, Ash/C-3681-2014},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Abebe, Ash/0000-0001-5759-2383},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000594634100010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000287715100005,
|
|
Author = {Lee, Cheol-Sung and Kim, Young-Bum and Shim, Jae-Mahn},
|
|
Title = {The Limit of Equality Projects: Public-Sector Expansion, Sectoral
|
|
Conflicts, and Income Inequality in Postindustrial Economies},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {76},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {100-124},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {In this study, we investigate how structural economic changes constrain
|
|
an equality project, the public-sector expansion strategy. First, we
|
|
describe a three-stage process in which a growing productivity gap
|
|
between the private-manufacturing and public-service sectors disrupts
|
|
traditional class solidarity. We contend that emerging conflicts between
|
|
private and public sectors due to public-sector expansion and a growing
|
|
inter-sectoral productivity gap eventually lead to employment and budget
|
|
crises, as well as the weakening of coordinated wage-setting
|
|
institutions. Furthermore, political, institutional, and economic
|
|
transformations originating from sectoral cleavages and imbalance lead
|
|
to increased income inequality. We test this argument using an
|
|
unbalanced panel dataset on 16 advanced industrial democracies from 1971
|
|
to 2003. We find that public-sector employment has a strong negative
|
|
effect on income inequality when the productivity gap between sectors is
|
|
low. In such situations, public-sector employment fulfills its promise
|
|
of equality and full employment. However, as the inter-sectoral
|
|
productivity gap increases, the negative effect of public-sector
|
|
expansion on income inequality evaporates. The findings suggest that
|
|
severely uneven productivity gaps due to different degrees of
|
|
technological innovations significantly weaken and limit the
|
|
effectiveness of left-wing governments' policy interventions through
|
|
public-service expansion.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lee, CS (Corresponding Author), Univ Chicago, Dept Sociol, 1126 E 59th St, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Lee, Cheol-Sung; Shim, Jae-Mahn, Univ Chicago, Dept Sociol, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Kim, Young-Bum, Hallym Univ, Hallym Univ Inst Aging, Chunchon, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0003122410396195},
|
|
ISSN = {0003-1224},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-8271},
|
|
Keywords = {public-sector employment; sectoral productivity gap; sectoral conflicts;
|
|
cross-class alliances; income inequality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WELFARE-STATE; FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT; RELATIVE POVERTY; INSTITUTIONS;
|
|
POLITICS; REDISTRIBUTION; GLOBALIZATION; GROWTH; LABOR; STRATEGIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {chslee@uchicago.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Shim, Jae-Mahn/B-7392-2014},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shim, Jae-Mahn/0000-0002-7752-8204},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {101},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {33},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000287715100005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000565514300008,
|
|
Author = {Gates, Alice B. and Pacheco, Dorian and Mejia, Anaceli and Varquez,
|
|
Caitlin and Martinez, Emma and Dillard, Danielle},
|
|
Title = {Exploring Conflicts Between Work and Care: Vulnerable Populations and
|
|
Paid Family Leave},
|
|
Journal = {FAMILIES IN SOCIETY-THE JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL SERVICES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {101},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {353-367},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {This exploratory study aims to increase understanding of conflict
|
|
related to integrating work and care among racial and ethnic minority
|
|
and economically disadvantaged populations. Employing community-based
|
|
research methods, we conducted qualitative interviews with women about
|
|
their caregiving needs following the birth of a child. Interviewees
|
|
struggled to balance their families' need for care with income and other
|
|
basic needs, and they reported experiencing physical, emotional, and
|
|
financial strain. The process of negotiating leave created additional
|
|
stress for workers and families. Our analysis suggests that the conflict
|
|
between work and care is associated with increased social risk and
|
|
vulnerability for members of already vulnerable and marginalized groups.
|
|
Drawing on these insights, specific implications for paid family leave
|
|
policy are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gates, AB (Corresponding Author), Univ Portland, Dept Sociol \& Social Work, 5000 N Willamette, Portland, OR 97203 USA.
|
|
Gates, Alice B.; Pacheco, Dorian; Mejia, Anaceli; Varquez, Caitlin; Martinez, Emma; Dillard, Danielle, Univ Portland, Portland, OR 97203 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1044389419863258},
|
|
ISSN = {1044-3894},
|
|
EISSN = {1945-1350},
|
|
Keywords = {community practice; modes of practice; policy; equity issues; human
|
|
rights; social justice; subjects of practice; vulnerable; marginalized
|
|
populations; community-based research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; OUTCOMES; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {gatesa@up.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gates, Alice/GQQ-3030-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gates, Alice/0000-0003-1646-7169},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000565514300008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000407557400010,
|
|
Author = {Picchi, Sara},
|
|
Title = {The elderly care and domestic services sector during the recent economic
|
|
crisis. The case of Italy, Spain and France},
|
|
Journal = {INVESTIGACIONES FEMINISTAS},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {169-190},
|
|
Abstract = {Over the past ten years in Italy, Spain and France, the demographic
|
|
pressure and the increasing women's participation in labour market have
|
|
fuelled the expansion of the private provision of domestic and care
|
|
services. In order to ensure the difficult balance between
|
|
affordability, quality and job creation, each countries' response has
|
|
been different. France has developed policies to sustain the demand side
|
|
introducing instruments such as vouchers and fiscal schemes, since the
|
|
mid of the 2000s. Massive public funding has contributed to foster a
|
|
regular market of domestic and care services and France is often
|
|
presented as a ``best practices{''} of those policies aimed at
|
|
encouraging a regular private sector. Conversely in Italy and Spain, the
|
|
development of a private domestic and care market has been mostly
|
|
uncontrolled and without a coherent institutional design: the osmosis
|
|
between a large informal market and the regular private care sector has
|
|
been ensured on the supply side by migrant workers' regularizations or
|
|
the introduction of new employment regulations. The analysis presented
|
|
in this paper aims to describe the response of these different policies
|
|
to the challenges imposed by the current economic crisis. In dealing
|
|
with the retrenchment of public expenditure and the reduced households'
|
|
purchasing power, Italy, Spain and France are experiencing greater
|
|
difficulties in ensuring a regular private sector of domestic and care
|
|
services. In light of that, the paper analyses the recent economic
|
|
conjuncture presenting some assumptions about the future risk of deeper
|
|
inequalities rising along with the increase of the process of
|
|
marketization of domestic and care services in all the countries under
|
|
analysis.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Picchi, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Rome, Rome, Italy.
|
|
Picchi, Sara, Univ Rome, Rome, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.5209/rev\_INFE.2016.v7.n1.52067},
|
|
ISSN = {2171-6080},
|
|
Keywords = {domestic and care services; Italy; Spain; France},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LONG-TERM-CARE; REGIMES; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {sara.picchi@uniroma1.it},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Feministas, Investigaciones/AAH-5809-2021},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000407557400010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000383597800004,
|
|
Author = {Chamberlain, Alyssa W. and Boggess, Lyndsay N. and Powers, Rachael A.},
|
|
Title = {The impact of the spatial mismatch between parolee and employment
|
|
locations on recidivism},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CRIME \& JUSTICE},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {398-420},
|
|
Abstract = {Prior research has shown that employed parolees are less likely to
|
|
recidivate. Yet, these studies often ignore the underlying employment
|
|
context of the neighborhoods to which parolees return. Given that
|
|
parolees often reside in disadvantaged neighborhoods, it is likely that
|
|
few potential employment opportunities exist nearby, and those
|
|
opportunities that do exist are of relatively poor quality. This study
|
|
examines the influence of geographic access to employment opportunities
|
|
on the likelihood of recidivism. We use a unique data set of parolees
|
|
and jobs in Ohio to determine whether parolees living closer to a
|
|
greater number of potential employers or higher-paying jobs are less
|
|
likely to recidivate. Further, we examine if these relationships are
|
|
conditioned by parolee race. More job opportunities and higher paying
|
|
jobs closer to the parolees' homes increase recidivism, and the
|
|
likelihood of recidivating is highest within smaller geographic
|
|
distances. Because many parolees reside in the inner city, jobs located
|
|
within close proximity of parolees are likely white-collar, reflecting
|
|
the increased competition for low-skill jobs close to where the parolee
|
|
lives. Our findings indicate that this may be particularly true for
|
|
black parolees. This suggests policy changes that reduce competition for
|
|
low-skill positions and facilitate parolees' ability to secure
|
|
employment are needed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chamberlain, AW (Corresponding Author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Criminol \& Criminal Justice, 411 North Cent Ave,Suite 600, Phoenix, AZ 85004 USA.
|
|
Chamberlain, Alyssa W., Arizona State Univ, Sch Criminol \& Criminal Justice, 411 North Cent Ave,Suite 600, Phoenix, AZ 85004 USA.
|
|
Boggess, Lyndsay N.; Powers, Rachael A., Univ S Florida, Dept Criminol, Tampa, FL USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/0735648X.2014.965264},
|
|
ISSN = {0735-648X},
|
|
EISSN = {2158-9119},
|
|
Keywords = {parolees and recidivism; employment; spatial mismatch},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR STRATIFICATION; NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT; LIFE-COURSE; CRIME;
|
|
UNEMPLOYMENT; YOUTH; INCARCERATION; ACCESSIBILITY; OPPORTUNITY;
|
|
INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Criminology \& Penology; Law},
|
|
Author-Email = {alyssa.chamberlain@asu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {81},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000383597800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000664609300003,
|
|
Author = {Pinto, Andrew D. and Perri, Melissa and Pedersen, Cheryl L. and
|
|
Aratangy, Tatiana and Hapsari, Ayu Pinky and Hwang, Stephen W.},
|
|
Title = {Exploring different methods to evaluate the impact of basic income
|
|
interventions: a systematic review},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JUN 16},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Persistent income inequality, the increase in precarious
|
|
employment, the inadequacy of many welfare systems, and economic impact
|
|
of the COVID-19 pandemic have increased interest in Basic Income (BI)
|
|
interventions. Ensuring that social interventions, such as BI, are
|
|
evaluated appropriately is key to ensuring their overall effectiveness.
|
|
This systematic review therefore aims to report on available methods and
|
|
domains of assessment, which have been used to evaluate BI
|
|
interventions. These findings will assist in informing future program
|
|
and research development and implementation. Methods Studies were
|
|
identified through systematic searches of the indexed and grey
|
|
literature (Databases included: Scopus, Embase, Medline, CINAHL, Web of
|
|
Science, ProQuest databases, EBSCOhost Research Databases, and
|
|
PsycINFO), hand-searching reference lists of included studies, and
|
|
recommendations from experts. Citations were independently reviewed by
|
|
two study team members. We included studies that reported on methods
|
|
used to evaluate the impact of BI, incorporated primary data from an
|
|
observational or experimental study, or were a protocol for a future BI
|
|
study. We extracted information on the BI intervention, context and
|
|
evaluation method. Results 86 eligible articles reported on 10 distinct
|
|
BI interventions from the last six decades. Workforce participation was
|
|
the most common outcome of interest among BI evaluations in the
|
|
1960-1980 era. During the 2000s, studies of BI expanded to include
|
|
outcomes related to health, educational attainment, housing and other
|
|
key facets of life impacted by individuals' income. Many BI
|
|
interventions were tested in randomized controlled trials with data
|
|
collected through surveys at multiple time points. Conclusions Over the
|
|
last two decades, the assessment of the impact of BI interventions has
|
|
evolved to include a wide array of outcomes. This shift in evaluation
|
|
outcomes reflects the current hypothesis that investing in BI can result
|
|
in lower spending on health and social care. Methods of evaluation
|
|
ranged but emphasized the use of randomization, surveys, and existing
|
|
data sources (i.e., administrative data). Our findings can inform future
|
|
BI intervention studies and interventions by providing an overview of
|
|
how previous BI interventions have been evaluated and commenting on the
|
|
effectiveness of these methods. Registration This systematic review was
|
|
registered with PROSPERO (CRD 42016051218).},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pinto, AD (Corresponding Author), Unity Hlth Toronto, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, MAP Ctr Urban Hlth Solut, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Pinto, AD (Corresponding Author), St Michaels Hosp, Dept Family \& Community Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Pinto, Andrew D.; Perri, Melissa; Pedersen, Cheryl L.; Aratangy, Tatiana; Hapsari, Ayu Pinky; Hwang, Stephen W., Unity Hlth Toronto, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, MAP Ctr Urban Hlth Solut, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Pinto, Andrew D., St Michaels Hosp, Dept Family \& Community Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Pinto, Andrew D., Univ Toronto, Dept Family \& Community Med, Fac Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Pinto, Andrew D.; Perri, Melissa; Hwang, Stephen W., Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Hwang, Stephen W., Univ Toronto, Div Gen Internal Med, Dept Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-021-01479-2},
|
|
Article-Number = {142},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Basic income; Income inequality; Social determinants of health;
|
|
Methodology; Health; Equity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-SUPPLY RESPONSE; GRADUATED WORK INCENTIVES; GUARANTEED ANNUAL
|
|
INCOME; EXPERIMENTAL PANEL-DATA; TAX PROGRAMS; MAINTENANCE EXPERIMENTS;
|
|
MARITAL DISSOLUTION; SOCIAL DETERMINANTS; SCHOOL PERFORMANCE; CASH
|
|
TRANSFERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {andrew.pinto@utoronto.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hwang, Stephen W./GVR-7773-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Pinto, Andrew/0000-0003-1841-9347},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {126},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000664609300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000704278000001,
|
|
Author = {Kim, Jaeseung and Golden, Lonnie},
|
|
Title = {Inadequacy inequality: the distribution and consequences of part-time
|
|
underemployment in the US},
|
|
Journal = {COMMUNITY WORK \& FAMILY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {84-111},
|
|
Month = {JAN 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite some attention devoted to part-time employment with insufficient
|
|
or inadequate work hours, research is still too limited on how the
|
|
burden of underemployment is distributed disproportionately on
|
|
vulnerable workers and its implications for financial well-being and
|
|
work-family balance. Furthermore, scarce research considers the role of
|
|
control over work hours in the context of worker underemployment. Using
|
|
unique data and measures constructed from a nationally representative
|
|
survey of the 2006 and 2016 US General Social Survey, we find that being
|
|
part-time underemployed is concentrated toward workers who are minority,
|
|
lower income, and employed in certain service occupations. Multivariate
|
|
analysis reveals that, relative to both part-time workers satisfied with
|
|
their hours and to full-time workers, the part-time underemployed endure
|
|
significantly greater risks of facing lower financial status and
|
|
financial dis-satisfaction. Part-time underemployed workers also
|
|
experience more frequent work-to-family conflict, compared to other
|
|
part-time workers, and no less than otherwise comparable full-time
|
|
workers. Their elevated work-family conflict is intensified when having
|
|
limited control over their work hours. We derive implications of these
|
|
findings for preventative public policies that would help curb both the
|
|
extent and the harms of underemployment, recently rendered even more
|
|
necessary by its rise during the 2020 recession.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kim, J (Corresponding Author), Univ South Carolina, Coll Social Work, 1512 Pendleton St, Columbia, SC 29208 USA.
|
|
Kim, Jaeseung, Univ South Carolina, Coll Social Work, 1512 Pendleton St, Columbia, SC 29208 USA.
|
|
Golden, Lonnie, Penn State Univ, Econ \& Lab Employment Relat, Abington, PA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/13668803.2021.1985433},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1366-8803},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-3615},
|
|
Keywords = {Underemployment; involuntary part-time; part-time employment;
|
|
work-family conflict; financial well-being; control over work hours},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK-FAMILY CONFLICT; FLEXIBLE WORK; GENDER SEGREGATION; SCHEDULE
|
|
CONTROL; EMPLOYMENT; QUALITY; ASSOCIATIONS; HEALTH; JOB; ORGANIZATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {jaeseung@mailbox.sc.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {86},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000704278000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000276104500005,
|
|
Author = {Schwartz, Christine R.},
|
|
Title = {Earnings Inequality and the Changing Association between Spouses'
|
|
Earnings},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {115},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1524-1557},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Increases in the association between spouses' earnings have the
|
|
potential to increase inequality as marriages increasingly consist of
|
|
two high-earning or two low-earning partners. This article uses
|
|
log-linear models and data from the March Current Population Survey to
|
|
describe trends in the association between spouses' earnings and
|
|
estimate their contribution to growing earnings inequality among married
|
|
couples from 1967 to 2005. The results indicate that increases in
|
|
earnings inequality would have been about 25\%-30\% lower than observed
|
|
in the absence of changes in the association, depending on the
|
|
inequality measure used. Three components of these changes and how they
|
|
vary across the earnings distribution are explored.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Schwartz, CR (Corresponding Author), Univ Wisconsin, Dept Sociol, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Univ Wisconsin, Dept Sociol, Madison, WI 53706 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1086/651373},
|
|
ISSN = {0002-9602},
|
|
EISSN = {1537-5390},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-FORCE PARTICIPATION; INCOME INEQUALITY; WOMENS EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
FAMILY-STRUCTURE; SOCIAL-MOBILITY; WAGE INEQUALITY; WIVES EARNINGS;
|
|
UNITED-STATES; 2 DECADES; TRENDS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {168},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {60},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000276104500005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000174581300007,
|
|
Author = {Lahelma, E and Arber, S and Kivela, K and Roos, E},
|
|
Title = {Multiple roles and health among British and Finnish women: the influence
|
|
of socioeconomic circumstances},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2002},
|
|
Volume = {54},
|
|
Number = {5, SI},
|
|
Pages = {727-740},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Two contrasting hypotheses have been presented to predict women's health
|
|
variations. The multiple burden hypothesis predicts that combining a
|
|
paid job, being married, and having children is likely to be detrimental
|
|
to women's health. The multiple attachment hypothesis predicts that
|
|
multiple roles provide attachment to the community. which is likely to
|
|
be beneficial to women's health. These hypotheses are examined in
|
|
Britain and Finland, which hive different patterns of women's employment
|
|
participation. Lone mothers form a critical case, since they have fewer
|
|
attachments and greater burdens, and therefore are expected to have
|
|
poorer health. The socioeconomic position of lone mothers differs in
|
|
Britain and Finland, but in both societies they are likely to have fewer
|
|
attachments. We assess the extent to which health variations between
|
|
women with different family and parental role combinations are because
|
|
of the differences in their socioeconomic status and material
|
|
circumstances. Comparable surveys from Britain and Finland from 1994
|
|
were used. Perceived general health and limiting long-standing illness
|
|
were analysed for working age women (20-49 years) by family type and
|
|
employment status, as well as other socioeconomic variables. In both
|
|
countries, women living in two parent families and having children had
|
|
better health than women living in other family types or on their own.
|
|
Lone mothers form a disadvantaged group and showed overall worse health
|
|
in both countries. Adjusting for employment status, education and
|
|
household income weakened the association between family type and poor
|
|
health. The findings are broadly in accordance with the multiple
|
|
attachment hypothesis. Despite the more generous welfare state and high
|
|
full-time employment among Finnish women, single lone mothers report
|
|
poorer health than other women in Finland as well as in Britain.
|
|
However, in Britain the disadvantaged social position of lone mothers
|
|
accounts for a greater proportion of their poor health than in Finland.
|
|
(C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lahelma, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Helsinki, Dept Publ Hlth, POB 41,Mannerheimintie 172, Helsinki 00014, Finland.
|
|
Univ Helsinki, Dept Publ Hlth, Helsinki 00014, Finland.
|
|
Univ Surrey, Dept Sociol, Guildford GU2 7XH, Surrey, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0277-9536(01)00105-8},
|
|
Article-Number = {PII S0277-9536(01)00105-8},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {women; health; work; family; Britain; Finland},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-RATED HEALTH; PAID EMPLOYMENT; SOCIAL POSITION; INEQUALITIES;
|
|
BRITAIN; GENDER; MORTALITY; ILLNESS; MEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {eero.lahelma@helsinki.fi},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lahelma, Eero T/ABC-8716-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lahelma, Eero T/0000-0002-1064-1333},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {150},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000174581300007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000635648100001,
|
|
Author = {Castaneda-Navarrete, Jennifer and Hauge, Jostein and Lopez-Gomez, Carlos},
|
|
Title = {COVID-19's impacts on global value chains, as seen in the apparel
|
|
industry},
|
|
Journal = {DEVELOPMENT POLICY REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {953-970},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Motivation The COVID-19 pandemic has massively disrupted international
|
|
trade and global value chains. Impacts, however, differ across regions
|
|
and industries. This article contributes to a better understanding of
|
|
the scale of disruptions to industries and value chains integral to the
|
|
economies of and livelihoods in developing countries, and what role
|
|
policy can play to mitigate harm.
|
|
Purpose This article aims to: (1) analyse and characterize disruptions
|
|
to the global apparel value chain caused by the COVID-19 pandemic,
|
|
focusing on how developing countries have been impacted, and; (2)
|
|
identify key policies to support a resilient, inclusive and sustainable
|
|
recovery.
|
|
Approach and methods We review COVID-19 related reports published by
|
|
international and non-governmental organizations, international trade
|
|
and production statistics, industry surveys and media reports. We frame
|
|
our analysis predominantly within the Global Value Chains literature.
|
|
Findings The global apparel value chain has been severely disrupted by
|
|
the pandemic, owing to direct effects of sickness on workers in
|
|
factories, reduced output of materials-cloth, thread, etc.-used to
|
|
fabricate clothing, and to reduced demand for apparel in high-income
|
|
countries. Developing countries are suffering disproportionately in
|
|
terms of profits, wages, job security and job safety. Women workers in
|
|
the apparel chain have been hit especially hard, not only because most
|
|
workers in the chain are women, but also because they have experienced
|
|
increasing unpaid care work and higher risk of gender-based violence.
|
|
Policy implications Five key areas of policy to support a resilient,
|
|
inclusive and sustainable recovery stand out: (1) delivering emergency
|
|
responses to ensure firm survival and the protection of workers'
|
|
livelihoods; (2) reformulating FDI attraction strategies and promoting
|
|
market diversification; (3) supporting technology adoption and skills
|
|
development; (4) deploying labour standards to improve workers'
|
|
conditions and strengthening social protection systems; and (5) adopting
|
|
gender-sensitive responses.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Castaneda-Navarrete, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Cambridge, IfM Engage, Cambridge, England.
|
|
Castaneda-Navarrete, Jennifer, Univ Cambridge, IfM Engage, Cambridge, England.
|
|
Hauge, Jostein, London Sch Econ, Dept Int Relat, Int Polit Econ, London, England.
|
|
Lopez-Gomez, Carlos, Univ Cambridge, IfM Engage, Policy Links, Cambridge, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/dpr.12539},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0950-6764},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-7679},
|
|
Keywords = {apparel industry; COVID-19; economic development; global value chains;
|
|
power disparities; reshoring; supply chains},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRODUCTION NETWORKS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {jc2190@cam.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Castañeda-Navarrete, Jennifer/AAT-5502-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Castaneda Navarrete, Jennifer/0000-0002-3402-8867
|
|
Hauge, Jostein/0000-0002-8259-963X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {84},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {54},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000635648100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000380474100026,
|
|
Author = {Acholonu, Ugochi and Pingrey, Katie and Pinkard, Nichole and Martin,
|
|
Caitlin K.},
|
|
Editor = {Barnes, T and Thiruvathukal, GK and Boyer, K and Forbes, J and Payton, J},
|
|
Title = {Uncovering barriers to participation through mapping citywide computing
|
|
opportunities in Chicago What do we mean by access?},
|
|
Booktitle = {2015 RESEARCH IN EQUITY AND SUSTAINED PARTICIPATION IN ENGINEERING,
|
|
COMPUTING, AND TECHNOLOGY (RESPECT)},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Note = {Research on Equity and Sustained Participation in Engineering Computing
|
|
and Technology, Charlotte, NC, AUG 13-14, 2015},
|
|
Abstract = {Unequal access to quality learning opportunities is a key issue that
|
|
shapes who is able to participate in computing relevant communities and
|
|
jobs {[}1]. Although many educators, government officials, and business
|
|
professionals acknowledge the need to provide computer science education
|
|
to all youth, access to computing opportunities is still limited {[}2].
|
|
Understanding the current state of available learning opportunities is
|
|
an initial step in addressing gaps, barriers, and unequal access. In
|
|
this poster we present our in-progress mapping of the computer science
|
|
ecosystem in the city of Chicago. As we present the landscape we ask:
|
|
How accessible are the educational opportunities for youth in Chicago,
|
|
particularly youth who are traditionally underrepresented in computing
|
|
careers. The barriers to participation revealed through our mapping
|
|
process include transportation, the time schedules of programs, and the
|
|
lack of opportunities for elementary youth. Our findings suggest that in
|
|
order to broaden participation in computing there is a need to 1)
|
|
increase the number of local computing opportunities, and 2) to create
|
|
opportunities that acknowledge the realities facing low-income and
|
|
working class households, realities that include child care constraints,
|
|
rigid work schedules, and limited disposable income.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Acholonu, U (Corresponding Author), Depaul Univ, Coll Comp \& Digital Media, Chicago, IL 60604 USA.
|
|
Acholonu, Ugochi; Pingrey, Katie; Pinkard, Nichole; Martin, Caitlin K., Depaul Univ, Coll Comp \& Digital Media, Chicago, IL 60604 USA.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-1-5090-0151-4},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Computer Science, Theory \& Methods; Education \& Educational Research;
|
|
Education, Scientific Disciplines; Education, Special},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {2},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000380474100026},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000408883400004,
|
|
Author = {Gaby, Sarah},
|
|
Title = {The Civic Engagement Gap(s): Youth Participation and Inequality From
|
|
1976 to 2009},
|
|
Journal = {YOUTH \& SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {49},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {923-946},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Civic participation in the United States is highly unequal, resulting in
|
|
a civic engagement gap between socioeconomic, racial, and gender groups.
|
|
Variation in civic participation and the civic engagement gap remain
|
|
contested, primarily as a result of inconsistent definitions and
|
|
measurement issues in previous work. Using consistent measures from the
|
|
Monitoring the Future Study from 1976 to 2009, I analyze whether
|
|
sociodemographic gaps in youth civic participation changed during a
|
|
period of growing income inequality. I find that since the 1970s,
|
|
electoral participation decreased, volunteering increased, and social
|
|
movement activity remained constant. Participation varied by
|
|
sociodemographic group, with highly educated Whites most active in all
|
|
activities. Females volunteered more than males, but participated at the
|
|
same rate in all other activities. The gap between male and female
|
|
volunteering increased over the time period, as did the socioeconomic
|
|
gap in volunteering. Racial gaps in participation, however, remained
|
|
relatively stable from 1976 to 2009.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gaby, S (Corresponding Author), Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, 155 Hamilton Hall,CB 3210, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Gaby, Sarah, Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, 155 Hamilton Hall,CB 3210, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0044118X16678155},
|
|
ISSN = {0044-118X},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-8499},
|
|
Keywords = {youth; civic engagement; inequality; political participation;
|
|
volunteering; social movements; civic engagement gap},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; PROTEST; RACE; ORGANIZATIONS; CITIZENSHIP; COMMUNITY;
|
|
ACTIVISM; SOCIETY; YOUNG},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Issues; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {sgaby@unc.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {71},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {46},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000408883400004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000780472600008,
|
|
Author = {Lindsay, Sally and Cagliostro, Elaine},
|
|
Title = {A Web-Based Intervention for Youth With Physical Disabilities: Comparing
|
|
the Role of Mentors in 12- and 4-Week Formats},
|
|
Journal = {JMIR PEDIATRICS AND PARENTING},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {3},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN-JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Youths with physical disabilities face many barriers in
|
|
society, including social exclusion, stigma, and difficulties finding
|
|
employment. Electronic mentoring (e-mentoring) offers a promising
|
|
opportunity for youths with disabilities and has the potential to
|
|
improve their inclusion while enhancing career outcomes. However, little
|
|
is known about the role of mentors in a Web based e-mentoring format to
|
|
improve employment outcomes.
|
|
Objective: This study aimed to explore the role of mentors in engaging
|
|
youths in an e-mentoring intervention and to compare and contrast
|
|
mentors' engagement strategies within a 12- and 4-week format.
|
|
Methods: This paper drew on a pilot feasibility study, which is a group,
|
|
Web-based employment readiness intervention involving a discussion forum
|
|
for youths with physical disabilities. Our intervention involved having
|
|
trained youth mentors (ie, near-peers who also had a disability) lead
|
|
Web-based discussion forums while offering peer support and resources,
|
|
which involved 12 modules completed over both a 12- or 4-week format. We
|
|
used a mixed method approach including qualitative data (mentor
|
|
interviews and discussion forum data) and quantitative data (pre-post
|
|
survey data) comparison.
|
|
Results: A total of 24 youths participated across 3 e-mentoring
|
|
intervention groups: 9 in the 12-week format (mean age 17.7 years {[}SD
|
|
1.7]) and 15 in the 4-week format (mean age 19.5 years {[}SD 2.6]), led
|
|
by 3 trained youth mentors with disabilities, 2 males and 1 female (mean
|
|
age 22 years {[}SD 2.64]). Our findings revealed that mentors engaged
|
|
youths in the e-mentoring program by providing informational, emotional,
|
|
and tangible support. We noted more instances of mentors providing
|
|
advice, empathy, and encouragement in the 12-week format compared with
|
|
the 4-week format. We also found fewer examples of providing advice,
|
|
developing a rapport, and social support from mentors in the 4-week
|
|
format. Our findings revealed no significant differences between the 2
|
|
groups regarding time spent in the forum, number of logins, number of
|
|
posts, and self-rated engagement.
|
|
Conclusions: Mentors in the 12-week and 4-week format engaged
|
|
participants differently in providing informational and emotional
|
|
support, although there were no differences in tangible support
|
|
provided. Mentors reported that the 12-week format was too long and
|
|
lacked interaction between participants, whereas the 4-week format felt
|
|
rushed and had fewer detailed responses from mentees.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lindsay, S (Corresponding Author), Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabil Hosp, Bloorview Res Inst, 150 Kilgour Rd, Toronto, ON M4G 1R8, Canada.
|
|
Lindsay, Sally; Cagliostro, Elaine, Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabil Hosp, Bloorview Res Inst, 150 Kilgour Rd, Toronto, ON M4G 1R8, Canada.
|
|
Lindsay, Sally, Univ Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2196/15813},
|
|
Article-Number = {e15813},
|
|
ISSN = {2561-6722},
|
|
Keywords = {social support; mentor; youth; adolescent; employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRANSITION-AGE YOUTH; SPINA-BIFIDA; YOUNG-ADULTS; EMPLOYMENT; SUPPORT;
|
|
PROGRAMS; SCHOOL; WORK; PERSPECTIVES; ADOLESCENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {slindsay@hollandbloorview.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cagliostro, Elaine/0000-0003-3079-1141},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000780472600008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000967676700001,
|
|
Author = {Shahidi, Faraz Vahid and Jetha, Arif and Kristman, Vicki and Smith,
|
|
Peter M. and Gignac, Monique A. M.},
|
|
Title = {The Employment Quality of Persons with Disabilities: Findings from a
|
|
National Survey},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 APR 12},
|
|
Abstract = {PurposeLabour market integration is a widely accepted strategy for
|
|
promoting the social and economic inclusion of persons with
|
|
disabilities. But what kinds of jobs do persons with disabilities obtain
|
|
following their integration into the labour market? In this study, we
|
|
use a novel survey of workers to describe and compare the employment
|
|
quality of persons with and without disabilities in Canada.MethodsWe
|
|
administered an online, cross-sectional survey to a heterogeneous sample
|
|
of workers in Canada (n = 2,794). We collected data on sixteen different
|
|
employment conditions (e.g., temporary contract, job security, flexible
|
|
work schedule, job lock, skill match, training opportunities, and union
|
|
membership). We used latent class cluster analysis to construct a novel
|
|
typology of employment quality describing four distinct `types' of
|
|
employment: standard, portfolio, instrumental, and precarious. We
|
|
examined associations between disability status, disability type, and
|
|
employment quality.ResultsPersons with disabilities reported
|
|
consistently lower employment quality than their counterparts without
|
|
disabilities. Persons with disabilities were nearly twice as likely to
|
|
report low-quality employment in the form of either instrumental (i.e.,
|
|
secure but trapped) or precarious (i.e., insecure and unrewarding)
|
|
employment. This gap in employment quality was particularly pronounced
|
|
for those who reported living with both a physical and mental/cognitive
|
|
condition.ConclusionThere are widespread inequalities in the employment
|
|
quality of persons with and without disabilities in Canada. Policies and
|
|
programs aiming to improve the labour market situation of persons with
|
|
disabilities should emphasize the importance of high-quality employment
|
|
as a key facet of social and economic inclusion.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shahidi, FV (Corresponding Author), Inst Work \& Hlth, 1800-400 Univ Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1S5, Canada.
|
|
Shahidi, FV (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Shahidi, Faraz Vahid; Jetha, Arif; Kristman, Vicki; Smith, Peter M.; Gignac, Monique A. M., Inst Work \& Hlth, 1800-400 Univ Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1S5, Canada.
|
|
Shahidi, Faraz Vahid; Jetha, Arif; Smith, Peter M.; Gignac, Monique A. M., Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kristman, Vicki, Lakehead Univ, EPID Work Res Inst, Thunder Bay, ON, Canada.
|
|
Smith, Peter M., Monash Univ, Dept Epidemiol \& Prevent Med, Melbourne, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10926-023-10113-7},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-0487},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Disability; Job quality; Employment equity; Inclusion; Precarious
|
|
employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PART-TIME WORK; JOB QUALITY; PEOPLE; INCLUSION; TOOL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {fshahidi@iwh.on.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000967676700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1995TA74900004,
|
|
Author = {RUBERY, J},
|
|
Title = {PERFORMANCE-RELATED PAY AND THE PROSPECTS FOR GENDER PAY EQUITY},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {1995},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {637-654},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Equal pay for work of equal value has come to be almost inextricably
|
|
associated with the application of job evaluation. Current trends
|
|
towards performance-related pay systems pose a potential threat to the
|
|
pursuit of greater gender pay equality as discretion in pay
|
|
determination increases and there is no clear relationship between
|
|
earnings and job grade. This paper examines the basis for this view
|
|
drawing upon the now widespread literature and research into
|
|
performance-related pay. The argument is made that the problem for
|
|
gender equality lies both in the nature of the payment system and in the
|
|
context in which it is being applied, including the changes in the
|
|
nature of employment relationships that are accompanying these
|
|
developments. While some women may benefit, overall the moves towards a
|
|
widening income dispersion and the increased importance of management
|
|
discretion and appraisal are likely to disadvantage women. However, the
|
|
individualization of pay is likely to lead to further fragmentation of
|
|
the interests of women, reducing the likelihood of collective
|
|
resistance. Opportunities to monitor pay trends will also decrease as
|
|
the spread of performance-related pay reduces the transparency of the
|
|
labour market.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {RUBERY, J (Corresponding Author), UNIV MANCHESTER,INST SCI \& TECHNOL,MANCHESTER SCH MANAGEMENT,MANCHESTER M60 1QD,LANCS,ENGLAND.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1467-6486.1995.tb00792.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-2380},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POLICIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Management},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {33},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {28},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1995TA74900004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000391570900001,
|
|
Author = {Nieuwenhuis, Rense and van der Kolk, Henk and Need, Ariana},
|
|
Title = {Women's earnings and household inequality in OECD countries, 1973-2013},
|
|
Journal = {ACTA SOCIOLOGICA},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {60},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {3-20},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {This article shows that women's rising earnings contributed to reducing
|
|
inequality in household earnings, with respect to couples. We use data
|
|
from the Luxembourg Income Study (LIS) on 1,148,762 coupled households,
|
|
covering 18 OECD countries and the period from 1973 to 2013. In this
|
|
period, women's share of household earnings grew, spouses' earnings
|
|
became more strongly and positively correlated in various countries, and
|
|
inequality in women's earnings was reduced. Inequality in household
|
|
earnings increased due to the rising correlation between spouses'
|
|
earnings, but was reduced more by the decline of inequality in women's
|
|
earnings. Had women's earnings remained unchanged since the 1970s and
|
|
1980s, inequality in household earnings would have been higher around
|
|
2010 in all observed OECD countries. Household inequality was reduced
|
|
least by trends in women's earnings in countries with a long history of
|
|
high female labor-force participation, such as Finland (3\% reduction)
|
|
and Sweden (5\%), and most in countries that observed a stronger
|
|
increase in female labor-force participation in recent decades such as
|
|
Spain (31\%) and the Netherlands (41\%). As more countries are reaching
|
|
a plateau in the growth of women's employment and earnings, the
|
|
potential for further stimulating women's employment and earnings to
|
|
counter both women's and household inequality seems to be increasingly
|
|
limited.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nieuwenhuis, R (Corresponding Author), Stockholm Univ, SOFI, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Nieuwenhuis, Rense, Stockholm Univ, Swedish Inst Social Res SOFI, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
van der Kolk, Henk; Need, Ariana, Univ Twente, Dept Publ Adm, Enschede, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0001699316654528},
|
|
ISSN = {0001-6993},
|
|
EISSN = {1502-3869},
|
|
Keywords = {Women's earnings; female labor-force participation; inequality;
|
|
household; homogamy; incomplete revolution},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WESTERN COUNTRIES; INCOME INEQUALITY; EMPLOYMENT; FAMILY; GENDER;
|
|
OPPORTUNITIES; EXPLANATIONS; SWEDEN; LABOR; PAY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {rense.nieuwenhuis@sofi.su.se},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Nieuwenhuis, Rense/B-4986-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Nieuwenhuis, Rense/0000-0001-6138-0463},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000391570900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000541042203090,
|
|
Author = {Egerer, Julia and Niederl, Franz and Prossnegg, Sabine and Schabereiter,
|
|
Wolfgang},
|
|
Editor = {Chova, LG and Martinez, AL and Torres, IC},
|
|
Title = {WORKPLACE INCLUSION 4.0-AN INNOVATIVE PROJECT TO IMPROVE THE WORKING
|
|
CONDITIONS FOR DISABLED PEOPLE BY TRAINING CONSULTANTS},
|
|
Booktitle = {13TH INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE
|
|
(INTED2019)},
|
|
Series = {INTED Proceedings},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Pages = {8509-8516},
|
|
Note = {13th International Technology, Education and Development Conference
|
|
(INTED), Valencia, SPAIN, MAR 11-13, 2019},
|
|
Abstract = {An estimated more than one billion people, or 15\% of the world's
|
|
population live with some form of disability (WHO). The condition of
|
|
their life depends very much on the level of integration into the labour
|
|
market. According to the International Labour Organization (ILO) 72.3\%
|
|
of disabled people are at the working age of between 15-64. (1) Disabled
|
|
people are more likely to experience adverse economic outcomes than
|
|
persons without disabilities such as lower wage rates, weak employment
|
|
opportunities, unavailability of supporting tools and technologies,
|
|
accessibility, and non-adopted means of communication. Workplace
|
|
Inclusion aims to remove barriers to ensure all employees with or
|
|
without disabilities to enjoy full participation in a workplace which
|
|
supports the future success of business and economy. The Project WI4.0
|
|
focuses on the improvement of workplace inclusion of people with
|
|
disabilities.
|
|
Workplace Inclusion means to build up a workplace culture that builds
|
|
respect, fosters inclusiveness, promotes diversity and embraces the
|
|
unique skills and qualities of all employees of a company. Workplace
|
|
Inclusion encompasses many positive aspects of life. It is about
|
|
acknowledging the diverse skills and perspectives that people may bring
|
|
to the workplace because of their cultural background or their
|
|
disability. The aim is to remove barriers to ensure all employees enjoy
|
|
full participation in a workplace which supports the development and
|
|
achievement of well informed and culturally appropriate business
|
|
outcomes. It also involves recognizing the value of individual
|
|
differences and managing them in the workplace.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Egerer, J (Corresponding Author), FH Joanneum GmbH, Graz, Austria.
|
|
Egerer, Julia; Niederl, Franz; Prossnegg, Sabine; Schabereiter, Wolfgang, FH Joanneum GmbH, Graz, Austria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.21125/inted.2019.2125},
|
|
ISSN = {2340-1079},
|
|
ISBN = {978-84-09-08619-1},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research; Psychology, Educational},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {0},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000541042203090},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000343869300005,
|
|
Author = {Timmons, Jeffrey F. and Nickelsburg, Jerry},
|
|
Title = {DO PEOPLE WITH SPECIFIC SKILLS WANT MORE SOCIAL INSURANCE? NOT IN THE
|
|
UNITED STATES},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMICS \& POLITICS},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {457-482},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Skill specificity is thought to increase preferences for social
|
|
insurance (Iversen and Soskice, 2001, American Political Science Review
|
|
95,875), especially where employment protections are low, notably the
|
|
United States (Gingrich and Ansell, 2012, Comparative Political Studies
|
|
45, 1624). The compensating differentials literature, by contrast,
|
|
suggests that neither skill specificity, nor labor market protections
|
|
affect preferences when wages adjust for differences in risks and
|
|
investment costs. We examine these competing predictions using U.S. data
|
|
on general and specific skills. Absolute and relative skill specificity
|
|
have a robust positive correlation with income, but are negatively
|
|
correlated with preferences for social protection. Our results strongly
|
|
support the compensating differentials approach.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Timmons, JF (Corresponding Author), IE Univ, IE Business Sch, Calle Alvarez de Baena 4,1, Madrid 28006, Spain.
|
|
Timmons, Jeffrey F., IE Univ, Madrid 28006, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/ecpo.12043},
|
|
ISSN = {0954-1985},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-0343},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POLICY PREFERENCES; OCCUPATIONAL TITLES; REDISTRIBUTION; INEQUALITY;
|
|
DICTIONARY; RETURNS; DEMAND; MARKET; RISKS; WAGES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Political Science},
|
|
Author-Email = {jeffrey.timmons@ie.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000343869300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000576265600017,
|
|
Author = {Vives, Alejandra and Benmarhnia, Tarik and Gonzalez, Francisca and
|
|
Benach, Joan},
|
|
Title = {The importance of using a multi-dimensional scale to capture the various
|
|
impacts of precarious employment on health: Results from a national
|
|
survey of Chilean workers},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Month = {SEP 24},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Social epidemiologic research in relation to the health
|
|
impacts of precarious employment has grown markedly during the past
|
|
decade. While the multidimensional nature of precarious employment has
|
|
long been acknowledged theoretically, empirical studies have mostly
|
|
focused on one-dimensional approach only (based either on employment
|
|
temporariness or perceived job insecurity). This study compares the use
|
|
of a multidimensional employment precariousness scale (EPRES) with
|
|
traditional one-dimensional approaches in relation to distinct health
|
|
outcomes and across various socio-demographic characteristics. Methods
|
|
We used a subsample of formal salaried workers (n = 3521) from the first
|
|
Chilean employment and working conditions survey (2009-2010). Multilevel
|
|
modified Poisson regressions with fixed effects (individuals nested
|
|
within regions) and survey weights were conducted to estimate the
|
|
association between general health, mental health and occupational
|
|
injuries and distinct precarious employment exposures (temporary
|
|
employment, perceived job insecurity, and the multidimensional EPRES
|
|
scale). We assessed the presence of effect measure modification
|
|
according to sex, age, educational level, and occupational class
|
|
(manual/non-manual). Results Compared to one-dimensional approaches to
|
|
precarious employment, the multidimensional EPRES scale captured a
|
|
larger picture of potential health effects and differences across
|
|
subgroups of workers. Patterns of effect measure that modification were
|
|
consistent with the expectations that groups in greater disadvantage
|
|
(women, older individuals, less educated and manual workers) were more
|
|
vulnerable to poor employment conditions. Conclusions Multidimensional
|
|
measures of precarious employment better capture its association with a
|
|
breath of health outcomes, being necessary tools for research in order
|
|
to strengthen the evidence base for policy making in the protection of
|
|
workers' health.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vives, A (Corresponding Author), Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Vives, A (Corresponding Author), Conicyt Fondap, Ctr Sustainable Urban Dev CEDEUS, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Vives, Alejandra, Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Vives, Alejandra, Conicyt Fondap, Ctr Sustainable Urban Dev CEDEUS, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Benmarhnia, Tarik, Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Family Med \& Publ Hlth, San Diego, CA 92103 USA.
|
|
Benmarhnia, Tarik, Univ Calif San Diego, Scripps Inst Oceanog, San Diego, CA 92103 USA.
|
|
Gonzalez, Francisca, Univ Tecn Federico Santa Maria, Dept Math, Valparaiso, Chile.
|
|
Benach, Joan, Univ Pompeu Fabra, Dept Polit \& Social Sci, GREDS EMCONET, Hlth Inequal Res Grp, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Benach, Joan, Johns Hopkins Univ Pompeu Fabra Univ Publ Policy, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Benach, Joan, Univ Autonoma Madrid, Transdisciplinary Res Grp Socioecol Transit GinTR, Madrid, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0238401},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0238401},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT; SAFETY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {alejandra.vives@uc.cl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Benach, Joan/H-2519-2013
|
|
Vives, Alejandra/AFB-2073-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Benach, Joan/0000-0003-2285-742X
|
|
Vives, Alejandra/0000-0001-5851-0693},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000576265600017},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000278839000007,
|
|
Author = {Patel, Vikram and Lund, Crick and Hatherill, Sean and Plagerson, Sophie
|
|
and Corrigall, Joanne and Funk, Michelle and Flisher, Alan J.},
|
|
Editor = {Blas, E and Kurup, AS},
|
|
Title = {Mental disorders: equity and social determinants},
|
|
Booktitle = {EQUITY, SOCIAL DETERMINANTS AND PUBLIC HEALTH PROGRAMMES},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Pages = {115-134},
|
|
Abstract = {As with most nonconummicable diseases, the etiology of mental disorders
|
|
is multifactorial, with risk determined by an interaction of genetic,
|
|
other biological, psychological and social determinants. The large
|
|
variation in the prevalence of most mental disorders between and within
|
|
countries suggests that the social determinants have particular
|
|
salience. This chapter focuses on social determinants with emphasis on
|
|
evidence from low- and middle-income countries, and gives particular
|
|
attention to two examples of mental disorders: depression and attention
|
|
deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). These disorders were selected
|
|
because they are each associated with a considerable burden, and there
|
|
is a substantive evidence base that interventions for these disorders
|
|
are effective and feasible.
|
|
There are significantly increased rates of depression among low
|
|
socioeconomic groups, and exposure to risk factors is disproportionately
|
|
high in contexts characterized by social disadvantage where vulnerable
|
|
groups are over represented. There is convincing evidence of an
|
|
association between depression and stressful life events; exposure to
|
|
violence and other crimes; chronic physical ill-health; low levels of
|
|
educational attainment; conflict; disasters; stressful working
|
|
environments; and female gender. Additionally, reasonable evidence
|
|
implicates discrimination, income inequality, food insecurity, hunger,
|
|
unemployment, toxins, urbanization, lack of housing, overcrowding, low
|
|
social capital, poor sanitation and built environment, and minority
|
|
ethnicity. Overall rates of mental health service use are generally
|
|
lower amongst the disadvantaged. Low mental health literacy and stigma
|
|
may reduce the ability of people with depression to use treatment
|
|
services effectively.
|
|
Further, depression is associated with negative physical health
|
|
outcomes, including cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus,
|
|
injuries, HIV/AIDS and various perinatal and reproductive conditions;
|
|
consequences of these comorbidities may also show social gradients.
|
|
While increased risk of ADHD is associated with lower socioeconomic
|
|
status and lower parental education in high-income countries, research
|
|
on ADHD from low- and middle-income countries is scarce and
|
|
inconclusive. The expression of genetic susceptibility to ADHD appears
|
|
to be moderated by environmental exposures. Fetal or neonatal hypoxia,
|
|
traumatic brain injury, epilepsy and antiepileptic medications, and HIV
|
|
infection are all associated with ADHD, and these exposures all show
|
|
social gradients. Also, male gender appears to confer additional risk.
|
|
Children with ADHD experience adverse academic outcomes.
|
|
Put simply, mental disorders are inequitably distributed, as people who
|
|
are socially and economically disadvantaged bear a disproportionate
|
|
burden of mental disorders and their adverse consequences. A vicious
|
|
cycle of disadvantage and mental disorder is the result of the dynamic
|
|
interrelationship between them. This chapter reviews a wealth of
|
|
evidence on interventions that can break this cycle, by addressing both
|
|
upstream social determinants and vulnerabilities, and downstream health
|
|
outcomes and consequences through a combination of population- and
|
|
individual-level actions. A key goal is for health care systems to be
|
|
responsive to the mental health needs of the population. Efforts to
|
|
increase coverage of cost-effective interventions must explicitly target
|
|
disadvantaged populations and health impact assessments of macroeconomic
|
|
policies must consider mental health outcomes. Evidence from low- and
|
|
middle-income countries remains relatively scarce and more contextual
|
|
research is required to inform mental health policy and practice. In
|
|
particular, research is needed regarding the impacts of social and
|
|
economic change on mental disorder, and the mechanisms through which
|
|
protective factors strengthen resilience and promote mental health.
|
|
Longitudinal monitoring of population mental health is crucial for this
|
|
purpose.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
ISBN = {978-92-4-156397-0},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER; ATTENTION-DEFICIT/HYPERACTIVITY
|
|
DISORDER; CHILD SEXUAL-ABUSE; RISK-FACTORS; HEALTH-CARE; LOW-INCOME;
|
|
ANTIDEPRESSANT TREATMENT; DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; FAMILY-ENVIRONMENT;
|
|
MAJOR DEPRESSION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Sociology},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lund, Crick/F-4405-2011},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {144},
|
|
Times-Cited = {100},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {47},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000278839000007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000440852800004,
|
|
Author = {Jafree, Sara Rizvi and Zakar, Rubeena and Mustafa, Mudasir and Fischer,
|
|
Florian},
|
|
Title = {Mothers employed in paid work and their predictors for home delivery in
|
|
Pakistan},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Month = {AUG 3},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Pakistan has one of the highest rates of maternal and
|
|
neonatal mortality in the world. It is assumed that employed mothers in
|
|
paid work will be more empowered to opt for safer institutional
|
|
deliveries. There is a need to understand the predictors of home
|
|
deliveries in order to plan policies to encourage institutional
|
|
deliveries in the region.
|
|
Methods: The study aimed to ascertain the predictors for home deliveries
|
|
among mothers employed in paid work in Pakistan. Data analysis is based
|
|
on secondary data taken from the Pakistan Demographic Health Survey
|
|
2012-13. Bivariate and multivariate logistic regression models were
|
|
conducted.
|
|
Results: The findings show that the majority (53.6\%) of employed
|
|
mothers in Pakistan give birth at home. Employed mothers in paid work
|
|
with the following characteristics had higher chances for delivering at
|
|
home: (i) women from rural areas (AOR 1.26; 95\% CI: 0.94-1.71), or
|
|
specific regions within Pakistan, (ii) those occupied in unskilled work
|
|
(AOR 2.61; 95\% CI: 1.76-3.88), (iii) women married to uneducated (AOR
|
|
1.70; 95\% CI: 1.08-2.66), unemployed (AOR 1.69; 95\% CI: 1.21-2.35), or
|
|
unskilled men (AOR 2.02; 95\% CI: 1.49-2.72), (iv) women with more than
|
|
7 children (AOR 1.57; 95\% CI: 1.05-2.35), (v) women who are unable in
|
|
the prenatal period to have an institutional check-up (AOR 4.84; 95\%
|
|
CI: 3.53-6.65), take assistance from a physician (AOR 3.98; 95\% CI:
|
|
3.03-5.20), have a blood analysis (AOR 2.63; 95\% CI: 1.95-3.57), urine
|
|
analysis (AOR 2.48; 95\% CI: 1.84-3.33) or taken iron tablets (AOR 2.64;
|
|
95\% CI: 2.06-3.38), and (vi) are unable to make autonomous decisions
|
|
with regard to spending their earnings (AOR 1.82; 95\% CI: 1.27-2.59)
|
|
and healthcare (AOR 1.12; 95\% CI: 0.75-1.65).
|
|
Conclusions: Greater efforts by the central and provincial state bodies
|
|
are needed to encourage institutional deliveries and institutional
|
|
access, quality and cost. Maternal and paternal benefits are needed for
|
|
workers in both the formal and informal sectors of the economy. Finally,
|
|
cultural change, through education, media and religious authorities, is
|
|
necessary to support institutional deliveries and formal sector paid
|
|
employment and out of home work opportunities for mothers of Pakistan.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fischer, F (Corresponding Author), Bielefeld Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Publ Hlth Med, Bielefeld, Germany.
|
|
Jafree, Sara Rizvi, Forman Christian Coll, Dept Sociol, Lahore, Pakistan.
|
|
Zakar, Rubeena, Univ Punjab, Inst Social \& Cultural Studies, Lahore, Pakistan.
|
|
Mustafa, Mudasir, Univ Punjab, Dept Sociol, Inst Social \& Cultural Studies, Lahore, Pakistan.
|
|
Fischer, Florian, Bielefeld Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Publ Hlth Med, Bielefeld, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12884-018-1945-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {316},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2393},
|
|
Keywords = {Mothers; Paid work; Employment; Delivery; Pakistan},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMICALLY DISADVANTAGED MIGRANTS; MATERNAL HEALTH; SYSTEMATIC
|
|
ANALYSIS; BIRTH; CARE; MORTALITY; OUTCOMES; NEWBORN; TRENDS;
|
|
DETERMINANTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {f.fischer@uni.bielefeld.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Zakar, Rubeena/HTR-8354-2023
|
|
Mustafa, Mudasir/AAG-9977-2020
|
|
Mustafa, Mudasir/AGV-1350-2022
|
|
Fischer, Florian/F-9003-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Zakar, Rubeena/0000-0001-9546-3742
|
|
Mustafa, Mudasir/0000-0002-4870-9014
|
|
Fischer, Florian/0000-0002-4388-1245},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000440852800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000537481700001,
|
|
Author = {Mueller, Valerie and Schmidt, Emily and Kirkleeng, Dylan},
|
|
Title = {Structural Change and Women's Employment Potential in Myanmar},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL REGIONAL SCIENCE REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {450-476},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {We use the Integrated Household Living Conditions Survey to evaluate the
|
|
extent women are included in Myanmar's dynamic transformation process
|
|
and the relative barriers that prohibit their inclusion between 2005 and
|
|
2010. Women play an active role in the labor force during a period of
|
|
massive structural change. Their growing importance is substantiated by
|
|
their increasing placement in manufacturing jobs near and away from
|
|
home. Despite their increasing labor force participation, women's
|
|
engagement in manufacturing is negatively associated with household
|
|
welfare. This may be a function of a gender pay gap or reflect
|
|
households' inability to substitute the labor of women to complete
|
|
specific tasks related to household production. Future investments in
|
|
surveys in Myanmar will improve our ability to identify which factors
|
|
systematically provide an enabling environment for female labor
|
|
participation, mobility, and improvements in well-being.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mueller, V (Corresponding Author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Polit \& Global Studies, POB 873902, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.
|
|
Mueller, Valerie; Kirkleeng, Dylan, Arizona State Univ, Sch Polit \& Global Studies, POB 873902, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.
|
|
Mueller, Valerie; Schmidt, Emily, Int Food Policy Res Inst, Dev Strategy \& Governance Div, Washington, DC 20036 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0160017620925139},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2020},
|
|
Article-Number = {0160017620925139},
|
|
ISSN = {0160-0176},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-6925},
|
|
Keywords = {gender; migration; employment; structural change; Myanmar},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-FORCE PARTICIPATION; ECONOMIC-GROWTH; MIGRATION; INCOME;
|
|
CONSUMPTION; EMPOWERMENT; RESPONSES; MARRIAGE; WAGES; RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies; Regional \& Urban Planning; Urban Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {vmuelle1@asu.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Schmidt, Emily/0000-0003-0109-7687
|
|
Mueller, Valerie/0000-0003-1246-2141},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000537481700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000685223000003,
|
|
Author = {Groton, Danielle and Radey, Melissa},
|
|
Title = {``I've Been Through It{''}: Assessing Employment Barriers among
|
|
Unaccompanied Women Experiencing Homelessness},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL WORK RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {88-100},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Women represent a growing segment of the homeless population; however,
|
|
little work has examined employment among an important segment of this
|
|
population: women unaccompanied by children. This study addressed the
|
|
following research questions: Which common employment barriers (that is,
|
|
physical health, mental health, substance abuse, or domestic violence)
|
|
influence employment of unaccompanied women experiencing homelessness?
|
|
How do these barriers influence the employment experiences of the women?
|
|
The authors analyzed a cross-sectional sample of unaccompanied women in
|
|
one community's homeless management information system (n = 1,331). Then
|
|
they completed semistructured interviews (n = 20) with a subsample of
|
|
these women. Logistic regression analyses indicated that no employment
|
|
barrier significantly related to current employment status. Interview
|
|
data indicated that women perceived physical and mental health issues as
|
|
barriers to full-time employment. Women reported a struggle to maintain
|
|
housing even when they had employment. Integrated quantitative and
|
|
qualitative analyses identified how agency data regarding barriers and
|
|
employment may miss central barriers (for example, stigma, physical
|
|
presentation) and employment engagement. Study findings provide support
|
|
for programs that address housing and current barriers before other
|
|
employment barriers, the importance of improving federal measures, and
|
|
recommendations to strengthen agency-level data collection to inform
|
|
program development and community-based research.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Groton, D (Corresponding Author), Florida Atlantic Univ, Phyllis \& Harvey Sandler Sch Social Work, 777 Glades Rd, Boca Raton, FL 33431 USA.
|
|
Groton, Danielle, Florida Atlantic Univ, Phyllis \& Harvey Sandler Sch Social Work, 777 Glades Rd, Boca Raton, FL 33431 USA.
|
|
Radey, Melissa, Florida State Univ, Coll Social Work, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/swr/svab003},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1070-5309},
|
|
EISSN = {1545-6838},
|
|
Keywords = {barriers; employment; homelessness; unaccompanied women; women},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; LOW-INCOME; SUBSTANCE USE; JOB SEEKING;
|
|
GENDER; INTERVENTION; INDIVIDUALS; VOLUNTEERS; SERVICES; SUPPORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {dgroton@fau.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000685223000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000727172800001,
|
|
Author = {Cmar, Jennifer L. and Steverson, Anne},
|
|
Title = {Job-Search Activities, Job-Seeking Barriers, and Work Experiences of
|
|
Transition-Age Youths With Visual Impairments},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF VISUAL IMPAIRMENT \& BLINDNESS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {115},
|
|
Number = {6, SI},
|
|
Pages = {479-492},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: The purpose of this study was to describe the job-seeking
|
|
and work experiences of transition-age youths with visual impairments.
|
|
Methods: We analyzed follow-up data from a quasi-experimental study of a
|
|
job-search intervention conducted from 2016 to 2019. Participants were
|
|
88 youths with visual impairments from three states; approximately half
|
|
received the job-search intervention, and the other half served as a
|
|
comparison group. Measures included job-search activities and outcomes,
|
|
job-seeking barriers, volunteer and work experiences, and parental
|
|
support for job-seeking. Results: Commonly reported job-search
|
|
activities were preparing or revising resumes, talking to people about
|
|
jobs, submitting applications, and submitting resumes, but most
|
|
participants performed these activities infrequently. Many job-seekers
|
|
encountered barriers during their job search, and few searches resulted
|
|
in paid employment. Participants generally reported moderate levels of
|
|
preparation to handle job-seeking barriers and parental support for
|
|
job-seeking. Intervention and comparison participants had similar
|
|
results on most measures, with few exceptions. Discussion: When youths
|
|
actively search for a job but do not find one, their motivation to
|
|
continue job-seeking may be reduced, particularly if their preparedness
|
|
to overcome job-seeking barriers is low. Although many participants had
|
|
some engagement in volunteer or work activities, short-term work
|
|
experiences were the most common-and perhaps most misunderstood-work
|
|
activity. Implications for practitioners: Youths with visual impairments
|
|
may benefit from feedback on their job-seeking approach, application
|
|
materials, and interview skills so they can make changes and determine
|
|
how to focus or refocus their efforts. In addition to offering feedback,
|
|
service providers can provide ongoing support to youth job-seekers and
|
|
encourage them to persist in their job search. Explicit discussions
|
|
about different types of work activities may help transition-age youths
|
|
understand how short-term work experiences differ from paid jobs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cmar, JL (Corresponding Author), Natl Res \& Training Ctr Blindness \& Low Vis, POB 6189, Mississippi State, MS 39762 USA.
|
|
Cmar, Jennifer L.; Steverson, Anne, Mississippi State Univ, Natl Res \& Training Ctr Blindness \& Low Vis, Mississippi State, MS 39762 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0145482X211059182},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {0145482X211059182},
|
|
ISSN = {0145-482X},
|
|
EISSN = {1559-1476},
|
|
Keywords = {blind; employment; job-search behavior; job-search outcomes; job-seeking
|
|
barriers; low vision; parental support; transition-age youths; visual
|
|
impairment; work experience},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMPLOYMENT STATUS; YOUNG-ADULTS; PREDICTORS; OUTCOMES; SCHOOL;
|
|
BEHAVIORS; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {jcmar@colled.msstate.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cmar, Jennifer/0000-0002-7619-7773
|
|
Steverson, Anne/0000-0003-0067-4438},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000727172800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000728115200004,
|
|
Author = {Barbosa, Rafael da Silva and Spolander, Gary and Teixeira Garcia, Maria
|
|
Lucia},
|
|
Title = {Children: paying the price of Bolsonaro's social policy reform in Brazil},
|
|
Journal = {CRITICAL AND RADICAL SOCIAL WORK},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {369-388},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {The impact of social inequality on children has enormous implications
|
|
for young people throughout their life journey by negatively impacting
|
|
their health, well-being and life chances. Following the democratisation
|
|
of Brazil, significant change resulted in improvements to the social
|
|
welfare and health care systems, which had begun to address
|
|
long-standing social and health problems. This article critically
|
|
explores the implications of current retrograde right-wing populist
|
|
political government policies for Brazilian children within the context
|
|
of efforts to reduce income inequality and improve the life chances of
|
|
children. While recognising the enormous challenges of poverty, racial
|
|
discrimination, precarity and socio-economic conditions, social work has
|
|
recognised that the enactment of the profession requires political
|
|
engagement and action against all inequality in professional practice.
|
|
The implications of retrogressive policy are explored, and the authors
|
|
call upon the profession globally to recognise these structural
|
|
socio-economic challenges and question whether social work can afford
|
|
not to be engaged in seeking change.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Barbosa, RD (Corresponding Author), Univ Fed Espirito Santo, Vitoria, ES, Brazil.
|
|
Barbosa, Rafael da Silva; Teixeira Garcia, Maria Lucia, Univ Fed Espirito Santo, Vitoria, ES, Brazil.
|
|
Spolander, Gary, Robert Gordon Univ, Aberdeen, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1332/204986021X16177218821095},
|
|
ISSN = {2049-8608},
|
|
EISSN = {2049-8675},
|
|
Keywords = {children; social policy; Bolsonaro; Brazil},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES; PRIMARY-HEALTH-CARE; INFANT-MORTALITY;
|
|
MENTAL-HEALTH; RISK-FACTORS; WORK; CHALLENGES; TRAUMA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {rafael.econ@gmail.com
|
|
g.spolander@rgu.ac.uk
|
|
lucia-garcia@uol.com.br},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Barbosa, Rafael da Silva/AAA-8846-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Barbosa, Rafael da Silva/0000-0002-9253-1487
|
|
Garcia, Maria Lucia/0000-0003-2672-9310
|
|
Spolander, Gary/0000-0003-2758-4555},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {79},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000728115200004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000661130400001,
|
|
Author = {Caven, Valerie and Navarro Astor, Elena and Urbanaviciene, Vita},
|
|
Title = {Gender inequality in an ``Equal{''} environment},
|
|
Journal = {GENDER WORK AND ORGANIZATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1658-1675},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Lithuania, as a part of the former Soviet Union, has a long-standing
|
|
history of perceived equality for women in the workplace. Women played
|
|
an equal role in economic production as it was a constitutional
|
|
expectation that all citizens had both a right and an obligation to
|
|
work. Consequently, at the time of independence in 1990 the levels of
|
|
participation of women in the workplace including at managerial and
|
|
professional levels were much higher than other western European
|
|
countries. In architecture, women achieved parity in terms of numbers,
|
|
but this equality did not transfer into all aspects of economic
|
|
activity. Drawing on qualitative survey and interview data from 31
|
|
Lithuanian women architects, our findings show, despite the historical
|
|
emphasis on equality, the existence of a ``critical mass{''} of women in
|
|
the profession and the adoption of EU gender equality policy, the
|
|
position of women remains poor with clear evidence of sex
|
|
discrimination, harassment, and lack of opportunities for career
|
|
advancement.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Caven, V (Corresponding Author), Nottingham Trent Univ, Ringgold Stand Inst, Nottingham, England.
|
|
Caven, Valerie, Nottingham Trent Univ, Ringgold Stand Inst, Nottingham, England.
|
|
Navarro Astor, Elena, Univ Politecn Valencia, Fac Adm \& Direccio Empreses, Ringgold Stand Inst, Valencia, Spain.
|
|
Urbanaviciene, Vita, Agcy Sci Innovat \& Technol MITA, Vilnius, Lithuania.
|
|
Urbanaviciene, Vita, Vilniaus Gedimino Tech Univ, Ringgold Stand Inst, Vilnius, Lithuania.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/gwao.12715},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0968-6673},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-0432},
|
|
Keywords = {architects; equality; gender; inequality; Lithuania; women},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WOMEN ARCHITECTS; STATE; UK; EMPLOYMENT; TRANSFORMATION; EXPERIENCE;
|
|
PATRIARCHY; LITHUANIA; SEXUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Management; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {valerie.caven@ntu.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Caven, Valerie/0000-0003-2047-2198},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {88},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {29},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000661130400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000540756700007,
|
|
Author = {Duffy, Sarah and van Esch, Patrick and Yousef, Murooj},
|
|
Title = {Increasing parental leave uptake: A systems social marketing approach},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALASIAN MARKETING JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {110-118},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Ineffective paid paternity leave policies perpetuate gender inequality
|
|
and have significant, long-lasting outcomes for families, organisations,
|
|
and the economy. They maintain unequal divisions in child-rearing and
|
|
household chores that restrict families' decisions about workforce
|
|
participation and caring responsibilities. Low levels of uptake of
|
|
paternity leave are caused by workplace practices, social norms, and
|
|
economic factors that influence the choices fathers make when their
|
|
children are born, and which become entrenched over time. Fathers' early
|
|
involvement in children's lives is profoundly beneficial for families,
|
|
therefore, we recommend to policy makers and organisations how they can
|
|
change internal workplace cultures to allow for a more inclusive image
|
|
of parenting and a more nuanced image of the ideal male worker. We
|
|
outline a systems social marketing approach that addresses change at the
|
|
macro, meso and micro levels through the three E's model (establish,
|
|
explore, and enable), to help policy makers, organisations, and families
|
|
consider the implications of meaningful parental leave and the
|
|
importance of increasing fathers' uptake. Future research questions for
|
|
increasing parental leave uptake are presented. (C) 2020 Australian and
|
|
New Zealand Marketing Academy. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights
|
|
reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {van Esch, P (Corresponding Author), Auckland Univ Technol, AUT Business Sch, Dept Mkt, Auckland, New Zealand.
|
|
Duffy, Sarah, Western Sydney Univ, Sch Business, Parramatta, Australia.
|
|
van Esch, Patrick, Auckland Univ Technol, AUT Business Sch, Dept Mkt, Auckland, New Zealand.
|
|
Yousef, Murooj, Griffith Univ, Griffith Business Sch, Social Mkt Griffith, Nathan, Qld, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ausmj.2020.01.007},
|
|
ISSN = {1441-3582},
|
|
EISSN = {1839-3349},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender equality; Parental leave; Systems social marketing; Macro-social
|
|
marketing; Organisational policy; Public policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK-LIFE BALANCE; GENDER EQUALITY; FATHERS USE; PATERNITY LEAVE;
|
|
CHILD-CARE; POLICY; WORKPLACE; FRAMEWORK; HEALTH; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business},
|
|
Author-Email = {Sarah.Duffy@westernsydney.edu.au
|
|
patrick.van.esch@aut.ac.nz
|
|
murooj.yousef@griffithuni.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {van Esch, Patrick/ABE-9472-2021
|
|
Yousef, Murooj/AAN-5685-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {van Esch, Patrick/0000-0002-0541-9340
|
|
Yousef, Murooj/0000-0002-8215-2627},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {96},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000540756700007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000707948100002,
|
|
Author = {Khanlou, Nazilla and Vazquez, Luz Maria and Pashang, Soheila and
|
|
Connolly, Jennifer A. and Ahmad, Farah and Ssawe, Andrew},
|
|
Title = {2020 Syndemic: Convergence of COVID-19, Gender-Based Violence, and
|
|
Racism Pandemics},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF RACIAL AND ETHNIC HEALTH DISPARITIES},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {2077-2089},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective To conduct a rapid knowledge synthesis of literature on the
|
|
social determinants of mental health of racialized women exposed to
|
|
gender-based violence (GBV) during the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
|
Methods We adapted the Cochrane Rapid Reviews method and were guided by
|
|
an equity lens in conducting rapid reviews on public health issues. Four
|
|
electronic databases (Cochrane CENTRAL, Medline, ProQuest, and EBSCO),
|
|
electronic news media, Google Scholar, and policy documents were
|
|
searched for literature between January 2019 and October 2020 with no
|
|
limitations for location. Fifty-five articles qualified for the review.
|
|
Results Health emergencies heighten gender inequalities in relation to
|
|
income, employment, job security, and working conditions. Household
|
|
stress and pandemic-related restrictions (social distancing, closure of
|
|
services) increase women's vulnerability to violence. Systemic racism
|
|
and discrimination intensify health disparities.
|
|
Conclusion Racialized women are experiencing a 2020 Syndemic: a
|
|
convergence of COVID-19, GBV, and racism pandemics, placing their
|
|
wellbeing at a disproportionate risk. GBV is a public health issue and
|
|
gender-responsive COVID-19 programming is essential. Anti-racist and
|
|
equity-promoting policies to GBV service provision and disaggregated
|
|
data collection are required.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Khanlou, N (Corresponding Author), York Univ, Fac Hlth, 4700 Keele St, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada.
|
|
Khanlou, Nazilla; Vazquez, Luz Maria; Connolly, Jennifer A.; Ahmad, Farah, York Univ, Fac Hlth, 4700 Keele St, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada.
|
|
Pashang, Soheila, Humber Inst Technol \& Adv Learning, Fac Social \& Community Serv, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Ssawe, Andrew, South Riverdale Community Hlth Ctr, Newcomers Families \& Clin Programs \& Serv, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s40615-021-01146-w},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2197-3792},
|
|
EISSN = {2196-8837},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; Racism; Gender-based violence; Mental health; Pandemics},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; VULNERABILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {nkhanlou@yorku.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ahmad, Farah/B-4261-2008},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ahmad, Farah/0000-0001-9747-1148},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000707948100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000865247300003,
|
|
Author = {Blinder, Victoria S. and Patil, Sujata and Finik, Jackie and Makower,
|
|
Della and Muppidi, Monica and Lichtenthal, Wendy G. and Parker, Patricia
|
|
A. and Claros, Maria and Suarez, Jennifer and Narang, Bharat and Gany,
|
|
Francesca},
|
|
Title = {An interactive mobile application versus an educational booklet to
|
|
promote job retention in women undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy for
|
|
breast cancer: a randomized controlled trial},
|
|
Journal = {TRIALS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {OCT 3},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Job loss after a cancer diagnosis can lead to long-term
|
|
financial toxicity and its attendant adverse clinical consequences,
|
|
including decreased treatment adherence. Among women undergoing
|
|
(neo)adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer, access to work
|
|
accommodations (e.g., sick leave) is associated with higher job
|
|
retention after treatment completion. However, low-income and/or
|
|
minority women are less likely to have access to work accommodations
|
|
and, therefore, are at higher risk of job loss. Given the time and
|
|
transportation barriers that low-income working patients commonly face,
|
|
it is crucial to develop an intervention that is convenient and easy to
|
|
use.
|
|
Methods: We designed an intervention to promote job retention during and
|
|
after (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer by improving access
|
|
to relevant accommodations. Talking to Employers And Medical staff about
|
|
Work (TEAMWork) is an English/Spanish mobile application (app) that
|
|
provides (1) suggestions for work accommodations tailored to specific
|
|
job demands, (2) coaching/strategies for negotiating with an employer,
|
|
(3) advice for symptom self-management, and (4) tools to improve
|
|
communication with the medical oncology team. This study is a randomized
|
|
controlled trial to evaluate the app as a job-retention tool compared to
|
|
a control condition that provides the app content in an informational
|
|
paper booklet. The primary outcome of the study is work status after
|
|
treatment completion. Secondary outcomes include work status 1 and 2
|
|
years later, participant self-efficacy to ask an employer for
|
|
accommodations, receipt of workplace accommodations during and following
|
|
adjuvant therapy, patient self-efficacy to communicate with the oncology
|
|
provider, self-reported symptom burden during and following adjuvant
|
|
therapy, and cancer treatment adherence.
|
|
Discussion: This study will assess the use of mobile technology to
|
|
improve vulnerable breast cancer patients' ability to communicate with
|
|
their employers and oncology providers, work during treatment and retain
|
|
their jobs in the long term, thereby diminishing the potential
|
|
consequences of job loss, including decreased treatment adherence, debt,
|
|
and bankruptcy.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Blinder, VS (Corresponding Author), Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr MSK, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Blinder, Victoria S.; Finik, Jackie; Lichtenthal, Wendy G.; Parker, Patricia A.; Claros, Maria; Suarez, Jennifer; Narang, Bharat; Gany, Francesca, Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr MSK, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Patil, Sujata, Cleveland Clin, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.
|
|
Makower, Della, Montefiore Med Ctr, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Muppidi, Monica, Lincoln Med \& Mental Hlth Ctr, New York, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13063-022-06580-7},
|
|
Article-Number = {840},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-6215},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment; Breast cancer; Disparities; Minority; Income; Cancer
|
|
survivorship; Financial toxicity; Mobile application},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COMMON TERMINOLOGY CRITERIA; REPORTED OUTCOMES VERSION; LOW-INCOME;
|
|
UNDERSERVED WOMEN; WORK; SURVIVORS; IMPACT; VALIDATION; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
PREDICTORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental},
|
|
Author-Email = {blinderv@mskcc.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000865247300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000305815200005,
|
|
Author = {Vick, Brandon and Jones, Kristine and Mitra, Sophie},
|
|
Title = {Poverty and Severe Psychiatric Disorder in the U.S.: Evidence from the
|
|
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH POLICY AND ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {83-96},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Previous studies have shown that persons with severe
|
|
psychiatric disorders are more likely to be poor and face disparities in
|
|
education and employment outcomes. Poverty rates, the standard measure
|
|
of poverty, give no information on how far below the poverty line this
|
|
group falls.
|
|
Aims of the Study: This paper compares the poverty rate, poverty depth
|
|
(distance from the poverty line) and poverty severity (inequality of
|
|
incomes below the poverty line) of households with and without a
|
|
working-age member with severe psychiatric disorder in the United States
|
|
using data from the 2007 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS).
|
|
Methods: First, we perform multivariate analysis of the association
|
|
between severe disorder and poverty depth using MEPS data. Second, we
|
|
calculate poverty rates, depth, and severity for the subgroup of
|
|
households having a member with disorder and compare to the subgroup of
|
|
households without such a member.
|
|
Results: In multivariate regressions, the presence of a household member
|
|
with severe psychiatric disorder predicts a 52-percentage point increase
|
|
in poverty depth and 3.10 times the odds of being poor. Poverty rate,
|
|
depth, and severity are significantly greater for households of persons
|
|
with disorder. Mean total incomes are lower for households of persons
|
|
with severe disorder compared to other households while mean health
|
|
expenditures are similar.
|
|
Discussion: Severe psychiatric disorder is associated with greater depth
|
|
of poverty and likelihood of being poor. We identify groups who are the
|
|
most disadvantaged according to severity of income poverty among
|
|
households with severe psychiatric disorder. These include households
|
|
whose head has no high school education, who has been without work for
|
|
the entire year, and who is black or Hispanic. While these
|
|
characteristics are related to poverty for the overall sample, they
|
|
correlate to heightened poverty severity when combined with severe
|
|
disorder. Families face less severity than single persons but poverty
|
|
rate, depth, and severity increase for both groups when combined with
|
|
severe psychiatric disorder. Our study does not attempt to investigate
|
|
the causes of poverty, focusing rather on improved poverty measurement.
|
|
Implications for Health Care Provision and Use: We find that households
|
|
of persons with disorder have a lower standard of living and face more
|
|
severe forms of poverty. This may affect the health of their members
|
|
through reduced access to health inputs, including access to health
|
|
care.
|
|
Implications for Health Policies: This paper shows that there is a
|
|
strong association between severe psychiatric disorder and poverty, and
|
|
points to a need to break this association. Both mental health policy
|
|
and income assistance programs should consider using poverty rate, depth
|
|
and severity measures to evaluate the economic benefits of current
|
|
programs and target future programs to those facing the most severe
|
|
poverty.
|
|
Implications for Further Research: The results point to the need for
|
|
additional research in a number of areas: trends in poverty for
|
|
households with severe psychiatric disorders over time; mobility and
|
|
persistence of poverty for this group; and the association of severe
|
|
disorder to other, non-monetary dimensions of poverty, such as a lack of
|
|
social integration.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vick, B (Corresponding Author), Fordham Univ, Dept Econ, 441 E Fordham Rd, The Bronx, NY 10458 USA.
|
|
Vick, Brandon; Mitra, Sophie, Fordham Univ, Dept Econ, The Bronx, NY 10458 USA.
|
|
Jones, Kristine, Nathan S Kline Inst Psychiat Res, Stat \& Social Sci Res Div, Orangeburg, NY 10962 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1091-4358},
|
|
EISSN = {1099-176X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-DISORDERS; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS; INCOME INEQUALITY; SCREENING
|
|
SCALES; SINGLE MOTHERS; UNITED-STATES; LIFE-COURSE; HEALTH; POPULATION;
|
|
PREVALENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {vick@fordham.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mitra, Sophie/0000-0001-7283-6630},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {42},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000305815200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000245025300001,
|
|
Author = {Xu, Ling and Wang, Yan and Collins, Charles D. and Tang, Shenglan},
|
|
Title = {Urban health insurance reform and coverage in China using data from
|
|
National Health Services Surveys in 1998 and 2003},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Month = {MAR 3},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: In 1997 there was a major reform of the government run urban
|
|
health insurance system in China. The principal aims of the reform were
|
|
to widen coverage of health insurance for the urban employed and contain
|
|
medical costs. Following this reform there has been a transition from
|
|
the dual system of the Government Insurance Scheme ( GIS) and Labour
|
|
Insurance Scheme ( LIS) to the new Urban Employee Basic Health Insurance
|
|
Scheme ( BHIS).
|
|
Methods: This paper uses data from the National Health Services Surveys
|
|
of 1998 and 2003 to examine the impact of the reform on population
|
|
coverage. Particular attention is paid to coverage in terms of gender,
|
|
age, employment status, and income levels. Following a description of
|
|
the data between the two years, the paper will discuss the relationship
|
|
between the insurance reform and the growing inequities in population
|
|
coverage.
|
|
Results: An examination of the data reveals a number of key points:
|
|
a) The overall coverage of the newly established scheme has decreased
|
|
from 1998 to 2003.
|
|
b) The proportion of the urban population without any type of health
|
|
insurance arrangement remained almost the same between 1998 and 2003 in
|
|
spite of the aim of the 1997 reform to increase the population coverage.
|
|
c) Higher levels of participation in mainstream insurance schemes ( i.
|
|
e. GIS-LIS and BHIS) were identified among older age groups, males and
|
|
high income groups. In some cases, the inequities in the system are
|
|
increasing.
|
|
d) There has been an increase in coverage of the urban population by
|
|
non-mainstream health insurance schemes, including non-commercial and
|
|
commercial ones.
|
|
The paper discusses three important issues in relation to urban
|
|
insurance coverage: institutional diversity in the forms of insurance,
|
|
labour force policy and the non-mainstream forms of commercial and
|
|
non-commercial forms of insurance.
|
|
Conclusion: The paper concludes that the huge economic development and
|
|
expansion has not resulted in a reduced disparity in health insurance
|
|
coverage, and that limited cross-group subsidy and regional inequality
|
|
is possible. Unless effective measures are taken, vulnerable groups such
|
|
as women, low income groups, employees based on short-term contracts and
|
|
rural-urban migrant workers may well be left out of sharing the social
|
|
and economic development.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wang, Y (Corresponding Author), Univ Liverpool, Liverpool Sch Trop Med, Pembroke Pl, Liverpool L3 5QA, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Univ Liverpool, Liverpool Sch Trop Med, Liverpool L3 5QA, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Minist Hlth, Ctr Hlth Stat \& Informat, Beijing, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1472-6963-7-37},
|
|
Article-Number = {37},
|
|
ISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-REFORM; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {xuling@moh.gov.cn
|
|
yan.wang@liverpool.ac.uk
|
|
chascollins@tiscali.co.uk
|
|
s.tang@liverpool.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tang, Shenglan/AAO-7403-2020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {78},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {47},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000245025300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000696992800012,
|
|
Author = {Hofmarcher, Thomas},
|
|
Title = {The effect of education on poverty: A European perspective},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {83},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {More than 1 in 7 people in Europe live in a household whose income is
|
|
below the national poverty line, but more than 30\% of people consider
|
|
themselves to live in poverty. This study provides evidence on the
|
|
causal relationship between education and various dimensions of poverty.
|
|
I construct a novel database comprising compulsory schooling reforms in
|
|
32 European countries and use them as instruments for education. I find
|
|
economically large poverty-reducing effects of education. This holds
|
|
true for several objective poverty measures, which are both absolute and
|
|
relative in nature, and a subjective poverty measure. An additional year
|
|
of education thus reduces not only the likelihood of being classified as
|
|
living in poverty but also the likelihood of considering oneself to live
|
|
in poverty. Increases in labor force participation and full-time
|
|
employment as well as better health are potential mechanisms behind
|
|
these results. Notably, countries in Eastern Europe seem to drive the
|
|
results.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hofmarcher, T (Corresponding Author), IHE Swedish Inst Hlth Econ, Box 2127, SE-22002 Lund, Sweden.
|
|
Hofmarcher, T (Corresponding Author), Lund Univ, Dept Econ, Box 2127, SE-22002 Lund, Sweden.
|
|
Hofmarcher, Thomas, IHE Swedish Inst Hlth Econ, Box 2127, SE-22002 Lund, Sweden.
|
|
Hofmarcher, Thomas, Lund Univ, Dept Econ, Box 2127, SE-22002 Lund, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.econedurev.2021.102124},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {102124},
|
|
ISSN = {0272-7757},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7382},
|
|
Keywords = {Educational economics; Compulsory schooling; Poverty; Social exclusion},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL EXCLUSION; HEALTH; WAGE; RETURNS; BENEFITS; ATTAINMENT;
|
|
INEQUALITY; REGRESSION; OUTCOMES; CRIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {thomas.hofmarcher@ihe.se},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hofmarcher, Thomas/0000-0002-3309-3181},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {91},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {49},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000696992800012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000600192300001,
|
|
Author = {Bruelle, Jan},
|
|
Title = {Dualisation versus targeting? Public transfers and poverty risks among
|
|
the unemployed in Germany and Great Britain},
|
|
Journal = {ACTA SOCIOLOGICA},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {420-436},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {The paper analyses changes in the generosity of public transfers to the
|
|
unemployed and their effectiveness for the alleviation of poverty risks
|
|
in Germany and Great Britain between the 1990s and the 2000s. In the
|
|
light of changing poverty risks among the unemployed, the contribution
|
|
of policy changes is assessed using individual-level data on household
|
|
incomes. The results indicate that the introduction and expansion of the
|
|
tax credit programmes in Britain led to an increase of public transfers
|
|
especially for those with low household market incomes and thereby also
|
|
improved the effectiveness of transfers in combating poverty. In
|
|
Germany, the generosity of transfers to the unemployed hardly changed
|
|
over time, whereas the effectiveness of transfers to prevent households
|
|
from falling into poverty declined. This can be explained by changes in
|
|
the composition of the unemployed by recent labour force participation
|
|
and household market incomes. As former labour market insiders are
|
|
consistently better protected from poverty than former outsiders, the
|
|
results confirm the stratified nature of unemployment protection in
|
|
Germany, albeit no significant trend towards increasing dualisation in
|
|
public benefits is found. Thus, the results do not support notions of a
|
|
fundamental shift of the system of unemployment protection with respect
|
|
to the generosity of transfers in Germany but emphasise the importance
|
|
of changes in the German labour market.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brulle, J (Corresponding Author), Goethe Univ Frankfurt, Inst Sociol, Theodor W Adorno Pl 6, D-60323 Frankfurt, Germany.
|
|
Bruelle, Jan, Goethe Univ Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0001699320974740},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2020},
|
|
Article-Number = {0001699320974740},
|
|
ISSN = {0001-6993},
|
|
EISSN = {1502-3869},
|
|
Keywords = {Welfare state; dualisation; targeting; social policy; unemployment;
|
|
poverty},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WELFARE-STATE; INCOME INEQUALITY; EMPLOYMENT; PARADOX; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {bruelle@soz.uni-frankfurt.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Brülle, Jan/A-7055-2014},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Brülle, Jan/0000-0002-7102-5649},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000600192300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000523751400233,
|
|
Author = {Choi, Daeheon and Chung, Chune Young and Yoon, Mira and Young, Jason},
|
|
Title = {Factors in a Sustainable Labor Market: Evidence from New College
|
|
Graduates' Initial Job Placement in Korea},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Month = {MAR 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Young Koreans have been experiencing stress and employment barriers due
|
|
to progressively worsening employment issues since the late 1990s.
|
|
College graduates spend excessive amounts of time job hunting,
|
|
necessitating institutional and policy measures to improve their initial
|
|
labor-market performance. We, therefore, attempt to empirically analyze
|
|
the relevant factors. Focusing on sustainable job quality, company size,
|
|
wages, and satisfaction levels for students' first jobs after
|
|
graduation, and we specifically use college education quality and
|
|
graduates' employment-preparation activities as independent variables
|
|
and initial labor-market performance as a dependent variable. First, we
|
|
measure education quality using vocational education and training,
|
|
satisfaction with college education, and studying a language abroad. We
|
|
find that they are positively associated with new graduates' initial
|
|
labor-market performance. Second, we measure employment preparation
|
|
activities using internship experience, certificates obtained, and
|
|
scores on standardized English exams. Internship experiences are
|
|
positively associated with new graduates' initial labor-market
|
|
performance. These findings suggest that the Korean government should
|
|
focus on establishing a sustainable labor market for new graduates and
|
|
offer specific, diverse support programs to improve employment among
|
|
young Koreans.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chung, CY (Corresponding Author), Chung Ang Univ, Coll Business \& Econ, Sch Business Adm, Seoul 06974, South Korea.
|
|
Choi, Daeheon, Kookmin Univ, Coll Business Adm, 77 Jeongneung Ro, Seoul 02707, South Korea.
|
|
Chung, Chune Young; Yoon, Mira, Chung Ang Univ, Coll Business \& Econ, Sch Business Adm, Seoul 06974, South Korea.
|
|
Young, Jason, Washington State Univ, Coll Business, Pullman, WA 99164 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su12062386},
|
|
Article-Number = {2386},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {sustainable labor market; college education quality;
|
|
employment-preparation activities; initial labor-market performance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RETURNS; ABILITY; SATISFACTION; EDUCATION; INVESTMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {dhchoi@kookmin.ac.kr
|
|
bizfinance@cau.ac.kr
|
|
meiluoyin@naver.com
|
|
bizfinace@naver.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {44},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000523751400233},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000463738400001,
|
|
Author = {Brydsten, Anna and Rostila, Mikael and Dunlavy, Andrea},
|
|
Title = {Social integration and mental health - a decomposition approach to
|
|
mental health inequalities between the foreign-born and native-born in
|
|
Sweden},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Month = {APR 3},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The increasing mental health inequalities between native-
|
|
and foreign-born persons in Sweden is an important public health issue.
|
|
Improving social integration has been stressed as a key strategy to
|
|
combat this development. While a vast amount of studies have confirmed
|
|
the importance of social integration for good mental health, less is
|
|
known about the role of different types of social integration, and how
|
|
they relate to mental health inequalities. This study aimed to examine
|
|
the extent to which indicators of social integration explained mental
|
|
health inequalities between the native- and foreign-born.
|
|
Methods: Based on the Health on Equal Terms survey from 2011/2015 in
|
|
Vastra Gotaland, Sweden (n=71,643), a non-linear Oaxaca-Blinder
|
|
decomposition analysis was performed comparing native- and foreign-born
|
|
individuals from Nordic-, European- and non-European countries. The
|
|
General Health Questionnaire was used to assess psychological distress,
|
|
while 11 items assessed employment conditions and economic disparities,
|
|
social relations, and experiences of discrimination to measure different
|
|
aspects of social integration.
|
|
Results: Differences in social integration explained large proportions
|
|
of observed mental health differences between the native- and
|
|
foreign-born. Important indicators included low levels of social
|
|
activity (20\%), trust in others (17\%) and social support (16\%), but
|
|
also labour market disadvantages, such as being outside the labour
|
|
market (15\%), unemployment (10\%) and experiencing financial strain
|
|
(16\%). In analyses stratified by region of origin, low trust in others
|
|
and discrimination contributed to the mental health gap between the
|
|
native-born and European-born (17 and 9\%, respectively), and the
|
|
native-born and non-European-born (19 and 10\%, respectively).
|
|
Precarious labour market position was a particularly important factor in
|
|
the mental health gap between the native-born and Nordic-origin (22\%),
|
|
and non-European origin (36\%) populations.
|
|
Conclusion: Social integration factors play a central role in explaining
|
|
the mental health inequality between natives and migrants in Sweden. Our
|
|
findings suggest that public health actions targeting mental health gaps
|
|
could benefit from focusing on inequalities in social and economic
|
|
recourses between natives and migrants in Sweden. Areas of priority
|
|
include improving migrants' financial strain, as well as increasing
|
|
trust in othersand social support and opportunities for civic
|
|
engagement.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brydsten, A (Corresponding Author), Stockholm Univ, Karolinska Inst, Ctr Hlth Equ Studies CHESS, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, SE-10591 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Brydsten, Anna; Rostila, Mikael; Dunlavy, Andrea, Stockholm Univ, Karolinska Inst, Ctr Hlth Equ Studies CHESS, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, SE-10591 Stockholm, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-019-0950-1},
|
|
Article-Number = {48},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Mental health inequality; Foreign-born; Social integration;
|
|
Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition; Sweden},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IMMIGRANTS; UNEMPLOYMENT; MIGRANTS; HOSPITALIZATION; DIFFERENTIALS;
|
|
DEPRESSION; MIGRATION; DISORDER; GENDER; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {anna.brydsten@su.se},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Brydsten, Anna/0000-0002-4118-6441},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000463738400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000504933200002,
|
|
Author = {Liu, Xiaomin and Bowe, Steven J. and Milner, Allison and Li, Lin and
|
|
Too, Lay San and LaMontagne, Anthony D.},
|
|
Title = {Differential Exposure to Job Stressors: A Comparative Analysis Between
|
|
Migrant and Australia-Born Workers},
|
|
Journal = {ANNALS OF WORK EXPOSURES AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {63},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {975-989},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Aims: Previous studies have suggested that migrants have higher
|
|
exposures to psychosocial job stressors than native-born workers. We
|
|
explored migrant status-related differences in skill discretion/job
|
|
complexity and decision authority, and whether the differences varied by
|
|
gender, age, and educational attainment.
|
|
Methods: Data were from Wave 14 of the Household Income and Labour
|
|
Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey. A total number of 9031 persons
|
|
were included in the analysis. Outcomes included skill discretion/job
|
|
complexity and decision authority. Exposure included migrant status
|
|
defined by (i) country of birth (COB), (ii) the combination of COB and
|
|
English/Non-English dominant language of COB, and (iii) the combination
|
|
of COB and years since arrival in Australia. Data were analysed using
|
|
linear regression, adjusting for gender, age, and educational
|
|
attainment. These covariates were also analysed as effect modifiers of
|
|
the relationship between migrant status and job stressor exposure.
|
|
Results: In the unadjusted analysis, only migrant workers from
|
|
Non-English-speaking countries (Non-ESC- born) had significantly lower
|
|
skill discretion and job complexity than Australia-born workers (-0.29,
|
|
95\% CI: -0.56; -0.01); however, results from fully adjusted models
|
|
showed that all migrant groups, except migrant workers from
|
|
Main-English-speaking countries, had significantly lower skill
|
|
discretion and job complexity than Australia-born workers (overseas-born
|
|
workers, -0.59, 95\% CI: -0.79; -0.38; Non-ESC-born, -1.01, 95\% CI:
|
|
-1.27; -0.75; migrant workers who had arrived <= 5 years ago, -1.33,
|
|
95\% CI: -1.94; -0.72; arrived 6-10 years ago, -0.92, 95\% CI: -1.46;
|
|
-0.39; and arrived >= 11 years ago,-0.45, 95\% CI: -0.67; -0.22). On the
|
|
contrary, the unadjusted model showed that migrant workers had higher
|
|
decision authority than Australia-born workers, whereas in the fully
|
|
adjusted model, no difference in decision authority was found between
|
|
migrant workers and Australia-born workers. Effect modification results
|
|
showed that as educational attainment increased, differences in skill
|
|
discretion and job complexity between Australia-born workers and
|
|
Non-ESC-born migrants progressively increased; whereas Non-ESC-born
|
|
migrants with postgraduate degree showed significantly lower decision
|
|
authority than Australia-born workers.
|
|
Conclusions: This study suggests that skill discretion and job
|
|
complexity but not decision authority is associated with migrant status.
|
|
Migrants with high educational attainment from Non-English-speaking
|
|
countries appear to be most affected by lower skill discretion/job
|
|
complexity and decision authority; however, differences in skill
|
|
discretion and job complexity attenuate over time for Non-ESC-born
|
|
migrants, consistent with an acculturation effect. Low skill discretion
|
|
and job complexity, to the extent that it overlaps with underemployment,
|
|
may adversely affect migrant workers' well-being. Targeted language
|
|
skill support could facilitate migrant integration into the Australian
|
|
labour market.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {LaMontagne, AD (Corresponding Author), Deakin Univ, Ctr Populat Hlth Res, Geelong, Vic 3220, Australia.
|
|
Liu, Xiaomin; Too, Lay San; LaMontagne, Anthony D., Deakin Univ, Ctr Populat Hlth Res, Geelong, Vic 3220, Australia.
|
|
Liu, Xiaomin, Kunming Med Univ, Affiliated Hosp 1, Psychiat Unit, Kunming 650032, Yunnan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Bowe, Steven J., Deakin Univ, Fac Hlth, Deakin Biostat Unit, Geelong, Vic 3220, Australia.
|
|
Milner, Allison, Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Ctr Hlth Equ, Melbourne, Vic 3010, Australia.
|
|
Li, Lin, Canc Council Victoria, Nigel Gray Fellowship Grp, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/annweh/wxz073},
|
|
ISSN = {2398-7308},
|
|
EISSN = {2398-7316},
|
|
Keywords = {immigrant; job stressor; native workers; occupational exposure;
|
|
overseas-born},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PSYCHOSOCIAL WORKING-CONDITIONS; PERCEIVED OVERQUALIFICATION; HEALTH
|
|
INEQUALITIES; OVER-QUALIFICATION; IMMIGRANT WORKERS; FOREIGN-BORN;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; LABOR; STRAIN; SATISFACTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {tony.lamontagne@deakin.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {LaMontagne, Anthony Daniel/AAX-3285-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {LaMontagne, Anthony Daniel/0000-0002-5811-5906
|
|
Milner, Allison/0000-0003-4657-0503
|
|
Li, Lin/0000-0002-4764-1679},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000504933200002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000255839400006,
|
|
Author = {Lesorogol, Carolyn K.},
|
|
Title = {Land privatization and pastoralist well-being in Kenya},
|
|
Journal = {DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {309-331},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {East African pastoralists have well-developed systems of communal land
|
|
management that have been challenged by recent demands from some
|
|
pastoralists for land privatization. This article analyses the impact on
|
|
household well-being of privatizing land among a community of Samburu
|
|
pastoralists in northern Kenya. Using longitudinal data from household
|
|
surveys conducted in 2000 and 2005, trends in wealth, income,
|
|
stratification and livelihood strategies are analysed comparing the
|
|
privatized community and a community where land remains communally
|
|
managed. Results indicate few significant differences in wealth and
|
|
income between the privatized and communal areas, although cultivation
|
|
has become an important additional strategy in the privatized community.
|
|
Significant levels of wealth stratification are present in both
|
|
communities but are mitigated to some extent by mobility across wealth
|
|
quintiles over time. Wealthy and poor groups exhibit different
|
|
livelihood strategies with wealthier groups relying more on livestock
|
|
trade and home consumption while poorer groups depend on wage labour and
|
|
trade for their income. Policy implications of this analysis include the
|
|
need for development strategies specific to different wealth groups,
|
|
greater investment in education and infrastructure, and more attention
|
|
to employment creation in pastoral areas.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lesorogol, CK (Corresponding Author), Washington Univ, George Warren Brown Sch Social Work, Campus Box 1196,1 Brookings Dr, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
|
|
Washington Univ, George Warren Brown Sch Social Work, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1467-7660.2007.00481.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0012-155X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GROUP RANCH SUBDIVISION; PROPERTY-RIGHTS; RISK-MANAGEMENT;
|
|
DIVERSIFICATION; INEQUALITY; MAASAILAND; LIVESTOCK; DYNAMICS; POVERTY;
|
|
COMMONS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lesorogol, Carolyn/0000-0001-8946-0289},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {63},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {39},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000255839400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000438870200004,
|
|
Author = {Baert, Stijn and De Meyer, Ann-Sofie and Moerman, Yentl and Omey, Eddy},
|
|
Title = {Does size matter? Hiring discrimination and firm size},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {550-566},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of this paper is to study the association between
|
|
firm size and hiring discrimination against women, ethnic minorities and
|
|
older job candidates.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach The authors merge field experimental
|
|
measures on unequal treatment with firm-level data. The resulting data
|
|
enable the authors to assess whether discrimination varies by indicators
|
|
of firm size, keeping other firm characteristics constant.
|
|
Findings In contrast with the theoretical expectations, the authors find
|
|
no evidence for an association between firm size and hiring
|
|
discrimination. On the other hand, the authors do find suggestive
|
|
evidence for hiring discrimination being lower in respect of public or
|
|
non-profit firms (compared to commercial firms).
|
|
Social implications To effectively combat hiring discrimination, one
|
|
needs to understand its driving factors. In other words, to design
|
|
adequate policy actions, targeted to the right employers in the right
|
|
way, one has to gain insight into when individuals are discriminated in
|
|
particular, i.e. into the moderators of labour market discrimination. In
|
|
this study, the authors focus on firm size as a moderator of hiring
|
|
discrimination.
|
|
Originality/value Former contributions investigated this association
|
|
within the context of ethnic discrimination only and included hardly any
|
|
controls for other firm-level drivers of discrimination. The authors are
|
|
the first to study the heterogeneity in discrimination by firm size with
|
|
respect to multiple discrimination grounds and control for additional
|
|
firm characteristics.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baert, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Ghent, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Baert, Stijn; De Meyer, Ann-Sofie; Moerman, Yentl; Omey, Eddy, Univ Ghent, Ghent, Belgium.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJM-09-2017-0239},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-7720},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6577},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender; Age; Firm size; Ethnicity; Discrimination; Hiring},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKET; FIELD EXPERIMENT; ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION; AGE; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
ACCESS; 1ST},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {Stijn.Baert@UGent.be},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Baert, Stijn/0000-0002-1660-5165},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {41},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000438870200004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000687090100001,
|
|
Author = {Chang, Yan-Shing and Harger, Laura and Beake, Sarah and Bick, Debra},
|
|
Title = {Women's and Employers' Experiences and Views of Combining Breastfeeding
|
|
with a Return to Paid Employment: A Systematic Review of Qualitative
|
|
Studies},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MIDWIFERY \& WOMENS HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {641-655},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction Returning to paid employment is one of the reasons women
|
|
stop breastfeeding earlier than they planned to. This systematic review
|
|
aimed to provide insight into the experiences and views of women and
|
|
employers on breastfeeding and returning to paid employment, with
|
|
findings used to inform practice and policy. Methods The review was
|
|
guided by the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology for systematic
|
|
reviews of qualitative evidence. Medline, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Web of
|
|
Science databases were searched for studies published in English. JBI's
|
|
meta-aggregative approach informed data analysis. The studies in this
|
|
analysis included women who stopped breastfeeding before, and those who
|
|
continued breastfeeding after, returning to paid employment and the
|
|
employers, work managers, or supervisors of women who continued
|
|
breastfeeding after returning to paid employment. Results Twenty-six
|
|
articles presenting findings from 25 studies were included and
|
|
critically appraised. Synthesized findings showed that women experienced
|
|
physical and emotional difficulties and described gender and employment
|
|
inequalities in accessing and receiving the support they needed. Women
|
|
reported that the importance of their own motivation and having
|
|
workplace legislation in place facilitated breastfeeding during
|
|
employment. Support from employers, colleagues, and family members, as
|
|
well as access to convenient child care, helped women continue
|
|
breastfeeding on return to paid employment. Employers' personal
|
|
experiences influenced their views on breastfeeding and working, and the
|
|
need for more education and communication between employers and
|
|
employers on breastfeeding in the workplace was recognized. Discussion
|
|
Support from family, work colleagues, and employers was important to
|
|
reduce the physical and emotional challenges women experienced when
|
|
combing breastfeeding with return to paid employment. Gender
|
|
inequalities, especially in low- and middle-income countries, in
|
|
accessing support exacerbated the difficulties women experienced.
|
|
Limited data were identified regarding employers' experiences and views,
|
|
suggesting an urgent need for further research to explore employers' and
|
|
work colleagues' experiences and views.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chang, YS (Corresponding Author), Kings Coll London, Florence Nightingale Fac Nursing Midwifery \& Pall, London, England.
|
|
Chang, Yan-Shing; Harger, Laura; Beake, Sarah, Kings Coll London, Florence Nightingale Fac Nursing Midwifery \& Pall, London, England.
|
|
Harger, Laura, Lewisham \& Greenwich NHS Trust, London, England.
|
|
Bick, Debra, Univ Warwick, Warwick Med Sch, Warwick Clin Trials Unit, Warwick, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/jmwh.13243},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1526-9523},
|
|
EISSN = {1542-2011},
|
|
Keywords = {breastfeeding; infant feeding; employment; work environment; maternity
|
|
leave; qualitative evidence},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MATERNITY LEAVE; NEW-DELHI; WORKPLACE; SUPPORT; MOTHERS; WORK; BARRIERS;
|
|
PERCEPTIONS; INTENTION; MANAGERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {yan-shing.chang@kcl.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Chang, Yan-Shing/J-6875-2016
|
|
Bick, Debra/P-9575-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Chang, Yan-Shing/0000-0002-9086-4472
|
|
Bick, Debra/0000-0002-8557-7276},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000687090100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000556581200001,
|
|
Author = {Watson, Tamlin L. and Kubasiewicz, Laura M. and Chamberlain, Natasha and
|
|
Nye, Caroline and Raw, Zoe and Burden, Faith A.},
|
|
Title = {Cultural ``Blind Spots,{''} Social Influence and the Welfare of Working
|
|
Donkeys in Brick Kilns in Northern India},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Month = {APR 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) work across the globe to improve
|
|
the welfare of working equids. Despite decades of veterinary and other
|
|
interventions, welfare issues persist with equids working in brick
|
|
kilns. Engagement with all stakeholders is integral to creating abiding
|
|
improvements to working equid welfare as interventions based purely on
|
|
reactive measures fail to provide sustainable solutions. Equid owners,
|
|
particularly those in low to middle-income countries (LMICs), may have
|
|
issues such as opportunity, capacity, gender or socio-economic status,
|
|
overriding their ability to care well for their own equids. These
|
|
``blind spots{''} are frequently overlooked when organizations develop
|
|
intervention programs to improve welfare. This study aims to highlight
|
|
the lives of the poorest members of Indian society, and will focus on
|
|
working donkeys specifically as they were the only species of working
|
|
equids present in the kilns visited. We discuss culture, status,
|
|
religion, and social influences, including insights into the
|
|
complexities of cultural ``blind spots{''} which complicate efforts by
|
|
NGOs to improve working donkey welfare when the influence of different
|
|
cultural and societal pressures are not recognized or acknowledged.
|
|
Employing a mixed-methods approach, we used the Equid Assessment
|
|
Research and Scoping (EARS) tool, a questionnaire based equid welfare
|
|
assessment tool, to assess the welfare of working donkeys in brick kilns
|
|
in Northern India. In addition, using livelihoods surveys and
|
|
semi-structured interviews, we established owner demographics,
|
|
socioeconomic status, ethnicity, religion and their personal accounts of
|
|
their working lives and relationships to their donkeys. During
|
|
transcript analysis six themes emerged: caste, ethnicity, inherited
|
|
knowledge; social status, and impacts of ethnic group and caste; social
|
|
status and gender; migration and shared suffering; shared suffering,
|
|
compassion; religious belief, species hierarchy. The lives led by these,
|
|
marginalized communities of low status are driven by poverty, exposing
|
|
them to exploitation, lack of community cohesion, and community
|
|
conflicts through migratory, transient employment. This vulnerability
|
|
influences the care and welfare of their working donkeys, laying bare
|
|
the inextricable link between human and animal welfare. Cultural and
|
|
social perspectives, though sometimes overlooked, are crucial to
|
|
programs to improve welfare, where community engagement and
|
|
participation are integral to their success.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Watson, TL (Corresponding Author), Donkey Sanctuary, Sidmouth, Devon, England.
|
|
Watson, Tamlin L.; Kubasiewicz, Laura M.; Chamberlain, Natasha; Nye, Caroline; Raw, Zoe; Burden, Faith A., Donkey Sanctuary, Sidmouth, Devon, England.
|
|
Nye, Caroline, Univ Exeter, Ctr Rural Policy Res, Exeter, Devon, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fvets.2020.00214},
|
|
Article-Number = {214},
|
|
EISSN = {2297-1769},
|
|
Keywords = {working equids; brick kilns; welfare; blindspots; donkeys; culture},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER INEQUALITY; SYSTEM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Veterinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {tamlin.watson@thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {watson, tamlin/ITV-5544-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {watson, tamlin/0000-0002-2751-5149
|
|
Burden, Faith/0000-0002-1223-3923},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000556581200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000797690700001,
|
|
Author = {Mitra, Sophie and Yap, Jaclyn and Herve, Justine and Chen, Wei},
|
|
Title = {Inclusive statistics: A disaggregation of indicators by disability
|
|
status and its implications for policy},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL SOCIAL POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {39-66},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Disability has received limited attention on the global data and social
|
|
policy scene. There are few global data portals or indices tracking the
|
|
socioeconomic situation of persons with disabilities. Global social
|
|
policy initiatives tend to focus on disability benefits, while other
|
|
social policies may impact the situation of persons with disabilities.
|
|
The absence of internationally comparable data and tools to measure
|
|
disability could explain this lack of attention until recently. Given
|
|
progress with respect to measuring disability, this article set out to
|
|
find out if human development indicators can be disaggregated by
|
|
disability status using census and mainstream survey data and, if they
|
|
can, consider what such disaggregation reveals regarding the
|
|
socioeconomic situation of persons with disabilities and derive
|
|
implications for social policies. Disability status is measured through
|
|
self-reports of functional difficulties (e.g. seeing, hearing). For 19
|
|
low- and middle-income countries, the median prevalence stands at 13\%
|
|
among adults aged 15 years and older, and at 28\% among households. We
|
|
could disaggregate a range of human development indicators across
|
|
disability status for all countries. There are consistent inequalities
|
|
associated with disability, particularly in terms of educational
|
|
attainment, employment population ratio, multidimensional poverty, and
|
|
food security. At the same time, we find that not all persons with
|
|
functional difficulties experience deprivations. Results in this article
|
|
on the prevalence of functional difficulties and their association with
|
|
socioeconomic deprivations show that disability should be central to
|
|
social policies globally. More data collection, research, and policy
|
|
work are needed to curb the inequalities associated with disability.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mitra, S (Corresponding Author), Fordham Univ, 441 East Fordham Rd, Bronx, NY 10458 USA.
|
|
Mitra, Sophie; Yap, Jaclyn; Herve, Justine; Chen, Wei, Fordham Univ, 441 East Fordham Rd, Bronx, NY 10458 USA.
|
|
Herve, Justine, Stevens Inst Technol, 1 Castle Point Terrace, Hoboken, NJ 07030 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/14680181221077866},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1468-0181},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-2803},
|
|
Keywords = {Disability; disaggregation; functional difficulties; human development;
|
|
statistics},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WASHINGTON GROUP; POVERTY; POOREST},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science},
|
|
Author-Email = {mitra@fordham.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mitra, Sophie/0000-0001-7283-6630},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000797690700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000291289800025,
|
|
Author = {Ham, John C. and Swenson, Charles and Imrohoroglu, Ayse and Song,
|
|
Heonjae},
|
|
Title = {Government programs can improve local labor markets: Evidence from State
|
|
Enterprise Zones, Federal Empowerment Zones and Federal Enterprise
|
|
Community},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {95},
|
|
Number = {7-8},
|
|
Pages = {779-797},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Federal and state governments spend well over a billion dollars a year
|
|
on programs that encourage employment development in disadvantaged labor
|
|
markets through the use of subsidies and tax credits. In this paper we
|
|
use an estimation approach that is valid under relatively weak
|
|
assumptions to measure the impact of State Enterprise Zones (ENTZs),
|
|
Federal Empowerment Zones (EMPZs), and Federal Enterprise Community
|
|
(ENTC) programs on local labor markets. We find that all three programs
|
|
have positive, statistically significant, impacts on local labor markets
|
|
in terms of the unemployment rate, the poverty rate, the fraction with
|
|
wage and salary income, and employment. Further, the effects of EMPZ and
|
|
ENTC designation are considerably larger than the impact of ENTZ
|
|
designation. We find that our estimates are robust to allowing for a
|
|
regression to the mean effect. We also find that there are positive, but
|
|
statistically insignificant, spillover effects to neighboring Census
|
|
tracts of each of these programs. Thus our positive estimates of these
|
|
program impacts do not simply represent a transfer from the nearest
|
|
non-treated Census tract to the treated Census tract. Our results are
|
|
noteworthy for several reasons. First, our study is the first to jointly
|
|
look at these three programs, thus allowing policy makers to compare the
|
|
impacts of these programs. Second, our paper, along with a concurrent
|
|
study by Neumark and Kolko (2008), is the first to carry out the
|
|
estimation accounting for overlap between the programs. Third, our
|
|
estimation strategy is valid under weaker assumptions than those made in
|
|
many previous studies; we consider three comparison groups and let the
|
|
data determine the appropriate group. Fourth, in spite of our
|
|
conservative estimation strategy, by looking at national effects with
|
|
disaggregated data, we show that ENTZ designation generally has a
|
|
positive effect on the local labor market, while most previous research
|
|
on ENTZs, much of which used more geographically aggregated data to look
|
|
at state-specific effects, did not find any significant impacts. Fifth,
|
|
we note that there is little or no previous work on ENTCs. Overall, our
|
|
results strongly support the efficacy of these labor market
|
|
interventions. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ham, JC (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, IZA \& IRP UW Madison, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Ham, John C., Univ Maryland, IZA \& IRP UW Madison, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Swenson, Charles; Imrohoroglu, Ayse, Univ So Calif, Marshall Sch Business, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jpubeco.2010.11.027},
|
|
ISSN = {0047-2727},
|
|
Keywords = {Enterprise zones; Empowerment zones; Enterprise communities; Program
|
|
evaluation; Disadvantaged labor markets},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INSTRUMENTAL VARIABLES; TRAINING-PROGRAMS; PROPENSITY SCORE; JOB
|
|
CREATION; IMPACT; EMPLOYMENT; CALIFORNIA; POLICIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {john.ham.at.maryland.economics@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {111},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {50},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000291289800025},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000446040900004,
|
|
Author = {Shildrick, Tracy},
|
|
Title = {Lessons from Grenfell: Poverty propaganda, stigma and class power},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {783-798},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {The Grenfell Tower fire that took place in a council owned high-rise
|
|
housing block in the early hours of 14 June 2017 in the London Borough
|
|
of Kensington and Chelsea represented the worst fire in Britain for many
|
|
decades. This article draws, in part, on the example of Grenfell Tower
|
|
to interrogate some of the most pressing issues of our time around
|
|
poverty, inequality and austerity. After a period of quiet, poverty now
|
|
features more regularly in popular and political conversations. This is,
|
|
in part, due to the proliferation of foodbanks that in many ways have
|
|
become the public face of poverty in contemporary Britain. Additionally
|
|
the increased popularity of so-called `poverty porn' exemplified by
|
|
programmes such as Benefit Street have provoked public and political
|
|
debate about the realities of poverty and its causes and consequences.
|
|
Punitive policies towards out of work benefits claimants, austerity
|
|
measures and the proliferation of low paid and insecure work mean
|
|
poverty has been extended to more and more people, yet at the same time
|
|
it is a condition that is frequently stigmatised, misrepresented and
|
|
misunderstood. Whilst evidence shows increased stereotyping and
|
|
stigmatisation of those experiencing poverty and other related
|
|
disadvantages, there is also evidence that the British general public on
|
|
the whole tend to care about fairness, equality of opportunity and that
|
|
they dislike extremes of income and wealth, although importantly they
|
|
also generally underestimate the realities of both. It was these
|
|
extremes of inequality that Grenfell thrust so violently into the public
|
|
imagination with many newspapers visually capturing the gulf between
|
|
rich and `poor' in their pictures of the burnt out shell of Grenfell set
|
|
against a typical block of luxury apartments of the sort that are
|
|
proliferating in London and other cities in Britain and that,
|
|
particularly in London, often cost in excess of a million pounds or
|
|
more. This article looks at examples of how critical work is being done
|
|
by those in power to manipulate and frame the terms of the discussion
|
|
around poverty, inequality and economic insecurity and its causes and
|
|
its consequences.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shildrick, T (Corresponding Author), Newcastle Univ, Sch Geog Polit \& Sociol, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU, Tyne \& Wear, England.
|
|
Shildrick, Tracy, Newcastle Univ, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne \& Wear, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0038026118777424},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-0261},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-954X},
|
|
Keywords = {inequality; poverty; power; stigma},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {tracy.shildrick@ncl.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {72},
|
|
Times-Cited = {46},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000446040900004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000874577700001,
|
|
Author = {Chen, Xinlin and Guo, Dandan and Tan, Huawei and Zhang, Yunfan and Liu,
|
|
Yanchen and Chen, Xinlan and Chen, Yingchun},
|
|
Title = {Can supplementary private health insurance further supplement health},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Month = {SEP 27},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundChina advocates a health insurance system with social health
|
|
insurance (SHI) as the main body and private health insurance (PHI) as
|
|
the supplement. The study of PHI's complementary role in health is
|
|
conducive to providing evidence for PHI's policy expansion and
|
|
encouraging the public to participate in PHI, which is insufficient in
|
|
China. MethodsWe used the three-wave balanced panel data of the China
|
|
Health and Retirement Longitudinal Survey (CHARLS). Taking the ownership
|
|
of supplementary PHI as the independent variable and EQ-5D index scores
|
|
as the dependent variable, the panel instrumental variable (IV) method
|
|
was used to analyze the impact of participation in PHI on health. We
|
|
also assessed the heterogeneity of the health effects of PHI between
|
|
chronic and non-chronic disease groups and between low- and high-income
|
|
groups. ResultsThe coverage rate of PHI at baseline was 10.53\%. The
|
|
regression results showed that participating in PHI on the basis of SHI
|
|
could result in an additional 8.21\% health gain (p < 0.001). At the
|
|
same time, PHI had greater health gain for chronic disease population
|
|
than for healthy population (9.25 vs. 6.24\%, p < 0.001), and greater
|
|
health gain for high-income population than for low-income population
|
|
(8.32 vs. 5.31\%, p < 0.001). ConclusionParticipating in supplementary
|
|
PHI can effectively enhance the health status of the insured, and has a
|
|
more significant effect on patients with chronic diseases. The
|
|
development of PHI should be further supported, while the health
|
|
inequality in different income groups should be paid attention to.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chen, YC (Corresponding Author), Huazhong Univ Sci \& Technol, Tongji Med Coll, Sch Med \& Hlth Management, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chen, YC (Corresponding Author), Key Res Inst Humanities \& Social Sci, Res Ctr Rural Hlth Serv, Prov Dept Educ, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chen, Xinlin; Guo, Dandan; Tan, Huawei; Zhang, Yunfan; Liu, Yanchen; Chen, Xinlan; Chen, Yingchun, Huazhong Univ Sci \& Technol, Tongji Med Coll, Sch Med \& Hlth Management, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chen, Yingchun, Key Res Inst Humanities \& Social Sci, Res Ctr Rural Hlth Serv, Prov Dept Educ, Wuhan, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpubh.2022.961019},
|
|
Article-Number = {961019},
|
|
EISSN = {2296-2565},
|
|
Keywords = {private health insurance; social health insurance; health promotion;
|
|
EQ-5D; instrumental variable},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORKING-AGE ADULTS; CARE UTILIZATION; MEDICAL-CARE; OLDER; SELECTION;
|
|
COVERAGE; SERVICE; MARKETS; DESIGN; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {chenyingchunhust@163.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Zhang, Yunfan/0000-0003-1805-5096},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000874577700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000392785700449,
|
|
Author = {Ahmad, Mumtaz Bte and Maon, Siti Noorsuriani Bt and Mansor, Mohammad
|
|
Naqiuddin Md and Daud, Norzaidi Mohd},
|
|
Editor = {Soliman, KS},
|
|
Title = {Quality of Life Sandwich Generation: A Review of the Literature},
|
|
Booktitle = {VISION 2020: INNOVATION MANAGEMENT, DEVELOPMENT SUSTAINABILITY, AND
|
|
COMPETITIVE ECONOMIC GROWTH, 2016, VOLS I - VII},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Pages = {4499-4504},
|
|
Note = {28th International Business-Information-Management-Association
|
|
Conference, Seville, SPAIN, NOV 09-10, 2016},
|
|
Abstract = {The sandwich generation is referring to the people raising their
|
|
children while having to care for their aging parents at the same time.
|
|
This trend is increasing in numbers in recent years. A dual breadwinner
|
|
paradigm resulted from the economic change which requires most families
|
|
to have two incomes for their economic viability. Besides that, this
|
|
working people also need to taking care their parent or parent in law
|
|
due to lack of preparation of elderly age. This group of people is
|
|
classified as `sandwich generation'.Nowadays, between 1 out of 8
|
|
households with aged 30 or older is classified as dual-earner or
|
|
sandwiched generation couples. The impact from multiple caregiving
|
|
duties is inequalities in psychological, physical, employment, and
|
|
financial outcomes of the family institution. It is possible that
|
|
multi-generational caregiving responsibilities will continue to rise for
|
|
the children of baby boomers as life expectancies continue to go up.
|
|
People continue to have children later in life, and continue to support
|
|
those children to older ages. The review of literature shows positive
|
|
and negative benefits for the caregivers. Policy and clinical supports
|
|
must be put into place to facilitate the highly necessary and valuable
|
|
caregiving responsibilities of this population. In addition, the
|
|
outcomes of the present study will spur the economic development and
|
|
assist the development of health promoting programs in accordance to the
|
|
local context. Besides that, it also provides guidelines to policy maker
|
|
and health professionals in maintaining quality healthy lifestyles of
|
|
the nation. Policy, health, and research implications are included.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ahmad, MB (Corresponding Author), Univ Teknol MARA, Fac Business \& Management, KampusPuncakAlam, Shah Alam, Malaysia.
|
|
Ahmad, Mumtaz Bte; Maon, Siti Noorsuriani Bt; Mansor, Mohammad Naqiuddin Md; Daud, Norzaidi Mohd, Univ Teknol MARA, Fac Business \& Management, KampusPuncakAlam, Shah Alam, Malaysia.
|
|
Daud, Norzaidi Mohd, Univ Teknol MARA, Accounting Res Inst, Shah Alam, Malaysia.
|
|
Daud, Norzaidi Mohd, Univ Teknol MARA, Inst Business Excellence, Shah Alam, Malaysia.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-0-9860419-8-3},
|
|
Keywords = {Quality of Life; Social Support; Work-life Conflict; Sandwich Generation},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {mumtaz2627@salam.uitm.edu.my
|
|
sitinoor123@puncakalam.uitm.edu
|
|
naqimthere@yahoo.com
|
|
zaidiuitm2000@yahoo.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Daud, Norzaidi Mohd/I-8324-2019
|
|
MD MANSOR, MOHAMAD NAQIUDDIN/IXN-9100-2023
|
|
Maon, Siti/AAB-5545-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Daud, Norzaidi Mohd/0000-0003-1641-8594
|
|
MD MANSOR, MOHAMAD NAQIUDDIN/0009-0009-7713-8589
|
|
Maon, Siti/0000-0002-3295-8817
|
|
Ahmad, Mumtaz Bte/0000-0003-3191-1256},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {9},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000392785700449},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000289292300002,
|
|
Author = {Garcia-Gomez, Pilar and von Gaudecker, Hans-Martin and Lindeboom,
|
|
Maarten},
|
|
Title = {Health, disability and work: patterns for the working age population},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL TAX AND PUBLIC FINANCE},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {146-165},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {We examine the role of health as a determinant of labour force
|
|
participation, paying particular attention to the link between the two
|
|
provided by disability insurance schemes. We first review the evidence
|
|
on associations between health and labour force participation. Enrolment
|
|
in disability insurance is not determined by health alone, and we
|
|
highlight the main other causes that the literature has identified. In
|
|
an application to The Netherlands, we follow the structure of the
|
|
literature review and show that the trends in health and disability
|
|
insurance enrolment look rather positive. In particular, the 1990
|
|
reforms of disability insurance might have been more effective than
|
|
previously realised because part of their success was hidden by
|
|
demographic change: The large number of baby boomers kept the absolute
|
|
inflow high as they aged, despite large reductions in relative rates.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {von Gaudecker, HM (Corresponding Author), Univ Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany.
|
|
von Gaudecker, Hans-Martin, Univ Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany.
|
|
Garcia-Gomez, Pilar, Erasmus Univ, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Lindeboom, Maarten, Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Lindeboom, Maarten, IZA, Bonn, Germany.
|
|
Garcia-Gomez, Pilar; von Gaudecker, Hans-Martin; Lindeboom, Maarten, Netspar, Tilburg, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10797-010-9150-z},
|
|
ISSN = {0927-5940},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-6970},
|
|
Keywords = {Health; Disability; Disability insurance; Labour force participation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CONSUMPTION INEQUALITY; SKILL FORMATION; EMPLOYMENT; INCOME; INSURANCE;
|
|
UNEMPLOYMENT; TECHNOLOGY; PROGRAMS; TRENDS; ROLLS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {hmgaudecker@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Garcia-Gomez, Pilar/ABA-9600-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Garcia-Gomez, Pilar/0000-0002-5634-4609},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000289292300002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000390504600013,
|
|
Author = {Trevisan, Elisabetta and Zantomio, Francesca},
|
|
Title = {The impact of acute health shocks on the labour supply of older workers:
|
|
Evidence from sixteen European countries},
|
|
Journal = {LABOUR ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {SI},
|
|
Pages = {171-185},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {We investigate the consequences of experiencing an acute health shock,
|
|
namely the first onset of myocardial infarction, stroke or cancer, on
|
|
the labour supply of older workers in Europe. Despite its policy
|
|
relevance to social security sustainability, the question has not yet
|
|
been empirically addressed in the European context We combine data from
|
|
the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing and the Survey of Health,
|
|
Ageing and Retirement in Europe and cover sixteen European countries,
|
|
representative of different institutional settings, in the years
|
|
spanning from 2002 to 2013. The empirical strategy builds on the
|
|
availability of an extremely rich set of health and labour market
|
|
information as well as of panel data. To remove the potential
|
|
confounding bias, a selection on observables strategy is adopted, while
|
|
the longitudinal dimension of data allows controlling for time invariant
|
|
unobservables. Implementation is based on a combination of
|
|
stratification and propensity score matching methods. Results reveal
|
|
that experiencing an acute health shock on average doubles the risk of
|
|
an older worker leaving the labour market, and is accompanied by a
|
|
deterioration in physical functioning and mental health, as well as by a
|
|
reduction in perceived life expectancy. Men's labour market response
|
|
appears driven by the onset of impairment acting as a barrier to work.
|
|
In the case of women, preferences for leisure and financial constraints
|
|
seem to play a prominent role. Heterogeneity in behavioural responses
|
|
across countries - with the largest labour supply reductions observed in
|
|
the Nordic and Eastern countries, and England - are suggestive of a
|
|
relevant role played by social security generosity. (C) 2016 Elsevier
|
|
B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zantomio, F (Corresponding Author), Ca Foscari Univ Venice, Dept Econ, San Giobbe 873, I-30121 Venice, Italy.
|
|
Trevisan, Elisabetta, Univ Padua, Dept Econ \& Management, I-35100 Padua, Italy.
|
|
Trevisan, Elisabetta, Netspar, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Zantomio, Francesca, Ca Foscari Univ Venice, Dept Econ, San Giobbe 873, I-30121 Venice, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.labeco.2016.04.002},
|
|
ISSN = {0927-5371},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-1034},
|
|
Keywords = {Health shocks; Labour supply; Europe; Older workers; Propensity score
|
|
matching},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LONG-TERM; EARLY RETIREMENT; BREAST-CANCER; JOB MOBILITY; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
INSURANCE; INCOME; LIFE; EPIDEMIOLOGY; PREDICTORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {francesca.zantomio@unive.it},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {84},
|
|
Times-Cited = {39},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000390504600013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000329373900002,
|
|
Author = {Andualem, Mulusew and Kebede, Gashaw and Kumie, Abera},
|
|
Title = {Information needs and seeking behaviour among health professionals
|
|
working at public hospital and health centres in Bahir Dar, Ethiopia},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {DEC 27},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Universal access to information for health professionals is
|
|
a need to achieve ``health for all strategy.{''} A large proportion of
|
|
the population including health professionals have limited access to
|
|
health information in resource limited countries. The aim of this study
|
|
is to assess information needs among Ethiopian health professionals.
|
|
Methods: A cross sectional quantitative study design complemented with
|
|
qualitative method was conducted among 350 health care workers in
|
|
Feburary26-June5/2012. Pretested self-administered questionnaire and
|
|
observation checklist were used to collect data on different variables.
|
|
Data entry and data analysis were done using Epi-Info version 3.5.1 and
|
|
by SPSS version19, respectively. Descriptive statistics and multivariate
|
|
regression analyses were applied to describe study objectives and
|
|
identify the determinants of information seeking behaviours
|
|
respectively. Odds ratio with 95\% CI was used to assess the association
|
|
between a factor and an outcome variable.
|
|
Results: The majority of the respondents acknowledged the need of health
|
|
information to their routine activities. About 54.0\% of respondents
|
|
lacked access to health information. Only 42.8\% of respondents have
|
|
access to internet sources. Important barriers to access information
|
|
were geographical, organizational, personal, economic, educational
|
|
status and time. About 58.0\% of the respondents accessed information by
|
|
referring their hard copies and asking senior staff. Age, sex, income,
|
|
computer literacy and access, patient size, work experience and working
|
|
site were significantly associated with information needs and seeking
|
|
behaviour. Conclusions: The health information seeking behaviour of
|
|
health professional was significant. The heaklth facilities had neither
|
|
informationcenter such as library, nor internet facilities.
|
|
Conducting training on managing health information, accessing computer
|
|
and improving infrastructures are important interventions to facilitate
|
|
evidence based descions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Andualem, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Gondar, Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Informat, Gondar, Ethiopia.
|
|
Andualem, Mulusew, Univ Gondar, Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Informat, Gondar, Ethiopia.
|
|
Kebede, Gashaw, Univ Addis Ababa, Sch Informat Sci, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
|
|
Kumie, Abera, Univ Addis Ababa, Sch Publ Hlth, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1472-6963-13-534},
|
|
Article-Number = {534},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Information; Information need; Information seeking behaviour;
|
|
Information source},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {muler.hi@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Asemahagn, Mulusew Andualem/J-9889-2019
|
|
Kumie, Abera/AAC-8537-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Asemahagn, Mulusew Andualem/0000-0002-0345-9437
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000329373900002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000422647700012,
|
|
Author = {Breathett, Khadijah and Filley, Jessica and Pandey, Madhaba and Rai,
|
|
Nayanjot and Peterson, Pamela N.},
|
|
Title = {Trends in Early Prenatal Care Among Women with Pre-Existing Diabetes:
|
|
Have Income Disparities Changed?},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {93-98},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Women with pre-existing diabetes are at high maternal risk
|
|
for comorbidities and death, particularly when early prenatal care is
|
|
not received. Low income is a known barrier to early prenatal care. It
|
|
is unknown whether recent policies to expand access to prenatal care
|
|
have reduced income disparities. We hypothesized that income disparities
|
|
would be minimized and that the odds of receipt of first trimester
|
|
prenatal care among women with pre-existing diabetes would become
|
|
similar across income strata over time. Material and Methods: Using the
|
|
Colorado birth certificate registry from 2007 to 2014, receipt of
|
|
prenatal care was assessed retrospectively in 2,497 women with
|
|
pre-existing diabetes. Logistic regression was used to examine the
|
|
association between high (>\$50,000), medium (\$25,000-50,000), and low
|
|
(<\$25,000) income strata and receipt of first trimester prenatal care
|
|
by birth year, adjusted for demographics. Results: High, medium, and low
|
|
income represented 29.5\%, 19.0\%, and 51.5\% of the cohort,
|
|
respectively. Women with high income were more likely to receive first
|
|
trimester care than women with low income from 2007 {[}adjusted odds
|
|
ratio, 95\% confidence interval: 2.16 (1.18, 3.96)] through 2013 {[}1.66
|
|
(1.01, 2.73)], but significant differences were no longer observed in
|
|
2014 {[}1.59 (0.89, 2.84)]. The likelihood of receiving first trimester
|
|
prenatal care was not significantly different between medium- and
|
|
low-income strata from 2007 {[}1.07 (0.66, 1.74)] through 2014 {[}0.77
|
|
(0.48, 1.23)]. Conclusions: From 2007 to 2013, women in Colorado with
|
|
diabetes were more likely to receive early prenatal care if they were in
|
|
the highest income stratum than in the lowest stratum. In 2014, receipt
|
|
of first trimester care became equitable across all income strata.
|
|
Future work should examine national patterns of income with receipt of
|
|
prenatal care and outcomes among women with pre-existing diabetes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Breathett, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Arizona, Div Cardiol, Sarver Heart Ctr, 1501 North Campbell Ave,POB 245046, Tucson, AZ 85724 USA.
|
|
Breathett, Khadijah; Peterson, Pamela N., Univ Colorado, Div Cardiol, Anschutz Med Campus, Aurora, CO USA.
|
|
Breathett, Khadijah, Univ Arizona, Sarver Heart Ctr, Div Cardiol, Tucson, AZ USA.
|
|
Filley, Jessica; Pandey, Madhaba; Rai, Nayanjot, Univ Colorado, Dept Publ Hlth, Anschutz Med Campus, Aurora, CO USA.
|
|
Peterson, Pamela N., Denver Hlth Med Ctr, Denver, CO USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1089/jwh.2016.6031},
|
|
ISSN = {1540-9996},
|
|
EISSN = {1931-843X},
|
|
Keywords = {pregnancy; socioeconomic status; policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PREGNANT-WOMEN; HEALTH; POPULATION; RISK; ADEQUACY; MELLITUS; OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Medicine, General \&
|
|
Internal; Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {kbreathett@shc.arizona.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rai, Nayanjot Kaur/AAU-2431-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rai, Nayanjot Kaur/0000-0001-9614-8234
|
|
Breathett, Khadijah/0000-0001-5397-6419},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000422647700012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000675491400006,
|
|
Author = {Galperin, Hernan and Arcidiacono, Malena},
|
|
Title = {Employment and the gender digital divide in Latin America: A
|
|
decomposition analysis},
|
|
Journal = {TELECOMMUNICATIONS POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {There is a vast literature that examines the determinants of the gender
|
|
digital gap in developing countries, and puts forth policy
|
|
recommendations to mitigate it. However, few studies examine how gender
|
|
differences in labor force participation and employment patterns affect
|
|
ICT adoption in general, or Internet use in particular. This matters
|
|
because employment and the types of jobs that men and women do correlate
|
|
with different opportunities to access the Internet and develop digital
|
|
skills, both of which contribute to overall Internet engagement. This
|
|
study contributes to fill this gap by exploring how gender differences
|
|
in employment affect the digital gender gap in four Latin American
|
|
countries. The findings point to differences in employment patterns
|
|
between men and women as the largest single contributor to the gender
|
|
gap in Internet use in these countries, ahead of differences in other
|
|
predictors of Internet use such as income, age and education. Further,
|
|
our results suggest that the correlation between employment and Internet
|
|
use is stronger among women than men, which we attribute to the fact
|
|
that women tend to work in more ICT-intensive sectors (e.g., health
|
|
services and education). Estimates from a decomposition analysis suggest
|
|
that if women were employed at the same rate as men the gender digital
|
|
gap in these countries would be reduced by at least a quarter.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Galperin, H (Corresponding Author), Univ Southern Calif, Los Angeles, CA 90007 USA.
|
|
Galperin, Hernan, Univ Southern Calif, Los Angeles, CA 90007 USA.
|
|
Arcidiacono, Malena, Univ Nacl La Plata UNLP Argentina, La Plata, Argentina.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.telpol.2021.102166},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {102166},
|
|
ISSN = {0308-5961},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-3258},
|
|
Keywords = {Digital gender gap; Labor markets; Latin America; Decomposition analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BROAD-BAND; LABOR-MARKET; INTERNET USE; DETERMINANTS; SKILLS;
|
|
DISCRIMINATION; INEQUALITY; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Communication; Information Science \& Library Science;
|
|
Telecommunications},
|
|
Author-Email = {hgalperi@usc.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {39},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000675491400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000605895000003,
|
|
Author = {Takizawa, Masaaki and Kawachi, Ichiro and Fujiwara, Takeo and Kizuki,
|
|
Masashi and Nawa, Nobutoshi and Kino, Shiho},
|
|
Title = {Association Between Maternal Working Status and Unintentional Injuries
|
|
Among 3 to 4-Month-Old Infants in Japan},
|
|
Journal = {MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {414-427},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives Globally, unintentional injuries are one of the leading
|
|
causes of infant death. Established risk factors for injuries during
|
|
infancy include single parent households, socioeconomic disadvantage and
|
|
maternal postpartum depression. We sought to examine whether maternal
|
|
working status is associated with unintentional injury among infants in
|
|
Japan.
|
|
Methods We used data from an original questionnaire targeting mothers
|
|
who participated in a 3 or 4-month health check-up program in Aichi
|
|
prefecture, Japan. Experience of any type of unintentional injury was
|
|
used as the primary outcome, and we also examined the experience of
|
|
``falls{''} and ``near-drowning{''} as secondary outcomes. We conducted
|
|
multivariable logistic regression analysis, adjusting for covariates. We
|
|
also performed propensity score matching in order to balance covariates
|
|
between paid employment and unpaid employment groups.
|
|
Results Among 6,465 valid responses (response rate, 67\%), 9.8\% of
|
|
infants experienced unintentional injuries. After matching on propensity
|
|
for maternal employment (based on 26 covariates), we found that infants
|
|
of mothers in paid employment were 1.35 times (95\% CI: 1.04-1.74) more
|
|
likely to experience injures, including 1.60 times higher likelihood of
|
|
falls (95\% CI: 1.14-2.24). Near-drowning was not significantly
|
|
associated with maternal employment. We also found that father's
|
|
employment status was positively associated with risk of falls.
|
|
Conclusion Both multivariable logistic analysis and propensity score
|
|
matching analysis revealed that maternal paid employment status was
|
|
associated with unintentional injuries among Japanese infants. To
|
|
prevent infant injuries, comprehensive support for working families
|
|
should be considered.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fujiwara, T (Corresponding Author), Tokyo Med \& Dent Univ, Dept Global Hlth Promot, Bunkyo Ku, 1-5-45 Yushima, Tokyo 1138519, Japan.
|
|
Takizawa, Masaaki; Fujiwara, Takeo; Kizuki, Masashi; Nawa, Nobutoshi, Tokyo Med \& Dent Univ, Dept Global Hlth Promot, Bunkyo Ku, 1-5-45 Yushima, Tokyo 1138519, Japan.
|
|
Kawachi, Ichiro; Kino, Shiho, Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social \& Behav Sci, Boston, MA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10995-020-03083-2},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1092-7875},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-6628},
|
|
Keywords = {Unintentional injury; Maternal working status; Infant; Propensity score},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {YOUNG-CHILDREN; PARENTAL LEAVE; EMPLOYMENT; HEALTH; FAMILY; RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {fujiwara.hlth@tmd.ac.jp},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Nawa, Nobutoshi/AAT-5292-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Nawa, Nobutoshi/0000-0001-6785-7867},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000605895000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000496890800001,
|
|
Author = {Bellani, Daniela and Esping-Andersen, Gosta},
|
|
Title = {Gendered Time Allocation and Divorce: A Longitudinal Analysis of German
|
|
and American Couples},
|
|
Journal = {FAMILY RELATIONS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {69},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {207-226},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective To examine the association between divorce and partners'
|
|
allocation of paid and unpaid work, and change over a few key decades in
|
|
both West Germany and the United States. Background Past research has
|
|
indicated that partner similarity in time spent on both paid and unpaid
|
|
work is associated with a higher risk of marital dissolution. We explore
|
|
whether the association between paid work disparities and divorce or
|
|
between unpaid work disparities and divorce changed across time or
|
|
differed between two cultures. Method Using data from the Panel Study of
|
|
Income Dynamics for the United States and the German Socio-Economic
|
|
Panel for West Germany from the mid-1980s until the end of the 2000s, we
|
|
conducted event history analyses. Results Over time, the risk of divorce
|
|
declined among couples with a more similar division of labor. In
|
|
parallel, the relative stability of marriages adhering to a dissimilar
|
|
pattern of unpaid work decreased in Western Germany. Conclusion These
|
|
results contrast with the predictions of a static normative perspective,
|
|
but they are consistent with the multiple equilibrium theory, which
|
|
predicts that divorce risks will decline in tandem with the embrace of
|
|
more gender similarity in couple arrangements. Thus, evidence suggests
|
|
that as societies evolve toward greater gender similarity in the
|
|
division of paid and unpaid work, marital stability will likely improve.
|
|
Implications Preventive intervention approaches promoting new forms of
|
|
organization in the division of work between partners may be useful in
|
|
the quest for improved marital relations and well-being.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bellani, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Florence, DISIA Dept Stat, Comp Sci, Applicat G Parenti, Viale Morgagni 59, I-50134 Florence, Italy.
|
|
Bellani, Daniela, Univ Florence, Florence, Italy.
|
|
Esping-Andersen, Gosta, Bocconi Univ, Milan, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/fare.12405},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {0197-6664},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-3729},
|
|
Keywords = {divorce; family relationships; gender roles; social change; work and
|
|
family issues},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DIVISION-OF-LABOR; MARITAL SATISFACTION; WIVES EMPLOYMENT; HOUSEWORK;
|
|
STABILITY; MARRIAGE; CONTEXT; EQUITY; DETERMINANTS; COHABITATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {daniela.bellani@unifi.it},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {BELLANI, DANIELA/0000-0003-0672-925X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {74},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {31},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000496890800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001030137100001,
|
|
Author = {Coyle, Emily F. and Fulcher, Megan and Baker, Konner and Fredrickson,
|
|
Craig N.},
|
|
Title = {Families in quarantine: COVID-19 pandemic effects on the work and home
|
|
lives of women and their daughters},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 JUL 21},
|
|
Abstract = {The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020 disrupted the lives of
|
|
millions of US families, with rising unemployment and initial lockdowns
|
|
forcing nationwide school and daycare closures. These abrupt changes
|
|
impacted women in particular, shifting how families navigated roles.
|
|
Even pre-pandemic, US women were responsible for the majority of
|
|
household labor and childcare, and daughters bore greater chore
|
|
responsibility than sons. We surveyed 280 families early in the pandemic
|
|
(Spring 2020) and another 199 families more than a year later (Summer
|
|
2021) about pre-pandemic versus current work-family conflict (WFC),
|
|
division of labor and schooling, and children's daily activities. Early
|
|
on, mothers reported increased WFC (especially family impacting work),
|
|
mothers assumed primary responsibility for children's education at home,
|
|
and daughters spent more time doing chores and educating siblings. One
|
|
year in, WFC remained high but mother's stress was lower, parents
|
|
reported working less from home, and children largely returned to
|
|
face-to-face schooling. Yet, children, especially daughters, actually
|
|
spent more time caring for siblings than early in the pandemic, though
|
|
less time on chores overall. We conclude that policies that support
|
|
families such as paid family leave and subsidized childcare are needed
|
|
to right the gender inequalities exacerbated by the pandemic.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Coyle, EF (Corresponding Author), St Martins Univ, 5000 Abbey Way SE, Lacey, WA 98503 USA.
|
|
Coyle, Emily F.; Baker, Konner; Fredrickson, Craig N., St Martins Univ, Dept Psychol, Lacey, WA 98503 USA.
|
|
Fulcher, Megan, Washington \& Lee Univ, Dept Cognit \& Behav Sci, Lexington, VA USA.
|
|
Coyle, Emily F., St Martins Univ, 5000 Abbey Way SE, Lacey, WA 98503 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/josi.12589},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-4537},
|
|
EISSN = {1540-4560},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUBSIDIZED CHILD-CARE; ADULTS EXPECTATIONS; MATERNITY LEAVE; HOUSEHOLD;
|
|
EQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Issues; Psychology, Social},
|
|
Author-Email = {ECoyle@stmartin.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Coyle, Emily/0000-0001-8533-4920},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001030137100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000847074200001,
|
|
Author = {Maroto, Michelle and Pettinicchio, David},
|
|
Title = {Living on the Edge: Institutional Supports and Perceptions of Economic
|
|
Insecurity Among People with Disabilities and Chronic Health Conditions},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIOLOGICAL INQUIRY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {93},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {538-570},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The growth of precarious employment coupled with declining social safety
|
|
nets has increased economic insecurity among many households, leaving
|
|
them without key resources to weather financial hardships like those
|
|
brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. This has been especially true for
|
|
people whose disabilities, health statuses, and already precarious
|
|
economic situations have made them extra vulnerable. We combine survey
|
|
(N = 1,027) and interview (N = 50) data for Canadians with disabilities
|
|
and chronic health conditions to explore how mobilizing four types of
|
|
institutional supports connected to labor markets, financial markets,
|
|
family, and government influenced perceptions of current and future
|
|
insecurity during crisis. Because employment income was only available
|
|
to about half of our respondents, many relied on a combination of
|
|
savings, family supports, and government programs to make up the
|
|
difference. This paper demonstrates how marginalized groups make use of
|
|
different supports within liberal welfare states during times of crisis.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Maroto, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Alberta, Sociol, 6-23 HM Tory Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H4, Canada.
|
|
Maroto, Michelle, Univ Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
|
|
Pettinicchio, David, Univ Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/soin.12504},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-0245},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-682X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PERCEIVED JOB INSECURITY; MATERIAL HARDSHIP; WAGE INEQUALITY; GREAT
|
|
RECESSION; WELFARE-STATE; EMPLOYMENT; POLICY; LABOR; CONTEXT; CANADA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {84},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000847074200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000788277200009,
|
|
Author = {Han, Jeehoon},
|
|
Title = {The impact of SNAP work requirements on labor supply},
|
|
Journal = {LABOUR ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {74},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {This study explores the impact of work requirements for the Supplemental
|
|
Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) on the labor supply of able-bodied
|
|
adults without dependents, exploiting variation in the work exemption
|
|
across areas over time as well as the age criteria for the work
|
|
requirement. I find that suspending work requirements does not
|
|
discourage employment; a decrease in employment of more than 1.4
|
|
percentage points among people who are potentially affected by the
|
|
exemptions can be ruled out with a 95\% confidence interval. I also find
|
|
evidence of a reduction in hours of work among older prime-age workers
|
|
due to the work exemption. Further analysis uncovers two reasons why the
|
|
work exemption has little effect on employment. First, many new SNAP
|
|
participants who enrolled due to the exemption are the long-term
|
|
non-employed who have no labor supply to reduce. Second, the generous
|
|
income deductions in benefit calculation act as a work incentive by
|
|
significantly lowering the effective benefit reduction rate at very low
|
|
income (\$0-600). These findings indicate that the SNAP work requirement
|
|
may not achieve the intended goal of promoting employment; instead it
|
|
may increase the risk of disadvantaged individuals failing to receive
|
|
the assistance they need.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Han, JH (Corresponding Author), Zhejiang Univ, Sch Econ, Hangzhou, Peoples R China.
|
|
Han, Jeehoon, Zhejiang Univ, Sch Econ, Hangzhou, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.labeco.2021.102089},
|
|
Article-Number = {102089},
|
|
ISSN = {0927-5371},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-1034},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FOOD STAMP PARTICIPATION; TRANSFER PROGRAMS; WELFARE-REFORM; DISABILITY;
|
|
DECLINE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {jeehoonhan3@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Han, Jeehoon/AAE-1072-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Han, Jeehoon/0000-0002-1517-6696},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000788277200009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000412616400020,
|
|
Author = {Banerjee, Mahasweta M. and Friedline, Terri and Phipps, Barbara J.},
|
|
Title = {Financial capability of parents of kindergarteners},
|
|
Journal = {CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {81},
|
|
Pages = {178-187},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Financial capability is generally conceptualized as the ability and the
|
|
opportunity to save, borrow, and invest money in the mainstream economy.
|
|
But, many families struggle with finding work, saving money, and
|
|
accessing credit. Thus, it is important to build families' financial
|
|
capability to enhance their well-being in an economy in which low
|
|
incomes and unstable employment are becoming commonplace and families
|
|
are having to make do with less. In order to better understand how to
|
|
support families' financial capability, this study elicited perspectives
|
|
on barriers to and enhancers of financial capability through an online
|
|
survey and in-depth interview with 32 parents of kindergarten children
|
|
from a mid-sized, Midwestern city. Some parents identified raising young
|
|
children as a barrier to aspects of their financial capability, and to
|
|
care for their children many parents were making tradeoffs between
|
|
working, paying for childcare, and related money management matters.
|
|
Parents' also reported barriers to finding paid work, earning adequate
|
|
and stable income, and saving money. In addition to children
|
|
transitioning to adulthood, some parents believed that having better
|
|
employment opportunities, earning more income, better money management
|
|
strategies, lower health insurance premiums, and completing higher
|
|
education might enhance their financial capability. Theory, and policy
|
|
considerations are discussed, and emphasize incorporating
|
|
income-generating work in conceptualizing financial capability, and
|
|
opportunities to support families with young children by creating steady
|
|
well-paying secure jobs, providing universal low- or no cost childcare,
|
|
and shoring up safety net programs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Banerjee, MM (Corresponding Author), Univ Kansas, Sch Social Welf, 121 Twente Hall,1545 Lilac Lane, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA.
|
|
Banerjee, Mahasweta M.; Friedline, Terri, Univ Kansas, Sch Social Welf, 121 Twente Hall,1545 Lilac Lane, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA.
|
|
Phipps, Barbara J., Univ Kansas, Sch Educ, Curriculum \& Teaching, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.childyouth.2017.08.009},
|
|
ISSN = {0190-7409},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7765},
|
|
Keywords = {Financial capability; Parents; Children; Poverty; Employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SAVINGS; CHILDREN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {mahaswetab@ku.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000412616400020},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000885976800003,
|
|
Author = {Garcia-Faroldi, Livia},
|
|
Title = {Digital inequality in Spain: The differentiated adoption of beneficial
|
|
uses of Internet (2017-2019)},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS REGIONALES},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Number = {124},
|
|
Pages = {73-100},
|
|
Month = {MAY-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Internet access is nowadays widespread in Spanish society. Nevertheless,
|
|
a digital divide still exists. The term ``digital divide{''} is defined
|
|
by the OECD (2001:5) as ``the gap between individuals, household,
|
|
businesses and geographic areas at different socio-economic levels with
|
|
regard both to their opportunities to access information and
|
|
communication technologies (ICTs) and to their use of the Internet for a
|
|
wide variety of activities{''}. In this context, Norris (2001) proposed
|
|
three dimensions of the digital divide: (1) global divide, the
|
|
divergence of Internet access between countries; (2) social divide, the
|
|
usability gap between different groups as a result of social
|
|
stratification; and (3) democratic divide, the gap between those who use
|
|
and do not use digital resources for political mobilization and
|
|
participation in public life. Other authors differentiate between three
|
|
divides: in access, in skills and in outcomes (Wei et al. 2011). Digital
|
|
divide research began with the study of the access to Internet and its
|
|
use (the so-called first divide), although soon after the interest moved
|
|
to the uses that different social groups made of Internet. Di Maggio et
|
|
al. (2004) distinguished capital-enhancing activities (activities that
|
|
improve social status) from social and recreational activities. These
|
|
different uses of internet give rise to ``digital inequalities{''}.
|
|
In this paper, three digital divides are considered: the first is
|
|
related to the access, the second to using or not Internet and the third
|
|
to three capital-enhancing activities. We use representative samples
|
|
(2017 and 2019) from the National Institute of Statistics (INE in
|
|
Spanish) and the Center for Sociological Research (CIS in Spanish). The
|
|
size of the sample is 17,337 (INE 2017), 17,196 (INE 2019) and 2,482
|
|
(CIS 2017).
|
|
We first analyse the access gap and reasons why households are not
|
|
connected. Second, we study the evolution of users of Internet
|
|
(2006-2019). Third, we create different indexes for measuring three
|
|
capital-enhancing activities: and index of educational purposes, an
|
|
index of professional purposes, and two indexes for measuring civic and
|
|
political participation.
|
|
The index of educational purposes includes four items: 1) make an online
|
|
course, 2) use Internet content for learning purpose, 3) communicate
|
|
with students and teachers through websites; and 4) other e-learning
|
|
activities. The index of professional purposes includes two items: 1)
|
|
search or apply for a job through Internet; and 2) participate in
|
|
professional networks. Lastly, in order to measure political and civic
|
|
participation two indexes are proposed. First, the index includes three
|
|
items from the INE dataset: 1) reading news online; express opinions
|
|
about social, civic and political topics; and 3) participate in online
|
|
enquiry or vote about civic and political topics. Second, the index
|
|
includes six items from the CIS dataset: 1) contact with a politician or
|
|
political party; 2) communication with an association or organization;
|
|
3) subscribe to a list about current affairs; 4) write comments about
|
|
social and political topics; 5) donation to association/ organization;
|
|
and 6) sign a petition or join a campaign.
|
|
The analytical strategy first includes a descriptive analysis of the
|
|
dependent variables, comparing how different social categories use
|
|
Internet and participate online. Second, we carry out regression
|
|
analyses to discover which of the different independent variables (level
|
|
of education, age, sex, size of habitat, employment status and income)
|
|
better predict the use of internet for capital-enhancing activities and
|
|
online political and civic participation.
|
|
Regarding access, although it is true that Internet access has become
|
|
widespread, in 2019 more than 10\% of households do not have access to
|
|
the Internet at home. The analysis of why household are not connected
|
|
shows that motivational access (attitudes towards Internet) is the most
|
|
frequent explanation for this trend. In 2019, among those habitants
|
|
living in households without Internet, more than 75\% explains that they
|
|
don't need Internet and more than 50\% considers they don't have enough
|
|
knowledge to use it. This motivational access is indeed stratified:
|
|
these reasons are more frequent in rural areas and in poorer families.
|
|
Other motives also mentioned, although to a lesser extent (around one in
|
|
four), are related to economic difficulties (costs of equipment and
|
|
connection). Finally, difficulties of access to broadband internet
|
|
connections, especially in rural areas, also are mentioned.
|
|
Regarding use, Internet is widespread among young and more educated
|
|
population (99\% of people aged 16 to 24 and with tertiary education in
|
|
2019) but it is remarkable the expansion among old people (almost
|
|
two-thirds of those aged 65 to 74 have accessed Internet in the last
|
|
three months). Similar trends of diffusion of the Internet use could be
|
|
observed in all levels of education and size of habitat. The only group
|
|
where non-Internet outnumbers Internet users in 2019 are people who have
|
|
not finished primary education. Finally, it is remarkable how the gender
|
|
gap has disappeared in 2019.
|
|
Regarding capital-enhancing activities in Internet, the data confirm the
|
|
so-called ``Matthew effect{''} (Merton, 1968), or ``rich get richer
|
|
effect{''}, that is, the most beneficial Internet uses in order to
|
|
improve social status are practiced by people who already occupy a
|
|
well-off position in the offline world. This result is in line with
|
|
previous studies (Di Maggio et al. 2004, Hargittai and Hinnats 2008).
|
|
This is especially the case when Internet is used for educational
|
|
purposes or for creating contacts in professional networks. Regarding
|
|
the use of Internet for educational purposes, regressions show that this
|
|
activity is more widespread among younger, more educated people and
|
|
students. Regarding professional purposes, as expected, the unemployed
|
|
is the group who uses more often the web when they search for a job, but
|
|
also the most educated and youngest people use the Internet most
|
|
frequently to improve their job position. Nevertheless, regressions show
|
|
a negative association between family income and the use of Internet for
|
|
professional purposes. Further research is needed to explain which
|
|
channels use the better off people to improve their professional status.
|
|
Lastly, the results on online civic and political participation
|
|
corroborate that the groups with the greatest involvement coincide with
|
|
those with higher traditional participation. Regressions show that sex,
|
|
level of education, age and income are the most important predictors of
|
|
political participation: men, the more educated, younger and the better
|
|
off participate more online than women, the less educated, older and the
|
|
economic disadvantage population. Nonetheless it can also be observed
|
|
that online participation gives space to new activism, at least to some
|
|
extent. Some groups less involved in the conventional channels of
|
|
political participation take a more active role here, such as students
|
|
and people aged 16 to 24.
|
|
Our findings confirm the hypothesis that those who are taking more
|
|
advantage of the digital world are the same people who are better
|
|
situated in the offline world. In our analysis, two variables stand out
|
|
above all as the most relevant: educational level and age. Other
|
|
variables are relevant, although to a lesser extent: employment status,
|
|
income, size of habitat and gender. These findings confirm previous
|
|
research carried out in Spain focused on the distinction between
|
|
Internet users or not (Robles and Molina 2007, Robles and Torres-Albero
|
|
2012). The results also corroborate recent research on the second gap in
|
|
Spain, although this second gap was previously measured focusing on
|
|
other activities such as e-shopping (Torres Albero 2017).
|
|
Further research is needed to study how the material access impact in
|
|
Spanish digital divide. That is, we need to focus on aspects as
|
|
differences in device-related opportunities, device and peripheral
|
|
diversity and maintenance expenses of devices and peripherals (van
|
|
Deursen and van Dijk 2019). It is also needed to study other
|
|
capital-enhancing activities and to compare if those groups more
|
|
involved these types of activities are at the same time more involved in
|
|
recreational activities.
|
|
This work shows that, even though the Internet is widespread, the uses
|
|
that could be more beneficial for the social position of the users are
|
|
more frequent among people who already occupy a good social position in
|
|
the offline world. Internet itself does not causes social exclusion, but
|
|
digital inequalities reinforce the inequalities of the offline world if
|
|
authorities do not act. These findings have clear political
|
|
implications. First, public authorities should concentrate on those
|
|
social groups with more negative attitudes towards Internet because the
|
|
motivational access is the first step of the appropriation process (van
|
|
Deursen and van Dijk 2019). Second, an effort should be made to improve
|
|
material access in disadvantaged areas and groups. Third, digital
|
|
alphabetization (increasing digital skills) is needed in order to
|
|
decrease the ``Matthew effect{''}, so disadvantaged groups could use
|
|
Internet to improve their social status.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Garcia-Faroldi, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Malaga, Malaga, Spain.
|
|
Garcia-Faroldi, Livia, Univ Malaga, Malaga, Spain.},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-7585},
|
|
Keywords = {Digital divide; E-learning; Civic participation; Political
|
|
participation; Professional networks},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POLITICAL-PARTICIPATION; DIVIDE; ACCESS; SKILLS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {García-Faroldi, Livia/AAC-6753-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {García-Faroldi, Livia/0000-0001-7816-7562},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000885976800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000447578600015,
|
|
Author = {Cheney, Ann M. and Newkirk, Christine and Rodriguez, Katheryn and
|
|
Montez, Anselmo},
|
|
Title = {Inequality and health among foreign-born latinos in rural borderland
|
|
communities},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {215},
|
|
Pages = {115-122},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Thousands of Mexicans and Central Americans settle in communities along
|
|
the borderlands between Mexico and the United States. Many live and work
|
|
in rural communities characterized by poverty and limited access to
|
|
basic resources. Drawing on qualitative research, this article reports
|
|
on inequalities and health among foreign-born Latinos in rural
|
|
borderland communities. From 2015 to 2016, the study team conducted
|
|
research in Inland Southern California's Eastern Coachella Valley with
|
|
Mexican farmworkers, farmworker advocates, community leaders, healthcare
|
|
service providers, and local political leaders. The analysis of field
|
|
notes and interviews demonstrates how situational and temporal factors
|
|
position this foreign-born population as vulnerable to inequalities
|
|
across multiple social systems resulting in low social status, lack of
|
|
employment and housing stability, and limited access to healthcare
|
|
services. Over time, the experience of both situational life events and
|
|
persistent and daily chronic strain infringes on self-concept, including
|
|
mastery or control over life and self-worth, and contributes to stress
|
|
and subsequent poor mental health outcomes (e.g., depression). The
|
|
research calls for local community action, healthcare policy change, and
|
|
further in-depth research on structural inequalities in health among
|
|
foreign-born Latinos.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cheney, AM (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Riverside, Sch Med, Dept Social Med Populat \& Publ Hlth, Riverside, CA 92521 USA.
|
|
Cheney, Ann M., Univ Calif Riverside, Sch Med, Dept Social Med Populat \& Publ Hlth, Riverside, CA 92521 USA.
|
|
Newkirk, Christine, Ctr Nonprofit Management Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
Rodriguez, Katheryn, Univ Calif Riverside, Ctr Hlth Communities, Riverside, CA 92521 USA.
|
|
Montez, Anselmo, Palm Desert Resuscitat Educ, Palm Desert, CA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.09.011},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {Borderlands; Community based participatory research; Latino health;
|
|
Mental health; Rural health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIGRANT DAY LABORERS; STRUCTURAL VULNERABILITY; CULTURAL CONSONANCE;
|
|
MEXICAN IMMIGRANTS; PROBLEM DRINKING; CARE ACCESS; RACISM; RISK;
|
|
ETHNOGRAPHY; CALIFORNIA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {ann.cheney@medsch.ucr.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {84},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {28},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000447578600015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000569064000005,
|
|
Author = {Volkov, Aleksey M.},
|
|
Title = {BASIC INCOME IN SOME NORDIC COUNTRIES: THEORY AND PRACTICE},
|
|
Journal = {MIROVAYA EKONOMIKA I MEZHDUNARODNYE OTNOSHENIYA},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {48-52},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {The article describes development of the idea of unconditional basic
|
|
income in some Nordic countries. There were active discussions in the
|
|
early 1980s and in 1992-1994 in Denmark and experiment was conducted on
|
|
the introduction of unconditional basic income in Finland in 2017-2018.
|
|
Basic income has never been seriously considered in Denmark on a
|
|
practical level. For the first time, interest in basic income arose in
|
|
Denmark in the 1980s. Once again, the issue of basic income was on the
|
|
official policy agenda in 1992-1994, when there was extensive discussion
|
|
on this issue. In many ways, these debates were associated with the
|
|
development of the system of unemployment benefits in the country at
|
|
that time and a number of economic, institutional and political
|
|
circumstances. The idea of basic income was considered as a fatal blow,
|
|
either too controversial or unrealistic, showing that it would require
|
|
considerable money. Thus, by the mid-1990s, this idea was categorically
|
|
rejected and disappeared forever from the agenda in Denmark. The
|
|
unconditional basic income in Finland has been discussed for the last 10
|
|
years. It was believed that due to the mass robotization and the
|
|
introduction of artificial intelligence, a huge number of people would
|
|
lose their jobs in the future, and the universal basic income will force
|
|
people to accept temporary contract work which ultimately will increase
|
|
labor mobility and efficiency. By the classical definition unconditional
|
|
basic income is the regular payment of a certain amount of money to each
|
|
member of the community without checking the financial situation or the
|
|
need to do work. The experiment with unconditional basic income in
|
|
Finland did not fully meet this definition. First, only the unemployed
|
|
could take part in it. Secondly, the experiment participants continued
|
|
to receive benefits from other support systems. The authorities decided
|
|
to focus on the unemployed in order to understand whether unconditional
|
|
basic income encourages employment. The 2,000 citizens selected by
|
|
lottery were unemployed, poor, and were between the ages of 25 and 58
|
|
years old. They received 560 euros per month, while the payment did not
|
|
stop even after they found a job. Intermediate results of the experiment
|
|
were almost completely opposite to the expected. Requests of recipients
|
|
of basic income to the labor market have only increased. They said they
|
|
were not ready to grab any job, and made more and more demands. Both for
|
|
employers and for trade unions such an outcome was an unpleasant
|
|
surprise. The preliminary results of the experiment with an
|
|
unconditional basic income showed that in the first year participants in
|
|
the experiment were looking for a little more actively than other
|
|
unemployed people. Although the Finnish authorities did not officially
|
|
comment on anything, all the experts said that the two-year tests showed
|
|
the project's inconsistency. First, the ``free{''} money was in fact an
|
|
unconditional unemployment benefit, that is, there was nothing new in
|
|
the proposed version of the universal basic income. Secondly, the
|
|
government did not conceal that the experiment with the basic income was
|
|
not aimed at reducing the number of the poor or fighting inequality -
|
|
its main task was ``promoting employment{''}. If all citizens received
|
|
unconditional basic income, additional social spending would be about
|
|
5\% of GDP. This is a lot, even taking into account the fact that
|
|
Finland spends about 30\% of GDP on social spending. A universal basic
|
|
income can only be successful if provided on a continuous and universal
|
|
basis.
|
|
But it requires a lot of money and higher taxes which most people
|
|
disagree with.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Russian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Volkov, AM (Corresponding Author), Russian Acad Sci IMEMO, Primakov Natl Res Inst World Econ \& Int Relat, 23 Profsoyuznaya Str, Moscow 117997, Russia.
|
|
Volkov, Aleksey M., Russian Acad Sci IMEMO, Primakov Natl Res Inst World Econ \& Int Relat, 23 Profsoyuznaya Str, Moscow 117997, Russia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.20542/0131-2227-2020-64-9-48-52},
|
|
ISSN = {0131-2227},
|
|
Keywords = {unconditional basic income; unemployment; unemployment benefits;
|
|
experiment; Denmark; Finland},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {International Relations},
|
|
Author-Email = {volkov@imemo.ru},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {11},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {35},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000569064000005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000359388800009,
|
|
Author = {Stone, Juliet and Evandrou, Maria and Falkingham, Jane and Vlachantoni,
|
|
Athina},
|
|
Title = {Women's economic activity trajectories over the life course:
|
|
implications for the self-rated health of women aged 64+in England},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {69},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {873-879},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Previous research has highlighted the importance of
|
|
accumulated life-course labour market status and the balancing of
|
|
multiple roles for understanding inequalities in health in later life.
|
|
This may be particularly important for women, who are increasingly
|
|
required to balance work and family life in liberal welfare contexts,
|
|
such as in Britain.
|
|
Methods This study analyses retrospective life history data for 2160
|
|
women aged 64+ years (born 1909-1943) from the English Longitudinal
|
|
Study of Ageing, collected in 2006-2007 as part of an ongoing panel
|
|
study. Optimal matching and cluster analyses are used to produce a
|
|
taxonomy of women's life-course economic activity trajectories based on
|
|
their experiences between ages 16 and 64 years. This classification is
|
|
then used in logistic regression analysis to investigate associations
|
|
with self-rated health in later life.
|
|
Results A set of five trajectories emerge as the dominant patterns of
|
|
women's economic activity over the life course for those cohorts of
|
|
English women born prior to 1943: (1) full-time workers; (2) family
|
|
carers; (3) full-time returners; (4) part-time returners; (5)
|
|
atypical/inactive. Regression analyses show that women who experience
|
|
defined periods of full-time work both before and after focusing on
|
|
family life appear to have the most favourable later life health
|
|
outcomes.
|
|
Conclusions The findings are discussed with reference to the
|
|
accumulation of social and economic resources over the life course and
|
|
the balancing of multiple roles in work and family domains. In
|
|
conclusion, the development of policies that facilitate women, if they
|
|
wish, to successfully combine paid employment with family life could
|
|
have a positive impact on their health in later life.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Stone, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Southampton, Sch Social Sci, ESRC Ctr Populat Change, Room 2043,Bldg 58, Southampton S017 1BJ, Hants, England.
|
|
Stone, Juliet; Evandrou, Maria; Falkingham, Jane; Vlachantoni, Athina, Univ Southampton, ESRC Ctr Populat Change, Southampton S017 1BJ, Hants, England.
|
|
Evandrou, Maria; Vlachantoni, Athina, Univ Southampton, Ctr Res Ageing, Southampton S017 1BJ, Hants, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/jech-2014-204777},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-005X},
|
|
EISSN = {1470-2738},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ROLE ACCUMULATION; MULTIPLE ROLES; SOCIAL ROLES; FAMILY-LIFE; ROLE
|
|
STRAIN; BRITISH; WORK; BRITAIN; PERSPECTIVE; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {j.stone@soton.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Falkingham, Jane/0000-0002-7135-5875
|
|
Vlachantoni, Athina/0000-0003-1539-3057},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000359388800009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000521515400040,
|
|
Author = {Webb, Calum and Bywaters, Paul and Scourfield, Jonathan and McCartan,
|
|
Claire and Bunting, Lisa and Davidson, Gavin and Morris, Kate},
|
|
Title = {Untangling child welfare inequalities and the `Inverse Intervention Law'
|
|
in England},
|
|
Journal = {CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {111},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {This article addresses some potential limitations of key findings from
|
|
recent research into inequalities in children's social services by
|
|
providing additional evidence from multilevel models that suggest the
|
|
socioeconomic social gradient and `Inverse Intervention Law' in
|
|
children's services interventions are statistically significant after
|
|
controlling for possible confounding spatial and population effects.
|
|
Multilevel negative binomial regression models are presented using
|
|
English child welfare data to predict the following intervention rates
|
|
at lower super output area-level: Child in Need (n = 2707, middle super
|
|
output area {[}MSOA] n = 543, local authority {[}LA] n = 13); Child
|
|
Protection Plan (n = 4115, MSOA n = 837, LA n = 18); and Children Looked
|
|
After (n = 4115, MSOA n = 837, LA n = 18). We find strong evidence
|
|
supporting the existence of a steep socioeconomic social gradient in
|
|
child welfare interventions. Furthermore, we find certain local
|
|
authority contexts exacerbate this social gradient. Contexts of low
|
|
overall deprivation and high income inequality are associated with
|
|
greater socioeconomic inequalities in neighbourhood intervention rates.
|
|
The relationship between neighbourhood deprivation and children looked
|
|
after rates is almost five times stronger in local authorities with
|
|
these characteristics than it is in local authorities with high overall
|
|
deprivation and low income inequality. We argue that social policy
|
|
responses addressing structural determinants of child welfare
|
|
inequalities are needed, and that strategies to reduce the numbers of
|
|
children taken into care must address underlying poverty and income
|
|
inequality at both a local and national level.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Webb, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Sheffield, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Webb, Calum; Morris, Kate, Univ Sheffield, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Bywaters, Paul, Huddersfield Univ, Huddersfield, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Scourfield, Jonathan, Cardiff Univ, Cardiff, Wales.
|
|
McCartan, Claire; Bunting, Lisa; Davidson, Gavin, Queens Univ Belfast, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.104849},
|
|
Article-Number = {104849},
|
|
ISSN = {0190-7409},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7765},
|
|
Keywords = {Social work; Child protection; Deprivation; Income inequality;
|
|
Children's social care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME INEQUALITY; TERRITORIAL STIGMATIZATION; PROTECTION; MALTREATMENT;
|
|
INEQUITIES; POVERTY; NEGLECT; ABUSE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {c.j.webb@sheffield.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Scourfield, Jonathan B/A-3464-2012
|
|
Webb, Calum/AAM-2424-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Scourfield, Jonathan/0000-0001-6218-8158
|
|
Davidson, Gavin/0000-0001-6003-0170
|
|
Bunting, Lisa/0000-0002-1857-0074
|
|
Bywaters, Paul/0000-0002-6375-6222
|
|
Webb, Calum/0000-0001-7521-2110
|
|
McCartan, Claire/0000-0002-2341-9715},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000521515400040},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000463069900008,
|
|
Author = {Frank, Morgan R. and Autor, David and Bessen, James E. and Brynjolfsson,
|
|
Erik and Cebrian, Manuel and Deming, David J. and Feldman, Maryann and
|
|
Groh, Matthew and Lobo, Jose and Moro, Esteban and Wang, Dashun and
|
|
Youn, Hyejin and Rahwan, Iyad},
|
|
Title = {Toward understanding the impact of artificial intelligence on labor},
|
|
Journal = {PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF
|
|
AMERICA},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {116},
|
|
Number = {14},
|
|
Pages = {6531-6539},
|
|
Month = {APR 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Rapid advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and automation
|
|
technologies have the potential to significantly disrupt labor markets.
|
|
While AI and automation can augment the productivity of some workers,
|
|
they can replace the work done by others and will likely transform
|
|
almost all occupations at least to some degree. Rising automation is
|
|
happening in a period of growing economic inequality, raising fears of
|
|
mass technological unemployment and a renewed call for policy efforts to
|
|
address the consequences of technological change. In this paper we
|
|
discuss the barriers that inhibit scientists from measuring the effects
|
|
of AI and automation on the future of work. These barriers include the
|
|
lack of high-quality data about the nature of work (e.g., the dynamic
|
|
requirements of occupations), lack of empirically informed models of key
|
|
microlevel processes (e.g., skill substitution and human-machine
|
|
complementarity), and insufficient understanding of how cognitive
|
|
technologies interact with broader economic dynamics and institutional
|
|
mechanisms (e.g., urban migration and international trade policy).
|
|
Overcoming these barriers requires improvements in the longitudinal and
|
|
spatial resolution of data, as well as refinements to data on workplace
|
|
skills. These improvements will enable multidisciplinary research to
|
|
quantitatively monitor and predict the complex evolution of work in
|
|
tandem with technological progress. Finally, given the fundamental
|
|
uncertainty in predicting technological change, we recommend developing
|
|
a decision framework that focuses on resilience to unexpected scenarios
|
|
in addition to general equilibrium behavior.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rahwan, I (Corresponding Author), MIT, Media Lab, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
|
|
Rahwan, I (Corresponding Author), MIT, Inst Data Syst \& Soc, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
|
|
Rahwan, I (Corresponding Author), Max Planck Inst Human Dev, Ctr Humans \& Machines, D-14195 Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Frank, Morgan R.; Cebrian, Manuel; Groh, Matthew; Moro, Esteban; Rahwan, Iyad, MIT, Media Lab, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
|
|
Autor, David, MIT, Dept Econ, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
|
|
Bessen, James E., Boston Univ, Sch Law, Technol \& Policy Res Initiat, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
|
|
Brynjolfsson, Erik, MIT, Sloan Sch Management, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
|
|
Brynjolfsson, Erik, Natl Bur Econ Res, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Deming, David J., Harvard Univ, Harvard Kennedy Sch, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Deming, David J., Harvard Univ, Grad Sch Educ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Feldman, Maryann, Univ N Carolina, Dept Publ Policy, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Lobo, Jose, Arizona State Univ, Sch Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.
|
|
Moro, Esteban, Univ Carlos III Madrid, Escuela Politecn Super, Dept Matemat, Grp Interdisciplinar Sistemas Complejos, Madrid 28911, Spain.
|
|
Wang, Dashun; Youn, Hyejin, Northwestern Univ, Kellogg Sch Management, Evanston, IL 60208 USA.
|
|
Wang, Dashun; Youn, Hyejin, Northwestern Univ, Northwestern Inst Complex Syst, Evanston, IL 60208 USA.
|
|
Rahwan, Iyad, MIT, Inst Data Syst \& Soc, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
|
|
Rahwan, Iyad, Max Planck Inst Human Dev, Ctr Humans \& Machines, D-14195 Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1073/pnas.1900949116},
|
|
ISSN = {0027-8424},
|
|
EISSN = {1091-6490},
|
|
Keywords = {automation; employment; economic resilience; future of work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SKILL; FUTURE; TASKS; JOBS; PROFESSION; EMPLOYMENT; DEMANDS; GROWTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {irahwan@mit.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rahwan, Iyad/ABB-2422-2020
|
|
Frank, Morgan R/L-3124-2016
|
|
Moro, Esteban/AAB-1159-2019
|
|
Youn, Hyejin/ABD-2997-2020
|
|
Lobo, Jose/AAG-2746-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rahwan, Iyad/0000-0002-1796-4303
|
|
Moro, Esteban/0000-0003-2894-1024
|
|
Youn, Hyejin/0000-0002-6190-4412
|
|
Lobo, Jose/0000-0002-0814-7168
|
|
/0000-0001-9487-9359
|
|
/0000-0002-6915-9381
|
|
Groh, Matthew/0000-0002-9029-0157},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {85},
|
|
Times-Cited = {140},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {92},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {443},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000463069900008},
|
|
ESI-Highly-Cited-Paper = {Y},
|
|
ESI-Hot-Paper = {N},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1993KX38000003,
|
|
Author = {MOSS, N and CARVER, K},
|
|
Title = {PREGNANT-WOMEN AT WORK - SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVES},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {1993},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {541-557},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {The 1988 National Maternal and Infant Health Survey, a stratified random
|
|
sample of 9,953 live births, shows that women who work during pregnancy
|
|
are more likely to be non-Hispanic white, married, of higher income and
|
|
education, to have medical insurance, and of lower parity than
|
|
nonemployed pregnant women (p < .0001). They begin prenatal care
|
|
earlier, are less likely to smoke, and are more likely to state that the
|
|
birth was wanted (p < .0001). Similar trends are seen for full-time as
|
|
compared to part-time workers. Women employed as precision production
|
|
workers, operators/fabricators, or in service occupations are
|
|
disadvantaged with regard to sociodemographic and behavioral risks for
|
|
pregnancy outcomes relative to women in professional and managerial
|
|
occupations. Black race, parity, body mass index, and smoking, but not
|
|
employment, are associated with low birth weight when gestational age is
|
|
controlled. The effects of stress and its buffers, paternal
|
|
characteristics, physical activity, and toxic exposures, both in and out
|
|
of the workplace, should be considered, as should the normative and
|
|
social policy context.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {MOSS, N (Corresponding Author), NICHHD, CTR POPULAT RES, DEMOG \& BEHAV SCI BRANCH, 6100 EXECUT BLVD, 8B13, BETHESDA, MD 20892 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/ajim.4700230404},
|
|
ISSN = {0271-3586},
|
|
EISSN = {1097-0274},
|
|
Keywords = {PREGNANCY; EMPLOYMENT; OCCUPATION; LOW BIRTH WEIGHT; RISK FACTORS},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-BIRTH-WEIGHT; MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; PRETERM BIRTH; PREMATURITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {22},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1993KX38000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000896654600015,
|
|
Author = {Moss, Charlie and Munford, Luke Aaron and Sutton, Matt},
|
|
Title = {Associations between inflexible job conditions, health and healthcare
|
|
utilisation in England: retrospective cross-sectional study},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {ObjectivesTo estimate the strength of association between having an
|
|
inflexible job and health-related quality of life and healthcare
|
|
utilisation; and to explore heterogeneity in the effects by gender, age
|
|
and area-level deprivation.DesignRetrospective cross-sectional
|
|
study.SettingSeven waves of the English General Practice Patient Survey
|
|
between 2012 and 2017.Participants1 232 884 people aged 16-64 years and
|
|
in full-time employment. We measured job inflexibility by inability to
|
|
take time away from work during usual working hours to seek medical
|
|
care.Primary and secondary outcome measuresHealth-related quality of
|
|
life (EQ-5D-5L); number of months since the respondent last saw a
|
|
general practitioner (GP) or nurse; use of out-of-hours general practice
|
|
in the past 6 months. We used regression analyses to estimate the
|
|
strength of association between outcomes and having an inflexible job,
|
|
adjusting for person and area-level characteristics.ResultsOne-third of
|
|
respondents reported job inflexibility. The probability of job
|
|
inflexibility was higher at younger ages and in more deprived areas. Job
|
|
inflexibility was associated with lower EQ-5D-5L utility scores of 0.017
|
|
(95\% CI 0.016 to 0.018) for women and 0.016 (95\% CI 0.015 to 0.017)
|
|
for men. Women were more affected than men in the mental health domain.
|
|
The reduction in health-related quality of life associated with having
|
|
an inflexible job was greater for employees who were older or lived in
|
|
more deprived areas. Having an inflexible job was associated with a
|
|
longer time since the last visit to their GP of 0.234 (95\% CI 0.201 to
|
|
0.268) months for women and 0.199 (95\% CI 0.152 to 0.183) months for
|
|
men.ConclusionsInequalities in the prevalence of inflexible jobs
|
|
contribute to inequalities in health. One mechanism may be through
|
|
reduced access to healthcare. Policymakers and employers should ensure
|
|
that all employees have sufficient job flexibility to protect their
|
|
health.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Moss, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Manchester, Ctr Primary Care \& Hlth Serv Res, Sch Hlth Sci, Hlth Org Policy \& Econ HOPE, Manchester, England.
|
|
Moss, Charlie; Munford, Luke Aaron; Sutton, Matt, Univ Manchester, Ctr Primary Care \& Hlth Serv Res, Sch Hlth Sci, Hlth Org Policy \& Econ HOPE, Manchester, England.
|
|
Sutton, Matt, Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Inst Appl Econ \& Social Res, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062942},
|
|
Article-Number = {e062942},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords = {public health; occupational \& industrial medicine; primary care; social
|
|
medicine},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORKPLACE INTERVENTION; WORKTIME CONTROL; WORKING HOURS; TIME CONTROL;
|
|
RECOVERY; FATIGUE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {charlie.moss@manchester.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Moss, Charlie/0000-0002-4694-378X
|
|
Munford, Luke/0000-0003-4540-6744
|
|
Sutton, Matt/0000-0002-6635-2127},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000896654600015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000566420100001,
|
|
Author = {DeLuca, Stefanie and Jang-Trettien, Christine},
|
|
Title = {``Not Just a Lateral Move{''}: Residential Decisions and the
|
|
Reproduction of Urban Inequality},
|
|
Journal = {CITY \& COMMUNITY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {451-488},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite decades of research on residential mobility and neighborhood
|
|
effects, we know comparatively less about how people sort across
|
|
geography. While there are reasons for lagging developments in the area
|
|
of residential decisions, we join others in calling for research to
|
|
consider residential selection as a social stratification process-one
|
|
ripe with significant conceptual and policy potential. In this paper, we
|
|
present findings from work our team has done over the last 17 years to
|
|
explore how people end up living where they do. We focus on four key
|
|
decisions: whether to move; where to move; whether to send children to
|
|
school in the neighborhood; and whether to rent or own a home. We found
|
|
that many residential mobility decisions among the poor were
|
|
``reactive,{''} with unpredictable shocks forcing families out of their
|
|
homes. As a result of reactive moving, time frames became shorter as
|
|
poor parents employed short-term survival solutions to secure housing
|
|
instead of long-term investment thinking about neighborhood quality and
|
|
schools. These shocks, constraints, and shorter time frames led parents
|
|
to decouple important aspects of neighborhood and school quality from
|
|
the housing search process while maximizing others like immediacy of
|
|
shelter, unit quality, and proximity to work and child care. Finally, we
|
|
found that policies can have a significant impact on some of these
|
|
decisions. Combined, our research revealed some of the decision-making
|
|
processes that underlie locational attainment and the intergenerational
|
|
transmission of neighborhood context.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {DeLuca, S (Corresponding Author), Johns Hopkins Univ, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA.
|
|
DeLuca, Stefanie, Johns Hopkins Univ, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA.
|
|
Jang-Trettien, Christine, Princeton Univ, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/cico.12515},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1535-6841},
|
|
EISSN = {1540-6040},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-INCOME; SPATIAL ASSIMILATION; NEIGHBORHOOD POVERTY; MOBILITY
|
|
DECISIONS; POOR NEIGHBORHOODS; CHEAP ETHNOGRAPHY; HOUSING MOBILITY; HOME
|
|
OWNERSHIP; SEARCH; PREFERENCES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology; Urban Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {sdeluca@jhu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {192},
|
|
Times-Cited = {19},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000566420100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000259639200005,
|
|
Author = {Shaw, Leslee J. and Merz, C. Noel Bairey and Bittner, Vera and Kip,
|
|
Kevin and Johnson, B. Delia and Reis, Steven E. and Kelsey, Sheryl F.
|
|
and Olson, Marian and Mankad, Sunil and Sharaf, Barry L. and Rogers,
|
|
William J. and Pohost, Gerald M. and Sopko, George and Pepine, Carl J.
|
|
and WISE Investigators},
|
|
Title = {Importance of socioeconomic status as a predictor of cardiovascular
|
|
outcome and costs of care in women with suspected myocardial ischemia.
|
|
Results from the National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung and
|
|
Blood Institute-sponsored Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation (WISE)},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {1081-1092},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: For women, who are more likely to live in poverty, defining
|
|
the clinical and economic impact of socioeconomic factors may aid in
|
|
defining redistributive policies to improve healthcare quality.
|
|
Methods. The NIH-NHLBI-sponsored Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation
|
|
(WISE) enrolled 819 women referred for clinically indicated coronary
|
|
angiography. This study's primary end point was to evaluate the
|
|
independent contribution of socioeconomic factors on the estimation of
|
|
time to cardiovascular death or myocardial infarction (MI) (n = 79)
|
|
using Cox proportional hazards models. Secondary aims included an
|
|
examination of cardiovascular costs and quality of life within
|
|
socioeconomic subsets of women.
|
|
Results: In univariable models, socioeconomic factors associated with an
|
|
elevated risk of cardiovascular death or MI included an annual household
|
|
income <\$20,000 (p = 0.0001), <9th grade education (p = 0.002), being
|
|
African American, Hispanic, Asian, or American Indian (p = 0.016), on
|
|
Medicaid, Medicare, or other public health insurance (p < 0.0001),
|
|
unmarried (p = 0.001.), unemployed or employed part-time (p < 0.0001),
|
|
and working in a service job (p = 0.003). Of these socioeconomic
|
|
factors, income (p = 0.006) remained a significant predictor of
|
|
cardiovascular death or MI in risk-adjusted models that controlled for
|
|
angiographic coronary disease, chest pain symptoms, and cardiac risk
|
|
factors. Low-income women, with an annual household income <\$20,000,
|
|
were more often uninsured or on public insurance (p < 0.0001) yet had
|
|
the highest 5-year hospitalization and drug treatment costs (p <
|
|
0.0001). Only 17\% of low-income women had prescription drug coverage
|
|
(vs. >= 50\% of higher-income households, p < 0.0001), and 64\% required
|
|
>= 2 anti-ischemic medications during follow-up (compared with 45\% of
|
|
those earning >=\$50,000, p < 0.0001).
|
|
Conclusions: Economic disadvantage prominently affects cardiovascular
|
|
disease outcomes for women with chest pain symptoms. These results
|
|
further support a profound intertwining between poverty and poor health.
|
|
Cardiovascular disease management strategies should focus on policies
|
|
that track unmet healthcare needs and worsening clinical status for
|
|
low-income women.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shaw, LJ (Corresponding Author), Emory Univ, Sch Med, Dept Med, Div Cardiol,Emory Program Cardiovasc Outcome Res, Suite 1 North,1256 Briarcliff Rd NE, Atlanta, GA 30306 USA.
|
|
Shaw, Leslee J., Emory Univ, Sch Med, Dept Med, Div Cardiol,Emory Program Cardiovasc Outcome Res, Atlanta, GA 30306 USA.
|
|
Merz, C. Noel Bairey, Cedars Sinai Med Ctr, Cedars Sinai Res Inst, Los Angeles, CA 90048 USA.
|
|
Bittner, Vera; Rogers, William J., Univ Alabama, Dept Med, Div Cardiovasc Dis, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.
|
|
Kip, Kevin; Johnson, B. Delia; Kelsey, Sheryl F.; Olson, Marian, Univ Pittsburgh, Grad Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Pittsburgh, PA USA.
|
|
Reis, Steven E., Univ Pittsburgh, Med Ctr, Cardiovasc Inst, Pittsburgh, PA USA.
|
|
Mankad, Sunil, Allegheny Univ Hlth Sci, Dept Med, Div Cardiol, Pittsburgh, PA USA.
|
|
Sharaf, Barry L., Rhode Isl Hosp, Div Cardiol, Providence, RI USA.
|
|
Pohost, Gerald M., Univ So Calif, Div Cardiol, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
Sopko, George, NHLBI, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.
|
|
Pepine, Carl J., Univ Florida, Dept Med, Div Cardiol, Gainesville, FL USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1089/jwh.2007.0596},
|
|
ISSN = {1540-9996},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CORONARY-ARTERY DISEASE; FUNCTIONAL-CAPACITY; ETHNIC-DIFFERENCES;
|
|
RISK-FACTORS; SOCIAL-CLASS; CHEST PAIN; ATHEROSCLEROSIS; INEQUALITIES;
|
|
MORTALITY; POSITION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Medicine, General \&
|
|
Internal; Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {leslee.shaw@emory.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Reis, Steven E/J-3957-2014
|
|
Kip, Kevin/HOH-9165-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bittner, Vera/0000-0001-9456-850X
|
|
Reis, Steven/0000-0001-8023-0102},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {34},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000259639200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000389577500008,
|
|
Author = {Autor, David H. and Dorn, David and Hanson, Gordon H.},
|
|
Editor = {Aghion, P and Rey, H},
|
|
Title = {The China Shock: Learning from Labor-Market Adjustment to Large Changes
|
|
in Trade},
|
|
Booktitle = {ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECONOMICS, VOL 8},
|
|
Series = {Annual Review of Economics},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Pages = {205-240},
|
|
Abstract = {China's emergence as a great economic power has induced an epochal shift
|
|
in patterns of world trade. Simultaneously, it has challenged much of
|
|
the received empirical wisdom about how labor markets adjust to trade
|
|
shocks. Alongside the heralded consumer benefits of expanded trade are
|
|
substantial adjustment costs and distributional consequences. These
|
|
impacts are most visible in the local labor markets in which the
|
|
industries exposed to foreign competition are concentrated. Adjustment
|
|
in local labor markets is remarkably slow, with wages and labor-force
|
|
participation rates remaining depressed and unemployment rates remaining
|
|
elevated for at least a full decade after the China trade shock
|
|
commences. Exposed workers experience greater job churning and reduced
|
|
lifetime income. At the national level, employment has fallen in the US
|
|
industries more exposed to import competition, as expected, but
|
|
offsetting employment gains in other industries have yet to materialize.
|
|
Better understanding when and where trade is costly, and how and why it
|
|
may be beneficial, is a key item on the research agenda for trade and
|
|
labor economists.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Autor, DH (Corresponding Author), MIT, Dept Econ, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA.
|
|
Autor, DH (Corresponding Author), Natl Bur Econ Res, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Autor, David H., MIT, Dept Econ, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA.
|
|
Autor, David H., Natl Bur Econ Res, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Dorn, David, Univ Zurich, Dept Econ, CH-8001 Zurich, Switzerland.
|
|
Dorn, David, Ctr Econ \& Policy Res, London EC1V 0DX, England.
|
|
Hanson, Gordon H., Univ Calif San Diego, Sch Global Policy \& Strategy, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1146/annurev-economics-080315-015041},
|
|
ISSN = {1941-1383},
|
|
ISBN = {978-0-8243-4608-9},
|
|
Keywords = {globalization; labor-market adjustment; local labor markets; inequality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-WAGE COUNTRIES; IMPORT COMPETITION; UNITED-STATES;
|
|
TECHNOLOGICAL-CHANGE; INDUSTRY DYNAMICS; GLOBAL ECONOMY; IMPACT;
|
|
INEQUALITY; GROWTH; LIBERALIZATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {dautor@mit.edu
|
|
david.dorn@econ.uzh.ch
|
|
gohanson@ucsd.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dorn, David/0000-0002-1827-4734},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {113},
|
|
Times-Cited = {389},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {207},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000389577500008},
|
|
ESI-Highly-Cited-Paper = {Y},
|
|
ESI-Hot-Paper = {N},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001049247300001,
|
|
Author = {Wignall, Ross and Piquard, Brigitte and Joel, Emily},
|
|
Title = {Up-skilling women or de-skilling patriarchy? How TVET can drive wider
|
|
gender transformation and the decent work agenda in Sub-Saharan Africa},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {102},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite decades of focus on gender and skills training, the Technical
|
|
and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) landscape in Sub-Saharan
|
|
Africa remains deeply gendered and rooted in wider structures of
|
|
patriarchal inequality and exploitation. Engaging with recent
|
|
theoretical moves toward gender-transformative and genderjust TVET
|
|
programming, this paper explores how a gradual revisioning of TVET can
|
|
be mobilised to challenge broader gender inequality and discrimination
|
|
in precarious settings. Bringing together insights from feminist
|
|
scholarship and the UN's decent work agenda, which seeks to align fair
|
|
and secure working conditions with the aspirations of workers, we ask
|
|
what a gender-transformative future for TVET might look like where
|
|
labour rights, sustainable livelihoods and wellbeing are incorporated
|
|
from the ground up. Drawing on findings from Cameroon and Sierra Leone,
|
|
from the innovative `Gen-Up' project which aims to investigate possible
|
|
gender-responsive TVET programmes and policies in collaboration with the
|
|
TVET provider, the Don Bosco network we ask what is both possible and
|
|
permissible in the fractious economic climate, where the focus on basic
|
|
survival and income generation inhibits a genuine challenge to
|
|
entrenched gender norms and stereotypes. For young women especially
|
|
whose aspirations are multiply damaged by persistent discriminatory
|
|
frameworks and who become further vulnerable at times of economic and
|
|
social crisis, we ask whether current TVET programming is helping them
|
|
escape the multiple forms of marginalisation they face. Even in cases
|
|
where women may be portrayed as successful entrepreneurs or achieving
|
|
sustainable livelihoods, the evidence suggests these individualistic
|
|
narratives are leaving many young women behind. In this context of
|
|
instability, precarity and increasing global and local socio-economic
|
|
and gender inequalities we argue that only holistic TVET programming
|
|
based on social and moral values and empowerment and proposing diverse
|
|
pathways to decent work, creating forms of solidarity, collaboration and
|
|
a contextualised enabling environment can act as both a lever for gender
|
|
transformation and also an engine for broader socio-economic change
|
|
fitting the `Decent Work' vision and a constantly changing world of
|
|
work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wignall, R (Corresponding Author), 5 Redvers Rd, Brighton BN2 4BF, England.
|
|
Wignall, R (Corresponding Author), Oxford Brookes Univ, Oxford, England.
|
|
Wignall, Ross, 5 Redvers Rd, Brighton BN2 4BF, England.
|
|
Wignall, Ross; Piquard, Brigitte; Joel, Emily, Oxford Brookes Univ, Oxford, England.
|
|
Piquard, Brigitte, 39 Chemin Mezeau, F-86000 Poitiers, France.
|
|
Joel, Emily, Bottom Flat, 3 Granville St, Aylesbury HP20 2JR, Bucks, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ijedudev.2023.102850},
|
|
Article-Number = {102850},
|
|
ISSN = {0738-0593},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-4871},
|
|
Keywords = {TVET; Gender; Youth; Employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOCATIONAL-EDUCATION; SOUTH-AFRICAN; TRAINING TVET; POLICY; YOUTH;
|
|
FEMINISMS; EQUALITY; ISSUES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {rwignall@brookes.ac.uk
|
|
bpiquard@brookes.ac.uk
|
|
ejoel@brookes.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {97},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001049247300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000363927800002,
|
|
Author = {Klasen, Stephan and Pieters, Janneke},
|
|
Title = {What Explains the Stagnation of Female Labor Force Participation in
|
|
Urban India?},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD BANK ECONOMIC REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {449-478},
|
|
Abstract = {Female labor force participation rates in urban India between 1987 and
|
|
2011 are surprisingly low and have stagnated since the late 1980s.
|
|
Despite rising growth, fertility decline, and rising wage and education
|
|
levels, married women's labor force participation hovered around 18
|
|
percent. Analysis of five large cross-sectional micro surveys shows that
|
|
a combination of supply and demand effects have contributed to this
|
|
stagnation. The main supply side factors are rising household incomes
|
|
and husband's education as well as the falling selectivity of highly
|
|
educated women. On the demand side, the sectors that draw in female
|
|
workers have expanded least, so that changes in the sectoral structure
|
|
of employment alone would have actually led to declining participation
|
|
rates.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pieters, J (Corresponding Author), Wageningen Univ, NL-6700 AP Wageningen, Netherlands.
|
|
Klasen, Stephan, Univ Gottingen, Gottingen, Germany.
|
|
Klasen, Stephan; Pieters, Janneke, IZA, Bonn, Germany.
|
|
Pieters, Janneke, Wageningen Univ, NL-6700 AP Wageningen, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/wber/lhv003},
|
|
ISSN = {0258-6770},
|
|
EISSN = {1564-698X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-DEVELOPMENT; WOMENS WORK; EDUCATION; GROWTH; ALLOCATION;
|
|
INEQUALITY; EMPLOYMENT; CHINA; CASTE; PANEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business, Finance; Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {sklasen@uni-goettingen.de
|
|
janneke.pieters@wur.nl},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {135},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {31},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000363927800002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000175384700004,
|
|
Author = {Overman, HG and Puga, D and Vandenbussche, H},
|
|
Title = {Unemployment clusters across Europe's regions and countries},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2002},
|
|
Number = {34},
|
|
Pages = {115-147},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {High unemployment and regional inequalities are major concerns for
|
|
European policy makers. but so far connections between policies dealing
|
|
with unemployment and regional inequalities have been few and weak. We
|
|
think that this should change. This paper documents a regional and
|
|
transnational dimension to unemployment - i.e.. geographical
|
|
unemployment clusters that do not respect national boundaries. Since the
|
|
Mid 1980s, regions with high or low initial unemployment rates saw
|
|
little change, while regions with intermediate unemployment moved
|
|
towards extreme values. During,, this polarization, nearby regions
|
|
tended to share similar outcomes due, we argue, to spatially related
|
|
changes in labour demand. These spatially correlated demand shifts were
|
|
due in part to initial clustering of low-skilled regions and badly
|
|
performing industries but a significant neighbour effect remains even
|
|
after controlling for these, and the effect is as strong within as it is
|
|
between nations. We believe this reflects agglomeration effects of
|
|
economic integration. The new economic geography literature shows how
|
|
integration fosters employment clusters that need not respect national
|
|
borders. If regional labour forces do not adjust, regional unemployment
|
|
polarization with neighbour effects can result. To account for these
|
|
`neighbour efficiency a cross-regional and transnational dimension
|
|
should be added to national policies. actions should consider policies
|
|
that encourage regional wage setting, and short distance mobility, and
|
|
the EU should consider including transnational considerations in its
|
|
regional policy, since neighbour effects on unemployment mean that an
|
|
anti-unemployment policy paid for by one region will benefit
|
|
neighbouring regions. Since local politicians gain no votes or tax
|
|
revenues from these `spillozeis', they are likely to underestimate the
|
|
true benefit of the policy and thus tend to undertake too little of it.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Overman, HG (Corresponding Author), Univ London London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Univ London London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Univ Toronto, Toronto, ON M5T 1R8, Canada.},
|
|
ISSN = {0266-4658},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-0327},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Puga, Diego/A-9184-2008},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Puga, Diego/0000-0003-2640-1534},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {21},
|
|
Times-Cited = {36},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000175384700004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000085585300006,
|
|
Author = {Bolbol, AA},
|
|
Title = {Trade, globalization, employment, and wages: Evidence from Arab MENA},
|
|
Journal = {REVUE CANADIENNE D ETUDES DU DEVELOPPEMENT-CANADIAN JOURNAL OF
|
|
DEVELOPMENT STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {1999},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {SI},
|
|
Pages = {755-777},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of this paper is to provide an evaluative analysis of the
|
|
impact of trade and globalization on income, employment, and wages in
|
|
the Arab countries of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) over the
|
|
1980-95 period. It first studies the behaviour of Arab barter, income,
|
|
and factoral terms of trade, and analyzes their effects on Arab income.
|
|
It then evaluates the extent of globalization in the Arab world, and
|
|
considers its political significance. This is followed by the derivation
|
|
of a relationship that will determine the behaviour of wages and
|
|
employment, and a case study of the impact of trade on relative wages in
|
|
Egypt. The paper closes with a political economy analysis of the
|
|
autonomy of the Arab state in an era of globalization.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bolbol, AA (Corresponding Author), Ryerson Polytech Univ, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Ryerson Polytech Univ, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
ISSN = {0225-5189},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKET; DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; MIDDLE-EAST; GROWTH; LIBERALIZATION;
|
|
UNEMPLOYMENT; INEQUALITY; POLICIES; EXPORTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Regional \& Urban Planning},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000085585300006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000187792600007,
|
|
Author = {Dong, WZ},
|
|
Title = {Healthcare-financing reforms in transitional society: A Shanghai
|
|
experience},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF HEALTH POPULATION AND NUTRITION},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {223-234},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Since the 1950s, China has had a very wide coverage of healthcare
|
|
service at the local level. In urban areas, the employment-based
|
|
healthcare-insurance schemes (Government Insurance Scheme and Labour
|
|
Insurance Scheme) worked hand in hand with the full employment policy of
|
|
the Government, which guaranteed basic care for almost every urban
|
|
resident. However, since the economic reforms of the early 1980s,
|
|
China's healthcare system has met great challenges. Some came from the
|
|
reform of the labour system, and other challenges came from the
|
|
introduction of market forces in the healthcare sector. The new policy
|
|
of the Chinese Government on the Urban Employees' Basic Health Care
|
|
Insurance is to introduce a cost-sharing plan in urban China. Like other
|
|
major social policy changes, this new health policy also has a great
|
|
impact on the lives of the Chinese people. Affordability has been the
|
|
major concern among urban residents. Shanghai implemented the
|
|
cost-sharing healthcare policy in the spring of 2001. It may be too
|
|
early to assess the pros and cons of the new policy, but evidence shows
|
|
that the employment-based health-insurance scheme excludes those at high
|
|
risk and in most need. It is argued that the cost-sharing healthcare
|
|
system will limit access by some people, especially those who are most
|
|
vulnerable to the consequences of ill health and those in low-income
|
|
groups' unless the deductibles vary according to income and unless
|
|
low-income groups are exempt from paying premiums and deductibles.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dong, WZ (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Banting Inst, 100 Coll St,Suite 207, Toronto, ON M5G 1L5, Canada.
|
|
Univ Toronto, Banting Inst, Toronto, ON M5G 1L5, Canada.
|
|
Univ Toronto, Canadian Inst Hlth Res, Inst Populat \& Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON M5G 1L5, Canada.
|
|
Univ Toronto, Ctr Hlth Promot, Toronto, ON M5G 1L5, Canada.},
|
|
ISSN = {1606-0997},
|
|
EISSN = {2072-1315},
|
|
Keywords = {healthcare; health expenditure; healthcare costs; inequalities; health
|
|
equity; health insurance; Shanghai; China},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {REPUBLIC-OF-CHINA; SYSTEM; LESSONS; EQUITY; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {wdong@chass.utoronto.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000187792600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000265687700003,
|
|
Author = {Shankar, Janki and Martin, Jennifer and McDonald, Catherine},
|
|
Title = {Emerging Areas of Practice for Mental Health Social Workers: Education
|
|
and Employment},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN SOCIAL WORK},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {62},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {28-44},
|
|
Abstract = {In recent times in Australia there has been a slow but steady trend
|
|
among mental health services to employ generic mental health workers
|
|
from a variety of professional backgrounds. These workers undertake the
|
|
jobs that were traditionally assigned to social workers. Although many
|
|
social workers compete successfully for these positions, a question that
|
|
needs to be explored in the contemporary service and policy context is
|
|
social work's distinct contribution to the field of mental health. The
|
|
present paper argues that social work's distinct contribution may lie in
|
|
the area of psychiatric recovery, especially those areas that link
|
|
mental health with broader social issues, such as employment and
|
|
education. The present paper will discuss the role of social work in two
|
|
areas of recovery, namely supported employment and education. These are
|
|
emerging areas of practice and social workers must take advantage of
|
|
these opportunities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shankar, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Calgary, Fac Social Work, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
|
|
Shankar, Janki, Univ Calgary, Fac Social Work, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
|
|
Martin, Jennifer; McDonald, Catherine, RMIT Univ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/03124070802626893},
|
|
ISSN = {0312-407X},
|
|
EISSN = {1447-0748},
|
|
Keywords = {Psychiatric Recovery; Supported Employment; Supported Education; Welfare
|
|
to Work Policy; Mental Illness},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; PSYCHIATRIC DISABILITIES; OUTCOMES;
|
|
REHABILITATION; SERVICES; CLIENTS; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {janki@ualberta.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000265687700003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000178223300003,
|
|
Author = {Fuller, B and Strath, A},
|
|
Title = {The child-care and preschool workforce: Demographics, earnings, and
|
|
unequal distribution},
|
|
Journal = {EDUCATIONAL EVALUATION AND POLICY ANALYSIS},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {37-55},
|
|
Month = {SPR},
|
|
Abstract = {America's early education sector remains so radically decentralized-a
|
|
far flung archipelago of preschools, family child-care homes, and
|
|
subsidized individuals providing services-that basic information on
|
|
local organizations and staff members remains scarce. This, despite
|
|
rising policy interest in, and skyrocketing appropriations for preschool
|
|
programs which are aimed at boosting children's school readiness.
|
|
Working from a social ecology framework, this study aimed to learn more
|
|
about local populations of early education organizations. This paper
|
|
uses 1990 household census data aggregated to the zipcode level to
|
|
report on features of the early education workforce nationwide. Teachers
|
|
and other staff in preschools and center-based programs reported low
|
|
wages, averaging about \$7,300 per year (\$10,700 in 2000 dollars), with
|
|
most working less than full time. The median center-based teacher was 34
|
|
years of age, reported having completed some college, and was married
|
|
The median worker in family child-care homes earned even less and only
|
|
had a high school diploma. About 15\% of all preschool teachers in urban
|
|
areas were African-American; about 8\% were Latina. Twice as many
|
|
preschool and center teachers per 1, 000 young children resided in
|
|
affluent zip codes, relative to poor and lower middle-class areas.
|
|
Preschools and centers located in blue-collar and middle-income zip
|
|
codes displayed the lowest level of organizational formalization,
|
|
compared to those operating in poor or affluent areas. We discuss the
|
|
utility of 2000 census data to assess inequalities in the supply and
|
|
quality of early education organizations and their staff, and modeling
|
|
how economic and policy forces may shape organizational variability.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fuller, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Sch Educ, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
|
|
Univ Calif Berkeley, Sch Educ, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
|
|
Policy Calif Educ, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3102/01623737023001037},
|
|
ISSN = {0162-3737},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000178223300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000327824900012,
|
|
Author = {Drake, Robert E. and Frey, William and Bond, Gary R. and Goldman, Howard
|
|
H. and Salkever, David and Miller, Alexander and Moore, Troy A. and
|
|
Riley, Jarnee and Karakus, Mustafa and Milfort, Roline},
|
|
Title = {Assisting Social Security Disability Insurance Beneficiaries With
|
|
Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, or Major Depression in Returning to
|
|
Work},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {170},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Pages = {1433-1441},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: People with psychiatric impairments (primarily schizophrenia
|
|
or a mood disorder) are the largest and fastest-growing group of Social
|
|
Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) beneficiaries. The authors
|
|
investigated whether evidence-based supported employment and mental
|
|
health treatments can improve vocational and mental health recovery for
|
|
this population.
|
|
Method: Using a randomized controlled trial design, the authors tested a
|
|
multifaceted intervention: team-based supported employment, systematic
|
|
medication management, and other behavioral health services, along with
|
|
elimination of barriers by providing complete health insurance coverage
|
|
(with no out-of-pocket expenses) and suspending disability reviews. The
|
|
control group received usual services. Paid employment was the primary
|
|
outcome measure, and overall mental health and quality of life were
|
|
secondary outcome measures.
|
|
Results: Overall, 2,059 SSDI beneficiaries with schizophrenia, bipolar
|
|
disorder, or depression in 23 cities participated in the 2-year
|
|
intervention. The teams implemented the intervention package with
|
|
acceptable fidelity. The intervention group experienced more paid
|
|
employment (60.3\% compared with 40.2\%) and reported better mental
|
|
health and quality of life than the control group.
|
|
Conclusions: Implementation of the complex intervention in routine
|
|
mental health treatment settings was feasible, and the intervention was
|
|
effective in assisting individuals disabled by schizophrenia or
|
|
depression to return to work and improve their mental health and quality
|
|
of life.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Drake, RE (Corresponding Author), Dartmouth Psychiat Res Ctr, Geisel Sch Med Dartmouth, Hanover, NH USA.
|
|
Drake, Robert E., Dartmouth Psychiat Res Ctr, Geisel Sch Med Dartmouth, Hanover, NH USA.
|
|
Univ Maryland, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA.
|
|
Univ Maryland, Dept Publ Policy, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Univ Texas San Antonio, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, South Texas Vet Hlth Care Syst, San Antonio, TX USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1176/appi.ajp.2013.13020214},
|
|
ISSN = {0002-953X},
|
|
EISSN = {1535-7228},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INDIVIDUAL PLACEMENT; SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; CARE; PERFORMANCE; FIDELITY;
|
|
ILLNESS; PEOPLE; SCALE; COSTS; MODEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {robert.e.drake@dartmouth.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Drake, Robert/AAS-3310-2020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {76},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {33},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000327824900012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000694868600001,
|
|
Author = {Khamzina, Zhanna and Buribayev, Yermek and Taitorina, Binur and
|
|
Baisalova, Gulzira},
|
|
Title = {Gender Equality in Employment: A View from Kazakhstan},
|
|
Journal = {ANAIS DA ACADEMIA BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIAS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {93},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Abstract = {Issue under consideration: existing legal resources to support gender
|
|
equality in the workplace. We systematised the provisions of Kazakhstan
|
|
labour law, which should guarantee the prohibition of discrimination
|
|
based on sex. The analysis resulted in five themes: ``Characteristics of
|
|
women's labour{''}, ``Analysis of labour laws differentiation{''},
|
|
``Evaluation of labour rights discrimination{''} and ``Characteristics
|
|
of the new labour legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan{''},
|
|
``Characteristics of workers with a special social status{''}. We
|
|
analysed the essence of the method of differentiation of labour
|
|
legislation, which affects the establishment of special working
|
|
conditions for women and workers with family responsibilities. We
|
|
suggested a correlation between the content of legal norms and the level
|
|
of guarantees of gender equality in the labour market The results show
|
|
that family circumstances, gender equality are factors influencing the
|
|
formation of labour legislation, state policy in the field of wage
|
|
labour. The creation of a favourable environment for labour relations of
|
|
the considered categories of workers should be carried out through
|
|
labour contracts, acts of the employer, social partnership agreements,
|
|
collective agreements. However, priority should be given to normative
|
|
acts of national action. Ensuring gender equality in fact always
|
|
requires the implementation of special measures by the employer, which
|
|
must be guaranteed by a coercive state mechanism. At least this thesis
|
|
is true for the conditions of Kazakhstan, a country with a transition
|
|
economy, when business does not have high social activity, and state
|
|
power is in a period of transformation. Importance should be given to
|
|
the monitoring and implementation of international obligations in the
|
|
field of ensuring the prohibition of discrimination, the implementation
|
|
of best practices and standards. The post-Soviet law of Kazakhstan
|
|
recognises the priority of international law over national law, and this
|
|
channel should be maximally used to promote the value of gender
|
|
equality.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Khamzina, Z (Corresponding Author), Kazakh Natl Pedag Univ, Inst Law, Dept Law, Dostyk Ave13, Alma Ata 050010, Kazakhstan.
|
|
Khamzina, Zhanna; Buribayev, Yermek; Taitorina, Binur, Kazakh Natl Pedag Univ, Inst Law, Dept Law, Dostyk Ave13, Alma Ata 050010, Kazakhstan.
|
|
Baisalova, Gulzira, Eurasian Law Acad, Dept Constitut Int Law \& Customs, Kurmangazy Ave 107, Alma Ata 050000, Kazakhstan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1590/0001-3765202120190042},
|
|
Article-Number = {e20190042},
|
|
ISSN = {0001-3765},
|
|
EISSN = {1678-2690},
|
|
Keywords = {discrimination; employment; gender equality; gender; Kazakhstan; women
|
|
`slabour},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK; INEQUALITY; BALANCE; RIGHTS; WOMEN; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {292803@mail.ru},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Khamzina, Zhanna Zhanna/K-4228-2019
|
|
Buribayev, Yermek A/Y-5925-2019
|
|
Buribayev, Yermek/Y-5925-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Khamzina, Zhanna Zhanna/0000-0003-0913-2002
|
|
Buribayev, Yermek A/0000-0003-2631-6372
|
|
Buribayev, Yermek/0000-0003-0433-596X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000694868600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000455955600003,
|
|
Author = {Martinez-Leon, Inocencia and Olmedo-Cifuentes, Isabel and Arcas-Lario,
|
|
Narciso and Zapata-Conesa, Juan},
|
|
Title = {Cooperatives in Education: Teacher Job Satisfaction and Gender
|
|
Differences},
|
|
Journal = {CIRIEC-ESPANA REVISTA DE ECONOMIA PUBLICA SOCIAL Y COOPERATIVA},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {94},
|
|
Pages = {31-60},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives
|
|
Cooperatives whose activity is undertaken in the field of education need
|
|
to optimize their management to survive and achieve competitive
|
|
advantage. As they are labor-intensive organizations that provide
|
|
services with high intangibility (transformation knowledge,
|
|
characteristics and individuals' behavior), their staff's job
|
|
satisfaction is one way of achieving these advantages (reputation,
|
|
strategic positioning, attracting talented employees, etc.). Therefore,
|
|
the objective of this paper is to analyze how education cooperatives can
|
|
achieve job satisfaction through certain human resources management
|
|
practices (work-life balance culture and availability of work-life
|
|
balance practices, hiring, training, performance assessment and
|
|
compensation). The gender perspective is also considered in the
|
|
analysis.
|
|
Methodology
|
|
An empirical study conducted with the data obtained from a sample of 101
|
|
teachers from education cooperatives in the Murcia Region (Spain) (5\%
|
|
response rate). Data were collected by a personal survey that included
|
|
measures used in previous studies. They were all assessed with a 7-point
|
|
Likert scale (1: totally disagree, and 7: totally agree) according to
|
|
teachers' perception of the different variables.
|
|
Teachers' job satisfaction, measured according to: professional
|
|
satisfaction (with the school and learning activities), satisfaction
|
|
with student achievement, teachers' experience in the educational
|
|
center, and treatment received by the center.
|
|
Work-life balance culture, divided into positive and negative
|
|
perspectives. The positive one includes: talking about personal life at
|
|
work, starting a family -expecting a child or adopting it-, leaving the
|
|
workplace to care for children or dependent family members, and
|
|
prolonging maternity/paternity leave. The negative work-life balance
|
|
culture includes: maintaining a family structure that requires a lot of
|
|
involvement, spending many hours at work on a daily basis, taking work
|
|
home regularly, and prioritizing work over private life.
|
|
Work-life balance practices, with measures adapted to the context
|
|
(education cooperatives) to specifically ask about a reduced working day
|
|
with a cut in salary, maternity/paternity leave longer than the legal
|
|
minimum, leave of absence to care for either sick or dependent family
|
|
members or sick or dependent children.
|
|
Hiring, assessed according to teachers' perception of if: recruiting
|
|
processes that are rigorous and formalized, teachers' continuity is
|
|
high, and appropriate teachers are hired at each school level.
|
|
The variable training, measured by considering if training actions are
|
|
carried out according to the teaching staff's needs, training plans are
|
|
tailored to the teaching staff, and the training suggestions made by the
|
|
teaching staff are taken into account.
|
|
Performance assessment, to consider if the objectives to be met are
|
|
communicated to those responsible for achieving them, the performance
|
|
and development of each teacher's activity are evaluated, and if the
|
|
evaluation of teachers' performance is adequate.
|
|
Finally, the variable compensation includes the perception of whether
|
|
the performance evaluation is linked to the salary paid, the salary paid
|
|
is independent of the teaching staff's performance, and salaries are at
|
|
similar to those paid to public school teachers.
|
|
The descriptive statistics and bivariate correlations of the variables
|
|
are included, as is a hierarchical linear regression model to test the
|
|
hypotheses. The general model obtained with all the sample data is also
|
|
analyzed by taking into account gender as a selection variable.
|
|
Results
|
|
The study results reveal that adequate training (beta=.478) and rigorous
|
|
formalized hiring (beta=.336) are the most valued factors to generate
|
|
job satisfaction among teachers of education cooperatives in the Murcia
|
|
Region. However, some gender differences appear in the variables that
|
|
generate job satisfaction, despite there being no significant
|
|
differences between male and female teachers' perception of their job
|
|
satisfaction.
|
|
In particular, male teachers (31\% of the sample) negatively perceive
|
|
the effect of availability of work-life balance practices (beta=-. 238)
|
|
and compensation (beta=-. 374) on their job satisfaction, while training
|
|
has a positive impact (beta=.706). These variables explain 52.6\% of the
|
|
male teachers' job satisfaction variation. For the female teachers (69\%
|
|
of the sample), hiring (beta=.440), training (beta=.345) and work-life
|
|
balance practices (beta=.233) have a positive effect on their perceived
|
|
job satisfaction, and explain 63.8\% of the variation in their job
|
|
satisfaction.
|
|
From these gender results, the most striking aspect is that the greater
|
|
availability of work-life balance practices and linking pay to
|
|
performance reduce male teachers' job satisfaction. One explanation
|
|
could be that males consider that work-life balance practices only
|
|
benefit women, and when female teachers use these measures, male
|
|
teachers must face a heavier workload, which affects their level of
|
|
satisfaction. The negative relationship between satisfaction and
|
|
performance assessment may be a consequence of the service type
|
|
(training), and the possible uncertainty and mistrust that a performance
|
|
measure can generate because the methods to determine it are not the
|
|
most suitable ones, or do not reflect all the work they do to perform
|
|
their teaching activity.
|
|
Females differ for the idea that hiring and work-life balance practices
|
|
are a key influence on their job satisfaction. Perhaps the females in
|
|
the Spanish studied region still assume the reproduction and care role
|
|
of the family to a greater extent, and the tools that support their
|
|
labor participation, such as work-life balance practices, possibly have
|
|
a positive effect on their perceived satisfaction. Additionally, hiring
|
|
is the most important factor that generates job satisfaction among
|
|
females. Rigorous formalized processes where the most appropriate
|
|
candidates are hired, with a high probability of continuity, are well
|
|
assessed by females as a way to assure gender equality and to banish
|
|
certain gender stereotypes, occupational segregation (horizontal and
|
|
vertical) and the glass ceiling.
|
|
In any case, both males and females agree that training is essential for
|
|
their job satisfaction, perhaps because this will improve the education
|
|
service that they provide, as well as their students performing better.
|
|
Practical conclusions and original value
|
|
This work offers guidelines to education cooperatives about the aspects
|
|
that create more job satisfaction, and how to manage and optimize it
|
|
according to each employee's gender.
|
|
This work shows some gender differences among teachers of educational
|
|
cooperatives in relation to the variables that generate their job
|
|
satisfaction. These differences must be carefully analyzed by the
|
|
management of cooperatives in an attempt to develop those human resource
|
|
management policies and strategies that tend to favor high job
|
|
satisfaction among male and female teachers given its effect on other
|
|
variables, e.g. performance (better service provision, perception of
|
|
higher quality), productivity or the cooperative's outcomes (attracting
|
|
new customers, better internal and external reputation, etc.).
|
|
In general, education cooperatives can increase job satisfaction by
|
|
mainly offering a training program suited to teachers' needs that can be
|
|
put into practice, if possible, in their working hours, and that does
|
|
not require travel, to avoid work-life conflict problems. This should be
|
|
complemented with formalized rigorous hiring processes that ensure
|
|
having highly trained motivated staff. The different perception of
|
|
work-life practices between males and females shows a clear need for
|
|
more training and awareness about work-life balance issues and
|
|
co-responsibility. Educational cooperatives should put the necessary
|
|
resources (hiring temporary staff to cover possible reductions in days,
|
|
leave, or absence) so teachers' satisfaction (and productivity) does not
|
|
disturb those situations.
|
|
The importance of education cooperatives, together with their
|
|
labor-intensive character and the absence of studies that analyze the
|
|
problems addressed herein, justify their relevance from both the
|
|
academic and business points of view.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Martinez-Leon, I (Corresponding Author), Univ Politecn Cartagena UPCT, Cartagena, Spain.
|
|
Martinez-Leon, Inocencia, Univ Politecn Cartagena UPCT, Cartagena, Spain.
|
|
Olmedo-Cifuentes, Isabel; Arcas-Lario, Narciso, UPCT, Cartagena, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.7203/CIRIEC-E.94.12700},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-8093},
|
|
EISSN = {1989-6816},
|
|
Keywords = {Cooperatives in education; teaching staff; gender; job satisfaction;
|
|
work-life balance; human resources management},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK-LIFE BALANCE; FAMILY CONFLICT; TURNOVER; ATTITUDES; OUTCOMES;
|
|
WOMEN; VALIDATION; MANAGEMENT; RETENTION; KNOWLEDGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {ino.martinez@upct.es
|
|
isabel.olmedo@upct.es
|
|
arcas.lario@upct.es
|
|
juanzapataconesa@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Martínez-León, Inocencia M IML/H-8391-2015
|
|
OLMEDO-CIFUENTES, ISABEL/AAH-8638-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Martínez-León, Inocencia M IML/0000-0002-8624-9848
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {87},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {62},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000455955600003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000354718500019,
|
|
Author = {Nevala, Nina and Pehkonen, Irmeli and Koskela, Inka and Ruusuvuori,
|
|
Johanna and Anttila, Heidi},
|
|
Title = {Workplace Accommodation Among Persons with Disabilities: A Systematic
|
|
Review of Its Effectiveness and Barriers or Facilitators},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {432-448},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose A systematic review was conducted to review the effectiveness of
|
|
workplace accommodation (WA) regarding employment, work ability, and
|
|
cost-benefit among disabled people. It also describes the evidence
|
|
gained on the barriers and facilitators of WA process to sustain
|
|
employment. Methods We reviewed systematically current scientific
|
|
evidence about effectiveness of WA among disabled persons. The outcomes
|
|
were employment, work ability, and cost-benefit. Qualitative studies of
|
|
employment facilitators and barriers were also included. The population
|
|
comprised people with physical disability, visual impairment, hearing
|
|
impairment, cognitive disability, or mental disability, aged 18-68
|
|
years. CINAHL, the Cochrane Library, Embase, Medic, OTseeker, PEDro,
|
|
PsycInfo, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science were searched for
|
|
peer-reviewed articles published in English from January 1990 to
|
|
November 2012. Results Three quantitative (one randomized controlled,
|
|
one concurrently controlled, and one cohort) and eight qualitative
|
|
studies met the inclusion criteria. There was moderate evidence that
|
|
specific types of WA (vocational counselling and guidance, education and
|
|
self-advocacy, help of others, changes in work schedules, work
|
|
organization, and special transportation) promote employment among
|
|
physically disabled persons and reduce costs. There was low evidence
|
|
that WA (liaison, education, work aids, and work techniques) coordinated
|
|
by case managers increases return to work and is cost-effective when
|
|
compared with the usual care of persons with physical and cognitive
|
|
disabilities. The key facilitators and barriers of employment were
|
|
self-advocacy, support of the employer and community, amount of training
|
|
and counselling, and flexibility of work schedules and work
|
|
organization. Conclusions More high-quality studies using validated
|
|
measures of the work ability and functioning of disabled persons are
|
|
needed. The identified barriers and facilitators found in the
|
|
qualitative studies should be used to develop quantitative study
|
|
designs.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nevala, N (Corresponding Author), Finnish Inst Occupat Hlth, Topeliuksenkatu 41 A, Helsinki 00250, Finland.
|
|
Nevala, Nina; Pehkonen, Irmeli; Koskela, Inka, Finnish Inst Occupat Hlth, Helsinki 00250, Finland.
|
|
Nevala, Nina, Univ Jyvaskyla, Dept Hlth Sci, Gerontol Res Ctr, Jyvaskyla 40014, Finland.
|
|
Ruusuvuori, Johanna, Univ Tampere, Sch Social Sci \& Humanities, Tampere 33014, Finland.
|
|
Anttila, Heidi, Natl Inst Hlth \& Welf, Helsinki 00271, Finland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10926-014-9548-z},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-0487},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Workplace accommodation; Disability; Employment; Work ability;
|
|
Systematic review},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; WORK DISABILITY; ERGONOMIC INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
ASSISTANCE SERVICES; BRAIN-INJURY; RETURN; INDIVIDUALS; EXPERIENCES;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; EMPLOYEES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {nina.nevala@ttl.fi},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Anttila, Heidi/AAC-7827-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {78},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {92},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000354718500019},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000186110000003,
|
|
Author = {Meyer, LB},
|
|
Title = {Economic globalization and women's status in the labor market: A
|
|
cross-national investigation of occupational sex segregation and
|
|
inequality},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIOLOGICAL QUARTERLY},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {351-383},
|
|
Month = {SUM},
|
|
Abstract = {This study examines the effects of economic globalization on
|
|
occupational sex segregation and occupational inequality. A theory of
|
|
global economic restructuring and its impact on the quality of women's
|
|
work suggests that national integration into the world economy
|
|
significantly expands opportunities for women in the workplace but does
|
|
not remove barriers to women's advancement or ameliorate the
|
|
predominance of low-paying, menial jobs held by women. Two measures of
|
|
gender occupational differentiation are employed as dependent variables
|
|
in cross-sectional OLS regression analyses of fifty-six countries using
|
|
data from 1970-1990. Results indicate that global economic forces reduce
|
|
occupational sex segregation and inequality. However, these effects are
|
|
determined by a country's world system position and region. The analyses
|
|
illustrate that global economic restructuring is a gendered process that
|
|
transforms and builds upon existing gender inequalities. Therefore, the
|
|
inclusion of global structural characteristics into comparative research
|
|
on occupational sex differentiation is essential.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Meyer, LB (Corresponding Author), SUNY Coll Geneseo, Dept Sociol, 123B Sturges Hall, Geneseo, NY 14454 USA.
|
|
SUNY Coll Geneseo, Dept Sociol, Geneseo, NY 14454 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1533-8525.2003.tb00537.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-0253},
|
|
EISSN = {1533-8525},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FORCE PARTICIPATION; GENDER; DIFFERENTIATION; INTEGRATION; DEPENDENCE;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; WORKPLACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {meyer@geneseo.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {114},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000186110000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000385863900009,
|
|
Author = {Fleming, Christopher M. and Kifle, Temesgen and Kler, Parvinder},
|
|
Title = {Immigrant occupational mobility in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {WORK EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {876-889},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {This research note takes an occupational attainment approach to
|
|
examining the economic assimilation of immigrants in Australia. This
|
|
approach differs from much of the existing literature, which tends to
|
|
examine economic assimilation by looking at levels of (un)employment or
|
|
wages. Focusing on occupational attainment is useful, in that
|
|
disadvantage in the labour market is not limited to employment status
|
|
and earnings, and an individual's occupation may provide a broader
|
|
signal of their economic and social well-being. Findings indicate that,
|
|
on arrival, immigrants from a non-English speaking background face
|
|
significant disadvantage in occupational attainment, particularly those
|
|
from Asian countries. There is also evidence to suggest that those who
|
|
arrive later in life, or are from an Asian non-English speaking
|
|
background, are the least likely to assimilate over time. Results are
|
|
indicative of the need for policies to better integrate immigrants from
|
|
more diverse cultures and societies into the Australian labour market.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fleming, CM (Corresponding Author), Griffith Univ, South Bank Campus,226 Grey St, S Bank, Qld 4101, Australia.
|
|
Fleming, Christopher M., Griffith Univ, Sch Business, S Bank, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Kifle, Temesgen, Univ Queensland, Sch Econ, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
|
|
Kler, Parvinder, Griffith Univ, Econ, S Bank, Qld, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0950017016631446},
|
|
ISSN = {0950-0170},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-8722},
|
|
Keywords = {economic assimilation; Household; Income and Labour Dynamics in
|
|
Australia (HILDA) survey; immigrant; occupation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ASSIMILATION; 2ND-GENERATION; UK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Industrial Relations \& Labor; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {chris.fleming@griffith.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kler, Parvinder S/F-9140-2015
|
|
Fleming, Christopher/ABE-3736-2020
|
|
Kler, Parvinder/P-3968-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kler, Parvinder S/0000-0001-5235-1038
|
|
Fleming, Christopher/0000-0001-7596-7775
|
|
Kler, Parvinder/0000-0001-5235-1038},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000385863900009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000208438200007,
|
|
Author = {Encel, Sol and Studencki, Helen},
|
|
Title = {Older workers: can they succeed in the job market?},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL ON AGEING},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {33-37},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: To identify and track the progress of mature age workers who
|
|
have overcome barriers associated with their age. To identify factors
|
|
contributing to successful employment outcomes for older workers. To
|
|
evaluate the success rate of service providers in facilitating access to
|
|
the labour market for older workers.
|
|
Methods: Three job network providers were approached: Mission
|
|
Employment, Salvation Army Employment Plus and Work Ventures Inc. All
|
|
three agreed to provide addresses of clients aged 45 years and over to
|
|
be reached through a mail questionnaire. A total of 700 questionnaires
|
|
were dispatched anonymously with the cooperation of these three
|
|
organisations. A small number of follow-up interviews were also
|
|
conducted with survey respondents who indicated their willingness to be
|
|
interviewed, and had signed a consent form for this purpose. Several
|
|
interviews were also conducted with staff at the three cooperating
|
|
agencies.
|
|
Results: Of the 700 questionnaires dispatched, 163 were returned, giving
|
|
a response rate of 23\%. Among the respondents, 82 were employed at the
|
|
time and 81 were unemployed. There were approximately equal responses
|
|
from men and women. Of the 82 employed persons, 48 had obtained jobs
|
|
either through answering advertisements or through personal contacts.
|
|
Only 19 had obtained employment through a job network agency. The most
|
|
important barrier to employment was identified as age, followed by lack
|
|
of specialised skills.
|
|
Conclusions: Early intervention is essential. The chances of
|
|
re-employment decline steadily with the duration of unemployment. Age
|
|
discrimination stands out as the major obstacle to re-employment for
|
|
older workers. Personal connections and specialised skills are more
|
|
important than the activities of job network agencies. Job seekers are
|
|
also handicapped by inflexibility in relation to training, travel to new
|
|
locations, and acceptance of a different kind of job.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Encel, S (Corresponding Author), Univ New S Wales, Social Policy Res Ctr, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Encel, Sol; Studencki, Helen, Univ New S Wales, Social Policy Res Ctr, Sydney, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1741-6612.2004.00006.x},
|
|
ISSN = {1440-6381},
|
|
Keywords = {discrimination; mature-age workers; unemployment},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geriatrics \& Gerontology; Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {s.encel@unsw.edu.au},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {10},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000208438200007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000209461900097,
|
|
Author = {Bhatta, Bharat P. and Arethun, Torbjorn},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to rural households' participation in low-skilled off-farm
|
|
labor markets: theory and empirical results from northern Ethiopia},
|
|
Journal = {SPRINGERPLUS},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {2},
|
|
Abstract = {Promotion of low-skilled off-farm rural labor market participation can
|
|
be an important strategy to improve livelihoods and food security of the
|
|
poor in developing countries. This paper investigates rural farm
|
|
households' participation in low-skilled off-farm labor markets with
|
|
disaggregate data from a survey of 400 households in Tigray, the
|
|
northern highlands of Ethiopia. Adopting Heckman's two stage approach,
|
|
we examined households' decisions to participate or not in markets by
|
|
probit model in the first stage and level of participation by ordinary
|
|
least squares procedures in the second stage. The results show that
|
|
households' decision to enter into a labor market significantly depends
|
|
on the characteristics of the households such as sex, age of the
|
|
household heads and labor endowments in the households. Similarly, the
|
|
level of participation in labor markets measured by the amount of
|
|
off-farm wage income depends on labor endowments in the households and
|
|
the place where the households are located. Since cash constrained rural
|
|
households do not find themselves advantageous to participate in
|
|
off-farm labor markets, the reduction of cash constraint is the major
|
|
policy implication of the paper. This holds true in general for all cash
|
|
constrained rural households in developing countries. Similarly, the
|
|
empirical results in the paper suggest removal of locational barriers to
|
|
access labor markets. This helps them to earn off-farm income. It is
|
|
necessary to eliminate (or at least reduce) obstacles for rural
|
|
households to enter into a market of off-farm wage earning activities.
|
|
This holds true in general for all rural households in developing
|
|
countries. This paper is therefore expected to contribute to frame
|
|
appropriate policy that promotes participation in low-skilled off-farm
|
|
rural labor markets in developing countries where many rural households
|
|
are not only poor but also low-skilled.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bhatta, BP (Corresponding Author), Sogn Fjordane Univ Coll, POB 133, NO-6851 Sogndal, Norway.
|
|
Bhatta, Bharat P.; Arethun, Torbjorn, Sogn Fjordane Univ Coll, NO-6851 Sogndal, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/2193-1801-2-97},
|
|
Article-Number = {97},
|
|
ISSN = {2193-1801},
|
|
Keywords = {Rural households; Low-skilled off-farm labor market participation;
|
|
Northern Ethiopia; Heckman's two stage model; Entry barriers; Household
|
|
characteristics},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME DIVERSIFICATION; NONFARM EMPLOYMENT; DETERMINANTS; POVERTY;
|
|
MEXICO},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {bharat.bhatta@hisf.no},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bhatta, Bharat Raj/HDM-7544-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {20},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000209461900097},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000379251700005,
|
|
Author = {Edwards, Patrick and Subramanian, Sujha and Hoover, Sonja and Ramesh,
|
|
Chaluvarayaswamy and Ramadas, Kunnambath},
|
|
Title = {Financial barriers to oral cancer treatment in India},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CANCER POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Pages = {28-31},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {The objective of this study was to determine the major financial
|
|
barriers that affect people's access to oral cancer treatment in India.
|
|
Barriers researched included not only the direct medical costs, but also
|
|
the direct non-medical costs, such as transportation and lodging, and
|
|
the indirect cost of missing work or family duties. Four hundred
|
|
patients from two regions in southern India responded to a 2014 survey
|
|
that asked about access and barriers to care. Traditionally, policies to
|
|
increase screening, diagnosis and treatment of oral cancer have focused
|
|
on affordable or free medical services for low-income groups; however,
|
|
the hidden costs associated with receiving care are a significant
|
|
burden. Transportation, lodging, loss of wages, and time away from
|
|
family duties are key barriers to oral cancer care that policy makers
|
|
should address. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Edwards, P (Corresponding Author), RTI Int, 3040 E Cornwallis Rd, Res Triangle Pk, NC 27709 USA.
|
|
Edwards, Patrick; Subramanian, Sujha; Hoover, Sonja, RTI Int, 3040 E Cornwallis Rd, Res Triangle Pk, NC 27709 USA.
|
|
Ramesh, Chaluvarayaswamy, Kidwai Mem Inst Oncol, Dr MH Marigowda Rd, Bangalore 560029, Karnataka, India.
|
|
Ramadas, Kunnambath, Reg Canc Ctr, Med Coll Campus, Thiruvananthapuram 695011, Kerala, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jcpo.2015.12.007},
|
|
ISSN = {2213-5383},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {pedwards@rti.org
|
|
ssubramanian@rti.org
|
|
shoover@rti.org
|
|
Ramesh\_kidwai@yahoo.co.in
|
|
ramdasrcc@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hoover, Sonja/0000-0002-6205-1212
|
|
Edwards, Patrick/0000-0001-5022-0018},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {7},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000379251700005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000834001100040,
|
|
Author = {Kiruthika, S. and Ravi, G.},
|
|
Title = {IMPACT OF WOMEN FREE BUS OPERATION INTAMIL NADU STATE TRANSPORT
|
|
CORPORATION (TNSTC) ON TAMILNADU},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EARLY CHILDHOOD SPECIAL EDUCATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1815-1820},
|
|
Abstract = {In this research paper described the impact of women free bus operation
|
|
in Tamil Nadu State transport corporation (TNSTC) in Tamil Nadu. After
|
|
the government's announcement of free bus travel for all women, most of
|
|
the women passengers are likely to shift from private to government
|
|
buses. Women who are travelling through other modes of transport may
|
|
also prefer to travel by government buses. As per the ITDP survey, 77\%
|
|
of women transit by walk, cycle and public transport. Either they lost a
|
|
job as they couldn't afford to travel long-distance anymore due to bus
|
|
fare hike. Many chose to work nearby their home for lower wages, hence,
|
|
it results in lower household income, income disparity, labour shortage,
|
|
gender discrimination, domestic violence, a lower standard of living,
|
|
lower accessibility and availability. In one word-socio and economic
|
|
loss of the household and to the state in general. Result in free bus
|
|
operation give multiple benefits across the state both in terms of
|
|
standard of livelihood and affordability, as well as raise in per capita
|
|
income per women.The main intention behind this scheme is to increase
|
|
the work participation rate of women and promote public transportation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kiruthika, S (Corresponding Author), Annamalai Univ, Dept Econ, Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu, India.
|
|
Kiruthika, S.; Ravi, G., Annamalai Univ, Dept Econ, Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.9756/INTJECSE/V14I5.189},
|
|
ISSN = {1308-5581},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Special},
|
|
Author-Email = {kiruthikas91996@gamil.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {13},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000834001100040},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000244219800003,
|
|
Author = {Chang, Young Eun and Huston, Aletha C. and Crosby, Danielle A. and
|
|
Gennetian, Lisa A.},
|
|
Title = {The effects of welfare and employment programs on children's
|
|
participation in Head Start},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {17-32},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {We examine the effects of 10 welfare and employment programs on single
|
|
mothers' use of Head Start for their 3- to 4-year-old children,
|
|
considering concurrent program effects on employment, income, and the
|
|
use of other types of childcare settings. In general, these welfare and
|
|
employment experiments increased parental employment and the use of
|
|
center- and home-based childcare, but decreased families' use of Head
|
|
Start. The findings suggest that two types of policies affecting
|
|
low-income families-welfare and employment on the one hand, and early
|
|
childhood intervention on the other - are operating independently, and
|
|
may actually conflict. Policy-induced increases in maternal employment
|
|
generated an increased need for childcare; however, mothers did not
|
|
appear to use Head Start to meet this need, instead increasing their use
|
|
of other types of care arrangements. The part-day, part-year structure
|
|
of Head Start at the time of these programs and issues of eligibility
|
|
are discussed as potential barriers to the use of Head Start among
|
|
low-income families under a welfare system that requires parents to
|
|
work. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chang, YE (Corresponding Author), Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Child Dev \& Family Studies, Seoul 151742, South Korea.
|
|
Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Child Dev \& Family Studies, Seoul 151742, South Korea.
|
|
Univ Texas, Dept Human Ecol, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
|
|
Univ N Carolina, Dept Human Dev \& Family Studies, Greensboro, NC 27402 USA.
|
|
MDRC, New York, NY 10016 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.econedurev.2005.01.009},
|
|
ISSN = {0272-7757},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7382},
|
|
Keywords = {Head Start; childcare; welfare; policy},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {utpooh@snu.ac.kr
|
|
achuston@mail.utexas.edu
|
|
lisa.gennetian@mdrc.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Crosby, Danielle/ISB-8879-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Crosby, Danielle/0000-0003-3543-3925},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000244219800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000323444700004,
|
|
Author = {Elwell-Sutton, Timothy M. and Jiang, Chao Qiang and Zhang, Wei Sen and
|
|
Cheng, Kar Keung and Lam, Tai H. and Leung, Gabriel M. and Schooling, C.
|
|
M.},
|
|
Title = {Inequality and inequity in access to health care and treatment for
|
|
chronic conditions in China: the Guangzhou Biobank Cohort Study},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {467-479},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are a large and rapidly-growing problem
|
|
in China and other middle-income countries. Clinical treatment of NCDs
|
|
is long-term and expensive, so it may present particular problems for
|
|
equality and horizontal equity (equal treatment for equal need) in
|
|
access to health care, although little is known about this at present in
|
|
low-and middle-income countries. To address this gap, and inform policy
|
|
for a substantial proportion of the global population, we examined
|
|
inequality and inequity in general health care utilization (doctor
|
|
consultations and hospital admissions) and in treatment of chronic
|
|
conditions (hypertension, hyperglycaemia and dyslipidaemia), in 30 499
|
|
Chinese adults aged >= 50 years from one of China's richest provinces,
|
|
using the Guangzhou Biobank Cohort Study (2003-2008).
|
|
We used concentration indices to test for inequality and inequity in
|
|
utilization by household income per head. Inequality was decomposed to
|
|
show the contributions of income, indicators of `need for health care'
|
|
(age, sex, self-rated health, coronary heart disease risk and chronic
|
|
obstructive pulmonary disease) and non-need factors (education,
|
|
occupation, out-of-pocket health care payments and health insurance).
|
|
We found inequality and inequity in treatment of chronic conditions but
|
|
not in general health care utilization. Using more objective and
|
|
specific measures of `need for health care' increased estimates of
|
|
inequity for treatment of chronic conditions. Income and non-need
|
|
factors (especially health insurance, education and occupation) made the
|
|
largest contributions to inequality. Further work is needed on why
|
|
access to treatment for chronic conditions in China is restricted for
|
|
those on low incomes and how these inequities can be mitigated.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Schooling, CM (Corresponding Author), Univ Hong Kong, Sch Publ Hlth, Li Ka Shing Fac Med, 21 Sassoon Rd, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Elwell-Sutton, Timothy M.; Lam, Tai H.; Leung, Gabriel M.; Schooling, C. M., Univ Hong Kong, Sch Publ Hlth, Li Ka Shing Fac Med, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Jiang, Chao Qiang; Zhang, Wei Sen, Guangzhou 12 Hosp, Guangzhou, Guangdong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Cheng, Kar Keung, Univ Birmingham, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapol/czs077},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-1080},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2237},
|
|
Keywords = {Inequity; inequality; chronic illness; access to care; China},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHRONIC DISEASES; RISK-FACTORS; HONG-KONG; EQUITY; POPULATION; INCOME;
|
|
SERVICES; PREVALENCE; PREVENTION; MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {cms1@hkucc.hku.hk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Leung, Gabriel Matthew/C-4336-2009
|
|
Cheng, Kar/AAL-8899-2021
|
|
Lam, Tai Hing/C-4317-2009
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cheng, Kar/0000-0002-1516-1857
|
|
Elwell-Sutton, Timothy/0000-0003-4950-726X
|
|
Lam, Tai Hing/0000-0002-2033-9971
|
|
Schooling, Mary/0000-0001-9933-5887
|
|
Leung, Gabriel/0000-0002-2503-6283},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {39},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {48},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000323444700004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000391254400060,
|
|
Author = {Sika, Peter},
|
|
Editor = {Primorac, Z and Bussoli, C and Recker, N},
|
|
Title = {THE RELATIONSHIP OF THE MINIMUM WAGE AND UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE SLOVAK
|
|
REPUBLIC},
|
|
Booktitle = {ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT (ESD)},
|
|
Series = {International Scientific Conference on Economic and Social Development},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Pages = {587-596},
|
|
Note = {16th International Scientific Conference on Economic and Social
|
|
Development - The Legal Challenges of Modern World, Split, CROATIA, SEP
|
|
01-02, 2016},
|
|
Abstract = {Minimum wage raises debate and controversy since its introduction.
|
|
Proponents reported its justification in particular related to the task
|
|
of ensuring income to workers, which guarantees them their basic needs.
|
|
Opponents argue the impacts of rising unemployment. Legislative and
|
|
institutional setting of the lower limit for wages in the economy does
|
|
not allow the wages of certain employees to decline to the level of
|
|
equilibrium wages in the event of adverse economic activity, which may
|
|
cause barriers in employing particular risk groups in the labor market.
|
|
The modification of the minimum wage is a serious problem, since it
|
|
represents the fundamental elements of the macroeconomic and
|
|
macro-regulation in the country, the impact on the revenue policy, price
|
|
policy, pension policy, as well as their own employees and employers and
|
|
other groups. The aim of this paper is to examine the correlation
|
|
between the increase in the minimum wage and the unemployment rate in
|
|
the Slovak Republic with a focus on specific groups in the labor market
|
|
and regional differentiation. Our contribution contains a justification
|
|
of the existence and function of the minimum with a proposal for its
|
|
modification, while it also focuses on the future shape of minimum wages
|
|
in Slovakia within the changed socio-economic conditions. Consumption
|
|
and investments are the driving force of the economy but the investment
|
|
is to some extent driven by the anticipated consumption. Only household
|
|
consumption accounted for a significant upward impetus to the Slovak
|
|
economy, which would not be possible without increasing the employment
|
|
and wage growth.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sika, P (Corresponding Author), Univ Econ Bratislava, Fac Natl Econ, Dept Social Dev \& Labour, Bratislava, Slovakia.
|
|
Sika, Peter, Univ Econ Bratislava, Fac Natl Econ, Dept Social Dev \& Labour, Bratislava, Slovakia.},
|
|
ISSN = {1849-7535},
|
|
Keywords = {Minimum wage; Unemployment; Regional differentiation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Criminology \& Penology; Economics; Law},
|
|
Author-Email = {peter.sika@euba.sk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sika, Peter/ADT-5146-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sika, Peter/0000-0001-6393-7325},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {20},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000391254400060},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000501052100001,
|
|
Author = {Ellingsaeter, Anne Lise and Kitterod, Ragni Hege and Ostbakken, Kjersti
|
|
Misje},
|
|
Title = {Immigrants and the `caring father': Inequality in access to and
|
|
utilisation of parental leave in Norway},
|
|
Journal = {ETHNICITIES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {959-982},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {How do parental leave rights and interacting societal structures
|
|
influence immigrant fathers' compliance with the `caring father'
|
|
model-typifying Nordic welfare states? Nordic parental leave schemes
|
|
differ; this study investigated the impact of the Norwegian policy.
|
|
Strong, stratifying effects related to access, particularly unfavourable
|
|
for non-Western immigrant fathers, were demonstrated. These effects
|
|
stemmed not only from the scheme being based on work performance
|
|
criteria, but also from fathers' rights being conditioned on mothers'
|
|
economic activity. Moreover, the observed gap between eligible immigrant
|
|
and native-born fathers in the take-up of the father quota (the part of
|
|
leave earmarked for fathers) was explored further. The gap was
|
|
associated with weaker individual resources; however, ethnic labour
|
|
market segregation played a significant role. The gap narrowed with the
|
|
increased duration of stay of these fathers, suggesting that adaptation
|
|
processes also are involved. The analysis is based on high-quality
|
|
register data of all partnered men who became fathers in Norway in 2011,
|
|
following them until their child was three years old in 2014.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ellingsaeter, AL (Corresponding Author), Univ Oslo, Dept Sociol \& Human Geog, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Ellingsaeter, Anne Lise, Univ Oslo, Dept Sociol \& Human Geog, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Kitterod, Ragni Hege; Ostbakken, Kjersti Misje, Inst Social Res, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1468796819890109},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2019},
|
|
Article-Number = {1468796819890109},
|
|
ISSN = {1468-7968},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-2706},
|
|
Keywords = {Ethnic labour market segregation; father quota; immigrants' social
|
|
rights; immigrants' utilisation of benefits; parental leave scheme},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WOMENS PAID WORK; SOCIAL RIGHTS; GENDER; ATTITUDES; MOTHERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Ethnic Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {a.l.ellingsater@sosgeo.uio.no},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ellingsaeter, Anne Lise/0000-0003-0458-5731},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000501052100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000572785500019,
|
|
Author = {Tamminga, Sietske J. and Jansen, Lyanne P. and Frings-Dresen, Monique H.
|
|
W. and de Boer, Angela G. E. M.},
|
|
Title = {Long-term employment status and quality of life after cancer: A
|
|
longitudinal prospective cohort study from diagnosis up to and including
|
|
5 years post diagnosis},
|
|
Journal = {WORK-A JOURNAL OF PREVENTION ASSESSMENT \& REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {901-907},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Accumulating evidence suggests that cancer survivors are
|
|
able to return to work. However, little is known about their work
|
|
situation 5 years after diagnosis.
|
|
OBJECTIVE: To explore fluctuations in employment status and its
|
|
association with quality of life 2, 3, and 5 years after cancer
|
|
diagnosis of 65 cancer survivors employed at diagnosis.
|
|
METHODS: In association with a randomised controlled trial (RCT),
|
|
questionnaires were administrated to eligible cancer survivors at
|
|
diagnosis, 2, 3, and 5 years thereafter comprising of validated
|
|
questionnaires related to work (i.e. Work Ability Index (WAI), cancer,
|
|
and quality of life (QOL) (i.e. SF-36, VAS QOL). The RCT studied a
|
|
hospital-based work support intervention in female breast and
|
|
gynaecological cancer survivors who were treated with curative intent
|
|
and had paid work at diagnosis. Descriptive statistics and longitudinal
|
|
multi-level analysis were employed.
|
|
RESULTS: Sixty-five of the 102 eligible cancer survivors participated,
|
|
who were primarily diagnosed with breast cancer (63\%). Two and 5 years
|
|
after cancer diagnosis respectively 63 (97\%) and 48 (81\%) participants
|
|
were employed. Reasons for not being employed after 5 years included
|
|
receiving unemployment benefits (7\%), voluntary unemployment (3\%),
|
|
receiving disability benefits (3\%), and early retirement (3\%).
|
|
Longitudinal multi-level analysis showed that employed cancer survivors
|
|
reported in general statistically significant better quality of life
|
|
outcomes at 5 years follow-up compared to those not being employed.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: We found high employment rates and few fluctuations in
|
|
employment status. The steepest decline in employment rate occurs after
|
|
the first two years of diagnosis. Employed participants reported better
|
|
quality of life outcomes. Survivorship care should therefore focus on
|
|
the population at risk possibly within the first two years after
|
|
diagnosis.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tamminga, SJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Amsterdam, Coronel Inst Occupat Hlth, Acad Med Ctr, POB 22660, NL-1100 DD Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Tamminga, Sietske J.; Jansen, Lyanne P.; Frings-Dresen, Monique H. W.; de Boer, Angela G. E. M., Univ Amsterdam, Acad Med Ctr, Coronel Inst Occupat Hlth, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst, Amsterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3233/WOR-203234},
|
|
ISSN = {1051-9815},
|
|
EISSN = {1875-9270},
|
|
Keywords = {Neoplasm; unemployment; labour participation; work disability; cancer
|
|
survivorship},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH SURVEY; WORK ABILITY; SURVIVORS; RETURN; FACILITATORS; BARRIERS;
|
|
FATIGUE; SF-36},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {S.J.Tamminga@amc.nl},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {de Boer, Angela/0000-0003-1942-6848},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000572785500019},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000080003200011,
|
|
Author = {Clarke, AE and Levinton, C and Joseph, L and Penrod, S and Zowall, H and
|
|
Sibley, JT and Grover, SA and Esdaile, JM},
|
|
Title = {Predicting the short term direct medical costs incurred by patients with
|
|
rheumatoid arthritis},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF RHEUMATOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {1999},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1068-1075},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective. With increasing interest in revising the mechanisms of health
|
|
care funding, the ability to anticipate patients' medical expenditures
|
|
as well as to identify potentially modifiable predictors would be
|
|
informative for health care providers, payers, and policy makers.
|
|
Methods. Eight hundred fifty-eight patients with rheumatoid arthritis
|
|
from 2 Canadian centers reported semi-annually on their health services
|
|
utilization and health status for up to 12 years. Annual direct costs
|
|
were calculated using 1993 Canadian prices. Regression models for the
|
|
variation in total direct costs and the individual resource components
|
|
(i.e., physicians, tests, medications, acute and non-acute hospital
|
|
care) were estimated using previous values of age, sex, disease
|
|
duration, education, methotrexate availability, employment status,
|
|
global well being, pain, duration of morning stiffness, and functional
|
|
disability as predictor variables. The models were developed using all
|
|
available data except the last 2 observations (i.e., data collected on
|
|
the last 2 self-report questionnaires) from each patient, which were
|
|
reserved for model validation. The predictive abilities of the models
|
|
were assessed by comparing the most recent costs with those predicted by
|
|
the model using values of the predictor variables from the previous time
|
|
period. Further, to assess whether the models conferred any advantage
|
|
over cost estimates based only on previous costs, most recent observed
|
|
costs were also compared with costs observed in the preceding time
|
|
period.
|
|
Results. Self-reported indices of either global well being, pain, or
|
|
functional disability predicted total direct costs as well as the costs
|
|
of the 5 individual resource components. Being younger, female, disabled
|
|
from the work force, having shorter disease duration, and receiving more
|
|
formal education also predicted higher costs in at least on health
|
|
resource category. However, being older predicted higher acute and
|
|
non-acute care hospital costs. Regression models incorporating
|
|
longitudinal data did not perform better than average costs in the
|
|
preceding rime period in predicting future short term costs.
|
|
Conclusion. Global well being, pain, functional disability, and previous
|
|
costs are the most important predictors of short term direct medical
|
|
costs. Although we have demonstrated that regression models do not
|
|
perform better than previous costs in predicting future short term
|
|
costs, previous costs are a much less informative predictor than health
|
|
status variables. Variables such as functional disability and pain
|
|
identify potentially modifiable disease features and suggest
|
|
interventions that may improve patient well being and reduce costs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Clarke, AE (Corresponding Author), McGill Univ, Montreal Gen Hosp, Dept Med, Div Clin Epidemiol, 1650 Cedar Ave, Montreal, PQ H3G 1A4, Canada.
|
|
McGill Univ, Montreal Gen Hosp, Dept Med, Div Clin Epidemiol, Montreal, PQ H3G 1A4, Canada.
|
|
McGill Univ, Montreal Gen Hosp, Dept Med, Div Clin Immunol Allergy, Montreal, PQ H3G 1A4, Canada.
|
|
McGill Univ, Montreal Gen Hosp, Dept Med, Div Internal Med, Montreal, PQ H3G 1A4, Canada.
|
|
Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Med, Div Rheumatol, Saskatoon, SK S7N 0W0, Canada.
|
|
Univ British Columbia, Mary Pack Arthrit Ctr, Dept Med, Div Rheumatol, Vancouver, BC, Canada.},
|
|
ISSN = {0315-162X},
|
|
Keywords = {rheumatoid arthritis; health care costs; disability; predictors},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SYSTEMIC LUPUS-ERYTHEMATOSUS; MUSCULOSKELETAL DISORDERS; DISABILITY;
|
|
OUTCOMES; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rheumatology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {37},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000080003200011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000671199500001,
|
|
Author = {Arnaud, Catherine and Duffaut, Carine and Fauconnier, Jerome and
|
|
Schmidt, Silke and Himmelmann, Kate and Marcelli, Marco and Pennington,
|
|
Lindsay and Alvarelhao, Joaquim and Cytera, Chirine and Rapp, Marion and
|
|
Ehlinger, Virginie and Thyen, Ute},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of participation and quality of life of young adults with
|
|
cerebral palsy: longitudinal approach and comparison with the general
|
|
population - SPARCLE 3 study protocol},
|
|
Journal = {BMC NEUROLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JUN 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Effective inclusion in society for young people with
|
|
disabilities is increasingly seen as generating opportunities for
|
|
self-development, and improving well-being. However, significant
|
|
barriers remain in the vast majority of activities meaningful for young
|
|
adults. Research argues that various personal (disabilities, health) and
|
|
environmental (access to the resources needed, accessible environment,
|
|
discrimination, lack of personal economic independence) factors
|
|
contribute to limited participation. However, previous studies conducted
|
|
in young people with cerebral palsy (CP) mainly investigated the
|
|
transition period to adulthood, and did not fully consider the whole
|
|
range of impairment severity profiles or environmental barriers. In this
|
|
study, we will use the follow-up of the SPARCLE cohort and a comparison
|
|
group from the general population (1) to investigate the impact of the
|
|
environment on participation and quality of life of young adults with
|
|
CP, (2) to determine predictors of a successful young adulthood in
|
|
educational, professional, health and social fields, (3) to compare
|
|
quality of life and frequency of participation in social, work and
|
|
recreational activities with the general population, (4) to document on
|
|
participation and quality of life in those with severe disabilities.
|
|
Methods The SPARCLE3 study has a combined longitudinal and
|
|
cross-sectional design. Young adults with CP aged 22 to 27 years in 6
|
|
European regions previously enrolled in the SPARCLE cohort or newly
|
|
recruited will be invited to self-complete a comprehensive set of
|
|
questionnaires exploring participation (daily life and discretionary
|
|
activities), health-related quality of life, body function, personal
|
|
factors (health, personal resources), and contextual factors
|
|
(availability of needed environmental items, family environment,
|
|
services provision) during home visits supervised by trained
|
|
researchers. Proxy-reports or adapted questionnaires will be used for
|
|
those with the most severe impairments. The recruitment of a large group
|
|
from the general population (online survey) will enable to identify life
|
|
areas where the discrepancies between young people with CP and their
|
|
able-bodied peers are the most significant. Discussion This study will
|
|
help identify to what extent disabilities and barriers in environment
|
|
negatively affect participation and quality of life, and how previous
|
|
valued experiences during childhood or adolescence might modulate these
|
|
effects.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Arnaud, C (Corresponding Author), Toulouse3 Univ, Hop Paule Viguier, INSERM, UMR 1027,Team Sphere, 330 Ave Grande Bretagne,TSA 70034, F-31059 Toulouse, France.
|
|
Arnaud, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Hosp, Clin Epidemiol Unit, F-31059 Toulouse, France.
|
|
Arnaud, Catherine; Duffaut, Carine; Ehlinger, Virginie, Toulouse3 Univ, Hop Paule Viguier, INSERM, UMR 1027,Team Sphere, 330 Ave Grande Bretagne,TSA 70034, F-31059 Toulouse, France.
|
|
Arnaud, Catherine, Univ Hosp, Clin Epidemiol Unit, F-31059 Toulouse, France.
|
|
Fauconnier, Jerome, Univ Grenoble Alpes, Lab TIMC IMAG Equipe ThEMAS, Pavillon Taillefer CHU Grenoble CS10217, F-338043 Grenoble, France.
|
|
Schmidt, Silke; Cytera, Chirine, Univ Greifswald, Inst Psychol, Robert Blum Str 13, D-17489 Greifswald, Germany.
|
|
Himmelmann, Kate, Univ Gothenburg, Inst Clin Sci, Gothenburg, Sweden.
|
|
Marcelli, Marco, Azienda Sanit Locale Viterbo, Child \& Adolescent Neuropsychiat Unit Adult Disab, Via Enrico Fermi 15, I-01100 Viterbo, Italy.
|
|
Pennington, Lindsay, Newcastle Univ, Populat Hlth Sci Inst, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne \& Wear, England.
|
|
Alvarelhao, Joaquim, Campo Univ Santiago, Univ Aveiro, Sch Hlth Sci, Aveiro, Portugal.
|
|
Cytera, Chirine; Rapp, Marion; Thyen, Ute, Univ Lubeck, Dept Pediat \& Adolescent Med, Ratzeburger Allee 160, D-23538 Lubeck, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12883-021-02263-z},
|
|
Article-Number = {254},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2377},
|
|
Keywords = {Cerebral palsy; Participation; Quality of life; Health care; Employment;
|
|
Adulthood},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FUNCTION CLASSIFICATION-SYSTEM; HEALTH; CHILDREN; ADOLESCENTS;
|
|
RELIABILITY; VALIDITY; TRAJECTORIES; INDIVIDUALS; DISABILITY; OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology},
|
|
Author-Email = {catherine.arnaud@univ-tlse3.fr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Alvarelhão, José/M-4142-2013
|
|
marcelli, marco/AGR-6853-2022
|
|
ARNAUD, Catherine/AAC-5646-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {ARNAUD, Catherine/0000-0002-4002-802X
|
|
Schmidt, Silke/0000-0002-4194-1937
|
|
Pennington, Lindsay/0000-0002-4540-2586},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {72},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000671199500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000249558600005,
|
|
Author = {Lidal, Ingeborg Beate and Huynh, Tuan Khai and Biering-Sorensen, Fin},
|
|
Title = {Return to work following spinal cord injury: A review},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {17},
|
|
Pages = {1341-1375},
|
|
Month = {SEP 15},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose. To review literature on return to work (RTW) and employment in
|
|
persons with spinal cord injury (SCI), and present employment rates,
|
|
factors influencing employment, and interventions aimed at helping
|
|
people with SCI to obtain and sustain productive work.
|
|
Methods. A systematic review for 2000-2006 was carried out in
|
|
PubMed/Medline, AMED, (ISI) Web of Science, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycInfo and
|
|
Sociological abstracts database. The keywords `spinal cord injuries',
|
|
`spinal cord disorder', `spinal cord lesion' or `spinal cord disease'
|
|
were cross-indexed with `employment', `return to work', `occupation' or
|
|
`vocational'.
|
|
Results. Out of approximately 270 hits, 110 references were used, plus
|
|
13 more found elsewhere. Among individuals with SCI working at the time
|
|
of injury 21 - 67 \% returned to work after injury. RTW was higher in
|
|
persons injured at a younger age, had less severe injuries and higher
|
|
functional independence. Employment rate improved with time after SCI.
|
|
Persons with SCI employed ranged from 11.5\% to 74\%. Individuals who
|
|
sustained SCI during childhood or adolescence had higher adult
|
|
employment rates. Most common reported barriers to employment were
|
|
problems with transportation, health and physical limitations, lack of
|
|
work experience, education or training, physical or architectural
|
|
barriers, discrimination by employers, and loss of benefits. Individuals
|
|
with SCI discontinue working at younger age.
|
|
Conclusions. This review confirmed low employment rates after SCI.
|
|
Future research should explore interventions aimed at helping people
|
|
with SCI to obtain and sustain productive work.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lidal, IB (Corresponding Author), Sunnaas Rehabil Hosp, Dept Res, N-1450 Nesoddtangen, Norway.
|
|
Sunnaas Rehabil Hosp, Dept Res, N-1450 Nesoddtangen, Norway.
|
|
Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Ctr Neurosci, Clin Spinal Cord Injuries, Rigshosp, Copenhagen, Denmark.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09638280701320839},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {spinal cord injuries; spinal cord lesion; spinal cord disorder;
|
|
employment; return to work; occupation; vocational},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; COMMUNITY INTEGRATION; ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY; EMPLOYMENT
|
|
OUTCOMES; INDIVIDUALS; PEOPLE; SATISFACTION; PARTICIPATION;
|
|
REHABILITATION; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {ingeborg.lidal@sunnaas.no},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lidal, Ingeborg Beate/0000-0003-1534-5178
|
|
Biering-Sorensen, Fin/0000-0002-2186-0144},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {123},
|
|
Times-Cited = {187},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {28},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000249558600005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000332308700006,
|
|
Author = {Shutes, Isabel and Taylor, Rebecca},
|
|
Title = {Conditionality and the Financing of Employment Services - Implications
|
|
for the Social Divisions of Work and Welfare},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL POLICY \& ADMINISTRATION},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {48},
|
|
Number = {2, SI},
|
|
Pages = {204-220},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Increasing conditionality in access to welfare has been central to the
|
|
reform of welfare states (Dean 2004; Dwyer 2004) and to the development
|
|
of welfare-to-work policies and programmes (Peck 2001). This article
|
|
addresses the ways in which the reform of employment services has,
|
|
likewise, been marked by increasing conditionality in the financing of a
|
|
market of those services. This form of conditionality involves the
|
|
obligation of contracted providers to achieve employment outcomes as a
|
|
condition of funding. The article examines how conditionality in the
|
|
financing of employment services impacts on the provision of services to
|
|
unemployed groups, and more disadvantaged groups in particular, and the
|
|
implications for the social divisions of work and welfare.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shutes, I (Corresponding Author), London Sch Econ, Dept Social Policy, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Shutes, Isabel, London Sch Econ, Dept Social Policy, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Taylor, Rebecca, Univ Birmingham, Sect Res Ctr 3, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/spol.12057},
|
|
ISSN = {0144-5596},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-9515},
|
|
Keywords = {Quasi-markets; Conditionality; Employment services; Social divisions},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TO-WORK; AUSTRALIA; UK; PERFORMANCE; ASSISTANCE; GENDER; MARKET; RIGHTS;
|
|
STATES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Public Administration; Social Issues; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {I.H.Shutes@lse.ac.uk
|
|
R.Taylor.5@bham.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shutes, Isabel/0000-0002-5325-3541
|
|
Taylor, Rebecca/0000-0002-8677-0246},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000332308700006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000240959100100,
|
|
Author = {Flores, Glenn and Abreu, Milagros and Tomany-Korman, Sandra C.},
|
|
Title = {Why are Latinos the most uninsured racial/ethnic group of US children? A
|
|
community-based study of risk factors for and consequences of being an
|
|
uninsured Latino child},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {118},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {E730-E740},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND. Latinos continue to be the most uninsured racial/ethnic
|
|
group of US children, but not enough is known about the risk factors for
|
|
and consequences of not being insured in Latino children.
|
|
OBJECTIVE. The objective of this study was to identify the risk factors
|
|
for and consequences of being uninsured in Latino children.
|
|
METHODS. A cross-sectional survey was conducted of parents at urban,
|
|
predominantly Latino community sites, including supermarkets, beauty
|
|
salons, and laundromats. Parents were asked 76 questions on access and
|
|
health insurance.
|
|
RESULTS. Interviews were conducted of 1100 parents, 900 of whom were
|
|
Latino. Uninsured Latino children were significantly more likely than
|
|
insured Latino children to be older (mean age: 9 vs 7 years) and poor
|
|
(89\% vs 72\%) and to have parents who are limited in English
|
|
proficiency (86\% vs 65\%), non-US citizens (87\% vs 64\%), and both
|
|
employed (35\% vs 27\%). Uninsured Latinos were significantly less
|
|
likely than their insured counterparts to have a regular physician (84\%
|
|
vs 99\%) and significantly more likely not to be brought in for needed
|
|
medical care because of expense, lack of insurance, difficulty making
|
|
appointments, inconvenient office hours, and cultural issues. In
|
|
multivariable analyses, parents who are undocumented or documented
|
|
immigrants, both parents working, the child's age, and the \$4000 to
|
|
\$9999 and \$15 000 to \$19 999 family income quintiles were the only
|
|
factors that were significantly associated with a child's being
|
|
uninsured; neither Latino ethnicity nor any other of 6 variables were
|
|
associated with being uninsured. Compared with insured Latino children,
|
|
uninsured Latino children had 23 times the odds of having no regular
|
|
physician and were significantly more likely not to be brought in for
|
|
needed medical care because of expense, lack of health insurance,
|
|
difficulty making appointments, and cultural barriers.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS. After adjustment, parental noncitizenship, having 2 parents
|
|
work, low family income, and older child age are associated with being
|
|
an uninsured child, but Latino ethnicity is not. The higher prevalence
|
|
of other risk factors seems to account for Latino children's high risk
|
|
for being uninsured. Uninsured Latino children are significantly more
|
|
likely than insured Latino children to have no regular physician and not
|
|
to get needed medical care because of expense, lack of health insurance,
|
|
difficulty making appointments, and cultural barriers. These findings
|
|
indicate specific high-risk populations that might benefit most from
|
|
targeted Medicaid and State Child Health Insurance Program outreach and
|
|
enrollment efforts.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Flores, G (Corresponding Author), Med Coll Wisconsin, Dept Pediat, Ctr Adv Underserved Children, 8701 Watertown Plank Rd, Milwaukee, WI 53226 USA.
|
|
Med Coll Wisconsin, Dept Pediat, Ctr Adv Underserved Children, Milwaukee, WI 53226 USA.
|
|
Med Coll Wisconsin, Hlth Policy Inst, Dept Epidemiol, Milwaukee, WI 53226 USA.
|
|
Childrens Hosp Wisconsin, Childrens Res Inst, Milwaukee, WI 53201 USA.
|
|
Boston Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA 02215 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1542/peds.2005-2599},
|
|
ISSN = {0031-4005},
|
|
Keywords = {uninsured; Hispanic Americans; children; pediatrics; health services
|
|
research; health status; medical home},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-INSURANCE; UNITED-STATES; PRIMARY-CARE; ACCESS; PARENTS;
|
|
LANGUAGE; SERVICES; BARRIERS; COVERAGE; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {gflores@mcw.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {45},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000240959100100},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000447408801116,
|
|
Author = {Plaisir, Jean-Yves},
|
|
Editor = {Chova, LG and Martinez, AL and Torres, IC},
|
|
Title = {GARNERING SUPPORTS FOR MALE ROLE MODELS IN EARLY EDUCATION AND CARE
|
|
SETTINGS},
|
|
Booktitle = {12TH INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE
|
|
(INTED)},
|
|
Series = {INTED Proceedings},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Pages = {1747-1755},
|
|
Note = {12th International Technology, Education and Development Conference
|
|
(INTED), Valencia, SPAIN, MAR 05-07, 2018},
|
|
Abstract = {The lack of diversity in professions that have been dominated by one
|
|
social group has created a crisis that calls for partnerships between
|
|
government and civil society actors to create innovative models of
|
|
workforce development and timely policy decisions to dismantle
|
|
long-standing barriers of exclusion and income gaps based on race,
|
|
gender, class, religion, sexual orientation, and other constructs. The
|
|
field of early childhood education (ECE) has been impacted by long-run
|
|
social problems such as gender-imbalance (Skelton, 2011; Rohrmann, 2012;
|
|
Mottint, 2013), cultural barriers (Pruit, 2015; Drudy, 2008),
|
|
stereotypes about male teachers' nurturing abilities (Sargent, 2004;
|
|
Johnson, Middleton, Nicholson, \& Sandrick, 2010), homophobic reactions
|
|
(Pruit, 2015; King, 1998) and low-paying jobs (Whitebook et al., 2016;
|
|
Cooney \& Bittner, 2001), which have collectively deterred men from
|
|
working with young children. Empirical research can provide much-needed
|
|
data to help practitioners and policymakers make sentient decisions to
|
|
take on these social challenges. This paper shares findings from a
|
|
place-based study that uses mixed methods (e.g., surveys, interviews,
|
|
and on-site observations) to examine strategic efforts toward increasing
|
|
men's engagement in the ECE workforce. One of the study's key research
|
|
question is: How can empirical data inform governmental agencies and
|
|
civil society to garner more supports for augmenting male participation
|
|
in the ECE field? Over a twelve-month period, the study has gleaned and
|
|
analyzed empirical data from more than 60 culturally and linguistically
|
|
diverse male educators and program administrators (both male and female)
|
|
who work in a variety of early education and care programs operating in
|
|
low, moderate, and high-resource neighborhoods throughout New York City.
|
|
The research uses SPSS, NVivo and SurveyMonkey in its analysis to
|
|
triangulate demographic information and employment-related themes that
|
|
emerge from the data. This methodology has helped to uncover recurrent
|
|
patterns in the analysis of factors that influence men's engagement in
|
|
the ECE field. The paper concludes that gender-flexible policy and
|
|
equitable salary will reinforce institutional efforts that aim to
|
|
enhance men's involvement in the early childhood education workforce.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Plaisir, JY (Corresponding Author), Borough Manhattan Community Coll CUNY, New York, NY 10007 USA.
|
|
Plaisir, Jean-Yves, Borough Manhattan Community Coll CUNY, New York, NY 10007 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {2340-1079},
|
|
ISBN = {978-84-697-9480-7},
|
|
Keywords = {Men; early childhood education; recruitment; gender; policy; diversity},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000447408801116},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000241384800004,
|
|
Author = {Ginn, Jay and Fast, Janet},
|
|
Title = {Employment and social integration in midlife - Preferred and actual time
|
|
use across welfare regime types},
|
|
Journal = {RESEARCH ON AGING},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {669-690},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Policy makers aim to raise the retirement age for economic reasons. For
|
|
individuals, longer employment maintains income and social contacts.
|
|
However, retirement allows more time for socially integrating activities
|
|
with family and friends. There is therefore tension for midlife
|
|
individuals between the perceived advantages of employment and
|
|
retirement. Welfare states vary in policies toward older workers, in
|
|
terms of incentives for working longer or ``early exit:{''} which may
|
|
influence individuals' preferences concerning retirement timing. Data
|
|
from 20 European countries were used to examine middle-aged women's and
|
|
men's attitudes toward employment and other time uses. The analysis
|
|
incorporated age, gender, socioeconomic circumstances, and type of
|
|
welfare regime. Work-life conflict was evident, expressed as preferring
|
|
more time for family, friends, and leisure, especially where employment
|
|
rates were highest and more for women than men. Many full-timers
|
|
preferred shorter hours. Differences between desired and actual
|
|
employment status were greatest among working-class, female, and older
|
|
individuals. Unmet demand for jobs was most common in transitional and
|
|
Mediterranean welfare states. The likelihood of employment was related
|
|
to the type of welfare regime.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ginn, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Surrey, Surrey, England.
|
|
Univ Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2M7, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0164027506291748},
|
|
ISSN = {0164-0275},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-7573},
|
|
Keywords = {social integration; welfare regimes; gender; employment; retirement
|
|
timing},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {j.ginn@surrey.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000241384800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000580051200030,
|
|
Author = {Bakketeig, Elisiv and Boddy, Janet and Gundersen, Tonje and Ostergaard,
|
|
Jeanette and Hanrahan, Fidelma},
|
|
Title = {Deconstructing doing well; what can we learn from care experienced young
|
|
people in England, Denmark and Norway?},
|
|
Journal = {CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {118},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper addresses the conceptualization of `outcomes' for care
|
|
experienced people through an in-depth longitudinal study of 75 young
|
|
adults in Denmark, England and Norway. `Outcome' studies have played a
|
|
crucial role in raising awareness of the risk of disadvantage that care
|
|
experienced people face, across a variety of domains including education
|
|
and employment. These studies may have an unintended consequence,
|
|
however, if care experienced people are predominantly viewed, and
|
|
studied, through a problem-focused lens. The danger is that policy and
|
|
research neglects other - perhaps less readily measurable - aspects of
|
|
experience, including subjective understandings - what matters to care
|
|
experienced people themselves. Our analyses are based on an in-depth
|
|
qualitative longitudinal study, which explored meanings of `doing well'
|
|
over time among care experienced people (aged 16-32), all of whom were
|
|
`successful' in relation to traditional indicators of participation in
|
|
education and/or employment (including voluntary work). Across
|
|
countries, their accounts revealed the importance of attending to
|
|
subjective and dynamic understandings of `doing well', and the
|
|
significance of ordinary, mundane and `do-able' lives. Participants'
|
|
narratives highlight aspects of doing well that raise challenging
|
|
questions about how traditional outcome indicators - and corresponding
|
|
policy priorities - might better capture what young people themselves
|
|
see as important. A narrow interpretation of outcomes may lead to
|
|
misrecognition of what it means to do well, and so to a stigmatizing
|
|
`way of seeing' care experienced lives. A broader conceptualization of
|
|
outcomes is necessary to recognize - and so to develop policy and
|
|
services to support - the complex, dynamic relationality of doing well.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bakketeig, E (Corresponding Author), OsloMet Oslo Metropolitan Univ, Norwegian Social Res NOVA, Pb 4, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Bakketeig, Elisiv; Gundersen, Tonje, OsloMet Oslo Metropolitan Univ, Norwegian Social Res NOVA, Pb 4, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Boddy, Janet, Univ Sussex, Ctr Innovat \& Res Childhood \& Youth, Sussex House, Brighton BN1 9RH, E Sussex, England.
|
|
Ostergaard, Jeanette, VIVE Danish Ctr Social Sci Res, Herluf Trolles Gade 11, DK-1052 Copenhagen K, Denmark.
|
|
Hanrahan, Fidelma, Res Practice, Dartington Hall, Totnes TQ9 6EE, Devon, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.105333},
|
|
Article-Number = {105333},
|
|
ISSN = {0190-7409},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7765},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILD; RECOGNITION; ADULTHOOD; LEAVERS; STIGMA; MOTHERHOOD; PREGNANCY;
|
|
PATHWAYS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {elba@oslomet.no
|
|
j.m.boddy@sussex.ac.uk
|
|
togun@oslomet.no
|
|
jea@vive.dk
|
|
Fidelma.Hanrahan@researchinpractice.org.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ostergaard, Jeanette/0000-0002-6659-7423},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {75},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000580051200030},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000080613400030,
|
|
Author = {Thyen, U and Kuhlthau, K and Perrin, JM},
|
|
Title = {Employment, child care, and mental health of mothers caring for children
|
|
assisted by technology},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {1999},
|
|
Volume = {103},
|
|
Number = {6, 1},
|
|
Pages = {1235-1242},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective. This study examines 1) the way that children with chronic
|
|
conditions are cared for at home and assisted by technology affects
|
|
maternal employment and child care; 2) the social and clinical factors
|
|
associated with the decision of a mother to quit employment to care for
|
|
a child at home; and 3) the way in which care at home and the decision
|
|
of a mother to quit a job affects maternal mental health.
|
|
Design. The 6-month postdischarge status of 70 mothers of children
|
|
assisted by technology (study group) was compared with the 6-month
|
|
postdischarge status of 58 mothers of children (matched for age and
|
|
gender) hospitalized for acute illnesses (comparison group). Between
|
|
January and December 1993, we gathered information on sociodemographic
|
|
status, employment status and changes in employment, severity of the
|
|
child's condition, child care and nursing services at home, family
|
|
support, and maternal mental health.
|
|
Results. One third of mothers in the study group reported that they quit
|
|
employment to take fare of a child at home with only 37.1\% remaining
|
|
employed outside the home, compared with 69.0\% of comparison group
|
|
mothers. Single caretakers were 15 times more likely to quit employment
|
|
compared with mothers in two-parent families. Availability of child care
|
|
had an independent effect on a mother's decision to quit a job, whereas
|
|
the severity of the child's condition did not. Child care hours were
|
|
significantly lower in study group families and were provided mostly by
|
|
relatives compared with daycare facilities and regular babysitters in
|
|
comparison families. Family support was highest among employed mothers
|
|
in both the study and the comparison groups and lowest in study group
|
|
mothers who were neither employed currently nor before the child's
|
|
illness or who had quit employment to care for the child. Family income
|
|
was significantly lower in families with a child assisted by technology.
|
|
Families in the study group had 20-fold higher uncompensated health care
|
|
costs than did the comparison group. Mothers caring for a child assisted
|
|
by technology reported less good mental health than did comparison group
|
|
mothers, and employment seems to mediate this relationship.
|
|
Conclusions. Caring for a child assisted by technology seems to create
|
|
barriers to maternal employment diminishing family resources at a time
|
|
when financial needs actually may increase. Lack of family support and
|
|
child care services increase the likelihood that mothers of children
|
|
assisted by technology will stay out of the labor force. Remaining
|
|
employed buffers the negative effects of care at home on maternal mental
|
|
health. Health policies for children with chronic health problems should
|
|
address issues of financial burdens and the labor force participation of
|
|
their caretakers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Thyen, U (Corresponding Author), Univ Lubeck, Klin Padiat, Kahlhorststr 31-35, D-23538 Lubeck, Germany.
|
|
Univ Lubeck, Klin Padiat, D-23538 Lubeck, Germany.
|
|
Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Div Gen Pediat, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
|
|
Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Boston, MA 02115 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1542/peds.103.6.1235},
|
|
ISSN = {0031-4005},
|
|
EISSN = {1098-4275},
|
|
Keywords = {chronic illness; home care; technology assisted; family support;
|
|
employment; quality of life; child care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PSYCHOLOGICAL ADJUSTMENT; FAMILY; STRESS; WOMEN; WORK; DISABILITIES;
|
|
FATHERS; IMPACT; PARENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {uthyen@compuserve.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Perrin, James/0000-0002-1810-3708},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {135},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000080613400030},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000263169400003,
|
|
Author = {Wrede, Sirpa and Benoit, Cecilia and Einarsdottir, Thorgerdur},
|
|
Title = {Equity and Dignity in Maternity Care Provision in Canada, Finland and
|
|
Iceland},
|
|
Journal = {CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE SANTE PUBLIQUE},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {99},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {S16-S21},
|
|
Month = {NOV-DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: In recent decades, governments around the globe have been
|
|
under pressure to create more efficient and effective health care
|
|
systems. Research shows, particularly in middle- and low-income
|
|
countries, that many of these neo-liberal policies that have been
|
|
enacted have had a largely negative effect with regard to equitable
|
|
health services for lower-income populations and dignified working
|
|
conditions for health providers. In this paper we highlight recent
|
|
reforms in health care in Canada, focusing on formal care during
|
|
pregnancy and childbirth, and compare these to parallel developments in
|
|
two Nordic countries - Finland and Iceland.
|
|
Method: We draw upon secondary data sources and primary research
|
|
findings.
|
|
Results: Our comparative analysis pays close attention to barriers in
|
|
access to primary care services across the childbearing period for
|
|
lower-income women in the three countries, as well as the factors that
|
|
create poor working conditions for the predominantly female maternity
|
|
care labour force.
|
|
Discussion: As Canada struggles to deal with the crisis in its maternity
|
|
care system, it could learn from developments in Finland and Iceland
|
|
that promote teamwork among primary health care professionals and
|
|
high-quality care for lower-income populations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wrede, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Helsinki, Swedish Sch Social Sci, POB 16, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Wrede, Sirpa, Univ Helsinki, Swedish Sch Social Sci, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Benoit, Cecilia, Univ Victoria, Dept Sociol, Victoria, BC, Canada.
|
|
Einarsdottir, Thorgerdur, Univ Iceland, Dept Sociol, Reykjavik, Iceland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/BF03403799},
|
|
ISSN = {0008-4263},
|
|
EISSN = {1920-7476},
|
|
Keywords = {Health care reform; equity; dignity; maternity care; lower-income
|
|
populations},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; MIDWIFERY; CONTEXT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {sirpa.wrede@helsinki.fi},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Einarsdottir, THorgerdur J./0000-0001-8906-0760
|
|
Wrede, Sirpa/0000-0001-7358-2097},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000263169400003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000089176100003,
|
|
Author = {Levernier, W and Partridge, MD and Rickman, DS},
|
|
Title = {The causes of regional variations in US poverty: A cross-county analysis},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF REGIONAL SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2000},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {473-497},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The persistence of poverty in the modem American Economy, with rates of
|
|
poverty in some areas approaching those of less advanced economies,
|
|
remains a central concern among policy makers. Therefore, in this study
|
|
we use U.S. county-level data to explore potential explanations for the
|
|
observed regional variation in the rates of poverty. The use of counties
|
|
allows Examination of both nonmetropolitan area and metropolitan area
|
|
poverty factors considered include those that relate to both area
|
|
economic performance and area demographic composition. Specific county
|
|
economic factors examined include economic growth, industry
|
|
restructuring, and labor market skills mismatches.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Levernier, W (Corresponding Author), Georgia So Univ, Dept Finance \& Econ, Statesboro, GA 30458 USA.
|
|
Georgia So Univ, Dept Finance \& Econ, Statesboro, GA 30458 USA.
|
|
St Cloud State Univ, Dept Econ, St Cloud, MN 56301 USA.
|
|
Oklahoma State Univ, Dept Econ \& Legal Studies, Stillwater, OK 74078 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/0022-4146.00184},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-4146},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-9787},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPATIAL MISMATCH HYPOTHESIS; WAGE INEQUALITY; LABOR-MARKET;
|
|
METROPOLITAN-AREAS; EMPLOYMENT GROWTH; BLACK-YOUTH; MIGRATION;
|
|
IMMIGRATION; DEMAND; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Environmental Studies; Regional \& Urban Planning},
|
|
Author-Email = {mpartridge@stcloudstate.edu
|
|
rdan@okway.okstate.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rickman, Dan/0000-0003-1233-7420},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {78},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000089176100003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000624424300001,
|
|
Author = {Nutz, Theresa and Lersch, Philipp M.},
|
|
Title = {Gendered employment trajectories and individual wealth at older ages in
|
|
Eastern and Western Germany},
|
|
Journal = {ADVANCES IN LIFE COURSE RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This study examines the association between employment trajectories and
|
|
retired men's and women's individual wealth at older ages in the two
|
|
distinct welfare state contexts of Eastern and Western Germany. Because
|
|
of the increasing re-marketization of retirement provisions, wealth is
|
|
becoming increasingly important for retirees' economic well-being. Using
|
|
data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (2002, 2007, 2012 and
|
|
2017), we conduct sequence and cluster analyses to identify groups of
|
|
typical employment trajectories of men and women in Eastern and Western
|
|
Germany. For men, we find that continuous full-time employment is
|
|
positively associated with net wealth at older ages, whereas early
|
|
retirement and long-term unemployment are negatively associated with
|
|
wealth. These associations are similar for housing and non-housing
|
|
wealth in both contexts. For women in Western Germany, a low labour
|
|
market participation is associated with higher levels of housing wealth
|
|
and lower levels of non-housing wealth compared with female full-time
|
|
employees. The results point to gendered wealth accumulation due to
|
|
differences in men's and women's labour market participation in
|
|
gender-unequal welfare state contexts. The associations between
|
|
employment and wealth are slightly weaker in Eastern Germany, indicating
|
|
that the socialist regime of the GDR restricted the ability to
|
|
accumulate wealth.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nutz, T (Corresponding Author), Humboldt Univ, Dept Social Sci, Univ Str 3b, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Nutz, Theresa; Lersch, Philipp M., Humboldt Univ, Dept Social Sci, Univ Str 3b, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Lersch, Philipp M., DIW Berlin, Mohrenstr 58, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.alcr.2020.100374},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {100374},
|
|
ISSN = {1040-2608},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment; Gender; Wealth accumulation; Retirement; Sequence analysis;
|
|
Welfare states},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FAMILY LIFE COURSES; DE-STANDARDIZATION; SEQUENCE-ANALYSIS; BABY
|
|
BOOMERS; WORK; INEQUALITY; PATTERNS; PENSION; INCOME; INHERITANCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {theresa.nutz@hu-berlin.de
|
|
p.m.lersch@hu-berlin.de},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Nutz, Theresa/0000-0002-5803-6810},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000624424300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000275443400001,
|
|
Author = {Dziak, Ewelina and Janzen, Bonnie L. and Muhajarine, Nazeem},
|
|
Title = {Inequalities in the psychological well-being of employed, single and
|
|
partnered mothers: the role of psychosocial work quality and work-family
|
|
conflict},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Month = {FEB 22},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: A large body of international research reveals that single
|
|
mothers experience poorer mental health than their partnered
|
|
counterparts, with socioeconomic disadvantage identified as an important
|
|
contributory factor in understanding this health disparity. Much less
|
|
research, however, has focused specifically on the psychological
|
|
well-being of single mothers who are employed, despite their growing
|
|
presence in the labor force. Of the research which has considered
|
|
employment, the focus has been on employment status per se rather than
|
|
on other important work-related factors which may impact psychological
|
|
health, such as psychosocial work quality and work-family conflict. The
|
|
aim of this study was to: (1) compare employed single mothers and
|
|
employed partnered mothers on measures of psychological distress,
|
|
psychosocial work quality and work-family conflict; and (2) explore the
|
|
potential role of work-family conflict and psychosocial work quality as
|
|
explanations for any observed differences in psychological distress
|
|
based on partner status.
|
|
Method: Analysis of data obtained from a cross-sectional telephone
|
|
survey of employed parents in a mid-sized Western Canadian city.
|
|
Analyses were based on 674 employed mothers (438 partnered and 236
|
|
single), who were 25-50 years old, with at least one child in the
|
|
household.
|
|
Results: Compared to employed single mothers, employed partnered mothers
|
|
were older, had more education and reported fewer hours of paid work.
|
|
Single mothers reported higher levels of psychological distress,
|
|
financial hardship, work-family conflict and poor psychosocial work
|
|
quality. Statistical adjustment for income adequacy, psychosocial work
|
|
quality and work-family conflict each independently resulted in single
|
|
motherhood no longer being associated with psychological distress.
|
|
Conclusions: While single employed mothers did experience higher levels
|
|
of psychological distress than their partnered counterparts, differences
|
|
between these groups of women in income adequacy, psychosocial work
|
|
quality, and work-family conflict were found to explain this
|
|
relationship. Future research employing a longitudinal design and
|
|
subject to lower selection biases is required to tease out the
|
|
interrelationship of these three life strains and to point to the most
|
|
appropriate economic and social policies to support single mothers in
|
|
the workforce.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Janzen, BL (Corresponding Author), Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Epidemiol \& Community Hlth, Hlth Sci Bldg,107 Wiggins Rd, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5E5, Canada.
|
|
Dziak, Ewelina; Janzen, Bonnie L.; Muhajarine, Nazeem, Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Epidemiol \& Community Hlth, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5E5, Canada.
|
|
Muhajarine, Nazeem, Univ Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan Populat Hlth \& Evaluat Res Unit, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5E5, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1475-9276-9-6},
|
|
Article-Number = {6},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH; SCREENING SCALES; DISTRESS; STRESS; STRAIN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {bonnie.janzen@usask.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Muhajarine, Nazeem/D-7360-2012},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {56},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {63},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000275443400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000378147200008,
|
|
Author = {Douglas, Elaine and Waller, Jo and Duffy, Stephen W. and Wardle, Jane},
|
|
Title = {Socioeconomic inequalities in breast and cervical screening coverage in
|
|
England: are we closing the gap?},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCREENING},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {98-103},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: Health policy in the UK is committed to tackling inequalities
|
|
in cancer screening participation. We examined whether socioeconomic
|
|
inequalities in breast and cervical cancer screening participation in
|
|
England have reduced over five years.
|
|
Methods: Cross-sectional analyses compared cervical and breast screening
|
|
coverage between 2007/8 and 2012/13 in Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) in
|
|
England in relation to area-level income deprivation.
|
|
Results: At the start and the end of this five year period, there were
|
|
socioeconomic inequalities in screening coverage for breast and cervical
|
|
screening. Inequalities were highest for breast screening. Over time,
|
|
the coverage gap between the highest and lowest quintiles of income
|
|
deprivation significantly reduced for breast screening (from 12.3 to 8.3
|
|
percentage points), but not for cervical screening (5.3 to 4.9
|
|
percentage points).
|
|
Conclusions: Efforts to reduce screening inequalities appear to have
|
|
resulted in a significant improvement in equitable delivery of breast
|
|
screening, although not of cervical screening. More work is needed to
|
|
understand the differences, and see whether broader lessons can be
|
|
learned from the reduction of inequalities in breast screening
|
|
participation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wardle, J (Corresponding Author), UCL, Dept Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, Gower St, London WC1E 6BT, England.
|
|
Douglas, Elaine; Waller, Jo; Wardle, Jane, UCL, Dept Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, Hlth Behav Res Ctr, Gower St, London WC1E 6BT, England.
|
|
Duffy, Stephen W., Queen Mary Univ London, Wolfson Inst Prevent Med, Ctr Canc Prevent, London EC1M 6BQ, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0969141315600192},
|
|
ISSN = {0969-1413},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-5793},
|
|
Keywords = {cancer screening; coverage; socioeconomic inequalities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CANCER; HEALTH; DIAGNOSIS; PROGRAMS; EAST},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {j.wardle@ucl.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Waller, Jo/C-1705-2008
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Waller, Jo/0000-0003-4025-9132
|
|
Douglas, Elaine/0000-0001-8540-1126},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {56},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000378147200008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000378329000009,
|
|
Author = {Miriti, L. C. and Gikaara, D. M. and Gitonga, J. and Waiganjo, M. M.},
|
|
Editor = {Wesonga, JM and Opiyo, AM},
|
|
Title = {Mapping Gender Concerns in Cut-Flower Value Chains in Kenya},
|
|
Booktitle = {I INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON ORNAMENTALS IN AFRICA},
|
|
Series = {Acta Horticulturae},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {1077},
|
|
Pages = {95-104},
|
|
Note = {1st International Symposium on Ornamentals in Africa, Naivasha, KENYA,
|
|
SEP 09-13, 2013},
|
|
Abstract = {The cut flower industry is one of Kenya's fastest growing foreign
|
|
exchange earners. The industry is dominated by large-scale sophisticated
|
|
outfits, growing mainly flowers in greenhouses. Employer-employee
|
|
relations in flower plantations at times develop in the context of
|
|
infringement of human, social, and labour rights. Recurrent problems
|
|
such as exposure to toxic chemicals without appropriate protective gear
|
|
and employment terms are rarely addressed. Consequently, women who are
|
|
normally employed as unskilled workers in flower production greenhouses
|
|
are more vulnerable. In order to change the prevailing inequality and
|
|
allow equal relations in flower industry, it is necessary to understand
|
|
details of the current situation. The study aimed at mapping existing
|
|
data on gender concerns in cut flower sub-sector, with the view of
|
|
offering suggestions for establishment of proactive gender policies and
|
|
gender mainstreaming frameworks. Secondary sources of data were used to
|
|
gather information. A combination of library/internet search and desk
|
|
study was used to ensure exhaustion of access to existing data. The
|
|
contents of the documents accessed were analysed systematically to
|
|
reveal the key dimensions presented in the data. This study traced a
|
|
wide range of gender concerns covering four main themes; gender rights
|
|
and participation, gender and employment, gender and sexual harassment
|
|
and gender in small holder flower value chain. For the code of conduct
|
|
to be effective, it must be gender sensitive with a continual process of
|
|
awareness raising and improvement with an ultimate aim of fostering a
|
|
work environment where the social and economic rights of workers are
|
|
respected. This requires an education process of management and workers
|
|
on recognising that improving labour conditions through gender sensitive
|
|
policies and frameworks would enhance productivity and quality of work.
|
|
It is in the interest of all stakeholders, including the government,
|
|
trade unions, workers, among others, to ensure that this occurs.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Miriti, LC (Corresponding Author), Natl Hort Res Ctr, Kenya Agr Res Inst, POB 220-01000, Thika, Kenya.
|
|
Miriti, L. C.; Gikaara, D. M.; Gitonga, J., Natl Hort Res Ctr, Kenya Agr Res Inst, POB 220-01000, Thika, Kenya.
|
|
Waiganjo, M. M., Dept Agr Livestock \& Fisheries, Kiambu, Kiambu County, Kenya.},
|
|
DOI = {10.17660/ActaHortic.2015.1077.9},
|
|
ISSN = {0567-7572},
|
|
ISBN = {978-94-62610-70-5},
|
|
Keywords = {flowers; Kenya; existing data; gender relations; large scale},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Horticulture},
|
|
Author-Email = {lydiahmiriti@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {14},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000378329000009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000595937600001,
|
|
Author = {Costas, Anton},
|
|
Title = {A new post-pandemic social contract. The role of the Social Economy},
|
|
Journal = {CIRIEC-ESPANA REVISTA DE ECONOMIA PUBLICA SOCIAL Y COOPERATIVA},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {100},
|
|
Pages = {11-29},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Beyond the insidious and morally contemptible personality of the
|
|
authoritarian political leaders that have emerged in the last decade,
|
|
the political ``supply{''} of populism responds to a real ``demand{''}
|
|
for popular policies that exists in advanced societies. This demands a
|
|
rebalancing of economic policies in favour of the working classes, the
|
|
middle classes and the social groups that have not benefited from the
|
|
economic growth of the last decades.
|
|
This social demand responds to an objective cause: the increase in
|
|
inequalities and economic insecurity. Coinciding with the neoliberal
|
|
shift in social and economic policies that accompanied the shift to
|
|
conservatism in the late 1970s and with the hyper-globalization and the
|
|
change of skin that global corporate capitalism experienced from the
|
|
1990s onward, large groups of middle classes in developed countries saw
|
|
their jobs, their welfare, their opportunities, and the lifestyles of
|
|
the communities in which they lived disappear or deteriorate. The
|
|
Covid-19 pandemic has only accentuated these inequalities.
|
|
This malaise with inequality and economic insecurity is fertile ground
|
|
for political polarization and authoritarian political populism. In this
|
|
sense, inequality and economic insecurity have acted as a powerful
|
|
solvent of the glue that every liberal society needs to function
|
|
harmoniously, to make the market economy inclusive, and to prevent
|
|
democracy from falling into the chaos of authoritarian populism.
|
|
The challenge now is to rebuild that glue, as it was done after the
|
|
Great Depression of the 1930s and World War 11. This essay argues,
|
|
first, that this glue must come from a new post-pandemic social
|
|
contract. Secondly, that the core of that new social contract is in the
|
|
reform of the enterprise to correct the misallocation of surplus (value
|
|
added) between wages, top management salaries and dividends.
|
|
The correction of this malfunctioning distribution requires
|
|
investigating its causes. Here it is argued that there are two. On the
|
|
one hand, the bias that capitalism acquired from the eighties in benefit
|
|
of shareholders and to the detriment of workers, suppliers, customers
|
|
and communities. On the other hand, that corporate concentration and the
|
|
market power acquired by large corporations has led to stagnation of
|
|
real wages and the precarization of employment.
|
|
The malfunctioning of distribution is not, however, the only source of
|
|
inequality and economic insecurity. They also come from the
|
|
malfunctioning of pre-distribution. To the extent that technological
|
|
change has opened a gap between the capabilities and skills of the
|
|
population and the professional profiles needed by companies, this gap
|
|
brings about inequality of income and employment opportunities. On the
|
|
other hand, the redistributive mechanisms of the Welfare State, both
|
|
taxes and social programs, have seen their capacity to correct the
|
|
inequality produced by the economy reduced.
|
|
To respond to this inequality and economic insecurity, the political
|
|
offer of new social contracts is wide and varied: the neoliberal, the
|
|
extreme right, the extreme left and the radical progressive. All try to
|
|
respond to the problem of distribution, but they do so through different
|
|
paths, depending on whether they emphasize pre-distribution,
|
|
redistribution, or distribution. The historical experience of the 1930s
|
|
teaches us that not everyone is well reconciled with the future.
|
|
A new progressive social contract must be based on the recovery of the
|
|
fundamental role of the third pillar of prosperity: the Social Economy.
|
|
Its abandonment in recent decades in favour of the market and the State
|
|
is one of the causes of the inability of market economies to generate
|
|
good jobs now.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Costas, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Costas, Anton, Univ Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.7203/CIRIEC-E.100.18715},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-8093},
|
|
EISSN = {1989-6816},
|
|
Keywords = {Social contract; progress; democracy; Social Economy; pandemic},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {acostas@ub.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {15},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000595937600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000886529700004,
|
|
Author = {Bhambhani, Yash and Gallo, Laurie},
|
|
Title = {Developing and Adapting a Mindfulness-Based Group Intervention for
|
|
Racially and Economically Marginalized Patients in the Bronx br},
|
|
Journal = {COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {771-786},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs; e.g., MBSR, MBCT, ACT) have been
|
|
widely used and disseminated for treat-ment of myriad physical and
|
|
psychological problems. However, most MBIs have primarily been used with
|
|
middle-or upper-class White populations, with some instances where they
|
|
have been adapted for use with diverse populations (e.g.,
|
|
Burnett-Zeigler et al., 2016; Roth \& Robbins, 2004). However, even when
|
|
adapted, most MBIs have not explicitly addressed unique factors faced by
|
|
the target population, such as racial discrimination, unemployment, lack
|
|
of financial means, and other stressors. We developed and used an
|
|
iterative approach to refine a MBI group based on MBSR and MBCT, for a
|
|
racially and ethnically diverse population in the Bronx, considered by
|
|
the U.S. census to be the most diverse in the country. Based on a
|
|
trauma-informed care and centering people of color approach, we
|
|
developed a longer than usual (16 weeks) mindfulness-based group, where
|
|
core skills were broken down into smaller chunks to facilitate easier
|
|
incorpo-ration into daily life. We also used a longer duration and
|
|
1-hour weekly meeting time keeping in mind needs of the indi-viduals,
|
|
who often had limited time to participate due to work limitations and
|
|
other comorbid physical conditions. While acknowledging that the
|
|
individuals this group was catering to had experienced multiple
|
|
traumatic events, we sought to also highlight and further develop the
|
|
resilience and courage people in the Bronx community bring to the table.
|
|
We review two clinically rich case vignettes, and also discuss
|
|
recommendations for working with racially and economically marginal-ized
|
|
people, and include a call to action for health care providers and
|
|
organizations to engage in activism.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bhambhani, Y (Corresponding Author), Montefiore Med Ctr, Moses Adult Outpatient Psychiat Dept, PhD Off K24, 111 E 210th St, Bronx, NY 10467 USA.
|
|
Bhambhani, Yash; Gallo, Laurie, Montefiore Med Ctr, Bronx, NY USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1077-7229},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-187X},
|
|
Keywords = {mindfulness; people of color; race; ethnicity; low income;
|
|
implementation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {STRESS REDUCTION; ETHNIC DISPARITIES; STRUCTURAL RACISM; HEALTH
|
|
INEQUITIES; MEDITATION; THERAPY; TRAUMA; PERSPECTIVES; PERCEPTIONS;
|
|
SYMPTOMS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Clinical},
|
|
Author-Email = {yashnpbhambhani@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {86},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000886529700004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000388446100009,
|
|
Author = {Lin, Ken-Hou},
|
|
Title = {The Rise of Finance and Firm Employment Dynamics},
|
|
Journal = {ORGANIZATION SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {972-988},
|
|
Month = {JUL-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {This article sheds light on the ongoing employment stagnation in the
|
|
United States by investigating the links between the rise of finance and
|
|
firm employment dynamics during the 1982-2005 period. I argue that the
|
|
rise of finance marginalized the role of labor in revenue generating and
|
|
sharing processes, which led to employment stagnation among the largest
|
|
nonfinancial firms in the United States. Evidence suggests that
|
|
increasing investment in financial assets depresses the workforce size.
|
|
The growing dependence on debt reprioritizes the order of distribution,
|
|
heightening the need for workforce reduction. The increasing rewards for
|
|
shareholders generate a downsize-and-distribute spiral, in which labor
|
|
expense becomes a primary target of cost-cutting strategies. Further
|
|
analysis indicates that production and service workers are more
|
|
vulnerable to shifts associated with the rise of finance than managers
|
|
and professionals.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lin, KH (Corresponding Author), Univ Texas Austin, Dept Sociol, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
|
|
Lin, Ken-Hou, Univ Texas Austin, Dept Sociol, Austin, TX 78712 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1287/orsc.2016.1073},
|
|
ISSN = {1047-7039},
|
|
Keywords = {corporate governance; financialization; employment contract},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SIZE-WAGE PREMIUM; INCOME INEQUALITY; SHAREHOLDER VALUE; US ECONOMY;
|
|
LABORS SHARE; FINANCIALIZATION; FINANCIALISATION; PERFORMANCE; DECLINE;
|
|
POWER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {lin@austin.utexas.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {112},
|
|
Times-Cited = {42},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {65},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000388446100009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000784467800022,
|
|
Author = {Kondrat, I and Yaroshevych, N. and Kalaitan, T. and Yakymiv, A.},
|
|
Title = {EVALUATING THE LONG-TERM SUSTAINABILITY OF UKRAINE'S PENSION SYSTEM AND
|
|
PROSPECTS FOR ITS DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Journal = {FINANCIAL AND CREDIT ACTIVITY-PROBLEMS OF THEORY AND PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {1},
|
|
Number = {42},
|
|
Pages = {226-239},
|
|
Abstract = {The article is devoted to assessing the long-term sustainability of
|
|
Ukraine's pension system in order to determine the efficiency of its
|
|
main function - protection against poverty in old age and income
|
|
replacement in retirement. The method of calculating the Global Pension
|
|
Index was applied, which was modified by the authors taking into account
|
|
the peculiarities of the national labor market (labor migration, shadow
|
|
employment, etc.). The long-term sustainability indicator is determined
|
|
on the basis of 9 sub-indicators,which reflect the impact of demographic
|
|
(life expectancy at state pension age, total fertility rate and old-age
|
|
dependency ratio, labor force participation rate aged 55-64 or over
|
|
etc.), structural (contribution of each level of pension system to
|
|
ensuring the welfare of beneficiaries), economic (the level of private
|
|
pension assets, expressed as a percentage of GDP, the level of the
|
|
adjusted government debt and public cost of pensions, real economic
|
|
growth) factors.The results showed that the sustainability indexof the
|
|
pension system gradually increased during 2016-2020, reaching its
|
|
maximum value at 45.29 out of 100 possible. This means that functioning
|
|
of the pension system is not effective enough in terms of providing
|
|
adequate income in old age. The disproportionate structure of the
|
|
pension system, in which almost all the financial strain of paying
|
|
benefits is concentrated in PAYG system, does not contribute to its
|
|
sustainability, especially in the long term. Prospects for the
|
|
development of Ukraine's pension system are mainly related to the
|
|
strengthening of private pensions: expanding the participation of the
|
|
working age population in private pension plans, increasing the share of
|
|
private pension assets in GDP, increasing protection of investors'
|
|
rights, stimulating labor force participation rate retirees. It was
|
|
shown that GDP per-capita is weakly correlated with pension's Therefore,
|
|
economic factors do not have a decisive influence.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Ukrainian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kondrat, I (Corresponding Author), Lviv Polytech Natl Univ, Dept Finance, Lvov, Ukraine.
|
|
Kondrat, I; Yaroshevych, N., Lviv Polytech Natl Univ, Dept Finance, Lvov, Ukraine.
|
|
Kalaitan, T., Stepan Gzhytskyi Natl Univ Vet Med \& Biotechnol, Dept Hist Ukraine Econ Theory \& Tourism, Lvov, Ukraine.
|
|
Yakymiv, A., Lviv Polytech Natl Univ, Dept Management Technol, Lvov, Ukraine.},
|
|
ISSN = {2306-4994},
|
|
EISSN = {2310-8770},
|
|
Keywords = {long-term sustainability; sustainability indicator; pension system of
|
|
Ukraine; solidarity system; private pension assets; structural
|
|
disparities; demographic and economic factors},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business, Finance},
|
|
Author-Email = {iryna.y.kondrat@lpnu.ua
|
|
natalya.b.yaroshevych@lpnu.ua
|
|
kalaitantv@gmail.com
|
|
yakymiv.andriy@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kalaitan, Tetyana/F-5828-2019
|
|
Yakymiv, Andriy/R-4108-2017},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kalaitan, Tetyana/0000-0003-4774-4990
|
|
Yakymiv, Andriy/0000-0003-1020-8481},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {18},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000784467800022},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000355634900002,
|
|
Author = {Perrino, Tatiana and Beardslee, William and Bernal, Guillermo and
|
|
Brincks, Ahnalee and Cruden, Gracelyn and Howe, George and Murry, Velma
|
|
and Pantin, Hilda and Prado, Guillermo and Sandler, Irwin and Brown, C.
|
|
Hendricks},
|
|
Title = {Toward Scientific Equity for the Prevention of Depression and Depressive
|
|
Symptoms in Vulnerable Youth},
|
|
Journal = {PREVENTION SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {642-651},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Certain subgroups of youth are at high risk for depression and elevated
|
|
depressive symptoms, and experience limited access to quality mental
|
|
health care. Examples are socioeconomically disadvantaged, racial/
|
|
ethnic minority, and sexual minority youth. Research shows that there
|
|
are efficacious interventions to prevent youth depression and depressive
|
|
symptoms. These preventive interventions have the potential to play a
|
|
key role in addressing these mental health disparities by reducing youth
|
|
risk factors and enhancing protective factors. However, there are
|
|
comparatively few preventive interventions directed specifically to
|
|
these vulnerable subgroups, and sample sizes of diverse subgroups in
|
|
general prevention trials are often too low to assess whether preventive
|
|
interventions work equally well for vulnerable youth compared to other
|
|
youth. In this paper, we describe the importance and need for
|
|
``scientific equity,{''} or equality and fairness in the amount of
|
|
scientific knowledge produced to understand the potential solutions to
|
|
such health disparities. We highlight possible strategies for promoting
|
|
scientific equity, including the following: increasing the number of
|
|
prevention research participants from vulnerable subgroups, conducting
|
|
more data synthesis analyses and implementation science research,
|
|
disseminating preventive interventions that are efficacious for
|
|
vulnerable youth, and increasing the diversity of the prevention science
|
|
research workforce. These strategies can increase the availability of
|
|
research evidence to determine the degree to which preventive
|
|
interventions can help address mental health disparities. Although this
|
|
paper utilizes the prevention of youth depression as an illustrative
|
|
case example, the concepts are applicable to other health outcomes for
|
|
which there are disparities, such as substance use and obesity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Perrino, T (Corresponding Author), Univ Miami Miller Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, 1120 NW 14th St,1011 R-669, Miami, FL 33136 USA.
|
|
Perrino, Tatiana; Brincks, Ahnalee; Cruden, Gracelyn; Pantin, Hilda; Prado, Guillermo, Univ Miami Miller Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Miami, FL 33136 USA.
|
|
Beardslee, William, Harvard Univ, Boston Childrens Hosp, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Bernal, Guillermo, Univ Puerto Rico, San Juan, PR 00936 USA.
|
|
Howe, George, George Washington Univ, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Murry, Velma, Vanderbilt Univ, Nashville, TN 37235 USA.
|
|
Sandler, Irwin, Arizona State Univ, Tempe, AZ USA.
|
|
Cruden, Gracelyn; Brown, C. Hendricks, Northwestern Univ, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11121-014-0518-7},
|
|
ISSN = {1389-4986},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-6695},
|
|
Keywords = {Scientific equity; Health disparities; Collaborative data synthesis;
|
|
Depression; Adolescents},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH DISPARITIES; DSM-IV DISORDERS; SUBTHRESHOLD DEPRESSION;
|
|
CHILDHOOD ADVERSITIES; PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS; INTERVENTION RESEARCH;
|
|
ETHNIC DISPARITIES; SEXUAL MINORITY; CHILDREN; ADOLESCENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {tperrino@med.miami.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bernal, Guillermo/O-2513-2019
|
|
Brincks, Ahnalee/HLW-8124-2023
|
|
Bernal, Guillermo/E-6360-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bernal, Guillermo/0000-0001-8855-1314
|
|
Bernal, Guillermo/0000-0001-8855-1314
|
|
Brown, C Hendricks/0000-0002-0294-2419},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {71},
|
|
Times-Cited = {31},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000355634900002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000998990000001,
|
|
Author = {Char, Vincent and Harrison, Linda J. and Li, Hui},
|
|
Title = {Macro-structural predictors of Australian family day care quality},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Month = {MAY 18},
|
|
Abstract = {IntroductionThis study explores the predictive power of macro-structural
|
|
characteristics on quality rating and improvement system (QRIS) outcomes
|
|
of Family Day Care (FDC) services in Australia. MethodsThe dataset
|
|
consisted of 441 FDC National Quality Standard (NQS) ratings from all
|
|
Australian states and territories, with overall ratings of Exceeding
|
|
NQS, Meeting NQS, Working Towards NQS, or Significant Improvement
|
|
Required. ResultsMultinomial logistic regressions confirmed that
|
|
management type, community socioeconomic status (SES), level of
|
|
urbanization, and government jurisdiction explained 6.9 to 19.3\% of the
|
|
variation in QRIS outcomes. Results indicated that lower FDC NQS ratings
|
|
were more likely for (1) private for-profit vs. not-for-profit; (2)
|
|
low-SES vs. high-SES area; and (3) regional or remote area vs.
|
|
metropolitan. State/territory jurisdiction also influenced NQS ratings.
|
|
DiscussionThese findings imply the need for policy attention to
|
|
inequalities in FDC quality associated with systemic and organizational
|
|
differences. Greater effort is needed to promote equality and equity in
|
|
FDC services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Li, H (Corresponding Author), Macquarie Univ, Macquarie Sch Educ, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Li, H (Corresponding Author), Shanghai Normal Univ, Shanghai Inst Early Childhood Educ, Shanghai, Peoples R China.
|
|
Char, Vincent; Harrison, Linda J.; Li, Hui, Macquarie Univ, Macquarie Sch Educ, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Li, Hui, Shanghai Normal Univ, Shanghai Inst Early Childhood Educ, Shanghai, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpubh.2023.1114256},
|
|
Article-Number = {1114256},
|
|
EISSN = {2296-2565},
|
|
Keywords = {family day care; national quality framework; systemic features; early
|
|
childcare; QRIS},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EARLY-CHILDHOOD EDUCATION; ACCESS; DISPARITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {philip.li@mq.edu.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Char, Vincent/0009-0001-1536-8663
|
|
Li, Hui/0000-0001-9355-1116
|
|
Harrison, Linda/0000-0003-3835-6283},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000998990000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000494854300005,
|
|
Author = {von Wachter, Till},
|
|
Title = {Unemployment Insurance Reform},
|
|
Journal = {ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {686},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {121-146},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {The Unemployment Insurance (UI) system is the largest general social
|
|
insurance program for working-age individuals in the United States and
|
|
currently insures more than 140 million workers against temporary income
|
|
losses related to unemployment. UI has been the bedrock of U.S. social
|
|
policy in recessions, but the system has remained largely unchanged
|
|
since the mid-1970s despite substantial changes in the labor market that
|
|
include deindustrialization, higher female participation, increases in
|
|
wage inequality, and technological changes. This article summarizes
|
|
existing empirical evidence on the state of the UI system and its
|
|
effectiveness in achieving its stated goals. A range of reform proposals
|
|
are discussed that aim to address both the well-known, long-term issues
|
|
with UI, as well as UI's readiness to support the workforce of the
|
|
twenty-first century.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {von Wachter, T (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Econ, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
von Wachter, T (Corresponding Author), Calif Policy Lab, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
|
|
von Wachter, T (Corresponding Author), Social Sci Div, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
von Wachter, Till, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Econ, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
von Wachter, Till, Calif Policy Lab, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
|
|
von Wachter, Till, Social Sci Div, Los Angeles, CA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0002716219885339},
|
|
ISSN = {0002-7162},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-3349},
|
|
Keywords = {unemployment insurance; experience rating; worker behavior; firm
|
|
behavior},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; JOB SEARCH; BENEFITS; EMPLOYMENT; DURATION; REEMPLOYMENT;
|
|
EXPERIENCE; REGRESSION; EARNINGS; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {tvwachter@econ.ucla.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000494854300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000752684000001,
|
|
Author = {Im, Zhen Jie and Shin, Young-Kyu},
|
|
Title = {Who gets labour market training? Access biases of social investment in
|
|
Finland},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN SOCIAL POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {3-18},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Policy access biases worry social policy scholars because they generate
|
|
Matthew effects that exacerbate socioeconomic divides. Yet, access
|
|
biases in many social investment policies, like training during
|
|
unemployment, remain under-researched. Such access biases may be
|
|
detrimental to a critical objective of social investment: to improve and
|
|
uplift workers with precarious economic prospects. We focus here on
|
|
access bias in training provided by public employment services against
|
|
lower-educated workers. They are vulnerable to unemployment and
|
|
fractured employment and should thus be targeted for training. While
|
|
there is burgeoning attention on access biases in training against
|
|
disadvantaged youths and non-citizens, fewer studies have focused on
|
|
similar access bias against lower-educated workers. We highlight that
|
|
access bias against such workers may stem from their lower willingness
|
|
and demand for training, as well as policy design, informal eligibility
|
|
criteria and caseworkers' creaming practices. We suggest, however, that
|
|
greater availability of training opportunities may ease this access bias
|
|
against lower-educated workers. Using the Finnish Income Distribution
|
|
survey data (2007-2012), we find evidence of training access bias:
|
|
primary-educated workers are significantly less likely to participate in
|
|
training than upper secondary and vocationally educated workers.
|
|
Concurrently, our results show that availability of training is not
|
|
significantly associated with the extent of training access bias against
|
|
primary-educated workers. With a Nordic welfare model that prioritizes
|
|
training to remedy labour market vulnerability and stresses that access
|
|
to benefits and services is based on need, Finland represents a least
|
|
likely case to find such access bias in training. We therefore consider
|
|
these results worrying: if it is found here, it may be prevalent in
|
|
countries with other welfare models.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Im, ZJ (Corresponding Author), Copenhagen Business Sch, Dept Int Econ Business \& Govt, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
|
|
Im, ZJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Helsinki, Fac Social Sci, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Im, Zhen Jie, Copenhagen Business Sch, Dept Int Econ Business \& Govt, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
|
|
Im, Zhen Jie; Shin, Young-Kyu, Univ Helsinki, Fac Social Sci, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Shin, Young-Kyu, Korea Inst Hlth \& Social Affairs, Sejong City, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/09589287211066408},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {09589287211066408},
|
|
ISSN = {0958-9287},
|
|
EISSN = {1461-7269},
|
|
Keywords = {Social investment; job training; Nordic welfare state; access biases;
|
|
Matthew effects},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POLICIES; PARTICIPATION; EMPLOYMENT; PROGRAM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public Administration; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {zhen.im@helsinki.fi},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Shin, Young-Kyu/AAE-1824-2022
|
|
Im, Zhen/AAB-6296-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shin, Young-Kyu/0000-0002-2713-7547
|
|
Im, Zhen/0000-0001-7854-1382},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000752684000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000369969000010,
|
|
Author = {Borodulin, Katja and Sipila, Noora and Rahkonen, Ossi and Leino-Arjas,
|
|
Paivi and Kestila, Laura and Jousilahti, Pekka and Prattala, Ritva},
|
|
Title = {Socio-demographic and behavioral variation in barriers to leisure-time
|
|
physical activity},
|
|
Journal = {SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {62-69},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: We examined the socio-demographic and behavioral
|
|
determinants of perceived barriers to leisure-time physical activity
|
|
(LTPA) in a population-based sample of working-aged adults. Methods:
|
|
Data comprised the National FINRISK 2002 Study, a population-based
|
|
health examination study. Analyses were restricted to those aged 25-64
|
|
years and who perceived that their amount of LTPA did not reach
|
|
sufficient levels. They reported barriers to LTPA, defined as a lack of
|
|
time, motivation and lack of companionship to be active with, as well as
|
|
high expenses. Age, education, household income, employment status,
|
|
family type, physical activity, smoking and body mass index (BMI) were
|
|
included as explanatory variables. Results: Lack of time was the most
|
|
frequent barrier. Each barrier was explained by a different set of
|
|
factors that also varied between genders. The strongest and most
|
|
systematic associations with the barriers were found for age, employment
|
|
status and family type. Lack of time was less often reported as a
|
|
barrier among the unemployed, singles without children and older people.
|
|
Lacking motivation as a barrier was most common among singles without
|
|
children. High expenses as a barrier was more often reported by the
|
|
unemployed, and less often reported in the highest income group.
|
|
Conclusions: When considering actions to promote LTPA, there is not one
|
|
single solution, because the perceived barriers vary by population
|
|
subgroups.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Borodulin, K (Corresponding Author), Natl Inst Hlth \& Welf, POB 30, FI-00271 Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Borodulin, Katja; Sipila, Noora; Kestila, Laura; Jousilahti, Pekka; Prattala, Ritva, Natl Inst Hlth \& Welf, POB 30, FI-00271 Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Rahkonen, Ossi, Univ Helsinki, Dept Publ Hlth, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Leino-Arjas, Paivi, Finnish Inst Occupat Hlth, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Leino-Arjas, Paivi, Univ Tampere, Sch Hlth Sci, FIN-33101 Tampere, Finland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1403494815604080},
|
|
ISSN = {1403-4948},
|
|
EISSN = {1651-1905},
|
|
Keywords = {Barriers; exercise; health behavior; FINRISK 2002; leisure time;
|
|
physical activity; population studies},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIOECONOMIC DIFFERENCES; PERCEIVED BARRIERS; PARTICIPATION; ADULTS;
|
|
EXERCISE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {katja.borodulin@thl.fi},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Leino-Arjas, Paivi/0000-0001-9534-7071
|
|
Rahkonen, Ossi/0000-0002-7202-3274
|
|
Borodulin, Katja/0000-0001-9529-2592},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {51},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000369969000010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000505365100002,
|
|
Author = {Ayon, Cecilia and Ramos Santiago, Jonathan and Lopez Torres, Andrea
|
|
Sthepania},
|
|
Title = {Latinx Undocumented Older Adults, Health Needs and Access to Healthcare},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {996-1009},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {An estimated 10.5 million undocumented immigrants reside in the U.S.;
|
|
10\% are 55 and older. Undocumented older adults do not qualify for
|
|
Medicaid or Social Security benefits even though many pay taxes. The
|
|
study examines undocumented older adults' perceptions on their health
|
|
status and their experiences in accessing health care. In-depth
|
|
semi-structured interviews were used to facilitate dialogue with
|
|
undocumented older adults (N = 30) ages 55-63 (M = 61.67, SD = 5.50).
|
|
Most of the participants were Mexican (n = 26, 87\%) and had lived in
|
|
the U.S. on average 21 years (SD = 8.78). A constant comparative
|
|
approach was used while completing initial, focused, and axial coding.
|
|
Participants were classified into a five-group typology that captures
|
|
the intersection of perceived health status/need and access to health
|
|
care; (1) High need, with access to care; (2) High need, with ambiguous
|
|
access; (3) Undiagnosed need, with no access; (4) Perceived healthy
|
|
status, with no access; (5) Healthy status, with access to care.
|
|
Participants who reported high health needs experienced a range of
|
|
chronic and degenerative health conditions. Participants accessed care
|
|
by paying-out-of-pocket (between \$100 and 300/visit for consultation,
|
|
lab work, and medications). High need participants with ambiguous access
|
|
have been able to access care through permanently residing under color
|
|
of law status or Medically Indigent Services Programs; access is
|
|
uncertain given their undocumented status and changes in policies.
|
|
Participants faced multiple barriers to accessing health care-mainly
|
|
high cost and documentation status. Limited access to care leads to
|
|
several detrimental consequences such as debilitated health, emotional
|
|
burden, and economic insecurity. Older undocumented adults are a
|
|
vulnerable population that experience great health needs. The high cost
|
|
for health care and limited access to care takes a toll on undocumented
|
|
older adults. The findings highlight many opportunities for policy
|
|
advocacy and practice with older undocumented adults.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ayon, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Riverside, Sch Publ Policy, 900 Univ Way, Riverside, CA 92521 USA.
|
|
Ayon, Cecilia; Lopez Torres, Andrea Sthepania, Univ Calif Riverside, Sch Publ Policy, 900 Univ Way, Riverside, CA 92521 USA.
|
|
Ramos Santiago, Jonathan, Univ Calif Berkeley, Sch Social Work, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10903-019-00966-7},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1557-1912},
|
|
EISSN = {1557-1920},
|
|
Keywords = {Undocumented; Older adults; Health; Health access},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT; LEGAL VIOLENCE; BARRIERS; QUALITY; JUSTICE;
|
|
PROGRAM; RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {cayon@ucr.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Torres, Andrea/HLP-6166-2023},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {19},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000505365100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000524455100002,
|
|
Author = {Tempesti, Tommaso},
|
|
Title = {Fringe Benefits and Chinese Import Competition},
|
|
Journal = {SOUTHERN ECONOMIC JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {86},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {1307-1337},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {While many studies have quantified the impact of Chinese import
|
|
competition on U.S. wages, to my knowledge this is the first study to
|
|
also estimate the effect on fringe benefits. This is important because
|
|
in the United States, fringe benefits are now more than 30\% of
|
|
compensation. I first argue that if trade affects the share of benefits
|
|
in compensation, focusing on wages and ignoring fringe benefits may give
|
|
us misleading estimates of the effect of trade on workers' total
|
|
compensation. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth
|
|
1979, I track the subsequent outcomes of workers who were working in
|
|
manufacturing in 1996. Similar to Autor et al. (2014), I find that
|
|
exposure to Chinese competition negatively affects wage income. As to
|
|
fringe benefits, the effect on participation in a defined benefit
|
|
retirement plan and the availability of vacation days is negative and
|
|
significant. The effects on other benefits are usually negative but
|
|
imprecisely estimated. The effect on the overall dollar value of
|
|
benefits is negative and significant. However, in percentage terms, the
|
|
effect on benefits is smaller than the effect on wages. This suggests
|
|
that, in percentage terms, the impact of Chinese import competition on
|
|
overall compensation is less severe than the one found in Autor et al.
|
|
(2014) for wages.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tempesti, T (Corresponding Author), Univ Massachusetts, Dept Econ, Lowell, MA 01854 USA.
|
|
Tempesti, Tommaso, Univ Massachusetts, Dept Econ, Lowell, MA 01854 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/soej.12426},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-4038},
|
|
EISSN = {2325-8012},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRADE; IMPACT; WAGES; INEQUALITY; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {tommaso\_tempesti@uml.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000524455100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000828987800026,
|
|
Author = {Hahn, Marianne and Groeschel, Sonja and Hayani, Eyad and Brockmann, Marc
|
|
A. and Muthuraman, Muthuraman and Groeschel, Klaus and Uphaus, Timo and
|
|
German Stroke Registry Endovasc Tr},
|
|
Title = {Sex Disparities in Re-Employment in Stroke Patients With Large Vessel
|
|
Occlusion Undergoing Mechanical Thrombectomy},
|
|
Journal = {STROKE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {53},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {2528-2537},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Strokes in the working-age population represent a relevant
|
|
share of ischemic strokes and re-employment is a major factor for
|
|
well-being in these patients. Income differences by sex have been
|
|
suspected a barrier for women in returning to paid work following
|
|
ischemic stroke. We aim to identify predictors of (not) returning to
|
|
paid work in patients with large vessel occlusion treated with
|
|
mechanical thrombectomy (MT) to identify potential areas of targeted
|
|
vocational rehabilitation.
|
|
METHODS: From 6635 patients enrolled in the German Stroke Registry
|
|
Endovascular Treatment between 2015 and 2019, data of 606 patients of
|
|
the working population who survived large vessel occlusion at least 90
|
|
days past MT were compared based on employment status at day 90
|
|
follow-up. Univariate analysis, multiple logistic regression and
|
|
analyses of area under the curve were performed to identify predictors
|
|
of re-employment.
|
|
RESULTS: We report 35.6\% of patients being re-employed 3 months
|
|
following MT (median age 54.0 years; 36.1\% of men, 34.5\% of women
|
|
{[}P=0.722]). We identified independent negative predictors against
|
|
re-employment being female sex (odds ratio {[}OR], 0.427 {[}95\% CI,
|
|
0.229-0.794]; P=0.007), higher National Institutes of Health Stroke
|
|
Scale (NIHSS) score 24 hours after MT (OR, 0.775 {[}95\% CI,
|
|
0.705-0.852]; P<0.001), large vessel occlusion due to large-artery
|
|
atherosclerosis (OR, 0.558 {[}95\% CI, 0.312-0.997]; P=0.049) and longer
|
|
hospital stay (OR, 0.930 {[}95\% CI, 0.868-0.998]; P=0.043). Positive
|
|
predictors favoring re-employment were excellent functional outcome
|
|
(modified Rankin Scale score of 0-1) at 90 day follow-up (OR, 11.335
|
|
{[}95\% CI, 4.864-26.415]; P<.001) and combined treatment with
|
|
intravenous thrombolysis (OR, 1.904 {[}95\% CI, 1.046-3.466]; P=0.035).
|
|
Multiple regression modeling increased predictive power of re-employment
|
|
status significantly over prediction by best single functional outcome
|
|
parameter (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale 24 hours after MT
|
|
<= 5; R-2: 0.582 versus 0.432; area under the receiver operating
|
|
characteristic curve: 0.887 versus 0.835, P<0.001).
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: There is more to re-employment after MT than functional
|
|
outcome alone. In particular, attention should be paid to possible
|
|
systemic barriers deterring women from resuming paid work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Groschel, K (Corresponding Author), Johannes Gutenberg Univ Mainz, Univ Med Ctr, Dept Neurol, Langenbeckstr 1, D-55131 Mainz, Germany.
|
|
Hahn, Marianne; Groeschel, Sonja; Hayani, Eyad; Muthuraman, Muthuraman; Groeschel, Klaus; Uphaus, Timo, Johannes Gutenberg Univ Mainz, Univ Med Ctr, Dept Neurol, Langenbeckstr 1, D-55131 Mainz, Germany.
|
|
Brockmann, Marc A., Johannes Gutenberg Univ Mainz, Univ Med Ctr, Dept Neuroradiol, Mainz, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1161/STROKEAHA.121.037386},
|
|
ISSN = {0039-2499},
|
|
EISSN = {1524-4628},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ISCHEMIC-STROKE; RETURN; WORK; PREDICTORS; SURVIVORS; ADULTS; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology; Peripheral Vascular Disease},
|
|
Author-Email = {klaus.groeschel@unimedizin-mainz.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Poli, Sven/HLH-8305-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Poli, Sven/0000-0002-0286-8781
|
|
Groschel, Klaus/0000-0002-0244-6116
|
|
Dichgans, Martin/0000-0002-0654-387X
|
|
Hahn, Marianne/0000-0002-9462-3844},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000828987800026},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000341541200012,
|
|
Author = {Onega, Tracy and Hubbard, Rebecca and Hill, Deirdre and Lee, Christoph
|
|
I. and Haas, Jennifer S. and Carlos, Heather A. and Alford-Teaster,
|
|
Jennifer and Bogart, Andy and DeMartini, Wendy B. and Kerlikowske, Karla
|
|
and Virnig, Beth A. and Buist, Diana S. M. and Henderson, Louise and
|
|
Tosteson, Anna N. A.},
|
|
Title = {Geographic Access to Breast Imaging for US Women},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF RADIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {874-882},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: The breast imaging modalities of mammography, ultrasound, and
|
|
MRI are widely used for screening, diagnosis, treatment, and
|
|
surveillance of breast cancer. Geographic access to breast imaging
|
|
services in various modalities is not known at a national level overall
|
|
or for population subgroups.
|
|
Methods: A retrospective study of 2004-2008 Medicare claims data was
|
|
conducted to identify ZIP codes in which breast imaging occurred, and
|
|
data were mapped. Estimated travel times were made for each modality for
|
|
215,798 census block groups in the contiguous United States. Using
|
|
Census 2010 data, travel times were characterized by sociodemographic
|
|
factors for 92,788,909 women aged >= 30 years, overall, and by subgroups
|
|
of age, race/ethnicity, rurality, education, and median income.
|
|
Results: Overall, 85\% of women had travel times of <= 20 minutes to
|
|
nearest mammography or ultrasound services, and 70\% had travel times of
|
|
<= 20 minutes for MRI with little variation by age. Native American
|
|
women had median travel times 2-3 times longer for all 3 modalities,
|
|
compared to women of other racial/ethnic groups. For rural women, median
|
|
travel times to breast imaging service's were 4-8-fold longer than they
|
|
were for urban women. Black and Asian women had the shortest median
|
|
travel times to services for all 3 modalities.
|
|
Conclusions: Travel times to mammography and ultrasound breast imaging
|
|
facilities are short for most women, but for breast MRI, travel times
|
|
are notably longer. Native American and rural women are disadvantaged in
|
|
geographic access based on travel times to breast imaging services. This
|
|
work informs potential interventions to reduce inequities in access and
|
|
utilization.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Onega, T (Corresponding Author), Geisel Sch Med Dartmouth, HB 7927 Rubin 8, Lebanon, NH 03756 USA.
|
|
Onega, Tracy; Alford-Teaster, Jennifer; Tosteson, Anna N. A., Geisel Sch Med Dartmouth, Dept Community \& Family Med, Lebanon, NH 03756 USA.
|
|
Onega, Tracy; Carlos, Heather A.; Alford-Teaster, Jennifer; Tosteson, Anna N. A., Geisel Sch Med Dartmouth, Norris Cotton Canc Ctr, Lebanon, NH 03756 USA.
|
|
Onega, Tracy; Tosteson, Anna N. A., Geisel Sch Med Dartmouth, Dartmouth Inst Hlth Policy \& Clin Practice, Lebanon, NH 03756 USA.
|
|
Hubbard, Rebecca; Bogart, Andy; Buist, Diana S. M., Grp Hlth Res Inst, Seattle, WA USA.
|
|
Hill, Deirdre, Univ New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA.
|
|
Lee, Christoph I., Univ Washington, Sch Med, Dept Radiol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Lee, Christoph I., Univ Washington, Sch Med, Dept Hlth Serv, Seattle, WA USA.
|
|
Haas, Jennifer S., Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Gen Internal Med, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
DeMartini, Wendy B., Univ Wisconsin, Dept Radiol, Sch Med \& Publ Hlth, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Kerlikowske, Karla, Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Med, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Kerlikowske, Karla, Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Virnig, Beth A., Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Minneapolis, MN USA.
|
|
Henderson, Louise, Univ N Carolina, Dept Radiol, Chapel Hill, NC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jacr.2014.03.022},
|
|
ISSN = {1546-1440},
|
|
Keywords = {Travel time; access; mammography; breast imaging; disparities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CANCER STAGE; TRAVEL-TIME; MEDICARE BENEFICIARIES; HEALTH-CARE;
|
|
DIAGNOSIS; MAMMOGRAPHY; PET; SURVEILLANCE; DISPARITIES; COVERAGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Radiology, Nuclear Medicine \& Medical Imaging},
|
|
Author-Email = {Tracy.L.Onega@dartmouth.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hubbard, Rebecca/Y-6500-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hubbard, Rebecca/0000-0003-0879-0994
|
|
Lee, Christoph/0000-0002-8185-7721
|
|
HAAS, JENNIFER/0000-0001-7227-851X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {62},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000341541200012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000704007200007,
|
|
Author = {Li, Lingchao and Liu, Can and Liu, Jinlong and Cheng, Baodong},
|
|
Title = {Has the Sloping Land Conversion Program in China impacted the income and
|
|
employment of rural households?},
|
|
Journal = {LAND USE POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {109},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {As the largest scale payment for ecosystem services program in the
|
|
developing world, one of the key objectives of the Sloping Land
|
|
Conversion Program (the SLCP) is to increase rural households' income
|
|
and to reallocate their employments. This paper estimates the effects of
|
|
the SLCP on rural households' income and employment changes using the
|
|
unique panel dataset of 1001 rural households in six provinces from 1995
|
|
to 2014. Following a strict parallel trend and other econometrics tests,
|
|
the Propensity score matching-Difference-in-differences (PSM-DID)
|
|
estimation technique was used. Based on the unique panel dataset, this
|
|
paper expands upon existing studies by estimating the effects of
|
|
mid-to-long-term and subsidy scheme adjustment of the SLCP on rural
|
|
households' income and employment. Our empirical results indicate that
|
|
1) the SLCP has no significant effect on rural households' total income,
|
|
while it has a negative effect on farm income. 2) The SLCP has a
|
|
positive effect on forestry labor input. 3) Half reduction subsidy of
|
|
the SLCP has caused different effects on rural households' income and
|
|
employment compared with that before policy adjustment. 4) The income
|
|
effects of the SLCP are indifferent by income, location, demographic or
|
|
resource endowment sub groups. Policy decision-makers should pay more
|
|
attention to create more off-farm opportunities for rural households
|
|
enrolled in the SLCP to maintain the achievements of the SLCP.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cheng, BD (Corresponding Author), Beijing Forestry Univ, Sch Econ \& Management, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
|
|
Cheng, BD (Corresponding Author), Beijing Forestry Univ, Natl Acad Econ \& Trade Forestry \& Grassland, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Lingchao; Cheng, Baodong, Beijing Forestry Univ, Sch Econ \& Management, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Lingchao; Cheng, Baodong, Beijing Forestry Univ, Natl Acad Econ \& Trade Forestry \& Grassland, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
|
|
Liu, Can, China Natl Forestry \& Grassland Econ \& Dev Res Ct, Beijing 100714, Peoples R China.
|
|
Liu, Jinlong, Renmin Univ China, Sch Agr Econ \& Rural Dev, Beijing 100872, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.landusepol.2021.105648},
|
|
Article-Number = {105648},
|
|
ISSN = {0264-8377},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5754},
|
|
Keywords = {Difference-in-differences (DID); Rural households' income; Off-farm
|
|
employment; Propensity score matching (PSM); The Sloping Land Conversion
|
|
Program; Sustainable livelihood},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PROPENSITY SCORE; GREEN; GRAIN; POVERTY; POLICY; IMPLEMENTATION;
|
|
CONSTRAINTS; ENVIRONMENT; INEQUALITY; PAYMENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {baodongcheng@163.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Li, Lingchao/0000-0002-2921-493X
|
|
Liu, Jinlong/0000-0002-0228-0865},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {43},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000704007200007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000470276200014,
|
|
Author = {Montserrat, Julia},
|
|
Editor = {Chybalski, F and Marcinkiewicz, E},
|
|
Title = {SPANISH RETIREMENT PENSIONS SYSTEM. GENDER IMPACT ON INEQUALITY AND
|
|
POVERTY},
|
|
Booktitle = {PROCEEDINGS OF PENCON 2018 PENSIONS CONFERENCE: CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS OF
|
|
INTERGENERATIONAL RELATIONS AND PENSION SYSTEMS: A THEORETICAL AND
|
|
EMPIRICAL PERSPECTIVE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Pages = {164-173},
|
|
Note = {Pensions Conference (PenCon), Lodz, POLAND, APR 19-20, 2018},
|
|
Abstract = {The Spanish pension system shows important gender differences both in
|
|
the gap in non-coverage rate and in the gap of pension incomes. About 60
|
|
percent of women aged 65 years or over do not have a contributory
|
|
retirement pension. Widowhood pensions play an important role to extend
|
|
the coverage of contributory pensions and reduces the poverty of women.
|
|
These gaps are the consequences of gender differences in employment such
|
|
as salaries, working hours and duration of working life. Also, there is
|
|
a strong cultural component which implies the traditional role of women
|
|
as the caretakers of their families. The Social Security system is
|
|
currently undergoing changes which mainly affect retirement pensions.
|
|
The main effect of the Spanish reforms on pensioners consists in
|
|
lowering pensions and adds to the women's pensions some negative impacts
|
|
such as the penalization of short work careers and careers with low
|
|
intensity of time worked (part-time and others). Also, the
|
|
sustainability factor based on the life expectancy will affect in
|
|
greater proportion in women than in men. It should be considered
|
|
alternatives measures to reconcile finance sustainability and adequacy
|
|
of pension systems in the context of ageing populations. Policies for
|
|
reducing gender gaps in pay, working hours and career length are,
|
|
likewise, active means of narrowing the gender gap in pensions which
|
|
will contribute to lowering the risks of poverty in women.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Montserrat, J (Corresponding Author), Ctr Social Policy Studies, Jerusalem, Israel.
|
|
Montserrat, Julia, Ctr Social Policy Studies, Jerusalem, Israel.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-83-7283-900-8},
|
|
Keywords = {gender economics; pensions; public finance; retirement policy; social
|
|
security},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business, Finance; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {jmontserratc@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {MONTSERRAT, JULIA/ABF-8043-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {MONTSERRAT, JULIA/0000-0002-6798-6973},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {15},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000470276200014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000669770800001,
|
|
Author = {Gilmartin, Mary and Dagg, Jennifer},
|
|
Title = {Finding the Gap: Immigrant Integration Outcomes and Settlement Service
|
|
Provision in the Republic of Ireland},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND INTEGRATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {679-699},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Immigrant integration is increasingly assessed through integration
|
|
outcomes, which assess the degree of convergence of the experiences of
|
|
immigrants and non-immigrants within a country. Integration processes -
|
|
for example, settlement services in key areas such as employment,
|
|
education and social inclusion - help to enhance integration outcomes.
|
|
In this paper, we use the example of the Republic of Ireland to show
|
|
that the relationship between desired integration outcomes and the
|
|
provision of settlement services needs considerably more attention. We
|
|
present immigrant integration outcomes for specific regions and groups
|
|
of immigrants derived from existing large-scale data sets. We then use
|
|
publicly available data on existing settlement services to assess the
|
|
extent to which settlement services address key areas of immigrant
|
|
integration outcomes. We demonstrate that there are considerable gaps in
|
|
the provision of appropriate settlement services that could support the
|
|
enhancement of key integration outcomes, such as the quality of work,
|
|
language proficiency and housing. If immigrant integration outcomes are
|
|
to be improved, the relationship between outcomes and settlement service
|
|
provision has to be better coordinated and targeted to address the
|
|
structural barriers faced by particular groups of immigrants and by
|
|
immigrants living in particular regions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gilmartin, M (Corresponding Author), Maynooth Univ, Dept Geog, Maynooth, Kildare, Ireland.
|
|
Gilmartin, Mary, Maynooth Univ, Dept Geog, Maynooth, Kildare, Ireland.
|
|
Dagg, Jennifer, NUI Galway, Inst Life Course \& Soc, Ctr Disabil Law \& Policy, Galway, Ireland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s12134-021-00862-w},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1488-3473},
|
|
EISSN = {1874-6365},
|
|
Keywords = {Immigrant integration; Integration outcomes; Settlement services;
|
|
Ireland},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIGRANT INTEGRATION; ASYLUM; ORGANIZATIONS; GOVERNMENT; SECTOR; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography},
|
|
Author-Email = {mary.gilmartin@mu.ie
|
|
jenny.dagg@nuigalway.ie},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dagg, Jenny/0000-0003-1774-5896
|
|
Gilmartin, Mary/0000-0001-5587-3384},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000669770800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000346024400006,
|
|
Author = {Hatzmann, Janneke and Peek, Niels and Heymans, Hugo and Maurice-Stam,
|
|
Heleen and Grootenhuis, Martha},
|
|
Title = {Consequences of caring for a child with a chronic disease: Employment
|
|
and leisure time of parents},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CHILD HEALTH CARE},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {346-357},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Chronically ill children require several hours of additional care per
|
|
day compared to healthy children. As parents provide most of this care,
|
|
they have to incorporate it into their daily schedule, which implies a
|
|
reduction in time for other activities. The study aimed to assess the
|
|
effect of having a chronically ill child on parental employment and
|
|
parental leisure activity time, and to explore the role of demographic,
|
|
social, and disease-related variables in relation to employment and
|
|
leisure activities. Outcomes of 576 parents of chronically ill children
|
|
and 441 parents of healthy school children were analyzed with
|
|
multivariate regression. Having a chronically ill child was negatively
|
|
related with family employment, maternal labor force participation, and
|
|
leisure activity time. Use of child care was positively related to
|
|
family and maternal employment of the total group of parents. Within
|
|
parents of chronically ill children, most important finding was the
|
|
negative relation of dependency of the child on daily care and low
|
|
parental educational level with family and maternal employment. In
|
|
conclusion, parents of chronically ill children, mothers in particular,
|
|
are disadvantaged in society probably due to the challenge of combining
|
|
child care with work and leisure time.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Grootenhuis, M (Corresponding Author), Emma Childrens Hosp, Acad Med Ctr, Pediat Psychosocial Dept, POB 22660, NL-1100 DD Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Hatzmann, Janneke; Heymans, Hugo; Maurice-Stam, Heleen; Grootenhuis, Martha, Emma Childrens Hosp, Acad Med Ctr, NL-1100 DD Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Peek, Niels, Acad Med Ctr, Amsterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1367493513496668},
|
|
ISSN = {1367-4935},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-2889},
|
|
Keywords = {Chronic illness; employment; functional limitation; leisure activity
|
|
time; parents},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE NEEDS; FAMILIES EXPERIENCES; DEPENDENT CHILDREN; FINANCIAL
|
|
BURDEN; UNITED-STATES; MENTAL-HEALTH; DISABILITIES; TECHNOLOGY; MOTHERS;
|
|
WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {m.a.grootenhuis@amc.uva.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Peek, Niels/AAD-9334-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Peek, Niels/0000-0002-6393-9969},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {42},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000346024400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000477645600009,
|
|
Author = {Richards, James and Sang, Kate},
|
|
Title = {The intersection of disability and in-work poverty in an advanced
|
|
industrial nation: The lived experience of multiple disadvantage in a
|
|
post-financial crisis UK},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC AND INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {3, SI},
|
|
Pages = {636-659},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The 2007-2008 financial crisis has affected the prospects for workers in
|
|
a range of ways. In-work poverty represents just one, yet key feature of
|
|
how prospects for workers have changed in recent times. In-work poverty
|
|
disproportionately impacts on marginalised groups, such as the disabled.
|
|
Current research reveals little about how disability and poverty
|
|
intersect in the context of employment. To address this oversight, life
|
|
history interviews were conducted with disabled people in in-work
|
|
poverty. The findings were analysed using the social model of disability
|
|
and the lens of intersectionality. The results highlight how government
|
|
policies, employer practices and household finances impact on disabled
|
|
workers' lived experience of in-work poverty. The findings suggest that
|
|
governments and employers can do more to reduce barriers to escaping
|
|
in-work poverty for disabled workers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Richards, J (Corresponding Author), Heriot Watt Univ, Dept Business Management, Mary Burton Bldg, Edinburgh EH14 4AS, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Richards, James; Sang, Kate, Heriot Watt Univ, Dept Business Management, Mary Burton Bldg, Edinburgh EH14 4AS, Midlothian, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0143831X17750474},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-831X},
|
|
EISSN = {1461-7099},
|
|
Keywords = {Disability; financial crisis; intersectionality; in-work poverty; social
|
|
model of disability; United Kingdom},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW PAY; JOB QUALITY; EMPLOYMENT; EMPLOYEES; PEOPLE; LIFE; NARRATIVES;
|
|
EXCLUSION; HARDSHIP; BRITAIN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {j.richards@hw.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Richards, James/AAP-3410-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Richards, James/0000-0003-3664-2884
|
|
Sang, Katherine/0000-0003-1397-1116},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {81},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000477645600009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000183698700008,
|
|
Author = {Poerwanto, S and Stevenson, M and de Klerk, N},
|
|
Title = {Infant mortality and family welfare: policy implications for Indonesia},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {493-498},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Study objective: To examine the effect of family welfare index ( FWI)
|
|
and maternal education on the probability of infant death.
|
|
Design: A population based multistage stratified clustered survey.
|
|
Setting: Women of reproductive age in Indonesia between 1983 - 1997.
|
|
Data sources: The 1997 Indonesian Demographic and Health Survey.
|
|
Main results: Infant mortality was associated with FWI and maternal
|
|
education. Relative to families of high FWI, the risk of infant death
|
|
was almost twice among families of low FWI ( aOR= 1.7, 95\% CI= 0.9 to
|
|
3.3), and three times for families of medium FWI ( aOR= 3.3,95\% CI= 1.7
|
|
to 6.5). Also, the risk of infant death was threefold higher ( aOR= 3.4,
|
|
95\% CI= 1.6 to 7.1) among mothers who had fewer than seven years of
|
|
formal education compared with mothers with more than seven years of
|
|
education. Fertility related indicators such as young maternal age,
|
|
absence from contraception, birth intervals, and prenatal care, seem to
|
|
exert significant effect on the increased probability of infant death.
|
|
Conclusions: The increased probability of infant mortality attributable
|
|
to family income inequality and low maternal education seems to work
|
|
through pathways of material deprivation and chronic psychological
|
|
stress that affect a person's health damaging behaviours. The policies
|
|
that are likely to significantly reduce the family's socioeconomic
|
|
inequality in infant mortality are implicated.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Poerwanto, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Western Australia, Sch Populat Hlth, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
|
|
Univ Western Australia, Sch Populat Hlth, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
|
|
Univ Western Australia, TVW Telethon Inst Child Hlth Res, Perth, WA 6009, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/jech.57.7.493},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-005X},
|
|
EISSN = {1470-2738},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME INEQUALITY; PSYCHOSOCIAL ENVIRONMENT; UNITED-STATES; HEALTH;
|
|
RATES; DETERMINANTS; EDUCATION; PATHWAYS; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {siswop@dph.uwa.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {de Klerk, Nicholas H/D-8388-2016
|
|
stevenson, mark/AAE-9706-2019
|
|
Poerwanto, Siswo/Q-2585-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {de Klerk, Nicholas H/0000-0001-9223-0767
|
|
stevenson, mark/0000-0003-3166-5876
|
|
Poerwanto, Siswo/0000-0003-4487-460X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {51},
|
|
Times-Cited = {19},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000183698700008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000847205300004,
|
|
Author = {Bould, Em and Callaway, Libby},
|
|
Title = {A co-design approach to examine and develop pathways to open employment
|
|
for people with acquired brain injury},
|
|
Journal = {BRAIN IMPAIRMENT},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {50-66},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background and objectives: People with acquired brain injury (ABI) have
|
|
traditionally experienced low employment rates, compared with the
|
|
national average and others with disability in Australia. To positively
|
|
impact mainstream economic participation following ABI, a co-design
|
|
approach was used to investigate open employment pathways available and
|
|
consider necessary pathway features to enable employment for people with
|
|
ABI.
|
|
Method: A qualitative focus group methodology was used with four groups:
|
|
people with ABI; health professionals working with this group; employers
|
|
providing work for people with ABI and social and injury insurers
|
|
funding employment services. The project was delivered in two phases:
|
|
(1) review existing work pathways in Australia and gather knowledge
|
|
about enablers and barriers to employment following ABI and (2) use ABI
|
|
lived experience, employers' experience and allied health and social
|
|
insurer expertise to develop a new pathway to mainstream employment.
|
|
Results: Co-design helped to identify enablers and barriers to
|
|
employment of people with ABI, as well as practical strategies to
|
|
facilitate workplace diversity and inclusion. Enablers included
|
|
replacing interviews with an onsite assessment to meet key staff and
|
|
trial work tasks, employer education on ABI, the use of compensatory
|
|
cognitive aides and graded on-the-job support. This guided the
|
|
development of a new employment pathway, tailored for people with ABI,
|
|
called `Employment CoLab'.
|
|
Conclusions: The Employment CoLab pathway, when coupled with
|
|
person-centred collaborative and effective social disability insurance
|
|
approaches, offers opportunities to build inclusive, sustainable and
|
|
scalable economic participation and mainstream wages for people with
|
|
ABI.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bould, E (Corresponding Author), Monash Univ, Dept Occupat Therapy, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Bould, Em; Callaway, Libby, Monash Univ, Dept Occupat Therapy, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Callaway, Libby, Monash Univ, Rehabil Ageing \& Independent Living Res Ctr, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/BrImp.2020.9},
|
|
ISSN = {1443-9646},
|
|
EISSN = {1839-5252},
|
|
Keywords = {Acquired brain injury; co-design; enablers and barriers; economic
|
|
participation; employment pathway},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY; RETURN; WORK; REHABILITATION; OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology; Neurosciences; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {em.bould@monash.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bould, Em/HZL-8802-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bould, Em/0000-0003-3108-2072
|
|
Callaway, Libby/0000-0002-3127-6312},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000847205300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000376215700008,
|
|
Author = {Detang-Dessendre, Cecile and Partridge, Mark D. and Piguet, Virginie},
|
|
Title = {Local labor market flexibility in a perceived low migration country: The
|
|
case of French labor markets},
|
|
Journal = {REGIONAL SCIENCE AND URBAN ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {58},
|
|
Pages = {89-103},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Local labor markets are most flexible and aggregate natural unemployment
|
|
is reduced when there is sufficient interregional economic migration to
|
|
ensure that workers are reallocated from declining to expanding regions.
|
|
Local European labor markets have generally been viewed as not as
|
|
flexible as those in North America, leading to greater fluctuations in
|
|
local wages, labor force participation and unemployment rates, and
|
|
smaller changes in local employment as economic shocks are primarily
|
|
experienced by the local area's original residents. France is an
|
|
interesting case. French gross migration rates-though perhaps relatively
|
|
low-are higher today than a generation ago. Using a host of novel
|
|
identification approaches and French employment zone data dating back to
|
|
the early 1980s, we investigate whether these changes correspond to
|
|
economic migration that would increase labor market flexibility. Our
|
|
results detect surprising amounts of economic migration in that most new
|
|
jobs are eventually taken by new migrants or outside commuters. We then
|
|
reconcile these somewhat surprising findings with the still relatively
|
|
low contemporary French interregional gross migration rates, concluding
|
|
that other structural impediments besides relative local labor market
|
|
inflexibility are behind relatively poor labor market performance. (C)
|
|
2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Detang-Dessendre, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Bourgogne Franche Comte, INRA, Cesaer UMR1041, AgroSup Dijon, BP87999, F-21079 Dijon, France.
|
|
Detang-Dessendre, Cecile; Piguet, Virginie, Univ Bourgogne Franche Comte, INRA, Cesaer UMR1041, AgroSup Dijon, BP87999, F-21079 Dijon, France.
|
|
Partridge, Mark D., Ohio State Univ, AED Econ, 2120 Fyffe Rd, Columbus, OH 43210 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2016.03.003},
|
|
ISSN = {0166-0462},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-2308},
|
|
Keywords = {Internal migration; Labor market flexibility; Rural urban disparities;
|
|
Local labor market},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTERNAL MIGRATION; UNEMPLOYMENT; GROWTH; WAGE; EQUILIBRIUM; RIGIDITIES;
|
|
EUROPE; SHIFTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Environmental Studies; Urban Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {Cecile.Detang-Dessendre@dijon.inra.fr
|
|
partridge.27@osu.edu
|
|
virginie.piguet@dijon.inra.fr},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Piguet, Virginie/0000-0001-9424-4695},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000376215700008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000696980700002,
|
|
Author = {Ralph, Kelcie M. and Iacobucci, Evan},
|
|
Title = {Travel mode and participation in structured activities among U.S. teens},
|
|
Journal = {TRAVEL BEHAVIOUR AND SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Pages = {164-173},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {In the United States, low-income and minority teens are less likely than
|
|
their affluent and white peers to engage in structured activities like
|
|
team sports, clubs, and paid work. This gap is problematic because teens
|
|
who participate earn higher grades, are less likely to drop out of high
|
|
school, and are more likely to enroll in college. While scholars in
|
|
other fields focus on program availability and affordability, this paper
|
|
asks: Could transportation barriers keep some teens from participating?
|
|
To answer that question, we analyze data on the travel and time use of
|
|
teens ages 15 to 18 from the American Time Use Survey (2004 to 2018). We
|
|
find that teens who use a car are far more likely than otherwise similar
|
|
teens who walk, bike, or ride public transit to participate in
|
|
extramurals, athletics, and paid work. Because minority and low-income
|
|
teens are less likely to have a car or a driver's license, they are less
|
|
likely to use a car on the survey day. This restricts their ability to
|
|
participate. What is worse, gaps in automobility have widened over time,
|
|
particularly by income. While this cross-sectional data cannot
|
|
definitively indicate causality, we draw on the modal mismatch and
|
|
transportation disadvantage literatures to interpret these findings.
|
|
Many teens, particularly low-income and minority teens-cannot reliably
|
|
access structured activities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ralph, KM (Corresponding Author), Rutgers State Univ, Edward J Bloustein Sch Planning \& Publ Policy, 33 Livingston Ave, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
|
|
Ralph, Kelcie M.; Iacobucci, Evan, Rutgers State Univ, Edward J Bloustein Sch Planning \& Publ Policy, 33 Livingston Ave, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.tbs.2021.07.004},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2214-367X},
|
|
EISSN = {2214-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Inequality; Activity participation; School travel; Accessibility; Travel
|
|
mode},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WELFARE-TO-WORK; HIGH-SCHOOL-STUDENTS; EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES; UNITED-STATES; US CHILDREN; GENDER-GAP; URBAN FORM;
|
|
TRANSPORTATION; ADOLESCENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {kelcie.ralph@ejb.rutgers.edu
|
|
evan.iacobucci@rutgers.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {96},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000696980700002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000654634200001,
|
|
Author = {Vermesch, P. and Boisjoly, G. and Lachapelle, U.},
|
|
Title = {Commuting mode share and workplace-based public transport services: An
|
|
equity perspective},
|
|
Journal = {CASE STUDIES ON TRANSPORT POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {590-599},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Forced car ownership, defined as owning a car despite having limited
|
|
economic resources, is an increasingly prevalent issue that places
|
|
low-income households under significant economic stress. This is largely
|
|
due to the car-oriented development that has prevailed in the last
|
|
decades in most metropolitan regions in North America and many other
|
|
parts of the world. Knowing that the desire to access employment
|
|
opportunities, combined with the lack of adequate transport
|
|
alternatives, is a major factor contributing to the acquisition of a car
|
|
among low-income households, this research investigates the use of cars
|
|
to access employment locations from a social equity perspective. More
|
|
specifically, this study seeks to understand the relationship between
|
|
public transport services at the workplace and commuting mode share, by
|
|
combining detailed workplace-based census data with public transport
|
|
schedule data. The spatial dispersion of low-income employment across
|
|
the territory is first assessed. A linear regression model is then
|
|
conducted to examine the relationship between mode share and public
|
|
transport services, while controlling for the socio-economic
|
|
characteristics of the commuters working in these areas. Interactions
|
|
terms are included to assess the differentiated impact of service
|
|
frequency across income groups. The results show that employment
|
|
locations with high shares of low-income (LI) workers are spatially
|
|
dispersed across the territory and are not, as a general trend, favoured
|
|
in terms of public transport provision. The results of the linear
|
|
regression model demonstrate that, in addition to the proximity of a
|
|
metro station, frequent bus services are strongly associated with a
|
|
decrease of the modal share of car, especially in areas that concentrate
|
|
larger shares of LI workers. This result, combined with the spatial
|
|
dispersion of LI jobs, points towards the improvement of bus services as
|
|
a key strategy to better serve LI jobs and thereby reduce car use and
|
|
dependency among LI workers. More specifically, one potential avenue
|
|
would be to explore the development of rapid bus corridors along
|
|
commercial streets. Taken together, the results of the study shed light
|
|
on the importance and possible equity benefits of transport policies
|
|
aiming at developing frequent bus services to support lower use of cars
|
|
among LI workers. By using census data aggregated at the work locations
|
|
instead of at the place of residence, this study complements the
|
|
research on travel behaviour and equity, which is typically based on the
|
|
residential location of different socio-economic groups. The findings of
|
|
this study are of relevance to researchers and policymakers wishing to
|
|
explore potential levers to reduce car use among low-income households.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Boisjoly, G (Corresponding Author), Polytech Montreal, Dept Civil Geol \& Min Engn, Montreal, PQ H3T 1J4, Canada.
|
|
Vermesch, P.; Boisjoly, G., Polytech Montreal, Dept Civil Geol \& Min Engn, Montreal, PQ H3T 1J4, Canada.
|
|
Lachapelle, U., Univ Quebec Montreal, Dept Etud Urbaines \& Tourist, Ecole Sci Gest, Montreal, PQ H3C 3P8, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.cstp.2021.02.013},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2213-624X},
|
|
EISSN = {2213-6258},
|
|
Keywords = {Forced car ownership; Transport equity; Commuting mode share; Public
|
|
transport; Job decentralization},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BUS RAPID-TRANSIT; SOCIAL EQUITY; ACCESSIBILITY; CAR; CHOICE;
|
|
OBJECTIVES; STRATEGIES; DISPARITY; PATTERNS; MOBILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {gboisjoly@polymtl.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Boisjoly, Genevieve/0000-0001-5375-7750},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000654634200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000380012500004,
|
|
Author = {Gandini, Luciana and Lozano-Ascencio, Fernando},
|
|
Title = {The Effects of the Crisis on Occupational Segregation of Skilled
|
|
Migrants from Latin America and the Caribbean in the United States,
|
|
2006-2012},
|
|
Journal = {POPULATION SPACE AND PLACE},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {5, SI},
|
|
Pages = {441-456},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of this paper is to analyse the effect of the 2007-2008
|
|
economic and financial crisis on the levels of employment and
|
|
unemployment of skilled migrants from Latin America and the Caribbean
|
|
(LAC), as well as their conditions of labour insertion and levels of
|
|
income, in order to identify patterns of occupational segregation and
|
|
wage inequality according to their participation in the US labour
|
|
market. This analysis was developed using a comparative perspective in
|
|
two ways: on the one hand, comparing skilled migrants from LAC to the
|
|
skilled migrant population from other regions of the world and to the
|
|
native skilled population and, on the other hand, by analysing these
|
|
indicators pre-crisis and post-crisis. The information source employed
|
|
in this study was the March supplements of the Current Population Survey
|
|
2006-2012. Our findings indicate that the crisis affected the entire
|
|
skilled population in the USA and particularly the migrant population.
|
|
This impact is stronger among LAC women because they are the ones at
|
|
greatest disadvantage, a situation that worsened following the crisis.
|
|
Skilled migrants from LAC are substantially more segregated on the
|
|
occupational structure than other migrants, and they increased its
|
|
concentration in medium-skilled occupations. The study also found that
|
|
skilled migrants from LAC are underrepresented in professional
|
|
occupations. Copyright (c) 2015 John Wiley \& Sons, Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gandini, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Inst Invest Jurid, Circuito Maestro Mario de la Cueva S-N, Mexico City 04510, DF, Mexico.
|
|
Gandini, Luciana, Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Inst Invest Jurid, Circuito Maestro Mario de la Cueva S-N, Mexico City 04510, DF, Mexico.
|
|
Lozano-Ascencio, Fernando, Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Ctr Reg Invest Multidisciplinarias, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/psp.1909},
|
|
ISSN = {1544-8444},
|
|
EISSN = {1544-8452},
|
|
Keywords = {skilled migration; crisis and migration; occupational segregation; wage
|
|
differentials; migration to the USA; Latin America and the Caribbean},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography; Geography},
|
|
Author-Email = {lgandini@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gandini, Luciana/0000-0002-1999-4696},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000380012500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1997YA11300004,
|
|
Author = {Mehl, P},
|
|
Title = {Transforming social security in agriculture in transition countries: The
|
|
case of East Germany},
|
|
Journal = {LANDBAUFORSCHUNG VOLKENRODE},
|
|
Year = {1997},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {75-88},
|
|
Abstract = {In this paper practical and political problems concerning the
|
|
transformation of the social security system in agriculture of the `old'
|
|
Federal Republic of Germany to the New Federal States are discussed. The
|
|
intention is to analyse the impacts of transferring this system to East
|
|
Germany, especially concerning social security matters and their
|
|
financial and distributive effects. Furthermore some conclusions from
|
|
the East German experiences for the transformation of the social policy
|
|
systems for the agricultural sectors in Central and Eastern European
|
|
countries (CEECs) are drawn. Since insight into the interdependencies of
|
|
polity politics and policies are important for a successful guidance the
|
|
political determinants of policy-making in this sector in unified
|
|
Germany are examined too.
|
|
In comparison with the CEECs the transformation process in East Germany
|
|
has to Se dealt with as a special case. The very rapid transition from a
|
|
planned economy to a market economy lead to a drastic reduction of jobs
|
|
particularly in the agricultural sector of East Germany. But unlike
|
|
other CEECs in transition, a whole string of government programmes has
|
|
been adopted and contributed a lot to make this process socially
|
|
acceptable. The transfers from the federal budget to the New Lander
|
|
amounted to 615 billion DM from 1991 to 1995; approximately 40 per cent
|
|
(215 billion DM) has been spent on social policy measures, mainly for
|
|
the labour market policy measures. In this respect, the New Federal
|
|
States found themselves in a unique situation which gave them a rather
|
|
privileged position, facilitating and mitigating the required changes. A
|
|
further consequence of this general framework of transition was that the
|
|
transformation in the New Federal States meant in almost every economic
|
|
sector the transfer of the West German institutions.
|
|
The structure of agricultural enterprises in East Germany differed,
|
|
however, considerably from the West German family farms. Therefore, a
|
|
sob adoption of West German institutions of social security policy for
|
|
the agricultural sector in the New Federal States was problematic: On
|
|
the one hand it seemed questionable whether this scheme was applicable
|
|
to the special situation and particular social security demands of the
|
|
farm population in the New Federal States. On the other band the
|
|
agricultural social security system in the Federal Republic of Germany
|
|
had become an important instrument of agricultural income policy at the
|
|
national level. Since it is highly subsidised the question arised how
|
|
this would influence the competitiveness between different legal forms
|
|
of farm enterprises. Hence political decision makers were in a dilemma:
|
|
introducing the special agricultural insurance system without any
|
|
significant changes in the financing system would exclude many
|
|
registered cooperatives from subsidies of considerable amount. So an
|
|
alternative policy-option was to reform the system by decoupling the
|
|
social security policy for agriculture from income: policy objectives
|
|
and reforming it using the social insurance systems for employees as a
|
|
point of reference.
|
|
Politicians have chosen different options in transferring the social
|
|
security system in agriculture of the Old Federal States to the New
|
|
Federal States. In health and accident insurance the policy-option of an
|
|
unchanged transfer of the West German institutions was preferred. In the
|
|
old age pension scheme the policy-option of a transfer was linked with a
|
|
partial reform of the system, reducing the distributive advantages of
|
|
the sectoral system. With the exception of the agricultural accident
|
|
insurance covering an types of farm enterprises the working population
|
|
in agriculture is treated in accordance to their status as self employed
|
|
or employees. Whereas agricultural entrepreneurs are included into the
|
|
sectoral systems, agricultural employees remain in the general statutory
|
|
systems. This was a reasonable solution in terms of the different social
|
|
needs of both groups. Comparing the distributive effects of the two
|
|
systems however shows, that there are still considerable advantages for
|
|
the farmers' system, despite a remarkable reform of the farmer's old age
|
|
pension scheme. Explaining these policy outcomes in social security
|
|
policy in agriculture has to focus on changing policy networks before
|
|
and after German unification. The path-dependency and in some way
|
|
contingency of the policy process and its results make it almost
|
|
impossible to draw general conclusions, in order to provide guidance as
|
|
to how to manage reform processes in agricultural policy.
|
|
Due to the fact that all CEECs are undertaking or initiating reforms of
|
|
their social security systems, however, these countries do have a
|
|
particular interest to find the best possible solutions for the social
|
|
problems they are involved, bearing in mind, however, that a social
|
|
security system cannot simply be copied from another country. A look at
|
|
social security systems in West European countries demonstrates the wide
|
|
range of possibilities available for organizing social security. In
|
|
Central and East European countries too there was not one single
|
|
socialist system of social security policy. Hence, CEECs have to reform
|
|
their own schemes due to the overall conditions and the historical
|
|
backgrounds in each country. This does not, however, imply that
|
|
experiences from social security in western democratic countries or the
|
|
transformation process in East Germany may not be of interest to the
|
|
other states undergoing transformation.
|
|
In all 15 member countries of the EU employees in agriculture and
|
|
self-employed farmers as well are covered by comprehensive compulsory
|
|
insurance schemes. But especially the insurance schemes for farmers,
|
|
obligatorily insured in old age pension schemes in all states, are very
|
|
heterogenously organized. Partly, farmers are insured in special
|
|
agricultural systems or in social security systems for self-employed
|
|
persons, partly, farmers are members of the general social security
|
|
systems. Despite great varieties in entitlement rules, insured persons,
|
|
level of benefits etc. all sectoral systems for farmers have the
|
|
following in common: more old age pensioners than contributors; a high
|
|
dependency on state subsidies; a low level of pensions and problems of
|
|
compatibility with other old age pension schemes, if a farmer decides to
|
|
change occupation.
|
|
Up to now among the CEECs only Poland has a special system of old age
|
|
pensions for farmers. In the other CEECs, farmers as well as the entire
|
|
working population in agriculture were insured within the general
|
|
system. Experiences in Poland with KRUS, the agricultural social
|
|
security fund, are similiar to those in Western European countries with
|
|
special security systems for farmers. Looking at the experiences in the
|
|
FRG, in the other West-European countries with special systems for
|
|
farmers and in Poland, it seems not to be a recommendable solution for
|
|
other CEECs to follow these examples.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mehl, P (Corresponding Author), BUNDESFORSCH ANSTALT LANDWIRTSCHAFT BRAUNSCHWEIG,INST STRUKTURFORSCH,BRAUNSCHWEIG,GERMANY.},
|
|
ISSN = {0458-6859},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Agriculture, Multidisciplinary},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1997YA11300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000788871700001,
|
|
Author = {Valverde, Jose R. Rubio and Mackenbach, Johan P. and De Waegenaere, Anja
|
|
M. B. and Melenberg, Bertrand and Lyu, Pintao and Nusselder, Wilma J.},
|
|
Title = {Projecting years in good health between age 50-69 by education in the
|
|
Netherlands until 2030 using several health indicators-an application in
|
|
the context of a changing pension age},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {APR 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective We investigate whether there are changes over time in years in
|
|
good health people can expect to live above (surplus) or below (deficit)
|
|
the pension age, by level of attained education, for the past (2006),
|
|
present (2018) and future (2030) in the Netherlands. Methods We used
|
|
regression analysis to estimate linear trends in prevalence of four
|
|
health indicators: self-assessed health (SAH), the Organization for
|
|
Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) functional limitation
|
|
indicator, the OECD indicator without hearing and seeing, and the
|
|
activities-of-daily-living (ADL) disability indicator, for individuals
|
|
between 50 and 69 years of age, by age category, gender and education
|
|
using the Dutch National Health Survey (1989-2018). We combined these
|
|
prevalence estimates with past and projected mortality data to obtain
|
|
estimates of years lived in good health. We calculated how many years
|
|
individuals are expected to live in good health above (surplus) or below
|
|
(deficit) the pension age for the three points in time. The pension ages
|
|
used were 65 years for 2006, 66 years for 2018 and 67.25 years for 2030.
|
|
Results Both for low educated men and women, our analyses show an
|
|
increasing deficit of years in good health relative to the pension age
|
|
for most outcomes, particularly for the SAH and OECD indicator. For high
|
|
educated we find a decreasing surplus of years lived in good health for
|
|
all indicators with the exception of SAH. For women, absolute
|
|
inequalities in the deficit or surplus of years in good health between
|
|
low and high educated appear to be increasing over time. Conclusions
|
|
Socio-economic inequalities in trends of mortality and the prevalence of
|
|
ill-health, combined with increasing statutory pension age, impact the
|
|
low educated more adversely than the high educated. Policies are needed
|
|
to mitigate the increasing deficit of years in good health relative to
|
|
the pension age, particularly among the low educated.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Valverde, JRR (Corresponding Author), Erasmus MC, Dept Publ Hlth, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Valverde, Jose R. Rubio; Mackenbach, Johan P.; Nusselder, Wilma J., Erasmus MC, Dept Publ Hlth, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
De Waegenaere, Anja M. B.; Melenberg, Bertrand; Lyu, Pintao, Tilburg Univ, Sch Econ \& Management, Tilburg, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-022-13223-8},
|
|
Article-Number = {859},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Ill-health; Retirement; Socioeconomic position},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; PAID EMPLOYMENT; ILL HEALTH; SULLIVANS METHOD;
|
|
RETIREMENT AGE; DISABILITY; EXIT; INEQUALITIES; EXPECTANCY; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {rubiojose84@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Melenberg, Bertrand/IUM-2524-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Melenberg, Bertrand/0000-0003-4195-8744
|
|
De Waegenaere, Anja/0000-0001-7396-3789},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000788871700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000537564800004,
|
|
Author = {Arun, Ozgur and Holdsworth, Jason K.},
|
|
Title = {Integrated social and health care services among societies in
|
|
transition: Insights from Turkey},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF AGING STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {53},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Societies experiencing rapid demographic transition may expect to face
|
|
challenges such as accelerated population aging and increasing
|
|
care-related needs. Decentralization of welfare states and resultant
|
|
fragmentation of services is gaining increasing attention. In this
|
|
study, we offer suggestions of how developing countries might move from
|
|
fragmentation to integration of social and health care services. Using
|
|
the Health Survey of Turkey (HST-2012) data with 15,000 households of
|
|
populations' age 15 and older, we explore challenges to integrating
|
|
social and health care service strategies in Turkey. Findings include
|
|
inequities in material and service accessibility between rural and urban
|
|
settings. Increasing numbers of older widowed women, especially in rural
|
|
environments, will require direct income assistance over the coming
|
|
decades. Additional findings include the need for primary and
|
|
preventative health care services for middle age groups and strategies
|
|
to address both unemployment among younger generations and barriers to
|
|
work force participation for women. In conclusion, among rapid
|
|
transition societies, it will take time to resolve
|
|
decentralization-related regional inequalities in social and health
|
|
services. Therefore, information and communications technologies (ICT)
|
|
should be employed from an intersectionality perspective to more quickly
|
|
bridge the services integration - regional inequalities gap in Turkey
|
|
and possibly other societies in transition.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Arun, O (Corresponding Author), Akdeniz Univ, Dept Gerontol, TR-07058 Antalya, Turkey.
|
|
Arun, Ozgur, Akdeniz Univ, Dept Gerontol, TR-07058 Antalya, Turkey.
|
|
Holdsworth, Jason K., Senex Assoc Aging Studies, Hamilton, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jaging.2020.100850},
|
|
Article-Number = {100850},
|
|
ISSN = {0890-4065},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-193X},
|
|
Keywords = {Social and health care services; Demographic transition; Inequalities;
|
|
Intersectionality; Correspondence analysis; Turkey},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SCIENCE; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {arun@akdeniz.edu.tr},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000537564800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000374222200003,
|
|
Author = {Sadana, Ritu and Blas, Erik and Budhwani, Suman and Koller, Theadora and
|
|
Paraje, Guillermo},
|
|
Title = {Healthy Ageing: Raising Awareness of Inequalities, Determinants, and
|
|
What Could Be Done to Improve Health Equity},
|
|
Journal = {GERONTOLOGIST},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {56},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {S178-S193},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose of the Study: Social and scientific discourses on healthy ageing
|
|
and on health equity are increasingly available, yet from a global
|
|
perspective limited conceptual and analytical work connecting both has
|
|
been published. This review was done to inform the WHO World Report on
|
|
Ageing and Health and to inform and encourage further work addressing
|
|
both healthy aging and equity.
|
|
Design and Methods: We conducted an extensive literature review on the
|
|
overlap between both topics, privileging publications from 2005 onward,
|
|
from low-, middle-, and high-income countries. We also reviewed evidence
|
|
generated around the WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health,
|
|
applicable to ageing and health across the life course.
|
|
Results: Based on data from 194 countries, we highlight differences in
|
|
older adults' health and consider three issues: First, multi-level
|
|
factors that contribute to differences in healthy ageing, across
|
|
contexts; second, policies or potential entry points for action that
|
|
could serve to reduce unfair differences (health inequities); and third,
|
|
new research areas to address the cause of persistent inequities and
|
|
gaps in evidence on what can be done to increase healthy ageing and
|
|
health equity.
|
|
Implications: Each of these areas warrant in depth analysis and
|
|
synthesis, whereas this article presents an overview for further
|
|
consideration and action.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sadana, R (Corresponding Author), WHO, Dept Ageing \& Life Course, 20 Ave Appia, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Sadana, Ritu, WHO, Dept Ageing \& Life Course, 20 Ave Appia, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Blas, Erik, Int Publ Hlth \& Dev, Copenhagen, Denmark.
|
|
Budhwani, Suman, Univ Toronto, Inst Hlth Policy Management \& Evaluat, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada.
|
|
Koller, Theadora, WHO, Gender Equ \& Human Rights Team, 20 Ave Appia, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Paraje, Guillermo, Univ Adolfo Ibanez, Escuela Negocios, Santiago, Chile.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/geront/gnw034},
|
|
ISSN = {0016-9013},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-5341},
|
|
Keywords = {Healthy life expectancy; Life course; Social determinants of health;
|
|
Health policy; Research agenda},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; OLDER-ADULTS; SOCIAL GERONTOLOGY; CARE;
|
|
COVERAGE; AGE; PRIORITIES; DEMOGRAPHY; DISEASES; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {sadanar@who.int},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Koller, Theadora Swift/0000-0001-5655-7690
|
|
Paraje, Guillermo/0000-0002-7863-907X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {112},
|
|
Times-Cited = {84},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {51},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000374222200003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000877504000013,
|
|
Author = {Chisholm, Hillary and Kershaw, Trace and Guerra, Laura Sotelo and Bocek,
|
|
Kevin and Garcia, Yesenia and Lion, K. Casey},
|
|
Title = {A Realist Evaluation Analysis of a Novel Multi-Faceted Inpatient Patient
|
|
Navigation Program},
|
|
Journal = {ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {789-796},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: Children of color and from low-income families experience
|
|
disparities in hospital care and outcomes. This study examined the
|
|
experiences of parents and providers who participated in a novel patient
|
|
navigation program designed to address these disparities.
|
|
METHODS: Between April and October 2018, we conducted semistructured
|
|
interviews with parents enrolled in the Family Bridge navigation pilot
|
|
study, and inpatient care providers. Each set of interviews was
|
|
thematically coded and analyzed according to the Realist Evaluation
|
|
Framework of context, mechanism and outcomes; to identify how and when
|
|
the program worked, for whom, and with what results.
|
|
RESULTS: Of 60 parents enrolled in the intervention, 50 (83\%) completed
|
|
an interview. All enrolled children had public insurance; 66\% were
|
|
Hispanic, 24\% were non-Hispanic Black, and 36\% of parents preferred
|
|
Spanish for communication. Of 23 providers who completed an interview,
|
|
16 (70\%) were attending physicians. Parents identified 4 contexts
|
|
influencing intervention effectiveness: past clinical experience,
|
|
barriers to communication, access to resources, and timing of
|
|
intervention delivery. Four mechanisms were identified by both parents
|
|
and providers: emotional support, information collection and sharing,
|
|
facilitating communication, and addressing unmet social needs.
|
|
Parent-level outcomes included improved communication, feeling
|
|
supported, and increased parental knowledge surrounding the child's care
|
|
and the health system. Provider-level outcomes included providing
|
|
tailored communication and attending to family nonmedical needs.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: This study provided insight into the mechanisms by which an
|
|
inpatient navigation program may improve communication, support, and
|
|
knowledge for parents of low-income children of color, both directly and
|
|
by changing provider behavior.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chisholm, H (Corresponding Author), Yale Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social \& Behav Sci, 60 Coll St, New Haven, CT 06510 USA.
|
|
Chisholm, Hillary; Kershaw, Trace, Yale Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social \& Behav Sci, 60 Coll St, New Haven, CT 06510 USA.
|
|
Chisholm, Hillary, MGH Inst Hlth Profess, Sch Nursing, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Guerra, Laura Sotelo; Bocek, Kevin; Garcia, Yesenia; Lion, K. Casey, Seattle Childrens Res Inst, Ctr Child Hlth Behav \& Dev, Seattle, WA USA.
|
|
Lion, K. Casey, Univ Washington, Seattle Childrens Hosp, Dept Pediat, Sch Med, Seattle, WA USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1876-2859},
|
|
EISSN = {1876-2867},
|
|
Keywords = {emotional support; low-income/minority; patient-centered communication;
|
|
patient navigation; pediatric hospital medicine},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ETHNIC DISPARITIES; CARE; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {hchisholm@mghihp.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Chisholm, Hillary/0000-0002-3946-4641
|
|
Lion, K. Casey/0000-0002-7718-7462
|
|
Sotelo Guerra, Laura/0000-0002-8456-8220
|
|
Bocek, Kevin/0000-0003-3574-2429},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000877504000013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000820117400006,
|
|
Author = {Sawyer, Ashlee N. and Bono, Rose S. and Kaplan, Bekir and Breland,
|
|
Alison B.},
|
|
Title = {Nicotine/tobacco use disparities among transgender and gender diverse
|
|
adults: Findings from wave 4 PATH data},
|
|
Journal = {DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {232},
|
|
Month = {MAR 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Transgender and Gender Diverse (TGD) populations have
|
|
current cigarette/e-cigarette/cigar use rates ranging from 32.6\% to
|
|
39.7\%. Importantly, while some studies have reported tobacco use as
|
|
significantly higher among TGD versus cisgender individuals in
|
|
multivariate analyses, others have reported no significant differences.
|
|
The present study used data from wave 4 of the Population Assessment of
|
|
Tobacco and Health (PATH) study, a large, nationally representative U.S.
|
|
study, to examine relationships among sociodemographic characteristics,
|
|
internal and external factors, and tobacco use behaviors, with a focus
|
|
on TGD individuals.
|
|
Methods: Data were from 33,628 adults from the PATH study's wave 4
|
|
(collected December 2016-January 2018). Multivariable logistic
|
|
regression models examined differences in current tobacco use
|
|
(cigarettes, electronic nicotine products, and cigars) between TGD and
|
|
cisgender individuals through the replication of previous work using
|
|
PATH data, as well as evaluating the role of other internal and external
|
|
factors.
|
|
Results: TGD individuals were 2-3 times more likely than cisgender
|
|
individuals to report current nicotine/tobacco use, even after
|
|
adjustment for potential confounders. TGD individuals tended to have
|
|
lower income and education and be more likely to endorse a sexual
|
|
minority identity than their cisgender counterparts; meanwhile, lower
|
|
income, less education, and lesbian/gay and bisexual identities were
|
|
significant predictors of nicotine/tobacco use, independent of TGD
|
|
identity.
|
|
Conclusions: Present findings underscore the high rates of
|
|
nicotine/tobacco use in the TGNC community and emphasize the necessity
|
|
of TGD-focused research methods and measures, access to quality medical
|
|
care, and policy aimed at minimizing marginalization and
|
|
nicotine/tobacco use disparities experienced by TGD communities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sawyer, AN (Corresponding Author), 100W Franklin St,Suite 200, Richmond, VA 23220 USA.
|
|
Sawyer, Ashlee N.; Bono, Rose S.; Breland, Alison B., Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Psychol, Ctr Study Tobacco Prod, Box 2018, Richmond, VA 23284 USA.
|
|
Sawyer, Ashlee N.; Bono, Rose S.; Breland, Alison B., Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Hlth Behav \& Policy, Sch Med, Richmond, VA USA.
|
|
Kaplan, Bekir, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Inst Global Tobacco Control, Dept Hlth Behav \& Soc, Baltimore, MD USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109268},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {109268},
|
|
ISSN = {0376-8716},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-0046},
|
|
Keywords = {Transgender and gender diverse (TGD); Transgender and gender
|
|
non-conforming (TGNC); Gender minorities; Nicotine and tobacco use;
|
|
Adults; Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) study},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MINORITY STRESS; UNITED-STATES; MENTAL-HEALTH; TOBACCO USE; GAY;
|
|
DISCRIMINATION; SAMPLE; INDIVIDUALS; CIGARETTES; CESSATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Substance Abuse; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {sawyeran@vcu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000820117400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000329532100109,
|
|
Author = {Osberg, Lars},
|
|
Title = {Instability implications of increasing inequality: Evidence from North
|
|
America},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC MODELLING},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Pages = {918-930},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Increasing inequality cannot be a long-run steady state i.e. a trend
|
|
that can continue indefinitely. Because the bottom 99\% and top 1\% in
|
|
the U.S. and Canada have had very different rates of growth of market
|
|
income since the 1980s, consumption and savings flows have necessarily
|
|
changed. If aggregate expenditure is to equal aggregate income, the
|
|
added savings of the increasingly affluent must be loaned to balance
|
|
total current expenditure but increasing indebtedness implies financial
|
|
fragility, periodic financial crises, greater volatility of aggregate
|
|
income and, as governments respond to mass unemployment with
|
|
counter-cyclical fiscal policies, a compounding instability of public
|
|
finances. In Canada and the United States, increasing economic
|
|
instability is thus an implication of increasing inequality. Either an
|
|
acceleration of the income growth rate of the bottom 99\%, or a decline
|
|
in income growth of the top 1\%, could equalize income growth rates, and
|
|
thereby stabilize market income shares and macro-economic flows.
|
|
However, there is no evidence that purely economic forces will produce
|
|
either outcome anytime soon in Canada or the U.S. any return to
|
|
stability depends on political economy.
|
|
The establishment of social transfer programs, rural out-migration,
|
|
expansion of school enrolment, increased female employment and declining
|
|
birth rates are large ``one-time{''} social changes with big income
|
|
impacts for working families. In Canada and the U.S. such trends helped
|
|
stabilize inequality from 1940 to 1975, while in Mexico they have
|
|
reduced inequality (albeit from a high level) in recent years. (C) 2013
|
|
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Osberg, L (Corresponding Author), Dalhousie Univ, 6214 Univ Ave,POB 15000, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada.
|
|
Dalhousie Univ, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.econmod.2013.06.039},
|
|
ISSN = {0264-9993},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-6122},
|
|
Keywords = {Economic inequality; Unbalanced growth; Economic instability; Financial
|
|
fragility; Structural change},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME INEQUALITY; UNITED-STATES; CANADA; EARNINGS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {lars.osberg@dal.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Osberg, Lars/0000-0001-9643-9269},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000329532100109},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000416165400001,
|
|
Author = {Trani, Jean-Francois and Bakhshi, Parul and Lopez, Dominique and Gall,
|
|
Fiona and Brown, Derek},
|
|
Title = {Socioeconomic situation of persons with disabilities in Morocco and
|
|
Tunisia: Inequalities, cost and stigma},
|
|
Journal = {ALTER-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DISABILITY RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {215-233},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Two household surveys completed with qualitative interviews were carried
|
|
out in 2013 and 2014 in Morocco and Tunisia, two countries which
|
|
ratified the United Nations convention of the rights of persons with
|
|
disabilities and actively engaged in innovative policies to promote
|
|
those rights. The two surveys look at inequalities among persons with
|
|
disabilities in terms of capabilities, i.e. real opportunities a person
|
|
has to live the life she values. Based on the capability approach of
|
|
Amartya Sen, analysis presented in this study show an important gap in
|
|
terms of education, employment and health related quality of life - a
|
|
somehow more narrow perspective on wellbeing than the one proposed by
|
|
Sen, but nevertheless interesting to compare two populations - for
|
|
persons with disabilities compared to the rest of the population in both
|
|
countries. If the situation seems improved for the new generation
|
|
compared to their parents' generation, access to education - which is a
|
|
right for children with disabilities in Morocco and Tunisia - is far
|
|
from being secured in both countries. Similarly, access to employment of
|
|
persons with disabilities remains uncertain, in more precarious jobs and
|
|
for lower wages than the rest of the working age population. Social
|
|
exclusion that persons with disabilities face - as shown in the case of
|
|
education and employment - have a considerable cost in terms of health
|
|
related quality of life estimated to be the equivalent of a reduction of
|
|
20 and 18 years, respectively in Morocco and Tunisia, of the average
|
|
life expectancy of persons in good health and without a disability. The
|
|
recent policy against discrimination and for the promotion of the rights
|
|
of the persons with disabilities are going in the right direction but a
|
|
strong political will is required for them to become long term. Civil
|
|
society has an important role to play to keep the current momentum. (C)
|
|
2016 Association ALTER. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights
|
|
reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {French},
|
|
Affiliation = {Trani, JF (Corresponding Author), Washington Univ, Brown Sch, Campus Box 1196,Goldfarb Hall,Room 243, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
|
|
Trani, Jean-Francois; Brown, Derek, Washington Univ, Brown Sch, Campus Box 1196,Goldfarb Hall,Room 243, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
|
|
Bakhshi, Parul, Washington Univ, Sch Med, Program Occupat Therapy, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
|
|
Gall, Fiona, Agcy Coordinating Body Afghan Relief \& Dev, Kabul, Afghanistan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.alter.2016.09.005},
|
|
ISSN = {1875-0672},
|
|
EISSN = {1875-0680},
|
|
Keywords = {Capability approach; Disability; Morocco; Social exclusion; Stigma;
|
|
Tunisia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CAPABILITY; POVERTY; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {jtrani@wustl.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Trani, Jean-Francois/M-1946-2014
|
|
Brown, Derek S/J-3035-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Brown, Derek S/0000-0001-9908-9882},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000416165400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000405260300010,
|
|
Author = {Feng, Shuaizhang and Hu, Yingyao and Moffitt, Robert},
|
|
Title = {Long run trends in unemployment and labor force participation in urban
|
|
China},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {304-324},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Unemployment rates in countries across the world are strongly correlated
|
|
with GDP. China is an unusual outlier from the pattern, whose official
|
|
government statistics show abnormally low, and suspiciously stable,
|
|
unemployment rates relative to its GDP. This paper reports estimates of
|
|
China's unemployment rate for its local urban Hukou population using a
|
|
more reliable, nationally representative dataset for that population
|
|
than in prior work, and which spans a longer period of history than in
|
|
the past literature. The unemployment rates we calculate differ
|
|
dramatically from those supplied in official data and are much more
|
|
consistent with what is known about key historical developments in
|
|
China's labor market. The rate averaged 3.7\% in 1988-1995, when the
|
|
labor market was highly regulated and dominated by state-owned
|
|
enterprises, but rose sharply during the period of mass layoff from 1995
|
|
to 2002, reaching an average of 9.5\% in the subperiod from 2002 to
|
|
2009. The rates were even higher when demographic composition is held
|
|
fixed. We can also calculate labor force participation rates, which are
|
|
not available in official statistics at all. We find that they declined
|
|
throughout the whole period, particularly in 1995-2002 when the
|
|
unemployment rate increased most significantly. We also find that the
|
|
impacts of these changes fell most heavily on the unskilled (women,
|
|
those with less education, and younger individuals). Finally, estimates
|
|
of unemployment and labor force participation rates are also provided
|
|
for all urban residents, including migrants without local urban Hukou,
|
|
and show the same patterns of change over time. (C) 2017 Association for
|
|
Comparative Economic Studies. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights
|
|
reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Feng, SZ (Corresponding Author), Jinan Univ, Inst Econ \& Social Res, 601 Huangpu Ave West, Guangzhou 510632, Guangdong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Feng, Shuaizhang, Jinan Univ, Inst Econ \& Social Res, 601 Huangpu Ave West, Guangzhou 510632, Guangdong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Hu, Yingyao; Moffitt, Robert, Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Econ, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA.
|
|
Moffitt, Robert, NBER, China Working Grp, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jce.2017.02.004},
|
|
ISSN = {0147-5967},
|
|
EISSN = {1095-7227},
|
|
Keywords = {Unemployment rate; Labor force participation rate; China; Economic
|
|
transition},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-REFORM; CHILD-CARE; INEQUALITY; STATISTICS; GROWTH; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {shuaizhang.feng@foxmail.com
|
|
yhu@jhu.edu
|
|
moffitt@jhu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {42},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000405260300010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000271217200006,
|
|
Author = {Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara and Lim, Lynette L-Y. and Carmichael, Gordon
|
|
A. and Seubsman, Sam-Ang and Sleigh, Adrian C.},
|
|
Title = {Tracking and Decomposing Health and Disease Inequality in Thailand},
|
|
Journal = {ANNALS OF EPIDEMIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {800-807},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {PURPOSE: In middle-income countries, interest in the Study of
|
|
inequalities in health has focused on aggregate types of health
|
|
outcomes, like rates of mortality. This work moves beyond such measures
|
|
to focus on disease-specific health outcomes with the use of national
|
|
health survey data.
|
|
METHODS: Cross-sectional data from the national Health and Welfare
|
|
Survey 2003, covering 52,030 adult aged 15 or older, were analyzed. The
|
|
health outcomes were the 20 most commonly reported diseases. The age-sex
|
|
adjusted concentration index (C{*}) of ill health was used as a measure
|
|
of socioeconomic health inequality (values ranging from -1 to +1). A
|
|
negative (or positive) concentration index shows that a disease was more
|
|
concentrated among the less well off (or better off). Crude
|
|
concentration indices (C) for four of the most common diseases were also
|
|
decomposed to quantify determinants of inequalities.
|
|
RESULTS: Several diseases, such as malaria (C{*} = -0.462), goiter (C{*}
|
|
= -0.352), kidney stone (C{*} = -0.261), and tuberculosis (C{*} =
|
|
-0.233), were strongly concentrated among those with lower incomes,
|
|
whereas allergic conditions (C{*} = 0.174) and migraine (01 = 0.085)
|
|
were disproportionately reported by the better off. Inequalities were
|
|
found to be associated with older age, low education, and residence in
|
|
the rural Northeast and rural North of Thailand.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: Pro-equity health policy in Thailand and other
|
|
middle-income countries with health surveys can now be informed by
|
|
national data combining epidemiological, socioeconomic and health
|
|
statistics in ways not previously possible. Ann Epidemiol 2009;
|
|
19:800-807. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Yiengprugsawan, V (Corresponding Author), Australian Natl Univ, ANU Coll Med Biol \& Environm, Natl Ctr Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Bldg 62, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.
|
|
Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara; Lim, Lynette L-Y.; Carmichael, Gordon A.; Sleigh, Adrian C., Australian Natl Univ, ANU Coll Med Biol \& Environm, Natl Ctr Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.
|
|
Seubsman, Sam-Ang, Sukhothai Thammathirat Open Univ, Thai Hlth Risk Transit Natl Cohort Study, Nonthaburi, Thailand.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.annepidem.2009.04.009},
|
|
ISSN = {1047-2797},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-2585},
|
|
Keywords = {Concentration index; Decomposition; Health inequality; Specific
|
|
diseases; Thailand},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIOECONOMIC INEQUALITIES; UNIVERSAL COVERAGE; CHILD-MORTALITY;
|
|
DETERMINANTS; COUNTRIES; CARE; PAYMENTS; ASIA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {vasoontara.yieng@anu.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Yiengprugsawan, Vas Sbirakos/G-3176-2011
|
|
sleigh, adrian/J-4540-2019
|
|
Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara/N-7072-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Yiengprugsawan, Vas Sbirakos/0000-0001-9101-4704
|
|
sleigh, adrian/0000-0001-8443-7864
|
|
Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara/0000-0001-9101-4704
|
|
Seubsman, Sam-ang/0000-0002-7451-3218},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000271217200006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000265293300002,
|
|
Author = {Nind, Melanie and Seale, Jane},
|
|
Title = {Concepts of access for people with learning difficulties: towards a
|
|
shared understanding},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY \& SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {273-287},
|
|
Abstract = {This article explores both the process and outcomes of a seminar series
|
|
on the concept of access for people with learning difficulties. The
|
|
seminar topics chosen to foster dialogue across professional and
|
|
disciplinary boundaries included access to information, education,
|
|
employment, the law, health, leisure, community, past histories and
|
|
future plans. The seminars brought together people with learning
|
|
difficulties and their support workers, researchers and professionals,
|
|
to examine the expert knowledge of people with learning difficulties in
|
|
negotiating access, the role of practitioners in mediating access and
|
|
the contribution of research to understanding access. The aim was to
|
|
develop a rich, shared understanding of the concept of access for people
|
|
with learning difficulties. However, a huge amount of `access work' had
|
|
to be done to achieve this. The article discusses that access work and
|
|
proposes a multidimensional model of access and ways of promoting it.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nind, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Southampton, Sch Educ, Southampton, Hants, England.
|
|
Nind, Melanie; Seale, Jane, Univ Southampton, Sch Educ, Southampton, Hants, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09687590902789446},
|
|
Article-Number = {PII 910413595},
|
|
ISSN = {0968-7599},
|
|
Keywords = {learning difficulties; access; participation; inclusion; barriers},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE PROVISION; DISABILITY; INCLUSION; SERVICES; SUPPORT; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {m.a.nind@soton.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Seale, Jane/0000-0002-4279-7463
|
|
Nind, Melanie/0000-0003-4070-7513},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {39},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000265293300002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000221588700002,
|
|
Author = {Parks, V},
|
|
Title = {Access to work: The effects of spatial and social accessibility on
|
|
unemployment for native-born black and immigrant women in Los Angeles},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {80},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {141-172},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {This study contributes to the debates on both spatial mismatch and
|
|
``social-network{''} mismatch by considering the independent effects of
|
|
spatial and social accessibility on the unemployment of less-educated
|
|
native-born black and immigrant women. These groups experience
|
|
relatively high unemployment yet differ in the hypothesized capacities
|
|
of their social networks. Using residential patterns and the by detailed
|
|
geographic census data matched to travel data, I calculated an
|
|
accessibility index to measure spatial job accessibility and used
|
|
information on neighborhood characteristics and household composition to
|
|
assess social accessibility. The results indicate that better spatial
|
|
accessibility to jobs is associated with lower unemployment among
|
|
native-born black and foreign-born Mexican and Vietnamese women; no
|
|
association was detected among the remaining immigrant groups. The
|
|
analysis yielded no empirical support for the advantages that residence
|
|
in an enclave may provide female immigrant residents in the form of
|
|
access to employment through social networks. In fact, the results point
|
|
to detrimental effects of residence in an ethnic enclave for
|
|
foreign-born Mexican and Vietnamese women. Finally, among all groups,
|
|
living with other employed adults significantly and substantively
|
|
decreased a woman's likelihood of unemployment, indicating the
|
|
importance of household-based social accessibility for less-educated
|
|
native-born black and immigrant women's employment outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Parks, V (Corresponding Author), Univ Chicago, Sch Social Serv Adm, 969E 60th St, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Univ Chicago, Sch Social Serv Adm, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0013-0095},
|
|
Keywords = {employment accessibility; spatial mismatch; immigrant labor markets;
|
|
neighborhood effects; female unemployment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-FORCE PARTICIPATION; FRANCISCO BAY AREA; JOB SEARCH; NEW-YORK;
|
|
MISMATCH HYPOTHESIS; RESIDENTIAL LOCATION; EMPLOYMENT PATTERNS;
|
|
RACIAL-DIFFERENCES; NETWORKS; MARKET},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Geography},
|
|
Author-Email = {vparks@uchicago.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {88},
|
|
Times-Cited = {77},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {29},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000221588700002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000222207400006,
|
|
Author = {Agenor, PR},
|
|
Title = {Macroeconomic adjustment and the poor: Analytical issues and
|
|
cross-country evidence},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC SURVEYS},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {351-408},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper studies the links between macroeconomic adjustment and
|
|
poverty. The first part summarizes some of the recent evidence on
|
|
poverty in the developing world. The second reviews the various channels
|
|
through which macroeconomic policies affect the poor, whereas the third
|
|
is devoted to the specific role of the labor market. It presents an
|
|
analytical framework that captures some of the main features of the
|
|
urban labor market in developing countries and studies the effects of
|
|
fiscal adjustment on wages, employment, and poverty. The fourth part
|
|
presents cross-country regressions linking various macroeconomic and
|
|
structural variables to poverty. Higher levels and growth rates of per
|
|
capita income, higher rates of real exchange rate depreciation, better
|
|
health conditions, and a greater degree of commercial openness lower
|
|
poverty, whereas inflation, greater income inequality, and macroeconomic
|
|
volatility tend to increase it. Moreover, the impact of growth on
|
|
poverty appears to be asymmetric; it seems to result from a significant
|
|
relationship between episodes of increasing poverty and negative growth
|
|
rates.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Agenor, PR (Corresponding Author), World Bank, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
|
|
World Bank, Washington, DC 20433 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.0950-0804.2004.00225.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0950-0804},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-6419},
|
|
Keywords = {macroeconomic policy; poverty; labor markets},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKET; INCOME-DISTRIBUTION; ECONOMIC-GROWTH; POVERTY; INEQUALITY;
|
|
INFLATION; VOLATILITY; INVESTMENT; AFRICA; UNEMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {102},
|
|
Times-Cited = {33},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000222207400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000769813600018,
|
|
Author = {Ivanova, Diana and Wood, Richard},
|
|
Title = {The unequal distribution of household carbon footprints in Europe and
|
|
its link to sustainability},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {3},
|
|
Abstract = {Non-technical summary
|
|
The distribution of household carbon footprints is largely unequal
|
|
within and across countries. Here, we explore household-level
|
|
consumption data to illustrate the distribution of carbon footprints and
|
|
consumption within 26 European Union countries, regions and social
|
|
groups. The analysis further sheds light on the relationships between
|
|
carbon footprints and socially desirable outcomes such as income,
|
|
equality, education, nutrition, sanitation, employment and adequate
|
|
living conditions.
|
|
Technical summary
|
|
We need a good understanding of household carbon distributions in order
|
|
to design equitable carbon policy. In this work, we analyse
|
|
household-level consumer expenditure from 26 European Union (EU)
|
|
countries and link it with greenhouse gas (GHG) intensities from the
|
|
multiregional input-output database EXIOBASE. We show carbon footprint
|
|
distributions and elasticities by country, region and socio-economic
|
|
group in the context of per capita climate targets. The top 10\% of the
|
|
population with the highest carbon footprints per capita account for
|
|
27\% of the EU carbon footprint, a higher contribution to that of the
|
|
bottom 50\% of the population. The top 1\% of EU households have a
|
|
carbon footprint of 55 tCO(2)eq/cap. The most significant contribution
|
|
is from air and land transport, with 41\% and 21\% among the top 1\% of
|
|
EU households. Air transport has a rising elasticity coefficient across
|
|
EU expenditure quintiles, making it the most elastic, unequal and
|
|
carbon-intensive consumption category in this study. Only 5\% of EU
|
|
households live within climate targets, with carbon footprints below 2.5
|
|
tCO(2)eq/cap. Our analysis points to the possibility of mitigating
|
|
climate change while achieving various well-being outcomes. Further
|
|
attention is needed to limit trade-offs between climate change
|
|
mitigation and socially desirable outcomes.
|
|
Social media summary
|
|
EU top 1\% of households emit 22 times the per capita climate targets.
|
|
Only 5\% of EU households live within the targets.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ivanova, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Leeds, Sch Earth \& Environm, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Ivanova, D (Corresponding Author), Norwegian Univ Sci \& Technol, Ind Ecol Programme, Trondheim, Norway.
|
|
Ivanova, Diana, Univ Leeds, Sch Earth \& Environm, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Ivanova, Diana; Wood, Richard, Norwegian Univ Sci \& Technol, Ind Ecol Programme, Trondheim, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/sus.2020.12},
|
|
Article-Number = {e18},
|
|
EISSN = {2059-4798},
|
|
Keywords = {adaptation and mitigation; ecology and biodiversity; energy; human
|
|
behaviour; policies; politics and governance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CLIMATE POLICY; CO2 EMISSIONS; CONSUMPTION; ENERGY; MITIGATION; IMPACTS;
|
|
EXPENDITURE; INEQUALITY; TRANSPORT; POVERTY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {d.ivanova@leeds.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Wood, Richard/E-4111-2015},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Wood, Richard/0000-0002-7906-3324},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {58},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000769813600018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000361587400001,
|
|
Author = {Camara, Soumaila and de Lauzon-Guillain, Blandine and Heude, Barbara and
|
|
Charles, Marie-Aline and Botton, Jeremie and Plancoulaine, Sabine and
|
|
Forhan, Anne and Saurel-Cubizolles, Marie-Josephe and Dargent-Molina,
|
|
Patricia and Lioret, Sandrine and EDEN Mother-Child Cohort Study Grp},
|
|
Title = {Multidimensionality of the relationship between social status and
|
|
dietary patterns in early childhood: longitudinal results from the
|
|
French EDEN mother-child cohort},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL NUTRITION AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Month = {SEP 24},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The association between socioeconomic position and diet in
|
|
early childhood has mainly been addressed based on maternal education
|
|
and household income. We aimed to assess the influence of a variety of
|
|
social factors from different socio-ecological levels (parents,
|
|
household and child-care) on multi-time point dietary patterns
|
|
identified from 2 to 5 y.
|
|
Method: This study included 974 children from the French EDEN
|
|
mother-child cohort. Two multi-time point dietary patterns were derived
|
|
in a previous study: they correspond to consistent exposures to either
|
|
core-or non-core foods across 2, 3 and 5 y and were labelled
|
|
``Guidelines{''} and ``Processed, fast-foods{''}. The associations of
|
|
various social factors collected during pregnancy (age, education level)
|
|
or at 2-y follow-up (mother's single status, occupation, work
|
|
commitments, household financial disadvantage, presence of older
|
|
siblings and child-care arrangements) with each of the two dietary
|
|
patterns, were assessed by multivariable linear regression analysis.
|
|
Results: The adherence to a diet close to ``Guidelines{''} was
|
|
positively and independently associated with both maternal and paternal
|
|
education levels. The adherence to a diet consistently composed of
|
|
processed and fast-foods was essentially linked with maternal variables
|
|
(younger age and lower education level), household financial
|
|
disadvantage, the presence of older sibling (s) and being cared for at
|
|
home by someone other than the mother.
|
|
Conclusions: Multiple social factors operating at different levels
|
|
(parents, household, and child-care) were found to be associated with
|
|
the diet of young children. Different independent predictors were found
|
|
for each of the two longitudinal dietary patterns, suggesting distinct
|
|
pathways of influence. Our findings further suggest that interventions
|
|
promoting healthier dietary choices for young children should involve
|
|
both parents and take into account not only household financial
|
|
disadvantage but also maternal age, family size and options for
|
|
child-care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lioret, S (Corresponding Author), Paris Descartes Univ, Early ORigin Childs Hlth \& Dev Team ORCHAD, Epidemiol \& Biostat Sorbonne Paris Cite Ctr CRESS, INSERM, F-75014 Paris, France.
|
|
Camara, Soumaila; de Lauzon-Guillain, Blandine; Heude, Barbara; Charles, Marie-Aline; Botton, Jeremie; Plancoulaine, Sabine; Forhan, Anne; Dargent-Molina, Patricia; Lioret, Sandrine; EDEN Mother-Child Cohort Study Grp, Paris Descartes Univ, Early ORigin Childs Hlth \& Dev Team ORCHAD, Epidemiol \& Biostat Sorbonne Paris Cite Ctr CRESS, INSERM, F-75014 Paris, France.
|
|
Botton, Jeremie, Univ Paris 11, Fac Pharm, F-92290 Chatenay Malabry, France.
|
|
Saurel-Cubizolles, Marie-Josephe, Paris Descartes Univ, Obstet Perinatal \& Pediat Epidemiol Team EPOPe, Epidemiol \& Biostat Sorbonne Paris Cite Ctr CRESS, INSERM, F-75014 Paris, France.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12966-015-0285-2},
|
|
Article-Number = {122},
|
|
EISSN = {1479-5868},
|
|
Keywords = {Dietary patterns; Toddlers; Preschool children; Socio-economic position;
|
|
Social inequalities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIOECONOMIC POSITION; ASSOCIATIONS; HEALTH; INFANCY; DETERMINANTS;
|
|
ADOLESCENTS; ACCEPTANCE; EDUCATION; VALIDITY; QUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nutrition \& Dietetics; Physiology},
|
|
Author-Email = {sandrine.lioret@inserm.fr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bernard, Jonathan/T-7064-2017
|
|
Lepeule, Johanna/N-2579-2013
|
|
de Lauzon-Guillain, Blandine/P-4659-2016
|
|
Heude, Barbara/G-3095-2016
|
|
PLANCOULAINE, Sabine/E-2824-2017
|
|
Dargent-Molina, Patricia/N-3887-2017
|
|
Charles, Marie Aline/F-8567-2017
|
|
Botton, Jérémie/I-1584-2019
|
|
Charles, Marie Aline/S-1866-2019
|
|
Saurel-Cubizolles, Marie-Josephe/D-1571-2014
|
|
FRITEL, Xavier/K-8566-2012
|
|
LIORET, Sandrine/G-5568-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bernard, Jonathan/0000-0002-6418-983X
|
|
Lepeule, Johanna/0000-0001-8907-197X
|
|
de Lauzon-Guillain, Blandine/0000-0001-5887-8842
|
|
Heude, Barbara/0000-0002-1565-1629
|
|
PLANCOULAINE, Sabine/0000-0003-0725-8306
|
|
Dargent-Molina, Patricia/0000-0001-8596-6899
|
|
Charles, Marie Aline/0000-0003-4025-4390
|
|
Botton, Jérémie/0000-0002-4814-6370
|
|
Charles, Marie Aline/0000-0003-4025-4390
|
|
Saurel-Cubizolles, Marie-Josephe/0000-0002-2210-974X
|
|
FRITEL, Xavier/0000-0002-4987-8127
|
|
LIORET, Sandrine/0000-0002-2483-7820
|
|
HANKARD, Regis/0000-0001-8450-5839
|
|
Germa, Alice/0000-0002-0505-4986},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {31},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000361587400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000438616000009,
|
|
Author = {Crocker, Jillian},
|
|
Editor = {Musolf, GR},
|
|
Title = {DUPE, SCHEMER, MOTHER: NAVIGATING AGENCY AND CONSTRAINT AT WORK},
|
|
Booktitle = {OPPRESSION AND RESISTANCE: STRUCTURE, AGENCY, TRANSFORMATION},
|
|
Series = {Studies in Symbolic Interaction},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {48},
|
|
Pages = {157-173},
|
|
Abstract = {Considerable research on the experiences of contemporary workers
|
|
theorizes everyday acts of resistance as inconsequential, emphasizing
|
|
their limited impact on overarching structures of inequality. This
|
|
chapter offers a different perspective. Drawing on a feminist
|
|
interpretivist paradigm, I argue that such characterizations of everyday
|
|
resistance fail to account for the ways in which workers themselves make
|
|
sense of power dynamics at work. Incorporating such accounts complicates
|
|
conventional understandings of low-income workers engaged in everyday
|
|
resistance as either dupes, as is often suggested by academic research,
|
|
or schemers, as is frequently articulated by the self-perceived targets
|
|
of worker rule-breaking - their managers. Based on 10 months of
|
|
ethnographic observation and interviews with nurses and nursing
|
|
assistants in a long-term care facility, I demonstrate that while
|
|
workers recognize the constraints within which they act, they
|
|
nonetheless make sense of their acts of everyday resistance as defiant.
|
|
The realities of precarious labor and family responsibility do not
|
|
combine to prevent resistance at work for these women; they combine to
|
|
transform it. Asserting their agency through a series of relatively
|
|
mundane and covert acts that gain them autonomy and dignity, workers
|
|
readily acknowledge their policy refusals while at the same time
|
|
recognizing the factors that shape them. Describing subversions of
|
|
authority as strategic collaborations, the constrained agency these
|
|
workers articulate hinges on their own and their coworkers' identities
|
|
not just as workers, but in many cases as low-income working mothers.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Crocker, J (Corresponding Author), SUNY Coll Old Westbury, Sociol, Old Westbury, NY 11568 USA.
|
|
Crocker, Jillian, SUNY Coll Old Westbury, Sociol, Old Westbury, NY 11568 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/S0163-239620180000048011},
|
|
ISSN = {0163-2396},
|
|
ISBN = {978-1-78743-167-6},
|
|
Keywords = {Agency; care work; everyday resistance; nursing assistants; work-family},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CULTURE; JOB},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000438616000009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000310348400001,
|
|
Author = {Mota, Ruben E. Mujica and Tarricone, Rosanna and Ciani, Oriana and
|
|
Bridges, John F. P. and Drummond, Mike},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of demand for total hip and knee arthroplasty: a systematic
|
|
literature review},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Month = {JUL 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Documented age, gender, race and socio-economic disparities
|
|
in total joint arthroplasty (TJA), suggest that those who need the
|
|
surgery may not receive it, and present a challenge to explain the
|
|
causes of unmet need. It is not clear whether doctors limit treatment
|
|
opportunities to patients, nor is it known the effect that patient
|
|
beliefs and expectations about the operation, including their paid work
|
|
status and retirement plans, have on the decision to undergo TJA.
|
|
Identifying socio-economic and other determinants of demand would inform
|
|
the design of effective and efficient health policy. This review was
|
|
conducted to identify the factors that lead patients in need to undergo
|
|
TJA.
|
|
Methods: An electronic search of the Embase and Medline (Ovid)
|
|
bibliographic databases conducted in September 2011 identified studies
|
|
in the English language that reported on factors driving patients in
|
|
need of hip or knee replacement to undergo surgery. The review included
|
|
reports of elective surgery rates in eligible patients or, controlling
|
|
for disease severity, in general subjects, and stated clinical experts'
|
|
and patients' opinions on suitability for or willingness to undergo TJA.
|
|
Quantitative and qualitative studies were reviewed, but quantitative
|
|
studies involving fewer than 20 subjects were excluded. The quality of
|
|
individual studies was assessed on the basis of study design (i.e.,
|
|
prospective versus retrospective), reporting of attrition, adjustment
|
|
for and report of confounding effects, and reported measures of need
|
|
(self-reported versus doctor-assessed). Reported estimates of effect on
|
|
the probability of surgery from analyses adjusting for confounders were
|
|
summarised in narrative form and synthesised in odds ratio (OR) forest
|
|
plots for individual determinants.
|
|
Results: The review included 26 quantitative studies-23 on individuals'
|
|
decisions or views on having the operation and three about health
|
|
professionals' opinions-and 10 qualitative studies. Ethnic and racial
|
|
disparities in TJA use are associated with socio-economic access factors
|
|
and expectations about the process and outcomes of surgery. In the
|
|
United States, health insurance coverage affects demand, including that
|
|
from the Medicare population, for whom having supplemental Medicaid
|
|
coverage increases the likelihood of undergoing TJA. Patients with
|
|
post-secondary education are more likely to demand hip or knee surgery
|
|
than those without it (range of OR 0.87-2.38). Women are as willing to
|
|
undergo surgery as men, but they are less likely to be offered surgery
|
|
by specialists than men with the same need. There is considerable
|
|
variation in patient demand with age, with distinct patterns for hip and
|
|
knee. Paid employment appears to increase the chances of undergoing
|
|
surgery, but no study was found that investigated the relationship
|
|
between retirement plans and demand for TJA. There is evidence of
|
|
substantial geographical variation in access to joint replacement within
|
|
the territory covered by a public national health system, which is
|
|
unlikely to be explained by differences in preference or unmeasured need
|
|
alone. The literature tends to focus on associations, rather than
|
|
testing of causal relationships, and is insufficient to assess the
|
|
relative importance of determinants.
|
|
Conclusions: Patients' use of hip and knee replacement is a function of
|
|
their socio-economic circumstances, which reinforce disparities by
|
|
gender and race originating in the doctor-patient interaction.
|
|
Willingness to undergo surgery declines steeply after the age of
|
|
retirement, at the time some eligible patients may lower their
|
|
expectations of health status achievement. There is some evidence that
|
|
paid employment independently increases the likelihood of operation. The
|
|
relative contribution of variations in surgical decision making to
|
|
differential access across regions within countries deserves further
|
|
research that controls for clinical need and patient lifestyle
|
|
preferences, including retirement decisions. Evidence on this question
|
|
will become increasingly relevant for service planning and policy design
|
|
in societies with ageing populations.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mota, REM (Corresponding Author), Univ Exeter, Inst Hlth Serv Res, Veysey Bldg,Salmon Pool Lane, Exeter EX2 4SG, Devon, England.
|
|
Mota, Ruben E. Mujica, Univ Exeter, Inst Hlth Serv Res, Exeter EX2 4SG, Devon, England.
|
|
Tarricone, Rosanna; Ciani, Oriana, Univ Bocconi, Ctr Res Healthcare Management, I-20136 Milan, Italy.
|
|
Bridges, John F. P., Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Drummond, Mike, Univ York, Ctr Hlth Econ, York YO10 5DD, N Yorkshire, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1472-6963-12-225},
|
|
Article-Number = {225},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Orthopaedic implant; Arthroplasty; Hip; Knee; Demand; Need; Equity;
|
|
Preferences; Patient selection; Osteoarthritis; Decision to operate;
|
|
Socio-economic disparities; Total joint replacement},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; JOINT REPLACEMENT SURGERY; WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; AGED 55
|
|
YEARS; DECISION-MAKING; ORTHOPEDIC SURGEONS; PATIENT PREFERENCES;
|
|
PRIMARY-CARE; POPULATION REQUIREMENT; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {r.e.mujica-mota@exeter.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ciani, Oriana/D-1455-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ciani, Oriana/0000-0002-3607-0508
|
|
Mujica-Mota, Ruben/0000-0002-7430-2744
|
|
TARRICONE, ROSANNA/0000-0002-2009-9357},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {109},
|
|
Times-Cited = {95},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {48},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000310348400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000397075300001,
|
|
Author = {Okoro, Catherine A. and Zhao, Guixiang and Fox, Jared B. and Eke, Paul
|
|
I. and Greenland, Kurt J. and Town, Machell},
|
|
Title = {Surveillance for Health Care Access and Health Services Use, Adults Aged
|
|
18-64 Years-Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, United States,
|
|
2014},
|
|
Journal = {MMWR SURVEILLANCE SUMMARIES},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {1-41},
|
|
Month = {FEB 24},
|
|
Abstract = {Problem/Condition: As a result of the 2010 Patient Protection and
|
|
Affordable Care Act, millions of U.S. adults attained health insurance
|
|
coverage. However, millions of adults remain uninsured or underinsured.
|
|
Compared with adults without barriers to health care, adults who lack
|
|
health insurance coverage, have coverage gaps, or skip or delay care
|
|
because of limited personal finances might face increased risk for poor
|
|
physical and mental health and premature mortality.
|
|
Period Covered: 2014.
|
|
Description of System: The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
|
|
(BRFSS) is an ongoing, state-based, landline- and cellular-telephone
|
|
survey of noninstitutionalized adults aged 18 years residing in the
|
|
United States. Data are collected from states, the District of Columbia,
|
|
and participating U.S. territories on health risk behaviors, chronic
|
|
health conditions, health care access, and use of clinical preventive
|
|
services (CPS). An optional Health Care Access module was included in
|
|
the 2014 BRFSS.
|
|
This report summarizes 2014 BRFSS data from all 50 states and the
|
|
District of Columbia on health care access and use of selected CPS
|
|
recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force or the Advisory
|
|
Committee on Immunization Practices among working-aged adults (aged
|
|
18-64 years), by state, state Medicaid expansion status, expanded
|
|
geographic region, and federal poverty level (FPL). This report also
|
|
provides analysis of primary type of health insurance coverage at the
|
|
time of interview, continuity of health insurance coverage during the
|
|
preceding 12 months, and other health care access measures (i.e., unmet
|
|
health care need because of cost, unmet prescription need because of
|
|
cost, medical debt {[}medical bills being paid off over time], number of
|
|
health care visits during the preceding year, and satisfaction with
|
|
received health care) from 43 states that included questions from the
|
|
optional BRFSS Health Care Access module.
|
|
Results: In 2014, health insurance coverage and other health care access
|
|
measures varied substantially by state, state Medicaid expansion status,
|
|
expanded geographic region (i.e., states categorized geographically into
|
|
nine regions), and FPL category. The following proportions refer to the
|
|
range of estimated prevalence for health insurance and other health care
|
|
access measures by examined geographical unit (unless otherwise
|
|
specified), as reported by respondents. Among adults with health
|
|
insurance coverage, the range was 70.8\%-94.5\% for states,
|
|
78.8\%-94.5\% for Medicaid expansion states, 70.8\%-89.1\% for
|
|
nonexpansion states, 73.3\%-91.0\% for expanded geographic regions, and
|
|
64.2\%-95.8\% for FPL categories. Among adults who had a usual source of
|
|
health care, the range was 57.2\%-86.6\% for states, 57.2\%-86.6\% for
|
|
Medicaid expansion states, 61.8\%-83.9\% for nonexpansion states,
|
|
64.4\%-83.6\% for expanded geographic regions, and 61.0\%-81.6\% for FPL
|
|
categories. Among adults who received a routine checkup, the range was
|
|
52.1\%-75.5\% for states, 56.0\%-75.5\% for Medicaid expansion states,
|
|
52.1\%-71.1\% for nonexpansion states, 56.8\%-70.2\% for expanded
|
|
geographic regions, and 59.9\%-69.2\% for FPL categories. Among adults
|
|
who had unmet health care need because of cost, the range was
|
|
8.0\%-23.1\% for states, 8.0\%-21.9\% for Medicaid expansion states,
|
|
11.9\%-23.1\% for nonexpansion states, 11.6\%-20.3\% for expanded
|
|
geographic regions, and 5.3\%-32.9\% for FPL categories. Estimated
|
|
prevalence of cancer screenings, influenza vaccination, and having ever
|
|
been tested for human immunodeficiency virus also varied by state, state
|
|
Medicaid expansion status, expanded geographic region, and FPL category.
|
|
The prevalence of insurance coverage varied by approximately 25
|
|
percentage points among racial/ethnic groups (range: 63.9\% among
|
|
Hispanics to 88.4\% among non-Hispanic Asians) and by approximately 32
|
|
percentage points by FPL category (range: 64.2\% among adults with
|
|
household income <100\% of FPL to 95.8\% among adults with household
|
|
income >400\% of FPL). The prevalence of unmet health care need because
|
|
of cost varied by nearly 14 percentage points among racial/ethnic groups
|
|
(range: 11.3\% among non-Hispanic Asians to 25.0\% among Hispanics), by
|
|
approximately 17 percentage points among adults with and without
|
|
disabilities (30.8\% versus 13.7\%), and by approximately 28 percentage
|
|
points by FPL category (range: 5.3\% among adults with household income
|
|
>400\% of FPL to 32.9\% among adults with household income <100\% of
|
|
FPL).
|
|
Among the 43 states that included questions from the optional module, a
|
|
majority of adults reported private health insurance coverage (63.4\%),
|
|
followed by public health plan coverage (19.4\%) and no primary source
|
|
of insurance (17.1\%). Financial barriers to health care (unmet health
|
|
care need because of cost, unmet prescribed medication need because of
|
|
cost, and medical bills being paid off over time {[}medical debt]) were
|
|
typically lower among adults in Medicaid expansion states than those in
|
|
nonexpansion states regardless of source of insurance. Approximately
|
|
75.6\% of adults reported being continuously insured during the
|
|
preceding 12 months, 12.9\% reported a gap in coverage, and 11.5\%
|
|
reported being uninsured during the preceding 12 months. The largest
|
|
proportion of adults reported >= 3 visits to a health care professional
|
|
during the preceding 12 months (47.3\%), followed by 1-2 visits
|
|
(37.1\%), and no health care visits (15.6\%). Adults in expansion and
|
|
nonexpansion states reported similar levels of satisfaction with
|
|
received health care by primary source of health insurance coverage and
|
|
by continuity of health insurance coverage during the preceding 12
|
|
months.
|
|
Interpretation: This report presents for the first time estimates of
|
|
population-based health care access and use of CPS among adults aged
|
|
18-64 years. The findings in this report indicate substantial variations
|
|
in health insurance coverage; other health care access measures; and use
|
|
of CPS by state, state Medicaid expansion status, expanded geographic
|
|
region, and FPL category. In 2014, health insurance coverage, having a
|
|
usual source of care, having a routine checkup, and not experiencing
|
|
unmet health care need because of cost were higher among adults living
|
|
below the poverty level (i.e., household income <100\% of FPL) in states
|
|
that expanded Medicaid than in states that did not. Similarly, estimates
|
|
of breast and cervical cancer screening and influenza vaccination were
|
|
higher among adults living below the poverty level in states that
|
|
expanded Medicaid than in states that did not. These disparities might
|
|
be due to larger differences to begin with, decreased disparities in
|
|
Medicaid expansion states versus nonexpansion states, or increased
|
|
disparities in nonexpansion states.
|
|
Public Health Action: BRFSS data from 2014 can be used as a baseline by
|
|
which to assess and monitor changes that might occur after 2014
|
|
resulting from programs and policies designed to increase access to
|
|
health care, reduce health disparities, and improve the health of the
|
|
adult population. Post-2014 changes in health care access, such as
|
|
source of health insurance coverage, attainment and continuity of
|
|
coverage, financial barriers, preventive care services, and health
|
|
outcomes, can be monitored using these baseline estimates.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Okoro, CA (Corresponding Author), CDC, Natl Ctr Chron Dis Prevent \& Hlth Promot, Div Populat Hlth, Atlanta, GA 30333 USA.
|
|
Okoro, Catherine A.; Zhao, Guixiang; Town, Machell, CDC, Natl Ctr Chron Dis Prevent \& Hlth Promot, Div Populat Hlth, Populat Hlth Surveillance Branch, Atlanta, GA 30333 USA.
|
|
Fox, Jared B., CDC, Policy Res Anal \& Dev Off, Atlanta, GA 30333 USA.
|
|
Eke, Paul I.; Greenland, Kurt J., CDC, Natl Ctr Chron Dis Prevent \& Hlth Promot, Div Populat Hlth, Atlanta, GA 30333 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1545-8636},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DEPENDENT COVERAGE EXPANSION; CLINICAL PREVENTIVE SERVICES;
|
|
YOUNG-ADULTS; INSURANCE-COVERAGE; OREGON EXPERIMENT; MENTAL-HEALTH; ACT;
|
|
MORTALITY; MEDICAID; REFORM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {cokoro@cdc.gov},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {69},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000397075300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000579400100001,
|
|
Author = {Paya Castiblanque, Raul and Beneyto Calatayud, Pere J.},
|
|
Title = {Inequalities and the Impact of Job Insecurity on Health Indicators in
|
|
the Spanish Workforce},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {16},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {In a context of high job insecurity resulting from social deregulation
|
|
policies, this research aims to study health and substance abuse
|
|
inequalities in the workplace from a gender perspective. To this end, a
|
|
transversal study was carried out based on microdata from the National
|
|
Health Survey in Spain-2017, selecting the active population and
|
|
calculating the prevalence of the state of health and consumption,
|
|
according to socio-occupational factors (work relationship, social
|
|
occupational class, time and type of working day). Odds ratios adjusted
|
|
by socio-demographic variables and their 90\% confidence intervals were
|
|
estimated by means of binary logistic regressions stratified by sex. The
|
|
results obtained showed two differentiated patterns of health and
|
|
consumption. On the one hand, unemployed people and those from more
|
|
vulnerable social classes showed a higher prevalence of both chronic
|
|
depression and anxiety and of hypnosedative and tobacco use. On the
|
|
other hand, the better positioned social classes reported greater work
|
|
stress and alcohol consumption. In addition, while unemployment affected
|
|
men's health more intensely, women were more affected by the type of
|
|
working day. The study can be used to design sustainable preventive
|
|
occupational health policies, which should at least aim at improving the
|
|
quantity and quality of employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Castiblanque, RP (Corresponding Author), Univ Valencia, Dept Sociol \& Social Anthropol, Ave Tarongers 4b, Valencia 46022, Spain.
|
|
Paya Castiblanque, Raul; Beneyto Calatayud, Pere J., Univ Valencia, Dept Sociol \& Social Anthropol, Ave Tarongers 4b, Valencia 46022, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su12166425},
|
|
Article-Number = {6425},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {job insecurity; health and consumption indicators; gender inequalities;
|
|
sustainable preventive policies},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PERCEIVED EMPLOYABILITY; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; MENTAL-HEALTH;
|
|
ECONOMIC-CRISIS; PUBLIC-HEALTH; WORK STRESS; EMPLOYMENT; ASSOCIATION;
|
|
POPULATION; SPAIN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {raul.paya@uv.es
|
|
Pere.J.Beneyto@uv.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Castiblanque, Raúl Paya/AAV-3960-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Castiblanque, Raúl Paya/0000-0002-7967-8660},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {90},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000579400100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000414381000002,
|
|
Author = {Schleicher, David},
|
|
Title = {Stuck! The Law and Economics of Residential Stagnation},
|
|
Journal = {YALE LAW JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {127},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {78-154},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {America has become a nation of homebodies. Rates of interstate mobility,
|
|
by most estimates, have been falling for decades. Interstate mobility
|
|
rates are particularly low and stagnant among disadvantaged groups
|
|
despite a growing connection between mobility and economic opportunity.
|
|
Perhaps most importantly, mobility is declining in regions where it is
|
|
needed most. Americans are not leaving places hit by economic crises,
|
|
resulting in unemployment rates and low wages that linger in these areas
|
|
for decades. And people are not moving to rich regions where the highest
|
|
wages are available.
|
|
This Article advances two central claims. First, declining interstate
|
|
mobility rates create problems for federal macroeconomic policymaking.
|
|
Low rates of interstate mobility make it harder for the Federal Reserve
|
|
to meet both sides of its ``dual mandate{''}: ensuring both stable
|
|
prices and maximum employment. Low interstate mobility rates also impair
|
|
the efficacy and affordability of federal safety net programs that rely
|
|
on state and local participation, and reduce wealth and growth by
|
|
inhibiting agglomeration economies. While determining an optimal rate of
|
|
interstate mobility is difficult, policies that unnaturally inhibit
|
|
interstate moves worsen national economic problems.
|
|
Second, the Article argues that governments, mostly at the state and
|
|
local levels, have created a huge number of legal barriers to interstate
|
|
mobility. Land-use laws and occupational licensing regimes limit entry
|
|
into local and state labor markets. Different eligibility standards for
|
|
public benefits, public employee pension policies, homeownership
|
|
subsidies, state and local tax regimes, and even basic property law
|
|
rules inhibit exit from low-opportunity states and cities. Furthermore,
|
|
building codes, mobile home bans, federal location-based subsidies,
|
|
legal constraints on knocking down houses, and the problematic structure
|
|
of Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy all limit the capacity of failing
|
|
cities to ``shrink{''} gracefully, directly reducing exit among some
|
|
populations and increasing the economic and social costs of entry limits
|
|
elsewhere.
|
|
Combining these two insights, the Article shows that big questions of
|
|
macroeconomic policy and performance turn on the content of state and
|
|
local policies usually analyzed using microeconomic tools. Many of the
|
|
legal barriers to interstate mobility emerged or became stricter during
|
|
the period in which interstate mobility declined. While causation is
|
|
difficult to determine, public policies developed by state and local
|
|
governments more interested in guaranteeing local population stability
|
|
than ensuring successful macroeconomic conditions either generated or
|
|
failed to stymie falling mobility rates. The Article concludes by
|
|
suggesting how the federal government could address stagnation in
|
|
interstate mobility.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Schleicher, D (Corresponding Author), Yale Law Sch, Law, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
|
|
Schleicher, David, Yale Law Sch, Law, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0044-0094},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-8611},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IMPORT COMPETITION; HOUSING CHOICE; MOBILITY; MARKET; STATE;
|
|
OPPORTUNITY; DECLINE; CITIES; CITY; SEGREGATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Law},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {301},
|
|
Times-Cited = {59},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000414381000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000394384300006,
|
|
Author = {Falkum, Erik and Klungsoyr, Ole and Lystad, June Ullevoldsaeter and
|
|
Bull, Helen Christine and Evensen, Stig and Martinsen, Egil W. and
|
|
Friis, Svein and Ueland, Torill},
|
|
Title = {Vocational rehabilitation for adults with psychotic disorders in a
|
|
Scandinavian welfare society},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Month = {JAN 17},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: This study examined the outcomes of a vocational
|
|
rehabilitation program (The Job Management Program, JUMP) for persons
|
|
with psychotic disorders based on close collaboration between health and
|
|
welfare services.
|
|
Methods: Participants (N = 148) with broad schizophrenia spectrum
|
|
disorders (age 18-65) were recruited from six counties in Norway. Three
|
|
counties were randomized to vocational rehabilitation augmented with
|
|
cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT), while the remaining three counties
|
|
were randomized to vocational rehabilitation augmented with cognitive
|
|
remediation (CR). This paper compares the vocational activity of the
|
|
total group of JUMP participants with a treatment as usual group (N =
|
|
341), and further examines differences between the two JUMP
|
|
interventions. Employment status (working/not working) was registered at
|
|
the time of inclusion and at the end of the intervention period.
|
|
Results: The total number of JUMP participants in any kind of vocational
|
|
activity increased from 17 to 77\% during the intervention. Of these,
|
|
8\% had competitive employment, 36\% had work placements in ordinary
|
|
workplaces with social security benefits as their income, and 33\% had
|
|
sheltered work. The total number of working participants in the TAU
|
|
group increased from 15.5 to 18.2\%. The JUMP group showed significant
|
|
improvements of positive (t = -2. 33, p = 0.02) and general (t = -2.75,
|
|
p = 0.007) symptoms of psychosis. Significant differences between the
|
|
CBT and CR interventions were not demonstrated.
|
|
Conclusions: The study supports existing evidence that the majority of
|
|
persons with broad schizophrenia spectrum disorders can cope with some
|
|
kind of work, given that internal and external barriers are reduced.
|
|
Those who wish to work should be offered vocational rehabilitation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Falkum, E (Corresponding Author), Oslo Univ Hosp, Dept Res \& Dev, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Falkum, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Oslo, Inst Clin Med, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Falkum, Erik; Klungsoyr, Ole; Lystad, June Ullevoldsaeter; Bull, Helen Christine; Evensen, Stig; Martinsen, Egil W.; Friis, Svein; Ueland, Torill, Oslo Univ Hosp, Dept Res \& Dev, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Falkum, Erik; Martinsen, Egil W.; Friis, Svein, Univ Oslo, Inst Clin Med, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Ueland, Torill, Univ Oslo, Inst Psychol, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12888-016-1183-0},
|
|
Article-Number = {24},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-244X},
|
|
Keywords = {Vocational rehabilitation; Psychotic disorders; Barriers to work;
|
|
Collaboration; Individual support},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL THERAPY;
|
|
QUALITY-OF-LIFE; SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; SCHIZOPHRENIA-PATIENTS;
|
|
PSYCHIATRIC-DIAGNOSIS; WORK; OUTCOMES; REMEDIATION; INTERVIEW},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {erik.falkum@medisin.uio.no},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ueland, Torill/AAO-1277-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ueland, Torill/0000-0002-8638-1152},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000394384300006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000685513300007,
|
|
Author = {Sebastian, Nancy},
|
|
Title = {Entry into and Escape from Poverty: The Role of Female Labor Supply in
|
|
Rural India},
|
|
Journal = {INDIAN JOURNAL OF LABOUR ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {63},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {719-740},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper investigates the factors influencing poverty transitions
|
|
among rural households. There is a higher likelihood for the poor rural
|
|
household in escaping poverty and lower likelihood for non-poor
|
|
households to fall into poverty over time, with the increase in average
|
|
completed years of education and mean labor hours supplied by female
|
|
members in the household. However, the contribution of female labor
|
|
supply and education toward changes in poverty risks is low due to the
|
|
low-wage cycle prevalent among women. Further, higher maximum
|
|
educational attainment of households and a higher level of assets
|
|
ensures a higher probability of escaping poverty and a lower probability
|
|
of falling into poverty over time. However, there is a higher likelihood
|
|
for a non-poor household to enter poverty over time and a lower
|
|
likelihood for a poor household in escaping poverty over time with an
|
|
increase in dependency ratio and household size. Efforts need to be made
|
|
to transform a woman's role from an ``income buffering{''} to an
|
|
``income generation{''} role. Women's economic participation and
|
|
empowerment are powerful tools for poverty reduction at the household
|
|
level.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sebastian, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Newcastle UON, Econ, 6 Temasek Blvd,10-02-03,Suntec Tower 4, Singapore 038986, Singapore.
|
|
Sebastian, Nancy, Univ Newcastle UON, Econ, 6 Temasek Blvd,10-02-03,Suntec Tower 4, Singapore 038986, Singapore.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s41027-020-00242-5},
|
|
ISSN = {0971-7927},
|
|
EISSN = {0019-5308},
|
|
Keywords = {Poverty transition; Female; Labor supply; Rural; India; Panel; J220;
|
|
R23; J16; I32},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER INEQUALITY; EMPLOYMENT; EDUCATION; GROWTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {sebastiannancy@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000685513300007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000241619700001,
|
|
Author = {Fuwa, Nobuhiko and Ito, Seiro and Kubo, Kensuke and Kurosaki, Takashi
|
|
and Sawada, Yasuyuki},
|
|
Title = {Introduction to a study of intrahousehold resource allocation and gender
|
|
discrimination in rural Andhra Pradesh, India},
|
|
Journal = {DEVELOPING ECONOMIES},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {375-397},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {In this special issue, we use unique household data which was collected
|
|
exclusively for our study in Andhra Pradesh, India, with the help of an
|
|
NGO. We estimate and test the intrahousehold resource allocation rules,
|
|
incidence of child labor, and the effects of credit constraints on time
|
|
allocation among household members. Three empirical papers of this issue
|
|
indicate the overall support for the collective model against the
|
|
unitary model of households, clarified the role of household structure,
|
|
and show the nature of mother-child labor substitution under a binding
|
|
credit constraint. In addition, a survey paper discussing the recent
|
|
trends on educational attainment and the empirical strategies in
|
|
identifyng the policy effects are included.},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fuwa, N (Corresponding Author), Chiba Univ, Grad Sch Sci \& Technol, Chiba, Japan.
|
|
Chiba Univ, Grad Sch Sci \& Technol, Chiba, Japan.
|
|
JETRO, Inst Econ Dev, Chiba, Japan.
|
|
Hitotsubashi Univ, Inst Econ Res, Tokyo, Japan.
|
|
Univ Tokyo, Fac Econ, Tokyo, Japan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1746-1049.2006.00022.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0012-1533},
|
|
EISSN = {1746-1049},
|
|
Keywords = {child labor; intrahousehold resource allocation; unitary versus
|
|
collective model of a household; NGO intervention; credit constraint},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MARKET OPPORTUNITIES; GENETIC ENDOWMENTS; MARRIAGE MARKET; CHILD-CARE;
|
|
HOUSEHOLD; INCOME; SCHOOL; INEQUALITY; HEALTH; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sawada, Yasuyuki/0000-0002-4167-7697
|
|
Kurosaki, Takashi/0000-0002-9762-0067},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {76},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000241619700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000946918900001,
|
|
Author = {Tripathi, Shalini Nath and Sethi, Deepa and Malik, Nishtha and
|
|
Mendiratta, Aparna and Shukla, Manisha},
|
|
Title = {A pandemic impact study on working women professionals: role of
|
|
effective communication},
|
|
Journal = {CORPORATE COMMUNICATIONS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {544-563},
|
|
Month = {MAY 30},
|
|
Abstract = {PurposeThe study aims to develop an in-depth understanding of challenges
|
|
faced by Indian women professionals during the pandemic and the human
|
|
resource (HR) initiatives like effective communication, taken by the
|
|
organizations to mitigate the plight of these
|
|
professionals.Design/methodology/approachA mix of two qualitative
|
|
research methods namely focus groups in-depth and one-to-one in-depth
|
|
interviews was used. A total of 32 females working with different
|
|
organizations participated.FindingsThe thematic analysis revealed themes
|
|
related to challenges faced by working women-gendered burnout, mental
|
|
health issues, increased household responsibilities, job insecurity,
|
|
work-life conflict, gender inequalities, reduced internal communication
|
|
and financial independence, domestic violence and exploitation. The
|
|
major themes that emerged for the organizational initiatives were
|
|
flexible working hours, equal women representation in response to
|
|
planning and decision making, driving transformative change for gender
|
|
equality, paid leaves for family care, caregiving bonus, leadership
|
|
development seeds, increased female recruitments, transparent
|
|
communication and counseling sessions.Research
|
|
limitations/implicationsThe study establishes a holistic understanding
|
|
of the plight of Indian women professionals and the consequent
|
|
organizational interventions accompanied by transparent communication.
|
|
It adds rigor to the evolving literature on COVID-19 and enriches the
|
|
theoretical narrative of policy adaptations by industry practitioners
|
|
for aligning them with employee needs. This helps in routing the policy
|
|
design and implementation in light of the challenges
|
|
faced.Originality/valueThe study presents an in-depth understanding of
|
|
challenges faced by women employees; and provides a foundation for
|
|
identifying human resource management (HRM) interventions customized for
|
|
working females. It also proposes a framework implementable in the
|
|
recovery phase, deploying critical strategic shifts like reflection,
|
|
recommitment and re-engagement of the women workforce in order to
|
|
maximize their efficacy for rapidly evolving organizational priorities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sethi, D (Corresponding Author), Indian Inst Management, Kozhikode, India.
|
|
Tripathi, Shalini Nath; Malik, Nishtha, Jaipuria Inst Management Lucknow, Lucknow, India.
|
|
Sethi, Deepa, Indian Inst Management, Kozhikode, India.
|
|
Mendiratta, Aparna, Jaipuria Inst Management Jaipur, Jaipur, India.
|
|
Shukla, Manisha, Jaipuria Inst Management Indore, Indore, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/CCIJ-09-2022-0107},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1356-3289},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6046},
|
|
Keywords = {Women professionals; Challenges; HR initiatives; Communication;
|
|
Pandemic; India},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INFORMAL COMMUNICATION; FAMILY CONFLICT; SOCIAL IDENTITY; BALANCE;
|
|
OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business},
|
|
Author-Email = {shalini.tripathi@jaipuria.ac.in
|
|
deepa@iimk.ac.in
|
|
nishthamalik3@gmail.com
|
|
aparna.mendiratta@jaipuria.ac.in
|
|
manisha.shukla@jaipuria.ac.in},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {81},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000946918900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000241046000020,
|
|
Author = {Warner, Richard and Mandiberg, James},
|
|
Title = {An update on affirmative businesses or social firms for people with
|
|
mental illness},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Pages = {1488-1492},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Social firms, or ``affirmative businesses{''} as they are known in North
|
|
America, are businesses created to employ people with disabilities and
|
|
to provide a needed product or service. This Open Forum offers an
|
|
overview of the development and status of social firms. The model was
|
|
developed in Italy in the 1970s for people with psychiatric disabilities
|
|
and has gained prominence in Europe. Principles include that over a
|
|
third of employees are people with a disability or labor market
|
|
disadvantage, every worker is paid a fair-market wage, and the business
|
|
operates without subsidy. Independent of European influence, affirmative
|
|
businesses also have developed in Canada, the United States, Japan, and
|
|
elsewhere. The success of individual social firms is enhanced by
|
|
locating the right market niche, selecting labor-intensive products,
|
|
having a public orientation for the business, and having links with
|
|
treatment services. The growth of the social firm movement is aided by
|
|
legislation that supports the businesses, policies that favor employment
|
|
of people with disabilities, and support entities that facilitate
|
|
technology transfer. Social firms can empower individual employees,
|
|
foster a sense of community in the workplace, and enhance worker
|
|
commitment through the organization's social mission.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Warner, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Colorado, Dept Psychiat, 4200 E 9th Ave, Denver, CO 80262 USA.
|
|
Univ Colorado, Dept Psychiat, Denver, CO 80262 USA.
|
|
Columbia Univ, Sch Social Work, New York, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1176/appi.ps.57.10.1488},
|
|
ISSN = {1075-2730},
|
|
EISSN = {1557-9700},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health;
|
|
Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {drdickwarner@aol.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Mandiberg, Jim/D-2275-2014
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mandiberg, James M./0000-0001-8641-9125},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {18},
|
|
Times-Cited = {63},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000241046000020},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000359614600069,
|
|
Author = {Mladen, Luise and Ghenta, Mihaela},
|
|
Book-Group-Author = {SGEM},
|
|
Title = {PENSION REFORM IN ROMANIA AND ITS IMPLICATIONS ON PENSION ADEQUACY FOR
|
|
WOMEN},
|
|
Booktitle = {POLITICAL SCIENCES, LAW, FINANCE, ECONOMICS AND TOURISM, VOL II},
|
|
Series = {International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on Social
|
|
Sciences and Arts},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Pages = {543-550},
|
|
Note = {International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on Social
|
|
Sciences and Arts (SGEM 2014), Albena, BULGARIA, SEP 01-10, 2014},
|
|
Abstract = {The pension system in Romania has undergone successive reforms,
|
|
parametric and structural, determined by a complex of factors such as
|
|
the demographic aging, the significant external migration, the changes
|
|
in the employment structure, the globalization and the growing of the
|
|
international competition. However, the changes brought to the system
|
|
have not been accompanied by gender impact studies. The current pension
|
|
system, build in accordance with the World Bank model, put more emphasis
|
|
on the contribution principle, the items of redistribution being very
|
|
few. This particularly affects women, since women often have lower
|
|
participation in the labour market, more frequent career breaks, being
|
|
overrepresented in low-paid occupations and having a higher share
|
|
between people with atypical employment contracts, and thus likely to
|
|
accumulate lower retirement rights than men. Our study performs a
|
|
careful analysis of the Romanian pension system in terms of complying
|
|
with the principles of gender equality. The methodology includes the
|
|
examination of the legislative framework, as well as the assessment of
|
|
the pension adequacy for men and women based on a microeconomic model.
|
|
Our approach takes into account the calculation and comparison of gross
|
|
and net theoretical replacement rates for men and women with different
|
|
career and income profiles, using certain assumptions about the economic
|
|
and demographic variables. Our study confirms the existence of gender
|
|
inequality in the pension system today. The system design is largely
|
|
responsible for the replication of gender inequalities that exist in the
|
|
labour market. The awareness of these issues is an important step in
|
|
fostering policy makers to take measures towards promoting the gender
|
|
equality in the pension field.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mladen, L (Corresponding Author), Natl Sci Reas Inst Labour \& Social Protect, Bucharest, Romania.
|
|
Mladen, Luise; Ghenta, Mihaela, Natl Sci Reas Inst Labour \& Social Protect, Bucharest, Romania.
|
|
Mladen, Luise, Spiru Haret Univ, Bucharest, Romania.},
|
|
ISSN = {2367-5659},
|
|
ISBN = {978-619-7105-26-1},
|
|
Keywords = {pension systems; pension reform; gender issues; pension adequacy},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business, Finance},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {6},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000359614600069},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000322037800009,
|
|
Author = {Jones, Gwyn C. and Crews, John E.},
|
|
Title = {Health disparities among workers and nonworkers with functional
|
|
limitations: implications for improving employment in the United States},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Number = {17},
|
|
Pages = {1479-1490},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: The aim of this study was to compare workers and nonworkers who
|
|
reported mild, moderate, and severe/complete functional limitations to
|
|
identify disparities in 19 health and social indicators. Method: Using
|
|
the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health
|
|
as our conceptual framework, we analyzed data from the combined
|
|
2000-2008 National Health Interview Survey, comparing workers and
|
|
nonworkers by severity of functional limitations, as measured by the
|
|
FL12 Scale of Functional Limitation Severity. Results: Only 9.5\% of
|
|
people reporting moderate/severe functional limitations worked. Although
|
|
not without exception, not working and severity of functional limitation
|
|
were associated with poorer health outcomes, with nonworkers reporting
|
|
severe/complete limitations having least optimal health. Prevalence of
|
|
chronic conditions was associated with level of functional limitation
|
|
severity, with the strongest associations among nonworkers. Conclusions:
|
|
By focusing exclusively on people with functional limitations, we were
|
|
better able to examine factors contributing to health and participation
|
|
of workers and nonworkers. People who worked and had moderate or
|
|
severe/complete limitations often did so while reporting poor health.
|
|
With improved access to health care, health promotion activities, and
|
|
other support systems, the quality of life and likelihood of work
|
|
participation of people with greater functional limitations might also
|
|
be improved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jones, GC (Corresponding Author), 2279 Alnwick Dr, Duluth, GA 30096 USA.
|
|
Crews, John E., Ctr Dis Control \& Prevent, Vis Hlth Initiat, Div Diabet Translat, Atlanta, GA 30329 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3109/09638288.2012.740137},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Health outcomes; International Classification of Functioning; Disability
|
|
and Health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SERIOUS MENTAL-ILLNESS; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS; PUBLIC-HEALTH;
|
|
DISABILITIES; ADULTS; PERFORMANCE; PREVENTION; PROMOTION; BEHAVIORS;
|
|
BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {geeceejay@bellsouth.net},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000322037800009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000517661700009,
|
|
Author = {Vogel, Lisa Klein},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to meeting formal child support obligations: Noncustodial
|
|
father perspectives},
|
|
Journal = {CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {110},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Changes in family demographic patterns and the erosion of the social
|
|
safety net have contributed to the centrality of child support as a
|
|
source of income for many families. Many custodial mothers and their
|
|
children rely on child support to meet basic needs; yet, most do not
|
|
receive all of the support they are owed. Given the importance of child
|
|
support as a financial resource for many families, and the gap between
|
|
child support owed and received, understanding why some fathers do not
|
|
meet their formal support obligations is important for improving the
|
|
well-being of children in single-parent families. This article
|
|
contributes to the evidence base on barriers to compliance with formal
|
|
child support obligations by the sharing perspectives of noncustodial
|
|
fathers struggling to find work and pay child support. Data were
|
|
gathered through focus groups with noncustodial fathers conducted for
|
|
the Child Support Noncustodial Parent Employment Demonstration. Results
|
|
indicate four types of factors contributing to noncompliance: (1)
|
|
practical impediments, including income constraints, high-burden orders
|
|
and obligations to other children; (2) system-imposed barriers; (3)
|
|
noncustodial father preferences; and (4) prior interactions with the
|
|
child support system. Findings from this study suggest a number of
|
|
policy changes that could help facilitate compliance among struggling
|
|
noncustodial fathers. These include access to services to help overcome
|
|
practical barriers to work; administrative and statutory changes within
|
|
child support to help address high burden orders, enforcement actions
|
|
that impede employment, and state-owed arrearages; and changes to TANF
|
|
pass-through policies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vogel, LK (Corresponding Author), Univ Wisconsin, Inst Res Poverty, 1180 Observ Dr, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Vogel, Lisa Klein, Univ Wisconsin, Inst Res Poverty, 1180 Observ Dr, Madison, WI 53706 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.104764},
|
|
Article-Number = {104764},
|
|
ISSN = {0190-7409},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7765},
|
|
Keywords = {Child support; Compliance barriers; Economic well-being; Qualitative
|
|
analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ENFORCEMENT; FAMILIES; POLICY; PAY; FERTILITY; RECEIPT; ABILITY; DADS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {lmklein@wisc.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Vogel, Lisa/0000-0001-9329-2732},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000517661700009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000755091500095,
|
|
Author = {Kwan, Amanda and Morris, Jonny and Barbic, Skye P.},
|
|
Title = {Protocol: A mixed methods evaluation of an IPS program to increase
|
|
employment and well-being for people with long-term experience of
|
|
complex barriers in Vancouver's downtown and DTES},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Month = {DEC 16},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Employment improves mental health and well-being by providing financial
|
|
security, daily structure, a sense of identity and purpose, and social
|
|
engagement. However, securing and sustaining employment is exceptionally
|
|
challenging for vulnerable populations who experience persistent and
|
|
multiple barriers, such as mental illness, homelessness, food and
|
|
housing insecurity, and marginalization. Evidence-based supported
|
|
employment programs, most notably individual placement and support (IPS)
|
|
are becoming a more common approach for addressing the needs of these
|
|
high-risk individuals. The aim of this paper is to outline the protocol
|
|
for evaluating an IPS program in Vancouver's downtown and Downtown
|
|
Eastside (DTES).
|
|
Methods and design
|
|
This prospective quasi-experimental study of persons with persistent and
|
|
multiple barriers to employment will use a mixed-methods approach for
|
|
evaluating a novel IPS program. The evaluation will consist of survey
|
|
packages and interviews that will capture outcomes related to employment
|
|
and well-being, as well as the experiential process of receiving
|
|
individualized and integrated supports through the IPS program. A
|
|
mixed-methods approach is appropriate for this study as quantitative
|
|
data will provide an objective assessment of program impacts on
|
|
employment and well-being outcomes over time, while qualitative data
|
|
will provide an in-depth understanding of continued barriers and
|
|
experiences.
|
|
Discussion
|
|
The results from this evaluation will contribute evidence within a local
|
|
British Columbian (BC) context that may increase access to meaningful
|
|
employment for those with long-term experience of complex barriers to
|
|
employment. Further, the findings will support continued improvements,
|
|
and guide decision-making around practices and policy for future
|
|
implementation of IPS and employment supports across BC.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kwan, A (Corresponding Author), Univ British Columbia, Fac Med, Dept Occupat Sci \& Occupat Therapy, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Kwan, Amanda; Barbic, Skye P., Univ British Columbia, Fac Med, Dept Occupat Sci \& Occupat Therapy, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Morris, Jonny, Canadian Mental Hlth Assoc BC Div, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Barbic, Skye P., Providence Hlth Care Res Inst, Vancouver, BC, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0261415},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0261415},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRANSITION-AGE YOUTH; SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; INDIVIDUAL PLACEMENT;
|
|
VETERANS; SERVICES; OUTCOMES; QUALITY; TRIAL; WORK; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {amanda.kwan@ubc.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kwan, Amanda/0000-0001-7367-9438},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000755091500095},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000637866800003,
|
|
Author = {Carter, Ebony B. and Mazzoni, Sara E. and EleVATE Women Collaborative},
|
|
Title = {A paradigm shift to address racial inequities in perinatal healthcare},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {224},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {359-361},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Health inequities are not caused by personal failings or shortcomings
|
|
within disadvantaged groups, which can be erased with behavioral
|
|
interventions. The scope of the problem is much greater and will only
|
|
fully be addressed with the examination of the systems, structures, and
|
|
policies that perpetuate racism, classism, and an economic, class, race,
|
|
or gender divide between patients and the people who care for them.
|
|
Solution-oriented strategies to achieve health equity will remain
|
|
elusive if researchers continue to focus on behavior modification in
|
|
patients while failing to do harder work that includes focusing on the
|
|
institutions, community, and societal contexts in which pregnant women
|
|
are living; addressing social determinants of health; considering racism
|
|
in study design, analysis, and reporting; valuing the voices of
|
|
patients, practitioners, and researchers from historically disadvantaged
|
|
groups; disseminating research findings back to the community; and
|
|
developing policy and reimbursement structures to support care delivery
|
|
change that advances equitable outcomes. A case study shows us how group
|
|
prenatal care may be one viable vehicle through which to affect this
|
|
change. Group prenatal care is one of the few interventions shown to
|
|
improve pregnancy outcomes for black women. Studies of group prenatal
|
|
care have predominantly focused on the patient, but here we propose that
|
|
the intervention may exert its greatest impact on clinicians and the
|
|
systems in which they work. The underlying mechanism through which group
|
|
prenatal care works may be through increased quantity and quality of
|
|
patient and practitioner time together and communication. We hypothesize
|
|
that this, in turn, fosters greater opportunity for cross-cultural
|
|
exposure and decreases clinician implicit bias, explicit bias, and
|
|
racism, thus increasing the likelihood that practitioners advocate for
|
|
systems-level changes that directly benefit patients and improve
|
|
perinatal outcomes.
|
|
taged groups, which can be erased with behavioral interventions. The
|
|
scope of the problem is much greater and will only fully be addressed
|
|
with the examination of the systems, structures, and policies that
|
|
perpetuate racism, classism, and an economic, class, race, or gender
|
|
divide between patients and the people who care for them.
|
|
Solution-oriented strategies to achieve health equity will remain
|
|
elusive if researchers continue to focus on behavior modification in
|
|
patients while failing to do harder work that includes focusing on the
|
|
institutions, community, and societal contexts in which pregnant women
|
|
are living; addressing social determinants of health; considering racism
|
|
in study design, analysis, and reporting; valuing the voices of
|
|
patients, practitioners, and researchers from historically disadvantaged
|
|
groups; disseminating research findings back to the community; and
|
|
developing policy and reimbursement structures to support care delivery
|
|
change that advances equitable outcomes. A case study shows us how group
|
|
prenatal care may be one viable vehicle through which to affect this
|
|
change. Group prenatal care is one of the few interventions shown to
|
|
improve pregnancy outcomes for black women. Studies of group prenatal
|
|
care have predominantly focused on the patient, but here we propose that
|
|
the intervention may exert its greatest impact on clinicians and the
|
|
systems in which they work. The underlying mechanism through which group
|
|
prenatal care works may be through increased quantity and quality of
|
|
patient and practitioner time together and communication. We hypothesize
|
|
that this, in turn, fosters greater opportunity for cross-cultural
|
|
exposure and decreases clinician implicit bias, explicit bias, and
|
|
racism, thus increasing the likelihood that practitioners advocate for
|
|
systems-level changes that directly benefit patients and improve
|
|
perinatal outcomes. Key words: centering pregnancy, group prenatal care,
|
|
health equity, racism},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Carter, EB (Corresponding Author), Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol, Div Maternal Fetal Med, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
|
|
Carter, Ebony B., Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol, Div Maternal Fetal Med, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
|
|
EleVATE Women Collaborative, St Louis Integrated Hlth Network, St Louis, MO USA.
|
|
Mazzoni, Sara E., Univ Washington, Sch Med, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol, Div Gen Obstet \& Gynecol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ajog.2020.11.040},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0002-9378},
|
|
EISSN = {1097-6868},
|
|
Keywords = {centering pregnancy; group prenatal care; health equity; racism},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GROUP PRENATAL-CARE; PRETERM BIRTH; UNITED-STATES; DISPARITIES; EQUITY;
|
|
CENTERINGPREGNANCY; STUDENTS; IMPACT; BIAS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {ebcarter@wustl.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Carter, Ebony/0000-0002-7620-4929},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000637866800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000672590400002,
|
|
Author = {Amuedo-Dorantes, Catalina and Borra, Cristina},
|
|
Title = {The role of non-contributory pensions on internal mobility in Spain},
|
|
Journal = {LABOUR ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {70},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Spain is one of the Southern European nations characterized by very low
|
|
inter-provincial mobility rates despite large inter-regional
|
|
unemployment rate differences. We examine whether non-contributory
|
|
pensions - an increasingly important component of many welfare systems,
|
|
have curtailed the internal migration of younger cohorts over the past
|
|
three decades. Using changes in the number of beneficiaries brought
|
|
about by a policy reform in 1991, we show that old-age non-contributory
|
|
pensions are associated with reduced internal migration of 25-to-35 year
|
|
old men and women with less human capital. The effects do not appear to
|
|
be driven by intergenerational reciprocity or quid pro quo exchanges,
|
|
and do not extend to other types of pensions, hinting on systematic
|
|
employment barriers faced by younger, less educated, or unexperienced
|
|
men and women from lower income households qualifying for these
|
|
pensions. The ability to rely on the support from older family members
|
|
residing nearby might provide a lifeline but, simultaneously, curtail
|
|
their propensity to out-migrate.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Borra, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Seville, Dept Econ \& Econ Hist, Ramon y Cajal 1, Seville 41018, Spain.
|
|
Amuedo-Dorantes, Catalina, Univ Calif, Merced, CA USA.
|
|
Borra, Cristina, Univ Seville, Dept Econ \& Econ Hist, Ramon y Cajal 1, Seville 41018, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.labeco.2021.101980},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {101980},
|
|
ISSN = {0927-5371},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-1034},
|
|
Keywords = {Internal migration; Non-contributory pensions; Inter-vivo support; Spain},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-FORCE PARTICIPATION; MIGRATION; UNEMPLOYMENT; PROGRAM; PROXIMITY;
|
|
TRANSFERS; GENDER; MARKET; CYCLE; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {cborra@us.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Borra, Cristina/E-6281-2010},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Borra, Cristina/0000-0003-2277-8342},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000672590400002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000314527100004,
|
|
Author = {Park, Mi-Jin and Son, Mia and Kim, Young-Ju and Paek, Domyung},
|
|
Title = {Social Inequality in Birth Outcomes in Korea, 1995-2008},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF KOREAN MEDICAL SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {25-35},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Social inequality in adverse birth outcomes has been demonstrated in
|
|
several countries. The present study examined the separate and joint
|
|
effects of parental education and work in order to investigate the
|
|
causal pathways of social class effects on adverse birth outcomes in
|
|
Korea. The occurrence of low birth weight, preterm births, and
|
|
intrauterine growth retardation was examined among 7,766,065 births in
|
|
Korea from 1995 to 2008. The effect of social inequality, as represented
|
|
by parental education and work, was examined against adverse birth
|
|
outcomes using multivariate logistic regression after controlling for
|
|
other covariates. Parental education had the most significant and
|
|
greatest effect on all three adverse outcomes, followed by parental work
|
|
and employment, which had lesser effects. For adverse birth outcomes,
|
|
the gap between educational levels increased steadily in Korea from 1995
|
|
to 2008. Throughout the analysis, the effect of maternal manual work on
|
|
adverse birth outcomes was apparent in the study results. Given this
|
|
evidence of social inequality in education and employment, social
|
|
interventions should aim at more in-depth and distal determinants of
|
|
health.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Son, M (Corresponding Author), Kangwon Natl Univ, Dept Prevent Med, Sch Med, 1 Kangwondaehak Gil, Chunchon 200701, South Korea.
|
|
Park, Mi-Jin; Paek, Domyung, Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Environm Hlth, Grad Sch Publ Hlth, Seoul, South Korea.
|
|
Son, Mia, Kangwon Natl Univ, Dept Prevent Med, Sch Med, Chunchon 200701, South Korea.
|
|
Kim, Young-Ju, Kangwon Natl Univ, Coll Nat Sci, Dept Stat, Chunchon 200701, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3346/jkms.2013.28.1.25},
|
|
ISSN = {1011-8934},
|
|
Keywords = {Social Inequality; Parental Education; Parental Work; Parental
|
|
Occupation; Birth Outcome Effect; Low Birth Weight; Preterm Birth;
|
|
Intrauterine Growth Retardation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRETERM DELIVERY; MATERNAL WORK; FETAL-GROWTH; PREGNANCY; WEIGHT;
|
|
PREMATURITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {sonmia@kangwon.ac.kr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Paek, Domyung/D-5747-2012},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000314527100004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000706736400001,
|
|
Author = {Edwards, Rebecca L. and Patrician, Patricia A. and Bakitas, Marie and
|
|
Markaki, Adelais},
|
|
Title = {Palliative care integration: a critical review of nurse migration effect
|
|
in Jamaica},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PALLIATIVE CARE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {OCT 13},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Provision of palliative care to individuals with late-stage
|
|
serious illnesses is critical to reduce suffering. Palliative care is
|
|
slowly gaining momentum in Jamaica but requires a highly skilled
|
|
workforce, including nurses. Out-migration of nurses to wealthier
|
|
countries negatively impacts the delivery of health care services and
|
|
may impede palliative care capacity-building. This critical review aimed
|
|
to explore the evidence pertaining to the nurse migration effect on the
|
|
integration of palliative care services in Jamaica and to formulate
|
|
hypotheses about potential mitigating strategies. Methods A
|
|
comprehensive search in the PubMed, CINAHL, and ProQuest PAIS databases
|
|
aimed to identify articles pertinent to nurse migration in the Caribbean
|
|
context. Grant and Booth's methodologic framework for critical reviews
|
|
was used to evaluate the literature. This methodology uses a narrative,
|
|
chronologic synthesis and was guided by the World Health Organization
|
|
(WHO) Public Health Model and the Model of Sustainability in Global
|
|
Nursing. Results Data from 14 articles were extracted and mapped. Poorer
|
|
patient outcomes were in part attributed to the out-migration of the
|
|
most skilled nurses. `Push-factors' such as aggressive recruitment by
|
|
wealthier countries, lack of continuing educational opportunities,
|
|
disparate wages, and a lack of professional autonomy and respect were
|
|
clear contributors. Gender inequalities negatively impacted females and
|
|
children left behind. Poor working conditions were not necessarily a
|
|
primary reason for nurse migration. Four main themes were identified
|
|
across articles: (a) globalization creating opportunities for migration,
|
|
(b) recruitment of skilled professionals from CARICOM by high income
|
|
countries, (c) imbalance and inequities resulting from migration, and
|
|
(d) mitigation strategies. Thirteen articles suggested education,
|
|
partnerships, policy, and incentives as mitigation strategies. Those
|
|
strategies directly align with the WHO Public Health Model drivers to
|
|
palliative care integration. Conclusion Emerged evidence supports that
|
|
nurse migration is an ongoing phenomenon that strains health systems in
|
|
Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) countries, with Jamaica
|
|
being deeply impacted. This critical review demonstrates the importance
|
|
of strategically addressing nurse migration as part of palliative care
|
|
integration efforts in Jamaica. Future studies should include targeted
|
|
migration mitigation interventions and should be guided by the three
|
|
working hypotheses derived from this review.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Edwards, RL (Corresponding Author), Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Nursing, Dept Acute Chron \& Continuing Care, 1720 2nd Ave South, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.
|
|
Edwards, Rebecca L., Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Nursing, Dept Acute Chron \& Continuing Care, 1720 2nd Ave South, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.
|
|
Patrician, Patricia A., Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Nursing, Family Community \& Hlth Syst Dept, 1720 2nd Ave South, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.
|
|
Bakitas, Marie, Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Nursing, Ctr Palliat \& Support Care, 1720 2nd Ave South, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.
|
|
Markaki, Adelais, Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Nursing, PAHO WHOCC Int Nursing Family Community \& Hlth Sy, 1720 2nd Ave South, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12904-021-00863-7},
|
|
Article-Number = {155},
|
|
ISSN = {1472-684X},
|
|
Keywords = {Palliative care; Integration; Nurse migration; Jamaica; CARICOM;
|
|
Caribbean; Critical review},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CANCER CARE; GUIDELINES; INCOME; PAIN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {rledwards@uab.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Edwards, Rebecca Lynn/HTN-7649-2023
|
|
Markaki, Adelais/N-7747-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Edwards, Rebecca Lynn/0000-0002-1468-6790
|
|
Markaki, Adelais/0000-0002-2038-3139
|
|
Patrician, Patricia/0000-0002-9608-1866
|
|
Bakitas, Marie/0000-0002-2913-2053},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000706736400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000471414900001,
|
|
Author = {Holzinger, Clara},
|
|
Title = {`We don't worry that much about language': street-level bureaucracy in
|
|
the context of linguistic diversity},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ETHNIC AND MIGRATION STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {1792-1808},
|
|
Month = {JUL 3},
|
|
Abstract = {The way we deal with diversity is crucial for social equity in the
|
|
context of migration-related super-diversityand represents a challenge
|
|
for all actors involved. The present article aims to contribute to the
|
|
understanding of linguistic discrimination by contrasting the
|
|
perceptions of institutional actors and mobile European citizens
|
|
concerning language-related barriers when accessing labour market
|
|
mediation services and benefits. The article draws exemplarily on
|
|
empirical data (mainly qualitative interviews) relating to the provision
|
|
of labour market-related services by the Austrian Employment Service and
|
|
Hungarian migrants' experiences with this institution. The juxtaposition
|
|
of these two complementary perspectives reveals the challenges that
|
|
managing linguistic diversity poses for institutions and the actors
|
|
involved alike. Likewise, it permits investigations into how emerging
|
|
language-related problems may translate into experiences of inequity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Holzinger, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Vienna, Dept Sociol, Vienna, Austria.
|
|
Holzinger, Clara, Univ Vienna, Dept Sociol, Vienna, Austria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/1369183X.2019.1610365},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {1369-183X},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-9451},
|
|
Keywords = {Labour market integration; language policy; linguicism; migration;
|
|
discrimination},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIGRATION; RIGHTS; REFLECTIONS; MIGRANTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography; Ethnic Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {clara.holzinger@univie.ac.at},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Holzinger, Clara/GWD-0371-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Holzinger, Clara/0000-0002-5524-2563},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000471414900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000423477700001,
|
|
Author = {McArthur, Caitlin and Ziebart, Christina and Papaioannou, Alexandra and
|
|
Cheung, Angela M. and Laprade, Judi and Lee, Linda and Jain, Ravi and
|
|
Giangregorio, Lora M.},
|
|
Title = {``We get them up, moving, and out the door. How do we get them to do
|
|
what is recommended?{''} Using behaviour change theory to put exercise
|
|
evidence into action for rehabilitation professionals},
|
|
Journal = {ARCHIVES OF OSTEOPOROSIS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN 25},
|
|
Abstract = {Recommendations suggest a multicomponent exercise for people with
|
|
osteoporosis. We identified rehabilitation professionals' barriers and
|
|
facilitators to implementing exercise recommendations with people with
|
|
osteoporosis, and used those to make suggestions for targeted knowledge
|
|
translation interventions. Future work will report on development and
|
|
evaluation of the interventions informed by our study.
|
|
Purpose Rehabilitation professionals can help people with osteoporosis
|
|
to engage in a multicomponent exercise program and perform activities of
|
|
daily living safely. However, rehabilitation professional face barriers
|
|
to implementing exercise evidence, especially for specific disease
|
|
conditions like osteoporosis. We performed a behavioural analysis and
|
|
identified rehabilitation professionals' barriers to and facilitators of
|
|
implementing disease-specific physical activity and exercise
|
|
recommendations (Too Fit to Fracture recommendations), and used the
|
|
Behaviour Change Wheel to select interventions.
|
|
Methods Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted with
|
|
rehabilitation professionals, including physical therapists,
|
|
kinesiologists, and occupational therapists, and transcribed verbatim.
|
|
Two researchers coded data and identified emerging themes. Using the
|
|
Behaviour Change Wheel framework, themes were categorized into
|
|
capability, opportunity, and motivation, and relevant interventions were
|
|
identified.
|
|
Results Ninety-four rehabilitation professionals (mean age 40.5 years,
|
|
88.3\% female) participated. Identified barriers were as follows:
|
|
capability-lack of training in behaviour change, how to modify
|
|
recommendations for physical and cognitive impairments; opportunity-lack
|
|
of resources, time, and team work; motivation-lack of trust between
|
|
providers, fear in providing interventions that may cause harm.
|
|
Interventions selected were as follows: education, training, enablement,
|
|
modelling and persuasion. Policy categories are communication/marketing,
|
|
guidelines, service provision and environmental/social planning.
|
|
Conclusions Key barriers to implementing the recommendations are
|
|
rehabilitation professionals' ability to use behaviour change
|
|
techniques, to modify the recommendations for physical and cognitive
|
|
limitations and to feel comfortable with delivering challenging but safe
|
|
interventions for people with osteoporosis, and lacking trust and team
|
|
work across sectors. Future work will report on development and
|
|
evaluation of knowledge translation interventions informed by our study.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McArthur, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Waterloo, Dept Kinesiol, 200 Univ Ave West, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
|
|
McArthur, C (Corresponding Author), Geriatr Educ \& Res Aging Sci Ctr, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
|
|
McArthur, C (Corresponding Author), McMaster Univ, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
|
|
McArthur, Caitlin; Ziebart, Christina; Giangregorio, Lora M., Univ Waterloo, Dept Kinesiol, 200 Univ Ave West, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
|
|
McArthur, Caitlin; Papaioannou, Alexandra; Giangregorio, Lora M., Geriatr Educ \& Res Aging Sci Ctr, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
|
|
McArthur, Caitlin; Papaioannou, Alexandra, McMaster Univ, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
|
|
Cheung, Angela M.; Laprade, Judi, Univ Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Laprade, Judi; Jain, Ravi, Ontario Osteoporosis Strategy \& Osteoporosis Cana, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Lee, Linda, Ctr Family Med, Kitchener, ON, Canada.
|
|
Giangregorio, Lora M., Univ Hlth Network, Toronto Rehabil Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Giangregorio, Lora M., Schlegel UW Res Inst Aging, Waterloo, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11657-018-0419-7},
|
|
Article-Number = {7},
|
|
ISSN = {1862-3522},
|
|
EISSN = {1862-3514},
|
|
Keywords = {Physical activity; Physical therapy; Osteoporosis; Health care provider;
|
|
Guidelines; Knowledge translation; Implementation science},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-BACK-PAIN; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; ALLIED HEALTH; IMPLEMENTATION;
|
|
OSTEOPOROSIS; MANAGEMENT; DIAGNOSIS; BELIEFS; PHYSIOTHERAPISTS;
|
|
GUIDELINE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Endocrinology \& Metabolism; Orthopedics},
|
|
Author-Email = {cmcarthur@uwaterloo.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ziebart, Christina/AAT-3639-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Giangregorio, Lora/0000-0002-3739-1805
|
|
McArthur, Caitlin/0000-0001-9985-2796
|
|
Cheung, Angela M./0000-0001-8332-0744},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000423477700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000313553000003,
|
|
Author = {Bushway, Shawn D. and Apel, Robert},
|
|
Title = {A Signaling Perspective on Employment-Based Reentry Programming:
|
|
Training Completion as a Desistance Signal},
|
|
Journal = {CRIMINOLOGY \& PUBLIC POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {17-50},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {This study argues that employment programs for individuals exiting
|
|
prison can benefit society even if they do not directly reduce
|
|
recidivism, by helping to identify quickly and efficiently those
|
|
desisters who are ready to work. We make the following basic claims:
|
|
1. Individuals exiting prison have poor work experience, low levels of
|
|
education, and generally qualify for only low-skill, entry-level jobs.
|
|
Moreover, the majority will recidivate within 3 years. Employment
|
|
training programs are designed to ameliorate these deficits, but to
|
|
date, they have demonstrated only limited potential to improve
|
|
employment prospects and recidivism risk.
|
|
2. Despite a poor track record for employment-based reentry programming,
|
|
a substantial minority of individuals exiting prison has desisted from
|
|
crime and has the capacity to maintain stable employment.
|
|
3. Growing evidence suggests that this desistance process occurs
|
|
quickly-almost instantaneously-and is driven by decisions on the part of
|
|
the individual to change.
|
|
4. This type of instantaneous, agent-based change is difficult to
|
|
predict using static risk prediction tools. As a result, desistance is
|
|
fundamentally unobservable to employers and others who might wish to
|
|
identify good employees from the group of people who have criminal
|
|
history records. In lieu of additional information, one's true
|
|
desistance state will only be revealed through time. This situation is a
|
|
classic case of a market with asymmetric information.
|
|
5. Although growing numbers of employers refuse to hire individuals with
|
|
criminal history records, some are in fact willing to hire from this
|
|
pool of workers. More might be willing to do so if they could reliably
|
|
identify desisters. The current legal environment is increasingly
|
|
hostile to across-the-board bans on hiring individuals with criminal
|
|
history records without documentation of business necessity.
|
|
6. Program participation, completion, and endorsement from a training
|
|
organization can provide a reliable signal to employers that a given
|
|
individual has desisted and is prepared to be a productive employee, as
|
|
long as the cost to program completion is high for those who have not
|
|
desisted, and low for those who have desisted. Effective signals must be
|
|
voluntary. Requiring program completion, or graduating all participants,
|
|
renders the signal useless.
|
|
7. Existing evidence demonstrates that program participants (or program
|
|
completers) do in fact recidivate less often and have better employment
|
|
outcomes than program nonparticipants (or program dropouts), even in
|
|
cases where the program does not seem to ``work{''} in a causal sense.
|
|
This evidence can be taken to suggest that program completion provides
|
|
valuable information-a signal-to the labor market.
|
|
8. Limited anecdotal evidence suggests that some employers-among those
|
|
willing to hire individuals with a criminal history record-may already
|
|
be using completion of employment training programs to identify ``good
|
|
employees{''} among the pool of low-skill labor.
|
|
9. The development of effective signals could create a net gain to
|
|
society if, in the absence of signals, employers will largely avoid
|
|
hiring individuals with criminal history records. Evidence suggests that
|
|
individuals with prison records are exiting the labor market at higher
|
|
rates than in the past.
|
|
10. The signaling approach is different than risk prediction because it
|
|
relies on actions taken by individuals to reveal information about them
|
|
that is, by definition, unobservable. Information about program
|
|
completion can be valuable even if the program has not caused
|
|
individuals to change.
|
|
11. Other actions besides completion of employment training programs
|
|
also could function as useful signals in domains other than employment.
|
|
Policy Implications
|
|
Reframing the problem of reentry as a case of asymmetric information
|
|
could potentially have dramatic implications for policy makers
|
|
struggling to deal with the growing number of individuals with criminal
|
|
history records, who are increasingly disconnected from the labor
|
|
market. This disconnection occurs, at least in part, because this group
|
|
is more readily identifiable through the use of criminal background
|
|
checks. Although restricting the use of background checks may be
|
|
infeasible in the current legal climate, policy makers are actively
|
|
working to create standards for hiring individuals with criminal history
|
|
records. For example, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is
|
|
currently revising its guidance for hiring individuals with criminal
|
|
history records. It is hard to overstate the level of interest, by both
|
|
advocates and employers, in these ongoing discussions. Research insight
|
|
could be incorporated into government statutes that currently bar
|
|
individuals with criminal history records from certain types of
|
|
employment. Indirectly, such guidelines also would help individuals with
|
|
criminal history records trying to identify themselves to employers as
|
|
``good bets.{''} Key elements of a research plan needed to develop this
|
|
idea further include:
|
|
1. Formalizing the argument with a theoretical model that can be
|
|
explicitly parameterized. Key elements of the argument depend crucially
|
|
on factors such as the size of the desisting population, the outcome in
|
|
the absence of effective signals, and the magnitude of the correlation
|
|
between the cost of the signal and desistance. Proper specification of
|
|
the requirements for effective signals in this context could then inform
|
|
empirical tests of the model. . 2. Empirical testing for evidence that
|
|
employers are already using factors such as program completion as
|
|
signals. This testing can include surveys of employers who hire
|
|
individuals with criminal history records to develop some idea of how
|
|
they discriminate between individuals with criminal history records.
|
|
Other potential methods include attempts to compare labor market
|
|
outcomes of individuals with otherwise similar skill levels, one who has
|
|
identifiably completed a program and one who has not. Empirical research
|
|
testing the strength of the link between the concept of crime desistance
|
|
and work productivity also would be valuable.
|
|
3. Calculating the relative costs of programs that provide signals with
|
|
more traditional risk prediction tools that take advantage of currently
|
|
available information. Creating these programs to generate signals only
|
|
can be justified if the additional information generates savings over
|
|
and above what can be gained by more passive methods.
|
|
4. Better understanding the trade-offs between maintaining voluntary
|
|
programs to generate signals and creating mandatory programs, like
|
|
Project HOPE, that might enhance rehabilitation. Although signaling and
|
|
rehabilitation are not competing concepts, the requirement that signals
|
|
be voluntarily acquired could potentially conflict with mandatory
|
|
rehabilitation programs.
|
|
In the short term, it might not be necessary to wait for the completion
|
|
of this research before policy makers can make progress in this area. We
|
|
are aware of one set of programs, often called Certificates of Relief,
|
|
Rehabilitation, or Good Conduct, by which policy makers explicitly
|
|
identify individuals with criminal history records who have met certain
|
|
requirements, including program completion. In the strongest cases,
|
|
these certificates carry with them explicit removal of statutory
|
|
restrictions on individuals with criminal history records. In our view,
|
|
these government-run programs are an attempt to create an explicit
|
|
signal for employers that these individuals have desisted from crime.
|
|
However, we are not aware of attempts to validate the standards used to
|
|
qualify individuals for these certificates, nor are we aware of attempts
|
|
to verify whether these signals work to create better opportunities for
|
|
the involved individuals. We urge those involved in these programs to
|
|
redouble their efforts to validate these promising programs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bushway, SD (Corresponding Author), SUNY Albany, Sch Criminal Justice, 135 Western Ave, Albany, NY 12222 USA.
|
|
Bushway, Shawn D., SUNY Albany, Sch Criminal Justice, Albany, NY 12222 USA.
|
|
Bushway, Shawn D., SUNY Albany, Rockefeller Coll Publ Affairs \& Policy, Albany, NY 12222 USA.
|
|
Apel, Robert, Rutgers State Univ, Sch Criminal Justice, Piscataway, NJ 08855 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1745-9133.2012.00785.x},
|
|
ISSN = {1538-6473},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-9133},
|
|
Keywords = {Signaling; Prisoner reentry; Desistance; Employment programs},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RISK; TRAJECTORIES; METAANALYSIS; RECIDIVISM; FUTURE; WORK; AGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Criminology \& Penology},
|
|
Author-Email = {sbushway@albany.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Apel, Robert/ABC-4270-2020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {72},
|
|
Times-Cited = {165},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {117},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000313553000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000354954400005,
|
|
Author = {Conde, Eduardo Salomao and Fonseca, Francisco},
|
|
Title = {The Brazilian Social Macrodynamic: Changes, Continuities and Challenges},
|
|
Journal = {DADOS-REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIAIS},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {58},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {151-185},
|
|
Abstract = {Contemporary Brazil is portrayed based on aggregate data on work,
|
|
employment, income, poverty, and inequality, seeking to establish the
|
|
recent of the social macrodynamic. To this end, the authors analyze role
|
|
of the exponential increase of employment, the reduction of unemployment
|
|
and informalization; real minimum wage increases and the rise of average
|
|
salaries, the strengthening of Social Security and social programs; the
|
|
retreat of extreme poverty. This set of data comparatively indicates
|
|
that, while the Cardoso government turned toward private investment,
|
|
monetary and fiscal restriction, and state reform (in the ``modern{''}
|
|
sense of decreasing its size), in the Lula government another
|
|
perspective of ``modernization{''}: the reinforcement of state capacity
|
|
to achieve ``embedded autonomy{''}. It concludes that the challenge of
|
|
modernization is still guided towards redistribution of wealth, the
|
|
creation of an effective Welfare State and sovereign insertion in the
|
|
international arena.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Portuguese},
|
|
Affiliation = {Conde, ES (Corresponding Author), Univ Fed Juiz de Fora UFJF, Juiz De Fora, MG, Brazil.
|
|
Conde, Eduardo Salomao, Univ Fed Juiz de Fora UFJF, Juiz De Fora, MG, Brazil.
|
|
Fonseca, Francisco, Fundacao Getulio Vargas FGV, Escola Adm Empresas Sao Paulo Easp, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.
|
|
Fonseca, Francisco, Pontificia Univ Catolica Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1590/00115258201541},
|
|
ISSN = {0011-5258},
|
|
EISSN = {1678-4588},
|
|
Keywords = {labor; income; inequality; social policy; development},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {eduardosconde@gmail.com
|
|
franciscocpfonseca@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {19},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000354954400005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1994PC86300007,
|
|
Author = {QUACK, S and MAIER, F},
|
|
Title = {FROM STATE SOCIALISM TO MARKET-ECONOMY - WOMENS EMPLOYMENT IN
|
|
EAST-GERMANY},
|
|
Journal = {ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A},
|
|
Year = {1994},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {1257-1276},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The transformation from a centrally planned economy to a market economy
|
|
involves a wide-ranging redistribution of paid employment, income, and
|
|
individual opportunities. Men and women in the former East Germany
|
|
(GDR)-who before reunification had equal roles of participation in paid
|
|
labour-have been affected in different ways by the restructuring of the
|
|
East German economy. Women are now more often unemployed, and for longer
|
|
periods, and face greater difficulties in finding a job. In order to
|
|
explain these differences between men and women, the authors investigate
|
|
the economic, social, and political dimensions of the transformation
|
|
process. The main argument is that economic and social disadvantages
|
|
affecting East German women are not just related to the economic and
|
|
political transformation as such. Rather, they are rooted in a
|
|
traditional gender division of paid work in the former GDR which was
|
|
reinforced by the paternalistic family and social policy developed by
|
|
the East German state. At the same time, however, East German women's
|
|
experiences of being fully integrated into employment, and enjoying
|
|
greater economic independence, make it unlikely that they will easily
|
|
accept the West German model of partial labour-market integration.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {QUACK, S (Corresponding Author), WISSENSCHAFTSZENTRUM SOZIALFORSCH,REICHPIETSCHUFER 50,D-10785 BERLIN,GERMANY.
|
|
FACHHSCH WIRTSCHAFT,D-10825 BERLIN,GERMANY.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1068/a261257},
|
|
ISSN = {0308-518X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOICE; EXIT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies; Geography},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1994PC86300007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000186957700002,
|
|
Author = {Brach, C and Lewit, EM and VanLandeghem, K and Bronstein, J and Dick, AW
|
|
and Kimminau, KS and LaClair, B and Shenkman, E and Shone, LP and
|
|
Swigonski, N and Szilagyi, PG},
|
|
Title = {Who's enrolled in the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)?
|
|
An overview of findings from the Child Health Insurance Research
|
|
Initiative (CHIRI)},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {112},
|
|
Number = {6, S},
|
|
Pages = {E499-E507},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background. The State Children's Health Insurance Program ( SCHIP) was
|
|
enacted in 1997 to provide health insurance coverage to uninsured
|
|
low-income children from families who earned too much to be eligible for
|
|
Medicaid.
|
|
Objectives. To develop a `` baseline{''} portrait of SCHIP enrollees in
|
|
5 states ( Alabama, Florida, Kansas, Indiana, and New York) by
|
|
examining: 1) SCHIP enrollees' demographic characteristics and health
|
|
care experiences before enrolling in SCHIP, particularly children with
|
|
special health care needs ( CSHCN), racial and ethnic minority children,
|
|
and adolescents; 2) the quality of the care adolescents received before
|
|
enrollment; and 3) the changes in enrollee characteristics as programs
|
|
evolve and mature.
|
|
Methods. Each of 5 projects from the Child Health Insurance Research
|
|
Initiative ( CHIRI) surveyed new SCHIP enrollees as identified by state
|
|
enrollment data. CHIRI investigators developed the CHIRI common core ( a
|
|
set of survey items from validated instruments), which were largely
|
|
incorporated into each survey. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were
|
|
conducted to ascertain whether there were racial and ethnic disparities
|
|
in access to health care and differences between CSHCN and those
|
|
without. Current Population Survey data for New York State were used to
|
|
identify secular trends in enrollee characteristics.
|
|
Results. Most SCHIP enrollees ( 65\% in Florida to 79\% in New York)
|
|
resided in families with incomes less than or equal to 150\% of the
|
|
federal poverty level. Almost half of SCHIP enrollees lived in single-
|
|
parent households. A majority of SCHIP parents had not had education
|
|
beyond high school, and in 2 states ( Alabama and New York) similar to
|
|
25\% had not completed high school. The vast majority of children lived
|
|
in households with a working adult, and in a substantial proportion of
|
|
households both parents worked. Children tended to be either insured for
|
|
the entire 12 months or uninsured the entire 12 months before enrolling
|
|
in SCHIP. Private insurance was the predominant form of insurance before
|
|
enrollment in SCHIP in most states, but 23.3\% to 51.2\% of insured
|
|
children had Medicaid as their most recent insurance.
|
|
Health Care Use and Unmet Needs Before SCHIP. The vast majority of all
|
|
SCHIP enrollees had a usual source of care ( USC) during the year before
|
|
SCHIP. The proportion of children who changed their USC after enrolling
|
|
in SCHIP ranged from 29\% to 41.3\%. A large proportion of SCHIP
|
|
enrollees used health services during the year before SCHIP, with some
|
|
variability across states in the use of health care. Nevertheless, 32\%
|
|
to almost 50\% of children reported unmet needs.
|
|
CSHCN. The prevalence of CSHCN in SCHIP ( between 17\% and 25\%) in the
|
|
study states was higher than the prevalence of CSHCN reported in the
|
|
general population in those states. In many respects, CSHCN were similar
|
|
to children without special health care needs, but CSHCN had poorer
|
|
health status, were more likely to have had unmet needs, and were more
|
|
likely to use the emergency department, mental health care, specialty
|
|
care, and acute care in the year before enrolling in SCHIP than children
|
|
without special health care needs.
|
|
Race and Ethnicity. A substantial proportion of SCHIP enrollees were
|
|
black non- Hispanic or Hispanic children ( Alabama: 34\% and < 1\%;
|
|
Florida: 6\% and 26\%; Kansas: 12\% and 15\%; and New York: 31\% and
|
|
45\%, respectively). Minority children were poorer, in poorer health,
|
|
and less likely to have had a USC or private insurance before enrolling
|
|
in SCHIP. The prevalence and magnitude of the disparities varied among
|
|
the states.
|
|
Quality of Care for Adolescents. Seventy- three percent of adolescent
|
|
SCHIP enrollees engaged in one or more risk behaviors ( ie, feeling sad
|
|
or blue; alcohol, tobacco, and drug use; having sexual intercourse; and
|
|
not wearing seat belts). Although almost 70\% of adolescents reported
|
|
having had a preventive care visit the previous year, a majority of them
|
|
did not receive counseling in each of 4 counseling areas. Controlling
|
|
for other factors, having a private, confidential visit with the
|
|
physician was associated with an increased likelihood ( 2 - 3 times more
|
|
likely) that the adolescent received counseling for 3 of 4 counseling
|
|
areas.
|
|
Trends Over Time. New York SCHIP enrollees in 2001, compared with 1994
|
|
enrollees in New York's SCHIP- precursor child health insurance program,
|
|
were more likely to be black or Hispanic, older, from New York City, and
|
|
from families with lower education, income, and employment levels. A
|
|
greater proportion of 2001 enrollees was uninsured for some time in the
|
|
year before enrollment, was insured by Medicaid, and lacked a USC.
|
|
Secular trends in the low- income population in the state did not seem
|
|
to be responsible for these differences. Program modifications during
|
|
this time period that may be related to the shift in enrollee
|
|
characteristics include changes to benefits, outreach and marketing
|
|
efforts, changes in the premium structure, and the advent of a single
|
|
application form for multiple public programs.
|
|
Conclusions. SCHIP enrollees are a diverse group, and there was
|
|
considerable variation among the 5 study states. Overall, SCHIP
|
|
enrollees had substantial and wide- ranging health care needs despite
|
|
high levels of prior contact with the health care system. A sizable
|
|
minority of SCHIP enrollees has special health care needs. There is
|
|
racial and ethnic diversity in the composition of enrollees as well,
|
|
with racial and ethnic disparities present. The quality of care
|
|
adolescents received before enrollment in SCHIP was suboptimal, with
|
|
many reporting unmet health care needs and not receiving recommended
|
|
counseling. The characteristics of SCHIP enrollees can be expected to
|
|
change as SCHIP programs evolve and mature.
|
|
Policy Implications. 1) Benefits should be structured to meet the needs
|
|
of SCHIP enrollees, which are comparable to Medicaid enrollees' needs in
|
|
many respects. 2) Provider networks will have to be broad if continuity
|
|
of care is to be achieved. 3) Multiple outreach strategies should be
|
|
used, including using providers to distribute information about SCHIP.
|
|
4) The quality of care delivered to vulnerable populations ( eg,
|
|
minority children, CSHCN, and adolescents) should be monitored. 5)
|
|
States and health plans should actively promote quality health care with
|
|
the goal of improving the care received by SCHIP enrollees before
|
|
enrollment. 6) States will have to craft policies that fit their local
|
|
context. 7) Collecting baseline information on SCHIP enrollees on a
|
|
continuous basis is important, because enrollee characteristics and
|
|
needs can change, and many vulnerable children are enrolling in SCHIP.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brach, C (Corresponding Author), Agcy Healthcare Res \& Qual, Ctr Delivery Org \& Markets, 540 Gaither Rd, Rockville, MD 20850 USA.
|
|
Agcy Healthcare Res \& Qual, Ctr Delivery Org \& Markets, Rockville, MD 20850 USA.
|
|
David \& Lucile Packard Fdn, Los Altos, CA USA.
|
|
Agcy Healthcare Res \& Qual, Arlington Hts, IL USA.
|
|
Univ Alabama Birmingham, Birmingham, AL USA.
|
|
Univ Rochester, Sch Med \& Dent, Dept Community \& Prevent Med, Rochester, NY USA.
|
|
Kansas Hlth Inst, Topeka, KS USA.
|
|
Univ Florida, Inst Child Hlth Policy, Gainesville, FL USA.
|
|
Univ Rochester, Sch Med \& Dent, Dept Pediat, Rochester, NY 14642 USA.
|
|
Indiana Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
Indiana Univ, Sch Med, Dept Med, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0031-4005},
|
|
EISSN = {1098-4275},
|
|
Keywords = {access; children; children with special health care needs; disparities;
|
|
enrollment; ethnicity; insurance; Medicaid; minorities; quality; race;
|
|
State Children's Health Insurance Program},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {AMBULATORY-CARE; UNITED-STATES; ACCESS; IMPACT; NEEDS; IDENTIFICATION;
|
|
ETHNICITY; RACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {cbrach@ahrq.gov},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Brach, Cindy/0000-0003-3600-8402},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {41},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000186957700002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000594605700001,
|
|
Author = {de Paz-Banez, Manuela A. and Asensio-Coto, Maria Jose and Sanchez-Lopez,
|
|
Celia and Aceytuno, Maria-Teresa},
|
|
Title = {Is There Empirical Evidence on How the Implementation of a Universal
|
|
Basic Income (UBI) Affects Labour Supply? A Systematic Review},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {22},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {The objective of this article is to determine, as conclusively as
|
|
possible, if the implementation of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) would
|
|
lead to a significant reduction in the working age population labour
|
|
supply. If this were true, implementation of a UBI may not be
|
|
sustainable. To do this, we will compile empirical evidence from studies
|
|
over the last few decades on the effects of implementation of a UBI on
|
|
employment. We apply the PRISMA methodology to better judge their
|
|
validity, which ensures maximum reliability of the results by avoiding
|
|
biases and making the work reproducible. Given that the methodologies
|
|
used in these studies are diverse, they are reviewed to contextualize
|
|
the results taking into account the possible limitations detected in
|
|
these methodologies. While many authors have been writing about this
|
|
issue citing experiences or experiments, the added value of this article
|
|
is that it performs a systematic review following a widely tested
|
|
scientific methodology. Over 1200 documents that discuss the
|
|
UBI/employment relationship have been reviewed. We found a total of 50
|
|
empirical cases, of which 18 were selected, and 38 studies with
|
|
contrasted empirical evidence on this relationship. The results speak
|
|
for themselves: Despite a detailed search, we have not found any
|
|
evidence of a significant reduction in labour supply. Instead, we found
|
|
evidence that labour supply increases globally among adults, men and
|
|
women, young and old, and the existence of some insignificant and
|
|
functional reductions to the system such as a decrease in workers from
|
|
the following categories: Children, the elderly, the sick, those with
|
|
disabilities, women with young children to look after, or young people
|
|
who continued studying. These reductions do not reduce the overall
|
|
supply since it is largely offset by increased supply from other members
|
|
of the community.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {de Paz-Banez, MA (Corresponding Author), Univ Huelva, Econ Dept, Huelva 21071, Spain.
|
|
de Paz-Banez, Manuela A.; Asensio-Coto, Maria Jose; Sanchez-Lopez, Celia; Aceytuno, Maria-Teresa, Univ Huelva, Econ Dept, Huelva 21071, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su12229459},
|
|
Article-Number = {9459},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {universal basic income (UBI); labour supply; inequality; poverty;
|
|
sustainability of social policies},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CASH TRANSFERS; WORK; INCENTIVES; SUPPORT; POVERTY; HEALTH; REFORM;
|
|
STATES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {depaz@uhu.es
|
|
asensio@uhu.es
|
|
celia@ole.uhu.es
|
|
maria.aceytuno@dege.uhu.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Aceytuno, M. Teresa/B-3718-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Aceytuno, M. Teresa/0000-0002-8314-0193
|
|
Asensio Coto, Maria Jose/0000-0003-4946-0940
|
|
Paz Banez, Manuela Adelaida de/0000-0003-2725-1398},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {144},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {33},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000594605700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000425613700004,
|
|
Author = {Wagener, Marlies N. and van den Dries, Lennert and Van Exel, Job and
|
|
Miedema, Harald S. and van Gorp, Eric C. M. and Roelofs, Pepijn D. D. M.},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of Employment in People Living with HIV in the Netherlands},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {45-56},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives Since HIV has become a manageable chronic disease, employment
|
|
is of increasing importance for people living with HIV (PLWH). This
|
|
study aimed to investigate the level of work participation among PLWH in
|
|
the Netherlands, and the associated determinants of employment. Methods
|
|
For this study the baseline measurements of a longitudinal cohort study
|
|
with a 2-year follow-up, the TREVI project, were used. The TREVI project
|
|
aims to study cognitive function disorders among PLWH in relation to
|
|
their employment, productivity, and social functioning. From December
|
|
2012 until December 2013, data on cognitive functioning, measured by the
|
|
HIV Dementia Scale, and medical data derived from patient records were
|
|
collected. Employment status and possible determinants of employment
|
|
were assessed by a digital survey. Chi square analysis and multivariate
|
|
logistic regression analysis were conducted in order to investigate the
|
|
level of employment and associated determinants of employment. Results
|
|
This cross-sectional study revealed significant differences in the level
|
|
of employment compared with Dutch reference data: i.e. in the age group
|
|
40-54 years PLWH had a significantly lower employment rate than the
|
|
general Dutch population. Multivariate analysis showed that employment
|
|
was negatively associated with a lower or higher age (reference: 40-54
|
|
years), a longer period since diagnosis, problems with physical
|
|
functioning, and a higher score on the HADS Depression. Having paid work
|
|
at diagnosis was positively associated with employment. Conclusion PLWH,
|
|
particularly in the age of 40-54, in the Netherlands have a significant
|
|
lower level of employment compared to the general population. Counseling
|
|
should address reduced psychological and physical functioning in order
|
|
to improve the position of PLWH on the labor market.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wagener, MN (Corresponding Author), Rotterdam Univ Appl Sci, Ctr Expertise Innovat Care, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Wagener, MN (Corresponding Author), Erasmus MC, Univ Med Ctr Rotterdam, Dept Virosci, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Wagener, Marlies N.; Miedema, Harald S.; Roelofs, Pepijn D. D. M., Rotterdam Univ Appl Sci, Ctr Expertise Innovat Care, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Wagener, Marlies N.; van den Dries, Lennert; van Gorp, Eric C. M., Erasmus MC, Univ Med Ctr Rotterdam, Dept Virosci, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Van Exel, Job, Erasmus Univ, Inst Hlth Policy \& Management, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
van Gorp, Eric C. M., Erasmus MC, Univ Med Ctr Rotterdam, Dept Internal Med, Rotterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10926-016-9692-8},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-0487},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Cohort study; Employment; HIV; Vocational guidance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ACTIVE ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; MEDICAL OUTCOMES; HEALTH SURVEY;
|
|
HIV/AIDS; WORK; PREDICTORS; BARRIERS; PARTICIPATION; FRANCE; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {m.n.wagener@hr.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {van Exel, Job/E-6191-2013
|
|
Roelofs, Pepijn D.D.M./P-9479-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {van Exel, Job/0000-0002-4178-1777
|
|
Roelofs, Pepijn D.D.M./0000-0003-2037-1370
|
|
Wagener, Marlies/0000-0002-3903-2670},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000425613700004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000466260800006,
|
|
Author = {Eyles, Emily and Manley, David and Jones, Kelvyn},
|
|
Title = {Occupied with classification: Which occupational classification scheme
|
|
better predicts health outcomes?},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {227},
|
|
Number = {SI},
|
|
Pages = {56-62},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Note = {17th International Medical Geography Symposium (IMGS), Angers, FRANCE,
|
|
JUL 02-07, 2017},
|
|
Abstract = {Health inequalities continue to grow despite continuous policy
|
|
intervention. Work, one domain of health inequalities, is often included
|
|
as a component of social class rather than as a determinant in its own
|
|
right. Many social class classifications are derived from occupation
|
|
types, but there are other components within them that mean they may not
|
|
be useful as proxies for occupation. This paper develops the exposome, a
|
|
life-course exposure model developed by Wild (2005), into the worksome,
|
|
allowing for the explicit consideration of both physical and
|
|
psychosocial exposures and effects derived from work and working
|
|
conditions. The interactions between and within temporal and
|
|
geographical scales are strongly emphasised, and the interwoven nature
|
|
of both psycho social and physical exposures is highlighted. Individuals
|
|
within an occupational type can be both affected by and effect upon
|
|
occupation level characteristics and health measures. By using the
|
|
worksome, occupation types are separated from value-laden social
|
|
classifications. This paper will empirically examine whether occupation
|
|
better predicts health measures from the European Working Conditions
|
|
Survey (EWCS). Logistic regression models using Bayesian MCMC estimation
|
|
were run for each classification system, for each health measure. Health
|
|
measures included, for example, whether the respondent felt their work
|
|
affected their health, their self-rated health, pain in upper or lower
|
|
limbs, and headaches. Using the Deviance Information Criterion (DIC), a
|
|
measure of predictive accuracy penalised for model complexity, the
|
|
models were assessed against one another. The DIC shows empirically
|
|
which classification system is most suitable for use in modelling. The
|
|
2-digit International Standard Classification of Occupations showed the
|
|
best predictive accuracy for all measures. Therefore, examining the
|
|
relationship between health and work should be done with classifications
|
|
specific to occupation or industry rather than socio-economic class
|
|
classifications. This justifies the worksome, allowing for a conceptual
|
|
framework to link many forms of work-health research.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Eyles, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Bristol, Sch Geog Sci, Univ Rd, Bristol BS8 1SS, Avon, England.
|
|
Eyles, Emily; Manley, David; Jones, Kelvyn, Univ Bristol, Sch Geog Sci, Univ Rd, Bristol BS8 1SS, Avon, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.09.020},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {Occupational health; Classifications; Class; Work; Worksome; Exposome;
|
|
Social exposure},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-RATED HEALTH; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; PRECARIOUS EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURE; WORKING HOURS; EXPOSOME; INEQUALITIES;
|
|
CHALLENGE; MORTALITY; SCIENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {ee15592@bristol.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Jones, Kelvyn/ABE-8689-2020
|
|
Jones, Kelvyn/A-3939-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jones, Kelvyn/0000-0001-8398-2190
|
|
Jones, Kelvyn/0000-0001-8398-2190
|
|
Eyles, Emily/0000-0002-2695-7172},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000466260800006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000423309900012,
|
|
Author = {Ralston, Margaret},
|
|
Title = {The Role of Older Persons' Environment in Aging Well: Quality of Life,
|
|
Illness, and Community Context in South Africa},
|
|
Journal = {GERONTOLOGIST},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {58},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {111-120},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {This article evaluates the influence of local district conditions on
|
|
subjective quality of life of older South African adults. Policymakers
|
|
increasingly recognize that ``successful{''} aging policies must not
|
|
only address physical health needs but also factors that influence
|
|
subjective well-being.
|
|
To investigate the influence of area-level distribution of ``public
|
|
goods{''} on well-being in a low- and middle-income setting, nationally
|
|
representative WHO-Study of Global AGEing and Adult Health (WHO-SAGE)
|
|
survey data is combined with district-level data that captures built
|
|
resources and health system distribution. Multilevel regression modeling
|
|
is utilized to explore how community context, including built resources
|
|
and health infrastructure quality, influence older persons' quality of
|
|
life and how chronic health conditions may moderate this relationship
|
|
while controlling for important individual characteristics.
|
|
While controlling for individual and district level factors, it is found
|
|
community level provision of built resources of basic services (i.e.,
|
|
water, sanitation, electricity, housing) has a modest but significant
|
|
impact on older persons' subjective well-being. Further, this effect on
|
|
older persons' perceptions of quality of life is moderated by individual
|
|
chronic health status; individuals with a chronic health condition do
|
|
not receive an equivalent benefit from district built condition like
|
|
those without an illness do.
|
|
This work adds to the literature concerning the effect of environments
|
|
in low- and middle-income countries on older adults' subjective
|
|
well-being. It also adds to the growing literature on the complex
|
|
relationship between subjective well-being and health in diverse
|
|
contexts.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ralston, M (Corresponding Author), 201 Bowen Hall,456 Hardy Rd, Mississippi State, MS 39862 USA.
|
|
Ralston, Margaret, Mississippi State Univ, Dept Sociol, Mississippi State, MS 39762 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/geront/gnx091},
|
|
ISSN = {0016-9013},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-5341},
|
|
Keywords = {Community context; Health; South Africa; Subjective well-being},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-RATED HEALTH; QOL 8-ITEM INDEX; INCOME INEQUALITY; ADULT HEALTH;
|
|
PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES; UNITED-STATES; PRIMARY-CARE; WHOQOL-BREF; US
|
|
STATES; DEPRESSION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {mr1636@msstate.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000423309900012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000577275400002,
|
|
Author = {Raynolds, Laura T.},
|
|
Title = {Gender equity, labor rights, and women's empowerment: lessons from
|
|
Fairtrade certification in Ecuador flower plantations},
|
|
Journal = {AGRICULTURE AND HUMAN VALUES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {657-675},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Certification programs seek to promote decent work in global
|
|
agriculture, yet little is known about their gender standards and
|
|
implications for female workers, who are often the most disadvantaged.
|
|
This study outlines the gender standard domains of major agricultural
|
|
certifications, showing how some programs (Fair Trade USA, Rainforest)
|
|
prioritize addressing gender equality in employment and others
|
|
(Fairtrade International, UTZ) incorporate wider gender rights. To
|
|
illuminate the implications of gender standards in practice, I analyze
|
|
Fairtrade certification and worker experience on certified flower
|
|
plantations in Ecuador, drawing on a qualitative and quantitative field
|
|
research study. (1) I show how Fairtrade seeks to bolster the wellbeing
|
|
of female workers, addressing their workplace needs via equal
|
|
employment, treatment, and remuneration standards and their reproductive
|
|
needs via maternity leave and childcare services. My research
|
|
demonstrates that for female workers, addressing family responsibilities
|
|
is critical, since they shape women's ability to take paid jobs, their
|
|
employment needs, and their overall wellbeing. (2) I show how Fairtrade
|
|
seeks to bolster the rights of women workers through individual and
|
|
collective capacity building standards. My findings reveal how promoting
|
|
women's individual empowerment serves as a precondition for collective
|
|
empowerment, and how targeting traditional labor rights is insufficient
|
|
for empowering female workers, since their strategic choices are
|
|
curtailed largely outside the workplace. While Fairtrade certification
|
|
bolsters the wellbeing and rights of female workers in and beyond the
|
|
workplace, much still needs to be done before women can claim their
|
|
rights as workers and citizens.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Raynolds, LT (Corresponding Author), Colorado State Univ, Ctr Fair \& Alternat Trade, Sociol Dept, Ft Collins, CO 80538 USA.
|
|
Raynolds, Laura T., Colorado State Univ, Ctr Fair \& Alternat Trade, Sociol Dept, Ft Collins, CO 80538 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10460-020-10171-0},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0889-048X},
|
|
EISSN = {1572-8366},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender; Empowerment; Certification; Fair trade; Labor standards; Ecuador},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CORPORATE SOCIAL-RESPONSIBILITY; FAMILY NORMS; TRADE; FAIR; STANDARDS;
|
|
CONTRADICTIONS; PARTICIPATION; REVOLUTION; VIOLENCE; MARKETS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; History \& Philosophy Of Science;
|
|
Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {Laura.Raynolds@colostate.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {, Laura Raynolds/JCE-2745-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Raynolds, Laura/0000-0001-5795-3169},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {84},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000577275400002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001008589400006,
|
|
Author = {Baril-Gingras, Genevieve and Cox, Rachel},
|
|
Title = {Reform of the OHS prevention regime in Quebec: critical analysis,
|
|
sensitive to gender and other sources of inequality},
|
|
Journal = {RELATIONS INDUSTRIELLES-INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {77},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Abstract = {We examine the potential effectiveness of key provisions of the Quebec
|
|
prevention regime as reformed by the Act to modernize the occupational
|
|
health and safety regime (AMOHS) in September 2021. We expand Tucker's
|
|
(2007) two-axis typology characterizing citizenship at work to include a
|
|
perspective sensitive to gender and to other sources of inequalities
|
|
such as class and race. In this expanded model, the right to
|
|
representative participation, worker influence and internal control
|
|
extends to all workers (regardless of employment status), and includes
|
|
accountability along value chains. In the expanded model,risks addressed
|
|
by the prevention regime, and subject to external control, include often
|
|
invisibilized risks associated with women's work. In the face of
|
|
opposition to the initial reform bill, which underestimated the risks
|
|
associated with women's work, adoption of key elements of the reform -
|
|
the provisions on preventive and participatory mechanisms - was
|
|
postponed and an interim regime established. The AMOHS will eventually
|
|
allow for worker participation mechanisms aimed at increasing internal
|
|
control in all sectors. This, however, comes with a risk that internal
|
|
control will result in cosmetic rather than substantive compliance, lead
|
|
to inconsistent levels of worker influence and undermine some of the
|
|
conditions that underpin effective participation mechanisms, especially
|
|
for non-unionized workers and those in small establishments. Further,
|
|
the Public Health network has lost systematic access to workplaces, and
|
|
it is not known what resources will be available to it or to the
|
|
inspectorate. It remains to be seen whether the ongoing joint regulatory
|
|
process to determine future preventive and participatory mechanisms will
|
|
strengthen prevention and at the same time bolster, rather than weaken,
|
|
citizenship at work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {French},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baril-Gingras, G (Corresponding Author), Univ Laval, Dept Relat Ind, Equipe Interdisciplinaire Sante Genre Egalite, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Baril-Gingras, G (Corresponding Author), Ctr Interuniv Rech Mondialisat \& Travail Quebec, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Baril-Gingras, Genevieve; Cox, Rachel, Univ Laval, Dept Relat Ind, Equipe Interdisciplinaire Sante Genre Egalite, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Baril-Gingras, Genevieve; Cox, Rachel, Ctr Interuniv Rech Mondialisat \& Travail Quebec, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.7202/1097694ar},
|
|
ISSN = {0034-379X},
|
|
Keywords = {Occupational health and safety; Prevention regime; Gender; Labour law;
|
|
Occupational hazards; Women at work; Employment agencies; Social
|
|
inequalities in health; Citizenship at work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OCCUPATIONAL-HEALTH; WORKERS-COMPENSATION; SAFETY; REPRESENTATION;
|
|
PARTICIPATION; CANADA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {genevieve.baril-gingras@rlt.ulaval.ca
|
|
cox.rachel@uqam.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {76},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001008589400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001061305400001,
|
|
Author = {Yeh, Catherine T. H. and Wodtke, Geoffrey T.},
|
|
Title = {The Effects of Head Start on Low-Income Mothers},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIUS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Abstract = {Head Start is a federal antipoverty program that provides free
|
|
childcare, preschool, and related services to disadvantaged families.
|
|
Research on Head Start has focused almost exclusively on impacts among
|
|
children. Using data from the Head Start Impact Study, a nationally
|
|
representative field experiment, the authors estimate treatment effects
|
|
on maternal employment, economic hardship, and depression. The authors
|
|
find that Head Start admission generates some improvements among Black
|
|
mothers but not among other subpopulations. In analyses accounting for
|
|
treatment intensity, noncompliance, and program substitution, the
|
|
authors find suggestive evidence that Head Start participation may lead
|
|
to even greater improvements in these outcomes specifically among Black
|
|
mothers who would otherwise look after their children at home and when
|
|
they participate in the program full-time. In conclusion, Head Start
|
|
likely improves outcomes for some groups of low-income mothers, but
|
|
these effects are heterogeneous, and they may be small, dose-dependent,
|
|
or otherwise difficult to detect for many women.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Yeh, CTH (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Dept Sociol, Unit 17100,17th Floor, 700 Univ Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1Z5, Canada.
|
|
Yeh, Catherine T. H., Univ Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Wodtke, Geoffrey T., Univ Chicago, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
Yeh, Catherine T. H., Univ Toronto, Dept Sociol, Unit 17100,17th Floor, 700 Univ Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1Z5, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/23780231231192392},
|
|
Article-Number = {23780231231192392},
|
|
ISSN = {2378-0231},
|
|
Keywords = {Head Start; poverty; low-income mothers; field experiment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILD-CARE SUBSIDIES; POVERTY; WORK; WELFARE; RACE; IDENTIFICATION;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {catherine.yeh@mail.utoronto.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001061305400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000744463500005,
|
|
Author = {Kolesnik, Daria P. and Pestova, Anna A. and Donina, Anna G.},
|
|
Title = {What should we do about the employment of women with children in Russia?
|
|
The role of preschool educational institutions},
|
|
Journal = {VOPROSY EKONOMIKI},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Pages = {94-117},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The paper examines the opportunities and obstacles to increasing the
|
|
employment of women with children in Russia. There is a tight
|
|
correlation between Russia's lagging behind in the share of working
|
|
women with children under the age of three and a lack of supply of
|
|
preschool and childcare institutions. Using quantitative analysis of the
|
|
Russian regions, we show that the expansion of the supply of preschool
|
|
education services is associated with an increase in the employment of
|
|
women, and the cost of introducing additional places in preschool
|
|
organizations is recouped by additional tax revenues from working women
|
|
with children in two years. Our cross-country analysis shows that the
|
|
transition from traditional gender and social roles to more equal ones,
|
|
the reduction of gender inequality, the encouragement of fathers to take
|
|
parental leave, and the increased availability of part-time or
|
|
flexible-schedule employment for women with children could further
|
|
facilitate the employment of women with children. Our estimates show
|
|
that an increase of preschool enrollment in Russia to the level of
|
|
European countries would materialize a sizable economic growth
|
|
potential: an increase in income per capita would be 3.5\%.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Russian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Donina, AG (Corresponding Author), MGIMO Univ, Moscow, Russia.
|
|
Donina, AG (Corresponding Author), Charles Univ Prague, CERGE EI, Prague, Czech Republic.
|
|
Kolesnik, Daria P.; Pestova, Anna A.; Donina, Anna G., MGIMO Univ, Moscow, Russia.
|
|
Pestova, Anna A.; Donina, Anna G., Charles Univ Prague, CERGE EI, Prague, Czech Republic.},
|
|
DOI = {10.32609/0042-8736-2021-12-94-117},
|
|
ISSN = {0042-8736},
|
|
Keywords = {female labor supply; employment of mothers; cross-country comparison;
|
|
Russian economy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-FORCE PARTICIPATION; MATERNITY LEAVE; CARE; FERTILITY; MOTHERS;
|
|
ALLOCATION; CHOICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {d.kolesnik@inno.mgimo.ru
|
|
anna.donina@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pestova, Anna/AAD-2654-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kolesnik, Daria/0000-0003-2028-3047
|
|
Pestova, Anna/0000-0001-9934-3617},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000744463500005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000932675000002,
|
|
Author = {Anjoy, Priyanka},
|
|
Title = {Hierarchical Bayes Measurement Error Small Area Model for Estimation of
|
|
Disaggregated Level Workers Mobility Pattern in India},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF QUANTITATIVE ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {339-361},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) is the major source of data on
|
|
various labour force indicators in India at annual or quarterly basis
|
|
which is on the field since 2017-18. It has strategically reformed the
|
|
previous quinquennial Employment and Unemployment Survey of National
|
|
Statistical Office, India. Mobility pattern of workers, basically in
|
|
terms of commuting is one of the key information contained therein which
|
|
essentially entails the workplace characteristics of the workforce. In
|
|
this article PLFS 2017-18 and 2018-19 data is analysed which depicts
|
|
state-wise large disparities in the commuting behaviour of workers,
|
|
whereas most of the workers are out-commuting from rural areas. The
|
|
potential reason behind is the rapid pace of urbanization and associated
|
|
improved transportation facilities as well as search for stable non-farm
|
|
employment opportunities by the rural workforce. Further, the planning
|
|
of urbanization or creation of employment opportunities at rural places
|
|
in each state requires within-state regional or disaggregated level
|
|
information of workplaces, spatial concentration of works and workers.
|
|
To pursue that, disaggregated level analysis of commuting pattern of
|
|
workers is done using small area estimation approach. In particular,
|
|
this article describes hierarchical Bayes (HB) measurement error (ME)
|
|
small area model for binary variable of interest indicating whether
|
|
individual in the workforce is commuting or not. The HBME model has been
|
|
implemented to obtain district level rural commuters proportions in
|
|
Uttar Pradesh state of India. This state specifically tops amongst the
|
|
states in the number of rural commuters. A spatial map has been
|
|
generated for visual inspection of disparity in commuting behaviour of
|
|
workers, also such map is useful to the policy makers and administration
|
|
for framing decentralized level plans or strategies eyeing stable
|
|
mobility behaviour to persuade improvement in employment rate.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Anjoy, P (Corresponding Author), Minist Stat \& Programme Implementat, Natl Accounts Div, Khurshid Lal Bhawan, New Delhi 110001, Delhi, India.
|
|
Anjoy, Priyanka, Minist Stat \& Programme Implementat, Natl Accounts Div, Khurshid Lal Bhawan, New Delhi 110001, Delhi, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s40953-023-00338-x},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0971-1554},
|
|
EISSN = {2364-1045},
|
|
Keywords = {Commuting; Periodic Labour Force Survey; Small area estimation; Spatial
|
|
map},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PREDICTION; MIGRATION; COUNTS; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {anjoypriyanka90@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000932675000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000429975300123,
|
|
Author = {Ortiz-Santacruz, Saul and Guevara-Segarra, Gabriela},
|
|
Editor = {Chova, LG and Martinez, AL and Torres, IC},
|
|
Title = {EDUCATION AND POVERTY: A SOCIO-DEMOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS ON THE EDUCATION OF
|
|
THE ECUADORIAN POPULATION BETWEEN 5-75 YEARS OLD SEGMENTED BY POVERTY
|
|
CONDITION},
|
|
Booktitle = {10TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF EDUCATION, RESEARCH AND INNOVATION
|
|
(ICERI2017)},
|
|
Series = {ICERI Proceedings},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Pages = {764-770},
|
|
Note = {10th Annual International Conference of Education, Research and
|
|
Innovation (ICERI), Seville, SPAIN, NOV 16-18, 2017},
|
|
Abstract = {Formal education represents one of the main determining factors in
|
|
poverty reduction. Different authors remark the relationship between
|
|
knowledge, incomes increase, and living standards. It represents a
|
|
crucial factor in an individual socioeconomic situation at present and
|
|
in the future. The main characteristics of development include:
|
|
education, health and economy, which are important factors in the
|
|
achievement of sustainable social development. In this line, the United
|
|
Nations Millennium Development Goals (UNMDG-2000) and the Sustainable
|
|
Development Objectives agenda highlights the need of promoting universal
|
|
education not only as an objective, but also as a means to reduce
|
|
poverty since it is considered as an investment that contributes to the
|
|
economic growth, social development and reduction of inequality. In
|
|
Ecuador, these objectives have been developed under the National Plan
|
|
for Well-being. According to its executors, it has achieved remarkable
|
|
results in the majority of its objectives and goals, including the
|
|
increase of the basic education coverage.
|
|
This descriptive and correlational research is aimed at determining the
|
|
Ecuadorian (5-75 years old) perception of education and poverty.
|
|
Socio-demographic characteristics marked by its condition of being or
|
|
not are analyzed in order to identify the peculiarities and differences
|
|
between these two groups and relate them to the development objectives
|
|
set by the government.
|
|
The Employment, Underemployment, and Unemployment Survey (ENEMDU 2015) -
|
|
INEC has been taken as a reference in the study, and it is important to
|
|
mention that it uses standardized variables of the ILO International
|
|
Labour Organization, thus making the results comparable internationally.
|
|
The analyzed variables are: age, racial group, language, educational
|
|
attainment, attendance, school day, educational establishment, activity
|
|
and inactivity condition, computer and technological Access, natural
|
|
region, state assistance, among others.
|
|
The most important results obtained in the research include the gap
|
|
between the attendance and the achievements according to the educational
|
|
attainment. The poor show a major percentage of attendance and better
|
|
results regarding the culmination of their study period in basic and
|
|
primary school. However, in middle and higher education, this percentage
|
|
is higher among non-poor people. The former situation can be influenced
|
|
by the state assistance and public policies implemented such as the free
|
|
distribution of school uniforms and lunch, as well as other benefits
|
|
given by the public institutions. The second major result is the fact
|
|
that most of these poor people belong to certain ethnic groups such as:
|
|
indigenous, afro-ecuadorian, black, mulatto, and montubio.
|
|
Based on these results, it seems that public policies which focused on
|
|
improving access to education of the poor population show encouraging
|
|
results in basic and primary education. However, they also show the
|
|
existing inequity in higher levels of education between mestizos and
|
|
white and other ethnic minority groups.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ortiz-Santacruz, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Politecn Salesiana, Cuenca, Ecuador.
|
|
Ortiz-Santacruz, Saul; Guevara-Segarra, Gabriela, Univ Politecn Salesiana, Cuenca, Ecuador.},
|
|
ISSN = {2340-1095},
|
|
ISBN = {978-84-697-6957-7},
|
|
Keywords = {Education; poverty condition; Ecuador; socio-demographic profile},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {REDUCTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {17},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000429975300123},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000277323700013,
|
|
Author = {Wang, J. L. and Schmitz, N. and Dewa, C. S.},
|
|
Title = {Socioeconomic status and the risk of major depression: the Canadian
|
|
National Population Health Survey},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {447-452},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Background There are few longitudinal studies investigating the risk of
|
|
major depression by socioeconomic status (SES). In this study, data from
|
|
the longitudinal cohort of Canadian National Population Health Survey
|
|
were used to estimate the risk of major depressive episode (MDE) over 6
|
|
years by SES levels.
|
|
Methods The National Population Health Survey used a nationally
|
|
representative sample of the Canadian general population. In this
|
|
analysis, participants (n=9589) were followed from 2000/2001 (baseline)
|
|
to 2006/2007. MDE was assessed using the Composite International
|
|
Diagnostic Interview-Short Form for Major Depression.
|
|
Results Low education level (OR=1.86, 95\% CI 1.28 to 2.69) and
|
|
financial strain (OR=1.65, 95\% CI 1.19 to 2.28) were associated with an
|
|
increased risk of MDE in participants who worked in the past 12 months.
|
|
In those who did not work in the past 12 months, participants with low
|
|
education were at a lower risk of MDE (OR 0.43, 95\% CI 0.25 to 0.76),
|
|
compared with those with high education. Financial strain was not
|
|
associated with MDE in participants who did not work. Working men who
|
|
reported low household income (12.9\%) and participants who did not work
|
|
and reported low personal income (5.4\%) had a higher incidence of MDE
|
|
than others.
|
|
Conclusions SES inequalities in the risk of MDE exist in the general
|
|
population. However, the inequalities may depend on measures of SES, sex
|
|
and employment status. These should be considered in interventions of
|
|
reducing inequalities in MDE. MDE history is an important factor in
|
|
studies examining inequalities in MDE.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wang, JL (Corresponding Author), Univ Calgary, Fac Med, Dept Psychiat, Room 127,Heritage Med Res Bldg,3330 Hosp Dr NW, Calgary, AB T2N 4N1, Canada.
|
|
Wang, J. L., Univ Calgary, Fac Med, Dept Psychiat, Calgary, AB T2N 4N1, Canada.
|
|
Wang, J. L., Univ Calgary, Fac Med, Dept Community Hlth Sci, Calgary, AB T2N 4N1, Canada.
|
|
Schmitz, N., McGill Univ, Fac Med, Dept Psychiat, Montreal, PQ H3A 2T5, Canada.
|
|
Dewa, C. S., Univ Toronto, Fac Med, Dept Psychiat, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/jech.2009.090910},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-005X},
|
|
EISSN = {1470-2738},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COMMON MENTAL-DISORDERS; BRITISH CIVIL-SERVANTS; SOCIAL-STATUS;
|
|
INEQUALITIES; EPIDEMIOLOGY; POSITION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jlwang@ucalgary.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Schmitz, Norbert/A-5177-2010
|
|
Schmitz, Norbert/AAH-3624-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Schmitz, Norbert/0000-0001-7777-6323
|
|
Dewa, Carolyn/0000-0001-5647-3905},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {80},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000277323700013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000265004600006,
|
|
Author = {Irving, Shelley K.},
|
|
Title = {State Welfare Rules, TANF Exits, and Geographic Context: Does Place
|
|
Matter?},
|
|
Journal = {RURAL SOCIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {73},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {605-630},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {This research compares the likelihood of exiting TANF with and without
|
|
employment and the effects of important state TANF rules on welfare
|
|
exits in more disadvantaged (large Rustbelt cities and poor southern
|
|
nonmetro) and less disadvantaged (other metro and other nonmetro) areas
|
|
during the 1996-2003 post-welfare reform period. Hierarchical competing
|
|
risk models using individual-level data from the 1996-99 and 2001-03
|
|
Panels of the Survey of Income and Program Participation merged with
|
|
state-level data from various sources show that female TANF participants
|
|
in poor southern nonmetro areas are the least likely to exit TANF with
|
|
work, and participants in large Rustbelt cities are less likely to exit
|
|
TANF with work than those in other metro areas. Non-work TANF exits, are
|
|
more likely to Occur in other nonmetro areas than in other metro areas.
|
|
Importantly, the effects of state welfare rules oil TANF exits differ
|
|
across places of residence. For example, stringent time limit policies
|
|
promote work exits in large Rustbelt cities but promote non-work exits
|
|
in poor Southern nonmetro areas. More lenient earned income disregards
|
|
are significantly related to remaining on TANF in poor southern nonmetro
|
|
areas but promote work exits in all other places. Findings from this
|
|
paper imply that. states should not take a ``one-size-fits-all
|
|
approach{''} to reduce welfare caseloads.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Irving, SK (Corresponding Author), Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, 211 Oswald Tower, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
|
|
Irving, Shelley K., Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
|
|
Irving, Shelley K., Penn State Univ, Populat Res Inst, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1526/003601108786471549},
|
|
ISSN = {0036-0112},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INFORMAL WORK; TIME LIMITS; POLICY; RECIPIENTS; POVERTY; REFORM; WOMEN;
|
|
1990S},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {sirving@pop.psu.cdu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000265004600006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000073669700002,
|
|
Author = {Stang, P and Von Korff, M and Galer, BS},
|
|
Title = {Reduced labor force participation among primary care patients with
|
|
headache},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {1998},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {296-302},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: To assess the long-term impact of headache on labor force
|
|
participation among primary care patients with headache.
|
|
DESIGN: A 2-year cohort study comparing employment status of primary
|
|
care patients with headache and that of patients with back pain.
|
|
PARTICIPANTS: Patients with headache (n = 662) or back gain (n = 1,024)
|
|
sampled from persons visiting a primary care physician who completed
|
|
baseline, 1-year and 2-year follow-up interviews.
|
|
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The percentage of subjects unemployed at
|
|
baseline, I year or 2 years was determined, excluding the retired and
|
|
homemakers. Among all patients, the percentage unable to obtain or keep
|
|
full-time work in the year prior to each interview because of headache
|
|
or back pain was also assessed. Over the 3-year period covered by the
|
|
study interviews, 13\% of headache and 18\% of back pain patients were
|
|
unable to obtain or keep full-time work because of their pain condition.
|
|
Among those in the labor farce, 12\% of headache patients and 12\% of
|
|
back pain patients were unemployed for any reason at one or more
|
|
interviews. Among the one in five headache patients with a poor
|
|
long-term outcome, 36\% were unable to obtain or keep full-time work
|
|
because of;headache at same time compared with 4\% of headache patients
|
|
with a good outcome. Among headache patients, women, persons aged 18 to
|
|
24 years, those with lower levels of education, persons with depressive
|
|
symptoms, and migraineurs were more likely to have reduced labor force
|
|
participation owing to headache,
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: The likelihood of reduced labor force participation among
|
|
primary care patients with headache was considerable and concentrated
|
|
among the one in five patients with a poor long-term outcome. Headache
|
|
patients at a social disadvantage in attaining occupational role
|
|
stability (e.g., younger women or poorly educated patients) were more
|
|
likely to report reduced labor force participation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Stang, P (Corresponding Author), 1744 Dekalb Pike,Suite 175, Blue Bell, PA 19422 USA.
|
|
Glaxo Res Inst, Chapel Hill, NC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1046/j.1525-1497.1998.00094.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0884-8734},
|
|
Keywords = {migraine; headache; epidemiology; back pain; epidemiology; unemployment;
|
|
outcomes},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; MIGRAINE; IMPACT; PAIN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {VonKorff, Michael/0000-0001-5386-8477},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {13},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000073669700002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000652175900011,
|
|
Author = {Daban, Ferran and Garcia-Subirats, Irene and Porthe, Victoria and Lopez,
|
|
M. Jose and De-Eyto, Begona and Pasarin, M. Isabel and Borrell, Carme
|
|
and Artazcoz, Lucia and Perez, Anna and Diez, Elia},
|
|
Title = {Improving mental health and wellbeing in elderly people isolated at home
|
|
due to architectural barriers: A community health intervention},
|
|
Journal = {ATENCION PRIMARIA},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {53},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: To explore the health effects of a community health
|
|
intervention on older people who are isolated at home due to mobility
|
|
problems or architectural barriers, to identify associated
|
|
characteristics and to assess participants' satisfaction.
|
|
Design: Quasi-experimental before-after study.
|
|
Setting: Five low-income neighbourhoods of Barcelona during 2010-15.
|
|
Participants: 147 participants, aged >= 59, living in isolation due to
|
|
mobility problems or architectural barriers were interviewed before the
|
|
intervention and after 6 months.
|
|
Intervention: Primary Health Care teams, public health and social
|
|
workers, and other community agents carried out a community health
|
|
intervention, consisting of weekly outings, facilitated by volunteers.
|
|
Measurements: We assessed self-rated health, mental health using the
|
|
General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12), and quality of life through the
|
|
EuroQol scale. Satisfaction with the programme was evaluated using a set
|
|
of questions. We analysed pre and post data with McNemar tests and
|
|
fitted lineal and Poisson regression models.
|
|
Results: At 6 months, participants showed improvements in self-rated
|
|
health and mental health and a reduction of anxiety. Improvements were
|
|
greater among women, those who had not left home for >= 4 months, those
|
|
with lower educational level, and those who had made >= 9 outings.
|
|
Self-rated health {[}aRR: 1.29(1.04-1.62)] and mental health
|
|
improvements {[}beta: 2.92(1.64-4.2)] remained significant in the
|
|
multivariate models. Mean satisfaction was 9.3 out of 10.
|
|
Conclusion: This community health intervention appears to improve
|
|
several health outcomes in isolated elderly people, especially among the
|
|
most vulnerable groups. Replications of this type of intervention could
|
|
work in similar contexts. (c) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier
|
|
Espana, S.L.U.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Daban, F (Corresponding Author), Agencia Salut Publ Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Daban, F (Corresponding Author), Inst Invest Biomed St Pau, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Daban, F (Corresponding Author), Univ Pompeu Fabra, Dept Expt \& Hlth Sci, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Daban, Ferran; Garcia-Subirats, Irene; Porthe, Victoria; Lopez, M. Jose; Pasarin, M. Isabel; Borrell, Carme; Artazcoz, Lucia; Perez, Anna; Diez, Elia, Agencia Salut Publ Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
De-Eyto, Begona, Creu Roja Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Porthe, Victoria; Lopez, M. Jose; Pasarin, M. Isabel; Borrell, Carme; Artazcoz, Lucia; Diez, Elia, Ctr Invest Biomed Red Epidemiol \& Salud Publ CIBE, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Daban, Ferran; Garcia-Subirats, Irene; Lopez, M. Jose; Pasarin, M. Isabel; Borrell, Carme; Artazcoz, Lucia; Perez, Anna; Diez, Elia, Inst Invest Biomed St Pau, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Daban, Ferran; Pasarin, M. Isabel; Borrell, Carme; Artazcoz, Lucia; Diez, Elia, Univ Pompeu Fabra, Dept Expt \& Hlth Sci, Barcelona, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.aprim.2021.102020},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0212-6567},
|
|
EISSN = {1578-1275},
|
|
Keywords = {Elderly; Loneliness; Social isolation; Health outcomes; Health
|
|
inequalities; Community health intervention},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PREVENTING SOCIAL-ISOLATION; OLDER-PEOPLE; LONELINESS; PARTICIPATION;
|
|
DEPRESSION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Primary Health Care; Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {fdaban@aspb.cat},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lopez, Maria/HHC-3659-2022
|
|
Artazcoz, Lucía/G-9538-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Artazcoz, Lucía/0000-0002-6300-5111
|
|
Diez, Elia/0000-0002-0353-3916
|
|
Porthe Reggiardo, Victoria/0000-0003-4420-7794},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000652175900011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000712629900026,
|
|
Author = {Fujishiro, Kaori and Ahonen, Emily Q. and Winkler, Megan},
|
|
Title = {Poor-quality employment and health: How a welfare regime typology with a
|
|
gender lens Illuminates a different work-health relationship for men and
|
|
women},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {291},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {In the growing literature on employment quality and health, poor quality
|
|
of employment is generally associated with poor health. However, this
|
|
association may not be uniform for men and women if unpaid caregiving
|
|
labor is taken into consideration. How paid and unpaid labor is
|
|
performed varies across societies because of differences in both state
|
|
support for families and labor market penalties for women. Applying a
|
|
gender lens to a welfare regime typology, we investigated the
|
|
relationship between poor-quality employment and poor health for men and
|
|
women. For each of five welfare regime types, we hypothesized if men or
|
|
women would be more strongly affected by poor-quality employment based
|
|
on the regime's family support policies and labor practices. Our
|
|
analysis of 18 countries using the 2015 European and American Working
|
|
Conditions Surveys data largely supported our hypotheses. In countries
|
|
that support traditional gender roles with high state expenditure and
|
|
have labor markets that penalize women, the association between
|
|
poor-quality employment and health was stronger for men. The association
|
|
was stronger for women in countries that rely on women to provide unpaid
|
|
caregiving without substantial state support. In countries with
|
|
apparently gender-neutral expectations for both paid work and unpaid
|
|
caregiving work, no difference was found between men and women in the
|
|
association of poor-quality employment with poor health. We discuss the
|
|
importance of institutional perspectives to understand work as a
|
|
gendered experience that impacts health. We suggest more comprehensive
|
|
welfare regime typologies that recognize women both as caregivers and
|
|
workers. Expanding the scope of research on work and health to include
|
|
this integrated view of life could make a stride toward gender health
|
|
equity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fujishiro, K (Corresponding Author), NIOSH, Div Field Studies \& Engn, MS R-15,1090 Tusculum Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45226 USA.
|
|
Fujishiro, Kaori, NIOSH, Div Field Studies \& Engn, MS R-15,1090 Tusculum Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45226 USA.
|
|
Ahonen, Emily Q., Indiana Univ, Dept Social \& Behav Sci, Richard M Fairbanks Sch Publ Hlth, Indianapolis, IN 46204 USA.
|
|
Winkler, Megan, Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Epidemiol \& Community Hlth, Minneapolis, MN USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114484},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {114484},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {Occupational health; Employment quality; Welfare regime; Self-rated
|
|
health; Unpaid labor; Structural sexism},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OCCUPATIONAL-HEALTH; POPULATION HEALTH; JOB-SATISFACTION; INEQUALITIES;
|
|
INDIVIDUALS; PERSPECTIVE; EUROPE; STATES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {kfujishiro@cdc.gov},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Fujishiro, Kaori/0000-0003-1743-625X
|
|
Ahonen, Emily/0000-0002-0572-5276
|
|
Winkler, Megan/0000-0001-8567-145X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000712629900026},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000391867500011,
|
|
Author = {Carrougher, Gretchen J. and Brych, Sabina B. and Pham, Tam N. and
|
|
Mandell, Samuel P. and Gibran, Nicole S.},
|
|
Title = {An Intervention Bundle to Facilitate Return to Work for Burn-Injured
|
|
Workers: Report From a Burn Model System Investigation},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF BURN CARE \& RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {E70-E78},
|
|
Month = {JAN-FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Rates of return to work (RTW) after burn injury vary. A 2012 systematic
|
|
review of the burn literature reported that nearly 28\% of all adult
|
|
burn survivors never return to any form of employment. These authors
|
|
called for interventions designed to assist survivors' ability to
|
|
function in an employed capacity. In 2010, our burn center outpatient
|
|
clinic instituted an intervention aimed to return injured workers to
|
|
employment within 90 days of their insurance claims. The interventions
|
|
include patient/family education focused on recovery rather than
|
|
disability, employer contact and education by the vocational
|
|
rehabilitation (VR) counselor, physician recommendations for work
|
|
accommodations, provision of employee status letters, and Activity
|
|
Prescription Forms (APFs). The purpose of this study is to report on the
|
|
effectiveness of these interventions. Following institutional review
|
|
board (IRB) approval, medical records of adults with occupation-related
|
|
burn injuries and receiving care at a single regional burn center from
|
|
June 2010 to July 2015 were reviewed. Data on patient and injury
|
|
characteristics and outpatient VR services provided were collected. The
|
|
primary outcome of interest was the percentage of patients who RTW; 338
|
|
individuals met study entry criteria. The VR counselor evaluated all
|
|
patients. All patients received an employer letter(s) and APF
|
|
documentation. Workplace accommodations were provided to more than 30\%
|
|
of patients. RTW rate was 93\%, with an average of 24 days from injury
|
|
to RTW. In an intervention bundle involving the patient, employer,
|
|
Workers' compensation, and the burn clinic staff, injured workers
|
|
achieved a high rate of RTW. Although we cannot correlate individual
|
|
bundle components to outcome, we postulate that the combination of
|
|
employer/employee/insurer engagement and flexibility contributed to the
|
|
success of this program.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Carrougher, GJ (Corresponding Author), Harborview Med Ctr, UW Med Reg Burn Ctr, Dept Surg, 325 9th Ave,Box 359796, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Carrougher, Gretchen J.; Pham, Tam N.; Mandell, Samuel P.; Gibran, Nicole S., Univ Washington, Dept Surg, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Brych, Sabina B., Univ Washington, Dept Burn \& Plast Surg, Outpatient Clin, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/BCR.0000000000000410},
|
|
ISSN = {1559-047X},
|
|
EISSN = {1559-0488},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES; EMPLOYMENT; BARRIERS; HEALTH; LONG},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Critical Care Medicine; Dermatology; Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {carrough@uw.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Mandell, Samuel/JDC-6762-2023
|
|
Mandell, Samuel/AAM-4647-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mandell, Samuel/0000-0002-8426-4518
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000391867500011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000177213100007,
|
|
Author = {Bittman, M},
|
|
Title = {Social participation and family welfare: The money and time costs of
|
|
leisure in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL POLICY \& ADMINISTRATION},
|
|
Year = {2002},
|
|
Volume = {36},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {408-425},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The concept of social exclusion has become a central rganizing, concept
|
|
in social policy research. Indeed ``social exclusion{''} has displaced
|
|
many of the terms formerly in use, such as ``inequality{''},
|
|
``deprivation{''} and ``poverty{''}. Social exclusion is a
|
|
multidimensional concept embracing economic, social and political
|
|
deprivations, that alerts us to the significance of social identity,
|
|
culture, agency and, ultimately, power relations. In contrast to some
|
|
earlier research traditions, the perspective of social exclusion draws
|
|
our attention to how people can be ``shut out of society{''} by their
|
|
inability to participate in customary leisure activities. The ability to
|
|
participate in leisure is the product of both access to leisure goods
|
|
and services, and a sufficient quantity of leisure time. An analysis of
|
|
Australian Household Expenditure Survey data shows that the consumption
|
|
of leisure goods and services is powerfully determined by income.
|
|
Consequently, low income can lead to exclusion from leisure
|
|
participation. However, analysis of Time Use Survey data also shows that
|
|
access to time for leisure participation is most powerfully determined
|
|
by hours of employment, family responsibilities and gender After
|
|
controlling for working hours, household income has no significant
|
|
effect on. available leisure time. A leisure-time poverty line, based on
|
|
half-median leisure time, is used to show which groups are most excluded
|
|
from leisure by time constraints. The paper concludes by considering a
|
|
range of policies to alleviate social exclusion from leisure
|
|
participation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bittman, M (Corresponding Author), Univ New S Wales, Social Policy Res Ctr, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
|
|
Univ New S Wales, Social Policy Res Ctr, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1467-9515.t01-1-00262},
|
|
ISSN = {0144-5596},
|
|
Keywords = {leisure; social exclusion; Australia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BUDGET},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Public Administration; Social Issues; Social Work},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bittman, Michael/0000-0001-9137-5542},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {44},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000177213100007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000529387100001,
|
|
Author = {Adesoye, Oluwatimilehin Peter and Adepoju, Abimbola Oluyemisi},
|
|
Title = {Food insecurity status of the working poor households in south west
|
|
Nigeria},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {581-597},
|
|
Month = {MAY 11},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the factors influencing
|
|
the food insecurity status of the working poor households in south west
|
|
Nigeria. Design/methodology/approach International Labour Organisation
|
|
poverty line, Household Food Insecurity Access Scale as well as the
|
|
Ordered Logit model were used to identify the factors influencing the
|
|
food insecurity status of the working poor households in south west
|
|
Nigeria. Findings The study revealed that more than half of the
|
|
respondents were working poor households, with more than four-fifths of
|
|
them being food insecure. Income irregularity, savings and level of
|
|
education had major roles to play in the food insecurity status of
|
|
working poor households. Social implications Employment has always been
|
|
considered as a route out of poverty and food insecurity. However, the
|
|
intensity of poverty among working households should be considered in
|
|
the design and development of policy and programmes, targeted towards
|
|
workers. Laws should protect the right of workers against non-payment of
|
|
salaries, advantages of family planning should be emphasised, social
|
|
security allowance should be provided to serve as an alternative source
|
|
of income during emergencies and more investment made in education.
|
|
Originality/value This paper attempts to bridge the knowledge gap in the
|
|
empirical link between employment, poverty and food insecurity.
|
|
Particularly, its application to the working households. Peer review The
|
|
peer review history for this article is available at:
|
|
https://publons.com/publon/10.1108/ IJSE-09-2019-0589},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Adesoye, OP (Corresponding Author), Univ Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
|
|
Adesoye, Oluwatimilehin Peter, Univ Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
|
|
Adepoju, Abimbola Oluyemisi, Univ Ibadan, Dept Agr Econ, Ibadan, Nigeria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJSE-09-2019-0589},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0306-8293},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6712},
|
|
Keywords = {Working poor households; Food insecurity; South west Nigeria; Ordered
|
|
logit},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {adesoyeoluwatimi@gmail.com
|
|
abimbola.adepoju@yahoo.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Adepoju, Abimbola Oluyemisi/K-1637-2019},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000529387100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000176559600007,
|
|
Author = {Thompson, GL},
|
|
Book-Group-Author = {TRB
|
|
TRB},
|
|
Title = {New insights into the value of transit - Modeling inferences from Dade
|
|
County},
|
|
Booktitle = {TRANSIT PLANNING, INTERMODAL FACILITIES, AND MARKETING: PUBLIC TRANSIT},
|
|
Series = {TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH RECORD-SERIES},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Number = {1753},
|
|
Pages = {52-58},
|
|
Note = {80th Annual Meeting of the Transportation-Research-Board, WASHINGTON,
|
|
D.C., JAN, 2001},
|
|
Abstract = {Whether transit accessibility influences labor force participation and
|
|
income of different racial and ethnic groups is examined. The
|
|
methodology involves the use of two-stage least-squares analysis to
|
|
control for possible reverse causality in two of the explanatory
|
|
variables: transit accessibility and auto ownership. Earlier literature
|
|
on spatial mismatch theory suggests that transit accessibility should
|
|
make a difference in unemployment rates for African Americans confined
|
|
to inner city ghettos. In contrast, more recent literature suggests that
|
|
other variables, such as workplace discrimination, are far more
|
|
significant explanatory variables. Because all of these studies used
|
|
measures of transit accessibility that failed to show the ease with
|
|
which residents of a geographic area could access jobs in the entire
|
|
region, this study attempts to do so. The transit accessibility measure
|
|
is first calculated for traffic analysis zones (TAZs) in Dade County,
|
|
Florida, and it is then used as one of several explanatory variables in
|
|
models of African American, Hispanic white, and non-Hispanic white labor
|
|
force participation; median zonal household income; and automobile
|
|
ownership in TAZs. This research finds that transit accessibility does
|
|
not explain labor force participation of any of the groups, but it helps
|
|
explain household income as well as auto ownership. Higher transit
|
|
accessibility is concluded to either directly or indirectly increase
|
|
wage rates significantly for auto-disadvantaged groups.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Thompson, GL (Corresponding Author), Florida State Univ, Dept Urban \& Reg Planning, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA.
|
|
Florida State Univ, Dept Urban \& Reg Planning, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0361-1981},
|
|
ISBN = {0-309-07214-X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPATIAL MISMATCH; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Engineering, Civil; Transportation Science \& Technology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000176559600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000459309500002,
|
|
Author = {Brzezinski, Michal},
|
|
Title = {What accounts for the rise of low self-rated health during the recent
|
|
economic crisis in Europe?},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Month = {JAN 28},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: A growing literature investigates health effects of the
|
|
recent economic crisis. This study examines how different economic
|
|
mechanisms affected low self-rated health (SRH) in Europe over the
|
|
crisis period (20082011). We measure changes in low SRH over 2008-2011
|
|
and analyze how they are accounted for by changes in household income
|
|
levels and income distribution (income poverty, income inequality),
|
|
labour market developments (increasing unemployment, falling employment,
|
|
changes in labour market inactivity), and non-income poverty (material
|
|
deprivation).
|
|
Methods: We use balanced panel data for 2008-2011 covering 26 European
|
|
countries and 43,456 participants. The data come from longitudinal 2011
|
|
European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC)
|
|
database. Increases in low SRH incidence over time are decomposed into
|
|
the contributions of changes in the distribution of covariates and
|
|
changes in returns to the covariates. Main covariates include household
|
|
income and its distribution, labour market developments, and non-income
|
|
poverty (material deprivation). The decompositions are performed using a
|
|
detailed non-linear multivariate regression-based decomposition
|
|
methodology.
|
|
Results: Low SRH incidence increased in Europe during the crisis by
|
|
almost 2 percentage points, and by 3.7 percentage points in case of the
|
|
Baltic countries. Decomposition analysis shows that: 1) decreasing
|
|
household incomes and changing income distribution had no impact on low
|
|
SRH incidence, 2) rise of material deprivation accounts for a
|
|
significant portion (12\%) of the overall growth in low SRH rates (27\%
|
|
for the Baltic countries), 3) decreasing levels of full-time and
|
|
part-time employment as well as transitions to unemployment, economic
|
|
inactivity, disability, or retirement account jointly for about 21\% of
|
|
the rise in low SRH in Europe (73\% for Baltic countries).
|
|
Conclusion: Together, the recession-related economic factors account for
|
|
about 33\% of the increase in low SRH incidence in Europe during the
|
|
crisis, and for about 100\% of the increase in the Baltic countries.
|
|
Public health policy during recessions should focus also on reducing
|
|
material deprivation through free or subsidized access to public
|
|
services, public housing, and other means.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brzezinski, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Warsaw, Fac Econ Sci, Dluga 44-50, PL-00241 Warsaw, Poland.
|
|
Brzezinski, Michal, Univ Warsaw, Fac Econ Sci, Dluga 44-50, PL-00241 Warsaw, Poland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-019-0926-1},
|
|
Article-Number = {21},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Self-rated health; Economic crisis; Decomposition; Oaxaca-Blinder;
|
|
Unemployment; Material deprivation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GREAT RECESSION; INCOME INEQUALITY; FINANCIAL CRISIS; MENTAL-HEALTH;
|
|
IMPACT; GREECE; UNEMPLOYMENT; TRANSITIONS; DISPARITIES; DEPRESSION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {mbrzezinski@wne.uw.edu.pl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Brzezinski, Michal/N-3365-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Brzezinski, Michal/0000-0002-7704-3805},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000459309500002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000846887800001,
|
|
Author = {Huang, Xiaoning},
|
|
Title = {Brain gain from Asia: educational and occupational selection of Asian
|
|
migrants into the United States},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {373-402},
|
|
Month = {MAY 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose This study investigates how working-age Asian immigrants'
|
|
educational attainment and professional abilities when arriving in the
|
|
United States have evolved over the past 4 decades and draws inferences
|
|
on the impact of the US employment based visa policies.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach Using data from the 1980, 1990 and 2000
|
|
census and American Community Survey for 2001 to 2019, the study adopts
|
|
multivariate regression and regression discontinuity design to
|
|
investigate the trends in educational and occupation selection among
|
|
Asian immigrants and the association with policy changes in the H1B visa
|
|
program. Findings The findings suggest that new Asian immigrants were
|
|
more positively selected for education than non-Asian immigrants and US
|
|
natives and this pattern of positive selection increased over time.
|
|
Newly arrived South Asian and East Asian immigrants had the highest
|
|
share of highly educated professionals than Southeast Asians and US-born
|
|
persons. I infer that the enactment and changes in the H1-B program
|
|
might have contributed to the changing patterns of the educational and
|
|
occupational selection among East and South Asian Immigrants. The
|
|
results also shed light on how Asian immigrants' skill selection might
|
|
be related to the size of Asian diasporas in the US and sending
|
|
countries' income, inequality and education level. Originality/value The
|
|
story of changing the skill profile (educational and occupational
|
|
profile) of newly arrived Asian immigrants during 1980-2019 can provide
|
|
valuable policy implications. US immigration policies are routinely
|
|
criticized for being inefficient and outdated. The economic prosperity
|
|
of Asian countries over time also provides an excellent opportunity to
|
|
test the theories pertaining to how sending countries' income,
|
|
inequality and education level of the population are associated with
|
|
Asian migrants' education and occupation when arriving in the US. This
|
|
study can provide insightful perspectives for policymakers and business
|
|
decision-makers to adapt to the changing demographics of Asian migrant
|
|
workers. The most recent reports on Asian immigrants in the US
|
|
highlighted the aggregated trends of migration flow and education.
|
|
Still, none have provided a longitudinal and nuanced review of Asian
|
|
immigrants' educational and occupational selection into the US.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Huang, XN (Corresponding Author), Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Huang, Xiaoning, Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJM-08-2021-0488},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-7720},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6577},
|
|
Keywords = {Immigration; Immigration in the US; Immigration policy; Immigration
|
|
theory},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-SELECTION; INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION; IMMIGRANT; DRAIN; INEQUALITY;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {jack.huang@northwestern.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Huang, Xiaoning/HHN-7229-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Huang, Xiaoning/0000-0001-5813-5993},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000846887800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000470823400007,
|
|
Author = {Leventhal, Adam M. and Bello, Mariel S. and Galstyan, Ellen and Higgins,
|
|
Stephen T. and Barrington-Trimis, Jessica L.},
|
|
Title = {Association of Cumulative Socioeconomic and Health-Related Disadvantage
|
|
With Disparities in Smoking Prevalence in the United States, 2008 to
|
|
2017},
|
|
Journal = {JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {179},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {777-785},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {This study of a nationally representative cross-sectional annual
|
|
household-based probability sample of noninstitutionalized residents
|
|
estimates disparities in smoking prevalence associated with the number
|
|
of socioeconomic and health-related disadvantages faced by US adults
|
|
from 2008 to 2017.
|
|
Key PointsQuestionAre US disparities in smoking prevalence associated
|
|
with the cumulative number of socioeconomic or health-related
|
|
disadvantages faced, and have such disparities widened over time?
|
|
FindingsIn this nationally representative cross-sectional annual
|
|
household-based probability sample of US noninstitutionalized residents,
|
|
the mean current smoking prevalence among 279 559 adults 25 years or
|
|
older collapsed across 2008 to 2017 was successively higher with each
|
|
additional form of disadvantage faced. Odds of current vs never smoking
|
|
decreased from 2008 to 2017 for groups with 0 to 2 disadvantages but did
|
|
not significantly change for groups facing 3 or more disadvantages.
|
|
MeaningMultidisadvantaged groups may constitute a disproportionate
|
|
percentage of US smokers, a disparity that recently widened.
|
|
ImportanceUnderstanding emerging patterns of smoking disparities among
|
|
disadvantaged populations can guide tobacco control policy. ObjectiveTo
|
|
estimate disparities in smoking prevalence associated with the number of
|
|
socioeconomic and health-related disadvantages faced by a population
|
|
among US adults from 2008 to 2017. Design, Setting, and
|
|
ParticipantsNationally representative cross-sectional annual
|
|
household-based probability sample of US noninstitutionalized residents.
|
|
Polytomous regression estimated associations of disadvantage variables,
|
|
survey year, and their interaction with the following 3 pairwise
|
|
contrasts: current vs never smoking (estimate of overall disparities),
|
|
current vs former smoking (unique contribution of disparities in smoking
|
|
cessation), and former vs never smoking (unique contribution of
|
|
disparities in smoking initiation). The setting was in-home face-to-face
|
|
interviews. Participants were respondents in 2008 to 2017 survey years
|
|
who were aged 25 years or older (N=279 559). ExposuresSelf-reported
|
|
past-year unemployment, income below the federal poverty line, absence
|
|
of high school diploma, disability/limitation interfering with daily
|
|
functions, serious psychological distress on the Kessler 6-item screen,
|
|
and at least 60 past-year heavy drinking days, each coded yes or no.
|
|
These indicators were summed in a cumulative disadvantage index (0, 1,
|
|
2, 3, 4, or 5 or 6). Main Outcomes and MeasuresSelf-reported current,
|
|
former (ever smoked 100 cigarettes, had since quit, and not currently
|
|
smoking), and never (<100 cigarettes) smoking. ResultsAmong 278 048
|
|
respondents (mean {[}SD] age, 51.9 {[}16.8] years; 55.7\% female) with
|
|
data on smoking history (99.5\% of the sample), the mean current smoking
|
|
prevalence across 2008 to 2017 compared with populations without
|
|
disadvantages was successively higher among populations with 1
|
|
disadvantage (21.4\% vs 13.8\%; current vs never smoking adjusted odds
|
|
ratio {[}OR], 2.34; 95\% CI, 2.27-2.43), 2 disadvantages (26.6\% vs
|
|
13.8\%; OR, 3.55; 95\% CI, 3.39-3.72), 3 disadvantages (35.1\% vs
|
|
13.8\%; OR, 5.35; 95\% CI, 5.05-5.66), 4 disadvantages (45.7\% vs
|
|
13.8\%; OR, 8.59; 95\% CI, 7.91-9.34), or 5 or 6 disadvantages (58.2\%
|
|
vs 13.8\%; OR, 14.70; 95\% CI, 12.30-17.50). In current vs former and
|
|
former vs never smoking status contrasts, ORs were lower but also showed
|
|
successively greater associations with increasing cumulative
|
|
disadvantage. Current (vs never) smoking odds significantly declined
|
|
each year among populations with 0 (OR, 0.95; 95\% CI, 0.94-0.96), 1
|
|
(OR, 0.96; 95\% CI, 0.95-0.97), or 2 (OR, 0.98; 95\% CI, 0.97-0.99)
|
|
disadvantages but did not change across 2008 to 2017 among those with 3
|
|
or more disadvantages. Conclusions and RelevanceResults of this study
|
|
demonstrate that US disparities in smoking prevalence from 2008 to 2017
|
|
were successively larger with each additional disadvantage faced, were
|
|
expressed in higher smoking initiation odds and lower smoking cessation
|
|
odds, and widened over time.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Leventhal, AM (Corresponding Author), Univ Southern Calif, Keck Sch Med, Dept Prevent Med, 2001 N Soto St,Ste 302C, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.
|
|
Leventhal, Adam M.; Galstyan, Ellen; Barrington-Trimis, Jessica L., Univ Southern Calif, Keck Sch Med, Dept Prevent Med, 2001 N Soto St,Ste 302C, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.
|
|
Leventhal, Adam M.; Bello, Mariel S., Univ Southern Calif, Dept Psychol, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.
|
|
Leventhal, Adam M., Univ Southern Calif, USC Norris Comprehens Canc Ctr, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
Higgins, Stephen T., Univ Vermont, Dept Psychiat, Vermont Ctr Behav \& Hlth, Burlington, VT USA.
|
|
Higgins, Stephen T., Univ Vermont, Dept Psychol Sci, Vermont Ctr Behav \& Hlth, Burlington, VT USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1001/jamainternmed.2019.0192},
|
|
ISSN = {2168-6106},
|
|
EISSN = {2168-6114},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CURRENT CIGARETTE-SMOKING; TOBACCO USE; ADULTS; EMPLOYMENT; ALCOHOL;
|
|
WORKING; SMOKERS; CANCER; RISK; AGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {adam.leventhal@usc.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Barrington-Trimis, Jessica/ABE-7311-2020
|
|
Higgins, Stephen/HPG-5751-2023
|
|
Bello, Mariel/HCH-7721-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {45},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000470823400007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000399878000002,
|
|
Author = {Santero Sanchez, Rosa and Castro Nunez, Belev and Martinez Martin, Ma
|
|
Isabel and Guillo Rodriguez, Nuria},
|
|
Title = {Social Economy and disability. Enablers and obstacles in the integration
|
|
of workers with disabilities in the Social Economy entities},
|
|
Journal = {CIRIEC-ESPANA REVISTA DE ECONOMIA PUBLICA SOCIAL Y COOPERATIVA},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {88},
|
|
Pages = {29-59},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Effective and full integration of people with disability into society is
|
|
deeply related to their integration into the labour market. The United
|
|
Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities adopted in
|
|
2006 triggered a change in the conception of disability towards a social
|
|
approach, especially in terms of their human rights and their
|
|
integration in society. One of the key elements of this integration is
|
|
the participation of persons with disabilities in the different spheres
|
|
of society with equal opportunities. In particular, their integration in
|
|
the labour market is a mayor challenge not only from the personal
|
|
development perspective, but also in terms of their autonomy and
|
|
independence.
|
|
Irrespective of the debate on the advantages and disadvantages of the
|
|
different strategies aimed at integrating persons with disability into
|
|
the labour market, further research is necessary on the factors that
|
|
encourage that integration and highlight entry into an ordinary labour
|
|
market, which should be the ultimate objective of integration policies
|
|
for persons with a disability.
|
|
The values shared by Social Economy enterprises generate a
|
|
differentiated behaviour in relation to their staff composition, the
|
|
work conditions, their productive specialisation and their geographical
|
|
location. This differentiated behaviour constitutes, at the same time,
|
|
an important contribution to social and territorial cohesion. In
|
|
particular, the contribution to social cohesion comprises the occupation
|
|
of groups with difficulties of access to employment, employment quality,
|
|
improvement in equal opportunities and the offer of social services.
|
|
The goal of this work is twofold. Firstly, to analyze the contribution
|
|
of Social Economy to social cohesion in terms of the employment of
|
|
people with disabilities and in particular the compliance with the quota
|
|
requirement. Secondly, to detect the enablers and barriers to work in
|
|
the design of labour policies for higher and better integration in
|
|
workplaces. This paper contributes to the literature by analyzing the
|
|
key aspects related to the perceptions, behaviour and culture of Social
|
|
Economy entities in relation to the integration of workers with
|
|
disabilities in their staffs, adding useful and relevant information for
|
|
the design and implementation of active labour policies.
|
|
In order to achieve these objectives, an ad-hoc survey has been designed
|
|
to analyze the compliance of quota legislation for people with
|
|
disabilities and conducted among Medium and Large Social Economy
|
|
entities (50 employees or more) in Spain. Quota legislation in Spain
|
|
establishes an obligation for companies with more than a certain number
|
|
of employees (50 or more) to employ a minimum percentage of people with
|
|
disabilities (2\%). The technical characteristics of the survey are as
|
|
follows:
|
|
i. The Universe of the survey is composed of all Social Economy entities
|
|
(except Special Employment Centres), located in Spain, from all economic
|
|
sectors with 50 or more employees. Universe size (according to the
|
|
National Statistics Institute of Spain and Social Economy statistics) is
|
|
composed by, approximately, 3.000 entities.
|
|
ii. Sampling used in this research is proportional, stratified by
|
|
economic sector, region and company size. Selection of interviewee units
|
|
is random. Sampling size is composed of 329 units, distributed to assure
|
|
representativeness by geographical region, sector and business size.
|
|
Sampling error is +/- 5\%. (Confidence level 95.5\% and probability
|
|
p=q=0.5 -2 sigma).
|
|
iii. Content of the survey refers to several topics such as:
|
|
identification data, business size, economic sector, employment size,
|
|
annual turnover; data about presence and job position of workers with
|
|
disabilities and information about integration process: how diversity,
|
|
especially related to people with disabilities, is incorporated into the
|
|
selection, hiring and promotion policies of the company.
|
|
Main results of the analyses show that the majority of Social Economy
|
|
entities are in compliance with the quota requirement (84.1\%). However,
|
|
there are some remarkable differences attending companies'
|
|
characteristics. Thus, the percentage of Social Economy entities
|
|
complying with the quota requirement is higher among large companies,
|
|
companies in social services and dependency sectors and, by geographical
|
|
area, among companies located in Andalusia or Catalonia. On the other
|
|
hand, medium-sized companies, industrial ones and Social Economy
|
|
entities located in Navarra or Basque Country show lower percentages of
|
|
compliance with the quota requirement.
|
|
This survey offers as well some qualitative information, divided into
|
|
two different sections. Firstly, the analysis is focused on some aspects
|
|
related to the perceptions, behaviour and culture of Social Economy
|
|
entities in relation to the integration of workers with disabilities in
|
|
their staffs. The aim of this section is to identify potential
|
|
differences between companies who are in compliance with the quota
|
|
requirement and those who do not. Some of the main results of this
|
|
section are:
|
|
i. Legal obligation and fiscal benefits are the main reason to hire
|
|
people with disabilities for both, companies that do and do not comply
|
|
with the quota requirement.
|
|
ii. Companies who comply with the quota requirement recruit personnel by
|
|
using employment agencies, acquaintances and relatives and online job
|
|
portals more frequently than those who do not comply with the quota
|
|
requirement.
|
|
iii. Companies or entities who integrate inclusion and diversity
|
|
(gender, cultural, racial, socio-economic, etc.) in their programmes,
|
|
policies and regulations are those with a higher percentage of people
|
|
with disabilities in their staff.
|
|
iv. Previous experiences related to the presence of workers with
|
|
disabilities seem to be the main and more important boost for Social
|
|
Economy entities and companies.
|
|
v. The appointment of a colleague as a support-buddy is the most
|
|
important intervention to facilitate the integration of the worker with
|
|
disability in the company
|
|
vi. The majority of Social Economy entities do not find any difficulty
|
|
related to the integration process. However, companies in compliance
|
|
with the quota find more obstacles than those who do not. Among those
|
|
who have faced any obstacle, main barriers are related to the adaptation
|
|
to the job; emotional barriers and physical space/accommodations
|
|
obstacles.
|
|
Secondly, the analysis focuses on the main reasons and obstacles found
|
|
by those companies and entities that do not have any employees with
|
|
disabilities in their staff, aiming to get to know their reasons to not
|
|
hire this collective. The main two reasons why these companies declare
|
|
that they do not have any person with disability in their staff are the
|
|
lack of candidates with disabilities and the lack of matching between
|
|
the candidates and job positions available.
|
|
Thus, results from this research highlight some key aspects that are
|
|
important to bear in mind. Firstly, values shared by Social Economy
|
|
entities do generate a differentiated behavior in relation to their
|
|
staff composition that contributes to the social cohesion. Secondly, the
|
|
implementation of instruments and active policies have a positive impact
|
|
over the integration of persons with disabilities in the ordinary labour
|
|
market; quota policies and fiscal incentives are named as the main
|
|
facilitators. In this sense, compliance with quota legislation is not a
|
|
dichotomous decision for Social Economy entities but a gradual and
|
|
continuous process that starts when hiring the first worker with
|
|
disability in their staffs. Thus, previous experiences related to the
|
|
presence of workers with disabilities seem to be the main boost for
|
|
Social Economy entities and companies. In third term, an inclusive
|
|
business culture that appreciates and accepts diversity (not only
|
|
related to disabilities) displays characteristics of general awareness
|
|
and inclusion of workers with disabilities in Social Economy entities.
|
|
The inclusion of specific measures related to disability in the
|
|
diversity policies is a challenge that firms, including Social Economy
|
|
ones, still has to confront.
|
|
Finally, the study and dissemination of best practices among employers
|
|
is also important to surpass stereotypes and prejudices, contributing to
|
|
the integration of people with disabilities into the ordinary labour
|
|
market. As we have seen through this study, Social Economy companies and
|
|
entities that have hired people with disabilities would recommend it to
|
|
other ones. And this does not only have a positive effect in terms of
|
|
equity and ethical reasons, but it can also have a great impact on the
|
|
image connected to the Corporate Social Responsibility of the Social
|
|
Economy, also in terms of benefits related to more diverse workplaces.
|
|
Further research is needed in terms of the design of policies to foster
|
|
deeper integration of persons with disabilities into ordinary labour
|
|
market. As observed in the results, the matching process between
|
|
candidates and job positions shows some weaknesses and the existence of
|
|
workers with disabilities is one of the main facilitator to increase the
|
|
number of these workers in firms. Besides design and implementation of
|
|
active policies towards the integration of workers with disabilities,
|
|
especial attention must be given to the business culture regarding
|
|
disability. The study of enablers and obstacles in all kind of firms
|
|
might show different results from the ones obtained in this paper as it
|
|
would include small firms, which have no quota requirements, and
|
|
entities outside Social Economy, in which social cohesion might not be
|
|
among their principles.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sanchez, RS (Corresponding Author), Univ Rey Juan Carlos, Fac Ciencias Jurid \& Sociales, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Santero Sanchez, Rosa; Castro Nunez, Belev, Univ Rey Juan Carlos, Fac Ciencias Jurid \& Sociales, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Martinez Martin, Ma Isabel; Guillo Rodriguez, Nuria, Abay Analistas Econ, Madrid, Spain.},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-8093},
|
|
EISSN = {1989-6816},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment; Social Economy; disability management; quotas},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {rosa.santero@urjc.es
|
|
belen.castro@urjc.es
|
|
mmartinez@abayanalistas.net
|
|
nguillo@abayanalistas.net},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {castro, rosa/ABE-7063-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Castro Nunez, Rosa Belen/0000-0002-9098-0748
|
|
Santero, Rosa/0000-0002-1071-4280},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {35},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000399878000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000783892300001,
|
|
Author = {Altman, Claire E. and Bachmeier, James D. and Spence, Cody and Hamilton,
|
|
Christal},
|
|
Title = {Sick Days: Logical Versus Survey Identification of the Foreign-Born
|
|
Population in the United States},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {395-420},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {The self-reported number of workdays missed due to injury or illness, or
|
|
sick days, is a reliable measure of health among working-aged adults.
|
|
Although sick days is a relatively underexplored health-related outcome
|
|
in migration studies, it can provide a multidimensional understanding of
|
|
immigrant wellbeing and integration. Current understandings of the
|
|
association between migration status and sick days are limited for two
|
|
reasons. First, in the United States, few nationally representative
|
|
surveys collect migration status information. Second, researchers lack
|
|
consensus on the most reliable approach for assigning migration status.
|
|
We use the 2008 Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) to
|
|
examine sick days and draw comparisons between two methods for assigning
|
|
migration status-a logical approach and a survey approach. The logical
|
|
method assigns migration status to foreign-born respondents based on
|
|
characteristics such as government employment or welfare receipt, while
|
|
the survey approach relies on self-reported survey responses. Sick days
|
|
among immigrants was correlated with and predicted by other health
|
|
conditions available in the SIPP. Comparisons of sick days by migration
|
|
status vary based on migration assignment approach. Lawful Permanent
|
|
Residents (LPRs) reported more sick days than non-LPRs and appear less
|
|
healthy when migration status is assigned using the logical approach.
|
|
The logical approach also produced a gap in sick days between LPRs and
|
|
non-LPRs that is not replicated in the survey approach. The results
|
|
demonstrate that if migration status is not measured directly in the
|
|
data, interpretation of migration status effects should proceed
|
|
cautiously.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Altman, CE (Corresponding Author), 304 Clark Hall, Columbia, MO 65211 USA.
|
|
Altman, Claire E., Univ Missouri, Dept Hlth Sci, Columbia, MO USA.
|
|
Bachmeier, James D.; Spence, Cody, Temple Univ, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.
|
|
Hamilton, Christal, Columbia Univ, Ctr Poverty \& Social Policy, Sch Social Work, New York, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/01979183221084333},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {01979183221084333},
|
|
ISSN = {0197-9183},
|
|
EISSN = {1747-7379},
|
|
Keywords = {sick days; immigration; SIPP; legal status; measurement},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IMMIGRANT LEGAL STATUS; HEALTH ADVANTAGE; WORKERS; ABSENCE; DISPARITIES;
|
|
INJURY; CARE; MORTALITY; EXPERIENCES; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography},
|
|
Author-Email = {altmanc@health.missouri.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Altman, Claire/0000-0002-9285-7348},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {84},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000783892300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000926233800001,
|
|
Author = {Aitken, Andrew and Singh, Shruti},
|
|
Title = {Time to change? Promoting mobility at older ages to support longer
|
|
working lives},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE ECONOMICS OF AGEING},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Extending working lives has been a major priority across the OECD to
|
|
mitigate the adverse effects of population ageing and declines in the
|
|
working-age population. Despite significant increases in labour force
|
|
participation rates of older workers aged 55-64, a key challenge facing
|
|
policymakers is to promote retention and job-to-job mobility of older
|
|
workers. Job stability (as measured by job tenure) is falling across
|
|
many OECD countries and older workers are less likely to change jobs
|
|
than their younger counterparts. While there is no optimal level of job
|
|
mobility or length of job tenure - and there are costs and benefits for
|
|
workers and firms to both - structural changes such as technological
|
|
change will exacerbate the need for mobility and flexibility at middle
|
|
and older ages. At the same time, low retention rates and persistently
|
|
high-long-term unemployment rates among this group illustrate greater
|
|
need for employers and governments to do more to support older workers
|
|
to keep their jobs. Achieving this will require a comprehensive approach
|
|
by all stakeholders including better management of age-diverse
|
|
workforces in the workplace, removing institutional barriers to
|
|
continued employment and improving the employability of workers
|
|
throughout their working lives by, for example, promoting better
|
|
op-portunities for lifelong learning and improving job quality.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Aitken, A (Corresponding Author), OECD, 2 Rue Andre Pascal, F-75016 Paris, France.
|
|
Aitken, Andrew; Singh, Shruti, OECD, 2 Rue Andre Pascal, F-75016 Paris, France.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jeoa.2022.100437},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2023},
|
|
Article-Number = {100437},
|
|
ISSN = {2212-828X},
|
|
EISSN = {2212-8298},
|
|
Keywords = {Job mobility; Workforce retention; Population ageing; Job quality},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography; Economics; Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {andrew.aitken@oecd.org
|
|
shruti.singh@oecd.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000926233800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000479813100001,
|
|
Author = {Randles, Jennifer},
|
|
Title = {The Means to and Meaning of ``Being There{''} in Responsible Fatherhood
|
|
Programming with Low-Income Fathers},
|
|
Journal = {FAMILY RELATIONS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {69},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {7-20},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective To understand how low-income men's views of paternal
|
|
responsibility shape their engagement with fatherhood program messages
|
|
and services. Background Research on the situated contexts of fathering
|
|
has found that the social and symbolic dimensions of fathering spaces
|
|
influence how men construct and enact fatherhood scripts. Qualitative
|
|
studies of fatherhood programs have mostly investigated parenting
|
|
education and job assistance programs, revealing how fathering
|
|
interventions allow disadvantaged men to shape positive paternal
|
|
identities. Method In-depth interviews and focus groups were conducted
|
|
with a nonrandom sample of 64 primarily Black and Latino low-income
|
|
fathers who participated in a federally funded responsible fatherhood
|
|
program. An inductive coding technique was used to identify reasons men
|
|
enrolled, the alignment of program messages with fathers' views, and how
|
|
the program allowed fathers to negotiate obstacles to sustained
|
|
involvement. Results Fathers overwhelmingly found the program valuable
|
|
because it offered the social and economic means they needed to enact
|
|
varied meanings of paternal responsibility-or ``being there.{''} Most
|
|
fathers reported that the program allowed them to realize their
|
|
involvement goals, thereby enabling them to better align their paternal
|
|
identities and behaviors. Conclusion Fatherhood programming that
|
|
promotes a broader idea of paternal provision to include money and care
|
|
aligns with how disadvantaged fathers tailor their understandings of
|
|
paternal involvement to account for socioeconomic constraints, including
|
|
poverty and racism. Implications Fatherhood interventions can influence
|
|
disadvantaged men's abilities to claim and enact responsible parent
|
|
identities, but programs must address the importance of resources and
|
|
opportunities, including and especially access to well-paid work, for
|
|
shaping paternal involvement.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Randles, J (Corresponding Author), Calif State Univ Fresno, Dept Sociol, 5340 N Campus Dr,M-S SS97, Fresno, CA 93740 USA.
|
|
Randles, Jennifer, Calif State Univ Fresno, Dept Sociol, 5340 N Campus Dr,M-S SS97, Fresno, CA 93740 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/fare.12376},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {0197-6664},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-3729},
|
|
Keywords = {economic distress; family policy; fathers and fatherhood; qualitative},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {jrandles@csufresno.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Randles, Jennifer/0000-0002-4845-5691},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000479813100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000481152700001,
|
|
Author = {Akter, N. and Akter, M. K. and Turale, S.},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to quality of work life among Bangladeshi nurses: a qualitative
|
|
study},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL NURSING REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {396-403},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Aim To explore and provide understanding of the barriers to quality of
|
|
work life among registered nurses in Bangladesh. Background Globally,
|
|
there is growing interest in the working environments of nurses,
|
|
especially at a time of nursing shortages and with the focus on safety
|
|
and care quality in health systems. In a low socio-economic country like
|
|
Bangladesh, nurses struggle in a grossly underfunded healthcare system
|
|
to deliver care to the people but no studies have been conducted on
|
|
their quality of work life. Methods This qualitative descriptive study
|
|
was conducted at three Bangladeshi tertiary hospitals in May
|
|
2015-January 2016. Three focus group discussions were held with 30
|
|
registered nurses exploring their perceived barriers to quality of work
|
|
life. Data were analysed with content analysis. Findings Seven barriers
|
|
to their work-life arose: heavy workloads; lack of government
|
|
accommodation and transportation; poor health status; lack of support
|
|
from nursing supervisors; lack of promotion opportunities; incomplete
|
|
hospital policies and procedures; and lack of night shift and risk
|
|
allowances. Discussion Participants described many issues and barriers
|
|
impacting on their work-life. They perceived little reward for their
|
|
hard work, felt that their health suffered from their working conditions
|
|
and described a low QWL. Conclusion and policy implications Findings
|
|
provide information for nursing and health policymakers and leaders to
|
|
reduce barriers to improve work-life quality among nurses that can
|
|
contribute better to quality of nursing care, and nursing retention and
|
|
satisfaction. Work policies and practices, and funding and other
|
|
resources need to be scrutinized to ensure better working conditions for
|
|
Bangladeshi nurses. Limitations Interviews were conducted with nurses
|
|
only in tertiary hospitals in the Bangladeshi capital, and understanding
|
|
of barriers to work-life quality of nurses in other health settings and
|
|
regions needs to be explored.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Akter, N (Corresponding Author), Fouzder Hat Nursing Coll, Chittagong 4203, Bangladesh.
|
|
Akter, N (Corresponding Author), Chittagong Nursing Coll, Chittagong 4203, Bangladesh.
|
|
Akter, N., Fouzder Hat Nursing Coll, Chittagong 4203, Bangladesh.
|
|
Akter, M. K., Nursing Inst Mitford, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Turale, S., Chiang Mai Univ, Chiang Mai, Thailand.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/inr.12540},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-8132},
|
|
EISSN = {1466-7657},
|
|
Keywords = {Bangladesh; Barriers; Nurses; Qualitative Descriptive; Quality of Life;
|
|
Quality of Work; Tertiary Hospitals; Working Environment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB-SATISFACTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {nasimamonir2012@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000481152700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000225197000015,
|
|
Author = {Evertsson, M and Nermo, M},
|
|
Title = {Dependence within families and the division of labor: Comparing Sweden
|
|
and the United States},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1272-1286},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Note = {Aage Sorensen Memorial Conference, Harvard Univ, Cambridge, MA, MAY,
|
|
2002},
|
|
Abstract = {This article assesses the relative explanatory value of the
|
|
resource-bargaining perspective and the doing-gender approach for the
|
|
division of housework in the United States and Sweden from the mid-1970s
|
|
to 2000. The data used are the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) and
|
|
the Swedish Level of Living Survey. Overall results show that housework
|
|
was truly gendered work in both countries during the entire period. Even
|
|
so, the results indicate that, unlike Swedish women, U.S. women seem to
|
|
increase their time spent in housework when their husbands are to some
|
|
extent economically dependent on them, as if to neutralize the presumed
|
|
gender deviance on the part of their spouses.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Evertsson, M (Corresponding Author), Stockholm Univ, Swedish Inst Social Res, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Stockholm Univ, Swedish Inst Social Res, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00092.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-2445},
|
|
Keywords = {bargaining; economic dependency; gender; housework; relative resources},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WOMENS ECONOMIC DEPENDENCY; GENDER INEQUALITY; HOUSEHOLD LABOR;
|
|
HOUSEWORK; ATTITUDES; PARTICIPATION; EMPLOYMENT; WORK; TIME; HOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {marie.evertsson@sofi.su.se},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Evertsson, Marie/0000-0001-8218-9342},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {181},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {44},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000225197000015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000664930500001,
|
|
Author = {Alspaugh, Amy and Lanshaw, Nikki and Kriebs, Jan and Van Hoover, Cheri},
|
|
Title = {Universal Health Care for the United States: A Primer for Health Care
|
|
Providers},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MIDWIFERY \& WOMENS HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {441-451},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {The United States is one of a very few high-income countries that does
|
|
not guarantee every person the right to health care. Residents of the
|
|
United States pay more out-of-pocket for increasingly worse outcomes.
|
|
People of color, those who have lower incomes, and those who live in
|
|
rural areas have less access to health care and are therefore at even
|
|
greater risk for poor health. Universal health care, a term for various
|
|
models of health care systems that provide care for every resident of a
|
|
given country, will help move the United States toward higher quality,
|
|
more affordable, and more equitable care. This article defines a
|
|
reproductive justice and human rights foundation for universal health
|
|
care, explores how health insurance has worked historically in the
|
|
United States, identifies the economic reasons for implementing
|
|
universal health care, and discusses international models that could be
|
|
used domestically.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Alspaugh, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Nursing, Family Hlth Care Nursing, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Alspaugh, Amy; Lanshaw, Nikki, Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Nursing, Family Hlth Care Nursing, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Kriebs, Jan; Van Hoover, Cheri, Thomas Jefferson Univ, Midwifery Inst, Jefferson Coll Hlth Profess, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/jmwh.13233},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1526-9523},
|
|
EISSN = {1542-2011},
|
|
Keywords = {universal health care; health policy; health equity; cost and
|
|
cost-effectiveness of health care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ETHNIC DISPARITIES; MENTAL-HEALTH; MEDICAID; INSURANCE; MORTALITY;
|
|
RACISM; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {amy.alspaugh@ucsf.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lanshaw, Nikki/0000-0002-7853-2870
|
|
Alspaugh, Amy/0000-0003-4427-4807
|
|
Kriebs, Jan/0000-0002-2476-4596},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {39},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000664930500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000329198200010,
|
|
Author = {Holloway, Sarah L. and Pimlott-Wilson, Helena},
|
|
Title = {Parental involvement in children's learning: Mothers' fourth shift,
|
|
social class, and the growth of state intervention in family life},
|
|
Journal = {CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIES-GEOGRAPHIES CANADIENNES},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Number = {3, SI},
|
|
Pages = {327-336},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Nation states across the global North are restructuring their education
|
|
systems. This process has changed the relationship between school and
|
|
home, with an increasing onus being placed on parents to involve
|
|
themselves in their children's education. The article explores what
|
|
mothers with different social class positions think about state attempts
|
|
to enrol them in the education of their primary-aged children (ages
|
|
4-11), and considers their experience of school curriculum events
|
|
designed to encourage and guide their help for children's learning
|
|
within the home. Mothers' support for this form of educational
|
|
restructuring is widespread, but motivations for, and experiences of,
|
|
involvement vary significantly between higher-, middle- and low-income
|
|
schools. This matters as parental involvement not only increases
|
|
mothers' workloadsadding a fourth shift to the existing demands of paid
|
|
labour, domestic work, and their own education/trainingbut also risks
|
|
widening social inequality as middle-class children potentially benefit
|
|
more than their working class counterparts. In conclusion, the article
|
|
emphasizes the need for geographies of education to: explore parents'
|
|
gendered and classed engagement with education; trace the sectors'
|
|
changing spatiality in the context of growing links between different
|
|
sites of learning; and produce geographies that look both inward into
|
|
the education system and outward at its importance in wider society.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Holloway, SL (Corresponding Author), Loughborough Univ Technol, Dept Geog, Loughborough LE11 3TU, Leics, England.
|
|
Holloway, Sarah L.; Pimlott-Wilson, Helena, Loughborough Univ Technol, Dept Geog, Loughborough LE11 3TU, Leics, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/cag.12014},
|
|
ISSN = {0008-3658},
|
|
EISSN = {1541-0064},
|
|
Keywords = {education; schools; parental engagement; good mothering; literacy;
|
|
numeracy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EDUCATION; POLICY; ASPIRATION; SCHOOLS; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography},
|
|
Author-Email = {s.l.holloway@lboro.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Pimlott-Wilson, Helena/0000-0002-1329-7718
|
|
Holloway, Sarah/0000-0002-7662-6638},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {38},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000329198200010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000397698100007,
|
|
Author = {Guadagnolo, B. Ashleigh and Petereit, Daniel G. and Coleman, C. Norman},
|
|
Title = {Cancer Care Access and Outcomes for American Indian Populations in the
|
|
United States: Challenges and Models for Progress},
|
|
Journal = {SEMINARS IN RADIATION ONCOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {143-149},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Low socioeconomic and health care access realities of being American
|
|
Indian/Alaskan Native (Al/AN) in the United States combined with decades
|
|
of data documenting poor cancer outcomes for-this population provide a
|
|
population nested within the United States that is analogous to the
|
|
cancer care landscape of low- and middle-income countries
|
|
internationally. We reviewed the medical literature with respect to
|
|
cancer prevention, access to cancer treatment, and access to effective
|
|
supportive and palliative care for Al/AN populations in the United
|
|
States. Research confirms poorer cancer outcomes, suboptimal cancer
|
|
screening, and high-risk cancer behaviors among Al/AN communities. Al/AN
|
|
cancer patients are less likely to undergo recommended cancer surgeries,
|
|
adjuvant chemotherapy, and radiation therapy than their White
|
|
counterparts. Studies including both rural and urban survivors with Al
|
|
cancer revealed barriers to receipt of optimal cancer symptom management
|
|
and proportionally lower hospice use among Al/AN populations. Culturally
|
|
tailored programs in targeted communities have been shown to mitigate
|
|
the observed cancer-related health disparities among Al/AN communities.
|
|
There is still much work to be done to improve cancer-related health
|
|
outcomes in Al/AN communities, and the goals of the providers serving
|
|
them corresponds with those propelling the growing interest in global
|
|
oncology equity. Policy work and more funding are needed to continue to
|
|
build upon the work that the Indian Health Service and established
|
|
cancer-related health programs have begun in Al/AN communities. (C) 2017
|
|
Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Guadagnolo, BA (Corresponding Author), Univ Texas MD Anderson Canc Ctr, Dept Radiat Oncol, Houston, TX 77030 USA.
|
|
Guadagnolo, B. Ashleigh, Univ Texas MD Anderson Canc Ctr, Dept Radiat Oncol, Houston, TX 77030 USA.
|
|
Petereit, Daniel G., Rapid City Reg Canc Care Inst, Rapid City, SD USA.
|
|
Coleman, C. Norman, Int Canc Expert Corps, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Coleman, C. Norman, NCI, Radiat Res Program, Div Canc Treatment \& Diag, Rockville, MD USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.semradonc.2016.11.006},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-4296},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-9461},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ALASKA-NATIVES; HEALTH-CARE; PALLIATIVE CARE; PATIENT NAVIGATION;
|
|
MEDICAL MISTRUST; DISPARITIES; MORTALITY; SYSTEM; SATISFACTION; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology; Radiology, Nuclear Medicine \& Medical Imaging},
|
|
Author-Email = {aguadagnolo@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Guadagnolo, B. Ashleigh/0000-0002-4489-7070},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {38},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000397698100007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000498096900002,
|
|
Author = {Senthanar, Sonja and MacEachen, Ellen and Premji, Stephanie and Bigelow,
|
|
Philip},
|
|
Title = {``Can Someone Help Me?{''} Refugee Women's Experiences of Using
|
|
Settlement Agencies to Find Work in Canada},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND INTEGRATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {273-294},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This article examines refugee women's experience with settlement
|
|
agencies and their employment outcomes in Canada. Based on qualitative
|
|
data, we found that employment was not a priority to settlement agencies
|
|
with many counselors referring the women to low-skilled, low-waged
|
|
positions with companies with whom they had pre-existing ties.
|
|
Meanwhile, counselors found themselves burdened with large workloads and
|
|
felt inadequately equipped to serve the needs of refugees. Through this
|
|
study, we propose policy recommendations that address women's
|
|
disproportional barriers that can be integrated within programs and
|
|
services offered by settlement agencies to improve employment
|
|
integration.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Senthanar, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Waterloo, Sch Publ Hlth \& Hlth Syst, 200 Univ Ave W, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
|
|
Senthanar, Sonja; MacEachen, Ellen; Bigelow, Philip, Univ Waterloo, Sch Publ Hlth \& Hlth Syst, 200 Univ Ave W, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
|
|
Premji, Stephanie, McMaster Univ, Sch Labour Studies, 1280 Main St W, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada.
|
|
Premji, Stephanie, McMaster Univ, Dept Hlth Aging \& Soc, 1280 Main St W, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s12134-019-00729-1},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {1488-3473},
|
|
EISSN = {1874-6365},
|
|
Keywords = {Refugees; Employment; Settlement agency; Gender; Canada},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IMMIGRANT WOMEN; EMPLOYMENT; ORGANIZATIONS; INTEGRATION; NEWCOMERS;
|
|
LABOR; PARTNERSHIPS; OPPORTUNITY; DIFFERENCE; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography},
|
|
Author-Email = {ssenthanar@uwaterloo.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Senthanar, Sonja/0000-0003-3406-5446},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {82},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000498096900002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000551107600001,
|
|
Author = {Van Hoang, Cuong and Tran, Tuyen Quang and Nguyen, Yen Hai Thi and
|
|
Nguyen, Lan Thanh},
|
|
Title = {Forest resources and household welfare: Empirical evidence from North
|
|
Central Vietnam},
|
|
Journal = {NATURAL RESOURCES FORUM},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {311-333},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Using secondary data from a socio-economic quantitative household survey
|
|
of the North Central region of Vietnam, the main aim of our study is to
|
|
analyze the causal effect of forest resources on household income and
|
|
poverty. Based on the observed characteristics of a forest-based
|
|
livelihood and forest-related activities, we use a propensity score
|
|
matching (PSM) method to control for potential bias arising from
|
|
self-selection. The PSM results indicate that households with a
|
|
forest-based livelihood had a higher level of income and lower poverty
|
|
rates than did those without. Interestingly, our findings confirm that a
|
|
forest-based livelihood offers much higher income than any other type of
|
|
livelihood adopted by local households. Also, the poverty rate among
|
|
households with a forest-based livelihood is lower than those earning
|
|
non-labor income or engaged in wage/crop and crop livelihoods. Among
|
|
households and provinces, we find varying opportunities deriving from
|
|
forest resources, suggesting that there are potential barriers hindering
|
|
local households from pursuing a forest livelihood or participating in
|
|
some forest activities. Therefore, government policy and regulations on
|
|
forest management should focus on improving the access of households to
|
|
forest resources, while enhancing the sustainability of these resources.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tran, TQ (Corresponding Author), Vietnam Natl Univ, Int Sch, Bldg G7 \& G8,144 Xuan Thuy St, Hanoi, Vietnam.
|
|
Van Hoang, Cuong; Nguyen, Yen Hai Thi; Nguyen, Lan Thanh, Natl Econ Univ, Fac Real Estate \& Resources Econ, Hanoi, Vietnam.
|
|
Tran, Tuyen Quang, Vietnam Natl Univ, Int Sch, Bldg G7 \& G8,144 Xuan Thuy St, Hanoi, Vietnam.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1477-8947.12206},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0165-0203},
|
|
EISSN = {1477-8947},
|
|
Keywords = {forest resources; household income; livelihood; poverty; rural
|
|
livelihood},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ENVIRONMENTAL INCOME; POVERTY ALLEVIATION; ETHNIC-MINORITIES; RURAL
|
|
LIVELIHOODS; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {tuyentranquang@isvnu.vn},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000551107600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000819469900003,
|
|
Author = {Ali, Rabia and Bashir, Iffat},
|
|
Title = {Women's employment in Gilgit-Baltistan: a contested terrain},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND CONSTITUTIONAL STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {233-245},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper aims to explore the attitudes of men towards women's
|
|
employment in Gilgit-Baltistan in Pakistan. Data was collected through a
|
|
survey from men belonging to different backgrounds and experiences
|
|
including professionals working in NGOs, government officers,
|
|
businessmen, and university students. The data illustrates that despite
|
|
high literacy rates for women and an increase in labour participation of
|
|
women in Gilgit City, men do not favour women's work, especially in
|
|
male-dominated professions. Interestingly though, men disapproved of
|
|
their own sisters/wives/relatives working along with men in certain
|
|
professions yet they readily accepted the idea of having women
|
|
colleagues at work. Nevertheless, women's work in private spaces and
|
|
their contribution to familial responsibilities were acknowledged.
|
|
Women's employment was believed to involve challenges and barriers
|
|
including harassment, low wages, and slow promotions. The outcomes of
|
|
women's work were perceived to be positive and to be leading towards
|
|
better health conditions and empowerment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ali, R (Corresponding Author), Int Islamic Univ, Dept Sociol, Islamabad, Pakistan.
|
|
Ali, Rabia, Int Islamic Univ, Dept Sociol, Islamabad, Pakistan.
|
|
Bashir, Iffat, Fatima Jinnah Degree Coll Women, Dept Sociol, Gilgit City, Pakistan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1504/IJHRCS.2022.123682},
|
|
ISSN = {2050-103X},
|
|
EISSN = {2050-1048},
|
|
Keywords = {women; workplace; attitude; family; conflict; Gilgit-Pakistan},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Law},
|
|
Author-Email = {rabia.gul@iiu.edu.pk
|
|
iffatbashir21@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ali, Rabia/ACK-6751-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000819469900003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000288705000006,
|
|
Author = {Bourke-Taylor, H. and Howie, L. and Law, M.},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to maternal workforce participation and relationship between
|
|
paid work and health},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {55},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {511-520},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Families of children with disabilities experience extra financial
|
|
strains, and mothers are frequently unable to participate in paid work
|
|
because of caregiving obligations.
|
|
Methods
|
|
A mailed survey and follow-up phone calls were used to gather data about
|
|
mother's health, workforce participation and barriers to inclusion in
|
|
the workplace (n = 152). Verbatim reports of issues that hindered
|
|
workforce participation were analysed qualitatively to derive themes.
|
|
Maternal health-related quality of life (HRQoL) was measured using the
|
|
Short Form Health Survey Version 2 (SF-36v2). Norm-based conversions
|
|
were used to compare HRQoL between working and non-working mothers and
|
|
to compare to population norms.
|
|
Results
|
|
Eighty-two per cent of mothers in the sample wanted and needed to work
|
|
for pay but indicated over 300 issues that prevent their work
|
|
participation. Data analysis revealed 26 common issues which prevent
|
|
work participation. These issues fit into three main categories:
|
|
mother-related reasons (28\%), child-related reasons (29\%) and service
|
|
limitations (43\%). Mothers who worked (n = 83) reported significantly
|
|
better HRQoL than mothers who did not work (n = 69) on five of the eight
|
|
SF-36v2 dimensions and overall mental health.
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
Compared to other working Australians, mothers in this study had higher
|
|
education yet reported poorer health, lower family income and lower
|
|
workforce participation. Respondents reported that service system
|
|
limitations were the main barriers to participation in the paid
|
|
workforce. Investigation of service changes such as increased respite
|
|
care, availability of outside hours school care, improved professional
|
|
competency and family-centred services is recommended in order to
|
|
improve maternal participation in paid work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bourke-Taylor, H (Corresponding Author), Monash Univ, Sch Primary Hlth Care, Dept Occupat Therapy, Fac Med Nursing \& Hlth Sci, Peninsula Campus,POB 527, Frankston, Vic 3199, Australia.
|
|
Bourke-Taylor, H., Monash Univ, Sch Primary Hlth Care, Dept Occupat Therapy, Fac Med Nursing \& Hlth Sci, Frankston, Vic 3199, Australia.
|
|
Howie, L., La Trobe Univ, Fac Hlth Sci, Sch Occupat Therapy, Bundoora, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Law, M., McMaster Univ, Sch Rehabil Sci, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
|
|
Law, M., McMaster Univ, CanChild Ctr Childhood Disabil Res, Hamilton, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1365-2788.2011.01407.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0964-2633},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2788},
|
|
Keywords = {disability; family QoL; maternal well-being; health-related QoL; paid
|
|
work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; SCHOOL-AGE-CHILDREN; INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES;
|
|
DEVELOPMENTAL-DISABILITY; BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS; CEREBRAL-PALSY;
|
|
MENTAL-HEALTH; MIXED METHODS; PRIMARY-CARE; MOTHERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Special; Genetics \& Heredity; Clinical Neurology;
|
|
Psychiatry; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {helen.bourke-taylor@monash.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {44},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000288705000006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1995UA68900005,
|
|
Author = {Wehman, P and Kregel, J},
|
|
Title = {At the crossroads: Supported employment a decade later},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR PERSONS WITH SEVERE HANDICAPS},
|
|
Year = {1995},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {286-299},
|
|
Month = {WIN},
|
|
Abstract = {Supported employment has grown rapidly within the past decade, fueled by
|
|
the consumer empowerment and inclusion movements. The program has
|
|
resulted in thousands of people with severe disabilities entering the
|
|
labor force for the first time. Many consumers have expanded their
|
|
vocational expectations, and employers have developed a new appreciation
|
|
of the potential contribution individuals with disabilities can make to
|
|
the work force. Unfortunately, despite these dramatic gains, the
|
|
supported employment movement appears to have lost much of its early
|
|
momentum and is increasingly at a crossroads. This article addresses
|
|
major challenges that consumers and professionals alike must face.
|
|
Conversion of day programs to integrated work options, expansion of
|
|
program capacity, the need to insure consumer choice and
|
|
self-determination, and the achievement of meaningful employment
|
|
outcomes in a highly competitive economy are among the challenges that
|
|
those dedicated to the supported employment movement must solve in the
|
|
years ahead. Specific recommendations are offered to meet each
|
|
challenge. Ultimately, the way to expand and reenergize the supported
|
|
employment initiative will be to educate and empower more consumers and
|
|
families.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIV,REHABIL RES \& TRAINING CTR SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT,RICHMOND,VA 23284.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/154079699602000405},
|
|
ISSN = {0274-9483},
|
|
Keywords = {job placement; policy analysis; sheltered employment; supported
|
|
employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-RETARDATION; SEVERE DISABILITIES; JOB-SATISFACTION; WORKPLACE;
|
|
CONSUMER; WORKERS; STRATEGIES; BARRIERS; OUTCOMES; BENEFITS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {55},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1995UA68900005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000334691500015,
|
|
Author = {Gupta, Samir and Sussman, Daniel A. and Doubeni, Chyke A. and Anderson,
|
|
Daniel S. and Day, Lukejohn and Deshpande, Amar R. and Elmunzer, B.
|
|
Joseph and Laiyemo, Adeyinka O. and Mendez, Jeanette and Somsouk, Ma and
|
|
Allison, James and Bhuket, Taft and Geng, Zhuo and Green, Beverly B. and
|
|
Itzkowitz, Steven H. and Martinez, Maria Elena},
|
|
Title = {Challenges and Possible Solutions to Colorectal Cancer Screening for the
|
|
Underserved},
|
|
Journal = {JNCI-JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {106},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a leading cause of cancer mortality
|
|
worldwide. CRC incidence and mortality can be reduced through screening.
|
|
However, in the United States, screening participation remains
|
|
suboptimal, particularly among underserved populations such as the
|
|
uninsured, recent immigrants, and racial/ethnic minority groups.
|
|
Increasing screening rates among underserved populations will reduce the
|
|
US burden of CRC. In this commentary focusing on underserved
|
|
populations, we highlight the public health impact of CRC screening,
|
|
list key challenges to screening the underserved, and review promising
|
|
approaches to boost screening rates. We identify four key policy and
|
|
research priorities to increase screening among underserved populations:
|
|
1) actively promote the message, ``the best test is the one that gets
|
|
done{''}; 2) develop and implement methods to identify unscreened
|
|
individuals within underserved population groups for screening
|
|
interventions; 3) develop and implement approaches for organized
|
|
screening delivery; and 4) fund and enhance programs and policies that
|
|
provide access to screening, diagnostic follow-up, and CRC treatment for
|
|
underserved populations. This commentary represents the consensus of a
|
|
diverse group of experts in cancer control and prevention, epidemiology,
|
|
gastroenterology, and primary care from across the country who formed
|
|
the Coalition to Boost Screening among the Underserved in the United
|
|
States. The group was organized and held its first annual working group
|
|
meeting in conjunction with the World Endoscopy Organization's annual
|
|
Colorectal Cancer Screening Committee meeting during Digestive Disease
|
|
Week 2012 in San Diego, California.},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gupta, S (Corresponding Author), VA San Diego Healthcare Syst, 3350 La Jolla Village Dr MC 111D, San Diego, CA 92161 USA.
|
|
Gupta, Samir, Univ Calif San Diego, Div Gastroenterol, Dept Internal Med, Vet Affairs San Diego Healthcare Syst, San Diego, CA 92103 USA.
|
|
Gupta, Samir; Martinez, Maria Elena, Univ Calif San Diego, Moores Canc Ctr, San Diego, CA 92103 USA.
|
|
Sussman, Daniel A.; Deshpande, Amar R., Univ Miami, Miller Sch Med, Dept Internal Med, Div Gastroenterol, Miami, FL 33136 USA.
|
|
Doubeni, Chyke A., Univ Penn, Dept Family Med \& Community Hlth, Perelman Sch Med, Leonard Davis Inst Hlth Econ,Ctr Clin Epidemiol \&, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Doubeni, Chyke A., Univ Penn, Ctr Publ Hlth Initiat, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Anderson, Daniel S., Southern Calif Kaiser Permanente Grp, San Diego, CA USA.
|
|
Day, Lukejohn; Somsouk, Ma; Allison, James, San Francisco Gen Hosp, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA.
|
|
Day, Lukejohn; Somsouk, Ma; Allison, James, Univ Calif San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Elmunzer, B. Joseph, Univ Michigan, Med Ctr, Div Gastroenterol, Ann Arbor, MI USA.
|
|
Laiyemo, Adeyinka O., Howard Univ, Dept Med, Div Gastroenterol, Washington, DC 20059 USA.
|
|
Mendez, Jeanette, MD Inc, Encinitas, CA USA.
|
|
Allison, James, Kaiser Northern Calif Div Res, Oakland, CA USA.
|
|
Bhuket, Taft, Alameda Cty Med Ctr, Oakland, CA USA.
|
|
Geng, Zhuo, Univ Texas SW Med Ctr Dallas, Dallas, TX 75390 USA.
|
|
Green, Beverly B., Grp Hlth Res Inst, Seattle, WA USA.
|
|
Itzkowitz, Steven H., Icahn Sch Med Mt Sinai, Dept Med, Div Gastroenterol, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Martinez, Maria Elena, Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Family \& Prevent Med, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/jnci/dju032},
|
|
Article-Number = {dju032},
|
|
ISSN = {0027-8874},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2105},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE-SYSTEM; LOW-INCOME; RACIAL DISPARITIES; DIVERSE; QUALITY;
|
|
COLON; ASSOCIATION; STATISTICS; INCREASES; ADHERENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {s1gupta@ucsd.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Doubeni, Chyke A/W-6749-2019
|
|
Elmunzer, Badih J/G-3032-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Doubeni, Chyke A/0000-0001-7495-0285
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {69},
|
|
Times-Cited = {136},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000334691500015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000261131300004,
|
|
Author = {Groenewold, N. and Hagger, A. J.},
|
|
Title = {REGIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT DISPARITIES: AN EVALUATION OF POLICY MEASURES},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC PAPERS},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper analyses the efficacy of regional and federal government
|
|
policies in reducing inter-regional unemployment disparities. We use as
|
|
our framework a two-region general equilibrium model with a given
|
|
freely-mobile supply of labour. We assume inter-regional migration to
|
|
occur in response to inter-regional utility differentials. Each region
|
|
has households, firms and a regional government. In addition to regional
|
|
governments, there is a federal government. The firms in a region use a
|
|
single factor, labour, to produce a single good which we assume to be
|
|
different to that produced in the other region. It is supplied to
|
|
households and to the regional government in the form of payroll taxes.
|
|
Households consume some, trade some with households in the other region
|
|
and give some up to the federal government as income tax. Firms and
|
|
households bargain over wages and firms then choose employment to
|
|
maximise profits. The resulting equilibrium will generally not be a
|
|
full-employment one.
|
|
We simulate a linearised numerical version of the model. We examine
|
|
seven alternative policies, six carried out by a regional government and
|
|
one by the federal government. In the first group there are traditional
|
|
tax/expenditure polices as well as policies which might be seen as
|
|
attacking the natural rate of unemployment: changes in unemployment
|
|
benefits, changes in union power, changes in the labour force and
|
|
changes in labour productivity. The federal government policy is a
|
|
regionally-differentiated fiscal policy.
|
|
Contrary to expectations, many policies which have traditionally been
|
|
recommended to alleviate unemployment are found, in fact, to exacerbate
|
|
the unemployment problem.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Groenewold, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Western Australia, Econ Discipline, Crawley, WA, Australia.
|
|
Groenewold, N., Univ Western Australia, Econ Discipline, Crawley, WA, Australia.
|
|
Hagger, A. J., Univ Tasmania, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1467-8454.2008.00354.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0004-900X},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-8454},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CYCLICAL SENSITIVITY; DIFFERENTIALS; MIGRATION; RATES; STATE;
|
|
EQUALIZATION; ELASTICITIES; REGISTRATION; PERSISTENCE; EFFICIENCY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {nic.groenewold@uwa.edu.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Groenewold, Nicolaas/0000-0003-3612-4470},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000261131300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000346942200001,
|
|
Author = {Shadmi, Efrat and Wong, William C. W. and Kinder, Karen and Heath, Iona
|
|
and Kidd, Michael},
|
|
Title = {Primary care priorities in addressing health equity: summary of the
|
|
WONCA 2013 health equity workshop},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {NOV 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Research consistently shows that gaps in health and health
|
|
care persist, and are even widening. While the strength of a country's
|
|
primary health care system and its primary care attributes significantly
|
|
improves populations' health and reduces inequity (differences in health
|
|
and health care that are unfair and unjust), many areas, such as
|
|
inequity reduction through the provision of health promotion and
|
|
preventive services, are not explicitly addressed by general practice.
|
|
Substantiating the role of primary care in reducing inequity as well as
|
|
establishing educational training programs geared towards health
|
|
inequity reduction and improvement of the health and health care of
|
|
underserved populations are needed.
|
|
Methods: This paper summarizes the work performed at the World WONCA
|
|
(World Organization of National Colleges and Academies of Family
|
|
Medicine) 2013 Meetings' Health Equity Workshop which aimed to explore
|
|
how a better understanding of health inequities could enable primary
|
|
care providers (PCPs)/general practitioners (GPs) to adopt strategies
|
|
that could improve health outcomes through the delivery of primary
|
|
health care. It explored the development of a health equity curriculum
|
|
and opened a discussion on the future and potential impact of health
|
|
equity training among GPs.
|
|
Results: A survey completed by workshop participants on the current and
|
|
expected levels of primary care participation in various inequity
|
|
reduction activities showed that promoting access (availability and
|
|
coverage) to primary care services was the most important priority.
|
|
Assessment of the gaps between current and preferred priorities showed
|
|
that to bridge expectations and actual performance, the following should
|
|
be the focus of governments and health care systems: forming
|
|
cross-national collaborations; incorporating health equity and cultural
|
|
competency training in medical education; and, engaging in initiation of
|
|
advocacy programs that involve major stakeholders in equity promotion
|
|
policy making as well as promoting research on health equity.
|
|
Conclusions: This workshop formed the basis for the establishment of
|
|
WONCA's Health Equity Special Interest Group, set up in early 2014,
|
|
aiming to bring the essential experience, skills and perspective of
|
|
interested GPs around the world to address differences in health that
|
|
are unfair, unjust, unnecessary but avoidable.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shadmi, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Haifa, Fac Social Welf \& Hlth Sci, IL-31999 Haifa, Israel.
|
|
Shadmi, Efrat, Univ Haifa, Fac Social Welf \& Hlth Sci, IL-31999 Haifa, Israel.
|
|
Wong, William C. W., Univ Hong Kong, Dept Family Med \& Primary Care, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Kinder, Karen, Johns Hopkins Univ, ACG Int, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA.
|
|
Heath, Iona, Royal Coll Gen Practitioners, London, England.
|
|
Kidd, Michael, Flinders Med Sch, WONCA, Bedford Pk, SA 5042, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-014-0104-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {104},
|
|
ISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Health equity; Disparities; Primary care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PHYSICIAN-CITIZENS; POPULATION HEALTH; INCOME INEQUALITY; DISPARITIES;
|
|
SYSTEMS; EUROPE; POLICY; ORGANIZATION; COUNTRIES; MORTALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {eshadmi@univ.haifa.ac.il},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shadmi, Efrat/0000-0001-9752-5724},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000346942200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000372249600004,
|
|
Author = {Moore, Corey L. and Wang, Ningning and Johnson, Jean and Manyibe, Edward
|
|
O. and Washington, Andre L. and Muhammad, Atashia},
|
|
Title = {Return-to-Work Outcome Rates of African American Versus White Veterans
|
|
Served by State Vocational Rehabilitation Agencies: A Randomized
|
|
Split-Half Cross-Model Validation Research Design},
|
|
Journal = {REHABILITATION COUNSELING BULLETIN},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {59},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {158-171},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of this study was to identify disparities in successful
|
|
return-to-work outcome rates based on race, gender, and level of
|
|
educational attainment at closure among veterans with a signed
|
|
Individualized Plan for Employment (IPE). A randomized split-half
|
|
cross-model validation research design was used to develop and test a
|
|
series of logistic regression models for goodness of fit across two
|
|
samples (i.e., screening and calibration) of case records (N = 11,337)
|
|
obtained from the national Fiscal Year (FY) 2013 Rehabilitation Services
|
|
Administration (RSA)-911 database. The final predictive multinomial
|
|
logistic regression model indicated that (a) the odds of White veterans
|
|
successfully returning to work were nearly 11/2 times the odds of
|
|
African American veterans returning to work and (b) African American
|
|
female veterans had the lowest probability for successfully returning to
|
|
work. Moreover, findings indicated that African American veterans'
|
|
successful return-to-work rates in 5 of the 10 RSA regions were below
|
|
the national benchmark. Recommendations for policy development and
|
|
future research directions are presented.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Moore, CL (Corresponding Author), Langston Univ, LU RRTC Res \& Capac Bldg,4205 N Lincoln Blvd, Oklahoma City, OK 73105 USA.
|
|
Moore, CL (Corresponding Author), Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc, Oklahoma City, OK 73105 USA.
|
|
Moore, Corey L.; Wang, Ningning; Johnson, Jean; Manyibe, Edward O.; Washington, Andre L.; Muhammad, Atashia, Langston Univ, LU RRTC Res \& Capac Bldg,4205 N Lincoln Blvd, Oklahoma City, OK 73105 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0034355215579917},
|
|
ISSN = {0034-3552},
|
|
EISSN = {1538-4853},
|
|
Keywords = {African American veterans; state vocational rehabilitation agencies;
|
|
RSA-911 data assessment and cross-validation research methods; minority
|
|
access and outcome rates},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MULTIPLE-REGRESSION; DISABILITIES; PREDICTION; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {clmoore@langston.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Manyibe, Edward/0000-0002-4616-9798},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000372249600004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000237396900002,
|
|
Author = {Turner, LJ and Danziger, S and Seefeldt, KS},
|
|
Title = {Failing the transition from welfare to work: Women chronically
|
|
disconnected from employment and cash welfare},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {87},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {227-249},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives. Although employment among welfare mothers increased
|
|
substantially following the 1996 welfare reform, some former welfare
|
|
recipients failed to find stable employment. We review the extent to
|
|
which low-income mothers are without work and cash welfare for long
|
|
periods of time and seek to understand the correlates of becoming
|
|
chronically disconnected. Methods. We analyze data from a 1997-2003
|
|
panel study of single mothers who received cash welfare in an urban
|
|
county in Michigan in February 1997. We develop a new measure of the
|
|
extent to which former recipients are ``chronically disconnected{''}
|
|
from both employment and cash welfare and estimate regression models of
|
|
the correlates of this economic outcome. Results. About 9 percent of
|
|
respondents became chronically disconnected, defined as being without
|
|
employment and cash welfare during at least one-quarter of the months
|
|
during the 79-month study period. Important correlates of becoming
|
|
chronically disconnected include having a physical limitation, having a
|
|
learning disability, using illegal drugs or meeting the diagnostic
|
|
screening criteria for alcohol dependence, and having no car or driver
|
|
license. The chronically disconnected are more likely to have lost a job
|
|
than to have lost welfare benefits and are more economically
|
|
disadvantaged than those with regular sources of economic support.
|
|
Conclusions. To reduce the number of women who fail to make a successful
|
|
transition from welfare to work, more attention should be given to
|
|
programs and policies that attempt to reconnect disconnected women to
|
|
regular sources of economic support.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Danziger, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Michigan, Gerald R Ford Sch Publ Policy, 1015 E Huron St, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 USA.
|
|
Univ Michigan, Gerald R Ford Sch Publ Policy, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1540-6237.2006.00378.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-4941},
|
|
EISSN = {1540-6237},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MOVE; PAY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {sheldond@umich.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {64},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000237396900002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000542039300007,
|
|
Author = {Obayelu, Abiodun Elijah and Ogbe, Agatha Osivweneta and Edewor, Sarah E.},
|
|
Title = {Gender gaps and female labour participation in agriculture in Nigeria},
|
|
Journal = {AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC AND MANAGEMENT STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {2, SI},
|
|
Pages = {285-300},
|
|
Month = {JUN 8},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of this paper is threefold: to assess the gender
|
|
gaps and the patterns of female workforce in agriculture; to examine the
|
|
level of household decision making among the principal males and females
|
|
in the household; and to estimate the time spent by the principal males
|
|
and females in the household by activities in Nigeria.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach The study made use of secondary data
|
|
obtained from various sources such as published articles, research
|
|
reports, unpublished discussion paper, policy documents, national and
|
|
international databases (World Bank World Development Indicators, United
|
|
Nations Development Programme and the ECOWAS-RAAF-PASANAO survey
|
|
conducted in Nigeria in 2017), and position papers. The information
|
|
gathered covers a range of empirical and conceptual issues relating to
|
|
labour, share of women contributing to agriculture and other
|
|
gender-related issues. The study covered 1,747 maize and/or rice
|
|
producing households spread across 141 farming communities in 16 states
|
|
in Nigeria using a multi-stage sampling technique. Findings It was
|
|
interesting to note that an average male was older and had more
|
|
educational qualification than their female counterparts. In the same
|
|
vein, he owned more assets (virgin lands, other plots and buildings)
|
|
when compared with their female counterparts and earned higher incomes
|
|
from farming and other labour activities with the exception of trading.
|
|
Furthermore, the result revealed females spent more time taking care of
|
|
children, cooking and schooling than their male counterparts. It can
|
|
therefore be concluded that a gender gap exists in agricultural labour
|
|
participation with the males playing dominant roles as compared with
|
|
their female counterparts. Analysis of women's agricultural should not
|
|
neglect the structural bases of their inequality. Research
|
|
limitations/implications The study is limited by lack of enough data
|
|
base on women's and men's engagement in labour force and on agricultural
|
|
activities which can be analysed for policy formulation and
|
|
implementation. Social implications The paper elucidates some of the
|
|
possible social, economic and biological implications of changes in
|
|
women's work and their participation in agriculture in Nigeria.
|
|
Originality/value The paper is original in nature and will add value to
|
|
the integration of women into the development process in Nigeria.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Obayelu, AE (Corresponding Author), Fed Univ Agr, Dept Agr Econ \& Farm Management, Abeokuta, Nigeria.
|
|
Obayelu, Abiodun Elijah; Ogbe, Agatha Osivweneta; Edewor, Sarah E., Fed Univ Agr, Dept Agr Econ \& Farm Management, Abeokuta, Nigeria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/AJEMS-03-2019-0128},
|
|
ISSN = {2040-0705},
|
|
EISSN = {2040-0713},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender; Paid workforce; Female labour; Unemployment; Primary male;
|
|
Primary female; Migration},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {obayelu@yahoo.com
|
|
ag05ogbe@gmail.com
|
|
sarradowe@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baldissera, Annalisa/AHD-6334-2022
|
|
Obayelu, Abiodun Elijah/GRR-2072-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Obayelu, Abiodun Elijah/0000-0003-3328-7717
|
|
Edewor, Sarah/0000-0003-3596-3176},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000542039300007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000331880000001,
|
|
Author = {Malmusi, Davide and Vives, Alejandra and Benach, Joan and Borrell, Carme},
|
|
Title = {Gender inequalities in health: exploring the contribution of living
|
|
conditions in the intersection of social class},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL HEALTH ACTION},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Pages = {1-9},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Women experience poorer health than men despite their longer
|
|
life expectancy, due to a higher prevalence of non-fatal chronic
|
|
illnesses. This paper aims to explore whether the unequal gender
|
|
distribution of roles and resources can account for inequalities in
|
|
general self-rated health (SRH) by gender, across social classes, in a
|
|
Southern European population.
|
|
Methods: Cross-sectional study of residents in Catalonia aged 25-64,
|
|
using data from the 2006 population living conditions survey (n =
|
|
5,817). Poisson regression models were used to calculate the fair/poor
|
|
SRH prevalence ratio (PR) by gender and to estimate the contribution of
|
|
variables assessing several dimensions of living conditions as the
|
|
reduction in the PR after their inclusion in the model. Analyses were
|
|
stratified by social class (non-manual and manual).
|
|
Results: SRH was poorer for women among both non-manual (PR 1.39, 95\%
|
|
CI 1.09-1.76) and manual social classes (PR 1.36, 95\% CI 1.20-1.56).
|
|
Adjustment for individual income alone eliminated the association
|
|
between sex and SRH, especially among manual classes (PR 1.01, 95\% CI
|
|
0.85-1.19; among non-manual 1.19, 0.92-1.54). The association was also
|
|
reduced when adjusting by employment conditions among manual classes,
|
|
and household material and economic situation, time in household chores
|
|
and residential environment among non-manual classes.
|
|
Discussion: Gender inequalities in individual income appear to
|
|
contribute largely to women's poorer health. Individual income may
|
|
indicate the availability of economic resources, but also the history of
|
|
access to the labour market and potentially the degree of independence
|
|
and power within the household. Policies to facilitate women's labour
|
|
market participation, to close the gender pay gap, or to raise
|
|
non-contributory pensions may be helpful to improve women's health.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Malmusi, D (Corresponding Author), Agcy Salut Publ Barcelona, Pl Lesseps 1, ES-08023 Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Malmusi, Davide; Borrell, Carme, CIBERESP, Ctr Biomed Network Res Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Malmusi, Davide; Borrell, Carme, IIB Sant Pau, Agcy Salut Publ Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Malmusi, Davide, PSMAR UPF ASPB, Unitat Docent Med Prevent \& Salut Publ, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Vives, Alejandra; Benach, Joan, Univ Pompeu Fabra, GREDS EMCONET, Hlth Inequal Res Grp, Employment Condit Network, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Vives, Alejandra, Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Escuela Med, Dept Salud Publ, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Borrell, Carme, Univ Pompeu Fabra, Dept Expt \& Hlth Sci, Barcelona, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3402/gha.v7.23189},
|
|
Article-Number = {23189},
|
|
EISSN = {1654-9880},
|
|
Keywords = {gender; health inequalities; self-rated health; intersectionality;
|
|
material resources; social class},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-RATED HEALTH; DETERMINANTS; EXPLANATION; ILLNESS; STATES; WOMEN;
|
|
LIFE; MENS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {dmalmusi@aspb.cat},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Benach, Joan/H-2519-2013
|
|
Vives, Alejandra/AFB-2073-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Benach, Joan/0000-0003-2285-742X
|
|
Vives, Alejandra/0000-0001-5851-0693
|
|
Borrell, Carme/0000-0002-1170-2505
|
|
Malmusi, Davide/0000-0003-1877-3581},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {43},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {34},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000331880000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000087586600010,
|
|
Author = {Lim, JY},
|
|
Title = {The effects of the East Asian crisis on the employment of women and men:
|
|
The Philippine case},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2000},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {1285-1306},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper analyzes the differential employment impacts on women and men
|
|
brought about by the East Asian crisis and the preceeding periods of
|
|
boom-bust cycles and increased openness. It is found that the growth
|
|
period in the second half of the 1980s favored male employment more than
|
|
female employment. The economic decline due to the East Asian crisis
|
|
reversed this process and increased male unemployment more than female
|
|
unemployment (especially in urban areas), despite a more rapid
|
|
displacement of women workers from the manufacturing sector. One
|
|
contributing factor to this is the resilience of the community, social
|
|
and personal services, and wholesale and trade sector during the crisis.
|
|
Evidence-such as increased female labor force participation and longer
|
|
working hours for women relative to men during the crisis-points to
|
|
increased female employment and work hours in the labor market as a
|
|
major coping mechanism during the crisis. The paper therefore argues
|
|
that the boom-bust cycles in the macroeconomy are not gender neutral and
|
|
contributes to increasing earnings and labor time disparities between
|
|
women and men, to the detriment of the women. (C) 2000 Published by
|
|
Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lim, JY (Corresponding Author), Univ Philippines, Quezon 1101, Philippines.
|
|
Univ Philippines, Quezon 1101, Philippines.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0305-750X(00)00023-1},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-750X},
|
|
Keywords = {employment; gender; labor market; women; Asian crisis; Philippines},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT; GENDER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {46},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000087586600010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000300973000023,
|
|
Author = {Blinder, Victoria S. and Patil, Sujata and Thind, Amardeep and Diamant,
|
|
Allison and Hudis, Clifford A. and Basch, Ethan and Maly, Rose C.},
|
|
Title = {Return to work in low-income Latina and non-Latina white breast cancer
|
|
survivors: A 3-year longitudinal study},
|
|
Journal = {CANCER},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {118},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {1664-1674},
|
|
Month = {MAR 15},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Previous research has found an 80\% return-to-work rate in
|
|
mid-income white breast cancer survivors, but little is known about the
|
|
employment trajectory of low-income minorities or whites. We set out to
|
|
compare the trajectories of low-income Latina and non-Latina white
|
|
survivors and to identify correlates of employment status. METHODS:
|
|
Participants were low-income women who had localized breast cancer,
|
|
spoke English or Spanish, and were employed at the time of diagnosis.
|
|
Interviews were conducted 6, 18, and 36 months after diagnosis.
|
|
Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify independent
|
|
correlates of employment status at 18 months. RESULTS: Of 290
|
|
participants, 62\% were Latina. Latinas were less likely than non-Latina
|
|
whites to be working 6 months ( 27\% vs 49\%; P.0002) and 18 months (
|
|
45\% vs 59\%; P.02) after diagnosis, but at 36 months there was no
|
|
significant difference ( 53\% vs 59\%; P.29). Latinas were more likely
|
|
to be manual laborers than were non-Latina whites ( P <.0001). Baseline
|
|
job type and receipt of axillary node dissection were associated with
|
|
employment status among Latinas but not non-Latina whites. CONCLUSIONS:
|
|
Neither low-income Latinas nor non-Latina whites approached the 80\%
|
|
rate of return to work seen in wealthier white populations. Latinas
|
|
followed a protracted return-to-work trajectory compared to non-Latina
|
|
whites, and differences in job type appear to have played an important
|
|
role. Manual laborers may be disproportionately impacted by surgical
|
|
procedures that limit physical activity. This can inform the development
|
|
of rehabilitative interventions and may have important implications for
|
|
the surgical and postsurgical management of patients. Cancer 2012; 118:
|
|
1664-74. VC 2011 American Cancer Society.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Blinder, VS (Corresponding Author), Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, 307 E 63rd St, New York, NY 10065 USA.
|
|
Blinder, Victoria S., Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, New York, NY 10065 USA.
|
|
Thind, Amardeep, Univ Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada.
|
|
Diamant, Allison; Maly, Rose C., Univ Calif Los Angeles, David Geffen Sch Med, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/cncr.26478},
|
|
ISSN = {0008-543X},
|
|
Keywords = {disparities; employment; breast cancer; survivorship},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; LYMPH-NODE DISSECTION; LONG-TERM; WOMEN; MORBIDITY;
|
|
DISPARITIES; VALIDATION; PREDICTORS; BIOPSY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {blinderv@mskcc.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hudis, Clifford/AAW-9482-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hudis, Clifford/0000-0001-7144-8791},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {70},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000300973000023},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000535278500049,
|
|
Author = {Marom, Batia S. and Sharabi, Moshe and Carel, Rafael S. and Ratzon,
|
|
Navah Z.},
|
|
Title = {Returning to work after a hand injury: Does ethnicity matter?},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Month = {MAR 10},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Hand injuries (HI) are common and may limit participation in work. The
|
|
objective of this study is to examine the effect of ethnicity and other
|
|
prognostic variables on return-to-work (RTW) among male manual workers
|
|
after acute HI.
|
|
Methods
|
|
A cohort of 178 subjects (90 Arabs, 88 Jews) aged 22 to 65 was studied.
|
|
Trained bilingual occupational therapists evaluated and interviewed the
|
|
subjects, using structured validated questionnaires for evaluating
|
|
personal and environmental factors, body function and structure, and
|
|
activity limitation and participation restrictions. Employment status 3
|
|
months post injury was assessed by a telephone interview. To establish a
|
|
predictive model for RTW, ethnicity and certain variables of the four
|
|
domains mentioned above were analyzed using logistic regression
|
|
analysis.
|
|
Results
|
|
A significant difference in the rate of RTW between Jews and Arabs was
|
|
found (45.5\% for Jews, 28.9\% for Arabs, p = 0.03) three months post
|
|
HI. In the univariate regression analysis, ethnicity was associated with
|
|
RTW (OR = 2.05; CI: 1.10-3.81) for Jews vs. Arabs. Using a multivariate
|
|
analysis, only legal counseling, educational attainment, and the
|
|
severity of disability were significantly associated with RTW.
|
|
Conclusion
|
|
RTW three months post HI among manual workers is directly related to
|
|
variables such as education and legal counseling and only indirectly
|
|
related to ethnicity. Patients with a lower level of education and those
|
|
who were engaged in legal counseling need special attention and close
|
|
guidance in the process of RTW.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Marom, BS (Corresponding Author), Clalit Hlth Serv, Occupat Therapy Unit, Tiberias, Israel.
|
|
Marom, Batia S., Clalit Hlth Serv, Occupat Therapy Unit, Tiberias, Israel.
|
|
Sharabi, Moshe, Max Stern Yezreel Valley Coll, Sociol \& Anthropol Dept, Yezreel Valley, Israel.
|
|
Carel, Rafael S., Univ Haifa, Sch Publ Hlth, Haifa, Israel.
|
|
Ratzon, Navah Z., Tel Aviv Univ, Sackler Fac Med, Dept Occupat Therapy, Tel Aviv, Israel.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0229982},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0229982},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRAUMATIC BRAIN-INJURY; EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES; DISABILITY; CULTURE;
|
|
REHABILITATION; PARTICIPATION; DISPARITIES; VALIDATION; ARABS; JEWS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {batiamarom2@clalit.org.il},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Marom, Batia/0000-0002-5696-2335
|
|
Sharabi, Moshe/0000-0001-8570-8769},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000535278500049},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000298854800011,
|
|
Author = {Racine, Louise and Proctor, Peggy and Jewell, Lisa M.},
|
|
Title = {Putting the World as Classroom: An Application of the Inequalities
|
|
Imagination Model in Nursing and Health Education},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF TRANSCULTURAL NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {90-99},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {This article focuses on the description of an educational initiative,
|
|
the Interdisciplinary Population Health Project ( IPHP) conducted in the
|
|
academic year of 2006-2007 with a group of nursing and health care
|
|
students. Inspired by population health, community development, critical
|
|
pedagogy, and the inequalities imagination model, students participated
|
|
in diverse educational activities to become immersed in the everyday
|
|
life of an underserved urban neighborhood. A sample of convenience
|
|
composed of 158 students was recruited from 4 health disciplines in a
|
|
Western Canadian university. Data were collected using a modified
|
|
version of the Parsell and Bligh's Readiness of Health Care Students for
|
|
Interprofessional Learning Scale. A one group pretest-posttest design
|
|
was used to assess the outcomes of the IPHP. Paired t tests and one-way
|
|
analyses of variance were used to compare the responses of students from
|
|
different academic programs to determine if there were differences
|
|
across disciplines. Findings suggest that students' readiness to work in
|
|
interprofessional teams did not significantly change over the course of
|
|
their participation in the IPHP. However, the inequalities imagination
|
|
model may be useful to enhance the quality and the effectiveness of
|
|
fieldwork learning activities as a means of educating culturally and
|
|
socially conscious nurses and other health care professionals of the
|
|
future.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Racine, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Saskatchewan, Coll Nursing, 411 St Andrews,107 Wiggins Rd, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5E5, Canada.
|
|
Racine, Louise, Univ Saskatchewan, Coll Nursing, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5E5, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1043659611423832},
|
|
ISSN = {1043-6596},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-7832},
|
|
Keywords = {community health; public health policy; baccalaureate programs;
|
|
transcultural health; quasi-experimental designs; First Nations;
|
|
Caucasians; marginalized; underserved; poverty},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COMMUNITY-HEALTH; INCOME; DETERMINANTS; SASKATOON; KNOWLEDGE; DISPARITY;
|
|
STUDENTS; SCALES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {louise.racine@usask.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000298854800011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001060641700001,
|
|
Author = {Kong, Dandan and Li, Jing and Jin, Zehu},
|
|
Title = {Can Digital Economy Drive Income Level Growth in the Context of
|
|
Sustainable Development? Fresh Evidence from ``Broadband China{''}},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {17},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {In the context of the rapid development of digital economy and the
|
|
promotion of sustainable development, this paper focuses on the impact
|
|
of digital economy on income levels. Based on the panel data of 195
|
|
prefecture-level cities, the ``Broadband China{''} pilot has been
|
|
regarded as a natural experiment for the measurement of the digital
|
|
economy. In this paper, a time-varying DID model was established to
|
|
evaluate the influential effect of ``Broadband China{''} on income
|
|
growth. It was found that the coming into service of ``Broadband
|
|
China{''} has increased the overall income level of the Chinese labor
|
|
force. Further research found that ``Broadband China{''} has done more
|
|
to raise the income levels of the high-skilled labor force, thus
|
|
widening the income gap between the high-, medium-, and low-skilled
|
|
labor force. ``Broadband China{''} can affect the income growth via two
|
|
mechanisms, namely, ``increasing the entrepreneurship rate{''} and
|
|
``leading to an increase in the overall number of professional and
|
|
skilled labor force in China{''}. In this case, the entrepreneurship
|
|
rate of the high-skilled labor force may be higher than that of the
|
|
medium- and low-skilled labor force due to human capital accumulation.
|
|
The rapid increase in the high-skilled labor force in technical
|
|
industries will lead to the situation where their income growth effect
|
|
is higher than that of the medium- and low-skilled labor force. Based on
|
|
the above research results, this paper puts forward policy suggestions
|
|
from three aspects: further accelerating the process of digital economy;
|
|
improving the institutional environment of the broadband network and
|
|
standardizing the order of the construction of the broadband network;
|
|
and further stimulating the entrepreneurial motivation of labor force,
|
|
paying attention to the problem of skill bias and optimizing the
|
|
employment structure, balancing efficiency and equity, and contributing
|
|
to the ultimate sustainable development of developing countries.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kong, DD (Corresponding Author), Anhui Univ, Sch Econ, Hefei 230601, Peoples R China.
|
|
Kong, DD (Corresponding Author), Bozhou Univ, Dept Econ \& Management, Bozhou 236800, Peoples R China.
|
|
Kong, Dandan; Li, Jing; Jin, Zehu, Anhui Univ, Sch Econ, Hefei 230601, Peoples R China.
|
|
Kong, Dandan, Bozhou Univ, Dept Econ \& Management, Bozhou 236800, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su151713170},
|
|
Article-Number = {13170},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {digital economy; sustainability; Broadband China; income level;
|
|
high-skilled labor force; medium- and low-skilled labor force},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TECHNOLOGICAL-CHANGE; KUZNETS CURVE; INEQUALITY; IMPACT; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
INDUSTRY; RETURNS; WAGES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {kongtina@163.com
|
|
4028@ahu.edu.cn
|
|
2015@ahu.edu.cn},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001060641700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000331068600005,
|
|
Author = {Cortis, Natasha and Bullen, Jane and Hamilton, Myra},
|
|
Title = {Sustaining transitions from welfare to work: the perceptions of
|
|
employers and employment service providers},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {48},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {363-384},
|
|
Abstract = {Successive Australian Governments have sought to improve the capacity of
|
|
the employment service system to build jobseekers' skills and
|
|
capabilities and to promote transitions from income support to paid
|
|
work. Yet despite these efforts, many jobseekers experience only short
|
|
periods of employment, moving repeatedly between joblessness and
|
|
positions with low skill requirements, low pay and few or fluctuating
|
|
hours. This article explores ways to achieve more sustained transitions
|
|
from welfare to work for disadvantaged jobseekers. We draw on data from
|
|
a qualitative study of employment service providers who assisted
|
|
jobseekers into work and the managers in the organisations that employed
|
|
them. These informants' perspectives underline the importance of
|
|
improving the quality of jobs that require low levels of skills and
|
|
experience and demonstrate some ways employers and employment services
|
|
can better work together and provide more enduring and effective forms
|
|
of support.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/j.1839-4655.2013.tb00287.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0157-6321},
|
|
EISSN = {1839-4655},
|
|
Keywords = {employment services; welfare to work; jobseekers; employment policy; job
|
|
retention},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Issues},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cortis, Natasha/0000-0003-2035-6146},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000331068600005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000473341600010,
|
|
Author = {Moisa, I, N.},
|
|
Title = {Economic Integration of Immigrants through Overcoming Inequalities in
|
|
Employment and Wages. Comparative Analysis of British and French Muslim
|
|
Communities},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL CHANGES-FACTS TRENDS FORECAST},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {158-171},
|
|
Abstract = {The issue of immigration management is one of the most complex and
|
|
relevant both in academic science and practical politics. It polarizes
|
|
public opinion and provokes fierce debate. One of the most important
|
|
objective of the domestic policy of countries with a large number of
|
|
immigrants is effective socio-economic integration of foreign cultural
|
|
communities and consolidation of the civil society. The article deals
|
|
with the general issues of integration of Muslim immigrants in the UK
|
|
and France in the economy; provides data on their number, employment,
|
|
income and social status compared with the ethnic majority. The
|
|
information framework of the research includes official statistics,
|
|
sociological surveys, analytics of government institutions and
|
|
commissions, reports of well-known research centers and Muslim
|
|
organizations. Due to the peculiarities of statistics it is impossible
|
|
to directly compare the situation of British and French Muslims.
|
|
Moreover, in the UK and France, migrant integration is carried out
|
|
according to different historical models. The article demonstrates the
|
|
specific features of each country in migrant resettlement, the position
|
|
of Muslims in the labor market among various immigrant minorities, the
|
|
issues of the national policy in fighting against discrimination and
|
|
Islamophobia. The purpose of the article is to focus on objective
|
|
quantitative and qualitative indicators of economic activity of Muslim
|
|
immigrants in the two countries in question to overcome the existing
|
|
stereotypes and political speculation. Analysis of the economic status
|
|
of Muslims in the UK and France reveals a significant spread depending
|
|
on the country of origin, country of birth, belonging to the first or
|
|
the second generation of immigrants. The article concludes that the UK
|
|
opens up more opportunities for the economic integration of Muslims than
|
|
France.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Russian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Moisa, NI (Corresponding Author), MSU Moscow Sch Econ, 1 Leninskie Gory St, Moscow 420111, Russia.
|
|
Moisa, N., I, MSU Moscow Sch Econ, 1 Leninskie Gory St, Moscow 420111, Russia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.15838/esc.2019.3.63.10},
|
|
ISSN = {2307-0331},
|
|
EISSN = {2312-9824},
|
|
Keywords = {immigration; Muslims; economic integration of immigrants; the UK;
|
|
France; employment; labor market},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {moysa@mse-msu.ru},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {17},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000473341600010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000573369200001,
|
|
Author = {Subramaniam, Mythily and Zhang, Yunjue and Shahwan, Shazana and
|
|
Vaingankar, Janhavi Ajit and Satghare, Pratika and Teh, Wen Lin and
|
|
Roystonn, Kumarasan and Goh, Chong Min Janrius and Maniam, Yogeswary and
|
|
Tan, Zhuan Liang and Tay, Benjamin and Verma, Swapna and Chong, Siow Ann},
|
|
Title = {Employment of young people with mental health conditions: making it work},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Pages = {2033-2043},
|
|
Month = {MAY 8},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The current study was undertaken to understand and describe the
|
|
meaning of work as well as the barriers and facilitators perceived by
|
|
young people with mental health conditions for gaining and maintaining
|
|
employment. Materials and Methods Employing a purposive and maximum
|
|
variation sampling, 30 young people were recruited and interviewed. The
|
|
respondents were Singapore residents with a mean age of 26.8 years (SD =
|
|
4.5, range 20-34 years); the majority were males (56.7\%), of Chinese
|
|
ethnicity (63.3\%), and employed (73.3\%), at the time of the interview.
|
|
Verbatim transcripts were analysed using inductive thematic analysis.
|
|
Results Three global themes emerged from the analyses of the narratives,
|
|
which included (i) the meaning of employment, (ii) barriers to
|
|
employment comprising individual, interpersonal and systemic
|
|
difficulties and challenges participants faced while seeking and
|
|
sustaining employment and (iii) facilitators of employment that
|
|
consisted of individual and interpersonal factors that had helped the
|
|
young persons to gain and maintain employment. Conclusions Stigma and
|
|
discrimination emerged as one of the most frequently mentioned
|
|
employment barriers. These barriers are not insurmountable and can be
|
|
overcome both through legislation as well as through the training and
|
|
support of young people with mental health conditions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Subramaniam, M (Corresponding Author), Inst Mental Hlth, Res Div, Buangkok Green Med Pk,10, Singapore 539747, Singapore.
|
|
Subramaniam, Mythily; Zhang, Yunjue; Shahwan, Shazana; Vaingankar, Janhavi Ajit; Satghare, Pratika; Teh, Wen Lin; Roystonn, Kumarasan; Goh, Chong Min Janrius; Chong, Siow Ann, Inst Mental Hlth, Res Div, Buangkok Green Med Pk,10, Singapore 539747, Singapore.
|
|
Subramaniam, Mythily, Natl Univ Singapore, Saw Swee Hock Sch Publ Hlth, Singapore, Singapore.
|
|
Maniam, Yogeswary; Verma, Swapna, Inst Mental Hlth, Dept Early Psychosis Intervent, Singapore, Singapore.
|
|
Tan, Zhuan Liang; Tay, Benjamin, Natl Council Social Serv, Sect Strategy Grp, Singapore, Singapore.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09638288.2020.1822932},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Barriers; discrimination; employment; mental disorder; stigma; support},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; STRUCTURAL STIGMA; SCHIZOPHRENIA; EXPERIENCES;
|
|
PSYCHOSIS; INCOME; PARTICIPATION; PRODUCTIVITY; INTERVENTION;
|
|
PERSPECTIVES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {Mythily@imh.com.sg},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tay, Benjamin/0000-0003-4544-1224
|
|
Roystonn, Kumarasan/0000-0001-9100-0353},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000573369200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000175515700008,
|
|
Author = {Jones, CJ and Perkins, DV and Born, DL},
|
|
Title = {Predicting work outcomes and service use in supported employment
|
|
services for persons with psychiatric disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHIATRIC REHABILITATION JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {53-59},
|
|
Month = {SUM},
|
|
Abstract = {New funding policies make it timely to identify correlates of
|
|
effectiveness and efficiency in supported employment (SE) programs for
|
|
persons with psychiatric disabilities. In a statewide sample of SE
|
|
participants with serious mental illness, individual clinical
|
|
characteristics were unrelated to competitive work or hours of services
|
|
consumed. However, amounts of SE provider time devoted to travel,
|
|
training, and nonemployment advocacy were independently related to the
|
|
likelihood of obtaining competitive work. These results suggest that SE
|
|
providers should pursue an individualized, participant-driven model of
|
|
services that includes active efforts to remove logistical barriers to
|
|
community employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Perkins, DV (Corresponding Author), Ball State Univ, Dept Psychol Sci, Muncie, IN 47306 USA.
|
|
Ball State Univ, Dept Psychol Sci, Muncie, IN 47306 USA.
|
|
Univ Illinois, Community \& Prevent Res Program, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
Ctr Mental Hlth, Supported Employment Consultat \& Training Ctr, Anderson, IN USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/h0095050},
|
|
ISSN = {1095-158X},
|
|
EISSN = {1559-3126},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PEOPLE; REHABILITATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {dperkins@gw.bsu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {17},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000175515700008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000422973000017,
|
|
Author = {Hess, Moritz},
|
|
Title = {Expected and preferred retirement age in Germany},
|
|
Journal = {ZEITSCHRIFT FUR GERONTOLOGIE UND GERIATRIE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {51},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {98-104},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Over the last 10 years the German pension system has undergone several
|
|
reforms including the abandonment of early retirement policies and an
|
|
increase in the statutory retirement age. Consequently, the average
|
|
retirement age has increased and future retiree cohorts have adjusted
|
|
the retirement expectations and preferences as to when they would like
|
|
to retire.
|
|
This study was carried out to examine discrepancies between the expected
|
|
and the preferred retirement age of older workers in Germany and to
|
|
investigate how these discrepancies differ between groups of older
|
|
workers.
|
|
Based on data from the survey ``Employment after retirement{''}, the
|
|
expected and preferred retirement ages of 1500 workers aged 55 years and
|
|
older were compared. Regression analyses were used to investigate the
|
|
influence of educational level and professional position on deviances
|
|
between the expected and preferred retirement ages.
|
|
On average older workers would like to retire 1.75 years earlier than
|
|
they actually expect to. The deviance is significantly larger for
|
|
employees with a lower professional position, lower income and lower
|
|
educational level.
|
|
The discrepancy between expected and preferred retirement ages, in
|
|
particular for older workers in vulnerable labor market positions,
|
|
indicates a potential social inequality regarding the choice of
|
|
retirement timing. This must be acknowledged when considering further
|
|
reforms of the German pension system.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hess, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Mannheim, Mannheim Ctr European Social Res MZES, D-68131 Mannheim, Germany.
|
|
Hess, Moritz, Univ Mannheim, Mannheim Ctr European Social Res MZES, D-68131 Mannheim, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s00391-016-1053-x},
|
|
ISSN = {0948-6704},
|
|
EISSN = {1435-1269},
|
|
Keywords = {Retirement; Occupational status; Social class; Public policy; Social
|
|
inequality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LONGITUDINAL ANALYSIS; CAREER; TREND; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geriatrics \& Gerontology; Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {moritz.hess@mzes.uni-mannheim.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hess, Moritz/AAD-1845-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hess, Moritz/0000-0003-4095-6448},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {24},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000422973000017},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000184064100012,
|
|
Author = {Drake, RE and Becker, DR and Bond, GR},
|
|
Title = {Recent research on vocational rehabilitation for persons with severe
|
|
mental illness},
|
|
Journal = {CURRENT OPINION IN PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {451-455},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose of review
|
|
This review examines the 2002 literature on vocational services for
|
|
people with psychiatric disabilities.
|
|
Recent findings
|
|
Vocational rehabilitation has emerged as a mainstream intervention in
|
|
community mental health, and supported employment has become an
|
|
evidence-based practice. In addition to clarifying and confirming the
|
|
effectiveness and principles of supported employment, the literature
|
|
describes clients' needs, innovative modifications of supported
|
|
employment for special groups, the subjective experiences and
|
|
non-vocational outcomes of clients related to employment, impacts of the
|
|
Americans with Disabilities Act, costs of vocational services, cultural
|
|
disparities, and the development of vocational services in other
|
|
countries.
|
|
Summary
|
|
Increasing demands for employment services and for empirical outcomes
|
|
influence clinical practice. Supported employment has by far the
|
|
strongest evidence base of any vocational intervention for people with
|
|
psychiatric disabilities and continues to be disseminated rapidly.
|
|
Further research is needed to clarify the principles, impacts, and
|
|
modifications of supported employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Drake, RE (Corresponding Author), New Hampshire Dartmouth Psychiat Res Ctr, 2 Whipple Pl, Lebanon, NH 03766 USA.
|
|
Dartmouth Coll Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, Lebanon, NH USA.
|
|
Dartmouth Coll Sch Med, Dept Community \& Family Med, Lebanon, NH USA.
|
|
Indiana Univ Purdue Univ, Dept Psychol, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/01.yco.0000079209.36371.84},
|
|
ISSN = {0951-7367},
|
|
EISSN = {1473-6578},
|
|
Keywords = {vocational rehabilitation; supported employment; mental illness},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; PSYCHIATRIC DISABILITIES; SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; WORK
|
|
PERFORMANCE; SUBSTANCE USE; PEOPLE; PROGRAM; SCHIZOPHRENIA;
|
|
OPPORTUNITIES; DYNAMICS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {robert.e.drake@dartmouth.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Drake, Robert/AAS-3310-2020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {41},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000184064100012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000361562800002,
|
|
Author = {Wu, Yuxiao and Zhou, Dongyang},
|
|
Title = {Women's Labor Force Participation in Urban China, 1990-2010},
|
|
Journal = {CHINESE SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {314-342},
|
|
Abstract = {Using a series of survey and census/mini-census data, this paper
|
|
explores the trends of women's labor force participation (WLFP) and
|
|
estimates the key factors affecting women's labor supply in urban China
|
|
between 1990 and 2010. Our results show that WLFP in urban China had
|
|
changed dramatically from 1990 to 2010. The rates of WLFP had dropped
|
|
drastically during the 1990s and early 2000s. In 2003, WLFP showed a
|
|
steady trend of increase. Since 2003, WLFP had become more and more
|
|
responsive to incomes from other family members. Specifically, women
|
|
from poorer families have been more likely to join the labor force over
|
|
time. We argue that Chinese women's labor supply had been driven by
|
|
different social or economic forces in different historical stages. From
|
|
1990 to 2003, the sharp decline of WLFP may have been caused by
|
|
institutional transformation (market transition) starting from early
|
|
1980s and the radical layoff policy of publicly-owned enterprises (POEs)
|
|
in the late 1990s. The steady increase of WLFP since 2003 may have been
|
|
driven by the surge of living costs (e.g., housing, education, and
|
|
healthcare) in urban China.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wu, YX (Corresponding Author), Nanjing Univ, Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Dept Sociol, 163 Xianlin Ave, Nanjing 210008, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
|
|
Wu, Yuxiao; Zhou, Dongyang, Nanjing Univ, Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Dept Sociol, Nanjing 210008, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/21620555.2015.1036234},
|
|
ISSN = {2162-0555},
|
|
EISSN = {2162-0563},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MARITAL CONSTRUCTION; PROBIT COEFFICIENTS; DECISION-MAKING; INEQUALITY;
|
|
GENDER; EMPLOYMENT; MARRIAGE; EARNINGS; EDUCATION; LOGIT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {yxwu2013@nju.edu.cn},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Wu, Yuxiao/HZI-9996-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Wu, Yuxiao/0000-0002-5663-071X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {34},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000361562800002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001009264200001,
|
|
Author = {Goel, Rahul},
|
|
Title = {Gender gap in mobility outside home in urban India},
|
|
Journal = {TRAVEL BEHAVIOUR AND SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {India has one of the highest levels of gender inequality in the world.
|
|
Work participation rate of women is among the lowest, with a wide gender
|
|
gap. There are seclusion norms that restrict the mobility of women
|
|
outside the home. However, transport literature in India has not
|
|
explored the impact of this lack of autonomy on gender differences in
|
|
travel demand. I use 2019 population-representative nationwide time-use
|
|
survey of India. The dataset reported both travel and non-travel
|
|
activities for 30-minute episodes over a 24-hour period. For urban
|
|
residents, I analysed gender differences in trip rates and mobility
|
|
rates, where the latter is defined as the per-centage going out of home
|
|
at least once on the reporting day. I developed gender-stratified
|
|
logistic regression models at the individual level with mobility as a
|
|
binary outcome. It was found that 53\% of the females did not report
|
|
going out of the home compared to only 14\% of males. The mobility of
|
|
females reduces steeply from adolescence to young adulthood and then
|
|
remains largely stable at a low level before reducing further for older
|
|
adults. No such variation is observed among males, except their mobility
|
|
is also reduced among older adults. There is a clear dichotomy with
|
|
women mostly participating in in-house activities while men mostly
|
|
involved in out-of-home activities. Adolescence or adulthood, marriage,
|
|
living with one or more household members, having an infant in the
|
|
house, lower income, and less education are associated with a lower
|
|
likelihood of female mobility. The results highlight the need for
|
|
gender-stratified analysis for transportation research, and a need for
|
|
greater engagement across the disciplines of development economics,
|
|
social sciences, and transport planning.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Goel, R (Corresponding Author), Indian Inst Technol Delhi, Transportat Res \& Injury Prevent Ctr, Delhi, India.
|
|
Goel, Rahul, Indian Inst Technol Delhi, Transportat Res \& Injury Prevent Ctr, Delhi, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.tbs.2023.01.004},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2023},
|
|
Article-Number = {100559},
|
|
ISSN = {2214-367X},
|
|
EISSN = {2214-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender; Time use; Trip rate; Mobility; India; Urban},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRAVEL BEHAVIOR; TIME USE; WOMEN; CITY; EMPLOYMENT; CHILDREN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Transportation},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001009264200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000424701900008,
|
|
Author = {Jou, Judy and Kozhimannil, Katy B. and Abraham, Jean M. and Blewett,
|
|
Lynn A. and McGovern, Patricia M.},
|
|
Title = {Paid Maternity Leave in the United States: Associations with Maternal
|
|
and Infant Health},
|
|
Journal = {MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {216-225},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives The United States is one of only three countries worldwide
|
|
with no national policy guaranteeing paid leave to employed women who
|
|
give birth. While maternity leave has been linked to improved maternal
|
|
and child outcomes in international contexts, up-to-date research
|
|
evidence in the U.S. context is needed to inform current policy debates
|
|
on paid family leave. Methods Using data from Listening to Mothers III,
|
|
a national survey of women ages 18-45 who gave birth in 2011-2012, we
|
|
conducted multivariate logistic regression to predict the likelihood of
|
|
outcomes related to infant health, maternal physical and mental health,
|
|
and maternal health behaviors by the use and duration of paid maternity
|
|
leave. Results Use of paid and unpaid leave varied significantly by
|
|
race/ethnicity and household income. Women who took paid maternity leave
|
|
experienced a 47\% decrease in the odds of re-hospitalizing their
|
|
infants (95\% CI 0.3, 1.0) and a 51\% decrease in the odds of being
|
|
re-hospitalized themselves (95\% CI 0.3, 0.9) at 21 months postpartum,
|
|
compared to women taking unpaid or no leave. They also had 1.8 times the
|
|
odds of doing well with exercise (95\% CI 1.1, 3.0) and stress
|
|
management (95\% CI 1.1, 2.8), compared to women taking only unpaid
|
|
leave. Conclusions for Practice Paid maternity leave significantly
|
|
predicts lower odds of maternal and infant re-hospitalization and higher
|
|
odds of doing well with exercise and stress management. Policies aimed
|
|
at expanding access to paid maternity and family leave may contribute
|
|
toward reducing socio-demographic disparities in paid leave use and its
|
|
associated health benefits.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jou, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Minnesota, Div Hlth Policy \& Management, Sch Publ Hlth, 420 Delaware St SE,MMC 729, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
|
|
Jou, Judy; Kozhimannil, Katy B.; Abraham, Jean M.; Blewett, Lynn A., Univ Minnesota, Div Hlth Policy \& Management, Sch Publ Hlth, 420 Delaware St SE,MMC 729, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
|
|
McGovern, Patricia M., Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Environm Hlth Sci, Minneapolis, MN USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10995-017-2393-x},
|
|
ISSN = {1092-7875},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-6628},
|
|
Keywords = {Maternity leave; Family and Medical Leave Act; Maternal health; Infant
|
|
health; Health behavior},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK-FAMILY POLICIES; PHYSICAL HEALTH; CHILD HEALTH; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
MOTHERS; OUTCOMES; COUNTRIES; DURATION; PRETERM; QUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jouxx008@umn.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jou, Judy/0000-0003-2446-1744},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {76},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {35},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000424701900008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000514833200047,
|
|
Author = {Mayfield, Erin N. and Cohon, Jared L. and Muller, Nicholas Z. and
|
|
Azevedo, Ines M. L. and Robinson, Allen L.},
|
|
Title = {Quantifying the social equity state of an energy system: environmental
|
|
and labor market equity of the shale gas boom in Appalachia},
|
|
Journal = {ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {A fundamental societal concern in energy system transitions is the
|
|
distribution of benefits and costs across populations. A recent
|
|
transition, the US shale gas boom, has dramatically altered the domestic
|
|
energy outlook and global markets; however, the social equity
|
|
implications have not been meaningfully assessed and accounted for in
|
|
public and private decision making. In this study, we develop and
|
|
demonstrate a systematic approach to quantify the multi-dimensional
|
|
equity state of an energy system, with a focus on the shale gas boom in
|
|
the Appalachian basin. We tailor variants of standard equity metrics as
|
|
well as develop new empirical and analytical methods and metrics to
|
|
assess spatial, temporal, income, and racial equity as it relates to air
|
|
quality, climate change, and labor market impacts across the natural gas
|
|
supply chain. We find moderate to high spatial inequities with respect
|
|
to the distribution of production (Gini coefficient (y) = 0.93),
|
|
consumption for electric power generation (77 = 0.68), commercial,
|
|
industrial, and residential end use (77 = 0.72), job creation (77 =
|
|
0.72), and air pollution-related deaths (77 = 0.77), which are largely
|
|
driven by geographicallyfixed natural gas abundance and demand. Air
|
|
quality impacts are also regressive, such that mortality risk induced by
|
|
natural gas activity generally increases as income decreases; for
|
|
example, mortality risk (m) (in units of premature mortality per 100 000
|
|
people) for the lowest income class (<\$15 000; m = 0.22 in 2016) is
|
|
higher (18\%-31\%) than for the highest income class (>\$150 000; m =
|
|
0.27 in 2016). These risks are higher for white (m = 0.30 in 2016) than
|
|
non-white (m = 0.16 in 2016) populations, which is largely a result of
|
|
the demographics of rural communities within the vicinity of natural gas
|
|
development. With respect to local labor market impacts within producing
|
|
counties, we find marginal declines in income inequality (2.8\% 1.0\%)
|
|
and poverty rates (9.9\% 1.7\%) during the boom, although household
|
|
income increases for the wealthiest and decreases for the poorest. At a
|
|
systems-level, there is an implied air quality-employment tradeoff of 3
|
|
(<1 to 7) job-years created per life-year lost; this tradeoff varies
|
|
spatially (-1100 to 4400 life-years lost minus job-years created),
|
|
wherein the job benefit outweighs the air quality costs in most
|
|
producing counties whereas in all other counties the reverse is true. We
|
|
also observe temporal inequities, with air quality and employment
|
|
impacts following the boom-and-bust cycle, while climate impacts are
|
|
largely borne by future generations. Cross-impact elasticities (c),
|
|
which measure the sensitivity between different types of impacts, reveal
|
|
that employment increases are sensitive to and coupled with increases in
|
|
air and climate impacts (c = 1.1 and c = 1.3, respectively). The metrics
|
|
applied here facilitate the evaluation and design of countervailing
|
|
policies and systems that explicitly account for social inequities
|
|
mediated through energy infrastructure, supply, and demand. For example,
|
|
in future energy system transition, such equity metrics can be used to
|
|
facilitate decisions related to the siting oflow-carbon infrastructure
|
|
such as transmission lines and wind turbines and the phase -out of
|
|
fossil fuel infrastructure, as well as to demonstrate changes in
|
|
distributional tradeoffs such as the decoupling of environmental and
|
|
employment effects.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Robinson, AL (Corresponding Author), Carnegie Mellon Univ, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA.
|
|
Mayfield, Erin N., Princeton Univ, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA.
|
|
Cohon, Jared L.; Muller, Nicholas Z.; Robinson, Allen L., Carnegie Mellon Univ, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA.
|
|
Azevedo, Ines M. L., Stanford Univ, Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1088/1748-9326/ab59cd},
|
|
Article-Number = {124072},
|
|
ISSN = {1748-9326},
|
|
Keywords = {energy systems; natural gas; equity; air quality; climate change; labor
|
|
markets},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FOSSIL-FUEL; MARCELLUS; JUSTICE; IMPACTS; EMPLOYMENT; EMISSIONS; INCOME;
|
|
RISKS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Meteorology \& Atmospheric Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {alr@andrew.cmu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Azevedo, Inês/HNQ-6690-2023
|
|
Robinson, Allen L/M-3046-2014
|
|
Azevedo, José Manuel Neto/C-1504-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Robinson, Allen L/0000-0002-1819-083X
|
|
Azevedo, José Manuel Neto/0000-0003-2573-1371
|
|
Azevedo, Ines/0000-0002-4755-8656
|
|
Muller, Nicholas/0000-0003-1712-6526
|
|
Mayfield, Erin/0000-0001-9843-8905},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000514833200047},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000570407800001,
|
|
Author = {Tattevin, Pierre and Levy Hara, Gabriel and Toumi, Adnene and Enani,
|
|
Mushira and Coombs, Geoffrey and Voss, Andreas and Wertheim, Heiman and
|
|
Poda, Armel and Daoud, Ziad and Laxminarayan, Ramanan and Nathwani,
|
|
Dilip and Gould, Ian and APUA and ISAC},
|
|
Title = {Advocacy for Increased International Efforts for Antimicrobial
|
|
Stewardship Actions in Low-and Middle-Income Countries on Behalf of
|
|
Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antimicrobials (APUA), Under the
|
|
Auspices of the International Society of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
|
|
(ISAC)},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Month = {AUG 25},
|
|
Abstract = {Antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) is a set of coordinated strategies to
|
|
improve the use of antimicrobials, to enhance patient outcomes, reduce
|
|
antimicrobial resistance, and decrease unnecessary costs. The pioneer
|
|
years of AMS were restricted to high-income countries (HIC), where
|
|
overconsumption of antibiotics was associated with emergence of
|
|
multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria. AMS in low- and middle-income
|
|
countries (LMIC) is also necessary. However, programs effective in HIC
|
|
may not perform as well in LMIC, because (i) While decreased consumption
|
|
of antibiotics may be an appropriate target in overconsuming HIC, this
|
|
may be dangerous in LMIC, where many patients die from the lack of
|
|
access to antibiotics; (ii) although AMS programs in HIC can be designed
|
|
and monitored through laboratory surveillance of resistance,
|
|
surveillance programs are not available in many LMIC; (iii) the
|
|
heterogeneity of health care systems implies that AMS programs must be
|
|
carefully contextualized. Despite the need to individually tailor AMS
|
|
programs in LMIC, international collaborations remain highly valuable,
|
|
through the dissemination of high-quality documents and educational
|
|
material, that may be shared, adapted where needed, and adopted
|
|
worldwide. This process, facilitated by modern communication tools,
|
|
combines many benefits, including: (i) saving time, a precious dimension
|
|
for health care workers, by avoiding the duplication of similar works in
|
|
different settings; (ii) taking advantage of colleagues skills, and
|
|
initiatives, through open access to the work performed in other parts of
|
|
the world; (iii) sharing experiences, so that we all learn from each
|
|
others' successes and failures.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tattevin, P (Corresponding Author), Pontchaillou Univ, Infect Dis \& Intens Care Unit, Ctr Hosp, Rennes, France.
|
|
Tattevin, Pierre, Pontchaillou Univ, Infect Dis \& Intens Care Unit, Ctr Hosp, Rennes, France.
|
|
Levy Hara, Gabriel, Hosp Carlos G Durand, Infect Dis Unit, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
|
|
Toumi, Adnene, Monastir Univ Hosp, Dept Infect Dis, Monastir, Tunisia.
|
|
Enani, Mushira, King Fahad Med City, Fac Med, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
|
|
Coombs, Geoffrey, Murdoch Univ, Antimicrobial Resistance \& Infect Dis Res Lab, Perth, WA, Australia.
|
|
Voss, Andreas, Canisius Wilhelmina Hosp, Dept Med Microbiol \& Infect Dis, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
|
|
Voss, Andreas; Wertheim, Heiman, Radboudumc, Dept Med Microbiol, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
|
|
Voss, Andreas; Wertheim, Heiman, Radboud Ctr Infect Dis, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
|
|
Poda, Armel, Souro Sanou Univ Hosp, Dept Infect Dis, Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso.
|
|
Daoud, Ziad, St George Hosp UMC, Clin Microbiol, Beirut, Lebanon.
|
|
Daoud, Ziad, Univ Balamand, Beirut, Lebanon.
|
|
Laxminarayan, Ramanan, Ctr Dis Dynam Econ \& Policy CDDEP, New Delhi, India.
|
|
Nathwani, Dilip, Ninewells Hosp \& Med Sch, Dundee, Scotland.
|
|
Gould, Ian, Aberdeen Royal Infirm, Aberdeen, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fmed.2020.00503},
|
|
Article-Number = {503},
|
|
EISSN = {2296-858X},
|
|
Keywords = {antimicrobial stewardship; low; and middle; income countries;
|
|
antibiotics; resistance; education},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ANTIBIOTIC STEWARDSHIP; INTERVENTIONS; IMPACT; MANAGEMENT; PROGRAM;
|
|
DISEASE; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {pierre.tattevin@chu-rennes.fr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Laxminarayan, Ramanan/ABD-5050-2021
|
|
Daoud, Ziad/AAW-7121-2021
|
|
Wertheim, Heiman/F-3338-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Daoud, Ziad/0000-0001-7139-6282
|
|
Coombs, Geoffrey/0000-0003-1635-6506
|
|
Wertheim, Heiman/0000-0002-5003-5565},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000570407800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000396679800006,
|
|
Author = {de Hoon, Sean and Keizer, Renske and Dykstra, Pearl},
|
|
Title = {The influence of motherhood on income: do partner characteristics and
|
|
parity matter?},
|
|
Journal = {COMMUNITY WORK \& FAMILY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {211-225},
|
|
Abstract = {Although the economic independence of women has been greatly advanced in
|
|
recent decades, it continues to lag far behind men's in the Netherlands
|
|
and elsewhere. The negative consequences of motherhood are an important
|
|
driving force behind women's abiding lower income. Although mother's
|
|
lower earnings have received a substantial amount of attention from
|
|
scholars and the underlying mechanisms are well established,
|
|
surprisingly little is known about mitigating factors. This article
|
|
contributes to the literature by investigating how the earnings
|
|
disadvantage of mothers is affected by partner characteristics and by
|
|
parity. We formulate hypotheses about the effect of a partner's working
|
|
hours, his earnings and his gender role orientations, on the earnings
|
|
disadvantage associated with motherhood. Furthermore, we examine the
|
|
role of parity in this earnings disadvantage. Our hypotheses are tested
|
|
using longitudinal data from the first three waves of the Netherlands
|
|
Kinship Panel Study. Our hypotheses concerning partner characteristics
|
|
are not supported. The earnings disadvantage of mothers is hardly
|
|
affected by them. We do find that parity matters greatly in examining
|
|
the effect that motherhood has on women's earnings. The transition to
|
|
motherhood has a much larger effect on earnings than the birth of
|
|
subsequent children. The implications of these findings and the
|
|
specificity of the Dutch context are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {de Hoon, S (Corresponding Author), Erasmus Univ, Dept Sociol, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
de Hoon, Sean; Keizer, Renske; Dykstra, Pearl, Erasmus Univ, Dept Sociol, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Keizer, Renske, Univ Amsterdam, Dept Child Dev \& Educ, Amsterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/13668803.2016.1227770},
|
|
ISSN = {1366-8803},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-3615},
|
|
Keywords = {Motherhood; parity; inequality; earnings; partner},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILD-CARE; HOUSEHOLD DIVISION; WOMENS EARNINGS; WAGE PENALTY; LABOR;
|
|
GENDER; WORK; PARTICIPATION; PERSPECTIVE; RESOURCES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {dehoon@fsw.eur.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dykstra, Pearl/E-9679-2013
|
|
Dykstra, Pearl/AAC-3494-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dykstra, Pearl/0000-0003-1518-1476
|
|
Dykstra, Pearl/0000-0003-1518-1476},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000396679800006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000294438000001,
|
|
Author = {Gordon, Louisa G. and Lynch, Brigid M. and Beesley, Vanessa L. and
|
|
Graves, Nicholas and McGrath, Catherine and O'Rourke, Peter and Webb,
|
|
Penelope M.},
|
|
Title = {The Working After Cancer Study (WACS): a population-based study of
|
|
middle-aged workers diagnosed with colorectal cancer and their return to
|
|
work experiences},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Month = {JUL 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The number of middle-aged working individuals being
|
|
diagnosed with cancer is increasing and so too will disruptions to their
|
|
employment. The aim of the Working After Cancer Study is to examine the
|
|
changes to work participation in the 12 months following a diagnosis of
|
|
primary colorectal cancer. The study will identify barriers to work
|
|
resumption, describe limitations on workforce participation, and
|
|
evaluate the influence of these factors on health-related quality of
|
|
life.
|
|
Methods/Design: An observational population-based study has been
|
|
designed involving 260 adults newly-diagnosed with colorectal cancer
|
|
between January 2010 and September 2011 and who were in paid employment
|
|
at the time they were diagnosed. These cancer cases will be compared to
|
|
a nationally representative comparison group of 520 adults with no
|
|
history of cancer from the general population. Eligible cases will have
|
|
a histologically confirmed diagnosis of colorectal cancer and will be
|
|
identified through the Queensland Cancer Registry. Data on the
|
|
comparison group will be drawn from the Household, Income and Labour
|
|
Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey. Data collection for the cancer
|
|
group will occur at 6 and 12 months after diagnosis, with work questions
|
|
also asked about the time of diagnosis, while retrospective data on the
|
|
comparison group will be come from HILDA Waves 2009 and 2010. Using
|
|
validated instruments administered via telephone and postal surveys,
|
|
data will be collected on socio-demographic factors, work status and
|
|
circumstances, and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) for both
|
|
groups while the cases will have additional data collected on cancer
|
|
treatment and symptoms, work productivity and cancer-related HRQoL.
|
|
Primary outcomes include change in work participation at 12 months, time
|
|
to work re-entry, work limitations and change in HRQoL status.
|
|
Discussion: This study will address the reasons for work cessation after
|
|
cancer, the mechanisms people use to remain working and existing
|
|
workplace support structures and the implications for individuals,
|
|
families and workplaces. It may also provide key information for
|
|
governments on productivity losses.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gordon, LG (Corresponding Author), Griffith Univ, Griffith Hlth Inst, Ctr Appl Hlth Econ, Univ Dr, Meadowbrook, Qld Q4131, Australia.
|
|
Gordon, Louisa G.; McGrath, Catherine, Griffith Univ, Griffith Hlth Inst, Ctr Appl Hlth Econ, Meadowbrook, Qld Q4131, Australia.
|
|
Gordon, Louisa G.; Beesley, Vanessa L.; O'Rourke, Peter; Webb, Penelope M., Queensland Inst Med Res, Populat Hlth Dept, Brisbane, Qld Q4006, Australia.
|
|
Gordon, Louisa G.; Beesley, Vanessa L.; Graves, Nicholas; O'Rourke, Peter, Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Publ Hlth, Brisbane, Qld Q4006, Australia.
|
|
Lynch, Brigid M., Alberta Hlth Serv Canc Care, Dept Populat Hlth Res, Calgary, AB T2N 4N2, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1471-2458-11-604},
|
|
Article-Number = {604},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BREAST-CANCER; SURVIVORS; QUESTIONNAIRE; PARTICIPATION; RELIABILITY;
|
|
INSTRUMENT; VALIDITY; COHORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {louisa.gordon@griffith.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Webb, Penelope/D-5736-2013
|
|
Graves, Nicholas/A-3052-2011
|
|
Beesley, Vanessa/AAX-5677-2021
|
|
Gordon, Louisa/P-1427-2016
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Webb, Penelope/0000-0003-0733-5930
|
|
Gordon, Louisa/0000-0002-3159-4249
|
|
Lynch, Brigid/0000-0001-8060-547X
|
|
Beesley, Vanessa/0000-0002-5081-1800
|
|
Graves, Nicholas/0000-0002-5559-3267},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000294438000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1994NT92500004,
|
|
Author = {JAMROZIK, A},
|
|
Title = {FROM HARVESTER TO DEREGULATION - WAGE-EARNERS IN THE AUSTRALIAN
|
|
WELFARE-STATE},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES},
|
|
Year = {1994},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {162-170},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {The significance of the Harvester Judgment in 1907 was not only in the
|
|
establishment of a `fair and reasonable' wage, which became known as the
|
|
basic wage, but also in the principle that wages had to meet at least
|
|
the basic social needs of the worker's family. Income earned through
|
|
employment was thus regarded as primary welfare. These principles in
|
|
wage determination were discarded in the 1960s and the de-regulation
|
|
policies of the 1980s further increased the division between employment
|
|
and social needs. Exacerbated by the endemic high levels of
|
|
unemployment, the progressive de-regulation of the labour marked since
|
|
the 1980s has been one of the most significant causative factors in the
|
|
growing inequality in Australia.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {JAMROZIK, A (Corresponding Author), FLINDERS UNIV S AUSTRALIA,BEDFORD PK,SA 5042,AUSTRALIA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/j.1839-4655.1994.tb00941.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0157-6321},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Issues},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {11},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1994NT92500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000293187200003,
|
|
Author = {Tracy, Melissa and Kruk, Margaret E. and Harper, Christine and Galea,
|
|
Sandro},
|
|
Title = {Neo-liberal economic practices and population health: a cross-national
|
|
analysis, 1980-2004},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH ECONOMICS POLICY AND LAW},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {5},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {171-199},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Although there has been substantial debate and research concerning the
|
|
economic impact of neo-liberal practices, there is a paucity of research
|
|
about the potential relation between neo-liberal economic practices and
|
|
population health. We assessed the extent to which neo-liberal policies
|
|
and practices are associated with population health at the national
|
|
level. We collected data on 119 countries between 1980 and 2004. We
|
|
measured neo-liberalism using the Fraser Institute's Economic Freedom of
|
|
the World (EFW) Index, which gives an overall score as well as a score
|
|
for each of five different aspects of neo-liberal economic practices:
|
|
(1) size of government, (2) legal structure and security of property
|
|
rights, (3) access to sound money, (4) freedom to exchange with
|
|
foreigners and (5) regulation of credit, labor and business. Our measure
|
|
of population health was under-five mortality. We controlled for
|
|
potential mediators (income distribution, social capital and openness of
|
|
political institutions) and confounders (female literacy, total
|
|
population, rural population, fertility, gross domestic product per
|
|
capita and time period). In longitudinal multivariable analyses, we
|
|
found that the EFW index did not have an effect on child mortality but
|
|
that two of its components: improved security of property rights and
|
|
access to sound money were associated with lower under-five mortality (p
|
|
= 0.017 and p = 0.024, respectively). When stratifying the countries by
|
|
level of income, less regulation of credit, labor and business was
|
|
associated with lower under-five mortality in high-income countries (p =
|
|
0.001). None of the EFW components were significantly associated with
|
|
under-five mortality in low-income countries. This analysis suggests
|
|
that the concept of `neo-liberalism' is not a monolithic entity in its
|
|
relation to health and that some `neo-liberal' policies are consistent
|
|
with improved population health. Further work is needed to corroborate
|
|
or refute these findings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Galea, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Michigan, Ctr Global Hlth, 109 Observ St,Room 3663, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Galea, Sandro, Univ Michigan, Ctr Global Hlth, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Tracy, Melissa; Harper, Christine, Univ Michigan, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/S1744133109990181},
|
|
ISSN = {1744-1331},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WELFARE-STATE INSTITUTIONS; LESS-DEVELOPED-COUNTRIES; INFANT-MORTALITY
|
|
RATES; INCOME INEQUALITY; CHILD-MORTALITY; SOCIAL COHESION; LIFE
|
|
EXPECTANCY; DETERMINANTS; POLICIES; NEOLIBERALISM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {sgalea@umich.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Galea, Sandro/GLR-6066-2022
|
|
Kruk, Margaret E/E-3058-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kruk, Margaret E/0000-0002-9549-8432
|
|
Galea, Sandro/0000-0002-7534-0945},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {85},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000293187200003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1994QD05600002,
|
|
Author = {SINGH, RP},
|
|
Title = {DIFFERENTIAL IMPACT OF NEW TECHNOLOGY ON RURAL INCOME AND EMPLOYMENT IN
|
|
DRYLAND REGIONS OF INDIA},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {1994},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {489-513},
|
|
Month = {OCT-DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The paper examines the basic issue of impact of new technology on
|
|
employment and income distribution in the rural areas of India's
|
|
Semi-Arid Tropics. The analysis indicates that in general average income
|
|
of rural households in dryland areas is quite low. However, the mean
|
|
income level is substantially higher in those assured rainfall villages
|
|
where the adoption of new technology is higher than in those villages
|
|
where rainfall is low and erratic and the adoption of improved seeds,
|
|
use of fertilizer and access to irrigation is limited. The differential
|
|
effect of new technology in different regions is partly because of
|
|
geographic physical conditions and level of infrastructure development.
|
|
The income is more equitably distributed in those villages where mean
|
|
level of income is low than in those where mean level of income is high.
|
|
There is a clear indication of improvement in the level of income in
|
|
almost all the villages but percentage increase in income was relatively
|
|
higher in those villages where the technical change was also higher.
|
|
Though, there was some improvement in the income distribution over time
|
|
in all the villages, the trend in the inequality does not indicate any
|
|
clear improvement in income distribution. This suggests that despite
|
|
increase in the income level, the inequality has not worsened over time.
|
|
In other words, it can be said that atleast the new technology has not
|
|
increased the inequality.
|
|
The new technology has reduced the poverty proportionately more in
|
|
progressive village than in less progressive village. Most of the income
|
|
gains in these villages came from crops specially in those villages
|
|
where adoption of new technology was high. In the less progressive
|
|
village wage earnings were equally important in improving the level of
|
|
income. This also indicates that inequality in productive resources
|
|
specially land and investment in irrigation are important factors
|
|
contributing to inequality. Increased farm and off-farm employment
|
|
opportunities due to new technology help the lower income group of
|
|
households to earn more income and reduce inequality. All households
|
|
gain from technological progress but the top and bottom income groups
|
|
gain proportionately more than the middle.
|
|
The investment in irrigation, improved seeds and fertilizer
|
|
substantially contribute to the agricultural productivity and the
|
|
differential use of these inputs leads to increased regional as well as
|
|
within the village disparities in income. The village differences also
|
|
contribute considerably to the variability in income because of
|
|
differences in the agro-climatic factors such as pattern of rainfall,
|
|
cropping pattern and type of soil but within village differences in the
|
|
farmer's resource base, labour participation and their managerial
|
|
practices are the largest contributors to income variability.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {SINGH, RP (Corresponding Author), NIRD, FAC ECON, HYDERABAD 500030, INDIA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0970-3357},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Regional \& Urban Planning},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {11},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1994QD05600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000551661300011,
|
|
Author = {Liu, Yanyan and Barrett, Christopher B. and Pham, Trinh and Violette,
|
|
William},
|
|
Title = {The intertemporal evolution of agriculture and labor over a rapid
|
|
structural transformation: Lessons from Vietnam},
|
|
Journal = {FOOD POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {94},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {We combine nationally representative household and labor force survey
|
|
data from 1992 to 2016 to provide a detailed description of rural labor
|
|
market evolution and how it relates to the structural transformation of
|
|
rural Vietnam, especially within the agricultural sector. Our study adds
|
|
to the emerging literature on structural transformation in low-income
|
|
countries using micro-level data and helps to answer several
|
|
policy-related questions. We find limited employment creation potential
|
|
of agriculture, especially for youth. Rural-urban real wage convergence
|
|
has gone hand-in-hand with increased diversification of the rural
|
|
economy into the non-farm sector nationwide and rapid advances in
|
|
educational attainment in all sectors' and regions' workforce. Minimum
|
|
wage laws seem to have played no significant role in increasing
|
|
agricultural wages. This enhanced integration also manifests in steady
|
|
attenuation of the longstanding inverse farm size-yield relationship.
|
|
Farming has remained securely household-based and the family farmland
|
|
distribution has remained largely unchanged. Small farm sizes have not
|
|
obstructed mechanization nor the uptake of labor-saving pesticides,
|
|
consistent with factor substitution induced by rising real wage rates.
|
|
As rural households rely more heavily on the labor market, human capital
|
|
accumulation (rather than land endowments) have become the key correlate
|
|
of improvements in rural household well-being.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Liu, YY (Corresponding Author), Int Food Policy Res Inst, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
|
|
Pham, T (Corresponding Author), Cornell Univ, Dyson Sch Appl Econ \& Management, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.
|
|
Liu, Yanyan, Int Food Policy Res Inst, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
|
|
Barrett, Christopher B.; Pham, Trinh, Cornell Univ, Dyson Sch Appl Econ \& Management, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.
|
|
Violette, William, Fed Trade Commiss, Washington, DC 20580 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.foodpol.2020.101913},
|
|
Article-Number = {101913},
|
|
ISSN = {0306-9192},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5657},
|
|
Keywords = {Vietnam; Structural transformation; Rural labor market; Inverse farm
|
|
size and productivity relationship},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SIZE-PRODUCTIVITY RELATIONSHIP; FARM SIZE; SEASONAL MIGRATION;
|
|
MEASUREMENT ERRORS; TRANSITION; MARKETS; MECHANIZATION; INEQUALITY;
|
|
SERVICES; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Agricultural Economics \& Policy; Economics; Food Science \& Technology;
|
|
Nutrition \& Dietetics},
|
|
Author-Email = {y.liu@cgiar.org
|
|
cbb2@cornell.edu
|
|
tp347@cornell.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Pham, Trinh/0000-0002-9026-8259},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {30},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {36},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000551661300011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000731087200002,
|
|
Author = {Chirgwin, Hannah and Cairncross, Sandy and Zehra, Dua and Waddington,
|
|
Hugh Sharma},
|
|
Title = {Interventions promoting uptake of water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH)
|
|
technologies in low- and middle-income countries: An evidence and gap
|
|
map of effectiveness studies},
|
|
Journal = {CAMPBELL SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Lack of access to and use of water, sanitation and hygiene
|
|
(WASH) cause 1.6 million deaths every year, of which 1.2 million are due
|
|
to gastrointestinal illnesses like diarrhoea and acute respiratory
|
|
infections like pneumonia. Poor WASH access and use also diminish
|
|
nutrition and educational attainment, and cause danger and stress for
|
|
vulnerable populations, especially for women and girls. The hardest hit
|
|
regions are sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Sustainable Development
|
|
Goal (SDG) 6 calls for the end of open defecation, and universal access
|
|
to safely managed water and sanitation facilities, and basic hand
|
|
hygiene, by 2030. WASH access and use also underpin progress in other
|
|
areas such as SDG1 poverty targets, SDG3 health and SDG4 education
|
|
targets. Meeting the SDG equity agenda to ``leave none behind{''} will
|
|
require WASH providers prioritise the hardest to reach including those
|
|
living remotely and people who are disadvantaged. Objectives Decision
|
|
makers need access to high-quality evidence on what works in WASH
|
|
promotion in different contexts, and for different groups of people, to
|
|
reach the most disadvantaged populations and thereby achieve universal
|
|
targets. The WASH evidence map is envisioned as a tool for commissioners
|
|
and researchers to identify existing studies to fill synthesis gaps, as
|
|
well as helping to prioritise new studies where there are gaps in
|
|
knowledge. It also supports policymakers and practitioners to navigate
|
|
the evidence base, including presenting critically appraised findings
|
|
from existing systematic reviews. Methods This evidence map presents
|
|
impact evaluations and systematic reviews from the WASH sector,
|
|
organised according to the types of intervention mechanisms, WASH
|
|
technologies promoted, and outcomes measured. It is based on a framework
|
|
of intervention mechanisms (e.g., behaviour change triggering or
|
|
microloans) and outcomes along the causal pathway, specifically
|
|
behavioural outcomes (e.g., handwashing and food hygiene practices),
|
|
ill-health outcomes (e.g., diarrhoeal morbidity and mortality),
|
|
nutrition and socioeconomic outcomes (e.g., school absenteeism and
|
|
household income). The map also provides filters to examine the evidence
|
|
for a particular WASH technology (e.g., latrines), place of use (e.g.,
|
|
home, school or health facility), location (e.g., global region,
|
|
country, rural and urban) and group (e.g., people living with
|
|
disability). Systematic searches for published and unpublished
|
|
literature and trial registries were conducted of studies in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries (LMICs). Searches were conducted in March 2018,
|
|
and searches for completed trials were done in May 2020. Coding of
|
|
information for the map was done by two authors working independently.
|
|
Impact evaluations were critically appraised according to methods of
|
|
conduct and reporting. Systematic reviews were critically appraised
|
|
using a new approach to assess theory-based, mixed-methods evidence
|
|
synthesis. Results There has been an enormous growth in impact
|
|
evaluations and systematic reviews of WASH interventions since the
|
|
International Year of Sanitation, 2008. There are now at least 367
|
|
completed or ongoing rigorous impact evaluations in LMICs, nearly
|
|
three-quarters of which have been conducted since 2008, plus 43
|
|
systematic reviews. Studies have been done in 83 LMICs, with a high
|
|
concentration in Bangladesh, India, and Kenya. WASH sector programming
|
|
has increasingly shifted in focus from what technology to supply (e.g.
|
|
, a handwashing station or child's potty), to the best way in which to
|
|
do so to promote demand. Research also covers a broader set of
|
|
intervention mechanisms. For example, there has been increased interest
|
|
in behaviour change communication using psychosocial ``triggering{''},
|
|
such as social marketing and community-led total sanitation. These
|
|
studies report primarily on behavioural outcomes. With the advent of
|
|
large-scale funding, in particular by the Bill \& Melinda Gates
|
|
Foundation, there has been a substantial increase in the number of
|
|
studies on sanitation technologies, particularly latrines. Sustaining
|
|
behaviour is fundamental for sustaining health and other quality of life
|
|
improvements. However, few studies have been done of intervention
|
|
mechanisms for, or measuring outcomes on sustained adoption of latrines
|
|
to stop open defaecation. There has also been some increase in the
|
|
number of studies looking at outcomes and interventions that
|
|
disproportionately affect women and girls, who quite literally carry
|
|
most of the burden of poor water and sanitation access. However, most
|
|
studies do not report sex disaggregated outcomes, let alone integrate
|
|
gender analysis into their framework. Other vulnerable populations are
|
|
even less addressed; no studies eligible for inclusion in the map were
|
|
done of interventions targeting, or reporting on outcomes for, people
|
|
living with disabilities. We were only able to find a single controlled
|
|
evaluation of WASH interventions in a health care facility, in spite of
|
|
the importance of WASH in health facilities in global policy debates.
|
|
The quality of impact evaluations has improved, such as the use of
|
|
controlled designs as standard, attention to addressing reporting
|
|
biases, and adequate cluster sample size. However, there remain
|
|
important concerns about quality of reporting. The quality and
|
|
usefulness of systematic reviews for policy is also improving, which
|
|
draw clearer distinctions between intervention mechanisms and synthesise
|
|
the evidence on outcomes along the causal pathway. Adopting
|
|
mixed-methods approaches also provides information for programmes on
|
|
barriers and enablers affecting implementation. Conclusion Ensuring
|
|
everyone has access to appropriate water, sanitation, and hygiene
|
|
facilities is one of the most fundamental of challenges for poverty
|
|
elimination. Researchers and funders need to consider carefully where
|
|
there is the need for new primary evidence, and new syntheses of that
|
|
evidence. This study suggests the following priority areas: Impact
|
|
evaluations incorporating understudied outcomes, such as sustainability
|
|
and slippage, of WASH provision in understudied places of use, such as
|
|
health care facilities, and of interventions targeting, or presenting
|
|
disaggregated data for, vulnerable populations, particularly over the
|
|
life-course and for people living with a disability; Improved reporting
|
|
in impact evaluations, including presentation of participant flow
|
|
diagrams; and Synthesis studies and updates in areas with sufficient
|
|
existing and planned impact evaluations, such as for diarrhoea
|
|
mortality, ARIs, WASH in schools and decentralisation. These studies
|
|
will preferably be conducted as mixed-methods systematic reviews that
|
|
are able to answer questions about programme targeting, implementation,
|
|
effectiveness and cost-effectiveness, and compare alternative
|
|
intervention mechanisms to achieve and sustain outcomes in particular
|
|
contexts, preferably using network meta-analysis.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Waddington, HS (Corresponding Author), London Int Dev Ctr, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Environm Hlth Grp, 20 Bloomsbury Sq, London WC1A 2NS, England.
|
|
Chirgwin, Hannah, London Int Dev Ctr, Int Initiat Impact Evaluat 3ie, London, England.
|
|
Cairncross, Sandy, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, London, England.
|
|
Zehra, Dua, UCL, London, England.
|
|
Waddington, Hugh Sharma, London Int Dev Ctr, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med \& Int Initiat Impact Ev, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/cl2.1194},
|
|
Article-Number = {e21194},
|
|
EISSN = {1891-1803},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED-CONTROLLED-TRIAL; POINT-OF-USE; HOUSEHOLD DRINKING-WATER;
|
|
REDUCE CHILDHOOD DIARRHEA; WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; SCHOOL-BASED WATER; LED
|
|
TOTAL SANITATION; TRANSMITTED HELMINTH INFECTIONS; PRIVATE-SECTOR
|
|
PARTICIPATION; ACUTE RESPIRATORY-INFECTIONS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {hugh.waddington@lidc.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sharma Waddington, Hugh/CAF-8169-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sharma Waddington, Hugh/0000-0003-3859-3342},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {887},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {40},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000731087200002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000422669800006,
|
|
Author = {Bainbridge, Hugh T. J. and Fujimoto, Yuka},
|
|
Title = {Job Seekers with Musculoskeletal or Sensory Disabilities: Barriers and
|
|
Facilitators of Job Search},
|
|
Journal = {BRITISH JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {82-98},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Drawing on interviews with job seekers and expert informants, we outline
|
|
a model of the job search experience of people with disabilities. This
|
|
model specifies the sequence of events involved in the pursuit of paid
|
|
work and the contextual features that inhibit or facilitate job search
|
|
attitudes, behaviours, intermediate search outcomes and employment
|
|
outcomes. By contrasting the experiences of job seekers with
|
|
musculoskeletal and sensory disabilities, and outlining the influence of
|
|
major stakeholders in the form of employment agencies and family
|
|
members, our model provides the basis for a more nuanced understanding
|
|
of the job search process. Finally, we recommend points of intervention
|
|
that are grounded in data for improving job search outcomes for people
|
|
with disabilities in general, and for job seekers with musculoskeletal
|
|
or sensory disabilities specifically.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bainbridge, HTJ (Corresponding Author), Univ New South Wales, Sch Business, Sch Management, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
|
|
Bainbridge, Hugh T. J., Univ New South Wales, Sch Business, Sch Management, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
|
|
Fujimoto, Yuka, Sunway Univ, Dept Management, Sunway Univ Business Sch, 5 Jalan Univ, Kuala Lumpur 46150, Malaysia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1467-8551.12266},
|
|
ISSN = {1045-3172},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-8551},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ONSET DISABILITY; SELF-REGULATION; CARE RECIPIENT; PEOPLE; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
DISCRIMINATION; INDIVIDUALS; WORKPLACE; NETWORKS; WORKERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {h.bainbridge@unsw.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bainbridge, Hugh/M-6956-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bainbridge, Hugh/0000-0001-6745-1920},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {97},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000422669800006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000643835900001,
|
|
Author = {Bergman, Beverly P. and Demou, Evangelia and Lewsey, James and
|
|
Macdonald, Ewan},
|
|
Title = {A comparison of routine and case-managed pathways for recovery from
|
|
musculoskeletal disorders in people in employment},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {17},
|
|
Pages = {4648-4655},
|
|
Month = {AUG 14},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose
|
|
To compare outcomes in employed people from an enhanced routine
|
|
management pathway for musculoskeletal disorders within National Health
|
|
Service Scotland with an existing active case-management system, Working
|
|
Health Services Scotland.
|
|
Materials and methods
|
|
The study comprised a service evaluation using anonymised routinely
|
|
collected data from all currently employed callers presenting with
|
|
musculoskeletal disorder to the two services. Baseline demographic and
|
|
clinical data were collected. EuroQol EQ-5D(TM) scores at the start and
|
|
end of treatment were compared for both groups, overall and by age, sex,
|
|
socio-economic status, and anatomical site, and the impact of mental
|
|
health status at baseline was evaluated.
|
|
Results
|
|
Active case-management resulted in greater improvement than enhanced
|
|
routine care. Case-managed service users entered the programme earlier
|
|
in the recovery pathway; there was evidence of spontaneous improvement
|
|
during the longer waiting time of routine service clients but only if
|
|
they had good baseline mental health. Those most disadvantaged through
|
|
mental health co-morbidity showed the greatest benefit.
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
People with musculoskeletal disorders who have poor baseline mental
|
|
health status derive greatest benefit from active case-management.
|
|
Case-management therefore contributes to reducing health inequalities
|
|
and can help to minimise long-term sickness absence. Shorter waiting
|
|
times contributed to better outcomes in the case-managed service.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bergman, BP (Corresponding Author), Inst Hlth \& Wellbeing, Publ Hlth \& Hlth Policy, 1 Lilybank Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RZ, Lanark, Scotland.
|
|
Bergman, Beverly P.; Lewsey, James; Macdonald, Ewan, Univ Glasgow, Inst Hlth \& Wellbeing, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.
|
|
Demou, Evangelia, Univ Glasgow, MRC CSO Social \& Publ Hlth Sci Unit, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09638288.2021.1912837},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Musculoskeletal disorder; case management; intervention; sickness
|
|
absence; rehabilitation; health inequalities},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {Beverly.bergman@glasgow.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lewsey, James/F-7546-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Demou, Evangelia/0000-0001-8616-525X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000643835900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000523143300001,
|
|
Author = {Broadway, Barbara and Kalb, Guyonne and McVicar, Duncan and Martin, Bill},
|
|
Title = {The Impact of Paid Parental Leave on Labor Supply and Employment
|
|
Outcomes in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {FEMINIST ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {30-65},
|
|
Month = {JUL 2},
|
|
Abstract = {The introduction of the Australian Paid Parental Leave scheme in 2011
|
|
provides a rare opportunity to estimate the impacts of publicly funded
|
|
paid leave on mothers in the first year postpartum. The almost universal
|
|
coverage of the scheme, coupled with detailed survey data collected
|
|
specifically for the scheme's evaluation, means that eligibility for
|
|
paid leave under the scheme can be plausibly taken as exogenous,
|
|
following a standard propensity score-matching exercise. Consistent with
|
|
much of the existing literature, the study finds a positive impact on
|
|
mothers' taking leave in the first half year and on mothers' probability
|
|
of returning to work in the first year. The paper provides new evidence
|
|
of a positive impact on continuing in the same job under the same
|
|
conditions, where previous conclusions have been mixed. Further, it
|
|
shows that disadvantaged mothers - low income, less educated, without
|
|
access to employer-funded leave - respond most.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Broadway, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Inst, Appl Econ \& Social Res, FBE Bldg,Level 5,111 Barry St, Melbourne, Vic 3010, Australia.
|
|
Broadway, Barbara, Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Inst, Appl Econ \& Social Res, FBE Bldg,Level 5,111 Barry St, Melbourne, Vic 3010, Australia.
|
|
Kalb, Guyonne, Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Inst Appl Econ \& Social Res, Level 5,111 Barry St, Melbourne, Vic 3010, Australia.
|
|
McVicar, Duncan, Queens Univ Belfast, Queens Management Sch, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland.
|
|
Martin, Bill, Univ Queensland, Social Sci Res Inst, Indooroopilly, Qld, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/13545701.2020.1718175},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1354-5701},
|
|
EISSN = {1466-4372},
|
|
Keywords = {Labor supply; parental leave; Australia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MATERNITY LEAVE; FAMILY LEAVE; MOTHERS; POLICIES; CALIFORNIA; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {b.broadway@unimelb.edu.au
|
|
g.kalb@unimelb.edu.au
|
|
d.mcvicar@qub.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kalb, Guyonne/H-7383-2015
|
|
Broadway, Barbara/N-8963-2014},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kalb, Guyonne/0000-0001-6582-8608
|
|
Broadway, Barbara/0000-0002-7816-7252},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000523143300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000463128500013,
|
|
Author = {Choi, Su Jung and Jeong, Jin Chul and Kim, Seoung Nam},
|
|
Title = {Impact of vocational education and training on adult skills and
|
|
employment: An applied multilevel analysis},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Pages = {129-138},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Vocational education and training has played a central role in promoting
|
|
the school-to-work transition of young people. Despite this role, the
|
|
return to Vocational Education and Training (VET) has been neglected in
|
|
previous studies. This paper aims to examine individual returns to VET
|
|
over a lifespan and to assess the effects of national VET systems,
|
|
including school-based and work-based VET systems, on economic outcomes.
|
|
We use the OECD's Program for the International Assessment of Adult
|
|
Competencies (PIAAC) dataset for conducting our analyses. The results of
|
|
this study indicate that vocational track graduates are more likely to
|
|
have literacy skill disadvantages, short-term employment advantages, and
|
|
long-term employment disadvantages compared to general track graduates.
|
|
The most significant finding is that there are substantial differences
|
|
between work-based and school-based VET systems with regard to their
|
|
literacy and employment effects. Compared to VET graduates from general
|
|
education-oriented countries, VET graduates from work-based VET-oriented
|
|
countries are initially more likely to be employed, but that employment
|
|
premium narrows faster over time. Therefore, a lifespan overview and the
|
|
characteristics of national VET systems should enter into policy debates
|
|
on national educational systems.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jeong, JC (Corresponding Author), Seoul Natl Univ, 1 Kwanak Ro, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
|
|
Choi, Su Jung; Jeong, Jin Chul, Seoul Natl Univ, 1 Kwanak Ro, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
|
|
Kim, Seoung Nam, Korean Res Inst Vocat Educ \& Training, 370 Sicheong Daero, Sejong City 30147, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ijedudev.2018.09.007},
|
|
ISSN = {0738-0593},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-4871},
|
|
Keywords = {Vocational education and training; Returns to education; Returns to
|
|
vocational education; Multilevel model; Vocational education and
|
|
training-oriented country; Work-based vocational education and training
|
|
oriented country},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {shizu@snu.ac.kr
|
|
vince88@snu.ac.kr
|
|
reoastro@krivet.re.kr},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {25},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {41},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000463128500013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000478101400008,
|
|
Author = {Leavey, Gerard and McGrellis, Sheena and Forbes, Trisha and Thampi,
|
|
Annette and Davidson, Gavin and Rosato, Michael and Bunting, Brendan and
|
|
Divin, Natalie and Hughes, Lynette and Toal, Alicia and Paul, Moli and
|
|
Singh, Swaran P.},
|
|
Title = {Improving mental health pathways and care for adolescents in transition
|
|
to adult services (IMPACT): a retrospective case note review of social
|
|
and clinical determinants of transition},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {54},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {955-963},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundPoor transitions to adult care from child and adolescent
|
|
mental health services may increase the risk of disengagement and
|
|
long-term negative outcomes. However, studies of transitions in mental
|
|
health care are commonly difficult to administer and little is known
|
|
about the determinants of successful transition. The persistence of
|
|
health inequalities related to access, care, and outcome is now well
|
|
accepted including the inverse care law which suggests that those most
|
|
in need of services may be the least likely to obtain them. We sought to
|
|
examine the pathways and determinants of transition, including the role
|
|
of social class.MethodA retrospective systematic examination of
|
|
electronic records and case notes of young people eligible to transition
|
|
to adult care over a 4-year period across five Health and Social Care
|
|
NHS Trusts in Northern Ireland.ResultsWe identified 373 service users
|
|
eligible for transition. While a high proportion of eligible patients
|
|
made the transition to adult services, very few received an optimal
|
|
transition process and many dropped out of services or subsequently
|
|
disengaged. Clinical factors, rather than social class, appear to be
|
|
more influential in the transition pathway. However, those not in
|
|
employment, education or training (NEET) were more likely (OR 3.04: 95\%
|
|
CI 1.34, 6.91) to have been referred to Adult Mental Health Services
|
|
(AMHS), as were those with a risk assessment or diagnosis (OR 4.89:
|
|
2.45, 9.80 and OR 3.36: 1.78, 6.34), respectively.ConclusionsDespite the
|
|
importance of a smoother transition to adult services, surprisingly, few
|
|
patients experience this. There is a need for stronger standardised
|
|
policies and guidelines to ensure optimal transitional care to AMHS. The
|
|
barriers between different arms of psychiatry appear to persist. Joint
|
|
working and shared arrangements between child and adolescent and adult
|
|
mental health services should be fostered.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Leavey, G (Corresponding Author), Ulster Univ, Bamford Ctr Mental Hlth \& Wellbeing, Cromore Rd, Coleraine, Londonderry, North Ireland.
|
|
Leavey, Gerard; McGrellis, Sheena; Forbes, Trisha; Rosato, Michael; Bunting, Brendan; Divin, Natalie; Hughes, Lynette, Ulster Univ, Bamford Ctr Mental Hlth \& Wellbeing, Cromore Rd, Coleraine, Londonderry, North Ireland.
|
|
Thampi, Annette, Belfast Hlth \& Social Care Trust, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland.
|
|
Davidson, Gavin, Queens Univ Belfast, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland.
|
|
Toal, Alicia, Voices Young People Care, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland.
|
|
Paul, Moli; Singh, Swaran P., Univ Warwick, Coventry, W Midlands, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s00127-019-01684-z},
|
|
ISSN = {0933-7954},
|
|
EISSN = {1433-9285},
|
|
Keywords = {Child and adolescent; Mental health; Inequalities; Service provision;
|
|
Transition},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILD; INEQUALITIES; GAP},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {g.leavey@ulster.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Leavey, Gerard/AAU-2912-2020
|
|
Forbes, Trisha/ISB-5690-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Leavey, Gerard/0000-0001-8411-8919
|
|
Davidson, Gavin/0000-0001-6003-0170
|
|
Forbes, Trisha/0000-0003-2047-2956},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000478101400008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000793441400001,
|
|
Author = {Park, Jiyoon and Sung, Connie and Fisher, Marisa H. and Okyere,
|
|
Christiana and Kammes, Rebecca R.},
|
|
Title = {Psychosocial and Vocational Impacts of COVID-19 on People With and
|
|
Without Disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {67},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {381-390},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose/Objective: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic led
|
|
to devastating economic impacts and psychosocial changes for individuals
|
|
around the world, including people with chronic illness and disabilities
|
|
(CID). This study explored the impacts on employment and how it related
|
|
to stress and satisfaction with life during COVID-19 between people with
|
|
and without CID. Research Method/Design: A cross-sectional study design
|
|
was used with 1,380 adults from 20 countries who were employed before
|
|
the COVID-19 pandemic, including 318 people with CID. Statistical
|
|
methods (i.e., descriptive statistics, chi-square analyses, two-way
|
|
analysis of variances) were used to analyze the time, employment, group,
|
|
and interaction effects. Results: There were three main findings. (1)
|
|
Compared with those without CID, individuals with CID were more likely
|
|
to have their employment impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and they were
|
|
more often laid off or dismissed from their job. (2) Individuals with
|
|
CID reported significantly higher stress and lower life satisfaction
|
|
compared with those without CID during the COVID-19 pandemic regardless
|
|
of its impacts on employment. (3) Individuals whose employment was
|
|
impacted reported significantly lower life satisfaction during the
|
|
COVID-19 pandemic regardless of their CID status.
|
|
Conclusion/Implications: Findings highlight the employment and
|
|
psychosocial impacts of a global pandemic and provide implications for
|
|
moving forward in regards to vocational and psychosocial intervention
|
|
services and supports that will be needed, especially for those with
|
|
CID.
|
|
Impact and Implications This study extends existing literature by
|
|
analyzing impacts of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic
|
|
across the globe on employment and psychosocial outcomes (i.e., stress
|
|
and life satisfaction) for people with chronic illness and disability
|
|
(CID) compared with those without CID and informs research and practices
|
|
for supporting those who have been adversely impacted. Given the
|
|
significant negative impacts of COVID-19 on employment for individuals
|
|
with CID in comparison with those without CID, vocational rehabilitation
|
|
agencies should provide vocational supports for individuals with CID and
|
|
work to develop new employment options. Researchers and practitioners
|
|
should develop effective vocational and psychosocial intervention
|
|
strategies (e.g., through telehealth) to resolve global employment and
|
|
mental health issues related to COVID-19 to minimize inequality between
|
|
individuals with and without CID and improve their quality of life.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sung, C (Corresponding Author), Michigan State Univ, Dept Counseling Educ Psychol \& Special Educ, 620 Farm Lane,Room 460, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
|
|
Park, Jiyoon, Changwon Natl Univ, Dept Special Educ, Chang Won, South Korea.
|
|
Park, Jiyoon; Sung, Connie; Fisher, Marisa H.; Okyere, Christiana; Kammes, Rebecca R., Michigan State Univ, MSU DOCTRID Michigan State Univ Daughters Char Te, Res Disabil Res Inst, Hegarty Fellow Program, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
|
|
Sung, Connie; Fisher, Marisa H.; Okyere, Christiana; Kammes, Rebecca R., Michigan State Univ, Dept Counseling Educ Psychol \& Special Educ, 620 Farm Lane,Room 460, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
|
|
Sung, Connie; Fisher, Marisa H., Michigan State Univ, Ctr Res Autism Intellectual \& Other Neurodev Disa, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/rep0000420},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0090-5550},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-1544},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; chronic illness; disabilities; employment; psychosocial},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH; UNEMPLOYMENT; EMPLOYMENT; OUTBREAK; DISEASE; WORK; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Clinical; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {csung@msu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Fisher, Marisa H/AAB-8320-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Fisher, Marisa H./0000-0003-4938-4773
|
|
Kammes, Rebecca/0000-0003-3272-7063
|
|
Sung, Connie/0000-0001-7564-3738},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000793441400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000831989600001,
|
|
Author = {Gullett, Lauren R. and Alhasan, Dana M. and Jackson, II, W. Braxton and
|
|
Jackson, Chandra L.},
|
|
Title = {Employment Industry and Occupational Class in Relation to Serious
|
|
Psychological Distress in the United States},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {14},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Occupational characteristics may influence serious psychological
|
|
distress (SPD) and contribute to health inequities; yet, few studies
|
|
have examined multiple employment industries and occupational classes in
|
|
a large, racially diverse sample of the United States. Using data from
|
|
the National Health Interview Survey, we investigated employment
|
|
industry and occupational class in relation to SPD in the overall
|
|
population and by race/ethnicity, gender, age, household income, and
|
|
health status. We created eight employment industry categories:
|
|
professional/administrative/management,
|
|
agricultural/manufacturing/construction, retail trade,
|
|
finance/information/real estate, educational services, health
|
|
care/social assistance, accommodation/food services, and public
|
|
administration/arts/other services. We also created three occupational
|
|
class categories: professional/management, support services, and
|
|
laborers. SPD was measured using the Kessler Psychological Distress
|
|
Scale and scores >= 13 indicated SPD. We adjusted for confounders and
|
|
used Poisson regression to estimate prevalence ratios (PRs) and 95\%
|
|
confidence intervals (CIs). Among the 245,038 participants, the mean age
|
|
was 41.7 +/- 0.1 years, 73\% were Non-Hispanic (NH)-White, and 1.5\%
|
|
were categorized as having SPD. Compared to the
|
|
professional/administrative/management industry, working in other
|
|
industries (e.g., manufacturing/construction (PR = 0.82 {[}95\% CI:
|
|
0.70-0.95]) and educational services (PR = 0.79 {[}95\% CI: 0.66-0.94]))
|
|
was associated with lower SPD. Working in support services and laborer
|
|
versus professional/management positions were both associated with 19\%
|
|
higher prevalence of SPD (95\% CI: 1.04-1.35; 95\% CI: 1.04-1.38,
|
|
respectively). Furthermore, working in a support services or laborer
|
|
versus professional/management position was associated with higher SPD
|
|
in most employment industries. Industry-specific workplace interventions
|
|
to equitably improve mental health are warranted.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jackson, CL (Corresponding Author), NIEHS, Epidemiol Branch, Dept Hlth \& Human Serv, NIH, Durham, NC 27709 USA.
|
|
Jackson, CL (Corresponding Author), Natl Inst Minor Hlth \& Hlth Dispar, Intramural Program, Dept Hlth \& Human Serv, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.
|
|
Gullett, Lauren R.; Alhasan, Dana M.; Jackson, Chandra L., NIEHS, Epidemiol Branch, Dept Hlth \& Human Serv, NIH, Durham, NC 27709 USA.
|
|
Jackson, W. Braxton, II, DLH Holdings Co, Social \& Sci Syst Inc, Durham, NC 27703 USA.
|
|
Jackson, Chandra L., Natl Inst Minor Hlth \& Hlth Dispar, Intramural Program, Dept Hlth \& Human Serv, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/ijerph19148376},
|
|
Article-Number = {8376},
|
|
EISSN = {1660-4601},
|
|
Keywords = {occupations; occupational health; psychological distress; employment;
|
|
race factors; economic status; mental health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH; WORK; WORKPLACE; SLEEP; DISCRIMINATION; DISPARITIES;
|
|
DISEASE; ILLNESS; IMPACT; BLACK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {lauren.gullett@nih.gov
|
|
dana.alhasan@nih.gov
|
|
braxton.jackson@dlhcorp.com
|
|
chandra.jackson@nih.gov},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Jackson, Chandra/A-6291-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jackson, Chandra/0000-0002-0915-8272
|
|
AlHasan, Dana/0000-0002-6388-6035},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000831989600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000684737400038,
|
|
Author = {Fekete, Christine and Reinhardt, Jan D. and Arora, Mohit and Engkasan,
|
|
Julia Patrick and Gross-Hemmi, Mirja and Kyriakides, Athanasios and Le
|
|
Fort, Marc and Tough, Hannah},
|
|
Title = {Socioeconomic status and social relationships in persons with spinal
|
|
cord injury from 22 countries: Does the countries' socioeconomic
|
|
development moderate associations?},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Social relationships are powerful determinants of health and
|
|
inequalities in social relationships across socioeconomic status (SES)
|
|
groups may contribute to social inequalities in health. This study
|
|
investigates inequalities in social relationships in an international
|
|
sample of persons with spinal cord injury and explores whether social
|
|
gradients in relationships are moderated by the countries' socioeconomic
|
|
development (SED). Methods Data from 12,330 participants of the
|
|
International SCI Community Survey (InSCI) performed in 22 countries
|
|
were used. We regressed social relationships (belongingness,
|
|
relationship satisfaction, social interactions) on individual SES
|
|
(education, income, employment, financial hardship, subjective status)
|
|
and countries' SED (Human Development Index) using multi-level models
|
|
(main effects). To test potential moderation of the SED, interaction
|
|
terms between individual SES and countries' SED were entered into
|
|
multi-level models. Results Paid work, absence of financial hardship and
|
|
higher subjective status were related to higher belongingness (OR, 95\%
|
|
CI: 1.50, 1.34-1.67; 1.76, 1.53-2.03; 1.16, 1.12-1.19, respectively),
|
|
higher relationship satisfaction (OR, 95\% CI: 1.28, 1.15-1.42; 1.97,
|
|
1.72-2.27; 1.20, 1.17-1.24, respectively) and fewer problems with social
|
|
interactions (Coeff, 95\% CI: 0.96, 0.82-1.10; 1.93, 1.74-2.12; 0.26,
|
|
0.22-0.29, respectively), whereas associations with education and income
|
|
were less consistent. Main effects for countries' SED showed that
|
|
persons from lower SED countries reported somewhat higher relationship
|
|
satisfaction (OR, 95\% CI: 0.97, 0.94-0.99) and less problems with
|
|
social interactions (Coeff, 95\% CI: -0.04, -0.09- -0.003). Results from
|
|
moderation analysis revealed that having paid work was more important
|
|
for relationships in lower SED countries, while education and subjective
|
|
status were more important for relationships in higher SED countries
|
|
(interaction terms p<0.05). Conclusion Social relationships in persons
|
|
with spinal cord injury are patterned according to individual SES and
|
|
the countries' SED and larger socioeconomic structures partly moderate
|
|
associations between individual SES and social relationships.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fekete, C (Corresponding Author), Swiss Parapleg Res, Nottwil, Switzerland.
|
|
Fekete, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Lucerne, Dept Hlth Sci \& Med, Luzern, Switzerland.
|
|
Fekete, Christine; Reinhardt, Jan D.; Gross-Hemmi, Mirja; Tough, Hannah, Swiss Parapleg Res, Nottwil, Switzerland.
|
|
Fekete, Christine; Reinhardt, Jan D.; Tough, Hannah, Univ Lucerne, Dept Hlth Sci \& Med, Luzern, Switzerland.
|
|
Reinhardt, Jan D., Sichuan Univ, Inst Disaster Management \& Reconstruct Sichuan Un, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
|
|
Arora, Mohit, Royal North Shore Hosp, John Walsh Ctr Rehabil Res, Kolling Inst Med Res, St Leonards, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Arora, Mohit, Univ Sydney, Fac Med \& Hlth, Sydney Med Sch Northern, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Engkasan, Julia Patrick, Univ Malaya, Dept Rehabil Med, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
|
|
Kyriakides, Athanasios, Univ Patras, Spinal Cord Injuries Unit, Patras, Greece.
|
|
Le Fort, Marc, Univ Hosp, Neurol Phys \& Rehabil Med Dept, Nantes, France.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0255448},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0255448},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ENVIRONMENTAL BARRIERS; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS; HEALTH INEQUALITIES;
|
|
OLDER-PEOPLE; LONELINESS; SUPPORT; PARTICIPATION; INDIVIDUALS; TRENDS;
|
|
RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {christine.fekete@paraplegie.ch},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Arora, Mohit/D-3373-2015
|
|
Engkasan, Julia Patrick/M-5547-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Arora, Mohit/0000-0003-1024-3682
|
|
Engkasan, Julia Patrick/0000-0003-0599-4908
|
|
Kyriakides, Athanasios/0000-0002-4906-6874
|
|
Le Fort, Marc/0000-0002-6360-2004},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {67},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000684737400038},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000081676000011,
|
|
Author = {Bartley, M and Sacker, A and Firth, D and Fitzpatrick, R},
|
|
Title = {Understanding social variation in cardiovascular risk factors in women
|
|
and men: the advantage of theoretically based measures},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {1999},
|
|
Volume = {49},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {831-845},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Many studies have attempted to understand observed social variations in
|
|
cardiovascular disease in terms of sets of intermediate or confounding
|
|
risk factors. Tests of these models have tended to produce inconsistent
|
|
evidence. This paper examines the relationships to cardiovascular risk
|
|
factors or two theoretically based measures of social position. Tt shows
|
|
that the strength of the relationships between social position and
|
|
cardiovascular risk factors varies according to the definition of social
|
|
position which is used: there is a closer relationship between most
|
|
health behaviours and the Cambridge scale, an indicator of `general
|
|
social advantage and lifestyle', whereas the Erikson-Goldthorpe schema,
|
|
which is based on employment relations and conditions, is more strongly
|
|
related to work control and breathlessness. The implications of these
|
|
findings for understanding the conflicting evidence in other studies of
|
|
health inequalities are then discussed. The paper concludes that
|
|
inconsistencies between studies may be in part due to unexamined
|
|
differences between the conceptual bases of the measures of social
|
|
position they use, combined with a failure to make explicit the
|
|
hypothetical mechanisms of effect. If neither the conceptual basis of
|
|
the measure of social position, nor the links between social position
|
|
and health outcome tested in each study are clear, inconsistencies
|
|
between studies will be difficult to interpret, making policy
|
|
recommendations highly problematic. (C) 1999 Published by Elsevier
|
|
Science Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bartley, M (Corresponding Author), UCL, Dept Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, 1-19 Torrington Pl, London WC1E 6BT, England.
|
|
UCL, Dept Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, London WC1E 6BT, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00192-6},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {social inequality; health related behaviour; cardiovascular risk
|
|
factors; social classification scales},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CORONARY HEART-DISEASE; BRITISH CIVIL-SERVANTS; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS;
|
|
HEALTH INEQUALITIES; EUROPEAN COUNTRIES; UNITED-STATES; FOLLOW-UP;
|
|
MORTALITY; MORBIDITY; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {mel@public.health.ucl.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Firth, David/A-8207-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Firth, David/0000-0003-0302-2312
|
|
Bartley, Mel/0000-0002-5981-0046},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {73},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000081676000011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000432147500002,
|
|
Author = {Jones, Antwan},
|
|
Title = {Parental Socioeconomic Instability and Child Obesity},
|
|
Journal = {BIODEMOGRAPHY AND SOCIAL BIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {15-29},
|
|
Abstract = {Using data from the 1986 to 2010 National Longitudinal Study of Youth
|
|
(NLSY) and the NLSY Child and Young Adult Supplement, this research
|
|
explores how changes in parental socioeconomic status relate to child
|
|
obesity over time. Results from linear mixed-effects models indicate
|
|
that maternal educational gains and maternal employment transitions
|
|
significantly increased their child's body mass index (BMI). This
|
|
finding suggests that mothers who work may have less time to devote to
|
|
monitoring their child's food intake and physical activity, which places
|
|
their children at higher risks of becoming overweight or obese over
|
|
time. Conversely, father's work transitions and educational gains
|
|
contribute to decreases in child's BMI. Thus, work instability and
|
|
increasing educational attainment for the traditional breadwinner of the
|
|
household corresponds to better child weight outcomes. Results also
|
|
suggest that there are racial differences in child BMI that remain after
|
|
adjusting for changes in socioeconomic status, which indicate that the
|
|
same structural disadvantages that operate to keep minorities in lower
|
|
social class standings in society also work to hinder minorities from
|
|
advancing among and out of their social class. Policy implications
|
|
related to curbing child obesity are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jones, A (Corresponding Author), George Washington Univ, Dept Sociol, 801 22nd St NW,Suite 409C, Washington, DC 20052 USA.
|
|
Jones, Antwan, George Washington Univ, Dept Sociol, 801 22nd St NW,Suite 409C, Washington, DC 20052 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/19485565.2018.1449630},
|
|
ISSN = {1948-5565},
|
|
EISSN = {1948-5573},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BODY-MASS INDEX; LOW-BIRTH-WEIGHT; RACIAL-DIFFERENCES; CUMULATIVE
|
|
DISADVANTAGE; MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; PUBLIC-HEALTH; UNITED-STATES;
|
|
LIFE-COURSE; RISK; CONSEQUENCES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography; Social Sciences, Biomedical; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {antwan@gwu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Jones, Antwan/C-4025-2008
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jones, Antwan/0000-0003-2933-9836},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000432147500002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000836344800001,
|
|
Author = {Dalve, Kimberly and Moe, Caitlin A. and Kovski, Nicole and Rivara,
|
|
Frederick P. and Mooney, Stephen J. and Hill, Heather D. and
|
|
Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali},
|
|
Title = {Earned Income Tax Credit and Youth Violence: Findings from the Youth
|
|
Risk Behavior Surveillance System},
|
|
Journal = {PREVENTION SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {1370-1378},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Family- and neighborhood-level poverty are associated with youth
|
|
violence. Economic policies may address this risk factor by reducing
|
|
parental stress and increasing opportunities. The federal Earned Income
|
|
Tax Credit (EITC) is the largest cash transfer program in the US
|
|
providing support to low-income working families. Many states have
|
|
additional EITCs that vary in structure and generosity. To estimate the
|
|
association between state EITC and youth violence, we conducted a
|
|
repeated cross-sectional analysis using the variation in state EITC
|
|
generosity over time by state and self-reported data in the Youth Risk
|
|
Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS) from 2005 to 2019. We estimated the
|
|
association for all youth and then stratified by sex and race and
|
|
ethnicity. A 10-percentage point greater state EITC was significantly
|
|
associated with 3.8\% lower prevalence of physical fighting among youth,
|
|
overall (PR: 0.96; 95\% CI 0.94-0.99), and for male students, 149 fewer
|
|
(95\% CI: -243, -55) students per 10,000 experiencing physical fighting.
|
|
A 10-percentage point greater state EITC was significantly associated
|
|
with 118 fewer (95\% CI: -184,-52) White students per 10,000
|
|
experiencing physical fighting in the past 12 months while reductions
|
|
among Black students (75 fewer; 95\% CI: -176, 26) and Hispanic/Latino
|
|
students (14 fewer; 95\% CI: -93, 65) were not statistically
|
|
significant. State EITC generosity was not significantly associated with
|
|
measures of violence at school. Economic policies that increase
|
|
financial security and provide financial resources may reduce the burden
|
|
of youth violence; further attention to their differential benefits
|
|
among specific population subgroups is warranted.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dalve, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Hans Rosling Ctr Populat Hlth, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 3980 15th Ave NE,Box 351619, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Dalve, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Harborview Injury Prevent \& Res Ctr, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Dalve, Kimberly; Moe, Caitlin A.; Rivara, Frederick P.; Mooney, Stephen J.; Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali, Univ Washington, Hans Rosling Ctr Populat Hlth, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 3980 15th Ave NE,Box 351619, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Dalve, Kimberly; Moe, Caitlin A.; Rivara, Frederick P.; Mooney, Stephen J.; Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali, Univ Washington, Harborview Injury Prevent \& Res Ctr, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Kovski, Nicole; Hill, Heather D., Univ Washington, Daniel J Evans Sch Publ Policy \& Governance, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Mooney, Stephen J.; Hill, Heather D.; Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali, Univ Washington, Ctr Studies Demog \& Ecol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Rivara, Frederick P.; Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali, Univ Washington, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11121-022-01417-w},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1389-4986},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-6695},
|
|
Keywords = {Youth violence; Tax policy; Policy; Poverty; Income support},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; POVERTY; INEQUALITY; IMPACT; VICTIMIZATION;
|
|
NEIGHBORHOODS; DISPARITIES; EMPLOYMENT; DIFFERENCE; MULTILEVEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {kdalve@uw.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Moe, Caitlin/GYA-1601-2022
|
|
Hill, Heather/HKW-4759-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Moe, Caitlin/0000-0002-9318-2514
|
|
Dalve, Kimberly/0000-0001-5289-4091},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000836344800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000447013800003,
|
|
Author = {Carvajal, Manuel J.},
|
|
Title = {A theoretical framework for the interpretation of pharmacist workforce
|
|
studies throughout the world: The labor supply curve},
|
|
Journal = {RESEARCH IN SOCIAL \& ADMINISTRATIVE PHARMACY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {999-1006},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite geographic, financial, and cultural diversity, publications
|
|
dealing with the pharmacist workforce throughout the world share common
|
|
concerns and focus on similar topics. Their findings are presented in
|
|
the literature in a seemingly unrelated way even though they are
|
|
connected to one another as parts of a comprehensive theoretical
|
|
structure. The purpose of this paper is to develop a theoretical model
|
|
that relates some of the most salient topics addressed in the
|
|
international literature on pharmacist workforce. The model is developed
|
|
along two fundamental ideas. The first identifies the shape and location
|
|
of the pharmacist's labor supply curve as the driving force behind all
|
|
workforce decisions undertaken by pharmacists; the second argues that
|
|
gender and age differences are two of the most important factors
|
|
determining the shape and location of this supply curve. The paper then
|
|
discusses movements along the curve attributed to changes in the wage
|
|
rate, as well as displacements of the curve attributed to disparities in
|
|
personal characteristics, investments in human capital, job-related
|
|
preferences, opinions and perceptions, and institutional rigidities. The
|
|
focus is on the individual pharmacist, not on groups of pharmacists or
|
|
the profession as a whole. Works in multiple countries that address each
|
|
topic are identified. Understanding these considerations is critical as
|
|
employers' failure to accommodate pharmacists' preferences for work and
|
|
leisure are associated with negative consequences not only for them but
|
|
also for the healthcare system as a whole. Possible consequences include
|
|
excessive job turnover, absenteeism, decreased institutional commitment,
|
|
and lower quality of work.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Carvajal, MJ (Corresponding Author), Nova Southeastern Univ, Coll Pharm, Dept Sociobehav \& Adm Pharm, 3200 South Univ Dr, Ft Lauderdale, FL 33328 USA.
|
|
Carvajal, Manuel J., Nova Southeastern Univ, Coll Pharm, Dept Sociobehav \& Adm Pharm, 3200 South Univ Dr, Ft Lauderdale, FL 33328 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.sapharm.2017.11.017},
|
|
ISSN = {1551-7411},
|
|
EISSN = {1934-8150},
|
|
Keywords = {Labor supply; Pharmacist workforce; Theoretical framework; Worldwide
|
|
literature},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE PROVIDERS; JOB-SATISFACTION; COMMUNITY PHARMACISTS; FORCE
|
|
PARTICIPATION; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; FUTURE; LIFE; EMPLOYMENT; HOSPITALS;
|
|
STRESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {cmanuel@nova.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {118},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000447013800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000878824200005,
|
|
Author = {Jessen, Jonas},
|
|
Title = {Culture, children and couple gender inequality},
|
|
Journal = {EUROPEAN ECONOMIC REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {150},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper examines how culture impacts within-couple gender inequality.
|
|
Exploiting the setting of Germany's division and reunification, I
|
|
compare child penalties of East Germans who were socialised in a more
|
|
gender egalitarian culture to West Germans socialised in a gender
|
|
-traditional culture. Using a household panel, I show that the long-run
|
|
child penalty on the female income share is 23.9 percentage points for
|
|
West German couples, compared to 12.9 for East German couples. The
|
|
arrival of children also leads to a greater increase in the female share
|
|
of housework and child care for West Germans. I add to the main findings
|
|
by using time-use diary data from the German Democratic Republic (GDR)
|
|
and reunified Germany, which provides a rare insight into gender
|
|
inequality in the GDR and allows me to compare the effect of having
|
|
children in the GDR to the effects in East and West Germany after
|
|
reunification. Lastly, I show that attitudes towards maternal employment
|
|
are more egalitarian among East Germans, but that the arrival of
|
|
children leads to more traditional attitudes for both East and West
|
|
Germans. The findings confirm that socialisation has a strong impact on
|
|
child penalties and that family policies may have an impact on gender
|
|
inequality through social learning in the long run.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jessen, J (Corresponding Author), European Univ Viadrina, Grosse Scharrnstr 59, D-15230 Frankfurt, Germany.
|
|
Jessen, Jonas, European Univ Viadrina, Frankfurt, Germany.
|
|
Jessen, Jonas, IZA Bonn, Bonn, Germany.
|
|
Jessen, Jonas, Berlin Sch Econ, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Jessen, Jonas, European Univ Viadrina, Grosse Scharrnstr 59, D-15230 Frankfurt, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.euroecorev.2022.104310},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {104310},
|
|
ISSN = {0014-2921},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-572X},
|
|
Keywords = {Cultural norms; Gender inequality; Child penalty},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ROLE ATTITUDES; WORK; DIVISION; DYNAMICS; FAMILY; TRANSMISSION; GERMANY;
|
|
REGIMES; MOTHERS; DIFFER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {jjessen@europa-uni.de},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jessen, Jonas/0000-0002-1908-6647},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000878824200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000436955800005,
|
|
Author = {Lettieri, Andrea and Diez Villoria, Emiliano},
|
|
Title = {A Systematization of the International Evidence Related to Labor
|
|
Inclusion Barriers and Facilitators for People with Mental Illness A
|
|
Review of Reviews},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIOLOGICA-ITALIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY ON LINE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Abstract = {Bringing people with mental illness into employment is a phenomenon that
|
|
has been extensively researched in recent years. A review to identify
|
|
and synthesize available evidence on bringing this group into employment
|
|
and the potential fields of interest related to barriers and
|
|
facilitators has been carried out. The electronic search was done using
|
|
17 databases. In total 24 publications of systematic reviews,
|
|
meta-analysis and meta-ethnographies aimed at individuating and
|
|
systematizing barriers to work inclusion were included. The different
|
|
process phases and the variety of circumstances that can slow down or
|
|
push towards a certain condition of job seeker or employee, together
|
|
with the rest of the results presented in this work, demonstrate the
|
|
need to re-direct or extend the research focus related to this issue.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lettieri, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Salamanca, Psychol, Salamanca, Spain.
|
|
Lettieri, A (Corresponding Author), INTRAS Fdn, Iberian Ctr Res Psychosciences IBIP, Zamora, Spain.
|
|
Lettieri, Andrea, Univ Salamanca, Psychol, Salamanca, Spain.
|
|
Lettieri, Andrea, INTRAS Fdn, Iberian Ctr Res Psychosciences IBIP, Zamora, Spain.
|
|
Diez Villoria, Emiliano, Inst Community Integrat INICO, Psychol, Minneapolis, MN USA.
|
|
Diez Villoria, Emiliano, Inst Community Integrat INICO, Minneapolis, MN USA.
|
|
Diez Villoria, Emiliano, Consolidated Res Unit Disabil UIC115, Minneapolis, MN USA.
|
|
Diez Villoria, Emiliano, Univ Salamanca, Grp Res Memory \& Cognit, Salamanca, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2383/89515},
|
|
ISSN = {1971-8853},
|
|
Keywords = {Mental Illness; Work Inclusion; Employability; Barriers and
|
|
Facilitators; Review of Reviews},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT SERVICES; WORK PARTICIPATION; DISCRIMINATION;
|
|
DISABILITIES; OUTCOMES; METAANALYSIS; INDIVIDUALS; PREDICTORS; STIGMA;
|
|
UPDATE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Diez, Emiliano/I-4544-2014},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Diez, Emiliano/0000-0001-7894-3998},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000436955800005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000654812600001,
|
|
Author = {Dorstyn, Diana S. and Chur-Hansen, Anna and Mansell, Ella and Murphy,
|
|
Gregory and Roberts, Rachel M. and Stewart, Peter and Potter, Elizabeth
|
|
and Kneebone, Ian and Craig, Ashley},
|
|
Title = {Facilitators and barriers to employment for persons with chronic spinal
|
|
cord injury or disorder: A qualitative study framed by the
|
|
person-environment-occupation model},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF SPINAL CORD MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {246-255},
|
|
Month = {MAR 4},
|
|
Abstract = {Context/Objective Prolonged unemployment is common for people living
|
|
with a spinal cord injury or disorder (SCI/D) and can impact negatively
|
|
on quality of life. The present study examines stakeholder perspectives
|
|
and experiences with the job search process in order to identify service
|
|
gaps and return-to-work solutions. Design In-depth semi-structured
|
|
interviews were thematically analysed, with questions focused on factors
|
|
that can help or hinder efforts to gain employment. Generated themes
|
|
were then applied to the Person-Environment-Occupation (PEO) systems
|
|
model of participation. Setting Community-based disability service
|
|
provider in South Australia. Participants Purposive sample of persons
|
|
with SCI/D (n = 8) and rehabilitation professionals (n = 4). Results
|
|
Person-centred themes were strongly endorsed by both groups and focused
|
|
on incentives of, and motivation for, employment. Equally important to
|
|
the job search process were individual expectations and attitudes,
|
|
particularly job readiness. Environmental facilitators included
|
|
employers' positive attitude, although workplace discrimination remained
|
|
a concern. Occupation-based barriers, rather than opportunities, were
|
|
identified - namely, difficulties in SCI/D self-management, the need for
|
|
timely functional assessments, and more opportunities for education,
|
|
upskilling and retraining. Conclusions The PEO model provides a broad
|
|
framework to better understand the complex return-to-work process for
|
|
people with a SCI/D and, potentially, uncover tangible solutions. The
|
|
suggestion is that vocational rehabilitation should go beyond skills
|
|
training and include motivational support to enhance job readiness. This
|
|
must be done on a case-by-case basis. There is also a need for active
|
|
and covert discrimination to be addressed through employment policies.
|
|
The findings will be used to develop intervention targets for a newly
|
|
established vocational rehabilitation service.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dorstyn, DS (Corresponding Author), Univ Adelaide, Sch Psychol, Level 5,Hughes Bldg,North Terrace Campus, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Dorstyn, Diana S.; Chur-Hansen, Anna; Mansell, Ella; Roberts, Rachel M.; Potter, Elizabeth, Univ Adelaide, Sch Psychol, Fac Hlth \& Med Sci, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Murphy, Gregory, La Trobe Univ, Sch Psychol \& Publ Hlth, Bundoora, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Stewart, Peter, Parapleg \& Quadripleg Assoc South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Kneebone, Ian, Univ Technol Sydney, Grad Sch Hlth, Discipline Clin Psychol, Ultimo, Australia.
|
|
Craig, Ashley, Univ Sydney, Kolling Inst Med Res, Fac Med \& Hlth, Northern Clin Sch, St Leonards, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/10790268.2021.1922231},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1079-0268},
|
|
EISSN = {2045-7723},
|
|
Keywords = {Spinal cord injury; Employment; Unemployment; Return to work;
|
|
Rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOCATIONAL-REHABILITATION; EARLY ACCESS; WORK; PATHWAYS; RETURN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology},
|
|
Author-Email = {diana.dorstyn@adelaide.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dorstyn, Diana/M-5707-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dorstyn, Diana/0000-0002-7799-8177
|
|
Chur-Hansen, Anna/0000-0002-2935-2689
|
|
Roberts, Rachel/0000-0002-9547-9995
|
|
Craig, Ashley/0000-0001-7647-7604
|
|
Potter, Elizabeth/0000-0002-1019-6233},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000654812600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000404120600011,
|
|
Author = {Meng, L. and Robinson, K. T. and Smith, M. L.},
|
|
Title = {Factors associated with sickness absence among employees with chronic
|
|
conditions},
|
|
Journal = {OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE-OXFORD},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {67},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {296-300},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background The growing prevalence of chronic conditions in the ageing
|
|
workforce has been shown to have a negative impact in terms of optimal
|
|
work performance and quality of life. It is therefore important to
|
|
understand the factors associated with sickness absence due to health
|
|
problems.
|
|
Aims To examine the socio-demographics, health status indicators,
|
|
barriers to self-care and social support associated with working adults
|
|
missing work because of chronic conditions.
|
|
Methods We analysed data from working adults in the USA with one or more
|
|
chronic conditions who completed the National Council on Aging (NCOA)
|
|
Chronic Care Survey. Analyses were performed using SPSS version 22;
|
|
independent sample t-tests and chi-squared tests were used to compare
|
|
sample characteristics and logistic regression was used to assess
|
|
factors associated with missed work as a dichotomous outcome variable.
|
|
Results Among the 250 study subjects, employees who reported poorer
|
|
general health status {[}odd ratio (OR) = 1.62, P < 0.05], more
|
|
physician visits (OR = 1.45, P < 0.01), not having enough money for
|
|
their health (OR = 3.69, P < 0.01) and a higher reliance on their
|
|
co-workers (OR = 1.71, P < 0.05) were significantly more likely to
|
|
report sickness absence due to their chronic conditions.
|
|
Conclusions To reduce absences among employees with chronic conditions,
|
|
employers need to understand the importance of factors such as employee
|
|
income, resources and knowledge of disease self-care. US employers
|
|
should explore opportunities for employees to offset health care costs,
|
|
apply appropriate time-flexible work policies and encourage employees'
|
|
participation in health knowledge enhancing interventions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Meng, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Georgia, Workpl Hlth Grp, Dept Hlth Promot \& Behav, Coll Publ Hlth, 346 Wright Hall, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
|
|
Meng, L.; Robinson, K. T., Univ Georgia, Workpl Hlth Grp, Dept Hlth Promot \& Behav, Coll Publ Hlth, 346 Wright Hall, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
|
|
Smith, M. L., Univ Georgia, Inst Gerontol, Dept Hlth Promot \& Behav, Coll Publ Hlth, 101 Hudson Hall, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
|
|
Smith, M. L., Texas A\&M Univ, Ctr Populat Hlth \& Aging, Dept Hlth Promot \& Community Hlth Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, College Stn, TX 77842 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/occmed/kqx028},
|
|
ISSN = {0962-7480},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-8405},
|
|
Keywords = {Chronic disease; health workplaces; management policy; workplace;
|
|
workplace health promotion},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHRONIC DISEASE; HEALTH; WORK; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {lm38147@uga.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Meng, Lu/GXN-0092-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Meng, Lu/0000-0003-4078-8480},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {10},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000404120600011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000378425300004,
|
|
Author = {Meadows, Sarah O. and Griffin, Beth Ann and Karney, Benjamin R. and
|
|
Pollak, Julia},
|
|
Title = {Employment Gaps Between Military Spouses and Matched Civilians},
|
|
Journal = {ARMED FORCES \& SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {542-561},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Drawing upon data from the Deployment Life Study, this article examines
|
|
whether female military spouses (SPs) are disadvantaged relative to
|
|
matched civilian peers in terms of hours worked and earnings, paying
|
|
particular attention to gaps among the highest educated women. Female
|
|
SPs do earn less than comparable civilian peers in terms of raw dollars
|
|
and percentage earnings. Moreover, military wives who are part of the
|
|
labor force work as many hours as their civilian counterparts, but still
|
|
earn significantly less for that work. Contrary to predictions, the most
|
|
educated SPs are not disproportionately affected compared to spouses
|
|
with less education. These results suggest that SPs at all education
|
|
levels could benefit from employment assistance; in particular, women
|
|
already participating in the labor force may benefit from support in
|
|
finding higher paying jobs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Meadows, SO (Corresponding Author), RAND Corp, 1776 Main St,POB 2138, Santa Monica, CA 90407 USA.
|
|
Meadows, Sarah O.; Pollak, Julia, RAND Corp, 1776 Main St,POB 2138, Santa Monica, CA 90407 USA.
|
|
Griffin, Beth Ann, RAND Corp, RAND Ctr Causal Inference, Santa Monica, CA 90407 USA.
|
|
Karney, Benjamin R., Univ Calif Los Angeles, Social Psychol, Los Angeles, CA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0095327X15607810},
|
|
ISSN = {0095-327X},
|
|
EISSN = {1556-0848},
|
|
Keywords = {military families; wives' employment; income; labor force participation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIGRATION; FAMILY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {smeadows@rand.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Karney, Benjamin/AAG-1632-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Karney, Benjamin/0000-0002-9063-6162},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000378425300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000301243900004,
|
|
Author = {Silva, V. G. and Silva, M. G.},
|
|
Editor = {Yang, J and Brandon, PS and Sidwell, AC},
|
|
Title = {Sustainable building: perspectives for implementation in Latin America},
|
|
Booktitle = {SMART AND SUSTAINABLE BUILT ENVIRONMENTS},
|
|
Year = {2005},
|
|
Pages = {14-22},
|
|
Abstract = {Sustainable building in Latin America extends beyond the use of
|
|
renewable materials, energy efficiency and low impact construction.
|
|
Additional components are fitness for use, durability and adaptability
|
|
over time, quality of indoor and outdoor areas, use of local materials,
|
|
and social and economic development including employment, poverty
|
|
eradication, improvement of income distribution and promotion of
|
|
regional production.
|
|
This text discusses strategies and barriers for the implementation of
|
|
sustainable building in the region based on four focal points:
|
|
(1) long- and short-term balance between building quality expectations
|
|
at low environmental impact and the need to satisfy basic needs for
|
|
large proportions of the population
|
|
(2) development of sustainable building regional parameters, which can
|
|
be significantly different from those found in developed countries
|
|
(3) difficulties posed by formal and informal construction to
|
|
sustainable building implementation
|
|
(4) introduction of sustainable building in professional education.
|
|
The industrialized countries taking part in the first rounds of the
|
|
Green Building Challenge process (GBC) have developed environmental
|
|
policies and finalized construction-oriented research investment. This
|
|
solid foundation facilitated and allowed for immediate work on
|
|
environmental assessment of buildings. Argentina, Brazil, Chile and
|
|
Mexico are now part of the GBC. Although it is clear that they cannot
|
|
replicate methods based on the success they had in other regions, GBC
|
|
can be a valuable means of introducing concepts and raising awareness.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Silva, VG (Corresponding Author), Univ Estadual Campinas, Board Directors, Fac Civil Engn, Brazilian Green Bldg Challenge GBC, Campinas, SP, Brazil.
|
|
Silva, V. G., Univ Estadual Campinas, Board Directors, Fac Civil Engn, Brazilian Green Bldg Challenge GBC, Campinas, SP, Brazil.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-0-470-75949-3},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Architecture; Construction \& Building Technology},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Silva, Márcia G/C-2050-2012},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Silva, Márcia G/0000-0002-4663-7926},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {10},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000301243900004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000478101400004,
|
|
Author = {Topor, Alain and Stefansson, Claes-Goran and Denhov, Anne and Bulow, Per
|
|
and Andersson, Gunnel},
|
|
Title = {Recovery and economy; salary and allowances: a 10-year follow-up of
|
|
income for persons diagnosed with first-time psychosis},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {54},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {919-926},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {PurposePersons with severe mental health problems (SMHP) point out
|
|
financial strain as one of their main problems. De-institutionalisation
|
|
in welfare countries has aimed at normalisation of their living
|
|
conditions. The aim of the study was to follow the changes in income and
|
|
source of income during a 10-year period for persons with a first-time
|
|
psychosis diagnosis (FTPD).MethodsData were gathered from different
|
|
registers. Data from persons with FTPD were compared to data on the
|
|
general population. Two groups with different recovery paths were also
|
|
compared: one group without contact with the mental health services
|
|
during the last five consecutive years of the 10-year follow-up, and the
|
|
other with contact with both 24/7 and community-based services during
|
|
the same period.ResultsSMHP led to poverty, even if the financial
|
|
effects of SMHP were attenuated by welfare interventions. Even a
|
|
recovery path associated with work did not resolve the inequalities
|
|
generated by SMHP.ConclusionsAttention should be paid to the risks of
|
|
confusing the effects of poverty with symptoms of SMHP and thus
|
|
pathologizing poverty and its impact on human beings. Adequate
|
|
interventions should consider to improve the financial situation of
|
|
persons with SMHP.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Topor, A (Corresponding Author), Stockholm Univ, Dept Social Work, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Topor, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Agder, Dept Mental Hlth Grimstad, Kristiansand, Norway.
|
|
Topor, Alain; Stefansson, Claes-Goran; Denhov, Anne; Andersson, Gunnel, Stockholm Univ, Dept Social Work, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Topor, Alain, Univ Agder, Dept Mental Hlth Grimstad, Kristiansand, Norway.
|
|
Bulow, Per, Ryhov Cty Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Jonkoping, Sweden.
|
|
Bulow, Per, Jonkoping Univ, Sch Hlth \& Welf, Dept Behav Sci \& Social Work, Jonkoping, Sweden.
|
|
Andersson, Gunnel, FoU Sodertorn, Res \& Dev Unit, Doktorsvagen 2, S-14730 Tullinge, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s00127-019-01655-4},
|
|
ISSN = {0933-7954},
|
|
EISSN = {1433-9285},
|
|
Keywords = {Psychosis; Poverty; Financial strain; Long-term follow-up; Recovery},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH-CARE; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; POVERTY; SCHIZOPHRENIA; PEOPLE;
|
|
COMMUNITY; SWEDEN; REINSTITUTIONALISATION; EMPLOYMENT; STOCKHOLM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {alain.topor@socarb.su.se},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Topor, Alain/AAH-5908-2019},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000478101400004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000225954200004,
|
|
Author = {Allaire, SH and Niu, JB and LaValley, MP},
|
|
Title = {Employment and satisfaction outcomes from a job retention intervention
|
|
delivered to persons with chronic diseases},
|
|
Journal = {REHABILITATION COUNSELING BULLETIN},
|
|
Year = {2005},
|
|
Volume = {48},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {100-109},
|
|
Month = {WIN},
|
|
Abstract = {Job retention services are recommended for people with chronic diseases
|
|
based on their high risk for work disability. This randomized trial
|
|
tested the effectiveness of a job retention intervention in a sample of
|
|
employed persons with rheumatic diseases at risk for work disability.
|
|
One hundred and twenty-two experimental participants received the job
|
|
retention intervention, and 120 controls received written materials.
|
|
Employment status was assessed at 6-month intervals up to 48 months
|
|
after enrollment. Main outcomes were time to job loss and satisfaction
|
|
with the experimental and control interventions. The log-rank test was
|
|
used to detect a difference between the groups in time to job loss.
|
|
Between-group differences in satisfaction scores were analyzed using
|
|
Wilcoxon tests. Job loss was delayed in experimental participants
|
|
compared with controls, p = 0.03. Satisfaction scores for the job
|
|
retention intervention were substantially higher than those for the
|
|
written materials, p < 0.0001. Job retention intervention has the
|
|
potential to reduce the high rates of chronic disease-associated job
|
|
loss.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Allaire, SH (Corresponding Author), Boston Univ, Sch Med, A203,715 Albany St, Boston, MA 02118 USA.
|
|
Boston Univ, Sch Med, Boston, MA 02118 USA.
|
|
Boston Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA 02118 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/00343552050480020401},
|
|
ISSN = {0034-3552},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH ASSESSMENT QUESTIONNAIRE; VOCATIONAL-REHABILITATION;
|
|
RHEUMATOID-ARTHRITIS; MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS; WORK DISABILITY; PEOPLE;
|
|
BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {sallaire@bu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {LaValley, Michael/AAA-2030-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {LaValley, Michael/0000-0002-8488-5170},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000225954200004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000169821600009,
|
|
Author = {Williams, AM and Balaz, V and Kollar, D},
|
|
Title = {Coming and going in Slovakia: international labour mobility in the
|
|
Central European `buffer zone'},
|
|
Journal = {ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {33},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {1101-1123},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {The collision between economic systems after 1989 led to significant new
|
|
forms of mobility. East Central Europe became a legally and
|
|
institutionally constructed `buffer zone' between Western Europe and the
|
|
CIS, Commonwealth of Independent States-the former USSR. The
|
|
opportunities for and costs of migration in the buffer zone were shaped
|
|
by the `double territorial shock' of the transition:
|
|
reinterationalisation and the withdrawal of massive state intervention
|
|
in support of regional convergence. The authors provide a comparative
|
|
study of mobility and migration into and out of the buffer zone, through
|
|
case studies of Ukrainians working in Slovakia, and Slovakians working
|
|
in Austria. Whereas the Ukrainians are largely confined to the
|
|
secondary-labour market, the Slovakians are found in both segments of
|
|
the dual labour market. This leads to different implications in respect
|
|
of `brain drain' and `brain waste' of international skilled-labour
|
|
mobility, as well as amplifying income differences. The overall effect
|
|
in both cases is to contribute to the reproduction of economic
|
|
inequalities in the buffer zone, and this is explored through an
|
|
analysis of savings and investment and future employment intentions. The
|
|
conclusions are particularly pessimistic in respect of the wage
|
|
differentials required to persuade Ukrainian migrants to return to their
|
|
country of origin.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Williams, AM (Corresponding Author), Univ Exeter, Dept Geog, Exeter EX4 4RJ, Devon, England.
|
|
Univ Exeter, Dept Geog, Exeter EX4 4RJ, Devon, England.
|
|
Slovak Acad Sci, Inst Forecasting, Bratislava 81105, Slovakia.
|
|
Slovak Acad Sci, Inst Geog, Bratislava 81473, Slovakia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1068/a33182},
|
|
ISSN = {0308-518X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GLOBAL CITY; HONG-KONG; MIGRATION; STRUCTURATION; PERSPECTIVE; MIGRANTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies; Geography},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baláž, Vladimír/R-9416-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Baláž, Vladimír/0000-0002-8132-3789},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000169821600009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000238595500012,
|
|
Author = {Jackson, J},
|
|
Title = {Developing regional tourism in China: The potential for activating
|
|
business clusters in a socialist market economy},
|
|
Journal = {TOURISM MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {695-706},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {In China, there are significant inequalities in income distribution
|
|
between inland and coastal regions. Tourism is regarded as one means of
|
|
fostering regional economic development and ameliorating these
|
|
inequalities. Many inland destinations possess natural advantages that
|
|
could form the basis for regional competitive advantage in the presence
|
|
of necessary other conditions, but have experienced difficulty in
|
|
drawing both domestic and international visitors away from the popular
|
|
coastal gateways. This paper considers the nature of competitive
|
|
advantage and the applicability of Porter's (1990. The competitive
|
|
advantage of nations. London: Macmillan Press) theory in an emerging
|
|
market economy. The development of regional tourism clusters based on
|
|
Porter's (1998. On competition. Boston: Harvard Business Review Press)
|
|
model may be a way of fostering competitive advantage in regional China.
|
|
This is especially relevant with recent policy events, including the
|
|
emergence of the `West Development' initiative. The potential for the
|
|
development of regional tourism clusters is explored in this paper,
|
|
which finds that while Porter's model is theoretically applicable, there
|
|
is much work to be done at a micro-business level in fostering cluster
|
|
development. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jackson, J (Corresponding Author), La Trobe Univ, Off Vice Chancellor, Melbourne, Vic 3086, Australia.
|
|
La Trobe Univ, Off Vice Chancellor, Melbourne, Vic 3086, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.tourman.2005.02.007},
|
|
ISSN = {0261-5177},
|
|
Keywords = {China; West Development; competitive advantage; clusters},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POLICIES; STRATEGY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies; Hospitality, Leisure, Sport \& Tourism;
|
|
Management},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {108},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {69},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000238595500012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000401799700004,
|
|
Author = {Lockwood, Mark B. and Saunders, Milda R. and Nass, Rachel and McGivern,
|
|
Claire L. and Cunningham, Patrick N. and Chon, W. James and Josephson,
|
|
Michelle A. and Becker, Yolanda T. and Lee, Christopher S.},
|
|
Title = {Patient-Reported Barriers to the Prekidney Transplant Evaluation in an
|
|
At-Risk Population in the United States},
|
|
Journal = {PROGRESS IN TRANSPLANTATION},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {131-138},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Despite our knowledge of barriers to the early stages of the
|
|
transplant process, we have limited insight into patient-reported
|
|
barriers to the prekidney transplant medical evaluation in populations
|
|
largely at-risk for evaluation failure. Methods: One-hundred consecutive
|
|
adults were enrolled at an urban, Midwestern transplant center.
|
|
Demographic, clinical, and quality of life data were collected prior to
|
|
patients visit with a transplant surgeon/nephrologist (evaluation
|
|
begins). Patient-reported barriers to evaluation completion were
|
|
collected using the Subjective Barriers Questionnaire 90-days after the
|
|
initial medical evaluation appointment (evaluation ends), our center
|
|
targeted goal for transplant work-up completion. Results: At 90 days,
|
|
40\% of participants had not completed the transplant evaluation. Five
|
|
barrier categories were created from the 85 responses to the Subjective
|
|
Barriers Questionnaire. Patient-reported barriers included poor
|
|
communication, physical health, socioeconomics, psychosocial influences,
|
|
and access to care. In addition, determinants for successful evaluation
|
|
completion included being of white race, higher income, free of
|
|
dialysis, a lower comorbid burden, and reporting higher scores on the
|
|
Kidney Disease Quality of Life subscale role-emotional. Conclusion: Poor
|
|
communication between patients and providers, and among providers, was
|
|
the most prominent patient-reported barrier identified. Barriers were
|
|
more prominent in marginalized groups such as ethnic minorities and
|
|
people with low income. Understanding the prevalence of patient-reported
|
|
barriers may aid in the development of patient-centered interventions to
|
|
improve completion rates.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lockwood, MB (Corresponding Author), Univ Illinois, Coll Nursing, Room 658,845 S Damen Ave, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Lockwood, Mark B., Univ Illinois, Coll Nursing, Dept Biobehav Sci, Chicago, IL 60680 USA.
|
|
Saunders, Milda R., Univ Chicago Med, Hosp Med, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
Saunders, Milda R., MacLean Ctr Clin Med Eth, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
Nass, Rachel; Cunningham, Patrick N.; Josephson, Michelle A., Univ Chicago Med, Dept Med, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
McGivern, Claire L.; Becker, Yolanda T., Univ Chicago Med, Dept Surg, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
Chon, W. James, Univ Arkansas Med Sci, Dept Med, Little Rock, AR 72205 USA.
|
|
Lee, Christopher S., Oregon Hlth \& Sci Univ, Sch Nursing, Portland, OR 97201 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1526924817699957},
|
|
ISSN = {1526-9248},
|
|
EISSN = {2164-6708},
|
|
Keywords = {inequities; barriers; transplant; evaluation; kidney},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {KIDNEY-TRANSPLANT; RACIAL DISPARITIES; COMPLETION; DIALYSIS; RACE;
|
|
DECISION; IMPACT; DONOR; STEPS; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Surgery; Transplantation},
|
|
Author-Email = {lockmar@uic.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Chon, Woojin James/F-4684-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Chon, Woojin James/0000-0002-3167-8549
|
|
Lockwood, Mark/0000-0003-2534-8583
|
|
Lee, Christopher/0000-0002-2510-4071},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000401799700004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000661125200048,
|
|
Author = {Bakkeli, Nan Zou},
|
|
Title = {Health, work, and contributing factors on life satisfaction: A study in
|
|
Norway before and during the COVID-19 pandemic},
|
|
Journal = {SSM-POPULATION HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The COVID-19 outbreak has posed considerable challenges for
|
|
people's health, work situations and life satisfaction. This article
|
|
reports on a study of the relationship between self-reported health and
|
|
life satisfaction before and during the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway, and
|
|
examines the role of work in explaining the health-life satisfaction
|
|
relationship.
|
|
Method: The study was based on survey data collected from 3185 Norwegian
|
|
employees in 2019 and 3002 employees in 2020. Propensity score matching
|
|
techniques were used to assess the mediating effects of work situations
|
|
and income loss on the health-life satisfaction relationship. Skew-t
|
|
regression models were further applied to estimate changes in life
|
|
satisfaction before and during the pandemic, as well as to explore
|
|
different underlying mechanisms for the health-life satisfaction
|
|
association.
|
|
Results: The study found a negative association between ill health and
|
|
life satisfaction. Compared to the healthy population, people with poor
|
|
health were more likely to experience worsened work situations. A
|
|
negative work situation is further associated with lower life
|
|
satisfaction, and the pandemic aggravated life satisfaction for those
|
|
who had worsened work situations. When exploring central contributing
|
|
factors for life satisfaction, we found that health-related risks and
|
|
work-life balance played predominant roles in predicting life
|
|
satisfaction before the pandemic, while different types of household
|
|
structure were among the most important predictors of life satisfaction
|
|
during the pandemic.
|
|
Conclusion: A reduction in life satisfaction is explained by ill health,
|
|
but different underlying mechanisms facilitated people's life
|
|
satisfaction before and during the pandemic. While work situation and
|
|
health risks were important predictors for life satisfaction in 2019,
|
|
worries about more unstable work situations and less access to family
|
|
support accentuated worsened life satisfaction in 2020. The findings
|
|
suggest the necessity of labour market interventions that address the
|
|
security and maintenance of proper and predictable work situations,
|
|
especially in these more uncertain times.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bakkeli, NZ (Corresponding Author), Oslo Metropolitan Univ, Consumpt Studies Norway, POB 4, N-0130 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Bakkeli, Nan Zou, Oslo Metropolitan Univ, Consumpt Studies Norway, POB 4, N-0130 Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100804},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {100804},
|
|
ISSN = {2352-8273},
|
|
Keywords = {Life satisfaction; Health; Work; COVID-19; Inequality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; MENTAL-HEALTH; FAMILY CONFLICT; WELFARE-STATE; ILL
|
|
HEALTH; HAPPINESS; IMPACT; DETERMINANTS; EMPLOYMENT; OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {Nan.Bakkeli@oslomet.no},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bakkeli, Nan/0000-0002-4089-020X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {104},
|
|
Times-Cited = {19},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {25},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000661125200048},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000595019000001,
|
|
Author = {Pothipala, Varaporn and Keerasuntonpong, Prae and Cordery, Carolyn},
|
|
Title = {Alleviating social and economic inequality? The role of social
|
|
enterprises in Thailand},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING AND ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {50-70},
|
|
Month = {FEB 26},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose
|
|
Thailand is a developing economy underpinned by high levels of wealth
|
|
inequality and an ingrained patronage culture. This research aims to
|
|
examine how social enterprises (SEs) have been encouraged in Thailand in
|
|
recent years as ``micro-level challenges{''} to capitalism and their
|
|
potential impact in addressing inequality.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach
|
|
Through analysing policy documents and consultations, this paper traces
|
|
the development of Thai policies intended to encourage SEs' development.
|
|
Additionally, the paper uses case study interviews and documents to
|
|
demonstrate how SEs tackle inequality. From these, a framework is
|
|
developed, outlining SEs' roles and interventions to reduce inequality.
|
|
Findings
|
|
Thailand's new policy is in contrast to those countries where SEs face
|
|
policy neglect. Nevertheless, government has been slow to embed
|
|
processes to encourage new SEs. Despite SEs' ``challenge{''} to
|
|
capitalism, listed companies are increasingly providing in-kind and
|
|
financial support. The case study data shows SEs reduce inequality as
|
|
they work with rural citizens to increase their employment and incomes.
|
|
This work may also contribute to diminishing rural citizens' dependency
|
|
on political patronage.
|
|
Research limitations/implications
|
|
While SEs can address inequality gaps, the research includes only
|
|
existing SEs on specific lists. Nevertheless, the Thai experience will
|
|
be useful to other developing countries, especially those beset by
|
|
political patronage.
|
|
Originality/value
|
|
The research shows legislation is insufficient to support SE growth and
|
|
inequality reduction. The framework highlights the need for both
|
|
government policy attention and interventions from donors and companies
|
|
to support SEs' efforts.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cordery, C (Corresponding Author), Aston Univ, Aston Business Sch, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Cordery, C (Corresponding Author), Victoria Univ Wellington, Sch Accounting \& Commercial Law, Victoria Business Sch, Wellington, New Zealand.
|
|
Pothipala, Varaporn, Chulalongkorn Business Sch, Dept Accounting, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
|
Keerasuntonpong, Prae, Chulalongkorn Business Sch, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
|
Cordery, Carolyn, Aston Univ, Aston Business Sch, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Cordery, Carolyn, Victoria Univ Wellington, Sch Accounting \& Commercial Law, Victoria Business Sch, Wellington, New Zealand.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/JAOC-09-2020-0127},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1832-5912},
|
|
EISSN = {1839-5473},
|
|
Keywords = {Social enterprise; Inequality; Patronage governance; Thai social class},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ENTREPRENEURSHIP; ACCOUNTABILITY; PERFORMANCE; DRIFT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business, Finance},
|
|
Author-Email = {c.cordery@aston.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cordery, Carolyn/0000-0001-9511-7671},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000595019000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000536120800004,
|
|
Author = {Shrestha, Binit K. and Choi, Jin Ouk and Shrestha, Pramen P. and Lim,
|
|
Jaewon and Manesh, Saba Nikkhah},
|
|
Title = {Employment and Wage Distribution Investigation in the Construction
|
|
Industry by Gender},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT IN ENGINEERING},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {36},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {JUL 1},
|
|
Abstract = {The construction industry has insufficient interest and participation
|
|
from women, as well as an existing gender wage gap. To address these
|
|
issues, a better understanding of the recent situation regarding gender
|
|
workforce biases and income differences is required. Therefore, this
|
|
study analyzes employment levels and wage distributions in 2015 by
|
|
gender through data collected from reputable sources, such as the Bureau
|
|
of Labor Statistics (BLS), Data USA, and the US Census Bureau, on
|
|
employment and wage gaps related to gender in the construction industry.
|
|
This data was normalized, and an analysis was conducted to compare males
|
|
and females versus the total population and median wages. The analysis
|
|
confirms the existence of gaps in both of these areas, reports that this
|
|
trend has remained steady over the years, and identifies the top ten
|
|
construction occupations in which discernable gaps from Data USA can be
|
|
observed. The purpose is to emphasize the latest status of construction
|
|
industry employment and wage discrepancy related to gender. This study
|
|
will contribute to the area of workplace diversity and discrimination by
|
|
drawing the attention of decision-makers to the problem and encouraging
|
|
them to develop approaches to reduce disparities. Subsequently, with the
|
|
attainment of the preceding objectives, the researchers hope this
|
|
technical note can help increase the interest and sustain participation
|
|
of women across the construction industry.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Choi, JO (Corresponding Author), Univ Nevada, Dept Civil \& Environm Engn \& Construct, 4505 S Maryland Pkwy, Las Vegas, NV 89154 USA.
|
|
Shrestha, Binit K.; Choi, Jin Ouk; Shrestha, Pramen P.; Manesh, Saba Nikkhah, Univ Nevada, Dept Civil \& Environm Engn \& Construct, 4505 S Maryland Pkwy, Las Vegas, NV 89154 USA.
|
|
Lim, Jaewon, Univ Nevada, Dept Publ Policy \& Leadership, 4505 S Maryland Pkwy, Las Vegas, NV 89154 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1061/(ASCE)ME.1943-5479.0000778},
|
|
Article-Number = {06020001},
|
|
ISSN = {0742-597X},
|
|
EISSN = {1943-5479},
|
|
Keywords = {Construction industry; Labor issues; Workplace diversity;
|
|
Discrimination; Wage gap},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SEX SEGREGATION; GRADUATE-SCHOOL; UNITED-STATES; GAP; EARNINGS; WOMENS;
|
|
IMPACT; STEM; MOBILITY; DECISION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Engineering, Industrial; Engineering, Civil},
|
|
Author-Email = {shresb1@unlv.nevada.edu
|
|
jinouk.choi@unlv.edu
|
|
pramen.shrestha@unlv.edu
|
|
jaewon.lim@unlv.edu
|
|
nikkhahm@unlv.nevada.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lim, Jaewon/AAL-6804-2020
|
|
Shrestha, Binit/AAU-5013-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shrestha, Binit/0000-0001-9042-3725
|
|
Lim, Jaewon/0000-0002-0224-6448
|
|
Shrestha, Pramen/0000-0001-6362-2315
|
|
Choi, Jin Ouk/0000-0003-3212-2304},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {19},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {37},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000536120800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000360141000008,
|
|
Author = {Zhou Changzheng},
|
|
Title = {Legal Protection of the Right to Old-Age Insurance for Migrant Workers
|
|
from Rural Areas in China},
|
|
Journal = {CHINA-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {135-150},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {China's main comparative advantage in international competition is its
|
|
cheap labour, mostly migrant workers from rural areas. Migrant workers
|
|
play an important role in the economic development of China. Since 1978
|
|
when China began to adopt the reform and opening-up policy, more and
|
|
more migrant workers have poured into cities and towns to seek better
|
|
employment opportunities. However, besides low wages, they have to
|
|
endure long working hours and dangerous working environments. In
|
|
addition, many employers do not contribute social insurance for migrant
|
|
workers at all, leaving them vulnerable to unexpected living costs.
|
|
According to a survey conducted in the Yangtze Delta Region by the Legal
|
|
Aid Program for Migrant Workers at Nanjing University in August 2009,
|
|
only 39.3 per cent of migrant workers have pension schemes, and 31.5 per
|
|
cent of migrant workers have not joined any social insurance schemes of
|
|
any sort. In some cities such as Wenzhou, even fewer are covered, as
|
|
only 15.4 per cent of migrant workers have a pension scheme and 50 per
|
|
cent of migrant workers have not joined any social insurance scheme.
|
|
When migrant workers become old, sick, unemployed or injured in
|
|
industrial accidents, they fall into poverty because they cannot apply
|
|
for social insurance benefits. Among these problematic issues, old-age
|
|
insurance should be specifically highlighted because more migrant
|
|
workers are reaching their retirement age. There has been an increasing
|
|
number of pension cases filed at the courts of law. However, many courts
|
|
refuse to proceed with the hearings of these social insurance cases, or
|
|
apply inappropriate legal doctrines in the trial process. It is also
|
|
almost impossible for migrant workers to get legal redress for their
|
|
pension benefits when their employers fail to comply with the law and
|
|
contribute fees for them. It is imperative for the Chinese government to
|
|
unify the old-age insurance system countrywide.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zhou, CZ (Corresponding Author), Nanjing Univ, Sch Law, Nanjing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Nanjing Univ, Sch Law, Nanjing, Peoples R China.},
|
|
ISSN = {0219-7472},
|
|
EISSN = {0219-8614},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Area Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {earnestzhou@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {8},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000360141000008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000705222200001,
|
|
Author = {Lim, Dohee and Kong, Kyoung Ae and Park, Hyesook and Jung-Choi, Kyunghee},
|
|
Title = {Employment status and mortality among Korean men over a 13-year period},
|
|
Journal = {EPIDEMIOLOGY AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Month = {AUG 18},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVES: This study explored the effect of employment status on
|
|
mortality over a 13-year period in Korean men. METHODS: Data were used
|
|
from the Korean Labor and Income Panel Study from 1999 to 2012. This
|
|
study started with 2,737 subjects and included employed men in good
|
|
health, aged 30-69 years. Deaths were tracked for 13 years from 2000 to
|
|
2012. Employment status classifications were: (1) regular employees, (2)
|
|
precarious employees, (3) petty bourgeoisie, and (4) employers. Hazard
|
|
ratios (HRs) were calculated using a Cox proportional hazards model, and
|
|
were adjusted for age, education, income, and occupation, with regular
|
|
employees as the reference category. To examine the effect of employment
|
|
status and include employment history, the risk ratios of mortality were
|
|
measured using the Poisson regression model, considering the duration of
|
|
each employment and using 0 years as the reference category. RESULTS:
|
|
Over the course of the 13-year study, being a precarious employee (HR,
|
|
1.84) or petty bourgeoisie (HR, 1.87) at a particular point in time had
|
|
a negative effect on mortality when compared with regular employees.
|
|
Furthermore, working as precarious employees or petty bourgeoisie had no
|
|
positive effect on mortality. A positive effect was observed, however,
|
|
on the overall mortality risk for regular employees. CONCLUSIONS: These
|
|
results suggest that a healthy social policy is needed for precarious
|
|
employees and petty bourgeoisie to avoid disadvantages in the workplace
|
|
and the social safety net.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jung-Choi, K (Corresponding Author), Ewha Womans Univ, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Coll Med, 25 Magokdong Ro, Seoul 07804, South Korea.
|
|
Lim, Dohee; Kong, Kyoung Ae; Park, Hyesook, Ewha Womans Univ, Coll Med, Dept Prevent Med, Seoul, South Korea.
|
|
Park, Hyesook, Ewha Womans Univ, Grad Program Syst Hlth Sci \& Engn, Seoul, South Korea.
|
|
Jung-Choi, Kyunghee, Ewha Womans Univ, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Coll Med, 25 Magokdong Ro, Seoul 07804, South Korea.
|
|
Lim, Dohee, Natl Med Ctr, Ctr Publ Healthcare, Seoul, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4178/epih.e2021055},
|
|
Article-Number = {e2021055},
|
|
ISSN = {2092-7193},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment status; Mortality; Precarious employee; Petty bourgeoisie},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ALL-CAUSE MORTALITY; PRECARIOUS EMPLOYMENT; SOCIAL-CLASS; WORK
|
|
DISORGANIZATION; TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT; FLEXIBLE EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
OCCUPATIONAL-HEALTH; GLOBAL EXPANSION; CONSEQUENCES; EMPLOYEES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jungchoi@ewha.ac.kr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Jung-Choi, Kyunghee/AAC-5561-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jung-Choi, Kyunghee/0000-0002-9800-0994
|
|
Lim, Dohee/0000-0002-0549-8704
|
|
Park, Hyesook/0000-0002-9359-6522},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000705222200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000403322900002,
|
|
Author = {Chau, Ruby C. M. and Foster, Liam and Yu, Sam W. K. and Yu, Yuk Pun},
|
|
Title = {Defamilization/familization measures and women's pension incomeThe case
|
|
of Taiwan},
|
|
Journal = {ASIAN SOCIAL WORK AND POLICY REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {116-123},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper examines how defamilization and familization measures can
|
|
affect women's capacity to accumulate pension income and their
|
|
subsequent standard of living after retirement. Firstly, it highlights
|
|
the concepts of defamilization and familization and discusses the
|
|
potential of these measures in assisting women to save pension income
|
|
through the commodification and decommodification of labor. Secondly, it
|
|
examines the major pension policies and examples of defamilization and
|
|
familization measures in Taiwan. It shows how the current limited
|
|
provision of such measures could create double jeopardy for women,
|
|
affecting access to paid employment or resources to enable women who
|
|
wish to undertake caring responsibilities to do so, ultimately impacting
|
|
their capacity to accumulate pension income. Thirdly, it suggests ways
|
|
to strengthen defamilization and familization measures in order to
|
|
enable women to accumulate sufficient retirement income on the basis of
|
|
three preconditions: policy attention to the reciprocal relationship
|
|
between familization/defamilization measures and pension schemes for
|
|
women; a recognition of differences between women in their preferred
|
|
strategies to accumulate pension income; and an emphasis on a life
|
|
course perspective to understand the double jeopardies faced by women in
|
|
saving for retirement.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chau, RCM (Corresponding Author), Univ Sheffield, Dept Sociol Studies, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Chau, Ruby C. M.; Foster, Liam, Univ Sheffield, Dept Sociol Studies, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Yu, Sam W. K., Hong Kong Baptist Univ, Dept Social Work, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Yu, Yuk Pun, Yan Oi Tong Community Ctr, Tuen Mun, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/aswp.12118},
|
|
ISSN = {1753-1403},
|
|
EISSN = {1753-1411},
|
|
Keywords = {defamilization; familization; life course approach; pension income;
|
|
Taiwan; women},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL-POLICY; GENDER; DEFAMILISATION; PATTERNS; REGIMES; INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {c.chau@sheffield.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Chau, Chui Man/0000-0003-3118-4669},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000403322900002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000293691000003,
|
|
Author = {Price, Sarah Kye},
|
|
Title = {Women's Use of Multisector Mental Health Services in a Community-based
|
|
Perinatal Depression Program},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL WORK RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {145-155},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Low-income and ethnic minority women have been described as at risk for
|
|
experiencing depression during and around the time of pregnancy, a
|
|
finding complicated by low levels of mental health service use within
|
|
this population. This study retrospectively examined data from a
|
|
community-based perinatal depression project targeting low-income women
|
|
in which many barriers to care were removed and a range of services
|
|
could be elected from social work, specialty mental health, primary
|
|
care, and peer support. The study focused on 206 women who self-referred
|
|
to the project after community-based screening. In this sample, the mean
|
|
age was 25.49 years, with 53\% of participants identified as women of
|
|
color, and 76\% had income at or below 185\% of the poverty level. The
|
|
characteristics within this sample most strongly associated with service
|
|
use varied among sectors of care. Women of color and women with elevated
|
|
psychosocial risk were significantly more likely to use social work home
|
|
visiting, whereas current depressive symptom level predicted specialty
|
|
mental health sector treatment but not other sectors of care. Findings
|
|
from this study compel future research to consider the complex factors
|
|
influencing women's use of mental health services among multiple sectors
|
|
of care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Price, SK (Corresponding Author), Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Sch Social Work, 1001 W Franklin St,POB 842027, Richmond, VA 23284 USA.
|
|
Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Sch Social Work, Richmond, VA 23284 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/swr/34.3.145},
|
|
ISSN = {1070-5309},
|
|
EISSN = {1545-6838},
|
|
Keywords = {community-based research; depression; mental health services; service
|
|
utilization; women},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TREATING DEPRESSION; POSTPARTUM; PREGNANCY; MOOD; HELP},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {skprice@vcu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Price, Sarah K/G-9140-2012},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000293691000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000081095700007,
|
|
Author = {Hetzler, A},
|
|
Title = {To commit social change: The sociology and the sociologists of the
|
|
welfare state},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIOLOGISK FORSKNING},
|
|
Year = {1999},
|
|
Volume = {36},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {141-154},
|
|
Abstract = {The article is an analysis of processes of social change in the Swedish
|
|
society during the 1990's. Changes in systems of production and changes
|
|
in identity processes are seen as central components fur understanding
|
|
the transformation of the welfare state. These processes of social
|
|
change can be sociologically underwood by reference to the important
|
|
impact on social policy of current theories of economic growth as well
|
|
as the relationship between economic theories and theories of the state,
|
|
Changes in the processes of production are discussed by looking at
|
|
theories of marginalisation and social exclusion as well as problems of
|
|
work and maintaining a liveable income. Changes in the creation and
|
|
development of identity are discussed by focusing on the public identity
|
|
as it is formed by citizenship and the democratic development of the
|
|
individual as a unique subject. The public identity, which is a
|
|
collective identity, is analysed against a market identity where the
|
|
individual is defined as a consumer or as a client and thereby
|
|
objectified and isolated,
|
|
The framework for the article is a four-step model of welfare state
|
|
transformation which occured in Sweden as well as in other countries
|
|
during the last decade. The first step is increased inequality in wages
|
|
as well as income distribution, the second step is narrowing of social
|
|
rights and entitlements, the third step is lowering wages, and the last
|
|
step is a redefinition of the concept of employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Swedish},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-0342},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000081095700007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000679176400010,
|
|
Author = {Rotheram, Suzanne and Cooper, Jessie and Barr, Ben and Whitehead,
|
|
Margaret},
|
|
Title = {How are inequalities generated in the management and consequences of
|
|
gastrointestinal infections in the UK? An ethnographic study},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {282},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Gastrointestinal infections are an important global public health issue.
|
|
In the UK, one in four people experience a gastrointestinal infection
|
|
each year and epidemiological research highlights inequalities in the
|
|
burden of disease. Specifically, poorer children are at greater risk of
|
|
infection and the consequences of illness, such as symptom severity and
|
|
time off work/school, are greater for less privileged groups of all
|
|
ages. Gastrointestinal infections are, however, largely `hidden' within
|
|
the home and little is known about the lived experience and practices
|
|
surrounding these illnesses, how they vary across contrasting
|
|
socioeconomic contexts, or how inequalities in the disease burden across
|
|
socioeconomic groups might come about. This paper presents data from an
|
|
ethnographic study which illuminate how socioeconomic inequalities in
|
|
the physical and material management and consequences of
|
|
gastrointestinal infections are generated in families with young
|
|
children. The study shows how the `work' needed to manage
|
|
gastrointestinal infections is more laborious for people living in more
|
|
`disadvantaged' conditions, exacerbated by: more overcrowded homes with
|
|
fewer washing and toilet facilities; inflexible employment; low
|
|
household incomes; and higher likelihood of co-morbidities which can be
|
|
made worse by having a gastrointestinal infection. Our findings call
|
|
into question the current approach to prevention of gastrointestinal
|
|
infections which tend to focus almost exclusively on individual
|
|
behaviours, which are not adapted to reflect differences in
|
|
socioeconomic context. Public health agencies should also consider how
|
|
wider social, economic and policy contexts shape inequalities in the
|
|
management and consequences of illness. Our findings are also pertinent
|
|
to the COVID-19 pandemic response in the UK. They highlight how research
|
|
and policy approaches to acute infectious diseases need to take into
|
|
consideration the differing lived experiences of contrasting households
|
|
if they wish to address (and avoid exacerbating) inequalities in the
|
|
future.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rotheram, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Liverpool, Natl Inst Hlth Res, Hlth Protect Res Unit Gastrointestinal Infect, Waterhouse Bldg,2nd Floor,Block F,1-5 Brownlow St, Liverpool L69 3GL, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Rotheram, Suzanne; Barr, Ben; Whitehead, Margaret, Univ Liverpool, Natl Inst Hlth Res, Hlth Protect Res Unit Gastrointestinal Infect, Waterhouse Bldg,2nd Floor,Block F,1-5 Brownlow St, Liverpool L69 3GL, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Rotheram, Suzanne; Barr, Ben; Whitehead, Margaret, Univ Liverpool, Dept Publ Hlth Policy \& Syst, Whelan Bldg, Liverpool L68 3GB, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Cooper, Jessie, City Univ London, Sch Hlth Sci, Div Hlth Serv Res \& Management, Myddelton St Bldg, London EC1R 1UW, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114131},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {114131},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {Gastrointestinal infection; Health inequalities; Behavioural
|
|
interventions; Ethnography; COVID-19},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; DISEASE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {suzanne.rotheram@liverpool.ac.uk
|
|
Jessie.Cooper@city.ac.uk
|
|
benbarr@liverpool.ac.uk
|
|
mmw@liverpool.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Barr, Ben R/W-9989-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Barr, Ben R/0000-0002-4208-9475
|
|
Rotheram, Suzanne/0000-0002-4444-9796},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000679176400010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000453172100009,
|
|
Author = {Sadovaya, Elena S. and Tsapenko, Irina P.},
|
|
Title = {IMPERATIVES OF SOCIAL POLICY IN TIMES OF CRISIS},
|
|
Journal = {MIROVAYA EKONOMIKA I MEZHDUNARODNYE OTNOSHENIYA},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {60},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {98-112},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {The crisis affecting Russia provokes risks of rising unemployment,
|
|
reducing real incomes, growing poverty, worsening demographic situation
|
|
and other negative social trends. It accentuates acute structural
|
|
problems challenging future human development, threatening with social
|
|
and economic degradation of Russia. Workforce employment structure by
|
|
economic activity and occupation lacks economic efficiency and social
|
|
reasonability. Poor state of labor protection results in high incidence
|
|
of work accidents. Obsolete labor regulations prevent the employment
|
|
adjustment to reindustrialization shocks. Huge and unfair gaps in
|
|
workers remuneration by economic activity, region and occupation cause
|
|
high income inequality. Low level of remuneration in many economic
|
|
activities, including those contributing to modernization of economy,
|
|
leads to high working poverty and low attractiveness of innovative
|
|
sectors to workers. Persistent low fertility, high mortality and low
|
|
life-spam engender unsupportable demographic development and risks of
|
|
restarting depopulation. Uncontrolled immigration of unqualified
|
|
workforce from developing Asian countries is a source of growing social,
|
|
ethno-cultural and political tensions. There are risks of growing
|
|
emigration and turning flows of adaptive migrants away from Russia to
|
|
EU. Structural and institutional reforms are to be realized to
|
|
counteract these problems and risks and overcome crisis. Such measures
|
|
are to get over the unjustified unbalances in employment and
|
|
remuneration distribution, to form new competences and professional
|
|
attitudes and raise stability of demographic development, supply of
|
|
labor resources and boost their productivity. These changes may create
|
|
social premises for transition to economic growth of new quality based
|
|
on frontier technologies, wide innovations and high human development.
|
|
At the same time high-tech economy development poses challenges of high
|
|
unemployment, and labor market policies are to maintain balance between
|
|
the needs of conserving stable employment and realizing economic
|
|
transformations. Solution of many acute national problems should be
|
|
based of complex approach, supposing package type of measures and
|
|
simultaneity of social and economic reforms.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Russian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sadovaya, ES (Corresponding Author), Russian Acad Sci IMEMO, Primakov Inst World Econ \& Int Relat, 23 Profsoyuznaya Str, Moscow 117997, Russia.
|
|
Sadovaya, Elena S.; Tsapenko, Irina P., Russian Acad Sci IMEMO, Primakov Inst World Econ \& Int Relat, 23 Profsoyuznaya Str, Moscow 117997, Russia.},
|
|
ISSN = {0131-2227},
|
|
Keywords = {social policy; Russia; economic crisis; risks; structural problems;
|
|
employment; remuneration of workers; demographic situation; social
|
|
reforms; innovation economy},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {International Relations},
|
|
Author-Email = {sadovaja.elena@yandex.ru
|
|
tsapenko@imemo.ru},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tsapenko, Irina Pavlovna/B-1993-2017
|
|
Sadovaya, Elena/G-6310-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tsapenko, Irina Pavlovna/0000-0001-6065-790X
|
|
Sadovaya, Elena/0000-0002-0553-3047},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {10},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000453172100009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000320281000001,
|
|
Author = {Olesen, Sarah C. and Butterworth, Peter and Leach, Liana S. and Kelaher,
|
|
Margaret and Pirkis, Jane},
|
|
Title = {Mental health affects future employment as job loss affects mental
|
|
health: findings from a longitudinal population study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {MAY 24},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Workforce participation is a key feature of public mental
|
|
health and social inclusion policies across the globe, and often a
|
|
therapeutic goal in treatment settings. Understanding the reciprocal
|
|
relationship between participation and mental health has been limited by
|
|
inadequate research methods. This is the first study to simultaneously
|
|
examine and contrast the relative effects of unemployment on mental
|
|
health and mental health on employment status in a single general
|
|
population sample.
|
|
Method: Data were from working-age respondents (20 to 55 years at
|
|
baseline) who completed nine waves of the Household, Income and Labour
|
|
Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey (N = 7176). Cross-lagged path
|
|
analyses were used to test the lagged and concurrent associations
|
|
between unemployment and mental health over time, adjusting for
|
|
sociodemographic characteristics.
|
|
Results: Mental health was shown to be both a consequence of and risk
|
|
factor for unemployment. Thus, the poorer mental health observed amongst
|
|
people who are not working is attributable to both the impact of
|
|
unemployment and existing mental health problems. While the strength of
|
|
these two effects was similar for women, the results for men suggested
|
|
that the effect of unemployment on subsequent mental health was weaker
|
|
than the effect of mental health on subsequent risk of unemployment.
|
|
Conclusion: Disentangling the reciprocal links between mental health and
|
|
workforce participation is central to the development and success of
|
|
clinical goals and health and social policies that aim to promote either
|
|
aspect. This study demonstrates that both effects are important and
|
|
supports concurrent responses to prevent a cycle of disadvantage and
|
|
entrenched social exclusion.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Olesen, SC (Corresponding Author), Australian Natl Univ, Coll Med Biol \& Environm, Ctr Res Ageing Hlth \& Wellbeing, Bldg 62A Eggleston Rd, Acton, ACT 0200, Australia.
|
|
Olesen, Sarah C.; Butterworth, Peter; Leach, Liana S., Australian Natl Univ, Coll Med Biol \& Environm, Ctr Res Ageing Hlth \& Wellbeing, Acton, ACT 0200, Australia.
|
|
Kelaher, Margaret; Pirkis, Jane, Univ Melbourne, Fac Med Dent \& Hlth Sci, Melbourne Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Carlton, Vic 3010, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1471-244X-13-144},
|
|
Article-Number = {144},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-244X},
|
|
Keywords = {Mental health; Unemployment; Employment; Inclusion; Longitudinal; Social
|
|
policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LONG-TERM UNEMPLOYMENT; PSYCHOTIC DISORDERS; NATIONAL-SURVEY;
|
|
PREDICTORS; SELECTION; SCHIZOPHRENIA; TRANSITIONS; DEPRESSION;
|
|
RETIREMENT; SYMPTOMS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {sarah.olesen@anu.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Butterworth, Peter/AFK-2636-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Leach, Liana/0000-0003-3686-2553
|
|
Butterworth, Peter/0000-0002-1531-3881
|
|
kelaher, Margaret/0000-0002-9899-858X
|
|
Olesen, Sarah/0000-0001-9564-6661},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {145},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {42},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000320281000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000487933400001,
|
|
Author = {Neumark, David and Asquith, Brian and Bass, Brittany},
|
|
Title = {LONGER-RUN EFFECTS OF ANTI-POVERTY POLICIES ON DISADVANTAGED
|
|
NEIGHBORHOODS},
|
|
Journal = {CONTEMPORARY ECONOMIC POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {409-434},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {We assess evidence on the longer-run effects of minimum wages, the
|
|
Earned Income Tax Credit, and welfare on key economic indicators of
|
|
economic self-sufficiency in disadvantaged neighborhoods. The evidence
|
|
suggests that the longer-run effects of the Earned Income Tax Credit are
|
|
to increase employment and to reduce poverty and public assistance. We
|
|
also find some evidence consistent with higher welfare benefits having
|
|
longer-run adverse effects, and stronger evidence that tighter welfare
|
|
time limits reduce poverty and public assistance in the longer-run. The
|
|
evidence on the longer-run effects of the minimum wage on poverty and
|
|
public assistance is not robust. (JEL J22, J23, J38)},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Neumark, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Econ, Econ, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.
|
|
Neumark, D (Corresponding Author), NBER, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Neumark, David, Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Econ, Econ, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.
|
|
Neumark, David, NBER, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Asquith, Brian, WE Upjohn Inst, Kalamazoo, MI 49007 USA.
|
|
Bass, Brittany, Calif State Univ Sacramento, Dept Econ, Sacramento, CA 95819 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/coep.12445},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {1074-3529},
|
|
EISSN = {1465-7287},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME-TAX CREDIT; MINIMUM-WAGE; WELFARE-REFORM; EMPLOYMENT; IMPACT;
|
|
MEDICAID; HEALTH; WORK; EITC},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Public Administration},
|
|
Author-Email = {dneumark@uci.edu
|
|
basquith86@gmail.com
|
|
b.bass@csus.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Asquith, Brian/0000-0002-5783-5557},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000487933400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000593166800001,
|
|
Author = {Wong, Katie and Owen-Smith, Amanda and Caskey, Fergus and MacNeill,
|
|
Stephanie and Tomson, Charles R. V. and Dor, Frank J. M. F. and
|
|
Ben-Shlomo, Yoav and Bouacida, Soumeya and Idowu, Dela and Bailey, Pippa},
|
|
Title = {Investigating Ethnic Disparity in Living-Donor Kidney Transplantation in
|
|
the UK: Patient-Identified Reasons for Non-Donation among Family Members},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {There is ethnic inequity in access to living-donor kidney transplants in
|
|
the UK. This study asked kidney patients from Black, Asian and minority
|
|
ethnic groups why members of their family were not able to be living
|
|
kidney donors. Responses were compared with responses from White
|
|
individuals. This questionnaire-based mixed-methods study included
|
|
adults transplanted between 1/4/13-31/3/17 at 14 UK hospitals.
|
|
Participants were asked to indicate why relatives could not donate,
|
|
selecting all options applicable from: Age; Health; Weight; Location;
|
|
Financial/Cost; Job; Blood group; No-one to care for them after
|
|
donation. A box entitled `Other-please give details' was provided for
|
|
free-text entries. Multivariable logistic regression was used to analyse
|
|
the association between the likelihood of selecting each reason for
|
|
non-donation and the participant's self-reported ethnicity. Qualitative
|
|
responses were analysed using inductive thematic analysis. In total,
|
|
1240 questionnaires were returned (40\% response). There was strong
|
|
evidence that Black, Asian and minority ethnic group individuals were
|
|
more likely than White people to indicate that family members lived too
|
|
far away to donate (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 3.25, 95\% Confidence
|
|
Interval (CI) 2.30-4.58), were prevented from donating by financial
|
|
concerns (aOR = 2.95, 95\% CI 2.02-4.29), were unable to take time off
|
|
work (aOR = 1.88, 95\% CI 1.18-3.02), were ``not the right blood
|
|
group{''} (aOR = 1.65, 95\% CI 1.35-2.01), or had no-one to care for
|
|
them post-donation (aOR = 3.73, 95\% CI 2.60-5.35). Four qualitative
|
|
themes were identified from responses from Black, Asian and minority
|
|
ethnic group participants: `Burden of disease within the family';
|
|
`Differing religious interpretations'; `Geographical concerns'; and `A
|
|
culture of silence'. Patients perceive barriers to living kidney
|
|
donation in the UK Black, Asian and minority ethnic population. If
|
|
confirmed, these could be targeted by interventions to redress the
|
|
observed ethnic inequity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wong, KT (Corresponding Author), Univ Bristol, Bristol Med Sch Populat Hlth Sci, Bristol BS8 2PS, Avon, England.
|
|
Wong, KT (Corresponding Author), North Bristol NHS Trust, Southmead Hosp, Bristol BS10 5NB, Avon, England.
|
|
Wong, Katie; Owen-Smith, Amanda; Caskey, Fergus; MacNeill, Stephanie; Ben-Shlomo, Yoav; Bailey, Pippa, Univ Bristol, Bristol Med Sch Populat Hlth Sci, Bristol BS8 2PS, Avon, England.
|
|
Wong, Katie; Caskey, Fergus; Bailey, Pippa, North Bristol NHS Trust, Southmead Hosp, Bristol BS10 5NB, Avon, England.
|
|
Tomson, Charles R. V., Newcastle Upon Tyne Hosp NHS Fdn Trust, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE7 7DN, Tyne \& Wear, England.
|
|
Dor, Frank J. M. F., Imperial Coll Healthcare NHS Trust, London W12 0HS, England.
|
|
Bouacida, Soumeya, Bristol Hlth Partners Chron Kidney Dis Hlth Integ, Bristol BS1 2NT, Avon, England.
|
|
Idowu, Dela, Gift Living Donat GOLD, London NW10 0NS, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/jcm9113751},
|
|
Article-Number = {3751},
|
|
EISSN = {2077-0383},
|
|
Keywords = {living kidney donation; living-donor kidney transplantation; ethnic
|
|
disparity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; RENAL-TRANSPLANTATION; NETWORKS; BARRIERS; CRITERIA;
|
|
RATES; RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {katie.wong@bristol.ac.uk
|
|
a.owen-smith@bristol.ac.uk
|
|
fergus.caskey@bristol.ac.uk
|
|
stephanie.macneill@bristol.ac.uk
|
|
ctomson@doctors.org.uk
|
|
frank.dor@nhs.net
|
|
pippa.bailey@bristol.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ben-Shlomo, Yoav/ABD-2004-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ben-Shlomo, Yoav/0000-0001-6648-3007
|
|
Wong, Katie/0000-0002-9175-9236
|
|
Bailey, Phillippa/0000-0003-2323-1082
|
|
MacNeill, Stephanie/0000-0001-6553-1433
|
|
Caskey, Fergus John/0000-0002-5199-3925
|
|
Owen-Smith, Amanda/0000-0003-1188-2371},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000593166800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1995RC27600011,
|
|
Author = {BRAYFIELD, A and HOFFERTH, SL},
|
|
Title = {BALANCING THE FAMILY BUDGET - DIFFERENCES IN CHILD-CARE EXPENDITURES BY
|
|
RACE ETHNICITY, ECONOMIC-STATUS, AND FAMILY-STRUCTURE},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY},
|
|
Year = {1995},
|
|
Volume = {76},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {158-177},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective. The cost of child care affects women's economic
|
|
opportunities, limits children's chances to experience high-quality
|
|
environments in their early childhood years, and reinforces economic and
|
|
social inequality. This paper examines several factors that may
|
|
influence whether employed mothers purchase child care, and, among those
|
|
who pay, how much they pay for child care services. It also
|
|
investigates how these factors may be associated with the proportion of
|
|
total family income and the proportion of the mother's earnings spent on
|
|
child care. Methods. Whereas past research has relied primarily on
|
|
cross-tabular techniques, this study uses logistic and OLS regressions
|
|
to analyze data from the National Child Care Survey 1990. Results.
|
|
Findings suggest that cultural, economic, and kinship resources and the
|
|
need for child care are most important in determining whether an
|
|
employed mother pays for child care. Family resources, cost of living,
|
|
and availability of alternative providers, such as teenage children, are
|
|
significant predictors of how much employed mothers pay for child care.
|
|
Conclusions. It is recommended that policies should emphasize voucher
|
|
programs over reimbursement for out-of-pocket expenditures.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {BRAYFIELD, A (Corresponding Author), TULANE UNIV,DEPT SOCIOL,220 NEWCOMB HALL,NEW ORLEANS,LA 70118, USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-4941},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science; Sociology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {17},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1995RC27600011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000698630900001,
|
|
Author = {Boruchowicz, Cynthia and Parker, Susan W. and Robbins, Lindsay},
|
|
Title = {Time use of youth during a pandemic: Evidence from Mexico},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {149},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Studying how the pandemic affects the education and work of adolescents
|
|
is a critical question with long lasting implications for well-being of
|
|
the next generation, particularly in the developing world. The Covid-19
|
|
pandemic by mid-March 2020 had led to the closing of most educational
|
|
institutions in Latin America and the Caribbean, and the region has been
|
|
one of the worst hit by the pandemic (Sanmarchi et al., 2021). This
|
|
paper uses the Mexican National Occupation and Employment Survey (ENOE)
|
|
to provide evidence on the pandemic's effects on school and work of
|
|
youth. We measure changes in the time use of adolescents comparing
|
|
patterns just before the pandemic (January to March 2020) with those at
|
|
the beginning of the following school year (September 2020), controlling
|
|
for pre pandemic trends and potential seasonality. Our study finds a
|
|
sharp reduction in the probability of being engaged in studies during
|
|
the previous week for youth age 12 to 18 during the pandemic, as well as
|
|
a reduction of about 30 percent in total hours spent on studies for
|
|
those who report spending at least one hour on studies in the previous
|
|
week. Time in work in general shows fewer changes than in time dedicated
|
|
to studies, with some reductions in the probability of working outside
|
|
the home for older youth, and a small increase in the number of hours
|
|
dedicated to work inside the household. Our results overall are
|
|
suggestive of an important decrease in youth who are engaged with
|
|
school, who may be at particular risk for abandoning school permanently.
|
|
It also suggests that even for those who remain engaged, there is a
|
|
reduction on time spent studying likely to lead to a decrease in
|
|
learning. Policies to combat potential dropout and negative effects on
|
|
learning of the pandemic are urgently needed. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All
|
|
rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Boruchowicz, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Sch Publ Policy, Van Munching Hall,7699 Mowatt Ln, College Pk, MD 20740 USA.
|
|
Boruchowicz, Cynthia; Parker, Susan W.; Robbins, Lindsay, Univ Maryland, College Pk, MD 20740 USA.
|
|
Robbins, Lindsay, CIDE, Mexico City, DF, Mexico.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105687},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {105687},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-750X},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5991},
|
|
Keywords = {Mexico; Education; Time use; Youth; Keyword; COVID-19},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILD LABOR; EDUCATION; INEQUALITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {cynthiab@umd.edu
|
|
swparker@umd.edu
|
|
lmrobbin@umd.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000698630900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000391843800005,
|
|
Author = {Fleurant, Erin and Schoeny, Michael and Hoban, Rebecca and Asiodu,
|
|
Ifeyinwa V. and Riley, Brittany and Meier, Paula P. and Bigger, Harold
|
|
and Patel, Aloka L.},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to Human Milk Feeding at Discharge of Very-Low-Birth-Weight
|
|
Infants: Maternal Goal Setting as a Key Social Factor},
|
|
Journal = {BREASTFEEDING MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {20-27},
|
|
Month = {JAN-FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: While black mothers initiate human milk (HM) provision at
|
|
lower rates than non-black mothers in the United States, some neonatal
|
|
intensive care units (NICUs) report similar initiation rates regardless
|
|
of race/ethnicity for mothers of very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) infants.
|
|
However, racial disparity frequently becomes evident in the proportion
|
|
of black infants who continue to receive HM feedings at NICU discharge.
|
|
Since social factors have been associated with differences in HM
|
|
provision for term infants, we sought to identify differences in social
|
|
factors associated with HM feeding at discharge based on race/ethnicity.
|
|
Materials and Methods: A prospective cohort study of racially diverse
|
|
mothers of VLBW infants measured social factors including maternal
|
|
education, breastfeeding support, return to work/school, HM feeding
|
|
goal, previous breastfeeding, or formula experience. Multivariate
|
|
logistic regression modeling was applied to social factors to predict HM
|
|
feeding at discharge. Additional regression models were created for
|
|
racial/ethnic subgroups to identify differences.
|
|
Results: For all 362 mothers, WIC (Special Supplemental Nutrition
|
|
Program for Women, Infants, and Children) eligibility and maternal goal
|
|
near time of discharge of providing any HM negatively and positively
|
|
predicted HM feeding at discharge, respectively. Perceived breastfeeding
|
|
support from the infant's maternal grandmother negatively predicted HM
|
|
feeding at discharge for black mothers.
|
|
Conclusions: Future interventions to increase duration of HM provision
|
|
in VLBW infants should focus on the establishment and maintenance of
|
|
maternal HM feeding goals. Further studies of the familial support
|
|
system of black mothers are warranted to determine multigenerational
|
|
impact and potential interventions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Patel, AL (Corresponding Author), Rush Univ, Childrens Hosp, 1653 West Congress Pkwy,Suite 353 Pavil, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Fleurant, Erin, Rush Univ, Coll Med, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Schoeny, Michael; Hoban, Rebecca; Meier, Paula P.; Patel, Aloka L., Rush Univ, Childrens Hosp, Dept Pediat, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Hoban, Rebecca; Meier, Paula P.; Bigger, Harold; Patel, Aloka L., Rush Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Pediat, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Asiodu, Ifeyinwa V., Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Nursing, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Riley, Brittany, Nationwide Childrens Hosp, Coll Nursing, Columbus, OH USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1089/bfm.2016.0105},
|
|
ISSN = {1556-8253},
|
|
EISSN = {1556-8342},
|
|
Keywords = {premature infant; social factors; barriers; NICU; human milk},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTENSIVE-CARE-UNIT; AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN; BREAST-MILK; LOW-INCOME;
|
|
NECROTIZING ENTEROCOLITIS; NICU HOSPITALIZATION; PREMATURE-INFANTS; PEER
|
|
COUNSELORS; MOTHERS; RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {aloka\_patel@rush.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Patel, Aloka L./T-1802-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Patel, Aloka L./0000-0003-1751-0421
|
|
Hoban, Rebecca/0000-0001-9457-8791},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {41},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000391843800005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000505640100011,
|
|
Author = {Schneider, Jeffrey C. and Shie, Vivian L. and Espinoza, Leda F. and
|
|
Shapiro, Gabriel D. and Lee, Austin and Acton, Amy and Marino, Molly and
|
|
Jette, Alan and Kazis, Lewis E. and Ryan, Colleen M. and LIBRE Advisory
|
|
Board},
|
|
Title = {Impact of Work-Related Burn Injury on Social Reintegration Outcomes: A
|
|
Life Impact Burn Recovery Evaluation (LIBRE) Study},
|
|
Journal = {ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {101},
|
|
Number = {1, 1},
|
|
Pages = {S86-S91},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Note = {48th Annual Meeting of the American-Burn-Association, Las Vegas, NV, MAY
|
|
03-07, 2016},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To examine differences in long-term social reintegration
|
|
outcomes for burn survivors with and without work-related injuries.
|
|
Design: Cross-sectional survey.
|
|
Setting: Community-dwelling burn survivors.
|
|
Participants: Burn survivors (N=601) aged >= 18 years with injuries to
|
|
>= 5\% total body surface area or burns to critical areas (hands, feet,
|
|
face, or genitals).
|
|
Interventions: Not applicable.
|
|
Main outcome measures: The Life Impact Burn Recovery Evaluation Profile
|
|
was used to examine the following previously validated 6 scale scores of
|
|
social participation: Family and Friends, Social Interactions, Social
|
|
Activities, Work and Employment, Romantic Relationships, and Sexual
|
|
Relationships.
|
|
Results: Older participants, those who were married, and men were more
|
|
likely to be burned at work (P<.01). Burn survivors who were injured at
|
|
work scored significantly lower on the Work and Employment scale score
|
|
after adjusting for demographic and clinical characteristics (P=.01).
|
|
All other domain scale scores demonstrated no significant differences
|
|
between groups. Individuals with work-related injuries scored
|
|
significantly worse on 6 of the 19 items within the Work and Employment
|
|
scale (P<.05). These individuals were more likely to report that they
|
|
were afraid to go to work and felt limited in their ability to perform
|
|
at work.
|
|
Conclusions: Burn survivors with work-related injuries report worse work
|
|
reintegration outcomes than those without work-related injuries.
|
|
Identification of those at higher risk for work reintegration challenges
|
|
after burn injury may enable survivors, providers, employers, and
|
|
insurers to better use appropriate resources to promote and target
|
|
optimal employment outcomes. (C) 2017 American Congress of
|
|
Rehabilitation Medicine.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Schneider, JC (Corresponding Author), Spaulding Rehabil Hosp, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, 300 1st Ave, Boston, MA 02129 USA.
|
|
Schneider, Jeffrey C.; Shie, Vivian L.; Espinoza, Leda F., Harvard Med Sch, Spaulding Rehabil Hosp, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Shie, Vivian L.; Marino, Molly; Jette, Alan; Kazis, Lewis E., Boston Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Law Policy \& Management, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Shapiro, Gabriel D., McGill Univ, Dept Epidemiol Biostat \& Occupat Hlth, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Lee, Austin, Bentley Univ, Dept Math Sci, Waltham, MA 02452 USA.
|
|
Acton, Amy, Phoenix Soc Burn Survivors, Grand Rapids, MI USA.
|
|
Ryan, Colleen M., Harvard Med Sch, Shriners Hosp Children Boston, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Boston, MA 02115 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.apmr.2017.10.022},
|
|
ISSN = {0003-9993},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-821X},
|
|
Keywords = {Burns; Community integration; Employment; Rehabilitation; Return to work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; PSYCHOSOCIAL ADJUSTMENT; RETURN;
|
|
COMPENSATION; HEALTH; ADAPTATION; BARRIERS; ADULTS; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Sport Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {jcschneider@partners.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Schneider, Jeffrey/AAO-2126-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Marino, Molly/0000-0002-9978-3038
|
|
Acton, Amy/0000-0001-8611-3230},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000505640100011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000303326600005,
|
|
Author = {Madhavan, Sangeetha and Roy, Kevin},
|
|
Title = {Securing Fatherhood Through Kin Work: A Comparison of Black Low-Income
|
|
Fathers and Families in South Africa and the United States},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF FAMILY ISSUES},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {33},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {801-822},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {In this article, the authors examine how low-income Black men in South
|
|
Africa and the United States work with their kin to secure fathering and
|
|
ensure the well-being of children. They use ethnographic and life
|
|
history data on men who fathered children from 1992 to 2005 to
|
|
demonstrate how fathers' roles as kin workers enable them to meet
|
|
culturally defined criteria for responsible fatherhood in two contexts
|
|
marked by legacies of racism, increasing rates of incarceration and
|
|
HIV/AIDS, and a web of interlocking inequalities that effectively
|
|
precludes them from accessing employment with good wages. Using a
|
|
comparative framework based on kin work, the authors identify three
|
|
common processes in both contexts-negotiation between maternal and
|
|
paternal kin, pedifocal approach, and flexible fathering-that enable men
|
|
and their kin networks to secure father involvement in economically
|
|
marginalized communities. The article concludes with a discussion of the
|
|
policy implications of the findings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Madhavan, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Dept African Amer Studies, 2169 LeFrak Hall, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Madhavan, Sangeetha, Univ Maryland, Dept African Amer Studies, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Madhavan, Sangeetha, Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Publ Hlth, MRC Wits Rural Publ Hlth \& Hlth Transit Res Unit, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0192513X11426699},
|
|
ISSN = {0192-513X},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-5481},
|
|
Keywords = {fathers; kin; global inequalities; poverty; South Africa; United States},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INVOLVEMENT; SUPPORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {smadhavan@aasp.umd.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {51},
|
|
Times-Cited = {26},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000303326600005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000277219000012,
|
|
Author = {Bernal, Raquel and Keane, Michael P.},
|
|
Title = {Quasi-structural estimation of a model of childcare choices and child
|
|
cognitive ability production},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ECONOMETRICS},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {156},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {164-189},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {This article evaluates the effects of maternal vs. alternative care
|
|
providers' time inputs on children's cognitive development using the
|
|
sample of single mothers in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth.
|
|
To deal with the selection problem created by unobserved heterogeneity
|
|
of mothers and children, we develop a model of mother's employment and
|
|
childcare decisions. We then obtain approximate decision rules for
|
|
employment and childcare use, and estimate these jointly with the
|
|
child's cognitive ability production function. To help identify our
|
|
selection model, we take advantage of the plausibly exogenous variation
|
|
in employment and childcare choices of single mothers generated by the
|
|
variation in welfare rules across states and over time created by the
|
|
1996 welfare reform legislation and earlier State waivers. (C) 2009
|
|
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Keane, MP (Corresponding Author), POB 123, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia.
|
|
Bernal, Raquel, Univ Los Andes, Dept Econ, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Bernal, Raquel, Univ Los Andes, CEDE, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Keane, Michael P., Univ Technol Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia.
|
|
Keane, Michael P., Arizona State Univ, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jeconom.2009.09.015},
|
|
ISSN = {0304-4076},
|
|
EISSN = {1872-6895},
|
|
Keywords = {Child cognitive development; Childcare; Human capital; Female labor
|
|
supply},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WELFARE EFFECTS CONSISTENT; EARLY MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; PARTICIPATION;
|
|
INCOME; PRESCHOOLERS; MOTHERS; FAMILY; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Mathematics, Interdisciplinary Applications; Social Sciences,
|
|
Mathematical Methods},
|
|
Author-Email = {michael.keane@uts.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Keane, Michael P/O-2840-2013
|
|
Keane, Michael/R-6329-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Keane, Michael P/0000-0002-3918-1377
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {60},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000277219000012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001045122200002,
|
|
Author = {Sharareh, Nasser and Adesoba, Taiwo P. and Wallace, Andrea S. and Bybee,
|
|
Sara and Potter, Lindsey N. and Seligman, Hilary and Wilson, Fernando A.},
|
|
Title = {Associations between food insecurity and other social risk factors among
|
|
US adults},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 AUG 9},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundFood insecurity (FI) often co-exists with other social risk
|
|
factors, which makes addressing it particularly challenging. The degree
|
|
of association between FI and other social risk factors across different
|
|
levels of income and before and during the COVID-19 pandemic is
|
|
currently unknown, impeding the ability to design effective
|
|
interventions for addressing these co-existing social risk
|
|
factors.ObjectiveTo determine the association between FI and other
|
|
social risk factors overall and across different levels of
|
|
income-poverty ratios and before (2019) and during (2020-2021) the
|
|
pandemic.DesignWe used nationally representative data from the 2019-2021
|
|
National Health Interview Survey for our cross-sectional analysis.
|
|
Social risk factors available in NHIS included difficulties paying for
|
|
medical bills, difficulties paying for medications, receiving income
|
|
assistance, receiving rental assistance, and ``not working last
|
|
week{''}.Subjects93,047 adults (\& GE;18 years old).Key
|
|
ResultsIndividuals with other social risk factors (except receiving
|
|
income assistance) were more likely to report FI, even after adjusting
|
|
for income and education inequalities. While poverty leads to a higher
|
|
prevalence of FI, associations between FI and other social risk factors
|
|
were stronger among people with higher incomes, which may be related to
|
|
their ineligibility for social safety net programs. Associations were
|
|
similar before and during the pandemic, perhaps due to the extensive
|
|
provision of social safety net programs during the
|
|
pandemic.ConclusionsFuture research should explore how access to a
|
|
variety of social safety net programs may impact the association between
|
|
social risk factors. With the expiration of most pandemic-related social
|
|
supports, further research and monitoring are also needed to examine FI
|
|
in the context of increasing food and housing costs. Our findings may
|
|
also have implications for the expansion of income-based program
|
|
eligibility criteria and screening for social risk factors across all
|
|
patients and not only low-income people.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sharareh, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Utah, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, Spence Fox Eccles Sch Med, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA.
|
|
Sharareh, Nasser; Wallace, Andrea S.; Wilson, Fernando A., Univ Utah, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, Spence Fox Eccles Sch Med, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA.
|
|
Adesoba, Taiwo P., Univ Arkansas Med Sci, Dept Hlth Policy \& Management, Little Rock, AR USA.
|
|
Wallace, Andrea S.; Bybee, Sara, Univ Utah, Coll Nursing, Salt Lake City, UT USA.
|
|
Potter, Lindsey N., Univ Utah, Spence Fox Eccles Sch Med, Ctr Hlth Outcomes \& Populat Equ, Dept Populat Hlth Sci,Huntsman Canc Inst, Salt Lake City, UT USA.
|
|
Seligman, Hilary, Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Med, Dept Med, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Wilson, Fernando A., Univ Utah, Coll Social \& Behav Sci, Matheson Ctr Hlth Care Studies, Dept Econ, Salt Lake City, UT USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11606-023-08360-8},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0884-8734},
|
|
EISSN = {1525-1497},
|
|
Keywords = {food insecurity; health policy; poverty; disparities; public health;
|
|
COVID-19},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {nasser.sharareh@hsc.utah.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Adesoba, Taiwo/ISA-9118-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Adesoba, Taiwo/0000-0001-8110-9830
|
|
Sharareh, Nasser/0000-0001-9552-2028},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001045122200002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000688485600002,
|
|
Author = {Walters, I, Gareth and Barber, Christopher M.},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to identifying occupational asthma among primary healthcare
|
|
professionals: a qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN RESPIRATORY RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction Occupational asthma (OA) accounts for one in six cases of
|
|
adult-onset asthma and is associated with a large societal cost. Many
|
|
cases of OA are missed or delayed, leading to ongoing exposure to the
|
|
causative agent and avoidable lung function loss and poor
|
|
employment-related outcomes. Enquiry about work-related symptoms and the
|
|
nature of work by healthcare professionals (HCPs) is limited, evident in
|
|
primary and secondary care. Potential reasons cited for this are time
|
|
pressure, lack of expertise and poor access to specialists. Aim To
|
|
understand organisational factors and beliefs and behaviours among
|
|
primary HCPs that may present barriers to identifying OA. Methods We
|
|
employed a qualitative phenomenological methodology and undertook 20-45
|
|
min interviews with primary HCPs in West Midlands, UK. We used purposive
|
|
and snowball sampling to include general practitioners (GPs) and
|
|
practice nurses with a range of experience, from urban and rural
|
|
settings. Interviews were recorded digitally and transcribed
|
|
professionally for analysis. Data were coded by hand, and thematic
|
|
analysis was undertaken and determined theoretically until themes were
|
|
saturated. Results Eleven HCPs participated (eight GPs, three nurses).
|
|
Four themes were identified that were considered to impact on
|
|
identification of OA: (1) training and experience, (2) perceptions and
|
|
beliefs, (3) systems constraints, and (4) variation in individual
|
|
practice. OA-specific education had been inadequate at every stage of
|
|
training and practice, and clinical exposure to OA had been generally
|
|
limited. OA-specific beliefs varied, as did clinical behaviour with
|
|
working-age individuals with asthma. There was a focus on diagnosis and
|
|
treatment rather than attributing causation. Identified issues regarding
|
|
organisation of asthma care were time constraints, lack of continuity,
|
|
referral pressure, use of guidelines and templates, and external
|
|
targets. Conclusion Organisation and delivery of primary asthma care,
|
|
negative OA-related beliefs, lack of formal education, and exposure to
|
|
OA may all currently inhibit its identification.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Walters, GI (Corresponding Author), Univ Hosp Birmingham NHS Fdn Trust, Reg NHS Occupat Lung Dis Serv, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Walters, GI (Corresponding Author), Univ Birmingham, Occupat \& Environm Med, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Walters, Gareth, I, Univ Hosp Birmingham NHS Fdn Trust, Reg NHS Occupat Lung Dis Serv, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Walters, Gareth, I, Univ Birmingham, Occupat \& Environm Med, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Barber, Christopher M., Northern Gen Hosp, Ctr Workplace Hlth, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjresp-2021-000938},
|
|
Article-Number = {e000938},
|
|
EISSN = {2052-4439},
|
|
Keywords = {asthma; occupational lung disease; asthma in primary care; asthma
|
|
epidemiology; asthma guidelines},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RESPIRATORY-DISEASES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Respiratory System},
|
|
Author-Email = {gareth.walters@heartofengland.nhs.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Walters, Gareth/0000-0002-7436-2261},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000688485600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000806868400027,
|
|
Author = {Unnikrishnan, Vidhya and Pinet, Melanie and Marc, Lukasz and Boateng,
|
|
Nathaniel Amoh and Boateng, Ethel Seiwaa and Pasanen, Tiina and
|
|
Atta-Mensah, Maya and Bridonneau, Sophie},
|
|
Title = {Impact of an integrated youth skill training program on youth
|
|
livelihoods: A case study of cocoa belt region in Ghana},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {151},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper assesses the impact of an integrated skills training program
|
|
given to youth aged 17-25-year old living under the \$2/day poverty line
|
|
in the cocoa belt region of Ghana. Despite being a leading producer of
|
|
cocoa and having a burgeoning youth population, it is estimated that the
|
|
average age of a cocoa farmer in Ghana is greater than 50 years. To
|
|
introduce young people to cocoa farming and address the potential
|
|
barriers they face in order to do that; a multi-faceted skills training
|
|
programme was designed with the ultimate aim of improving and
|
|
diversifying youth livelihoods. The training had three key components:
|
|
i) cocoa academies (which includes agricultural practices; life skills
|
|
and financial literacy); ii) business incubators (including
|
|
entrepreneurial training, networks, mentoring) and iii) supporting
|
|
enabling environment (access to land and finance). Combining
|
|
quasi-experimental methods Propensity Score Matching with Difference in
|
|
Differences, we estimate the causal effect of the programme on
|
|
agricultural outcomes (farming, agricultural practices), financial
|
|
behaviour outcomes (saving practices, mobile banking) and livelihood
|
|
outcomes (employment, income, poverty likelihood) one year after the
|
|
completion of training. The results of the impact evaluation suggest
|
|
that compared to the control group (youth nonparticipants), youths who
|
|
participated in the training adopt better agricultural practices (26
|
|
percentage points (pp)), cultivate cocoa (24 pp), and are more likely to
|
|
engage in farming (22 pp). We also find a 28.7\% increase in income in
|
|
the last seven days and hours worked by 12.4\%. Youth also increase the
|
|
use of banks for saving (16 pp), save using mobile money (6.7 pp), the
|
|
use of Village Savings and Loan Associations (1.7 pp) and, in general,
|
|
the use of mobile money for both sending and receiving transfers (10.6
|
|
pp). The sex-disaggregated sub-sample analysis provides other valuable
|
|
insights on the intervention.(c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Unnikrishnan, V (Corresponding Author), Univ Manchester, Global Dev Inst, Manchester, Lancs, England.
|
|
Unnikrishnan, Vidhya, Univ Manchester, Global Dev Inst, Manchester, Lancs, England.
|
|
Pinet, Melanie; Pasanen, Tiina, Overseas Dev Inst, London, England.
|
|
Marc, Lukasz, World Bank, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
|
|
Boateng, Nathaniel Amoh, Solidaridad West Africa, Accra, Ghana.
|
|
Boateng, Ethel Seiwaa, Participatory Dev Associates, Kumasi, Ghana.
|
|
Atta-Mensah, Maya, Cornerstone Res, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Bridonneau, Sophie, Civil Serv Fast Stream, Cabinet Off, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105732},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {105732},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-750X},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5991},
|
|
Keywords = {Training; Youths; Impact; Quasi-experiment; Livelihood strategies},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {Vidhya.unnikrishnan@manchester.ac.uk
|
|
m.pinet@odi.org.uk
|
|
lmarc@worldbank.org
|
|
nat@solidaridadnetwork.org
|
|
t.pasanen@odi.org.uk
|
|
bridonneau@faststream.civilservice.gov.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Amoh Boateng, Nathaniel/0000-0003-2320-8376},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000806868400027},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000446431800010,
|
|
Author = {Dare, Julie and Wilkinson, Celia and Marquis, Ruth and Donovan, Robert
|
|
J.},
|
|
Title = {``The people make it fun, the activities we do just make sure we turn up
|
|
on time.{''} Factors influencing older adults' participation in
|
|
community-based group programmes in Perth, Western Australia},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH \& SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {871-881},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Rapid ageing in western societies is placing increasing strain on health
|
|
and social care services. In response, governments and health agencies
|
|
have sought to promote healthy ageing through a range of interventions,
|
|
many of which aim to enhance social engagement and participation among
|
|
older people. Such interventions are based on evidence that being
|
|
socially engaged through participation in various activities leads to
|
|
better physical, mental and psychosocial health outcomes. The research
|
|
reported here employed focus groups and individual interviews to address
|
|
research aims: (a) identify enablers and barriers to participation in
|
|
community-based group activities among a sample of older people (n = 35,
|
|
median age 71 years) living in a local government area in the northern
|
|
suburbs of Perth, Western Australia, and (b) examine how these factors
|
|
differ between those who regularly participate and those who do not. Our
|
|
research highlighted four themes: Friendship and Function; Availability
|
|
and Accessibility; Competing Responsibilities and Priorities; and
|
|
Changing of the Guard. In particular, this research highlighted the
|
|
importance of group activities in offering social support as a platform
|
|
to develop friendships. The findings also indicated that opportunities
|
|
for social interaction should be embedded in the structure of the group,
|
|
beyond that which may occur incidentally during activities. This is
|
|
important, given that while interest may motivate older people to join a
|
|
group, a sense of belonging and connectedness generated through the
|
|
group is more likely to maintain their attendance. Barriers included
|
|
limited availability of local programmes, limited accessibility related
|
|
to programme scheduling, and lack of programmes relevant to those who do
|
|
not find traditional seniors' centres appealing. Recommendations include
|
|
incorporating social engagement as an outcome measure when evaluating
|
|
the efficacy of programmes targeting older people, and encouraging local
|
|
governments to work with seniors' centres in developing activities
|
|
attractive to a broader cohort of older people.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dare, J (Corresponding Author), Edith Cowan Univ, 270 Joondalup Dr, Joondalup, WA 6027, Australia.
|
|
Dare, Julie; Wilkinson, Celia; Marquis, Ruth, Edith Cowan Univ, 270 Joondalup Dr, Joondalup, WA 6027, Australia.
|
|
Wilkinson, Celia, Curtin Univ, Bentley, WA, Australia.
|
|
Donovan, Robert J., Univ Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/hsc.12600},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-0410},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2524},
|
|
Keywords = {group activities; Older people; participation; social connectedness;
|
|
social engagement; social interaction},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; SOCIAL-PARTICIPATION; MENTAL-HEALTH; INVOLVEMENT;
|
|
LONELINESS; INDICATORS; DEPRESSION; ADHERENCE; SERVICES; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {J.dare@ecu.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dare, Julie/D-1711-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dare, Julie/0000-0002-2226-4651},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000446431800010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000447318300003,
|
|
Author = {Moni, Nurun Naher and Haider, Mohammed Ziaul and Al Masud, Md. Mahedi},
|
|
Title = {Institutional practices and vulnerability of shrimp fry catchers in the
|
|
south-west region of Bangladesh},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {1533-1549},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of this paper is to provide a better understanding
|
|
of the dynamics of institutional practices, socio-economic status and
|
|
vulnerability of shrimp fry catchers in the south-west region of
|
|
Bangladesh.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach This study draws on primary research
|
|
conducted through face-to-face interviews with women fry collectors in
|
|
the south-west region of Bangladesh. This study attempts to identify the
|
|
nature and extent of the impact of institutional practices on the women
|
|
engaged in catching fry regarding their positioning within the
|
|
institutional framework.
|
|
Findings In the coastal region of Bangladesh, the shrimp sector has
|
|
opened up economic opportunities for women in terms of access to income
|
|
and employment. However, women have to make a trade-off between
|
|
employment gain in terms of wage and health hazards caused due to poor
|
|
working conditions. The findings of the study indicate that shrimp fry
|
|
catching, complemented by other sources of income, can only help women
|
|
to survive. The study also finds that the vulnerability of the fry
|
|
collectors is the end result of mutually interacting institutional
|
|
practices under different institutional domains. Accordingly,
|
|
recommendations are made with a view to effectively utilizing social
|
|
capital at the community level, which will be particularly helpful in
|
|
raising fry catchers' voice in the local political arena and
|
|
strengthening their position in the marketplace. Due to the higher
|
|
preferences of buyers towards wild fry and the participation of a huge
|
|
number of people in fry collecting, this study suggests rethinking
|
|
government intervention in this regard.
|
|
Originality/value This is original research focusing on the underlying
|
|
structural and institutional factors behind the marginalization and
|
|
vulnerability of women and devising policies that will enable
|
|
modification of the factors that restrain women.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Moni, NN (Corresponding Author), Khulna Univ, Econ Discipline, Khulna, Bangladesh.
|
|
Moni, Nurun Naher; Haider, Mohammed Ziaul, Khulna Univ, Econ Discipline, Khulna, Bangladesh.
|
|
Al Masud, Md. Mahedi, Minist Social Welf, Dept Social Serv, Khulna, Bangladesh.
|
|
Al Masud, Md. Mahedi, Khulna Univ, Environm Sci Discipline, Khulna, Bangladesh.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJSE-08-2017-0312},
|
|
ISSN = {0306-8293},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6712},
|
|
Keywords = {Vulnerability; Institution; Fry catching; South-west region},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {nnmoniku@yahoo.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Haider, Mohammed Ziaul/O-7617-2019
|
|
Hamad, Mohammed Hiader/AAZ-7803-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Haider, Mohammed Ziaul/0000-0002-1520-0633
|
|
Hamad, Mohammed Hiader/0000-0002-4475-9567},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {16},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000447318300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000514165300007,
|
|
Author = {Priest, Becki and Lockett, Helen},
|
|
Title = {Working at the Interface Between Science and Culture: The Enablers and
|
|
Barriers to Individual Placement and Support Implementation in
|
|
Aotearoa/New Zealand},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHIATRIC REHABILITATION JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {40-52},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To identify the factors that help and hinder the
|
|
implementation of individual placement and support (IPS) practices in
|
|
the Aotearoa/New Zealand (Aotearoa/NZ) context. Methods: An examination
|
|
of the conceptual and empirical literature on IPS implementation in
|
|
Aotearoa/NZ and a prospective cohort study of people with mental
|
|
illnesses and/or methamphetamine addiction participating in a newly
|
|
established IPS program. Results: IPS programs have been operating in
|
|
Aotearoa/NZ for more than 10 years, but coverage across the country is
|
|
patchy and access inequitable. Previous public policy, contracting, and
|
|
funding systems limited the availability of IPS programs, and in some
|
|
cases operated as a barrier to the provision of integrated health and
|
|
employment services. There is an opportunity for change, with a greater
|
|
focus in government policy on mental health and addiction and achieving
|
|
equity, a plan for cross-government policy solutions, and a recently
|
|
established technical assistance organization to support new and
|
|
existing IPS implementation. Facilitating implementation conditions
|
|
include technical assistance, service integration, supportive
|
|
contracting, and attention to culture. In 1 program where these
|
|
conditions were in place from the outset, IPS fidelity reached 107/125;
|
|
41.1\% of participants had commenced employment; and the program was
|
|
achieving equity of engagement and outcomes for indigenous Maori people
|
|
within 15 months of program establishment. Conclusions and implications
|
|
for practice: Although IPS programs have been successfully implemented
|
|
in Aotearoa/NZ, availability and access to them remains limited.
|
|
Identifying the enablers and barriers to IPS implementation specific to
|
|
the Aotearoa/NZ context could inform future IPS implementation and
|
|
national program scale-up.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lockett, H (Corresponding Author), Wise Grp, POB 307, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.
|
|
Priest, Becki, Northland Dist Hlth Board, Whangarei, New Zealand.
|
|
Priest, Becki, Otago Polytech, Sch Occupat Therapy, Dunedin, New Zealand.
|
|
Lockett, Helen, Univ Auckland, Sch Med, Dept Psychol Med, Auckland, New Zealand.
|
|
Lockett, Helen, Wise Grp, POB 307, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.
|
|
Lockett, Helen, Univ Otago, Dept Publ Hlth, Dunedin, New Zealand.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/prj0000388},
|
|
ISSN = {1095-158X},
|
|
EISSN = {1559-3126},
|
|
Keywords = {individual placement and support; New Zealand; culture; implementation;
|
|
evidence-based practices},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SEVERE MENTAL-ILLNESS; EMPLOYMENT SERVICES; RACIAL-DISCRIMINATION;
|
|
HEALTH INTERVENTION; PEOPLE; MAORI; IPS; EXPERIENCE; THERAPY; LABOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {helen.lockett@wisegroup.co.nz},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000514165300007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000315239700002,
|
|
Author = {Harris, Ruth and Ooms, Ann and Grant, Robert and Marshall-Lucette,
|
|
Sylvie and Chu, Christine Sek Fun and Sayer, Jane and Burke, Linda},
|
|
Title = {Equality of employment opportunities for nurses at the point of
|
|
qualification: An exploratory study},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {50},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {303-313},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Securing employment after qualification is of utmost
|
|
importance to newly qualified nurses to consolidate knowledge and
|
|
skills. The factors that influence success in gaining this first post
|
|
are not known.
|
|
Objectives: The study aimed to describe the first post gained after
|
|
qualification in terms of setting, nature of employment contract and
|
|
geographical distribution and explore the relationship between a range
|
|
of factors (including ethnicity) and employment at the point of
|
|
qualification.
|
|
Design: An exploratory study using structured questionnaires and
|
|
secondary analysis of data routinely collected by the universities about
|
|
students and their progress during their course.
|
|
Settings: The study was conducted in eight universities within a large,
|
|
multicultural city in the UK as part of the `Readiness for Work'
|
|
research programme.
|
|
Participants: Eight hundred and four newly qualified nurses who had
|
|
successfully completed a diploma or degree from one of the universities;
|
|
a response rate of 77\% representing 49\% of all graduating students in
|
|
the study population.
|
|
Methods: Data were collected by self-completed semi-structured
|
|
questionnaires administered to students at the time of qualification and
|
|
at three months post-qualification. Routinely collected data from the
|
|
universities were also collected.
|
|
Results: Fifty two percent of participants had been offered a job at the
|
|
point of qualification (85\% of those who had applied and been
|
|
interviewed). Of these, 99\% had been offered a nursing post, 88\% in
|
|
the city studied, 67\% in the healthcare setting where they had
|
|
completed a course placement. 44\% felt ``confident{''} and 32\% ``very
|
|
confident{''} about their employment prospects. Predictors of employment
|
|
success included ethnicity, specialty of nursing and university
|
|
attended. Predictors of confidence and preparedness for job seeking
|
|
included ethnicity, nursing specialty, gender and grade of degree. Newly
|
|
qualified nurses from non-White/British ethnic groups were less likely
|
|
to get a job and feel confident about and prepared for job seeking.
|
|
Conclusions: This study has demonstrated that ethnicity does lead to
|
|
employment disadvantage for newly qualified nurses. This is an important
|
|
contribution towards recognizing and describing the evidence so that
|
|
appropriate responses and interventions can be developed. It is
|
|
important that universities and healthcare institutions work closely
|
|
together to support students at this important time in their nursing
|
|
career. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Harris, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Kingston, Fac Hlth \& Social Care Sci, Kingston Upon Thames, Surrey, England.
|
|
Harris, Ruth; Ooms, Ann; Grant, Robert; Marshall-Lucette, Sylvie; Chu, Christine Sek Fun, Univ Kingston, Fac Hlth \& Social Care Sci, Kingston Upon Thames, Surrey, England.
|
|
Harris, Ruth; Ooms, Ann; Grant, Robert; Marshall-Lucette, Sylvie; Chu, Christine Sek Fun, Univ London, London WC1E 7HU, England.
|
|
Sayer, Jane, South London \& Maudsley NHS Fdn Trust, London, England.
|
|
Burke, Linda, Univ Greenwich, Sch Hlth \& Social Care, London SE18 6PF, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2012.10.008},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-7489},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-491X},
|
|
Keywords = {Employability; Ethnicity; Newly qualified nurses; Occupational
|
|
inequality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {NATIONAL-HEALTH-SERVICE; QUALIFIED NURSE; EXPERIENCES; PROGRESSION;
|
|
TRANSITION; STUDENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {Ruth.Harris@sgul.kingston.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ooms, Ann/HLH-5127-2023
|
|
Ooms, Ann/AAT-7588-2020
|
|
Harris, Ruth/A-7542-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ooms, Ann/0000-0002-5217-1907
|
|
Ooms, Ann/0000-0002-5217-1907
|
|
Harris, Ruth/0000-0002-4377-5063},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {36},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000315239700002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000652845500025,
|
|
Author = {Rocha, Rudi and Atun, Rifat and Massuda, Adriano and Rache, Beatriz and
|
|
Spinola, Paula and Nunes, Leticia and Lago, Miguel and Castro, Marcia C.},
|
|
Title = {Effect of socioeconomic inequalities and vulnerabilities on
|
|
health-system preparedness and response to COVID-19 in Brazil: a
|
|
comprehensive analysis},
|
|
Journal = {LANCET GLOBAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {E782-E792},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background COVID-19 spread rapidly in Brazil despite the country's well
|
|
established health and social protection systems. Understanding the
|
|
relationships between health-system preparedness, responses to COVID-19,
|
|
and the pattern of spread of the epidemic is particularly important in a
|
|
country marked by wide inequalities in socioeconomic characteristics
|
|
(eg, housing and employment status) and other health risks (age
|
|
structure and burden of chronic disease).
|
|
Methods From several publicly available sources in Brazil, we obtained
|
|
data on health risk factors for severe COVID-19 (proportion of the
|
|
population with chronic disease and proportion aged >= 60 years),
|
|
socioeconomic vulnerability (proportions of the population with housing
|
|
vulnerability or without formal work), health-system capacity (numbers
|
|
of intensive care unit beds and physicians), coverage of health and
|
|
social assistance, deaths from COVID-19, and state-level responses of
|
|
government in terms of physical distancing policies. We also obtained
|
|
data on the proportion of the population staying at home, based on
|
|
locational data, as a measure of physical distancing adherence. We
|
|
developed a socioeconomic vulnerability index (SVI) based on household
|
|
characteristics and the Human Development Index. Data were analysed at
|
|
the state and municipal levels. Descriptive statistics and correlations
|
|
between state-level indicators were used to characterise the
|
|
relationship between the availability of health-care resources and
|
|
socioeconomic characteristics and the spread of the epidemic and the
|
|
response of governments and populations in terms of new investments,
|
|
legislation, and physical distancing. We used linear regressions on a
|
|
municipality-by-month dataset from February to October, 2020, to
|
|
characterise the dynamics of COVID-19 deaths and response to the
|
|
epidemic across municipalities.
|
|
Findings The initial spread of COVID-19 was mostly affected by patterns
|
|
of socioeconomic vulnerability as measured by the SVI rather than
|
|
population age structure and prevalence of health risk factors. The
|
|
states with a high (greater than median) SVI were able to expand
|
|
hospital capacity, to enact stringent COVID-19-related legislation, and
|
|
to increase physical distancing adherence in the population, although
|
|
not sufficiently to prevent higher COVID-19 mortality during the initial
|
|
phase of the epidemic compared with states with a low SVI. Death rates
|
|
accelerated until June, 2020, particularly in municipalities with the
|
|
highest socioeconomic vulnerability. Throughout the following months,
|
|
however, differences in policy response converged in municipalities with
|
|
lower and higher SVIs, while physical distancing remained relatively
|
|
higher and death rates became relatively lower in the municipalities
|
|
with the highest SVIs compared with those with lower SVIs.
|
|
Interpretation In Brazil, existing socioeconomic inequalities, rather
|
|
than age, health status, and other risk factors for COVID-19, have
|
|
affected the course of the epidemic, with a disproportionate adverse
|
|
burden on states and municipalities with high socioeconomic
|
|
vulnerability. Local government responses and population behaviour in
|
|
the states and municipalities with higher socioeconomic vulnerability
|
|
have helped to contain the effects of the epidemic. Targeted policies
|
|
and actions are needed to protect those with the greatest socioeconomic
|
|
vulnerability. This experience could be relevant in other low-income and
|
|
middle-income countries where socioeconomic vulnerability varies
|
|
greatly.Copyright (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Atun, R (Corresponding Author), Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Global Hlth \& Populat, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Rocha, Rudi; Massuda, Adriano, Fundacao Getulio Vargas, Sao Paulo Sch Business Adm, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
|
|
Rocha, Rudi; Rache, Beatriz; Nunes, Leticia, Inst Estudos Polit Saude, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
|
|
Atun, Rifat; Castro, Marcia C., Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Global Hlth \& Populat, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Spinola, Paula, UCL, Ctr Global Hlth Econ, London, England.
|
|
Lago, Miguel, Inst Estudos Polit Saude, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S2214-109X(21)00081-4},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2214-109X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COMMUNICATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {ratun@hsph.harvard.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Spinola, Paula/HKW-4879-2023
|
|
Castro, Marcia/S-2681-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Spinola, Paula/0000-0002-4554-4250
|
|
Castro, Marcia/0000-0003-4606-2795},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {131},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {35},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000652845500025},
|
|
ESI-Highly-Cited-Paper = {Y},
|
|
ESI-Hot-Paper = {N},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000456469700001,
|
|
Author = {Kley, Stefanie and Drobnic, Sonja},
|
|
Title = {Does moving for family nest-building inhibit mothers' labour force
|
|
(re-)entry?},
|
|
Journal = {DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Pages = {155-183},
|
|
Month = {JAN 24},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND
|
|
Couples tend to move house around first childbirth and often into
|
|
suburban or rural neighbourhoods, conforming to the normative belief
|
|
that children should grow up in a `proper family home.' Such moves are
|
|
likely to increase housing costs and both partners might need to
|
|
contribute to the household income. But the move might also necessitate
|
|
long commutes, inhibiting mothers' labour force participation. If the
|
|
family sphere is more salient for (prospective) mothers, they might
|
|
accept a remote location for its family-friendly environment but also
|
|
because they are not planning a rapid return to work.
|
|
OBJECTIVE
|
|
This article analyses the influence of moving around first childbirth on
|
|
the timing of mothers' transitions into employment after childbirth.
|
|
METHODS
|
|
Event history methods are used on longitudinal data from the German
|
|
Socio-Economic Panel 1999-2014 (N = 1334 first-time mothers).
|
|
RESULTS
|
|
Limited evidence was found for the hypothesis that moving around first
|
|
childbirth accelerates mothers' labour market (re-)entry: moving for
|
|
homeownership increased the entry rate into full-time employment for
|
|
mothers with low earnings potential. Strong evidence was found for the
|
|
hypothesis that moving around first childbirth impedes mothers'
|
|
employment, particularly hampering entering part-time jobs, the domain
|
|
of working mothers in Germany and other countries.
|
|
CONCLUSION
|
|
Moving for family nest-building seems to place mothers in unfavourable
|
|
structural positions for employment.
|
|
CONTRIBUTION
|
|
This article shows that social inequalities among women and within
|
|
households as well as the persistence of gendered life courses can be
|
|
reinforced through processes of family migration.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kley, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Kley, Stefanie, Univ Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Drobnic, Sonja, Univ Bremen, Bremen, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4054/DemRes.2019.40.7},
|
|
Article-Number = {7},
|
|
ISSN = {1435-9871},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LIFE-COURSE; UNITED-STATES; EMPLOYMENT INTERRUPTIONS; WEST-GERMANY;
|
|
MIGRATION; GENDER; WORK; TIME; TRANSITIONS; CHILDBIRTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography},
|
|
Author-Email = {stefanie.kley@uni-hamburg.de
|
|
sonja.drobnic@bigsss.uni\_bremen.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Drobnic, Sonja/A-2523-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Drobnic, Sonja/0000-0002-7007-879X
|
|
Kley, Stefanie/0000-0003-3400-7799},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000456469700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000497249800016,
|
|
Author = {Castellanos-Navarrete, Antonio and Tobar-Tomas, William V. and
|
|
Lopez-Monzon, Carlos E.},
|
|
Title = {Development without change: Oil palm labour regimes, development
|
|
narratives, and disputed moral economies in Mesoamerica},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {71},
|
|
Pages = {169-180},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Government officials and representatives of corporations and
|
|
international organisations promoting oil palm argue this crop brings
|
|
development by creating numerous jobs for the rural poor, even through
|
|
large-scale plantations. This study critically assesses this narrative
|
|
as deployed in Mesoamerica and analyses oil palm labour regimes in two
|
|
study regions in Mexico and one in Guatemala where both smallholders and
|
|
private sector plantations are producing oil palm. Following a political
|
|
ecology framework, we analyse labour practices as embodied and
|
|
political, taking into account larger processes of agrarian change.
|
|
Based on interviews and surveys of producers and field labourers, we
|
|
found oil palm production was characterised by low employment rates (one
|
|
job or less for every 10 hectares of land) and flexible labour regimes
|
|
under which field labourers face uncertain, poorly paid and risky
|
|
circumstances at work. The palm oil industry defines development
|
|
narrowly, as access to income without social change, while it profits
|
|
from contemporary and historical inequalities that have turned young
|
|
men, many of them indigenous Maya, rural women, and Guatemalan peasants
|
|
into cheap labour. However, in oil palm production, profit oriented
|
|
neoliberal arrangements by the private sector clash with a peasant moral
|
|
economy that emphasise the value of physical labour and
|
|
smallholder-worker solidarity. Despite being highly profitable, the palm
|
|
oil industry offers limited livelihood opportunities for field
|
|
labourers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Castellanos-Navarrete, A (Corresponding Author), Natl Autonomous Univ Mexico UNAM, Ctr Multidisciplinary Res Chiapas \& Southern Bord, Maria Adelina Flores 34, Chiapas 29230, Mexico.
|
|
Castellanos-Navarrete, Antonio, Natl Autonomous Univ Mexico UNAM, Ctr Multidisciplinary Res Chiapas \& Southern Bord, Maria Adelina Flores 34, Chiapas 29230, Mexico.
|
|
Tobar-Tomas, William V.; Lopez-Monzon, Carlos E., San Carlos Univ, Northwestern Res Inst CUNOROC, Aldea Chivacabe 13001, Huehuetenango, Guatemala.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jrurstud.2018.08.011},
|
|
ISSN = {0743-0167},
|
|
Keywords = {Dispossession; Moral economy; Neoliberalism; Precarisation; Rural
|
|
Employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER; PLANTATIONS; EXPANSION; SMALLHOLDERS; ENVIRONMENT; GUATEMALA;
|
|
POLICY; MEXICO},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography; Regional \& Urban Planning},
|
|
Author-Email = {acastela@unam.mx},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Castellanos-Navarrete, Antonio/J-1077-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Castellanos-Navarrete, Antonio/0000-0001-5796-962X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000497249800016},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000884124500001,
|
|
Author = {Fauk, Nelsensius Klau and Seran, Alfonsa Liquory and Raymond,
|
|
Christopher and Tahir, Roheena and Ward, Paul Russell and Gesesew,
|
|
Hailay Abrha},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to Accessing HIV Care Services in Host Low and Middle Income
|
|
Countries: Views and Experiences of Indonesian Male Ex-Migrant Workers
|
|
Living with HIV},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {21},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Migrant populations are one of the vulnerable groups to HIV transmission
|
|
and its consequences. They are also reported to experience delayed entry
|
|
or linkage into HIV services and have poorer HIV-related health
|
|
outcomes. This study aimed to understand barriers to accessing HIV care
|
|
services in host countries among Indonesian, male, former (returned)
|
|
migrant workers living with HIV. The study was carried out from December
|
|
2020 to February 2021. It utilised a qualitative design employing
|
|
in-depth interviews to collect data from twenty-two returned migrant
|
|
workers from Eastern Indonesia, recruited using the snowball sampling
|
|
technique. A qualitative data analysis framework was used to guide a
|
|
step-by-step analysis of the findings. Findings demonstrated that
|
|
limited host-country language proficiency, lack of knowledge regarding
|
|
healthcare systems in host countries and having `undocumented' worker
|
|
status were barriers to accessing HIV care services. Data also revealed
|
|
the unavailability of HIV care services nearby migrants' work locations,
|
|
long-distance travel to healthcare facilities, and challenges in
|
|
accessing public transportation as barriers that impeded their access to
|
|
the services. Other factors limiting the participants' access to HIV
|
|
services were identified as the transient and mobile nature of migrant
|
|
work requiring frequent relocation and disrupting work-life stability.
|
|
Additionally, in lieu of formal HIV services, many participants
|
|
self-medicated by using over-the-counter herbal or `traditional'
|
|
medicines, often because of peer or social group influence regarding the
|
|
selection of informal treatment options. Recommendations arising from
|
|
this study demonstrate the need to improve pre-departure information for
|
|
migrant workers regarding the healthcare system and access procedures in
|
|
potential host countries. Data from this study also indicate that social
|
|
services should be available to assist potential migrants to access
|
|
legal channels for migrant work overseas, to ensure that Indonesian
|
|
migrants can safely access healthcare services in the countries for
|
|
which they are providing migrant labour. Future studies to understand
|
|
barriers to accessing HIV care services among various migrant groups
|
|
living with HIV are warranted to build evidence for potential social
|
|
policy change.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ward, PR (Corresponding Author), Torrens Univ Australia, Res Ctr Publ Hlth Equ \& Human Flourishing, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia.
|
|
Fauk, Nelsensius Klau; Raymond, Christopher; Ward, Paul Russell; Gesesew, Hailay Abrha, Torrens Univ Australia, Res Ctr Publ Hlth Equ \& Human Flourishing, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia.
|
|
Fauk, Nelsensius Klau, Inst Resource Governance \& Social Change, Kupang 85227, Indonesia.
|
|
Gesesew, Hailay Abrha, Mekelle Univ, Coll Hlth Sci, Mekelle 1871, Ethiopia.
|
|
Seran, Alfonsa Liquory, Atapupu Publ Hlth Ctr, Hlth Dept Belu Dist, Atambua 85752, Indonesia.
|
|
Tahir, Roheena, Flinders Univ S Australia, Coll Med \& Publ Hlth, Adelaide, SA 5042, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/ijerph192114377},
|
|
Article-Number = {14377},
|
|
EISSN = {1660-4601},
|
|
Keywords = {migrant workers living with HIV; barriers to care; HIV care services;
|
|
host countries; Indonesia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; HERBAL MEDICINE; IMMIGRANT WOMEN; HIV/AIDS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {paul.ward@torrens.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Fauk, Nelsensius/L-8024-2015
|
|
Ward, Paul R/A-1368-2008
|
|
Raymond, Christopher/IQU-1788-2023
|
|
Gesesew, Hailay/AAF-6486-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Fauk, Nelsensius/0000-0002-1325-2640
|
|
Raymond, Christopher/0000-0002-8702-9337
|
|
Gesesew, Hailay/0000-0002-3531-4400
|
|
Ward, Paul/0000-0002-5559-9714},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000884124500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000386516300003,
|
|
Author = {Arcas, M. Marta and Delclos, George L. and Tora-Rocamora, Isabel and
|
|
Martinez, Jose Miguel and Benavides, Fernando G.},
|
|
Title = {Gender differences in the duration of non-work-related sickness absence
|
|
episodes due to musculoskeletal disorders},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {70},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {1065-1073},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Background There is wide evidence that women present longer duration of
|
|
sickness absence (SA) than men. Musculoskeletal disorders are influenced
|
|
by gender due to the sexual division of work.
|
|
Methods 354 432 episodes of non-work-related SA due to musculoskeletal
|
|
disorders, which were registered in Catalonia between 2005 and 2008,
|
|
were selected. The outcome variable was the duration of SA. Frailty
|
|
survival models, stratified by sex and adjusted for explanatory
|
|
variables (age, employment status, case management, economic activity
|
|
and repeated episode), were fitted to study the association between each
|
|
variable and the duration of SA, obtaining HRs.
|
|
Results Women presented longer SA episodes than men in all variable
|
|
categories. A trend from shorter to longer duration of SA with
|
|
increasing age was observed in men, whereas in women, it had a
|
|
fluctuating pattern. Analysing most frequent diagnostic subgroups from
|
|
the sample, only `non-specific lumbago' and `sciatic lumbago' showed
|
|
these age patterns. Frailty survival models applied to these 2 subgroups
|
|
confirmed the described age patterns in SA duration.
|
|
Conclusions Women have longer non-work-related SA due to musculoskeletal
|
|
disorders than men. However, while men have longer absences as their age
|
|
increases, in women some older groups have shorter absences than younger
|
|
ones. These findings could be explained by gender differences in the
|
|
interaction between paid work and family demands. Our results highlight
|
|
the need for continued research on SA from a gender perspective, in
|
|
order to improve management of SA in terms of clinical practice and
|
|
public policies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Arcas, MM (Corresponding Author), Univ Pompeu Fabra, Hosp del Mar, Agencia Salut Publ Barcelona, Prevent Med \& Publ Hlth,Educ Unit, Passeig Maritim 25-29, Barcelona 08003, Catalonia, Spain.
|
|
Arcas, M. Marta, Univ Pompeu Fabra, Hosp del Mar, Agencia Salut Publ Barcelona, Dept Prevent Med \& Publ Hlth,Educ Unit, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
|
|
Delclos, George L.; Tora-Rocamora, Isabel; Martinez, Jose Miguel; Benavides, Fernando G., Univ Pompeu Fabra, Ctr Res Occupat Hlth, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
|
|
Delclos, George L.; Tora-Rocamora, Isabel; Martinez, Jose Miguel; Benavides, Fernando G., CIBERESP, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
|
|
Delclos, George L., Univ Texas Sch Publ Hlth, Houston, TX USA.
|
|
Delclos, George L.; Tora-Rocamora, Isabel; Martinez, Jose Miguel; Benavides, Fernando G., Hosp del Mar Med Res Inst IMIM, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/jech-2014-204331},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-005X},
|
|
EISSN = {1470-2738},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; RETURN; LEAVE; COHORT; INEQUALITIES; SEX},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {arcasferre@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Martínez, José Miguel/AAU-3228-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Martínez, José Miguel/0000-0002-9633-1204},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000386516300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000438121400014,
|
|
Author = {Fornell, Beatriz and Correa, Manuel and Puerto Lopez del Amo, M. and
|
|
Martin, Jose J.},
|
|
Title = {Influence of changes in the Spanish labor market during the economic
|
|
crisis (2007-2011) on perceived health},
|
|
Journal = {QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {2095-2105},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {We analyze the influence of the dramatic changes in the Spanish labor
|
|
market during the crisis on the perceived health of the Spanish
|
|
population.
|
|
We use the longitudinal Living Conditions Survey database and multilevel
|
|
longitudinal logistic models between 2007 and 2011, before and during
|
|
the economic crisis in one of the European countries most affected by
|
|
its consequences.
|
|
Unemployment (OR 1.75; p < 0.001), job insecurity (OR 1.38; p < 0.001),
|
|
and being part of a household with severe material deprivation (OR 1.87;
|
|
p = 0.004) increase the risk of having worsened perceived health.
|
|
Available income, on the other hand, is a protective factor (OR 0.72; p
|
|
< 0.001). Public expenditure policies have little impact on the
|
|
perceived health. Labor market reforms reducing the degree of job
|
|
insecurity and unemployment, together with income transfers to those at
|
|
greater risk of social deprivation, can be more effective in improving
|
|
the health of the population than the increase of aggregated social or
|
|
health care expenditure.
|
|
This study provides evidence of the influence that unemployment, job
|
|
insecurity, and poverty exert on the perceived health of individuals,
|
|
with data collected in Spain after the onset of the financial crisis. In
|
|
addition, after analyzing public social expenditure, only expenditure on
|
|
FPS seems to influence self-reported health, although to a very limited
|
|
degree.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Correa, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Granada, Appl Econ, Campus Univ Cartuja, E-18071 Granada, Spain.
|
|
Fornell, Beatriz; Correa, Manuel; Puerto Lopez del Amo, M.; Martin, Jose J., Univ Granada, Appl Econ, Campus Univ Cartuja, E-18071 Granada, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11136-018-1824-5},
|
|
ISSN = {0962-9343},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-2649},
|
|
Keywords = {Unemployment; Precarious employment; Poverty; Self-rated health; Spain;
|
|
Longitudinal study},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-RATED HEALTH; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; JOB INSECURITY; PRECARIOUS
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; MENTAL-HEALTH; TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT; SOCIOECONOMIC GROUPS;
|
|
INCOME INEQUALITIES; MULTILEVEL ANALYSIS; REPORTED HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services; Public,
|
|
Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {manuelcorrea@ugr.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Martín, José Jesús/AAB-7056-2019
|
|
del Amo Gonzál, M. Puerto López/AAC-5041-2019
|
|
Correa, Manuel/AAT-6956-2020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {88},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000438121400014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000253897900003,
|
|
Author = {Dobossy, Imre and Viragh, Eszter and Vukovich, Gabriella},
|
|
Title = {The situation of non-profit organisations active in improving employment},
|
|
Journal = {CIVIL SZEMLE},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {4},
|
|
Number = {3-4},
|
|
Pages = {44+},
|
|
Abstract = {Our research was designed to find out to what extent non-profit
|
|
organisations that identified their scope of activity as enhancing
|
|
employment and training are able to fulfil their aims, can they increase
|
|
employment, especially the employment of groups that are disadvantaged
|
|
in the labour market, what did they achieve in the field of
|
|
(re)integrating people to the labour market. We analysed existing
|
|
statistics and also carried out a survey among non-profit organisations.
|
|
the information that we were able to gather and organise in a systematic
|
|
way can be used to assess the effectivity of civil initiatives.
|
|
The number of non-profit organisations active in the field of enhancing
|
|
employment was around 200 in the past few years, with a slightly
|
|
declining tendency in the number. The majority had the form of
|
|
foundations and associations. An increasing number of these
|
|
organisations had employees, but they have fewer volunteers than other
|
|
non-profit organisations. The weight of Government financial support is
|
|
outstandingly high in these organisations, compared to the average of
|
|
the non-profit sector. The total amount of government financial support
|
|
to non-profit organisations active in the field of employment issues was
|
|
18 billion HUF The majority of the organisations targeted the employment
|
|
of unemployed persons, their activities included training, job hunting
|
|
but also the employment of the target group by the organisation itself.
|
|
The target group is mainly private individuals, but some of the
|
|
organisations service other organisations or groups, among them minority
|
|
groups (old, young, families, Roma etc.). the activity of the
|
|
organisations is mostly limited to a settlement or a micro-region, few
|
|
of them have a county, macro regional or national activity scope.
|
|
The demand for the services of these NGOs exceeds their capacity but
|
|
they are sooner or later able to help.
|
|
The major source of resources are the municipalities and their own
|
|
incomes but a large amount comes from the government or from ministries
|
|
directly and from the offerings of private individuals who can offer 1\%
|
|
of their income tax to an NGO of their choice. The working conditions
|
|
and the infrastructure of these NGOs is at a medium level. they have to
|
|
cope with a shortage in resources, which they try to overcome by
|
|
continuous applications to various funds; they submit proposals 7 times
|
|
a year on the average.
|
|
They consider their own activities to be successful and improving, the
|
|
majority said that they were able to reach their goals, though they
|
|
would like to provide services to more people and they would like to
|
|
improve the co-operation with local municipalities and government
|
|
organisations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Hungarian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dobossy, I (Corresponding Author), Hungarian Cent Stat, Budapest, Hungary.
|
|
Dobossy, Imre; Viragh, Eszter; Vukovich, Gabriella, Hungarian Cent Stat, Budapest, Hungary.
|
|
Vukovich, Gabriella, DEMO STAT CONSULTANTS, Budapest, Hungary.},
|
|
ISSN = {1786-3341},
|
|
Keywords = {civil (non-profit) sector; ngos active in improving employment;
|
|
reintegration to the labour market; support to disadvanteged groups;
|
|
training; register of ngos},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public Administration},
|
|
Author-Email = {imre.dobossy@ksh.hu
|
|
eszter.viragh@ksh.hu
|
|
vukovich.gabriella@axelero.hu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {0},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000253897900003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000611948000021,
|
|
Author = {Ragie, Fatima H. and Olivier, David W. and Hunter, Lori M. and Erasmus,
|
|
Barend F. N. and Vogel, Coleen and Collinson, Mark and Twine, Wayne},
|
|
Title = {A portfolio perspective of rural livelihoods in Bushbuckridge, South
|
|
Africa},
|
|
Journal = {SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {116},
|
|
Number = {9-10},
|
|
Pages = {98-105},
|
|
Month = {SEP-OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Land-based income streams, which include the consumption and selling of
|
|
crops, livestock and environmental products, are inherent in rural
|
|
households' livelihoods. However, the off-farm cash income stream -
|
|
primarily composed of migrant labour remittances, social grants, and
|
|
savings and loans - is increasing in importance in many regions. This
|
|
case study of 590 households from Bushbuckridge, South Africa, analyses
|
|
the economic value of each of these income streams at three points: what
|
|
enters the household, what is used and what is sold. Two important
|
|
findings emerge. First, dependence on off-farm cash incomes is far
|
|
higher than previously suggested by case studies in the area and the
|
|
benefits of employment accrue to those already better educated and
|
|
wealthier. This suggests that shifts in off-farm opportunities will
|
|
exacerbate already deep inequalities. Second, while environmental
|
|
products and crops are important for direct use, they generate
|
|
insignificant cash incomes from sales. This suggests a weakening of the
|
|
direct links between the local ecosystem and this society, challenging
|
|
traditional notions of African rurality being intrinsically land based.
|
|
Significance:
|
|
Off-farm incomes such as wage labour, remittances and social grants are
|
|
almost the sole source of cash for households in the study area. Even
|
|
when including non-monetary incomes such as harvested produce, foraged
|
|
goods and livestock products, off-farm incomes still represent the
|
|
overwhelmingly largest proportion of overall household income value.
|
|
This highlights the fact that South African rural economies are not
|
|
consistently or primarily land based, and indicates the necessity of
|
|
rural development strategies that facilitate participation in local cash
|
|
economies. Otherwise, such efforts will be unable to yield broad
|
|
benefits and will, instead, simply enrich those who are already better
|
|
off.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Olivier, DW (Corresponding Author), Univ Witwatersrand, Global Change Inst, Johannesburg, South Africa.
|
|
Ragie, Fatima H.; Twine, Wayne, Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Anim Plant \& Environm Sci, Johannesburg, South Africa.
|
|
Olivier, David W.; Erasmus, Barend F. N.; Vogel, Coleen, Univ Witwatersrand, Global Change Inst, Johannesburg, South Africa.
|
|
Hunter, Lori M., Univ Colorado, Inst Behav Sci, CU Populat Ctr, Dept Sociol, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
|
|
Hunter, Lori M.; Collinson, Mark, Univ Witwatersrand, MRC Wits Rural Publ Hlth \& Hlth Transit Unit Agin, Sch Publ Hlth, Johannesburg, South Africa.
|
|
Collinson, Mark, Univ Johannesburg, DSI MRC South African Populat Res Infrastruct Net, Johannesburg, South Africa.
|
|
Erasmus, Barend F. N., Univ Pretoria, Fac Nat \& Agr Sci, Pretoria, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.17159/sajs.2020/7522},
|
|
Article-Number = {7522},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-2353},
|
|
EISSN = {1996-7489},
|
|
Keywords = {land-based income; off-farm cash income; income streams; rural
|
|
households; sustainable livelihoods},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DIRECT-USE VALUES; RESOURCES; SAVANNA; PATTERNS; INCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {david.olivier@wits.ac.za},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Erasmus, Barend FN/G-3411-2012
|
|
Collinson, Mark/E-1830-2016
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Erasmus, Barend FN/0000-0003-1869-8091
|
|
Twine, Wayne/0000-0002-4163-198X
|
|
HUNTER, LORI/0000-0002-3450-9791
|
|
Collinson, Mark/0000-0002-8205-7099
|
|
Olivier, David/0000-0002-6037-9150},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000611948000021},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000167012100006,
|
|
Author = {Pachaud, D and Sutherland, H},
|
|
Title = {Child poverty in Britain and the new labour government},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF SOCIAL POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {95-118},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {The new Labour government in Britain has made the reduction of child
|
|
poverty one of its central objectives. This article analyses the
|
|
circumstances of children in poverty and describes the specific
|
|
initiatives involved in Labour's approach and weighs them up in terms of
|
|
their potential impact. The impact on child poverty of policies designed
|
|
to raise incomes directly is analysed using micro-simulation modelling,
|
|
A major emphasis of current policy is on the promotion of paid work, and
|
|
we explore the potential for poverty reduction of increasing the
|
|
employment of parents. The policies that address long-term disadvantage
|
|
are also discussed and finally the whole programme is assessed and
|
|
future strategy is considered.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pachaud, D (Corresponding Author), Univ London London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Univ London London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Univ Cambridge, Microsimulat Unit, Dept Appl Econ, Cambridge CB2 1TN, England.},
|
|
ISSN = {0047-2794},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public Administration; Social Issues; Social Work},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000167012100006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000436915700006,
|
|
Author = {Horn, Philipp and Grugel, Jean},
|
|
Title = {The SDGs in middle-income countries: Setting or serving domestic
|
|
development agendas? Evidence from Ecuador},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {109},
|
|
Pages = {73-84},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {The expansion of middle-income countries in the global South is now
|
|
widely acknowledged as significant for international development
|
|
research and practice. But, as yet, scholars have not fully considered
|
|
how middle-income countries are responding to the new global goals on
|
|
international development (the Sustainable Development Goals - SDGs)
|
|
outlined in Agenda 2030. Equally, insufficient attention has been paid
|
|
to how - if at all - the SDGs shape domestic development policies and
|
|
practices in middle income countries. We ask these questions in Ecuador,
|
|
a country that recently moved from being a lower middle income and donor
|
|
dependent country to a more autonomous higher middle-income country with
|
|
the capacity to promote its own national domestic development approach,
|
|
Buen Vivir (in English: living well). Deploying a qualitative case study
|
|
methodology and drawing primarily on in-depth semi-structured interviews
|
|
conducted with policy makers working in Ecuador's national government
|
|
and in the capital Quito, we show that policy makers' engagement with
|
|
the SDGs is selective, with an emphasis on those goals and targets which
|
|
are considered of domestic importance. Both the national government and
|
|
Quito's local government are currently focussing mainly on SDGs 10.2
|
|
(breaking inequalities) and 11 (inclusive cities). We demonstrate that,
|
|
in practice, how policy makers understand implementation of these
|
|
``priority{''} goals is not consistent; it depends on political
|
|
preferences, where policy makers are located in the architecture of
|
|
decentralised governance and the context-specific challenges they face.
|
|
Evidence from Ecuador suggests that the SDGs cannot be understood as a
|
|
single coherent template for development that states will simply adopt.
|
|
Rather they should be analysed in the context of a rapidly changing
|
|
architecture of global power, shaped by the context-specific nature of
|
|
national development challenges and national political structures,
|
|
including decentralisation. (C) 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier
|
|
Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Horn, P (Corresponding Author), Univ Sheffield, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Horn, Philipp, Univ Sheffield, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Grugel, Jean, Univ York, York, N Yorkshire, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.worlddev.2018.04.005},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-750X},
|
|
Keywords = {Sustainable Development Goals; Middle-income countries;
|
|
Decentralisation; Ecuador; SDGs 11 \& 10.2; Quito},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS; MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS; GLOBAL
|
|
GOVERNANCE; POLITICAL-ECONOMY; POLICY; CHINA; AID; MOVEMENTS; RIGHTS;
|
|
WORLD},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {p.horn@sheffield.ac.uk
|
|
Jean.grugel@york.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Horn, Philipp/0000-0002-4122-4866},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {91},
|
|
Times-Cited = {61},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {34},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000436915700006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000311939100001,
|
|
Author = {Nonzee, Narissa J. and McKoy, June M. and Rademaker, Alfred W. and Byer,
|
|
Peter and Thanh Ha Luu and Liu, Dachao and Richey, Elizabeth A. and
|
|
Samaras, Athena T. and Panucci, Genna and Dong, XinQi and Simon, Melissa
|
|
A.},
|
|
Title = {Design of a prostate cancer patient navigation intervention for a
|
|
Veterans Affairs hospital},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Month = {SEP 25},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Patient navigation programs have been launched nationwide in
|
|
an attempt to reduce racial/ethnic and socio-demographic disparities in
|
|
cancer care, but few have evaluated outcomes in the prostate cancer
|
|
setting. The National Cancer Institute-funded Chicago Patient Navigation
|
|
Research Program (C-PNRP) aims to implement and evaluate the efficacy of
|
|
a patient navigation intervention for predominantly low-income minority
|
|
patients with an abnormal prostate cancer screening test at a Veterans
|
|
Affairs (VA) hospital in Chicago.
|
|
Methods/Design: From 2006 through 2010, C-PNRP implemented a
|
|
quasi-experimental intervention whereby trained social worker and lay
|
|
health navigators worked with veterans with an abnormal prostate screen
|
|
to proactively identify and resolve personal and systems barriers to
|
|
care. Men were enrolled at a VA urology clinic and were selected to
|
|
receive navigated versus usual care based on clinic day. Patient
|
|
navigators performed activities to facilitate timely follow-up such as
|
|
appointment reminders, transportation coordination, cancer education,
|
|
scheduling assistance, and social support as needed. Primary outcome
|
|
measures included time (days) from abnormal screening to diagnosis and
|
|
time from diagnosis to treatment initiation. Secondary outcomes included
|
|
psychosocial and demographic predictors of non-compliance and patient
|
|
satisfaction. Dates of screening, follow-up visits, and treatment were
|
|
obtained through chart audit, and questionnaires were administered at
|
|
baseline, after diagnosis, and after treatment initiation. At the VA,
|
|
546 patients were enrolled in the study (245 in the navigated arm, 245
|
|
in the records-based control arm, and 56 in a subsample of surveyed
|
|
control subjects).
|
|
Discussion: Given increasing concerns about balancing better health
|
|
outcomes with lower costs, careful examination of interventions aimed at
|
|
reducing healthcare disparities attain critical importance. While
|
|
analysis of the C-PNRP data is underway, the design of this patient
|
|
navigation intervention will inform other patient navigation programs
|
|
addressing strategies to improve prostate cancer outcomes among
|
|
vulnerable populations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Simon, MA (Corresponding Author), Northwestern Univ, Robert H Lurie Comprehens Canc Ctr, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Nonzee, Narissa J.; McKoy, June M.; Rademaker, Alfred W.; Byer, Peter; Liu, Dachao; Simon, Melissa A., Northwestern Univ, Robert H Lurie Comprehens Canc Ctr, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Nonzee, Narissa J., Jesse Brown VA Med Ctr, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
McKoy, June M., Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Div Gen Internal Med \& Geriatr, Dept Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
McKoy, June M.; Rademaker, Alfred W.; Liu, Dachao; Simon, Melissa A., Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Dept Prevent Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Thanh Ha Luu; Samaras, Athena T.; Simon, Melissa A., Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Richey, Elizabeth A., Dartmouth Coll, Geisel Sch Med, Hanover, NH 03755 USA.
|
|
Panucci, Genna, Harvard Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Dong, XinQi, Rush Univ, Inst Hlth Aging, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1472-6963-12-340},
|
|
Article-Number = {340},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Patient navigation; Prostate cancer; Cancer health disparities; Veterans},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RELIABILITY-ANALYSIS; RANDOMIZED PROSTATE; MORTALITY; RACE; DIAGNOSIS;
|
|
LITERACY; SATISFACTION; DISPARITIES; VALIDATION; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {m-simon2@northwestern.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {MCKOY, JUNE/GRJ-5660-2022
|
|
Dong, Xin/IZQ-2213-2023
|
|
Dong, Xin/HSG-6425-2023},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000311939100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000427442400001,
|
|
Author = {Andersen, Synove N. and Drange, Nina and lappegard, Trude},
|
|
Title = {Can a cash transfer to families change fertility behaviour?},
|
|
Journal = {DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Pages = {897-928},
|
|
Month = {MAR 8},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE
|
|
This paper assesses the much-disputed relationship between family policy
|
|
and fertility, and cash transfers and fertility in particular.
|
|
METHODS
|
|
We take advantage of a cash-for-care (CFC) policy introduced in Norway
|
|
in 1998, and compare the subsequent fertility behaviour of eligible and
|
|
ineligible mothers over a four-year period. We estimate linear models
|
|
assessing both the occurrence and timing of second births, relying on a
|
|
rich set of covariates and a sensitivity analysis to ensure the
|
|
robustness of our results.
|
|
RESULTS
|
|
Contrary to theoretical expectations, the results show that CFC-eligible
|
|
mothers had a slower progression to second births and lower short-term
|
|
fertility. The patterns differ between different groups of mothers, and
|
|
the decline in subsequent childbearing is only statistically significant
|
|
among mothers with upper secondary (but not higher) education and
|
|
part-time or full-time employment. We find no increase in short-term
|
|
fertility in any group of mothers, and suggest that this pattern may be
|
|
driven by an interaction between the CFC benefit and the already
|
|
established Norwegian parental leave scheme.
|
|
CONTRIBUTION
|
|
The paper demonstrates how policy changes may indeed be associated with
|
|
changes in fertility behaviour, and that this association may run in
|
|
theoretically unexpected directions when a given policy is implemented
|
|
in a wider policy framework. Moreover, it demonstrates how eligible
|
|
parents may differ in their response to policies depending on the
|
|
policy's income effect and the parents' opportunity costs of
|
|
childbearing.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Andersen, SN (Corresponding Author), Stat Norway, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Andersen, Synove N.; Drange, Nina, Stat Norway, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
lappegard, Trude, Univ Oslo, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4054/DemRes.2018.38.33},
|
|
Article-Number = {33},
|
|
ISSN = {1435-9871},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILD-CARE; LEAVE; WORK; POLICIES; BENEFIT; NORWAY; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography},
|
|
Author-Email = {sna@ssb.no},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000427442400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000433946000005,
|
|
Author = {Vlachou, Anastasia and Papananou, Ioanna},
|
|
Title = {Experiences and Perspectives of Greek Higher Education Students with
|
|
Disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {60},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {206-221},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundIn Higher Education, inclusion and the enhancement of equality
|
|
of opportunities and practices appeal as imperative, in most Western
|
|
societies' laws. Inclusive education literature, however, reveals that
|
|
despite inclusion's strong advocacy, delivery remains problematic, as
|
|
beyond the surface of institutional policy, the reality of university
|
|
life for students with disabilities may be one of continued exclusion
|
|
and barriers to learning. Furthermore, in many countries, including
|
|
Greece, the voices of students with disabilities appear significantly
|
|
under-represented, not only in policy-making processes and practices,
|
|
but also in the area of research.PurposeIn the light of the above, this
|
|
paper aims to explore the experiences and perspectives of 32 students
|
|
with disabilities on: education in Higher Education Institutions in
|
|
Greece, the impending transition to paid employment and future
|
|
aspirations.MethodThe paper is based on a qualitative study where data
|
|
were collected through semi-structured interviews with university
|
|
students with disabilities. Data were analysed according to the
|
|
principles of interpretative phenomenological analysis.FindingsComplex
|
|
and rich accounts divulged specific issues, such as physical access and
|
|
access to academic knowledge, quality of available support, interactions
|
|
with tutors and fellow students, as well as perceived factors that may
|
|
hinder the transition into the labour market. The results of the study
|
|
also confirmed that students with disabilities are capable of asserting
|
|
their needs, challenging institutional discrimination issues and
|
|
proposing more inclusive alternatives.ConclusionThe findings indicate
|
|
the need for reconsidering and refining institutional policies and
|
|
practices in relation to issues of disability and education.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vlachou, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Thessaly, Dept Special Educ, Volos, Greece.
|
|
Vlachou, Anastasia; Papananou, Ioanna, Univ Thessaly, Dept Special Educ, Volos, Greece.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/00131881.2018.1453752},
|
|
ISSN = {0013-1881},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-5847},
|
|
Keywords = {Higher education; inclusion; equity; participation; teaching and
|
|
learning; students with disabilities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCLUSIVE EDUCATION; ACHIEVEMENT; SCHOOL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {anavlachou@uth.gr},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000433946000005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000412962400009,
|
|
Author = {Julia, Mireia and Vives, Alejandra and Tarafa, Gemma and Benach, Joan},
|
|
Title = {Changing the way we understand precarious employment and health:
|
|
Precarisation affects the entire salaried population},
|
|
Journal = {SAFETY SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {100},
|
|
Number = {A, SI},
|
|
Pages = {66-73},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Employment precariousness (EP) has expanded over recent years. The aim
|
|
of this study is to test the existence of a general precarisation of the
|
|
Spanish labour market and its association with mental health for
|
|
different types of contract.
|
|
On the subsample of salaried workers from the second Psychosocial Work
|
|
Environment Survey and using the revised Employment Precariousness Scale
|
|
(EPRES-2010), we calculated the prevalence of EP and poor mental health
|
|
for salaried workers. We created six groups of workers according to
|
|
their levels of EP and types of contract. We used Poisson regressions,
|
|
stratified by gender, to examine associations between belonging to the
|
|
different groups of workers and poor mental health.
|
|
Although temporary workers had a higher prevalence of EP and poorer
|
|
mental health than permanent workers, we found that the association with
|
|
poor mental health was unexpectedly stronger in permanent workers with
|
|
high precariousness (2.97, IC95\% 2.25-3.92 in men and 2.50, 1.70-3.67
|
|
in women) than in temporary workers (2.17, IC95\% 1.59-2.96 in men and
|
|
1.81, 1.17-2.78 in women). A gradient of poor mental health existed by
|
|
EP score for both men and women and permanent and temporary workers.
|
|
The Spanish labour market is highly affected by employment
|
|
precarisation. Using the multidimensional EPRES is more informative and
|
|
a better tool for mental health research than type of contract alone.
|
|
Creating a surveillance system to monitor the magnitude and evolution of
|
|
EP has to be a priority in order to reduce health inequalities and to
|
|
evaluate the impact of policies and programs. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All
|
|
rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Julia, M (Corresponding Author), Campus Ciutadella,Merce Rodoreda Bldg, Barcelona 08005, Spain.
|
|
Julia, Mireia; Vives, Alejandra; Tarafa, Gemma; Benach, Joan, Univ Pompeu Fabra, Dept Polit \& Social Sci, Employment Condit Knowledge Network GREDS EMCONET, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Julia, Mireia; Tarafa, Gemma; Benach, Joan, Johns Hopkins Univ Univ Pompeu Fabra, Publ Policy Ctr, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Vives, Alejandra, Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Escuela Med, Dept Salud Publ, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Vives, Alejandra, ACCDIS Conicyt Fondap 15130011, CEDEUS Conicyt Fondap 15110020, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Tarafa, Gemma; Benach, Joan, Univ Autonoma Madrid, Transdisciplinary Res Grp Socioecol Transit GinTR, Madrid, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ssci.2017.01.015},
|
|
ISSN = {0925-7535},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-1042},
|
|
Keywords = {Social determinants of health; Employment conditions; Health
|
|
inequalities; Precarious employment; Precarisation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB INSECURITY; TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT; SOCIAL DISTRIBUTION; SPANISH
|
|
VERSION; MENTAL-HEALTH; SPAIN; RISK; PERMANENT; EXPOSURE; COHORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Engineering, Industrial; Operations Research \& Management Science},
|
|
Author-Email = {mireia.julia@upf.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Julia, Mireia/H-2512-2013
|
|
Vives, Alejandra/AFB-2073-2022
|
|
Benach, Joan/H-2519-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Julia, Mireia/0000-0002-7432-0942
|
|
Vives, Alejandra/0000-0001-5851-0693
|
|
Benach, Joan/0000-0003-2285-742X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {42},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {45},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000412962400009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000283899400009,
|
|
Author = {Ruppanner, Leah E.},
|
|
Title = {Cross-national reports of housework: An investigation of the gender
|
|
empowerment measure},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {963-975},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper analyses the relationship between country-level gender
|
|
empowerment and individual-level divisions of housework. Pairing the
|
|
2004 United Nations gender empowerment measure (GEM) with
|
|
individual-level (n = 18,560) data from the 2004 European Social Survey,
|
|
the author compares the relationship between a country's GEM score, both
|
|
as an index and as disaggregated measures, and respondents' housework
|
|
hours and housework proportions. The GEM index has a positive and linear
|
|
relationship with men's housework hours and a positive and non-linear
|
|
relationship with men and women's housework proportions and with women's
|
|
housework hours. For the disaggregated GEM measures, women's
|
|
representation in parliament is positively associated with men's
|
|
housework hours and proportions and women's housework hours. Women's
|
|
labor market status, including the percent of women in professional
|
|
positions and female-male wage ratios, is negatively associated with
|
|
women's housework hours and proportions. Finally, the cross-level
|
|
interactions demonstrate theoretically important relationships to the
|
|
housework literature. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ruppanner, LE (Corresponding Author), Univ Hawaii, Dept Sociol, 200 W Kawili St, Hilo, HI 96720 USA.
|
|
Univ Hawaii, Dept Sociol, Hilo, HI 96720 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ssresearch.2010.04.002},
|
|
ISSN = {0049-089X},
|
|
EISSN = {1096-0317},
|
|
Keywords = {Housework; Gender empowerment measure; Comparative research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DIVISION-OF-LABOR; HOUSEHOLD LABOR; CONTEXTUAL FACTORS; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
WOMEN; REPRESENTATION; PARTICIPATION; PARENTHOOD; INEQUALITY; ATTITUDES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {lruppann@hawaii.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ruppanner, Leah/0000-0002-6111-1914},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {45},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {38},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000283899400009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000360253600012,
|
|
Author = {Hajizadeh, Mohammad and Heymann, Jody and Strumpf, Erin and Harper, Sam
|
|
and Nandi, Arijit},
|
|
Title = {Paid maternity leave and childhood vaccination uptake: Longitudinal
|
|
evidence from 20 low-and-middle-income countries},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {140},
|
|
Pages = {104-117},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {The availability of maternity leave might remove barriers to improved
|
|
vaccination coverage by increasing the likelihood that parents are
|
|
available to bring a child to the clinic for immunizations. Using
|
|
information from 20 low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs) we estimated
|
|
the effect of paid maternity leave policies on childhood vaccination
|
|
uptake. We used birth history data collected via Demographic and Health
|
|
Surveys (DHS) to assemble a multilevel panel of 258,769 live births in
|
|
20 countries from 2001 to 2008; these data were merged with longitudinal
|
|
information on the number of full-time equivalent (FTE) weeks of paid
|
|
maternity leave guaranteed by each country. We used Logistic regression
|
|
models that included country and year fixed effects to estimate the
|
|
impact of increases in FTE paid maternity leave policies in the prior
|
|
year on the receipt of the following vaccines: Bacillus Calmette-Guerin
|
|
(BCG) commonly given at birth, diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTP,
|
|
3 doses) commonly given in clinic visits and Polio (3 doses) given in
|
|
clinic visits or as part of campaigns. We found that extending the
|
|
duration of paid maternity leave had a positive effect on immunization
|
|
rates for all three doses of the DTP vaccine; each additional FTE week
|
|
of paid maternity leave increased DTP1, 2 and 3 coverage by 1.38 (95\%
|
|
CI = 1.18, 1.57), 1.62 (CI = 1.34, 1.91) and 2.17 (CI = 1.76, 2.58)
|
|
percentage points, respectively. Estimates were robust to adjustment for
|
|
birth characteristics, household-level covariates, attendance of skilled
|
|
health personnel at birth and time-varying country-level covariates. We
|
|
found no evidence for an effect of maternity leave on the probability of
|
|
receiving vaccinations for BCG or Polio after adjustment for the
|
|
above-mentioned covariates. Our findings were consistent with the
|
|
hypothesis that more generous paid leave policies have the potential to
|
|
improve DTP immunization coverage. Further work is needed to understand
|
|
the health effects of paid leave policies in LMICs. (C) 2015 Elsevier
|
|
Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hajizadeh, M (Corresponding Author), Dalhousie Univ, Sch Hlth Adm, 5161 George St,Suite 700, Halifax, NS B3J 1M7, Canada.
|
|
Hajizadeh, Mohammad, Dalhousie Univ, Sch Hlth Adm, Halifax, NS B3J 1M7, Canada.
|
|
Heymann, Jody, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Fielding Sch Publ Hlth, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
Strumpf, Erin, McGill Univ, Dept Econ, Montreal, PQ H3A 2T5, Canada.
|
|
Strumpf, Erin; Harper, Sam; Nandi, Arijit, McGill Univ, Dept Epidemiol Biostat \& Occupat Hlth, Montreal, PQ H3A 2T5, Canada.
|
|
Nandi, Arijit, McGill Univ, Inst Hlth \& Social Policy, Montreal, PQ H3A 2T5, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.07.008},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {Maternity leave; Childhood vaccination; Low-and-middle-income countries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE USE; IMMUNIZATION COVERAGE; PARENTAL PERCEPTIONS; CHILDREN;
|
|
WORK; DETERMINANTS; POPULATION; EMPLOYMENT; BARRIERS; PROGRAM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {m.hajizadeh@dal.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Harper, Sam/A-3406-2008
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Harper, Sam/0000-0002-2767-1053
|
|
Hajizadeh, Mohammad/0000-0002-4591-8531
|
|
Heymann, Jody/0000-0003-0008-4198},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {44},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000360253600012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000609237200025,
|
|
Author = {Prakash, Nishith},
|
|
Title = {The impact of employment quotas on the economic lives of disadvantaged
|
|
minorities in India},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR \& ORGANIZATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {180},
|
|
Pages = {494-509},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {India has the world's biggest and arguably most aggressive
|
|
employment-based affirmative action policy for minorities. This paper
|
|
exploits the institutional features of a federally mandated employment
|
|
quota policy to examine its causal impact on the economic lives of the
|
|
two distinct minority groups (Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes). My
|
|
main finding is that a 1-percentage point increase in the employment
|
|
quota for Scheduled Castes increases the likelihood of obtaining a
|
|
salaried job by 0.6-percentage points for male Scheduled Caste members
|
|
residing in the rural sector. The employment quota policy has no impact
|
|
for Scheduled Tribes. Contrary to popular notion, I do not find evidence
|
|
of ``elite-capture{''} among the Scheduled Castes - the impact is
|
|
concentrated among members who have completed less than secondary
|
|
education. Consistent with the employment results, I find that the
|
|
policy improved the well-being of Scheduled Castes members in rural
|
|
areas who have completed less than secondary education. Finally, the
|
|
impact of the employment quota policy varies by state characteristics.
|
|
(C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Prakash, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Connecticut, Dept Econ, 365 Fairfield Way,Oak Hall, Storrs, CT 06269 USA.
|
|
Prakash, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Connecticut, Human Rights Inst, 365 Fairfield Way,Oak Hall, Storrs, CT 06269 USA.
|
|
Prakash, Nishith, Univ Connecticut, Storrs, CT USA.
|
|
Prakash, Nishith, IZA, Bonn, Germany.
|
|
Prakash, Nishith, HiCN, Bonn, Germany.
|
|
Prakash, Nishith, GLO, Bonn, Germany.
|
|
Prakash, Nishith, CReAM, Bonn, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jebo.2020.10.017},
|
|
ISSN = {0167-2681},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-1751},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment quota; Scheduled Castes; Scheduled Tribes; Consumption
|
|
expenditure; Public sector; India},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CIVIL-RIGHTS ACT; AFFIRMATIVE-ACTION; LABOR-MARKET; POLICY; CALIFORNIA;
|
|
LAW},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {nishith.prakash@uconn.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Prakash, Nishith/0000-0001-8046-5593},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000609237200025},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000670358600007,
|
|
Author = {O'Neill, John and Dyson-Hudson, Trevor A.},
|
|
Title = {Employment After Spinal Cord Injury},
|
|
Journal = {CURRENT PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION REPORTS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {141-148},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose of ReviewThis review focuses on employment after spinal cord
|
|
injury (SCI) and highlights recent evidence-based models of vocational
|
|
rehabilitation.Recent FindingsEmployment rates among people with SCI
|
|
remain much lower than the general population. Benefits of employment
|
|
for persons with SCI include improved quality of life, enhanced
|
|
independence, reduced depression, improved social integration, greater
|
|
life satisfaction, better health, and longevity. When striving to work
|
|
after SCI, there are facilitators to be exploited (e.g., education,
|
|
transportation, assistive technology) and barriers that need management
|
|
(e.g., secondary medical complications).SummaryIndividualized placement
|
|
and support (IPS) and vocational resource facilitation (VRF) are
|
|
examples of new evidence-based models of vocational rehabilitation that
|
|
integrate vocational services with clinical care in order to better help
|
|
persons with SCI find competitive employment in the community. If people
|
|
with SCI do not return to work soon after their injury, then it may take
|
|
more time for them to reach their full vocational potential.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dyson-Hudson, TA (Corresponding Author), Kessler Fdn, W Orange, NJ 07052 USA.
|
|
Dyson-Hudson, TA (Corresponding Author), Rutgers New Jersey Med Sch, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, Newark, NJ 07103 USA.
|
|
O'Neill, John; Dyson-Hudson, Trevor A., Kessler Fdn, W Orange, NJ 07052 USA.
|
|
O'Neill, John; Dyson-Hudson, Trevor A., Rutgers New Jersey Med Sch, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, Newark, NJ 07103 USA.
|
|
O'Neill, John, Rutgers State Univ, John J Heldrich Ctr Workforce Dev, New Brunswick, NJ USA.
|
|
O'Neill, John, CUNY Hunter Coll, New York, NY 10021 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s40141-020-00266-4},
|
|
EISSN = {2167-4833},
|
|
Keywords = {Spinal cord injuries; Employment; Supported employment; Return-to-work;
|
|
Vocational rehabilitation; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; INDIVIDUAL PLACEMENT; RETURN;
|
|
WORK; PARTICIPATION; VETERANS; OUTCOMES; COMMUNITY; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {tdysonhudson@kesslerfoundation.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000670358600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000633997800022,
|
|
Author = {Kosari, Sam and Deeks, Louise S. and Naunton, Mark and Dawda, Paresh and
|
|
Postma, Marteen J. and Tay, Guan Han and Peterson, Gregory M.},
|
|
Title = {Funding pharmacists in general practice: A feasibility study to inform
|
|
the design of future economic evaluations},
|
|
Journal = {RESEARCH IN SOCIAL \& ADMINISTRATIVE PHARMACY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1012-1016},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Funding is a significant barrier to employing general
|
|
practice pharmacists. Objective(s): To explore the feasibility of
|
|
determining the cost-benefit of pharmacists in Australian general
|
|
practice.
|
|
Methods: Two part-time pharmacists were employed by general practices in
|
|
Canberra, Australia. Diaries of the pharmacists were analysed to
|
|
determine time worked and participation in income-generating activities,
|
|
including Government-funded programs: Asthma Cycle of Care, Home
|
|
Medicine Reviews, and Health Care Assessments. Scenarios using different
|
|
practice and business models were entered into value-cost models to
|
|
determine the income generated by the pharmacists relative to their
|
|
salary.
|
|
Results: Over 19 weeks, pharmacists A and B supported 47 and 23 Asthma
|
|
Cycle of Care activities, generating income to the general practice of
|
|
AU\$4,700 and AU\$2,300, respectively. The pharmacists spent 36.4 and
|
|
24.1 hours on activities usually conducted by general practitioners
|
|
(GPs), allowing additional time for GP-patient consultations. Value-cost
|
|
models determined AU\$0.61 - AU\$1.20 income generation by pharmacists
|
|
per AU\$1 salary.
|
|
Conclusions: It was feasible to determine the value-cost ratios of
|
|
employing pharmacists in general practice using these methods. Future
|
|
work should focus on developing a robust business model that includes
|
|
health care system savings resulting from practice pharmacist
|
|
interventions, determined from randomised controlled trials.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kosari, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Canberra, Fac Hlth, Discipline Pharm, Canberra, ACT 2617, Australia.
|
|
Kosari, Sam; Deeks, Louise S.; Naunton, Mark; Tay, Guan Han; Peterson, Gregory M., Univ Canberra, Fac Hlth, Discipline Pharm, Canberra, ACT 2617, Australia.
|
|
Dawda, Paresh, Univ Canberra, Hlth Res Inst, Ctr Res \& Act Publ Hlth, Canberra, ACT 2617, Australia.
|
|
Postma, Marteen J., Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr, Dept Hlth Sci, Pharm, Groningen, Netherlands.
|
|
Peterson, Gregory M., Univ Tasmania, Fac Hlth, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.sapharm.2020.07.030},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1551-7411},
|
|
EISSN = {1934-8150},
|
|
Keywords = {Pharmacists; General practice; General practitioners; Primary care;
|
|
Economics},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {sam.kosari@canberra.edu.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Postma, Maarten/0000-0002-6306-3653},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000633997800022},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000542634700002,
|
|
Author = {Barr, Anna Louise and Partap, Uttara and Young, Elizabeth H. and
|
|
Agoudavi, Kokou and Balde, Naby and Kagaruki, Gibson B. and Mayige, Mary
|
|
T. and Longo-Mbenza, Benjamin and Mutungi, Gerald and Mwalim, Omar and
|
|
Wesseh, Chea S. and Bahendeka, Silver K. and Guwatudde, David and
|
|
Jorgensen, Jutta M. Adelin and Bovet, Pascal and Motala, Ayesha A. and
|
|
Sandhu, Manjinder S.},
|
|
Title = {Sociodemographic inequities associated with participation in
|
|
leisure-time physical activity in sub-Saharan Africa: an individual
|
|
participant data meta-analysis},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JUN 15},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundLeisure-time physical activity (LTPA) is an important
|
|
contributor to total physical activity and the focus of many
|
|
interventions promoting activity in high-income populations. Little is
|
|
known about LTPA in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), and with expected declines
|
|
in physical activity due to rapid urbanisation and lifestyle changes we
|
|
aimed to assess the sociodemographic differences in the prevalence of
|
|
LTPA in the adult populations of this region to identify potential
|
|
barriers for equitable participation.MethodsA two-step individual
|
|
participant data meta-analysis was conducted using data collected in SSA
|
|
through 10 population health surveys that included the Global Physical
|
|
Activity Questionnaire. For each sociodemographic characteristic, the
|
|
pooled adjusted prevalence and risk ratios (RRs) for participation in
|
|
LTPA were calculated using the random effects method. Between-study
|
|
heterogeneity was explored through meta-regression analyses and tests
|
|
for interaction.ResultsAcross the 10 populations (N =26,022), 18.9\%
|
|
(95\%CI: 14.3, 24.1; I-2 =99.0\%) of adults (>= 18years) participated in
|
|
LTPA. Men were more likely to participate in LTPA compared with women
|
|
(RR for women: 0.43; 95\%CI: 0.32, 0.60; P <0.001; I-2 =97.5\%), while
|
|
age was inversely associated with participation. Higher levels of
|
|
education were associated with increased LTPA participation (RR: 1.30;
|
|
95\%CI: 1.09, 1.55; P =0.004; I-2 =98.1\%), with those living in rural
|
|
areas or self-employed less likely to participate in LTPA. These
|
|
associations remained after adjusting for time spent physically active
|
|
at work or through active travel.ConclusionsIn these populations,
|
|
participation in LTPA was low, and strongly associated with sex, age,
|
|
education, self-employment and urban residence. Identifying the
|
|
potential barriers that reduce participation in these groups is
|
|
necessary to enable equitable access to the health and social benefits
|
|
associated with LTPA.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sandhu, MS (Corresponding Author), Univ Cambridge, Dept Med, Cambridge, England.
|
|
Barr, Anna Louise; Partap, Uttara; Young, Elizabeth H.; Sandhu, Manjinder S., Univ Cambridge, Dept Med, Cambridge, England.
|
|
Partap, Uttara; Young, Elizabeth H., Wellcome Sanger Inst, Genome Campus, Hinxton, England.
|
|
Agoudavi, Kokou, Togo Minist Hlth, Lome, Togo.
|
|
Balde, Naby, Donka Univ Hosp, Dept Endocrinol \& Diabet, Conakry, Guinea.
|
|
Kagaruki, Gibson B., Natl Inst Med Res, Tukuyu Res Ctr, Tukuyu, Tanzania.
|
|
Mayige, Mary T., Natl Inst Med Res, Headquarter Res Ctr, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
|
|
Longo-Mbenza, Benjamin, Walter Sisulu Univ, Fac Hlth Sci, Mthatha, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
|
|
Longo-Mbenza, Benjamin, LOMO Univ Res, Kinshasa, DEM REP CONGO.
|
|
Mutungi, Gerald, Minist Hlth, Control Noncommunicable Dis Desk, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Mwalim, Omar, Zanzibar Minist Hlth, Mnazi Mmoja, Tanzania.
|
|
Wesseh, Chea S., Minist Hlth, Monrovia, Liberia.
|
|
Bahendeka, Silver K., Uganda Martyrs Univ, Mother Kevin Postgrad Med Sch MKPGMS, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Bahendeka, Silver K., St Francis Hosp, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Guwatudde, David, Makerere Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Jorgensen, Jutta M. Adelin, Univ Copenhagen, Dept Publ Hlth, Copenhagen, Denmark.
|
|
Bovet, Pascal, Univ Ctr Primary Care \& Publ Hlth Unisante, Lausanne, Switzerland.
|
|
Bovet, Pascal, Minist Hlth, Victoria, Seychelles.
|
|
Motala, Ayesha A., Univ KwaZulu Natal, Nelson R Mandela Sch Med, Dept Diabet \& Endocrinol, Durban, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-020-08987-w},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Leisure-time physical activity; Physical activity; Sub-Saharan Africa;
|
|
Occupational physical activity; Active travel; Global physical activity
|
|
questionnaire; Recreation; Equity; Urbanisation; Mechanisation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ORGANIZATION STEPWISE APPROACH; HEALTH; ADULTS; RISK; PATTERNS; DISEASE;
|
|
OBESITY; TRENDS; URBAN; ENVIRONMENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {mss31@cam.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Mayige, Mary Theodory/L-5342-2016
|
|
Bovet, Pascal/F-4477-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mayige, Mary Theodory/0000-0003-4861-7870
|
|
Bovet, Pascal/0000-0002-0242-4259
|
|
Guwatudde, David/0000-0003-3563-0224
|
|
Agoudavi, Kokou/0000-0002-3139-9777
|
|
Silver, Bahendeka/0000-0001-8080-7872
|
|
Mwalim, Omar/0000-0002-0791-1937},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {80},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000542634700002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000376365300002,
|
|
Author = {Shabunova, A. A. and Kalachikova, O. N. and Leonidova, V, G. and
|
|
Smoleva, E. O.},
|
|
Title = {Exclusion as a Criterion for Selecting Socially Vulnerable Population
|
|
Groups},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL CHANGES-FACTS TRENDS FORECAST},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {22-47},
|
|
Abstract = {The article considers theoretical aspects of a scientific research ``The
|
|
Mechanisms for Overcoming Mental Barriers of Inclusion of Socially
|
|
Vulnerable Categories of the Population for the Purpose of Intensifying
|
|
Modernization in the Regional Community{''} (RSF grant No. 16-18-00078).
|
|
The authors analyze the essence of the category of ``socially vulnerable
|
|
groups{''} from the legal, economic and sociological perspectives. The
|
|
paper shows that the economic approach that uses the criterion ``the
|
|
level of income and accumulated assets{''} when defining vulnerable
|
|
population groups prevails in public administration practice. The legal
|
|
field of the category based on the economic approach is defined by the
|
|
concept of ``the poor and socially unprotected categories of
|
|
citizens{''}. With the help of the analysis of theoretical and
|
|
methodological aspects of this issue, the authors show that these
|
|
criteria are a necessary but not sufficient condition for classifying
|
|
the population as being socially vulnerable. Foreign literature
|
|
associates the phenomenon of vulnerability with the concept of risks,
|
|
with the possibility of households responding to them and with the
|
|
likelihood of losing the well-being (poverty theory; research areas
|
|
related to the means of subsistence, etc.). The asset-based approaches
|
|
relate vulnerability to the poverty that arises due to lack of access to
|
|
tangible and intangible assets. Sociological theories presented by the
|
|
concept of social exclusion pay much attention to the breakdown of
|
|
social ties as a source of vulnerability. The essence of social
|
|
exclusion consists in the inability of people to participate in
|
|
important aspects of social life (in politics, labor markets, education
|
|
and healthcare, cultural life, etc.) though they have all the rights to
|
|
do so. The difference between the concepts of exclusion and poverty is
|
|
manifested in the displacement of emphasis from income inequality to
|
|
limited access to rights. Social exclusion is characterized by the
|
|
situation and state of exception that is linked to social status and
|
|
self-perception of human rights and expressed through the senses of
|
|
inferiority, anger, fear, despair, depression, shame. The status of
|
|
social exclusion has many criteria: poverty, limited opportunities for
|
|
employment and education, lack of access to social and community
|
|
networks and activities, inability to plan one's own life. The
|
|
explanatory concept of social exclusion is based on the construction of
|
|
the attitude toward socially vulnerable layers as the devalued social
|
|
status. The barrier of social inclusion consists in the formation of a
|
|
negative image of a representative of this category of the population in
|
|
the eyes of more secure population groups; and the reason for this
|
|
phenomenon lies in individual characteristics of an individual: lack of
|
|
purpose, apathy, laziness, low motivation to labor and training, and bad
|
|
habits. The prevailing social stereotype contributes to the
|
|
stratification of entire families, including children, who are in
|
|
advance deprived of the most important economic, political and cultural
|
|
resources of society, and have no opportunities for the upward mobility.
|
|
If no measures are taken to overcome social exclusion, it can lead to
|
|
the fact that part of the population will fall out of social development
|
|
and slip into a state of stagnation and complete social dependence. The
|
|
concept of social inclusion shifts the priorities of state social policy
|
|
from the allocation of social transfers to actively changing the mindset
|
|
in society.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Russian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shabunova, AA (Corresponding Author), Russian Acad Sci, Inst Socioecon Dev Terr, 56A,Gorky St, Vologda 160014, Russia.
|
|
Kalachikova, ON (Corresponding Author), Russian Acad Sci, Inst Socioecon Dev Terr, Dept Studies Lifestyles \& Stand Living, Lab Management Social Sphere, 56A,Gorky St, Vologda 160014, Russia.
|
|
Leonidova, GV (Corresponding Author), Russian Acad Sci, Inst Socioecon Dev Terr, Lab Studies Labor Potential Dev, 56A,Gorky St, Vologda 160014, Russia.
|
|
Smoleva, EO (Corresponding Author), Russian Acad Sci, Inst Socioecon Dev Terr, Dept Studies Lifestyles \& Stand Living, 56A,Gorky St, Vologda 160014, Russia.
|
|
Shabunova, A. A., Russian Acad Sci, Inst Socioecon Dev Terr, 56A,Gorky St, Vologda 160014, Russia.
|
|
Kalachikova, O. N., Russian Acad Sci, Inst Socioecon Dev Terr, Dept Studies Lifestyles \& Stand Living, Lab Management Social Sphere, 56A,Gorky St, Vologda 160014, Russia.
|
|
Leonidova, G., V, Russian Acad Sci, Inst Socioecon Dev Terr, Lab Studies Labor Potential Dev, 56A,Gorky St, Vologda 160014, Russia.
|
|
Smoleva, E. O., Russian Acad Sci, Inst Socioecon Dev Terr, Dept Studies Lifestyles \& Stand Living, 56A,Gorky St, Vologda 160014, Russia.},
|
|
ISSN = {2307-0331},
|
|
EISSN = {2312-9824},
|
|
Keywords = {social exclusion; socially vulnerable groups; the poor; poverty concept;
|
|
social inclusion},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POVERTY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {aas@vscc.ac.ru
|
|
onk82@yandex.ru
|
|
galinaleonidova@mail.ru
|
|
riolenas@ramber.ru},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Shabunova, Aleksandra/HKF-0842-2023
|
|
Kalachikova, Olga/I-9562-2016
|
|
Smoleva, Elena/I-8343-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Smoleva, Elena/0000-0002-6452-1441},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000376365300002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1995RT68600006,
|
|
Author = {SLADKOVA, E},
|
|
Title = {SIGNIFICANCE OF HUMAN-CAPITAL IN THE TRANSFORMATION PROCESS},
|
|
Journal = {EKONOMICKY CASOPIS},
|
|
Year = {1995},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {439-450},
|
|
Abstract = {The author of the paper analyzes human capital issues in two levels.
|
|
From the theoretical point of view human capital is defined as the
|
|
acquired knowledge, habits, motives and energy disposed of by people and
|
|
applicable in production of goods and services during a certain period
|
|
of time. The owner of human capital receives an adequate compensation in
|
|
income.
|
|
The second level of the analysis is that of an application character
|
|
taking account of the problems of the transformation process. The use of
|
|
human capital in the state economic policy is analyzed, the
|
|
interconnection between education, employment and wages policy and the
|
|
barriers arising in the transformation process are studied. Business
|
|
activities as a special form of human capital are paid attention to.
|
|
Modern business assumes that a successful application of high
|
|
technologies depends not only upon the technical level, on the changes
|
|
in organizational structures but also upon the change in the `'spirit''
|
|
of business principles. That is the reason why the author analyzes the
|
|
ethic business criteria that are actual for the nowaday economic
|
|
transformation especially.
|
|
In the conclusion of the paper the author points out the necessity of
|
|
the close cooperation between state economic policy and the business
|
|
strategy in finding a new position of a human being within the creation
|
|
of market relationships that cannot remain just in the level of
|
|
comparative advantages of a cheap labour force. Depreciation of human
|
|
capital stock, undervaluation of human investments may have, from the
|
|
longterm point of view, huge negative consequences upon the prosperity
|
|
of the transforming economies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Czech},
|
|
Affiliation = {SLADKOVA, E (Corresponding Author), SLOVAK UNIV TECHNOL BRATISLAVA, FAK ELEKTROTECH \& INFORMAT, ILKOVICOVA 3, BRATISLAVA 84104, SLOVAKIA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0013-3035},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {13},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1995RT68600006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000494033800010,
|
|
Author = {McMahon, Martin and Bowring, Darren Lee and Hatton, Chris},
|
|
Title = {Not such an ordinary life: a comparison of employment, marital status
|
|
and housing profiles of adults with and without intellectual
|
|
disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {TIZARD LEARNING DISABILITY REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {213-221},
|
|
Month = {SEP 26},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose Having paid work, relationships and a choice of where to live
|
|
are common policy priorities for adults with intellectual disabilities.
|
|
The purpose of this paper is to compare outcomes with respect to these
|
|
three priorities between adults with intellectual disability and the
|
|
general population in Jersey. Design/methodology/approach Data were
|
|
collected from 217 adults with intellectual disability known to
|
|
services, and 2,350 adults without intellectual disability using a
|
|
stratified random sample. Data on employment, marital status and
|
|
accommodation profiles were compared. Findings In sum, 87 per cent of
|
|
adults with intellectual disability were currently single vs 16 per cent
|
|
of adults without intellectual disability; 23 per cent of working-age
|
|
adults with intellectual disability were in paid employment vs 92 per
|
|
cent of working-age adults without intellectual disability; and 57 per
|
|
cent of adults with intellectual disability lived-in sheltered housing
|
|
vs 2 per cent of adults without intellectual disability. Social
|
|
implications - Very few adults with intellectual disability are in paid
|
|
employment or intimate relationships, and the majority live in
|
|
sheltered, supported housing, with very few owning their own home. There
|
|
is a significant disconnect between policy and reality. Considerable
|
|
work is required to make an ordinary life the reality for adults with
|
|
intellectual disability. Originality/value This study adds to the body
|
|
of evidence that suggests people with intellectual disabilities are less
|
|
likely to experience an ordinary life. Furthermore, it illustrates that
|
|
despite Jersey being an affluent society, the same difficulties and
|
|
barriers exist there for persons with an intellectual disability as in
|
|
other jurisdictions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McMahon, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Lancaster, Div Hlth Res, Lancaster, England.
|
|
McMahon, M (Corresponding Author), Govt Jersey Hlth \& Community Serv, St Helier, Jersey, England.
|
|
McMahon, Martin, Univ Lancaster, Div Hlth Res, Lancaster, England.
|
|
McMahon, Martin; Bowring, Darren Lee, Govt Jersey Hlth \& Community Serv, St Helier, Jersey, England.
|
|
Bowring, Darren Lee, Univ Warwick, CEDAR, Coventry, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Hatton, Chris, Univ Lancaster, Ctr Disabil Res, Lancaster, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/TLDR-03-2019-0014},
|
|
ISSN = {1359-5474},
|
|
EISSN = {2042-8782},
|
|
Keywords = {Relationships; Employment; Housing; Intellectual disabilities; Ordinary
|
|
life},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LEARNING-DISABILITIES; PEOPLE; PREVALENCE; ASSOCIATION; BEHAVIORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Special},
|
|
Author-Email = {m.mcmahon2@lancaster.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hatton, Chris/C-1924-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hatton, Chris/0000-0001-8781-8486
|
|
McMahon, Martin/0000-0002-3340-9537},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000494033800010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000414914900001,
|
|
Author = {Guan, Ming},
|
|
Title = {Should the poor have no medicines to cure? A study on the association
|
|
between social class and social security among the rural migrant workers
|
|
in urban China},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Month = {NOV 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The rampant urbanization and medical marketization in China
|
|
have resulted in increased vulnerabilities to health and socioeconomic
|
|
disparities among the rural migrant workers in urban China. In the
|
|
Chinese context, the socioeconomic characteristics of rural migrant
|
|
workers have attracted considerable research attention in the recent
|
|
past years. However, to date, no previous studies have explored the
|
|
association between the socioeconomic factors and social security among
|
|
the rural migrant workers in urban China. This study aims to explore the
|
|
association between socioeconomic inequity and social security inequity
|
|
and the subsequent associations with medical inequity and reimbursement
|
|
rejection.
|
|
Methods: Data from a regionally representative sample of 2009 Survey of
|
|
Migrant Workers in Pearl River Delta in China were used for analyses.
|
|
Multiple logistic regressions were used to analyze the impacts of
|
|
socioeconomic factors on the eight dimensions of social security (sick
|
|
pay, paid leave, maternity pay, medical insurance, pension insurance,
|
|
occupational injury insurance, unemployment insurance, and maternity
|
|
insurance) and the impacts of social security on medical reimbursement
|
|
rejection. The zero-inflated negative binomial regression model (ZINB
|
|
regression) was adopted to explore the relationship between
|
|
socioeconomic factors and hospital visits among the rural migrant
|
|
workers with social security.
|
|
Results: The study population consisted of 848 rural migrant workers
|
|
with high income who were young and middle-aged, low-educated, and
|
|
covered by social security. Reimbursement rejection and abusive
|
|
supervision for the rural migrant workers were observed. Logistic
|
|
regression analysis showed that there were significant associations
|
|
between socioeconomic factors and social security. ZINB regression
|
|
showed that there were significant associations between socioeconomic
|
|
factors and hospital visits among the rural migrant workers. Also,
|
|
several dimensions of social security had significant associations with
|
|
reimbursement rejections.
|
|
Conclusions: This study showed that social security inequity, medical
|
|
inequity, and reimbursement inequity happened to the rural migrant
|
|
workers simultaneously. Future policy should strengthen health justice
|
|
and enterprises' medical responsibilities to the employed rural migrant
|
|
workers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Guan, M (Corresponding Author), Xuchang Univ, Family Issues Ctr, Rd Bayi 88, Xuchang, Henan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Guan, M (Corresponding Author), Xuchang Univ, Sch Business, Rd Bayi 88, Xuchang, Henan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Guan, Ming, Xuchang Univ, Family Issues Ctr, Rd Bayi 88, Xuchang, Henan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Guan, Ming, Xuchang Univ, Sch Business, Rd Bayi 88, Xuchang, Henan, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-017-0692-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {193},
|
|
ISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Social class; Rural migrant workers; Social security inequity; Medical
|
|
inequity; Reimbursement rejection},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; HEALTH-CARE; WORKING-CLASS; INSURANCE; POPULATION;
|
|
ACCESS; PREVALENCE; INEQUALITY; MIGRATION; EQUITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {gming0604@163.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Guan, Ming/AGL-7074-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Guan, Ming/0000-0002-8861-1281},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {54},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000414914900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000808698500001,
|
|
Author = {Ari, Ajeni and Leva, Maria Chiara and D'Arcy, Lorraine and Kinahan, Mary},
|
|
Title = {Fairness and Inclusion for Users of Surface Transport-An Exploratory
|
|
Thematic Study for Irish Users},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper explores the conditions of public transport with respect to
|
|
user accessibility, design of infrastructure, and safety from a gendered
|
|
perspective. Our investigation aims to understand the factors that
|
|
direct a citizen's choice of whether or not to use public transport. Our
|
|
discussion is focused on gender disparities among user experiences, so
|
|
we confine our focus to that of women's perspectives and their
|
|
experiences with public transport use. A framework for our discussion
|
|
was formed with consideration of the theoretical aspects of fairness,
|
|
justice, and gender in transport, as well as user statistics. We
|
|
identified several spaces where public transport policy planning and
|
|
implementation may be improved in order to balance gender disparity of
|
|
access, safety, and security across the gender divide. (We acknowledge
|
|
that both distinct and interchangeable definitions of safety and
|
|
security exist. In this work, we err to the latter, while also
|
|
recognising from user-based qualitative data that safety concerns are
|
|
not limited to infrastructure, but also relate to other unwanted sources
|
|
of physical, mental, or emotional harm experienced within the transport
|
|
system.) Primary among these was the necessity of both the
|
|
acknowledgment and appreciation of the issues disproportionately
|
|
experienced by women. A one-size-fits-all approach was found to
|
|
ill-recognise the societal minutiae of constant caring responsibilities,
|
|
income limitations, ability/disability, or the effects of past negative
|
|
experiences faced by women. We conclude that improvements may be
|
|
achieved by targeting and meeting actual, not just perceived need.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ari, A (Corresponding Author), Technol Univ Dublin, Sch Food Sci \& Environm Hlth, Pk House,191 North Circular Rd, Dublin D07 EWV4, Ireland.
|
|
Ari, Ajeni; Leva, Maria Chiara, Technol Univ Dublin, Sch Food Sci \& Environm Hlth, Pk House,191 North Circular Rd, Dublin D07 EWV4, Ireland.
|
|
D'Arcy, Lorraine, Technol Univ Dublin, Sch Transport Engn Environm \& Planning, Pk House,191 North Circular Rd, Dublin D07 EWV4, Ireland.
|
|
Kinahan, Mary, Technol Univ Dublin, Sch Management, Aungier St, Dublin D02 HW71, Ireland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su14116480},
|
|
Article-Number = {6480},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {fairness; justice; gender; public transport (PT); safety and security;
|
|
accessibility; women},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITATIVE CONTENT-ANALYSIS; MODE CHOICE; LIFE-COURSE; MOBILITY;
|
|
DEMAND; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {ajeni.thimnu@tudublin.ie
|
|
mariachiaraleva@tudublin.ie
|
|
lorraine.darcy@tudublin.ie
|
|
mary.kinahan@tudublin.ie},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {D'Arcy, Lorraine/0000-0002-7163-2780
|
|
Leva, Maria Chiara/0000-0002-6770-8332},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000808698500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000811234600001,
|
|
Author = {Giummarra, Melita J. and Dipnall, Joanna F. and Gabbe, Belinda J.},
|
|
Title = {A Registry-Based Observational Cohort Study Examining Patterns of Pain
|
|
and Mental Health Symptoms and Their Impact on Work or Other Activities
|
|
After Injury},
|
|
Journal = {REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {67},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {405-420},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Impact and Implications This is one of the largest studies to date to
|
|
characterize patterns of pain and mental health postinjury, including
|
|
predictors of reduced symptoms over time using a robust registry-based
|
|
cohort. The findings highlight that most characteristics associated with
|
|
reductions in pain or mental health symptoms are not modifiable (e.g.,
|
|
age, education, neighborhood, and employment status). People who are
|
|
experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage and poor health before injury
|
|
are at the greatest risk of experiencing persistent problems after
|
|
injury. Outcomes for those patients could potentially be improved if
|
|
trauma and rehabilitation services provide targeted assessment and
|
|
coordinated treatment early after injury given that risk factors can be
|
|
identified during the trauma admission.
|
|
Purpose/Objective Research: This study aimed to examine patterns of pain
|
|
and mental health after injury, and the patient characteristics
|
|
associated with reductions in those symptoms. Research Method/Design:
|
|
This registry-based observational cohort study included all people >= 16
|
|
years old hospitalized for unintentional injuries from 2007 to 2014 who
|
|
were included in the Victorian State Trauma Registry or Victorian
|
|
Orthopaedic Trauma Outcomes Registry, survived to 12-months postinjury
|
|
and did not have severe brain injury or spinal cord injury (N = 31,073).
|
|
Symptoms and related impacts were measured with pain Numerical Rating
|
|
Scale, EuroQol Five Dimensions Three Level questionnaire (EQ-5D-3L), and
|
|
12-item Short Form Health Survey (SF-12) pain and mental health items at
|
|
6-, 12-, and 24-months postinjury. Symptom patterns over time, and their
|
|
predictors, were examined using Latent Class and Transition Analyses and
|
|
multinomial logistic regression. Results: Four classes were identified:
|
|
(1) Low pain and mental health problems (49-54\%); (2) mental health
|
|
problems only (11-12\%); (3) pain problems only (18-23\%); and (4) pain
|
|
and mental health problems (16-17\%). Most people stayed within the same
|
|
class over time, or transitioned to fewer problems. People who
|
|
transitioned to lower problems had higher socioeconomic status (e.g.,
|
|
higher education level, higher neighborhood-level advantage, and
|
|
employment), better preinjury health (e.g., no disability or substance
|
|
use condition) and noncompensable injuries. Conclusion/Implications:
|
|
Reduced pain and mental health symptoms and related impairments were
|
|
primarily associated with nonmodifiable biological, social, or economic
|
|
characteristics. People with persistent symptoms were often already
|
|
living with social disadvantage preinjury, and may have benefited from
|
|
risk screening and proactive interventions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Giummarra, MJ (Corresponding Author), Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Giummarra, Melita J.; Dipnall, Joanna F.; Gabbe, Belinda J., Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Giummarra, Melita J., Caulfield Hosp, Caulfield Pain Management \& Res Ctr, Caulfield, Australia.
|
|
Dipnall, Joanna F., Deakin Univ, Inst Mental \& Phys Hlth \& Clin Translat, Geelong, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Gabbe, Belinda J., Swansea Univ, Med Sch, Hlth Data Res United Kingdom, Swansea, W Glam, Wales.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/rep0000453},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0090-5550},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-1544},
|
|
Keywords = {pain; depression; anxiety; disability; recovery},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; TRAUMATIC INJURY; DEPRESSION; OUTCOMES;
|
|
DISABILITY; TRAJECTORIES; RESILIENCE; ANXIETY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Clinical; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {melita.giummarra@monash.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Giummarra, Melita/H-8387-2012
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Giummarra, Melita/0000-0001-7839-6058
|
|
Gabbe, Belinda/0000-0001-7096-7688},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000811234600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000354834500002,
|
|
Author = {Glidewell, Liz and West, Robert and Hackett, Julia E. C. and Carder,
|
|
Paul and Doran, Tim and Foy, Robbie},
|
|
Title = {Does a local financial incentive scheme reduce inequalities in the
|
|
delivery of clinical care in a socially deprived community? A
|
|
longitudinal data analysis},
|
|
Journal = {BMC FAMILY PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Month = {MAY 14},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Socioeconomic deprivation is associated with inequalities in
|
|
health care and outcomes. Despite concerns that the Quality and Outcomes
|
|
Framework pay-for-performance scheme in the UK would exacerbate
|
|
inequalities in primary care delivery, gaps closed over time. Local
|
|
schemes were promoted as a means of improving clinical engagement by
|
|
addressing local health priorities. We evaluated equity in achievement
|
|
of target indicators and practice income for one local scheme.
|
|
Methods: We undertook a longitudinal survey over four years of routinely
|
|
recorded clinical data for all 83 primary care practices. Sixteen
|
|
indicators were developed that covered five local clinical and public
|
|
health priorities: weight management; alcohol consumption; learning
|
|
disabilities; osteoporosis; and chlamydia screening. Clinical indicators
|
|
were logit transformed from a percentage achievement scale and modelled
|
|
allowing for clustering of repeated measures within practices. This
|
|
enabled our study of target achievements over time with respect to
|
|
deprivation. Practice income was also explored.
|
|
Results: Higher practice deprivation was associated with poorer
|
|
performance for five indicators: alcohol use registration (OR 0.97; 95
|
|
\% confidence interval 0.96,0.99); recorded chlamydia test result (OR
|
|
0.97; 0.94,0.99); osteoporosis registration (OR 0.98; 0.97,0.99);
|
|
registration of repeat prednisolone prescription (OR 0.98; 0.96,0.99);
|
|
and prednisolone registration with record of dual energy X-ray
|
|
absorptiometry (DEXA) scan/referral (OR 0.92; 0.86,0.97); practices in
|
|
deprived areas performed better for one indicator (registration of
|
|
osteoporotic fragility fracture (OR 1.26; 1.04,1.51). The
|
|
deprivation-achievement gap widened for one indicator (registered
|
|
females aged 65-74 with a fracture referred for a DEXA scan; OR 0.97;
|
|
0.95,0.99). Two other indicators indicated a similar trend over two
|
|
years before being withdrawn (registration of fragility fracture and
|
|
over-75 s with a fragility fracture assessed and treated for
|
|
osteoporosis risk). For one indicator the deprivation-achievement gap
|
|
reduced over time (repeat prednisolone prescription (OR 1.01;
|
|
1.01,1.01). Larger practices and those serving more affluent areas
|
|
earned more income per patient than smaller practices and those serving
|
|
more deprived areas (t = -3.99; p = 0.0001).
|
|
Conclusions: Any gaps in achievement between practices were modest but
|
|
mostly sustained or widened over the duration of the scheme. Given that
|
|
financial rewards may not reflect the amount of work undertaken by
|
|
practices serving more deprived patients, future pay-for-performance
|
|
schemes also need to address fairness of rewards in relation to
|
|
workload.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hackett, JEC (Corresponding Author), Univ Leeds, Leeds Inst Hlth Sci, Charles Thackrah Bldg,101 Clarendon Rd, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Glidewell, Liz; West, Robert; Hackett, Julia E. C.; Foy, Robbie, Univ Leeds, Leeds Inst Hlth Sci, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Carder, Paul, Yorkshire \& Humber Commissioning Support Unit, Bradford, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Doran, Tim, Univ York, Dept Hlth Sci, York YO10 5DD, N Yorkshire, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12875-015-0279-9},
|
|
Article-Number = {61},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2296},
|
|
Keywords = {Primary health care; Social deprivation; Pay-for-performance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENERAL-PRACTICE; OUTCOMES FRAMEWORK; QUALITY; PERFORMANCE; PAY; UK;
|
|
INDICATORS; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Primary Health Care; Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {j.e.hackett@leeds.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Glidewell, Liz/N-8832-2019
|
|
Glidewell, Liz/G-7338-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Glidewell, Liz/0000-0003-2519-2654
|
|
Glidewell, Liz/0000-0003-2519-2654
|
|
Foy, Robbie/0000-0003-0605-7713
|
|
carder, paul/0000-0002-7940-6016},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000354834500002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001008842600022,
|
|
Author = {Mudaranthakam, Dinesh Pal and Pepper, Sam and Fortney, Tanner and Alsup,
|
|
Alexander and Woodward, Jennifer and Sykes, Kevin and Calhoun, Elizabeth},
|
|
Title = {The Effects of COVID-19 Pandemic Policy on Social Needs Across the State
|
|
of Kansas and Western Missouri: Paired Survey Response Testing},
|
|
Journal = {JMIR PUBLIC HEALTH AND SURVEILLANCE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Studying patients' social needs is critical to the
|
|
understanding of health conditions and disparities, and to inform
|
|
strategies for improving health outcomes. Studies have shown that people
|
|
of color, low-income families, and those with lower educational
|
|
attainment experience greater hardships related to social needs. The
|
|
COVID-19 pandemic represents an event that severely impacted people's
|
|
social needs. This pandemic was declared by the World Health
|
|
Organization on March 11, 2020, and contributed to food and housing
|
|
insecurity, while highlighting weaknesses in the health care system
|
|
surrounding access to care. To combat these issues, legislators
|
|
implemented unique policies and procedures to help alleviate worsening
|
|
social needs throughout the pandemic, which had not previously been
|
|
exerted to this degree. We believe that improvements related to COVID-19
|
|
legislature and policy have positively impacted people's social needs in
|
|
Kansas and Missouri, United States. In particular, Wyandotte County is
|
|
of interest as it suffers greatly from issues related to social needs
|
|
that many of these COVID-19-related policies aimed to improve.Objective:
|
|
The research objective of this study was to evaluate the change in
|
|
social needs before and after the COVID-19 pandemic declaration based on
|
|
responses to a survey from The University of Kansas Health System
|
|
(TUKHS). We further aimed to compare the social needs of respondents
|
|
from Wyandotte County from those of respondents in other counties in the
|
|
Kansas City metropolitan area.Methods: Social needs survey data from
|
|
2016 to 2022 were collected from a 12-question patient-administered
|
|
survey distributed by TUKHS during a patient visit. This provided a
|
|
longitudinal data set with 248,582 observations, which was narrowed down
|
|
into a paired-response data set for 50,441 individuals who had provided
|
|
at least one response before and after March 11, 2020. These data were
|
|
then bucketed by county into Cass (Missouri), Clay (Missouri), Jackson
|
|
(Missouri), Johnson (Kansas), Leavenworth (Kansas), Platte (Missouri),
|
|
Wyandotte (Kansas), and Other counties, creating groupings with at least
|
|
1000 responses in each category. A pre-post composite score was
|
|
calculated for each individual by adding their coded responses (yes=1,
|
|
no=0) across the 12 questions. The Stuart-Maxwell marginal homogeneity
|
|
test was used to compare the pre and post composite scores across all
|
|
counties. Additionally, McNemar tests were performed to compare
|
|
responses before and after March 11, 2020, for each of the 12 questions
|
|
across all counties. Finally, McNemar tests were performed for questions
|
|
1, 7, 8, 9, and 10 for each of the bucketed counties. Significance was
|
|
assessed at P<.05 for all tests.Results: The Stuart-Maxwell test for
|
|
marginal homogeneity was significant (P<.001), indicating that
|
|
respondents were overall less likely to identify an unmet social need
|
|
after the COVID-19 pandemic. McNemar tests for individual questions
|
|
indicated that after the COVID-19 pandemic, respondents across all
|
|
counties were less likely to identify unmet social needs related to food
|
|
availability (odds ratio {[}OR]=0.4073, P<.001), home utilities
|
|
(OR=0.4538, P<.001), housing (OR=0.7143, P<.001), safety among
|
|
cohabitants (OR=0.6148, P<.001), safety in their residential location
|
|
(OR=0.6172, P<.001), child care (OR=0.7410, P<0.01), health care access
|
|
(OR=0.3895, P<.001), medication adherence (OR=0.5449, P<.001), health
|
|
care adherence (OR=0.6378, P<.001), and health care literacy (0.8729,
|
|
P=.
|
|
02), and were also less likely to request help with these unmet needs
|
|
(OR=0.7368, P<.001) compared with prepandemic responses. Responses from
|
|
individual counties were consistent with the overall results for the
|
|
most part. Notably, no individual county demonstrated a significant
|
|
reduction in social needs relating to a lack of
|
|
companionship.Conclusions: Post-COVID-19 responses showed improvement
|
|
across almost all social needs-related questions, indicating that the
|
|
federal policy response possibly had a positive impact on social needs
|
|
across the populations of Kansas and western Missouri. Some counties
|
|
were impacted more than others and positive outcomes were not limited to
|
|
urban counties. The availability of resources, safety net services,
|
|
access to health care, and educational opportunities could play a role
|
|
in this change. Future research should focus on improving survey
|
|
response rates from rural counties to increase their sample size, and to
|
|
evaluate other explanatory variables such as food pantry access,
|
|
educational status, employment opportunities, and access to community
|
|
resources. Government policies should be an area of focused research as
|
|
they may affect the social needs and health of the individuals
|
|
considered in this analysis.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mudaranthakam, DP (Corresponding Author), Univ Kansas, Dept Biostat \& Data Sci, Med Ctr, 3901 Rainbow Blvd, Kansas City, KS 66160 USA.
|
|
Mudaranthakam, Dinesh Pal; Pepper, Sam; Alsup, Alexander, Univ Kansas, Dept Biostat \& Data Sci, Med Ctr, Kansas City, KS USA.
|
|
Fortney, Tanner; Calhoun, Elizabeth, Univ Kansas, Dept Populat Hlth, Med Ctr, Kansas City, KS USA.
|
|
Woodward, Jennifer, Univ Kansas, Dept Family Med \& Community Hlth, Med Ctr, Kansas City, KS USA.
|
|
Sykes, Kevin, Univ Kansas, Dept Otolaryngol Head \& Neck Surg, Med Ctr, Kansas City, KS USA.
|
|
Mudaranthakam, Dinesh Pal, Univ Kansas, Dept Biostat \& Data Sci, Med Ctr, 3901 Rainbow Blvd, Kansas City, KS 66160 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2196/41369},
|
|
ISSN = {2369-2960},
|
|
Keywords = {social determinants of health; COVID-19; food assistance program; public
|
|
health; quality of life; well-being; health disparity; health inequity;
|
|
health policy; Kansas; social work; socioeconomic},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; DETERMINANTS; DISPARITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {dmudaranthakam@kumc.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sykes, Kevin/D-5897-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sykes, Kevin/0000-0001-9379-3406
|
|
Alsup, Alexander/0000-0002-9487-4686
|
|
Mudaranthakam, Dinesh Pal/0000-0001-9767-1158},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001008842600022},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000339984500002,
|
|
Author = {Rind, Esther and Jones, Andy},
|
|
Title = {Declining Physical Activity and the Socio-Cultural Context of the
|
|
Geography of Industrial Restructuring: A Novel Conceptual Framework},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY \& HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {683-692},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: At the population level, the prevalence of physical activity
|
|
has declined considerably in many developed countries in recent decades.
|
|
There is some evidence that areas exhibiting the lowest activity levels
|
|
are those which have undergone a particularly strong transition away
|
|
from employment in physically demanding occupations. We propose that
|
|
processes of deindustrialization may be causally linked to unexplained
|
|
geographical disparities in levels of physical activity. While the
|
|
sociocultural correlates of physical activity have been well studied,
|
|
and prior conceptual frameworks have been developed to explain more
|
|
general patterns of activity, none have explicitly attempted to identify
|
|
the components of industrial change that may impact physical activity.
|
|
Methods: In this work we review the current literature on sociocultural
|
|
correlates of health behaviors before using a case study centered on the
|
|
United Kingdom to present a novel framework that links industrial change
|
|
to declining levels of physical activity. Results: We developed a
|
|
comprehensive model linking sociocultural correlates of physical
|
|
activity to processes associated with industrial restructuring and
|
|
discuss implication for policy and practice. Conclusions: A better
|
|
understanding of sociocultural processes may help to ameliorate adverse
|
|
health consequences of employment decline in communities that have
|
|
experienced substantial losses of manual employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rind, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Edinburgh, Sch Geosci, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Rind, Esther, Univ Edinburgh, Sch Geosci, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Jones, Andy, Univ E Anglia, Sch Environm Sci, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1123/jpah.2012-0173},
|
|
ISSN = {1543-3080},
|
|
EISSN = {1543-5474},
|
|
Keywords = {health behavior; environment; evidence-based research; United Kingdom},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH INEQUALITIES; DISADVANTAGED AREAS; INCOME INEQUALITY; TEMPORAL
|
|
TRENDS; LEISURE-TIME; DETERMINANTS; ENGLAND; OBESITY; ENVIRONMENTS;
|
|
ASSOCIATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {e.rind@ed.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jones, Andy/0000-0002-3130-9313},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {99},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000339984500002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000384538300001,
|
|
Author = {Carr, Stuart C. and Parker, Jane and Arrowsmith, James and Watters, Paul
|
|
A.},
|
|
Title = {The living wage: Theoretical integration and an applied research agenda},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL LABOUR REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {155},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {1-24},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {The concept of a living wage is defined by quality of life and work
|
|
life, not merely economic subsistence. It extends to adequate
|
|
participation in organizational and social life. In development
|
|
economics, these crucial components of ``decent work{''} connect with
|
|
``capabilities{''}, whose development is important to individuals,
|
|
organizations and society. However, the links between income and
|
|
capabilities remain unknown, and living wages are often set by fiat. By
|
|
integrating theories from development studies, management, psychology
|
|
and employment relations into a single concentric, contingency model,
|
|
the authors derive a series of propositions with which to test this
|
|
context-sensitive model in empirical research.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Carr, SC (Corresponding Author), Massey Univ, Sch Psychol, Auckland, New Zealand.
|
|
Carr, Stuart C., Massey Univ, Sch Psychol, Auckland, New Zealand.
|
|
Parker, Jane; Arrowsmith, James, Massey Univ, Sch Management, Auckland, New Zealand.
|
|
Watters, Paul A., Massey Univ, Sch Engn \& Adv Technol, Auckland, New Zealand.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1564-913X.2015.00029.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-7780},
|
|
EISSN = {1564-913X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PSYCHOLOGICAL EMPOWERMENT; INTRINSIC MOTIVATION; POVERTY TRAPS;
|
|
MINIMUM-WAGE; INEQUALITY; INCOME; DYNAMICS; WORK; CONSEQUENCES;
|
|
DIMENSIONS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {S.C.Carr@massey.ac.nz
|
|
J.Parker@massey.ac.nz
|
|
J.Arrowsmith@massey.ac.nz
|
|
P.A.Watters@massey.ac.nz},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Watters, Paul/0000-0002-1399-7175},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {118},
|
|
Times-Cited = {31},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000384538300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000666977800001,
|
|
Author = {Chaurasia, Himanshu and Debnath, Paramita and Srivastava, Shobhit and
|
|
Purkayastha, Naina},
|
|
Title = {Is Socioeconomic Inequality Boosting Intimate Partner Violence in India?
|
|
An Overview of the National Family Health Survey, 2005-2006 and
|
|
2015-2016},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL SOCIAL WELFARE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {263-277},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a breach of fundamental human
|
|
rights, and a global health issue. While the literature is rich in
|
|
research on the determinants of IPV, the possible effect of
|
|
socioeconomic inequality on IPV has received little attention. The
|
|
present paper is aimed at examining the effect of socioeconomic
|
|
inequality on IPV in India, a nation where VAW is among the highest in
|
|
the world.
|
|
Methods We used data from the third and fourth round of National Family
|
|
Health Survey for India, a nationally representative sample survey
|
|
conducted in 2005-2006 and 2015-2016, respectively. It is claimed that,
|
|
by eroding social capital in the living community, socioeconomic
|
|
inequality raises the likelihood of witnessing violence. To estimate the
|
|
impact of socioeconomic inequality on IPV, we rely on concentration
|
|
curve, and decomposition analysis method.
|
|
Results Our findings show a clear statistically significant positive
|
|
association between IPV and socioeconomic inequality in India, though
|
|
the percentage has decreased from 2005-2006 to 2015-2016 (39.7 to
|
|
31.0\%). The large age gap between couples was found to be positively
|
|
associated where younger women have a higher risk of IPV from their
|
|
spouses. In addition, other covariates such as no education, husband's
|
|
unemployment status, poor economic status of household increases the
|
|
risk of IPV and were also statistically significant. Women's working
|
|
status protected them against IPV (A.O.R = 0.80 {[}2005-2006]; A.O.R =
|
|
0.70 {[}2015-2016]), though there was a greater risk of IPV among
|
|
uneducated women.
|
|
Conclusion Poverty and deprivation among men often emerge as potentially
|
|
important drivers of this. Interventions to empower women would not only
|
|
expand women's access to economic services and opportunities, but should
|
|
also collaborate with men and women to tackle men's livelihoods, male
|
|
gender stereotypes, and masculinity norms.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chaurasia, H (Corresponding Author), Natl Inst Res Reprod Hlth NIRRH, Indian Council Med Res ICMR, Mumbai 400012, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Chaurasia, Himanshu, Natl Inst Res Reprod Hlth NIRRH, Indian Council Med Res ICMR, Mumbai 400012, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Debnath, Paramita; Srivastava, Shobhit, Int Inst Populat Sci IIPS, Mumbai 400088, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Purkayastha, Naina, Dibrugarh Univ, Dibrugarh, Assam, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s40609-021-00215-6},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2196-8799},
|
|
Keywords = {Violence against women; Intimate partner violence; Socioeconomic
|
|
inequality; Empower women},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; RISK-FACTORS; WOMEN;
|
|
PREVALENCE; PERSPECTIVES; EMPOWERMENT; PREDICTORS; IPV; AGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {himanshu.icmr369@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Srivastava, Shobhit/AAI-1811-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Srivastava, Shobhit/0000-0002-7138-4916
|
|
Chaurasia, Himanshu/0000-0003-3679-4415
|
|
Debnath, Paramita/0000-0003-3451-6622},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {74},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000666977800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000272005700016,
|
|
Author = {Morgenstern, Jon and Hogue, Aaron and Dauber, Sarah and Dasaro,
|
|
Christopher and McKay, James R.},
|
|
Title = {Does Coordinated Care Management Improve Employment for Substance-Using
|
|
Welfare Recipients?},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF STUDIES ON ALCOHOL AND DRUGS},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {70},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {955-963},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: This study tested whether coordinated care management, a
|
|
continuity of care intervention for substance-use disorders, improved
|
|
employment among men and women on public assistance compared with usual
|
|
welfare management. Method: Participants were 421 welfare applicants
|
|
identified via substance-use-disorder screening and assigned via a
|
|
computerized allocation program to coordinated care management (CCM; n =
|
|
232) or referral and monitoring practices in usual care (UC; n = 189).
|
|
Substance use, treatment attendance,job training and search activities,
|
|
and employment outcomes were assessed for I year after baseline.
|
|
Results: Men were more likely to be working than women overall. Among
|
|
women, CCM clients increased their employment over time, whereas UC
|
|
clients remained stable at very low employment levels. There were no
|
|
treatment effects on employment for men. Also among women only, greater
|
|
substance-use-disorder treatment attendance and abstinence in the first
|
|
6 months of CCM predicted higher rates of later employment. Job training
|
|
activities were low and did not differ by condition between either
|
|
gender. Conclusions: Findings are consistent with previous research
|
|
supporting the effectiveness of case management for improving
|
|
abstinence, which leads to employment gains, among substance-using women
|
|
on public assistance. In contrast, various mandated elements of
|
|
welfare-to-work programs for substance users--treatment attendance, case
|
|
management, job training-did not improve employment rates for men.
|
|
Implications of study results for designing effective welfare-to-work
|
|
interventions in a post-welfare-reform era are discussed. (J. Stud.
|
|
Alcohol Drugs 70: 955-963, 2009)},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Morgenstern, J (Corresponding Author), Columbia Univ, Med Ctr, 180 Ft Washington Ave,HP 240, New York, NY 10032 USA.
|
|
McKay, James R., Univ Penn, Treatment Res Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Morgenstern, Jon; Hogue, Aaron; Dauber, Sarah; Dasaro, Christopher; McKay, James R., Columbia Univ, Natl Ctr Addict \& Subst Abuse, New York, NY 10032 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.15288/jsad.2009.70.955},
|
|
ISSN = {1937-1888},
|
|
EISSN = {1938-4114},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RECEIVING TEMPORARY ASSISTANCE; LONGITUDINAL DATA; ABUSE TREATMENT; USE
|
|
DISORDERS; WOMEN; OUTCOMES; SERVICES; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Substance Abuse; Psychology},
|
|
Author-Email = {jm977@columbia.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000272005700016},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000961463300001,
|
|
Author = {Li, Yali and Marquez, Ronald},
|
|
Title = {Can government subsidies and public mechanisms alleviate the physical
|
|
and mental health vulnerability of China's urban and rural residents?},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {APR 1},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundPoverty vulnerability has been defined as the likelihood of a
|
|
family falling into poverty in the upcoming months. Inequality is a
|
|
major cause of poverty vulnerability in developing countries. There is
|
|
evidence that establishing effective government subsidies and public
|
|
service mechanisms significantly reduces health poverty vulnerability.
|
|
One of the ways to study poverty vulnerability is by using empirical
|
|
data such as income elasticity of demand to perform the analysis. Income
|
|
elasticity refers to the extent to which changes in consumers' income
|
|
affect changes in demand for commodities or public goods. In this work,
|
|
we assess health poverty vulnerability in rural and urban China. We
|
|
provide two levels of evidence on the marginal effects of the design and
|
|
implementation of government subsidies and public mechanisms in reducing
|
|
health poverty vulnerability, before and after incorporating the income
|
|
elasticity of demand for health.MethodsMultidimensional physical and
|
|
mental health poverty indexes, according to the Oxford Poverty \& Human
|
|
Development Initiative and the Andersen model, were implemented to
|
|
measure health poverty vulnerability by using the 2018 China Family
|
|
Panel Survey database (CFPS) as the data source for empirical analysis.
|
|
The income elasticity of demand for health care was used as the key
|
|
mediating variable of impact. Our assessment was conducted by a
|
|
two-level multidimensional logistic regression using STATA16
|
|
software.ResultsThe first level regression indicates that the marginal
|
|
utility of public mechanism (PM) in reducing urban and rural
|
|
vulnerability as expected poverty on physical and mental health
|
|
(VEP-PH\&MH) was insignificant. On the other hand, government subsidies
|
|
(GS) policies had a positive suppression effect on VEP-PH\&MH to a
|
|
relatively low degree. The second level regression found that given the
|
|
diversity of health needs across individual households, i.e., the income
|
|
elasticity of demand (HE) for health care products, PM and GS policies
|
|
have a significant effect in reducing VEP-PH\&MH in rural and urban
|
|
areas. Our analysis has verified the significant positive impact of
|
|
enacting accurate GS and PM policies on effectively reducing VEP-PH\&MH
|
|
in rural as well as urban areas.ConclusionsThis study shows that
|
|
implementing government subsidies and public mechanisms has a positive
|
|
marginal effect on reducing VEP-PH\&MH. Meanwhile, there are individual
|
|
variations in health demands, urban-rural disparities, and regional
|
|
disparities in the effects of GS and PM on inhibiting VEP-PH\&MH.
|
|
Therefore, special consideration needs to be given to the differences in
|
|
the degree of health needs of individual residents among urban and rural
|
|
areas and regions with varying economic development. Furthermore,
|
|
considerations of this approach in the current worldwide scenario are
|
|
analyzed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Li, YL (Corresponding Author), Jiangxi Univ Sci \& Technol, Sch Business, Nanchang 330013, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Yali, Jiangxi Univ Sci \& Technol, Sch Business, Nanchang 330013, Peoples R China.
|
|
Marquez, Ronald, ESPCI Paris, Lab Physico Chim Interfaces Complexes, 10 Rue Vauquelin, F-75231 Paris, France.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-022-01805-2},
|
|
Article-Number = {59},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Government subsidies; Public mechanisms; Physical and mental health
|
|
poverty vulnerability index; Andersen model; Multivariate logistic
|
|
regression analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-RATED HEALTH; PERSISTENT POVERTY; INEQUALITY; DETERMINANTS;
|
|
COVID-19; PANEL; TIME; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {liyali\_maxspeci@outlook.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Marquez, Ronald/R-5626-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Marquez, Ronald/0000-0001-6003-7487
|
|
Li, Yali/0000-0001-7950-9448},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {80},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {26},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000961463300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000506722400003,
|
|
Author = {Chaouni, Saloua Berdai and Smetcoren, An-Sofie and De Donder, Liesbeth},
|
|
Title = {Caring for migrant older Moroccans with dementia in Belgium as a complex
|
|
and dynamic transnational network of informal and professional care: A
|
|
qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {101},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Due to its labour migration history, Belgium is confronted
|
|
with an increasingly older population of people of Moroccan background
|
|
who have been diagnosed with dementia. These migrants came to the
|
|
country during the labour migration wave of the nineteen-sixties and
|
|
seventies to work in mines and other industries and they are now ageing.
|
|
Yet little is known about how dementia care is provided to this older
|
|
population.
|
|
Objectives: This study explores how dementia care is provided to these
|
|
Moroccan older people with dementia, and what challenges do caregivers
|
|
face in providing care.
|
|
Methods: A qualitative study including 31 informal caregivers of older
|
|
Moroccan migrants with dementia and professional caregivers in the field
|
|
of dementia care in several Belgian cities was conducted. After an
|
|
initial focus group including 6 informal and professional caregivers,
|
|
individual in-depth interviews were held with 12 informal caregivers of
|
|
Moroccan decent and 13 professional caregivers. In order to be included
|
|
in the study, informal caregivers had to have a recent experience in
|
|
caring for an older family member with dementia. The professional
|
|
caregivers had to be active in the field of dementia care (General
|
|
Practitioners, nurses, psychologists,...) and have experience with older
|
|
migrants with dementia.
|
|
Results: Analyses of the collected data reveal that current dementia
|
|
care is a challenging, complex and dynamic search process. This process
|
|
is shaped by (1) multiple factors reflecting the changing care needs of
|
|
the care recipient during the course of the dementia, (2) the individual
|
|
(transnational) recourses of the informal caregivers and the (3) current
|
|
(lack of) accessibility of professional dementia care (driven by the
|
|
absence of an accessible migration-, culture- and religion-sensitive
|
|
professional care). The limited professional service-use is
|
|
predominantly compensated through the search for transnational external
|
|
helpers. The limited migration, cultural and religious sensitivity of
|
|
current dementia care is often overlooked by professional caregivers.
|
|
Conclusion: The study provides a better understanding of the complex
|
|
reality of dementia care for older migrants in which these different
|
|
aspects intersect. This understanding enable health professionals and
|
|
policy makers to develop a better suited care for older migrants with
|
|
dementia. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chaouni, SB (Corresponding Author), Vnje Univ Brussels, Dept Educ Sci, Pl Laan 2, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium.
|
|
Chaouni, Saloua Berdai; Smetcoren, An-Sofie; De Donder, Liesbeth, Vnje Univ Brussels, Dept Educ Sci, Pl Laan 2, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2019.103413},
|
|
Article-Number = {103413},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-7489},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-491X},
|
|
Keywords = {Caregivers' perspectives; Dementia care; Informal care; Older migrants;
|
|
Transnational care; Othering},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ETHNIC-MINORITY; HOME-CARE; EXPERIENCES; HEALTH; IMMIGRANTS; SERVICES;
|
|
BARRIERS; ACCESS; LIFE; PERSPECTIVES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {Saloua.Berdai-Chaouni@vub.be
|
|
An-sofie.smetcoren@vub.be
|
|
liesbeth.de.donder@vub.be},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Smetcoren, An-Sofie/IVV-3325-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {De Donder, Liesbeth/0000-0003-4999-5902
|
|
Berdai Chaouni, Saloua/0000-0002-0455-0144
|
|
Smetcoren, An-Sofie/0000-0002-4581-4898},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000506722400003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000635187900005,
|
|
Author = {Lipatova, L. N.},
|
|
Title = {Gender Inequality in the Economy of Modern Russia: A Quantitative
|
|
Analysis of the Problem},
|
|
Journal = {REGIONOLOGIYA-REGIONOLOGY RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF REGIONAL STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {99-125},
|
|
Month = {JAN-MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction. Legislative consolidation of a right is not always
|
|
implemented in practice. This can be fully attributed to the situation
|
|
in the sphere of equality of people of different sexes in the economy,
|
|
including the sphere of public administration. The purpose of the
|
|
article is to assess the status of women in the economy of modern
|
|
Russia, based on the study of official statistics, as well as the
|
|
possibility of women's participation in solving key problems of the
|
|
development of society through representation in public authorities at
|
|
different levels of government.
|
|
Materials and Methods. The author analyzed data from Russian Federal
|
|
State Statistics Service, publications of scientists involved in the
|
|
study of the issue concerned, as well as materials from authoritative
|
|
international organizations. The systemic approach, analysis and
|
|
synthesis, the monographic method, content analysis, as well as the
|
|
employed methods of economic and statistical analysis made it possible
|
|
to identify the main trends in the changing status of women in the
|
|
Russian labor market and public authorities at different levels of
|
|
government.
|
|
Results. The status of women in the Russian labor market and public
|
|
authorities at the federal, regional and municipal levels has been
|
|
characterized. Violation of the rights of women has been established in
|
|
terms of remuneration when filling the same positions as men with equal
|
|
amount of working time. It has been revealed that the representation of
|
|
women in the highest bodies of state power lags behind the benchmark
|
|
level of 30 \%, proclaimed by the Fourth World Conference on Women in
|
|
Beijing and supported by the Russian Federation.
|
|
Discussion and Conclusion. A conclusion has been drawn that women are
|
|
underrepresented in senior government positions in the Russian
|
|
Federation. In the Russian labor market, violation of women's rights is
|
|
manifested in lower wages, despite higher overall level of education of
|
|
women. The results may prove useful when conducting research in the
|
|
field of gender equality, as well as when developing and implementing
|
|
measures aimed at improving the status of women in the country's economy
|
|
and ensuring their right to participate in making decisions important
|
|
for the society.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Russian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lipatova, LN (Corresponding Author), Russian Presidential Acad Natl Econ \& Publ Adm, North West Inst Management, Dept Econ, 57-43 Sredny Prospect VO, St Petersburg 199178, Russia.
|
|
Lipatova, L. N., Russian Presidential Acad Natl Econ \& Publ Adm, North West Inst Management, Dept Econ, 57-43 Sredny Prospect VO, St Petersburg 199178, Russia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.15507/2413-1407.114.029.202101.099-125},
|
|
ISSN = {2413-1407},
|
|
EISSN = {2587-8549},
|
|
Keywords = {gender equality; politics; administration; civil service; municipal
|
|
employees; labor market; employment; unemployment; wages},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Area Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {ln.lipatova@yandex.ru},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000635187900005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000401152400012,
|
|
Author = {Steurer, Lisa M.},
|
|
Title = {Maternity Leave Length and Workplace Policies' Impact on the Sustainment
|
|
of Breastfeeding: Global Perspectives},
|
|
Journal = {PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {286-294},
|
|
Month = {MAY-JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundBreastfeeding is a global initiative of the World Health
|
|
Organization and the U.S. domestic health agenda, Healthy People 2020;
|
|
both recommend exclusive breastfeeding, defined as providing breast milk
|
|
only via breast or bottle, through the first 6months of an infant's
|
|
life. Previous literature has shown the correlation between
|
|
socioeconomic status and breastfeeding, with higher maternal education
|
|
and income as predictors of sustained breastfeeding. This same
|
|
population of women is more likely to be employed outside the home.
|
|
MethodsPubMed and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews were
|
|
searched using inclusion and exclusion criteria to identify the effect
|
|
of maternity leave length and workplace policies on the sustainment of
|
|
breastfeeding for employed mothers.
|
|
ResultsCommon facilitators to sustainment of breastfeeding included
|
|
longer length of maternity leave as well as adequate time and space for
|
|
the pumping of breast milk once the mother returned to the workplace.
|
|
Barriers included inconsistency in policy and the lack of enforcement of
|
|
policies in different countries.
|
|
ConclusionsThere is a lack of consistency globally on maternity leave
|
|
length and workplace policy as determinants of sustained breastfeeding
|
|
for employed mothers. A consistent approach is needed to achieve the
|
|
goal of exclusive breastfeeding for infants.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Steurer, LM (Corresponding Author), Univ Missouri Kansas City, Sch Nursing \& Hlth Studies, One Childrens Pl,PL 25, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
|
|
Steurer, Lisa M., Univ Missouri Kansas City, Sch Nursing \& Hlth Studies, One Childrens Pl,PL 25, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/phn.12321},
|
|
ISSN = {0737-1209},
|
|
EISSN = {1525-1446},
|
|
Keywords = {breast feeding; parental leave; policy; workplace},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORKING MOTHERS; SUPPORT; ORGANIZATIONS; EXPERIENCES; EMPLOYMENT; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {lmi8177@bjc.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Steurer, Lisa/0000-0002-7212-9861},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {39},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {30},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000401152400012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000511450800002,
|
|
Author = {Doss, Cheryl and Swaminathan, Hema and Deere, Carmen Diana and Suchitra,
|
|
J. Y. and Oduro, Abena D. and Anglade, Boaz},
|
|
Title = {Women, assets, and formal savings: A comparative analysis of Ecuador,
|
|
Ghana and India},
|
|
Journal = {DEVELOPMENT POLICY REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {MotivationSavings are an important but often overlooked component of
|
|
financial inclusion. While women are less active than men in the formal
|
|
financial sector there is little understanding about their ability to
|
|
accumulate savings.
|
|
PurposeWe hypothesize that a woman's individual economic status,
|
|
measured by her property ownership, is an important driver of her
|
|
ability to save.
|
|
Approach and MethodsWomen are considered as savers in the formal sector
|
|
only if they have savings above a minimum threshold. Three measures of
|
|
women's asset ownership are used: two capture their absolute property
|
|
status and one their relative status in the household. The data are
|
|
obtained from three large-scale surveys that collected individual-level
|
|
asset data in Ecuador, Ghana and the Indian state of Karnataka. Logistic
|
|
regression models are employed to examine the relationship between
|
|
women's property ownership and accumulation of savings.
|
|
FindingsThe absolute value of a woman's physical assets and her share of
|
|
household physical wealth are correlated with being able to accumulate
|
|
formal savings. Women's relative wealth status is more strongly related
|
|
to their savings, along with education, paid employment and group
|
|
membership.
|
|
ConclusionsWomen's intrahousehold status, defined by their relative
|
|
wealth, is critical to determining their ability to save in formal
|
|
accounts.
|
|
Policy ImplicationsInterventions that boost women's bargaining power, by
|
|
increasing their property ownership, should be encouraged, along with
|
|
greater efforts to improve girls' access to quality education.
|
|
Functional literacy training for older women can both reduce barriers to
|
|
accessing financial institutions and create awareness of their benefits.
|
|
Constraints to women's participation in the labour force should be
|
|
removed in tandem with interventions to reduce gender earnings gaps.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Oduro, AD (Corresponding Author), Univ Ghana, Accra, Ghana.
|
|
Doss, Cheryl, Univ Oxford, Oxford, England.
|
|
Swaminathan, Hema; Suchitra, J. Y., Indian Inst Management Bangalore, Bangalore, Karnataka, India.
|
|
Deere, Carmen Diana; Anglade, Boaz, Univ Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
|
|
Oduro, Abena D., Univ Ghana, Accra, Ghana.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/dpr.12424},
|
|
ISSN = {0950-6764},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-7679},
|
|
Keywords = {financial institutions; formal savings; gender; immoveable property},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BANKING; GENDER; RIGHTS; POOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {aoduro@ug.edu.gh},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Doss, Cheryl/0000-0001-8292-3295},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000511450800002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000446103800005,
|
|
Author = {Fu, Chao and Wolpin, I, Kenneth},
|
|
Title = {Structural Estimation of a Becker-Ehrlich Equilibrium Model of Crime:
|
|
Allocating Police Across Cities to Reduce Crime},
|
|
Journal = {REVIEW OF ECONOMIC STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {85},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {2097-2138},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {We develop a model of crime in which the number of police, the crime
|
|
rate, the arrest rate, the employment rate, and the wage rate are joint
|
|
outcomes of a subgame perfect Nash equilibrium. The local government
|
|
chooses the size of its police force and citizens choose among work,
|
|
home, and crime alternatives. We estimate the model using metropolitan
|
|
statistical area (MSA)-level data. We use the estimated model to examine
|
|
the effects on crime of targeted federal transfers to local governments
|
|
to increase police. We find that knowledge about unobserved MSA-specific
|
|
attributes is critical for the optimal allocation of police across
|
|
MSA's.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fu, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Fu, Chao, Univ Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Wolpin, Kenneth, I, Rice Univ, Houston, TX 77251 USA.
|
|
Wolpin, Kenneth, I, Univ Penn, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/restud/rdx068},
|
|
ISSN = {0034-6527},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-937X},
|
|
Keywords = {Crime; Multiple equilibria; Estimation; Efficient police allocation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SEARCH MODEL; EDUCATION; MARKET; IDENTIFICATION; UNEMPLOYMENT;
|
|
DETERRENCE; PUNISHMENT; INEQUALITY; DROPOUT; SCHOOL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000446103800005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000485064700001,
|
|
Author = {Vlachou, Anastasia and Roka, Olga and Stavroussi, Panayiota},
|
|
Title = {Experiences of workers with disabilities receiving supported employment
|
|
services in Greece},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {151-167},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {People with disabilities (PwDs) are under-represented in the workforce,
|
|
especially during times of economic recession. Supported employment is
|
|
recognized as an effective practice for promoting work inclusion of
|
|
PwDs, including people with intellectual disabilities (IDs). This study
|
|
aimed at exploring the experiences of workers with ID or mental health
|
|
conditions who received supported employment services in Greece.
|
|
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with nine workers with ID and
|
|
five with mental health conditions. The thematic analysis revealed that
|
|
emotional pressure was experienced by the participants with mental
|
|
health conditions and those with ID during the job search and the
|
|
adaptation period, respectively. On-the-job training was available for
|
|
the participants with ID and assistance in finding suitable job
|
|
opportunities was given to those with mental health conditions. All
|
|
participants highlighted the importance of maintaining employment. The
|
|
findings can inform efforts on developing employment services targeting
|
|
social and work inclusion for PwDs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Roka, O (Corresponding Author), Univ Thessaly, Dept Special Educ, Argonafton \& Filellinon Str, Volos 38221, Greece.
|
|
Vlachou, Anastasia; Roka, Olga; Stavroussi, Panayiota, Univ Thessaly, Volos, Greece.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1744629519871172},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2019},
|
|
Article-Number = {1744629519871172},
|
|
ISSN = {1744-6295},
|
|
EISSN = {1744-6309},
|
|
Keywords = {employment; intellectual disabilities; mental health conditions;
|
|
supported employment; workers with disabilities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-ILLNESS; DEVELOPMENTAL-DISABILITIES; COMPETITIVE EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
PEOPLE; JOB; INTEGRATION; RECOVERY; BARRIERS; OUTCOMES; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Special; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {rokaolga@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000485064700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000666661000001,
|
|
Author = {Wang, Xiaolei and Sarkar, Apurbo and Wang, Hongyu and Zhang, Fuhong},
|
|
Title = {Does Participation in Agricultural Value Chain Activities Influence
|
|
Smallholder Fruit Grower Production Performance? A Cross-Sectional Study
|
|
of Apple Farmers in Shandong, China},
|
|
Journal = {HORTICULTURAE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {The value chain comprises several factors and activities useful for
|
|
strengthening production and distribution by connecting producers with
|
|
suppliers, intermediaries, and marketplaces and collaboratively creating
|
|
added value for products or goods. However, the values of agricultural
|
|
products mostly depend on various factors and actors, which should be
|
|
linked together for fostering added values. Thus, there may be strong
|
|
ground for facilitating a smooth transition of the agricultural value
|
|
chain (AVC) within the prospects of emerging countries. It could be a
|
|
key means of promoting a profound connection between smallholder farmers
|
|
and modern agriculture facilities. It could be especially crucial for
|
|
the highly perishable and high-value product such as fruits. The main
|
|
aims of the study are to evaluate the factors influencing smallholder
|
|
apple farmers' participation in the agricultural value chain and
|
|
determine whether participation in AVC improves farmers' production
|
|
performance. The empirical setup of the study was chosen based on survey
|
|
data of apple growers in Shandong, China. The propensity score matching
|
|
(PSM) and inverse probability weighted regression adjustment (IPWRA)
|
|
models were employed to craft the study's outcomes. The main conclusions
|
|
are as follows. (1) Fruit farmers' gender, total household expenditure,
|
|
housing value, planting scale, planting years, degree of specialization,
|
|
days of family labour input, and total days of employment have
|
|
significant effects on their participation in AVC activities. (2) Fruit
|
|
farmers' usage of improved fertilizers and organization participation
|
|
supports a higher yield and net income per acre. (3) Participating in
|
|
two kinds of AVC can significantly improve the yield per acre and net
|
|
income per acre compared with only using one type of AVC (improved
|
|
fertilizer). Policy makers should improve the existing policy by
|
|
eliminating institutional barriers and enhancing human factors for
|
|
farmers to participate in high-value chain activities. Governments
|
|
should extend technical support, and enhance training facilities, and
|
|
comprehensively promote the AVC among smallholder farmers. Finally,
|
|
farmers' organizations (e.g., cooperatives and credit organizations)
|
|
should come forward to help facilitate the effectiveness of AVC.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zhang, FH (Corresponding Author), Shandong Agr Univ, Coll Econ \& Management, Tai An 271018, Shandong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Wang, Xiaolei, Shandong Agr Univ, Coll Informat Sci \& Engn, Tai An 271018, Shandong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Sarkar, Apurbo; Wang, Hongyu, Northwest A\&F Univ, Coll Econ \& Management, Yangling 712100, Shaanxi, Peoples R China.
|
|
Zhang, Fuhong, Shandong Agr Univ, Coll Econ \& Management, Tai An 271018, Shandong, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/horticulturae7060153},
|
|
Article-Number = {153},
|
|
EISSN = {2311-7524},
|
|
Keywords = {smallholder farmers; value chain integration; apple industry; production
|
|
performance; improve fertilizer use},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LINKING SMALL FARMERS; MARKET PARTICIPATION; DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; FOOD
|
|
SECURITY; TECHNOLOGY; VEGETABLES; PRODUCERS; FARMLAND; CHANNELS;
|
|
ADOPTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Horticulture},
|
|
Author-Email = {wanghongyu@nwafu.edu.cn
|
|
apurbo@nwafu.edu.cn
|
|
2018110568@sdau.edu.cn
|
|
sdzhangfuhong@sdau.edu.cn},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sarkar, Apurbo/AAO-7476-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sarkar, Apurbo/0000-0001-6520-9217
|
|
Zhang, Fuhong/0000-0001-8005-8330},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {102},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000666661000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1996TX02800004,
|
|
Author = {McDonald, MG},
|
|
Title = {Farmers as workers in Japan's regional economic restructuring, 1965-1985},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY},
|
|
Year = {1996},
|
|
Volume = {72},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {49-72},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Individuals living in farm households who commute to wage employment
|
|
make up an important portion of Japan's `'nonfarm'' workers. This study
|
|
examines their growing numbers and the regional and sectoral trends in
|
|
their off-farm jobs, to argue that farms have been more involved in
|
|
recent macroeconomic growth than is commonly acknowledged. In the 20
|
|
years between 1965 and 1985, individuals living on farms filled new
|
|
manufacturing jobs in the regions outside the Tokaido, urban-industrial
|
|
belt. State subsidies for farm families' agricultural production have
|
|
been generous, but have paid mainly for farm mechanization, which in
|
|
turn has allowed and required farm residents to seek off-farm income.
|
|
Regional policy has directed industrial plants to locate in farming
|
|
regions, both to provide jobs to farmers and to provide workers to
|
|
industries. To the extent that farm subsidies have partly supported
|
|
rural households while enabling members to accept low-wage jobs in
|
|
machinery manufacturing, farm subsidies have provided labor-cost
|
|
advantages to the leading firms and industries in this period of
|
|
restructuring. When farm households are viewed in this larger context of
|
|
their off-farm employment, they have not fallen outside the loop of
|
|
national economic growth in recent years, but have remained integral to
|
|
that growth.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McDonald, MG (Corresponding Author), UNIV HAWAII,DEPT GEOG,HONOLULU,HI 96822, USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2307/144502},
|
|
ISSN = {0013-0095},
|
|
Keywords = {part-time farming; industrial restructuring; regional job shift;
|
|
off-farm employment; Japan},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TECHNOPOLIS PROGRAM; RICE POLICY; TECHNOLOGY; AGRICULTURE; INDUSTRY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Geography},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {124},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1996TX02800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000656158500002,
|
|
Author = {Handley, Tonelle E. and Lewin, Terry J. and Butterworth, Peter and
|
|
Kelly, Brian J.},
|
|
Title = {Employment and retirement impacts on health and wellbeing among a sample
|
|
of rural Australians},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAY 10},
|
|
Abstract = {Background In Australia, it is projected that one in four individuals
|
|
will be at the nominal retirement age of 65 or over by 2056; this effect
|
|
is expected to be especially pronounced in rural areas. Previous
|
|
findings on the effects of retirement on wellbeing have been mixed. The
|
|
present study explores the effects of employment and retirement on
|
|
health and wellbeing among a sample of rural Australians. Methods
|
|
Australian Rural Mental Health Study participants who were aged 45 or
|
|
over (N = 2013) were included in a series of analyses to compare the
|
|
health and wellbeing of individuals with differing employment and
|
|
retirement circumstances. Self-reported outcome variables included
|
|
perceived physical health and everyday functioning, financial wellbeing,
|
|
mental health, relationships, and satisfaction with life. Results Across
|
|
the outcomes, participants who were employed or retired generally
|
|
reported better health and wellbeing than those not in the workforce.
|
|
Retired participants rated more highly than employed participants on
|
|
mental health, relationships, and satisfaction with life. There was also
|
|
a short-term benefit for perceived financial status for retired
|
|
participants compared to employed participants, but this effect
|
|
diminished over time. Conclusions While retirement is a significant life
|
|
transition that may affect multiple facets of an individual's life, the
|
|
direction and magnitude of these effects vary depending on the
|
|
retirement context, namely the pre-retirement and concurrent
|
|
circumstances within which an individual is retiring. Personal
|
|
perceptions of status changes may also contribute to an individual's
|
|
wellbeing more so than objective factors such as income. Policies that
|
|
promote rural work/retirement opportunities and diversity and address
|
|
rural disadvantage are needed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Handley, TE (Corresponding Author), Univ Newcastle, Ctr Rural \& Remote Mental Hlth, Univ Dr, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia.
|
|
Handley, TE (Corresponding Author), Univ Newcastle, Sch Med \& Publ Hlth, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Handley, Tonelle E., Univ Newcastle, Ctr Rural \& Remote Mental Hlth, Univ Dr, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia.
|
|
Handley, Tonelle E.; Lewin, Terry J.; Kelly, Brian J., Univ Newcastle, Sch Med \& Publ Hlth, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Lewin, Terry J.; Kelly, Brian J., Univ Newcastle, Ctr Brain \& Mental Hlth Res, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Butterworth, Peter, Australian Natl Univ, Ctr Res Ageing Hlth \& Wellbeing, Canberra, ACT, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-021-10876-9},
|
|
Article-Number = {888},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Retirement; Employment; Ageing; Mental health; Wellbeing; Rural},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-RATED HEALTH; MENTAL-HEALTH; PHYSICAL HEALTH; LIFE; WORK;
|
|
DETERMINANTS; TRAJECTORIES; TRANSITION; DEPRESSION; BENEFITS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {tonelle.handley@newcastle.edu.au
|
|
brian.kelly@newcastle.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lewin, Terry J/D-4513-2012
|
|
Butterworth, Peter/AFK-2636-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lewin, Terry J/0000-0002-4510-4001
|
|
Butterworth, Peter/0000-0002-1531-3881},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000656158500002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000273277800002,
|
|
Author = {Falba, T'racy A. and Sindelar, Jody L. and Gallo, William T.},
|
|
Title = {Work Expectations, Realizations, and Depression in Older Workers},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH POLICY AND ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {175-186},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Aims of the Study: In this study, we explore whether ex ante work
|
|
expectations, conditional on work force status at age 62, affect
|
|
self-reported depressive symptoms at age 62.
|
|
Methods: Our sample includes 4,387 participants of the Health and
|
|
Retirement Study, a national longitudinal survey of individuals born
|
|
between 1931 and 194 1, and their spouses. The sample is composed of
|
|
workers who were less than 62 years of age at the study baseline (1992),
|
|
and who had reached age 62 by the current study endpoint (2004). This
|
|
sample enables comparison of realized work status with prior
|
|
expectations. We estimate the impact of expected work status on
|
|
self-reported depressive symptoms using negative binomial and logistic
|
|
regression methods. Sex-stratified regressions are estimated according
|
|
to full-time work status at age 62. The primary outcome is a summary
|
|
measure of self-reported depressive symptoms based on a short form of
|
|
the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression (CES-D) scale. The
|
|
explanatory variable of interest is the subjective probability of
|
|
working full-time at the age of 62, reported by participants at the 1992
|
|
HRS baseline. We control for baseline socioeconomic and demographic
|
|
variables as well as life events and changes in macroeconomic conditions
|
|
that occur within the study timeframe.
|
|
Results: Among participants who were not working full time at age 62, we
|
|
find that men who provided a higher ex ante likelihood of full-time
|
|
employment at 62 had significantly worse self-reported depressive
|
|
symptoms than men who provided a lower ex ante likelihood. A similar
|
|
effect was not found for women. Among participants who were working full
|
|
time at age 62, we do not find a statistical relationship between ex
|
|
ante expectations and age-62 self-reported depressive symptoms, for
|
|
either men or women.
|
|
Discussion: The results suggest that an earlier-than-anticipated work
|
|
exit is detrimental to mental health for men nearing normal retirement
|
|
age. Previous research has demonstrated that stress is a causal factor
|
|
in depression, and a premature labor force departure, which is
|
|
inconsistent with an individual's cognitive judgment of a suitably timed
|
|
exit from work, is a psychologically stressful transition that could
|
|
realistically induce depression. This may be especially true of men, who
|
|
in this cohort, have stronger labor force attachment than women and tend
|
|
to define their roles by their occupation. The advantages of the study
|
|
include nationally representative data, a baseline depression control
|
|
that circumscribes the effect of endogeneity, and a reasonably long
|
|
follow-up. Despite our efforts to infer causality, unmeasured factors
|
|
may account for part of the observed relationship.
|
|
Implications for Health Policy and Research: Depression is a disease
|
|
that, if untreated, may have serious consequences for behavioral,
|
|
medical, and social well-being. Our results suggest that further
|
|
research should aim to estimate the magnitude of clinically severe and
|
|
mild depression in populations of those who retire earlier than
|
|
expected, especially for men. Such information could help health care
|
|
planners and policy makers to direct resources to the mental health
|
|
needs of men who retire prematurely.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sindelar, JL (Corresponding Author), Yale Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
|
|
Sindelar, Jody L., Yale Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
|
|
Sindelar, Jody L., Yale Univ, Sch Med, New Haven, CT USA.
|
|
Gallo, William T., CUNY Hunter Coll, Brookdale Ctr Healthy Aging \& Longev, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Gallo, William T., CUNY Hunter Coll, Sch Publ Hlth, New York, NY 10021 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1091-4358},
|
|
EISSN = {1099-176X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RETIREMENT EXPECTATIONS; HEALTH; SYMPTOMS; DECISION; MODEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {jody.sindelar@yale.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000273277800002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000452230000001,
|
|
Author = {Silverman, Kenneth and Holtyn, August F. and Subramaniam, Shrinidhi},
|
|
Title = {Behavior Analysts in the War on Poverty: Developing an Operant
|
|
Antipoverty Program},
|
|
Journal = {EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {515-524},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Poverty is associated with poor health and affects many United States
|
|
residents. The therapeutic workplace, an operant intervention designed
|
|
to treat unemployed adults with histories of drug addiction, could form
|
|
the basis for an effective antipoverty program. Under the therapeutic
|
|
workplace, participants receive pay for work. To promote drug abstinence
|
|
or medication adherence, participants must provide drug-free urine
|
|
samples or take scheduled doses of medication, respectively, to maintain
|
|
maximum pay. Therapeutic workplace participants receive job-skills
|
|
training in Phase 1 and perform income-producing jobs in Phase 2. Many
|
|
unemployed, drug-addicted adults lack skills they would need to obtain
|
|
high-skilled and high-paying jobs. Many of these individuals attend
|
|
therapeutic workplace training reliably, but only when offered stipends
|
|
for attendance. They also work on training programs reliably, but only
|
|
when they earn stipends for performance on training programs. A
|
|
therapeutic workplace social business can promote employment, although
|
|
special contingencies may be needed to ensure that participants are
|
|
punctual and work entire work shifts, and social businesses do not
|
|
reliably promote community employment. Therapeutic workplace
|
|
participants work with an employment specialist to seek community
|
|
employment, but primarily when they earn financial incentives. Reducing
|
|
poverty is more challenging than promoting employment, because it
|
|
requires promoting employment in higher paying, full-time and steady
|
|
jobs. Although a daunting challenge, promoting the type of employment
|
|
needed to reduce poverty is an important goal, both because of the
|
|
obvious benefit in reducing poverty itself and in the potential
|
|
secondary benefit of reducing poverty-related health disparities.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Silverman, K (Corresponding Author), Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, Ctr Learning \& Hlth, 5200 Eastern Ave,Suite 350 East, Baltimore, MD 21224 USA.
|
|
Silverman, Kenneth; Holtyn, August F.; Subramaniam, Shrinidhi, Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Subramaniam, Shrinidhi, Calif State Univ Stanislaus, Dept Psychol \& Child Dev, Turlock, CA 95382 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/pha0000230},
|
|
ISSN = {1064-1297},
|
|
EISSN = {1936-2293},
|
|
Keywords = {poverty; operant conditioning; incentives; unemployment; drug addiction},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMPLOYMENT-BASED REINFORCEMENT; INJECTION-DRUG USERS; OPIOID-DEPENDENT
|
|
ADULTS; THERAPEUTIC WORKPLACE; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; COCAINE ABSTINENCE;
|
|
UNITED-STATES; CONTINGENCY MANAGEMENT; ACADEMIC SKILLS; ATTENDANCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Biological; Psychology, Clinical; Pharmacology \& Pharmacy;
|
|
Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {ksilverm@jhmi.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {/ABG-5735-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Subramaniam, Shrinidhi/0000-0003-4273-7935},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000452230000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000827308500004,
|
|
Author = {Bodenheimer, Thomas S. and Willard-Grace, Rachel},
|
|
Title = {Care Management For Patients With Type 2 Diabetes: The Roles Of Nurses,
|
|
Pharmacists, And Social Workers},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH AFFAIRS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {41},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {947-954},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Managing patients with type 2 diabetes takes time. Clinicians in primary
|
|
care, where most diabetes visits take place, lack that time. Planned
|
|
visits by diabetes care managers-nurses, pharmacists, social workers,
|
|
and other team members-assist clinicians and are associated with
|
|
improved glycemic control. Particularly effective is care management
|
|
featuring nurses or pharmacists adjusting medications without prior
|
|
physician approval. Care management programs need to pay close attention
|
|
to inequities in diabetes care and outcomes. The widespread
|
|
implementation of diabetes care management in primary care faces several
|
|
barriers: lack of an adequate, diverse, trained care manager workforce;
|
|
regulations limiting care managers' scope of practice; and financial
|
|
models not supportive of care management. Wide-ranging policies are
|
|
needed to address these barriers. In particular, payment reform is
|
|
needed to stimulate the spread of diabetes care management: adding
|
|
fee-for-service codes that adequately pay care managers for their work,
|
|
adopting shared savings models that channel savings back to primary
|
|
care, and increasing the percentage of health care spending dedicated to
|
|
primary care. In this article we explore key questions around type 2
|
|
diabetes care management, review the published evidence, examine the
|
|
barriers to its wider use, and describe policy solutions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bodenheimer, TS (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Bodenheimer, Thomas S.; Willard-Grace, Rachel, Univ Calif San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1377/hlthaff.2022.00227},
|
|
ISSN = {0278-2715},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY IMPROVEMENT STRATEGIES; LOW-INCOME PATIENTS; GLYCEMIC CONTROL;
|
|
REGISTERED NURSES; HEALTH; HYPERLIPIDEMIA; HYPERTENSION; CONCORDANCE;
|
|
PROGRAMS; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {tombodie3@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000827308500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000349771100012,
|
|
Author = {Cooklin, A. R. and Westrupp, E. and Strazdins, L. and Giallo, R. and
|
|
Martin, A. and Nicholson, J. M.},
|
|
Title = {Mothers' work-family conflict and enrichment: associations with
|
|
parenting quality and couple relationship},
|
|
Journal = {CHILD CARE HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {41},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {266-277},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundEmployment participation of mothers of young children has
|
|
steadily increased in developed nations. Combining work and family roles
|
|
can create conflicts with family life, but can also bring enrichment.
|
|
Work-family conflict and enrichment experienced by mothers may also
|
|
impact children's home environments via parenting behaviour and the
|
|
couple relationship, particularly in the early years of parenting when
|
|
the care demands for young children is high.
|
|
MethodsIn order to examine these associations, while adjusting for a
|
|
wide range of known covariates of parenting and relationship quality,
|
|
regression models using survey data from 2151 working mothers of 4- to
|
|
5-year-old children are reported.
|
|
Results/ConclusionResults provided partial support for the predicted
|
|
independent relationships between work-family conflict, enrichment and
|
|
indicators of the quality of parenting and the couple relationship.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cooklin, AR (Corresponding Author), Parenting Res Ctr, Level 5,232 Victoria Parade East, Melbourne, Vic 3002, Australia.
|
|
Cooklin, A. R.; Westrupp, E.; Giallo, R.; Nicholson, J. M., Parenting Res Ctr, Melbourne, Vic 3002, Australia.
|
|
Westrupp, E.; Giallo, R.; Nicholson, J. M., Murdoch Childrens Res Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Strazdins, L., Australian Natl Univ, Natl Ctr Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
|
|
Martin, A., Univ Tasmania, Hobart, Tas, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/cch.12137},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-1862},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2214},
|
|
Keywords = {maternal employment; parenting; work-family conflict; work-family gains;
|
|
work-family strains},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH; PHYSICAL HEALTH; MULTIPLE ROLES; CHILDRENS; OUTCOMES;
|
|
GENDER; ANTECEDENTS; INEQUALITY; CHILDHOOD; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {ACooklin@parentingrc.org.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Martin, Angela J/J-7183-2014
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Martin, Angela J/0000-0003-0109-1218
|
|
Strazdins, Lyndall/0000-0001-5158-6855
|
|
Giallo, Rebecca/0000-0002-1065-2921
|
|
Nicholson, Jan/0000-0002-0305-0017
|
|
/0000-0001-6517-6064},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {62},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {60},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000349771100012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000980753100003,
|
|
Author = {Hinduja, Preeta and Siddiqui, Sohni and Kamran, Mahwish},
|
|
Title = {Public Sector Education and Gender Inequality: A Mixed-Method Study in
|
|
Metropolis City of Pakistan},
|
|
Journal = {ASIAN WOMEN},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Girls' education and participation in economic activities are relatively
|
|
low in patriarchal Pakistani societies due to stereotypical family roles
|
|
and cultural and religious inclinations. This study examines the
|
|
influences of educational institutions and educational actors on
|
|
gender-role ideologies in mainstream education in the public sector in
|
|
an urban setting. The study methodology uses a mixed-method research
|
|
approach; the quantitative analysis is conducted using the Social Roles
|
|
Questionnaire, and the study aims to explore educators' views on gender
|
|
roles and their relationship to demographics. Schools' disposition
|
|
toward gender segregation was investigated through a qualitative
|
|
Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA). The findings of the quantitative part
|
|
revealed that the majority of the participants believed in traditional
|
|
gender roles regardless of differences in their education, parental
|
|
education, experience, job status, level of teaching, gender,
|
|
designation, and type of institution (girls only/boys
|
|
only/co-education). Qualitative analysis showed that educational
|
|
institutions are playing a significant role in widening the gender gap
|
|
due to the perceived intention of education being gender-biased that
|
|
aims at developing boys as income producers and girls as morally rich
|
|
stereotypical daughters, wives, and mothers. Additionally, education
|
|
allows girls to shoulder the double burden of work and home in poor and
|
|
middle-class families with limited cultural and domestic careers;
|
|
however, for outdoor services, teaching careers are of paramount
|
|
importance. Furthermore, girls' higher education is considered less
|
|
meaningful, and participants have a rigid, traditional mindset. This
|
|
study is unique in that, for the first time, it examines the influence
|
|
of public-sector institutions and educationists' personal mindsets on
|
|
gender-role stereotypes in an urban metropolitan area of Pakistan. This
|
|
research provides recommendations for policymakers to cater to
|
|
gender-disparity concerns for the well-being of the nation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Siddiqui, S (Corresponding Author), Tech Univ, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Hinduja, Preeta; Kamran, Mahwish, Iqra Univ, Karachi, Pakistan.
|
|
Siddiqui, Sohni, Tech Univ, Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.14431/aw.2023.12.39.1.45},
|
|
ISSN = {1225-925X},
|
|
EISSN = {2586-5714},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender roles; classroom practices; girls? career; girls? higher
|
|
education; Pakistan},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {hindujapreeta@gmail.com
|
|
s.zahid@campus.tu-berlin.de
|
|
mahwish.siddiqui@iqra.edu.pk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kamran, Mahwish/AAV-5351-2021
|
|
Siddiqui, Sohni/AAC-6045-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kamran, Mahwish/0000-0002-0572-1603
|
|
Siddiqui, Sohni/0000-0002-4001-5181
|
|
Hinduja, Preeta/0000-0003-4316-3734},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {7},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000980753100003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000538044100007,
|
|
Author = {Artner, Annamaria},
|
|
Title = {Workfare Society in Action - the Hungarian Labour Market and Social
|
|
Conditions in European Comparison},
|
|
Journal = {ROMANIAN JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN AFFAIRS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {109-128},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper aims at investigating the achievements of Hungary's
|
|
``work-based society{''}. Based on statistical data, it examines the
|
|
characteristics of the Hungarian labour market and the development of
|
|
social indicators over the past decade in comparison with the European
|
|
Union and the Central and Eastern European member states. As there are
|
|
improving tendencies during recent years on a regional level, the
|
|
relatively good employment situation of Hungary cannot be considered as
|
|
an outlier. While the Hungarian labour market conditions have been
|
|
improved to some extent, some characteristics, like the level of wages
|
|
and productivity are rather lagging behind the regional average. Due to
|
|
policy changes since 2010, the social protection of the most vulnerable
|
|
declines and, concerning the increase of income inequalities, Hungary is
|
|
a regional ``leader{''}. The article concludes that in order for such a
|
|
social welfare regime to help social inclusion and serve social
|
|
equality, a reconfiguration of the economic, as well as political
|
|
governance, is needed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Artner, A (Corresponding Author), Ctr Reg \& Econ Studies, Inst World Econ, Budapest, Hungary.
|
|
Artner, Annamaria, Ctr Reg \& Econ Studies, Inst World Econ, Budapest, Hungary.},
|
|
ISSN = {1582-8271},
|
|
EISSN = {1841-4273},
|
|
Keywords = {Central and Eastern Europe; Hungary; labour market; welfare; workfare},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMIGRATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {International Relations},
|
|
Author-Email = {artner.annamaria@krtk.mta.hu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Artner, Annamaria/U-9126-2017},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Artner, Annamaria/0000-0002-3979-4624},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000538044100007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000896574300001,
|
|
Author = {Sun, Qianqian and Zhou, Weiyi and Kabiri, Aliakbar and Darzi, Aref and
|
|
Hu, Songhua and Younes, Hannah and Zhang, Lei},
|
|
Title = {COVID-19 and income profile: How communities in the United States
|
|
responded to mobility restrictions in the pandemic's early stages},
|
|
Journal = {REGIONAL SCIENCE POLICY AND PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {541-558},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Mobility interventions in communities play a critical role in containing
|
|
a pandemic at an early stage. The real-world practice of social
|
|
distancing can enlighten policymakers and help them implement more
|
|
efficient and effective control measures. A lack of such research using
|
|
real-world observations initiates this article. We analyzed the social
|
|
distancing performance of 66,149 census tracts from 3,142 counties in
|
|
the United States with a specific focus on income profile. Six daily
|
|
mobility metrics, including a social distancing index, stay-at-home
|
|
percentage, miles traveled per person, trip rate, work trip rate, and
|
|
non-work trip rate, were produced for each census tract using the
|
|
location data from over 100 million anonymous devices on a monthly
|
|
basis. Each mobility metric was further tabulated by three perspectives
|
|
of social distancing performance: ``best performance,{''} ``effort,{''}
|
|
and ``consistency.{''} We found that for all 18 indicators, high-income
|
|
communities demonstrated better social distancing performance. Such
|
|
disparities between communities of different income levels are presented
|
|
in detail in this article. The comparisons across scenarios also raise
|
|
other concerns for low-income communities, such as employment status,
|
|
working conditions, and accessibility to basic needs. This article lays
|
|
out a series of facts extracted from real-world data and offers
|
|
compelling perspectives for future discussions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sun, QQ (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Maryland Transportat Inst MTI, Dept Civil \& Environm Engn, 8228 Paint Branch Dr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Sun, Qianqian; Zhou, Weiyi; Kabiri, Aliakbar; Darzi, Aref; Hu, Songhua; Younes, Hannah; Zhang, Lei, Univ Maryland, Maryland Transportat Inst MTI, Dept Civil \& Environm Engn, 8228 Paint Branch Dr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/rsp3.12598},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1757-7802},
|
|
Keywords = {causal impact analysis of income; community differences; COVID-19
|
|
pandemic; Mobile location data; social distancing behavior},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PROPENSITY; BEHAVIOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography},
|
|
Author-Email = {qsun12@umd.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {HU, SONGHUA/ABF-2415-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {HU, SONGHUA/0000-0002-0731-3080
|
|
Kabiri, Aliakbar/0000-0003-2119-007X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000896574300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000976162000001,
|
|
Author = {Hornberg, Carla and Heisig, Jan Paul and Solga, Heike},
|
|
Title = {Explaining the training disadvantage of less-educated workers: the role
|
|
of labor market allocation in international comparison},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIO-ECONOMIC REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 APR 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Less-educated workers have the lowest participation rates in job-related
|
|
further training across the industrialized world, but the extent of
|
|
their disadvantage varies. Using data on 28 high- and middle-income
|
|
countries, we assess different explanations for less-educated workers'
|
|
training disadvantage relative to intermediate-educated workers, with a
|
|
focus on the role of labor market allocation (i.e. job tasks, other job
|
|
features and firm characteristics). Shapley decompositions reveal a
|
|
broadly similar pattern for all countries: differences in labor market
|
|
allocation between less- and intermediate-educated workers are more
|
|
important for explaining the training gap than differences in individual
|
|
learning disposition (i.e. cognitive skills and motivation to learn).
|
|
Our analysis further suggests that the training gap is related to
|
|
educational and labor market institutions and that labor market
|
|
allocation processes play a key role in mediating any institutional
|
|
`effects'. Strong conclusions regarding the role of institutions are
|
|
hampered by the small country-level sample, however.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hornberg, C (Corresponding Author), WZB Berlin Social Sci Ctr, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Hornberg, Carla; Heisig, Jan Paul; Solga, Heike, WZB Berlin Social Sci Ctr, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Heisig, Jan Paul; Solga, Heike, Free Univ Berlin, Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/ser/mwad023},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1475-1461},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-147X},
|
|
Keywords = {inequality in adult training; skills; labor market allocation; Shapley
|
|
decomposition; labor market institutions; education systems},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB TASKS; OCCUPATIONAL-STATUS; SYSTEMS; PARTICIPATION; INSTITUTIONS;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; COUNTRIES; MODELS; SKILLS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Political Science; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {carla.hornberg@wzb.eu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Heisig, Jan Paul/AAY-4706-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Solga, Heike/0000-0002-1589-4380},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000976162000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000551061100001,
|
|
Author = {Barker, Abigail R. and Li, Linda},
|
|
Title = {The cumulative impact of health insurance on health status},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {55},
|
|
Number = {2, SI},
|
|
Pages = {815-822},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective To add to the evidence base on causal linkages between health
|
|
insurance coverage and health status, controlling for sociodemographic
|
|
factors, by analyzing longitudinal data. Data Source Secondary data from
|
|
the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), 2009-17, which is a
|
|
longitudinal, multigenerational study covering a wide array of
|
|
socioeconomic topics that began in 1968 but has only recently begun
|
|
collecting useful information on individual health insurance. Study
|
|
Design 2017 data on self-reported health status, work limitations, and
|
|
death were analyzed as outcomes based upon the degree of exposure to
|
|
health insurance in 2011-17. All variables were collected biannually for
|
|
four years beginning in 2011. Having health insurance at each point in
|
|
time was, in turn, modeled as a function of several sociodemographic
|
|
factors. Data Extraction Methods Data were downloaded using the
|
|
crosswalk tool available at the PSID website. Because individual health
|
|
insurance questions were only asked of heads and spouses in households
|
|
beginning in 2011, we analyzed only these records. Principal Findings
|
|
Among respondents who were not in fair or poor health in 2009, each
|
|
additional 2 years of subsequent reported insurance coverage reduced the
|
|
chance of reporting fair or poor health in 2017 by 10 percent; however,
|
|
this effect was not present for black respondents. Conclusions Our
|
|
results suggest that the effect of health insurance on health status may
|
|
compound over time, although unevenly by race. Since people who report
|
|
fair or poor health status represent the bulk of utilization and
|
|
spending, our findings provide evidence in support of viewing coverage
|
|
expansions as investments that will pay dividends in the form of lower
|
|
utilization over time. More work is needed to produce detailed estimates
|
|
of cost savings, which may in turn influence policy, as well as to
|
|
understand and address the source of racial disparity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Barker, AR (Corresponding Author), Washington Univ St Louis, Brown Sch, 1 Brookings Dr,Campus Box 1196, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
|
|
Barker, Abigail R.; Li, Linda, Washington Univ St Louis, Brown Sch, 1 Brookings Dr,Campus Box 1196, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1475-6773.13325},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0017-9124},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-6773},
|
|
Keywords = {health care costs; health insurance; health status; Medicaid; Medicare;
|
|
race factors},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEDICAID; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {arbarker@wustl.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Li, Linda/0000-0003-0996-7763
|
|
Barker, Abigail/0000-0002-0826-5156},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {21},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000551061100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000649129100001,
|
|
Author = {Knies, Gundi and Melo, Patricia C. and Zhang, Min},
|
|
Title = {Neighbourhood deprivation, life satisfaction and earnings: Comparative
|
|
analyses of neighbourhood effects at bespoke scales},
|
|
Journal = {URBAN STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {58},
|
|
Number = {13},
|
|
Pages = {2640-2659},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage has a profound impact on
|
|
individuals' earnings and life satisfaction. Since definitions of the
|
|
neighbourhood and research designs vary greatly across studies, it is
|
|
difficult to ascertain which neighbourhoods and outcomes matter the
|
|
most. By conducting parallel analyses of the impact of neighbourhood
|
|
deprivation on life satisfaction and earnings at multiple scales, we
|
|
provide a direct empirical test of which scale matters the most and
|
|
whether the effects vary between outcomes. Our identification strategy
|
|
combines rich longitudinal information on individual characteristics,
|
|
family background and initial job conditions for England and Wales with
|
|
econometric estimators that address residential sorting bias, and we
|
|
compare results for individuals living in choice-restricted social
|
|
housing with results for those living in self-selected privately rented
|
|
housing. We find that the effect of neighbourhood deprivation on life
|
|
satisfaction and wages is negative for both outcomes and largely
|
|
explained by strong residential sorting on both individual and
|
|
neighbourhood characteristics rather than a genuine causal effect. We
|
|
also find that the results overall do not vary by neighbourhood scale.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Knies, G (Corresponding Author), Univ Essex, Inst Social \& Econ Res ISER, Wivenhoe Pk, Colchester CO4 3SQ, Essex, England.
|
|
Knies, Gundi, Univ Essex, Colchester, Essex, England.
|
|
Melo, Patricia C., Univ Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal.
|
|
Zhang, Min, Univ Cambridge, Cambridge, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0042098020956930},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2020},
|
|
Article-Number = {0042098020956930},
|
|
ISSN = {0042-0980},
|
|
EISSN = {1360-063X},
|
|
Keywords = {demographics; employment; labour; life satisfaction; longitudinal
|
|
analysis; neighbourhood; poverty; exclusion},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH; INCOME; DISADVANTAGE; EXPOSURE; PLACES; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies; Urban Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {gknies@essex.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Melo, Patricia C/G-9132-2017
|
|
Knies, Gundi/ABA-7097-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Melo, Patricia C/0000-0001-6722-1914
|
|
Knies, Gundi/0000-0002-0251-2865},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000649129100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000348252800027,
|
|
Author = {Sivachithappa, K.},
|
|
Editor = {BinAbuBakar, MN},
|
|
Title = {Impact of Micro Finance on Income Generation and Livelihood of Members
|
|
of Self Help Groups - A Case Study of Mandya District, India},
|
|
Booktitle = {PSU-USM INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES},
|
|
Series = {Procedia Social and Behavioral Sciences},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {91},
|
|
Pages = {228-240},
|
|
Note = {PSU-USM International Conference on Humanities and Social Sciences, Hat
|
|
Yai, THAILAND, OCT 03-04, 2011},
|
|
Abstract = {The traditional Indian society functioned mainly on the basis of
|
|
self-help and mutual aid. However, in recent years, they have been
|
|
emerging as a major strategy for the promotion of informal credit to the
|
|
poor. Self-help groups are expected to make a significant contribution
|
|
to poverty alleviation and empower the members in economic, social and
|
|
political spheres. These programmes are also expected to become
|
|
increasingly self-reliant and independent of donor funds. In rural
|
|
India; there is substantial degree of feminization of poverty on account
|
|
of an increase in the net population growth rate among the landless
|
|
agricultural labour households (including SC/ST and other backward
|
|
classes women), low level of human skills, lack of availability of wage
|
|
employment opportunities and inadequacy of institutional support to
|
|
create wage as well as self employment opportunities. This list includes
|
|
economic factors responsible for feminization of poverty which are much
|
|
stronger in operation and which function along with socio-cultural
|
|
barriers and discrimination against women in economic participation. The
|
|
objectives of the self-help groups are to promote strong and independent
|
|
women groups who exert control over their own development and that of
|
|
the community. The women would be equipped with managerial and technical
|
|
skills through enhanced participation in economic activities. In this
|
|
context, it is desirable to generate information and analyse to what
|
|
extent these micro finance programmes have been able to reduce poverty
|
|
and vulnerability by; increasing capital/asset formation at the
|
|
household level, improving household and enterprise incomes, enhancing
|
|
the capacity of individuals and households to manage risk, increasing
|
|
enterprise activity within households, expanding employment
|
|
opportunities for the poor in non-farm enterprises, empowering women and
|
|
improving the accessibility of other financial services at the community
|
|
level. (C) 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sivachithappa, K., Univ Mysore, Post Grad Ctr, Mandya 571402, Karnataka, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.sbspro.2013.08.421},
|
|
ISSN = {1877-0428},
|
|
Keywords = {Micro Finance; SHGs and Livelihood Security},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {kseyadav@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {9},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000348252800027},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000649262800003,
|
|
Author = {Viswanathan, P. K. and Bahinipati, Chandra Sekhar},
|
|
Title = {Growth and human development in the regional economy of Gujarat, India:
|
|
an analysis of missed linkages},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {25-47},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {The case of Gujarat is often highlighted in the literature for the
|
|
glaring mismatch between growth and human development (HD) outcomes.
|
|
This paper makes a critical assessment of the growth and development
|
|
scenario and their linkages with human development outcomes with
|
|
particular focus on the important HD factors across the districts. The
|
|
objectives of the paper are to: (i) analyse the broad trends in the
|
|
major economic sectors, viz. agriculture, industries and employment and
|
|
delineate the differences in the growth scenario across districts and
|
|
(ii) examine the `inclusive growth outcomes' across districts in the
|
|
state based on the district-level HD indices and delineate the
|
|
differences in the major HD factors. The broad trends in the growth of
|
|
the major economic sectors reveal some disquieting aspects of growth of
|
|
the state, characterised by stark differences in literacy and
|
|
educational attainments across gender and districts, the decline in
|
|
farming population coincided with marginalisation of farm holdings
|
|
amidst growth of commercial agriculture, declining rural work
|
|
participation, especially women work participation, and concentration of
|
|
industrial growth confining to few districts. The analysis of
|
|
district-level HDIs brings out disparate trends of the status of HDI,
|
|
reflecting stark differences in the status of development of the
|
|
critical components, viz. standard of living, availability of health
|
|
infrastructure and educational attainments. Based on the analysis, we
|
|
argue that Gujarat needs to strengthen and reorient its development
|
|
priorities by accelerating public spending more on critical areas of
|
|
public health infrastructure, provision of better healthcare services,
|
|
nutritional security, education and skill development, women
|
|
empowerment, etc., which are critical aspects of human development and
|
|
inclusive growth.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Viswanathan, PK (Corresponding Author), Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Dept Management, Kochi 682041, Kerala, India.
|
|
Viswanathan, P. K., Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Dept Management, Kochi 682041, Kerala, India.
|
|
Bahinipati, Chandra Sekhar, Indian Inst Technol Tirupati, Dept Humanities \& Social Sci, Yerpedu 517619, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s40847-020-00144-8},
|
|
ISSN = {0972-5792},
|
|
EISSN = {2199-6873},
|
|
Keywords = {Inclusive growth; Human development index; Regional disparity; Public
|
|
policy; Gujarat},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {pk\_viswanathan@asb.kochi.amrita.edu
|
|
csbahinipati@iittp.ac.in},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bahinipati, Chandra Sekhar/H-8627-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bahinipati, Chandra Sekhar/0000-0002-4013-8915
|
|
Pozhamkandath, Viswanathan/0000-0002-1064-5051},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000649262800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000377694100027,
|
|
Author = {Limpangog, Cirila P.},
|
|
Title = {RESUMING THE ``SKILLED WORKER{''} IDENTITY: The Filipinas' Strategies in
|
|
Labor Market Participation in Melbourne, Australia},
|
|
Journal = {KRITIKA KULTURA},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Number = {26},
|
|
Pages = {523-607},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Through the lens of culture intersecting with gender, race and class,
|
|
this monograph looks at the reconfiguration of skilled worker identity
|
|
of 20 Philippines-born women who have immigrated to Australia. Through
|
|
interviews and analyses of their lived experiences, it attempts to
|
|
comprehend the complexity of their unemployment, from their encounter
|
|
with the labor market, to their attempts in breaking into the workforce.
|
|
It contextualizes the institutional disadvantages and discrimination
|
|
befalling migrant women of non-English speaking background, as well as
|
|
housework and mothering responsibilities they continue to resist at
|
|
home. The complex interaction of the women's higher education, English
|
|
language proficiency, their sense of purpose and other personal
|
|
resources-all assisted in reframing their subordinated identity, and
|
|
recapturing their careers. The women risked taking jobs lower than their
|
|
qualifications, took further studies, went through rigorous
|
|
accreditation, and acquired local experience, as stepping stones to
|
|
regain their professions and subsequently their middle-class status.
|
|
Their journey, however, is not without severe difficulties. By using
|
|
agency and privilege, this monograph argues that the women epitomized
|
|
the classical modernist ideology of the self within a capitalist system.
|
|
They were aware of structural disadvantages and discriminatory
|
|
practices, but they found ways of working within these limitations,
|
|
which results to masking the hardships they endured. The study debunks
|
|
the effectiveness of the notion that individual's capacity over the
|
|
state ``to enterprise themselves{''} is a success strategy.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Limpangog, CP (Corresponding Author), RMIT Univ, Ctr Global Res, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Limpangog, Cirila P., RMIT Univ, Ctr Global Res, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
ISSN = {2094-6937},
|
|
Keywords = {career reconstitution; citizenship rights; Filipina immigrants;
|
|
intersectionality; occupational mobility; skilled migration},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION; IMMIGRANT WOMEN; GENDER; MIGRANTS; RACE;
|
|
DETERMINANTS; UNEMPLOYMENT; PHILIPPINES; EMPLOYMENT; QUESTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Language \& Linguistics; Literature},
|
|
Author-Email = {cirila.limpangog@rmit.edu.au},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {147},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000377694100027},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000756426700001,
|
|
Author = {McGaughey, Ewan},
|
|
Title = {Will Robots Automate Your Job Away? Full Employment, Basic Income and
|
|
Economic Democracy},
|
|
Journal = {INDUSTRIAL LAW JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {51},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {511-559},
|
|
Month = {NOV 20},
|
|
Abstract = {Will the internet, robotics and artificial intelligence mean a `jobless
|
|
future'? A recent narrative, endorsed by tech-billionaires, says we face
|
|
mass unemployment, and we need a basic income. In contrast, this article
|
|
shows why the law can achieve full employment with fair incomes, and
|
|
holidays with pay. Universal human rights, including the right to `share
|
|
in scientific advancement and its benefits', set the proper guiding
|
|
principles. Three distinct views of the causes of unemployment are that
|
|
it is a `natural' phenomenon, that technology may propel it, or that it
|
|
is social and legal choice: to let capital owners restrict investment in
|
|
jobs. Only the third view has any credible evidence to support it.
|
|
Technology may create redundancies, but unemployment is a purely social
|
|
phenomenon. After World War Two, 42\% of UK jobs were redundant but
|
|
social policy maintained full employment. This said, transition to new
|
|
technology, when markets are left alone, can be exceedingly slow: a
|
|
staggering 88\% of American horses lost their jobs after the Model T
|
|
Ford, but only over 45 years. Both the global financial crisis from 2008
|
|
and the COVID-19 pandemic from 2020 illustrate the importance of social
|
|
and legal policy, and suggest it is time to learn. Taking lessons from
|
|
history, it is clear that unemployment is driven by inequality of wealth
|
|
and of votes in the economy. To uphold human rights, governments should
|
|
reprogramme the law, for full employment, fair incomes and more leisure,
|
|
on a living planet. Robot owners will not automate your job away, if we
|
|
defend economic democracy.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McGaughey, E (Corresponding Author), Kings Coll London, Law, London, England.
|
|
McGaughey, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Cambridge, Ctr Business Res, Cambridge, England.
|
|
McGaughey, Ewan, Kings Coll London, Law, London, England.
|
|
McGaughey, Ewan, Univ Cambridge, Ctr Business Res, Cambridge, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/indlaw/dwab010},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-9332},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-3669},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-KINGDOM; NATURAL RATE; LABOR-LAW; UNEMPLOYMENT; PROPERTY;
|
|
BRITAIN; HISTORY; GOVERNANCE; INFLATION; DEMAND},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor; Law},
|
|
Author-Email = {ewan.mcgaughey@kcl.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {257},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {28},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000756426700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000600699900001,
|
|
Author = {Fisher, Jill A. and Wood, Megan M. and Monahan, Torin},
|
|
Title = {Speculating on precarious income: finance cultures and the risky
|
|
strategies of healthy volunteers in clinical drug trials},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CULTURAL ECONOMY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {464-484},
|
|
Month = {JUL 4},
|
|
Abstract = {Speculation has become a normalized occupational strategy and quotidian
|
|
economic rationality that extends throughout society. Although there are
|
|
many contemporary articulations of speculation, this article focuses on
|
|
contract labor as a domain of financialization. Seen through this lens,
|
|
contract labor can be understood as a speculative investment strategy
|
|
wherein individuals leverage whatever assets they have at their disposal
|
|
- savings, time, bodily health - to capture economic advantages. In
|
|
particular, we explore the speculative practices of healthy individuals
|
|
who enroll in pharmaceutical drug trials as their primary or critical
|
|
source of income. Mobilizing speculative logics to maximize the money
|
|
they can earn from their clinical trial participation, these contract
|
|
workers employ what we term a future-income-over-immediate-pay calculus.
|
|
This speculative calculus valorizes fictional projections of significant
|
|
long-term future income over present financial opportunities. For the
|
|
economically precarious individuals in our study, we argue that rather
|
|
than effectively increasing their income, speculation on contract work
|
|
serves a compensatory function, providing an important - but ultimately
|
|
inadequate - sense of control over market conditions that thrive upon
|
|
workers' economic insecurity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fisher, JA (Corresponding Author), Univ N Carolina, Dept Social Med, 333E MacNider Hall,Campus Box 7240, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Fisher, JA (Corresponding Author), Univ N Carolina, Ctr Bioeth, 333E MacNider Hall,Campus Box 7240, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Fisher, Jill A., Univ N Carolina, Dept Social Med, 333E MacNider Hall,Campus Box 7240, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Fisher, Jill A., Univ N Carolina, Ctr Bioeth, Social Med, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Wood, Megan M.; Monahan, Torin, Univ N Carolina, Dept Commun, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/17530350.2020.1850504},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1753-0350},
|
|
EISSN = {1753-0369},
|
|
Keywords = {Clinical trials; independent contractors; financialization; labor;
|
|
precarity; speculation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PHASE-I; WORK; PARTICIPATION; KNOWLEDGE; ECONOMY; CRISIS; ETHICS; GIG},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Cultural Studies; Economics; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {jill.fisher@unc.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {76},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000600699900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000441947400008,
|
|
Author = {Lachapelle, Ugo},
|
|
Title = {Employer subsidized public transit pass: Assessing disparities in
|
|
access, use, and latent demand},
|
|
Journal = {CASE STUDIES ON TRANSPORT POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {353-363},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {In 1999, the U.S. Transportation Equity Act enabled employer subsidized
|
|
public transit passes to be tax free benefits to employees and tax
|
|
deductible to employers. Public transit agencies can use these to
|
|
increase ridership, revenue or efficiency. Assessing disparities in
|
|
access, use and willingness to use the incentive can help improve the
|
|
policy's effectiveness and help promote equitable access to its
|
|
benefits.
|
|
The analysis uses employed respondents from a travel survey in Atlanta,
|
|
Georgia (2001-2002, n = 3430) categorized based on whether they were
|
|
offered a subsidized transit pass by their employer, whether they used
|
|
it or not, and whether they would be likely to use the pass if it was
|
|
available to them. Socio-demographic characteristics, the presence of
|
|
other incentives and built environment around home and work were
|
|
compared across groups, and three logistic regressions were used to
|
|
estimate parameters for each of the following questions: What
|
|
socio-demographic and employer location characteristics are associated
|
|
with working for an employer offering subsidized transit passes? What
|
|
are the factors associated with using a pass if the incentive is
|
|
offered? Finally, for those who were not offered a transit pass, what
|
|
factors are associated with being likely to use a transit pass?
|
|
Results suggest an undersupply of employer subsidized public transit
|
|
passes for lower income workers, who were however more likely to report
|
|
being likely to use a subsidized pass when not receiving one.
|
|
Interestingly, however, lower income individuals with access to a
|
|
transit pass were less likely to use it than their wealthier
|
|
counterparts. Employment in sales and services, a workplace with limited
|
|
nearby destinations and low quality transit service between home and
|
|
work may further exacerbate disparities in use of subsidized transit
|
|
pass. Promoting transit pass programs to employers in sales and
|
|
services, and other lower income jobs and coordinating transit service
|
|
improvements in locations where these employers concentrate may increase
|
|
subsidized transit pass program effectiveness and distributional
|
|
benefits. The work also suggests that socioeconomic disparities exist
|
|
not only in infrastructure development and congestion charging, but also
|
|
in policies used to influence mode shifts to public transit.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lachapelle, U (Corresponding Author), Univ Quebec, Ecole Sci Gest, Dept Etud Urbaines \& Tourist, Case Postale 8888,Succursale Ctr Ville, Montreal, PQ H3C 3P8, Canada.
|
|
Lachapelle, Ugo, Univ Quebec, Ecole Sci Gest, Dept Etud Urbaines \& Tourist, Case Postale 8888,Succursale Ctr Ville, Montreal, PQ H3C 3P8, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.cstp.2017.08.006},
|
|
ISSN = {2213-624X},
|
|
EISSN = {2213-6258},
|
|
Keywords = {Employer sponsored transit pass; Distributional analysis; Equity;
|
|
Access; Choice; Willingness; Built environment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRANSPORTATION POLICY; BUILT ENVIRONMENT; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; EQUITY
|
|
ANALYSIS; MODE CHOICE; URBAN FORM; TRAVEL; MANAGEMENT; OWNERSHIP;
|
|
PARKING},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {lachapelle.ugo@uqam.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lachapelle, Ugo/0000-0003-2306-6021},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000441947400008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000433656600020,
|
|
Author = {Solheim, Erling F. and Leiulfsrud, Annelie Schedin},
|
|
Title = {Employment after Spinal Cord Injury in Norway: A Cross-Sectional Survey},
|
|
Journal = {SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF DISABILITY RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {197+},
|
|
Abstract = {Two research questions are addressed: 1) What predicts employment among
|
|
persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) in Norway? 2) How do the employed
|
|
compare with the non-employed in their job motivation, labour
|
|
discrimination, quality of life, everyday coping, health and pain
|
|
suffering? We use a cross-sectional survey from 2012. With a 51\%
|
|
response rate, 320 Norwegians aged 21-66 years with SCI participated.
|
|
After injury, 69.5\% were employed, and 44.5\% remained employed at the
|
|
time of the interview. There was no gender difference in employment.
|
|
Among men and women, age at onset of SCI, ability to continue working in
|
|
the same organisation and education was associated with employment. For
|
|
men paraplegia and vocational rehabilitation were also significant.
|
|
Occupational class was non-significant among both men and women. Job
|
|
motivation and work ability could have affected past employment, and
|
|
both the employed and non-employed supported the statement that
|
|
employers discriminate against wheelchair users.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Solheim, EF (Corresponding Author), Norwegian Univ Sci \& Technol, Social Res, Trondheim, Norway.
|
|
Solheim, Erling F., Norwegian Univ Sci \& Technol, Social Res, Trondheim, Norway.
|
|
Leiulfsrud, Annelie Schedin, Norwegian Univ Sci \& Technol, Dept Neuromed \& Movement Sci, Fac Med \& Hlth Sci, Trondheim, Norway.
|
|
Leiulfsrud, Annelie Schedin, St Olavs Univ Hosp, Spinal Cord Unit, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, Trondheim, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.16993/sjdr.322},
|
|
ISSN = {1501-7419},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-3011},
|
|
Keywords = {Spinal cord injury; Employment; Attitudes toward work; Quality of life;
|
|
Norway},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOCATIONAL SERVICES; WORK; RETURN; PARTICIPATION; PEOPLE; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {erling.solheim@nuffield.oxon.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Solheim, Erling/D-9399-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Solheim, Erling/0000-0003-3087-617X
|
|
Schedin Leiulfsrud, Annelie/0000-0002-9086-6670},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000433656600020},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000181505600007,
|
|
Author = {Brandon, PD and Hofferth, SL},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of out-of-school childcare arrangements among children in
|
|
single-mother and two-parent families},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {129-147},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Little is known about the determinants of out-of-school childcare
|
|
arrangements of school-age children. Using data from the Survey of
|
|
Income and Program Participation, this study compares out-of-school
|
|
childcare arrangements of children in single-mother and two-parent
|
|
working families and examines the factors influencing their childcare
|
|
decisions. Findings suggest that for both types of families, the key
|
|
factors influencing childcare choices are hours of employment of
|
|
mothers, degree of economic disadvantage, and children's ages. We also
|
|
find that single mothers compensate for absence spouses by using kin
|
|
disproportionately more for childcare. The study shows that after-school
|
|
programs are used relatively less than other forms of childcare for
|
|
schoolchildren. We think that less use maybe associated with the
|
|
inability of after-school programs to meet the hours of childcare needed
|
|
by full-time working mothers. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA). All
|
|
rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brandon, PD (Corresponding Author), Univ Massachusetts, Dept Sociol, Thompson Hall,Box 37525, Amherst, MA 01003 USA.
|
|
Univ Massachusetts, Dept Sociol, Amherst, MA 01003 USA.
|
|
Univ Maryland, Dept Family Studies, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0049-089X(02)00022-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {PII S049-089X(02)00022-4},
|
|
ISSN = {0049-089X},
|
|
EISSN = {1096-0317},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-CARE; LOW-INCOME; AGE; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {brandon@soc.umass.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Brandon, Peter D/A-9059-2009},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000181505600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000998624200003,
|
|
Author = {Alsoof, Daniel and Kasthuri, Viknesh and Homer, Alexander and Glueck,
|
|
Jacob and McDonald, Christopher L. and Kuris, Eren O. and Daniels, Alan
|
|
H.},
|
|
Title = {County Rurality is Associated with Increased Tumor Size and Decreased
|
|
Survival in Patients with Ewing Sarcoma},
|
|
Journal = {ORTHOPEDIC REVIEWS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Ewing Sarcoma (ES) is an aggressive tumor affecting
|
|
adolescents and young adults. Prior studies investigated the association
|
|
between rurality and outcomes, although there is a paucity of literature
|
|
focusing on ES. Objective This study aims to determine whether ES
|
|
patients in rural areas are subject to adverse outcomes. Methods This
|
|
study utilized the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER)
|
|
database. A Poisson regression model was used with controls for race,
|
|
sex, median county income, and age to determine the association between
|
|
rurality and tumor size. A multivariate Cox Proportional Hazard Model
|
|
was utilized, controlling for age, race, gender, income, and tumor size.
|
|
Results There were 868 patients eligible for analysis, with a mean age
|
|
of 14.14 years. Of these patients, 97 lived in rural counties (11.18\%).
|
|
Metropolitan areas had a 9.50\% smaller tumor size (p<0.0001), compared
|
|
to non-metropolitan counties. Patients of Black race had a 14.32\%
|
|
larger tumor size (p<0.0001), and male sex was associated with a 15.34\%
|
|
larger tumor size (p<0.0001). The Cox Proportional Hazard model
|
|
estimated that metropolitan areas had a 36\% lower risk of death over
|
|
time, compared to non-metropolitan areas (HR: 0.64, p <= 0.04).
|
|
Conclusion Patients in metropolitan areas had a smaller tumor size at
|
|
time of diagnosis and had a more favorable survival rate for
|
|
cancer-specific mortality compared to patients residing in rural areas.
|
|
Further work is needed to examine interventions to reduce this
|
|
discrepancy and investigate the effect of extremely rural and urban
|
|
settings and why racial disparities occur.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
DOI = {10.52965/001c.74118},
|
|
ISSN = {2035-8237},
|
|
EISSN = {2035-8164},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RACIAL DISPARITIES; HOSPITAL VOLUME; CHEMOTHERAPY; ACCESS; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Orthopedics},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000998624200003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000743729600001,
|
|
Author = {Wong, Jasin and Ezeife, Nnaemezie and Kudla, Angelika and Crown, Deborah
|
|
and Trierweiler, Robert and Capraro, Pamela and Tomazin, Stephanie and
|
|
Su, Han and Pham, Tri and Heinemann, Allen W.},
|
|
Title = {Employment Consequences of COVID-19 for People with Disabilities and
|
|
Employers},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {464-472},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected the lives
|
|
of people with disabilities (PWD). How the pandemic affects the
|
|
employment of PWD and employers has yet to be determined. We aimed to
|
|
investigate the employment consequences of the pandemic as experienced
|
|
by PWD and employers. The research questions were: (1) What employment
|
|
effects do PWD experience, and what business changes do employers
|
|
encounter as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic? (2) What challenges have
|
|
PWD encountered during the pandemic? Methods Cross-sectional online
|
|
surveys of 733 PWD and 67 employers in the Midwestern United States.
|
|
Results Compared to non-disabled peers, PWD encountered more challenges
|
|
in employment during the pandemic. We found high percentages of both
|
|
employers and PWD experiencing employment changes and business shutdown
|
|
during the pandemic. For PWD whose employment was not affected, 14.6\%
|
|
of the participants (n = 107) expected a loss of income and worried
|
|
about the economic uncertainty of the pandemic. Unemployment for PWD is
|
|
high due to illness or disability, being laid-off or furloughed,
|
|
business reductions, and not feeling safe to work. However, only about
|
|
18.6\% of unemployed PWD (n = 16) received pay or benefits for the time
|
|
they were not working even though more than half filed for unemployment
|
|
benefits. Conclusions The pandemic adversely affected employment of PWD
|
|
as reported by workers and employers. Findings parallel the experience
|
|
of the non-disabled workforce, but reveal vulnerabilities that reflect
|
|
disability consequences and the need for job accommodations. Results
|
|
reveal emergent needs for policy supports to reduce the disparities
|
|
experienced by PWD in the workplace.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wong, J (Corresponding Author), Natl Tsing Hua Univ, Dept Special Educ, 521 Nanda Rd East Dist, Hsinchu, Taiwan.
|
|
Wong, Jasin, Natl Tsing Hua Univ, Dept Special Educ, 521 Nanda Rd East Dist, Hsinchu, Taiwan.
|
|
Ezeife, Nnaemezie; Kudla, Angelika; Crown, Deborah; Trierweiler, Robert; Capraro, Pamela; Tomazin, Stephanie; Heinemann, Allen W., Shirley Ryan AbilityLab, Ctr Rehabil Outcomes Res, 355 East Erie St, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Su, Han, Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Ctr Hlth Serv \& Outcomes Res, 633 N St Clair St,Suite 2000, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Pham, Tri, Univ Texas Southwestern Med Sch, 5323 Harry Hines Blvd, Dallas, TX 75390 USA.
|
|
Heinemann, Allen W., Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, 710 N Lake Shore Dr, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10926-021-10012-9},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-0487},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; Disabled persons; Employment; Return to work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; HEALTH; ADULTS; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {jswong@bu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Heinemann, Allen W./AAI-2790-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Heinemann, Allen W./0000-0003-2782-7326
|
|
Wong, Jasin/0000-0003-0045-6393},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000743729600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000296977500001,
|
|
Author = {Gupta, Neeru and Alfano, Marco},
|
|
Title = {Access to non-pecuniary benefits: does gender matter? Evidence from six
|
|
low- and middle-income countries},
|
|
Journal = {HUMAN RESOURCES FOR HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Month = {OCT 19},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Gender issues remain a neglected area in most approaches to
|
|
health workforce policy, planning and research. There is an accumulating
|
|
body of evidence on gender differences in health workers' employment
|
|
patterns and pay, but inequalities in access to non-pecuniary benefits
|
|
between men and women have received little attention. This study
|
|
investigates empirically whether gender differences can be observed in
|
|
health workers' access to non-pecuniary benefits across six low-and
|
|
middle-income countries.
|
|
Methods: The analysis draws on cross-nationally comparable data from
|
|
health facility surveys conducted in Chad, Cote d'Ivoire, Jamaica,
|
|
Mozambique, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe. Probit regression models are used to
|
|
investigate whether female and male physicians, nurses and midwives
|
|
enjoy the same access to housing allowance, paid vacations, in-service
|
|
training and other benefits, controlling for other individual and
|
|
facility-level characteristics.
|
|
Results: While the analysis did not uncover any consistent pattern of
|
|
gender imbalance in access to non-monetary benefits, some important
|
|
differences were revealed. Notably, female nursing and midwifery
|
|
personnel (the majority of the sample) are found significantly less
|
|
likely than their male counterparts to have accessed in-service
|
|
training, identified not only as an incentive to attract and retain
|
|
workers but also essential for strengthening workforce quality.
|
|
Conclusion: This study sought to mainstream gender considerations by
|
|
exploring and documenting sex differences in selected employment
|
|
indicators across health labour markets. Strengthening the global
|
|
evidence base about the extent to which gender is independently
|
|
associated with health workforce performance requires improved
|
|
generation and dissemination of sex-disaggregated data and research with
|
|
particular attention to gender dimensions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gupta, N (Corresponding Author), WHO, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Gupta, Neeru, WHO, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Alfano, Marco, Univ Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1478-4491-9-25},
|
|
Article-Number = {25},
|
|
ISSN = {1478-4491},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {neeru.gupta@gnb.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Alfano, Marco/0000-0001-5491-2054
|
|
Gupta, Neeru/0000-0002-3806-4435},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {18},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000296977500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000486991400001,
|
|
Author = {Quintal, Carlota},
|
|
Title = {Evolution of catastrophic health expenditure in a high income country:
|
|
incidence versus inequalities},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {SEP 18},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) is well established as
|
|
an indicator of financial protection on which there is extensive
|
|
literature. However, most works analyse mainly low to middle income
|
|
countries and do not address the different distributional dimensions of
|
|
CHE. We argue that, besides incidence, the latter are crucial to better
|
|
grasp the scope and nature of financial protection problems. Our
|
|
objectives are therefore to analyse the evolution of CHE in a high
|
|
income country, considering both its incidence and distribution. Methods
|
|
Data are taken from the last three waves of the Portuguese Household
|
|
Budget Survey conducted in 2005/2006, 2010/2011 and 2015/2016. To
|
|
identify CHE, the approach adopted is capacity to pay/normative food
|
|
spending, at the 40\% threshold. To analyse distribution, concentration
|
|
curves and indices (CI) are used and adjusted odds ratios are
|
|
calculated. Results The incidence of CHE was 2.57, 1.79 and 0.46\%, in
|
|
2005, 2010 and 2015, respectively. CHE became highly concentrated among
|
|
the poorest (the respective CI evolved from - 0.390 in 2005 to - 0.758
|
|
in 2015) and among families with elderly people (the absolute CI evolved
|
|
from 0.520 in 2005 to 0.740 in 2015). Absolute CI in geographical
|
|
context also increased over time (0.354 in 2015, 0.019 in 2005).
|
|
Medicines represented by far the largest share of catastrophic payments,
|
|
although, in this case concentration decreased (the median share of
|
|
medicines diminished from 93 to 43\% over the period analysed).
|
|
Contrarily, the weight of expenses incurred with consultation fees has
|
|
been growing (even for General Practitioners, despite the NHS coverage
|
|
of primary care). Conclusions The incidence of CHE and inequality in its
|
|
distribution might progress in the same direction or not, but most
|
|
importantly policy makers should pay attention to the distributional
|
|
dimensions of CHE as these might provide useful insight to target
|
|
households at risk. Greater concentration of CHE can actually be
|
|
regarded as an opportunity for policy making, because interventions to
|
|
tackle CHE become more confined. Monitoring the distribution of payments
|
|
across services can also contribute to early detection of emerging (and
|
|
even, unexpected) drivers of catastrophic payments.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Quintal, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Coimbra, Fac Econ, FEUC, CeBER,CEISUC, Ave Dias da Silva 165, P-3004512 Coimbra, Portugal.
|
|
Quintal, Carlota, Univ Coimbra, Fac Econ, FEUC, CeBER,CEISUC, Ave Dias da Silva 165, P-3004512 Coimbra, Portugal.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-019-1044-9},
|
|
Article-Number = {145},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Catastrophic health expenditure; Financial protection; Inequality;
|
|
Portugal},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OF-POCKET PAYMENTS; FINANCIAL PROTECTION; CONCENTRATION INDEX; CARE
|
|
EXPENDITURE; HOUSEHOLDS; BINARY; EQUITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {qcarlota@fe.uc.pt},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Quintal, Carlota/AAE-9866-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Quintal, Carlota/0000-0002-8306-3431},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000486991400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000601162800039,
|
|
Author = {Stock, Ryan},
|
|
Title = {Bright as night: Illuminating the antinomies of `gender positive' solar
|
|
development},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {138},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {India is undergoing a rapid transition to renewable energy; the Gujarat
|
|
Solar Park typifies this transition. In addition to mitigating climate
|
|
change, the Gujarat Solar Park boasts female empowerment through social
|
|
development schemes. This manuscript is inspired by the following
|
|
research question: To what extent are gender positive' processes and
|
|
projects associated with solar development in India realized on the
|
|
ground? Utilizing mixed methods fieldwork and drawing on literature from
|
|
feminist political ecology, this paper demonstrates how the modalities
|
|
of solar park development represent an antinomy of a nature-society
|
|
relation. New configurations of labor under the political economy of
|
|
solar have produced a gendered surplus population of landless peasants
|
|
who are not absorbed into wage-labor employment in the solar park.
|
|
Further, associated social development schemes actually disempower
|
|
women, despite mandates of `gender positive' outcomes by UN-based
|
|
climate treaties to which this project is beholden. The opportunity to
|
|
participate in one such scheme for female empowerment was reserved for
|
|
only women of middle-to-high class status and those of dominant castes,
|
|
thereby reproducing class and caste-based social power asymmetries.
|
|
Female (dis)empowerment eclipses `gender positive' guarantees of the
|
|
solar park. This study highlights some unintended consequences of
|
|
sustainable energy transitions in the Global South at the local scale.
|
|
Designing development interventions related to climate change mitigation
|
|
that boast `gender positive' outcomes must be careful not to exacerbate
|
|
gender disparities and economic exclusion in rural areas. (C) 2020
|
|
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Stock, R (Corresponding Author), Northern Michigan Univ, Dept Earth Environm \& Geog Sci, 1401 Presque Isle Ave, Marquette, MI 49855 USA.
|
|
Stock, Ryan, Northern Michigan Univ, Dept Earth Environm \& Geog Sci, 1401 Presque Isle Ave, Marquette, MI 49855 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.worlddev.2020.105196},
|
|
Article-Number = {105196},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-750X},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5991},
|
|
Keywords = {Energy transition; Solar park; Antinomy; Feminist political ecology;
|
|
Gender; Intersectionality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; CLEAN DEVELOPMENT; ENERGY;
|
|
VULNERABILITY; GEOGRAPHIES; COMMUNITY; POWER; TRANSITIONS; DYNAMICS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {rystock@nmu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {98},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000601162800039},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000458376100005,
|
|
Author = {Morton, Sarah and Kmec, Julie A.},
|
|
Title = {Risk-taking in the academic dual-hiring process: how risk shapes later
|
|
work experiences},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF RISK RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Pages = {1517-1532},
|
|
Month = {DEC 2},
|
|
Abstract = {This article examines risk-taking in the job search process and whether
|
|
women and men who are part of a dual-career couple experience different
|
|
work-related consequences for taking such risks. Specifically, we
|
|
explore how the decision to reveal dual-career status in the academic
|
|
job search process impacts faculty members' later promotions,
|
|
productivity, pay, mobility, and career-related goals. We draw on a
|
|
sample of roughly 230 faculty in seven US universities who were part of
|
|
a dual-career couple at their time of hire. We find that risk-taking
|
|
during the job search impacts some career outcomes, and does so
|
|
similarly for women and men. Members of a dual-career couple who took
|
|
the risk of revealing their dual-career status before a job offer
|
|
reported significantly more positive career experiences related to
|
|
promotion and productivity than those who did not reveal their status
|
|
during the job search. Only the salary outcome was negatively related to
|
|
revealing dual-career status in the job search process. Because of the
|
|
nature of academic hiring, revealing a risky status during the job
|
|
search process may ameliorate barriers to employment. Our study has
|
|
important implications for research and the development of academic
|
|
dual-career policies that make dual-career hiring more transparent.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Morton, S (Corresponding Author), Washington State Univ, Dept Sociol, Pullman, WA 99164 USA.
|
|
Morton, Sarah; Kmec, Julie A., Washington State Univ, Dept Sociol, Pullman, WA 99164 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/13669877.2017.1313761},
|
|
ISSN = {1366-9877},
|
|
EISSN = {1466-4461},
|
|
Keywords = {risk; academic job search; gender; dual-career; work experiences},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER-DIFFERENCES; NEGOTIATION; AVERSION; WOMEN; SALARY; FIELD},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {sarah.morton@wsu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000458376100005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000456896400020,
|
|
Author = {Dwyer, Dan B. and Bellesini, Kylie and Gastin, Paul and Kremer, Peter
|
|
and Dawson, Andrew},
|
|
Title = {The Australian high performance and sport science workforce: A national
|
|
profile},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND MEDICINE IN SPORT},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {227-231},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: The purpose of this study was to provide a profile of the
|
|
demographics and employment characteristics of the Australian high
|
|
performance and sport science workforce.
|
|
Design: This study used a cross-sectional, quantitative survey
|
|
methodology to collect data about the Australian high performance and
|
|
sport science workforce.
|
|
Method: 175 Australian high performance and sport science employees
|
|
completed an online survey which captured demographic information and
|
|
work-related characteristics such as role, industry sector, income,
|
|
permanence of employment and hours worked. Descriptive statistics were
|
|
used to summarise information and some comparisons were made between
|
|
position titles, industry sectors and sexes.
|
|
Results: The Australian high performance and sport science workforce is
|
|
predominantly male (76.0\%), <= 35 years of age (50.3\%), located on the
|
|
eastern seaboard of Australia (69\%) and have been in their current
|
|
position for 2-5 years (37.4\%). They are mostly employed on a fixed
|
|
term contract of 2.4 years, by an institute of sport. Income varied,
|
|
with those working in professional sporting clubs and/or employed as
|
|
high performance managers earning the highest wage. On average,
|
|
participants worked well over their contracted hours, with a
|
|
considerable proportion of these hours outside the standard 9-5 working
|
|
week.
|
|
Conclusions: Employees in the high performance and sport science
|
|
workforce in Australia face significant professional issues that relate
|
|
to long and unusual work hours, job insecurity and income disparity.
|
|
Policy makers and the managers of this workforce should consider the
|
|
impact of these issues on work-life balance, staff retention rates and
|
|
the risk of burnout. (C) 2018 Sports Medicine Australia. Published by
|
|
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dwyer, DB (Corresponding Author), Deakin Univ, Ctr Sport Res, Geelong, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Dwyer, Dan B.; Bellesini, Kylie; Gastin, Paul; Kremer, Peter, Deakin Univ, Ctr Sport Res, Geelong, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Dawson, Andrew, Victoria Univ, ISEAL, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jsams.2018.07.017},
|
|
ISSN = {1440-2440},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-1861},
|
|
Keywords = {Demographics; Employment conditions; Income; Job security; Policy
|
|
development},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CAREER EXPERIENCES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sport Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {dan.dwyer@deakin.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dwyer, Daniel/AAY-4381-2020
|
|
Dawson, Andrew/AAE-4674-2022
|
|
Kremer, Peter/I-8202-2019
|
|
Gastin, Paul B/D-4220-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dawson, Andrew/0000-0003-1596-6927
|
|
Kremer, Peter/0000-0003-2476-1958
|
|
Gastin, Paul B/0000-0003-2320-7875
|
|
Dwyer, Dan/0000-0002-8177-7262
|
|
Bellesini, Kylie/0000-0001-9945-9679},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000456896400020},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000178120000008,
|
|
Author = {Davies, J and Heyman, B and Bryar, R and Graffy, J and Gunnell, C and
|
|
Lamb, B and Morris, L},
|
|
Title = {The research potential of practice nurses},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH \& SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY},
|
|
Year = {2002},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {370-381},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Little is known about the research aspirations and experiences of
|
|
practice nurses. The study discussed in the present paper had three main
|
|
aims: (1) to assess the level of research interest among practice nurses
|
|
working in Essex and East London, UK; (2) to identify practice nurses'
|
|
research priorities; and (3) to explore factors which facilitate and
|
|
impede the development of practice nursing research. All practice nurses
|
|
(n = 1054) in the above areas were sent a questionnaire, and a total of
|
|
40\% (n = 426) responded after two follow-up letters. Fifty-five
|
|
respondents who volunteered for further participation were interviewed,
|
|
either individually or in focus groups. About half (n = 207) of the
|
|
survey respondents expressed an interest in undertaking research.
|
|
One-third (n = 145) reported previous participation in research, and
|
|
20\% (n = 85) had initiated their own research. Logistic regression
|
|
showed that practice nurses educated to graduate level, and those
|
|
working in practices with nurse training or participation in external
|
|
research, were most likely to want to undertake research. Working in a
|
|
medical training practice was found to be a negative predictor of
|
|
research interest. Respondents prioritised research into long-term
|
|
health problems with a high prevalence in the local population; for
|
|
example, diabetes. Their reasons for wishing to engage in research
|
|
included improving the service, career development, making work more
|
|
interesting and reducing isolation. The main barriers identified were
|
|
lack of time, lack of support from some general practitioners and poor
|
|
access to higher education resources outside formal courses. The
|
|
development of practice nurse research would provide a distinctive
|
|
perspective on health need and service provision. It would contribute to
|
|
the achievement of the national strategic objective of improving the
|
|
quality of primary care, enhance the status of the profession, utilise
|
|
the enthusiasm of individuals, increase job satisfaction and staff
|
|
retention, and answer real questions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Davies, J (Corresponding Author), City Univ London, St Bartholomew Sch Nursing \& Midwifery, 20 Bartholomew Close, London EC1A 7QN, England.
|
|
City Univ London, St Bartholomew Sch Nursing \& Midwifery, London EC1A 7QN, England.
|
|
E London \& Essex Network Researchers, London, England.
|
|
Univ London, Queen Marys Sch Med \& Dent, London, England.
|
|
Anglia Polytech Univ, Sch Community Hlth \& Social Studies, Chelmsford, Essex, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1046/j.1365-2524.2002.00377.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-0410},
|
|
Keywords = {barriers to research; practice nurse; practice nursing; primary care
|
|
research; research capacity; research priorities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RESEARCH PRIORITIES; NURSING RESEARCH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000178120000008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000949883300001,
|
|
Author = {McNeeley, Susan},
|
|
Title = {The Effects of Vocational Education on Recidivism and Employment Among
|
|
Individuals Released Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OFFENDER THERAPY AND COMPARATIVE CRIMINOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 MAR 14},
|
|
Abstract = {Prior research shows employment is an important component of desistance,
|
|
but there is mixed evidence regarding the effectiveness of prison-based
|
|
education programs. Therefore, this study examines whether participation
|
|
in vocational education programs while incarcerated improves recidivism
|
|
and post-release employment outcomes. In addition, the study controls
|
|
for the timing of release to examine whether recidivism and employment
|
|
outcomes varied during the COVID-19 pandemic. Observable selection bias
|
|
was reduced by using propensity score matching to create similar
|
|
treatment and comparison groups. After matching, there were no
|
|
differences in any outcome between those who obtained vocational
|
|
certificates and the comparison group. The results demonstrate the
|
|
importance of accounting for selection bias in evaluations of education
|
|
and employment programs. It is recommended that career-focused
|
|
educational programs incorporate the risk-needs-responsivity model and
|
|
the continuum of care principle, build relationships with community
|
|
employers, and assist with practical barriers to employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McNeeley, S (Corresponding Author), Minnesota Dept Correct, 1450 Energy Pk Dr,Suite 200, St Paul, MN 55108 USA.
|
|
McNeeley, Susan, Minnesota Dept Correct, St Paul, MN USA.
|
|
McNeeley, Susan, Minnesota Dept Correct, 1450 Energy Pk Dr,Suite 200, St Paul, MN 55108 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0306624X231159886},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0306-624X},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-6933},
|
|
Keywords = {prison programming; vocational programs; recidivism; post-release
|
|
employment; reentry},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {REENTRY; WORK; RISK; OFFENDERS; CRIME; RELEVANT; MODEL; NEEDS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Criminology \& Penology; Psychology, Applied},
|
|
Author-Email = {susan.mcneeley@state.mn.us},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000949883300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000349494900008,
|
|
Author = {Blumenberg, Evelyn and Thomas, Trevor},
|
|
Title = {Travel Behavior of the Poor After Welfare Reform},
|
|
Journal = {TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH RECORD},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Number = {2452},
|
|
Pages = {53-61},
|
|
Abstract = {In 1996, President Bill Clinton signed into law the Personal
|
|
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, also known as
|
|
welfare reform. As part of this act, Congress established welfare block
|
|
grant programs that included a set of provisions intended to promote
|
|
employment. In the aftermath of these reforms, policy makers turned to
|
|
transportation as one strategy to transition welfare recipients and
|
|
other low-income adults rapidly into the labor market. As the foundation
|
|
for these transportation programs, studies documented the travel
|
|
patterns of the poor and highlighted the limited access of these
|
|
individuals to automobiles. Given the many changes since the 1990s, it
|
|
is time to revisit these data. This study draws on the 1995 Nationwide
|
|
Personal Transportation Survey and the 2009 National Household Travel
|
|
Survey to examine changes in the commute travel of low-income adults
|
|
since welfare reform. The data provide evidence that the reliance on
|
|
automobiles has increased significantly over time; the growth reflects
|
|
the many advantages of cars in increasingly decentralized environments.
|
|
However, some population groups-particularly the carless-have become
|
|
more dependent on public transit to access work. These findings suggest
|
|
the importance of protecting and expanding vital transit services for
|
|
those who need them, as well as acting on behalf of low-income
|
|
households that may be better served through personal vehicular travel.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Blumenberg, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Luskin Sch Publ Affairs, Inst Transportat Studies, 3250 Publ Affairs Bldg, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
|
|
Blumenberg, Evelyn; Thomas, Trevor, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Luskin Sch Publ Affairs, Inst Transportat Studies, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3141/2452-07},
|
|
ISSN = {0361-1981},
|
|
EISSN = {2169-4052},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPATIAL MISMATCH; EMPLOYMENT; ACCESSIBILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Engineering, Civil; Transportation; Transportation Science \& Technology},
|
|
Author-Email = {eblumenb@ucla.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000349494900008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000790901300001,
|
|
Author = {Kazembe, Abigail and Simwaka, Andrew and Dougherty, Kylie and Petross,
|
|
Chisomo and Kafulafula, Ursula and Chakhame, Bertha and Chodzaza,
|
|
Elizabeth and Chisuse, Isabella and Kamanga, Martha and Sun, Carolyn and
|
|
George, Maureen},
|
|
Title = {Experiences of women with physical disabilities accessing prenatal care
|
|
in low- and middle-income countries},
|
|
Journal = {PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1156-1166},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction Women with physical disabilities experience barriers to
|
|
accessing patient-centered and accommodative care during the prenatal
|
|
and childbirth periods. While there is a growing body of work in
|
|
high-income countries to address these needs, there is little research
|
|
detailing specific challenges in low- and middle-income countries
|
|
(LMICs) where a woman's' burden- and need-is greatest. Methods We
|
|
conducted an integrative review to synthesize the experiences of women
|
|
with physical disabilities accessing prenatal care and childbirth
|
|
services in LMICs. Five databases were searched for systematic reviews,
|
|
retrospective cohort studies, cross-sectional studies, narrative
|
|
literature reviews, as well as other evidence types. We used Ediom's
|
|
EvidenceEngine (TM), a machine-assisted search engine that uses
|
|
artificial intelligence to conduct this search using pertinent keywords
|
|
to identify original research published between January 2009 - September
|
|
2018. These results were augmented by hand searching of reference lists.
|
|
Forty articles were identified using this method and 11 retained after
|
|
duplicates were removed and inclusion and exclusion criteria applied.
|
|
Results Four types of experiences are described in these 11 studies: (1)
|
|
limited physical and material resources; (2) health care worker
|
|
knowledge, attitudes, and skills; (3) pregnant people's knowledge; and
|
|
(4) public stigma and ignorance. Discussion People with physical
|
|
disabilities face specific challenges during pregnancy and childbirth.
|
|
Importantly, these findings offer targets for enhanced clinical training
|
|
for nurses, midwives, traditional birth attendants and public health
|
|
workers, as well as opportunities for the improved delivery of prenatal
|
|
care and childbirth services to these vulnerable women.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {George, M (Corresponding Author), Columbia Univ, Sch Nursing, 630 West 168th St Mail Code 6, New York, NY 10032 USA.
|
|
Kazembe, Abigail; Simwaka, Andrew; Petross, Chisomo; Kafulafula, Ursula; Chakhame, Bertha; Chodzaza, Elizabeth; Chisuse, Isabella; Kamanga, Martha, Univ Malawi, Kamuzu Coll Nursing, Lilongwe, Malawi.
|
|
Dougherty, Kylie; George, Maureen, Columbia Univ, Sch Nursing, 630 West 168th St Mail Code 6, New York, NY 10032 USA.
|
|
Sun, Carolyn, Hunter Coll, Sch Nursing, New York, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/phn.13087},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0737-1209},
|
|
EISSN = {1525-1446},
|
|
Keywords = {disparities; maternal health; people with disabilities; pregnant women},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH-SERVICES; PREGNANCY; MOTHERHOOD; CHILDBIRTH;
|
|
RECOMMENDATIONS; BARRIERS; PEOPLE; ACCESSIBILITY; CHALLENGES; ATTITUDES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {mg3656@cumc.columbia.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000790901300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000166970900010,
|
|
Author = {Yeung, WJ and Sandberg, JF and Davis-Kean, PE and Hofferth, SL},
|
|
Title = {Children's time with fathers in intact families},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {63},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {136-154},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper uses the Panel Study of Income Dynamics to examine children's
|
|
involvement with their fathers in intact families as measured through
|
|
time spent together. Our findings suggest that although mothers still
|
|
shoulder the lion's share of the parenting, fathers' involvement
|
|
relative to that of mothers appears to be on the increase. A ``new
|
|
father{''} role is emerging on weekends in intact families. Different
|
|
determinants of fathers' involvement were found on weekdays and on
|
|
weekends. Fathers' wages and work hours have a negative relationship
|
|
with the time they spend with a child on weekday's, but not on weekends.
|
|
Mothers' work hours have no effect on children's time with fathers. On
|
|
weekends, Black fathers were found to be less involved and Latino
|
|
fathers more involved with their children than are White fathers. The
|
|
weekday-weekend differential suggests that a simple gender inequality
|
|
theory is not sufficient in explaining the dynamics of household
|
|
division of labor in today's American families.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Yeung, WJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Michigan, Inst Social Res, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA.
|
|
Univ Michigan, Inst Social Res, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00136.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-2445},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-3737},
|
|
Keywords = {family time use; fathers' involvement; household division of labor;
|
|
parent-child relationship},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PATERNAL INVOLVEMENT; SOCIAL SUPPORT; DOMESTIC LABOR; WORK;
|
|
PARTICIPATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {jeany@umich.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Yeung, Wei Jun Jean/AFP-4081-2022
|
|
Yeung, Wei-Jun Jean/AAI-3931-2020
|
|
Davis-Kean, Pamela/B-3176-2008
|
|
Yeung, Wei-Jun/D-7661-2015},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Yeung, Wei-Jun Jean/0000-0001-7519-5576
|
|
Davis-Kean, Pamela/0000-0001-8389-6268
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {586},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {81},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000166970900010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000545081200001,
|
|
Author = {Branicki, Layla J.},
|
|
Title = {COVID-19, ethics of care and feminist crisis management},
|
|
Journal = {GENDER WORK AND ORGANIZATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {5, SI},
|
|
Pages = {872-883},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {The COVID-19 pandemic threatens both lives and livelihoods. To reduce
|
|
the spread of the virus, governments have introduced crisis management
|
|
interventions that include border closures, quarantines, strict social
|
|
distancing, marshalling of essential workers and enforced homeworking.
|
|
COVID-19 measures are necessary to save the lives of some of the most
|
|
vulnerable people within society, and yet in parallel they create a
|
|
range of negative everyday effects for already marginalized people.
|
|
Likely unintended consequences of the management of the COVID-19 crisis
|
|
include elevated risk for workers in low-paid, precarious and care-based
|
|
employment, over-representation of minority ethnic groups in case
|
|
numbers and fatalities, and gendered barriers to work. Drawing upon
|
|
feminist ethics of care, I theorize a radical alternative to the
|
|
normative assumptions of rationalist crisis management. Rationalist
|
|
approaches to crisis management are typified by utilitarian logics,
|
|
masculine and militaristic language, and the belief that crises follow
|
|
linear processes of signal detection, preparation/prevention,
|
|
containment, recovery and learning. By privileging the quantifiable -
|
|
resources and measurable outcomes - such approaches tend to omit
|
|
considerations of pre-existing structural disadvantage. This article
|
|
contributes a new theorization of crisis management that is grounded in
|
|
feminist ethics to provide a care-based concern for all crisis affected
|
|
people.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Branicki, LJ (Corresponding Author), Macquarie Univ, Macquarie Business Sch, 4 Eastern Rd, Macquarie Pk, NSW 2113, Australia.
|
|
Branicki, Layla J., Macquarie Univ, Macquarie Business Sch, 4 Eastern Rd, Macquarie Pk, NSW 2113, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/gwao.12491},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0968-6673},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-0432},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; crisis management; ethics of care; feminism},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Management; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {layla.branicki@mq.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Branicki, Layla/AFP-6958-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Branicki, Layla/0000-0002-0952-9504},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {74},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {56},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000545081200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000672271900017,
|
|
Author = {Baker, Marzena and French, Erica and Ali, Muhammad},
|
|
Title = {Insights into Ineffectiveness of Gender Equality and Diversity
|
|
Initiatives in Project-Based Organizations},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT IN ENGINEERING},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {37},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Month = {MAY 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Project-based organizations (PBOs) in engineering-construction-property
|
|
industries are persistently among the most male-dominated worldwide,
|
|
and, as such, are not capitalizing on numerous performance gains derived
|
|
from diversity. Large Australian PBOs (among others) are required to
|
|
develop formal gender equality and diversity initiatives (GEDIs) to
|
|
embrace equality and diversity. Despite comparatively higher numbers of
|
|
GEDIs in PBOs, women's representation remains lower than in non-PBOs.
|
|
Using the lenses of organizational justice theory and inattention
|
|
theory, this study explored leaders' GEDI decisions related to the
|
|
selection and implementation of GEDIs and their ineffectiveness.
|
|
Quantitative data from 4,841 PBOs and non-PBOs were collected from
|
|
2018-2019 annual equality progress reports. In-depth quantitative and
|
|
qualitative data from five PBOs were collected through interviews with
|
|
senior leaders, organizational documents, and reports. Findings indicate
|
|
that leaders select GEDIs based on their personal views of justice and
|
|
individual bias. They focus on meeting legislative and industry
|
|
requirements rather than on developing a strategic business approach,
|
|
and appear trapped by their own indifference to the substantive issues
|
|
of equality and diversity, reinforcing systemic inequalities. We
|
|
discussed theoretical and research contributions and practical
|
|
implications.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baker, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Sydney, Sch Project Management, 21 Ross St, Forest Lodge, NSW 2006, Australia.
|
|
Baker, Marzena, Univ Sydney, Sch Project Management, 21 Ross St, Forest Lodge, NSW 2006, Australia.
|
|
French, Erica; Ali, Muhammad, Queensland Univ Technol, Business Sch, 2 George St, Brisbane, Qld 4000, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1061/(ASCE)ME.1943-5479.0000893},
|
|
Article-Number = {04021013},
|
|
ISSN = {0742-597X},
|
|
EISSN = {1943-5479},
|
|
Keywords = {Women; Equality and diversity; Organizational justice theory;
|
|
Inattention theory; Project-based organizations (PBOs)},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HUMAN-RESOURCE MANAGEMENT; SOCIAL-EXCHANGE THEORY; EMPLOYMENT
|
|
OPPORTUNITY; MANAGING DIVERSITY; WOMEN; IMPACT; WORK; IMPLEMENTATION;
|
|
POLICIES; JUSTICE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Engineering, Industrial; Engineering, Civil},
|
|
Author-Email = {marzena.baker@sydney.edu.au
|
|
e.french@qut.edu.au
|
|
m3.ali@qut.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baker, Marzena/AAT-7208-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Baker, Marzena/0000-0002-4108-5325
|
|
Ali, Muhammad/0000-0001-5641-8033
|
|
French, Erica/0000-0003-2440-0749},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {87},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000672271900017},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000189344400059,
|
|
Author = {Kuhlthau, K and Nyman, RM and Ferris, TG and Beal, AC and Perrin, JM},
|
|
Title = {Correlates of use of specialty care},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {113},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {E249-E255},
|
|
Month = {MAR 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective. This study examines patterns of specialist use among children
|
|
and adolescents by presence of a chronic condition or disability,
|
|
insurance, and sociodemographic characteristics.
|
|
Design. Cross-sectional analysis of national survey data, describing
|
|
rates of specialist use, with logistic regressions to examine
|
|
associations with having a chronic condition or disability, insurance
|
|
status, and sociodemographic variables.
|
|
Setting. The 1999 National Health Interview Survey, a nationally
|
|
representative household survey.
|
|
Participants. Children and adolescents 2 to 17 years old.
|
|
Outcome. Parental/respondent reports of specialist visits based on
|
|
reports of the child having seen or talked to a medical doctor who
|
|
specializes in a particular medical disease or problem about the child's
|
|
health during the last 12 months.
|
|
Results. Thirteen percent of US children were reported as seeing a
|
|
specialist in the past year. Specialist-visit rates were twice as high
|
|
for children with a chronic condition or disability (26\% vs 10.2\%).
|
|
The specialist utilization rates for children without insurance were
|
|
much lower than those for insured children, but among the children who
|
|
have coverage (private, Medicaid, or other), specialist-utilization
|
|
rates were similar (no statistically significant difference).
|
|
Results of multivariate analyses predicting the use of specialists
|
|
confirm the above-mentioned findings. Additionally, they show that use
|
|
of specialist care was lower among children in the middle age group,
|
|
minorities, children in families between 100\% and 200\% of the federal
|
|
poverty level, and lower parental educational levels. We found no
|
|
difference in specialist-visit rates between rural- and urban-dwelling
|
|
children, by family status, or by gender. Differences in specialist use
|
|
by gatekeeping status are found only among subgroups.
|
|
Conclusions. The results showed that, overall, 13\% of children used a
|
|
specialist in a year. Among the insured, a slightly greater percentage
|
|
of children used such care (15\%). These numbers were slightly lower
|
|
than the 18\% to 28\% of pediatric patients referred per year in 5 US
|
|
health plans, although the sources of data and definitions of specialist
|
|
use differ. Our results showed that 26\% of children with a chronic
|
|
condition or disability who were insured by Medicaid use a specialist.
|
|
Although the data are not directly comparable, this is within the range
|
|
of previous findings showing annual rates by condition of use between
|
|
24\% and 59\%. These findings are consistent also with greater use of
|
|
many different types of health care by children with special health care
|
|
needs.
|
|
Medicaid-utilization rates presented here were similar also to the rates
|
|
found among privately insured children and children with ``other{''}
|
|
insurance. In our earlier work examining use of specialists by children
|
|
insured by Medicaid, we speculated that Medicaid-insured children might
|
|
face particular difficulty with access (eg, due to transportation or
|
|
language barriers). The findings presented here suggest that children
|
|
insured by Medicaid had no different use of specialists than other
|
|
insured children. We do not know, however, whether similar rates are
|
|
appropriate.
|
|
As predicted, sociodemographic differences were pronounced and followed
|
|
patterns typically found for use of health services. Lower rates of
|
|
specialist use by non-Hispanic blacks and Hispanics remains even,
|
|
controlling for chronic condition/disability, status, insurance, and
|
|
socioeconomic status. This is an important issue that not only needs to
|
|
be addressed in using specialist care but also in many areas in health
|
|
care. It is the near poor who seem to have difficulty accessing care (as
|
|
is evidenced by lower use of specialists). In a study of access to care,
|
|
similar results were found, with those between 125\% and 200\% of the
|
|
federal poverty level being less likely to have a usual source of care.
|
|
This is roughly the population targeted by the State Children's Health
|
|
Insurance Programs.
|
|
These findings cannot determine whether rates of use are too high or too
|
|
low. Additional work on outcomes for children who do and do not use
|
|
specialist care would further inform the work presented here. Extending
|
|
that work to examine patterns of care including but not limited to
|
|
specialists and generalists would be even better.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kuhlthau, K (Corresponding Author), Harvard Univ, Sch Med, MassGen Hosp Children, Dept Pediat,Ctr Child \& Adolescent Hlth Policy, 50 Staniford St,Ste 901, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
|
|
Harvard Univ, Sch Med, MassGen Hosp Children, Dept Pediat,Ctr Child \& Adolescent Hlth Policy, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
|
|
Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Inst Hlth Policy,Dept Med,Div Gen Med, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Commonwealth Fund, Qual Care Underserved Populat, New York, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1542/peds.113.3.e249},
|
|
ISSN = {0031-4005},
|
|
EISSN = {1098-4275},
|
|
Keywords = {Medicaid; specialist; insurance; pediatric; child; disability; chronic
|
|
condition},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; ETHNIC-DIFFERENCES; ENROLLED CHILDREN; CHRONIC ILLNESS;
|
|
MEDICAID; ADOLESCENTS; ACCESS; GENERALISTS; PREVALENCE; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {kkuhlthau@partners.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Perrin, James/0000-0002-1810-3708},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {62},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000189344400059},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000448462700057,
|
|
Author = {Morales-Novelo, Jorge A. and Rodriguez-Tapia, Lilia and
|
|
Revollo-Fernandez, Daniel A.},
|
|
Title = {Inequality in Access to Drinking Water and Subsidies between Low and
|
|
High Income Households in Mexico City},
|
|
Journal = {WATER},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Economic and population growth in Mexico City (CDMX) is the main cause
|
|
of an increase in water demand against a naturally limited endowment,
|
|
which increases the gap between water demand and supply. In a water
|
|
scarcity environment, households are facing pressure to maintain their
|
|
involvement in the city's only operating body, the Water System of
|
|
Mexico City (SACMEX) total supply. The objective of this work is to
|
|
measure the inequality in the distribution of drinking water and water
|
|
subsidies between households connected to the public network of CDMX in
|
|
order to generate objective indicators of the phenomenon. Having such
|
|
information provides a baseline scenario of the problem and allows for
|
|
the delineation of a policy covering the minimum levels of well-being in
|
|
the supply of drinking water that is appropriate for the most important
|
|
city in the country. The method consists of measuring inequality through
|
|
continuous variables estimating the Lorenz curve, the Gini coefficient,
|
|
the targeting coefficient and elasticity in water consumption and in
|
|
water subsidies among households in CDMX. Data comes from a household
|
|
survey carried out in 2011, Consumption Habits, Service and Quality of
|
|
Water by Household in Mexico City (EHCSCA). Results show that drinking
|
|
water and subsidies present a regressive distribution, benefit
|
|
high-income households and, to a lesser degree, the poorest households
|
|
in the city and highlight the urgency and importance for SACMEX to
|
|
redefine its policy on water distribution, fees and subsidies. The
|
|
present study's scope can contribute to the monitoring of the
|
|
distribution of drinking water and of subsidies among household groups.
|
|
The study justifies that the indicators employed in this work can be
|
|
used and are recommended as a valuable tool in water management,
|
|
especially in a dynamic environment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rodriguez-Tapia, L (Corresponding Author), Autonomous Metropolitan Univ, Dept Econ, Azcapotzalco Univ Ave San Pablo 180, Mexico City 02200, DF, Mexico.
|
|
Morales-Novelo, Jorge A.; Rodriguez-Tapia, Lilia, Autonomous Metropolitan Univ, Dept Econ, Azcapotzalco Univ Ave San Pablo 180, Mexico City 02200, DF, Mexico.
|
|
Revollo-Fernandez, Daniel A., Autonomous Metropolitan Univ, Area Environm \& Growth, Dept Econ, CONACYT UAM, Azcapotzalco Unit Ave San Pablo 180, Mexico City 02200, DF, Mexico.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/w10081023},
|
|
Article-Number = {1023},
|
|
EISSN = {2073-4441},
|
|
Keywords = {water distribution; water subsidies; inequality in domestic water
|
|
supply; inequality in subsidies; water in CDMX; water and households},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Water Resources},
|
|
Author-Email = {jamn8647@gmail.com
|
|
lrt3@prodigy.net.mx
|
|
darevollof@conacyt.mx},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Morales-Novelo, Jorge A/0000-0002-9143-2452
|
|
Rodriguez-Tapia, Lilia/0000-0002-1456-999X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000448462700057},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000349418800015,
|
|
Author = {Andersen, Ingelise and Kolodziejczyk, Christophe and Thielen, Karsten
|
|
and Heinesen, Eskil and Diderichsen, Finn},
|
|
Title = {The effect of breast cancer on personal income three years after
|
|
diagnosis by cancer stage and education: a register-based cohort study
|
|
among Danish females},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Month = {JAN 31},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The purpose of this study was to investigate whether there
|
|
is an association between stage of incident breast cancer (BC) and
|
|
personal income three years after diagnosis. The analysis further
|
|
considered whether the association differed among educational groups.
|
|
Methods: The study was based on information from Danish nationwide
|
|
registers. A total of 7,372 women aged 30-60 years diagnosed with BC,
|
|
48\% with metastasis, were compared to 213,276 controls. Generalised
|
|
linear models were used to estimate the effect of a cancer diagnosis on
|
|
personal gross income three years after diagnosis, stratified by
|
|
education and stage of cancer. The models were adjusted for income two
|
|
years prior to cancer diagnosis and demographic, geographic and
|
|
co-morbidity covariates.
|
|
Results: Adjusting for income two years prior to cancer diagnosis and
|
|
other baseline covariates (see above), cancer had a minor effect on
|
|
personal income three years after diagnosis. The effect of metastatic BC
|
|
was a statistically significant reduction in income three years after
|
|
diagnosis of -3.4\% (95\% CI -4.8;-2.0), -2.8\% (95\% CI -4.3;-1.3) and
|
|
-4.1 (95\% CI -5.9;-2.3) among further, vocational and low educated
|
|
women, respectively. The corresponding estimates for the effect of
|
|
localised BC were -2.5\% (95\% CI -3.8; -1.2), -1.6\% (95\% CI -3.0;
|
|
-0.2) and -1.7\% (95\% CI -3.7; 0.3); the latter estimate (for the
|
|
low-educated) was not statistically different from zero. We found no
|
|
statistically significant educational gradient in the effect of cancer
|
|
stage on income.
|
|
Conclusions: In a Danish context, the very small negative effect of BC
|
|
on personal income may be explained by different types of compensation
|
|
in low- and high-income groups. The public income transfers are equal
|
|
for all income groups and cover a relatively high compensation among
|
|
low- income groups. However, high-income groups additionally receive
|
|
pay-outs from private pension and insurance schemes, which typically
|
|
provide higher coverage for high-income workers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Andersen, I (Corresponding Author), Univ Copenhagen, Inst Publ Hlth, Sect Social Med, Oster Farimagsgade 5,POB 2099, DK-1014 Copenhagen K, Denmark.
|
|
Andersen, Ingelise; Thielen, Karsten; Diderichsen, Finn, Univ Copenhagen, Inst Publ Hlth, Sect Social Med, DK-1014 Copenhagen K, Denmark.
|
|
Kolodziejczyk, Christophe, Danish Inst Local \& Reg Govt Res, KORA, DK-1150 Copenhagen K, Denmark.
|
|
Heinesen, Eskil, Rockwool Fdn, Res Unit, DK-1307 Copenhagen K, Denmark.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-015-1387-0},
|
|
Article-Number = {50},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Breast cancer; Income; Longitudinal; Inequality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MACROLEVEL CONTEXTS; EMPLOYMENT CHANCES; CHRONICALLY ILL; SURVIVORS;
|
|
POLICIES; IMPACT; OUTCOMES; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {inan@sund.ku.dk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Diderichsen, Finn/P-4654-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Diderichsen, Finn/0000-0002-9998-4972
|
|
Thielen, Karsten/0000-0003-0505-5986
|
|
Andersen, Ingelise/0000-0002-0076-265X
|
|
Heinesen, Eskil/0000-0001-8953-1403},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {15},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000349418800015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000344425100014,
|
|
Author = {Ayala, Ricardo A. and Holmqvist, Moira T. and Messing, Helga B. and
|
|
Browne, Rodrigo F.},
|
|
Title = {Blessed art thou among women: male nursing students and gender
|
|
inequalities in Chile},
|
|
Journal = {NURSE EDUCATION TODAY},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Pages = {1480-1484},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The evolution of nursing education into an academic
|
|
curriculum and the growing interest of men in nursing have been
|
|
significant landmarks in the development of a `female' occupation.
|
|
Chilean nursing is considered as the leading example of nursing
|
|
education in Latin America, demanding a five-year training on a
|
|
full-time university programme. The consequences of education, however,
|
|
are assumed as more egalitarian opportunities, disregarding the latent
|
|
replication of structures that perpetuate inequalities.
|
|
Objective: To comprehend the socialisation of male nursing students and
|
|
its relation with their masculine identity and the construction of
|
|
inequalities in nursing education.
|
|
Methods: We draw upon interviews undertaken with beginner and advanced
|
|
nursing students from a Chilean university. Approval was obtained from
|
|
the relevant Ethics Committee. The data were organised to allow the
|
|
development of concepts by using the Grounded Theory approach.
|
|
Results: The analysis uncovers paradoxical results of nursing education
|
|
and its ineffectiveness in preventing gender-based inequalities. The
|
|
interest in empowering nursing politically may lead to favour an
|
|
increasing number of men entering nursing in ways that facilitate male
|
|
students' progress. Furthermore, there exist discourses of compassion
|
|
that feed consideration for male students, engendering in the process
|
|
the prospect of professional success and the gravitation into strategic
|
|
positions in the employment market. These are mechanisms that reproduce
|
|
earlier gender-based inequalities in nursing.
|
|
Conclusions: In the light of the social reproduction theory, the
|
|
academisation of Chilean nursing seems to be built upon historical
|
|
gender asymmetries. Although the interest of men in embracing a career
|
|
in nursing may have a meaningful resonance with the transformation of
|
|
contemporary society, this process needs a judicious examination in
|
|
order to protect academic integrity and, ultimately, prevent the
|
|
reproduction of those inequalities in question. This analysis offers a
|
|
perspective for understanding social patterns embedded in the practice
|
|
of nursing education in Chile and elsewhere. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All
|
|
rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ayala, RA (Corresponding Author), Univ Ghent, Dept Sociol, 5 Korte Meer, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Ayala, Ricardo A., Univ Ghent, Dept Sociol, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Holmqvist, Moira T.; Messing, Helga B., St Sebastian Univ, Sch Nursing, Valdivia 5090000, Chile.
|
|
Browne, Rodrigo F., Univ Austral Chile, Inst Social Commun, Valdivia 5090000, Chile.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.nedt.2014.04.022},
|
|
ISSN = {0260-6917},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-2793},
|
|
Keywords = {Nursing students; Male nursing student; Nursing education; Social
|
|
inequality; Gender; Qualitative study; Sociology},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-FORCE PARTICIPATION; MALE NURSES; MEN; SANTIAGO; IMAGE; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Scientific Disciplines; Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {RicardoAlexis.AyalaValenzuela@Ugent.be
|
|
moira.holmqvsit@uss.cl
|
|
beate.messing@uss.cl
|
|
rodrigobrowne@uach.cl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ayala, Ricardo A./E-1335-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ayala, Ricardo A./0000-0001-7840-1072},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {29},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000344425100014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000654637700005,
|
|
Author = {Brain, Isabel and Prieto, Joaquin},
|
|
Title = {Understanding changes in the geography of opportunity over time: The
|
|
case of Santiago, Chile},
|
|
Journal = {CITIES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {114},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {The geography of opportunity research has made significant progress in
|
|
recent years. The use of composite indexes aimed at capturing the
|
|
attributes of different urban areas has been particularly useful to
|
|
deepen the understanding of the role that the urban context plays in
|
|
people's life chances. However, little attention has been paid to the
|
|
dynamic component of the geography of opportunity, that is, what
|
|
explains its changes over time and whether or not those changes
|
|
(positive or negative) are substantial.
|
|
The contribution of this work is that it offers a methodology (a
|
|
conceptual framework, a composite geography of opportunity index and
|
|
relative and absolute measures) that provides a holistic and in-depth
|
|
approach to analyse not only the set of opportunities available in the
|
|
different urban areas but also their change over time (how they change,
|
|
the depth of those changes and the forces explaining it). The
|
|
information generated through this approach has the advantage of better
|
|
informing place-based policy interventions since it offers not only a
|
|
clear classification of areas but also a useful method for comparing and
|
|
monitoring the changes in the geography of opportunity over time.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brain, I (Corresponding Author), UCL, Bartlett Dev Planning Unit, 34 Tavistock Sq, London WC1H 9EZ, England.
|
|
Brain, Isabel, UCL, Bartlett Dev Planning Unit, 34 Tavistock Sq, London WC1H 9EZ, England.
|
|
Prieto, Joaquin, London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, Int Inequal Inst, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.cities.2021.103186},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {103186},
|
|
ISSN = {0264-2751},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-6084},
|
|
Keywords = {Geography of opportunity; Drivers of urban change; Multidimensional
|
|
indices; Municipal fiscal capacity; Urban attributes; Urban land market
|
|
activity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {NEIGHBORHOOD INCOME MIX; JOB ACCESSIBILITY; SPATIAL MISMATCH; SKILLS
|
|
MISMATCH; HEALTH-CARE; UNEMPLOYMENT; EMPLOYMENT; MOBILITY; ACCESS; AREA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Urban Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {isabel.brain@ucl.ac.uk
|
|
prietosj@lse.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Prieto, Joaquin/0000-0003-4145-9988
|
|
Brain, Isabel/0000-0001-6771-7127},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {125},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000654637700005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000367886000011,
|
|
Author = {Petner-Arrey, Jami and Howell-Moneta, Angela and Lysaght, Rosemary},
|
|
Title = {Facilitating employment opportunities for adults with intellectual and
|
|
developmental disability through parents and social networks},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {789-795},
|
|
Month = {APR 9},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: People with intellectual and developmental disability (IDD)
|
|
have historically had high unemployment and underemployment rates and
|
|
continue to face significant barriers to attaining and sustaining
|
|
employment. The purpose of this research, conducted in Ontario, Canada
|
|
was to better understand the experiences of people with IDD gaining and
|
|
keeping productivity roles. Method: We used qualitative semi-structured
|
|
interviews with 74 participants with IDD and their families or
|
|
caregivers as proxies regarding the employment of a person with IDD. We
|
|
selected a sample of persons from three different geographic regions in
|
|
Ontario, Canada, and analyzed data through coding methods consistent
|
|
with a grounded theory approach. Results: Our results demonstrate the
|
|
importance of parents and other members of social and family networks
|
|
relative to connecting with work options and sustaining work over time,
|
|
especially through continued advocacy and investment. Parents helped
|
|
individuals with IDD negotiate the right job fit, though they often
|
|
encountered challenges as a result of their efforts. Conclusion:
|
|
Practitioners must understand how to support parents to be effective
|
|
advocates for their adult children with IDD, assist them to develop and
|
|
maintain their social networks and help them to avoid caregiver
|
|
burnout.Implications for RehabilitationPeople with intellectual and
|
|
developmental disability (IDD) face numerous challenges in indentifying
|
|
work options and overcoming barriers to employment.Parents and other
|
|
non-paid support members of social networks can be instrumental in
|
|
ensuring that persons with IDD not only secure initial job placements,
|
|
but also sustain employment and employment alternatives.Professionals
|
|
that support persons with IDD can direct their efforts to helping
|
|
persons with IDD develop strong social connections, as well as helping
|
|
parents to prevent burnout.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Petner-Arrey, J (Corresponding Author), Human Serv Res Inst, Tualatin, OR 97062 USA.
|
|
Petner-Arrey, Jami, Queens Univ, Dept Epidemiol \& Community Hlth, Kingston, ON, Canada.
|
|
Howell-Moneta, Angela, Queens Univ, Dept Psychol, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada.
|
|
Lysaght, Rosemary, Queens Univ, Dept Rehabil Therapy, Kingston, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3109/09638288.2015.1061605},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Developmental disability; employment; intellectual disability; parents;
|
|
social inclusion; social networks},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; YOUNG-ADULTS; PEOPLE; INDIVIDUALS; OUTCOMES;
|
|
PARTICIPATION; MILD; JOB},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {jpetnerarrey@hsri.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {28},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {78},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000367886000011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000351699100008,
|
|
Author = {Ineson, Rachel},
|
|
Title = {Exploring paid employment options with a person with severe learning
|
|
disabilities and high support needs: An exploratory case study},
|
|
Journal = {BRITISH JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {78},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {58-65},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction This case-study research followed the journey of one person
|
|
who has severe learning and high support needs as, supported by
|
|
occupational therapy, she attempted to gain a real paid job.
|
|
Method Qualitative triangulated methodology was used, combining a
|
|
reflexive account of clinical occupational therapy intervention with
|
|
interview data and secondary documentary analysis. The link between
|
|
policy and practice was also explored.
|
|
Findings Ultimately, the participant was unsuccessful in gaining a paid
|
|
job, but remained motivated towards this goal. She became empowered to
|
|
aspire for paid work, voiced opinions, and developed pre-vocational
|
|
skills enabling continued pursuit of her goals. Negotiating access to
|
|
potential employers on behalf of the participant was a significant
|
|
barrier for the occupational therapist.
|
|
Conclusion The journey of the participant in seeking paid employment was
|
|
a new experience for everyone involved. There was a clear dichotomy
|
|
between the aspirational language of policy and the reality of putting
|
|
those aspirations into practice. As occupational therapists increasingly
|
|
move into emerging fields, exploring employment for this client group
|
|
presents opportunities to apply and expand core occupational therapy
|
|
skills, to achieve mutually rewarding co-occupation and to influence an
|
|
outstanding issue of occupational injustice.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ineson, R (Corresponding Author), Sheffield Hallam Univ, Dept Occupat Therapy, Robert Winston Bldg,Coll Crescent Campus, Sheffield S10 2BP, S Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Sheffield Hallam Univ, Dept Occupat Therapy, Sheffield S10 2BP, S Yorkshire, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0308022614561234},
|
|
ISSN = {0308-0226},
|
|
EISSN = {1477-6006},
|
|
Keywords = {Severe learning disability; paid employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PROVISION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {r.ineson@hotmail.co.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000351699100008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000464479200008,
|
|
Author = {Apotsos, Alex},
|
|
Title = {Mapping relative social vulnerability in six mostly urban municipalities
|
|
in South Africa},
|
|
Journal = {APPLIED GEOGRAPHY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {105},
|
|
Pages = {86-101},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Urban decision-makers in South Africa face growing challenges related to
|
|
rapidly expanding populations and a changing climate. To help target
|
|
limited resources, municipalities have begun to conduct climate change
|
|
vulnerability assessments. Many of these assessments take a holistic
|
|
approach that combines both physical hazard exposure and the underlying
|
|
socio-economic conditions that predispose populations to harm (i.e.,
|
|
social vulnerability). Given the increasing use of socio-economic
|
|
conditions in climate change vulnerability analyses, this paper seeks to
|
|
explore two key research questions: 1) can the spatial distribution of
|
|
relative social vulnerability be estimated in six mostly urban South
|
|
African municipalities, and if so, 2) how sensitive are the results to a
|
|
range of subjective methodological choices often required when
|
|
implementing this type of analysis. Here, social vulnerability is
|
|
estimated using socio-economic and demographic data from the 2001 and
|
|
2011 South African censuses. In all six municipalities, social
|
|
vulnerability varies spatially, driven primarily by differences in
|
|
income, assets, wealth, employment and education, and secondarily by
|
|
differences in access to services and demographics. Even though social
|
|
vulnerability is estimated from a wide array of population
|
|
characteristics, the spatial distribution is surprising similar to that
|
|
of the percent of working-age individuals making less than 800 rand per
|
|
month. Areas with high percentages of previously disadvantaged, extended
|
|
family, and informal households tend to display relatively higher levels
|
|
of social vulnerability. In fact, demographics (e.g., race, language,
|
|
age) are often highly correlated with other characteristics that have
|
|
direct ties to social vulnerability (e.g., income, employment,
|
|
education). The spatial patterns of relative social vulnerability are
|
|
similar in 2001 and 2011. However, there is some evidence social
|
|
vulnerability is relatively lower in 2011. While the choice of input
|
|
data and aggregation method can affect the spatial distribution of
|
|
social vulnerability, the general spatial patterns appear to be fairly
|
|
robust across a number of subjective choices related to methodological
|
|
and aggregation approach, spatial resolution, and input data.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Apotsos, A (Corresponding Author), Williams Coll, Geosci Dept, Clark Hall,947 Main St, Williamstown, MA 01267 USA.
|
|
Apotsos, Alex, Williams Coll, Geosci Dept, Clark Hall,947 Main St, Williamstown, MA 01267 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.apgeog.2019.02.012},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-6228},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7730},
|
|
Keywords = {Social vulnerability; South Africa; Urban municipalities; Mapping},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; NATURAL HAZARDS;
|
|
ASSESSMENTS; VARIABILITY; INDICATORS; CHALLENGES; HOUSEHOLDS; DYNAMICS;
|
|
LEVEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography},
|
|
Author-Email = {aa13@williams.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {69},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000464479200008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000885982100004,
|
|
Author = {Salib, Peter N.},
|
|
Title = {BIG DATA AFFIRMATIVE ACTION},
|
|
Journal = {NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {117},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {821-892},
|
|
Abstract = {As a vast and ever-growing body of social-scientific research shows,
|
|
discrimination remains pervasive in the United States. In education,
|
|
work, consumer markets, healthcare, criminal justice, and more, Black
|
|
people fare worse than whites, women worse than men, and so on.
|
|
Moreover, the evidence now convincingly demonstrates that this
|
|
inequality is driven by discrimination. Yet solutions are scarce. The
|
|
best empirical studies find that popular interventions-like diversity
|
|
seminars and antibias trainings-have little or no effect. And more
|
|
muscular solutions-like hiring quotas or school busing-are now regularly
|
|
struck down as illegal. Indeed, in the last thirty years, the Supreme
|
|
Court has invalidated every such ambitious affirmative action plan that
|
|
it has reviewed. This Article proposes a novel solution: Big Data
|
|
Affirmative Action. Like old-fashioned affirmative action, Big Data
|
|
Affirmative Action would award benefits to individuals because of their
|
|
membership in protected groups. Since Black defendants are
|
|
discriminatorily incarcerated for longer than whites, Big Data
|
|
Affirmative Action would intervene to reduce their sentences. Since
|
|
women are paid less than men, it would step in to raise their salaries.
|
|
But unlike old-fashioned affirmative action, Big Data Affirmative Action
|
|
would be automated, algorithmic, and precise. Circa 2021, data
|
|
scientists are already analyzing rich datasets to identify and quantify
|
|
discriminatory harm. Armed with such quantitative measures, Big Data
|
|
Affirmative Action algorithms would intervene to automatically adjust
|
|
flawed human decisions-correcting discriminatory harm but going no
|
|
further. Big Data Affirmative Action has two advantages over the
|
|
alternatives. First, it would actually work. Unlike, say, antibias
|
|
trainings, Big Data Affirmative Action would operate directly on unfair
|
|
outcomes, immediately remedying discriminatory harm. Second, Big Data
|
|
Affirmative Action would be legal, notwithstanding the Supreme Court's
|
|
recent case law. As argued here, the Court has not, in fact, recently
|
|
turned against affirmative action. Rather, it has consistently demanded
|
|
that affirmative action policies both stand on solid empirical ground
|
|
and be well tailored to remedying only particularized instances of
|
|
actual discrimination. The policies that the Court recently rejected
|
|
have failed to do either. Big Data Affirmative Action can easily do
|
|
both.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Salib, PN (Corresponding Author), Univ Houston, Law Ctr, Law, Houston, TX 77004 USA.
|
|
Salib, PN (Corresponding Author), Univ Houston, Hobby Sch Publ Affairs, Houston, TX 77004 USA.
|
|
Salib, Peter N., Univ Houston, Law Ctr, Law, Houston, TX 77004 USA.
|
|
Salib, Peter N., Univ Houston, Hobby Sch Publ Affairs, Houston, TX 77004 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0029-3571},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RACIAL-DISCRIMINATION; DISPARITIES; MARKET; EMPLOYMENT; IMPACT; BLACK;
|
|
BIAS; RACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Law},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {124},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000885982100004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000434432400003,
|
|
Author = {Schenck, Rinie and Blaauw, Derick},
|
|
Title = {Day labourers: A case study of the vulnerability of the social fabric
|
|
and cohesion in South Africa's informal economy},
|
|
Journal = {TYDSKRIF VIR GEESTESWETENSKAPPE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {58},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {36-55},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {The concepts social fabric and social cohesion refer to complex and
|
|
interdependent systems that exist in a community. Social cohesion
|
|
includes aspects such as the level of respect people have for each
|
|
other, people's experiences of belonging, identification with the
|
|
community, identity, their experiences of social justice, and
|
|
participation. Social cohesion is further evident in the extent that
|
|
people are accepting each other, taking responsibility for themselves
|
|
and others and providing safety and security.
|
|
South Africa's political and racially-based history and the current high
|
|
poverty and inequality do not provide a conducive context for a cohesive
|
|
society. This is evident in the high prevalence of poverty,
|
|
unemployment, crime, substance dependency and the neglect and abuse of
|
|
women and children. Facilitating a socially cohesive society is high on
|
|
the agenda of the current government, but the current policy frameworks
|
|
and institutional structures cannot create a socially cohesive society.
|
|
Failing to create a socially cohesive South African society is evident
|
|
in the more than 50 000 day labourers who are standing on the street
|
|
corners of our cities and towns daily, with the hope to access a job and
|
|
an income for the day.
|
|
Day labourers are unemployed people, mostly men, making a living by
|
|
selling their labour and skills on the street corners of South African
|
|
cities and towns. The growing number of day labourers who make a living
|
|
in the informal economy is a clear indication that South Africa cannot
|
|
absorb the unemployed in the formal economy. In particular, South Africa
|
|
is unable to accommodate the low-skilled and uneducated labourers in the
|
|
formal labour market. To make a living and survive in the informal
|
|
economy imply an insecure existence.
|
|
The aim of the article is to describe the socio-economic profile of the
|
|
3 830 day labourers interviewed during the first national study in South
|
|
Africa as a case study that illustrates the vulnerability of the social
|
|
cohesion and social fabric of poor families and communities surviving in
|
|
the informal economy. The national study was implemented in two phases.
|
|
The first phase lasted approximately two years, which were spent
|
|
travelling throughout South Africa to determine on which street corners
|
|
and open spaces the day labourers are standing in the cities and towns
|
|
of South Africa. This reconnaissance phase of the study resulted in the
|
|
estimation that there are at least 50 000 day labourers occupying street
|
|
corners of South African towns and cities daily. The second, or
|
|
fieldwork, phase of the research consisted of the completion of 3 830
|
|
interviews with day labourers throughout South Africa during 2007 and
|
|
2008. In this phase, the authors developed the survey instrument,
|
|
recruited field workers, provided appropriate training and tested the
|
|
questionnaire. This was followed by the sampling, where a combination of
|
|
cluster and snowball sampling was used to proportionally represent the
|
|
research population. A representative sample of approximately 9\%
|
|
enabled meaningful statistical analysis. All ethical principles were
|
|
adhered to. The questionnaires were completed with the assistance of
|
|
well-trained fieldworkers who were fluent in the languages spoken by the
|
|
day labourers.
|
|
The results of the study show that, given the high unemployment rate and
|
|
slow economic growth in South Africa, the informal economy and day
|
|
labouring are here to stay and should be supported with relevant
|
|
facilitating policies and institutions/structures. Day labouring is
|
|
furthermore a survivalist strategy and it implies an irregular income.
|
|
It became clear that the day labourers in general have very low
|
|
education and skills levels and will not be able to access formal labour
|
|
in the current economic climate.
|
|
Day labourers are the result of a vulnerable socially exclusive society.
|
|
It will remain in an increasingly vulnerable exclusive society if not
|
|
addressed through the implementation of policies and practices that will
|
|
enhance social cohesion and strengthen the social fabric of the South
|
|
African society.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Afrikaans},
|
|
Affiliation = {Schenck, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Wes Kaapland, Dept Maatskaplike Werk, Cape Town, South Africa.
|
|
Schenck, Rinie, Univ Wes Kaapland, Dept Maatskaplike Werk, Cape Town, South Africa.
|
|
Blaauw, Derick, Noordwes Univ, Skool Vir Ekon Wetenskappe, Potchefstroom, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.17159/2224-7912/2018/v58n1a3},
|
|
ISSN = {0041-4751},
|
|
Keywords = {Day labourers; informal economy; social fabric; social cohesion;
|
|
unemployment; poverty; informal employment; migrants; survival;
|
|
vulnerability; food insecurity},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {cschenck@uwc.ac.za
|
|
Derick.Blaauw@nwu.ac.za},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Schenck, Catherina J/O-9605-2014},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000434432400003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000259343800005,
|
|
Author = {Derose, Kathryn Pitkin},
|
|
Title = {Do bonding, bridging, and linking social capital affect preventable
|
|
hospitalizations?},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {5, 1},
|
|
Pages = {1520-1541},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective. To examine the relationship between social capital and
|
|
preventable hospitalizations (PHs).
|
|
Data Sources. Administrative and secondary data for Florida (hospital
|
|
discharge, U.S. Census, voting, nonprofits, faith-based congregations,
|
|
uninsured, safety net and primary care providers, and hospital beds).
|
|
Study Design. Cross-sectional, zip code-level multivariate analyses to
|
|
examine the associations among social capital, primary care resources,
|
|
and adult PHs and pediatric asthma hospitalizations.
|
|
Data Extraction. Data were merged at the zip code-level (n=837).
|
|
Principal Findings. Few of the social capital measures were
|
|
independently associated with PHs: longer mean commute times (reduced
|
|
bonding social capital) were related to higher adult rates; more racial
|
|
and ethnic diversity (increased bridging social capital) was related to
|
|
lower nonelderly adult rates but higher pediatric rates; more
|
|
faith-based organizations (linking social capital) were associated with
|
|
higher nonelderly adult rates. Having a safety net clinic within 20
|
|
miles was associated with lower adult rates, while general internists
|
|
were associated with higher rates. More pediatricians per capita were
|
|
related to higher pediatric rates.
|
|
Conclusions. The importance of social capital for health care access is
|
|
unclear. Some bonding and bridging ties were related to PHs, but
|
|
differentially across age groups; more work is needed to operationalize
|
|
linking ties.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Derose, KP (Corresponding Author), RAND Corp, 1776 Main St,POB 2138, Santa Monica, CA 90407 USA.
|
|
RAND Corp, Santa Monica, CA 90407 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1475-6773.2008.00856.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0017-9124},
|
|
Keywords = {social capital; access to care; primary care; race and ethnicity; social
|
|
environment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {AFRICAN-CARIBBEAN PARTICIPATION; HEALTH-SERVICE USE;
|
|
SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; MENTAL-HEALTH; AVOIDABLE HOSPITALIZATIONS;
|
|
RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION; INCOME INEQUALITY; MULTILEVEL ANALYSIS;
|
|
INFANT-MORTALITY; UNITED-STATES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {derose@rand.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dalla Zuanna, Teresa/G-3133-2015},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {22},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000259343800005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000541738000003,
|
|
Author = {Li, Jian and Roessler, Richard T. and Rumrill, Jr., Phillip D. and
|
|
Krause, James},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of General Satisfaction With the Employment Situation Among
|
|
People With Multiple Sclerosis},
|
|
Journal = {REHABILITATION RESEARCH POLICY AND EDUCATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {86-102},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Social and environmental participation endeavors are
|
|
theorized to shape one's general satisfaction with the overall
|
|
employment situation facing people with MS.
|
|
Objective: Responding to a national survey of the employment concerns of
|
|
Americans with multiple sclerosis (MS), this study examined the extent
|
|
to which factors at the demographic, disease-related, and social and
|
|
environmental participation levels contribute to the predictability
|
|
power for general satisfaction with the employment situation for people
|
|
with MS.
|
|
Method: Participants in this study consisted of 1,149 members of nine
|
|
National Multiple Sclerosis Society (NMSS) chapters representing 21
|
|
states and Washington, DC. In a hierarchical multiple regression
|
|
analysis, participants were mostly older (average age of 50 years) White
|
|
(74\%) individuals, nearly half of whom were unemployed (47\%) but well
|
|
educated (98\% were high school graduates, 45\% were college graduates).
|
|
Findings: Findings underscore the complexity involved in predicting how
|
|
satisfied people with MS are with their overall employment situation.
|
|
Conclusions: Younger, less educated individuals with higher levels of
|
|
perceived quality of life who were employed full-time and experiencing
|
|
no or lower levels of cognitive impairment were more likely than other
|
|
participants to be satisfied with 17 high-priority employment concerns.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Li, J (Corresponding Author), Kent State Univ, Sch Fdn Leadership \& Adm, POB 5190,316-O White Hall, Kent, OH 44242 USA.
|
|
Li, Jian; Rumrill, Phillip D., Jr., Kent State Univ, Kent, OH 44242 USA.
|
|
Krause, James, Med Univ South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1891/RE-19-20},
|
|
ISSN = {2168-6653},
|
|
EISSN = {2168-6661},
|
|
Keywords = {multiple sclerosis; employment expectation; vocational rehabilitation;
|
|
employment concerns},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOCATIONAL-REHABILITATION SERVICES; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; WORK; DIFFICULTIES;
|
|
PREDICTORS; DISABILITY; MOTIVATION; MANAGEMENT; BARRIERS; OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {jli42@kent.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000541738000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000556126900001,
|
|
Author = {Benjamin Puertas, Eduardo and Antonio Orellana, Rafael and Erazo Munoz,
|
|
Brian and Arturo Jimenez, Jorge and Medina Quiroz, Isamara Gilmiani and
|
|
Terron, Lucia and Florencio, Alexandre and Leal, Hilda M. and Jose
|
|
Vindell, Juan},
|
|
Title = {Factors influencing the choice of a career in primary care among medical
|
|
students in Central America},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA PANAMERICANA DE SALUD PUBLICA-PAN AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC
|
|
HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives. To identify the preferred specialties, salary perception and
|
|
other factors that influence the choice of a career in primary care
|
|
among last-year medical students or social service students in Central
|
|
America.
|
|
Methods. A cross-sectional, multicenter study using a survey that
|
|
investigated demographic information, preferred specialty, salary
|
|
perception, and other factors that influence the choice of a specialty.
|
|
Results. A total of 1 722 students from 31 universities participated and
|
|
identified as future specialties: surgery (11.7\%),
|
|
gynecology/obstetrics (10.3\%), pediatrics (9.9\%) and internal medicine
|
|
(6.6\%). General medicine was preferred by 3.8\% and family medicine by
|
|
1.1\%. On grouping them, the greatest interest was observed for medical
|
|
specialties (49.7\%), followed by surgical specialties (31.7\%). Primary
|
|
care registered an interest of 17.1\%. Surgical specialties were
|
|
perceived as having the highest income (USD 36 000); primary care was
|
|
perceived as having the lowest income (USD 24 000). Income (23.6\%),
|
|
future work (19.7\%) and ``making a difference in people{''} (8.9\%)
|
|
were the main factors involved in the choice. ``Working with people with
|
|
low access{''} was significantly associated with preference for primary
|
|
care. Preference for other specialties was influenced by ``perceived
|
|
prestige{''} and ``enjoying life{''} (P < 0.05). Most participants who
|
|
chose primary care were studying at a public university (P < 0.05),
|
|
highlighting the role of public institutions of higher education.
|
|
Conclusions. There is a combination of facilitating factors and barriers
|
|
that affect the low interest in primary care careers. There is a need
|
|
for strategies from academia and the government sector, as well as the
|
|
definition of public policies, that support the choice of primary care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Puertas, EB (Corresponding Author), Org Panamer Salud, San Salvador, El Salvador.
|
|
Benjamin Puertas, Eduardo, Org Panamer Salud, San Salvador, El Salvador.
|
|
Antonio Orellana, Rafael; Jose Vindell, Juan, Univ El Salvador, San Salvador, El Salvador.
|
|
Erazo Munoz, Brian, Univ Nacl Autonoma Honduras, Tegucigalpa, Honduras.
|
|
Arturo Jimenez, Jorge, Ctr Desarrollo Estrateg \& Informac Salud \& Seguri, San Jose, Costa Rica.
|
|
Medina Quiroz, Isamara Gilmiani, Univ Nacl Autonoma Nicaragua, Managua, Nicaragua.
|
|
Terron, Lucia, Ejercicio Profes Supervisado Rural, Ciudad De Guatemala, Guatemala.
|
|
Florencio, Alexandre, Org Panamer Salud, Managua, Nicaragua.
|
|
Leal, Hilda M., Org Panamer Salud, San Salvador, El Salvador.},
|
|
DOI = {10.26633/RPSP.2020.94},
|
|
Article-Number = {e94},
|
|
ISSN = {1020-4989},
|
|
Keywords = {Primary health care; specialization; health workforce; Central America},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FAMILY MEDICINE; SPECIALTY CHOICE; HEALTH; SELECTION; IMPACT; MONEY;
|
|
WORK; DEBT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {puertasb@paho.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Erazo Munoz, Brian/0000-0002-6582-9392},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000556126900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000677638100001,
|
|
Author = {Dalve, Kimberly and Gause, Emma and Mills, Brianna and Floyd, Anthony S.
|
|
and Rivara, Frederick P. and Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali},
|
|
Title = {Neighborhood disadvantage and firearm injury: does shooting location
|
|
matter?},
|
|
Journal = {INJURY EPIDEMIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAR 8},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundFirearm violence is a public health problem that disparately
|
|
impacts areas of economic and social deprivation. Despite a growing
|
|
literature on neighborhood characteristics and injury, few studies have
|
|
examined the association between neighborhood disadvantage and fatal and
|
|
nonfatal firearm assault using data on injury location. We conducted an
|
|
ecological Bayesian spatial analysis examining neighborhood disadvantage
|
|
as a social determinant of firearm injury in Seattle,
|
|
Washington.MethodsNeighborhood disadvantage was measured using the
|
|
National Neighborhood Data Archive disadvantage index. The index
|
|
includes proportion of female-headed households with children,
|
|
proportion of households with public assistance income, proportion of
|
|
people with income below poverty in the past 12months, and proportion of
|
|
the civilian labor force aged 16 and older that are unemployed at the
|
|
census tract level. Firearm injury counts included individuals with a
|
|
documented assault-related gunshot wound identified from medical records
|
|
and supplemented with the Gun Violence Archive between March 20, 2016
|
|
and December 31, 2018. Available addresses were geocoded to identify
|
|
their point locations and then aggregated to the census tract level.
|
|
Besag-York-Mollie (BYM2) Bayesian Poisson models were fit to the data to
|
|
estimate the association between the index of neighborhood disadvantage
|
|
and firearm injury count with a population offset within each census
|
|
tract.ResultsNeighborhood disadvantage was significantly associated with
|
|
the count of firearm injury in both non-spatial and spatial models. For
|
|
two census tracts that differed by 1 decile of neighborhood
|
|
disadvantage, the number of firearm injuries was higher by 21.0\% (95\%
|
|
credible interval: 10.5, 32.8\%) in the group with higher neighborhood
|
|
disadvantage. After accounting for spatial structure, there was still
|
|
considerable residual spatial dependence with 53.3\% (95\% credible
|
|
interval: 17.0, 87.3\%) of the model variance being spatial.
|
|
Additionally, we observed census tracts with higher disadvantage and
|
|
lower count of firearm injury in communities with proximity to
|
|
employment opportunities and targeted redevelopment, suggesting other
|
|
contextual protective factors.ConclusionsEven after adjusting for
|
|
socioeconomic factors, firearm injury research should investigate
|
|
spatial clustering as independence cannot be able to be assumed. Future
|
|
research should continue to examine potential contextual and
|
|
environmental neighborhood determinants that could impact firearm
|
|
injuries in urban communities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dalve, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Hans Rosling Ctr Populat Hlth, 3980 15th Ave NE,Box 351619, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Dalve, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Firearm Injury \& Policy Res Program, Harborview Injury Prevent Res Ctr, 325 Ninth Ave,Box 359960, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Dalve, Kimberly; Gause, Emma; Mills, Brianna; Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali, Univ Washington, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Hans Rosling Ctr Populat Hlth, 3980 15th Ave NE,Box 351619, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Dalve, Kimberly; Gause, Emma; Mills, Brianna; Rivara, Frederick P.; Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali, Univ Washington, Firearm Injury \& Policy Res Program, Harborview Injury Prevent Res Ctr, 325 Ninth Ave,Box 359960, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Floyd, Anthony S., Univ Washington, Alcohol \& Drug Abuse Inst, 1107 NE 45th St,Suite 120,Box 354805, Seattle, WA 98105 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s40621-021-00304-2},
|
|
Article-Number = {10},
|
|
EISSN = {2197-1714},
|
|
Keywords = {Firearm violence; Neighborhood disadvantage; Injury epidemiology},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VIOLENT CRIME; US; TRACT; RATES; CITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {kdalve@uw.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali/0000-0002-2705-4485
|
|
Dalve, Kimberly/0000-0001-5289-4091},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000677638100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000672642900045,
|
|
Author = {{[}Anonymous]},
|
|
Title = {International Symposium on Reproductive Health: overcoming barriers for
|
|
research in reproduction Abstracts},
|
|
Journal = {CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL OBSTETRICS \& GYNECOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {48},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {733-777},
|
|
Month = {JUN 15},
|
|
Abstract = {Accumulating evidence suggests that parental health, even before
|
|
conception, may affect offspring development. Stressful environments
|
|
during critical periods of growth and development that include
|
|
preconception, pregnancy, and early childhood could cause long-term
|
|
effects that may impact offspring's health. These environmental factors
|
|
may include maternal and paternal metabolic and endocrine health,
|
|
exposure to endocrine disruptors, pollutants, environmental stressors
|
|
and chemicals, and also the use of assisted reproductive techniques
|
|
(ARTs), among others.
|
|
Periconceptional and prenatal care are crucial to improving infants'
|
|
development and health and preventing adult diseases, such as diabetes,
|
|
neurocognitive, and other multifactorial and complex disorders.
|
|
Although increasing attention has been given to prenatal care management
|
|
in the last years, there are still disparities among nations in terms of
|
|
access to healthcare and also controversial results in many aspects, and
|
|
unresolved issues. In this regard, the COVID-19 pandemic has raised new
|
|
questions regarding reproduction, pregnancy and childhood development
|
|
care.
|
|
In particular, in Latin America, socioeconomic inequalities in primary
|
|
health system access make these societies vulnerable in terms of
|
|
gestational care. Moreover, although antenatal care is more accessible
|
|
in developed countries, there is still a need to comprehend the impact
|
|
of different environmental cues on human health and development and
|
|
improve the possible medical interventions and public policy management.
|
|
To address the above-mentioned topics, the International Symposium on
|
|
Reproductive Health 2021 (ISRH2021) was proposed by a group of
|
|
early-career scientists from Argentina, as a free one-day symposium with
|
|
different roundtable sessions, including:
|
|
-Maternal-fetal interface -Maternal effects on pregnancy and offspring
|
|
health
|
|
-ARTs effects on embryo and offspring development
|
|
-Paternal effects on fertility and offspring health
|
|
The virtual format provided a networking space between Early-Career and
|
|
experienced researchers from home, anywhere in the world. This not only
|
|
allowed to join experts from Latin-American and developed countries but
|
|
also allowed a wider global audience to attend, including those who may
|
|
not be able to travel for a face-to-face meeting. The economic barrier
|
|
is a common problem in Latin America and developing countries as the low
|
|
incomes affect the possibility of attending international meetings.
|
|
Moreover, as ECRs are the academic members with lower salaries, they are
|
|
usually the most affected. The spirit of this symposium was to create
|
|
possibilities for worldwide participation at all career stages.
|
|
During the ISRH2021, each session consisted of two Senior talks of
|
|
invited international researchers and two short talks of early-career
|
|
researchers (ECRs), which were selected based on their abstract quality.
|
|
Also, a poster session was held.
|
|
To generate different opportunities for interaction between Senior and
|
|
ECRs, several short talks were also held, followed by a debate. Among
|
|
the topics discussed were ``Women in Science and Gender Discrepancy{''},
|
|
``From basic research to public policies{''}, ``ECRs Resources{''} and
|
|
``Career Paths{''}.
|
|
Listed below we present the abstract of the works presented at the ISRH
|
|
2021 meeting.},
|
|
Type = {Meeting},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
DOI = {10.31083/j.ceog.2021.03.0511},
|
|
ISSN = {0390-6663},
|
|
EISSN = {2709-0094},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {0},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000672642900045},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000345346000075,
|
|
Author = {Gafiuc, Petru Vasile},
|
|
Editor = {Vasile, C},
|
|
Title = {Educational Concepts for Social Inclusion on the Labor Market of Young
|
|
People at Risk},
|
|
Booktitle = {ADULT EDUCATION IN UNIVERSITIES: LOCAL AND REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES},
|
|
Series = {Procedia Social and Behavioral Sciences},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {142},
|
|
Pages = {481-486},
|
|
Note = {4th International Conference on Adult Education, Iasi, ROMANIA, APR
|
|
27-30, 2014},
|
|
Abstract = {The European policies through its own funding programs underline the
|
|
increase need for creating educational models for people at risk. Many
|
|
official documents speak about vulnerable groups of the European
|
|
society, constantly creating categorizations that are not always
|
|
understandable and relevant for social workers with activities in social
|
|
inclusion. Slightly less is discussed about the failure of some
|
|
implemented programs to facilitate the social inclusion of vulnerable
|
|
raised within the social assistance systems of the Member State. In
|
|
Romania also, for some years now, a series of social integration models
|
|
for youngsters which come from the child protection system was
|
|
experimented, which unfortunately can't always be considered good
|
|
practices. These young people abandoned by their families, are abandoned
|
|
for the second time after graduation by the system in which they grew up
|
|
and which offered them a range of services and protection measures, but
|
|
without access to the labor market. Through the opportunities opened by
|
|
the adult education system it is possible to develop some innovative
|
|
training concepts for these young people which often do not require
|
|
state protection by basic services, a house and food, but adequate
|
|
employment opportunities. This article analyses the European and
|
|
Romanian possibilities for the inclusion of youngsters at risk by
|
|
proposing the implementation of a training and employment system through
|
|
apprenticeship in local workshops or Small and medium enterprises
|
|
(SMEs). This model offers youngsters a place of work where they can
|
|
practice their competencies, a mentor from which they can learn, the
|
|
experience of a job environment and of course a minimum income for their
|
|
work. This training concept can be included and valorized by
|
|
establishing a legal framework to facilitate the public-private
|
|
partnership, the cooperation between adult education institutions, local
|
|
businesses and child protection systems, for the benefit of this
|
|
disadvantaged category. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
|
|
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license
|
|
(http://creativecommons.org/licences/by-nc-nd/3.0/).},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gafiuc, Petru Vasile, Reg Assoc Adult Educ Suceava, Suceava 720228, Romania.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.07.652},
|
|
ISSN = {1877-0428},
|
|
Keywords = {adult education institutions; apprenticeship; social inclusion;
|
|
youngsters at risk},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {pvgafiuc@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {5},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000345346000075},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000468263500004,
|
|
Author = {Petrelli, Alessio and Di Napoli, Anteo and Rossi, Alessandra and
|
|
Gargiulo, Lidia and Mirisola, Concetta and Costanzo, Gianfranco},
|
|
Title = {Self-perceived health status among immigrants in Italy},
|
|
Journal = {EPIDEMIOLOGIA \& PREVENZIONE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {41},
|
|
Number = {3-4, 1},
|
|
Pages = {11-17},
|
|
Month = {MAY-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVES: to evaluate self-perceived health status of immigrants in
|
|
Italy.
|
|
DESIGN: cross-sectional study based on the representative national
|
|
samples of the multipurpose surveys ``Health conditions and use of
|
|
health services{''} conducted in 2005 and 2013 by the Italian National
|
|
Institute of Statistics (Istat).
|
|
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: the study was conducted on the age group of
|
|
18-64: No. 80,661 in 2005, among which 3.2\% were immigrants, and No.
|
|
72,476 in 2013, among which 7.1\% were immigrants.
|
|
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: prevalence rate ratios (PRR) calculated through
|
|
log-binomial regression models, stratified by survey edition and gender,
|
|
by evaluating the association between the Physical Component Score
|
|
(PCS), the Mental Component Component Score (MCS), and the overall
|
|
health index and citizenship. Adjustment for the following confounding
|
|
factors was performed: age, educational level, working condition,
|
|
perceived economic resources, body mass index (BMI).
|
|
RESULTS: in 2005, immigrants had a lower probability of poor-perceived
|
|
physical health, both among men (PRR: 0.79; 95\%CI 0.70-0.89) and women
|
|
(PRR: 0.89; 95\%CI 0.820.97), compared to Italians. In 2013, the
|
|
perceived health advantage of immigrants was reduced for both genders
|
|
(PRR males: 0.87; 95\%CI 0.80-0.95; PRR females: 0.94; 95\%Cl
|
|
0.88-0.99). In the considered period, the prevalence of people with
|
|
worse mental health conditions increases, with lower PRR among
|
|
immigrants, compared to Italians. Higher probability of ``NOT good{''}
|
|
overall perceived health was also observed among immigrants residing in
|
|
Italy for at least 10 years (PRR men: 1.24; PRR women: 1.15) and among
|
|
immigrants men from America (PRR: 1.35).
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: from 2005 to 2013, immigrants seemed to maintain a better
|
|
perception of health status than Italians. Nevertheless, study results
|
|
show a decrease in self-perceived health, particularly mental health, in
|
|
the considered period - apart from demographic, socioeconomic, and
|
|
lifestyle factors - as well as a worse overall self-perceived health
|
|
status among immigrants who stayed in Italy longer. Such results lead to
|
|
suppose that the ``healthy migrant effect{''} tends to disappear over
|
|
time, maybe due to the world financial crisis. Unemployment increases
|
|
and lower income also made the access to medical care more difficult,
|
|
particularly among the most fragile population groups, including
|
|
migrants. In this context it is essential to promote health policies
|
|
supporting equity of access to healthy lifestyles and effective health
|
|
services, which are fundamental to reduce health inequalities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Italian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Petrelli, A (Corresponding Author), Ist Nazl Promoz Salute Popolaz Migranti \& Contras, Rome, Italy.
|
|
Petrelli, Alessio; Di Napoli, Anteo; Rossi, Alessandra; Mirisola, Concetta; Costanzo, Gianfranco, Ist Nazl Promoz Salute Popolaz Migranti \& Contras, Rome, Italy.
|
|
Gargiulo, Lidia, Ist Nazl Stat Istat, Rome, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.19191/EP17.3-4S1.P011.060},
|
|
ISSN = {1120-9763},
|
|
Keywords = {immigrants; self-perceived health; socioeconomic status},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {petrelli@inmp.it},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Di Napoli, Anteo/AAN-1659-2020
|
|
Di Napoli, Anteo/S-6477-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Di Napoli, Anteo/0000-0003-3207-8761
|
|
Di Napoli, Anteo/0000-0003-3207-8761
|
|
Petrelli, Alessio/0000-0002-7533-7260},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000468263500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000634452600001,
|
|
Author = {Baruah, Bipasha and Biskupski-Mujanovic, Sandra},
|
|
Title = {Navigating sticky floors and glass ceilings: Barriers and opportunities
|
|
for women's employment in natural resources industries in Canada},
|
|
Journal = {NATURAL RESOURCES FORUM},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {183-205},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Women make up almost half the Canadian labour force and more than 50\%
|
|
of post-secondary students. However, in natural resources (NR)
|
|
industries (energy, mining, forestry), they represent less than 20\% of
|
|
the workforce, face persistent wage gaps, hold traditionally gendered
|
|
roles (in sales, administrative and support services) instead of
|
|
technical or managerial positions, and are persistently absent from
|
|
leadership roles. Retention of women is also a big challenge in these
|
|
industries: many tend to leave their jobs within the first five years of
|
|
employment, and/or after one or more maternity leaves. Women are very
|
|
poorly represented in leadership positions (as senior executives and
|
|
board members) despite significant evidence that gender diversity in
|
|
leadership is good for business. Findings from our study of the status
|
|
of women in NR employment in Canada produced concrete policy
|
|
recommendations for recruiting, retaining, and promoting women in
|
|
energy, mining, and forestry. Although these are intended specifically
|
|
for Canadian organisations, they may also be relevant for other
|
|
countries where women are underrepresented in NR industries.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baruah, B (Corresponding Author), Western Univ, Global Womens Issues, Dept Womens Studies \& Feminist Res, Lawson Hall Room 3244,1151 Richmond St, London, ON N6A 5B8, Canada.
|
|
Baruah, Bipasha, Western Univ, Dept Womens Studies \& Feminist Res, London, ON, Canada.
|
|
Biskupski-Mujanovic, Sandra, Western Univ, Womens Studies \& Feminist Res, London, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1477-8947.12216},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0165-0203},
|
|
EISSN = {1477-8947},
|
|
Keywords = {Canada; employment; energy; forestry; gender equality; mining; natural
|
|
resources; women},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {bbaruah@uwo.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Biskupski-Mujanovic, Sandra/0000-0002-4224-0833},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000634452600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000469020600007,
|
|
Author = {Tomasi, Elaine and Aguiar Fernandes, Pedro Agner and Fischer, Talita and
|
|
Vinholes Siqueira, Fernando Carlos and da Silveira, Denise Silva and
|
|
Thume, Elaine and Silva Duro, Suele Manjourany and Saes, Mirelle de
|
|
Oliveira and Nunes, Bruno Pereira and Fassa, Anaclaudia Gastal and
|
|
Facchini, Luiz Augusto},
|
|
Title = {Quality of prenatal services in primary healthcare in Brazil: indicators
|
|
and social inequalities},
|
|
Journal = {CADERNOS DE SAUDE PUBLICA},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {33},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {The aim of this study was to describe quality indicators for prenatal
|
|
care in Brazil as part of the Program for the Improvement of Access and
|
|
Quality (PMAQ-AB). The study analyzed number of prenatal visits,
|
|
vaccination status, prescription of ferrous sulfate, physical
|
|
examination, orientation, and laboratory tests, based on which a summary
|
|
quality indicator was constructed. Data were collected in 2012-2013
|
|
during interviews conducted by External Evaluators of the PMAQ-AB, with
|
|
6,125 users who had done their last prenatal follow-up in Family Health
|
|
units. During prenatal follow-up, 89\% reported six or more visits, more
|
|
than 95\% received a tetanus booster and prescription of ferrous
|
|
sulfate, 24\% reported having received all the procedures in the
|
|
physical examination, 60\% received all the orientation, and 69\% had
|
|
all the recommended laboratory tests. Only 15\% of interviewees had
|
|
received adequate prenatal care, including all the recommended measures,
|
|
and there was a significantly higher proportion of ``complete{''} care
|
|
in pregnant women that were older, with higher income, in the Southeast
|
|
region of Brazil, in municipalities with more than 300,000 inhabitants,
|
|
and in those with HDI in the upper quartile. There are persist social
|
|
and individual inequalities that can be targeted by measures to upgrade
|
|
the teams' work processes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Portuguese},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tomasi, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Fed Pelotas, Fac Med, Dept Med Social, Ave Duque de Caxias 250, BR-96030001 Pelotas, RS, Brazil.
|
|
Tomasi, Elaine; Aguiar Fernandes, Pedro Agner; Fischer, Talita; da Silveira, Denise Silva; Fassa, Anaclaudia Gastal; Facchini, Luiz Augusto, Univ Fed Pelotas, Fac Med, Pelotas, Brazil.
|
|
Vinholes Siqueira, Fernando Carlos, Univ Fed Pelotas, Escola Super Educ Fis, Pelotas, Brazil.
|
|
Thume, Elaine; Silva Duro, Suele Manjourany; Nunes, Bruno Pereira, Univ Fed Pelotas, Fac Enfermagem, Pelotas, Brazil.
|
|
Saes, Mirelle de Oliveira, Univ Fed Rio Grande, Programa Posgrad Ciencias Saude, Rio Grande, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1590/0102-311X00195815},
|
|
Article-Number = {e00195815},
|
|
ISSN = {0102-311X},
|
|
EISSN = {1678-4464},
|
|
Keywords = {Prenatal Care; Primary Health Care; Quality of health Care; Health
|
|
Inequalities},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {tomasiet@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Nunes, Bruno P/E-3231-2014
|
|
Facchini, Luiz A/A-2268-2009
|
|
Tomasi, Elaine/AAH-2226-2021
|
|
Saes, Mirelle/ABF-3820-2020
|
|
Fassa, Anaclaudia G/I-5979-2015
|
|
Thumé, Elaine/A-8252-2011
|
|
Thumé, Elaine/ISU-8904-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Nunes, Bruno P/0000-0002-4496-4122
|
|
Facchini, Luiz A/0000-0002-5746-5170
|
|
Fassa, Anaclaudia G/0000-0001-6070-6214
|
|
Thumé, Elaine/0000-0002-1169-8884
|
|
Thumé, Elaine/0000-0002-1169-8884
|
|
Saes, Mirelle de Oliveira/0000-0001-7225-1552},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {30},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000469020600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000469845400001,
|
|
Author = {Vidal, Sergi and Lersch, Philipp M.},
|
|
Title = {Changes in gender role attitudes following couples' residential
|
|
relocations},
|
|
Journal = {DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Pages = {1111-1152},
|
|
Month = {APR 30},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND
|
|
Residential relocations of couple households are associated with
|
|
increases in objective gender inequality within families in paid and
|
|
unpaid work. Little is known about how couples' relocations affect
|
|
subjective outcomes such as attitudes.
|
|
OBJECTIVE
|
|
We examine whether gender role attitudes change when families move
|
|
residentially in Britain, empirically addressing potential explanations.
|
|
We also assess heterogeneity in outcomes by relocation distance and
|
|
relocation motive.
|
|
METHOD
|
|
We use linear fixed-effects regression on a representative sample of
|
|
6,415 partnered women and 6,220 partnered men from the British Household
|
|
Panel Survey (1991-2007).
|
|
RESULTS
|
|
Our results show that, on average, an individual's gender role attitudes
|
|
were not significantly altered following a couple's relocation. As an
|
|
exception, we find that when couples exclusively relocated for the
|
|
female partner's job, men's gender role attitudes became more
|
|
egalitarian post-relocation. Preliminary evidence also suggests that
|
|
women's gender role attitudes are potentially affected by their exposure
|
|
to residential contexts.
|
|
CONTRIBUTION
|
|
Despite widespread evidence regarding increases in objective gender
|
|
inequality following couple relocations in Britain, our findings suggest
|
|
that this does not permeate into subjective outcomes such as attitudes.
|
|
Beyond expanding the knowledge on subjective sources of gender
|
|
inequality that follow couples' relocations, our results also contribute
|
|
to a better understanding of the dynamics of change in gender role
|
|
attitudes over the life course.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vidal, S (Corresponding Author), CED, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Vidal, Sergi, CED, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Lersch, Philipp M., Univ Cologne, Inst Sociol \& Social Psychol, Cologne, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4054/DemRes.2019.40.39},
|
|
ISSN = {1435-9871},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DISTANCE FAMILY MIGRATION; SUBSEQUENT EMPLOYMENT; INTERNAL MIGRATION;
|
|
LABOR; IDEOLOGY; HOMEOWNERSHIP; EARNINGS; BRITAIN; WORK; PARTICIPATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography},
|
|
Author-Email = {svidal@ced.uab.es},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Vidal, Sergi/0000-0003-4011-2077},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {75},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000469845400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000297414400014,
|
|
Author = {Weisner, Thomas S.},
|
|
Title = {``If You Work in This Country You Should Not be Poor, and Your Kids
|
|
Should be Doing Better{''}: Bringing Mixed Methods and Theory in
|
|
Psychological Anthropology to Improve Research in Policy and Practice},
|
|
Journal = {ETHOS},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {455-476},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {New Hope (NH) was a successful poverty reduction program that offered a
|
|
positive social contract to working-poor adults. If you worked full
|
|
time, you were eligible to receive income supplements, childcare
|
|
vouchers, health care benefits, a community service job, and client
|
|
respect. NH did reduce poverty and increase income and earnings for some
|
|
participants, and improved outcomes for some children. But in spite of
|
|
relatively generous benefits, NH was only selectively effective. Only
|
|
those not working when NH began and those with few barriers to work were
|
|
positively affected by the program through achieving more work hours,
|
|
poverty reduction, and income gains. Boys in program families benefited,
|
|
girls did not. Take-up of NH benefits was typically partial and
|
|
episodic; for instance, some parents would not use childcare programs
|
|
for young children. Ethnographic evidence was essential for
|
|
understanding these sometimes-surprising program impacts and their
|
|
policy and practice implications, and was effectively combined with an
|
|
experimental, random-assignment research design. Psychological
|
|
anthropology can bring its traditions of integrating qualitative and
|
|
quantitative methods and its focus on experience, context, and meaning
|
|
to understanding and improving policies and practices within a
|
|
scientific frame of the committed, fair witness. {[}mixed methods,
|
|
policy and practice, family, poverty, adolescence]},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Weisner, TS (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Psychiat, Semel Inst, Ctr Culture \& Hlth, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
Weisner, Thomas S., Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Psychiat, Semel Inst, Ctr Culture \& Hlth, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
Weisner, Thomas S., Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Anthropol, Los Angeles, CA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1548-1352.2011.01208.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0091-2131},
|
|
EISSN = {1548-1352},
|
|
Keywords = {mixed methods; policy and practice; family; poverty; adolescence},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILDREN; INTERVENTION; POVERTY; IMPACTS; PROMOTE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Anthropology; Psychology, Multidisciplinary},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000297414400014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000339066100002,
|
|
Author = {Herbst, Chris M. and Tekin, Erdal},
|
|
Title = {CHILD CARE SUBSIDIES, MATERNAL HEALTH, AND CHILD-PARENT INTERACTIONS:
|
|
EVIDENCE FROM THREE NATIONALLY REPRESENTATIVE DATASETS},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {894-916},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {A complete account of the US child care subsidy system requires an
|
|
understanding of its implications for both parental and child
|
|
well-being. Although the effects of child care subsidies on maternal
|
|
employment and child development have been recently studied, many other
|
|
dimensions of family well-being have received little attention. This
|
|
paper attempts to fill this gap by examining the impact of child care
|
|
subsidy receipt on maternal health and the quality of child-parent
|
|
interactions. The empirical analyses use data from three nationally
|
|
representative surveys, providing access to numerous measures of family
|
|
well-being. In addition, we attempt to handle the possibility of
|
|
non-random selection into subsidy receipt by using several
|
|
identification strategies both within and across the surveys. Our
|
|
results consistently indicate that child care subsidies are associated
|
|
with worse maternal health and poorer interactions between parents and
|
|
their children. In particular, subsidized mothers report lower levels of
|
|
overall health and are more likely to show symptoms consistent with
|
|
anxiety, depression, and parenting stress. Such mothers also reveal more
|
|
psychological and physical aggression toward their children and are more
|
|
likely to utilize spanking as a disciplinary tool. Together, these
|
|
findings suggest that work-based public policies aimed at economically
|
|
disadvantaged mothers may ultimately undermine family well-being.
|
|
Copyright (C) 2013 John Wiley \& Sons, Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Herbst, CM (Corresponding Author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Publ Affairs, 411 N Cent Ave,Suite 480, Phoenix, AZ 85004 USA.
|
|
Herbst, Chris M., Arizona State Univ, Sch Publ Affairs, Phoenix, AZ 85004 USA.
|
|
Herbst, Chris M., IZA, Phoenix, AZ USA.
|
|
Tekin, Erdal, Georgia State Univ, IZA, Andrew Young Sch Policy Studies, Dept Econ, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA.
|
|
Tekin, Erdal, NBER, Atlanta, GA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/hec.2964},
|
|
ISSN = {1057-9230},
|
|
EISSN = {1099-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {child care subsidies; maternal health; maternal employment; family
|
|
well-being; subjective well-being},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SINGLE MOTHERS; WELFARE-REFORM; FRAGILE FAMILIES; LOW-INCOME;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; WORK; RECEIPT; IMPACT; WAGES; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {chris.herbst@asu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {25},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {33},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000339066100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000469521100002,
|
|
Author = {Cui, Zhaohui and Truesdale, Kimberly P. and Robinson, Thomas N. and
|
|
Pemberton, Victoria and French, Simone A. and Escarfuller, Juan and
|
|
Casey, Terri L. and Hotop, Anne M. and Matheson, Donna and Pratt,
|
|
Charlotte A. and Lotas, Lynn J. and Po'e, Eli and Andrisin, Sharon and
|
|
Ward, Dianne S.},
|
|
Title = {Recruitment strategies for predominantly low-income, multi-racial/ethnic
|
|
children and parents to 3-year community-based intervention trials:
|
|
Childhood Obesity Prevention and Treatment Research (COPTR) Consortium},
|
|
Journal = {TRIALS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Month = {MAY 28},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundThe recruitment of participants into community-based
|
|
randomized controlled trials studying childhood obesity is often
|
|
challenging, especially from low-income racial/ethnical minorities and
|
|
when long-term participant commitments are required. This paper
|
|
describes strategies used to recruit and enroll predominately low-income
|
|
racial/ethnic minority parents and children into the Childhood Obesity
|
|
Prevention and Treatment Research (COPTR) consortium.MethodsThe COPTR
|
|
consortium has run four independent 3-year, multi-level (individual,
|
|
family, school, clinic, and community) community-based randomized
|
|
controlled trials. Two were prevention trials in preschool children and
|
|
the other two were treatment trials in pre-adolescents and adolescent
|
|
youth. All trials reported monthly participant recruitment numbers using
|
|
a standardized method over the projected 18-24months of recruitment.
|
|
After randomization of participants was completed, recruitment staff and
|
|
investigators from each trial retrospectively completed a survey of
|
|
recruitment strategies and their perceived top three recruitment
|
|
strategies and barriers.ResultsRecruitment was completed in 15-21months
|
|
across trials, enrolling a total of 1745 parent-child dyads- out of 6314
|
|
screened. The number of children screened per randomized child was 4.6
|
|
and 3.5 in the two prevention trials, and 3.1 and 2.5 in the two
|
|
treatment trials. Recruitment strategies reported included: (1) careful
|
|
planning, (2) working with trusting community partners, (3) hiring
|
|
recruitment staff who were culturally sensitive, personality
|
|
appropriate, and willing to work flexible hours, (4) contacting
|
|
potential participants actively and repeatedly, (5) recruiting at times
|
|
and locations convenient for participants, (6) providing incentives to
|
|
participants to complete baseline measures, (7) using a tracking
|
|
database, (8) evaluating whether participants understand the activities
|
|
and expectations of the study, and (9) assessing participants'
|
|
motivation for participating. Working with community partners, hiring
|
|
culturally sensitive staff, and contacting potential participants
|
|
repeatedly were cited by two trials among their top three strategies.
|
|
The requirement of a 3-year commitment to the trial was cited by two
|
|
trials to be among the top three recruitment
|
|
barriers.ConclusionsComprehensive strategies that include community
|
|
partnership support, culturally sensitive recruitment staff, and
|
|
repeated contacts with potential participants can result in successful
|
|
recruitment of low-income racial/ethnic minority families into obesity
|
|
prevention and treatment trials.Trial registrationNET-Works trial:
|
|
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01606891. Registered on 28 May 2012.GROW trial:
|
|
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01316653. Registered on 16 March 2011.GOALS
|
|
trial: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01642836. Registered on 17 July
|
|
2012.IMPACT trial: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01514279. Registered on 23
|
|
January 2012.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cui, ZH (Corresponding Author), Univ N Carolina, Gillings Sch Global Publ Hlth, Dept Nutr, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
|
|
Cui, Zhaohui; Truesdale, Kimberly P.; Ward, Dianne S., Univ N Carolina, Gillings Sch Global Publ Hlth, Dept Nutr, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
|
|
Robinson, Thomas N.; Matheson, Donna, Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Stanford Solut Sci Lab, Stanford, CA USA.
|
|
Pemberton, Victoria; Pratt, Charlotte A., NHLBI, NIH, Bldg 10, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.
|
|
French, Simone A.; Hotop, Anne M., Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Epidemiol \& Community Hlth, Minneapolis, MN USA.
|
|
Escarfuller, Juan; Po'e, Eli, Vanderbilt Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Pediat, Nashville, TN 37232 USA.
|
|
Casey, Terri L., Rainbow Babies \& Childrens Hosp, 2101 Adelbert Rd, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.
|
|
Lotas, Lynn J.; Andrisin, Sharon, Case Western Reserve Univ, Frances Payne Bolton Sch Nursing, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13063-019-3418-0},
|
|
Article-Number = {296},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-6215},
|
|
Keywords = {Recruitment; Strategy; Barrier; Intervention; Minority; Hispanic;
|
|
African American; Low-income; Children; Parent-child dyads},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; CLINICAL-TRIALS; FAMILY; ADOLESCENTS;
|
|
OVERWEIGHT; RETENTION; MINORITY; WEIGHT; IMPACT; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental},
|
|
Author-Email = {cuizhaohui2008@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {French, Simone/0000-0003-3413-5985},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000469521100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000797521800001,
|
|
Author = {Kiely, Ray and Sumner, Andy},
|
|
Book-Author = {Schlogl, L
|
|
Sumner, A},
|
|
Title = {Disrupted Development and the Future of Inequality in the Age of
|
|
Automation Introduction},
|
|
Booktitle = {DISRUPTED DEVELOPMENT AND THE FUTURE OF INEQUALITY IN THE AGE OF
|
|
AUTOMATION},
|
|
Series = {Rethinking International Development},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Pages = {1+},
|
|
Abstract = {Automation is likely to impact on developing countries in different ways
|
|
to the way automation affects high-income countries. The poorer a
|
|
country is, the more jobs it has that are in principle-automatable
|
|
because the kinds of jobs common in developing countries-such as routine
|
|
work-are substantially more susceptible to automation than the jobs that
|
|
dominate high-income economies. This matters because employment
|
|
generation is crucial to spreading the benefits of economic growth
|
|
broadly and to reducing global poverty. We argue that the rise of a
|
|
global ``robot reserve army{''} has profound effects on labor markets
|
|
and structural transformation in developing countries, but rather than
|
|
causing mass unemployment, AI and robots are more likely to lead to
|
|
stagnant wages and premature deindustrialization. As agricultural and
|
|
manufacturing jobs are automated, workers will continue to flood the
|
|
service sector. This will itself hinder poverty reduction and likely put
|
|
upward pressure on national inequality, weakening the poverty-reducing
|
|
power of growth, and potentially placing the existing social contract
|
|
under strain. How developing countries should respond in terms of public
|
|
policy is a crucial question, affecting not only middle-income
|
|
developing countries, but even the very poorest countries.},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kiely, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
|
|
Kiely, Ray, Univ Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
|
|
Sumner, Andy, Kings Coll London, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/978-3-030-30131-6\_1},
|
|
ISBN = {978-3-030-30131-6; 978-3-030-30130-9},
|
|
Keywords = {Automation; Digitization; Labor-saving technology; Developing countries;
|
|
Economic development; Jobs},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TECHNOLOGICAL-CHANGE; UNBALANCED GROWTH; STRUCTURAL-CHANGE; MODEL;
|
|
POLARIZATION; HISTORY; JOBS; SUBSTITUTION; UNEMPLOYMENT; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Regional \& Urban Planning; Public Administration},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {155},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000797521800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000514998600007,
|
|
Author = {Brouwers, E. P. M. and Joosen, M. C. W. and van Zelst, C. and Van
|
|
Weeghel, J.},
|
|
Title = {To Disclose or Not to Disclose: A Multi-stakeholder Focus Group Study on
|
|
Mental Health Issues in the Work Environment},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {84-92},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose Whether or not to disclose mental illness or mental health
|
|
issues in the work environment is a highly sensitive dilemma. It can
|
|
facilitate keeping or finding paid employment, but can also lead to
|
|
losing employment or to not being hired, because of discrimination and
|
|
stigma. Research questions were: (1) what do stakeholders see as
|
|
advantages and disadvantages of disclosing mental illness or mental
|
|
health issues in the work environment?; (2) what factors are of
|
|
influence on a positive outcome of disclosure? Methods A focus group
|
|
study was conducted with five different stakeholder groups: people with
|
|
mental illness, Human Resources professionals, employers, work
|
|
reintegration professionals, and mental health advocates. Sessions were
|
|
audio-taped and transcribed verbatim. Thematic content analysis was
|
|
performed by two researchers using AtlasTi-7.5. Results were visually
|
|
represented in a diagram to form a theoretical model. Results Concerning
|
|
(dis-)advantages of disclosure, six themes emerged as advantages
|
|
(improved relationships, authenticity, work environment support,
|
|
friendly culture) and two as disadvantages (discrimination and stigma).
|
|
Of influence on the disclosure outcome were: Aspects of the disclosure
|
|
process, workplace factors, financial factors, and employee factors.
|
|
Stakeholders generally agreed, although distinct differences were also
|
|
found and discussed in the paper. Conclusion As shown from the
|
|
theoretical model, the (non-)disclosure process is complex, and the
|
|
outcome is influenced by many factors, most of which cannot be
|
|
influenced by the individual with mental illness. However, the theme
|
|
`Aspects of the disclosure process', including subthemes: who to
|
|
disclose to, timing, preparation, message content and communication
|
|
style is promising for improving work participation of people with
|
|
mental illness or mental health issues, because disclosers can
|
|
positively influence these aspects themselves.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brouwers, EPM (Corresponding Author), Tilburg Univ, Dept Tranzo, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, NETHLAB, POB 90153, NL-5000 LE Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Brouwers, E. P. M.; Joosen, M. C. W.; Van Weeghel, J., Tilburg Univ, Dept Tranzo, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, NETHLAB, POB 90153, NL-5000 LE Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Joosen, M. C. W., Tilburg Univ, Dept Human Resource Studies, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, NETHLAB, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
van Zelst, C., Maastricht Univ, Dept Psychiat \& Neuropsychol, Maastricht, Netherlands.
|
|
Van Weeghel, J., Phrenos Ctr Expertise, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Van Weeghel, J., Parnassia Grp, The Hague, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10926-019-09848-z},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-0487},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Discrimination; Stigma; Employment; Mental illness; Disclosure},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DECISION AID; WORKPLACE; ILLNESS; ATTITUDES; STIGMA; DISCRIMINATION;
|
|
AUTHENTICITY; EXPERIENCES; DISABILITY; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {e.p.m.brouwers@tilburguniversity.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {62},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {46},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000514998600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000173290000009,
|
|
Author = {Gruen, R and Anwar, R and Begum, T and Killingsworth, JR and Normand, C},
|
|
Title = {Dual job holding practitioners in Bangladesh: an exploration},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2002},
|
|
Volume = {54},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {267-279},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper analyses the system of financial and non-financial incentives
|
|
underlying job preferences of doctors in Bangladesh who work both in
|
|
government health services and in private practice. The study is based
|
|
on a survey of 100 government-employed doctors with private practice,
|
|
across different levels of care and geographical areas. In-depth
|
|
interviews were carried out in a sub-sample of 28 respondents. The study
|
|
explores the beliefs and attitudes towards the arrangements of joint
|
|
private/public practice, establishes profiles of fee levels and earnings
|
|
and examines the options to change the incentive system in a way that
|
|
ensures an increased involvement of dual job holding practitioners in
|
|
the priority areas of care.
|
|
Consultation fees were Tk120 on average (range Tk20-300) and found to be
|
|
correlated with the qualification of the practice owner and the type of
|
|
service offered. A majority of the respondents reported at least to
|
|
double their government income by engaging in private practice.
|
|
Significant predictors of total income included the number of patients
|
|
seen in private practice (p = 0.000), employment in a secondary or
|
|
tertiary care facility (p = 0.001) and ownership of premises for private
|
|
practice (p = 0.033). Age was found to be marginally significant (p =
|
|
0.084). No association was found between total income and
|
|
specialisation, private practice costs, level of government salary or a
|
|
degree from abroad.
|
|
The data suggest that doctors have adopted individual strategies to
|
|
accommodate the advantages of both government employment and private
|
|
practice in their career development, thus maximising benefit from the
|
|
incentives provided to them e.g. status of a government job, and
|
|
minimising opportunity costs of economic losses e.g. lower salaries.
|
|
Commitment to government services was found to be greater among doctors
|
|
in primary health care who reported they would give up private practice
|
|
if paid a higher salary. Among doctors in secondary and tertiary care,
|
|
the propensity to give up private practice was found to be low.
|
|
Financial incentives that aim to increase numbers of doctors in rural
|
|
areas, such as a non-private-practice allowance, are more likely to be
|
|
appreciated by doctors who are at the beginning of their career.
|
|
Improved training and career opportunities also appear to be of high
|
|
importance for job satisfaction. Policy changes to ensure a better
|
|
resource allocation to the priority areas of the health sector have to
|
|
reflect an understanding of the incentives generated by the
|
|
organisational and financial context within which dual job holding
|
|
practitioners operate. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights
|
|
reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gruen, R (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Hlth Serv Res Unit, Dept Publ Hlth \& Policy, Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England.
|
|
London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Hlth Serv Res Unit, Dept Publ Hlth \& Policy, London WC1E 7HT, England.
|
|
Minist Hlth \& Family Welf, Policy Res Unit, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Minist Hlth \& Family Welf, Hlth Econ Unit, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Data Int, Dhaka, Bangladesh.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0277-9536(01)00026-0},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {Bangladesh; health economics; human resource development; incentives},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Normand, Charles/0000-0002-0885-5754},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {70},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000173290000009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000792023600001,
|
|
Author = {Brongers, Kor A. and Hoekstra, Tialda and Wilming, Loes and Stewart, Roy
|
|
E. and Roelofs, Pepijn D. D. M. and Brouwer, Sandra},
|
|
Title = {Comprehensive approach to reintegration of disability benefit recipients
|
|
with multiple problems (CARm) into the labour market: results of a
|
|
randomized controlled trial},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {1498-1507},
|
|
Month = {APR 24},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose Although most clients on work disability benefits face multiple
|
|
problems, most traditional interventions for (re)integration focus on a
|
|
single problem. The aim of this study was to evaluate the
|
|
``Comprehensive Approach to Reintegrate clients with multiple
|
|
problems{''} (CARm), which provides a strategy for labour experts to
|
|
build a relationship with each client in order to support clients in
|
|
their needs and mobilize their social networks. Methods This study is a
|
|
stratified, two-armed, non-blinded randomized controlled trial (RCT),
|
|
with a 12-month follow-up period. Outcome measures were: having paid
|
|
work, level of functioning, general health, quality of life, and social
|
|
support. Results We included a total of 207 clients in our study; 97 in
|
|
the intervention group and 110 in the care as usual (CAU) group. The
|
|
clients' mean age was 35.4 years (SD 12.8), 53.1\% were female, and 179
|
|
(86.5\%) reported multiple problems. We found the CARm intervention to
|
|
have no significant effects superior to those of the CAU group on all
|
|
outcomes. Conclusion As we found no superior effect of the CARm
|
|
intervention compared to CAU, we cannot recommend widespread adoption of
|
|
CARm. A process evaluation will give more insight into possible
|
|
implementation failure of the intervention.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brongers, KA (Corresponding Author), Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Dept Hlth Sci Community \& Occupat Med, Groningen, Netherlands.
|
|
Brongers, Kor A.; Hoekstra, Tialda; Wilming, Loes; Stewart, Roy E.; Roelofs, Pepijn D. D. M.; Brouwer, Sandra, Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Dept Hlth Sci Community \& Occupat Med, Groningen, Netherlands.
|
|
Brongers, Kor A., Res Ctr Labour Expertise AKC, Nijkerk, Netherlands.
|
|
Brongers, Kor A., Dutch Social Secur Inst, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Brongers, Kor A., Inst Employee Benefit Schemes UWV, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Hoekstra, Tialda; Wilming, Loes; Roelofs, Pepijn D. D. M.; Brouwer, Sandra, Res Ctr Insurance Med KCVG, Amsterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09638288.2022.2065543},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Multiple problems; strength; disability benefit; reintegration;
|
|
intervention study; RCT; return to work; vocational rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES; HEALTH; WORK; BARRIERS; SCALES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {k.a.brongers@umcg.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Stewart, Roy/HTS-6240-2023
|
|
Hoekstra, Tialda/H-3128-2014
|
|
Roelofs, Pepijn D.D.M./P-9479-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Stewart, Roy/0000-0001-9227-433X
|
|
Hoekstra, Tialda/0000-0003-3414-5681
|
|
Roelofs, Pepijn D.D.M./0000-0003-2037-1370
|
|
Brongers, Kor/0000-0002-5358-4738
|
|
Brouwer, Sandra/0000-0002-3819-4360},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000792023600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000381937400008,
|
|
Author = {Dunstan, Debra A. and MacEachen, Ellen},
|
|
Title = {Workplace managers' view of the role of co-workers in return-to-work},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {23},
|
|
Pages = {2324-2333},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: Theoretical and empirical research findings attest to the
|
|
workplace being a social environment in which co-workers have a critical
|
|
influence on the employment outcomes and return-to-work (RTW) success of
|
|
other employees. However, co-workers do not have a formal role in RTW
|
|
planning. The aim of this study was to explore how managers responsible
|
|
for developing and implementing RTW procedures view the role of
|
|
co-workers in this process.
|
|
Method: An exploratory qualitative pilot study was conducted in Canada.
|
|
Participants (1 male; 13 females; mean experience in RTW = 11.8 years)
|
|
were workplace (n=8) or RTW managers (n=6) with direct oversight of RTW
|
|
plans. The participants were recruited via invitation from a research
|
|
institute and were drawn from three different provinces. Data were
|
|
gathered via open-ended questions and were coded and subject to thematic
|
|
analysis.
|
|
Findings: Three key themes were identified: (1) Managers view RTW as
|
|
having little relevance to co-workers but expect them to cooperate with
|
|
the arrangements; (2) Formal procedures are inadequate when psychosocial
|
|
barriers to work resumption are present, so managers use informal
|
|
strategies to engage co-workers' emotional and social support; and (3)
|
|
Managers have difficulty integrating RTW procedures with other legal
|
|
obligations, such as privacy and confidentiality requirements.
|
|
Conclusion: Existing arrangements for the development and implementation
|
|
of RTW are sufficient most of the time, but may be inadequate when an
|
|
injured worker presents with psychosocial barriers to work resumption.
|
|
IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION
|
|
Standard RTW arrangements can be inadequate when a RTW plan requires
|
|
active co-worker support.
|
|
Privacy and confidentiality provisions can result in managers using
|
|
informal procedures for information exchange and to engage co-workers.
|
|
The use of risk management strategies - assessment, consultation and
|
|
communication - could be used to include co-workers when workplace
|
|
issues threaten the success of a RTW plan.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dunstan, DA (Corresponding Author), Univ New England, Sch Behav Cognit \& Social Sci, Discipline Psychol, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.
|
|
Dunstan, Debra A., Univ New England, Sch Behav Cognit \& Social Sci, Discipline Psychol, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.
|
|
MacEachen, Ellen, Univ Waterloo, Sch Publ Hlth \& Hlth Syst, Waterloo, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3109/09638288.2015.1129447},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Injury management policy; social context of work; workers' compensation;
|
|
work reintegration},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COMMON MENTAL-DISORDERS; REINTEGRATION PROCESSES; SUPERVISORS;
|
|
ATTITUDES; EMPLOYEES; ABSENCE; INJURY; REHABILITATION; ACCOMMODATION;
|
|
DISABILITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {ddunstan@une.edu.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dunstan, Debra/0000-0002-0298-7393},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000381937400008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000432396600014,
|
|
Author = {Shattuck, Rachel M. and Rendall, Michael S.},
|
|
Editor = {Alwin, DF},
|
|
Title = {RETROSPECTIVE REPORTING OF FIRST EMPLOYMENT IN THE LIFE-COURSES OF US
|
|
WOMEN},
|
|
Booktitle = {SOCIOLOGICAL METHODOLOGY, VOL 47},
|
|
Series = {Sociological Methodology},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Pages = {307-344},
|
|
Abstract = {The authors investigate the accuracy of young women's retrospective
|
|
reporting on their first substantial employment in three major,
|
|
nationally representative U.S. surveys, examining hypotheses that longer
|
|
recall duration, employment histories with lower salience and higher
|
|
complexity, and an absence of ``anchoring{''} biographical details will
|
|
adversely affect reporting accuracy. The authors compare retrospective
|
|
reports to benchmark panel survey estimates for the same cohorts.
|
|
Sociodemographic groups-notably non-Hispanic white women and women with
|
|
college-educated mothers-whose early employment histories at these ages
|
|
are in aggregate more complex (multiple jobs) and lower in salience
|
|
(more part-time jobs) are more likely to omit the occurrence of their
|
|
first substantial job or employment and to misreport their first job or
|
|
employment as occurring at an older age. Also, retrospective reports are
|
|
skewed toward overreporting longer, therefore more salient, later jobs
|
|
over shorter, earlier jobs. The relatively small magnitudes of
|
|
differences, however, indicate that the retrospective questions
|
|
nevertheless capture these summary indicators of first substantial
|
|
employment reasonably accurately. Moreover, these differences are
|
|
especially small for groups of women who are more likely to experience
|
|
labor-market disadvantage and for women with early births.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shattuck, RM (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Maryland Populat Res Ctr, 2105 Morrill Hall, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Shattuck, Rachel M., Univ Maryland, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Rendall, Michael S., Univ Maryland, Sociol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Rendall, Michael S., Univ Maryland, Maryland Populat Res Ctr, 2105 Morrill Hall, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0081175017723397},
|
|
ISSN = {0081-1750},
|
|
Keywords = {survey recall; life-course; first employment; retrospective reporting},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEASUREMENT ERROR; PROGRAM PARTICIPATION; DATA QUALITY; UNEMPLOYMENT;
|
|
PANEL; BIAS; RELIABILITY; RECALL; MEMORY; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {rachel.m.shattuck@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000432396600014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000429849900001,
|
|
Author = {Bates, Nicole and Callander, Emily and Lindsay, Daniel and Watt,
|
|
Kerrianne},
|
|
Title = {Labour force participation and the cost of lost productivity due to
|
|
cancer in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Month = {APR 6},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: In Australia, 40\% of people diagnosed with cancer will be
|
|
of working age (25-64 years). A cancer diagnosis may lead to temporary
|
|
or permanent changes in a person's labour force participation, which has
|
|
an economic impact on both the individual and the economy. However,
|
|
little is known about this economic impact of cancer due to lost
|
|
productivity in Australia. This paper aims to determine the labour force
|
|
participation characteristics of people with cancer, to estimate the
|
|
indirect cost due to lost productivity, and to identify any inequality
|
|
in the distribution of labour force absence in Australia.
|
|
Methods: This study used national cross-sectional data from the 2015
|
|
Survey of Disability, Ageing and Carers, conducted by the Australian
|
|
Bureau of Statistics (ABS). The ABS weighted each component of the
|
|
survey to ensure the sample represented the population distribution of
|
|
Australia. The analysis was limited to people aged 25-64 years.
|
|
Participants were assigned to one of three health condition groups: `no
|
|
health condition', `cancer', and `any other long-term health condition'.
|
|
A series of logistic regression models were constructed to determine the
|
|
association between health condition and labour force participation.
|
|
Results: A total of 34,393 participants surveyed were aged 25-64 years,
|
|
representing approximately 12,387,800 Australians. Almost half (46\%) of
|
|
people with cancer were not in the labour force, resulting in a
|
|
reduction of \$1.7 billion to the Australian gross domestic product
|
|
(GDP). Amongst those in the labour force, people with no health
|
|
condition were 3.00 times more likely to be employed full-time compared
|
|
to people with cancer (95\% CI 1.96-4.57), after adjusting for age, sex,
|
|
educational attainment and rurality. Amongst those with cancer, people
|
|
without a tertiary qualification were 3.73 times more likely to be out
|
|
of the labour force (95\% CI 1.97-7.07).
|
|
Conclusions: This paper is the first in Australia to estimate the
|
|
national labour force participation rates of people with cancer. People
|
|
with cancer were less likely to be in the labour force, resulting in a
|
|
reduction in Australia's GDP. Cancer survivors, especially those without
|
|
a tertiary qualification may benefit from support to return to work
|
|
after a diagnosis.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bates, N (Corresponding Author), James Cook Univ, Coll Publ Hlth Med \& Vet Sci, Bldg 48,Douglas Campus, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
|
|
Bates, Nicole; Lindsay, Daniel; Watt, Kerrianne, James Cook Univ, Coll Publ Hlth Med \& Vet Sci, Bldg 48,Douglas Campus, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
|
|
Callander, Emily; Lindsay, Daniel, James Cook Univ, Australian Inst Trop Hlth \& Med, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-018-5297-9},
|
|
Article-Number = {375},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Cancer; Oncology; Costs; Health economics; Productivity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COLORECTAL-CANCER; WORK; SURVIVORS; EMPLOYMENT; DIAGNOSIS; DISEASE;
|
|
IMPACT; RETURN; INCOME; BURDEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {Nicole.bates@my.jcu.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lindsay, Daniel/GPS-6965-2022
|
|
Callander, Emily J/M-5679-2017
|
|
Watt, Kerrianne/G-2520-2010},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lindsay, Daniel/0000-0002-7471-3041
|
|
Callander, Emily J/0000-0001-7233-6804
|
|
Watt, Kerrianne/0000-0002-2275-081X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000429849900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000787978200001,
|
|
Author = {Negi, Nalini Junko and Siegel, Jennifer L.},
|
|
Title = {Social Service Providers Navigating the Rapid Transition to Telehealth
|
|
With Latinx Immigrants During the COVID-19 Pandemic},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ORTHOPSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {92},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {463-473},
|
|
Abstract = {Public Policy Relevance Statement In the wake of COVID-19 and shift to
|
|
remote platforms, little is known about the telehealth implementation
|
|
experiences of social service providers who work with Latinx immigrants,
|
|
an underserved group with limited accessibility to reliable internet or
|
|
computers. Findings suggest that the lack of a clear and coordinated
|
|
federal, local, or organizational response led social service providers
|
|
to work beyond the scope of their routine duties to navigate unreliable
|
|
remote platforms to meet the rising needs of their Latinx immigrant
|
|
clients, which impacted work-related stress and satisfaction. The urgent
|
|
development of more equitable and accessible models of telehealth is
|
|
critical in the face of exacerbating disparities in the health and
|
|
social consequences of COVID-19 among Latinx immigrants.
|
|
The COVID-19 pandemic radically altered social service provision with
|
|
significant public health implications as social services often target
|
|
society's most vulnerable with preventative health services addressing
|
|
social determinants of health. Social service providers serve as crucial
|
|
linkages to services for low-income Latinx immigrants who face
|
|
substantial barriers to health and social care. However, little is known
|
|
regarding how social service providers working with Latinx immigrants
|
|
navigated service delivery and the rapid transition to telehealth during
|
|
the COVID-19 pandemic. This mixed-methods (QUAL-quant; capitalization
|
|
denotes primacy) study used survey data collected from April 2020 to
|
|
October 2020 with Latinx immigrant serving as social service providers
|
|
in the Maryland-Washington, DC, region. Social ecological theory guided
|
|
the analysis of narrative data and the integration of quantitative data
|
|
with qualitative themes. Participants (N = 41) were majority women
|
|
(85.4\%), identified as Latinx (48.6\%) and elucidated themes related to
|
|
their transition to telehealth, including adjusting from in-person to
|
|
telehealth, barriers to telehealth implementation, impact on quality of
|
|
services, working to prevent clients' disconnection to social services,
|
|
and work-related stress and satisfaction. Through the firsthand
|
|
experiences of frontline social service providers, results reveal
|
|
conditions of scarcity endemic in social services for Latinx immigrants
|
|
that preexisted the pandemic and became further constrained during a
|
|
time of heightened health and social need. Further, critical insights
|
|
regarding the use of remote modalities with vulnerable populations
|
|
(language minorities and immigrants) can be instructive in the
|
|
development of improved and accessible telehealth and remote programming
|
|
and services for Latinx immigrants.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Negi, NJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Sch Social Work, 525 West Redwood St, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA.
|
|
Negi, Nalini Junko; Siegel, Jennifer L., Univ Maryland, Sch Social Work, 525 West Redwood St, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/ort0000626},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0002-9432},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-0025},
|
|
Keywords = {telehealth; Latinx; immigrants; social services; COVID-19},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; STRESS; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {nnegi@ssw.umaryland.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000787978200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000427200300001,
|
|
Author = {Lee, Ki-Dong and Lee, Seo-Hyeong and Choe, Jong-Il},
|
|
Title = {State dependence, individual heterogeneity, and the choice of employment
|
|
status: evidence from Korea},
|
|
Journal = {APPLIED ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {50},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {824-837},
|
|
Abstract = {Focusing on the individual heterogeneity, this article examines the
|
|
causes of an individual's employment status choice and the extent of
|
|
state dependence in the Korean labour market. We estimate a dynamic
|
|
multinomial logit model using the panel data drawn from the first to
|
|
fifteenth wave of the Korean Labour and Income Panel Study. The results
|
|
suggest the presence of state dependence. Individual characteristics and
|
|
growth background have a significant effect on the choice of employment
|
|
status. Gender is still an important employment factor; males are more
|
|
likely to be employed and this gender effect is highest for regular
|
|
employment (RE). One's educational attainment and age operate in
|
|
opposite directions. That is, educational attainment (age) has a
|
|
positive (negative) impact on the choice of a regular job and a negative
|
|
(positive) impact on the choice of a non-regular job. Contrary to our
|
|
expectations, a wealthy family background reduces the probability of
|
|
individuals being wage workers, and raises the probability of them being
|
|
unemployed. The barriers to RE are greater than for non-regular
|
|
employment. These findings are of great importance for designing
|
|
policies to effectively address unemployment and labour informality
|
|
problems in Korea.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lee, KD (Corresponding Author), Keimyung Univ, Dept Int Commerce, Daegu, South Korea.
|
|
Lee, Ki-Dong; Lee, Seo-Hyeong, Keimyung Univ, Dept Int Commerce, Daegu, South Korea.
|
|
Choe, Jong-Il, Chosun Univ, Dept Econ, Gwangju, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/00036846.2017.1343447},
|
|
ISSN = {0003-6846},
|
|
EISSN = {1466-4283},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment status; individual heterogeneity; multinomial logit model;
|
|
state dependence; transition probability},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKET; UNOBSERVED HETEROGENEITY; SELF-EMPLOYMENT; UNEMPLOYMENT;
|
|
DYNAMICS; MOBILITY; TRANSITIONS; DURATION; MODEL; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {kdlee@kmu.ac.kr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lee, Ki-Dong/L-4195-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lee, Ki-Dong/0000-0002-2660-2806
|
|
Lee, Seo-Hyeong/0000-0003-0584-5232},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000427200300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000329983200002,
|
|
Author = {Fahlen, Susanne},
|
|
Title = {CAPABILITIES AND CHILDBEARING INTENTIONS IN EUROPE: The association
|
|
between work-family reconciliation policies, economic uncertainties and
|
|
women's fertility plans},
|
|
Journal = {EUROPEAN SOCIETIES},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {639-662},
|
|
Month = {DEC 1},
|
|
Abstract = {This article investigates the association between economic
|
|
uncertainties, work-family reconciliation policies and women's
|
|
short-term childbearing intentions in 10 European countries. I introduce
|
|
the capability approach to this issue and argue that short-term
|
|
childbearing intentions are an indicator of women's capabilities to
|
|
start a family or to have additional children. Using data from the
|
|
European Social Survey, the analysis reveals that the association
|
|
between economic uncertainties and short-term childbearing intentions
|
|
varies by the number of children already born, education and
|
|
institutional contexts. In some countries, having a job have a positive
|
|
impact on childless women's short-term intentions, while in other
|
|
countries, low educated childless women out of the labour market are
|
|
those most likely to intend to have a child in the near future. Other
|
|
aspects of economic uncertainties, namely perceived job and income
|
|
insecurity, have a negative impact on short-term childbearing
|
|
intentions, regardless of motherhood status. The analysis also shows
|
|
that the combination of weaker institutional support for work-family
|
|
reconciliation, perceived job and income insecurity and low educational
|
|
skills are associated with lower childbearing intentions, and the
|
|
pattern across the 10 countries is slightly stronger for childless
|
|
women. This study underscores the importance of embedding individual
|
|
decision processes in a broader societal context.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fahlen, S (Corresponding Author), Stockholm Univ, Dept Sociol, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Stockholm Univ, Dept Sociol, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/14616696.2013.798018},
|
|
ISSN = {1461-6696},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-8307},
|
|
Keywords = {childbearing intentions; capability approach; economic uncertainties;
|
|
reconciliation policies},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FEMALE EMPLOYMENT; GENDER; PARENTHOOD; INEQUALITY; EMERGENCE; SWEDEN;
|
|
AGENCY; SIZE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {susanne.fahlen@sociology.su.se},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {40},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000329983200002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000445989000022,
|
|
Author = {Chang, Juin-jen and Liu, Chia-ying and Wang, Wei-neng},
|
|
Title = {Conspicuous consumption and trade unionism},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MACROECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Pages = {350-366},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper examines the equilibrium optimality with consumption-induced
|
|
social comparisons in a unionized economy which entails unemployment. We
|
|
show that social comparisons of consumption lead to excessive labor
|
|
supply for employed workers, but trade unionism results in
|
|
under-employment. When conspicuous consumption meets trade unionism, the
|
|
labor force exhibits an ``intensive margin{''} under which the excessive
|
|
labor supply caused by social comparisons of consumption is restrained
|
|
by unionization. Conspicuous consumption can then achieve the social
|
|
sub-optimum, without a need for government intervention, creating no
|
|
distortions in consumption, capital accumulation, and output in a
|
|
competitive equilibrium. When social comparisons in consumption are more
|
|
intensive, a higher degree of unionization is required for restoring
|
|
optimality. Given a specific degree of social comparison in consumption,
|
|
a higher degree of unionization is socially desirable if the output
|
|
elasticity of labor, the elasticity of labor supply, or the elasticity
|
|
of substitution between working hours and employment is high. By
|
|
contrast, a lower degree of unionization is socially desirable when the
|
|
trade union displays a more favorable orientation toward wages. By
|
|
shedding light on the role of trade unionism, our study also provides a
|
|
reconciliation of the disparity between the theoretical prediction and
|
|
the empirical findings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chang, JJ (Corresponding Author), Acad Sinica, Inst Econ, Taipei 115, Nankang, Taiwan.
|
|
Chang, Juin-jen; Wang, Wei-neng, Acad Sinica, Inst Econ, Taipei 115, Nankang, Taiwan.
|
|
Liu, Chia-ying, Aletheia Univ, Dept Econ, Taipei, Taiwan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jmacro.2018.06.006},
|
|
ISSN = {0164-0704},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-152X},
|
|
Keywords = {Conspicuous consumption; Trade unionism; Intensive/extensive margin of
|
|
labor supply; Social optimum},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL-STATUS; ECONOMIC-GROWTH; LEISURE; EMPLOYMENT; JONESES;
|
|
EXTERNALITIES; EFFICIENCY; NETWORKS; TAXATION; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {jjchang@econ.sinica.edu.tw},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Chang, Juin-Jen/ABD-9235-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000445989000022},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000588392200001,
|
|
Author = {Silvaggi, Fabiola and Leonardi, Matilde and Raggi, Alberto and
|
|
Eigenmann, Michela and Mariniello, Arianna and Silvani, Antonio and
|
|
Lamperti, Elena and Schiavolin, Silvia},
|
|
Title = {Employment and Work Ability of Persons With Brain Tumors: A Systematic
|
|
Review},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Month = {OCT 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Brain tumors (BT) are between the eight most common cancers among
|
|
persons aged 40 years, with an average survival time of 10 years for
|
|
patients affected by non-malignant brain tumor. Some patients continue
|
|
to work, reporting difficulties in work-related activities, or even job
|
|
loss. The purpose of the present study was to review the existing
|
|
information about the ability people with BT to return to work and to
|
|
identify factors associated with job loss. We performed a systematic
|
|
review on SCOPUS and EMBASE for peer-reviewed papers that reported
|
|
studies assessing work ability in patients with BT that were published
|
|
in the period from January 2010 to January 2020. Out of 800 identified
|
|
records, 7 articles were selected for analysis, in which 1,507
|
|
participants with BT were enrolled overall. Three main themes emerged:
|
|
the impact of neuropsychological functioning on work productivity, the
|
|
change of employment status for long-term survivors and issues related
|
|
to return to work processes. Based on the results of selected studies,
|
|
it can be concluded that the impact of BT on workforce participation is
|
|
determined by depressive symptoms and cognitive deficits, as well as by
|
|
high short-term mortality but also on environmental barriers. Vocational
|
|
Rehabilitation programs should be implemented to help patients wishing
|
|
to return to or maintain their current work, as much as possible.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Silvaggi, F (Corresponding Author), Fdn Ist Ricovero \& Cura Carattere Sci, Ist Neurol Carlo Besta, Disabilita, Unita Operat Complessa Neurol,Salute Pubbl, Milan, Italy.
|
|
Silvaggi, Fabiola; Leonardi, Matilde; Raggi, Alberto; Eigenmann, Michela; Mariniello, Arianna; Schiavolin, Silvia, Fdn Ist Ricovero \& Cura Carattere Sci, Ist Neurol Carlo Besta, Disabilita, Unita Operat Complessa Neurol,Salute Pubbl, Milan, Italy.
|
|
Silvani, Antonio; Lamperti, Elena, Fdn Ist Ricovero \& Cura Carattere Sci, Ist Neurol Carlo Besta, Unita Operat Complessa Neurol 2, Neurooncol Clin, Milan, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fnhum.2020.571191},
|
|
Article-Number = {571191},
|
|
ISSN = {1662-5161},
|
|
Keywords = {brain tumors; employment; work ability; public health; RTW},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; CANCER-RELATED FATIGUE; PERFORMANCE STATUS; FOLLOW-UP;
|
|
DEPRESSION; SURVIVORS; REHABILITATION; PRODUCTIVITY; OUTCOMES; DISEASE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Neurosciences; Psychology},
|
|
Author-Email = {fabiola.silvaggi@istituto-besta.it},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Schiavolin, Silvia/K-6595-2016
|
|
Mariniello, Arianna/AAT-4792-2021
|
|
Raggi, Alberto/K-5787-2016
|
|
Silvani, Antonio/AAA-4600-2019
|
|
Lamperti, Elena/AAO-5323-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Schiavolin, Silvia/0000-0002-5391-7539
|
|
Mariniello, Arianna/0000-0001-7074-0635
|
|
Raggi, Alberto/0000-0002-7433-7779
|
|
Silvani, Antonio/0000-0002-4791-1042
|
|
Lamperti, Elena/0000-0003-3749-713X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000588392200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000722445200001,
|
|
Author = {Simmons, Cassandra and Rodrigues, Ricardo and Szebehely, Marta},
|
|
Title = {Working conditions in the long-term care sector: A comparative study of
|
|
migrant and native workers in Austria and Sweden},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH \& SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {E2191-E2202},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Increased demand for long-term care (LTC) services alongside precarious
|
|
working conditions has resulted in labour shortages in the LTC sector,
|
|
which has led to an increasing share of workers of migrant origin
|
|
filling these jobs. Previous research on migrant care workers has also
|
|
highlighted the seeming gap in working conditions relative to native
|
|
workers. However, lack of disaggregated data on migrant and native care
|
|
workers, alongside single-case studies, may have concealed potential
|
|
disadvantages faced by certain groups and insufficiently accounted for
|
|
differences in migration regimes and organisation of LTC sectors. To
|
|
address these gaps, we carried out a comparative study on various
|
|
working conditions of migrant and native LTC workers in Austria and
|
|
Sweden. Using the international Nordcare survey on care sector working
|
|
conditions, carried out in Austria in 2017 (n = 792) and in Sweden in
|
|
2015 (n = 708), we employed t-tests and multivariate logistic
|
|
regressions to compare the working conditions of migrant and native
|
|
carers in home and residential care in each country. We found that worse
|
|
working conditions in Sweden compared to Austria may be explained by
|
|
differences in training requirements of the LTC workforce and the
|
|
relatively large for-profit private sector. Country of origin also plays
|
|
a paramount role in the differences in working conditions experienced by
|
|
migrants compared to native care workers, with non-European migrants
|
|
being more likely to face a number of precarious working conditions. Our
|
|
findings highlight the need to continue addressing precarious working
|
|
conditions across the sector, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic
|
|
where poor working conditions have been linked to increased
|
|
COVID-related deaths in nursing homes. Our findings also emphasise the
|
|
importance of policies that consider the various challenges experienced
|
|
by different migrant groups in the LTC sector, who may particularly be
|
|
at risk of presenteeism during the COVID-19 pandemic.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rodrigues, R (Corresponding Author), European Ctr Social Welf Policy \& Res, Vienna, Austria.
|
|
Simmons, Cassandra; Rodrigues, Ricardo, European Ctr Social Welf Policy \& Res, Vienna, Austria.
|
|
Szebehely, Marta, Stockholm Univ, Dept Social Work, Stockholm, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/hsc.13657},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-0410},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2524},
|
|
Keywords = {care of elderly people; long-term care; long-term care workers;
|
|
migrants; working conditions},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HOME-CARE; QUALITY; STAFF; JOB; ELDERCARE; TURNOVER; NURSES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {rodrigues@euro.centre.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rodrigues, Ricardo/AAD-1109-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rodrigues, Ricardo/0000-0001-8438-4184
|
|
Simmons, Cassandra/0000-0002-3053-4244},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000722445200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000885960300006,
|
|
Author = {Chisholm, Hillary and Kershaw, Trace and Guerra, Laura Sotelo and Bocek,
|
|
Kevin and Garcia, Yesenia and Lion, K. Casey},
|
|
Title = {A Realist Evaluation Analysis of a Novel Multi-Faceted Inpatient Patient
|
|
Navigation Program},
|
|
Journal = {ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {789-796},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: Children of color and from low-income families experience
|
|
disparities in hospital care and outcomes. This study examined the
|
|
experiences of parents and providers who participated in a novel patient
|
|
navigation program designed to address these disparities. METHODS:
|
|
Between April and October 2018, we conducted semistructured interviews
|
|
with parents enrolled in the Family Bridge navigation pilot study, and
|
|
inpatient care providers. Each set of interviews was thematically coded
|
|
and analyzed according to the Realist Evaluation Framework of context,
|
|
mechanism and outcomes; to identify how and when the pro-gram worked,
|
|
for whom, and with what results. RESULTS: Of 60 parents enrolled in the
|
|
intervention, 50 (83\%) completed an interview. All enrolled children
|
|
had public insurance; 66\% were Hispanic, 24\% were non -His-panic
|
|
Black, and 36\% of parents preferred Spanish for communication. Of 23
|
|
providers who completed an inter-view, 16 (70\%) were attending
|
|
physicians. Parents identified 4 contexts influencing intervention
|
|
effectiveness: past clinical experience, barriers to communication,
|
|
access to resources, and timing of intervention delivery. Four
|
|
mechanisms were identified by both parents and providers: emotional
|
|
support, information collection and sharing, facilitating communication,
|
|
and addressing unmet social needs. Parent-level outcomes included
|
|
improved communication, feeling supported, and increased parental
|
|
knowledge surrounding the child's care and the health system.
|
|
Provider-level outcomes included providing tailored communication and
|
|
attending to family nonmedical needs. CONCLUSIONS: This study provided
|
|
insight into the mechanisms by which an inpatient navigation program may
|
|
improve communication, support, and knowledge for parents of low-income
|
|
children of color, both directly and by changing provider behavior.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chisholm, H (Corresponding Author), Yale Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social \& Behav Sci, 60 Coll St, New Haven, CT 06510 USA.
|
|
Chisholm, Hillary; Kershaw, Trace, Yale Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social \& Behav Sci, 60 Coll St, New Haven, CT 06510 USA.
|
|
Chisholm, Hillary, MGH Inst Hlth Profess, Sch Nursing, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Guerra, Laura Sotelo; Bocek, Kevin; Garcia, Yesenia; Lion, K. Casey, Seattle Childrens Res Inst, Ctr Child Hlth Behav \& Dev, Seattle, WA USA.
|
|
Lion, K. Casey, Univ Washington, Seattle Childrens Hosp, Dept Pediat, Sch Med, Seattle, WA USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1876-2859},
|
|
EISSN = {1876-2867},
|
|
Keywords = {emotional support; low-income/minority; patient-centered communication;
|
|
patient navigation; pediatric hospital medicine},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {hchisholm@mghihp.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000885960300006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000618890700029,
|
|
Author = {Ge, Zhong-Ming and Chen, Ren-Xing and Tang, Wei-Zhong and Cong, Yu},
|
|
Title = {Why strong employment support for persons with disabilities has not
|
|
brought about positive outcomes? A qualitative study in mainland China},
|
|
Journal = {CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {121},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Employment is an important way for persons with disabilities (PwDs) to
|
|
participate in society and fulfil their potential. However, despite the
|
|
impression that employment support for PwDs is improving, why is the
|
|
actual employment situation in China stagnant or even worsening? In
|
|
order to answer this question, this paper uses a qualitative study in
|
|
BTQ City, QL Province, China to analyze the causes of the general
|
|
problems in employment support for PwDs by breaking them down into
|
|
official government, quasi-government, and primary support groups. This
|
|
study finds that the prioritization of `economic development' dominates
|
|
people's thinking and actions, to the detriment of social and economic
|
|
goals. Consequently, the responses of the three employment support
|
|
systems are: (a) an official government focus on ``productivism{''}
|
|
means PwDs employment is not a priority, and official support is usually
|
|
``all talk, no action{''}; (b) bureaucratic quasi-government
|
|
organizations are reluctant to assist beyond mere formalities to boost
|
|
PwDs employment as this does not form part of their performance
|
|
assessment; and (c) individualism resulting from societal breakdown
|
|
makes the primary support group perceive a lack of benefit in assisting
|
|
PwDs, and any assistance they render is done purely out of self-interest
|
|
and are therefore unsustainable. We hope that the findings of this study
|
|
will provide some inspiration and reference for improving the employment
|
|
policy of PwDs in China.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chen, RX (Corresponding Author), Renmin Univ China, Sch Labor \& Human Resources, 59 Zhongguancun St, Beijing 100872, Peoples R China.
|
|
Ge, Zhong-Ming, Shandong Univ, Welf Res Ctr People Disabil, Zhixin Bldg A1416,Shanda North St 27, Jinan 250100, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chen, Ren-Xing, Renmin Univ China, Sch Labor \& Human Resources, 59 Zhongguancun St, Beijing 100872, Peoples R China.
|
|
Tang, Wei-Zhong, Weizhong Childrens Rehabil Ctr, 39 Baimashan South Rd, Jinan, Shandong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Cong, Yu, Shandong Univ, Welf Res Ctr People Disabil, Shanda South Rd 27,Cent Campus, Jinan, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.105839},
|
|
Article-Number = {105839},
|
|
ISSN = {0190-7409},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7765},
|
|
Keywords = {Persons with disabilities; Employment support; Productivism; China},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PSYCHIATRIC DISABILITIES; BARRIERS; WELFARE; PEOPLE; ATTITUDES;
|
|
EDUCATION; YOUTH; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {renxing1010@126.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tang, Wei/IZQ-1283-2023
|
|
tang, wei/HZH-5205-2023},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {71},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {45},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000618890700029},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000509675400005,
|
|
Author = {Shah, Reshma and Gustafson, Erika and Atkins, Marc},
|
|
Title = {Parental Attitudes and Beliefs Surrounding Play Among Predominantly
|
|
Low-income Urban Families: A Qualitative Study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL AND BEHAVIORAL PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {606-612},
|
|
Month = {OCT-NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: Parents' perceived benefits and barriers to participation in
|
|
cognitively stimulating activities may help explain why income-related
|
|
discrepancies in early and frequent participation in such activities
|
|
exist. We sought to develop an improved understanding of attitudes and
|
|
beliefs surrounding play among families who live in predominantly
|
|
low-income urban communities. Methods: Using qualitative methods, focus
|
|
groups were conducted with parents of children 2 weeks to 24 months of
|
|
age who attended a primary care clinic serving predominantly low-income
|
|
urban communities. Discussions were recorded, transcribed verbatim, and
|
|
analyzed using thematic analysis. Results: Thirty-five parents
|
|
participated in 6 focus groups. Participants were 61\% female and 94\%
|
|
nonwhite; 71\% had children who received public health insurance.
|
|
Analyses revealed 7 major themes that mapped onto the Health Belief
|
|
Model's core domains of perceived need, barriers, and cues to action:
|
|
(1) play as important for developing parent-child relationships, (2)
|
|
toy- and media-focused play as important for developmental and
|
|
educational benefit, (3) lack of time due to household and work demands,
|
|
(4) lack of knowledge regarding the importance of play, (5)
|
|
media-related barriers, (6) need for reminders, and (7) need for ideas
|
|
for play. Conclusion: Caregivers of young children describe many
|
|
important benefits of play, yet they have misconceptions regarding use
|
|
of toys and media in promoting development as well as notable barriers
|
|
to participating in play, which may be opportunities for intervention.
|
|
Public health programs may be more effectively implemented if they
|
|
consider these attitudes to develop new or refine existing strategies
|
|
for promoting parent-child learning activities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shah, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Illinois, Coll Med, Dept Pediat, 840 South Wood St,MC 856, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Shah, Reshma, Univ Illinois, Coll Med, Dept Pediat, 840 South Wood St,MC 856, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Gustafson, Erika; Atkins, Marc, Univ Illinois, Dept Psychiat, Inst Juvenile Res, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/DBP.0000000000000708},
|
|
ISSN = {0196-206X},
|
|
EISSN = {1536-7312},
|
|
Keywords = {parenting; play; communication; development; early childhood},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTHY CHILD-DEVELOPMENT; LANGUAGE; FOCUS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Behavioral Sciences; Psychology, Developmental; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {reshmamd@uic.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gustafson, Erika/0000-0003-2774-6745},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000509675400005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000542165500005,
|
|
Author = {Sokhi, Jeremy and Desborough, James and Norris, Nigel and Wright, David
|
|
John},
|
|
Title = {Learning from community pharmacists' initial experiences of a
|
|
workplace-based training program},
|
|
Journal = {CURRENTS IN PHARMACY TEACHING AND LEARNING},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {932-939},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: To prepare community pharmacists for the provision of
|
|
clinical and patient-focused services, a novel postgraduate course for
|
|
community pharmacists in the United Kingdom was developed. The program
|
|
incorporated personal development planning against a personal
|
|
development framework, workplace mentoring, employment of work-based
|
|
assessment tools, activities that encouraged increased
|
|
inter-professional working, reflection, and opportunities for peer
|
|
support. Objectives were to identify course components that support
|
|
development, describe the effect on practice, and explore the perceived
|
|
advantages and disadvantages of this model of postgraduate education.
|
|
Methods: Interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 15
|
|
community pharmacists after they had completed approximately one year of
|
|
the three-year course. A topic guide covering approaches to learning,
|
|
rationale for course selection, course experiences to date, and impact
|
|
on practice was used. Interview recordings were thematically analyzed.
|
|
Results: Two themes were identified. `Support for learning' describes
|
|
the components of the course that provided support for learning,
|
|
including opportunities to learn with and from others, workplace
|
|
mentoring, and facilitated access to general practitioners. `Outcomes of
|
|
learning' encompasses how the course was a way of effecting change
|
|
within existing roles and the increase in confidence and motivation to
|
|
change practice.
|
|
Conclusions: The model has merit in supporting community pharmacists to
|
|
develop the confidence and competence required for extended clinical and
|
|
patient-focused roles. While this model of learning seems to provide
|
|
educational value, further research is required to determine whether the
|
|
additional resources required to provide workplace mentoring, use
|
|
work-based assessment tools, and encourage inter-professional working
|
|
are justified.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sokhi, J (Corresponding Author), Univ East Anglia, Sch Pharm, Norwich Res Pk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
|
|
Sokhi, Jeremy; Desborough, James; Wright, David John, Univ East Anglia, Sch Pharm, Norwich Res Pk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
|
|
Norris, Nigel, Univ East Anglia, Sch Educ \& Lifelong Learning, Norwich Res Pk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.cptl.2020.04.017},
|
|
ISSN = {1877-1297},
|
|
EISSN = {1877-1300},
|
|
Keywords = {Community pharmacists; Postgraduate education; Work-based assessment;
|
|
Workplace learning; Workplace mentoring},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CONTINUING MEDICAL-EDUCATION; PROFESSIONAL-DEVELOPMENT; CARE;
|
|
INTERVENTIONS; PERCEPTIONS; BARRIERS; HEALTH; SKILLS; IMPACT; VIEWS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Scientific Disciplines},
|
|
Author-Email = {j.sokhi@uea.ac.uk
|
|
j.desborough@uea.ac.uk
|
|
n.norris@uea.ac.uk
|
|
d.j.wright@uea.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sokhi, Jeremy/AAV-3734-2021
|
|
Desborough, James/ABF-5389-2020
|
|
Wright, David/K-7833-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sokhi, Jeremy/0000-0001-8501-1224
|
|
Desborough, James/0000-0001-5807-1731
|
|
Wright, David/0000-0003-3690-9593},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {51},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000542165500005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000452162500005,
|
|
Author = {Coulborn, Rebecca Marie and Gebrehiwot, Tesfay Gebregzabher and
|
|
Schneider, Martin and Gerstl, Sibylle and Adera, Cherinet and Herrero,
|
|
Merce and Porten, Klaudia and den Boer, Margriet and Ritmeijer, Koert
|
|
and Alvar, Jorge and Hassen, Abrahim and Mulugeta, Afework},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to access to visceral leishmaniasis diagnosis and care among
|
|
seasonal mobile workers in Western Tigray, Northern Ethiopia: A
|
|
qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS NEGLECTED TROPICAL DISEASES},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Ethiopia bears a high burden of visceral leishmaniasis (VL). Early
|
|
access to VL diagnosis and care improves clinical prognosis and reduces
|
|
transmission from infected humans; however, significant obstacles exist.
|
|
The approximate 250,000 seasonal mobile workers (MW) employed annually
|
|
in northwestern Ethiopia may be particularly disadvantaged and at risk
|
|
of VL acquisition and death. Our study aimed to assess barriers, and
|
|
recommend interventions to increase access, to VL diagnosis and care
|
|
among MWs.
|
|
Methodology/Principal findings
|
|
In 2017, 50 interviews and 11 focus group discussions were conducted
|
|
with MWs, mobile residents, VL patients and caretakers, community
|
|
leaders and healthcare workers in Kafta Humera District, Tigray.
|
|
Participants reported high vulnerability to VL among MWs and residents
|
|
engaged in transitory work. Multiple visits to health facilities were
|
|
consistently needed to access VL diagnosis. Inadequate healthcare worker
|
|
training, diagnostic test kit unavailability at the primary healthcare
|
|
level, lack of VL awareness, insufficient finances for care-seeking and
|
|
prioritization of income-generating activities were significant barriers
|
|
to diagnosis and care. Social (decision-making and financial) support
|
|
strongly and positively influenced care-seeking; workers unable to
|
|
receive salary advances, compensation for partial work, or peer
|
|
assistance for contract completion were particularly disadvantaged.
|
|
Participants recommended the government/stakeholders intervene to
|
|
ensure: MWs access to bed-nets, food, shelter, water, and healthcare at
|
|
farms or sick leave; decentralization of diagnostic tests to primary
|
|
healthcare facilities; surplus medications/staff during the peak season;
|
|
improved referral/feedback/reporting/training within the health system;
|
|
free comprehensive healthcare for all VL-related services; and community
|
|
health education.
|
|
Conclusions/Significance
|
|
Contrary to what health policy for VL dictates in this endemic setting,
|
|
study participants reported very poor access to diagnosis and,
|
|
consequently, significantly delayed access to treatment. Interventions
|
|
tailored to the socio-economic and health needs of MWs (and other
|
|
persons suffering from VL) are urgently needed to reduce health
|
|
disparities and the VL burden.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Coulborn, RM (Corresponding Author), Epictr, Paris, France.
|
|
Coulborn, Rebecca Marie; Schneider, Martin; Gerstl, Sibylle; Porten, Klaudia, Epictr, Paris, France.
|
|
Gebrehiwot, Tesfay Gebregzabher, Mekelle Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Mekelle, Ethiopia.
|
|
Adera, Cherinet; Herrero, Merce; den Boer, Margriet, KalaCORE, London, England.
|
|
Herrero, Merce, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
den Boer, Margriet, Med Sans Frontieres, London, England.
|
|
Ritmeijer, Koert, Med Sans Frontieres, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Alvar, Jorge, Drugs Neglected Dis Initiat, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Hassen, Abrahim, Tigray Reg Hlth Bur, Dept Hlth Promot \& Dis Prevent, Tigray, Ethiopia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pntd.0006778},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0006778},
|
|
ISSN = {1935-2735},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {KALA-AZAR; HIV-INFECTION; RISK; PREVALENCE; OUTBREAK; DISEASES; AFRICA;
|
|
HUMERA; IMPACT; KENYA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Infectious Diseases; Parasitology; Tropical Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {rebecca.coulborn@epicentre.msf.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mulugeta, Afework/0000-0003-0707-4363},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000452162500005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000309493500013,
|
|
Author = {Pablo Bocarejo, Juan S. and Ricardo Oviedo, Daniel H.},
|
|
Title = {Transport accessibility and social inequities: a tool for identification
|
|
of mobility needs and evaluation of transport investments},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Pages = {142-154},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Although the concept of social equity seems to be ubiquitous in most
|
|
mobility plans of major Latin American cities, when evaluating transport
|
|
projects for financing and prioritisation there are no specific or solid
|
|
indicators to measure how they can contribute to promoting better access
|
|
to opportunities, particularly for the most vulnerable segments of the
|
|
population. In response, we designed a methodology that uses the
|
|
concepts of accessibility and affordability as a complementary means for
|
|
evaluating public transport investment, and identifying transport
|
|
disadvantages and priorities for project generation. This is based on
|
|
the calculation of accessibility levels to the labour market for
|
|
different zones of a given city, by introducing a function of impedance
|
|
composed by travel time budget and the percentage of income spent on
|
|
transportation.
|
|
The characteristics of time and percentage of income spent for accessing
|
|
work obtained from transportation surveys define the ``real
|
|
accessibility{''} to employment for all the zones of a city. Then, a
|
|
stated preference survey was applied in order to determine the desired
|
|
expenditure in both variables, and the accessibility to jobs in this new
|
|
situation was subsequently calculated. We calculated a third type of
|
|
accessibility, using ``standard{''} values of travel time and
|
|
expenditure budget.
|
|
This methodology is therefore used to evaluate different policies in
|
|
Bogota, corresponding to changes in the fare structure of the existing
|
|
public transport system, by proposing the development of cross
|
|
subsidies, and carrying out an appraised on the impact of the
|
|
development of a new Bus Rapid Transit line. The results show that
|
|
depending on the population, its location and purchasing power, the
|
|
impact of a redistributive fare with respect to accessibility to the
|
|
labour market can be greater than the expansion and improvement of the
|
|
public transport network. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bocarejo, SJP (Corresponding Author), Univ Los Andes, Grp Estudios Sostenibilidad Urbana \& Reg, Carrera 1 Este 19A-40,Edificio Mario Laserna, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Pablo Bocarejo, Juan S.; Ricardo Oviedo, Daniel H., Univ Los Andes, Grp Estudios Sostenibilidad Urbana \& Reg, Bogota, Colombia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2011.12.004},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-6923},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-1236},
|
|
Keywords = {Accessibility; Social exclusion; Social equity; Urban transport;
|
|
Developing countries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPACE-TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Geography; Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {jbocarej@uniandes.edu.co
|
|
dan-ovie@unian-des.edu.co},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Oviedo Hernandez, Daniel/AGJ-6328-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Oviedo Hernandez, Daniel/0000-0002-5692-6633
|
|
Bocarejo, Juan Pablo/0000-0003-3806-2189},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {227},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {249},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000309493500013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000304662800003,
|
|
Author = {Campbell, Iain and Charlesworth, Sara and Malone, Jenny},
|
|
Title = {Part-time of what? Job quality and part-time employment in the legal
|
|
profession in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {48},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {149-166},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {This article examines the quality of part-time employment for solicitors
|
|
in private practice in Australia. Although full-time jobs based on long
|
|
hours are dominant in the legal profession, part-time jobs, primarily
|
|
taken by women, have attracted attention in recent years. The article
|
|
seeks to answer fundamental questions about the extent and quality of
|
|
these jobs, and how well they serve the needs of the increasingly
|
|
diverse workforce. The article draws on recent surveys and in-depth
|
|
interviews, as well as Census and other secondary data to describe the
|
|
features of the part-time workforce and to explore aspects of poor
|
|
quality such as limited access, inferior job content, stalled career
|
|
progression and narrow schedules. It suggests that the major barrier to
|
|
improving the quality of part-time jobs is the dominant model of
|
|
full-time work in law firms, centred on heavy workloads, high targets of
|
|
`billable hours' and long working hours.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Campbell, I (Corresponding Author), RMIT Univ, Ctr Appl Social Res, GPO Box 2476, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia.
|
|
Campbell, Iain; Malone, Jenny, RMIT Univ, Ctr Appl Social Res, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia.
|
|
Charlesworth, Sara, Univ S Australia, Hawke Res Inst, Ctr Work Life, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1440783311408970},
|
|
ISSN = {1440-7833},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-2978},
|
|
Keywords = {gender; job quality; legal profession; long hours; part-time work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {iain.campbell@rmit.edu.au
|
|
sara.charlesworth@unisa.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Charlesworth, Sara/F-1098-2011},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Charlesworth, Sara/0000-0001-6975-9283},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000304662800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000393681400004,
|
|
Author = {Goodman, Michael L. and Gitari, Stanley and Keiser, Philip H. and
|
|
Raimer-Goodman, Lauren},
|
|
Title = {Economic empowerment or cash-dependency for orphans and vulnerable
|
|
children in Kenya: Evidence from an alternative to cash-only models},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WELFARE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {37-48},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Orphan and vulnerable children (OVC) often have worse educational,
|
|
developmental, nutritional, and behavioral outcomes than non-OVC. Much
|
|
of these disparities come from reduced household earnings due to the
|
|
loss of parental income. The present study used conditional process
|
|
analysis to evaluate income and savings among OVC households, using
|
|
cross-sectional data from 1,060 OVC in a 3-year Kenyan empowerment
|
|
program that combined elements of cash transfer, psychosocial support,
|
|
and small business entrepreneurship. Higher monthly earnings were
|
|
significantly associated with program participation in a graded fashion.
|
|
Approximately one-third of the association was mediated by material
|
|
inputs, indicating that a substantial portion may be explained by other
|
|
unobserved program elements. Eighty-five percent of increased rates of
|
|
saving money in the past year were mediated by improved monthly income,
|
|
cash transferred and improved food consumption. Data analysis highlights
|
|
the need for multisectoral approaches and the need for more research to
|
|
understand how to improve household economic stability among OVC. Key
|
|
Practitioner Message: center dot Orphans and vulnerable children (OVC)
|
|
are at risk of greater poverty, leading to multiple developmental and
|
|
health challenges; center dot Current policy in Kenya to offset costs of
|
|
caring for OVC utilizes monthly cash transfers to households providing
|
|
care for OVC; center dot The present study found that increases in
|
|
monthly income in an OVC multisectoral empowerment program were largely
|
|
due to factors beyond the material inputs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Goodman, ML (Corresponding Author), Univ Texas Med Branch, Internal Med, 301 Univ Blvd,M Graves 4-314C, Galveston, TX 77555 USA.
|
|
Goodman, ML (Corresponding Author), Sodzo Int, OVC Res, 4100 Main St, Houston, TX 77002 USA.
|
|
Goodman, Michael L.; Keiser, Philip H.; Raimer-Goodman, Lauren, Univ Texas Med Branch, Internal Med, 301 Univ Blvd,M Graves 4-314C, Galveston, TX 77555 USA.
|
|
Goodman, Michael L., Sodzo Int, OVC Res, 4100 Main St, Houston, TX 77002 USA.
|
|
Gitari, Stanley, Maua Methodist Hosp, Community Hlth, Maua Eastern, Kenya.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/ijsw.12226},
|
|
ISSN = {1369-6866},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-2397},
|
|
Keywords = {social welfare policy; social and economic justice; quantitative
|
|
research; international social work; Kenya; youth development},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA; HEALTH; PROGRAM; POVERTY; EDUCATION; TRANSFERS;
|
|
OUTCOMES; GENDER; YOUTH; WATER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {migoodma@utmb.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Goodman, Michael/0000-0003-1779-4698},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000393681400004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001032516400007,
|
|
Author = {Rusu, Valentina Diana and Dornean, Adina},
|
|
Title = {Do Tax Rates Matter for Entrepreneurial Motivations? An Empirical
|
|
Approach},
|
|
Journal = {SCIENTIFIC ANNALS OF ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {70},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {277-299},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {There are a number of factors that can hinder the path of
|
|
entrepreneurship development and the literature highlighted the fact
|
|
that taxes are one of the most important barriers for entrepreneurs.
|
|
This paper aims at identifying the relationship between tax rates and
|
|
entrepreneurship and to establish the impact of tax rates on
|
|
entrepreneurs considering their motivations (necessity, opportunity or
|
|
improvement-driven opportunity). The research focuses on a sample of 46
|
|
countries grouped according to their income level, for a period of eight
|
|
years (2012-2019). In order to test our hypotheses, we use multiple
|
|
linear regression based on balanced panel data and we consider, as
|
|
dependent variables, indicators that measure entrepreneurship and
|
|
entrepreneurial motivations (early-stage entrepreneurial activity,
|
|
necessity-driven entrepreneurs, opportunity-driven entrepreneurs,
|
|
improvement-driven opportunity entrepreneurs, and motivational index).
|
|
As independent variables, we consider indicators that measure the tax
|
|
rates supported by entrepreneurs (total tax and contribution rate,
|
|
profit tax, labor tax and contributions, and other taxes payable by
|
|
businesses). The results show that tax rates play a key role in
|
|
fostering the creation of new companies. Moreover, the impact is
|
|
different, depending on the entrepreneurs' motivations. Entrepreneurs
|
|
motivated by necessity are positively related to total tax and
|
|
contribution rate, while those motivated by opportunity are negatively
|
|
related with this indicator. Therefore, tax rates discourage the
|
|
entrepreneurs that seek innovation, but they do not affect those that do
|
|
not have other options to obtain the necessary income for living.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rusu, VD (Corresponding Author), Alexandru Ioan Cuza Univ, Inst Interdisciplinary Res, Dept Social Sci \& Humanities, Iasi, Romania.
|
|
Rusu, Valentina Diana, Alexandru Ioan Cuza Univ, Inst Interdisciplinary Res, Dept Social Sci \& Humanities, Iasi, Romania.
|
|
Dornean, Adina, Alexandru Ioan Cuza Univ, Fac Econ \& Business Adm, Dept Finance Money \& Publ Adm, Iasi, Romania.},
|
|
DOI = {10.47743/saeb-2023-0025},
|
|
ISSN = {2501-1960},
|
|
EISSN = {2501-3165},
|
|
Keywords = {tax rate; entrepreneurial motivations; necessity entrepreneurs;
|
|
opportunity entrepreneurs; panel data analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-EMPLOYMENT; NECESSITY ENTREPRENEURSHIP; INCOME TAXATION;
|
|
OPPORTUNITY; POLICY; INTENTIONS; ALLOCATION; DRIVERS; MODEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {valentinadiana.ig@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rusu, Valentina/T-2252-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rusu, Valentina/0000-0002-5974-9150},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {82},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001032516400007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000475981900008,
|
|
Author = {Montanari, Bernadette and Bergh, Sylvia I.},
|
|
Title = {A Gendered Analysis of the Income Generating Activities under the Green
|
|
Morocco Plan: Who Profits?},
|
|
Journal = {HUMAN ECOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {409-417},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Since 2005, major donors have been expanding Morocco's programs to
|
|
combat poverty, social exclusion and gender inequality. Yet, despite
|
|
newly designed programs that advocate participatory approaches,
|
|
empowerment and inclusion, rural women endure a persistent
|
|
marginalization in development programs. This article explores the
|
|
latest strategies of the Green Morocco Plan (GMP) and the income
|
|
generating activities (IGA) strategies that seek to support the
|
|
employment and autonomy of rural women. Interviews and focus groups were
|
|
conducted with women in seven villages in Rhamna province and with key
|
|
official informants. The study shows that the women's participation in
|
|
income generating activities and rural cooperatives' decision-making
|
|
processes is virtually non-existent and that empowerment and gender
|
|
equality is not unfolding for women. Rather, the women's involvement in
|
|
running cooperatives is limited to providing cheap or even free manual
|
|
labor, while only literate and generally educated people are able to
|
|
benefit economically from the cooperative structures.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Montanari, B (Corresponding Author), Erasmus Univ Rotterdam Int Inst Social Studies, The Hague, Netherlands.
|
|
Montanari, Bernadette; Bergh, Sylvia I., Erasmus Univ Rotterdam Int Inst Social Studies, The Hague, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10745-019-00086-8},
|
|
ISSN = {0300-7839},
|
|
EISSN = {1572-9915},
|
|
Keywords = {Green Morocco plan; Income generating activities (IGA); Socio-economic
|
|
development; Rural women; Morocco},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WOMENS EMPOWERMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Anthropology; Environmental Studies; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {bernadettemontanari@hotmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Montanari, Bernadette/AAE-9619-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Montanari, Bernadette/0000-0002-2124-7059
|
|
Bergh, Sylvia I./0000-0002-0651-6732},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000475981900008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000478566600002,
|
|
Author = {Estenssoro, Elisa and Loudet, I, Cecilia and Reina, Rosa and Fernandez,
|
|
Analia and Gabriela Vidal, Maria},
|
|
Title = {Gender disparity in ICU staffing in Argentina},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CRITICAL CARE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {53},
|
|
Pages = {8-10},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: Gender disparities in healthcare are striking, notwithstanding
|
|
an increase in female students and physicians. Underrepresentation of
|
|
women in leadership positions is well-documented; however, information
|
|
fromlowand middle-income countries (LMICs) is still sparse. The
|
|
Argentinian Society of Intensive Care Medicine (SATI) aimed to
|
|
characterize the gender composition in Argentine ICUs.
|
|
Methods and results: Between 8/1/2018 and 1/1/2019, 131 questionnaires
|
|
were submitted to ICU Department Chairs of SATI research networks.
|
|
Gender distribution of the different staffing levels, board
|
|
certification and hospital characteristics were recorded.
|
|
One-hundred and four were completed, including 2186 physicians; 44\%
|
|
were female. Female participation decreased with highest responsibility:
|
|
only 23\% of Department Chairs were female (P = .002 vs. the rest of the
|
|
staffing categories, adjusted for multiple comparisons). Residents
|
|
exhibited the highest proportion of female physicians (47\%). Board
|
|
certification was similar for both sexes (62.3\% vs. 62.2\%, P=. 97).
|
|
Female/male distribution in public and private hospitals was 47\%/53\%
|
|
and 40/60\% (P < .01), respectively.
|
|
Conclusion: Our data provide evidence of an important gender gap in ICU
|
|
management in a LMIC. Women were poorly represented in the leadership
|
|
positions, although qualifications were similar to men. Moreover, female
|
|
physicians worked more frequently in the public health subsector,
|
|
usually underfinanced in LMICs-a surrogate of a gender pay gap. (C) 2019
|
|
Published by Elsevier Inc.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Estenssoro, E (Corresponding Author), Hosp Interzonal Agudos San Martin La Plata, Serv Terapia Intens, Calle 42 577, RA-1990 La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
|
|
Estenssoro, Elisa; Loudet, Cecilia, I; Reina, Rosa; Gabriela Vidal, Maria, Hosp Interzonal Agudos San Martin La Plata, Serv Terapia Intens, Calle 42 577, RA-1990 La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
|
|
Fernandez, Analia, Hosp Agudos Carlos D Durand, Serv Terapia Intens Pediat, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jcrc.2019.05.016},
|
|
ISSN = {0883-9441},
|
|
EISSN = {1557-8615},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender gap; Gender disparities; Gender inequities; ICU staffing; Gender
|
|
pay gap},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Critical Care Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {estenssoro.elisa@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {14},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000478566600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000470923000002,
|
|
Author = {Gayen, Kaberi and Raeside, Robert and McQuaid, Ronald},
|
|
Title = {Social networks, accessed and mobilised social capital and the
|
|
employment status of older workers: A case study},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY AND SOCIAL POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {5-6},
|
|
Pages = {356-375},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the importance of
|
|
social networks, and the social capital embedded in them, to secure
|
|
employment if someone had become unemployed after the age of 50 years
|
|
and to reveal the process of accessing and mobilising that social
|
|
capital.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach A case study of a Scottish labour market was
|
|
undertaken which involved an interview-based survey of those who became
|
|
unemployed in their early 50's and tried to regain employment. The
|
|
interview had structured and unstructured parts which allowed both
|
|
quantitative and qualitative analysis to compare those who were
|
|
successful in regaining work with those who were not. The uniqueness of
|
|
the paper is the use of social network components while controlling for
|
|
other socio-economic and demographic variables in job search of older
|
|
workers.
|
|
Findings Those older people who were unemployed and, returned to
|
|
employment (reemployed) had a higher proportion of contacts with higher
|
|
prestige jobs, their job searching methods were mainly interpersonal and
|
|
the rate of finding their last job via their social networks was higher
|
|
than those who remained unemployed. Both groups mobilised social capital
|
|
(MSC), but those reemployed accessed higher quality social capital.
|
|
Strong ties, rather than weak ties, were found to be important in
|
|
accessing and mobilising social capital for the older workers who
|
|
returned to employment.
|
|
Research limitations/implications This work is limited to a local labour
|
|
market and is based on a small but informative sample. However, it does
|
|
show that policy is required to allow older people to enhance their
|
|
social networks by strengthening the social capital embedded in the
|
|
networks. The results support the use of intermediaries as bridges to
|
|
help compensate for older people who have weak social networks. Besides
|
|
the policy implications, the paper also has two distinct research
|
|
implications. First, the use of social network component to the existing
|
|
literature of older workers' job search. Second, exploring the type and
|
|
relational strength with network members to explain older workers'
|
|
reemployment.
|
|
Practical implications The paper illustrates that how accessed and MSC
|
|
can be measured.
|
|
Social implications As populations age, this work points to an approach
|
|
to support older people to re-enter employment and to include them in
|
|
society.
|
|
Originality/value The paper extends social network and employment
|
|
literature to fill gaps on how older people require to both access and
|
|
mobilise social capital. The importance of strong ties in the
|
|
reemployment of older workers contrasts with much of the literature on
|
|
younger workers where the strength of weak ties so far has been regarded
|
|
as essential for successful job search. Measures are forwarded to reveal
|
|
the relevance of social capital. The policy value of the work is in
|
|
suggesting ways to facilitate older people re-enter or remain in work
|
|
and hence sustain their well-being.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Raeside, R (Corresponding Author), Heriot Watt Univ, Edinburgh Business Sch, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Gayen, Kaberi, Dartmouth Coll, Hanover, NH 03755 USA.
|
|
Gayen, Kaberi, Dhaka Univ, Dept Mass Commun \& Journalism, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Raeside, Robert, Heriot Watt Univ, Edinburgh Business Sch, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
McQuaid, Ronald, Univ Stirling, Dept Management Work \& Org, Stirling, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJSSP-07-2018-0111},
|
|
ISSN = {0144-333X},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6720},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment; Social networks; Social capital; Older workers},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB SEARCH BEHAVIOR; LABOR-MARKET; WORKING LIVES; EMPLOYERS ATTITUDES;
|
|
COMMON STEREOTYPES; AGE STEREOTYPES; WEAK TIES; INFORMATION; RETIREMENT;
|
|
BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {r.raeside@hw.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gayen, Kaberi/AAH-6857-2021
|
|
McQuaid, Ronald/K-6219-2012
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {McQuaid, Ronald/0000-0002-5342-7097
|
|
Gayen, Kaberi/0000-0001-5862-1297},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {72},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {36},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000470923000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000627461700001,
|
|
Author = {Bindley, Kristin and Lewis, Joanne and Travaglia, Joanne and DiGiacomo,
|
|
Michelle},
|
|
Title = {Social welfare needs of bereaved Australian carers: Implications of
|
|
insights from palliative care and welfare workers},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH \& SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {631-642},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {An individual and psychological emphasis has influenced practice and
|
|
research on bereavement following informal care provision in the context
|
|
of life-limiting illness. Consideration of the potential for bereavement
|
|
to be shaped by intersecting social and structural inequities is needed;
|
|
and should include an understanding of interactions with government
|
|
institutions and social policy. This qualitative study employed
|
|
interpretive description to explore the way in which palliative care
|
|
workers and welfare sector workers perceive and approach experiences and
|
|
needs of bereaved carers receiving government income support or housing
|
|
assistance in Western Sydney, an area associated with recognised
|
|
socioeconomic disadvantage. A total of 21 palliative care workers within
|
|
a public health service and welfare workers from two government social
|
|
welfare services participated in in-depth interviews. Data were analysed
|
|
using framework analysis. Participants highlighted social welfare policy
|
|
and related interactions that may impact bereavement, potentially
|
|
related to financial, housing and employment precariousness. Personal,
|
|
interpersonal and structural factors perceived to shape the navigation
|
|
of welfare needs were explored, alongside needed professional and
|
|
structural changes envisioned by workers. With limited forms of capital,
|
|
vulnerably positioned carers may encounter difficulties that heighten
|
|
their precariousness in bereavement. Transactional organisational
|
|
cultures alongside health and welfare agencies that function in a siloed
|
|
manner appear to contribute to structural burden for carers, following
|
|
death due to life-limiting illness. Palliative care and welfare workers
|
|
also associated elements of their work with bereaved carers with their
|
|
own experiences of helplessness, frustration and distress. Findings
|
|
point to a need for the development of interagency strategies in
|
|
addition to policy underpinned by more nuanced understandings of
|
|
vulnerability in bereavement, post-caring.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bindley, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Technol Sydney, Fac Hlth, 235 Jones St, Ultimo, NSW 2007, Australia.
|
|
Bindley, Kristin; Lewis, Joanne; Travaglia, Joanne; DiGiacomo, Michelle, Univ Technol Sydney, Fac Hlth, 235 Jones St, Ultimo, NSW 2007, Australia.
|
|
Bindley, Kristin, Western Sydney Local Hlth Dist, Support \& Palliat Care, Mt Druitt, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/hsc.13339},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-0410},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2524},
|
|
Keywords = {bereavement; family carers; palliative care; social welfare},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OF-LIFE CARE; INTERPRETIVE DESCRIPTION; HEALTH; END; PERSPECTIVES;
|
|
EXPERIENCE; DEATH; CHALLENGES; CAREGIVERS; CANCER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bindley, Kristin/AAN-2441-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bindley, Kristin/0000-0003-1408-2484
|
|
Travaglia, Joanne/0000-0002-7537-0466
|
|
Lewis, Joanne/0000-0001-8668-712X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000627461700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000455309300158,
|
|
Author = {Kingdon, Carol and Downe, Soo and Betran, Ana Pilar},
|
|
Title = {Interventions targeted at health professionals to reduce unnecessary
|
|
caesarean sections: a qualitative evidence synthesis},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective To establish the views and experiences of healthcare
|
|
professionals in relation to interventions targeted at them to reduce
|
|
unnecessary caesareans.
|
|
Design Qualitative evidence synthesis.
|
|
Setting Studies undertaken in high-income, middle-income and low-income
|
|
settings.
|
|
Data sources Seven databases (CINAHL, MEDLINE, PsychINFO, Embase, Global
|
|
Index Medicus, POPLINE and African Journals Online). Studies published
|
|
between 1985 and June 2017, with no language or geographical
|
|
restrictions. We hand-searched reference lists and key citations using
|
|
Google Scholar.
|
|
Study selection Qualitative or mixed-method studies reporting health
|
|
professionals' views.
|
|
Data extraction and synthesis Two authors independently assessed study
|
|
quality prior to extraction of primary data and authors'
|
|
interpretations. The data were compared and contrasted, then grouped
|
|
into summary of findings (SoFs) statements, themes and a line of
|
|
argument synthesis. All SoFs were Confidence in the Evidence from
|
|
Reviews of Qualitative research (GRADE-CERQual) assessed.
|
|
Results 17 papers were included, involving 483 health professionals from
|
|
17 countries (nine high-income, six middle-income and two low-income).
|
|
Fourteen SoFs were identified, resulting in three core themes:
|
|
philosophy of birth (four SoFs); (2) social and cultural context (five
|
|
SoFs); and (3) negotiation within system (five SoFs). The resulting line
|
|
of argument suggests three key mechanisms of effect for change or
|
|
resistance to change: prior beliefs about birth; willingness or not to
|
|
engage with change, especially where this entailed potential loss of
|
|
income or status (including medicolegal barriers); and capacity or not
|
|
to influence local community and healthcare service norms and values
|
|
relating to caesarean provision.
|
|
Conclusion For maternity care health professionals, there is a
|
|
synergistic relationship between their underpinning philosophy of birth,
|
|
the social and cultural context they are working within and the extent
|
|
to which they were prepared to negotiate within health system resources
|
|
to reduce caesarean rates. These findings identify potential mechanisms
|
|
of effect that could improve the design and efficacy of change
|
|
programmes to reduce unnecessary caesareans.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kingdon, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Cent Lancashire, Sch Community Hlth \& Midwifery, Fac Hlth \& Wellbeing, Preston, Lancs, England.
|
|
Kingdon, Carol; Downe, Soo, Univ Cent Lancashire, Sch Community Hlth \& Midwifery, Fac Hlth \& Wellbeing, Preston, Lancs, England.
|
|
Betran, Ana Pilar, WHO, Dept Reprod Hlth \& Res, Geneva, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025073},
|
|
Article-Number = {e025073},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OPTIMAL SEARCH STRATEGIES; VAGINAL BIRTH; MIXED-METHOD; CLINICAL
|
|
PATHWAY; MATERNAL REQUEST; OBSTETRICIANS; DELIVERY; RATES; WOMEN; CHOICE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {ckingdon@uclan.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kingdon, Carol/0000-0002-5958-9257},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {89},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000455309300158},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000172211600003,
|
|
Author = {Chapin, MH and Kewman, DG},
|
|
Title = {Factors affecting employment following spinal cord injury: A qualitative
|
|
study},
|
|
Journal = {REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {400-416},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Note = {13th Annual Conference of the
|
|
Ameican-Association-of-Spinal-Cord-Injury-Psychologists-and-Social-Worke
|
|
rs, LAS VEGAS, NV, SEP 08, 1999},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To examine factors that differentiated persons with spinal
|
|
cord injury (SCI) who returned to work from those who did not,
|
|
Participants: Six employed persons with SCI matched with 6 unemployed
|
|
persons with SCI on the basis of education, race, age, gender, time
|
|
since injury, and level of function. Study Design: Semi-structured
|
|
interviews 1 to 2 hr in length were completed and transcribed. The
|
|
responses of the employed were compared with those of the unemployed
|
|
using grounded theory. The theory is inductively derived from the
|
|
qualitative data. Results: Psychological and environmental factors were
|
|
the most salient factors affecting employment in this matched sample.
|
|
Key psychological factors associated with employment were optimism,
|
|
self-esteem, achievement orientation, and role models. Key environmental
|
|
factors were monetary incentives, disincentives, access, and
|
|
accommodation. Conclusions: The development of increased optimism may
|
|
promote employment for persons with SCI. Employment barriers and the
|
|
perception of these barriers as insurmountable need to be decreased.
|
|
Policies that promote return to work with former employers are likely to
|
|
improve employment rates for persons with SCI. A more intensive job
|
|
exploration process using job shadowing of peers and positive peer
|
|
models may also improve employment after SCI.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chapin, MH (Corresponding Author), E Carolina Univ, Dept Rehabil Studies, 312 Belk Bldg, Greenville, NC 27858 USA.
|
|
Univ Michigan, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, Med Ctr, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/0090-5550.46.4.400},
|
|
ISSN = {0090-5550},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-1544},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Clinical; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {chapinm@mail.ecu.edu
|
|
dkewman@umich.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {58},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000172211600003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000314515300003,
|
|
Author = {Wu, Joseph S. K. and Ho, Chi Pui},
|
|
Title = {TOWARDS A MORE COMPLETE EFFICIENCY WAGE THEORY},
|
|
Journal = {PACIFIC ECONOMIC REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {660-676},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The efficiency wage is an important topic in the theory of employment.
|
|
In a traditional efficiency wage model, only the representative firm is
|
|
optimizing against an assumed S-shaped effort supply function. This
|
|
S-shaped supply curve is critical for the model and the absence of a
|
|
derivation of the curve in the literature means that it is an incomplete
|
|
theory. In the present paper, we extend the model by specifying a
|
|
worker's representative utility function so that the corresponding
|
|
argmax function will be the S-shaped effort supply curve. This will make
|
|
the worker's decision process endogenous and will produce a more
|
|
complete model. The importance of this extension is clear. The
|
|
characterization of the utility function will make explicit the
|
|
necessary conditions and crucial assumptions of the traditional model.
|
|
More importantly, the extension will allow researchers to introduce
|
|
employment compensation factors into the worker's utility function for
|
|
analysis. This has important bearings on future development in
|
|
employment theory. For example, a worker's satisfaction from shirking
|
|
(net of dismissal risks), or his or her willingness to search for jobs
|
|
(net of search cost), can now be included in his or her utility function
|
|
to form an optimal work or search strategy. Incorporating the worker's
|
|
optimization behaviour into the model will also enable researchers to
|
|
study policy directed not just towards firms but also towards the
|
|
worker's decision process. Furthermore, this approach provides a
|
|
framework for researchers to generate comparative statics. These
|
|
comparative statics can lead to interesting topics for econometric
|
|
models or to further research within this field.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wu, JSK (Corresponding Author), Univ Hong Kong, Sch Econ \& Finance, KK Leung Bldg,Pokfulam Rd, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Wu, Joseph S. K.; Ho, Chi Pui, Univ Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1468-0106.12003},
|
|
ISSN = {1361-374X},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-0106},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKETS; MODEL; UNEMPLOYMENT; PRODUCTIVITY; HYPOTHESIS;
|
|
INEQUALITY; NUTRITION; RIGIDITY; INCOME; SIZE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {josephwu@econ.hku.hk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000314515300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000176181400004,
|
|
Author = {Christopher, K},
|
|
Title = {Welfare state regimes and mothers' poverty},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL POLITICS},
|
|
Year = {2002},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {60-86},
|
|
Month = {SPR},
|
|
Abstract = {This article assesses the extent to which welfare states reduce poverty
|
|
among single mothers and all mothers. I focus on two different
|
|
typologies of welfare states: one identifies the gendered assumptions
|
|
underlying social policies, while the other focuses on bow welfare
|
|
states and labor markets affect class inequality. Using data from the
|
|
Luxembourg Income Study, I show bow tax and transfer systems and
|
|
employment supports in nine Western nations affect the poverty rates of
|
|
single mothers and all mothers vis-a-vis other groups. I find that,
|
|
particularly in the Scandinavian nations and to a lesser extent in
|
|
France, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, the tax and transfer
|
|
system, employment supports, or a combination of the two allow most
|
|
single mothers to form autonomous households that escape poverty. I
|
|
conclude by discussing bow these findings speak to the different
|
|
typologies of welfare state regimes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Christopher, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA.
|
|
Univ Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/sp/9.1.60},
|
|
ISSN = {1072-4745},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER; CITIZENSHIP},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Issues; Women's Studies},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000176181400004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000399878000003,
|
|
Author = {Esteban Salvador, M. Luisa and Gargallo Castel, Ana F. and Perez Sanz,
|
|
Francisco Javier},
|
|
Title = {Do cooperatives have favorable contexts for gender equality?: Special
|
|
reference to the province of Teruel},
|
|
Journal = {CIRIEC-ESPANA REVISTA DE ECONOMIA PUBLICA SOCIAL Y COOPERATIVA},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {88},
|
|
Pages = {61-92},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives
|
|
Cooperative enterprises have different organizational and operational
|
|
characteristics that could provide favorable conditions for gender
|
|
equality. In this paper, we describe several aspects of the working
|
|
conditions and workplace flexibility of women in cooperatives in the
|
|
province of Teruel, a region that is characterized by its low population
|
|
density. In addition, we study other aspects involved in the running of
|
|
these organizations in the context of social economy, and how this could
|
|
have potential benefits and advantages for the personal and professional
|
|
development of women and their families. A greater understanding of
|
|
these organizations will facilitate the development of actions aimed at
|
|
strengthening business projects that contribute to integrate women's
|
|
needs and the needs of their surrounding environments.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach
|
|
A qualitative analysis has been carried out through in-depth interviews,
|
|
which have provided more detailed and extensive information than other
|
|
available methodologies. The initial sample consists of 99 cooperatives,
|
|
representing 31.03\% of the total population of cooperative entities in
|
|
the province of Teruel, Spain. This sample was then filtered by
|
|
selecting the cooperatives which have a greater percentage of female
|
|
employees higher than male employees, or have more female than male
|
|
directors, including those cooperatives which fulfilled both of these
|
|
conditions. There resulting set of 12 cooperatives with a large number
|
|
of female employees among its staff or with high female participation in
|
|
their boards of directors. We subjected to semi-structured interviews,
|
|
one per cooperative, of their partners and/or employees, using a
|
|
semi-structured questionnaire.
|
|
Results / Research limitations / Implications
|
|
The results suggest that self-management allows greater flexibility than
|
|
other forms of enterprise in areas such as conciliation or working
|
|
conditions. Likewise, women recognize that their involvement with the
|
|
entity must be greater, since their future employment depends on the
|
|
survival of the cooperative. One factor that affects the reconciliation
|
|
of family, work and personal life is the presence or absence of
|
|
seasonality in the activities carried out by the cooperative. Internal
|
|
measures for the seasonal adjustment of demand could contribute to
|
|
improving the reconciliation and also to reducing inequalities between
|
|
men and women.
|
|
With regard to working conditions, there are opportunities for
|
|
conciliation and timetable flexibility that rely on the goodwill and the
|
|
climate of trust existing in the cooperatives. This issue is closely
|
|
related to the good relations among its members, as evidenced by the
|
|
opinions of the respondents and the presence of female leadership
|
|
focused on greater collaboration and teamwork. It is noteworthy that
|
|
these cordial relations extend even among the companies in the sector.
|
|
Collaborative attitudes between cooperatives of the same sector of
|
|
activity are frequent.
|
|
Self-management allows the working day to be better and more easily
|
|
adjusted to the specific needs of female employees as compared to other
|
|
styles of management. In general, working hours are not cause for
|
|
concern. Women are aware that if the activity requires a greater time
|
|
investment, their commitment must be greater, since their future careers
|
|
depend of the survival of the cooperative
|
|
The good relations existing among the different cooperatives in the
|
|
province are remarkable. The study emphasizes the establishment of
|
|
mutually supportive relationships with other cooperatives and, in many
|
|
cases, the use of synergies with the competing companies. This
|
|
reinforces the expected behaviors for organizations based on
|
|
inter-cooperation and networking.
|
|
Due to the peculiarities of the context in which these cooperatives
|
|
operate, mainly in rural areas, cooperatives can cover the needs of the
|
|
partners, boost rural development, to improve trade activities, provide
|
|
support and advice to access to new foreign markets; improve structures
|
|
through integration processes and obtain competitive advantages with
|
|
formulas of inter-cooperation with other groups.
|
|
Regarding the support of the public administrations in issues related to
|
|
paperwork or consultation and advisory services, no conclusive results
|
|
have been obtained. Relations with public administrations, however,
|
|
could be improved to take full advantage of the potential of wealth
|
|
creation in cooperatives and to achieve greater effectiveness of
|
|
policies of public support for the promotion of female entrepreneurship
|
|
and social economy entities. The recognition of gender inequalities in
|
|
the labor and business sphere by the Spanish government, expressed
|
|
through the Gender Equality Act, should be taken into account when
|
|
implementing administrative procedures for cooperatives in order to be
|
|
more sensitive to women's necessities.
|
|
Simplification of administrative procedures and a more individualised
|
|
guidance and advice for female entrepreneurs in the social economy
|
|
should be included in the agendas of public authorities. These measures
|
|
become especially sensitive in territories such as Teruel, where the
|
|
weakness of its business fabric and its relatively high rate of female
|
|
unemployment are clear components of the economic stagnation of the
|
|
province.
|
|
Some questionnaire answers show that cooperative principles are present
|
|
in these entities, as is the case in one company where the partners
|
|
reported being satisfied and happy to contribute to the respect of
|
|
agriculture and to promote environmental care.
|
|
In addition to the financial income associated with participation in the
|
|
cooperative, other non-economic ``intangible{''} benefits related to
|
|
personal satisfaction and fulfilment derived from such participation
|
|
should be highlighted. This added value must also be taken into account
|
|
at the time of quantifying the benefits of both cooperatives and the
|
|
social economy as a whole, and especially when formulating strategy and
|
|
assessing the results achieved.
|
|
Practical conclusions and original value
|
|
The findings show that there is still a long way to go to achieve the
|
|
reconciliation of personal, family and work life that allows full
|
|
equality. This issue reveals the need for action, both institutionally,
|
|
through a suitable framework of support measures, and internally, within
|
|
the entities themselves, through incentives leading to the full
|
|
implementation of these cooperative values and rules of conduct.
|
|
Our results give new evidence of the internal and external social
|
|
policies, and of institutional and business relationships of these
|
|
cooperatives characterized by a high representation of women. It is also
|
|
noted that self-management allows improve adaptation of the working
|
|
conditions and flexibility of women in cooperative workplaces. Moreover,
|
|
they realize that their involvement must be greater, since future
|
|
employment depends on the survival of the cooperative. It would be
|
|
interesting for future studies to compare these results with the
|
|
equivalent relationships observed between shareholders and employees in
|
|
other types of entities. Future research could also examine whether
|
|
other factors, such as the size of the organization, can influence the
|
|
existence of harmonious relations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Esteban Salvador, ML (Corresponding Author), Univ Zaragoza, Fac Ciencias Sociales \& Humanas, Escuela Univ, Zaragoza, Spain.
|
|
Esteban Salvador, M. Luisa; Gargallo Castel, Ana F.; Perez Sanz, Francisco Javier, Univ Zaragoza, Fac Ciencias Sociales \& Humanas, Escuela Univ, Zaragoza, Spain.},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-8093},
|
|
EISSN = {1989-6816},
|
|
Keywords = {Cooperatives; employment; woman; conciliation; Spain; depopulation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TOP MANAGEMENT; FIRM PERFORMANCE; WOMEN; DIVERSITY; BOARDS; TEAM;
|
|
DISCRIMINATION; EXECUTIVES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {luisaes@unizar.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {ESTEBAN-SALVADOR, MARIA LUISA/H-3181-2015
|
|
Gargallo-Castel, Ana/F-8686-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {ESTEBAN-SALVADOR, MARIA LUISA/0000-0001-6511-1893
|
|
Gargallo-Castel, Ana/0000-0001-8054-8997},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {84},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {31},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000399878000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000223736500005,
|
|
Author = {Hills, J and Waldfogel, J},
|
|
Title = {A ``third way{''}' in welfare reform? Evidence from the United Kingdom},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF POLICY ANALYSIS AND MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {765-788},
|
|
Month = {FAL},
|
|
Abstract = {U.S. welfare reforms, whether promoting work first or human capital
|
|
development, have had in common an emphasis on employment as the key to
|
|
improving the life chances of children living in single-mother families.
|
|
We describe in this article a different type of reform-a ``third way{''}
|
|
in welfare reform. The welfare reforms carried out in the United Kingdom
|
|
since the ``New Labour{''} government of Tony Blair was elected in 1997
|
|
have included promotion of paid work, but along side two other
|
|
components-an explicit commitment to reduce and eventually eliminate
|
|
child poverty, and a campaign against long-term disadvantage under the
|
|
label of tackling ``social exclusion.{''} Welfare-to-work reforms
|
|
promoting employment for single mothers have been active but not as
|
|
punitive as in the United States. At the same time, the tax credit and
|
|
cash benefit system has been radically overhauled, benefiting low-income
|
|
families with children, whether or not parents are working. Early
|
|
indications suggest a more rapid fall in child poverty in the United
|
|
Kingdom since its reforms began than in the United States since its
|
|
reforms, and a faster rise in single-mother employment. (C) 2004 by the
|
|
Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hills, J (Corresponding Author), Univ London London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, ESRC Res Ctr Anal Social Exclus, CASE, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Univ London London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, ESRC Res Ctr Anal Social Exclus, CASE, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Columbia Univ, Sch Social Work, New York, NY 10027 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/pam.20046},
|
|
ISSN = {0276-8739},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRESIDENTIAL-ADDRESS; CHILD POVERTY; POLICY; STATES; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Public Administration},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {22},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000223736500005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000842000100009,
|
|
Author = {Hulsegge, G. and Otten, W. and van de Ven, H. A. and Hazelzet, A. M. and
|
|
Blonk, R. W. B.},
|
|
Title = {Employers' attitude, intention, skills and barriers in relation to
|
|
employment of vulnerable workers},
|
|
Journal = {WORK-A JOURNAL OF PREVENTION ASSESSMENT \& REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {72},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {1215-1226},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Little is known why some organizations employ vulnerable
|
|
workers and others do not.
|
|
OBJECTIVE: To explore the relationships between the attitude, intention,
|
|
skills and barriers of employers and employment of vulnerable workers.
|
|
METHODS: We included 5,601 inclusive organizations (>= 1\% of employees
|
|
had a disability, was long-term unemployed or a school dropout) and
|
|
6,236 non-inclusive organizations of the Netherlands Employers Work
|
|
Survey 2014-2019. We operationalized employer factors based on the
|
|
Integrative Model of Behavioral Prediction as attitude (negative
|
|
impact), intention (mission statement regarding social inclusion),
|
|
skills (human resources policies and practices), and barriers (economic
|
|
conditions and type of work). We used multivariate-adjusted logistic
|
|
regression models.
|
|
RESULTS: Compared to non-inclusive organizations, inclusive
|
|
organizations had a more negative attitude (OR:0.81) and a stronger
|
|
intention to employ vulnerable workers (OR:6.09). Regarding skills,
|
|
inclusive organizations had more inclusive human resources practices
|
|
(OR:4.83) and initiated more supporting human resources actions
|
|
(OR:4.45). Also, they adapted more work conditions towards the needs of
|
|
employees (OR:1.52), negotiated about work times and absenteeism
|
|
(OR:1.49), and had general human resources practices on, for example,
|
|
employability (OR:1.78). Inclusive organizations had less barriers
|
|
reflected by better financial results (OR:1.32), more employment
|
|
opportunities (OR:1.33) and more appropriate work tasks (OR:1.40).
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: Overall, inclusive organizations reported more positive
|
|
results on the employer factors of the Integrative Model of Behavioral
|
|
Prediction, except for a more negative attitude. The more negative
|
|
attitude might reflect a more realistic view on the efforts to employ
|
|
vulnerable groups, and suggests that other unmeasured emotions and
|
|
beliefs are more positive.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hulsegge, G (Corresponding Author), Netherlands Org Appl Sci Res TNO, Sustainable Prod \& Employabil, Leiden, Netherlands.
|
|
Hulsegge, G.; Otten, W.; van de Ven, H. A.; Hazelzet, A. M.; Blonk, R. W. B., Netherlands Org Appl Sci Res TNO, Sustainable Prod \& Employabil, Leiden, Netherlands.
|
|
Blonk, R. W. B., Tilburg Univ, Fac Social \& Behav Sci, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Blonk, R. W. B., North West Univ, Optentia, Vanderbijlpark, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3233/WOR-210898},
|
|
ISSN = {1051-9815},
|
|
EISSN = {1875-9270},
|
|
Keywords = {Disability; employers; hiring intention; retention; occupational
|
|
rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALIFIED WORKERS; DISABLED PEOPLE; DISABILITIES; HRM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {gerben.hulsegge@tno.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Blonk, Roland/HPE-2050-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {van de Ven, Hardy/0000-0002-0194-2222},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000842000100009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000874929200007,
|
|
Author = {Waid, Jeffrey and Tomfohrde, Olivia and Kutzler, Courtney},
|
|
Title = {Promoting health and social equity through family navigation to
|
|
prevention and early intervention services: a proof of concept study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {OCT 27},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Health and social inequality are associated with multiple
|
|
adverse childhood experiences including poverty, mental illness, and
|
|
child maltreatment. While effective interventions currently exist for
|
|
many health and social problems, large segments of the population
|
|
experience barriers accessing needed services. In alignment with broader
|
|
public health efforts to reduce health and social inequality in one
|
|
state in the U.S.A., the current study describes the development and
|
|
formative evaluation of a brief, low cost, portable model of
|
|
prevention-oriented family service navigation called Navigate Your Way.
|
|
Methods Caregivers of children experiencing significant unmet health or
|
|
social service needs were recruited to the study. Participants completed
|
|
an initial and closing telephone interview which included measures of
|
|
past and current family health and social service utilization, service
|
|
barriers, parenting stress, and child internalizing/externalizing
|
|
behaviors. Between interviews participants created a family service plan
|
|
and received 10 weeks of telephone and web-mediated family navigation,
|
|
at which time process and fidelity of implementation data were
|
|
collected. Frequency and descriptive statistics are provided for
|
|
participant demographic characteristics, service barriers, intervention
|
|
engagement, and primary and secondary study outcomes. Paired samples
|
|
t-tests examined changes in study outcomes between initial and closing
|
|
telephone interviews. Results Thirty two caregivers enrolled,
|
|
twenty-nine completed the study. The age range was 20-59 (M = 39.5, SD =
|
|
10.0). The majority identified as female (96.9\%, n = 31), racial/ethnic
|
|
minority (56.2\%, n = 18), and reported an average 10 barriers to care
|
|
(M = 10.4, SD = 4.1). The most frequently reported service needs were
|
|
mental health care, housing, food security, transportation, and health
|
|
insurance. The mean duration of intervention delivery was 83 days. Most
|
|
participants (82.8\%, n = 24) were connected to one or more health or
|
|
social services. Caregivers reported significant improvements to youth
|
|
internalizing behaviors (d = 2.5, p = .05) and high levels of overall
|
|
satisfaction with the navigation approach. Conclusion Telephone and
|
|
web-mediated service navigation is a feasible and practical approach to
|
|
supporting families in rapidly connecting to health and social care.
|
|
Future research investigating the efficacy and implementation of
|
|
Navigate Your Way in routine settings is indicated.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Waid, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Minnesota Twin Cities, Sch Social Work, 1404 Gortner Ave,105 Peters Hall, St Paul, MN 55108 USA.
|
|
Waid, Jeffrey; Kutzler, Courtney, Univ Minnesota Twin Cities, Sch Social Work, 1404 Gortner Ave,105 Peters Hall, St Paul, MN 55108 USA.
|
|
Tomfohrde, Olivia, Univ Minnesota Twin Cities, Family Social Sci, 1985 Buford Ave, St Paul, MN 55108 USA.
|
|
Kutzler, Courtney, Univ Minnesota Twin Cities, Sch Publ Hlth, 420 Delaware St SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-022-14320-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {1972},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Children; Equity; Families; Health; Inequality; Maltreatment;
|
|
Navigation; Prevention; Social Work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DESIGNS; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jdwaid@umn.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000874929200007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000519468800001,
|
|
Author = {Black, Melissa H. and Mahdi, Soheil and Milbourn, Benjamin and Scott,
|
|
Melissa and Gerber, Alan and Esposito, Christopher and Falkmer, Marita
|
|
and Lerner, Matthew D. and Halladay, Alycia and Strom, Eva and D'Angelo,
|
|
Axel and Falkmer, Torbjorn and Bolte, Sven and Girdler, Sonya},
|
|
Title = {Multi-informant International Perspectives on the Facilitators and
|
|
Barriers to Employment for Autistic Adults},
|
|
Journal = {AUTISM RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {1195-1214},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Employment rates for autistic individuals are poor, even compared to
|
|
those from other disability groups. Internationally, there remains
|
|
limited understanding of the factors influencing employment across the
|
|
stages of preparing for, gaining, and maintaining employment. This is
|
|
the third in a series of studies conducted as part of an International
|
|
Society for Autism Research (INSAR) policy brief intended to improve
|
|
employment outcomes for autistic individuals. A multi-informant
|
|
international survey with five key stakeholder groups, including
|
|
autistic individuals, their families, employers, service providers, and
|
|
researchers, was undertaken in Australia, Sweden, and the United States
|
|
to understand the facilitators and barriers to employment for autistic
|
|
adults. A total of 687 individuals participated, including autistic
|
|
individuals (n = 246), family members (n = 233), employers (n = 35),
|
|
clinicians/service providers (n = 123), and researchers (n = 50).
|
|
Perceptions of the facilitators and barriers to employment differed
|
|
significantly across both key stakeholder groups and countries, however,
|
|
ensuring a good job match and focusing on strengths were identified by
|
|
all groups as important for success. Key barriers to employment included
|
|
stigma, a lack of understanding of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and
|
|
communication difficulties. Results suggest that a holistic approach to
|
|
employment for autistic individuals is required, aimed at facilitating
|
|
communication between key stakeholders, addressing attitudes and
|
|
understanding of ASD in the workplace, using strength-based approaches
|
|
and providing early work experience.
|
|
Lay Summary Autistic individuals experience significant difficulty
|
|
getting and keeping a job. This article presents a survey study
|
|
involving autistic individuals, their families, employers, service
|
|
providers and researchers in Australia, Sweden, and the United States to
|
|
understand their perspectives on the factors that support or act as
|
|
barriers to employment. While perspectives varied across key
|
|
stakeholders, strategies such as using a holistic approach, targeting
|
|
workplace attitudes and understanding, focusing on strengths, and
|
|
providing early work experience are important for success. (c) 2020
|
|
International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Black, MH (Corresponding Author), Curtin Univ, Sch Occupat Therapy \& Social Work, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.
|
|
Black, MH (Corresponding Author), GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.
|
|
Black, Melissa H.; Milbourn, Benjamin; Scott, Melissa; Falkmer, Marita; Falkmer, Torbjorn; Bolte, Sven; Girdler, Sonya, Curtin Univ, Sch Occupat Therapy Social Work \& Speech Pathol, Perth, WA, Australia.
|
|
Black, Melissa H.; Milbourn, Benjamin; Scott, Melissa; Falkmer, Marita; Falkmer, Torbjorn; Bolte, Sven; Girdler, Sonya, Curtin Univ, Curtin Autism Res Grp, Perth, WA, Australia.
|
|
Mahdi, Soheil; D'Angelo, Axel; Bolte, Sven, Karolinska Inst, Ctr Psychiat Res, Ctr Neurodev Disorders KIND, Stockholm, Region Stockhol, Sweden.
|
|
Mahdi, Soheil; D'Angelo, Axel; Bolte, Sven, Karolinska Inst, Dept Womens \& Childrens Hlth, Stockholm, Region Stockhol, Sweden.
|
|
Mahdi, Soheil; D'Angelo, Axel; Bolte, Sven, Stockholm Hlth Care Serv, Stockholm, Region Stockhol, Sweden.
|
|
Gerber, Alan; Esposito, Christopher; Lerner, Matthew D., SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794 USA.
|
|
Falkmer, Marita, Jonkoping Univ, Sch Educ \& Commun, Swedish Inst Disabil Res, CHILD, Jonkoping, Sweden.
|
|
Halladay, Alycia, Autism Sci Fdn, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Strom, Eva, Swedish Publ Employment Serv, Unit Rehabil \& Work, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Falkmer, Torbjorn, Linkoping Univ, Dept Hlth Med \& Caring Sci, Pain \& Rehabil Ctr, Linkoping, Sweden.
|
|
Bolte, Sven, Stockholm Hlth Care Serv, Child \& Adolescent Psychiat, Stockholm, Region Stockhol, Sweden.
|
|
Halladay, Alycia, Rutgers State Univ, Dept Pharmacol \& Toxicol, New Brunswick, NJ USA.
|
|
Black, Melissa H., GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/aur.2288},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1939-3792},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-3806},
|
|
Keywords = {autism; cross-cultural; employment; key stakeholders; adults},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPECTRUM DISORDER; EMPLOYEES; DISABILITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Behavioral Sciences; Psychology, Developmental},
|
|
Author-Email = {melissa.black@curtin.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Girdler, Sonya/ABC-9629-2021
|
|
Bölte, Sven/F-6644-2010
|
|
Black, Melissa/U-5318-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Black, Melissa/0000-0003-0293-4053
|
|
Lerner, Matthew/0000-0002-7373-6663
|
|
Bolte, Sven/0000-0002-4579-4970
|
|
Gerber, Alan/0000-0002-8133-3995
|
|
Girdler, Sonya/0000-0001-7992-0800},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {33},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000519468800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000809651600001,
|
|
Author = {Allen, Jeff and Palm, Matthew and Tiznado-Aitken, Ignacio and Farber,
|
|
Steven},
|
|
Title = {Inequalities of extreme commuting across Canada},
|
|
Journal = {TRAVEL BEHAVIOUR AND SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Pages = {42-52},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {There is growing body of research and practice assessing transportation
|
|
equity and justice. Commuting is an especially important dimension to
|
|
study since such frequent, non-discretionary travel, can come at the
|
|
expense of time for other activities and therefore negatively impact
|
|
mental health and well-being. An ``extreme commuter `` is a worker who
|
|
has a particularly burdensome commute, and has previously been defined
|
|
based on one-way commute times above 60 or 90 minutes. In this paper, we
|
|
examine the social and geographic inequalities of extreme commuting in
|
|
Canada. We use a 25\% sample of all commuters in Canada in 2016 (n =
|
|
4,543,417) and our analysis consists of descriptive statistics and
|
|
logistic regression models. The average one-way commute time in 2016
|
|
across Canada was 26 minutes, but over 9.7\% of the workforce had
|
|
commute times exceeding 60 mi-nutes. However, this rate of extreme
|
|
commuting was 11.5\% for low-income households, 13.5\% for immigrants,
|
|
and 13.4\% among non-white Canadians, reaching as high as 18.6\% for
|
|
Black Canadians and 14.7\% for Latin American Canadians specifically. We
|
|
find that these inequalities persist even after controlling for
|
|
household factors, commute mode, occupation, and built environment
|
|
characteristics. The persistently significant effects of race in our
|
|
models point to factors like housing and employment discrimination as
|
|
possible contributors to extreme commuting. These results highlight
|
|
commuting disparities at a national scale prior to the COVID-19
|
|
pandemic, and represents clear evidence of structural marginalization
|
|
contributing to racialized inequalities in the critical metric of daily
|
|
commute times seldom recognized by Canadian scholars and planners.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Allen, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Dept Geog \& Planning, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Allen, Jeff, Univ Toronto, Dept Geog \& Planning, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Palm, Matthew; Tiznado-Aitken, Ignacio; Farber, Steven, Univ Toronto Scarborough, Dept Human Geog, Scarborough, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.tbs.2022.05.005},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {2214-367X},
|
|
EISSN = {2214-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Commuting; Canada; Social inequalities; Extreme commuting; Race;
|
|
Immigration},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRADE-OFFS; TIME; TRANSPORTATION; SATISFACTION; WORK; PARTICIPATION;
|
|
ACCESSIBILITY; DETERMINANTS; DURATION; DISTANCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {jeff.allen@utoronto.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tiznado-Aitken, Ignacio/AAL-7641-2020
|
|
Farber, Steven/ABE-6061-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Palm, Matthew/0000-0002-8800-2777
|
|
Tiznado Aitken, Ignacio/0000-0002-7385-2357},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000809651600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000413749700005,
|
|
Author = {Kwon, Jinwoo and Hetling, Andrea},
|
|
Title = {Moving In and Out of Welfare and Work: The Influence of Regional
|
|
Socioeconomic Circumstances on Economic Disconnection Among Low-Income
|
|
Single Mothers},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT QUARTERLY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {326-341},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {An increasing proportion of low-income single mothers are experiencing
|
|
periods of economic disconnection, defined as receiving no cash income
|
|
from welfare or work. Most research on disconnection has focused on
|
|
personal attributes as risk factors for experiencing disconnection at a
|
|
static point in time. This study adopts a dynamic perspective and
|
|
broadens the existing set of determinants by adding regional
|
|
socioeconomic characteristics to explain changes in status. Results from
|
|
multivariate survival analyses demonstrate that residence in a
|
|
disadvantaged county is associated with an increased risk of becoming
|
|
disconnected. State-level policies, as opposed to county socioeconomic
|
|
characteristics, have stronger influences on movements out of
|
|
disconnection. The findings from the analyses provide a base for policy
|
|
discussions about helping this vulnerable population.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kwon, J (Corresponding Author), Rutgers State Univ, Bloustein Sch Planning \& Publ Policy, 33 Livingston Ave, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
|
|
Kwon, Jinwoo; Hetling, Andrea, Rutgers State Univ, Edward J Bloustein Sch Planning \& Publ Policy, 33 Livingston Ave, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0891242417730607},
|
|
ISSN = {0891-2424},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-3543},
|
|
Keywords = {economic disconnection; socioeconomic influences; resilience of
|
|
low-income women; Temporary Assistance for Needy Families},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMPLOYMENT; STRATEGIES; MULTILEVEL; DECLINE; REFORM; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics; Urban Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {jinwoo.kwon@rutgers.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000413749700005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000345375200004,
|
|
Author = {Smith, George and Smith, Teresa},
|
|
Title = {Targeting educational disadvantage by area: continuity and change in
|
|
urban areas in England, 1968-2014},
|
|
Journal = {OXFORD REVIEW OF EDUCATION},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {6, SI},
|
|
Pages = {715-738},
|
|
Month = {NOV 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Focusing on data and policies from England, trends in educational
|
|
disadvantage by area are traced from the late 1960s when the first pilot
|
|
projects were established in the UK, to the present. The origins of
|
|
these developments and the subsequent rises and falls of such area-based
|
|
policies in England are reviewed. Specially collected data for the pilot
|
|
areas from the 1960s and national data for England from 2000 are used to
|
|
draw out some striking patterns of changes over the period. Though many
|
|
of the areas remain highly disadvantaged, educational measures at age 16
|
|
and at entry to higher education (HE) indicate some important changes.
|
|
Thus the settled, white working-class pilot area in the 1960s with just
|
|
below average results had fallen back very substantially by 2013,
|
|
particularly in entry to HE. By contrast the newly settled Asian
|
|
immigrant area in Birmingham where educational performance was
|
|
exceptionally poor in the 1960s had moved above average despite
|
|
remaining highly disadvantaged. Analysis of the national results since
|
|
2000 using local area data showed that these trends were widespread
|
|
across England. Disadvantaged `multicultural urban areas' were doing
|
|
markedly better than the disadvantaged white working-class urban areas,
|
|
where in many cases traditional industries had closed. This was
|
|
especially marked at entry to HE where multicultural areas had rates
|
|
close to the national average of 40\% while white working-class urban
|
|
areas had rates of entry to HE of between 10\% and 15\% of the age group
|
|
and this gap has widened rapidly in recent years. These trends are
|
|
likely to be the source of major resentment, with one group finding
|
|
itself increasingly excluded from higher level employment opportunities,
|
|
and the other failing to find opportunities that match their
|
|
expectations once they leave education.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Smith, T (Corresponding Author), Univ Oxford, Dept Social Policy \& Intervent, Wellington Sq, Oxford OX1 2ER, England.
|
|
Smith, George; Smith, Teresa, Univ Oxford, Oxford OX1 2ER, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/03054985.2014.981436},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-4985},
|
|
EISSN = {1465-3915},
|
|
Keywords = {educational performance; Educational Priority Areas; area deprivation;
|
|
area-based interventions; educational disadvantage; educational policy},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {Teresa.smith@spi.ox.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000345375200004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000355693700003,
|
|
Author = {Zhang, Qian Forrest},
|
|
Title = {Class Differentiation in Rural China: Dynamics of Accumulation,
|
|
Commodification and State Intervention},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF AGRARIAN CHANGE},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {3, SI},
|
|
Pages = {338-365},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper develops a classification of the emerging agrarian class
|
|
positions in China today. Using an instrument based on rural households'
|
|
combination of market positions in four markets - land, labour, means of
|
|
production and product - I identify five agrarian classes: the
|
|
capitalist employer class, the petty-bourgeois class of commercial
|
|
farmers, two labouring classes of dual-employment households and wage
|
|
workers, and subsistence peasants. This classification is then used as a
|
|
heuristic device to organize the empirical analysis that examines how
|
|
dynamics of agrarian change drive class differentiation in rural China.
|
|
For the capitalist employer class, the analysis focuses on their diverse
|
|
paths of accumulation; for the petty-bourgeois commercial farmers, their
|
|
contingent resilience and tendencies of differentiation; and for the two
|
|
classes of labour, the commodification of their subsistence. The state
|
|
plays important but varying roles in all these processes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zhang, QF (Corresponding Author), Singapore Management Univ, Sch Social Sci, Sociol, 90 Stamford Rd, Singapore 178903, Singapore.
|
|
Singapore Management Univ, Sch Social Sci, Sociol, Singapore 178903, Singapore.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/joac.12120},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-0358},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-0366},
|
|
Keywords = {class differentiation; accumulation; commodification; state
|
|
intervention; capitalism; China},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LAND; MARKETS; REFORM; AGRIBUSINESS; INEQUALITY; MIGRATION; EMERGENCE;
|
|
PEASANTS; POLITICS; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {forrestzhang@smu.edu.sg},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Zhang, Qian Forrest/F-9094-2010},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Zhang, Qian Forrest/0000-0002-5004-6715},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {71},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000355693700003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000471325700104,
|
|
Author = {Busygina, A. L. and Shtrikova, D. B.},
|
|
Editor = {Mantulenko, V},
|
|
Title = {UNLOCKING THE FEMALE EMPLOYMENT POTENTIAL: GENDER ASPECT},
|
|
Booktitle = {GCPMED 2018 - INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE GLOBAL CHALLENGES AND
|
|
PROSPECTS OF THE MODERN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Series = {European Proceedings of Social and Behavioural Sciences},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Pages = {1042-1054},
|
|
Note = {International Scientific Conference on Global Challenges and Prospects
|
|
of the Modern Economic Development (GCPMED), Samara State Univ Econ,
|
|
Samara, RUSSIA, DEC 06-08, 2018},
|
|
Abstract = {The participation of women in labor activity makes a significant
|
|
contribution to unlocking the employment potential of the region and the
|
|
country as a whole. At the same time, the traditional division of gender
|
|
roles, which is typical for Russia, affects the position of women in the
|
|
labor market. Although in modern Russian society, the family model is
|
|
actually dominant, where a man is not the only bread winner in the
|
|
family, and a woman continues to work after the birth of the children.
|
|
However, despite the undeniable progress in the issue of integrating
|
|
women into the labor market, it is too early to speak about the complete
|
|
equality in distribution of work. The current situation shows that
|
|
women, in comparison with men, are the most vulnerable social group.
|
|
Women are more likely to be discriminated when they are employed and
|
|
promoted. Modern scientists, for the most part, recognize that women
|
|
have a high level of the employment potential. The authors conducted a
|
|
study on the probability of unlocking the female employment potential in
|
|
leadership positions. The paper analyzes and identifies the main
|
|
socially determined and personal gender stereotypes in the Russian labor
|
|
market. It has been determined which factors, such as education, marital
|
|
status, motherhood, social status of a husband, self-confidence have a
|
|
positive or negative influence on unlocking the female employment
|
|
potential in leadership positions. In modern society, from a legal point
|
|
of view, women have every opportunity to be successful professionals.
|
|
(c) 2019 Published by Future Academy www.FutureAcademy.org.UK},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shtrikova, DB (Corresponding Author), Samara State Tech Univ, Dept Econ \& Management, Molodogvardeyskaya St 244, Samara 443100, Russia.
|
|
Busygina, A. L., Samara State Social \& Pedag Univ, Dept Psychol, M Gorkogo St 65-67, Samara 443099, Russia.
|
|
Shtrikova, D. B., Samara State Tech Univ, Dept Econ \& Management, Molodogvardeyskaya St 244, Samara 443100, Russia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.15405/epsbs.2019.03.104},
|
|
ISSN = {2357-1330},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment potential; women; gender stereotypes; labour market;
|
|
discrimination; female professional mentality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MARKET; WOMEN; GAP},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {busygina@pgsga.ru
|
|
shtrikovadb@yandex.ru},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Shtrikova, Darya D.B./D-7890-2014
|
|
Shtrikova, Darya/AAI-8533-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shtrikova, Darya/0000-0003-1625-5537},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000471325700104},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000757460500001,
|
|
Author = {Kovacs, Roxanne and Brown, Garrett W. and Kadungure, Artwell and
|
|
Kristensen, Soren R. and Gwati, Gwati and Anselmi, Laura and Midzi,
|
|
Nicholas and Borghi, Josephine},
|
|
Title = {Who is paid in pay-for-performance? Inequalities in the distribution of
|
|
financial bonuses amongst health centres in Zimbabwe},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {37},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {429-439},
|
|
Month = {APR 13},
|
|
Abstract = {Although pay-for-performance (P4P) schemes have been implemented across
|
|
low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), little is known about their
|
|
distributional consequences. A key concern is that financial bonuses are
|
|
primarily captured by providers who are already better able to perform
|
|
(for example, those in wealthier areas), P4P could exacerbate existing
|
|
inequalities within the health system. We examine inequalities in the
|
|
distribution of pay-outs in Zimbabwe's national P4P scheme (2014-2016)
|
|
using quantitative data on bonus payments and facility characteristics
|
|
and findings from a thematic policy review and 28 semi-structured
|
|
interviews with stakeholders at all system levels. We found that in
|
|
Zimbabwe, facilities with better baseline access to guidelines, more
|
|
staff, higher consultation volumes and wealthier and less remote target
|
|
populations earned significantly higher P4P bonuses throughout the
|
|
programme. For instance, facilities that were 1 SD above the mean in
|
|
terms of access to guidelines, earned 90 USD more per quarter than those
|
|
that were 1 SD below the mean. Differences in bonus pay-outs for
|
|
facilities that were 1 SD above and below the mean in terms of the
|
|
number of staff and consultation volumes are even more pronounced at 348
|
|
USD and 445 USD per quarter. Similarly, facilities with villages in the
|
|
poorest wealth quintile in their vicinity earned less than all
|
|
others-and 752 USD less per quarter than those serving villages in the
|
|
richest quintile. Qualitative data confirm these findings. Respondents
|
|
identified facility baseline structural quality, leadership, catchment
|
|
population size and remoteness as affecting performance in the scheme.
|
|
Unequal distribution of P4P pay-outs was identified as having negative
|
|
consequences on staff retention, absenteeism and motivation. Based on
|
|
our findings and previous work, we provide some guidance to policymakers
|
|
on how to design more equitable P4P schemes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Borghi, J (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, 15-17 Tavistock Pl, London WC1H 9SH, England.
|
|
Kovacs, Roxanne; Borghi, Josephine, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Publ Hlth \& Policy, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, 15-17 Tavistock Pl, London WC1H 9SH, England.
|
|
Brown, Garrett W., Univ Leeds, Sch Polit \& Int Studies POLIS, Woodhouse Leeds LS2 9JT, England.
|
|
Kadungure, Artwell, Training \& Res Support Ctr TARSC, Harare, Zimbabwe.
|
|
Kristensen, Soren R., Univ Southern Denmark, Danish Ctr Hlth Econ, DK-5000 Odense C, Denmark.
|
|
Kristensen, Soren R., Imperial Coll London, Fac Med, Inst Global Hlth Innovat, London SW7 2AZ, England.
|
|
Gwati, Gwati, Minist Hlth \& Child Care, Harare, Zimbabwe.
|
|
Anselmi, Laura, Univ Manchester, Hlth Serv Res \& Primary Care, Div Populat Hlth, Manchester M13 9NT, Lancs, England.
|
|
Midzi, Nicholas, Minist Hlth \& Child Care, Natl Inst Hlth Res, Harare, Zimbabwe.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapol/czab154},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-1080},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2237},
|
|
Keywords = {Health financing; pay-for-performance; inequality; Zimbabwe},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE; QUALITY; PENALTIES; SERVICES; PAYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {Josephine.Borghi@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Borghi, Josephine/0000-0002-0482-5451},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000757460500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000334819000006,
|
|
Author = {Duncan, Greg J. and Magnuson, Katherine and Votruba-Drzal, Elizabeth},
|
|
Title = {Boosting Family Income to Promote Child Development},
|
|
Journal = {FUTURE OF CHILDREN},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {99-120},
|
|
Month = {SPR},
|
|
Abstract = {Families who live in poverty face disadvantages that can hinder their
|
|
children's development in many ways, write Greg Duncan, Katherine
|
|
Magnuson, and Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal. As they struggle to get by
|
|
economically, and as they cope with substandard housing, unsafe
|
|
neighborhoods, and inadequate schools, poor families experience more
|
|
stress in their daily lives than more affluent families do, with a host
|
|
of psychological and developmental consequences. Poor families also lack
|
|
the resources to invest in things like high-quality child care and
|
|
enriched learning experiences that give more affluent children a leg up.
|
|
Often, poor parents also lack the time that wealthier parents have to
|
|
invest in their children, because poor parents are more likely to be
|
|
raising children alone or to work nonstandard hours and have inflexible
|
|
work schedules.
|
|
Can increasing poor parents' incomes, independent of any other sort of
|
|
assistance, help their children succeed in school and in life? The
|
|
theoretical case is strong, and Duncan, Magnuson, and Votruba-Drzal find
|
|
solid evidence that the answer is yes children from poor families that
|
|
see a boost in income do better in school and complete more years of
|
|
schooling, for example. But if boosting poor parents' incomes can help
|
|
their children, a crucial question remains: Does it matter when in a
|
|
child's life the additional income appears? Developmental neurobiology
|
|
strongly suggests that increased income should have the greatest effect
|
|
during children's early years, when their brains and other systems are
|
|
developing rapidly, though we need more evidence to prove this
|
|
conclusively.
|
|
The authors offer examples of how policy makers could incorporate the
|
|
findings they present to create more effective programs for families
|
|
living in poverty. And they conclude with a warning: if a boost in
|
|
income can help poor children, then a drop in income for example,
|
|
through cuts to social safety net programs like food stamps can surely
|
|
harm them.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Duncan, GJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Irvine, Sch Educ, Irvine, CA 92717 USA.
|
|
Duncan, Greg J., Univ Calif Irvine, Sch Educ, Irvine, CA 92717 USA.
|
|
Magnuson, Katherine, Univ Wisconsin, Sch Social Work, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Votruba-Drzal, Elizabeth, Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Psychol, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1353/foc.2014.0008},
|
|
ISSN = {1054-8289},
|
|
EISSN = {1550-1558},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; SCHOOL PERFORMANCE; WELFARE-REFORM; HEALTH;
|
|
POVERTY; STRESS; IMPACT; TAX; ACHIEVEMENT; DISPARITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Health Policy \& Services; Social Sciences,
|
|
Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {74},
|
|
Times-Cited = {131},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {71},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000334819000006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000559216300001,
|
|
Author = {Dodd-Reynolds, Caroline J. and Vallis, Dimitris and Kasim, Adetayo and
|
|
Akhter, Nasima and Hanson, Coral L.},
|
|
Title = {The Northumberland Exercise Referral Scheme as a Universal Community
|
|
Weight Management Programme: A Mixed Methods Exploration of Outcomes,
|
|
Expectations and Experiences across a Social Gradient},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {15},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Exercise referral schemes (ERS) are internationally recognised, yet
|
|
little attention has been paid to discrete referral groups or the
|
|
influence of wider social determinants of health. The primary
|
|
quantitative element of this mixed methods study used a mixed effects
|
|
linear model to examine associations of sociodemographic predictors,
|
|
obesity class and profession of referrer on weight and physical activity
|
|
(PA) variables for weight-related referrals (n= 3624) to an established
|
|
24-week ERS. Chained equations modelling imputed missing data. The
|
|
embedded qualitative element (n= 7) used individual semi-structured
|
|
interviews to explore participant weight-related expectations and
|
|
experiences. Age, gender and profession of referrer influenced weight
|
|
loss. PA increased and was influenced by age and gender. The weight gap
|
|
between the most and least obese narrowed over time but the PA gap
|
|
between most and least widened. Age, employment and obesity class were
|
|
most predictive of missing data but would unlikely alter overall
|
|
conclusions. Qualitative themes were weight-loss support, personal
|
|
circumstances and strategies, and weight expectations versus wellbeing
|
|
rewards. This ERS worked, did not widen existing obesity inequalities,
|
|
but demonstrated evidence of PA inequalities for those living with
|
|
deprivation. To improve equity of experience, we recommend further
|
|
stakeholder dialogue around referral experience and ongoing support
|
|
needs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dodd-Reynolds, CJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Durham, Dept Sport \& Exercise Sci, Durham DH1 3HN, England.
|
|
Dodd-Reynolds, CJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Durham, Wolfson Res Inst Hlth \& Wellbeing, Phys Act Special Interest Grp, Durham DH1 3HN, England.
|
|
Dodd-Reynolds, CJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Durham, Durham Res Methods Ctr, Durham DH1 3HN, England.
|
|
Dodd-Reynolds, Caroline J., Univ Durham, Dept Sport \& Exercise Sci, Durham DH1 3HN, England.
|
|
Dodd-Reynolds, Caroline J.; Kasim, Adetayo; Akhter, Nasima, Univ Durham, Wolfson Res Inst Hlth \& Wellbeing, Phys Act Special Interest Grp, Durham DH1 3HN, England.
|
|
Dodd-Reynolds, Caroline J.; Vallis, Dimitris; Kasim, Adetayo, Univ Durham, Durham Res Methods Ctr, Durham DH1 3HN, England.
|
|
Kasim, Adetayo; Akhter, Nasima, Univ Durham, Dept Anthropol, Durham DH1 3HN, England.
|
|
Hanson, Coral L., Edinburgh Napier Univ, Sch Hlth \& Social Care, Edinburgh EH11 4BN, Midlothian, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/ijerph17155297},
|
|
Article-Number = {5297},
|
|
EISSN = {1660-4601},
|
|
Keywords = {exercise referral; obesity; physical activity; inequalities;
|
|
sociodemographic},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; PRIMARY-CARE; SOCIOECONOMIC POSITION;
|
|
COST-EFFECTIVENESS; PUBLIC-HEALTH; INTERVENTIONS; OBESITY; INEQUALITIES;
|
|
VALIDATION; PREDICTORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {caroline.dodd-reynolds@durham.ac.uk
|
|
dimitris.vallis@durham.ac.uk
|
|
a.s.kasim@durham.ac.uk
|
|
nasima.akhter@durham.ac.uk
|
|
c.hanson@napier.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hanson, Coral L/K-4215-2017
|
|
Akhter, Nasima/AAL-3670-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hanson, Coral L/0000-0003-1602-1968
|
|
Akhter, Nasima/0000-0002-5424-1593
|
|
Kasim, Adetayo Safiriyu/0000-0002-0411-3059
|
|
Dodd-Reynolds, Caroline/0000-0003-0670-8264},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000559216300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000601162800027,
|
|
Author = {Kosec, Katrina and Mo, Cecilia Hyunjung and Schmidt, Emily and Song, Jie},
|
|
Title = {Perceptions of relative deprivation and women's empowerment},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {138},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {How do perceptions of one's relative economic status affect gender
|
|
attitudes, including support for women's economic participation and
|
|
involvement in decision-making in their community and household? We
|
|
conducted a 2018 survey experiment with female and male adults in
|
|
approximately 1000 households in Papua New Guinea. Employing an
|
|
established survey treatment to subtly alter respondents' perception of
|
|
their relative economic wellbeing, we find that increased feelings of
|
|
relative deprivation make both men and women significantly more likely
|
|
to support girls' schooling and women's paid employment, suggesting that
|
|
relative economic insecurity can actually prompt support for women's
|
|
economic participation. However, increased feelings of relative
|
|
deprivation may trigger greater intrahousehold tension. While increased
|
|
perceptions of relative deprivation cause women to want more household
|
|
decision-making authority, men's attitudes toward women's proper roles
|
|
in decision-making are unchanged. In other words, increased support for
|
|
women's economic participation among men appears to stem mainly from a
|
|
desire to raise household income, and not to alter the general role of
|
|
women in society. The results underscore the multifaceted nature of
|
|
gender attitudes, and how support for women's economic participation may
|
|
rise without simultaneous increases in women's agency in
|
|
decision-making. (C) 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kosec, K (Corresponding Author), Int Food Policy Res Inst, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
|
|
Kosec, Katrina; Schmidt, Emily, Int Food Policy Res Inst, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
|
|
Mo, Cecilia Hyunjung; Song, Jie, Univ Calif Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.worlddev.2020.105218},
|
|
Article-Number = {105218},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-750X},
|
|
Keywords = {Women's empowerment; Gender attitudes; Inequality; Labor force
|
|
participation; Relative deprivation; Experiment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; GENDER-ROLE ATTITUDES; SELF-HELP GROUPS;
|
|
ECONOMIC-DEVELOPMENT; BARGAINING POWER; FIELD EXPERIMENT; RESPONSE
|
|
SCALES; PROSPECT-THEORY; INEQUALITY; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {k.kosec@cgiar.org
|
|
cecilia.h.mo@berkeley.edu
|
|
e.schmidt@cgiar.org
|
|
jiesong@berkeley.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Song, Jie/ABW-6627-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Song, Jie/0000-0003-1108-5188},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {138},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000601162800027},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000497732700002,
|
|
Author = {Jadwin-Cakmak, Laura and Reisner, Sari L. and Hughto, Jaclyn M. W. and
|
|
Salomon, Liz and Martinez, Miguel and Popoff, Elliot and Rivera, Bre
|
|
Anne and Harper, Gary W.},
|
|
Title = {HIV prevention and HIV care among transgender and gender diverse youth:
|
|
design and implementation of a multisite mixed-methods study protocol in
|
|
the US},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {NOV 15},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundIn the U.S., transgender and gender diverse (TGD) populations
|
|
face structural, interpersonal, and individual barriers to healthcare.
|
|
Less is known, however, about the HIV prevention and treatment
|
|
experiences of TGD youth in the U.S. The current study was developed to
|
|
fill this research gap.MethodsThis article describes the research
|
|
protocol for a multi-site, U.S.-based mixed-methods study that sought to
|
|
identify the multi-level facilitators and barriers that influence
|
|
participation of TGD youth in various stages of the HIV prevention
|
|
(e.g., pre-exposure prophylaxis uptake) and care continua. A sample of
|
|
diverse TGD youth ages 16-24 was recruited from 14U.S. sites. TGD youth
|
|
participants completed a one-time, in-person visit that included an
|
|
informed consent process, computer-based quantitative survey, and
|
|
in-depth qualitative interview assessing experiences accessing HIV
|
|
prevention and/or care services. Providers serving TGD youth were
|
|
recruited from the same 14 sites and completed a one-time visit via
|
|
phone that included informed consent, demographic questionnaire, and
|
|
in-depth qualitative interview assessing their experiences providing HIV
|
|
prevention or treatment services to TGD youth.ResultsOverall, 186 TGD
|
|
youth ages 16-24 and 59 providers serving TGD youth were recruited and
|
|
enrolled from across the 14U.S. sites. TGD youth participants had a mean
|
|
age of 20.69; 77.3\% youth of color; 59.7\% trans-feminine; 15.5\%
|
|
trans-masculine; 24.9\% non-binary; 53.6\% family income under poverty
|
|
level. Providers included medical and mental health providers as well as
|
|
case manager/care coordinators, HIV test counselors, and health
|
|
educators/outreach workers. Providers were 81.3\% cisgender and 30.5\%
|
|
people of color. Successes with community-engagement strategies and
|
|
gender-affirming research methods are reported.ConclusionsThis study
|
|
addresses critical gaps in current knowledge about the HIV prevention
|
|
and care experiences of TGD youth. Findings have implications for the
|
|
development of HIV interventions across levels to support the health and
|
|
well-being of TGD youth. Future research is warranted to replicate and
|
|
expand on lessons learned regarding recruitment and engagement of
|
|
communities of TGD youth, including longitudinal designs to assess
|
|
engagement across their developmental stages. Lessons learned working
|
|
with TGD youth through developing and implementing the study protocol
|
|
are shared.Trial registrationRegistered on ClinicalTrials.gov on
|
|
05/20/2015 (NCT02449629).},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jadwin-Cakmak, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Michigan, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Behav \& Hlth Educ, 1415 Washington Hts, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Jadwin-Cakmak, Laura; Popoff, Elliot; Harper, Gary W., Univ Michigan, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Behav \& Hlth Educ, 1415 Washington Hts, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Reisner, Sari L., Boston Childrens Hosp, Pediat, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Reisner, Sari L., Harvard Med Sch, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Reisner, Sari L.; Salomon, Liz, Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 677 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Reisner, Sari L.; Hughto, Jaclyn M. W., Fenway Hlth, Fenway Inst, 1340 Boylston St, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
|
|
Hughto, Jaclyn M. W., Brown Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 121 South Main St, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
|
|
Hughto, Jaclyn M. W., Brown Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Behav \& Social Sci, 121 South Main St, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
|
|
Hughto, Jaclyn M. W., Brown Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Ctr Hlth Equ Res, 121 South Main St, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
|
|
Martinez, Miguel, Childrens Hosp Los Angeles, Ctr Transyouth Hlth \& Dev, 4650 Sunset Blvd,MS 2, Los Angeles, CA 90027 USA.
|
|
Rivera, Bre Anne, Trans Sistas Color Project, 77 Victor St, Highland Pk, MI 48203 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-019-7605-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {1531},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Transgender; HIV prevention; HIV care continuum; Adolescent; Young
|
|
adult; Mixed methods},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SEXUAL RISK BEHAVIORS; MENTAL-HEALTH; TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS; DEPRESSIVE
|
|
SYMPTOMS; MINORITY STRESS; SOCIAL STRESS; SUBSTANCE USE; FEMALE YOUTH;
|
|
GAY; PREVALENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {ljadwin@umich.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hughto, Jaclyn White/GNH-6189-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jadwin-Cakmak, Laura/0000-0001-5744-9632},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {69},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000497732700002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000455338800006,
|
|
Author = {Burzynski, Michal and Docquier, Frederic and Rapoport, Hillel},
|
|
Title = {The Changing Structure of Immigration to the OECD: What Welfare Effects
|
|
on Member Countries?},
|
|
Journal = {IMF ECONOMIC REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {66},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {564-601},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {We investigate the welfare implications of two pre-crisis immigration
|
|
waves (1991-2000 and 2001-2010) and of the post-crisis wave (2011-2015)
|
|
for OECD native citizens. To do so, we develop a general equilibrium
|
|
model that accounts for the main channels of transmission of immigration
|
|
shocks - the employment and wage effects, the fiscal effect and the
|
|
market size effect - and for the interactions between them. We
|
|
parameterize our model for 20 selected OECD member states. We find that
|
|
the three waves induce positive effects on the real income of natives;
|
|
however, the size of these gains varies considerably across countries
|
|
and across skill groups. In relative terms, the post-crisis wave induces
|
|
smaller welfare gains compared to the previous ones. This is due to the
|
|
changing origin mix of immigrants, which translates into lower levels of
|
|
human capital and smaller fiscal gains. With a few exceptions,
|
|
differences across cohorts explain a tiny fraction of the highly
|
|
persistent, cross-country heterogeneity in the economic benefits from
|
|
immigration.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Docquier, F (Corresponding Author), Catholic Univ Louvain, FNRS, Off 232,3 Pl Montesquieu, B-1348 Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
|
|
Docquier, F (Corresponding Author), Catholic Univ Louvain, IRES, Off 232,3 Pl Montesquieu, B-1348 Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
|
|
Burzynski, Michal, Univ Luxembourg, CREA, Luxembourg, Luxembourg.
|
|
Docquier, Frederic, Catholic Univ Louvain, FNRS, Off 232,3 Pl Montesquieu, B-1348 Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
|
|
Docquier, Frederic, Catholic Univ Louvain, IRES, Off 232,3 Pl Montesquieu, B-1348 Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
|
|
Rapoport, Hillel, Univ Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne, Paris Sch Econ, Paris, France.
|
|
Rapoport, Hillel, CEPII, Paris, France.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1057/s41308-018-0059-3},
|
|
ISSN = {2041-4161},
|
|
EISSN = {2041-417X},
|
|
Keywords = {Immigration; Welfare; Crisis; Inequality; General equilibrium},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-SELECTION; INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION; MEXICO; LABOR; EDUCATION;
|
|
EUROPE; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business, Finance; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {michal.burzynski@uni.lu
|
|
frederic.docquier@uclouvain.be
|
|
hillel.rapoport@psemail.eu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Burzynski, Michal/0000-0002-3937-0645
|
|
Docquier, Frederic/0000-0003-3581-6141},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000455338800006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000418098400007,
|
|
Author = {Nordh, Helena and Vistad, Odd Inge and Skar, Margrete and Wold, Line C.
|
|
and Baerum, Kim Magnus},
|
|
Title = {Walking as urban outdoor recreation: Public health for everyone},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OUTDOOR RECREATION AND TOURISM-RESEARCH PLANNING AND
|
|
MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Pages = {60-66},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {This study aims to investigate whether the frequency of neighbourhood
|
|
walks (both for recreation and for transport) is associated with various
|
|
indicators of demographic and socio-economic position, indicators of
|
|
self-reported physical activity and perceived health status. We compare
|
|
the findings with participation (yes/no) in physical exercise/workouts.
|
|
A survey (N = 780) was conducted in the Norwegian town Moss. We used
|
|
linear regression models to assess the potential links between the
|
|
frequency of walks from home and the following self-reported indicators:
|
|
income, education, housing type, employment, age, gender, raised in
|
|
Norway or not, years of residence in Moss, number of financial household
|
|
providers, household with/without children, exerciser or not, activity
|
|
level at work, perceived health status, sedentary minutes per week, and
|
|
dog ownership. The study reveals that neighbourhood walking appeals to
|
|
all adults regardless of demographic situation or socio-economic
|
|
position. Furthermore, owning a dog seems to be a successful factor for
|
|
getting people to walk. Our results show a higher frequency of walks
|
|
from home for transport than for the walk itself (usually called
|
|
recreational walks). Given the global political health goal of
|
|
encouraging people to be more physically active, this study demonstrates
|
|
the potential of walking from a public health perspective. The study
|
|
argues for the importance of health promoting urban planning, with
|
|
attractive and walkable friendly urban environments. Furthermore, the
|
|
study acknowledges the importance of promoting a broader understanding
|
|
of outdoor recreation in urban settings, where neighbourhood walking,
|
|
both for recreation and for transport, should be regarded as an activity
|
|
within the frame of urban recreation.
|
|
Management implications:
|
|
Neighbourhood walking appeals to all adults regardless of demographic
|
|
situation or socio-economic position.
|
|
Young adults and people who are better economically situated favour
|
|
physical exercise more than other adults do.
|
|
In a world dominated by inactive adults, a moderate physical activity
|
|
such as neighbourhood walking has great potential to improve public
|
|
health.
|
|
Public health policy and management should facilitate efficient measures
|
|
to stimulate neighbourhood walking.
|
|
Neighbourhood walking, both for recreation and for transport, should be
|
|
regarded as an activity within the frame of urban recreation; both types
|
|
are mostly performed in people's leisure time.
|
|
It is important to base urban planning on the principle of developing a
|
|
walkable city.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nordh, H (Corresponding Author), Norwegian Univ Life Sci, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Box 5003, N-1432 As, Norway.
|
|
Nordh, Helena, Norwegian Univ Life Sci, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Box 5003, N-1432 As, Norway.
|
|
Vistad, Odd Inge; Skar, Margrete; Wold, Line C.; Baerum, Kim Magnus, Norwegian Inst Nat Res, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jort.2017.09.005},
|
|
ISSN = {2213-0780},
|
|
EISSN = {2213-0799},
|
|
Keywords = {Physical activity; Neighbourhood walking; Physical exercise;
|
|
Socio-economic position; Urban recreation; Urban planning},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; NEIGHBORHOOD; DISADVANTAGE; INEQUALITIES;
|
|
WALKABILITY; ENVIRONMENT; TRANSPORT; BEHAVIOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Hospitality, Leisure, Sport \& Tourism},
|
|
Author-Email = {helena.nordh@nmbu.no},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kowan, Megan/AAH-7833-2020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {22},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {45},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000418098400007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000432721200006,
|
|
Author = {Marsh, Celeste and Agius, Paul A. and Jayakody, Gamini and Shajehan,
|
|
Roshan and Abeywickrema, Chandima and Durrant, Kelly and Luchters,
|
|
Stanley and Holmes, Wendy},
|
|
Title = {Factors associated with social participation amongst elders in rural Sri
|
|
Lanka: a cross-sectional mixed methods analysis},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Month = {MAY 16},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Populations of low and middle-income countries are ageing
|
|
rapidly; there is a need for policies that support an increase in the
|
|
duration of old age lived in good health. There is growing evidence that
|
|
social participation protects against morbidity and mortality, but few
|
|
studies explore patterns of social participation. Analysis of baseline
|
|
quantitative and qualitative data from a trial of the impact of Elders'
|
|
Clubs on health and well-being in the hill country of Sri Lanka provided
|
|
an opportunity to better understand the extent of, and influences on,
|
|
social participation among elders.
|
|
Methods: We analysed data from 1028 baseline survey respondents and from
|
|
12 focus group discussions. Participants were consenting elders, aged
|
|
over 60 years, living in Tamil tea plantation communities or Sinhala
|
|
villages in 40 randomly selected local government divisions. We assessed
|
|
participation in organised social activities using self-reported
|
|
attendance during the previous year. Multivariable regression analyses
|
|
were used to explore associations with community and individual factors.
|
|
The quantitative findings were complemented by thematic analysis of
|
|
focus group discussion transcripts.
|
|
Results: Social participation in these poor, geographically isolated
|
|
communities was low: 63\% reported `no' or `very low' engagement with
|
|
organised activities. Plantation community elders reported significantly
|
|
less participation than village elders. Attendance at religious
|
|
activities was common and valued. Individual factors with significant
|
|
positive association with social participation in multivariable analyses
|
|
were being younger, male, Sinhala, married, employed, and satisfied with
|
|
one's health. Domestic work and cultural constraints often prevented
|
|
older women from attending organised activities.
|
|
Conclusions: Elders likely to benefit most from greater social contact
|
|
are those most likely to face barriers, including older women, the
|
|
oldest old, those living alone and those in poor health. Understanding
|
|
these barriers can inform strategies to overcome them. This might
|
|
include opportunities for both informal and formal social contact close
|
|
to elders' homes, consulting elders, providing childcare, improving
|
|
physical access, advocating with elders' families and religious leaders,
|
|
and encouraging mutual support and inter-generational activities.
|
|
Influences on social participation are interrelated and vary with the
|
|
history, culture and community environment. Further study is required in
|
|
other low and middle-income country contexts.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Marsh, C (Corresponding Author), Burnet Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Marsh, Celeste; Agius, Paul A.; Durrant, Kelly; Luchters, Stanley; Holmes, Wendy, Burnet Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Agius, Paul A.; Durrant, Kelly; Luchters, Stanley, Monash Univ, Dept Epidemiol \& Prevent Med, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Agius, Paul A., La Trobe Univ, Judith Lumley Ctr, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Luchters, Stanley, Univ Ghent, Int Ctr Reprod Hlth, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Jayakody, Gamini, Cent Prov Hlth Dept, Kandy, Sri Lanka.
|
|
Shajehan, Roshan; Abeywickrema, Chandima, PALM Fdn, Nuwara Eliya, Sri Lanka.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-018-5482-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {636},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Social participation; Organised activities; Older adults; Low and middle
|
|
income countries; Healthy ageing; Active ageing},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OLDER-ADULTS; HEALTH OUTCOMES; LOW-VISION; LATE-LIFE; PEOPLE;
|
|
DETERMINANTS; DEPRESSION; SUPPORT; LONELINESS; VALIDATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {celeste.marsh@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Luchters, Stanley/0000-0001-5235-5629
|
|
Agius, Paul/0000-0002-6075-8548},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {67},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000432721200006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1996UB80200002,
|
|
Author = {Emmons, KM and Linnan, L and Abrams, D and Lovell, HJ},
|
|
Title = {Women who work in manufacturing settings: Factors influencing their
|
|
participation in worksite health promotion programs},
|
|
Journal = {WOMENS HEALTH ISSUES},
|
|
Year = {1996},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {74-81},
|
|
Month = {MAR-APR},
|
|
Abstract = {The workplace is an effective channel for disseminating health promotion
|
|
interventions,(1) and it is becoming an increasingly important vehicle
|
|
for reaching women. In the United States, 54\% of women over 18 work
|
|
outside the home. Bureau of Labor projections indicate that by the year
|
|
2005, women will be entering the workforce at a faster rate than men.
|
|
Manufacturing worksites, in particular, offer an effective means of
|
|
reaching women who are underserved, undereducated, and from lower income
|
|
strata. The worksite may play a particularly important role in reaching
|
|
these underserved women because they may have less access to traditional
|
|
channels for health care and prevention. However, poor participation in
|
|
worksite programs is often cited as a major contributor to less than
|
|
optimal outcomes in worksite-based programs.
|
|
Little is known about the determinants of participation in worksite
|
|
health promotion programs. In addition, there is no common definition of
|
|
`'participation,'' which adds to the confusion in this literature.(2)
|
|
While it is difficult to make comparisons across data that use different
|
|
definitions of participation, several recurrent themes exist.
|
|
Demographic characteristics tend to predict participation in worksite
|
|
health promotion programs. Younger employees, those with higher
|
|
education levels, and women are more likely to participate,(2,6)
|
|
although men are more likely to participate in fitness programs.(7,8)
|
|
Organizational or worksite-level factors that promote individual
|
|
participation in health promotion programs are less clear. Top
|
|
management support, willingness to allow attendance on company time, and
|
|
line supervisor permission to attend programs all seem to play a role in
|
|
facilitating participation. Although the importance of organizational
|
|
factors has been acknowledged,(2,6,9-11) the systematic study of how
|
|
these factors differentially predict participation by
|
|
gender-occupational characteristics, age, and health status has only
|
|
recently begun.(12,13)
|
|
The Working Well Trial, a randomized trial of worksite health
|
|
promotion,12 13 offers a unique opportunity to investigate factors
|
|
influencing participation in health promotion programs. In one of the
|
|
four participating study centers (Brown University), it was observed
|
|
that 57\% of women employed in participating companies did not attend
|
|
any of the intervention activities. These data indicated that the
|
|
program was not effectively reaching a large percentage of the women
|
|
employed in these companies. As a result, the present study was designed
|
|
to investigate the facilitators and barriers to women's participation in
|
|
worksite health promotion.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Emmons, KM (Corresponding Author), MIRIAM HOSP,PROVIDENCE,RI 02906, USA.
|
|
BROWN UNIV,SCH MED,PROVIDENCE,RI 02912.
|
|
BROWN UNIV,MEM HOSP RHODE ISL,PAWTUCKET,RI 02860.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/1049-3867(95)00049-6},
|
|
ISSN = {1049-3867},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SMOKING},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Women's Studies},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Abrams, David B/AAY-7699-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Abrams, David B/0000-0002-0868-4350},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {18},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1996UB80200002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000350886900035,
|
|
Author = {Gilmore, Anna B. and Fooks, Gary and Drope, Jeffrey and Bialous, Stella
|
|
Aguinaga and Jackson, Rachel Rose},
|
|
Title = {Tobacco-free world 3 Exposing and addressing tobacco industry conduct in
|
|
low-income and middle-income countries},
|
|
Journal = {LANCET},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {385},
|
|
Number = {9972},
|
|
Pages = {1029-1043},
|
|
Month = {MAR 14},
|
|
Abstract = {The tobacco industry's future depends on increasing tobacco use in
|
|
low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), which face a growing
|
|
burden of tobacco-related disease, yet have potential to prevent
|
|
full-scale escalation of this epidemic. To drive up sales the industry
|
|
markets its products heavily, deliberately targeting non-smokers and
|
|
keeps prices low until smoking and local economies are sufficiently
|
|
established to drive prices and profits up. The industry systematically
|
|
flaunts existing tobacco control legislation and works aggressively to
|
|
prevent future policies using its resource advantage to present highly
|
|
misleading economic arguments, rebrand political activities as corporate
|
|
social responsibility, and establish and use third parties to make its
|
|
arguments more palatable. Increasingly it is using domestic litigation
|
|
and international arbitration to bully LMICs from implementing effective
|
|
policies and hijacking the problem of tobacco smuggling for policy gain,
|
|
attempting to put itself in control of an illegal trade in which there
|
|
is overwhelming historical evidence of its complicity. Progress will not
|
|
be realised until tobacco industry interference is actively addressed as
|
|
outlined in Article 5.3 of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
|
|
Exemplar LMICs show this action can be achieved and indicate that
|
|
exposing tobacco industry misconduct is an essential first step.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gilmore, AB (Corresponding Author), Univ Bath, Dept Hlth, Bath BA2 7AY, Avon, England.
|
|
Gilmore, Anna B.; Fooks, Gary; Jackson, Rachel Rose, Univ Bath, Dept Hlth, Bath BA2 7AY, Avon, England.
|
|
Gilmore, Anna B.; Fooks, Gary; Jackson, Rachel Rose, Univ Bath, UK Ctr Tobacco \& Alcohol Studies, Bath BA2 7AY, Avon, England.
|
|
Drope, Jeffrey, Amer Canc Soc, Atlanta, GA 30329 USA.
|
|
Drope, Jeffrey, Marquette Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Milwaukee, WI 53233 USA.
|
|
Bialous, Stella Aguinaga, Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Nursing, Social \& Behav Sci, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60312-9},
|
|
ISSN = {0140-6736},
|
|
EISSN = {1474-547X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CONTROL POLICIES; FRAMEWORK CONVENTION; FCTC IMPLEMENTATION; GOVERNMENT
|
|
REVENUE; PUBLIC-HEALTH; TRADE-POLICY; INTERFERENCE; LEGISLATION;
|
|
COMPANIES; EXAMPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {a.gilmore@bath.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pavananunt, Pirudee/E-7537-2015
|
|
gilmore, anna B/I-7130-2012},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {gilmore, anna B/0000-0003-0281-1248},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {185},
|
|
Times-Cited = {153},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {37},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000350886900035},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000490399600004,
|
|
Author = {Marston, Greg and Zhang, Juan and Peterie, Michelle and Ramia, Gaby and
|
|
Patulny, Roger and Cooke, Emma},
|
|
Title = {To move or not to move: mobility decision-making in the context of
|
|
welfare conditionality and paid employment},
|
|
Journal = {MOBILITIES},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {596-611},
|
|
Month = {SEP 3},
|
|
Abstract = {The mobility and agency of the unemployed have rarely been examined
|
|
together in welfare administration. Mobility research has much to offer
|
|
the (im)mobility of low-skilled and unemployed workers. The article
|
|
begins by critically examining dominant public discourse and policy
|
|
reforms that stigmatise the assumed immobility of the unemployed.
|
|
Drawing on empirical data from in-depth interviews with people on income
|
|
support payments in Australia, it then offers a critical view on the
|
|
mobility decision-making processes of these job-seekers. Building on
|
|
previous research concerning the politics of mobility, it shows that
|
|
structural inequalities impact mobility choices, making relocation
|
|
difficult for many job-seekers. At the same time, it highlights the
|
|
localised mobility that job search now involves, complicating orthodox
|
|
associations between mobility and power ? as well as assumptions that
|
|
job-seekers are immobile.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Marston, G (Corresponding Author), Univ Queensland, Sch Social Sci, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Marston, Greg; Peterie, Michelle; Cooke, Emma, Univ Queensland, Sch Social Sci, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Zhang, Juan, Univ Bristol, Dept Anthropol \& Archaeol, Bristol, Avon, England.
|
|
Ramia, Gaby, Univ Sydney, Sch Social \& Polit Sci, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Patulny, Roger, Univ Wollongong, Sociol, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/17450101.2019.1611016},
|
|
ISSN = {1745-0101},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-011X},
|
|
Keywords = {Mobility; immobility; unemployment; Australia; income support; welfare
|
|
conditionality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK; LIFE; IMMOBILITY; POLITICS; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography; Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {g.marston@uq.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Cooke, Emma/T-6929-2019
|
|
Zhang, Juan/D-1989-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cooke, Emma/0000-0001-8368-2032
|
|
Marston, Greg/0000-0002-0263-140X
|
|
Zhang, Juan/0000-0003-3613-6332
|
|
Patulny, Roger/0000-0003-4510-6987
|
|
Peterie, Michelle/0000-0002-7182-7246},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {81},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000490399600004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000080963200010,
|
|
Author = {Baker, D and North, K and ALSPAC Study Team},
|
|
Title = {Does employment improve the health of lone mothers?},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {1999},
|
|
Volume = {49},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {121-131},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {In Britain the government is currently proposing legislation that will
|
|
encourage welfare recipients to gain employment. A central tenet of this
|
|
`welfare to work' policy is that employment will not only reduce the
|
|
poverty of welfare recipients, but also improve their health. This
|
|
research assessed the extent to which the movement from `welfare to
|
|
work' is likely to benefit the mental and physical health of lone
|
|
mothers with preschool children. The sample was 719 lone mothers and a
|
|
comparison group of 8779 women with partners drawn from the Avon
|
|
Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood (ALSPAC). Data collected
|
|
by self completion questionnaire at 33 months postpartum provided
|
|
information about average weekly take home family income and the
|
|
mother's employment status. The health outcomes measured were general
|
|
well being, both minor and major depression (using the Edinburgh
|
|
Postnatal Depression Scale), self report of respiratory symptoms
|
|
(cough/cold, wheeze, influenza) from 18-33 months postpartum and self
|
|
report of symptoms common in the childbearing years (backache,
|
|
haemorrhoids) also from 18-33 months postpartum Lone mothers who were
|
|
not employed were the poorest group in the sample; 94\% of this group
|
|
(402) had a family income of less than pound 200 per week, compared with
|
|
72\% (188) of lone mothers who were employed, 25\% (905) of partnered
|
|
women who were not employed and 12\% (466) of partnered women who were
|
|
employed. Lone mothers were significantly more likely than women with
|
|
partners to report poorer well being (chi(2) = 11.7, df = 3, P = 0.01),
|
|
to have a major depressive disorder (chi(2) = 92.6, df = 1, P = 0.0001)
|
|
and to report wheeze (chi(2) = 31.1, df = 1, P = 0.0001), but
|
|
significantly less likely to report cough/cold (chi(2) = 9.9, df = 1, P
|
|
= 0.0001) or haemorrhoids (chi(2) = 16.6, df = 1, P = 0.0001). Lone
|
|
mothers who were unemployed and living on less than pound 100 per week
|
|
were significantly more likely to be depressed (chi(2) = 3.9, df = 1, P
|
|
= 0.05) than those who were employed and living on pound 200 or more per
|
|
week, and significantly less likely to report cough/cold (chi(2) = 3.8,
|
|
df = 1, P = 0.05). Logistic regression analyses showed no significant
|
|
independent association between employment and better health for lone
|
|
mothers. Rather, when compared with lone mothers who were not working,
|
|
those who were employed were more likely to report minor respiratory
|
|
symptoms such as cough/cold (OR = 1.51, 95\% CI = 1.00,2.31). Overall,
|
|
the results suggested that the movement from `welfare to work' is
|
|
unlikely to improve the health of lone mothers. (C) 1999 Elsevier
|
|
Science Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baker, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Manchester, Natl Primary Care Res \& Dev Ctr, 5th Floor,Williamson Bldg,Oxford Rd, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England.
|
|
Univ Manchester, Natl Primary Care Res \& Dev Ctr, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00104-5},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {lone mothers; employment; UK; inequality in health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PAID EMPLOYMENT; PHYSICAL HEALTH; YOUNG-CHILDREN; SINGLE MOTHERS; WOMENS
|
|
HEALTH; ILL HEALTH; UNEMPLOYMENT; DEPRESSION; POLICY; ROLES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Northstone, Kate/A-8165-2011},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Northstone, Kate/0000-0002-0602-1983},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {48},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000080963200010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000744925100017,
|
|
Author = {Curran, Janet A. and Gallant, Allyson J. and Wong, Helen and Shin,
|
|
Hwayeon Danielle and Urquhart, Robin and Kontak, Julia and Wozney, Lori
|
|
and Boulos, Leah and Bhutta, Zulfiqar and Langlois, V, Etienne},
|
|
Title = {Knowledge translation strategies for policy and action focused on
|
|
sexual, reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health and
|
|
well-being: a rapid scoping review},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective The aim of this study was to identify knowledge translation
|
|
(KT) strategies aimed at improving sexual, reproductive, maternal,
|
|
newborn, child and adolescent health (SRMNCAH) and well-being.
|
|
Design Rapid scoping review.
|
|
Search strategy A comprehensive and peer-reviewed search strategy was
|
|
developed and applied to four electronic databases: MEDLINE ALL, Embase,
|
|
CINAHL and Web of Science. Additional searches of grey literature were
|
|
conducted to identify KT strategies aimed at supporting SRMNCAH. KT
|
|
strategies and policies published in English from January 2000 to May
|
|
2020 onwards were eligible for inclusion.
|
|
Results Only 4\% of included 90 studies were conducted in low-income
|
|
countries with the majority (52\%) conducted in high-income countries.
|
|
Studies primarily focused on maternal newborn or child health and
|
|
well-being. Education (81\%), including staff workshops and education
|
|
modules, was the most commonly identified intervention component from
|
|
the KT interventions. Low-income and middle-income countries were more
|
|
likely to include civil society organisations, government and
|
|
policymakers as stakeholders compared with high-income countries.
|
|
Reported barriers to KT strategies included limited resources and time
|
|
constraints, while enablers included stakeholder involvement throughout
|
|
the KT process.
|
|
Conclusion We identified a number of gaps among KT strategies for
|
|
SRMNCAH policy and action, including limited focus on adolescent, sexual
|
|
and reproductive health and rights and SRMNCAH financing strategies.
|
|
There is a need to support stakeholder engagement in KT interventions
|
|
across the continuum of SRMNCAH services. Researchers and policymakers
|
|
should consider enhancing efforts to work with multisectoral
|
|
stakeholders to implement future KT strategies and policies to address
|
|
SRMNCAH priorities.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Curran, JA (Corresponding Author), Dalhousie Univ, Sch Nursing, Halifax, NS, Canada.
|
|
Curran, JA (Corresponding Author), IWK Hlth Ctr, Pediat, Halifax, NS, Canada.
|
|
Curran, Janet A.; Shin, Hwayeon Danielle, Dalhousie Univ, Sch Nursing, Halifax, NS, Canada.
|
|
Curran, Janet A., IWK Hlth Ctr, Pediat, Halifax, NS, Canada.
|
|
Gallant, Allyson J.; Wong, Helen, Dalhousie Univ, Fac Hlth, Halifax, NS, Canada.
|
|
Urquhart, Robin, Dalhousie Univ, Dept Community Hlth \& Epidemiol, Halifax, NS, Canada.
|
|
Kontak, Julia; Boulos, Leah, Maritime SPOR SUPPORT Unit, Halifax, NS, Canada.
|
|
Wozney, Lori, Nova Scotia Hlth, Halifax, NS, Canada.
|
|
Bhutta, Zulfiqar, Hosp Sick Children, Ctr Global Child Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Langlois, Etienne, V, World Hlth Org, Partnership Maternal Newborn \& Child Hlth, Geneva, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2021-053919},
|
|
Article-Number = {e053919},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROJECT; TRAINING INTERVENTION; POSTPARTUM
|
|
HEMORRHAGE; POSTNATAL CARE; SCALE-UP; IMPLEMENTATION; GUIDELINES;
|
|
PROGRAM; IMPACT; GHANA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {jacurran@dal.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bhutta, Zulfiqar/L-7822-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kontak, Julia/0000-0002-9104-0678
|
|
Curran, Janet/0000-0001-9977-0467
|
|
Wozney, Lori/0000-0003-4280-3322
|
|
Bhutta, Zulfiqar/0000-0003-0637-599X
|
|
Gallant, Allyson/0000-0002-2933-7470
|
|
Shin, Hwayeon Danielle/0000-0003-4037-4464},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {128},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000744925100017},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000408753800013,
|
|
Author = {Lee, Barbara C. and Salzwedel, Marsha A. and Chyou, Po-Huang and
|
|
Liebman, Amy K.},
|
|
Title = {Employers' Perspective on Childcare Services for Hired Farm Workers},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF AGROMEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {376-383},
|
|
Abstract = {The goal of this project was to protect children while parents work in
|
|
agriculture by improving off-farm services for children of migrant and
|
|
seasonal farm workers. Large agricultural enterprises have policies
|
|
forbidding children in the worksite. At the same time, their employees,
|
|
who are trying to generate income, seek as many work hours as possible
|
|
but often lack viable options for childcare services. As employers
|
|
strive to increase their labor pool, and workers seek off-farm
|
|
childcare, there is mutual interest in improving access to childcare
|
|
services in agricultural regions dependent on large numbers of full-time
|
|
and seasonal workers. This report describes the employers' perspectives
|
|
on childcare needs of hired farm workers' families and their barriers
|
|
and motivators to facilitating off-farm childcare services. Using
|
|
descriptive survey research methodology, data were collected from a
|
|
convenience sample of 102 agribusiness owners and Human Resource
|
|
directors attending an agricultural conference regarding labor laws or
|
|
personnel management. Results revealed significant differences for those
|
|
companies employing more than 25 workers compared to their counterparts.
|
|
Primary motivators for offering childcare as an employment benefit were
|
|
improved employee morale, enhanced company reputation, and a more stable
|
|
workforce. A major barrier was that half of large-scale enterprises lack
|
|
guidance on how to provide childcare options for their workers. Survey
|
|
results are being used to facilitate collaboration among employers, farm
|
|
workers, and childcare providers to offer a safe, nurturing environment
|
|
for children while their parents work in agriculture.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lee, BC (Corresponding Author), Natl Childrens Ctr Rural \& Agr Hlth \& Safety, 1000 N Oak Ave, Marshfield, WI 54449 USA.
|
|
Lee, Barbara C.; Salzwedel, Marsha A., Natl Childrens Ctr Rural \& Agr Hlth \& Safety, 1000 N Oak Ave, Marshfield, WI 54449 USA.
|
|
Chyou, Po-Huang, Marshfield Clin Res Inst, Marshfield, WI USA.
|
|
Liebman, Amy K., Migrant Clinicians Network, Salisbury, MD USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/1059924X.2017.1358230},
|
|
ISSN = {1059-924X},
|
|
EISSN = {1545-0813},
|
|
Keywords = {Agriculture; child care; employers; farm workers; socio-ecological model},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {lee.barbara@mcrf.mfldclin.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {13},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000408753800013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000676759000001,
|
|
Author = {Bakirtzis, Christos and Artemiadis, Artemios and Nteli, Elli and Boziki,
|
|
Marina Kleopatra and Karakasi, Maria-Valeria and Honan, Cynthia and
|
|
Messinis, Lambros and Nasios, Grigorios and Dardiotis, Efthimios and
|
|
Grigoriadis, Nikolaos},
|
|
Title = {A Greek Validation Study of the Multiple Sclerosis Work Difficulties
|
|
Questionnaire-23},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTHCARE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {The Multiple Sclerosis Work Difficulties Questionnaire-23 (MSWDQ-23) is
|
|
a self-report instrument developed to assess barriers faced by People
|
|
with Multiple Sclerosis (PwMS) in the workplace. The aim of this study
|
|
was to explore the psychometric properties of the Greek version of the
|
|
MSWDQ-23. The study sample consisted of 196 PwMS, all currently working
|
|
in part- or full-time jobs. Participants underwent clinical examination
|
|
and cognitive screening with the Brief International Cognitive
|
|
Assessment for Multiple Sclerosis (BICAMS) and completed self-report
|
|
measures of fatigue, psychological functioning, and quality of life,
|
|
along with the MSWDQ-23 questionnaire. Confirmatory Factor Analysis
|
|
(CFA) was performed, and goodness-of-fit measures were used to evaluate
|
|
construct validity. Convergent validity was checked by correlating
|
|
MSWDQ-23 scores with study measures. Cronbach's alpha value was produced
|
|
to assess internal consistency. CFA yielded a model with a fair fit
|
|
confirming the three-factor structure of the instrument. Higher work
|
|
difficulties were associated with higher Expanded Disability Status
|
|
Scale (EDSS) scores, poorer cognitive function, more fatigue, stress,
|
|
anxiety, and depression, and poorer health status, supporting the
|
|
convergent validity of MSWDQ-23. Internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha
|
|
= 0.94) and test-retest reliability (ICC = 0.996, 95\%, CI =
|
|
0.990-0.998) were excellent. The Greek MSWDQ-23 can be considered a
|
|
valid patient-reported outcome measure and can be used in interventions
|
|
aiming to improve the vocational status of PwMS.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bakirtzis, C (Corresponding Author), Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Multiple Sclerosis Ctr, Dept Neurol 2, GR-54124 Thessaloniki, Greece.
|
|
Bakirtzis, Christos; Nteli, Elli; Boziki, Marina Kleopatra; Grigoriadis, Nikolaos, Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Multiple Sclerosis Ctr, Dept Neurol 2, GR-54124 Thessaloniki, Greece.
|
|
Artemiadis, Artemios, Univ Cyprus, Fac Med, CY-2029 Nicosia, Cyprus.
|
|
Karakasi, Maria-Valeria, AHEPA Univ, Univ Dept Psychiat 3, Gen Hosp, GR-54124 Thessaloniki, Greece.
|
|
Honan, Cynthia, Univ Tasmania, Coll Hlth \& Med, Sch Psychol Sci, Launceston, Tas 7250, Australia.
|
|
Messinis, Lambros, Univ Hosp Patras, Neuropsychol Sect, GR-26504 Patras, Greece.
|
|
Nasios, Grigorios, Univ Ioannina, Dept Speech \& Language Therapy, GR-45110 Ioannina, Greece.
|
|
Dardiotis, Efthimios, Univ Thessaly, Dept Neurol, GR-41500 Larisa, Greece.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/healthcare9070897},
|
|
Article-Number = {897},
|
|
EISSN = {2227-9032},
|
|
Keywords = {multiple sclerosis; employment; patient-reported outcome; MSWDQ-23;
|
|
validation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTERNATIONAL COGNITIVE ASSESSMENT; IMPACT SCALE; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
DISABILITY; PEOPLE; VALIDITY; RELIABILITY; IMPAIRMENT; FATIGUE; RESERVE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {cbakirtzis@auth.gr
|
|
artemiadis.artemios@ucy.ac.cy
|
|
nteli.elli@gmail.com
|
|
bozikim@auth.gr
|
|
valeria28289@hotmail.gr
|
|
cynthia.honan@utas.edu.au
|
|
lmessinis@upatras.gr
|
|
nasios@uoi.gr
|
|
edar@med.uth.gr
|
|
ngrigoriadis@auth.gr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Boziki, Marina/ACF-8768-2022
|
|
Karakasi, Valeria/IRZ-8890-2023
|
|
Bakirtzis, Christos/AAV-9163-2020
|
|
Messinis, Lambros/HIK-2587-2022
|
|
Honan, Cynthia/O-6332-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Boziki, Marina/0000-0002-6601-5163
|
|
Karakasi, Valeria/0000-0002-5026-0842
|
|
Bakirtzis, Christos/0000-0002-4737-3707
|
|
GRIGORIADIS, NIKOLAOS/0000-0002-4278-3301
|
|
Dardiotis, Efthimios/0000-0003-2957-641X
|
|
Artemiadis, Artemios/0000-0001-9435-9644
|
|
Honan, Cynthia/0000-0001-5735-4270
|
|
NASIOS, GRIGORIOS/0000-0001-7495-6863},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000676759000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000352006200001,
|
|
Author = {Chikovore, Jeremiah and Hart, Graham and Kumwenda, Moses and Chipungu,
|
|
Geoffrey A. and Corbett, Liz},
|
|
Title = {`For a mere cough, men must just chew Conjex, gain strength, and
|
|
continue working': the provider construction and tuberculosis
|
|
care-seeking implications in Blantyre, Malawi},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL HEALTH ACTION},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Pages = {1-9},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Delay by men in seeking healthcare results in their higher
|
|
mortality while on HIV or tuberculosis (TB) treatment and contributes to
|
|
ongoing community-level disease transmission before going on treatment.
|
|
Objective: To understand masculinity's role in delay in healthcare
|
|
seeking for men, with a focus on TB-suggestive symptoms.
|
|
Design: Data were collected between March 2011 and March 2012 in
|
|
low-income suburbs in urban Blantyre using focus group discussions with
|
|
community members (n = 8) and health workers (n = 2), in-depth
|
|
interviews with 20 TB patients (female = 14) and 20 uninvestigated
|
|
chronic coughers (female = 8), and a 3-day participatory workshop with
|
|
27 health stakeholder representatives. The research process drew to a
|
|
large extent on grounded theory principles in the manner of Strauss and
|
|
Corbin (1998) and also Charmaz (1995).
|
|
Results: Role descriptions by both men and women in the study
|
|
universally assigned men as primary material providers for their
|
|
immediate family, that is, the ones earning and bringing livelihood and
|
|
additional material needs. In a context where collectivism was valued,
|
|
men were also expected to lead the provision of support to wider kin.
|
|
Successful role enactment was considered key to achieving recognition as
|
|
an adequate man; at the same time, job scarcity and insecurity, and low
|
|
earnings gravely impeded men. Pressures to generate continuing income
|
|
then meant constantly looking for jobs, or working continuously to
|
|
retain insecure jobs or to raise money through self-employment. All this
|
|
led men to relegate their health considerations.
|
|
Conclusions: Early engagement with formal healthcare is critical to
|
|
dealing with TB and HIV. However, role constructions as portrayed for
|
|
men in this study, along with the opportunity costs of acknowledging
|
|
illness seem, in conditions of vulnerability, important barriers to
|
|
care-seeking. There is a need to address hidden care-seeking costs and
|
|
to consider more complex interventions, including reducing precarity, in
|
|
efforts to improve men's engagement with their health.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chikovore, J (Corresponding Author), Human Sci Res Council, Sexually Transmitted Infect \& TB, HIV AIDS, 750 Mary Thipe Rd, ZA-4001 Durban, South Africa.
|
|
Chikovore, Jeremiah, Human Sci Res Council, Sexually Transmitted Infect \& TB, HIV AIDS, ZA-4001 Durban, South Africa.
|
|
Hart, Graham, UCL, Sch Life \& Med Sci, London, England.
|
|
Kumwenda, Moses; Chipungu, Geoffrey A., Helse Nord TB Initiat, Coll Med, Blantyre, Malawi.
|
|
Kumwenda, Moses; Corbett, Liz, Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Res Programme, Blantyre, Malawi.
|
|
Corbett, Liz, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, London WC1, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3402/gha.v8.26292},
|
|
Article-Number = {26292},
|
|
EISSN = {1654-9880},
|
|
Keywords = {Malawi; masculinity; tuberculosis; healthcare seeking; gender; provider;
|
|
qualitative; low income},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; HELP-SEEKING; GENDER; HIV; HEALTH; MASCULINITY;
|
|
SYMPTOMS; BEHAVIOR; PREVENTION; PREVALENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jchikovore@hsrc.ac.za},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hart, Graham J/C-1591-2008
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hart, Graham/0000-0001-9676-6577
|
|
Chikovore, Jeremiah/0000-0002-4910-6952
|
|
Corbett, Elizabeth/0000-0002-3552-3181
|
|
Kumwenda, Moses Kelly/0000-0003-3091-7330},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000352006200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000493955700008,
|
|
Author = {Scalco, Andrea and Macdiarmid, I, Jennie and Craig, Tony and Whybrow,
|
|
Stephen and Horgan, Graham W.},
|
|
Title = {An Agent-Based Model to Simulate Meat Consumption Behaviour of Consumers
|
|
in Britain},
|
|
Journal = {JASSS-THE JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL SOCIETIES AND SOCIAL SIMULATION},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {OCT 31},
|
|
Abstract = {The current rate of production and consumption of meat poses a problem
|
|
both to peoples' health and to the environment. This work aims to
|
|
develop a simulation of peoples' meat consumption in Britain using
|
|
agent-based modelling. The agents represent individual consumers. The
|
|
key variables that characterise agents include sex, age, monthly income,
|
|
perception of the living cost, and concerns about the impact of meat on
|
|
the environment, health, and animal welfare. A process of peer influence
|
|
is modelled with respect to the agents' concerns. Influence spreads
|
|
across two eating networks (i.e. co-workers and household members)
|
|
depending on the time of day, day of the week, and agents' employment
|
|
status. Data from a representative sample of British consumers is used
|
|
to empirically ground the model. Different experiments are run
|
|
simulating interventions of the application of social marketing
|
|
campaigns and a rise in price of meat. The main outcome is the mean
|
|
weekly consumption of meat per consumer. A secondary outcome is the
|
|
likelihood of eating meat. Analyses are run on the overall artificial
|
|
population and by subgroups. The model succeeded in reproducing observed
|
|
consumption patterns. Different sizes of effect on consumption emerged
|
|
depending on the application of a social marketing strategy or a price
|
|
increase. A price increase had a greater effect than environmental and
|
|
animalwelfare campaigns, while a health campaign had a larger impact on
|
|
consumers' behaviour than the other campaigns. An environmental campaign
|
|
targeted at consumers concerned about the environment produced a
|
|
boomerang effect increasing the consumption in the population rather
|
|
than reducing it. The results of the simulation experiments are mainly
|
|
consistent with the literature on food consumption providing support for
|
|
future models of public strategies to reduce meat consumption.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Scalco, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Aberdeen, Rowett Inst, Ashgrove Rd W, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, Scotland.
|
|
Scalco, Andrea; Macdiarmid, Jennie, I; Whybrow, Stephen, Univ Aberdeen, Rowett Inst, Ashgrove Rd W, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, Scotland.
|
|
Craig, Tony, James Hutton Inst, Aberdeen AB15 8QH, Scotland.
|
|
Horgan, Graham W., James Hutton Inst, Biomath \& Stat Scotland, Ashgrove Rd W, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.18564/jasss.4124},
|
|
Article-Number = {8},
|
|
ISSN = {1460-7425},
|
|
Keywords = {Consumer Behaviour; Food Choice; Meat Consumption; Population Health;
|
|
Social Influence},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME INEQUALITIES; SOCIAL NORMS; FOOD CHOICE; SUSTAINABILITY;
|
|
SCENARIOS; FRIENDS; HEALTH; IMPACT; POWER; DIET},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {andrea.scalco@abdn.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Horgan, Graham/J-3738-2013
|
|
Craig, Tony/I-8353-2012
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Craig, Tony/0000-0001-9552-1682
|
|
Scalco, Andrea/0000-0002-0517-9084},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {34},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000493955700008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000354827300014,
|
|
Author = {Heise, Lori L. and Kotsadam, Andreas},
|
|
Title = {Cross-national and multilevel correlates of partner violence: an
|
|
analysis of data from population-based surveys},
|
|
Journal = {LANCET GLOBAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {3},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {E332-E340},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background On average, intimate partner violence affects nearly one in
|
|
three women worldwide within their lifetime. But the distribution of
|
|
partner violence is highly uneven, with a prevalence of less than 4\% in
|
|
the past 12 months in many high-income countries compared with at least
|
|
40\% in some low-income settings. Little is known about the factors that
|
|
drive the geographical distribution of partner violence or how
|
|
macro-level factors might combine with individual-level factors to
|
|
affect individual women's risk of intimate partner violence. We aimed to
|
|
assess the role that women's status and other gender-related factors
|
|
might have in defining levels of partner violence among settings.
|
|
Methods We compiled data for the 12 month prevalence of partner violence
|
|
from 66 surveys (88 survey years) from 44 countries, representing 481
|
|
205 women between Jan 1, 2000, and Apr 17, 2013. Only surveys with
|
|
comparable questions and state-of-the-art methods to ensure safety and
|
|
encourage violence disclosure were used. With linear and quantile
|
|
regression, we examined associations between macro-level measures of
|
|
socioeconomic development, women's status, gender inequality, and
|
|
gender-related norms and the prevalence of current partner violence at a
|
|
population level. Multilevel modelling and tests for interaction were
|
|
used to explore whether and how macro-level factors affect
|
|
individual-level risk. The outcome for this analysis was the population
|
|
prevalence of current partner violence, defined as the percentage of
|
|
ever-partnered women (excluding widows without a current partner), aged
|
|
from 15 years to 49 years who were victims of at least one act of
|
|
physical or sexual violence within the past 12 months.
|
|
Findings Gender-related factors at the national and subnational level
|
|
help to predict the population prevalence of physical and sexual partner
|
|
violence within the past 12 months. Especially predictive of the
|
|
geographical distribution of partner violence are norms related to male
|
|
authority over female behaviour (0.102, p<0.0001), norms justifying wife
|
|
beating (0.263, p<0.0001), and the extent to which law and practice
|
|
disadvantage women compared with men in access to land, property, and
|
|
other productive resources (0.271, p<0.0001). The strong negative
|
|
association between current partner violence and gross domestic product
|
|
(GDP) per person (-0.055, p=0.0009) becomes non-significant in the
|
|
presence of norm-related measures (-0.015, p=0.472), suggesting that GDP
|
|
per person is a marker for social transformations that accompany
|
|
economic growth and is unlikely to be causally related to levels of
|
|
partner violence. We document several cross-level effects, including
|
|
that a girl's education is more strongly associated with reduced risk of
|
|
partner violence in countries where wife abuse is normative than where
|
|
it is not. Likewise, partner violence is less prevalent in countries
|
|
with a high proportion of women in the formal work force, but working
|
|
for cash increases a woman's risk in countries where few women work.
|
|
Interpretation Our findings suggest that policy makers could reduce
|
|
violence by eliminating gender bias in ownership rights and addressing
|
|
norms that justify wife beating and male control of female behaviour.
|
|
Prevention planners should place greater emphasis on policy reforms at
|
|
the macro-level and take cross-level effects into account when designing
|
|
interventions. Copyright (C) Heise et al. Open access article published
|
|
under the terms of CC BY},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Heise, LL (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, London WC1H 9SH, England.
|
|
Heise, Lori L., London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, London WC1H 9SH, England.
|
|
Kotsadam, Andreas, Univ Oslo, Dept Econ, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S2214-109X(15)00013-3},
|
|
ISSN = {2214-109X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER INEQUALITY; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; DETERMINANTS; AGGRESSION;
|
|
EQUALITY; INDIA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {lori.heise@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Heise, LORI/AAI-6251-2020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {307},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {82},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000354827300014},
|
|
ESI-Highly-Cited-Paper = {Y},
|
|
ESI-Hot-Paper = {N},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000606630400004,
|
|
Author = {Tipuric, Darko and Garaca, Zeljko and Krajnovic, Ana},
|
|
Title = {UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME: UTOPIA OR FUTURE REALITY},
|
|
Journal = {EKONOMSKI PREGLED},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {71},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {632-656},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The global economic crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic has
|
|
further stimulated the interest in the universal basic income (UBI).
|
|
Proponents believe that UBI, in addition to reducing poverty and
|
|
economic inequality, can be a useful instrument for mitigating the
|
|
effects of the crisis and at the same time an important bulwark in
|
|
creating a completely different economic and social paradigm. UBI
|
|
reaches beyond economic policies and is a matter of moral and social
|
|
commitment; it is at the same time a program and an ideal that radically
|
|
changes society by strengthening mutual responsibility and solidarity,
|
|
strengthening reliability in institutions. The implementation of the UBI
|
|
places justice as a stronghold of social reality; it connects the
|
|
categories of economic and social value and blurs established
|
|
assumptions between labour, capital and well-being. The paper presents
|
|
the basic features of UBI and some obstacles in its implementation. The
|
|
possible role that basic income can play in the changes in the structure
|
|
of employment and productivity brought about by the Fourth Industrial
|
|
Revolution are discussed and examples of countries that have designed
|
|
pilot projects of customized UBI according to different models are
|
|
given. Criticisms of the concept are presented, among others, that UBI
|
|
violates the principles of rational economic behaviour and the intrinsic
|
|
meaning that work brings to people; the problem of moral aberration or
|
|
the inadequacy of the role of the state to take full responsibility from
|
|
the individual to cover the necessary costs of living; as well as the
|
|
problem of the huge costs that states may have in designing and
|
|
implementing UBI rograms, which is ultimately reflected in possible tax
|
|
increases or inflationary risks. Special attention in the paper is paid
|
|
to the issue of economic sustainability of UBI.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {Croatian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tipuric, D (Corresponding Author), Ekonomski Fak, Trajnom Zvanju, Zagreb, Croatia.
|
|
Tipuric, Darko, Ekonomski Fak, Trajnom Zvanju, Zagreb, Croatia.
|
|
Garaca, Zeljko, Ekonomski Fak, Trajnom Zvanju, Split, Croatia.
|
|
Krajnovic, Ana, Ekonomski Fak, Zagreb, Croatia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.32910/ep.71.6.4},
|
|
ISSN = {0424-7558},
|
|
EISSN = {1848-9494},
|
|
Keywords = {universal basic income; guaranteed minimum income; COVID-19; social
|
|
welfare; economic crisis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRANSFERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {dtipuric@efzg.hr
|
|
garaca@efst.hr
|
|
akrajnovic@net.efzg.hr},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {37},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000606630400004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000638999000001,
|
|
Author = {Lopez, Beatriz and Kargas, Niko and Udell, Julie and Rubin, Tomas and
|
|
Burgess, Linda and Dew, Dominic and McDonald, Ian and O'Brien, Ann and
|
|
Templeton-Mepstead, Karen},
|
|
Title = {Evaluation of the ACE employment programme: helping employers to make
|
|
tailored adjustments for their autistic employees},
|
|
Journal = {ADVANCES IN AUTISM},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {3-15},
|
|
Month = {MAY 12},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose
|
|
The purpose of this study was to explore the views of autistic people,
|
|
carers and practitioners regarding the barriers autistic employees face
|
|
at work (Study 1) and to use these views to inform the design of an
|
|
employment programme for autistic employees without learning
|
|
disabilities (Study 2).
|
|
Design/methodology/approach
|
|
In Study 1, 16 (20\%) carers, 17 (21\%) practitioners and 47 (59\%)
|
|
autistic adults who had been or were currently employed, answered a
|
|
survey regarding barriers at work. Study 2 evaluates the efficacy of a
|
|
set of profiling assessment tools (PA) developed to help employers make
|
|
individually-tailored adjustments for their autistic employees by
|
|
delivering an employment programme consisting of 15, 8-week work
|
|
placements.
|
|
Findings
|
|
In Study 1, only 25\% of autistic adults reported having had adjustments
|
|
in the workplace and all groups reported this as the main barrier -
|
|
alongside employers' lack of understanding. Two sets of results
|
|
demonstrate the efficacy of the PA tools in addressing this barrier.
|
|
First, a comparative cost simulation revealed a cost-saving in terms of
|
|
on-job support of 6.67 pound per participant per hour worked relative to
|
|
published data from another programme. Second, 83\% of autistic
|
|
employees reported having had the right adjustments at work.
|
|
Research limitations/implications
|
|
This is an exploratory study that did not include a comparison group.
|
|
Hence, it was not possible to evaluate the efficacy of the PA tools
|
|
relative to a standard employment programme intervention, nor to assess
|
|
cost reduction, which currently is only estimated from already available
|
|
published data.
|
|
Practical implications
|
|
Overall the findings from these studies demonstrate that the time
|
|
invested in the high-quality assessment of the profile of autistic
|
|
employees results in saving costs over time and better outcomes.
|
|
Originality/value
|
|
The originality of the Autism Centre for Employment programme resides in
|
|
that, unlike other programmes, it shifts the focus from helping autistic
|
|
employees to helping their employers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lopez, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Portsmouth, Dept Psychol, Portsmouth, Hants, England.
|
|
Lopez, Beatriz; Udell, Julie; Rubin, Tomas, Univ Portsmouth, Dept Psychol, Portsmouth, Hants, England.
|
|
Kargas, Niko, Univ Lincoln, Dept Psychol, Lincoln, England.
|
|
Burgess, Linda, Hampshire Cty Council, Winchester, Hants, England.
|
|
Dew, Dominic, Portsmouth City Council, Portsmouth, Hants, England.
|
|
McDonald, Ian, Southampton City Council, Southampton, Hants, England.
|
|
O'Brien, Ann, Isle Of Wight Council, Newport, England.
|
|
Templeton-Mepstead, Karen, Autism Hampshire, Fareham, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/AIA-11-2019-0038},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2056-3868},
|
|
Keywords = {Autism; Interventions; Assessment; Autism spectrum disorder; Autism
|
|
spectrum condition; Behavioural phenotypes},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental},
|
|
Author-Email = {beatriz.lopez@port.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Udell, Julie/0000-0003-0427-9216
|
|
Lopez, Beatriz/0000-0001-5621-6044},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000638999000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000346327100002,
|
|
Author = {Herr, Hansjoerg and Sonat, Zeynep M.},
|
|
Title = {The fragile growth regime of Turkey in the post-2001 period},
|
|
Journal = {NEW PERSPECTIVES ON TURKEY},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Number = {51},
|
|
Pages = {35-68},
|
|
Month = {FAL},
|
|
Abstract = {After the 2001 crisis, Turkey continued to pursue the radical
|
|
market-oriented reform strategy that had started in the early 1980s and
|
|
followed the philosophy of the Washington Consensus. Gross domestic
|
|
product (GDP) growth in the post-2001 period was relatively high, but it
|
|
was a `jobless{''} growth caused by substantial productivity increases
|
|
generated largely by intensifying the work process rather than by
|
|
technological advancements. Economic growth in the post-2001 period
|
|
benefited society very unequally. The growth regime of Turkey is
|
|
vulnerable owing to high current account deficit; high currency
|
|
mismatch, particularly in the corporate sector; high income inequality;
|
|
high unemployment; and an unsatisfactory development of the industrial
|
|
sector, despite some successes. We recommend a new development regime
|
|
with selective capital controls, a balanced current account, an active
|
|
industrial policy by the government, stronger trade unions and
|
|
employers' associations engaged in social dialogue combined with
|
|
coordinated wage bargaining on the sectoral level, and last but not
|
|
least, redistributive policies aiming to achieve a more equal income
|
|
distribution.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Herr, H (Corresponding Author), Berlin Sch Econ \& Law, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Herr, Hansjoerg; Sonat, Zeynep M., Berlin Sch Econ \& Law, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Sonat, Zeynep M., Free Univ Berlin, Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
ISSN = {0896-6346},
|
|
EISSN = {1305-3299},
|
|
Keywords = {Turkey; growth regime; monetary policy; international capital flows;
|
|
financial system},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EXCHANGE-RATE REGIMES; MARKET; GLOBALIZATION; DETERMINANTS; EXPERIENCE;
|
|
ECONOMY; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {hansherr@hwr-berlin.de
|
|
zeynep-sonat@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {98},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000346327100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000181113500006,
|
|
Author = {Friedman, DE},
|
|
Title = {Employer supports for parents with young children},
|
|
Journal = {FUTURE OF CHILDREN},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {63-77},
|
|
Month = {SPR-SUM},
|
|
Abstract = {The competing interests of employers, working parents, and very young
|
|
children collide in decisions over work schedules, child care
|
|
arrangements, promotions, children's sicknesses, and overtime hours.
|
|
With the rising number of women in the labor force, more and more
|
|
employers are concerned about how their workers balance work and family
|
|
priorities. This article examines the supports that employers provide to
|
|
help parents with young children juggle demands on their time and
|
|
attention. It reviews the availability of traditional benefits, such as
|
|
vacation and health insurance, and describes family-friendly
|
|
initiatives. Exciting progress is being made in this arena by,leading
|
|
employers, but coverage remains uneven:
|
|
. Employers say they provide family-friendly policies and programs to
|
|
improve, staff recruitment and retention, reduce absenteeism, and
|
|
increase job satisfaction and company loyalty. Evaluations demonstrate
|
|
positive impacts on each of these valued outcomes.
|
|
. Employee benefits and work/family supports seldom reach all layers of
|
|
the work force, and low-income workers who need assistance the most are
|
|
the least likely to receive or take advantage of it.
|
|
. Understandably, employer policies seek to maximize productive work
|
|
time. However, it is often in the best interests of children for a
|
|
parent to be able to set work aside to address urgent family concerns.
|
|
The author concludes that concrete work/family supports like on-site
|
|
child care, paid leave, and flextime are important innovations.
|
|
Ultimately, the most valuable aid to employees would be a
|
|
family-friendly workplace culture, with supportive supervision and
|
|
management practices.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Friedman, DE (Corresponding Author), Bright Horizons Family Solut, Watertown, MA USA.
|
|
Bright Horizons Family Solut, Watertown, MA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2307/1602810},
|
|
ISSN = {1054-8289},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Health Policy \& Services; Social Sciences,
|
|
Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {28},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000181113500006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000613906500015,
|
|
Author = {Bukey, Abdullah Mirac and Akgul, Osman},
|
|
Title = {The Effect of Financial Deepening on Income Distribution: The Case of
|
|
BRICS-T},
|
|
Journal = {SOSYOEKONOMI},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {47},
|
|
Pages = {301-318},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {The Oil Crisis erupted in 1974 has caused severe contractions in global
|
|
investment and aggregate demand. In order to combat the consequences of
|
|
this crisis, a new process has been initiated in the global economy
|
|
under the leadership of developed countries such as the USA, Japan and
|
|
Germany. This process dominated by neo-liberal economic policies has
|
|
included opening up economies to foreign markets, and initiating
|
|
deregulation policies in domestic labour, goods and capital markets.
|
|
Since then, the production of new goods and services and their financing
|
|
has become a new global agenda. In order to manage this new process, new
|
|
economic associations have started to be established. One of these new
|
|
associations is the BRICS countries. This process, called
|
|
``globalization{''}, has also affected financial markets. In this
|
|
period, the types of financial instruments have increased, their usage
|
|
has become widespread and financial markets have deepened. One of the
|
|
most important areas affected by financial deepening, which has an
|
|
increasing impact on the global economy, and has many economic impacts
|
|
ranging from employment to balance of payments, from monetary policies
|
|
to fiscal policies, is the distribution of income. In the present study,
|
|
the effect of financial deepening on income distribution is examined for
|
|
BRICS-T (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa and Turkey). The
|
|
study utilizes annual panel data for the period of 1993-2015. According
|
|
to the results of the econometric analyses, an increase of 1\% in
|
|
domestic credits, which is one of the financial deepening indicators,
|
|
decreases the Gini coefficient by about 0.068\%, an increase of 1\% in
|
|
the stock exchange value increases the Gini coefficient by approximately
|
|
0.011\%, and an increase of 1\% in the financial system deposits
|
|
increases the Gini coefficient by about 0.061\%. In other words,
|
|
financial deepening affects income distribution positively in one aspect
|
|
and negatively in other. Therefore, it can be said that the empirical
|
|
findings of the study support both the Inequality-Narrowing Hypothesis
|
|
and the Inequality-Extending Hypothesis in the literature.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Turkish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bukey, AM (Corresponding Author), Istanbul Univ, Dept Econ, Istanbul, Turkey.
|
|
Bukey, Abdullah Mirac, Istanbul Univ, Dept Econ, Istanbul, Turkey.
|
|
Akgul, Osman, Istanbul Univ, Dept Lab Econ \& Ind Relat, Istanbul, Turkey.},
|
|
DOI = {10.17233/sosyoekonomi.2021.01.15},
|
|
ISSN = {1305-5577},
|
|
Keywords = {Financial Deepening; Financial Development; BRICS; BRICS-T; Turkey;
|
|
Income Distribution; Panel Data Analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {abdullahmiracbukey1@istanbul.edu.tr
|
|
osman.akgul@istanbul.edu.tr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bükey, Abdullah Miraç/AAT-3134-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bükey, Abdullah Miraç/0000-0002-5483-9077},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000613906500015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000221824300001,
|
|
Author = {Whiteneck, GG and Gerhart, KA and Cusick, CP},
|
|
Title = {Identifying environmental factors that influence the outcomes of people
|
|
with traumatic brain injury},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF HEAD TRAUMA REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {191-204},
|
|
Month = {MAY-JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: To determine the types of environmental barriers reported by
|
|
persons with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and to identify the relations
|
|
between environmental barriers and such components of societal
|
|
participation as employment, community mobility, social integration, and
|
|
life satisfaction. Design: Seventy-three persons with TBI who were
|
|
participating in the TBI Model Systems program at Craig Hospital were
|
|
surveyed at 1 year, using a new measure of the environment, the Craig
|
|
Hospital Inventory of Environmental Factors (CHIEF), which rates
|
|
frequency and impact of 25 barriers. Results: Transportation, the
|
|
surroundings, government policies, attitudes, and the natural
|
|
environment were the environmental barriers with the greatest reported
|
|
impact. Those who were married, older, and unemployed or not in school
|
|
reported the most barriers overall. Additionally, those reporting a
|
|
greater impact from environmental barriers also reported lower levels of
|
|
participation and life satisfaction. Conclusions: Although environmental
|
|
barriers affect TBI survivors and play a role in their outcomes, their
|
|
interplay with other, perhaps as yet unidentified, factors requires
|
|
continued research. CHIEF may be a valuable tool for understanding the
|
|
environment's role in the lives of people with TBI, and identifying the
|
|
general environmental domains where interventions are needed to reduce
|
|
their negative impact.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Whiteneck, GG (Corresponding Author), Craig Hosp, Res Dept, 3425 S Clarkson St, Englewood, CO 80113 USA.
|
|
Craig Hosp, Res Dept, Englewood, CO 80113 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/00001199-200405000-00001},
|
|
ISSN = {0885-9701},
|
|
EISSN = {1550-509X},
|
|
Keywords = {brain injury; environment; environment design; social environment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPINAL-CORD-INJURY; MEDICAL COMPLICATIONS; SATISFACTION; PREDICTION;
|
|
HANDICAP; WORK; COMA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {gale@craighospital.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {104},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000221824300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000714822000001,
|
|
Author = {Moosavian, Seyed Farhan and Zahedi, Rahim and Hajinezhad, Ahmad},
|
|
Title = {Economic, Environmental and Social Impact of Carbon Tax for Iran: A
|
|
Computable General Equilibrium Analysis},
|
|
Journal = {ENERGY SCIENCE \& ENGINEERING},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {13-29},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {The environmental taxes, such as carbon tax, also affect other economic
|
|
variables in a different way in addition to the main goal of
|
|
politicians. The carbon tax aims to reduce energy consumption and
|
|
pollutant emissions, while it can also reduce labor tax and labor costs
|
|
which are incentives to create new jobs. It is necessary to evaluate the
|
|
carbon taxation policy in Iran due to the special circumstances of the
|
|
budget deficit mainly caused by the decline of exports and oil revenues.
|
|
The present study is based on a general equilibrium model in the form of
|
|
a nonlinear equations system. The model has been calibrated for the 2017
|
|
reference year using the data table adopted from Iran's economy. It has
|
|
been shown that if the carbon tax revenue is employed to decrease the
|
|
labor income tax, the environmental quality will be improved by reducing
|
|
pollutant emissions on the one hand, and it will lead to positive
|
|
effects on the welfare and employment on the other hand. In the present
|
|
paper, the effect of applying this tax on two policies with
|
|
redistribution (compensation) and without redistribution (no
|
|
compensation) of income tax among the households is examined. Maximum,
|
|
minimum, and optimal values of pollutant emissions reduction under the
|
|
influence of carbon tax policies were calculated in both scenarios. The
|
|
simulation results show that the taxation without redistribution of tax
|
|
revenues decreases the welfare and household's actual consumed budget by
|
|
6.2\%, but in policy with compensation of tax revenue, these indices
|
|
will increase by 0.8\%. The gross domestic product (GDP) decreases by
|
|
about 1.7\% and 2.1\% in both policies, respectively, while the consumer
|
|
price index (CPI) in both scenarios will increase by about 6.4\% and
|
|
8\%, respectively. According to this research findings, carbon taxation
|
|
with the redistribution of revenue is a suitable policy to reduce
|
|
greenhouse gas emissions and adhere to international commitments at the
|
|
same time.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hajinezhad, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Tehran, Fac New Sci \& Technol, Dept Renewable Energy \& Environm, Tehran, Iran.
|
|
Moosavian, Seyed Farhan; Zahedi, Rahim; Hajinezhad, Ahmad, Univ Tehran, Fac New Sci \& Technol, Dept Renewable Energy \& Environm, Tehran, Iran.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/ese3.1005},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2021},
|
|
EISSN = {2050-0505},
|
|
Keywords = {carbon tax; employment; general equilibrium model; welfare},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ENERGY EFFICIENCY; POVERTY; POLICY; FUEL; INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Energy \& Fuels},
|
|
Author-Email = {hajinezhad@ut.ac.ir},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Zahedi, Rahim/0000-0001-6837-8729
|
|
Moosavian, Seyed Farhan/0000-0002-9431-5518},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {19},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000714822000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000475387000008,
|
|
Author = {Vega, Cristina and Paredes, Myriam and Almeida, Andrea Nathaly},
|
|
Title = {INEQUALITIES AND REPRODUCTIVE CRISIS AFTER THE EARTHQUAKE IN THE
|
|
ECUADORIAN COAST. FAMILY STRATEGIES IN THE MODEL OF DEVELOPMENT AND
|
|
EXTRACTIVE WORK},
|
|
Journal = {AIBR-REVISTA DE ANTROPOLOGIA IBEROAMERICANA},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {323-350},
|
|
Month = {MAY-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {This article analyzes the productive and reproductive strategies of the
|
|
families of Coaque, a community on the Manabi coast near the epicenter
|
|
of the earthquake that shook Ecuador on April 16, 2016. The reproductive
|
|
crisis originated after the catastrophe highlighted the economic and
|
|
social inequalities existing in this territory, where the thriving
|
|
extractive industry of shrimp has become present in recent decades.
|
|
Based on an ethnographic methodology and indepth interviews, it is
|
|
concluded that the responses of the families oscillate between a closer
|
|
connection to salaried work in this sector and the option for
|
|
independent but unstable activities such as artisanal fishing and other
|
|
self-support initiatives that allow a greater margin of action. The
|
|
sources of income are articulated in a complex way, according to gender
|
|
and age, with the requirements of attention to people, family
|
|
organization and lifestyles in a period of vulnerability. Issues such as
|
|
caring for children, reconstruction of housing, closeness to livelihoods
|
|
or cooperation and daily transactions condition dependence on the model
|
|
of agro-export development. There is evidence, therefore, of a series of
|
|
tensions that worsen in the face of crisis conditions and that require a
|
|
look at reproduction in post-disaster public policies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vega, C (Corresponding Author), FLACSO Ecuador, Fac Latinoamer Ciencias Sociales, Dept Sociol \& Genero, Quito, Ecuador.
|
|
Vega, Cristina, FLACSO Ecuador, Fac Latinoamer Ciencias Sociales, Dept Sociol \& Genero, Quito, Ecuador.
|
|
Paredes, Myriam, Flacso Ecuador, Fac Latinoamer Ciencias Sociales, Dept Desarrollo Ambiente \& Terr, Quito, Ecuador.
|
|
Almeida, Andrea Nathaly, Flacso Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador.},
|
|
DOI = {10.11156/aibr.140208},
|
|
ISSN = {1695-9752},
|
|
EISSN = {1578-9705},
|
|
Keywords = {Model of agro-export development; inequalities; catastrophe;
|
|
reproductive crisis; sustainability of life},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Anthropology},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Paredes, Myriam/AAN-7731-2021},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000475387000008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000288567000009,
|
|
Author = {Perreira, Krista M. and Ornelas, India J.},
|
|
Title = {The Physical and Psychological Well-Being of Immigrant Children},
|
|
Journal = {FUTURE OF CHILDREN},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {195-218},
|
|
Month = {SPR},
|
|
Abstract = {Poor childhood health contributes to lower socioeconomic status in
|
|
adulthood. Subsequently, low socioeconomic status among parents
|
|
contributes to poor childhood health outcomes in the next generation.
|
|
This cycle can be particularly pernicious for vulnerable and low-income
|
|
minority populations, including many children of immigrants. And because
|
|
of the rapid growth in the numbers of immigrant children, this cycle
|
|
also has implications for the nation as a whole. By promoting the
|
|
physical well-being and emotional health of children of immigrants,
|
|
health professionals and policy makers can ultimately improve the
|
|
long-term economic prospects of the next generation.
|
|
Despite their poorer socioeconomic circumstances and the stress
|
|
associated with migration and acculturation, foreign-born children who
|
|
immigrate to the United States typically have lower mortality and
|
|
morbidity risks than U. S. children born to immigrant parents. Over
|
|
time, however, and across generations, the health advantage of immigrant
|
|
children fades. For example, researchers have found that the share of
|
|
adolescents who are overweight or obese, a key indicator of physical
|
|
health, is lowest for foreign-born youth, but these shares grow larger
|
|
for each generation and increase rapidly as youth transition into
|
|
adulthood.
|
|
Access to health care substantially influences the physical and
|
|
emotional health status of immigrant children. Less likely to have
|
|
health insurance and regular access to medical care services than
|
|
nonimmigrants, immigrant parents delay or forgo needed care for their
|
|
children. When children finally receive care, it is often in the
|
|
emergency room after an urgent condition has developed.
|
|
To better promote the health of children of immigrants, health
|
|
researchers and reformers must improve their understanding of the unique
|
|
experiences of immigrant children; increase access to medical care and
|
|
the capacity of providers to work with multilingual and multicultural
|
|
populations; and continue to improve the availability and affordability
|
|
of health insurance for all Americans.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Perreira, KM (Corresponding Author), Univ N Carolina Chapel Hill, Dept Publ Policy, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Perreira, Krista M., Univ N Carolina Chapel Hill, Dept Publ Policy, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Perreira, Krista M., Univ N Carolina Chapel Hill, Carolina Populat Ctr, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
|
|
Ornelas, India J., Fred Hutchinson Canc Res Ctr, Biobehav Canc Prevent Training Program, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Ornelas, India J., Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1054-8289},
|
|
EISSN = {1550-1558},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEXICAN-AMERICAN ADOLESCENTS; UNITED-STATES; HEALTH-CARE; SUBSTANCE USE;
|
|
SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; CHILDHOOD HEALTH;
|
|
ASIAN-AMERICAN; LABOR-MARKET; DRUG-USE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Health Policy \& Services; Social Sciences,
|
|
Interdisciplinary},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ornelas, India/0000-0003-2957-6452},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {90},
|
|
Times-Cited = {109},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {37},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000288567000009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001005628100001,
|
|
Author = {Iftikhar, Sundus and Yasmeen, Rahila and Khan, Rehan Ahmed and Arooj,
|
|
Mahwish},
|
|
Title = {Barriers and Facilitators for Female Healthcare Professionals to Be
|
|
Leaders in Pakistan: A Qualitative Exploratory Study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF HEALTHCARE LEADERSHIP},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Pages = {71-82},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: Despite being in high numbers in medical colleges, only a small
|
|
proportion of women join the workforce and even fewer reach leadership
|
|
positions in Pakistan. Organizations like United Nations and Women
|
|
Global Health are working towards closing the gender gap. The study aims
|
|
to explore the enablers and barriers for women in healthcare leadership
|
|
and to explore the strategies to promote women in leadership positions
|
|
in Pakistan's specific societal culture. Methods: In this qualitative
|
|
exploratory study, semi-structured interviews of 16 women holding
|
|
leadership positions in the health-care profession, ie, medical and
|
|
dental (basic or clinical sciences) were included. The data were
|
|
collected until saturation was achieved. The data were analyzed in MS
|
|
Excel. Deductive and Inductive thematic analysis was done.Results:
|
|
Thirty-eight codes were generated that were combined in the form of
|
|
categories. The major themes that emerged from the data were: elevating
|
|
factors, the shackles holding them back, let us bring them up and
|
|
implicit bias. Elevating factors were intrinsic motivation and
|
|
exceptional qualifications, while the shackles were related to gender
|
|
bias, male insecurities, and lack of political background. It was
|
|
noteworthy that differences in gender roles were highly defined by
|
|
culture and religion.Conclusion: There is a need to change the
|
|
perception of South Asian society and redefine gender roles through
|
|
media and individual attempts. Women must take charge of their choices
|
|
and believe in themselves. The institutional policies to help promote
|
|
gender equality would be mentorship programs for new faculty,
|
|
gender-responsive training for everyone, equal opportunities for all,
|
|
and maintaining gender diversity on all committees.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Iftikhar, S (Corresponding Author), 26-C Extens DHA Phase 8 Exparkview, Lahore, Pakistan.
|
|
Iftikhar, Sundus; Arooj, Mahwish, Univ Lahore, Univ Coll Med \& Dent, Lahore, PB, Pakistan.
|
|
Yasmeen, Rahila; Khan, Rehan Ahmed, Riphah Int Univ, Islamic Int Med Coll, Rawalpindi, PB, Pakistan.
|
|
Iftikhar, Sundus, 26-C Extens DHA Phase 8 Exparkview, Lahore, Pakistan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2147/JHL.S399430},
|
|
ISSN = {1179-3201},
|
|
Keywords = {gender disparity; leadership in the health profession; gender roles in
|
|
Pakistani society},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WOMEN; MEDICINE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {sundus@iftikhar.me},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Iftikhar, Sundus/IWM-5274-2023},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001005628100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000344690300012,
|
|
Author = {Baiman, Ron},
|
|
Title = {Unequal Exchange and the Rentier Economy},
|
|
Journal = {REVIEW OF RADICAL POLITICAL ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {536-557},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Detailed analysis of BEA methodology and data strongly suggests that
|
|
U.S. GDP is overvalued on the output side. The ability to generate
|
|
income without producing real value-added output is a key characteristic
|
|
of a rentier economy. Broader indicators include a massive increase in
|
|
financial activity and finance, insurance, and real estate (FIRE),
|
|
declining manufacturing share, declining real investment in plant and
|
|
equipment, increased outsourcing of production and rising trade
|
|
deficits, declining employment and real wage growth, rising profits,
|
|
growing inequality, and increasing aggregate demand dependency on
|
|
private (household and business) and public sector debt. Based on these
|
|
indicators, relative to other advanced countries like Germany, the U.S.
|
|
has since the mid-1970's increasingly become a rentier economy. Grafting
|
|
a schematic rentier economy onto a simple free trade unequal exchange
|
|
model from Baiman (2006) highlights the labor exchange, inequality, and
|
|
efficiency characteristics of rentier United States, unequal exchange
|
|
(German), and developing country (China), economies. Reviving the U.S.
|
|
economy and restoring full employment will require a public policy
|
|
induced reallocation of resources away from rentier activity back to
|
|
productive high-value added unequal exchange production.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baiman, R (Corresponding Author), Benedictine Univ, Lisle, IL 60532 USA.
|
|
Benedictine Univ, Lisle, IL 60532 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0486613413511404},
|
|
ISSN = {0486-6134},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-8502},
|
|
Keywords = {full employment; unequal exchange; rentier economy; national income and
|
|
product accounts; federal deficit; trade deficit; E01; E11; E12; F16;
|
|
F41; J21},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {rbaiman@ben.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000344690300012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000514015500009,
|
|
Author = {Mueller, Kai-Uwe and Wrohlich, Katharina},
|
|
Title = {Does subsidized care for toddlers increase maternal labor supply?
|
|
Evidence from a large-scale expansion of early childcare},
|
|
Journal = {LABOUR ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {62},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Expanding public or publicly subsidized childcare has been a top social
|
|
policy priority in many industrialized countries. It is supposed to
|
|
increase fertility, promote children's development and enhance mothers'
|
|
labor market attachment. In this paper, we analyze the causal effect of
|
|
one of the largest expansions of subsidized childcare for children up to
|
|
three years among industrialized countries on the employment of mothers
|
|
in Germany. Identification is based on spatial and temporal variation in
|
|
the expansion of publicly subsidized childcare triggered by two
|
|
comprehensive childcare policy reforms. The empirical analysis is based
|
|
on the German Microcensus that is matched to county level data on
|
|
childcare availability. Based on our preferred specification which
|
|
includes time and county fixed effects we find that an increase in
|
|
childcare slots by one percentage point increases mothers' labor market
|
|
participation rate by 0.2 percentage points. The overall increase in
|
|
employment is explained by the rise in part-time employment with
|
|
relatively long hours (20-35 h per week). We do not find a change in
|
|
full-time employment or lower part-time employment that is causally
|
|
related to the childcare expansion. The effect is almost entirely driven
|
|
by mothers with medium-level qualifications. Mothers with low education
|
|
levels do not profit from this reform calling for a stronger policy
|
|
focus on particularly disadvantaged groups in coming years.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wrohlich, K (Corresponding Author), German Inst Econ Res Berlin DIW Berlin, Mohrenstr 58, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Mueller, Kai-Uwe; Wrohlich, Katharina, German Inst Econ Res Berlin DIW Berlin, Mohrenstr 58, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.labeco.2019.101776},
|
|
Article-Number = {101776},
|
|
ISSN = {0927-5371},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-1034},
|
|
Keywords = {Childcare provision; Mother's labor supply; Generalized
|
|
difference-in-difference},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {STRUCTURAL MODEL; LOW-INCOME; MARRIED MOTHERS; YOUNG-CHILDREN;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; SINGLE; COSTS; DECISIONS; QUALITY; DEMAND},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {kwrohlich@diw.de},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000514015500009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000460290600009,
|
|
Author = {Kochan, Thomas A. and Riordan, Christine A. and Kowalski, Alexander M.
|
|
and Khan, Mahreen and Yang, Duanyi},
|
|
Editor = {Morgeson, F and Ashford, SJ and Aguinis, H},
|
|
Title = {The Changing Nature of Employee and Labor-Management Relationships},
|
|
Booktitle = {ANNUAL REVIEW OF ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY AND ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR,
|
|
VOL 6},
|
|
Series = {Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Pages = {195-219},
|
|
Abstract = {This article reviews work and employment research, paying particular
|
|
attention to theory and applications by scholars in organizational
|
|
psychology and organizational behavior (OP/OB) and employment or
|
|
industrial relations (ER), with the objective of better understanding
|
|
employee and labor-management relationships. Our animating premise is
|
|
that juxtaposing these two research traditions provides a stronger basis
|
|
for analyzing these relationships today. OP/OB offer micro-and
|
|
meso-level focuses, whereas ER focuses on organizations, collective
|
|
actors, and labor markets, with an emphasis on historical context. We
|
|
hope this review motivates efforts to think about and build new social
|
|
and psychological contracts that are attuned to the evolving dynamics
|
|
present in the economy, workforce, and society. To this end, we look to
|
|
the future and propose ways of deepening, broadening, and accelerating
|
|
the pace of research that might lead to useful changes in practices,
|
|
institutions, and public policies.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kochan, TA (Corresponding Author), MIT, Sloan Sch Management, Inst Work \& Employment Res, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA.
|
|
Kochan, Thomas A.; Riordan, Christine A.; Kowalski, Alexander M.; Khan, Mahreen; Yang, Duanyi, MIT, Sloan Sch Management, Inst Work \& Employment Res, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1146/annurev-orgpsych-012218-015335},
|
|
ISSN = {2327-0608},
|
|
EISSN = {2327-0616},
|
|
Keywords = {employee relationships; labor-management relationships; social contract;
|
|
psychological contract; changing nature of work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HUMAN-RESOURCE MANAGEMENT; INVOLVEMENT WORK PRACTICES;
|
|
INDUSTRIAL-RELATIONS; INCOME INEQUALITY; TECHNOLOGICAL-CHANGE;
|
|
PERFORMANCE; IMPACT; FUTURE; VOICE; CONTRACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Applied; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {tkochan@mit.edu
|
|
criordan@mit.edu
|
|
mkalex@mit.edu
|
|
mahreen@mit.edu
|
|
duanyi@mit.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kowalski, Alexander/ABE-2941-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kowalski, Alexander/0000-0002-4636-5449},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {181},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {61},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000460290600009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000975638800017,
|
|
Author = {Bernstein, David N. and Lans, Amanda and Karhade, Aditya V. and Heng,
|
|
Marilyn and Poolman, Rudolf W. and Schwab, Joseph H. and Tobert, Daniel
|
|
G.},
|
|
Title = {Are Detailed, Patient-level Social Determinant of Health Factors
|
|
Associated With Physical Function and Mental Health at Presentation
|
|
Among New Patients With Orthopaedic Conditions?},
|
|
Journal = {CLINICAL ORTHOPAEDICS AND RELATED RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {481},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {912-921},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundIt is well documented that routinely collected patient
|
|
sociodemographic characteristics (such as race and insurance type) and
|
|
geography-based social determinants of health (SDoH) measures (for
|
|
example, the Area Deprivation Index) are associated with health
|
|
disparities, including symptom severity at presentation. However, the
|
|
association of patient-level SDoH factors (such as housing status) on
|
|
musculoskeletal health disparities is not as well documented. Such
|
|
insight might help with the development of more-targeted interventions
|
|
to help address health disparities in orthopaedic
|
|
surgery.Questions/purposes(1) What percentage of patients presenting for
|
|
new patient visits in an orthopaedic surgery clinic who were unemployed
|
|
but seeking work reported transportation issues that could limit their
|
|
ability to attend a medical appointment or acquire medications, reported
|
|
trouble paying for medications, and/or had no current housing? (2)
|
|
Accounting for traditional sociodemographic factors and patient-level
|
|
SDoH measures, what factors are associated with poorer patient-reported
|
|
outcome physical health scores at presentation? (3) Accounting for
|
|
traditional sociodemographic factor patient-level SDoH measures, what
|
|
factors are associated with poorer patient-reported outcome mental
|
|
health scores at presentation?MethodsNew patient encounters at one Level
|
|
1 trauma center clinic visit from March 2018 to December 2020 were
|
|
identified. Included patients had to meet two criteria: they had
|
|
completed the Patient-Reported Outcome Measure Information System
|
|
(PROMIS) Global-10 at their new orthopaedic surgery clinic encounter as
|
|
part of routine clinical care, and they had visited their primary care
|
|
physician and completed a series of specific SDoH questions. The SDoH
|
|
questionnaire was developed in our institution to improve data that
|
|
drive interventions to address health disparities as part of our
|
|
accountable care organization work. Over the study period, the SDoH
|
|
questionnaire was only distributed at primary care provider visits. The
|
|
SDoH questions focused on transportation, housing, employment, and
|
|
ability to pay for medications. Because we do not have a way to
|
|
determine how many patients had both primary care provider office visits
|
|
and new orthopaedic surgery clinic visits over the study period, we were
|
|
unable to determine how many patients could have been included; however,
|
|
9057 patients were evaluated in this cross-sectional study. The mean age
|
|
was 61 +/- 15 years, and most patients self-reported being of White race
|
|
(83\% {[}7561 of 9057]). Approximately half the patient sample had
|
|
commercial insurance (46\% {[}4167 of 9057]). To get a better sense of
|
|
how this study cohort compared with the overall patient population seen
|
|
at the participating center during the time in question, we reviewed all
|
|
new patient clinic encounters (n = 135,223). The demographic information
|
|
between the full patient sample and our study subgroup appeared similar.
|
|
Using our study cohort, two multivariable linear regression models were
|
|
created to determine which traditional metrics (for example,
|
|
self-reported race or insurance type) and patient-specific SDoH factors
|
|
(for example, lack of reliable transportation) were associated with
|
|
worse physical and mental health symptoms (that is, lower PROMIS scores)
|
|
at new patient encounters. The variance inflation factor was used to
|
|
assess for multicollinearity. For all analyses, p values < 0.05
|
|
designated statistical significance. The concept of minimum clinically
|
|
important difference (MCID) was used to assess clinical importance.
|
|
Regression coefficients represent the projected change in PROMIS
|
|
physical or mental health symptom scores (that is, the dependent
|
|
variable in our regression analyses) accounting for the other included
|
|
variables. Thus, a regression coefficient for a given variable at or
|
|
above a known MCID value suggests a clinical difference between those
|
|
patients with and without the presence of that given characteristic. In
|
|
this manuscript, regression coefficients at or above 4.2 (or at and
|
|
below -4.2) for PROMIS Global Physical Health and at or above 5.1 (or at
|
|
and below -5.1) for PROMIS Global Mental Health were considered
|
|
clinically relevant.ResultsAmong the included patients, 8\% (685 of
|
|
9057) were unemployed but seeking work, 4\% (399 of 9057) reported
|
|
transportation issues that could limit their ability to attend a medical
|
|
appointment or acquire medications, 4\% (328 of 9057) reported trouble
|
|
paying for medications, and 2\% (181 of 9057) had no current housing.
|
|
Lack of reliable transportation to attend doctor visits or pick up
|
|
medications (beta = -4.52 {[}95\% CI -5.45 to -3.59]; p < 0.001),
|
|
trouble paying for medications (beta = -4.55 {[}95\% CI -5.55 to -3.54];
|
|
p < 0.001), Medicaid insurance (beta = -5.81 {[}95\% CI -6.41 to -5.20];
|
|
p < 0.001), and workers compensation insurance (beta = -5.99 {[}95\% CI
|
|
-7.65 to -4.34]; p < 0.001) were associated with clinically worse
|
|
function at presentation. Trouble paying for medications (beta = -6.01
|
|
{[}95\% CI -7.10 to -4.92]; p < 0.001), Medicaid insurance (beta = -5.35
|
|
{[}95\% CI -6.00 to -4.69]; p < 0.001), and workers compensation (beta =
|
|
-6.07 {[}95\% CI -7.86 to -4.28]; p < 0.001) were associated with
|
|
clinically worse mental health at presentation.ConclusionAlthough
|
|
transportation issues and financial hardship were found to be associated
|
|
with worse presenting physical function and mental health, Medicaid and
|
|
workers compensation insurance remained associated with worse presenting
|
|
physical function and mental health as well even after controlling for
|
|
these more detailed, patient-level SDoH factors. Because of that,
|
|
interventions to decrease health disparities should focus on not only
|
|
sociodemographic variables (for example, insurance type) but also
|
|
tangible patient-specific SDoH characteristics. For example, this may
|
|
include giving patients taxi vouchers or ride-sharing credits to attend
|
|
clinic visits for patients demonstrating such a need, initiating
|
|
financial assistance programs for necessary medications, and/or
|
|
identifying and connecting certain patient groups with social support
|
|
services early on in the care cycle.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tobert, DG (Corresponding Author), Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Orthopaed Surg, 55 Fruit St, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
|
|
Bernstein, David N.; Lans, Amanda; Karhade, Aditya V.; Heng, Marilyn; Schwab, Joseph H.; Tobert, Daniel G., Harvard Med Sch, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Bernstein, David N.; Karhade, Aditya V., Harvard Combined Orthopaed Residency Program, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Lans, Amanda, Univ Utrecht, Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Bernstein, David N.; Poolman, Rudolf W., Leiden Univ, Leiden Univ Med Ctr, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Leiden, Netherlands.
|
|
Tobert, Daniel G., Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Orthopaed Surg, 55 Fruit St, Boston, MA 02114 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/CORR.0000000000002446},
|
|
ISSN = {0009-921X},
|
|
EISSN = {1528-1132},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SYMPTOM SEVERITY; LUMBAR DISC; CARE; DISADVANTAGE; DISPARITIES;
|
|
ETHNICITY; SURGERY; METRICS; RACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Orthopedics; Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {bernsteindavidn@gmail.com
|
|
alans@mgh.harvard.edu
|
|
akarhade@partners.org
|
|
mheng@mgh.harvard.edu
|
|
namloop@gmail.com
|
|
jhschwab@mgh.harvard.edu
|
|
dtobert@mgh.harvard.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bernstein, David N./AAL-2777-2021
|
|
Poolman, Rudolf/AAM-7815-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Poolman, Rudolf/0000-0003-3178-2247
|
|
Bernstein, David/0000-0002-1784-3288},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000975638800017},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000687750000018,
|
|
Author = {Burkhauser, Richard V. and Corinth, Kevin and Holtz-Eakin, Douglas},
|
|
Title = {Policies to Help the Working Class in the Aftermath of COVID-19: Lessons
|
|
from the Great Recession},
|
|
Journal = {ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {695},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {314-330},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {The COVID-19 pandemic and the associated government-mandated shutdowns
|
|
caused a historic shock to the U.S. economy and a disproportionate job
|
|
loss concentrated among the working class. While an unprecedented social
|
|
safety net policy response successfully offset earnings losses among
|
|
lower-wage workers, the risk of continued and persistent unemployment
|
|
remains higher among the working class. The key lesson from the Great
|
|
Recession is that strong economic growth and a hot labor market do more
|
|
to improve the economic well-being of the working class and historically
|
|
disadvantaged groups than a slow recovery that relies on safety net
|
|
policies to help replace lost earnings. Thus, the best way to prevent a
|
|
``k-shaped{''} recovery is to ensure that safety net policies do not
|
|
interfere with a return to the strong pre-pandemic economy once the
|
|
health risk subsides and that progrowth policies that incentivize
|
|
business investment and hiring are maintained.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Corinth, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Chicago, Harris Sch Publ Policy, Comprehens Income Dataset Project, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Burkhauser, Richard V., Cornell Univ, Publ Policy, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.
|
|
Corinth, Kevin, Univ Chicago, Harris Sch Publ Policy, Comprehens Income Dataset Project, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Corinth, Kevin; Holtz-Eakin, Douglas, Council Econ Advisers, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Corinth, Kevin, Amer Enterprise Inst Publ Policy Res, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Holtz-Eakin, Douglas, Amer Act Forum, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Holtz-Eakin, Douglas, Congress Budget Off, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Holtz-Eakin, Douglas, Syracuse Univ, Syracuse, NY 13244 USA.
|
|
Holtz-Eakin, Douglas, Columbia Univ, New York, NY 10027 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/00027162211031772},
|
|
ISSN = {0002-7162},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-3349},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19 Recession; Great Recession; income growth; employment; safety
|
|
net policy; working class},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {kcorinth@uchicago.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000687750000018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000919443900001,
|
|
Author = {Liotti, Giorgio and Millemaci, Emanuele and Salvati, Luigi},
|
|
Title = {Do Flexibility Measures Affect the Wage Share? An Empirical Analysis of
|
|
Selected European Countries},
|
|
Journal = {REVIEW OF POLITICAL ECONOMY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 JAN 31},
|
|
Abstract = {Since the beginning of the 1980s, reforms of the labour market have been
|
|
at the centre of political and economic debate in the European Union.
|
|
While these reforms were implemented mainly with the aim of improving
|
|
employment performance by removing structural issues, they may also have
|
|
had non-secondary and non-negligible effects on the share of national
|
|
income received by workers. The aim of this paper is to study the
|
|
effects of the changes in the labour market regulation index (LMRI) on
|
|
the wage share in twelve Eurozone countries between 2000 and 2019. The
|
|
empirical results - obtained from the estimation of an error correction
|
|
model (ECM) - show that: (i) an inverse relation exists between LMRI as
|
|
a whole and adjusted wage share in the short run only; (ii) the
|
|
reduction of the adjusted wage share depends mainly on two specific
|
|
measures of flexibility: a more decentralized level of bargaining (the
|
|
effects of which are significant in both long- and short-run periods)
|
|
and a relaxation of the hiring and firing regulations (the effects of
|
|
which are significant only in the short run); (iii) the economic growth
|
|
and unemployment rate also contribute to the decline of the adjusted
|
|
wage share.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Liotti, G (Corresponding Author), Univ Messina, Messina, Italy.
|
|
Liotti, Giorgio; Millemaci, Emanuele, Univ Messina, Messina, Italy.
|
|
Salvati, Luigi, Univ Roma Tre, Rome, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09538259.2023.2165391},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0953-8259},
|
|
EISSN = {1465-3982},
|
|
Keywords = {Labour market policies; wage share; Eurozone countries; panel data},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FUNCTIONAL INCOME-DISTRIBUTION; LABOR-MARKET FLEXIBILITY; UNEMPLOYMENT
|
|
BENEFITS; AGGREGATE DEMAND; GROWTH; OECD; INEQUALITY; FINANCIALISATION;
|
|
INSTITUTIONS; INSTABILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {giorgio.liotti@unime.it},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Millemaci, Emanuele/0000-0002-9095-7513
|
|
Salvati, Luigi/0000-0002-1196-6017},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {99},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000919443900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000259911100007,
|
|
Author = {Ingram, Maia and Sabo, Samantha and Rothers, Janet and Wennerstrom,
|
|
Ashley and de Zapien, Jill Guernsey},
|
|
Title = {Community Health Workers and Community Advocacy: Addressing Health
|
|
Disparities},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {33},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {417-424},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The Community Health Worker model is recognized nationally as a means to
|
|
address glaring inequities in the burden of adverse health conditions
|
|
that exist among specific population groups in the United States. This
|
|
study explored Arizona CHW involvement in advocacy beyond the individual
|
|
patient level into the realm of advocating for community level change as
|
|
a mechanism to reduce the structural underpinnings of health
|
|
disparities. A survey of CHWs in Arizona found that CHWs advocate at
|
|
local, state and federal political levels as well as within health and
|
|
social service agencies and business. Characteristics significantly
|
|
associated with advocacy include employment in a not for profit
|
|
organization, previous leadership training, and a work environment that
|
|
allows flexible work hours and the autonomy to start new projects at
|
|
work. Intrinsic characteristics of CHWs associated with advocacy include
|
|
their belief that they can influence community decisions, self
|
|
perception that they are leaders in the community, and knowledge of who
|
|
to talk to in their community to make change. Community-level advocacy
|
|
has been identified as a core CHW function and has the potential to
|
|
address structural issues such as poverty, employment, housing, and
|
|
discrimination. Agencies utilizing the CHW model could encourage
|
|
community advocacy by providing a flexible working environment, ongoing
|
|
leadership training, and opportunities to collaborate with both veteran
|
|
CHWs and local community leaders. Further research is needed to
|
|
understand the nature and impact of CHW community advocacy activities on
|
|
both systems change and health outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ingram, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Arizona, Mel \& Enid Zuckerman Coll Publ Hlth, POB 245209, Tucson, AZ 85724 USA.
|
|
Ingram, Maia; Sabo, Samantha; Rothers, Janet; Wennerstrom, Ashley; de Zapien, Jill Guernsey, Univ Arizona, Mel \& Enid Zuckerman Coll Publ Hlth, Tucson, AZ 85724 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10900-008-9111-y},
|
|
ISSN = {0094-5145},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3610},
|
|
Keywords = {Community Health Worker; Policy; Advocacy; Leadership; Health
|
|
disparities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WOMEN; DISEASE; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {maiai@u.arizona.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Wennerstrom, Ashley/0000-0003-1888-0432},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {62},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000259911100007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000404976600034,
|
|
Author = {Glasziou, Paul and Straus, Sharon and Brownlee, Shannon and Trevena,
|
|
Lyndal and Dans, Leonila and Guyatt, Gordon and Elshaug, Adam G. and
|
|
Janett, Robert and Saini, Vikas},
|
|
Title = {Evidence for underuse of effective medical services around the world},
|
|
Journal = {LANCET},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {390},
|
|
Number = {10090},
|
|
Pages = {169-177},
|
|
Month = {JUL 8},
|
|
Abstract = {Underuse-the failure to use effective and affordable medical
|
|
interventions-is common and responsible for substantial suffering,
|
|
disability, and loss of life worldwide. Underuse occurs at every point
|
|
along the treatment continuum, from populations lacking access to health
|
|
care to inadequate supply of medical resources and labour, slow or
|
|
partial uptake of innovations, and patients not accessing or declining
|
|
them. The extent of underuse for different interventions varies by
|
|
country, and is documented in countries of high, middle, and low-income,
|
|
and across different types of health-care systems, payment models, and
|
|
health services. Most research into underuse has focused on measuring
|
|
solutions to the problem, with considerably less attention paid to its
|
|
global prevalence or its consequences for patients and populations.
|
|
Although focused effort and resources can overcome specific underuse
|
|
problems, comparatively little is spent on work to better understand and
|
|
overcome the barriers to improved uptake of effective interventions, and
|
|
methods to make them affordable.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Glasziou, P (Corresponding Author), Bond Univ, Ctr Res Evidence Based Practice, Gold Coast, Qld 4229, Australia.
|
|
Glasziou, Paul, Bond Univ, Ctr Res Evidence Based Practice, Robina, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Straus, Sharon, Univ Toronto, St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, Dept Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Brownlee, Shannon; Saini, Vikas, Lown Inst, Brookline, MA USA.
|
|
Trevena, Lyndal, Univ Sydney, Sch Publ Hlth, Discipline Gen Practice, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Elshaug, Adam G., Univ Sydney, Sch Publ Hlth, Menzies Ctr Hlth Policy, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Dans, Leonila, Univ Philippines Manila, Manila, Philippines.
|
|
Guyatt, Gordon, McMaster Univ, Dept Clin Epidemiol \& Biostat, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
|
|
Janett, Robert, Harvard Clin \& Translat Sci Ctr, Boston, MA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0140-6736(16)30946-1},
|
|
ISSN = {0140-6736},
|
|
EISSN = {1474-547X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; ATRIAL-FIBRILLATION; CARE; GUIDELINES;
|
|
MORTALITY; QUALITY; INTERVENTION; PREVENTION; STRATEGY; DELIVERY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {paul\_glasziou@bond.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Elshaug, Adam G/A-5714-2008
|
|
Glasziou, Paul/A-7832-2008
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Glasziou, Paul/0000-0001-7564-073X
|
|
Elshaug, Adam/0000-0002-4939-5379},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {131},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000404976600034},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000307081300009,
|
|
Author = {Holley, Sasha and Rainnie, Al},
|
|
Title = {Who Cleans Up? The Declining Earnings Position of Cleaners in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC AND LABOUR RELATIONS REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {143-160},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Neoliberal policies of industrial relations decentralisation and
|
|
privatisation have transformed the economic landscape of Australia in
|
|
the last 20 years. The primary objective of these policies has been to
|
|
enhance wealth and prosperity by improving productivity and flexibility
|
|
of the workforce and competition and accountability in the market. Yet
|
|
the evidence suggests that precarious workers are not benefiting from
|
|
this increased prosperity, indeed they suffer by comparison with all
|
|
other workers. Cleaners are a subset of precarious workers who have been
|
|
hard hit by the dual impacts of labour market decentralisation and
|
|
privatisation. This study finds quantitative evidence of an increasing
|
|
gap in earnings between cleaners and other workers in Australia since
|
|
the onset of workplace relations decentralisation and the proliferation
|
|
of privatisation in the mid 1990s. We locate our argument in recent
|
|
debates about the nature of variegated neoliberalism, the emergence of
|
|
the networked economy, and the implications of these developments for
|
|
the nature of work and employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Holley, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Sydney, Sch Work \& Org Studies, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
|
|
Holley, Sasha, Univ Sydney, Sch Work \& Org Studies, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
|
|
Rainnie, Al, Curtin Univ Technol, Grad Sch Business, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/103530461202300109},
|
|
ISSN = {1035-3046},
|
|
EISSN = {1838-2673},
|
|
Keywords = {Cleaners; income disparity; networked economy; outsourcing; precarious
|
|
work; privatisation and decentralisation; vulnerable; low-paid workers},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK; HEALTH; LABOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {sasha.holley@sydney.edu.au
|
|
al.rainnie@gsb.curtin.edu.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rainnie, Alistair/0000-0001-6071-4193},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000307081300009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000244260900008,
|
|
Author = {Siddiqi, Arjumand and Hertzman, Clyde},
|
|
Title = {Towards an epidemiological understanding of the effects of long-term
|
|
institutional changes on population health: A case study of Canada
|
|
versus the USA},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {589-603},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper uses a comparative case study of Canada and the USA to argue
|
|
that, in order to fully understand the associations between population
|
|
health and the socioeconomic environment we must begin to place
|
|
importance on the dynamic aspect of these factors-examining them as they
|
|
evolve over time. In particular, for institutional and policy shifts
|
|
that often unfold over decades, population health must attend to these
|
|
big, slow moving processes by adopting a historical perspective to the
|
|
knowledge base. We compare Canada and the USA on basic health outcomes
|
|
and a range of determinants of health for which routine data have been
|
|
collected for all or most of the period between 1950 and the present.
|
|
During the analysis that follows, we are able to establish that, at the
|
|
level of society (i) greater economic well being and spending on health
|
|
care does not yield better health outcomes, that (ii) public provision
|
|
and income redistribution trump economic success where population health
|
|
is concerned, and (iii) that the gradual development of public provision
|
|
represents the buildup of social infrastructure that has long-lasting
|
|
effects on health status. Our case study shows what can be gleaned from
|
|
a comparative perspective and a long-term view. The long view allows us
|
|
to detect the gradual divergence in health status between these two
|
|
societies and to trace potential institutional causes that would
|
|
otherwise go unnoticed. The perspective introduced here, and in
|
|
particular the comparison of Canada and the USA, provides strong support
|
|
for the use of cross-national comparative work, and a historical
|
|
perspective on the investigation of societies that successfully support
|
|
population health. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Siddiqi, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA.
|
|
Univ Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.09.034},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {income inequality; Canada; USA; social epidemiology; historical
|
|
analysis; structural determinants; institutional determinants},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CROSS-SECTIONAL ANALYSIS; INCOME INEQUALITY; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS;
|
|
INDIVIDUAL INCOME; LIFE EXPECTANCY; MORTALITY; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {asiddiqi@utk.edu
|
|
hertzman@interchange.ubc.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {51},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000244260900008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000423918800004,
|
|
Author = {Rakipi, Remzije and Syla, Shpresa},
|
|
Title = {Trends and Challenges of Female Unemployment in the Republic of
|
|
Macedonia: A Regional Comparative Study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {57-78},
|
|
Month = {FAL},
|
|
Abstract = {The Republic of Macedonia has since its independence made great progress
|
|
in terms of economic reform and social development; prompted often by
|
|
the county's aspiration to become part of the European Union. However,
|
|
in spite of these advances, weak labour market indicators in particular
|
|
among females remains a great concern and a persisting challenge for the
|
|
country. Based on official data from the Labour Force Survey (LFS)
|
|
conducted by the State Statistical Office (SSO) for the case of the
|
|
Republic of Macedonia, the aim of this study is to examine the
|
|
development of female unemployment in the past decade (2004-2013) in the
|
|
Republic of Macedonia from a multi-dimensional perspective. This while
|
|
comparing national trends with other Balkan countries already in the EU
|
|
using LFS data provided by Eurostat. Findings show that the female
|
|
unemployment rate in the R. Macedonia is moving in the right direction
|
|
with a decreasing trend throughout the observed period with drop of 8.8
|
|
percent point from 2004 to 2013 (observed at 29\% in 2013). Compared to
|
|
Balkan countries in the EU, findings show that the R. Macedonia has been
|
|
performing relatively better than these countries, who have all
|
|
experienced negative fluctuations in female unemployment rates in the
|
|
observed period with rates at higher levels compared to 2004.
|
|
Furthermore, the findings show no evidence of inequality between male
|
|
and female unemployment rates in the country, however notable
|
|
disparities are evident when observing unemployment among various age
|
|
groups and the level of education attainment. The paper concludes with
|
|
clear policy recommendations for boosting female employment to include
|
|
increasing female access to education and entrepreneurial programs,
|
|
increased access to childcare, etc.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rakipi, R (Corresponding Author), South East European Univ Tetovo, Fac Business \& Econ, Tetovo, Macedonia.
|
|
Rakipi, Remzije; Syla, Shpresa, South East European Univ Tetovo, Fac Business \& Econ, Tetovo, Macedonia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.14706/JECOSS16619},
|
|
ISSN = {1986-8499},
|
|
EISSN = {1986-8502},
|
|
Keywords = {Labour market; female unemployment; unemployment; employment},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business},
|
|
Author-Email = {r.rakipi@seeu.edu.mk
|
|
s.syla@seeu.edu.mk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {18},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000423918800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000380788300001,
|
|
Author = {Dagher, Rada K. and McGovern, Patricia M. and Schold, Jesse D. and
|
|
Randall, Xian J.},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of breastfeeding initiation and cessation among employed
|
|
mothers: a prospective cohort study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Month = {JUL 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The U.S. continues to have one of the lowest breastfeeding
|
|
rates in the industrialized world. Studies have shown that full-time
|
|
employment and early return to work decreased breastfeeding duration,
|
|
but little is known about the relationship between leave policies and
|
|
breastfeeding initiation and cessation. This study aimed to identify
|
|
workplace-related barriers and facilitators associated with
|
|
breastfeeding initiation and cessation in the first 6 months postpartum.
|
|
Methods: A prospective cohort study design was utilized to recruit 817
|
|
Minnesota women aged 18 and older while hospitalized for childbirth.
|
|
Selection criteria included English-speaking, employed mothers with a
|
|
healthy, singleton birth. These women were followed up using telephone
|
|
interviews at 6 weeks, 12 weeks, and 6 months after childbirth. The main
|
|
study outcomes were breastfeeding initiation, measured during hospital
|
|
enrollment, and breastfeeding cessation by 6 months postpartum.
|
|
Results: Women were 30 years old; 86 \% were White, and 73 \% were
|
|
married. Breastfeeding rates were 81 \% at childbirth, 67 \% at 6 weeks,
|
|
49 \% at 12 weeks, and 33 \% at 6 months postpartum. Logistic regression
|
|
revealed the odds of breastfeeding initiation were higher for women who:
|
|
held professional jobs, were primiparae, had graduate degree, did not
|
|
smoke prenatally, had no breastfeeding problems, and had family or
|
|
friends who breastfeed. Survival analyses showed the hazard for
|
|
breastfeeding cessation by 6 months was: higher for women who returned
|
|
to work at any time during the 6 months postpartum versus those who did
|
|
not return, lower for professional workers, higher among single than
|
|
married women, higher for every educational category compared to
|
|
graduate school, and higher for those with no family or friends who
|
|
breastfeed.
|
|
Conclusions: While employer paid leave policy did not affect
|
|
breastfeeding initiation or cessation, women who took shorter leaves
|
|
were more likely to stop breastfeeding in the first 6 months postpartum.
|
|
Future research should examine women's awareness of employer policies
|
|
regarding paid and unpaid leave.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dagher, RK (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Serv Adm, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Dagher, Rada K., Univ Maryland, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Serv Adm, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
McGovern, Patricia M., Univ Minnesota, Div Environm Hlth Sci, Minneapolis, MN USA.
|
|
Schold, Jesse D., Cleveland Clin, Dept Quantitat Hlth Sci, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.
|
|
Randall, Xian J., US Dept Housing \& Urban Dev, Washington, DC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12884-016-0965-1},
|
|
Article-Number = {194},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2393},
|
|
Keywords = {Breastfeeding; Family leave policy; Postpartum; Workplace barriers},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; POSTPARTUM HEALTH; UNITED-STATES; DURATION; WORK;
|
|
TIME; CHILDBIRTH; FAMILY; IMPACT; LEAVE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {radadagher@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Schold, Jesse/AAC-5844-2019},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {77},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {31},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000380788300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000607446600026,
|
|
Author = {Waters, Nicholas E. and Ahmed, Sammy F. and Tang, Sandra and Morrison,
|
|
Frederick J. and Davis-Kean, Pamela E.},
|
|
Title = {Pathways from socioeconomic status to early academic achievement: The
|
|
role of specific executive functions},
|
|
Journal = {EARLY CHILDHOOD RESEARCH QUARTERLY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {54},
|
|
Pages = {321-331},
|
|
Abstract = {Among the many factors contributing to the SES-achievement gap,
|
|
executive function (EF) skills have received a considerable amount of
|
|
attention, given their role in supporting academic skill development.
|
|
While recent work has demonstrated that global EF constructs mediate
|
|
SES-achievement relations, less attention has been paid to unpacking the
|
|
role of specific EF components in linking SES to achievement. Data from
|
|
the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (N = 1273)
|
|
were analyzed to assess direct and indirect associations between SES
|
|
indicators, preschool EF skills, and first-grade math and reading
|
|
achievement. Using path analysis, we found parent education and working
|
|
memory to be uniquely and most predictive of both achievement domains.
|
|
Further, after controlling for baseline academic skills, verbal ability,
|
|
and other child- and family-level covariates, only working memory
|
|
mediated the association between parent education and children's math
|
|
achievement. These findings offer a comprehensive look at the specific
|
|
mechanisms through which socioeconomic disadvantage contributes to
|
|
children's academic development and provide an initial step towards
|
|
generating more precise targets for policies and interventions aimed at
|
|
closing the achievement gap. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Waters, NE (Corresponding Author), Univ Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Waters, Nicholas E.; Ahmed, Sammy F.; Tang, Sandra; Morrison, Frederick J.; Davis-Kean, Pamela E., Univ Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ecresq.2020.09.008},
|
|
ISSN = {0885-2006},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7706},
|
|
Keywords = {Socioeconomic status; Executive function; Academic achievement;
|
|
Achievement gap; Parent education; Working memory},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SCHOOL READINESS; EARLY-CHILDHOOD; SELF-REGULATION;
|
|
BEHAVIORAL-REGULATION; MATERNAL EDUCATION; PARENT EDUCATION; FUNCTION
|
|
SKILLS; WORKING-MEMORY; FAMILY INCOME; LITERACY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research; Psychology, Developmental},
|
|
Author-Email = {nickwat@umich.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ahmed, Sammy/AAW-7661-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ahmed, Sammy/0000-0003-3814-2955
|
|
Davis-Kean, Pamela/0000-0001-8389-6268
|
|
Waters, Nicholas/0000-0001-7149-3541},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {97},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {52},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000607446600026},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000357046000008,
|
|
Author = {Schoffstall, Sarah and Cawthon, Stephanie Washbourn and Tarantolo-Leppo,
|
|
Rachel Harper and Wendel, Erica},
|
|
Title = {Developing Consumer and System-Level Readiness for Effective
|
|
Self-Advocacy: Perspectives from Vocational Rehabilitation Counselors
|
|
Working With Deaf and Hard of Hearing Individuals in Post-Secondary
|
|
Settings},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL AND PHYSICAL DISABILITIES},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {533-555},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Effective self-advocacy skills have been shown to positively influence
|
|
lifetime outcomes of d/Deaf and Hard of Hearing (DHH) individuals. The
|
|
literature suggests that many DHH individuals may be underprepared to
|
|
effectively self-advocate in post-secondary settings due to a lack of
|
|
effective training and opportunity. Vocational rehabilitation counselors
|
|
(VRCs) who work with and serve DHH consumers are in a unique position to
|
|
support their clients' self-advocacy skill building, especially during
|
|
the transition into the workforce and other post-secondary settings. The
|
|
purpose of this qualitative study was to explore how VRC's promote the
|
|
self-advocacy knowledge and skills of their DHH consumers within
|
|
post-secondary employment and educational contexts. Additionally, this
|
|
study explored how VRC's facilitated self-advocacy opportunities for
|
|
their clients at broader systems-levels. Utilizing a grounded theory
|
|
approach, data from semi-structured interviews with 10 VRCs working
|
|
specifically with DHH clients was analyzed. Selective coding procedures
|
|
revealed sixteen thematic strategies used by VRCs at both the individual
|
|
and systems level, including defining of necessary self-advocacy skills,
|
|
linguistic skill building, provision of full communication access,
|
|
comprehension monitoring, both informal and formal self-advocacy
|
|
assessments, direct modeling of advocacy skill, self-advocacy skills
|
|
programming and counseling, an overall gauging of client `readiness to
|
|
advocate', identification of advocacy opportunity at the system-level,
|
|
and employer education. Implications and future directions are
|
|
discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Schoffstall, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Texas Austin, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
|
|
Schoffstall, Sarah; Cawthon, Stephanie Washbourn; Tarantolo-Leppo, Rachel Harper; Wendel, Erica, Univ Texas Austin, Austin, TX 78712 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10882-015-9435-3},
|
|
ISSN = {1056-263X},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3580},
|
|
Keywords = {Deaf/hard of hearing; Vocational rehabilitation; Self-advocacy;
|
|
Transition},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {STUDENTS; OUTCOMES; YOUTH; PARTICIPATION; PERCEPTIONS; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Special; Psychology, Developmental; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {sarah.schoffstall@utexas.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Cawthon, Stephanie/AAW-1197-2021},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000357046000008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000437384300013,
|
|
Author = {Berge, Jerica M. and Tate, Allan and Trofholz, Amanda and Loth, Katie
|
|
and Miner, Michael and Crow, Scott and Neumark-Sztainer, Dianne},
|
|
Title = {Examining variability in parent feeding practices within a low-income,
|
|
racially/ethnically diverse, and immigrant population using ecological
|
|
momentary assessment},
|
|
Journal = {APPETITE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {127},
|
|
Pages = {110-118},
|
|
Month = {AUG 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Current measures of parent feeding practices are typically
|
|
survey-based and assessed as static/ unchanging characteristics, failing
|
|
to account for fluctuations in these behaviors across time and context.
|
|
The current study uses ecological momentary assessment to examine
|
|
variability of, and predictors of, parent feeding practices within a
|
|
low-income, racially/ethnically diverse, and immigrant sample.
|
|
Methods: Children ages 5-7 years old and their parents (n = 150 dyads)
|
|
from six racial/ethnic groups (n = 25 from each; Black/African American,
|
|
Hispanic, Hmong, Native American, Somali, White) were recruited for this
|
|
mixed-methods study through primary care clinics.
|
|
Results: Among parents who used restriction (49\%) and pressure-to-eat
|
|
(69\%) feeding practices, these feeding practices were utilized about
|
|
every other day. Contextual factors at the meal associated with parent
|
|
feeding practices included: number of people at the meal, who prepared
|
|
the meal, types of food served at meals (e.g., pre-prepared, homemade,
|
|
fast food), meal setting (e.g., kitchen table, front room), and meal
|
|
emotional atmosphere (p < 0.05). Parents tended to restrict desserts,
|
|
dairy, and vegetables and pressure children to eat fruits, vegetables,
|
|
meat proteins, and refined grains (p < 0.05). There were some
|
|
differences by race/ethnicity across findings (p < 0.01), with Hmong
|
|
parents engaging in the highest levels of pressure-to-eat feeding
|
|
practices.
|
|
Conclusions: Parent feeding practices varied across the week, indicating
|
|
feeding practices are more likely to be context-specific, or state-like
|
|
than trait-like. There were some meal characteristics more strongly
|
|
associated with engaging in restriction and pressure-to-eat feeding
|
|
practices. Given that parent feeding practices appear to be state-like,
|
|
future interventions and health care providers who work with parents and
|
|
children may want to address contextual factors associated with parent
|
|
feeding practices to decrease restriction and pressure-to-eat parent
|
|
feeding practices.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Berge, JM (Corresponding Author), Dept Family Med \& Community Hlth, 717 Delaware St SE,Room 425, Minneapolis, MN 55414 USA.
|
|
Berge, Jerica M.; Tate, Allan; Trofholz, Amanda; Loth, Katie; Miner, Michael, Univ Minnesota, Sch Med, Dept Family Med \& Community Hlth, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
|
|
Crow, Scott, Univ Minnesota, Dept Psychiat, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
|
|
Crow, Scott, Emily Program, St Paul, MN USA.
|
|
Neumark-Sztainer, Dianne, Univ Minnesota, Div Epidemiol \& Community Hlth, Minneapolis, MN USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.appet.2018.04.006},
|
|
ISSN = {0195-6663},
|
|
EISSN = {1095-8304},
|
|
Keywords = {Parent feeding practices; Ecological momentary assessment; Minority;
|
|
Low-income; Immigrants},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; FOOD; CHILDREN; OBESITY; PREVALENCE; VALIDATION;
|
|
CHILDHOOD; RESTRICTION; ADOLESCENTS; DISPARITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Behavioral Sciences; Nutrition \& Dietetics},
|
|
Author-Email = {jberge@umn.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Neumark-Sztainer, Dianne/D-8574-2011
|
|
Neumark-Sztainer, Dianne/JBJ-8026-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Neumark-Sztainer, Dianne/0000-0001-9435-1669
|
|
Miner, Michael H/0000-0002-8371-5276
|
|
Tate, Allan/0000-0001-6039-2868
|
|
Berge, Jerica/0000-0003-3371-351X
|
|
Loth, Katie/0000-0001-8934-2522},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000437384300013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000445061900003,
|
|
Author = {Dupray, Arnaud and Daune-Richard, Anne-Marie and Nohara, Hiroatsu},
|
|
Title = {Welfare-state regimes and gender division of housework time in three
|
|
conurbations: New York, Paris, Tokyo},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY AND SOCIAL POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {11-12},
|
|
Pages = {956-972},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore the patterns and
|
|
determinants of the division of household tasks within couples in
|
|
countries under different welfare-state regimes.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach The paper investigates data on urban middle-
|
|
and upper-class couples living in New York, Paris or Tokyo area, from a
|
|
2007 international comparative time-budget survey carried out at the
|
|
initiative of the Rengo-Soken Research Institute. Each partner was
|
|
interviewed separately, offering a unique statistical source for
|
|
analysing the organisation of domestic time.
|
|
Findings The results shed light on the degree of proximity among the
|
|
three populations in their housework-sharing arrangements. Greater
|
|
parity in partners' housework time is found for the New York couples,
|
|
regardless of their occupational activity. In Paris and especially in
|
|
Tokyo, other demands on the partners' time and the contribution each
|
|
makes to the household income both impact the actual division of
|
|
household labour.
|
|
Research limitations/implications The partners' gender ideology was not
|
|
elicited, and inclusion of lower-class couples could change certain
|
|
results. However, the findings attest to the strong role that
|
|
welfare-state regime plays in shaping housework time allocation.
|
|
Originality/value Unlike other international comparisons, the survey
|
|
used enables us to ensure strong comparability of measures. The
|
|
welfare-state regime and family model frameworks clearly highlight the
|
|
interplay between individual determinants and the institutional context.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dupray, A (Corresponding Author), Ctr Res Educ Training \& Employment, Dept Entries \& Changes Act Life, Marseille, France.
|
|
Dupray, A (Corresponding Author), Aix Marseille Univ, Lab Labour Econ \& Ind Sociol, Aix En Provence, France.
|
|
Dupray, Arnaud, Ctr Res Educ Training \& Employment, Dept Entries \& Changes Act Life, Marseille, France.
|
|
Dupray, Arnaud; Daune-Richard, Anne-Marie; Nohara, Hiroatsu, Aix Marseille Univ, Lab Labour Econ \& Ind Sociol, Aix En Provence, France.
|
|
Nohara, Hiroatsu, Yamanashigakuin Univ, Kofu, Yamanashi, Japan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJSSP-03-2018-0041},
|
|
ISSN = {0144-333X},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6720},
|
|
Keywords = {Comparative analysis; Gender; Housework; Relative resources},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK-FAMILY POLICIES; HOUSEHOLD LABOR; OF-LABOR; ECONOMIC DEPENDENCY;
|
|
DOMESTIC LABOR; COUNTRIES; INEQUALITY; EARNINGS; JAPAN; MONEY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {dupray@cereq.fr},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {nohara, hiroatsu/0000-0003-0017-8557
|
|
Dupray, Arnaud/0000-0001-7820-8838},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000445061900003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1995TM33200005,
|
|
Author = {Gallaher, C},
|
|
Title = {Social policy and the construction of need: A critical examination of
|
|
the geography of needs assessments for low-income women's health},
|
|
Journal = {GEOFORUM},
|
|
Year = {1995},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {287-295},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {In public health care, needs assessments are a common practice, often
|
|
done once a year or every couple of years, to determine arenas on which
|
|
providers should focus their prime attention. The structure of needs
|
|
assessments varies between political boundaries, but within political
|
|
boundaries (e.g. state, county, etc.) they are generally standardized so
|
|
that organizations offering similar types of care may compare results
|
|
and streamline strategies. Public health providers, however, often see
|
|
needs assessments as bureaucratic mazes through which providers must
|
|
navigate to gain state and federal dollars. Despite this image, needs
|
|
assessments play an integral role in how governmentally subsidized
|
|
health care services are provided and delivered. Equally important,
|
|
needs assessment design may at once reinforce and be reinforced by
|
|
existing geographies of inequality and associated social policy
|
|
regarding subsidized populations. The purpose of this paper is to
|
|
examine this mutually constitutive relationship between social policy
|
|
and spatiality using an empirical example in the public health arena,
|
|
specifically, the needs assessment process for federally subsidized
|
|
women's health care clinics in Butler County, Ohio, where I worked as an
|
|
intern on a three year needs assessment in 1993. The paper focuses on
|
|
how the problem definition process (the use of indicators of need)
|
|
constitutes and is constituted by a dualistic conception of health care
|
|
provision which views health care as either preventive or sick care and
|
|
the provision of care as either site specific or individual specific. I
|
|
criticize this binary conception and then analyze it in terms of the
|
|
geographical implications for low income women and children seeking
|
|
subsidized health care. The paper has three sections. The first section
|
|
lays out a theoretical framework through which social policy analysis
|
|
may be understood. The second section offers an introduction to the
|
|
study area and the needs assessment methodology for subsidized women's
|
|
health care clinics in Ohio. The third and final section examines the
|
|
geographical implications of the needs assessment process in Ohio.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gallaher, C (Corresponding Author), UNIV KENTUCKY,DEPT GEOG,LEXINGTON,KY 40506, USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/0016-7185(95)00033-X},
|
|
ISSN = {0016-7185},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {15},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1995TM33200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000610298800001,
|
|
Author = {Joy, Meghan and Vogel, Ronald K.},
|
|
Title = {Beyond Neoliberalism: A Policy Agenda for a Progressive City},
|
|
Journal = {URBAN AFFAIRS REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1372-1409},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {The urban crisis-poverty and inequality, un-and under-employment,
|
|
inadequate and unaffordable housing and public transportation, pollution
|
|
and climate disasters-is the result of the failure of the neoliberal
|
|
agenda to produce adequate funds and capacities to ensure the provision
|
|
of services necessary for the city to function and its residents to
|
|
thrive, especially the most vulnerable, and increasingly, the middle
|
|
class. In the last few years, there appears to be a potential for a new
|
|
more radical direction in urban policy. Yet, urban scholars and
|
|
practitioners have been slow to notice the new possibilities that
|
|
reopens the question of whether cities may engage in redistributive
|
|
policies. In reviewing the history and current practice of progressive
|
|
politics and policy in cities, this paper explores what a policy agenda
|
|
for a progressive city might entail and identifies themes and questions
|
|
for a renewed urban politics research agenda.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vogel, RK (Corresponding Author), Ryerson Univ, Dept Polit \& Publ Adm, 350 Victoria St, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada.
|
|
Joy, Meghan, Concordia Univ, Polit Sci, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Vogel, Ronald K., Ryerson Univ, Polit \& Publ Adm \& Grad Program, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Vogel, Ronald K., Ryerson Univ, PhD Policy Studies Program, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1078087420984241},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {1078087420984241},
|
|
ISSN = {1078-0874},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-8332},
|
|
Keywords = {progressive city; public transit and equity; climate change; affordable
|
|
housing; work and income},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CLIMATE-CHANGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Urban Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {ron.vogel@ryerson.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Vogel, Ronald/0000-0002-3383-7144},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {122},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000610298800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000415711900004,
|
|
Author = {Lindsay, Sally and Duncanson, Michelle and Niles-Campbell, Nadia and
|
|
McDougall, Carolyn and Diederichs, Sara and Menna-Dack, Dolly},
|
|
Title = {Applying an ecological framework to understand transition pathways to
|
|
post-secondary education for youth with physical disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {277-286},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the experiences of
|
|
youth with physical disabilities and clinicians who support them in
|
|
their transition to post-secondary education (PSE). Most research on
|
|
transition to PSE has focused on youth with intellectual disabilities
|
|
while there is a lack of research on youth with physical disabilities.
|
|
Methods: This study drew on 30 interviews with 20 youth with
|
|
disabilities and 10 clinicians. We used Bronfrenbrenner's ecological
|
|
framework to inform our analysis.
|
|
Results: Our results showed that there are several important individual
|
|
skills that youth need to be successful in transitioning to PSE. Youth
|
|
with disabilities experienced supports from peers and family that
|
|
influence their transition to PSE. Several disability-specific issues
|
|
(e.g., coping, self-care, disclosure, and accommodations) were often a
|
|
barrier to transitioning to PSE. Clinicians and youth both reported that
|
|
improved inter-professional collaboration and inter-agency partnerships
|
|
were needed to enhance the transition experience. Societal attitudes
|
|
(stigma and discrimination), policies, and the timing of transitions
|
|
also influence youth's transition.
|
|
Conclusion: Applying an ecological approach helped to provide a more
|
|
holistic perspective of the PSE transitions and emphasizes the need to
|
|
consider more than just preparing individuals but also where they are
|
|
transitioned.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lindsay, S (Corresponding Author), Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabil Hosp, Bloorview Res Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Lindsay, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Dept Occupat Sci, Occupat Therapy, 150 Kilgour Rd, Toronto, ON M4G 1R8, Canada.
|
|
Lindsay, Sally, Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabil Hosp, Bloorview Res Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Lindsay, Sally, Univ Toronto, Dept Occupat Sci, Occupat Therapy, 150 Kilgour Rd, Toronto, ON M4G 1R8, Canada.
|
|
Duncanson, Michelle, Univ Toronto, Rehabil Sci Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Niles-Campbell, Nadia; McDougall, Carolyn; Menna-Dack, Dolly, Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabil Hosp, Ctr Participat \& Inclus, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Diederichs, Sara, Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabil Hosp, Bloorview Sch Author, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09638288.2016.1250171},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Qualitative; vocational rehabilitation; transitions},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {YOUNG-ADULTS; EMPLOYMENT; SERVICES; STUDENTS; SCHOOL; INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
ADOLESCENTS; OUTCOMES; WORK; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {slindsay@hollandbloorview.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000415711900004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000342880900006,
|
|
Author = {Tak, Hyo Jung and Hougham, Gavin W. and Ruhnke, Atsuko and Ruhnke,
|
|
Gregory W.},
|
|
Title = {The effect of in-office waiting time on physician visit frequency among
|
|
working-age adults},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {118},
|
|
Pages = {43-51},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Disparities in unmet health care demand resulting from socioeconomic,
|
|
racial, and financial factors have received a great deal of attention in
|
|
the United States. However, out-of-pocket costs alone do not fully
|
|
reflect the total opportunity cost that patients must consider as they
|
|
seek medical attention. While there is an extensive literature on the
|
|
price elasticity of demand for health care, empirical evidence regarding
|
|
the effect of waiting time on utilization is sparse. Using the
|
|
nationally representative 2003 Community Tracking Study Household
|
|
Survey, the most recent iteration containing respondents' physician
|
|
office visit frequency and estimated in-office waiting time in the
|
|
United States (N = 23,484), we investigated the association between
|
|
waiting time and calculated time cost with the number of physician
|
|
visits among a sample of working-age adults. To avoid the bias that
|
|
literature suggests would result from excluding respondents with zero
|
|
physician visits, we imputed waiting time for the essential inclusion of
|
|
such individuals. On average, respondents visited physician offices 3.55
|
|
times, during which time they waited 28.7 mm. The estimates from a
|
|
negative binomial model indicated that a doubling of waiting time was
|
|
associated with a 7.7 percent decrease (p-value < 0.001) in physician
|
|
visit frequency. For women and unemployed respondents, who visited
|
|
physicians more frequently, the decrease was even larger, suggesting a
|
|
stronger response to greater waiting times. We believe this finding
|
|
reflects the discretionary nature of incremental visits in these groups,
|
|
and a consequent lower perceived marginal benefit of additional visits.
|
|
The results suggest that in-office waiting time may have a substantial
|
|
influence on patients' propensity to seek medical attention. Although
|
|
there is a belief that expansions in health insurance coverage increase
|
|
health care utilization by reducing financial barriers to access, our
|
|
results suggest that unintended consequences may arise if in-office
|
|
waiting time increases. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tak, HJ (Corresponding Author), Univ N Texas, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Hlth Management \& Policy, 3500 Camp Bowie Blvd,EAD 601R, Ft Worth, TX 76107 USA.
|
|
Tak, Hyo Jung, Univ N Texas, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Hlth Management \& Policy, Ft Worth, TX 76107 USA.
|
|
Hougham, Gavin W.; Ruhnke, Gregory W., Univ Chicago, Dept Med, Sect Hosp Med, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Hougham, Gavin W., Univ Chicago, Ctr Hlth \& Social Sci, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.07.053},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {USA; Waiting time; Time cost; Medical care demand; Health policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEDICAL-CARE; HEALTH-CARE; SERVICES; QUALITY; CENTERS; DEMAND; GENDER;
|
|
COSTS; PRICE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {hyojung.tak@unthsc.edu
|
|
ghougham@bsd.uchicago.edu
|
|
atsuko.daibo@gmail.com
|
|
gruhnke@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hougham, Gavin Wade/F-4554-2012},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hougham, Gavin Wade/0000-0001-7006-1835},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000342880900006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000678046000001,
|
|
Author = {Lam Hoang Viet Le and Toan Luu Duc Huynh and Weber, Bryan S. and Bao
|
|
Khac Quoc Nguyen},
|
|
Title = {Different firm responses to the COVID-19 pandemic shocks:
|
|
machine-learning evidence on the Vietnamese labor market},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EMERGING MARKETS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Month = {2021 JUL 27},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose This paper aims to identify the disproportionate impacts of the
|
|
COVID-19 pandemic on labor markets. Design/methodology/approach The
|
|
authors conduct a large-scale survey on 16,000 firms from 82 industries
|
|
in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and analyze the data set by using
|
|
different machine-learning methods. Findings First, job loss and
|
|
reduction in state-owned enterprises have been significantly larger than
|
|
in other types of organizations. Second, employees of foreign direct
|
|
investment enterprises suffer a significantly lower labor income than
|
|
those of other groups. Third, the adverse effects of the COVID-19
|
|
pandemic on the labor market are heterogeneous across industries and
|
|
geographies. Finally, firms with high revenue in 2019 are more likely to
|
|
adopt preventive measures, including the reduction of labor forces. The
|
|
authors also find a significant correlation between firms' revenue and
|
|
labor reduction as traditional econometrics and machine-learning
|
|
techniques suggest. Originality/value This study has two main policy
|
|
implications. First, although government support through taxes has been
|
|
provided, the authors highlight evidence that there may be some
|
|
additional benefit from targeting firms that have characteristics
|
|
associated with layoffs or other negative labor responses. Second, the
|
|
authors provide information that shows which firm characteristics are
|
|
associated with particular labor market responses such as layoffs, which
|
|
may help target stimulus packages. Although the COVID-19 pandemic
|
|
affects most industries and occupations, heterogeneous firm responses
|
|
suggest that there could be several varieties of targeted
|
|
policies-targeting firms that are likely to reduce labor forces or firms
|
|
likely to face reduced revenue. In this paper, the authors outline
|
|
several industries and firm characteristics which appear to more
|
|
directly be reducing employee counts or having negative labor responses
|
|
which may lead to more cost-effect stimulus.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Huynh, TLD (Corresponding Author), Univ Econ Ho Chi Minh City, Sch Banking, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
|
|
Lam Hoang Viet Le, Univ Peoples Secur, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
|
|
Toan Luu Duc Huynh, Univ Econ Ho Chi Minh City, Sch Banking, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
|
|
Toan Luu Duc Huynh, WHU Otto Beisheim Sch Management, Chair Behav Finance, Vallendar, Germany.
|
|
Weber, Bryan S., CUNY Coll Staten Isl, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Bao Khac Quoc Nguyen, Univ Econ Ho Chi Minh City, Sch Finance, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJOEM-02-2021-0292},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1746-8809},
|
|
EISSN = {1746-8817},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; Employment; Labor forces; Organizational behavior;
|
|
Disparities; Vietnam; J22; J23; J21; J62; J63; J64; E24},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CRISIS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Economics; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {toanhld@ueh.edu.vn},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Weber, Bryan/0000-0003-1806-4451
|
|
Nguyen, Khac Quoc Bao/0000-0001-7735-2096
|
|
Huynh, Toan Luu Duc/0000-0002-1486-127X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000678046000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000476948500004,
|
|
Author = {Aitken, Andrew},
|
|
Title = {Measuring Welfare Beyond GDP},
|
|
Journal = {NATIONAL INSTITUTE ECONOMIC REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {249},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {R3-R16},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is often treated as shorthand for national
|
|
economic well-being, even though it was never intended to be; it is a
|
|
measure of (some) of the marketable output of the economy. This paper
|
|
reviews several developments in measuring welfare beyond GDP that were
|
|
recently presented at the Economic Statistics Centre of Excellence
|
|
(ESCoE) annual conference in May 2019. The papers discussed fall into
|
|
three broad areas. First, a significant amount of work has focused on
|
|
incorporating information about the distribution of income, consumption
|
|
and wealth in the national accounts. Second, the effects of digitisation
|
|
and the growth of the internet highlight the potential value in
|
|
measuring time use as a measure of welfare. Third, the digital
|
|
revolution has spawned many new, often `free' goods, the welfare
|
|
consequences of which are difficult to measure. Other areas, such as
|
|
government services, are also difficult to measure. Measuring economic
|
|
welfare properly matters because it affects the decisions made by
|
|
government and society. GDP does a reasonable job of measuring the
|
|
marketable output of the economy (which remains important for some
|
|
policies), but it should be downgraded; more attention should be given
|
|
to measures that reflect both objective and subjective measures of
|
|
well-being, and measures that better reflect the heterogeneity of
|
|
peoples' experiences.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Aitken, A (Corresponding Author), Natl Inst Econ \& Social Res, London, England.
|
|
Aitken, A (Corresponding Author), Econ Stat Ctr Excellence ESCoE, London, England.
|
|
Aitken, Andrew, Natl Inst Econ \& Social Res, London, England.
|
|
Aitken, Andrew, Econ Stat Ctr Excellence ESCoE, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/002795011924900110},
|
|
ISSN = {0027-9501},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-3036},
|
|
Keywords = {GDP; welfare; inequality; time use; digital economy; economic
|
|
measurement},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME; INEQUALITY; GROWTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {a.aitken@niesr.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {31},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000476948500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000456285000002,
|
|
Author = {Tanwir, Maryam and Khemka, Nitya},
|
|
Title = {Breaking the silicon ceiling: Gender equality and information technology
|
|
in Pakistan},
|
|
Journal = {GENDER TECHNOLOGY \& DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {109-129},
|
|
Abstract = {In a rapidly globalizing world, high growth sectors like information
|
|
technology (IT) hold the key to narrow or broaden the gulf between men
|
|
and women at work. However, there is a serious underrepresentation of
|
|
women in the technology sector, particularly in leadership roles. This
|
|
gulf between men and women at work is likely to widen unless immediate
|
|
action is taken. ICT jobs can provide women with greater opportunities
|
|
and higher wages, compared to the low-skill jobs that women are often
|
|
crowded into. Yet, achieving gender neutrality and inclusivity in the IT
|
|
sector is an uphill task. This paper focuses on the challenges,
|
|
opportunities and conditions that can be created to facilitate the
|
|
participation of urban, educated women of Pakistan in the IT sector.
|
|
Although the empowerment aspects of individualization in the workplace
|
|
for women are tangible, in Pakistan, there are a number of
|
|
socio-cultural barriers and an implicit gender bias in education and
|
|
employment which prevents greater participation of women in the IT
|
|
sector. The paper also sets out specific recommendations for the
|
|
government and private sectors to further increase gender inclusivity in
|
|
employment. In doing so, it draws upon primary research and current
|
|
behavioral economic insights and makes the case that a multi-sectoral
|
|
effort involving the private sector, government, and macro-social
|
|
environment is critical to radically disrupting bias, providing
|
|
norm-changing solutions, and ensuring rapid gains to the economy from
|
|
the inclusion of women in the sector.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tanwir, M (Corresponding Author), Ctr Dev Studies, 7 West Rd, Cambridge CB3 9DP, England.
|
|
Tanwir, Maryam; Khemka, Nitya, Univ Cambridge, Ctr Dev Studies, Cambridge, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09718524.2018.1496695},
|
|
ISSN = {0971-8524},
|
|
EISSN = {0973-0656},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender; information technology; work force participation; Pakistan;
|
|
unconscious bias; gender stereotype},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ROLE-MODELS; WOMEN; SCIENCE; FEMALE; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {mt383@cam.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000456285000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000799637800001,
|
|
Author = {Evertsson, Marie and Malmquist, Anna},
|
|
Title = {Division of Care and Leave Arrangements in Gay Father Families in Sweden},
|
|
Journal = {SEXUALITY RESEARCH AND SOCIAL POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {242-256},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction This study analyses the division of parental leave and the
|
|
income development in gay father families through surrogacy in Sweden,
|
|
seen as one of the most family-friendly and egalitarian countries in the
|
|
world. Methods Based on longitudinal population register data,
|
|
descriptive and bivariate regression models are estimated to analyse the
|
|
parental leave uptake and income development of married partners
|
|
becoming (first-time) parents in 2006-2015 (in total 53 couples).
|
|
Retrospective in-depth interviews with 23 gay men in 12 couples,
|
|
conducted in 2010 and 2018 are analysed thematically to study how
|
|
fathers discussed and decided how to divide the leave. Results The
|
|
process of establishing legal parenthood delays the fathers' access to
|
|
reimbursed parental leave. Despite this, the fathers' earnings were not
|
|
considerably affected by the addition of a child to the family. Once the
|
|
fathers had access to reimbursed leave, they generally shared this
|
|
equally, with a tendency for the genetic father to take leave first and
|
|
for a slightly longer period. Conclusions The fathers becoming parents
|
|
via surrogacy arrangements are a well-off group, able to counter the
|
|
negative financial consequences of becoming parents. Swedish family
|
|
policies enable parents to share the leave equally. Less impacted by
|
|
gender and parenthood norms creating difference between parents, gay
|
|
father families are in a better position to realise ideals of shared
|
|
care and sameness. Policy Implications The delayed access to reimbursed
|
|
parental leave structures the ability of gay couples to become parents
|
|
and contributes to class inequalities in the transition to parenthood.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Evertsson, M (Corresponding Author), Stockholm Univ, Swedish Inst Social Res, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Evertsson, Marie, Stockholm Univ, Swedish Inst Social Res, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Malmquist, Anna, Linkoping Univ, Div Psychol, Dept Behav Sci \& Learning, Linkoping, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s13178-022-00732-9},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1868-9884},
|
|
EISSN = {1553-6610},
|
|
Keywords = {Gay; Father; Care leave; Parental leave; Earnings; Income; Surrogacy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PARENTAL LEAVE; DYADIC INTERVIEWS; CHILD-CARE; OF-LABOR; GENDER;
|
|
COUPLES; WOMENS; WORK; TRANSITION; COUNTRIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {marie.evertsson@sofi.su.se},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Evertsson, Marie/0000-0001-8218-9342},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000799637800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000856075000001,
|
|
Author = {Kerman, Nick and Goodwin, Jordan M. and Tiderington, Emmy and Ecker,
|
|
John and Stergiopoulos, Vicky and Kidd, Sean A.},
|
|
Title = {Towards the Quadruple Aim in permanent supportive housing: A mixed
|
|
methods study of workplace mental health among service providers},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH \& SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {E6674-E6688},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {The Quadruple Aim is a health policy framework with the objective of
|
|
concurrently improving population health, enhancing the service
|
|
experience, reducing costs and improving the work-life of service
|
|
providers. Permanent supportive housing (PSH) is a best practice
|
|
approach for stably housing people experiencing homelessness who have
|
|
diverse support needs. Despite the intervention's strong evidence base,
|
|
little is known about the work-life of PSH providers. This study
|
|
explored the mental health and work challenges experienced by PSH
|
|
providers in Canada. Using an explanatory sequential, equally weighted,
|
|
mixed methods design, 130 PSH providers were surveyed, followed by
|
|
semi-structured interviews with 18 providers. Quantitative findings
|
|
showed that 23.1\% of PSH providers had high psychological distress.
|
|
Participants who were younger, spent all or almost all of their time in
|
|
direct contact with service users and had less social support from
|
|
coworkers were significantly more likely to have high psychological
|
|
distress. Three themes were identified from the qualitative analysis
|
|
that showed how PSH providers experience psychological distress from
|
|
work-related challenges: (a) Sisyphean Endeavours: `You Do What You
|
|
Can', (b) Occupationally Unsupported: `Everyone Is Stuck in Their Zone'
|
|
and (c) Wear and Tear of `Continuous Exposure to Crisis and Chaos'. The
|
|
themes interacted with systemic (Sisyphean Endeavours) and
|
|
organisational issues (Occupationally Unsupported), intensifying the
|
|
emotional burden of day-to-day work, which involved frequent crises and
|
|
uncertainty (Wear and Tear of `Continuous Exposure to Crisis and
|
|
Chaos'). The findings underscore how these challenges threaten
|
|
providers' wellness at work and have implications for the care provided
|
|
to service users. Accordingly, the Quadruple Aim is a potentially useful
|
|
and applicable framework for measuring the performance of PSH programs,
|
|
which warrants further consideration in research and policy.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kerman, N (Corresponding Author), Ctr Addict \& Mental Hlth, 1051 Queen St West, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kerman, Nick; Stergiopoulos, Vicky; Kidd, Sean A., Ctr Addict \& Mental Hlth, 1051 Queen St West, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Goodwin, Jordan M., Rutgers State Univ, Sch Social Work, New Brunswick, NJ USA.
|
|
Tiderington, Emmy, Rutgers State Univ, Sch Social Work, Newark, NJ USA.
|
|
Ecker, John, York Univ, Canadian Observ Homelessness, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Stergiopoulos, Vicky; Kidd, Sean A., Univ Toronto, Dept Psychiat, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/hsc.14033},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-0410},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2524},
|
|
Keywords = {Housing First; permanent supportive housing; Quadruple Aim; secondary
|
|
traumatization; service provision; social support; workplace mental
|
|
health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HIGH-INCOME COUNTRIES; HOMELESS INDIVIDUALS; SUBSTANCE USE; CARE; 1ST;
|
|
EPIDEMIOLOGY; DISORDER; BARRIERS; CULTURE; ILLNESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {nick.kerman@camh.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tiderington, Emmy/AAF-7137-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tiderington, Emmy/0000-0001-7934-0961},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000856075000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000397958100013,
|
|
Author = {Suh, Moon-Gi},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of Female Labor Force Participation in South Korea: Tracing
|
|
out the U-shaped Curve by Economic Growth},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {131},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {255-269},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper attempts to investigate the structural relationship between
|
|
economic growth and female labor force participation in Korea. The
|
|
recurring issue of whether women's integration to the society is
|
|
critical becomes salient once again, but with little consideration of
|
|
its meaning and potential consequences. It extends further the research
|
|
theme that the degree of female labor force participation relies on the
|
|
extent to which social context is reflected in the time-series data for
|
|
the country from 1980 to 2014. While multiple theories are being
|
|
espoused in this research, effects traced across levels of analysis and
|
|
over substantial temporality lead up to a system of dynamic causal
|
|
relationships, using contingency table and log-linear analysis. It
|
|
appears to be supported in the regression analysis that the country
|
|
travels through the U-shaped curve over time whereas income inequality
|
|
displays greater impact on women's employment. The empirical estimates
|
|
of social transformation credit this trend to family structure and
|
|
wife's education, as the second pivot that, at least, noneconomic causal
|
|
factors are also operative.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Suh, MG (Corresponding Author), Soongil Univ, Dept Informat Sociol, Sangdo Ro 369, Seoul 06978, South Korea.
|
|
Suh, Moon-Gi, Soongil Univ, Dept Informat Sociol, Sangdo Ro 369, Seoul 06978, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11205-016-1245-1},
|
|
ISSN = {0303-8300},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-0921},
|
|
Keywords = {Economic growth; Women's employment; Family structure; Educational
|
|
attainment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {mgsuh@ssu.ac.kr},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000397958100013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001061202500001,
|
|
Author = {Baruah, Bipasha and Biskupski-Mujanovic, Sandra},
|
|
Title = {Indigenous women's employment in natural resource industries in Canada:
|
|
Patterns, barriers and opportunities},
|
|
Journal = {WOMENS STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {99},
|
|
Month = {JUL-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper identifies barriers and opportunities that Indigenous women
|
|
in Canada face in energy, mining, and forest sector employment through a
|
|
review of scholarly and practitioner literature published between 2000
|
|
and 2022, and 10 in-depth interviews conducted between May and August
|
|
2021 with Indigenous women working in various capacities within (or
|
|
knowledgeable about) natural resources industries in the Yukon,
|
|
Northwest Ter-ritories, and Nunavut. Our findings reveal that it is
|
|
important to understand the intersections of gender, culture,
|
|
ethnicity/race, language, and class to respond to the challenges
|
|
Indigenous women face in natural resources employment. Some of the
|
|
barriers that Indigenous women encounter in these industries are similar
|
|
to those faced by non-Indigenous women (glass ceilings, lack of mentors,
|
|
for example). Indigenous women encounter the added dimension of racism
|
|
(based on Indigenous status) as well as limitations based on geographic
|
|
location. Our recommendations for improving the status of Indigenous
|
|
women in natural resources industries in Canada include implementing
|
|
specific targets for Indigenous women in professional, technical, and
|
|
senior administrative positions; enabling the Native Women's Association
|
|
of Canada to serve as an information and employment conduit to industry
|
|
associations and employers; and creating mechanisms to enable Indigenous
|
|
women who live off-reserve to access quality employment opportunities.
|
|
Enabling Indigenous women to access skilled, well-paid employment in
|
|
natural resources should be considered a key priority and opportunity
|
|
for governments, resource development companies, industry associations
|
|
and gender equality advocacy organizations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baruah, B (Corresponding Author), Western Univ, Dept Gender Sexual \& Womens Studies, 1151 Richmond St, London, ON N6A 5B8, Canada.
|
|
Baruah, Bipasha; Biskupski-Mujanovic, Sandra, Western Univ, Dept Gender Sexual \& Womens Studies, 1151 Richmond St, London, ON N6A 5B8, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.wsif.2023.102784},
|
|
Article-Number = {102784},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-5395},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-243X},
|
|
Keywords = {Indigenous women; Employment; Canada; Mining; Forestry; Energy; Natural
|
|
resources; Racism; Sexism},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LAND-USE; MANAGEMENT; FORESTRY; GENDER; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {bbaruah@uwo.ca
|
|
sbiskups@uwo.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001061202500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000167192600002,
|
|
Author = {Stryker, R},
|
|
Title = {Disparate impact and the quota debates: Law, labor market sociology, and
|
|
equal employment policies},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIOLOGICAL QUARTERLY},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {13-46},
|
|
Month = {WIN},
|
|
Note = {Annual Meeting of the American-Sociological-Association, NEW YORK, NEW
|
|
YORK, AUG 16-20, 1996},
|
|
Abstract = {Bringing sociological theory and research to bear on the ``quota
|
|
debates{''} dogging discussion of federal civil rights legislation in
|
|
the early 1990s, this article highlights sociology's role in shaping
|
|
employment law and shows how apparently technical legal arguments about
|
|
allocating burdens of proof affect labor market resource allocation
|
|
among the classes, races, and genders. Contrasting
|
|
institutional-sociological with liberal-legal concepts of
|
|
discrimination, the article shows why disparate impact theory has been
|
|
the most sociological approach to Title VII enforcement. It also shows
|
|
how disparate impact-a theory and method for establishing legally
|
|
cognizable employment discrimination injurious to women and
|
|
minorities-is, and is not, related to affirmative action-a policy
|
|
encompassing a broad range of procedures intended to provide positive
|
|
consideration to members of groups discriminated against in the past.
|
|
Finally, a competing incentive framework is used to show that, although
|
|
disparate impact creates some incentives for employers to adopt quota
|
|
hiring, such incentives are counter-balanced by major incentives working
|
|
against race- and gender-based quotas. Major counterincentives stem from
|
|
disparate impact itself, from other aspects of equal employment law, and
|
|
from organizational goals shaping business response to the legal
|
|
environment.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Stryker, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Minnesota, Dept Sociol, 909 Social Sci Bldg,267 19th Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
|
|
Univ Minnesota, Dept Sociol, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1525/tsq.2001.42.1.13},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-0253},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {AFFIRMATIVE-ACTION; CIVIL-RIGHTS; SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION; TITLE-VII;
|
|
DISCRIMINATION; ANTIDISCRIMINATION; WORKPLACE; TRANSFORMATION;
|
|
SEGREGATION; OPPORTUNITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {111},
|
|
Times-Cited = {28},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000167192600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000825159600001,
|
|
Author = {Gomes Fernandes, Ana Paula and Cardoso, Veronica Ribeiro and dos Santos,
|
|
Kamila Cristina and Migliaccio, Mariane Martins and Pinto, Juliana
|
|
Martins},
|
|
Title = {Factors related to the accumulation of healthy behavior among older
|
|
adults attending primary Health Care},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF POPULATION AGEING},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {3, SI},
|
|
Pages = {677-690},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {The adoption and maintenance of healthy behaviors contribute for its
|
|
accumulation throughout life, which require more than information
|
|
disclosure and recommendations. Biopsychosocial factors may work as
|
|
barriers to adherence to healthier behaviors, and yet have been
|
|
underexplored. The objective was to investigate the factors related to
|
|
the accumulation of healthy behavior among older adults attending
|
|
Primary Health Care. Cross-sectional analysis with 201 older adults from
|
|
baseline of Longitudinal Investigation of Functioning Epidemiology
|
|
(LIFE) was performed in a Southeastern Brazilian city. The Healthy
|
|
Behavior Score (HBS), ranging from 0 to 8, was calculated by the sum of
|
|
the following habits: Physical activity practice, healthy eating, water
|
|
consumption, night sleep time, not smoking, not drinking alcohol,
|
|
frequent social relations, and spirituality. A linear multivariate
|
|
regression was performed to test the influence of biopsychosocial
|
|
aspects on HBS, with 95\% confidence interval. Higher number of healthy
|
|
behaviors was related to high social support, better cognitive status,
|
|
less depressive symptoms and lower functional performance. Additionally,
|
|
age and resilience score were correlated to healthy behaviors, which
|
|
were higher among women and those with sufficient income. Multivariate
|
|
analysis revealed depressive symptoms, functional performance and
|
|
education as independent predictors of HBS. Depressive symptoms,
|
|
functional performance and education are predictors of accumulation of
|
|
health behaviors, independently of health status, contextual and
|
|
sociodemographic aspects. Higher social support partially contributed to
|
|
the higher number of healthy behaviors, and should be considered in
|
|
public health policies for healthy longevity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pinto, JM (Corresponding Author), Univ Fed Triangulo Mineiro, Inst Hlth Sci, Dept Phys Therapy, Lab Phys Therapy \& Publ Hlth, 100 Vigario Carlos St, BR-38025350 Uberaba, MG, Brazil.
|
|
Gomes Fernandes, Ana Paula, Univ Fed Triangulo Mineiro, Grad Program Phys Therapy, Uberaba, MG, Brazil.
|
|
Cardoso, Veronica Ribeiro; dos Santos, Kamila Cristina; Migliaccio, Mariane Martins, Univ Fed Triangulo Mineiro, Undergrad Program Phys Therapy, Uberaba, MG, Brazil.
|
|
Pinto, Juliana Martins, Univ Fed Triangulo Mineiro, Inst Hlth Sci, Dept Phys Therapy, Lab Phys Therapy \& Publ Hlth, 100 Vigario Carlos St, BR-38025350 Uberaba, MG, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s12062-022-09376-4},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1874-7884},
|
|
EISSN = {1874-7876},
|
|
Keywords = {Quality of life; Public Health; Health Promotion; Preventive medicine;
|
|
Aging},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MORTALITY; ASSOCIATION; DISEASE; WOMEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {ana\_paulagf@yahoo.com.br
|
|
ve.ribeirocardoso@gmail.com
|
|
kaamila.cs@gmail.com
|
|
marianemigliaccio@gmail.com
|
|
juliana.martins@uftm.edu.br},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pinto, Juliana Martins/A-1940-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Pinto, Juliana Martins/0000-0003-2617-3308
|
|
Migliaccio, Mariane/0000-0002-6656-5093
|
|
Cristina dos Santos, Kamila/0000-0002-3337-1479
|
|
Ribeiro Cardoso, Veronica/0000-0003-0048-0561
|
|
Gomes Fernandes, Ana Paula/0000-0001-5424-755X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000825159600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000251939900009,
|
|
Author = {Esselman, Peter C. and Askay, Shelley Wiechman and Carrougher, Gretchen
|
|
J. and Lezotte, Dennis C. and Holavanahalli, Radha K. and
|
|
Magyar-Russell, Gina and Fauerbach, James A. and Engrav, Loren H.},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to return to work after burn injuries},
|
|
Journal = {ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {88},
|
|
Number = {12, 2},
|
|
Pages = {S50-S56},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To identify barriers to return to work after burn injury as
|
|
identified by the patient.
|
|
Design: A cohort study with telephone interview up to 1 year.
|
|
Setting: Hospital-based burn centers at 3 national sites.
|
|
Participants: Hospitalized patients (N=154) meeting-the American Burn
|
|
Association criteria for major burn injury, employed at least 20 hours a
|
|
week at the time of injury, and with access to a telephone after
|
|
discharge.
|
|
Intervention: Patients were contacted via telephone every 2 weeks up to
|
|
4 months, then monthly up to I year after discharge.
|
|
Main Outcome Measures: A return to work survey was used to identify
|
|
barriers that prevented patients from returning to work. A graphic
|
|
rating scale determined the impact of each barrier.
|
|
Results: By 1 year, 79.7\% of patients returned to work. Physical and
|
|
wound issues were barriers early after discharge. Although physical
|
|
abilities continued to be a significant barrier up to I year, working
|
|
conditions (temperature, humidity, safety) and psychosocial factors
|
|
(nightmares, flashbacks, appearance concerns) became important issues in
|
|
those with long-term disability.
|
|
Conclusions: The majority of patients return to work after a burn
|
|
injury. Although physical and work conditions are important barriers,
|
|
psychosocial issues need to be evaluated and treated to optimize return
|
|
to work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Esselman, PC (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Dept Rehabil Med, 325 9th Ave,Box 359740, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Esselman, Peter C.; Askay, Shelley Wiechman, Univ Washington, Dept Rehabil Med, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Carrougher, Gretchen J.; Engrav, Loren H., Univ Washington, Dept Surg, Div Plast Surg, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Lezotte, Dennis C., Univ Colorado, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Prevent Med \& Biometr, Denver, CO 80262 USA.
|
|
Holavanahalli, Radha K., Univ Texas SW Med Ctr Dallas, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, Dallas, TX 75390 USA.
|
|
Magyar-Russell, Gina; Fauerbach, James A., Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.apmr.2007.09.009},
|
|
ISSN = {0003-9993},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-821X},
|
|
Keywords = {burns; employment; rehabilitation; work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {REHABILITATION; EMPLOYMENT; HEALTH; INTERVENTIONS; DISABILITY;
|
|
WORKPLACE; OUTCOMES; RATES; ICF},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Sport Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {esselman@u.washington.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {66},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000251939900009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000077295200001,
|
|
Author = {Aldous, J and Mulligan, GM and Bjarnason, T},
|
|
Title = {Fathering over time: What makes the difference?},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY},
|
|
Year = {1998},
|
|
Volume = {60},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {809-820},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Note = {34th Seminar of the Committee-on-Family-Research of the
|
|
International-Sociological-Association, ISRAEL, MAY 19, 1997},
|
|
Abstract = {This article examines how much fathers participate in child care, an
|
|
important component of domestic duties, and factors related to it. It
|
|
has the advantage of longitudinal data, so that it is possible to look
|
|
at changes in fathers' participation and factors affecting changes and
|
|
continuities over time. The data come from the 1987-1988 and 1992-1993
|
|
National Surveys of Families and Households. The sample is restricted to
|
|
White, two-parent families with at least one child younger than 5 years
|
|
of age at the time of the first survey. The analyses control for the
|
|
number of children and the gender of the child for whom there is
|
|
fathering information. Based on prior theories and research, the study
|
|
variables related to fathers' child care include performance of
|
|
household tasks, their marital quality, gender tale ideologies,
|
|
perceptions of the fairness of the division of domestic label; and the
|
|
mothers' childcare hours. The labor-force variables are the husbands'
|
|
and wives' hours of paid employment, as well as the earned incomes of
|
|
husbands and wives. The findings indicate that hours on the job keep
|
|
some men from active fathering, but if they begin taking care of young
|
|
children, a continuing pattern is established. Mothers' child-care hours
|
|
are positively related to fathers' child care, and fathers do more with
|
|
sons. The discussion places the findings in theoretical context.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Aldous, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Notre Dame, Dept Sociol, 325 OShaughnessy, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.
|
|
Univ Notre Dame, Dept Sociol, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2307/353626},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-2445},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-3737},
|
|
Keywords = {child care; childrearing; fathering; parenting; paternal involvement},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DUAL-EARNER COUPLES; HOUSEHOLD LABOR; MENS HOUSEWORK; CHILD-CARE;
|
|
DIVISION; GENDER; PARTICIPATION; DETERMINANTS; PERCEPTIONS; INVOLVEMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {joan.aldous.1@nd.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bjarnason, Thoroddur/A-9603-2008},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bjarnason, Thoroddur/0000-0002-1400-231X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {150},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {29},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000077295200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000344381000005,
|
|
Author = {Xu, Tianxi and Dempsey, Ian and Foreman, Phil},
|
|
Title = {Views of Chinese parents and transition teachers on school-to-work
|
|
transition services for adolescents with intellectual disability: A
|
|
qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL \& DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {342-352},
|
|
Month = {OCT 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Background The use of effective theory and practice in school-to-work
|
|
transition for adolescents with intellectual disability (ID) is
|
|
essential to enhance transition outcomes. In China, little attention has
|
|
been paid to these issues. The current study explored Chinese parents'
|
|
and transition teachers' views on school-to-work transition services for
|
|
adolescents with ID.
|
|
Method Fourteen transition teachers and 14 parents across 7 cities in
|
|
China were interviewed, and the interview data were thematically
|
|
analysed.
|
|
Results The results suggest that the chief reasons for poor transition
|
|
outcomes in China include social bias toward and limited employability
|
|
of adolescents with ID, lack of quality transition programs, and
|
|
insufficient policy and financial support.
|
|
Conclusions It is recommended that the Chinese government, employers,
|
|
transition institutions, and families make changes to address the
|
|
underachievement of postsecondary transition outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Xu, TX (Corresponding Author), Univ Newcastle, Sch Educ, Ctr Special Educ \& Disabil Studies, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia.
|
|
Xu, Tianxi; Dempsey, Ian; Foreman, Phil, Univ Newcastle, Sch Educ, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3109/13668250.2014.947920},
|
|
ISSN = {1366-8250},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-9532},
|
|
Keywords = {China; parent and transition teacher views; school-to-work transition;
|
|
intellectual disability},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPECIAL-EDUCATION; PROMOTE TRANSITION; YOUNG-PEOPLE; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
OUTCOMES; PROFESSIONALS; PERSPECTIVES; PERCEPTIONS; STUDENTS; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Special; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {tianxi.xu@uon.edu.au},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {28},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000344381000005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000186957700006,
|
|
Author = {Dick, AW and Klein, JD and Shone, LP and Zwanziger, J and Yu, H and
|
|
Szilagyi, PG},
|
|
Title = {The evolution of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
|
|
in New York: Changing program features and enrollee characteristics},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {112},
|
|
Number = {6, S},
|
|
Pages = {E542-E550},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background. The State Children's Health Insurance Program ( SCHIP) has
|
|
been operating for > 5 years. Policy makers are interested in the
|
|
characteristics of children who have enrolled and changes in the health
|
|
care needs of enrolled children as programs mature. New York State's
|
|
SCHIP evolved from a similar statewide health insurance program that was
|
|
developed in 1991 ( Child Health Plus {[} CHPlus]). Understanding how
|
|
current SCHIP enrollees differ from early CHPlus enrollees together with
|
|
how program features changed during the period may shed light on how
|
|
best to serve the evolving SCHIP population.
|
|
Objective. To 1) describe changes in the characteristics of children
|
|
enrolled in 1994 CHPlus and 2001 SCHIP; 2) determine if changes in the
|
|
near- poor, age- eligible population during the time period could
|
|
account for the evolution of enrollment; and 3) describe changes in the
|
|
program during the period that could be responsible for the enrollment
|
|
changes.
|
|
Setting. New York State, stratified into 4 regions: New York City, New
|
|
York City environs, upstate urban counties, and upstate rural counties.
|
|
Design. Retrospective telephone interviews of parents of 2 cohorts of
|
|
CHPlus enrollees: 1) children who enrolled in CHPlus in 1993 to 1994 and
|
|
2) children who enrolled in New York's SCHIP in 2000 to 2001. The
|
|
Current Population Survey ( CPS) 1992 to 1994 and 1999 to 2001 were used
|
|
to identify secular trends that could explain differences in the CHPlus
|
|
and SCHIP enrollees.
|
|
Program Characteristics. 1994 CHPlus and 2001 SCHIP were similar in
|
|
design, both limiting eligibility by age, family income, and insurance
|
|
status. SCHIP 2001 included 1) expansion of eligibility to adolescents
|
|
13 to 19 years old; 2) expansion of benefits to include
|
|
hospitalizations, mental health, and dental benefits; 3) changes in
|
|
premium contributions; 4) more participating insurance plans, limited to
|
|
managed care; 5) expansions in marketing and outreach; and 6) a combined
|
|
enrollment application for SCHIP and several low- income programs
|
|
including Medicaid.
|
|
Sample. Cohort 1 included 2126 new CHPlus enrollees 0 to 13 years old
|
|
who were enrolled for at least 9 months, stratified by geographic
|
|
region. Cohort 2 included 1100 new SCHIP enrollees 0 to 13 years old who
|
|
were enrolled for at least 9 months, stratified by geographic region,
|
|
age, race, and ethnicity. Results were weighted to be representative of
|
|
statewide CHPlus or SCHIP new enrollees who met the sampling criteria.
|
|
Samples of age- and income- eligible children from New York State were
|
|
drawn from the CPS and pooled and reweighted ( 1992 - 1994 and 1999 -
|
|
2001) to generate a comparison group of children targeted by CHPlus and
|
|
SCHIP.
|
|
Measures. Sociodemographic characteristics, race and ethnicity ( white
|
|
non- Hispanic, black non- Hispanic, and Hispanic), prior health
|
|
insurance, health care access, and first source of information about the
|
|
program.
|
|
Analyses. Weighted bivariate analyses ( comparisons of means and rates)
|
|
adjusted for the complex sampling design to compare measures between the
|
|
2 program cohorts and between the 2 CPS samples. We tested for
|
|
equivalence by using chi(2) statistics.
|
|
Results. As the program evolved from CHPlus to SCHIP, relatively more
|
|
black and Hispanic children enrolled ( 9\% to 30\% black from 1994 to
|
|
2001, and 16\% to 48\% Hispanic), more New York City residents ( 46\% to
|
|
69\% from 1994 to 2001), more children with parents who had less than a
|
|
high school education ( 10\% to 25\%), more children from lower income
|
|
families ( 59\% to 75\% below 150\% of the federal poverty level), and
|
|
more children from families with parents not working ( 7\% to 20\%)
|
|
enrolled. These socioeconomic and demographic changes were not reflected
|
|
in the underlying age- and income-eligible population. A greater
|
|
proportion of 2001 enrollees were uninsured for some time immediately
|
|
before enrollment ( 57\% to 76\% had an uninsured gap), were insured by
|
|
Medicaid during the year before enrollment ( 23\% to 48\%), and lacked a
|
|
USC ( 5\% to 14\%). Although `` word of mouth{''} was the most common
|
|
means by which families heard about both programs, a greater proportion
|
|
of 2001 enrollees learned about SCHIP from marketing or outreach
|
|
sources.
|
|
Conclusion. As New York programs for the uninsured evolved, more
|
|
children from minority groups, with lower family incomes and education,
|
|
and having less baseline access to health care were enrolled. Although
|
|
changes in the underlying population were relatively small,
|
|
progressively increased marketing and outreach, particularly in New York
|
|
City, the introduction of a single application form for SCHIP and
|
|
Medicaid, and expansions in the benefit package may have accounted, in
|
|
part, for the large change in the characteristics of enrollees.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dick, AW (Corresponding Author), Univ Rochester, Sch Med \& Dent, Dept Community \& Prevent Med, Div Hlth Serv Res \& Policy, 601 Elmwood Ave, Rochester, NY 14642 USA.
|
|
Univ Rochester, Sch Med \& Dent, Dept Community \& Prevent Med, Div Hlth Serv Res \& Policy, Rochester, NY 14642 USA.
|
|
Univ Rochester, Sch Med \& Dent, Dept Pediat, Strong Childrens Res Ctr, Rochester, NY 14642 USA.
|
|
Univ Illinois, Chicago, IL USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0031-4005},
|
|
EISSN = {1098-4275},
|
|
Keywords = {access to health care; health insurance; children; New York State;
|
|
disparities; race; ethnicity; SCHIP},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEDICARE; SELECTION; CARE; HMOS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {adick@rochester.rr.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Klein, Jonathan/0000-0003-4185-1998},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000186957700006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000434119500007,
|
|
Author = {Steinke, M. K. and Rogers, M. and Lehwaldt, D. and Lamarche, K.},
|
|
Title = {An examination of advanced practice nurses' job satisfaction
|
|
internationally},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL NURSING REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {65},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {162-172},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {AimTo examine the level of job satisfaction of nurse
|
|
practitioners/advanced practice nurses in developing and developed
|
|
countries.
|
|
BackgroundThe nurse practitioner/advanced practice nurse has the
|
|
advanced, complex skills and experience to play an important role in
|
|
providing equitable health care across all nations.
|
|
IntroductionKey factors that contribute to health disparities include
|
|
lack of access to global health human resources, the right skill mix of
|
|
healthcare providers and the satisfaction and retention of quality
|
|
workers.
|
|
MethodsThe study utilized a descriptive analysis and cross-sectional
|
|
survey methodology with quantitative and qualitative sections of 1419
|
|
job satisfaction survey respondents from an online survey.
|
|
ResultsAge, number of hours worked in a week and length of time that
|
|
nurse practitioners/advanced practice nurses worked in their current
|
|
jobs were statistically significant in job satisfaction. A key barrier
|
|
was the lack of respect from supervisors and physicians.
|
|
DiscussionIt was clear from the number of comments in the qualitative
|
|
section of the survey that having a wide scope of practice is rewarding
|
|
and challenging to the nurse practitioner and advanced practice nurse.
|
|
Conclusion and implications for health policyThe challenges to transform
|
|
healthcare gaps of access into a better distribution of health care in
|
|
all countries would constitute a systematic change in policy including
|
|
providing education and training for doctors and nurses that will match
|
|
the skills needed in the workplace; emphasizing the right skill mix for
|
|
the healthcare team; supporting advanced practice nurses in the
|
|
workplace; and utilizing all healthcare providers to the fullest extent
|
|
of their abilities.},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Steinke, MK (Corresponding Author), Indiana Univ, Kokomo Sch Nursing, 2300 South Washington, Kokomo, IN 46904 USA.
|
|
Steinke, M. K., Indiana Univ, Sch Nursing, Kokomo, IN USA.
|
|
Rogers, M., Univ Huddersfield, Huddersfield, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Lehwaldt, D., Dublin City Univ, Sch Nursing \& Human Sci, Dublin, Ireland.
|
|
Lamarche, K., Athabasca Univ, Fac Hlth Disciplines, Athabasca, AB, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/inr.12389},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-8132},
|
|
EISSN = {1466-7657},
|
|
Keywords = {Advanced Practice Nurse; Barriers to Job Satisfaction; Developed and
|
|
Developing Countries; Facilitators of Job Satisfaction; Health Care;
|
|
Mixed-Method Design; Nurse Practitioner},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRACTITIONERS; EDUCATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {msteinke@iuk.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000434119500007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000491087800007,
|
|
Author = {Zandam, Hussain and Juni, Muhamad Hanafiah},
|
|
Title = {Equity analysis of health system accessibility from perspective of
|
|
people with disability},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH GOVERNANCE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {298-309},
|
|
Month = {NOV 21},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose Self-evaluated access and accessibility has been found to be
|
|
associated with healthcare seeking and quality of life. Studies have
|
|
shown that, however, a vast majority of individuals with disability
|
|
living in poor countries have limited access to healthcare influenced by
|
|
several barriers. The purpose of this paper is to compare the perception
|
|
of general accessibility of health care services and its association
|
|
with access barriers and other contextual factors between people with
|
|
physical disabilities and counterparts without disability.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach This study is a cross sectional survey
|
|
involving 213 individuals with physical disabilities and 213
|
|
counterparts without disability sampled using a multi-stage method. Data
|
|
were collected using a structured questionnaire with sections on
|
|
socioeconomic and living conditions, education, health, employment and
|
|
access to health care. Data analysis involved using chi(2) for
|
|
proportions and T-test and multiple regressions (stepwise) method to
|
|
determine significant factors that influence perception on
|
|
accessibility. Findings The study finds that people with disabilities
|
|
fared worse in various socioeconomic factors such as education,
|
|
employment, income and assets possession. People with disabilities also
|
|
experience more dimensional barriers and reported poor health system
|
|
accessibility. The difference in accessibility continued after adjusting
|
|
for other variables, implying that there are more inherent factors that
|
|
explain the perception of access for people with disabilities. Practical
|
|
implications - Governments should ensure equitable access to health care
|
|
delivery for people with disabilities through equitable health policies
|
|
and services that are responsive to the needs of people with
|
|
disabilities and promote the creation of enabling environment to enhance
|
|
participation in health care delivery. Originality/value The authors
|
|
confirm that the paper has neither been submitted to peer review, nor is
|
|
in the process of peer reviewing or accepted for publishing in another
|
|
journal. The author(s) confirms that the research in this work is
|
|
original, and that all the data given in the paper are real and
|
|
authentic. If necessary, the paper can be recalled, and errors
|
|
corrected. The undersigned authors transfer the copyright for this work
|
|
to the International Journal of Health Governance. The authors are free
|
|
of any personal or business association that could represent a conflict
|
|
of interest regarding the paper submitted, and the authors have
|
|
respected the research ethics principles.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zandam, H (Corresponding Author), Univ Putra Malaysia, Dept Community Hlth, Serdang, Malaysia.
|
|
Zandam, Hussain, Univ Putra Malaysia, Dept Community Hlth, Serdang, Malaysia.
|
|
Juni, Muhamad Hanafiah, Univ Putra Malaysia, Fac Med \& Hlth, Dept Community Hlth, Hlth Serv Management Unit, Serdang, Malaysia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJHG-11-2018-0067},
|
|
ISSN = {2059-4631},
|
|
Keywords = {Primary care; Patient perspectives; Emerging healthcare delivery
|
|
structures; Quantitative research; Health law or regulation; Public
|
|
health regulations},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; ACCESS; CARE; BARRIERS; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {huzandam@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Zandam, Hussaini/AAF-7449-2020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000491087800007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000386645600010,
|
|
Author = {Tsiboe, Francis and Zereyesus, Yacob A. and Osei, Evelyn},
|
|
Title = {Non-farm work, food poverty, and nutrient availability in northern Ghana},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {A},
|
|
Pages = {97-107},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite the significant economic development in Ghana, northern Ghana
|
|
has made little progress. Nationally, households engaged in the non-farm
|
|
work are less likely to be categorized as poor, relative to those
|
|
engaged in farming only. Given the well-established positive nexus
|
|
between non-farm work and food security, this study extends the
|
|
literature by analyzing the nexus between different types of non-farm
|
|
work (own business, wage employment, and their combination) and
|
|
household food nutrient availability in northern Ghana. Results from an
|
|
application of a linear regression with endogenous treatment effects
|
|
model to a sample of 3488 farming households and 5770 individuals
|
|
indicate that, non-farm work positively affects food nutrient
|
|
availability; and that farming households that own non-farm business are
|
|
superior in terms of their nutrient availability and the extent of food
|
|
security. Furthermore, households participating in the labor market in
|
|
search of supplemental income do not appear to have better food security
|
|
status relative to those engaged in farming only. Finally, females
|
|
participating in non-farm work provide the largest contribution to
|
|
household food nutrient availability. The study recommends the
|
|
implementation of policies and building of infrastructure that foster
|
|
the creation of non-farm income generating opportunities in northern
|
|
Ghana, coupled with a framework that enables women to take advantage of
|
|
these opportunities. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tsiboe, F (Corresponding Author), Univ Arkansas, Dept Agr Econ \& Agribusiness, Agr Annex, Fayetteville, AR 72701 USA.
|
|
Tsiboe, Francis, Univ Arkansas, Dept Agr Econ \& Agribusiness, Agr Annex, Fayetteville, AR 72701 USA.
|
|
Zereyesus, Yacob A., Kansas State Univ, Dept Agr Econ, 337 B Waters Hall, Manhattan, KS 66506 USA.
|
|
Osei, Evelyn, Univ Ghana, Dept Agr Econ \& Agribusiness, Accra, Ghana.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jrurstud.2016.07.027},
|
|
ISSN = {0743-0167},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-1392},
|
|
Keywords = {Non-farm work; Food security; Nutrition; Poverty; Gender differences;
|
|
Ghana},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OFF-FARM INCOME; WOMENS EMPOWERMENT; LIVELIHOOD DIVERSIFICATION;
|
|
NUTRITIONAL-STATUS; RURAL HOUSEHOLDS; DETERMINANTS; AGRICULTURE;
|
|
PATTERNS; ALLOCATION; MIGRATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography; Regional \& Urban Planning},
|
|
Author-Email = {ftsiboe@hotmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tsiboe, Francis/A-6485-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tsiboe, Francis/0000-0001-5984-1072},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {35},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000386645600010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000355766900036,
|
|
Author = {Kulkarni, Veena S.},
|
|
Title = {Her earnings: Exploring variation in wives' earning contributions across
|
|
six major Asian groups and Whites},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {52},
|
|
Pages = {539-557},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Previous research on understanding race-ethnic differentials in
|
|
employment and economic contributions by married women has primarily
|
|
focused on Blacks, Hispanics, or Whites. This study investigates
|
|
variations in wives' earning contributions as measured by wives earnings
|
|
as a proportion of total annual household earnings among six Asian
|
|
groups, Asian Indian, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, and
|
|
Vietnamese relative to native born non-Hispanic White. I disaggregate
|
|
the six Asian groups by their ethnicity and nativity status. Using
|
|
pooled data from 2009-2011 American Community Survey, the findings show
|
|
significance of human capital, hours of paid labor market engagement and
|
|
nativity status. There is strong and negative association between
|
|
husbands' human capital and labor supply with wives' earning
|
|
contributions suggesting near universality of male-breadwinner status.
|
|
Notwithstanding the commonalities, there is significant intergroup
|
|
diversity. While foreign born and native born Filipina wives despite
|
|
their spouses' reasonably high human capital and work hours, contribute
|
|
one of the highest shares, the same cannot be said for the Asian Indians
|
|
and Japanese. For foreign born Asian Indian and to some extent Japanese
|
|
women, their high human capital is not translated to high earning
|
|
contribution after controlling for husband's human capital. Further,
|
|
nativity status impacts groups differentially. Native born Vietnamese
|
|
wives contribute the greatest. Overall, the findings underscore the
|
|
relevance of employing multiple conceptual frameworks in understanding
|
|
earning contributions of foreign and native born Asian wives belonging
|
|
to the six Asian groups, Asian Indian, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese,
|
|
Korean, and Vietnamese. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kulkarni, VS (Corresponding Author), Arkansas State Univ, Dept Criminol Sociol \& Geog, POB 2410, State Univ, AR 72467 USA.
|
|
Arkansas State Univ, Dept Criminol Sociol \& Geog, State Univ, AR 72467 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ssresearch.2015.03.002},
|
|
ISSN = {0049-089X},
|
|
EISSN = {1096-0317},
|
|
Keywords = {Asian Americans; Comparative; Immigrant households; Wives' earnings},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-FORCE PARTICIPATION; DUAL-EARNER COUPLES; UNITED-STATES; WOMENS
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; AMERICAN-WOMEN; ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES; GENDER INEQUALITY;
|
|
INDIAN IMMIGRANTS; MARRIED-WOMEN; FAMILY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {vkulkarni@astate.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {95},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000355766900036},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000348416100001,
|
|
Author = {Maini, Rishma and Van den Bergh, Rafael and van Griensven, Johan and
|
|
Tayler-Smith, Katie and Ousley, Janet and Carter, Daniel and Mhatre, Seb
|
|
and Ho, Lara and Zachariah, Rony},
|
|
Title = {Picking up the bill - improving health-care utilisation in the
|
|
Democratic Republic of Congo through user fee subsidisation: a before
|
|
and after study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Month = {NOV 5},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: User fees have been shown to constitute a major barrier to
|
|
the utilisation of health-care, particularly in low-income countries
|
|
such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Importantly, such
|
|
barriers can lead to the exclusion of vulnerable individuals from
|
|
health-care. In 2008, a donor-funded primary health-care programme began
|
|
implementing user fee subsidisation in 20 health zones of the DRC. In
|
|
this study, we quantified the short and long-term effects of this policy
|
|
on health-care utilisation.
|
|
Methods: Sixteen health zones were included for analysis. Using
|
|
routinely collected health-care utilisation data before and after policy
|
|
implementation, interrupted time series regression was applied to
|
|
quantify the temporal impact of the user fee policy in the studied
|
|
health zones. Payment of salary supplements to health-care workers and
|
|
provision of free drugs - the other components of the programme - were
|
|
controlled for where possible.
|
|
Results: Fourteen (88\%) health zones showed an immediate positive
|
|
effect in health-care utilisation rates (overall median increase of
|
|
19\%, interquartile range 11 to 43) one month after the policy was
|
|
introduced, and the effect was significant in seven zones (P <0.05).
|
|
This initial effect was sustained or increased at 24 months in five
|
|
health zones but was only significant in one health zone at P <0.05.
|
|
Utilisation reduced over time in the remaining health zones (overall
|
|
median increase of 4\%, interquartile range -10 to 33). The modelled
|
|
mean health-care utilisation rate initially increased significantly from
|
|
43 consultations/1000 population to 51 consultations/1000 population
|
|
during the first month following implementation (P <0.01). However, the
|
|
on-going effect was not significant (P =0.69).
|
|
Conclusions: Our research brings mixed findings on the effectiveness of
|
|
user fee subsidisation as a strategy to increase the utilisation of
|
|
services. Future work should focus on feasibility issues associated with
|
|
the removal or reduction of user fees and how to sustain its effects on
|
|
utilisation in the longer term.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Maini, R (Corresponding Author), Dept Int Dev, 83 Ave Roi Baudouin, Kinshasa, DEM REP CONGO.
|
|
Maini, Rishma; Carter, Daniel, Dept Int Dev, 83 Ave Roi Baudouin, Kinshasa, DEM REP CONGO.
|
|
Van den Bergh, Rafael; Tayler-Smith, Katie; Zachariah, Rony, Med Sans Frontieres Operat Ctr Brussels, Operat Res Unit LuxOR, Luxembourg, Luxembourg.
|
|
van Griensven, Johan, Inst Trop Med, B-2000 Antwerp, Belgium.
|
|
Ousley, Janet; Ho, Lara, Int Rescue Comm, Kinshasa, DEM REP CONGO.
|
|
Mhatre, Seb, Dept Int Dev, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12913-014-0504-6},
|
|
Article-Number = {504},
|
|
ISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {User fees; Subsidisation; Health-care utilisation; Operational research;
|
|
DRC},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FINANCIAL BARRIERS; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {mainirishma@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Van den Bergh, Rafael/0000-0001-6277-8713
|
|
Maini, Rishma/0000-0002-0835-6154
|
|
zachariah, rony/0000-0002-2915-9328},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000348416100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000399309300011,
|
|
Author = {Paget, Simon P. and Caldwell, Patrina H. Y. and Murphy, Joyce and
|
|
Lilischkis, Kimberley J. and Morrow, Angie M.},
|
|
Title = {Moving beyond `not enough time': factors influencing paediatric
|
|
clinicians' participation in research},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {299-306},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Increasing the amount of clinical research that occurs in
|
|
healthcare settings has been identified as an important mechanism to
|
|
improve healthcare outcomes. While clinicians are key persons in
|
|
achieving this aim, research participation amongst clinicians is
|
|
generally limited.
|
|
Aims: To identify the factors (barriers and facilitators) influencing
|
|
clinician research participation and determine how professional culture
|
|
impacts on these factors.
|
|
Methods: Forty clinicians working at a tertiary children's hospital
|
|
participated in six discipline-specific focus groups. Thematic analysis
|
|
was performed using an inductive process based in grounded theory.
|
|
Results: Four major themes (cultural factors, personal factors,
|
|
resources and solutions) and 16 subthemes were identified. Participants
|
|
described how the current health system discourages clinician research.
|
|
They reported that their research participation requires personal
|
|
sacrifice of their own time; income or career progression. Research
|
|
participation was seen to compete with other priorities in clinicians'
|
|
workload and is disadvantaged because of the primacy of clinical work
|
|
and the lack of immediate tangible benefit from research projects.
|
|
Solutions suggested by our participants included better alignment of
|
|
clinical and research goals, improved availability of research mentors
|
|
and collaborative opportunities. Nurses and allied health professionals
|
|
reported a changing professional culture that values research. Only
|
|
doctors identified research participation to be important for career
|
|
progression.
|
|
Conclusions: For clinician research participation to flourish,
|
|
significant changes in healthcare structure and priorities will be
|
|
required that result in research becoming more embedded in healthcare
|
|
delivery. Initiatives to improve collaboration between clinicians and
|
|
universities may also support these aims.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Paget, SP (Corresponding Author), Childrens Hosp Westmead, Locked Bag 4001, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia.
|
|
Paget, Simon P.; Morrow, Angie M., Childrens Hosp Westmead, Kids Rehab, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Caldwell, Patrina H. Y., Childrens Hosp Westmead, Dept Nephrol, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Paget, Simon P.; Caldwell, Patrina H. Y.; Morrow, Angie M., Univ Sydney, Sydney Med Sch, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Murphy, Joyce, Western Sydney Local Hlth Dist, Gen Managers Unit, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Lilischkis, Kimberley J., Novogen Pty Ltd, Clin \& Regulatory Affairs, Sydney, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/imj.13351},
|
|
ISSN = {1444-0903},
|
|
EISSN = {1445-5994},
|
|
Keywords = {research; health personnel; allied health occupations; medical staff;
|
|
nursing staff},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; ATTITUDES; KNOWLEDGE; SCIENTISTS; MEDICINE; BARRIERS;
|
|
NURSES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {simon.paget@health.nsw.gov.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Caldwell, Patrina/C-4211-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Paget, Simon/0000-0001-6605-3330
|
|
Caldwell, Patrina/0000-0003-1124-6578},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000399309300011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000322757700001,
|
|
Author = {Meyer, Samantha B. and Luong, Tini C. N. and Mamerow, Loreen and Ward,
|
|
Paul R.},
|
|
Title = {Inequities in access to healthcare: analysis of national survey data
|
|
across six Asia-Pacific countries},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {JUL 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Evidence suggests that there is a link between inequitable
|
|
access to healthcare and inequitable distribution of illness. A recent
|
|
World Health Organization report stated that there is a need for
|
|
research and policy to address the critical role of health services in
|
|
reducing inequities and preventing future inequities. The aim of this
|
|
manuscript is to highlight disparities and differences in terms of the
|
|
factors that distinguish between poor and good access to healthcare
|
|
across six Asia-Pacific countries: Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, South
|
|
Korea, Taiwan, and Thailand.
|
|
Methods: A population survey was undertaken in each country. This paper
|
|
is a secondary analysis of these existing data. Data were collected in
|
|
each country between 2009 and 2010. Four variables related to
|
|
difficulties in access to healthcare (distance, appointment, waiting
|
|
time, and cost) were analysed using binomial logistic regression to
|
|
identify socio- and demographic predictors of inequity.
|
|
Results: Consistent across the findings, poor health and low income were
|
|
identified as difficulties in access. Country specific indicators were
|
|
also identified. For Thailand, the poorest level of access appears to be
|
|
for respondents who work within the household whereas in Taiwan,
|
|
part-time work is associated with difficulties in access. Within Hong
|
|
Kong, results suggest that older (above 60) and retired individuals have
|
|
the poorest access and within Australia, females and married individuals
|
|
are the worst off.
|
|
Conclusion: Recognition of these inequities, from a policy perspective,
|
|
is essential for health sector policy decision-making. Despite the
|
|
differences in political and economic climate in the countries under
|
|
analysis, our findings highlight patterns of inequity which require
|
|
policy responses. Our data should be used as a means of deciding the
|
|
most appropriate policy response for each country which includes, rather
|
|
than excludes, socially marginalised population groups. These findings
|
|
should be of interest to those involved in health policy, but also in
|
|
policy more generally because as we have identified, access to health
|
|
care is influenced by determinants outside of the health system.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Meyer, SB (Corresponding Author), Flinders Univ S Australia, Discipline Publ Hlth, Sturt Rd, Bedford Pk, SA 5042, Australia.
|
|
Meyer, Samantha B.; Luong, Tini C. N.; Mamerow, Loreen; Ward, Paul R., Flinders Univ S Australia, Discipline Publ Hlth, Bedford Pk, SA 5042, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1472-6963-13-238},
|
|
Article-Number = {238},
|
|
ISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Equity; Access; Healthcare; Asia; Pacific; Social determinants; Policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CROSS-SECTIONAL ANALYSIS; PRESCRIBING RATES; SOUTH-AUSTRALIA; EQUITY;
|
|
CANCER; SERVICES; PARTICIPATION; INEQUALITIES; ASSOCIATION; POPULATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {samantha.meyer@flinders.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ward, Paul R/A-1368-2008
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tisdall, Loreen/0000-0001-6303-6148
|
|
Ward, Paul/0000-0002-5559-9714},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {77},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000322757700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000742366700005,
|
|
Author = {Verra, Sanne E. and Poelman, Maartje P. and Mudd, Andrea L. and de Vet,
|
|
Emely and van Rongen, Sofie and de Wit, John and Kamphuis, Carlijn B. M.},
|
|
Title = {What's important to you? Socioeconomic inequalities in the perceived
|
|
importance of health compared to other life domains},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN 13},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Pressing issues, like financial concerns, may outweigh the
|
|
importance people attach to health. This study tested whether health,
|
|
compared to other life domains, was considered more important by people
|
|
in high versus low socioeconomic positions, with future focus and
|
|
financial strain as potential explanatory factors.
|
|
Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in 2019 among N=1,330
|
|
Dutch adults. Participants rated the importance of two health-related
|
|
domains (not being ill, living a long life) and seven other life domains
|
|
(e.g., work, family) on a five-point scale. A latent class analysis
|
|
grouped participants in classes with similar patterns of importance
|
|
ratings. Differences in class membership according to socioeconomic
|
|
position (indicated by income and education) were examined using
|
|
structural equation modelling, with future focus and financial strain as
|
|
mediators.
|
|
Results: Three classes were identified, which were defined as:
|
|
neutralists, who found all domains neutral or unimportant (3.5\% of the
|
|
sample); hedonists, who found most domains important except living a
|
|
long life, work, and religion (36.2\%); and maximalists, who found
|
|
nearly all domains important, including both health domains (60.3\%). Of
|
|
the neutralists, 38\% considered not being ill important, and 30\%
|
|
considered living a long life important. For hedonists, this was 92\%
|
|
and 39\%, respectively, and for maximalists this was 99\% and 87\%,
|
|
respectively. Compared to belonging to the maximalists class, a low
|
|
income predicted belonging to the neutralists, and a higher educational
|
|
level and unemployment predicted belonging to the hedonists. No
|
|
mediation pathways via future focus or financial strain were found.
|
|
Conclusions: Lower income groups were less likely to consider not being
|
|
ill important. Those without paid employment and those with a higher
|
|
educational level were less likely to consider living a long life
|
|
important. Neither future focus nor financial strain explained these
|
|
inequalities. Future research should investigate socioeconomic
|
|
differences in conceptualisations of health, and if inequalities in the
|
|
perceived importance of health are associated with inequalities in
|
|
health. To support individuals dealing with challenging circumstances in
|
|
daily life, health-promoting interventions could align to the life
|
|
domains perceived important to reach their target group and to prevent
|
|
widening socioeconomic health inequalities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Verra, SE (Corresponding Author), Univ Utrecht, Dept Interdisciplinary Social Sci, Padualaan 14, NL-3584 CH Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Verra, Sanne E.; Mudd, Andrea L.; de Wit, John; Kamphuis, Carlijn B. M., Univ Utrecht, Dept Interdisciplinary Social Sci, Padualaan 14, NL-3584 CH Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Poelman, Maartje P.; de Vet, Emely; van Rongen, Sofie, Wageningen Univ \& Res, Chair Grp Consumpt \& Hlth Lifestyles, Hollandseweg 1, NL-6706 KN Wageningen, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-022-12508-2},
|
|
Article-Number = {86},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DISENGAGEMENT; CONSEQUENCES; EXPLANATION; MORTALITY; VARIABLES; LIVES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {s.e.verra@uu.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {De Vet, Emely/B-4896-2014
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {De Vet, Emely/0000-0002-4452-2367
|
|
Verra, Sanne/0000-0003-4963-0153},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000742366700005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000685279900001,
|
|
Author = {Goswami, Sriparna and Chakraborty, Bidisha},
|
|
Title = {Wealth distribution and skills generation under public and private
|
|
education systems},
|
|
Journal = {INDIAN GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {350-372},
|
|
Month = {OCT 5},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose This paper aims to understand the differing impacts of wealth
|
|
distribution on human capital accumulation and skilled-unskilled labour
|
|
generation under three educational paradigms as follows: private, public
|
|
and a system of mixed education. Design/methodology/approach The authors
|
|
use an overlapping generations model. Findings The wealth dynamics show
|
|
that both in the private education system and public education system,
|
|
there are two possible outcomes- stagnation and steady growth depending
|
|
on the efficiency of the education system, skill premium and other
|
|
parameters. The choice of the education system through voting is
|
|
discussed. It is found that skilled workers would always vote for
|
|
private education whilst unskilled workers vote for private education if
|
|
public education expenditure of the economy is low. Research
|
|
limitations/implications The study is subject to several limitations.
|
|
This paper considers the rate of interest and wage rate to be
|
|
exogenously given, and thus ignores the general equilibrium effects. The
|
|
authors do not consider the labour-leisure choice. The introduction of
|
|
labour leisure choice in the model would alter many of the results. The
|
|
authors do not consider heterogeneous ability across individuals. The
|
|
analysis of the differential efficiency of the different education
|
|
systems needs further, rigorous research. Also, this paper does not
|
|
consider other occupations such as entrepreneurship and self-employment.
|
|
This paper considers the labour demand function to be perfectly elastic,
|
|
and hence, does not consider any demand constraint. What happens if
|
|
bequests are taxed? What happens if parents are not altruistic? These
|
|
questions may be addressed in future research. Social implications If
|
|
the proportion of tax paying skilled labour is low in any country, pure
|
|
public education may not be able to generate sustained human capital
|
|
growth. For countries with a sufficiently large proportion of skilled
|
|
labour, the public education system would be successful. On the other
|
|
hand, if skill premium is low or the education system is poorly managed
|
|
private education system may fail too. Originality/value Whilst
|
|
investigating the effects of public vs private education on growth and
|
|
development in the presence of unequal wealth distribution, The authors
|
|
have tried to address a few questions. First, why the public education
|
|
system has been successful in skill accumulation in developed countries
|
|
whilst it has failed to do so in less developed countries? Second, why
|
|
do some countries with mostly privately run educational institutions
|
|
perform much better in human capital production whilst others do not?
|
|
Third, in an economy with unequal wealth distribution, what are the
|
|
factors that result in public or private education as a voting
|
|
equilibrium outcome?},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chakraborty, B (Corresponding Author), Jadavpur Univ, Dept Econ, Kolkata, India.
|
|
Goswami, Sriparna, Iowa State Univ, Dept Econ, Ames, IA 50011 USA.
|
|
Chakraborty, Bidisha, Jadavpur Univ, Dept Econ, Kolkata, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IGDR-02-2020-0025},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1753-8254},
|
|
EISSN = {1753-8262},
|
|
Keywords = {Growth; Public choice; Human capital; Public education; Private
|
|
education; O15; I25; H31; J24},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HUMAN-CAPITAL ACCUMULATION; OCCUPATIONAL CHOICE; ENDOGENOUS GROWTH;
|
|
POLICY; INCOME; INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {sriparnagoswami@gmail.com
|
|
bidisha.chakraborty@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000685279900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000584762900001,
|
|
Author = {Haque, Tariq H. and Haque, M. Ohidul},
|
|
Title = {Double disadvantage? The slow progress of non-English-speaking migrant
|
|
women in accessing good jobs in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {LABOUR \& INDUSTRY-A JOURNAL OF THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC RELATIONS OF
|
|
WORK},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {256-282},
|
|
Month = {JUL 2},
|
|
Abstract = {In this paper, primary and secondary sector employment corresponds
|
|
broadly to `good' and `bad' jobs. Previous studies indicate that
|
|
non-English-speaking background (NESB) migrant women are
|
|
under-represented in `good jobs' but none of those studies evaluates
|
|
their chance of finding `good jobs' in Australia. This study estimates
|
|
their probability of getting good jobs and compares this with that of
|
|
Australian-born women. The probability of securing good jobs for each of
|
|
these groups is also estimated separately, based on a new general probit
|
|
model, after classifying women into primary and secondary sector
|
|
employment from their occupational categories and incomes using 2016
|
|
Australian Census data. It showed that NESB migrant women had
|
|
significantly lesser probability of securing primary sector employment
|
|
compared to Australian-born women. While this difference is narrowing
|
|
over time, NESB migrant women's progress in accessing `good jobs' has
|
|
been slow. Improving English proficiency, education, recognition of
|
|
overseas qualifications and experience can significantly increase their
|
|
chances of attaining good jobs. This study provides an exact estimate of
|
|
the probability of securing good jobs for both groups and the relevance
|
|
of different determinants for this difference so that proper actions can
|
|
be taken to improve the employment situation of NESB migrant women.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Haque, MO (Corresponding Author), Int Inst Business \& Social Studies IIBASS, Appl Stat \& Econometr, Burwood, Australia.
|
|
Haque, MO (Corresponding Author), Univ Melbourne, Econ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Haque, Tariq H., Univ Adelaide, Fac Profess, Adelaide Business Sch, Finance, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Haque, M. Ohidul, Int Inst Business \& Social Studies IIBASS, Appl Stat \& Econometr, Burwood, Australia.
|
|
Haque, M. Ohidul, Univ Melbourne, Econ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/10301763.2020.1824437},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1030-1763},
|
|
EISSN = {2325-5676},
|
|
Keywords = {Non-English-speaking background (NESB) migrant women; Australian-born
|
|
women; primary sector employment; general probit model},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKET HYPOTHESIS; OCCUPATIONAL PRESTIGE; IMMIGRANT WOMEN;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; WORK; ATTAINMENT; FAMILY; PARTICIPATION; MOBILITY; FORCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {international.ibass@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {134},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000584762900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000477624200001,
|
|
Author = {Tovar, Alison and Kaar, Jill L. and McCurdy, Karen and Field, Alison E.
|
|
and Dabelea, Dana and Vadiveloo, Maya},
|
|
Title = {Maternal vegetable intake during and after pregnancy},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Month = {JUL 26},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundImproved understanding of vegetable intake changes between
|
|
pregnancy and postpartum may inform future intervention targets to
|
|
establish healthy home food environments. Therefore, the goal of this
|
|
study was to explore the changes in vegetable intake between pregnancy
|
|
and the postnatal period and explore maternal and sociodemographic
|
|
factors that are associated with these changes.MethodsWe examined
|
|
sociodemographic, dietary, and health characteristics of healthy mothers
|
|
18-43y from the prospective Infant Feeding Practices II cohort (n=847)
|
|
(2005-2012). Mothers completed a modified version of the diet history
|
|
questionnaire, a food-frequency measure, developed by the National
|
|
Cancer Institute. We created four categories of mothers, those that
|
|
were: meeting vegetablerecommendations post- but not prenatally (n=121;
|
|
improved intake), not meeting vegetable recommendations during pregnancy
|
|
and postnatally (n=370; stable inadequate), meeting recommendations pre-
|
|
but not postnatally (n=123; reduced intake), and meeting recommendations
|
|
at both time points (n=233; stable adequate). To make our results more
|
|
relevant to public health recommendations, we were interested in
|
|
comparing the improved vegetable intake group vs. stable inadequate
|
|
vegetable intake group, as well as those that reduced their vegetable
|
|
intake compared to the stable adequate vegetable intake group. Separate
|
|
multivariable-adjusted logistic regression were used to examine
|
|
sociodemographic predictors of improved vs. stable inadequate and
|
|
reduced vs. stable adequate vegetable intake.ResultsWomen with improved
|
|
vegetable intake vs. stable inadequate smoked fewercigarettes while
|
|
women with reduced vegetable intake vs. stable adequate were more likely
|
|
to experience less pregnancy weight gain. In adjusted models, employed
|
|
women had greater odds of reduced vegetable intake (OR=1.64 95\% CI
|
|
1.14-2.36). In exploratory analyses, employment was associated with
|
|
greater odds of reduced vegetable intake among low-income (OR=1.79; 95\%
|
|
CI 1.03-3.1), but not higher income women (OR=1.31; 95\% CI 0.94-1.84).
|
|
After further adjustment for paid maternity leave, employment was no
|
|
longer associated with vegetable intake among lower income women (OR:
|
|
1.53; 95\% CI: 0.76-3.05).ConclusionsMore women with reduced vs. stable
|
|
adequate vegetable intake were lower income and worked full time.
|
|
Improved access to paid maternity leave may help reduce disparities in
|
|
vegetable quality between lower and higher income women.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tovar, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Nutr \& Food Sci, 41 Lower Coll Rd, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
|
|
Tovar, Alison; Vadiveloo, Maya, Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Nutr \& Food Sci, 41 Lower Coll Rd, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
|
|
Kaar, Jill L.; Dabelea, Dana, Univ Colorado Anschutz Med Campus, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Aurora, CO USA.
|
|
McCurdy, Karen, Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Human Dev \& Family Studies, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
|
|
Field, Alison E., Brown Univ, Dept Epidemiol, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
|
|
Kaar, Jill L.; Dabelea, Dana, Univ Colorado Anschutz Med Campus, Colorado Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Aurora, CO USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12884-019-2353-0},
|
|
Article-Number = {267},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2393},
|
|
Keywords = {Vegetable intake; Pregnancy; Employment; Maternity leave},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DIET QUALITY; FEEDING PRACTICES; WEIGHT STATUS; FOOD CHOICES;
|
|
CONSUMPTION; PATTERNS; FRUIT; AGE; MACRONUTRIENT; ACCEPTANCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {Alison\_tovar@uri.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kaar, Jill Landsbaugh/K-8121-2019
|
|
Field, Alison/AAA-4508-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kaar, Jill Landsbaugh/0000-0001-9487-7476
|
|
Tovar, Alison/0000-0002-1559-592X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000477624200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000376401500023,
|
|
Author = {Davidson, Michael and Kapara, Ori and Goldberg, Shira and Yoffe, Rinat
|
|
and Noy, Shlomo and Weiser, Mark},
|
|
Title = {A Nation-Wide Study on the Percentage of Schizophrenia and Bipolar
|
|
Disorder Patients Who Earn Minimum Wage or Above},
|
|
Journal = {SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {443-447},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: Although it is undisputable that patients with severe mental
|
|
illness have impaired ability to work, the extent of this is unclear.
|
|
This is a nation-wide, cross-sectional survey of patients who have been
|
|
hospitalized with severe mental illness earning minimum wage or above.
|
|
Method: Data from the Israeli Psychiatric Hospitalization Case Registry
|
|
were linked with nationwide data from the National Insurance Institute
|
|
(the equivalent of US Social Security) on personal income.
|
|
Hospitalization data were obtained on all consecutive admissions to any
|
|
psychiatric hospital in the country between 1990-2008 with a diagnosis
|
|
of schizophrenia, other nonaffective psychotic disorders, or bipolar
|
|
disorder (N = 35 673). Earning minimum wage or more was defined as
|
|
earning at least 1000 USD/month, which was equivalent to minimum wage in
|
|
Israel in December 2010. Results: The percentages of patients with only
|
|
1 admission who were earning minimum wage or above in December 2010 were
|
|
as follows: 10.6\% of patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia; 21.6\%
|
|
of patients with a diagnosis of nonaffective psychotic disorders; and
|
|
24.2\% of patients with bipolar disorder. The percentages of patients
|
|
with multiple admissions who were earning minimum wage or above were as
|
|
follows: 5.8\% of patients with schizophrenia; 11.2\% of patients with
|
|
nonaffective psychotic disorders; and 19.9\% of patients with bipolar
|
|
disorder. Conclusions: Despite potential confounders, the results
|
|
indicate that patients with schizophrenia, nonaffective psychotic
|
|
disorders, or bipolar disorder have a poor employment outcome, even if
|
|
they have only been admitted once. These results emphasize the
|
|
importance of improving interventions to re-integrate these individuals
|
|
into the work force.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Weiser, M (Corresponding Author), Chaim Sheba Med Ctr, Dept Psychiat, IL-52621 Tel Hashomer, Israel.
|
|
Davidson, Michael; Kapara, Ori; Goldberg, Shira; Noy, Shlomo; Weiser, Mark, Chaim Sheba Med Ctr, Dept Psychiat, Ramat Gan, Israel.
|
|
Davidson, Michael; Noy, Shlomo; Weiser, Mark, Tel Aviv Univ, Sackler Sch Med, Ramat Aviv, Israel.
|
|
Yoffe, Rinat, Minist Hlth, Dept Mental Hlth, Jerusalem, Israel.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/schbul/sbv023},
|
|
ISSN = {0586-7614},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-1701},
|
|
Keywords = {income; employment; mental disorders; hospitalization},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; MENTAL-ILLNESS; PEOPLE; PREDICTORS; OUTCOMES;
|
|
WORK; BARRIERS; UPDATE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {mweiser@netvision.net.il},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {21},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000376401500023},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000863129900001,
|
|
Author = {O'Donoghue, Julia and Luther, Janki and Hoque, Shushmita and Mizrahi,
|
|
Raphael and Spano, Michelle and Frisard, Christine and Garg, Arvin and
|
|
Crawford, Sybil and Byatt, Nancy and Lemon, Stephenie C. and Rosal,
|
|
Milagros and Pbert, Lori and Trivedi, Michelle},
|
|
Title = {Strategies to improve the recruitment and retention of underserved
|
|
children and families in clinical trials: A case example of a
|
|
school-supervised asthma therapy pilot},
|
|
Journal = {CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL TRIALS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {120},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Due to underrepresentation of racial/ethnic minority and
|
|
low-income groups in clinical studies, there is a call to improve the
|
|
recruitment and retention of these populations in research. Pilot
|
|
studies can test recruitment and retention practices for better
|
|
inclusion of medically underserved children and families in sub-sequent
|
|
clinical trials. We examined this using a school-based asthma
|
|
intervention, in preparation for a larger clinical trial in which our
|
|
goal is to include an underserved study population.Methods: We recruited
|
|
children with poorly controlled asthma in a two-site pilot cluster
|
|
randomized controlled trial of school-supervised asthma therapy versus
|
|
enhanced usual care (receipt of an educational asthma work-book). We
|
|
sought a study population with a high percentage of children and
|
|
families from racial/ethnic minority and low-income groups. The primary
|
|
outcome of the pilot trial was recruitment/retention over 12 months.
|
|
Strategies used to facilitate recruitment/retention of this study
|
|
population included engaging pre-trial multi-level stakeholders,
|
|
selecting trial sites with high percentages of underserved children and
|
|
families, training diverse medical providers to recruit participants,
|
|
conducting remote trial assessments, and providing multi-lingual study
|
|
materials.Results: Twenty-six children {[}42.3\% female, 11.5\% Black,
|
|
30.8\% Multiracial (Black \& other), 76.9\% Hispanic, and 92.3\% with
|
|
family income below \$40,000] and their caregivers were enrolled in the
|
|
study, which represents 55.3\% of those initially referred by their
|
|
provider, with 96.2\%, 92.3\%, and 96.2\% retention at 3-, 6-, and 12
|
|
-month follow-up, respectively.Conclusion: Targeted strategies
|
|
facilitated the inclusion of a medically underserved population of
|
|
children and families in our pilot study, prior to expanding to a larger
|
|
trial.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {O'Donoghue, J (Corresponding Author), S5-828,55 Lake Ave N, Worcester, MA 01655 USA.
|
|
O'Donoghue, Julia; Hoque, Shushmita; Mizrahi, Raphael; Spano, Michelle; Trivedi, Michelle, Univ Massachusetts, Dept Pediat, Div Pulmonol, Chan Med Sch, Worcester, MA USA.
|
|
Luther, Janki, Washington Univ, Dept Med, Sch Med, St Louis, MO USA.
|
|
Crawford, Sybil, Univ Massachusetts, Dept Med, Chan Med Sch, Worcester, MA USA.
|
|
Frisard, Christine; Lemon, Stephenie C.; Rosal, Milagros; Pbert, Lori; Trivedi, Michelle, Univ Massachusetts, Dept Populat \& Quantitat Hlth Sci, Chan Med Sch, Worcester, MA USA.
|
|
Garg, Arvin, Univ Massachusetts, Dept Pediat, Chan Med Sch, Worcester, MA USA.
|
|
Byatt, Nancy, Univ Massachusetts, Dept Psychiat, Chan Med Sch, Worcester, MA USA.
|
|
O'Donoghue, Julia, S5-828,55 Lake Ave N, Worcester, MA 01655 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.cct.2022.106884},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {106884},
|
|
ISSN = {1551-7144},
|
|
EISSN = {1559-2030},
|
|
Keywords = {Pilot test; Recruitment; Retention; Asthma; Clinical trials; Underserved},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POPULATIONS; OPPORTUNITIES; DISPARITIES; MINORITY; WOMEN; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental; Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {julia.odonoghue@spectrumhealth.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000863129900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000686803900001,
|
|
Author = {Hong, Philip Young P. and Kim, Suk-Hee and Marley, James and Park, Jang
|
|
Ho},
|
|
Title = {Transforming Impossible into Possible (TIP) for SUD recovery: a
|
|
promising practice innovation to combat the opioid crisis},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL WORK IN HEALTH CARE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {60},
|
|
Number = {6-7},
|
|
Pages = {509-528},
|
|
Month = {AUG 9},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of this study is to examine the psychological
|
|
self-sufficiency (PSS) process among low-income individuals
|
|
participating in the Transforming Impossible into Possible (TIP) program
|
|
and explore the implications of TIP as a SUD recovery intervention. A
|
|
sample of 622 individuals from 9 local job training programs in a large
|
|
Midwestern city was used to examine the group differences in substance
|
|
abuse barrier and employment hope as they relates to economic
|
|
self-sufficiency (ESS). Individuals in the TIP program (n = 315) had
|
|
statistically significant path coefficients between substance abuse
|
|
barriers, employment hope and ESS while the non-TIP counterpart (n =
|
|
307) showed a significant path only between employment hope and ESS.
|
|
Also, the time difference score in substance abuse barrier and ESS was
|
|
greater for the TIP group compared to the non-TIP comparison group.
|
|
Results provide implications for social work practice among persons with
|
|
SUDs. While the traditional employment programs focused only on the
|
|
interview and job skills, TIP allowed participants to discover their
|
|
resources to address the inner obstacles that have been holding them
|
|
back. TIP could serve as a promising model to treat SUDs and support the
|
|
recovery process.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hong, PYP (Corresponding Author), Loyola Univ, Sch Social Work, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Hong, Philip Young P.; Marley, James; Park, Jang Ho, Loyola Univ, Sch Social Work, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Kim, Suk-Hee, Northern Kentucky Univ, Sch Social Work, Highland Hts, KY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/00981389.2021.1958127},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0098-1389},
|
|
EISSN = {1541-034X},
|
|
Keywords = {Transforming Impossible into Possible (TIP); psychological
|
|
self-sufficiency (PSS); substance use disorders; opioid crisis;
|
|
recovery; employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUBSTANCE-ABUSE TREATMENT; PSYCHOLOGICAL SELF-SUFFICIENCY; PSYCHOSOCIAL
|
|
INTERVENTIONS; EMPLOYMENT SERVICES; PLACEMENT MODEL; UNITED-STATES;
|
|
DRUG; OUTCOMES; WORK; JOB},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {phong@luc.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {78},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000686803900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000791702000018,
|
|
Author = {Lim, Jiyoung and Ko, Kwon and Lee, Kyung Eun and Park, Jae Bum and Lee,
|
|
Seungho and Jeong, Inchul},
|
|
Title = {Inequalities in External-Cause Mortality in 2018 across Industries in
|
|
Republic of Korea},
|
|
Journal = {SAFETY AND HEALTH AT WORK},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {117-125},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: External-cause mortality is an important public health issue
|
|
worldwide. Considering its significance to workers' health and
|
|
inequalities across industries, we aimed to describe the state of
|
|
external-cause mortality and investigate its difference by industry in
|
|
Republic of Korea based on data for 2018.Methods: Data obtained from the
|
|
Statistics Korea and Korean Employment Information System were used.
|
|
External causes of death were divided into three categories (suicide,
|
|
transport accident, and others), and death occurred during employment
|
|
period or within 90 days after unemployment was regarded as workers'
|
|
death. We calculated age-and sex-standardized mortalities per 100,000,
|
|
standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) compared to the general population
|
|
and total workers, and mortality rate ratios (RRs) across industries
|
|
using information and communication as a reference. Correlation analyses
|
|
between income, education, and mortality were conducted.Results: Age-and
|
|
sex-standardized external-cause mortality per 100,000 in all workers was
|
|
29.4 (suicide: 16.2, transport accident: 6.6, others: 6.6). Compared to
|
|
the general population, all external-cause and suicide SMRs were
|
|
significantly lower; however, there was no significant difference in
|
|
transport accidents. When compared to total workers, wholesale,
|
|
transportation, and business facilities management showed higher SMR for
|
|
suicide, and agriculture, forestry, and fishing, mining and quarrying,
|
|
construction, transportation and storage, and public administration and
|
|
defense showed higher SMR for transport accidents. A moderate to strong
|
|
negative correlation was observed between education level and mortality
|
|
(both age-and sex-standardized mortality rates and SMR compared to the
|
|
general population).Conclusion: Inequalities in external-cause
|
|
mortalities from suicide, transport accidents, and other causes were
|
|
found. For reducing the differences, improved policies are needed for
|
|
industries with higher mortalities.(c) 2021 Occupational Safety and
|
|
Health Research Institute, Published by Elsevier Korea LLC. This is an
|
|
open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license
|
|
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Jeong, I (Corresponding Author), Ajou Univ, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Sch Med, 164 World Cup Ro, Suwon 16499, South Korea.
|
|
Lim, Jiyoung; Ko, Kwon; Park, Jae Bum; Jeong, Inchul, Ajou Univ Hosp, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Suwon, South Korea.
|
|
Lee, Kyung Eun, Korea Occupat Safety \& Hlth Agcy, Dept Epidemiol Invest, Occupat Safety \& Hlth Res Inst, Ulsan, South Korea.
|
|
Park, Jae Bum; Lee, Seungho; Jeong, Inchul, Ajou Univ, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Sch Med, 164 World Cup Ro, Suwon 16499, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.shaw.2021.12.001},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {2093-7911},
|
|
EISSN = {2093-7997},
|
|
Keywords = {External-cause death; Health inequality; Industry; Injury; Suicide},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK-RELATED INJURIES; SUICIDAL IDEATION; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT STATUS; UNITED-STATES; JAPANESE MEN; RISK-FACTORS;
|
|
UNEMPLOYMENT; OCCUPATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {icjeong0101@aumc.ac.kr},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {LEE, KYUNG-EUN/0000-0001-5112-7747
|
|
Lee, Seungho/0000-0001-7069-267X
|
|
Ko, Kwon/0000-0001-7677-4502},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000791702000018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000256302600058,
|
|
Author = {Vigdor, Jacob L.},
|
|
Title = {The Katrina effect: Was there a bright side to the evacuation of greater
|
|
New Orleans?},
|
|
Journal = {B E JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS \& POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper uses longitudinal data from Current Population Surveys
|
|
conducted between 2004 and 2006 to estimate the net impact of Hurricane
|
|
Katrina-related evacuation on various indicators of well-being. While
|
|
evacuees who have returned to the affected region show evidence of
|
|
returning to normalcy in terms of labor supply and earnings, those who
|
|
persisted in other locations exhibit large and persistent gaps, even
|
|
relative to the poor outcomes of individuals destined to become evacuees
|
|
observed prior to Katrina. Evacuee outcomes are not demonstrably better
|
|
in destination communities with lower initial unemployment or higher
|
|
growth rates. The impact of evacuation on total income was blunted to
|
|
some extent by government transfer payments and by self-employment
|
|
activities. Overall, there is little evidence to support the notion that
|
|
poor underemployed residents of the New Orleans area were disadvantaged
|
|
by their location in a relatively depressed region.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vigdor, JL (Corresponding Author), Duke Univ, Durham, NC 27706 USA.
|
|
Duke Univ, Durham, NC 27706 USA.},
|
|
Article-Number = {64},
|
|
ISSN = {1935-1682},
|
|
Keywords = {disaster; labor force participation; income; displacement},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB DISPLACEMENT; NEIGHBORHOOD},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {jacob.vigdor@duke.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {18},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000256302600058},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000360825200010,
|
|
Author = {Baker, Regina S.},
|
|
Title = {The Changing Association Among Marriage, Work, and Child Poverty in the
|
|
United States, 1974-2010},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {77},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1166-1178},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Marriage and work have long been central to debates regarding poverty
|
|
and the family. Although ample research has demonstrated their negative
|
|
association with child poverty, both marriage and work have undergone
|
|
major transformations over recent decades. Consequently, it is plausible
|
|
that their association with child poverty may have also changed. Using
|
|
10 waves of U.S. Census Current Population Survey data from the
|
|
Luxembourg Income Study, this study examined the relationships among
|
|
marriage, work, and relative measures of child poverty from 1974 to
|
|
2010. The results indicated that both marriage and work still decrease
|
|
the odds of child poverty. However, time interactions showed marriage's
|
|
negative association with child poverty has declined in magnitude,
|
|
whereas work's negative association with child poverty has increased in
|
|
magnitude. These findings underscore the historically varying influence
|
|
of demographic characteristics for poverty. They also suggest the
|
|
limitations of overemphasizing marriage and the growing importance of
|
|
work for reducing child poverty in America.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baker, RS (Corresponding Author), Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, 218 McNeil Bldg,3781 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/jomf.12216},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-2445},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-3737},
|
|
Keywords = {employment; inequality; marriage; poverty},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; FAMILY-STRUCTURE; LESSONS; WELFARE; POLICY; INCOME;
|
|
MONEY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {regbaker@sas.upenn.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {58},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000360825200010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000430775100006,
|
|
Author = {Schaap, Rosanne and de Wind, Astrid and Coenen, Pieter and Proper, Karin
|
|
and Boot, Cecile},
|
|
Title = {The effects of exit from work on health across different socioeconomic
|
|
groups: A systematic literature review},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {198},
|
|
Pages = {36-45},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Exit from work leads to different effects on health, partially depending
|
|
on the socioeconomic status (SES) of people in the work exit. Several
|
|
studies on the effects of exit from work on health across socioeconomic
|
|
groups have been performed, but results are conflicting. The aim of this
|
|
review is to systematically review the available evidence regarding the
|
|
effects of exit from work on health in high and low socioeconomic
|
|
groups. A systematic literature search was conducted using Pubmed,
|
|
Embase, Web of Science, CINAHL and PsycINFO. Search terms related to
|
|
exit from work, health, SES and design (prospective or retrospective).
|
|
Articles were included if they focused on: exit from work
|
|
(early/statutory retirement, unemployment or disability pension); health
|
|
(general, physical or mental health and/or health behaviour); SES
|
|
(educational, occupational and/or income level); and inclusion of
|
|
stratified or interaction analyses to determine differences across
|
|
socioeconomic groups. This search strategy resulted in 22 studies. For
|
|
general, physical or mental health and health behaviour, 13 studies
|
|
found more positive effects of exit from work on health among employees
|
|
with a higher SES compared to employees with a lower SES. These effects
|
|
were mainly found after early/statutory retirement. In conclusion, the
|
|
effects of exit from work, or more specific the effects of
|
|
early/statutory retirement on health are different across socioeconomic
|
|
groups. However, the findings of this review should be interpreted with
|
|
caution as the studies used heterogeneous health outcomes and on each
|
|
health outcome a limited number of studies was included. Yet, the
|
|
positive effects of exit from work on health are mainly present in
|
|
higher socioeconomic groups. Therefore, public health policies should
|
|
focus on improving health of employees with a lower SES, in particular
|
|
after exit from work to decrease health inequalities.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {de Wind, A (Corresponding Author), Van der Boechorststr 7,POB 7075, NL-1007 MB Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Schaap, Rosanne; de Wind, Astrid; Coenen, Pieter; Boot, Cecile, Vrije Univ Amsterdam Med Ctr, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst, Dept Publ \& Occupat Hlth, Van der Boechorststr 7, NL-1007 MB Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Coenen, Pieter, Curtin Univ, Sch Physiotherapy \& Exercise Grp Sci, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.
|
|
Proper, Karin, Natl Inst Publ Hlth \& Environm, Ctr Nutr Prevent \& Hlth Serv, Antonio van Leeuwenhoeklaan 9, NL-3721 MA Bilthoven, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.12.015},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {Exit from work; Socioeconomic status; Socioeconomic groups; Systematic
|
|
review; General health; Physical health; Mental health; Health behaviour},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INVOLUNTARY JOB LOSS; SELF-RATED HEALTH; OLDER WORKERS;
|
|
PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; MENTAL-HEALTH; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; PROSPECTIVE
|
|
COHORT; PAID EMPLOYMENT; RETIREMENT GOOD; WHITEHALL-II},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {r.schaap@vumc.nl
|
|
a.dewind@vumc.nl
|
|
p.coenen@vumc.nl
|
|
karin.proper@rivm.nl
|
|
crl.boot@vumc.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Schaap, Rosanne/AAL-9789-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Schaap, Rosanne/0000-0002-5216-5750
|
|
de Wind, Astrid/0000-0003-0022-3805},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {40},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {44},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000430775100006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000626214900001,
|
|
Author = {Paudel, Susan and Owen, Alice J. and Smith, Ben J.},
|
|
Title = {Exploration of Physical Activity Barriers and Facilitators Among Adults
|
|
in Kathmandu, Nepal},
|
|
Journal = {QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {1183-1195},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Previous research suggests that a range of factors influence an
|
|
individual's physical activity (PA) participation, but studies among
|
|
Nepalese adults are limited. In this qualitative study, we aimed to
|
|
explore the multilevel influences upon PA participation among
|
|
community-dwelling adults aged 40 years and above living in an urban
|
|
setting in Kathmandu, Nepal. Men (n = 21) and women (n = 30) were
|
|
purposively sampled to participate in one of nine focus group
|
|
discussions. Types of PA undertaken constituted activities related to
|
|
housework, farm work, and active travel. Individual-level barriers
|
|
included lack of knowledge, lack of motivation, perceptions of already
|
|
being active, personal limitations, and lack of time. Interpersonal
|
|
barriers included household responsibilities and lack of support.
|
|
Broader environmental barriers included lack of infrastructure for
|
|
active commuting, poor safety, rising use of motorized transport, lack
|
|
of resting areas, weak social norms about PA, declining agricultural
|
|
engagement, mechanization, and improved access to technology and
|
|
facilities. Some differences were observed between the gender and
|
|
disease groups. Health benefits, integration into domestic work,
|
|
opportunities for social interaction, and social support were the
|
|
facilitators. Interventions focusing on families, highlighting the
|
|
short- and long-term benefits of PA, addressing gender roles, and
|
|
ensuring women are better supported represent opportunities to promote
|
|
PA. Community-based interventions will be essential to establish social
|
|
norms around PA and improve social support.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Paudel, S (Corresponding Author), Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Paudel, Susan, Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Owen, Alice J.; Smith, Ben J., Monash Univ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Smith, Ben J., Univ Sydney, Prevent \& Hlth Promot, Publ Hlth, Sydney, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1049732321993096},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {1049732321993096},
|
|
ISSN = {1049-7323},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-7557},
|
|
Keywords = {physical activity; adults; Nepal; focus groups; qualitative; reflexive
|
|
thematic analysis},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Information Science \&
|
|
Library Science; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {susan.paudelsubedi@monash.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Paudel, Susan/AGE-1499-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Paudel, Susan/0000-0001-7536-9476},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000626214900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000485212400005,
|
|
Author = {Ozawa, Sachiko and Yemeke, Tatenda T. and Evans, Daniel R. and Pallas,
|
|
Sarah E. and Wallace, Aaron S. and Lee, Bruce Y.},
|
|
Title = {Defining hard-to-reach populations for vaccination},
|
|
Journal = {VACCINE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {37},
|
|
Number = {37},
|
|
Pages = {5525-5534},
|
|
Month = {SEP 3},
|
|
Abstract = {Extending the benefits of vaccination to everyone who is eligible
|
|
requires an understanding of which populations current vaccination
|
|
efforts have struggled to reach. A clear definition of
|
|
``hard-to-reach{''} populations - also known as high-risk or
|
|
marginalized populations, or reaching the last mile - is essential for
|
|
estimating the size of target groups, sharing lessons learned based on
|
|
consistent definitions, and allocating resources appropriately. A
|
|
literature review was conducted to determine what formal definitions of
|
|
hard-to-reach populations exist and how they are being used, and to
|
|
propose definitions to consider for future use. Overall, we found that
|
|
(1) there is a need to distinguish populations that are hard to reach
|
|
versus hard to vaccinate, and (2) the existing literature poorly defined
|
|
these populations and clear criteria or thresholds for classifying them
|
|
were missing. Based on this review, we propose that hard-to-reach
|
|
populations be defined as those facing supply-side barriers to
|
|
vaccination due to geography by distance or terrain, transient or
|
|
nomadic movement, healthcare provider discrimination, lack of healthcare
|
|
provider recommendations, inadequate vaccination systems, war and
|
|
conflict, home births or other homebound mobility limitations, or legal
|
|
restrictions. Although multiple mechanisms may apply to the same
|
|
population, supply-side barriers should be distinguished from
|
|
demand-side barriers. Hard-to-vaccinate populations are defined as those
|
|
who are reachable but difficult to vaccinate due to distrust, religious
|
|
beliefs, lack of awareness of vaccine benefits and recommendations,
|
|
poverty or low socioeconomic status, lack of time to access available
|
|
vaccination services, or gender-based discrimination. Further work is
|
|
needed to better define hard-to-reach populations and delineate them
|
|
from populations that may be hard to vaccinate due to complex refusal
|
|
reasons, improve measurement of the size and importance of their impact,
|
|
and examine interventions related to overcoming barriers for each
|
|
mechanism. This will enable policy makers, governments, donors, and the
|
|
vaccine community to better plan interventions and allocate necessary
|
|
resources to remove existing barriers to vaccination. (C) 2019 Elsevier
|
|
Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ozawa, S (Corresponding Author), UNC Eshelman Sch Pharm, CB 7574,Beard Hall 115H, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Ozawa, Sachiko; Yemeke, Tatenda T., Univ N Carolina, UNC Eshelman Sch Pharm, Div Practice Adv \& Clin Educ, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
|
|
Ozawa, Sachiko, Univ N Carolina, UNC Eshelman Sch Pharm, Dept Maternal \& Child Hlth, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
|
|
Evans, Daniel R., Duke Univ, Sch Med, Durham, NC USA.
|
|
Pallas, Sarah E.; Wallace, Aaron S., CDC, US Ctr Dis Control \& Prevent, Global Immunizat Div, Atlanta, GA USA.
|
|
Lee, Bruce Y., Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Publ Hlth Computat \& Operat Res PHICOR, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Lee, Bruce Y., Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Int Hlth, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Lee, Bruce Y., Johns Hopkins Univ, GOPC, Baltimore, MD USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.06.081},
|
|
ISSN = {0264-410X},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-2518},
|
|
Keywords = {Hard-to-reach; Definition; Vaccination; Immunization; Unvaccinated},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS VACCINATION; ROUTINE IMMUNIZATION COVERAGE;
|
|
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; HEALTH-CARE; INFLUENZA VACCINATION; CHILDREN;
|
|
BARRIERS; RECOMMENDATIONS; INCREASE; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Immunology; Medicine, Research \& Experimental},
|
|
Author-Email = {ozawa@unc.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ozawa, Sachiko/Z-4944-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ozawa, Sachiko/0000-0001-7608-9038
|
|
Evans, Daniel/0000-0002-9818-5001
|
|
Wallace, Aaron/0000-0003-2264-3229
|
|
Pallas, Sarah/0000-0002-9719-6278
|
|
Yemeke, Tatenda/0000-0002-1489-627X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {106},
|
|
Times-Cited = {36},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000485212400005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000982375500001,
|
|
Author = {Angulo-Guerrero, Maria J. and Barcena-Martin, Elena and Medina-Claros,
|
|
Samuel and Perez-Moreno, Salvador},
|
|
Title = {Labor market regulation and gendered entrepreneurship: a cross-national
|
|
perspective},
|
|
Journal = {SMALL BUSINESS ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 MAY 5},
|
|
Abstract = {Plain English SummaryOur analysis reveals that the application of labor
|
|
regulation, apparently formulated in a gender-neutral manner, might lead
|
|
to gender differences in entrepreneurial activity, especially in
|
|
developing countries. We find that the link between labor market
|
|
regulation and entrepreneurship tend to weaken for men and women as the
|
|
country's level of economic development increases, becoming negligible
|
|
in high-income countries. However, in developing countries more flexible
|
|
labor regulation is closely related to lower female early-stage
|
|
entrepreneurial activity. This is because women's greater opportunity
|
|
costs and risk aversion, along with gender biases that usually
|
|
characterize labor markets in numerous developing economies, might
|
|
prevent them from taking advantage of their capabilities and
|
|
opportunities for new ventures. Consequently, improving labor regulation
|
|
in these countries in aspects such as minimum wages, laws inhibiting
|
|
layoffs, severity requirements, and restraints on hiring and hours
|
|
worked might be particularly advisable in terms of female
|
|
entrepreneurship, rather than the traditional prescription of increasing
|
|
labor flexibility suggested by the liberal paradigm.
|
|
This research examines the extent to which labor regulatory context
|
|
matters for entrepreneurial activity under a gender perspective, using
|
|
institutional economics and feminist theories as the analytical
|
|
framework. We conduct a panel data analysis for 86 countries during the
|
|
period 2004-2018 by differentiating between high-income and developing
|
|
economies. Our findings highlight that while the links between labor
|
|
regulation and entrepreneurial activity seem negligible in high-income
|
|
economies, in developing economies labor flexibility is closely
|
|
associated with female entrepreneurship. However, unlike the
|
|
market-oriented view on the positive association between labor market
|
|
flexibility and entrepreneurship, our results point out that in these
|
|
economies more flexible labor regulation is related to lower early-stage
|
|
female entrepreneurial activity, even though this relationship tends to
|
|
vanish as the level of economic development of the country increases.
|
|
This study contributes theoretically, helping to advance the analysis of
|
|
gender differences in entrepreneurial activity from an institutional
|
|
approach, and practically, providing evidence to policy makers on
|
|
possible gender differences in the application of country-level labor
|
|
market regulation in terms of entrepreneurial activity.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Perez-Moreno, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Malaga, Dept Appl Econ Econ Policy, Malaga 29071, Spain.
|
|
Angulo-Guerrero, Maria J., Univ Malaga, Dept Business Management, Malaga 29071, Spain.
|
|
Barcena-Martin, Elena, Univ Malaga, Dept Appl Econ Stat \& Econometr, Malaga 29071, Spain.
|
|
Medina-Claros, Samuel, Univ Malaga, Dept Appl Econ Polit Econ, Malaga 29071, Spain.
|
|
Perez-Moreno, Salvador, Univ Malaga, Dept Appl Econ Econ Policy, Malaga 29071, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11187-023-00776-0},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0921-898X},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-0913},
|
|
Keywords = {Labor market regulation; Entrepreneurship; Gender; Cross-country
|
|
analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMPLOYMENT PROTECTION LEGISLATION; WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS; SELF; BUSINESS;
|
|
FEMALE; PERCEPTIONS; LEADERSHIP; FRAMEWORK; NASCENT; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Economics; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {mjanguloguerrero@uma.es
|
|
barcenae@uma.es
|
|
smedina@uma.es
|
|
sperezmoreno@uma.es},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Medina-Claros, Samuel/0000-0002-6512-9177},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {112},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000982375500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000340448600007,
|
|
Author = {Serowik, Kristin L. and Rowe, Michael and Black, Anne C. and Ablondi,
|
|
Karen and Fiszdon, Joanna and Wilber, Charles and Rosen, Marc I.},
|
|
Title = {Financial motivation to work among people with psychiatric disorders},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {186-190},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Supported employment is an effective intervention for people
|
|
with serious mental illnesses (SMI) but is underutilized. Clients'
|
|
desire to work might be heightened by programs that provide counseling
|
|
about managing one's funds, since money management helps people become
|
|
more aware of the advantages of having money.
|
|
Aim: To analyze the thoughts of recently homeless or hospitalized
|
|
persons with SMI concerning their personal finances and employment.
|
|
Methods: We interviewed 49 people with SMI about their finances,
|
|
reviewed transcripts and analyzed their baseline characteristics.
|
|
Results: Twenty of the 49 participants spontaneously expressed a desire
|
|
to work in order to earn more money. Those who expressed a desire to
|
|
work managed their money significantly better than those who did not.
|
|
Conclusion: Discussion of finances, such as that fostered by money
|
|
management programs, may promote engagement in vocational rehabilitation
|
|
and working for pay.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Serowik, KL (Corresponding Author), Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, 34 Pk St, New Haven, CT 06519 USA.
|
|
Serowik, Kristin L.; Rowe, Michael; Black, Anne C.; Ablondi, Karen; Fiszdon, Joanna; Rosen, Marc I., Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, New Haven, CT 06519 USA.
|
|
Serowik, Kristin L.; Black, Anne C.; Ablondi, Karen; Fiszdon, Joanna; Rosen, Marc I., VA Connecticut Healthcare Syst, West Haven, CT USA.
|
|
Wilber, Charles, Hartford Hosp, Inst Living, Hartford, CT 06115 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3109/09638237.2014.924046},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8237},
|
|
EISSN = {1360-0567},
|
|
Keywords = {Money management; serious mental illness; social security; supported
|
|
employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SERIOUS MENTAL-ILLNESS; SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; MONEY MANAGEMENT;
|
|
SOCIAL-SECURITY; SCHIZOPHRENIA; OUTCOMES; DISABILITY; SERVICES;
|
|
BARRIERS; BENEFITS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Clinical},
|
|
Author-Email = {klserowik@suffolk.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rowe, Michael/0000-0002-6940-5546
|
|
Serowik, Kristin/0000-0001-6608-9069},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000340448600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000433129800081,
|
|
Author = {Mbengi, Regine Levo Kiasuwa and Nicolaie, Alina Mioara and Goetghebeur,
|
|
Els and Otter, Renee and Mortelmans, Katrien and Missinnne, Sarah and
|
|
Arbyn, Marc and Bouland, Catherine and de Brouwer, Christophe},
|
|
Title = {Assessing factors associated with long-term work disability after cancer
|
|
in Belgium: a population-based cohort study using competing risks
|
|
analysis with a 7-year follow-up},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives The number of workers with cancer has dramatically increasing
|
|
worldwide. One of the main priorities is to preserve their quality of
|
|
life and the sustainability of social security systems. We have carried
|
|
out this study to assess factors associated with the ability to work
|
|
after cancer. Such insight should help with the planning of
|
|
rehabilitation needs and tailored programmes.
|
|
Participants We conducted this register-based cohort study using
|
|
individual data from the Belgian Disability Insurance. Data on 15 543
|
|
socially insured Belgian people who entered into the long-term work
|
|
disability between 2007 and 2011 due to cancer were used.
|
|
Primary and secondary outcome measures We estimated the duration of work
|
|
disability using Kaplan-Meier and the cause-specific cumulative
|
|
incidence of ability to work stratified by age, gender, occupational
|
|
class and year of entering the work disability system for 11 cancer
|
|
sites using the Fine and Gray model allowing for competing risks.
|
|
Results The overall median time of work disability was 1.59 years (95\%
|
|
CI 1.52 to 1.66), ranging from 0.75 to 4.98 years. By the end of
|
|
follow-up, more than one-third of the disabled cancer survivors were
|
|
able to work (35\%). While a large proportion of the women were able to
|
|
work at the end of follow-up, the men who were able to work could do so
|
|
sooner. Being women, white collar, young and having haematological, male
|
|
genital or breast cancers were factors with the bestlikelihood to be
|
|
able to return to work.
|
|
Conclusion Good prognostic factors for the ability to work were youth,
|
|
woman, white collar and having breast, male genital or haematological
|
|
cancers. Reviewing our results together with the cancer incidence
|
|
predictions up to 2025 offers a high value for social security and
|
|
rehabilitation planning and for ascertaining patients' perspectives.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mbengi, RLK (Corresponding Author), Sci Inst Publ Hlth, Belgian Canc Ctr, Brussels, Belgium.
|
|
Mbengi, RLK (Corresponding Author), Univ Libre Bruxelles ESP ULB, Brussels Sch Publ Hlth, Res Ctr Environm \& Occupat Hlth, Brussels, Belgium.
|
|
Mbengi, Regine Levo Kiasuwa; Otter, Renee; Missinnne, Sarah, Sci Inst Publ Hlth, Belgian Canc Ctr, Brussels, Belgium.
|
|
Mbengi, Regine Levo Kiasuwa; Bouland, Catherine; de Brouwer, Christophe, Univ Libre Bruxelles ESP ULB, Brussels Sch Publ Hlth, Res Ctr Environm \& Occupat Hlth, Brussels, Belgium.
|
|
Nicolaie, Alina Mioara; Goetghebeur, Els, Univ Ghent, Stat Gent CRESCENDO, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Mortelmans, Katrien, LNZ, KaMoCo, Antwerp, Belgium.
|
|
Arbyn, Marc, Sci Inst Publ Hlth, Unit Canc Epidemiol, Brussels, Belgium.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014094},
|
|
Article-Number = {e014094},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RETURN-TO-WORK; BREAST-CANCER; OCCUPATIONAL CLASS; SOCIAL-INEQUALITY;
|
|
SICK LEAVE; SURVIVORS; EMPLOYMENT; REHABILITATION; HEALTH; INTERVENTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {regine.kiasuwambengi@wiv-isp.be},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Goetghebeur, Els J/H-7939-2016
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kiasuwa, Regine/0000-0002-5839-8459
|
|
Zhang, Jinyu/0000-0003-3877-9147
|
|
Nicolaie, M. A./0000-0001-8468-921X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000433129800081},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000368306700018,
|
|
Author = {Niedzielski, Michael A. and O'Kelly, Morton E. and Boschmann, E. Eric},
|
|
Title = {Synthesizing spatial interaction data for social science research:
|
|
Validation and an investigation of spatial mismatch in Wichita, Kansas},
|
|
Journal = {COMPUTERS ENVIRONMENT AND URBAN SYSTEMS},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {54},
|
|
Pages = {204-218},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Rising economic segregation suggests a need to examine constraints to
|
|
job access by race/ethnicity and economic inequality simultaneously.
|
|
This often requires detailed socio-spatial interaction data to make
|
|
progress on theoretical and modeling development, empirical studies and
|
|
policy insights. Commuting data are commonly used because of its wide
|
|
availability. Despite excellent work trip datasets from the U.S. Census
|
|
such as the Census Transportation Planning Package and the Longitudinal
|
|
Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) data, there are often gaps between
|
|
the data that are available and ideal detailed commuting data suited to
|
|
models and data analysis. This is because commuting data are available
|
|
for a limited set of socio-economic dimensions and this coarseness
|
|
limits researchers in their ability to uncover nuances of place-based
|
|
generalizations about commuting, either socially or spatially. In one
|
|
promising approach, an information minimizing technique was proposed as
|
|
a workable practical method to synthesize disaggregated work trip flows.
|
|
Because the strength of fit between predicted and observed trips is
|
|
unknown, this paper validates this method using real commutes
|
|
disaggregated by income and then synthesizes race-income work trips
|
|
using LEHD data for the Wichita, Kansas metropolitan statistical area.
|
|
We find that low-income Whites travel longer distances and have more
|
|
dispersed travel patterns than all African-American and Asian income
|
|
groups and that both low- and middle-income groups of all race groups
|
|
have spatially constrained flows. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights
|
|
reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Niedzielski, MA (Corresponding Author), Univ N Dakota, Dept Geog \& Geog Informat Sci, 221 Centennial Dr Stop 9020, Grand Forks, ND 58202 USA.
|
|
Niedzielski, Michael A., Univ N Dakota, Dept Geog \& Geog Informat Sci, Grand Forks, ND 58202 USA.
|
|
O'Kelly, Morton E., Ohio State Univ, Dept Geog, Columbus, OH 43210 USA.
|
|
Boschmann, E. Eric, Univ Denver, Dept Geog \& Environm, Denver, CO 80208 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.compenvurbsys.2015.09.004},
|
|
ISSN = {0198-9715},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-7587},
|
|
Keywords = {Commuting; Spatial interaction; Accessibility; Disaggregated; Race;
|
|
Income},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB ACCESS; COMMUTING PATTERNS; INTERACTION-MODELS; ACCESSIBILITY; WORK;
|
|
TIME; EMPLOYMENT; JOURNEY; TRAVEL; SEGREGATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Engineering,
|
|
Environmental; Environmental Studies; Geography; Operations Research \&
|
|
Management Science; Regional \& Urban Planning},
|
|
Author-Email = {michael.niedzielski@und.edu
|
|
okelly.1@osu.edu
|
|
eric.boschmann@du.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {O'Kelly, Morton/0000-0002-8967-9771
|
|
Niedzielski, Michal/0000-0001-6639-1057
|
|
Boschmann, Eric/0000-0003-1419-4339},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {24},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {25},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000368306700018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000693258500012,
|
|
Author = {Cardona, Beatriz},
|
|
Title = {The pitfalls of personalization rhetoric in time of health crisis:
|
|
COVID-19 pandemic and cracks on neoliberal ideologies},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH PROMOTION INTERNATIONAL},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {36},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {714-721},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {The rise of the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the incongruity of
|
|
individualization ideologies that position individuals at the centre of
|
|
health care, by contributing, making informed decisions and exercising
|
|
choice regarding their health options and lifestyle considerations. When
|
|
confronted with a global health threat, government across the world,
|
|
have understood that the rhetoric of individualization, personal
|
|
responsibility and personal choice would only led to disastrous national
|
|
health consequences. In other words, individual choice offers a poor
|
|
criterion to guide the health and wellbeing of a population. This
|
|
reality has forced many advanced economies around the world to suspend
|
|
their pledges to `small government', individual responsibility and
|
|
individual freedom, opting instead for a more rebalanced approach to
|
|
economic and health outcomes with an increasing role for institutions
|
|
and mutualization. For many marginalized communities, individualization
|
|
ideologies and personalization approaches have never worked. On the
|
|
contrary, they have exacerbated social and health inequalities by
|
|
benefiting affluent individuals who possess the educational, cultural
|
|
and economic resources required to exercise `responsibility', avert
|
|
risks and adopt health protecting behaviours. The individualization of
|
|
the management of risk has also further stigmatized the poor by shifting
|
|
the blame for poor health outcomes from government to individuals. This
|
|
paper will explore how the COVID-19 pandemic exposes the cracks of
|
|
neoliberal rhetoric on personalization and opens new opportunities to
|
|
approach the health of a nation as socially, economically and
|
|
politically determined requiring `upstream' interventions on key areas
|
|
of health including housing, employment, education and access to health
|
|
care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cardona, B (Corresponding Author), Univ NSW, Ctr Primary Hlth Care \& Equ, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Cardona, Beatriz, Univ NSW, Ctr Primary Hlth Care \& Equ, Sydney, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapro/daaa112},
|
|
ISSN = {0957-4824},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2245},
|
|
Keywords = {health equity; social determinants of health; Australian social policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DETERMINANTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {b.cardona@unsw.edu.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cardona, Beatriz/0000-0001-8485-0528},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000693258500012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000306282700009,
|
|
Author = {Marti, A. and Reinhardt, J. D. and Graf, S. and Escorpizo, R. and Post,
|
|
M. W. M.},
|
|
Title = {To work or not to work: labour market participation of people with
|
|
spinal cord injury living in Switzerland},
|
|
Journal = {SPINAL CORD},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {50},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {521-526},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Study design: Cross-sectional survey.
|
|
Objectives: To establish labour market participation figures of persons
|
|
with spinal cord injury (SCI) living in Switzerland and to investigate
|
|
determinants and consequences of having paid work.
|
|
Setting: Community.
|
|
Methods: A survey among members of the Swiss Paraplegic Association was
|
|
performed in 2008. Inclusion criteria were: SCI of traumatic or
|
|
non-traumatic origin, minimum age of 18 years, and living in the
|
|
community for at least 1 year. A total of 559 persons with SCI returned
|
|
the questionnaire (response rate 27\%), of which 495 (24\%) fulfilled
|
|
the eligibility criteria. Bivariate and logistic regression analyses
|
|
were performed based on theoretical considerations and relevant
|
|
determinants found in the literature.
|
|
Results: Of the respondents of working age, 63.8\% were involved in
|
|
gainful employment. No significant difference between persons with
|
|
para-and tetraplegia was observed. Logistic regression showed that
|
|
employment was associated with age, time since onset of SCI, having
|
|
worked at 2 years after initial rehabilitation, having received
|
|
vocational counselling, having less pain, more years of education and
|
|
more perceived importance of work. Working persons achieved a
|
|
significantly higher total income. The most important reasons to work
|
|
were not financial, but rather of social nature. Barriers to work were
|
|
primarily health-related.
|
|
Conclusions: We found a relatively high employment rate among the
|
|
studied persons with SCI living in Switzerland. However, because of the
|
|
low response, it is difficult to generalise this finding. Spinal Cord
|
|
(2012) 50, 521-526; doi: 10.1038/sc.2011.181; published online 17
|
|
January 2012},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Marti, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Lucerne, Dept Hlth Sci \& Hlth Policy, Swiss Parapleg Res SPF, Guido A Zach Str 4, CH-6207 Nottwil, Switzerland.
|
|
Marti, A.; Reinhardt, J. D.; Graf, S.; Escorpizo, R., SPF, Nottwil, Switzerland.
|
|
Post, M. W. M., Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Rudolf Magnus Inst Neurosci, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Post, M. W. M., Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Ctr Excellence Rehabil Med, Utrecht, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1038/sc.2011.181},
|
|
ISSN = {1362-4393},
|
|
Keywords = {spinal cord injury; employment; return to work; determinants of working;
|
|
consequences of working},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMPLOYMENT; RETURN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {albert.marti@paranet.ch},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Escorpizo, Reuben/AAH-4934-2019
|
|
Post, Marcel/AAS-2502-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Escorpizo, Reuben/0000-0002-3199-4744},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {35},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000306282700009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000222055600002,
|
|
Author = {Moller, S and Bradley, D and Huber, E and Nielsen, F and Stephens, JD},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of relative poverty in advanced capitalist democracies},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {68},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {22-51},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Using relative poverty measures based on micro-level data from the
|
|
Luxembourg Income Study, in conjunction with pooled time-series data for
|
|
14 advanced capitalist democracies between 1970 and 1997, the authors
|
|
analyze separately the rate of pretax/transfer poverty and the reduction
|
|
in poverty achieved by systems of taxes and transfers. Socioeconomic
|
|
factors, including de-industrialization and unemployment, largely
|
|
explain pre-tax/transfer poverty rates of the working-age population in
|
|
these advanced capitalist democracies. The extent of redistribution
|
|
(measured as poverty reduction via taxes and transfers) is explained
|
|
directly by welfare state generosity and constitutional structure
|
|
(number of veto points) and the strength of the political left, both in
|
|
unions and in government.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Moller, S (Corresponding Author), Univ N Carolina, Dept Sociol, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Univ N Carolina, Dept Sociol, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2307/3088901},
|
|
ISSN = {0003-1224},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-8271},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME INEQUALITY; TIME; DEINDUSTRIALIZATION; GLOBALIZATION;
|
|
INSTITUTIONS; REGRESSION; EMPLOYMENT; EQUALITY; POLICIES; DUALISM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {moller@email.unc.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Moller, Stephanie/0000-0002-8239-719X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {98},
|
|
Times-Cited = {195},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {103},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000222055600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000642628300004,
|
|
Author = {Satoh, Miho and Sato, Naoko},
|
|
Title = {Relationship of attitudes toward uncertainty and preventive health
|
|
behaviors with breast cancer screening participation},
|
|
Journal = {BMC WOMENS HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {APR 21},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundcxsEarly detection of breast cancer is effective for
|
|
prolonging survival, but the participation rate in breast cancer
|
|
screening among target Japanese women remains low. This study examined
|
|
the relationships between tendencies in decision-making under conditions
|
|
of uncertainty, health behaviors, demographics, and breast cancer
|
|
screening participation in Japanese women.MethodsSecondary analysis was
|
|
performed using data from the 2017 Keio Household Panel Survey (KHPS).
|
|
The study population consisted of 2945 households. Data were obtained
|
|
from the KHPS for women aged 40 years or older. Breast cancer screening
|
|
participation in the past year, risk aversion, time preference, health
|
|
behaviors (e.g., smoking, alcohol consumption, and medical treatment
|
|
received in the past year), and demographic variables were
|
|
analyzed.ResultsData from 708 women were analyzed. Among the
|
|
respondents, 28.8\% had attended breast cancer screening in the past
|
|
year. Factors found to significantly contribute to breast cancer
|
|
screening participation included higher risk aversion (odds ratio
|
|
{[}OR], 2.34; 95\% confidence interval {[}CI]=1.03-5.32; p=0.043),
|
|
medical treatment received in the past year (OR, 1.56; 95\%
|
|
CI=1.06-2.30; p=0.026), higher self-rated health (OR, 1.47; 95\%
|
|
CI=1.18-1.83; p=0.001), living above the poverty line (OR, 2.31; 95\%
|
|
CI=1.13-4.72; p=0.022), and having children (OR, 1.57; 95\%
|
|
CI=1.02-2.42; p=0.042). Factors significantly associated with
|
|
non-participation in breast cancer screening were smoking (OR, 0.20;
|
|
95\% CI=0.10-0.42; p<0.000), alcohol consumption (OR, 0.56; 95\%
|
|
CI=0.37-0.86; p=0.007), being self-employed (OR, 0.22; 95\%
|
|
CI=0.10-0.46; p<0.000), and being unemployed (OR, 0.48; 95\%
|
|
CI=0.26-0.90; p=0.022). No significant relationship was observed between
|
|
time preference and screening participation.ConclusionsThe results
|
|
indicate that women who recognize the actual risk of developing breast
|
|
cancer or have high awareness of breast cancer prevention tend to
|
|
participate in breast cancer screening. Barriers to screening
|
|
participation are not working for an organization that encourages
|
|
screening and low income.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Satoh, M (Corresponding Author), Yokohama City Univ, Dept Fundamental Nursing, Kanazawa Ku, 3-9 Fukuura, Yokohama, Kanagawa 2360004, Japan.
|
|
Satoh, Miho, Yokohama City Univ, Dept Fundamental Nursing, Kanazawa Ku, 3-9 Fukuura, Yokohama, Kanagawa 2360004, Japan.
|
|
Sato, Naoko, Fukushima Med Univ, Dept Clin Nursing, Fukushima, Fukushima, Japan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12905-021-01317-1},
|
|
Article-Number = {171},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6874},
|
|
Keywords = {Breast cancer; Breast cancer screening; Mammography; Risk aversion;
|
|
Health behavior},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TIME PREFERENCE; MAMMOGRAPHY; SMOKING},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {miho.sth@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Satoh, Miho/0000-0001-8939-5595},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {71},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000642628300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000319071100001,
|
|
Author = {Greysen, S. Ryan and Richards, Adam K. and Coupet, Sidney and Desai,
|
|
Mayur M. and Padela, Aasim I.},
|
|
Title = {Global health experiences of U.S. Physicians: a mixed methods survey of
|
|
clinician-researchers and health policy leaders},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBALIZATION AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Month = {MAY 11},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Interest and participation in global health activities among
|
|
U.S. medical trainees has increased sharply in recent decades, yet the
|
|
global health activities of physicians who have completed residency
|
|
training remain understudied. Our objectives were to assess associations
|
|
between individual characteristics and patterns of post-residency global
|
|
health activities across the domains of health policy, education, and
|
|
research.
|
|
Methods: Cross-sectional, mixed methods national survey of 521
|
|
physicians with formal training in clinical and health services research
|
|
and policy leadership. Main measures were post-residency global health
|
|
activity and characteristics of this activity (location, funding,
|
|
products, and perceived synergy with domestic activities).
|
|
Results: Most respondents (73\%) hold faculty appointments across 84
|
|
U.S. medical schools and a strong plurality (46\%) are trained in
|
|
internal medicine. Nearly half of all respondents (44\%) reported some
|
|
global health activity after residency; however, the majority of this
|
|
group (73\%) reported spending <= 10\% of professional time on global
|
|
health in the past year. Among those active in global health, the
|
|
majority (78\%) reported receiving some funding for their global health
|
|
activities, and most (83\%) reported at least one scholarly,
|
|
educational, or other product resulting from this work. Many respondents
|
|
perceived synergies between domestic and global health activities, with
|
|
85\% agreeing with the statement that their global health activities had
|
|
enhanced the quality of their domestic work and increased their level of
|
|
involvement with vulnerable populations, health policy advocacy, or
|
|
research on the social determinants of health. Despite these perceived
|
|
synergies, qualitative data from in-depth interviews revealed personal
|
|
and institutional barriers to sustained global health involvement,
|
|
including work-family balance and a lack of specific avenues for career
|
|
development in global health.
|
|
Conclusions: Post-residency global health activity is common in this
|
|
diverse, multi-specialty group of physicians. Although those with global
|
|
health experience describe synergies with their domestic work, the lack
|
|
of established career development pathways may limit the benefits of
|
|
this synergy for individuals and their institutions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Greysen, SR (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, Div Hosp Med, 533 Parnassus Ave,Suite U112,Box 0131, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Greysen, S. Ryan, Univ Calif San Francisco, Div Hosp Med, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Richards, Adam K., Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Gen Internal Med \& Hlth Serv Res, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
Coupet, Sidney, Univ Michigan, Robert Wood Johnson Fdn, Clin Scholars Program, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Desai, Mayur M., Yale Univ, Robert Wood Johnson Fdn, Clin Scholars Program, New Haven, CT USA.
|
|
Desai, Mayur M., Yale Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Chron Dis Epidemiol, New Haven, CT USA.
|
|
Padela, Aasim I., Univ Chicago, Dept Med, Sect Emergency Med, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Padela, Aasim I., Univ Chicago, Dept Med, Gen Internal Med Sect, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1744-8603-9-19},
|
|
Article-Number = {19},
|
|
ISSN = {1744-8603},
|
|
Keywords = {Global health; International medicine; Health policy; Career development},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTERNATIONAL HEALTH; MEDICAL-EDUCATION; EMERGENCY-MEDICINE;
|
|
OPPORTUNITIES; SCHOLARS; PROGRAM; PROFESSIONALS; PERSPECTIVE; ELECTIVES;
|
|
CORPS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {Ryan.Greysen@ucsf.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {richards, adam/ABF-8189-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {richards, adam/0000-0002-7098-0513
|
|
Desai, Mayur/0000-0001-6616-0945},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000319071100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000403469500019,
|
|
Author = {Peppercorn, Jeffrey and Horick, Nora and Houck, Kevin and Rabin, Julia
|
|
and Villagra, Victor and Lyman, Gary H. and Wheeler, Stephanie B.},
|
|
Title = {Impact of the Elimination of Cost Sharing for Mammographic Breast Cancer
|
|
Screening Among Rural US Women: A Natural Experiment},
|
|
Journal = {CANCER},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {123},
|
|
Number = {13},
|
|
Pages = {2506-2515},
|
|
Month = {JUL 1},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Rural US women experience disparities in breast cancer
|
|
screening and outcomes. In 2006, a national rural health insurance
|
|
provider, the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA),
|
|
eliminated out-of-pocket costs for screening mammography. METHODS: This
|
|
study evaluated the elimination of cost sharing as a natural experiment:
|
|
it compared trends in screening before and after the policy change.
|
|
NRECA insurance claims data were used to identify all women aged 40 to
|
|
64 years who were eligible for breast cancer screening, and mammography
|
|
utilization from 1998 through 2011 was evaluated. Repeated measures
|
|
regression models were used to evaluate changes in utilization over time
|
|
and the association between screening and sociodemographic factors.
|
|
RESULTS: The analysis was based on 45,738 women enrolled in the NRECA
|
|
membership database for an average of 6.1 years and included 279,940
|
|
person-years of enrollment. Between 1998 and 2011, the annual screening
|
|
rate increased from 35\% to a peak of 50\% among women aged 40 to 49
|
|
years and from 49\% to 58\% among women aged 50 to 64 years. The
|
|
biennial screening rate increased from 56\% to 66\% for women aged 40 to
|
|
49 years and from 68\% to 73\% for women aged 50 to 64 years. Screening
|
|
rates increased significantly (P < .0001) after the elimination of cost
|
|
sharing and then declined slightly after changes to government screening
|
|
guidelines in 2009. Younger women experienced greater increases in both
|
|
annual screening (6.2\%) and biennial screening (5.6\%) after the
|
|
elimination of cost sharing in comparison with older women (3.0\% and
|
|
2.6\%, respectively). In a multivariate analysis, rural residence, lower
|
|
population income, and lower population education were associated with
|
|
modestly lower screening. CONCLUSIONS: In a national sample of
|
|
predominantly rural working-age women, the elimination of cost sharing
|
|
correlated with increased breast cancer screening. (C) 2017 American
|
|
Cancer Society.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Peppercorn, J (Corresponding Author), Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Canc Survivorship Program, 55 Fruit St, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
|
|
Peppercorn, Jeffrey; Horick, Nora; Rabin, Julia, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Ctr Canc, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Houck, Kevin, Duke Univ, Med Ctr, Durham, NC USA.
|
|
Villagra, Victor, Univ Connecticut, Hlth Ctr, Farmington, CT USA.
|
|
Lyman, Gary H., Fred Hutchinson Canc Res Ctr, 1124 Columbia St, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Wheeler, Stephanie B., Univ N Carolina, Sch Global Publ Hlth, Chapel Hill, NC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/cncr.30629},
|
|
ISSN = {0008-543X},
|
|
EISSN = {1097-0142},
|
|
Keywords = {access to care; breast cancer screening; disparities; health policy;
|
|
rural health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; TRENDS; RATES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {jpeppercorn@mgh.harvard.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Peppercorn, Jeffrey/GPX-3100-2022
|
|
Lyman, Gary H/K-5227-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lyman, Gary H/0000-0002-0823-8086
|
|
Horick, Nora/0000-0002-4355-5853},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000403469500019},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000463714200005,
|
|
Author = {Ciarli, Tommaso and Lorentz, Andre and Valente, Marco and Savona, Maria},
|
|
Title = {Structural changes and growth regimes},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {119-176},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {We study the relation between income distribution and growth, mediated
|
|
by structural changes on the demand and supply sides. Using the results
|
|
from a multi-sector growth model, we compare two growth regimes that
|
|
differ in three aspects: labour relations, competition and consumption
|
|
patterns. Regime one, similar to Fordism, is assumed to be relatively
|
|
less unequal, more competitive and to have more homogeneous consumers
|
|
than regime two, which is similar to post-Fordism. We analyse the
|
|
parameters that define the two regimes to study the role of the
|
|
economy's exogenous institutional features and endogenous structural
|
|
features on output growth, income distribution, and their relation. We
|
|
find that regime one exhibits significantly lower inequality, higher
|
|
output and productivity and lower unemployment compared to regime two,
|
|
and that both institutional and structural features explain these
|
|
differences. Most prominent amongst the first group are wage
|
|
differences, accompanied by capital income and the distribution of
|
|
bonuses to top managers. The concentration of production magnifies the
|
|
effect of wage differences on income distribution and output growth,
|
|
suggesting the relevance of competition norms. Amongst structural
|
|
determinants, firm organisation and the structure of demand are
|
|
particularly relevant. The way that final demand is distributed across
|
|
sectors influences competition and overall market concentration; demand
|
|
from the least wealthy classes is especially important. We show also the
|
|
tight linking between institutional and structural determinants. Based
|
|
on this linking, we conclude by discussing a number of policy
|
|
implications that emerge from our model.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ciarli, T (Corresponding Author), Univ Sussex, SPRU, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
|
|
Ciarli, Tommaso; Valente, Marco; Savona, Maria, Univ Sussex, SPRU, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
|
|
Lorentz, Andre, Univ Strasbourg, CNRS, BETA, Strasbourg, France.
|
|
Valente, Marco, Univ Aquila, Laquila, Italy.
|
|
Valente, Marco, Ruhr Univ Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
|
|
Valente, Marco, St Anna Sch Adv Studies, LEM, Pisa, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s00191-018-0574-4},
|
|
ISSN = {0936-9937},
|
|
EISSN = {1432-1386},
|
|
Keywords = {Structural change; Income distribution; Competition; Consumption
|
|
behaviour; Technological change},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {AGENT-BASED MODEL; BEVERIDGE CURVE; ECONOMIC-GROWTH; DEMAND; PATTERNS;
|
|
PERCEPTIONS; INEQUALITY; EMPLOYMENT; EVOLUTION; DYNAMICS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {T.Ciarli@sussex.ac.uk
|
|
alorentz@unistra.fr
|
|
marco.valente@univaq.it
|
|
M.Savona@sussex.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lorentz, André/J-4326-2015
|
|
Valente, Marco/G-8781-2012},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lorentz, André/0000-0002-1403-1460
|
|
Valente, Marco/0000-0001-5378-4898},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {127},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000463714200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000424188200006,
|
|
Author = {Alvarez, Begona and Ramos Palencia, Fernando},
|
|
Title = {Human capital and earnings in eighteenth-century Castile},
|
|
Journal = {EXPLORATIONS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {67},
|
|
Pages = {105-133},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Using the Ensenada Cadastre, a unique database on Castilian households
|
|
circa 1750, this paper provides new evidence on the relationship between
|
|
human capital and male labor earnings in eighteenth-century Spain. Human
|
|
capital is proxied by individual indicators of basic skills (literacy
|
|
and numeracy) and of occupational skills. We employ a Mincerian
|
|
regression approach and find a positive and statistically significant
|
|
association between skills and average earnings. Although we cannot
|
|
reliably assess causality in the observed relationship, these findings
|
|
are robust to conditioning on household composition, job
|
|
characteristics, and place of residence. Nonetheless, further testing
|
|
indicates that the earnings gradient associated with literacy is driven
|
|
mainly by unobservable variables (e.g., ability, family background) that
|
|
explain both the worker's acquisition of this skill and his earnings.
|
|
The estimated associations are stronger for urban than for rural workers
|
|
and are highly heterogeneous across activity sectors. Our analysis
|
|
reveals that workers with higher skills were not only better remunerated
|
|
in their main occupation but also more likely to diversify their
|
|
earnings through ``by-employment{''}. Finally, quantile regression
|
|
analysis indicates that earnings disparities between workers with
|
|
different skills were much smaller at the lower than the upper end of
|
|
the earnings distribution. This evidence suggests that, in
|
|
pre-industrial Castile, human capital may have contributed to inequality
|
|
of earnings. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Palencia, FR (Corresponding Author), Univ Pablo Olavide, Dept Econ, Carretera Utrera Km 1, Seville 41013, Spain.
|
|
Alvarez, Begona, Univ Vigo, Dept Appl Econ, Campus Lagoas Marcosende, Vigo 36310, Spain.
|
|
Ramos Palencia, Fernando, Univ Pablo Olavide, Dept Econ, Carretera Utrera Km 1, Seville 41013, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.eeh.2017.10.005},
|
|
ISSN = {0014-4983},
|
|
EISSN = {1090-2457},
|
|
Keywords = {Literacy; Numeracy; Occupational skills; Pre-industrial Spain;
|
|
Individual earnings; Skill premia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TECHNOLOGICAL DIFFUSION; WESTERN-EUROPE; INEQUALITY; SPAIN; EDUCATION;
|
|
LITERACY; SKILLS; PARTICIPATION; 19TH-CENTURY; FERTILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; History Of Social Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {alvarez@uvigo.es
|
|
fernando.ramos.palencia@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Alvarez, Begoña/H-9724-2015
|
|
Ramos-Palencia, Fernando/E-8556-2016
|
|
Palencia, Fernando Ramos/N-5092-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Alvarez, Begoña/0000-0003-1756-7014
|
|
Ramos-Palencia, Fernando/0000-0002-4677-2730
|
|
Palencia, Fernando Ramos/0000-0002-4677-2730},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {112},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000424188200006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000084333500002,
|
|
Author = {Siahpush, M and Singh, GK},
|
|
Title = {Social integration and mortality in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {1999},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {571-577},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To investigate the relationship between social integration
|
|
and mortality at the aggregate level of analysis.
|
|
Method: The data were compiled from several Australian Bureau of
|
|
Statistics documents. The unit of analysis was State (Territory)-year.
|
|
The multivariate regression analysis included data from all States and
|
|
the Australian Capital Territory for 1990-96. Five indicators of social
|
|
integration percentage of people living alone; divorce rate;
|
|
unemployment rate; proportion of people who are discouraged job seekers;
|
|
and unionisation rate - were used as predictors of nine measures of
|
|
mortality.
|
|
Results: Higher levels of social integration, as measured by all
|
|
indicators except unionisation, were associated with lower mortality
|
|
rates. In the case of unionisation, higher levels were associated with
|
|
increased mortality rates.
|
|
Conclusion: Studies concerning the relationship between social
|
|
integration and health should investigate the `type' and `level' of
|
|
social integration that is conducive to better health.
|
|
Implications: To help reduce disparities in health and mortality across
|
|
communities, public health researchers and policy makers need to closely
|
|
monitor geographic and temporal trends in social integration measures.
|
|
Social policies that emphasise investment in social integration or
|
|
social capital through job creation and training, provision of gainful
|
|
employment and social services for discouraged and marginalised workers,
|
|
improved work conditions and social support may lower mortality directly
|
|
or through their beneficial effects on health-promoting behaviours such
|
|
as reduced levels of smelting, drinking and physical inactivity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Siahpush, M (Corresponding Author), La Trobe Univ, Fac Humanities \& Social Sci, POB 821,Parkers Rd, Wodonga, Vic 3689, Australia.
|
|
La Trobe Univ, Fac Humanities \& Social Sci, Wodonga, Vic 3689, Australia.
|
|
NCI, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1467-842X.1999.tb01539.x},
|
|
ISSN = {1326-0200},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME INEQUALITY; HEALTH; POPULATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {22},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000084333500002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000754206300002,
|
|
Author = {Tavares, Aida Isabel},
|
|
Title = {Older Europeans' experience of unmet health care during the COVID-19
|
|
pandemic (first wave)},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {FEB 12},
|
|
Abstract = {Background During the COVID-19 pandemic the utilization of health
|
|
services has changed. People were living in a very different social,
|
|
economic and epidemiological context. Unmet health care is expected to
|
|
happen. The purposes of this work are i) to compare the differences
|
|
between unmet care across countries, ii) to find the main factors which
|
|
are associated with unmet health care, which includes giving up and
|
|
postponing medical care, as well as denial of medical care provision by
|
|
the health services, and iii) to determine if health systems'
|
|
characteristics and government decisions on lockdown were related to
|
|
unmet care. Methods We have used the most recent dataset collected by
|
|
the SHARE-COVID Survey during the summer of 2020. These data cover all
|
|
EU countries and are applied to people over 50. We have estimated a set
|
|
of logistic regressions to explain unmet health care. Results The
|
|
results indicate that women, people who are slightly younger, with
|
|
higher education and income, who find it hard to make ends meet each
|
|
month, and people with poorer health were more likely to experience
|
|
unmet health care. We also found that in health systems with high
|
|
out-of-pocket payments people are more likely to give up health care
|
|
while in countries with previous high levels of unmet health needs this
|
|
likelihood was the opposite; people in countries with a high number of
|
|
beds per capita and with a Beveridge-type health system were reporting
|
|
less postponement of health care. Conclusion Some policy measures may be
|
|
suggested such as social and economic measures to mitigate loss of
|
|
income, expansion of the points and forms of access to health care to
|
|
improve utilisation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tavares, AI (Corresponding Author), Lisbon Sch Econ \& Management, ISEG, Lisbon, Portugal.
|
|
Tavares, AI (Corresponding Author), Univ Coimbra, Ctr Studies \& Res Hlth, CEISUC, Coimbra, Portugal.
|
|
Tavares, Aida Isabel, Lisbon Sch Econ \& Management, ISEG, Lisbon, Portugal.
|
|
Tavares, Aida Isabel, Univ Coimbra, Ctr Studies \& Res Hlth, CEISUC, Coimbra, Portugal.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12913-022-07563-9},
|
|
Article-Number = {182},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Unmet health care; COVID-19 pandemic; Europe; SHARE},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME-RELATED INEQUALITIES; MEDICAL-CARE; ACCESS; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {atavares@iseg.ulisboa.pt},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tavares, AIsabel/HPG-6135-2023},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tavares, AIsabel/0000-0003-3487-1202},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000754206300002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000493526500001,
|
|
Author = {Eerola, Petteri and Lammi-Taskula, Johanna and O'Brien, Margaret and
|
|
Hietamaki, Johanna and Raikkonen, Eija},
|
|
Title = {Fathers' Leave Take-Up in Finland: Motivations and Barriers in a Complex
|
|
Nordic Leave Scheme},
|
|
Journal = {SAGE OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite being the first country in the world to introduce paternity
|
|
leave in 1978, Finland's current national leave scheme is complex with
|
|
regard to incentivizing fathers' take-up. Taking the unique Finnish
|
|
leave scheme as a case example, this article examines fathers'
|
|
motivations and barriers to leave. Although research on fathers' take-up
|
|
of leave in divergent leave policy contexts has increased dramatically,
|
|
fathers' motivations and barriers to leave have remained
|
|
underresearched. The article reports on a survey sample of 852 Finnish
|
|
fathers of infants who were taking paternity, parental, and other forms
|
|
of leave, drawn from the Population Register Center. Results show that
|
|
less than 20\% of fathers report taking no leave, with more than 80\%
|
|
taking some form of leave. A multinomial logistic regression analysis
|
|
indicates that father's work, partner's education, and family income,
|
|
along with father's wish to take a break from work and wish to
|
|
facilitate mother's return to work or studies, are the key
|
|
characteristics and motivations associated with fathers' take-up of
|
|
leave. The most common barriers to fathers' take-up of leave were
|
|
related to the family's economic situation and the father's job. It is
|
|
suggested that decreasing maternalism in the leave scheme, by extending
|
|
investment in fathers' individual well-paid leave weeks, will also help
|
|
promote greater gender equality for working parents in Finland following
|
|
the path of Nordic neighbors.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Eerola, P (Corresponding Author), Tampere Univ, Kalevantie 5, Tampere 33014, Finland.
|
|
Eerola, Petteri, Tampere Univ, Fac Social Sci, Tampere, Finland.
|
|
Eerola, Petteri, UCL, London, England.
|
|
O'Brien, Margaret, UCL, Child \& Family Policy, London, England.
|
|
Eerola, Petteri; O'Brien, Margaret, UCL, Thomas Comm Res Unit, London, England.
|
|
Lammi-Taskula, Johanna; Hietamaki, Johanna, Natl Inst Hlth \& Welf, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Raikkonen, Eija, Univ Jyvaskyla, Fac Educ \& Psychol, Jyvaskyla, Finland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/2158244019885389},
|
|
Article-Number = {2158244019885389},
|
|
ISSN = {2158-2440},
|
|
Keywords = {fatherhood; paternity leave; parental leave; Finland},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PAID PARENTAL LEAVE; GENDER EQUALITY; CARING FATHERS; INVOLVEMENT;
|
|
COUNTRIES; DIVISION; POLICIES; RIGHTS; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {petteri.eerola@tuni.fi},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hietamäki, Johanna/ACG-9155-2022
|
|
Lammi-Taskula, Johanna/AAJ-8900-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hietamaki, Johanna/0000-0002-0387-223X
|
|
Lammi-Taskula, Johanna/0000-0003-1571-2505
|
|
Eerola, Petteri/0000-0002-9563-5871},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000493526500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000798395200024,
|
|
Author = {Singh, Hardeep and Tang, Terence and Gray, Carolyn Steele and
|
|
Kokorelias, Kristina and Thombs, Rachel and Plett, Donna and Heffernan,
|
|
Matthew and Jarach, Carlotta M. and Armas, Alana and Law, Susan and
|
|
Cunningham, V, Heather and Nie, Jason Xin and Ellen, Moriah E. and
|
|
Thavorn, Kednapa and Nelson, Michelle L. A.},
|
|
Title = {Recommendations for the Design and Delivery of Transitions-Focused
|
|
Digital Health Interventions: Rapid Review},
|
|
Journal = {JMIR AGING},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {5},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Month = {APR-JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Older adults experience a high risk of adverse events during
|
|
hospital-to-home transitions. Implementation barriers have prevented
|
|
widespread clinical uptake of the various digital health technologies
|
|
that aim to support hospital-to-home transitions.
|
|
Objective: To guide the development of a digital health intervention to
|
|
support transitions from hospital to home (the Digital Bridge
|
|
intervention), the specific objectives of this review were to describe
|
|
the various roles and functions of health care providers supporting
|
|
hospital-to-home transitions for older adults, allowing future
|
|
technologies to be more targeted to support their work; describe the
|
|
types of digital health interventions used to facilitate the transition
|
|
from hospital to home for older adults and elucidate how these
|
|
interventions support the roles and functions of providers; describe the
|
|
lessons learned from the design and implementation of these
|
|
interventions; and identify opportunities to improve the fit between
|
|
technology and provider functions within the Digital Bridge intervention
|
|
and other transition-focused digital health interventions.
|
|
Methods: This 2-phase rapid review involved a selective review of
|
|
providers' roles and their functions during hospital-to-home transitions
|
|
(phase 1) and a structured literature review on digital health
|
|
interventions used to support older adults' hospital-to-home transitions
|
|
(phase 2). During the analysis, the technology functions identified in
|
|
phase 2 were linked to the provider roles and functions identified in
|
|
phase 1.
|
|
Results: In phase 1, various provider roles were identified that
|
|
facilitated hospital-to-home transitions, including navigation-specific
|
|
roles and the roles of nurses and physicians. The key transition
|
|
functions performed by providers were related to the 3 categories of
|
|
continuity of care (ie, informational, management, and relational
|
|
continuity). Phase 2, included articles (n=142) that reported digital
|
|
health interventions targeting various medical conditions or groups.
|
|
Most digital health interventions supported management continuity (eg,
|
|
follow-up, assessment, and monitoring of patients' status after hospital
|
|
discharge), whereas informational and relational continuity were the
|
|
least supported. The lessons learned from the interventions were
|
|
categorized into technology- and research-related challenges and
|
|
opportunities and informed several recommendations to guide the design
|
|
of transition-focused digital health interventions.
|
|
Conclusions: This review highlights the need for Digital Bridge and
|
|
other digital health interventions to align the design and delivery of
|
|
digital health interventions with provider functions, design and test
|
|
interventions with older adults, and examine multilevel outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Singh, H (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Temerty Fac Med, Dept Occupat Sci \& Occupat Therapy, 500 Univ Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1V7, Canada.
|
|
Singh, Hardeep, Univ Toronto, Temerty Fac Med, Dept Occupat Sci \& Occupat Therapy, 500 Univ Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1V7, Canada.
|
|
Singh, Hardeep; Armas, Alana; Nelson, Michelle L. A., March Dimes Canada, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Singh, Hardeep; Heffernan, Matthew, Univ Toronto, Temerty Fac Med, Rehabil Sci Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Singh, Hardeep, Univ Hlth Network, Toronto Rehabil Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Tang, Terence; Plett, Donna; Law, Susan; Nie, Jason Xin, Trillium Hlth Partners, Inst Better Hlth, Mississauga, ON, Canada.
|
|
Tang, Terence, Univ Toronto, Dept Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Gray, Carolyn Steele; Thombs, Rachel; Armas, Alana; Nelson, Michelle L. A., Sinai Hlth Syst, Collaboratory Res \& Innovat, Lunenfeld Tanenbaum Res Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Gray, Carolyn Steele; Plett, Donna; Law, Susan; Ellen, Moriah E.; Nelson, Michelle L. A., Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Inst Hlth Policy Management \& Evaluat, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kokorelias, Kristina, Sunnybrook Hlth Sci Ctr, Sunnybrook Res Inst, St Johns Rehab Res Program, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Jarach, Carlotta M., Ist Ric Farmacol Mario Negri IRCCS, Dept Environm Hlth Sci, Milan, Italy.
|
|
Cunningham, Heather, V, Univ Toronto, Gerstein Sci Informat Ctr, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Ellen, Moriah E., Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Dept Hlth Policy \& Management, Guilford Glazer Fac Business \& Management, Beer Sheva, Israel.
|
|
Ellen, Moriah E., Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Fac Hlth Sci, Beer Sheva, Israel.
|
|
Thavorn, Kednapa, Ottawa Hosp, Clin Epidemiol Program, Res Inst, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
|
|
Thavorn, Kednapa, Univ Ottawa, Sch Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, Ottawa, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2196/35929},
|
|
Article-Number = {e35929},
|
|
EISSN = {2561-7605},
|
|
Keywords = {transitions; health; medical informatics; aged; mobile phone},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; IMPROVING CARE TRANSITIONS; OBSTRUCTIVE
|
|
PULMONARY-DISEASE; PATIENTS AFTER-DISCHARGE; QUALITY-OF-LIFE;
|
|
OLDER-ADULTS; FOLLOW-UP; HEART-FAILURE; SELF-MANAGEMENT; ELECTRONIC
|
|
DISCHARGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geriatrics \& Gerontology; Gerontology; Medical Informatics},
|
|
Author-Email = {hardeepk.singh@mail.utoronto.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tang, Terence/HNQ-7020-2023
|
|
Jarach, Carlotta Micaela/AAA-5148-2022
|
|
Jarach, Carlotta Micaela/GQH-8460-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jarach, Carlotta Micaela/0000-0002-9963-1624
|
|
Jarach, Carlotta Micaela/0000-0002-9963-1624
|
|
Heffernan, Matthew/0000-0001-7270-2069
|
|
Kokorelias, Kristina/0000-0002-1277-472X
|
|
Armas, Alana/0000-0002-7664-3294
|
|
Singh, Hardeep/0000-0002-7429-5580
|
|
Plett, Donna/0000-0001-8457-7218
|
|
Thombs, Rachel/0000-0002-3915-2234
|
|
Tang, Terence/0000-0002-1735-7298
|
|
Steele Gray, Carolyn/0000-0002-2146-0001},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {259},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000798395200024},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000314156400006,
|
|
Author = {Selwyn, Ben},
|
|
Title = {The global retail revolution, fruiticulture and economic development in
|
|
north-east Brazil},
|
|
Journal = {REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {153-179},
|
|
Month = {FEB 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Rapidly expanding world fruiticulture markets provide developing country
|
|
producers with new income opportunities and much development literature
|
|
and policy is orientated towards facilitating export production in these
|
|
countries. However, it has been widely observed that the global retail
|
|
revolution is accelerating the exclusion of small producers from export
|
|
markets and (increasingly) from many domestic retail chains due to
|
|
rising entry barriers. Small producers are thus often only able to sell
|
|
their produce on to relatively low price traditional markets. This paper
|
|
is based on data collected from a recently emerged fruiticulture sector
|
|
in north-east Brazil. It shows that (a) export fruiticulture does
|
|
generate significant economic benefits, (b) that modern domestic retail
|
|
markets are increasingly demanding and exclusionary, but also, and
|
|
counter to much of the literature concerned with export promotion, that
|
|
(c) small-farms producing fruiticulture products for traditional
|
|
domestic markets do generate positive local economic impacts.
|
|
Policymakers should, therefore, consider new ways of assisting smaller
|
|
producers to enter these markets.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Selwyn, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Sussex, Sch Global Studies, Dept Int Relat, Brighton BN19SN, E Sussex, England.
|
|
Univ Sussex, Sch Global Studies, Dept Int Relat, Brighton BN19SN, E Sussex, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09692290.2011.633850},
|
|
ISSN = {0969-2290},
|
|
EISSN = {1466-4526},
|
|
Keywords = {Latin America; Brazil; fruiticulture; small producers; global retail
|
|
revolution; upgrading; global commodity chains; economic development},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WAGE WORK; HORTICULTURE; FLEXIBILITY; CONTRACTS; GENDER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; International Relations; Political Science},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000314156400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000524958400001,
|
|
Author = {Faura-Martinez, Ursula and Lafuente-Lechuga, Matilde and Garcia-Luque,
|
|
Olga},
|
|
Title = {Social and Territorial Cohesion in Spain: Relevance of the Socioeconomic
|
|
Context},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {150},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {501-547},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Exclusion processes are shaped through the accumulation of social
|
|
disadvantages in seven life dimensions: income, employment, education,
|
|
health, housing, social and family relationships and participation. This
|
|
paper conducts a factor analysis to build seven partial indices that
|
|
synthesise the relevant information of each of the dimensions under
|
|
consideration, providing the explanatory factors underlying social
|
|
exclusion risk. A multidimensional social exclusion index is constructed
|
|
from the explanatory factors to account for the social and territorial
|
|
inequalities existing in Spain during the crisis, 2009-2014. At the same
|
|
time, an indicator of the regional socioeconomic context is built to
|
|
contrast its influence over the social cohesion outcomes obtained. This
|
|
work includes all Spanish territories with a regional government, that
|
|
is, seventeen autonomous communities and two autonomous cities, and
|
|
considers a wide set of both demographic and economic social indicators.
|
|
Results show broad gaps across regions in both the social scenario and
|
|
socioeconomic context conditions. Additionally, the influence of the
|
|
socioeconomic context over the social wellbeing levels found in each
|
|
territory is confirmed, as the analysis reveals a high correlation
|
|
between the social exclusion index and the indicator.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lafuente-Lechuga, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Murcia, Dept Quantitat Methods Econ \& Business, Campus Espinardo, E-30100 Murcia, Spain.
|
|
Faura-Martinez, Ursula; Lafuente-Lechuga, Matilde, Univ Murcia, Dept Quantitat Methods Econ \& Business, Campus Espinardo, E-30100 Murcia, Spain.
|
|
Garcia-Luque, Olga, Univ Murcia, Dept Appl Econ, Campus Espinardo, E-30100 Murcia, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11205-020-02308-9},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0303-8300},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-0921},
|
|
Keywords = {Social exclusion; Regional socioeconomic context; Factor analysis;
|
|
Multidimensional index; Social and territorial cohesion},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-CRISIS; EVOLUTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {faura@um.es
|
|
mati@um.es
|
|
olga@um.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lechuga, Matilde Lafuente/M-8097-2017
|
|
Faura, U./N-3621-2019
|
|
faura, ursula/N-4553-2015
|
|
García-Luque, Olga/AAA-2059-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lechuga, Matilde Lafuente/0000-0002-6010-4851
|
|
Faura, U./0000-0001-6373-9433
|
|
faura, ursula/0000-0001-6373-9433
|
|
García-Luque, Olga/0000-0002-5160-4272},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {92},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000524958400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000705182900008,
|
|
Author = {Mikolajczak, Pawel},
|
|
Title = {What affects employment by NGOs? Counteraction to precarious employment
|
|
in the Polish non-profit sector in the perspective of COVID-19 pandemic
|
|
crises},
|
|
Journal = {OECONOMIA COPERNICANA},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {761-788},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Research background: The precarious employment in non-governmental
|
|
organizations has not been the subject of thorough scientific
|
|
considerations so far. Meanwhile, the dominance of flexible forms of
|
|
employment in an organization evokes a sense of instability, insecurity
|
|
and uncertainty among employees. It weakens the relationship between
|
|
staff and the organization, which, by not providing employees with
|
|
prospects for permanent employment, creates a threat to its own
|
|
development. The COVID-19 pandemic is reinforcing these fears as the
|
|
situation in the labour market continues to deteriorate.
|
|
Purpose of the article: The purpose of this study is to identify the
|
|
factors affecting NGOs employment of contract employees, as a key
|
|
condition for crowding out precarious employment.
|
|
Methods: Logistic regression analysis was conducted based on a national
|
|
representative survey of 1500 Polish NGOs.
|
|
Findings \& value added: Its results indicate that NGOs are increasing
|
|
the employment of contract staff in order to cope with the excessive
|
|
bureaucracy of public administration. A stimulating impact on employment
|
|
is also provided by difficulties in maintaining good staff and
|
|
volunteers, as well as when there is no sense of security in running an
|
|
organization. In turn, the lack of people ready to selflessly get
|
|
involved in an organization's activities, as well as difficulties in
|
|
accessing premises appropriate to NGOs both reduce the desire among
|
|
staff to be employed full-time. The monitoring of precarious employment
|
|
(PE) in NGOs is of key importance in the shaping and effectiveness of
|
|
national policies aimed at improving the living standards of society as
|
|
a whole. NGOs are an important element, as they fill the gaps remaining
|
|
in the implementation of such policies. In the long term, improving the
|
|
quality of full-time employment in such entities by reducing the
|
|
barriers to their activity will increase their potential for fulfilling
|
|
their social mission. To date, such barriers and their relation to
|
|
employment have not been considered in research literature. However, a
|
|
considerable proportion of employees in the Polish NGO sector may join
|
|
the ranks of those excluded from employment and deprived of income due
|
|
to the crisis on the job market caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. This
|
|
article contributes to the existing literature and practice by
|
|
identifying the influence of wide spectrum of barriers of NGOs activity
|
|
on permanent employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mikolajczak, P (Corresponding Author), Poznan Univ Econ \& Business, Poznan, Poland.
|
|
Mikolajczak, Pawel, Poznan Univ Econ \& Business, Poznan, Poland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.24136/oc.2021.025},
|
|
ISSN = {2083-1277},
|
|
EISSN = {2353-1827},
|
|
Keywords = {contract employees; precarious employment; barriers to activity; NGOs},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRUST; WORK; STRATEGIES; MOTIVATION; TURNOVER; PEOPLE; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {pawel.mikolajczak@ue.poznan.pl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Mikołajczak, Paweł/U-6413-2017},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mikołajczak, Paweł/0000-0002-7662-2565},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {93},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000705182900008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000369718800006,
|
|
Author = {Tanser, Frank and Baernighausen, Till and Vandormael, Alain and Dobra,
|
|
Adrian},
|
|
Title = {HIV treatment cascade in migrants and mobile populations},
|
|
Journal = {CURRENT OPINION IN HIV AND AIDS},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {430-438},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose of review
|
|
Health policy makers aspire to achieve an HIV treatment `cascade' in
|
|
which diagnostic and treatment services are accessed early and routinely
|
|
by HIV-infected individuals. However, migrants and highly mobile
|
|
individuals are likely to interact with HIV treatment programs and the
|
|
healthcare system in ways that reflect their movement through time and
|
|
place, affecting their successful progression through the HIV treatment
|
|
cascade. We review recent research that has examined the challenges in
|
|
effective and sustained HIV treatment for migrants and mobile
|
|
populations.
|
|
Recent findings
|
|
Mobility is associated with increased risk of antiretroviral therapy
|
|
(ART) nonadherence, lost to follow-up, deterioration in CD4 count,
|
|
HIV-related death, development of drug resistance and general
|
|
noncontinuity of HIV care. Migrants' slow progression through the HIV
|
|
treatment cascade can be attributed to feelings of confusion,
|
|
helplessness; an inability to effectively communicate in the native
|
|
language; poor knowledge about administrative or logistical requirements
|
|
of the healthcare system; the possibility of deportation or expulsion
|
|
based on the legal status of the undocumented migrant; fear of
|
|
disclosure and social isolation from the exile or compatriot group.
|
|
Travel or transition to the host country commonly makes it difficult for
|
|
migrants to remain enrolled in ART programs and to maintain adherence to
|
|
treatment.
|
|
Summary
|
|
Existing public health systems fail to properly account for migration,
|
|
and actionable knowledge of the health requirements of migrants is still
|
|
lacking. A large body of research has shown that migrants are more
|
|
likely to enter into the healthcare system late and are less likely to
|
|
be retained at successive stages of the HIV treatment cascade.
|
|
HIV-infected migrants are especially vulnerable to a wide range of
|
|
social, economic and political factors that include a lack of direct
|
|
access to healthcare services; exposure to difficult or oppressive work
|
|
environments; the separation from family, friends and a familiar
|
|
sociocultural environment. Realizing the full treatment and preventive
|
|
benefits of the UNAIDS 90-90-90 strategy will require reaching all
|
|
marginalized subpopulations of which migrants are a particularly large
|
|
and important group.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tanser, F (Corresponding Author), Univ KwaZulu Natal, Africa Ctr Hlth \& Populat Studies, POB 198, ZA-3935 Mtubatuba, South Africa.
|
|
Tanser, Frank; Baernighausen, Till; Vandormael, Alain, Univ KwaZulu Natal, Wellcome Trust Africa Ctr Hlth \& Populat Studies, Mtubatuba, South Africa.
|
|
Tanser, Frank, Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Nursing \& Publ Hlth, Durban, South Africa.
|
|
Baernighausen, Till, Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Global Hlth \& Populat, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Dobra, Adrian, Univ Washington, Dept Stat, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Dobra, Adrian, Univ Washington, Ctr Studies Demog \& Ecol, Ctr Stat \& Social Sci, Dept Biobehav Nursing \& Hlth Syst, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/COH.0000000000000192},
|
|
ISSN = {1746-630X},
|
|
EISSN = {1746-6318},
|
|
Keywords = {antiretroviral therapy; HIV epidemiology; key populations; migration},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; STRUCTURAL BARRIERS;
|
|
UNITED-STATES; PUBLIC-HEALTH; CARE SERVICES; BLACK-PEOPLE; SOUTH-AFRICA;
|
|
FOLLOW-UP; SCALE-UP},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Immunology; Infectious Diseases},
|
|
Author-Email = {ftanser@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bärnighausen, Till/Y-2388-2019
|
|
Tanser, Frank/ABE-8326-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tanser, Frank/0000-0001-9797-0000
|
|
Vandormael, Alain/0000-0002-5742-0511},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {89},
|
|
Times-Cited = {75},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000369718800006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000751323900001,
|
|
Author = {Strelkovskii, Nikita and Rovenskaya, Elena and Ilmola-Sheppard, Leena
|
|
and Bartmann, Robin and Rein-Sapir, Yonat and Feitelson, Eran},
|
|
Title = {Implications of COVID-19 Mitigation Policies for National Well-Being: A
|
|
Systems Perspective},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {The ongoing COVID-19 crisis and measures aimed at curbing the pandemic
|
|
have a widespread impact on various aspects of well-being, such as
|
|
housing, social connections, and others. Moreover, COVID-19 does not
|
|
affect all population groups equally. This study analyzes the impact of
|
|
major COVID-19 non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) on a set of
|
|
national well-being indicators from the most recent version of the OECD
|
|
Well-Being Framework. Using causal loop diagrams (systems maps), we
|
|
consider direct and indirect effects of these policies on various
|
|
components of the national well-being system. Our results show that
|
|
business closures directly and/or indirectly impact more national
|
|
well-being components than any other policy. The most affected national
|
|
well-being components by all policies are life satisfaction, perceived
|
|
health, and prevalence of depressive symptoms. In addition, we specify
|
|
how the impact of the anti-pandemic measures differs for various
|
|
population strata, using the degree of income and employment loss as key
|
|
stratifying variables. Our insights can be helpful to identify and
|
|
promote measures that can alleviate the adverse effects of the COVID-19
|
|
crisis on the national well-being.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Strelkovskii, N (Corresponding Author), Int Inst Appl Syst Anal IIASA, Adv Syst Anal Program, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
|
|
Strelkovskii, Nikita; Rovenskaya, Elena; Ilmola-Sheppard, Leena; Bartmann, Robin, Int Inst Appl Syst Anal IIASA, Adv Syst Anal Program, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
|
|
Rovenskaya, Elena, Lomonosov Moscow State Univ, Fac Computat Math \& Cybernet, GSP-1 Leninskie Gory, Moscow 119991, Russia.
|
|
Rein-Sapir, Yonat; Feitelson, Eran, Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Dept Geog, IL-9190501 Jerusalem, Israel.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su14010433},
|
|
Article-Number = {433},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; national well-being; systems thinking; causal loop diagram},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LIFE-SATISFACTION; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; SOCIAL SUPPORT; JOB STRAIN;
|
|
INCOME INEQUALITY; MENTAL-HEALTH; WORKING HOURS; ASSOCIATION;
|
|
INSECURITY; EXPECTANCY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {strelkon@iiasa.ac.at
|
|
rovenska@iiasa.ac.at
|
|
ilmola@iiasa.ac.at
|
|
bartmannr@iiasa.ac.at
|
|
yonat.rein@mail.huji.ac.il
|
|
msfeitel@mail.huji.ac.il},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rovenskaya, Elena/CAF-1378-2022
|
|
Rein-Sapir, Yonat/IUP-7323-2023
|
|
Strelkovskii, Nikita/B-9112-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Strelkovskii, Nikita/0000-0001-6862-1768
|
|
Feitelson, Eran/0000-0002-4246-575X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {218},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000751323900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000656630300001,
|
|
Author = {Carrillo, Laura A. and Sabharwal, Sanjeev},
|
|
Title = {Pediatric Orthopaedic Observerships in North America for International
|
|
Surgeons The Visitor's Perspective},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {103},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {APR 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: There is substantial disparity in access to surgical care
|
|
worldwide that largely impacts children in resource-limited
|
|
environments. Although it has been suggested that surgeons in
|
|
high-income countries work alongside their overseas peers to bridge this
|
|
gap, there is limited information regarding the impact of pediatric
|
|
orthopaedic observerships that are available to international surgeons.
|
|
This study aimed to assess the perceived impact of such visitations on
|
|
overseas surgeons, including their professional development and clinical
|
|
practice. Methods: A survey was distributed to overseas surgeons who
|
|
participated in a pediatric orthopaedic observership in North America in
|
|
the years 2009 to 2019. Details were collected regarding each
|
|
respondent's demographics and observership program, and the impact of
|
|
this short-term clinical experience as perceived by the visiting
|
|
surgeon. Results: Of the 181 international surgeons from 56 countries
|
|
who participated in a pediatric orthopaedic observership, most were
|
|
young male surgeons residing in a middle-income nation. The majority of
|
|
surgeons observed in outpatient clinics (98\%) and in the operating room
|
|
(96\%) and attended educational in-house conferences (92\%). Most
|
|
observers (75\%) acknowledged gaining relevant orthopaedic knowledge and
|
|
clinical skills that improved local patient care, and nearly all (99\%)
|
|
shared the newly acquired knowledge with their peers and trainees. Most
|
|
(97\%) were still living and working in the country that had been their
|
|
residence at the time of their observership. No noteworthy trends were
|
|
identified between the income classification of the surgeons' country of
|
|
residence and their ability to incorporate the acquired skills into
|
|
their practice. Conclusions: Participating in a North American pediatric
|
|
orthopaedic observership has a positive perceived impact on the majority
|
|
of visiting surgeons, with potential gains in clinical skills and
|
|
knowledge that likely benefit their patients, peers, and trainees. Such
|
|
participation does not contribute to substantial brain drain and may
|
|
assist with local capacity building. Identifying ways to increase access
|
|
to such educational opportunities, particularly for surgeons from
|
|
lower-income countries, should be explored further.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sabharwal, S (Corresponding Author), UCSF Benioff Childrens Hosp Oakland, Oakland, CA 94609 USA.
|
|
Sabharwal, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Carrillo, Laura A.; Sabharwal, Sanjeev, UCSF Benioff Childrens Hosp Oakland, Oakland, CA 94609 USA.
|
|
Carrillo, Laura A., Med Coll Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI 53226 USA.
|
|
Sabharwal, Sanjeev, Univ Calif San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2106/JBJS.20.01464},
|
|
ISSN = {0021-9355},
|
|
EISSN = {1535-1386},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; EDUCATION; OPPORTUNITIES; CHALLENGES; BURDEN;
|
|
COUR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Orthopedics; Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {Sanjeev.Sabharwal@ucsf.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Carrillo, Laura/0000-0003-1469-3269},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000656630300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000685146100002,
|
|
Author = {Ullrich, Anneke and Rath, Hilke Maria and Otto, Ullrich and Kerschgens,
|
|
Christa and Raida, Martin and Hagen-Aukamp, Christa and Bergelt, Corinna},
|
|
Title = {Long-term outcomes among localized prostate cancer survivors:
|
|
prospective predictors for return-to-work three years after cancer
|
|
rehabilitation},
|
|
Journal = {SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {843-854},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose This study aimed at (1) investigating the work status of men
|
|
treated by radical prostatectomy due to diagnosis of localized prostate
|
|
cancer (LPCa) three years after having attended a cancer rehabilitation
|
|
program and (2) identifying prospective risk factors for not working at
|
|
this time point. Methods In a longitudinal, questionnaire-based
|
|
multicenter study, 519 working-age LPCa survivors reported on their work
|
|
status 12 and 36 months following rehabilitation. Chi-square tests/t
|
|
tests and multivariable logistic regression analysis were used to
|
|
identify prospective factors associated with not working at 36 months
|
|
follow-up. Results Nearly three quarter of LPCa survivors (N = 377,
|
|
73\%) worked 3 years after post-acute rehabilitation. Most participants
|
|
(N = 365, 71\%) showed continuous return-to-work (RTW) patterns as they
|
|
worked both 1 and 3 years following rehabilitation. Multivariable
|
|
regression analysis revealed older age, low or middle socio-economic
|
|
status as well as resigned and unambitious work behavior and fatigue at
|
|
the time of attending the rehabilitation program to be prospective
|
|
factors for not working at 36 months follow-up. Low socio-economic
|
|
status {[}Odds ratio (OR) 4.81, 95\% confidence interval (CI)
|
|
2.07-11.16] and unambitious work behavior {[}OR 4.48, 95\% CI 2.16-9.31]
|
|
were the strongest predictors. Conclusion Long-term work retention is a
|
|
realistic goal among LPCa survivors. The results contribute to the
|
|
identification of at-risk LPCa survivors early in the RTW process.
|
|
Special attention should be paid to social inequality. Further,
|
|
interventions related to the management of fatigue and work-related
|
|
coping styles could improve long-term RTW, as these were relevant, but
|
|
potentially modifiable factors impeding work retention.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ullrich, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Med Ctr Hamburg Eppendorf, Dept Med Psychol, Martinistr 52, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Ullrich, Anneke; Rath, Hilke Maria; Bergelt, Corinna, Univ Med Ctr Hamburg Eppendorf, Dept Med Psychol, Martinistr 52, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Otto, Ullrich, Rehabil Clin Hartenstein GmbH, Clin Quellental, Bad Wildungen, Germany.
|
|
Kerschgens, Christa, Vivantes Rehabil Clin GmbH, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Raida, Martin, HELIOS Rehabil Clin Berg Land, Wuppertal, Germany.
|
|
Hagen-Aukamp, Christa, Niederrhein Rehabil Clin, Korschenbroich, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s00520-021-06376-6},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0941-4355},
|
|
EISSN = {1433-7339},
|
|
Keywords = {Prostate cancer; Employment; Long term; Rehabilitation; Return to work;
|
|
Survivorship},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; META-SYNTHESIS; EXPERIENCES; INTERVENTIONS; INSTRUMENT;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; FATIGUE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology; Health Care Sciences \& Services; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {a.ullrich@uke.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bergelt, Corinna/HJI-3342-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bergelt, Corinna/0000-0003-1413-1872
|
|
Ullrich, Anneke/0000-0002-1759-4461},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000685146100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000469969300001,
|
|
Author = {Missiaia, Anna},
|
|
Title = {One market fits all? Market access and the origins of the Italian
|
|
north-south divide},
|
|
Journal = {REGIONAL STUDIES REGIONAL SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {92-100},
|
|
Abstract = {Italy's economic development since its unification in 1861 has been
|
|
characterized by extensive regional inequality. Northern regions were
|
|
the frontrunners of modern industrialization in the late 19th century,
|
|
while southern regions never closed the gap. New Economic Geography
|
|
(NEG) proposes market access as the main driver of regional income
|
|
differentials. But is its effect homogeneous across regions? The NEG
|
|
hypothesis is here for the first time considered for the north and the
|
|
south of Italy separately in the period 1871-1911. Following previous
|
|
work by the author, both domestic and total market potentials are taken
|
|
into account as possible drivers of regional gross domestic product
|
|
(GDP) per capita. The results differ for the two macro-areas: in the
|
|
south, both market potentials have a strong role in determining the
|
|
levels of GDP per capita, but they do not affect the growth rates from
|
|
period to period; and in the north, only domestic market potential is
|
|
significant in both levels and growth rates. These results point to
|
|
different dynamics at the sub-national level that should be further
|
|
qualified by extending the analysis from the NUTS-2 to the NUTS-3 level.
|
|
The policy implication is that market-oriented measures might not be
|
|
effective for the most disadvantaged regions before other prerequisites
|
|
for growth are achieved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Missiaia, A (Corresponding Author), Lund Univ, Econ Hist Dept, Lund, Skane, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/21681376.2019.1578256},
|
|
ISSN = {2168-1376},
|
|
Keywords = {New Economic Geography; Italian regions; regional inequality; historical
|
|
economic geography; market potential; regional gross domestic product},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography},
|
|
Author-Email = {anna.missiaia@ekh.lu.se},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Missiaia, Anna/0000-0002-4872-1865},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {14},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000469969300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000434097300025,
|
|
Author = {Fitzgerald, Jared B. and Schor, Juliet B. and Jorgenson, Andrew K.},
|
|
Title = {Working Hours and Carbon Dioxide Emissions in the United States,
|
|
2007-2013},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL FORCES},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {96},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {1851-1874},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {The well-established association between economic output and carbon
|
|
emissions has led researchers in sociology and related disciplines to
|
|
study new approaches to climate change mitigation, including policies
|
|
that stabilize or reduce GDP growth. Within this degrowth approach,
|
|
working time reduction is a key policy lever to reduce emissions as well
|
|
as protect employment. In the United States, the abdication of
|
|
responsibility for mitigation by the federal government has led to the
|
|
emergence of state climate leadership. This study is the first to
|
|
analyze the relationship between emissions and working hours at the
|
|
state level. Our findings suggest that over the 2007-2013 period,
|
|
state-level carbon emissions and average working hours have a strong,
|
|
positive relationship, which holds across a variety of model estimation
|
|
techniques and net of various political, economic, and demographic
|
|
drivers of emissions. We conclude that working time reduction may
|
|
represent a multiple dividend policy, contributing to enhanced quality
|
|
of life and lower unemployment as well as emissions mitigation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fitzgerald, JB (Corresponding Author), Boston Univ, Sociol, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
|
|
Fitzgerald, Jared B.; Schor, Juliet B.; Jorgenson, Andrew K., Boston Univ, Sociol, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
|
|
Jorgenson, Andrew K., Boston Univ, Environm Studies, Boston, MA 02215 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/sf/soy014},
|
|
ISSN = {0037-7732},
|
|
EISSN = {1534-7605},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-GROWTH; GREENHOUSE-GAS; TIME USE; INCOME INEQUALITY; ENERGY
|
|
DEMANDS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ENVIRONMENT; WORLD; INTENSITY; LESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {jared.fitzgerald@bc.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {98},
|
|
Times-Cited = {54},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {30},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000434097300025},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000336976900002,
|
|
Author = {Ariansen, Anja M. S.},
|
|
Title = {Age, occupational class and sickness absence during pregnancy: a
|
|
retrospective analysis study of the Norwegian population registry},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {4},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: Western women increasingly delay having children to advance
|
|
their career, and pregnancy is considered to be riskier among older
|
|
women. In Norway, this development surprisingly coincides with increased
|
|
sickness absence among young pregnant women, rather than their older
|
|
counterparts. This paper tests the hypothesis that young pregnant women
|
|
have a higher number of sick days because this age group includes a
|
|
higher proportion of working class women, who are more prone to sickness
|
|
absence.
|
|
Design: A zero-inflated Poisson regression was conducted on the
|
|
Norwegian population registry.
|
|
Participants: All pregnant employees giving birth in 2004-2008 were
|
|
included in the study. A total number of 216 541 pregnancies were
|
|
observed among 180 483 women.
|
|
Outcome measure: Number of sick days.
|
|
Results: Although the association between age and number of sick days
|
|
was U-shaped, pregnant women in their early 20s had a higher number of
|
|
sick days than those in their mid-40s. This was particularly the case
|
|
for pregnant women with previous births. In this group, 20-year-olds had
|
|
12.6 more sick days than 45-year-olds; this age difference was reduced
|
|
to 6.3 after control for class. Among women undergoing their first
|
|
pregnancy, 20-year-olds initially had 1.2 more sick days than
|
|
45-year-olds, but control for class altered this age difference. After
|
|
control for class, 45-year-old first-time pregnant women had 2.9 more
|
|
sick days than 20-year-olds with corresponding characteristics.
|
|
Conclusions: The negative association between age and sickness absence
|
|
was partly due to younger age groups including more working class women,
|
|
who were more prone to sickness absence. Young pregnant women's needs
|
|
for job adjustments should not be underestimated.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ariansen, AMS (Corresponding Author), Univ Bergen, Dept Sociol, Bergen, Norway.
|
|
Univ Bergen, Dept Sociol, Bergen, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2013-004381},
|
|
Article-Number = {e004381},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB ADJUSTMENT; RISK-FACTORS; SOCIAL-CLASS; LEAVE; WORK; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
HEALTH; POLICY; PREECLAMPSIA; INEQUALITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {anja.steinsland@sos.uib.no},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000336976900002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000653227600001,
|
|
Author = {Fraser, Sarah and Grant, Julian and Mackean, Tamara and Hunter, Kate and
|
|
Keeler, Ngara and Clapham, Kathleen and Edgar, Dale W. and Towers, Kurt
|
|
and Teague, Warwick J. and Ivers, Rebecca},
|
|
Title = {Considering difference: clinician insights into providing equal and
|
|
equitable burns care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {220-226},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To better understand issues driving quality in burn care
|
|
related to equity of outcomes and equality of provision for Aboriginal
|
|
and Torres Strait Islander children.
|
|
Methods: Seventy-six interviews with team members who provide care for
|
|
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children in six paediatric burn
|
|
units across five Australian jurisdictions were completed. Interface
|
|
research methodology within a qualitative design guided data collection
|
|
and analysis.
|
|
Results: Three themes were identified: i) Burn team members who identify
|
|
the requirement to meet the specific needs of Aboriginal and Torres
|
|
Strait Islander children and deliver differential care; ii) Burn team
|
|
members who believe in equal care, but deliver differential care based
|
|
on the specific needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children;
|
|
and iii) Burn team members who see little need for provision of
|
|
differential care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and
|
|
rather, value the provision of equal care for all.
|
|
Conclusion: Burn team members conflate equitable and equal care, which
|
|
has implications for the delivery of care for Aboriginal and Torres
|
|
Strait Islander children. Equitable care is needed to address
|
|
disparities in post-burn outcomes, and this requires clinicians,
|
|
healthcare services and relevant system structures to work coherently
|
|
and intentionally to reflect these needs.
|
|
Implications for public health: Changes in health policy, the embedding
|
|
of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander liaison officers in burn care
|
|
teams and systems that prioritise critical reflexive practice are
|
|
fundamental to improving care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fraser, S (Corresponding Author), Univ New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
|
|
Fraser, Sarah; Ivers, Rebecca, Univ New South Wales, Fac Med \& Hlth, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Grant, Julian, Charles Sturt Univ, Fac Sci, Sch Nursing Midwifery \& Indigenous Hlth, Bathurst, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Mackean, Tamara, Flinders Univ S Australia, Coll Med \& Publ Hlth, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Hunter, Kate, George Inst Global Hlth, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Hunter, Kate, Fac Med, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Hunter, Kate, Univ New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
|
|
Keeler, Ngara, Cent Local Hlth Network, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Clapham, Kathleen, Univ Wollongong, Ngarruwan Ngadju Peoples Hlth 1, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Clapham, Kathleen, Univ Wollongong, Wellbeing Res Ctr, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Edgar, Dale W., Fiona Stanley Hosp, Burn Serv Western Australia, Murdoch, WA, Australia.
|
|
Edgar, Dale W., Univ Notre Dame Australia, Inst Hlth Res, Fremantle, WA, Australia.
|
|
Towers, Kurt, Northern Adelaide Local Hlth Network, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Teague, Warwick J., Royal Childrens Hosp, Burns Serv, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Teague, Warwick J., Univ Melbourne, Dept Paediat, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1753-6405.13110},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1326-0200},
|
|
EISSN = {1753-6405},
|
|
Keywords = {Australia; health equity; burn care; cultural safety; Aboriginal and
|
|
Torres Strait Islander; Indigenous; children; quality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; AUSTRALIA; INJURIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {sarah.fraser@unsw.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Teague, Warwick J/AAY-7260-2020
|
|
Edgar, Dale W/AAV-9394-2021
|
|
Grant, Julian/AAM-6906-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Teague, Warwick J/0000-0003-4747-6025
|
|
Edgar, Dale W/0000-0001-7336-9317
|
|
Grant, Julian/0000-0002-4856-2147
|
|
Clapham, Kathleen/0000-0001-9776-5496},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000653227600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000267463200003,
|
|
Author = {Hartmann, Heidi and English, Ashley},
|
|
Title = {Older Women's Retirement Security: A Primer},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF WOMEN POLITICS \& POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {2-3},
|
|
Pages = {109-140},
|
|
Abstract = {This article provides an overview of the basic facts of old age in the
|
|
United States, including a description of the retirement programs
|
|
commonly available to the elderly and an examination of gender
|
|
differences in the retirement experience. Women's greater economic
|
|
insecurity relative to men during the retirement years is closely linked
|
|
to their different work experiences, including differences in earnings,
|
|
years of employment, Social Security earnings records, and likelihood of
|
|
pension participation and receipt. Decisions about marriage, childbirth,
|
|
and caregiving, as well as societal expectations and arrangements, also
|
|
affect women's retirement security. Women are also disproportionately
|
|
affected by risks associated with their longer lifespans and chronic
|
|
health conditions that often result in women outliving their income and
|
|
assets, losing access to a spouse's resources, paying high out-of-pocket
|
|
medical expenses, and requiring long-term care. Many more older women
|
|
than men live alone and among the elderly the poverty rate is highest
|
|
among single women living alone. After exploring the sources of women's
|
|
retirement insecurity, the article concludes with brief recommendations
|
|
for reform. The aging of the baby boom and the global financial crisis
|
|
of 2008 combine to raise questions about the future of retirement. The
|
|
authors argue it is important for policymakers and advocates to work to
|
|
improve retirement security in the United States and strengthen Social
|
|
Security for all, preserving those features of Social Security that work
|
|
well for older women, while also reforming the outdated aspects of the
|
|
Social Security system that disadvantage women.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {English, A (Corresponding Author), Inst Womens Policy Res, 1707 L St NW,Suite 750, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
|
|
Hartmann, Heidi; English, Ashley, Inst Womens Policy Res, Washington, DC 20036 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/15544770902901932},
|
|
Article-Number = {PII 912766394},
|
|
ISSN = {1554-477X},
|
|
EISSN = {1554-4788},
|
|
Keywords = {women; employment; Social Security; pensions; retirement security;
|
|
marriage; aging; health},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {english@iwpr.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000267463200003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000502563300001,
|
|
Author = {Bruno, Esien Eddy},
|
|
Title = {Principal-Agent Relation and Contracting-out for Employment Case
|
|
Management to Enable Third-Country Nationals' Transition to Work},
|
|
Journal = {NISPACEE JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {9-28},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper analyzes the role of public and private employment-service
|
|
agencies in contracting-out for employment case management under
|
|
principal-agency relation to understand young third-country immigrants'
|
|
transition to work in Czechia, Poland, and Hungary. Existing research
|
|
pointed to contracting-out as a major trend in public-service reforms
|
|
when the government (principal) hires private employment agencies
|
|
(agents) to perform service delivery, but overall the control of
|
|
standards and the accountability to the public remains with the
|
|
authority. Although the principal-agency relation shows human beings as
|
|
rational and opportunist in corporate governance, there is still little
|
|
research in CEE countries explaining the role of public and private
|
|
employment agencies under principal-agency relation in contracting-out
|
|
for case management to understand young third-country immigrants'
|
|
transition to work. Based on a qualitative cross-national case-oriented
|
|
research approach with fewer-country comparison, documents and
|
|
scholastic texts are collected and analyzed by means of a document and
|
|
content analysis technique to fill in this gap. The findings show that
|
|
open information, regulation, and monitoring administrative devices are
|
|
a major perceived influence in principal-agency relational governance
|
|
with a lack of cooperation that may impair the quality and service when
|
|
looking at issues such as employment-related transition of young
|
|
third-country immigrants and socio-economically disadvantaged groups in
|
|
a contracting-out setting. The study demonstrated certain decentralized
|
|
new public administration governance similarities but dissimilarities
|
|
from the country's institutional context. The outcome points to
|
|
regulatory administrative devices to target agencies' behavior and young
|
|
vulnerable people's need for paid work. This is relevant to performance
|
|
monitoring in contemporary fluid society targeting benefits and scarce
|
|
resources that may not only constrain ethnic minorities' upward
|
|
mobility, but the economy and the social cohesion process.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bruno, EE (Corresponding Author), Charles Univ Prague, Prague, Czech Republic.
|
|
Bruno, Esien Eddy, Charles Univ Prague, Prague, Czech Republic.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2478/nispa-2019-0012},
|
|
ISSN = {1337-9038},
|
|
EISSN = {1338-4309},
|
|
Keywords = {Agency theory; case management; CEE countries; contracting-out; Czech
|
|
Republic; Hungary; Poland; principal-agency relation; young
|
|
third-country immigrant},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OWNERSHIP; COSTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public Administration},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Esien, Eddy Bruno/AAP-3533-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Esien, Eddy Bruno/0000-0003-4634-1452},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000502563300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000957464100001,
|
|
Author = {Hamilton, Leah and Despard, Mathieu and Roll, Stephen and Bellisle,
|
|
Dylan and Hall, Christian and Wright, Allison},
|
|
Title = {Does Frequency or Amount Matter? An Exploratory Analysis the Perceptions
|
|
of Four Universal Basic Income Proposals},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Advocates for a Universal Basic Income (UBI) argue that it would provide
|
|
citizens with a basic foundation for financial security, boost the
|
|
economy, alleviate poverty, encourage entrepreneurship, reduce crime,
|
|
and insulate the employment sector against job losses due to automation.
|
|
Still, the idea lags in popularity in the United States compared to
|
|
existing cash policies such as the annual Earned Income Tax Credit and
|
|
one-time COVID-19 relief packages. We hypothesize that this disparity is
|
|
related to predicted uses of a UBI in comparison to annual or lump sum
|
|
cash programs. In this survey of 836 Americans, we explore whether
|
|
predicted behavioral responses to four randomly assigned hypothetical
|
|
cash transfer scenarios vary across the domains of amount and frequency.
|
|
Respondents are more likely to associate monthly payments with work
|
|
disincentives and lump-sum transfers with debt repayment. Implications
|
|
for UBI advocates include the need to continue educating the public on
|
|
the empirical associations between UBI, employment, and expenditures.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hamilton, L (Corresponding Author), Appalachian State Univ, Dept Social Work, ASU Box 32155, Boone, NC 28608 USA.
|
|
Hamilton, Leah; Hall, Christian; Wright, Allison, Appalachian State Univ, Dept Social Work, ASU Box 32155, Boone, NC 28608 USA.
|
|
Despard, Mathieu, Univ N Carolina, Dept Social Work, POB 26170, Greensboro, NC 27402 USA.
|
|
Roll, Stephen, Washington Univ, Social Policy Inst, One Brookings Dr, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
|
|
Bellisle, Dylan, Univ Illinois, Project Middle Class Renewal, 504 E Armory Ave, Champaign, IL 61820 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/socsci12030133},
|
|
Article-Number = {133},
|
|
EISSN = {2076-0760},
|
|
Keywords = {survey research; experiment; universal basic income; welfare},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TAX CREDIT; WELFARE; SANCTIONS; POLITICS; CHILDREN; REFORM; EITC; RACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {hamiltonl@appstate.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Despard, Mathieu/0000-0001-7590-7908
|
|
Hamilton, Leah/0000-0002-1253-171X
|
|
Bellisle, Dylan/0000-0003-2017-4983},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {82},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000957464100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000249553100007,
|
|
Author = {Duncan, Greg J. and Ludwig, Jens and Magnuson, Katherine A.},
|
|
Title = {Reducing poverty through preschool interventions},
|
|
Journal = {FUTURE OF CHILDREN},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {143-160},
|
|
Month = {FAL},
|
|
Abstract = {Greg Duncan, Jens Ludwig, and Katherine Magnuson explain how providing
|
|
high-quality care to disadvantaged preschool children can help reduce
|
|
poverty. In early childhood, they note, children's cognitive and
|
|
socioemotional skills develop rapidly and are sensitive to ``inputs{''}
|
|
from parents, home learning environments, child care settings, and the
|
|
health care system.
|
|
The authors propose an intensive two-year, education-focused
|
|
intervention for economically disadvantaged three- and four-year-olds.
|
|
Classrooms would be staffed by college-trained teachers and have no more
|
|
than six children per teacher. Instruction would be based on proven
|
|
preschool academic and behavioral curricula and would be provided to
|
|
children for three hours a day, with wraparound child care available to
|
|
working parents.
|
|
The authors estimate that the annual cost of the instructional portion
|
|
of the program would be about \$8,000, with child care adding up to
|
|
another \$4,000. The program would fully subsidize low-income children's
|
|
participation; high-income parents would pay the full cost. The total
|
|
cost of the proposal, net of current spending, would be \$20 billion a
|
|
year.
|
|
Researchers have estimated that a few very intensive early childhood
|
|
programs have generated benefits of as much as \$8 to \$14 for every \$1
|
|
in cost. The authors think it unrealistic that a nationwide early
|
|
education program could be equally socially profitable, but they
|
|
estimate that their proposal would likely have benefits amounting to
|
|
several times its cost. Some of the benefits would appear quickly in the
|
|
form of less school retention and fewer special education
|
|
classifications; others would show up later in the form of less crime
|
|
and greater economic productivity. The authors estimate that their
|
|
program would reduce the future poverty rates of participants by between
|
|
5 percent and 15 percent.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Duncan, GJ (Corresponding Author), Northwestern Univ, Evanston, IL 60208 USA.
|
|
Northwestern Univ, Evanston, IL 60208 USA.
|
|
Univ Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Univ Wisconsin, Madison, WI USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1353/foc.2007.0015},
|
|
ISSN = {1054-8289},
|
|
EISSN = {1550-1558},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EARLY-CHILDHOOD; HEAD-START; PRE-K; EDUCATION; CHILDREN; FULL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Health Policy \& Services; Social Sciences,
|
|
Interdisciplinary},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hoffman, Shannah K/B-4104-2012},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {57},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {38},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000249553100007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000528224500004,
|
|
Author = {Kajdi, Laszlo and Ligeti, Anna Sara},
|
|
Title = {Remittance Behaviour of Intra-EU Migrants - Evidence from Hungary},
|
|
Journal = {COMPARATIVE POPULATION STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Pages = {87-113},
|
|
Abstract = {After the eastern expansion of the European Union (EU), a large number
|
|
of emigrants left their home countries to work in economically better
|
|
developed western member states. Hungary followed this EU emigration
|
|
trend with a certain time lag. However, the rising number of emigrants
|
|
caused structural problems in the domestic labour market. A
|
|
comprehensive examination of intra-EU remittances as one of the major
|
|
determinants of migration has been outside the scope of recent research
|
|
activity. The data from the Hungarian Microcensus survey and the first
|
|
Hungarian household survey focusing on the topic of remittances can
|
|
provide a valuable case study of intra-EU private transfer flows.
|
|
The aims of this study are twofold. On the one hand we intend to provide
|
|
empirical evidence for the major factors that determine remittance
|
|
propensity by calculating probit regressions. On the other hand, OLS
|
|
regressions are calculated in order to introduce variables which are
|
|
associated with money transfers. These results are interpreted within
|
|
the theoretical framework of the New Economics of Labour Migration
|
|
(NELM) to identify the underlying motivations for remittances. The most
|
|
important findings are that older men with vocational school education
|
|
have the highest remittance propensity, and the likelihood of sending
|
|
private support is higher among short-term migrants. As the key factors,
|
|
the income of the sender person is positively associated with the sum of
|
|
money flows, while the income of the receiving household is negatively
|
|
associated. Within the theoretical framework of NELM, these results
|
|
favour the dominance of altruistic motives, since supporting the
|
|
household members who remain behind seems to be the major driving force.
|
|
However, when intentions of returning home are considered in the models,
|
|
it seems that self-interest might also play a role as a driver of
|
|
remittances. Within this study, the main focus was on the
|
|
characteristics of the senders, meaning that a possible field of future
|
|
research could be an examination of these questions from the perspective
|
|
of remittance receiver households.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kajdi, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Pecs, Fac Sci, Pecs, Hungary.
|
|
Kajdi, Laszlo, Univ Pecs, Fac Sci, Pecs, Hungary.
|
|
Ligeti, Anna Sara, Hungarian Cent Stat Off, Budapest, Hungary.},
|
|
DOI = {10.12765/CPoS-2020-04en},
|
|
ISSN = {1869-8980},
|
|
EISSN = {1869-8999},
|
|
Keywords = {Labour-market; Remittances; European Union; Migration policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION; PRIVATE TRANSFERS; INEQUALITY; ECONOMICS;
|
|
DRIVERS; IMPACT; INCOME; CYCLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography},
|
|
Author-Email = {kajdil@mnb.hu
|
|
Anna.Ligeti@ksh.hu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ligeti, Anna Sara/0000-0002-8261-0552},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000528224500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000372885600007,
|
|
Author = {Kerr, Sari Pekkala},
|
|
Title = {Parental Leave Legislation and Women's Work: A Story of Unequal
|
|
Opportunities},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF POLICY ANALYSIS AND MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {117+},
|
|
Month = {WIN},
|
|
Abstract = {U.S. federal and state family leave legislation requires employers to
|
|
provide job-protected parental leave for new mothers covered under the
|
|
legislation. In most cases the leave is unpaid, and rarely longer than
|
|
12 weeks in duration. This study evaluates disparities in parental leave
|
|
eligibility, access, and usage across the family income distribution in
|
|
the United States. It also describes the links between leave-taking and
|
|
women's labor market careers. The focus is especially on low-income
|
|
families, as their leave coverage and ability to afford taking unpaid
|
|
leave is particularly poor. This study shows that the introduction of
|
|
both state and federal legislation increased overall leave coverage,
|
|
leave provision, and leave-taking. For example, the Family and Medical
|
|
Leave Act (FMLA) leads to an increased probability of leave-taking by
|
|
nearly 20 percentage points and increased average leave length by almost
|
|
five weeks across all states. The new policies did not, however, reduce
|
|
gaps between low-and high-income families' eligibility, leave-taking, or
|
|
leave length. In addition, the FMLA effects on leave-taking were very
|
|
similar across states with and without prior leave legislation, and the
|
|
FMLA did not disproportionately increase leave-taking for women who
|
|
worked in firms and jobs covered by the new legislation, as these women
|
|
were already relatively well covered by other parental leave
|
|
arrangements. (C) 2015 by the Association for Public Policy Analysis and
|
|
Management.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kerr, SP (Corresponding Author), WCW, Wellesley Coll, 106 Cent St, Wellesley, MA 02481 USA.
|
|
Kerr, Sari Pekkala, WCW, Wellesley Coll, 106 Cent St, Wellesley, MA 02481 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/pam.21875},
|
|
ISSN = {0276-8739},
|
|
EISSN = {1520-6688},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EARLY MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; PAID FAMILY LEAVE; MEDICAL LEAVE; AFFECT
|
|
FERTILITY; UNITED-STATES; CHILD HEALTH; MOTHERS; GAP; PAY; EARNINGS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Public Administration},
|
|
Author-Email = {skerr3@wellesley.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kerr, Sari/0000-0003-3454-5335},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {160},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000372885600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000749560800001,
|
|
Author = {Freyer-Adam, Jennis and Baumann, Sophie and Bischof, Gallus and Staudt,
|
|
Andreas and Goeze, Christian and Gaertner, Beate and John, Ulrich},
|
|
Title = {Social Equity in the Efficacy of Computer-Based and In-Person Brief
|
|
Alcohol Interventions Among General Hospital Patients With At-Risk
|
|
Alcohol Use: A Randomized Controlled Trial},
|
|
Journal = {JMIR MENTAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN 24},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Social equity in the efficacy of behavior change
|
|
intervention is much needed. While the efficacy of brief alcohol
|
|
interventions (BAIs), including digital interventions, is well
|
|
established, particularly in health care, the social equity of
|
|
interventions has been sparsely investigated.
|
|
Objective: We aim to investigate whether the efficacy of computer-based
|
|
versus in-person delivered BAIs is moderated by the participants'
|
|
socioeconomic status (ie, to identify whether general hospital patients
|
|
with low-level education and unemployed patients may benefit more or
|
|
less from one or the other way of delivery compared to patients with
|
|
higher levels of education and those that are employed).
|
|
Methods: Patients with nondependent at-risk alcohol use were identified
|
|
through systematic offline screening conducted on 13 general hospital
|
|
wards. Patients were approached face-to-face and asked to respond to an
|
|
app for self-assessment provided by a mobile device. In total, 961 (81\%
|
|
of eligible participants) were randomized and received their allocated
|
|
intervention: computer-generated and individually tailored feedback
|
|
letters (CO), in-person counseling by research staff trained in
|
|
motivational interviewing (PE), or assessment only (AO). CO and PE were
|
|
delivered on the ward and 1 and 3 months later, were based on the
|
|
transtheoretical model of intentional behavior change and required the
|
|
assessment of intervention data prior to each intervention. In CO, the
|
|
generation of computer-based feedback was created automatically. The
|
|
assessment of data and sending out feedback letters were assisted by the
|
|
research staff. Of the CO and PE participants, 89\% (345/387) and 83\%
|
|
(292/354) received at least two doses of intervention, and 72\%
|
|
(280/387) and 54\% (191/354) received all three doses of intervention,
|
|
respectively. The outcome was change in grams of pure alcohol per day
|
|
after 6, 12, 18, and 24 months, with the latter being the primary
|
|
time-point of interest. Follow-up interviewers were blinded. Study group
|
|
interactions with education and employment status were tested as
|
|
predictors of change in alcohol use using latent growth modeling.
|
|
Results: The efficacy of CO and PE did not differ by level of education
|
|
(P=.98). Employment status did not moderate CO efficacy (Ps >=.66). Up
|
|
to month 12 and compared to employed participants, unemployed
|
|
participants reported significantly greater drinking reductions
|
|
following PE versus AO (incidence rate ratio 0.44, 95\% CI 0.21-0.94;
|
|
P=.03) and following PE versus CO (incidence rate ratio 0.48, 95\% CI
|
|
0.24-0.96; P=.04). After 24 months, these differences were statistically
|
|
nonsignificant (Ps >=.31).
|
|
Conclusions: Computer-based and in-person BAI worked equally well
|
|
independent of the patient's level of education. Although findings
|
|
indicate that in the short-term, unemployed persons may benefit more
|
|
from BAI when delivered in-person rather than computer-based, the
|
|
findings suggest that both BAIs have the potential to work well among
|
|
participants with low socioeconomic status.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Freyer-Adam, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Med Greifswald, Inst Med Psychol, Walther Rathenau Str 48, D-17475 Greifswald, Germany.
|
|
Freyer-Adam, Jennis; Goeze, Christian, Univ Med Greifswald, Inst Med Psychol, Walther Rathenau Str 48, D-17475 Greifswald, Germany.
|
|
Freyer-Adam, Jennis; John, Ulrich, German Ctr Cardiovasc Res DZHK, Greifswald, Germany.
|
|
Baumann, Sophie; Staudt, Andreas, Univ Med Greifswald, Inst Community Med, Dept Methods Community Med, Greifswald, Germany.
|
|
Bischof, Gallus, Med Univ Lubeck, Dept Psychiat \& Psychotherapy, Lubeck, Germany.
|
|
Staudt, Andreas, Tech Univ Dresden, Inst \& Policlin Occupat \& Social Med, Fac Med, Dresden, Germany.
|
|
Gaertner, Beate, Robert Koch Inst Berlin, Dept Epidemiol \& Hlth Monitoring, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
John, Ulrich, Univ Med Greifswald, Inst Community Med, Dept Prevent Res \& Social Med, Greifswald, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2196/31712},
|
|
Article-Number = {e31712},
|
|
ISSN = {2368-7959},
|
|
Keywords = {brief alcohol intervention; electronic; eHealth; digital; motivational
|
|
interviewing; socioeconomic status; equity; social inequality;
|
|
transtheoretical model; moderator; mental health; public health; alcohol
|
|
interventions; digital intervention; digital health intervention;
|
|
alcohol use},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DISORDERS IDENTIFICATION TEST; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; MENTAL-HEALTH; LIFE
|
|
EXPECTANCY; TEST AUDIT; CONSUMPTION; MORTALITY; VALIDITY; DETERMINANTS;
|
|
MODERATORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {Jennis.Freyer-Adam@med.uni-greifswald.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baumann, Sophie/IXN-7491-2023
|
|
Gaertner, Beate/F-8197-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Baumann, Sophie/0000-0002-7697-4923
|
|
Staudt, Andreas/0000-0001-9905-1999
|
|
Freyer-Adam, Jennis/0000-0002-4827-8760
|
|
John, Ulrich/0000-0003-0587-5298
|
|
Gaertner, Beate/0000-0002-5785-3341},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000749560800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000583258000001,
|
|
Author = {Johnston, Karen and Guingona, Monsie and Elsanousi, Salwa and Mbokazi,
|
|
Jabu and Labarda, Charlie and Cristobal, Fortunato L. and Upadhyay,
|
|
Shambhu and Othman, Abu-Bakr and Woolley, Torres and Acharya, Balkrishna
|
|
and Hogenbirk, John C. and Ketheesan, Sarangan and Craig, Jonathan C.
|
|
and Neusy, Andre-Jacques and Larkins, Sarah},
|
|
Title = {Training a Fit-For-Purpose Rural Health Workforce for Low- and
|
|
Middle-Income Countries (LMICs): How Do Drivers and Enablers of Rural
|
|
Practice Intention Differ Between Learners From LMICs and High Income
|
|
Countries?},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Month = {OCT 19},
|
|
Abstract = {Equity in health outcomes for rural and remote populations in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries (LMICs) is limited by a range of socio-economic,
|
|
cultural and environmental determinants of health. Health professional
|
|
education that is sensitive to local population needs and that attends
|
|
to all elements of the rural pathway is vital to increase the proportion
|
|
of the health workforce that practices in underserved rural and remote
|
|
areas. The Training for Health Equity Network (THEnet) is a
|
|
community-of-practice of 13 health professional education institutions
|
|
with a focus on delivering socially accountable education to produce a
|
|
fit-for-purpose health workforce. The THEnet Graduate Outcome Study is
|
|
an international prospective cohort study with more than 6,000 learners
|
|
from nine health professional schools in seven countries (including four
|
|
LMICs; the Philippines, Sudan, South Africa and Nepal). Surveys of
|
|
learners are administered at entry to and exit from medical school, and
|
|
at years 1, 4, 7, and 10 thereafter. The association of learners'
|
|
intention to practice in rural and other underserved areas, and a range
|
|
of individual and institutional level variables at two time points-entry
|
|
to and exit from the medical program, are examined and compared between
|
|
country income settings. These findings are then triangulated with a
|
|
sociocultural exploration of the structural relationships between
|
|
educational and health service delivery ministries in each setting,
|
|
status of postgraduate training for primary care, and current policy
|
|
settings. This analysis confirmed the association of rural background
|
|
with intention to practice in rural areas at both entry and exit.
|
|
Intention to work abroad was greater for learners at entry, with a
|
|
significant shift to an intention to work in-country for learners with
|
|
entry and exit data. Learners at exit were more likely to intend a
|
|
career in generalist disciplines than those at entry however lack of
|
|
health policy and unclear career pathways limits the effectiveness of
|
|
educational strategies in LMICs. This multi-national study of learners
|
|
from medical schools with a social accountability mandate confirms that
|
|
it is possible to produce a health workforce with a strong intent to
|
|
practice in rural areas through attention to all aspects of the rural
|
|
pathway.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Larkins, S (Corresponding Author), James Cook Univ, Coll Med \& Dent, Anton Breinl Res Ctr Hlth Syst Strengthening, Douglas, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Johnston, Karen; Woolley, Torres; Ketheesan, Sarangan; Larkins, Sarah, James Cook Univ, Coll Med \& Dent, Anton Breinl Res Ctr Hlth Syst Strengthening, Douglas, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Guingona, Monsie; Cristobal, Fortunato L., Ateneo de Zamboanga Univ, Sch Med, Zamboanga City, Philippines.
|
|
Elsanousi, Salwa; Othman, Abu-Bakr, Univ Gezira, Fac Med, Gezira, Sudan.
|
|
Mbokazi, Jabu, Walter Sisulu Univ, Sch Med, Mthatha, South Africa.
|
|
Labarda, Charlie, Univ Philippines, Sch Hlth Sci, Manila, Philippines.
|
|
Upadhyay, Shambhu; Acharya, Balkrishna, Patan Acad Hlth Sci, Patan, Nepal.
|
|
Hogenbirk, John C., Laurentian Univ, Ctr Rural \& Northern Hlth Res, Sudbury, ON, Canada.
|
|
Craig, Jonathan C., Flinders Univ S Australia, Coll Med \& Publ Hlth, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Neusy, Andre-Jacques, Training Hlth Equ Network, New York, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpubh.2020.582464},
|
|
Article-Number = {582464},
|
|
EISSN = {2296-2565},
|
|
Keywords = {rural practice intention; rural medical practice; barriers and enablers;
|
|
rural practice; human resources for health (HRH); LMIC = low; and
|
|
middle-income countries; practice intentions; social accountability},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EDUCATION; SYSTEMS; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {sarah.larkins@jcu.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ketheesan, Sarangan/ABB-1898-2021
|
|
Johnston, Karen/ABD-7646-2020
|
|
Hogenbirk, John C/A-7619-2015
|
|
Larkins, Sarah/A-2319-2013
|
|
Craig, Jonathan/E-2813-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ketheesan, Sarangan/0000-0002-2323-338X
|
|
Johnston, Karen/0000-0002-0477-4666
|
|
Hogenbirk, John C/0000-0003-0841-4657
|
|
Larkins, Sarah/0000-0002-7561-3202
|
|
Craig, Jonathan/0000-0002-2548-4035},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000583258000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000642174300001,
|
|
Author = {Narla, Nirmala Priya and Ratner, Leah and Bastos, Fernanda Viera and
|
|
Owusu, Sheila Agyeiwaa and Osei-Bonsu, Angela and Russ, Christiana M.},
|
|
Title = {Paediatric to adult healthcare transition in resource-limited settings:
|
|
a narrative review},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ PAEDIATRICS OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {5},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Ageing into adulthood is challenging at baseline, and doing
|
|
so with a chronic disease can add increased stress and vulnerability.
|
|
Worldwide, a substantial care gap exists as children transition from
|
|
care in a paediatric to adult setting. There is no current consensus on
|
|
safe and equitable healthcare transition (HCT) for patients with chronic
|
|
disease in resource-denied settings. Much of the existing literature is
|
|
specific to HIV care. The objective of this narrative review was to
|
|
summarise current literature related to adolescent HCT not associated
|
|
with HIV, in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) and other
|
|
resource-denied settings, in order to inform equitable health policy
|
|
strategies. Methods A literature search was performed using defined
|
|
search terms in PubMed and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health
|
|
Literature databases to identify all peer-reviewed studies published
|
|
until January 2020, pertaining to paediatric to adult HCT for
|
|
adolescents and young adults with chronic disease in resource-denied
|
|
settings. Following deduplication, 1111 studies were screened and
|
|
reviewed by two independent reviewers, of which 10 studies met the
|
|
inclusion criteria. Resulting studies were included in thematic analysis
|
|
and narrative synthesis. Results Twelve subthemes emerged, leading to
|
|
recommendations which support equitable and age-appropriate adolescent
|
|
care. Recommendations include (1) improvement of community health
|
|
education and resilience tools for puberty, reproductive health and
|
|
mental health comorbidities; (2) strengthening of health systems to
|
|
create individualised adolescent-responsive policy; (3) incorporation of
|
|
social and financial resources in the healthcare setting; and (4)
|
|
formalisation of institution-wide procedures to address
|
|
community-identified barriers to successful transition. Conclusion
|
|
Limitations of existing evidence relate to the paucity of formal policy
|
|
for paediatric to adult transition in LMICs for patients with
|
|
childhood-onset conditions, in the absence of a diagnosis of HIV. With a
|
|
rise in successful treatments for paediatric-onset chronic disease,
|
|
adolescent health and transition programmes are needed to guide
|
|
effective health policy and risk reduction for adolescents in
|
|
resource-denied settings.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ratner, L (Corresponding Author), Harvard Med Sch, Div Resp Med, Boston Childrens Hosp, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Ratner, L (Corresponding Author), Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Gen Internal Med, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Narla, Nirmala Priya; Russ, Christiana M., Harvard Med Sch, Div Med Crit Care, Boston Childrens Hosp, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Narla, Nirmala Priya, Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston, Dept Pediat, Houston, TX USA.
|
|
Ratner, Leah, Harvard Med Sch, Div Resp Med, Boston Childrens Hosp, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Ratner, Leah, Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Gen Internal Med, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Bastos, Fernanda Viera, Hosp Clin Univ Sao Paolo, Med Sch, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
|
|
Owusu, Sheila Agyeiwaa; Osei-Bonsu, Angela, Komfo Anokye Teaching Hosp, Directorate Child Hlth, Kumasi, Ghana.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjpo-2021-001059},
|
|
Article-Number = {e001059},
|
|
EISSN = {2399-9772},
|
|
Keywords = {adolescent health; social work; health services research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ADOLESCENTS; YOUTH; DISABILITIES; VALIDATION; READINESS; SERVICES; NEEDS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {Leah.Ratner@childrens.harvard.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Owusu, Sheila Agyeiwaa/AAE-8025-2022
|
|
owusu, Sheila Agyeiwaa/ITT-2132-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Owusu, Sheila Agyeiwaa/0000-0002-5172-2842
|
|
Narla, Nirmala/0000-0002-6152-9245
|
|
Vieira Bastos, Fernanda/0009-0007-2037-8720
|
|
Osei-Bonsu, Angela/0000-0002-0468-1160
|
|
Ratner, Leah/0000-0001-6326-3543},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000642174300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000575145300001,
|
|
Author = {Windle, Gill and Bennett, Kate M. and MacLeod, Catherine and CFAS WALES
|
|
Res Team},
|
|
Title = {The Influence of Life Experiences on the Development of Resilience in
|
|
Older People With Co-morbid Health Problems},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Month = {SEP 22},
|
|
Abstract = {Background:Co-morbidity is a major late-life challenge with poor
|
|
outcomes, yet many older people are resilient. We consider an
|
|
ecopsychosocial framework of resilience to investigate this disparity.
|
|
This theorises that sources of resilience may be personal, social and
|
|
structural. We explored older people's responses and reactions to
|
|
significant life experiences, to understand resilience development for
|
|
managing later life health challenges. Methods:We applied a two-stage,
|
|
cross-sectional mixed-methods design to the Cognitive Function and
|
|
Ageing Studies Wales (CFAS Wales). Participants' defined quantitatively
|
|
as resilient (high level of well-being despite co-morbidity) were
|
|
identified in the wave 1 dataset. A sub-sample of the resilient
|
|
participants aged 65+ were randomly selected for semi-structured
|
|
interviews (N= 20). Qualitative thematic analyses were both inductive
|
|
and deductive. Results:The analyses revealed four primary life
|
|
experiences reflecting different developmental trajectories. ``Early
|
|
years as formative{''} and ``work and employment as formative{''}
|
|
occurred at normative developmental stages in the life-course. In
|
|
contrast non-normative life events such as loss, bereavement, illness of
|
|
self, and others underpinned the themes of ``adverse events and
|
|
experiences{''} and ``caring experiences.{''} Four potential mechanisms
|
|
for resilience were central to these life experiences, reflecting
|
|
reactions, actions, and development: ``character and self-identity;{''}
|
|
``approach to life and insight;{''} ``meaningful relationships and
|
|
belonging.{''} Conclusions:This work contributes further theoretical
|
|
insights into the ecopsychosocial resilience framework. It highlights
|
|
the process of interdependence between the individual and the wider
|
|
environment, suggesting how the availability and accessibility of
|
|
resources and human agency (protective factors), can influence, and be
|
|
influenced by, the timing of significant events and experiences. In
|
|
doing so, it corroborates international healthy ageing policy which
|
|
recognises resilience as important for a public health response to
|
|
support older people to adjust to changes and losses experienced in
|
|
later life. It highlights the importance of current and future policies
|
|
and services for supporting the management of adverse events earlier in
|
|
the life-course, and recommends that policies and services take a ``long
|
|
view{''} on population health and well-being and consider the whole
|
|
life-course, in addition to specific points in the ageing process.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Windle, G (Corresponding Author), Bangor Univ, Sch Hlth Sci, Dementia Serv Dev Ctr Wales Res Ctr, Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales.
|
|
Windle, Gill; MacLeod, Catherine, Bangor Univ, Sch Hlth Sci, Dementia Serv Dev Ctr Wales Res Ctr, Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales.
|
|
Bennett, Kate M., Univ Liverpool, Sch Psychol, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fmed.2020.502314},
|
|
Article-Number = {502314},
|
|
EISSN = {2296-858X},
|
|
Keywords = {resilience; health; life course; adverse events; co-morbidites; healthy
|
|
ageing},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ILL-HEALTH; SATISFACTION; ADVERSITY; DEMENTIA; CARERS; AGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {g.windle@bangor.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bennett, Kate/JCP-4878-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {MacLeod, Catherine/0000-0002-9314-7380},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000575145300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000255012700014,
|
|
Author = {Poblete, Fernando C. and Sapag, Jaime C. and Bossert, Thomas J.},
|
|
Title = {Social capital and mental health in low income urban communities in
|
|
Santiago, Chile},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA MEDICA DE CHILE},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {136},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {230-239},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Background- Many studies suggest that social capital, defined as those
|
|
intangible resources of a society or community (trust, participation and
|
|
reciprocity), that might facilitate collective action, can be associated
|
|
with positive health effects. Aim: To explore the relationship between
|
|
social capital an the level of mental health, in urban communities of
|
|
Santiago, Chile. Material and methods: In a qualitative-quantitative
|
|
cross-sectional design, two low income neighborboods in the municipality
|
|
of Puente Alto were selected. Interviews to key agents and focus groups,
|
|
as well as surveys (407) to adults from a representative random sample
|
|
of households, were conducted, measuring social capital using a locally
|
|
devised questionnaire and mental health using the General Health
|
|
Questionnaire (GHQ-12 instrument). A qualitative analysis based on the
|
|
grounded theory and a quantitative analysis through correlations and
|
|
simple and logistic regression models were applied. Results. The
|
|
quantitative analysis found an association between female gender
|
|
education and having a chronic disease, with low levels of mental
|
|
health. At the same time, the trust component of social capital might be
|
|
associated with a better mental bealth status. Qualitatively all the
|
|
components of social capital were identified as important for a better
|
|
mental health. Conclusions. This study suggests the existence of a
|
|
positive relationship between social capital and mental health.
|
|
Developing trust in a community might be a useful tool to work in mental
|
|
health at the community level.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Poblete, FC (Corresponding Author), Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Dept Med Familiar, Escuela Med, Lira 40, Santiago 10, Chile.
|
|
Poblete, Fernando C.; Sapag, Jaime C., Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Dept Med Familiar, Escuela Med, Santiago 10, Chile.
|
|
Bossert, Thomas J., Harvard Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Populat \& Int Hlth, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0034-9887},
|
|
EISSN = {0717-6163},
|
|
Keywords = {mental health; population characteristics; socio economic factors},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POLITICAL-ECONOMY; PUBLIC-HEALTH; PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS; ASSOCIATION;
|
|
PREVALENCE; ENVIRONMENT; INEQUALITY; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {fpoblete@med.puc.cl},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sapag, Jaime C./0000-0003-2227-8233},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000255012700014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000667805400005,
|
|
Author = {Okere, Nwanneka E. and Corball, Lucia and Kereto, Dunia and Hermans,
|
|
Sabine and Naniche, Denise and de Wit, Tobias F. Rinke and Gomez,
|
|
Gabriela B.},
|
|
Title = {Patient-incurred costs in a differentiated service delivery club
|
|
intervention compared to standard clinical care in Northwest Tanzania},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL AIDS SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction Placing all clients with a positive diagnosis for HIV on
|
|
antiretroviral therapy (ART) has cost implications both for patients and
|
|
health systems, which could, in turn, affect feasibility, sustainability
|
|
and uptake of new services. Patient-incurred costs are recognized
|
|
barriers to healthcare access. Differentiated service delivery (DSD)
|
|
models in general and community-based care in particular, could reduce
|
|
these costs. We aimed to assess patient-incurred costs of a
|
|
community-based DSD intervention (clubs) compared to clinic-based care
|
|
in the Shinyanga region, Tanzania. Methods Cross-sectional survey among
|
|
stable ART patients (n = 390, clinic-based; n = 251, club-based). For
|
|
each group, we collected socio-demographic, income and expenditure data
|
|
between May and August 2019. We estimated direct and indirect
|
|
patient-incurred costs. Direct costs included out-of-pocket
|
|
expenditures. Indirect costs included income loss due to time spent
|
|
during transport, accessing services and off work during illness. Cost
|
|
drivers were assessed in multivariate regression models. Results
|
|
Overall, costs were significantly higher among clinic participants.
|
|
Costs (USD) per year for clinic versus club were as follows: 11.7 versus
|
|
4.17 (p < 0.001) for direct costs, 20.9 versus 8.23 (p < 0.001) for
|
|
indirect costs and 32.2 versus 12.4 (p < 0.001) for total costs. Time
|
|
spent accessing care and time spent in illness (hours/year) were 38.3
|
|
versus 13.8 (p < 0.001) and 16.0 versus 6.69 (p < 0.001) respectively.
|
|
The main cost drivers included transportation (clinic vs. club: 67.7\%
|
|
vs. 44.1\%) for direct costs and income loss due to time spent accessing
|
|
care (clinic vs. club: 60.4\% vs. 56.7\%) for indirect costs. Factors
|
|
associated with higher total costs among patients attending clinic
|
|
services were higher education level (coefficient {[}95\% confidence
|
|
interval]) 20.9 {[}5.47 to 36.3]) and formal employment (44.2 {[}20.0 to
|
|
68.5). Differences in mean total costs remained significantly higher
|
|
with formal employment, rural residence, in addition to more frequent
|
|
visits among clinic participants. The percentage of households
|
|
classified as having had catastrophic expenditures in the last year was
|
|
low but significantly higher among clinic participants (10.8\% vs.
|
|
5.18\%, p = 0.014). Conclusions Costs incurred by patients accessing DSD
|
|
in the community are significantly lower compared to those accessing
|
|
standard clinic-based care. DSD models could improve access, especially
|
|
in resource-limited settings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Okere, NE (Corresponding Author), Amsterdam Inst Global Hlth \& Dev, AHTC Tower C4 Paasheuvelweg 25, NL-1105 BP Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Okere, Nwanneka E., Sanofi Pasteur, Vaccine Epidemiol \& Modelling Dept, Lyon, France.
|
|
Okere, Nwanneka E.; Corball, Lucia; Hermans, Sabine; de Wit, Tobias F. Rinke, Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam Inst Global Hlth \& Dev, Dept Global Hlth, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Kereto, Dunia, Bugisi Hlth Ctr, Shinyanga, Tanzania.
|
|
Naniche, Denise, Univ Barcelona, Hosp Clin, ISGLOBAL Barcelona Inst Global Hlth, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Gomez, Gabriela B., London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/jia2.25760},
|
|
Article-Number = {e25760},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-2652},
|
|
Keywords = {costs; antiretroviral treatment; differentiated service delivery;
|
|
Tanzania; catastrophic costs; patient-incurred costs},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; HEALTH FACILITIES; HIV TREATMENT; MODEL;
|
|
DECENTRALIZATION; RETENTION; MALAWI; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Immunology; Infectious Diseases},
|
|
Author-Email = {n.okere@aighd.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gomez, Gabriela B/HSB-1504-2023
|
|
Naniche, Denise S/S-1814-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gomez, Gabriela B/0000-0002-7409-798X
|
|
Naniche, Denise S/0000-0002-4495-6325
|
|
Okere, Nwanneka/0000-0001-9182-6518},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000667805400005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000512875600001,
|
|
Author = {Ziersch, Anna and Freeman, Toby and Javanparast, Sara and Mackean,
|
|
Tamara and Baum, Fran},
|
|
Title = {Regional primary health care organisations and migrant and refugee
|
|
health: the importance of prioritisation, funding, collaboration and
|
|
engagement},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {152-159},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: This paper examines whether Australian regional primary
|
|
health care organisations - in this case, Medicare Locals (MLs) and
|
|
Primary Health Networks (PHNs) - have engaged with migrant and refugee
|
|
health, and what factors encourage work in this area.
|
|
Methods: The study used mixed methods with surveys of ML (N=210) and PHN
|
|
staff (N=66), interviews with ML (N=50) and PHN (N=55) staff, national
|
|
consultations with migrant and refugee organisations (N=8 groups with 62
|
|
participants), and analysis of ML and PHN documents.
|
|
Results: Needs assessment documents identified migrant and refugee
|
|
health issues in 46\% of MLs and 74\% of PHNs. However, 48\% of MLs and
|
|
55\% of PHNs did not report any activities on migrant health, and 78\%
|
|
and 62\% did not report any activities for refugees, respectively. Key
|
|
factors identified by participants as associated with whether ML and PHN
|
|
focus on migrant and refugee health were the determination of local
|
|
priority areas, policy context and funding, collaboration with migrant
|
|
and refugee organisations and communities, and mechanisms for
|
|
engagement.
|
|
Conclusions: Despite the importance of primary health care for migrants
|
|
and refugees, there was relatively little attention paid to these
|
|
population groups in MLs and PHNs, with a small number of notable
|
|
exceptions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ziersch, A (Corresponding Author), Flinders Univ S Australia, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
|
|
Ziersch, Anna; Freeman, Toby; Javanparast, Sara; Mackean, Tamara; Baum, Fran, Flinders Univ S Australia, Southgate Inst Hlth Soc \& Equ, Adelaide, SA, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1753-6405.12965},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1326-0200},
|
|
EISSN = {1753-6405},
|
|
Keywords = {primary health care; migrant; refugee; asylum seeker; policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HIGH-INCOME COUNTRIES; MENTAL-HEALTH; ASYLUM SEEKERS; MIGRATION;
|
|
COMMUNITY; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {anna.ziersch@flinders.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ziersch, Anna M/A-8457-2008
|
|
Baum, Fran/AAJ-1896-2021
|
|
Baum, Fran/AGN-4014-2022
|
|
Freeman, Toby/GXV-3652-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Baum, Fran/0000-0002-2294-1368
|
|
Ziersch, Anna/0000-0001-6600-2568},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000512875600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000336490600021,
|
|
Author = {Poenaru, Dan and Ozgediz, Doruk and Gosselin, Richard A.},
|
|
Title = {Burden, need, or backlog: A call for improved metrics for the global
|
|
burden of surgical disease},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {483-486},
|
|
Abstract = {The global burden of disease (GBD) has been measured primarily through
|
|
the use of the DALY metric. Using this approach, preliminary estimates
|
|
were that 11\% of the GBD is surgical. However, prior work has
|
|
questioned specific aspects of the GBD methodology as well as its
|
|
practicality. This paper refines other conceptual approaches based on
|
|
met and unmet population need for services by considering incident and
|
|
prevalent need as well as backlogs for treatment that can inform
|
|
effective coverage of services. Some of these methods are tested using
|
|
the example of surgical repair of cleft lip and palate. Measurement of
|
|
disability incurred by delays in care may also be estimated through
|
|
these approaches and has not previously been estimated through a
|
|
validated model. These concepts may provide more practical information
|
|
for individuals and organizations to advocate for scaling up surgical
|
|
programs. While many surgical conditions are unique, as a single
|
|
intervention can lead to cure, these concepts may also prove useful for
|
|
non-surgical diseases. Further exploration of these approaches is
|
|
merited in resource-limited settings. (C) 2014 Surgical Associates Ltd.
|
|
Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ozgediz, D (Corresponding Author), Yale Univ, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
|
|
Poenaru, Dan, Queens Univ, Kingston, ON, Canada.
|
|
Ozgediz, Doruk, Yale Univ, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ijsu.2014.01.021},
|
|
ISSN = {1743-9191},
|
|
EISSN = {1743-9159},
|
|
Keywords = {Burden of disease; Surgery; Low and middle-income countries; Access to
|
|
care; Disparities; Health policy; Metrics; Backlog; Effective coverage},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SIERRA-LEONE; CARE; DISABILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {dozgediz@hotmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Poenaru, Dan/S-2562-2017},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Poenaru, Dan/0000-0002-6267-6140},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {17},
|
|
Times-Cited = {22},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000336490600021},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000726352200001,
|
|
Author = {Pharr, Jennifer R. and Batra, Kavita},
|
|
Title = {Physical and Mental Disabilities among the Gender-Diverse Population
|
|
Using the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, BRFSS (2017-2019):
|
|
A Propensity-Matched Analysis},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTHCARE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {This propensity-matched analysis utilized the publicly available
|
|
Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (2017-2019) data to compare
|
|
the burden of disabilities among transgender/non-binary (TGNB) and
|
|
cisgender groups. The groups were matched (1:1 ratio) on demographic
|
|
variables using Nearest Neighborhood Matching. Categorical variables
|
|
were compared among groups using a Chi-square analysis to test
|
|
differences in the proportions. Multivariate logistic regression
|
|
analysis was fit to predict the likelihood of the physical and mental
|
|
disabilities among the TGNB group compared with the cisgender group
|
|
while controlling for healthcare access factors, income, and employment.
|
|
Survey weights were included in the model to account for the complex
|
|
survey design. In a weighted sample of 664,103 respondents, only 2827
|
|
(0.4\%) self-identified as TGNB. In the matched sample, a higher
|
|
proportion of the TGNB group belonged to the low-income group (39.5\%
|
|
vs. 29.8\%, p < 0.001), were unable to work (12.5\% vs. 8.6\%, p <
|
|
0.001), and delayed care due to cost barriers (19.0\% vs. 12.4\%, p <
|
|
0.001). Compared with the cisgender group, the odds of having difficulty
|
|
making decisions were 1.94 times higher (95\% CI: 1.67-2.27) and odds of
|
|
difficulty walking were 1.38 times higher (95\% CI: 1.19, 1.59) among
|
|
the TGNB group. Additionally, the TGNB group had 59.8\% higher adjusted
|
|
odds ratio (aOR) (aOR 1.598, 95\% Confidence interval (CI): 1.256,
|
|
2.034) of experiencing difficulty dressing and 83.3\% higher odds (aOR
|
|
1.833, 95\% CI: 1.533, 2.191) in having difficulty doing things alone.
|
|
The findings of this study advocate for developing policies and
|
|
interventions to deliver culturally competent care to the TGNB
|
|
population with disabilities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pharr, JR (Corresponding Author), Univ Nevada, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Environm \& Occupat Hlth, Las Vegas, NV 89119 USA.
|
|
Pharr, Jennifer R., Univ Nevada, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Environm \& Occupat Hlth, Las Vegas, NV 89119 USA.
|
|
Batra, Kavita, Univ Nevada, Kirk Kerkorian Sch Med, Off Res, Las Vegas, NV 89102 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/healthcare9101285},
|
|
Article-Number = {1285},
|
|
EISSN = {2227-9032},
|
|
Keywords = {physical disability; mental disability; transgender; propensity score
|
|
matching; Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {KEY HEALTH INDICATORS; UNITED-STATES; OLDER-ADULTS; MINORITY STRESS;
|
|
CARE ACCESS; US ADULTS; GAY; STIGMA; PREJUDICE; CANCER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {jennifer.pharr@unlv.edu
|
|
Kavita.batra@unlv.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Batra, Kavita/ABH-7821-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Batra, Kavita/0000-0002-0722-0191
|
|
Pharr, Jennifer/0000-0002-0383-2641},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000726352200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000297101200013,
|
|
Author = {Sharma, Vanita and Kerr, Stewart H. and Kawar, Zsana and Kerr, David J.},
|
|
Title = {Challenges of cancer control in developing countries: current status and
|
|
future perspective},
|
|
Journal = {FUTURE ONCOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Pages = {1213-1222},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Cancer is a global problem accounting for almost 13\% of all deaths
|
|
worldwide. This equates to over 7 million people a year, more than is
|
|
caused by HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria combined. Now is the time to
|
|
strengthen the health systems of developing countries to deal with
|
|
cancer, to avoid a future crisis similar to the HIV/AIDS pandemic. In
|
|
this article we discuss the current state of cancer in the developing
|
|
world, how we need to advocate for a change in cancer control policy
|
|
with the governments of developing nations/transnational governmental
|
|
bodies (e. g., the UN and WHO etc) and how we think cancer care could be
|
|
improved in developing countries. We feel the only way to overcome the
|
|
growing burden of cancer in the developing world is working in
|
|
partnership with, nongovernmental organizations, international
|
|
nongovernmental organizations, transnational governmental bodies and
|
|
governmental bodies.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kerr, SH (Corresponding Author), Africa Oxford Canc Fdn AfrOx, 57 Woodstock Rd, Oxford OX2 6HJ, England.
|
|
Sharma, Vanita; Kerr, Stewart H.; Kawar, Zsana; Kerr, David J., Africa Oxford Canc Fdn AfrOx, Oxford OX2 6HJ, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2217/FON.11.101},
|
|
ISSN = {1479-6694},
|
|
EISSN = {1744-8301},
|
|
Keywords = {breast; cancer; cervical; childhood; developing countries; disparities;
|
|
early diagnosis; HBV vaccine; HPV vaccine; low-cost treatment;
|
|
prevention; prostate; tobacco control},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME COUNTRIES; HEALTH; PREVENTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {stewart.kerr@afrox.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000297101200013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000905903000001,
|
|
Author = {Dunn, Jeff and Rodin, Gary},
|
|
Title = {Global psycho-oncology in low middle-income countries: Challenges and
|
|
opportunities},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {3-5},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {ObjectivesThis Special Issue of Psycho-Oncology is focused on challenges
|
|
and opportunities in the provision of psychosocial care to patients in
|
|
low and middle-income countries (LMICs). The aim is to highlight global
|
|
disparities and inequity in the provision of evidence-based,
|
|
culturally-sensitive and timely psychosocial care and to showcase the
|
|
work of researchers and practitioners to address this gap. We hope that
|
|
this Issue will help to advance the psychological and social dimensions
|
|
of cancer care in all parts of the world. MethodsThe focus of the papers
|
|
is on research and clinical innovations in LMICs that target the
|
|
psychological, social and cultural dimensions of cancer and on
|
|
interventions to improve or maintain the psychological well-being,
|
|
social functioning and/or quality of life of those who are affected and
|
|
their families. ResultsThese papers draw attention to guidelines,
|
|
resource needs, clinical service evaluation, emerging research and
|
|
knowledge translation within LMICs that advance knowledge and
|
|
implementation in the field of psycho-oncology. ConclusionsInnovations
|
|
and advances in psycho-oncology are emerging from LMICs to enhance the
|
|
care of patients with cancer and their families in these regions and in
|
|
all parts of the world. A sustained global initiative is now needed to
|
|
ensure that guidelines for such care are routinely included in global,
|
|
national and local cancer control plans and that essential resources and
|
|
attention are directed to implement them.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rodin, G (Corresponding Author), Princess Margaret Canc Ctr, 620 Univ Ave 12th floor, Toronto, ON M5G 2C1, Canada.
|
|
Dunn, Jeff, Univ Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Dunn, Jeff, Australian Catholic Univ, Banyo, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Rodin, Gary, Univ Hlth Network, Princess Margaret Canc Ctr, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Rodin, Gary, Univ Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Rodin, Gary, Univ Toronto, Global Inst Psychosocial Palliat \& End of Life Car, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Rodin, Gary, Univ Hlth Network, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Rodin, Gary, Princess Margaret Canc Ctr, 620 Univ Ave 12th floor, Toronto, ON M5G 2C1, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/pon.6078},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1057-9249},
|
|
EISSN = {1099-1611},
|
|
Keywords = {cancer; caregivers; global; inequity; LMICs; mental health;
|
|
psycho-oncology; psychological; social},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CANCER CARE; PROGRAMS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology; Psychology; Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {Gary.Rodin@uhn.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rodin, Gary/0000-0002-6626-6974},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000905903000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000964924400001,
|
|
Author = {Oberholzer, Basil},
|
|
Title = {Post-growth transition, working time reduction, and the question of
|
|
profits},
|
|
Journal = {ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {206},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {The ecological macroeconomics literature has developed models, which
|
|
outline the transition from today's growth-dependent economies to
|
|
post-growth systems where output can be stabilized to limit resource
|
|
con-sumption while good living conditions and high employment are
|
|
ensured. Working time reduction plays a pivotal role in those
|
|
transitional strategies to relax the trade-off between economic growth
|
|
and unemployment. This analysis contributes to the research by
|
|
developing a macroeconomic model where, in contrast to the existing
|
|
models, a sufficient profit rate is the precondition of any
|
|
private-sector economic activity. It is shown that under such
|
|
assumptions working time reduction is not enough to stabilize output but
|
|
is a threat to macroeconomic stability. To make the post-growth
|
|
transition successful, working time reduction must go along with
|
|
supporting economic policies and macroeconomic governance including
|
|
public investment, which controls the private -sector profit rate to
|
|
avoid instability and unemployment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Oberholzer, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
|
|
Oberholzer, Basil, Univ Bern, Ctr Dev \& Environm, Bern, Switzerland.
|
|
Oberholzer, Basil, Univ Bern, Bern, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ecolecon.2023.107748},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2023},
|
|
Article-Number = {107748},
|
|
ISSN = {0921-8009},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-6106},
|
|
Keywords = {Economic growth; Post -growth; Working time reduction; Profits},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME-DISTRIBUTION; INEQUALITY; FINANCIALIZATION; STAGNATION;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; DEMAND; GROWTH; POLICY; WAGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {basil.oberholzer@unibe.ch},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000964924400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000274758000005,
|
|
Author = {Namara, Regassa E. and Hanjra, Munir A. and Castillo, Gina E. and
|
|
Ravnborg, Helle Munk and Smith, Lawrence and Van Koppen, Barbara},
|
|
Title = {Agricultural water management and poverty linkages},
|
|
Journal = {AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {97},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {520-527},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Water is critically important to the livelihoods of more than I billion
|
|
people living on less than \$1 a day, particularly for the 850 million
|
|
rural poor primarily engaged in agriculture. In many developing
|
|
countries, water is a major factor constraining agricultural output, and
|
|
income of the world's rural poor. Improved agricultural water management
|
|
can contribute to poverty reduction through several pathways. First,
|
|
access to reliable water improves production and productivity, enhances
|
|
employment opportunities and stabilizes income and consumption.
|
|
Secondly, it encourages the utilization of other yield-enhancing inputs
|
|
and allows diversification into high-value products, enhances nonfarm
|
|
outputs and employment, and fulfils multiple needs of households. Third,
|
|
it may contribute either negatively or positively to nutritional status,
|
|
health, societal equity and environment. The net impact of agricultural
|
|
water management interventions on poverty may depend individually and/or
|
|
synergistically on the working of these pathways. Improved access to
|
|
water is essential, but not sufficient for sustained poverty reduction.
|
|
Investments are needed in agricultural science and technology, policies
|
|
and institutions, economic reform, addressing global agricultural trade
|
|
inequities, etc. But how best to match the agricultural water management
|
|
technologies, institutions and policies to the needs of the
|
|
heterogeneous poor living in diverse agro-ecological settings remains
|
|
unclear. This article provides a menu of promising pathways through
|
|
which agricultural water management can contribute to sustained poverty
|
|
reduction. (C) 2009 Published by Elsevier B.V.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Namara, RE (Corresponding Author), Int Water Management Inst, IWMI Reg Off Africa, PMB, CT 112, Cantonments, Accra, Ghana.
|
|
Namara, Regassa E., Int Water Management Inst, IWMI Reg Off Africa, PMB, Cantonments, Accra, Ghana.
|
|
Namara, Regassa E., Int Water Management Inst, Subreg Off W Africa, PMB, Cantonments, Accra, Ghana.
|
|
Hanjra, Munir A., Charles Sturt Univ, Int Ctr Water Food Secur, Bathurst, NSW 2795, Australia.
|
|
Ravnborg, Helle Munk, Danish Inst Int Studies, Nat Resources \& Poverty Res Unit, DK-1401 Copenhagen K, Denmark.
|
|
Smith, Lawrence, Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol \& Med, Ctr Environm Policy, London, England.
|
|
Van Koppen, Barbara, So Africa Reg Program, Int Water Management Inst, ZA-0127 Pretoria, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.agwat.2009.05.007},
|
|
ISSN = {0378-3774},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-2283},
|
|
Keywords = {Irrigation; Investments; Livelihoods; Multiple uses; Water rights},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IRRIGATION; SUSTAINABILITY; EXTERNALITIES; INEQUALITY; ECONOMICS;
|
|
IMPACTS; MODEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Agronomy; Water Resources},
|
|
Author-Email = {r.namara@cgiar.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {76},
|
|
Times-Cited = {117},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {48},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000274758000005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000407405100005,
|
|
Author = {MacVicar, Sarah and Berrang-Ford, Lea and Harper, Sherilee and Steele,
|
|
Vivienne and Lwasa, Shuaib and Bambaiha, Didacus Namanya and Twesigomwe,
|
|
Sabastien and Asaasira, Grace and Ross, Nancy and IHACC Res Team},
|
|
Title = {How seasonality and weather affect perinatal health: Comparing the
|
|
experiences of indigenous and non-indigenous mothers in Kanungu
|
|
District, Uganda},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {187},
|
|
Pages = {39-48},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Maternal and newborn health disparities and the health impacts of
|
|
climate change present grand challenges for global health equity, and
|
|
there remain knowledge gaps in our understanding of how these challenges
|
|
intersect. This study examines the pathways through which mothers are
|
|
affected by seasonal and meteorological factors in sub-Saharan Africa in
|
|
general, and Kanungu District (Uganda), in particular. We conducted a
|
|
community-based study consisting of focus group discussions with mothers
|
|
and interviews with health care workers in Kanungu District. Using a
|
|
priori and a posteriori coding, we found a diversity of perspectives on
|
|
the impacts of seasonal and weather exposures, with reporting of more
|
|
food available in the rainy season. The rainy season was also identified
|
|
as the period in which women performed physical labour for longer time
|
|
periods, while work conditions in the dry season were reported to be
|
|
more difficult due to heat. The causal pathways through which weather
|
|
and seasonality may be affecting size at birth as reported by Kanungu
|
|
mothers were consistent with those most frequently reported in the
|
|
literature elsewhere, including maternal energy balance (nutritional
|
|
intake and physical exertion output) and seasonal illness. While both
|
|
Indigenous and non-Indigenous mothers described similar pathways,
|
|
however, the severity of these experiences differed. Non-Indigenous
|
|
mothers frequently relied on livestock assets or opportunities for less
|
|
taxing physical work than Indigenous women, who had fewer options when
|
|
facing food shortages or transport costs. Findings point to specific
|
|
entry points for intervention including increased nutritional support in
|
|
dry season periods of food scarcity, increased diversification of wage
|
|
labour opportunities, and increased access to contraception.
|
|
Interventions should be particularly targeted towards Indigenous mothers
|
|
as they face greater food insecurity, may have fewer sources of income,
|
|
and face greater overall deprivation than non-Indigenous mothers. (C)
|
|
2017 Published by Elsevier Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {MacVicar, S (Corresponding Author), McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Burnside Hall Bldg,Room 705, Montreal, PQ H3A 0B9, Canada.
|
|
MacVicar, Sarah; Berrang-Ford, Lea; Ross, Nancy, McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Burnside Hall Bldg,Room 705, Montreal, PQ H3A 0B9, Canada.
|
|
Harper, Sherilee; Steele, Vivienne, Univ Guelph, Sch Populat Med, Ontario Vet Coll, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
|
|
Lwasa, Shuaib, Makerere Univ, Coll Agr \& Environm Sci, Sch Forestry Environm \& Geog Sci, Dept Geog Geoinformat \& Climat Sci, POB 7062,Arts Bldg, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Bambaiha, Didacus Namanya, Ugandan Minist Hlth, Dept Community Hlth, Plot 6,Lourdel Rd,POB 7272, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Twesigomwe, Sabastien, Batwa Dev Programme, Kinkizi, Kanungu, Uganda.
|
|
Asaasira, Grace, IHACC Res Team, Kinkizi, Uganda.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.06.021},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {Uganda; Perinatal health; Climate change; Weather; Season; Indigenous
|
|
health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-BIRTH-WEIGHT; CLIMATE-CHANGE; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; PARTICIPATORY
|
|
RESEARCH; CRITICAL REALISM; FETAL ORIGINS; PRETERM BIRTH; VULNERABILITY;
|
|
DETERMINANTS; TEMPERATURE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {sarah.macvicar@mail.mcgill.ca
|
|
lea.berrangford@mcgill.ca
|
|
harpers@uoguelph.ca
|
|
vivienne@uoguelph.ca
|
|
lwasa\_s@caes.mak.ac.ug
|
|
didamanya@yahoo.com
|
|
twesigomwe.sabastian@yahoo.com
|
|
graceasaasira@gmail.com
|
|
nancy.ross@mcgill.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lwasa, Shuaib/G-3723-2014
|
|
Ford, James/A-4284-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lwasa, Shuaib/0000-0003-4312-2836
|
|
Ford, James/0000-0002-2066-3456},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {98},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000407405100005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000269857300001,
|
|
Author = {Levesque, Martine C. and Dupere, Sophie and Loignon, Christine and
|
|
Levine, Alissa and Laurin, Isabelle and Charbonneau, Anne and Bedos,
|
|
Christophe},
|
|
Title = {Bridging the Poverty Gap in Dental Education: How Can People Living in
|
|
Poverty Help Us?},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF DENTAL EDUCATION},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {73},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {1043-1054},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Dental education on specific knowledge and intervention approaches for
|
|
working with people living on welfare is crucial to the therapeutic
|
|
success of the relationships dental professionals establish with this
|
|
clientele. Despite growing attention to the importance of cultural
|
|
competence and communication skills training in dentistry, very few
|
|
initiatives have been documented in relation to serving low-income
|
|
populations. Following discussions at a 2006 Montreal-based colloquium
|
|
on access to dental care, academics, dental association administrators,
|
|
and public health agency and antipoverty coalition representatives began
|
|
collaborating to develop innovative pedagogy designed to increase
|
|
providers' competence in interacting with their underprivileged
|
|
patients. The group's first round of workshops (November 2006-October
|
|
2007) resulted in the creation of an original video-based tool
|
|
containing testimonies from six individuals living currently or formerly
|
|
on welfare. The videotaped interview data represent their perceptions
|
|
and experiences regarding their oral health, dental care service
|
|
provision, and poverty in general. This article describes the
|
|
participative methods, the content of the resulting DVD, and the
|
|
implications of the ``Listening to Each Other{''} program, a
|
|
collaborative knowledge translation approach for improving interaction
|
|
between underprivileged people and dental care providers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bedos, C (Corresponding Author), McGill Univ, Fac Dent, Div Oral Hlth \& Soc, Listening Each Other Project, 3550 Univ St, Montreal, PQ H3A 2A7, Canada.
|
|
Levesque, Martine C.; Bedos, Christophe, McGill Univ, Fac Dent, Div Oral Hlth \& Soc, Listening Each Other Project, Montreal, PQ H3A 2A7, Canada.
|
|
Dupere, Sophie, Univ Laval, Fac Nursing, Quebec City, PQ G1K 7P4, Canada.
|
|
Loignon, Christine, Charles Lemoyne Hosp, Greenfield Pk, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Loignon, Christine, Univ Sherbrooke, Dept Family Med, Sherbrooke, PQ J1K 2R1, Canada.
|
|
Laurin, Isabelle, Montreal Ctr Hlth, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Laurin, Isabelle, Social Serv Agcy, Las Cruces, NM USA.
|
|
Charbonneau, Anne, Univ Montreal, Fac Dent, Montreal, PQ H3C 3J7, Canada.},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-0337},
|
|
EISSN = {1930-7837},
|
|
Keywords = {poverty; cultural competence; oral health disparities; dental education;
|
|
low-income populations; participatory research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEDICAID-INSURED CHILDREN; ORAL-HEALTH; CULTURAL COMPETENCE; CARE;
|
|
ACCESS; CHALLENGES; PATIENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Dentistry, Oral Surgery \& Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {christophe.bedos1@mcgill.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bedos, Christophe/0000-0003-0141-0928
|
|
Dupere, sophie/0000-0002-5035-2851},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000269857300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000537100500001,
|
|
Author = {Lorenzetti, Lara and Tharaldson, Jenae and Pradhan, Subarna and
|
|
Rastagar, Sayed Haroon and Hemat, Shafiqullah and Ahmadzai, Sharif A. H.
|
|
and Dulli, Lisa S. and Weissman, Amy and Todd, Catherine S.},
|
|
Title = {Adapting a health video library for use in Afghanistan: provider-level
|
|
acceptability and lessons for strengthening operational feasibility},
|
|
Journal = {HUMAN RESOURCES FOR HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAY 19},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Community health workers (CHWs) in Afghanistan are a critical
|
|
care extender for primary health services, including reproductive,
|
|
maternal, neonatal, and child health (RMNCH) care. However, volunteer
|
|
CHWs face challenges including an ever-expanding number of tasks and
|
|
insufficient time to conduct them. We piloted a health video library
|
|
(HVL) intervention, a tablet-based tool to improve health promotion and
|
|
counseling by CHWs. We qualitatively assessed provider-level
|
|
acceptability and operational feasibility. Methods CHWs implemented the
|
|
HVL pilot in three rural districts of Balkh, Herat, and Kandahar
|
|
provinces. We employed qualitative methods, conducting 47 in-depth
|
|
interviews (IDIs) with male and female CHWs and six IDIs with community
|
|
health supervisors. We used semi-structured interview guides to explore
|
|
provider perceptions of program implementation processes and solicit
|
|
feedback on how to improve the HVL intervention to inform scale-up. We
|
|
conducted a thematic analysis. Results CHWs reported that the HVL
|
|
increased time efficiencies, reduced work burden, and enhanced
|
|
professional credibility within their communities. CHWs felt video
|
|
content and format were accessible for low literacy clients, but also
|
|
identified challenges to operational feasibility. Although tablets were
|
|
considered easy-to-use, certain technical issues required continued
|
|
support from supervisors and family. Charging tablets was difficult due
|
|
to inconsistent electricity access. Although some CHWs reported reaching
|
|
most households in their catchment area for visits with the HVL, others
|
|
were unable to visit all households due to sizeable populations and
|
|
gender-related barriers, including women's limited mobility. Conclusions
|
|
The HVL was acceptable and feasible for integration into existing CHW
|
|
duties, indicating it may improve RMNCH counseling, contributing to
|
|
increased care-seeking behaviors in Afghanistan. Short-term challenges
|
|
with technology and hardware can be addressed through continued training
|
|
and provision of solar chargers. Longer-term challenges, including
|
|
tablet costs, community coverage, and gender issues, require further
|
|
consideration with an emphasis on equitable distribution.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lorenzetti, L (Corresponding Author), FHI 360, Global Hlth Populat \& Nutr, Durham, NC 27701 USA.
|
|
Lorenzetti, Lara; Tharaldson, Jenae; Pradhan, Subarna; Dulli, Lisa S.; Todd, Catherine S., FHI 360, Global Hlth Populat \& Nutr, Durham, NC 27701 USA.
|
|
Rastagar, Sayed Haroon; Ahmadzai, Sharif A. H., FHI 360, HEMAYAT Project, Kabul, Afghanistan.
|
|
Hemat, Shafiqullah, Minist Publ Hlth, Hlth Promot Dept, Kabul, Afghanistan.
|
|
Weissman, Amy, FHI 360, Asia Pacific Reg Off, Bangkok, Thailand.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12960-020-00477-9},
|
|
Article-Number = {35},
|
|
EISSN = {1478-4491},
|
|
Keywords = {Afghanistan; Community health workers; Maternal health; Demand
|
|
generation; Social and behavior change; Counseling},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; CHILD HEALTH; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {llorenzetti@fhi360.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dulli, Lisa/IAP-5119-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dulli, Lisa/0000-0002-3987-8932
|
|
Lorenzetti, Lara/0000-0003-4758-7390
|
|
Hemat, Shafiqullah/0000-0003-4447-6935},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000537100500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000359182500004,
|
|
Author = {Zhang, Huiping},
|
|
Title = {Wives' Relative Income and Marital Quality in Urban China: Gender Role
|
|
Attitudes as a Moderator},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE FAMILY STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {203+},
|
|
Month = {SPR},
|
|
Abstract = {This study attempted to examine the impact of relative income on marital
|
|
happiness and instability among urban Chinese women. Using a sample of
|
|
1104 married women in Beijing, this study found that wives' relative
|
|
income was negatively associated with marital happiness, and positively
|
|
associated with marital instability to a small extent. Traditional
|
|
breadwinner role attitudes were positively associated with marital
|
|
happiness, and negatively associated with marital instability. Feminine
|
|
role attitudes were not associated with any dimension of marital
|
|
quality. Hierarchical multiple regression indicated that the moderating
|
|
role of feminine role attitudes on marital happiness was supported. In
|
|
other words, the negative impact of wives' income advantage on marital
|
|
happiness was buffered by egalitarian feminine role attitudes. The
|
|
implications of the findings for theoretical verification and
|
|
family-friendly policy making are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zhang, HP (Corresponding Author), Renmin Univ China, Dept Social Work, Sch Sociol \& Populat Studies, 59 Zhongguancun St, Beijing 100872, Peoples R China.
|
|
Renmin Univ China, Dept Social Work, Sch Sociol \& Populat Studies, Beijing 100872, Peoples R China.},
|
|
ISSN = {0047-2328},
|
|
EISSN = {1929-9850},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PERCEIVED FAIRNESS; HOUSEHOLD LABOR; EMPLOYMENT; IDEOLOGY; HUSBANDS;
|
|
EARNINGS; DIVORCE; FAMILY; SATISFACTION; RESOURCES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {zhang\_huiping@yahoo.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000359182500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000958170400001,
|
|
Author = {Varela, Elder Garcia and Zeldman, Jamie and Bolivar, Isabella and
|
|
Mobley, Amy R.},
|
|
Title = {A Qualitative Study to Compare Barriers to Improving Food Security among
|
|
Households with Young Children in the US as Perceived by Different Types
|
|
of Stakeholders before and during COVID-19},
|
|
Journal = {NUTRIENTS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This qualitative study aimed to determine the perceived barriers of
|
|
different community stakeholders' to providing resources for improving
|
|
food security in households with young children in the U.S. Community
|
|
stakeholders working with low-income families with children 0-3 years of
|
|
age in Florida were recruited to represent healthcare (n = 7),
|
|
community/policy development (n = 6), emergency food assistance (n = 6),
|
|
early childhood education (n = 7), and nutrition education (n = 6)
|
|
sectors. In 2020, one-on-one interviews were conducted with each
|
|
stakeholder in via Zoom, using an interview script based on the
|
|
PRECEDE-PROCEED model and questions to capture the impacts of COVID-19.
|
|
The interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed
|
|
using a deductive thematic approach. A cross-tab qualitative analysis
|
|
was used to compare data across categories of stakeholders. Healthcare
|
|
professionals and nutrition educators indicated stigma, community/policy
|
|
development stakeholders indicated a lack of time, emergency food
|
|
assistance personnel indicated a limited access to food, and early
|
|
childhood professionals indicated a lack of transportation as the main
|
|
barriers to food security prior to COVID-19. COVID-19 impacts included
|
|
the fear of virus exposure, new restrictions, lack of volunteers, and a
|
|
lack of interest in virtual programming as barriers to food security. As
|
|
perceived barriers may vary with respect to providing resources to
|
|
improve food security in families with young children and the COVID-19
|
|
impacts persist, coordinated policy, systems, and environmental changes
|
|
are needed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mobley, AR (Corresponding Author), Univ Florida, Coll Hlth \& Human Performance, Dept Hlth Educ \& Behav, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
|
|
Varela, Elder Garcia; Zeldman, Jamie; Bolivar, Isabella; Mobley, Amy R., Univ Florida, Coll Hlth \& Human Performance, Dept Hlth Educ \& Behav, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/nu15061438},
|
|
Article-Number = {1438},
|
|
EISSN = {2072-6643},
|
|
Keywords = {food security; early childhood; community resources; health
|
|
professionals; nutrition educators; nutrition policy; food assistance;
|
|
COVID-19; systems integration},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POLICY DEVELOPMENT; HEALTH-PROMOTION; DIET QUALITY; INSECURITY;
|
|
ENGAGEMENT; OPPORTUNITIES; ASSOCIATIONS; INTERVIEWS; OVERWEIGHT;
|
|
STRATEGIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nutrition \& Dietetics},
|
|
Author-Email = {amy.mobley@ufl.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mobley, Amy/0000-0002-7477-942X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000958170400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000785566900001,
|
|
Author = {Zartler, Ulrike and Suwada, Katarzyna and Kreyenfeld, Michaela},
|
|
Title = {Family lives during the COVID-19 pandemic in European societies:
|
|
Introduction to the Special Issue},
|
|
Journal = {JFR-JOURNAL OF FAMILY RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {1-15},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: This chapter introduces the reader to the Special Issue
|
|
``Family Lives during the COVID-19 Pandemic in European Societies{''}.
|
|
Background: This Special Issue analyses how families, parents, and
|
|
children have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, and how they have
|
|
been coping with its related challenges in different societal contexts.
|
|
Method: The studies collected in this Special Issue are based on
|
|
qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-methods approaches and data that
|
|
have been gathered during 2020 in a range of European countries. It
|
|
covers the first lockdown period, the reopening phases, and the months
|
|
thereafter.
|
|
Results: The 20 contributions of this Special Issue show that families
|
|
shouldered large responsibilities during the pandemic. While the
|
|
pandemic did not lead to radical shifts in gendered care patterns,
|
|
mothers and fathers experienced the pandemic differently, with mothers
|
|
reporting higher levels of stress. Moreover, there was great
|
|
heterogeneity in how different types of families and children were
|
|
affected by the pandemic. Single parents and parents and children in
|
|
low-income households were most strongly affected in their social and
|
|
economic wellbeing. Social and economic distress are strongly
|
|
interwoven, and the developments during the pandemic aggravated existing
|
|
social disparities.
|
|
Conclusion: This Special Issue underlines the importance of the family
|
|
for the functioning of societies during times of crisis. It also shows
|
|
that policy makers often adopted a too narrow view of what constitutes a
|
|
family and did not adequately address family diversity in their decision
|
|
making. This Special Issue furthermore emphasized that there is a danger
|
|
that the pandemic will increase disparities between families. Thus,
|
|
parents and their children need adequate support measures that are
|
|
tailored to their needs, and that are designed to alleviate these
|
|
social, economic and educational disparities.},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zartler, U (Corresponding Author), Univ Vienna, Dept Sociol, Rooseveltpl 2, A-1090 Vienna, Austria.
|
|
Zartler, Ulrike, Univ Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
|
|
Suwada, Katarzyna, Nicolaus Copernicus Univ Torun, Torun, Poland.
|
|
Kreyenfeld, Michaela, Hertie Sch Berlin, Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.20377/jfr-808},
|
|
EISSN = {2699-2337},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; family lives; work-family balance; gender roles; social
|
|
inequality; parent-child relations; well-being; family dissolution;
|
|
post-divorce families; intergenerational relations},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TIMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {ulrike.zartler@univie.ac.at},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Suwada, Katarzyna/0000-0001-8785-855X
|
|
Zartler, Ulrike/0000-0002-8833-8713
|
|
Kreyenfeld, Michaela/0000-0001-9420-3818},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {8},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000785566900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000281882000003,
|
|
Author = {Bourne, Paul Andrew},
|
|
Title = {The uninsured ill in a developing nation},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTHMED},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {4},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {499-514},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Empirical studies have used a piecemeal approach to the
|
|
examination of health, health care-seeking, uninsured people and the
|
|
health status of those who are chronically ill, but no study emerged in
|
|
an extensive literature search, on the developing nations, and in
|
|
particular Latin America and the Caribbean, that has investigated health
|
|
and health care-seeking behaviour among uninsured ill people in a single
|
|
research.
|
|
Aims: The current study aims to narrow this divide by investigating
|
|
health, self-reported diagnosed health conditions, and health
|
|
care-seeking behaviour among uninsured ill Jamaicans, and to model
|
|
factors which account for their moderate-to-very good health status as
|
|
well as health care-seeking behaviour.
|
|
Methods and materials: The current study utilises cross-sectional survey
|
|
data on Jamaicans which was collected in 2007. The survey is a
|
|
modification of the World Bank's Living Standard Household Survey. This
|
|
work extracted a sample of 736 respondents who indicated that they were
|
|
ill and uninsured from a sample of 6,783 respondents. Logistic
|
|
regression analyses examined 1) the relationship between
|
|
moderate-to-very good health status and some socio-demographic, economic
|
|
and biological variables; as well as 2) a correlation between medical
|
|
care-seeking behaviour and some socio-demographic, economic and
|
|
biological variables.
|
|
Results: Sixty out of every 100 uninsured ill Jamaicans were females; 43
|
|
out of every 100 were poor; 59 out of every 100 uninsured ill persons
|
|
dwelled in rural areas; 1 of every 2 utilised public health care
|
|
facilities, two-thirds had chronic health conditions, and 22 out of
|
|
every 100 reported at least poor health. Moderate-to-very good health
|
|
status was correlated with age (OR = 0.97, 95\% CI = 0.95-0.98); male
|
|
(OR = 0.60, 95\% CI = 0.37-0.97); middle class (OR = 0.45, 95\% CI =
|
|
0.21-0.95); logged income (OR = 2.87, 95\% CI = 1.50-5.49); area of
|
|
residence (Other Town - OR = 2.33, 95(boolean AND)\% CI = 1.19-4.54;
|
|
Urban - OR = 2.01, 95\% CI = 1.11-3.62), and health care-seeking
|
|
behaviour (OR = 0.45, 95\% CI = 0.27-0.74). Sixty-one of every 100
|
|
uninsured respondents with ill health sought medical care. Medical
|
|
care-seeking behaviour was significantly related to chronic illness (OR
|
|
= 2.25, 95\% CI = 1.31-3.88); age (OR = 1.03, 95\% CI = 1.01-1.04);
|
|
crowding (OR = 1.12, 1.01-1.24); income (OR = 1.00, 95\% CI =
|
|
1.00-1.00); and married people (OR = 0.48, 95\% CI = 0.28-0.82).
|
|
Uninsured ill Jamaicans who resided in rural areas had the lowest
|
|
moderate-to-very good health status, but there was no difference in
|
|
health care-seeking behaviour based on the geographical location of
|
|
residence.
|
|
Conclusion: Despite the fact that there is health insurance coverage
|
|
available for those who are chronically ill and elderly in Jamaica,
|
|
there are still many such people who are without health insurance
|
|
coverage. The task of public health specialists and policy makers is to
|
|
fashion public education and interventions that will address many of the
|
|
realities which emerged in this research.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bourne, PA (Corresponding Author), Univ W Indies, Dept Community Hlth Stat, Fac Med Sci, Kingston 7, Jamaica.
|
|
Bourne, Paul Andrew, Univ W Indies, Dept Community Hlth \& Psychiat, Fac Med Sci, Kingston 7, Jamaica.},
|
|
ISSN = {1840-2291},
|
|
EISSN = {1986-8103},
|
|
Keywords = {Uninsured; uninsured ill; chronic illness; health status; health
|
|
care-seeking behaviour; health disparity; inequality in health;
|
|
developing nation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; POVERTY; ILLNESS; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {paulbourne1@yahoo.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bourne, Paul Andrew/AAE-2714-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000281882000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000459375200002,
|
|
Author = {Aboueid, Stephanie and Jasinska, Monika and Bourgeault, Ivy and Giroux,
|
|
Isabelle},
|
|
Title = {Current Weight Management Approaches Used by Primary Care Providers in
|
|
Six Multidisciplinary Healthcare Settings in Ontario},
|
|
Journal = {CANADIAN JOURNAL OF NURSING RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {50},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {169-178},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Obesity management in primary care has been suboptimal due
|
|
to lack of access to allied health professionals, time, and resources.
|
|
Purpose: To understand the weight management approaches used by primary
|
|
care providers working in team-based settings and how they assess the
|
|
most suitable approach for a patient.
|
|
Methods: A total of 20 primary care providers (13 nurse practitioners
|
|
and 7 family physicians) working in 6 multidisciplinary clinics in
|
|
Ontario were interviewed. All interviews were recorded, transcribed
|
|
verbatim, and coded using NVivo qualitative software. Conventional
|
|
content analysis was used to inductively elucidate codes, which were
|
|
then clustered into categories.
|
|
Results: A referral to on-site programming was the most frequent weight
|
|
management approach used. The pharmacological approach was underutilized
|
|
due to adverse side effects and cost to patients. Primary care providers
|
|
assessed the most suitable weight management approach based on
|
|
patients': preference, level of motivation, income status and access to
|
|
resources, body mass index and comorbidities, and previous weight loss
|
|
attempts. Primary care providers perceived that referring to health
|
|
professionals and educational resources were the approaches preferred by
|
|
patients.
|
|
Conclusions: The team-based nature of these clinics allowed for
|
|
referrals to various on-site professionals and/or programs. Some
|
|
barriers to pursuing weight management avenues with patients were
|
|
patient dependent.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Aboueid, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Ottawa, Telfer Sch Management, Dept Hlth Syst, 55 Laurier Ave East, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada.
|
|
Aboueid, Stephanie; Jasinska, Monika; Bourgeault, Ivy, Univ Ottawa, Telfer Sch Management, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
|
|
Giroux, Isabelle, Univ Ottawa, Fac Hlth Sci, Sch Nutr Sci, Ottawa, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0844562118769229},
|
|
ISSN = {0844-5621},
|
|
EISSN = {1705-7051},
|
|
Keywords = {Multiprofessional practice; obesity; Canadian health services; primary
|
|
care; qualitative approaches},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OBESITY; ADULTS; INTERVENTIONS; PERSPECTIVES; PREVENTION; OVERWEIGHT;
|
|
ATTITUDES; NUTRITION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {sabou095@uottawa.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Giroux, Isabelle/0000-0003-4933-5162
|
|
Bourgeault, Ivy/0000-0002-5113-9243},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000459375200002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000692556700014,
|
|
Author = {Krause, S. James and Li, Chao and Backus, Deborah and Jarnecke, Melinda
|
|
and Reed, Karla and Rembert, Jameka and Rumrill, Phillip and
|
|
Dismuke-Greer, E. Clara},
|
|
Title = {Barriers and Facilitators to Employment: A Comparison of Participants
|
|
With Multiple Sclerosis and Spinal Cord Injury},
|
|
Journal = {ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {102},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {1556-1561},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To compare self-reported barriers and facilitators to
|
|
employment among employed and unemployed participants with multiple
|
|
sclerosis (MS) and spinal cord injury (SCI). Design: Cross-sectional
|
|
study using self-report assessment obtained by mail or online. Setting:
|
|
Medical university in the southeastern United States. Participants:
|
|
Participants (N=2624) identified from either a specialty hospital or a
|
|
state-based surveillance system in the southeastern United States,
|
|
including 1234 with MS and 1390 with SCI. All participants were aged <65
|
|
years at the time of assessment. Interventions: Not applicable. Main
|
|
Outcome Measures: Self-reported barriers and facilitators to employment.
|
|
Results: Overall, the MS participants reported more barriers,
|
|
particularly stress, cognition, and fatigue, whereas those with SCI were
|
|
more likely to report not having the proper education and training,
|
|
resources, transportation, and attendant care. Follow-up analyses broken
|
|
down by employment status indicated that several barriers and
|
|
facilitators were significantly related to diagnosis for either employed
|
|
or unemployed participants, but not both. Among those employed,
|
|
participants with SCI were more likely to report they could not do the
|
|
same types of jobs as they could pre SCI and those with MS were more
|
|
likely to state that they did not know much about jobs for people with
|
|
disabilities (no differences were noted for these variables among
|
|
unemployed participants). Unemployed individuals with SCI were more
|
|
likely to report that the jobs for which they were trained were not
|
|
accessible. Conclusions: The primary barriers for individuals with MS
|
|
revolve around the condition itself, whereas the barriers for SCI appear
|
|
to be more related to modifiable factors. Vocational rehabilitation
|
|
specialists need to identify diagnostic-specific barriers to promote
|
|
employment outcomes. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
|
|
2021;102:1556-61 (c) 2021 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation
|
|
Medicine},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Krause, SJ (Corresponding Author), Med Univ South Carolina, Coll Hlth Profess, Charleston, SC 29425 USA.
|
|
Krause, S. James; Li, Chao; Jarnecke, Melinda; Reed, Karla; Rembert, Jameka; Dismuke-Greer, E. Clara, Med Univ South Carolina, Coll Hlth Profess, Charleston, SC 29425 USA.
|
|
Backus, Deborah, Shepherd Ctr, Atlanta, GA USA.
|
|
Rumrill, Phillip, Univ Kentucky, Inst Human Dev, Lexington, KY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.apmr.2021.02.015},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0003-9993},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-821X},
|
|
Keywords = {Multiple Sclerosis; Spinal cord injuries; Employment; Rehabilitation;
|
|
Vocational},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PEOPLE; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Sport Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {krause@musc.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {17},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000692556700014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000431311500003,
|
|
Author = {de Assumpcao, Daniela and Senicato, Caroline and Fisberg, Regina Mara
|
|
and Canesqui, Ana Maria and de Azevedo Barros, Marilisa Berti},
|
|
Title = {Are there differences in the quality of the diet of working and
|
|
stay-at-home women?},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA DE SAUDE PUBLICA},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {52},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: To verify whether there is an association between the quality
|
|
of the diet and the inclusion of women in the labor market and whether
|
|
the education level would modify this association. We have analyzed the
|
|
differences according to education level and evaluated whether the
|
|
insertion or not in the market modifies the association between the
|
|
quality of the diet and education level.
|
|
METHODS: This is a cross-sectional population-based study that has used
|
|
data from the Campinas Health Survey (2008 ISACamp). We have evaluated
|
|
the diet of 464 women, aged 18 to 64 years, using the Brazilian Healthy
|
|
Eating Index - Revised. We have estimated the means of the total score
|
|
and index components using simple and multiple linear regression.
|
|
RESULTS: We have observed no difference in the quality of diet of
|
|
working and stay-at-home women. The analysis stratified by education
|
|
level showed a lower intake of fruits among stay-at-home women in the
|
|
segment of lower education level, in relation to working women. Among
|
|
all women, a lower education level was associated with lower overall
|
|
quality of the diet, higher intake of sodium, and lower intake of
|
|
fruits, vegetables, whole grains, milk, and saturated fat. On the other
|
|
hand, the inclusion in the labor market changed the effect of the
|
|
education level on the quality of the diet. In the stay-at-home stratum,
|
|
a low education level was associated with poorer quality of the diet and
|
|
lower consumption of fruits, dark green and orange vegetables, and whole
|
|
grains. Among the working women, a low education level was associated
|
|
with higher intake of sodium and lower intake of vegetables, whole
|
|
grains, and milk and dairy products.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: The results show inequities in the profile of food in
|
|
relation to education level and inclusion in the labor market, which
|
|
shows the relevance of public policies that increase the access to
|
|
education and provide guidance on a healthy diet.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {de Assumpcao, D (Corresponding Author), Rua Tessalia Vieira de Camargo,126 Cidade Univ, BR-13083887 Campinas, SP, Brazil.
|
|
de Assumpcao, Daniela; Senicato, Caroline; Canesqui, Ana Maria; de Azevedo Barros, Marilisa Berti, Univ Estadual Campinas, Fac Ciencias Med, Dept Saude Colet, Campinas, SP, Brazil.
|
|
Fisberg, Regina Mara, Univ Sao Paulo, Fac Saude Publ, Dept Nutr, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.11606/S1518-8787.2018052000104},
|
|
Article-Number = {47},
|
|
ISSN = {0034-8910},
|
|
EISSN = {1518-8787},
|
|
Keywords = {Women; Women, Working; Healthy Diet; Socioeconomic Factors; Health
|
|
Inequalities; Diet Surveys},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BRAZILIAN POPULATION; FOOD ENVIRONMENTS; EMPLOYMENT STATUS;
|
|
MENTAL-HEALTH; ASSOCIATIONS; POSITION; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {danideassumpcao@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {de Assumpção, Daniela/G-1590-2016
|
|
Fisberg, Regina M/C-4069-2012
|
|
Fisberg, Regina Mara/Q-6494-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {de Assumpção, Daniela/0000-0003-1813-996X
|
|
Fisberg, Regina M/0000-0002-4490-9035
|
|
Fisberg, Regina Mara/0000-0002-4490-9035},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000431311500003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000522034800014,
|
|
Author = {Beaudoin, Pier-Luc and Anchouche, Sonia and Gaffar, Rouan and Guadagno,
|
|
Elena and Ayad, Tareck and Poenaru, Dan},
|
|
Title = {Barriers in Access to Care for Patients With Head and Neck Cancer in
|
|
Resource-Limited Settings A Systematic Review},
|
|
Journal = {JAMA OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD \& NECK SURGERY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {146},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {291-297},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This systematic review analyzes published studies to identify social and
|
|
clinical factors in head and neck cancer treatment in low-income and
|
|
lower-middle-income countries predominantly in South Asia.
|
|
Importance The identification of the barriers to care for patients with
|
|
head and neck cancer in low-income and lower-middle-income countries is
|
|
a crucial first step toward the identification of targets for developing
|
|
and implementing cost-effective programs to increase awareness,
|
|
prevention, and treatment of head and neck cancer in this setting.
|
|
Objective To identify the barriers to care for patients presenting with
|
|
head and neck cancer in low-income and lower-middle-income countries.
|
|
Evidence Review Nine databases were searched from their inception to
|
|
December 21, 2017: Africa-Wide Information, the Cochrane Library,
|
|
Embase, Global Health, LILACS, MEDLINE, BIOSIS Previews, and Web of
|
|
Science. Search terms referred to head and neck cancer, barriers to
|
|
care, and low- and lower-middle-income countries, and no temporal and
|
|
linguistic restrictions were imposed. Articles were reviewed by 2
|
|
independent investigators, and differences in inclusion were resolved by
|
|
discussion. Bibliographies of all included articles were screened, and
|
|
all relevant articles were reviewed using the same procedure.
|
|
Quantitative articles were assessed using the Methodological Index for
|
|
Non-Randomized Studies tool, and articles with qualitative data used the
|
|
Critical Appraisal Skills Programme qualitative checklist. This
|
|
systematic review was registered in PROSPERO (registration No.
|
|
CRD42018092448) and followed the Preferred Reporting Items for
|
|
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols. Findings Of the 44
|
|
articles selected for review, 18 (41\%) met the selection criteria. All
|
|
articles reported quantitative results, and 3 (17\%) added some
|
|
qualitative material to the study design. Most (11 {[}61\%]) of the
|
|
studies originated from India. A total of 41 different barriers to care
|
|
were identified, with low level of education (cited in 8 articles
|
|
{[}44\%]), low socioeconomic status (in 4 articles {[}22\%]), and lack
|
|
of knowledge about head and neck cancer (in 3 articles {[}17\%]) being
|
|
statistically associated with a delayed presentation. Misunderstanding
|
|
of signs and symptoms, use of alternative medicine, and inability to
|
|
access health care were other barriers discussed in the qualitative
|
|
articles. Conclusions and Relevance This systematic review highlighted
|
|
the lack of both qualitative and quantitative information for patients
|
|
with head and neck cancer in low-income and lower-middle-income
|
|
countries. The findings suggest that integrating the barriers to care
|
|
with information from patient lives may identify the clinical and social
|
|
relevance of these barriers and guide future research.
|
|
Question What are the barriers to care for patients presenting with head
|
|
and neck cancer in low-income and lower-middle-income countries?
|
|
Findings In this mixed-methods systematic review of 18 studies that
|
|
originated from Asia and Africa, a low level of literacy was
|
|
statistically associated with a delayed presentation in 8 articles
|
|
(44\%), and lower socioeconomic status was statistically associated in 4
|
|
articles (22\%). Qualitative articles identified misunderstanding of
|
|
symptoms, use of alternative medicine, and inability to access health
|
|
care as factors associated with a delayed presentation. Meaning Findings
|
|
of this study may help identify the clinical and social validity of a
|
|
given barrier to care in low-income and lower-middle-income countries
|
|
and may guide future work in this understudied area.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Beaudoin, PL (Corresponding Author), Univ Montreal, OTL HNS, Otolaryngol Head \& Neck Surg, 1051 Rue Sanguinet, Montreal, PQ H2X 3E4, Canada.
|
|
Beaudoin, Pier-Luc, McGill Univ, Dept Surg, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Beaudoin, Pier-Luc, Univ Montreal, PGY Otolaryngol Head \& Neck Surg 4, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Anchouche, Sonia; Gaffar, Rouan, McGill Univ, Dept Med, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Guadagno, Elena, McGill Univ, Ctr Hlth, Pediat Gen \& Thorac Surg, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Ayad, Tareck, Ctr Hosp Univ Montreal, Otolaryngol \& Head \& Neck Surg Dept, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Ayad, Tareck, Univ Montreal, Otolaryngol \& Head \& Neck Surg, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Poenaru, Dan, McGill Univ, Ctr Hlth, Dept Pediat Surg, Montreal, PQ, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1001/jamaoto.2019.4311},
|
|
ISSN = {2168-6181},
|
|
EISSN = {2168-619X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ORAL-CANCER; DELAY; CAVITY; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Otorhinolaryngology; Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {pier-luc.beaudoin@mail.mcgill.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Poenaru, Dan/S-2562-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Poenaru, Dan/0000-0002-6267-6140
|
|
Guadagno, Elena/0000-0002-4616-9990},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000522034800014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000362686100015,
|
|
Author = {Johnson, Donna B. and Lamson, Erica and Schwartz, Rachel and Goldhammer,
|
|
Camie and Ellings, Amy},
|
|
Title = {A Community Health Clinic Breastfeeding-Friendly Pilot: What Can We
|
|
Learn about the Policy Process?},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF HUMAN LACTATION},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {660-670},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Implementing evidence-based practices and policies for
|
|
breastfeeding support in community clinics is a promising, but
|
|
challenging, approach to reducing disparities in breastfeeding rates.
|
|
Objective: This study aimed to apply a policy process research framework
|
|
to increase knowledge of factors that facilitate adoption and
|
|
implementation of breastfeeding policy changes.
|
|
Methods: In 2013, Washington State piloted a process to encourage 8
|
|
clinics to adopt and implement steps to become breastfeeding friendly.
|
|
Evaluation data were collected through interviews, project reports,
|
|
training evaluations, and pre- and post-self-assessments of achievement
|
|
of the steps.
|
|
Results: In 6 months, clinics increased the breastfeeding-friendly steps
|
|
that they were implementing from a median (interquartile range) of 1.5
|
|
(0-3) to 6 (5-7). Improvements were most likely in the steps that
|
|
required the fewest resources and administrative changes. Barriers to
|
|
implementation included misperceptions about breastfeeding and
|
|
breastfeeding support; lack of administrative buy-in; need for
|
|
organizational changes to accommodate actions like monitoring
|
|
breastfeeding rates and allowing providers training time; and the
|
|
social-political climate of the clinic. Several factors, including
|
|
actions taken by public health practitioners, enhanced the change
|
|
process. These included fostering supportive relationships, targeting
|
|
technical assistance, and providing resources for planning and training.
|
|
Conclusion: This pilot project demonstrates that it is possible to make
|
|
changes in breastfeeding support practices and policies in community
|
|
clinics. Recommendations to enhance future work include framing and
|
|
marketing breastfeeding support in ways that resonate with clinic
|
|
decision makers and enhancing training, resources, and advocacy to build
|
|
capacity for internal and external systems changes to support
|
|
breastfeeding best practices.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Johnson, DB (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Nutr Sci, Box 353410, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Johnson, Donna B.; Lamson, Erica, Univ Washington, Ctr Publ Hlth Nutr, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Schwartz, Rachel; Goldhammer, Camie, WithinReach, Seattle, WA USA.
|
|
Ellings, Amy, Washington State Dept Hlth, Olympia, WA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0890334415579656},
|
|
ISSN = {0890-3344},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-5732},
|
|
Keywords = {breastfeeding; breastfeeding practices; government policy; low-income
|
|
women; nutrition policy; process evaluation; program evaluation; Ten
|
|
Steps to Successful Breastfeeding},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {10 STEPS; IMPLEMENTATION; ATTITUDES; SUPPORT; CARE; KNOWLEDGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing; Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {djohn@uw.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000362686100015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000470781200001,
|
|
Author = {Thi Minh Le and Morley, Christine and Hill, Peter S. and Quyen Tu Bui
|
|
and Dunne, Michael P.},
|
|
Title = {The evolution of domestic violence prevention and control in Vietnam
|
|
from 2003 to 2018: a case study of policy development and implementation
|
|
within the health system},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEMS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {JUN 8},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundInternationally, mental health and social care systems face
|
|
significant challenges when implementing policy to prevent and respond
|
|
to domestic violence (DV). This paper reviews the policy process
|
|
pertaining to the national law on domestic violence prevention and
|
|
control (DVPC) within the health system in Vietnam from 2003 to 2018,
|
|
and critically examines the policy-making process and content, the
|
|
involvement of key actors and the barriers to implementation within the
|
|
health system.Methods63 policy documents, 36 key informant interviews
|
|
and 4 focus group discussions were conducted in Hanoi city, Bac Giang
|
|
and Hai Duong provinces. The policy triangle framework was used to
|
|
analyse the development and implementation process of the Law on
|
|
DVPC.ResultsThe Vietnamese government developed the law on DVPC in
|
|
response to the Millennium Development Goals reporting requirements. The
|
|
development was a top-down process directed by state bodies, but it was
|
|
the first time that international agencies and civil society groups had
|
|
been involved in the health policy development process. The major themes
|
|
that emerged in the analysis include: policy content, policymaking and
|
|
implementation processes, the nature of actors' involvement, contexts,
|
|
and mechanisms for policy implementation. Policy implementation was slow
|
|
and delayed due to implementation being optional, decentralization,
|
|
socio-cultural factors related especially to sensitivity, insufficient
|
|
budgets, and insufficient cooperation between various actors within the
|
|
health system and other related DV support systems.ConclusionThe initial
|
|
development process for DVPC Law in Vietnam was pressured by external
|
|
and internal demands, but the subsequent implementation within the
|
|
health system experienced protracted delays. It is recommended that the
|
|
policy be revised to emphasise a rights-based approach. Implementation
|
|
would be more effective if monitoring and evaluation mechanisms are
|
|
improved, the quality of training for health workers is enhanced, and
|
|
cooperation between the health sector and related actors in the
|
|
community is required and becomes routine in daily work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Le, TM (Corresponding Author), Hanoi Univ Publ Hlth, Fac Hlth Social Sci Behav \& Hlth Educ, Dept Populat \& Reprod Hlth, Duc Thang Ward, 1A Duc Thang Rd, Hanoi, Vietnam.
|
|
Le, TM (Corresponding Author), Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Publ Hlth \& Social Work, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Thi Minh Le, Hanoi Univ Publ Hlth, Fac Hlth Social Sci Behav \& Hlth Educ, Dept Populat \& Reprod Hlth, Duc Thang Ward, 1A Duc Thang Rd, Hanoi, Vietnam.
|
|
Thi Minh Le; Morley, Christine; Dunne, Michael P., Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Publ Hlth \& Social Work, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Hill, Peter S., Univ Queensland, Sch Publ Hlth, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Quyen Tu Bui, Hanoi Univ Publ Hlth, Fac Fundamental Sci, Duc Thang Ward, 1A Duc Thang Rd, Hanoi, Vietnam.
|
|
Dunne, Michael P., Hue Univ, Inst Community Hlth Res, Hue, Vietnam.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13033-019-0295-6},
|
|
Article-Number = {41},
|
|
ISSN = {1752-4458},
|
|
Keywords = {Domestic violence; Gender; Case study; Policy; Development;
|
|
Implementation; Vietnam; Health system},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {lmt@huph.edu.vn},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bui, Quyen/ABA-5289-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bui, Quyen/0000-0002-5061-8488
|
|
Le, Minh Thi/0000-0002-1017-6187
|
|
Morley, Christine/0000-0002-5141-3804},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000470781200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000304202700013,
|
|
Author = {Clark, Noreen M.},
|
|
Editor = {Fielding, JE},
|
|
Title = {Community-Based Approaches to Controlling Childhood Asthma},
|
|
Booktitle = {ANNUAL REVIEW OF PUBLIC HEALTH, VOL 33},
|
|
Series = {Annual Review of Public Health},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {33},
|
|
Pages = {193+},
|
|
Abstract = {The prevalence and burden of childhood asthma remain high and are
|
|
increasing. Asthma hot spot neighborhoods around the country face
|
|
particular challenges in controlling the effects of the condition.
|
|
Increasing attention is being paid to developing interventions that
|
|
recognize the child and family as the primary managers of disease and to
|
|
introducing assistance that reaches beyond the clinical care setting
|
|
into the places where families live and work. A range of types of
|
|
community-focused interventions has been assessed in the past decade in
|
|
schools, homes, and community health clinics, and programs using
|
|
electronic media and phone links have been evaluated. Stronger evidence
|
|
for all these approaches is needed. However, school-based programs and
|
|
community coalitions designed to bring about policy and systems changes
|
|
show particular promise for achieving sustainable improvements in asthma
|
|
control. Research is needed that emphasizes comparisons among proven
|
|
asthma control interventions, translation of effective approaches to new
|
|
settings and communities, and institutionalization of effective
|
|
strategies.},
|
|
Type = {Review; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Clark, NM (Corresponding Author), Univ Michigan, Ctr Managing Chron Dis, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Univ Michigan, Ctr Managing Chron Dis, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1146/annurev-publhealth-031811-124532},
|
|
ISSN = {0163-7525},
|
|
ISBN = {978-0-8243-2733-0},
|
|
Keywords = {disease prevalence; social/behavioral interventions; disparities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; INNER-CITY CHILDREN; QUALITY-OF-CARE;
|
|
LOW-INCOME; SELF-MANAGEMENT; URBAN CHILDREN; AIR-POLLUTION; HEALTH
|
|
WORKERS; SYSTEM CHANGE; SCHOOL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {nmclark@umich.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {33},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000304202700013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000186335200007,
|
|
Author = {Subramaniam, N},
|
|
Title = {Factors affecting the career progress of academic accountants in
|
|
Australia: Cross-institutional and gender perspectives},
|
|
Journal = {HIGHER EDUCATION},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {507-542},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Since the late 1980s, Australian higher education has undergone
|
|
significant reforms and policy changes based on economic rationalism and
|
|
modernisation of management. This paper examines the outcomes of the
|
|
reform processes based on the career attributes, status and perceptions
|
|
of work environment of academic accountants in Australian universities.
|
|
Similarities and differences between academic accountants are explored
|
|
from cross-institutional and gender perspectives. The data provide
|
|
insight into a number of systemic inequalities between the older and
|
|
more established universities and the newer universities. In specific, a
|
|
cross-institutional analysis based on four university types:
|
|
Sandstones/Redbricks, Gumtrees, Unitechs and New (Marginson 1999)
|
|
indicates that academic accountants in New universities employ a much
|
|
lower proportion of staff with PhD qualification, a weaker publication
|
|
profile, and perceive greater barriers for conducting research in terms
|
|
of a shortage of research mentors, colleagues with research experience,
|
|
and post-graduate students. Further, the commitment to flexible learning
|
|
and delivery strategies is comparatively stronger in Unitechs, and poses
|
|
additional demands on accounting academics' overall workload.
|
|
Perceptions of gender-based discrimination by female academic
|
|
accountants are generally stronger than their male counterparts,
|
|
particularly, in New universities. These results raise several issues
|
|
for academic accountants at both the institutional and individual level
|
|
in terms of equal employment opportunities, management of research
|
|
programmes, development of teaching strategies and individual time
|
|
management.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Subramaniam, N (Corresponding Author), Griffith Univ Gold Coast, Sch Accounting \& Finance, PMB 50, Southport, Qld 9726, Australia.
|
|
Griffith Univ Gold Coast, Sch Accounting \& Finance, Southport, Qld 9726, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1023/A:1027388311727},
|
|
ISSN = {0018-1560},
|
|
Keywords = {academic accountants; accounting education; flexible delivery;
|
|
institutional differentiation; research performance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HIGHER-EDUCATION; UNIVERSITY; PERCEPTIONS; WOMEN; STAFF; ROLES; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Subramaniam, Nava/H-7300-2019
|
|
Subramaniam, Nava/GXF-3523-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Subramaniam, Nava/0000-0002-3960-0754
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {24},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000186335200007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000407196700007,
|
|
Author = {Banks, Lena Morgon and Zuurmond, Maria and Ferrand, Rashida and Kuper,
|
|
Hannah},
|
|
Title = {Knowledge of HIV-related disabilities and challenges in accessing care:
|
|
Qualitative research from Zimbabwe},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Month = {AUG 9},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction
|
|
While the rapid expansion in antiretroviral therapy access in low and
|
|
middle income countries has resulted in dramatic declines in mortality
|
|
rates, many people living with HIV face new or worsening experiences of
|
|
disability. As nearly 1 in 20 adults are living with HIV in sub-Saharan
|
|
Africa-many of whom are likely to develop disabling sequelae from
|
|
long-term infection, co-morbidities and side effects of their
|
|
treatment-understanding the availability and accessibility of services
|
|
to address HIV-related disabilities is of vital importance. The aim of
|
|
this study thus is to explore knowledge of HIV-related disabilities
|
|
amongst stakeholders working in the fields of HIV and disability and
|
|
factors impacting uptake and provision of interventions for preventing,
|
|
treating or managing HIV-related disabilities.
|
|
Methods
|
|
In-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with ten
|
|
stakeholders based in Harare, Zimbabwe, who were working in the fields
|
|
of either disability or HIV. Stakeholders were identified through a
|
|
priori stakeholder analysis. Thematic Analysis, complemented by constant
|
|
comparison as described in Grounded Theory, was used to analyse
|
|
findings.
|
|
Results
|
|
All key informants reported some level of knowledge of HIV-related
|
|
disability, mostly from observations made in their line of work.
|
|
However, they reported no interventions or policies were in place
|
|
specifically to address HIV-related disability. While referrals between
|
|
HIV and rehabilitation providers were not uncommon, no formal mechanisms
|
|
had been established for collaborating on prevention, identification and
|
|
management. Additional barriers to accessing and providing services to
|
|
address HIV-related disabilities included: the availability of
|
|
resources, including trained professionals, supplies and equipment in
|
|
both the HIV and rehabilitation sectors; lack of disability-inclusive
|
|
adaptations, particularly in HIV services; heavy centralization of
|
|
available services in urban areas, without accessible, affordable
|
|
transportation links; and attitudes and understanding among service
|
|
providers and people living with HIV-related disabilities.
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
As people living with HIV are surviving longer, HIV-related disabilities
|
|
will become a major source of disability globally, particularly in
|
|
sub-Saharan Africa where infection is endemic. Preventing, treating and
|
|
managing HIV-related disabilities must become a key component of both
|
|
HIV response efforts and rehabilitation strategies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Banks, LM (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Int Ctr Evidence Disabil, London, England.
|
|
Banks, LM (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Clin Res Dept, London, England.
|
|
Banks, Lena Morgon; Zuurmond, Maria; Kuper, Hannah, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Int Ctr Evidence Disabil, London, England.
|
|
Banks, Lena Morgon; Zuurmond, Maria; Ferrand, Rashida; Kuper, Hannah, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Clin Res Dept, London, England.
|
|
Ferrand, Rashida, Biomed Res \& Training Inst, Harare, Zimbabwe.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0181144},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0181144},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; LIFE EXPECTANCY; PEOPLE; REHABILITATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {morgon.banks@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Nyirenda, Makandwe/R-4080-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Nyirenda, Makandwe/0000-0002-1839-877X
|
|
Banks, Lena Morgon/0000-0002-4585-1103},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000407196700007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000425689900003,
|
|
Author = {Kim, Eun Jung and Byrne, Bronagh and Parish, Susan L.},
|
|
Title = {Deaf people and economic well-being: findings from the Life
|
|
Opportunities Survey},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY \& SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {33},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {374-391},
|
|
Abstract = {The present study used propensity score analysis to compare the economic
|
|
well-being of people with and without hearing impairment in the UK.
|
|
Using nationally representative 2009/10 Life Opportunities Survey, our
|
|
study found that economic well-being was significantly worse for people
|
|
with hearing impairment than people without hearing impairment. Hearing
|
|
impaired people (1) had lower household income, (2) experienced greater
|
|
difficulties making ends meets, (3) were unable to pay for unexpected
|
|
but necessary expenses of 500, and (4) were less likely to work in paid
|
|
jobs even after accounting for other demographic characteristics. The
|
|
findings underscore the barriers and discrimination against people with
|
|
hearing impairment in the UK. Policy measures to increase access and
|
|
engagement of hearing impaired people should be considered, including
|
|
increasing investment in better employment opportunities, sign
|
|
interpretation, and disability benefits.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kim, EJ (Corresponding Author), Brandeis Univ, Heller Sch Social Policy \& Management, Waltham, MA 02453 USA.
|
|
Kim, Eun Jung; Parish, Susan L., Brandeis Univ, Heller Sch Social Policy \& Management, Waltham, MA 02453 USA.
|
|
Byrne, Bronagh, Queens Univ Belfast, Sch Social Sci Educ \& Social Work, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland.
|
|
Parish, Susan L., Northeastern Univ, Bouve Coll Hlth Sci, Boston, MA 02115 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09687599.2017.1420631},
|
|
ISSN = {0968-7599},
|
|
EISSN = {1360-0508},
|
|
Keywords = {Hearing impairment; UK; economic well-being; propensity score analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PROPENSITY SCORE; DISABILITY; EMPLOYMENT; SERVICES; POVERTY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {ejkim@brandeis.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Parish, Susan/AAD-5163-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Byrne, Bronagh/0000-0002-9884-5401},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000425689900003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000365312600002,
|
|
Author = {Brown, Helen Elizabeth and Schiff, Annie and van Sluijs, Esther M. F.},
|
|
Title = {Engaging families in physical activity research: a family-based focus
|
|
group study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Month = {NOV 25},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Family-based interventions present a much-needed opportunity
|
|
to increase children's physical activity levels. However, little is
|
|
known about how best to engage parents and their children in physical
|
|
activity research. This study aimed to engage with the whole family to
|
|
understand how best to recruit for, and retain participation in,
|
|
physical activity research.
|
|
Methods: Families (including a `target' child aged between 8 and 11
|
|
years, their parents, siblings, and others) were recruited through
|
|
schools and community groups. Focus groups were conducted using a
|
|
semi-structured approach (informed by a pilot session). Families were
|
|
asked to order cards listing the possible benefits of, and the barriers
|
|
to, being involved in physical activity research and other health
|
|
promotion activities, highlighting the items they consider most
|
|
relevant, and suggesting additional items. Duplicate content analysis
|
|
was used to identify transcript themes and develop a coding frame.
|
|
Results: Eighty-two participants from 17 families participated,
|
|
including 17 `target' children (mean age 9.3 +/- 1.1 years, 61.1 \%
|
|
female), 32 other children and 33 adults (including parents,
|
|
grandparents, and older siblings). Social, health and educational
|
|
benefits were cited as being key incentives for involvement in physical
|
|
activity research, with emphasis on children experiencing new things,
|
|
developing character, and increasing social contact (particularly for
|
|
shy children). Children's enjoyment was also given priority. The
|
|
provision of child care or financial reward was not considered
|
|
sufficiently appealing. Increased time commitment or scheduling
|
|
difficulties were quoted as the most pertinent barriers to involvement
|
|
(especially for families with several children), but parents commented
|
|
these could be overcome if the potential value for children was clear.
|
|
Conclusions: Lessons learned from this work may contribute to the
|
|
development of effective recruitment and retention strategies for
|
|
children and their families. Making the wide range of potential benefits
|
|
clear to families, providing regular feedback, and carefully considering
|
|
family structure, may prove useful in achieving desired research
|
|
participation. This may subsequently assist in engaging families in
|
|
interventions to increase physical activity in children.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brown, HE (Corresponding Author), Univ Cambridge, Sch Clin Med, Inst Metab Sci, MRC Epidemiol Unit, Box 285, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, England.
|
|
Brown, Helen Elizabeth, Univ Cambridge, Sch Clin Med, Inst Metab Sci, MRC Epidemiol Unit, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, England.
|
|
Univ Cambridge, Sch Clin Med, Inst Metab Sci, UKCRC Ctr Diet \& Activ Res CEDAR, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-015-2497-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {1178},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; WEIGHT-LOSS PROGRAM; CHILDREN;
|
|
INTERVENTIONS; ADOLESCENTS; RECRUITMENT; MAINTENANCE; PREDICTORS;
|
|
ATTRITION; PARENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {heb56@medschl.cam.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {van Sluijs, Esther/0000-0001-9141-9082},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000365312600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000841641000001,
|
|
Author = {Bird, Victoria Jane and Davis, Syjo and Jawed, Abeer and Qureshi, Onaiza
|
|
and Ramachandran, Padmavati and Shahab, Areeba and Venkatraman, Lakshmi},
|
|
Title = {Implementing psychosocial interventions within low and middle-income
|
|
countries to improve community-based care for people with psychosis-A
|
|
situation analysis},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {AUG 1},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundGlobally, a treatment gap exists for individuals with severe
|
|
mental illness, with 75\% of people with psychosis failing to receive
|
|
appropriate care. This is most pronounced in low and middle-income
|
|
countries, where there are neither the financial nor human resources to
|
|
provide high-quality community-based care. Low-cost, evidence-based
|
|
interventions are urgently needed to address this treatment gap. AimTo
|
|
conduct a situation analysis to (i) describe the provision of
|
|
psychosocial interventions within the context of existing care in two
|
|
LMICs-India and Pakistan, and (ii) understand the barriers and
|
|
facilitators of delivering a new psychosocial intervention. MethodA
|
|
situation analysis including a quantitative survey and individual
|
|
interviews with clinicians, patients and caregivers was conducted.
|
|
Quantitative survey data was collected from staff members at 11 sites
|
|
(private and government run hospitals) to assess organizational
|
|
readiness to implement a new psychosocial intervention. To obtain
|
|
in-depth information, 24 stakeholders including clinicians and service
|
|
managers were interviewed about the typical care they provide and/or
|
|
receive, and their experience of either accessing or delivering
|
|
psychosocial interventions. This was triangulated by six interviews with
|
|
carer and patient representatives. Results and discussionThe results
|
|
highlight the positive views toward psychosocial interventions within
|
|
routine care and the enthusiasm for multidisciplinary working. However,
|
|
barriers to implementation such as clinician time, individual attitudes
|
|
toward psychosocial interventions and organizational concerns including
|
|
the lack of space within the facility were highlighted. Such barriers
|
|
need to be taken into consideration when designing how best to implement
|
|
and sustain new psychosocial interventions for the community treatment
|
|
of psychosis within LMICs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bird, VJ (Corresponding Author), Queen Mary Univ London, Wolfson Inst Populat Hlth, Unit Social \& Community Psychiat, London, England.
|
|
Bird, Victoria Jane, Queen Mary Univ London, Wolfson Inst Populat Hlth, Unit Social \& Community Psychiat, London, England.
|
|
Davis, Syjo; Ramachandran, Padmavati; Venkatraman, Lakshmi, Schizophrenia Res Fdn, Chennai, India.
|
|
Jawed, Abeer; Qureshi, Onaiza; Shahab, Areeba, Interact Res \& Dev, Karachi, Pakistan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpsyt.2022.807259},
|
|
Article-Number = {807259},
|
|
ISSN = {1664-0640},
|
|
Keywords = {severe mental illness; psychosis; psychological interventions; India;
|
|
Pakistan; low and middle-income countries; situation analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH; TREATMENT GAP; DIALOG PLUS; DISORDERS; ILLNESS; PATIENT;
|
|
NEEDS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {v.j.bird@qmul.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bird, Victoria/N-1165-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bird, Victoria/0000-0002-2053-7679
|
|
Qureshi, Onaiza/0000-0002-3861-3473},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000841641000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001040414700001,
|
|
Author = {Pfeiffer, Beth and Song, Wei and Davidson, Amber and Salzer, Mark and
|
|
Feeley, Cecilia and Shea, Lindsey},
|
|
Title = {Transportation Use and Barriers for Employed and Unemployed Autistic
|
|
Adults},
|
|
Journal = {AUTISM IN ADULTHOOD},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 AUG 4},
|
|
Abstract = {Community brief Why is this an important issue?Employment is important
|
|
for income, quality of life, and the ability to get the supports or
|
|
services a person needs. Autistic adults are more likely to be
|
|
unemployed or underemployed when compared with neurotypical adults and
|
|
people with other disabilities. There are many environmental barriers to
|
|
participating in adult activities in the community, but issues with
|
|
transportation are a primary barrier. In previous research, a high
|
|
number of autistic adults (72\%) reported that they had missed some of
|
|
their desired activities due to lack of transportation. It is important
|
|
to understand the relationship between transportation and employment to
|
|
know how to overcome barriers and improve employment options for
|
|
autistic adults who want to work. What was the purpose of this
|
|
research?The purpose of this research was to look at transportation and
|
|
employment status (i.e., employed or unemployed). Specifically, this
|
|
study compared types of transportation used and perceived barriers to
|
|
transportation between autistic adults who were employed and those who
|
|
were unemployed. What did the researchers do?Information was collected
|
|
from 1120 autistic adults through a large statewide survey, which
|
|
included questions about employment and transportation. Information from
|
|
autistic adults who were employed and those who were not employed was
|
|
compared. What were the results of the study?Results of this comparison
|
|
showed that participants who were employed were more likely to drive
|
|
themselves and less likely to take rides from other people or to use
|
|
service transportation. Those who were employed also reported fewer
|
|
barriers to public transportation. Barriers such as crime, planning a
|
|
trip, treatment by fellow passengers, cost, knowledge on how to use
|
|
public transportation, and sensory overload were identified by more
|
|
people who were unemployed than by people who were employed. How will
|
|
these findings help autistic adults now or in the future?The study
|
|
identified specific barriers to transportation for autistic adults who
|
|
are unemployed. This information can help to guide supports and policies
|
|
to reduce barriers for travel needed for employment. In addition,
|
|
results of this study can help guide future research to develop or
|
|
identify the transportation skills needed for travel to work for
|
|
autistic adults.
|
|
Background: Autistic adults are significantly unemployed or
|
|
underemployed even compared with other disability groups. Employment is
|
|
a social determinant that, when satisfied, closely influences
|
|
health-related quality of life. For autistic adults, environmental
|
|
barriers to transportation can impact the ability to get to employment
|
|
resulting in limited employment opportunities. This study provides a
|
|
closer examination of the association between transportation use and
|
|
employment status.Objective: To examine the use of different types of
|
|
transportation and barriers to public transit by employed and unemployed
|
|
autistic adults.Method: The data were from a large statewide study
|
|
conducted between May 2017 and June 2018 using the Pennsylvania Autism
|
|
Needs Assessment (PANA), in which information about employment and
|
|
transportation use was obtained from autistic adults who were residents
|
|
of Pennsylvania. The study sample included 1120 autistic adults (M-age =
|
|
28.03 years, standard deviation = 9.84; 70\% men; 82\% non-Hispanic
|
|
White).Results: Participants who were employed were more likely to drive
|
|
themselves than those who were unemployed (45\% vs. 21\%, p < 0.001),
|
|
while they were less likely to take rides from others (62\% vs. 75\%, p
|
|
< 0.001) or use service transportation (11\% vs. 18\%, p = 0.001). For
|
|
barriers to public transit, the results identified that employed
|
|
participants reported fewer barriers to public transportation than
|
|
unemployed participants with a small effect size (1.98 vs. 2.54, d =
|
|
0.22).Conclusion: Employed autistic adults exercise more transportation
|
|
independence. Unemployed autistic adults report more barriers to
|
|
participation and lower ability to independently use public
|
|
transportation. Future transportation and employment studies are
|
|
necessary.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pfeiffer, B (Corresponding Author), Temple Univ, Coll Publ Hlth, Hlth \& Rehabil Sci, 1913 North Broad St,Mitten Hall,Suite 201, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.
|
|
Pfeiffer, Beth; Davidson, Amber, Temple Univ, Coll Publ Hlth, Hlth \& Rehabil Sci, Philadelphia, PA USA.
|
|
Song, Wei; Shea, Lindsey, Drexel Univ, AJ Drexel Autism Inst, Philadelphia, PA USA.
|
|
Salzer, Mark, Temple Univ, Coll Publ Hlth, Social \& Behav Sci, Philadelphia, PA USA.
|
|
Feeley, Cecilia, Rutgers State Univ, Ctr Adv Infrastruct \& Res, New Brunswick, NJ USA.
|
|
Pfeiffer, Beth, Temple Univ, Coll Publ Hlth, Hlth \& Rehabil Sci, 1913 North Broad St,Mitten Hall,Suite 201, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1089/aut.2022.0069},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {2573-9581},
|
|
EISSN = {2573-959X},
|
|
Keywords = {autistic adults; autism; employment; transportation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRANSIT SERVICES; SPECTRUM; HEALTH; IMPACT; TRAVEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {bpfeiffe@temple.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001040414700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000914071700001,
|
|
Author = {Vadivel, Balachandran and Alam, Sohaib and Nikpoo, Iman and Ajanil,
|
|
Bemnet},
|
|
Title = {The Impact of Low Socioeconomic Background on a Child's Educational
|
|
Achievements},
|
|
Journal = {EDUCATION RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {2023},
|
|
Month = {JAN 3},
|
|
Abstract = {A child's educational achievements are based on multiple factors,
|
|
including their family, their family's behavior, socioeconomic status,
|
|
their behavior toward their parents, etc. The main objective of the
|
|
study is to establish the relationship between the socioeconomic
|
|
background of the children and their educational achievements and how it
|
|
impacts their psychology. A descriptive survey research design was used
|
|
to conduct this study. The target population was 50 students and either
|
|
of their parents. The target was selected through random sampling. Focus
|
|
group discussions, in-depth interviews, and different types of
|
|
observation techniques were implied while collecting the data. The study
|
|
concluded that most of the students with low socioeconomic status had
|
|
poor achievements in their academics, which led them into the labor
|
|
market at an early age. It has been found that parents with low
|
|
socioeconomic backgrounds were less interested in educating their
|
|
children. Kids from low socioeconomic backgrounds are more focused on
|
|
employment instead of pursuing their studies after completing their
|
|
secondary education. Such students end up in unskilled or blue-collar
|
|
jobs. This study recommends free-of-cost vocational and technical
|
|
education to such children to provide them with better livelihood
|
|
opportunities. There is a need for parental education and awareness
|
|
programs as well conducted by schools/universities and other concerned
|
|
authorities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ajanil, B (Corresponding Author), Bahir Dar Univ, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
|
|
Vadivel, Balachandran, Cihan Univ Duhok, Dept English, Dihok, Kurdistan Reg, Iraq.
|
|
Alam, Sohaib, Prince Sattam Bin Abdulaziz Univ, Coll Sci \& Humanities Alkharj, Dept English, Al Kharj, Saudi Arabia.
|
|
Nikpoo, Iman, Univ Yazd, Dept Foreign Languages, Yazd, Iran.
|
|
Ajanil, Bemnet, Bahir Dar Univ, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1155/2023/6565088},
|
|
Article-Number = {6565088},
|
|
ISSN = {2090-4002},
|
|
EISSN = {2090-4010},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; ADOLESCENTS; PERFORMANCE; ATTAINMENT; INEQUALITY;
|
|
STUDENTS; POVERTY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {sasibalu83@gmail.com
|
|
s.alam@psau.edu.sa
|
|
nikpooiman@yahoo.com
|
|
bemnet.ajanil@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Vadivel, Balachandran/AHD-5989-2022
|
|
ALAM, SOHAIB/AAE-3237-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Vadivel, Balachandran/0000-0003-0419-794X
|
|
ALAM, SOHAIB/0000-0002-9972-9357
|
|
Nikpoo, Iman/0000-0002-0496-8233},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000914071700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001037081800001,
|
|
Author = {Sprong, Matthew E. and Hollender, Heaven and Lee, Yu-Sheng and Williams,
|
|
Lee Ann Rawlins and Sneed, Zach and Garakani, Amir and Buono, Frank D.},
|
|
Title = {Disparities in program enrollment and employment outcomes for veterans
|
|
with psychiatric and co-occurring substance use disorders referred or
|
|
enrolled for VHA vocational rehabilitation},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Month = {JUL 13},
|
|
Abstract = {IntroductionThe purpose of the study was to investigate factors that
|
|
influence vocational rehabilitation program enrollment and employment at
|
|
discharge of veterans with psychiatric and co-occurring alcohol and
|
|
other substance use disorders enrolled at a veteran health
|
|
administration (VHA) medical center. MethodsA sample of 2,550 veteran
|
|
patients referred for VHA vocational rehabilitation between 2016 and
|
|
2021 were examined for the current study. The current study was
|
|
classified as quality improvement/assurance, thus resulting in exempt
|
|
research by the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs Institutional Review
|
|
Board. ResultsVeterans with active alcohol use disorders (AUDs) and
|
|
co-occurring depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, or
|
|
bipolar disorders were less likely to be enrolled for vocational
|
|
rehabilitation program services compared to those without these
|
|
co-occurring diagnoses. Veterans with AUD (active \& in-remission status
|
|
combined into one category) and a diagnosis of anxiety were less likely
|
|
to be employed at discharge compared to veterans with AUDs and no
|
|
anxiety diagnosis (anxiety diagnosis - 3.5\% vs. no anxiety diagnosis -
|
|
5.8\%). DiscussionVHA vocational rehabilitation can be an effective
|
|
intervention to assist veterans in reintegrating back into the
|
|
community. Yet, there appears to be some disparities in the program
|
|
enrollment and employment at discharge, depending on the nature of the
|
|
psychiatric diagnosis. Investigating the factors contributing (mediating
|
|
or moderating) to these discrepancies are needed. Although it appears
|
|
access is not the issue in being referred for vocational rehabilitation
|
|
services, other factors are likely contributing to program entry.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sprong, ME (Corresponding Author), Edward Hines Jr VA Med Ctr, Hines, IL 60141 USA.
|
|
Sprong, ME (Corresponding Author), Univ Illinois, Sch Publ Management \& Policy, Springfield, IL 62703 USA.
|
|
Sprong, Matthew E., Edward Hines Jr VA Med Ctr, Hines, IL 60141 USA.
|
|
Sprong, Matthew E., Univ Illinois, Sch Publ Management \& Policy, Springfield, IL 62703 USA.
|
|
Hollender, Heaven, Indiana Univ Purdue Univ, Dept Hlth Sci, Indianapolis, IN USA.
|
|
Lee, Yu-Sheng, Univ Illinois, Sch Integrated Sci Sustainabil \& Publ Hlth, Springfield, IL USA.
|
|
Williams, Lee Ann Rawlins, Univ North Dakota, Coll Educ \& Human Dev, Rehabil \& Human Serv, Grand Forks, ND USA.
|
|
Sneed, Zach, Texas Tech Univ, Hlth Sci Ctr, Sch Hlth Profess, Lubbock, TX USA.
|
|
Garakani, Amir, Greenwich Hosp, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Hlth, Greenwich, CT USA.
|
|
Garakani, Amir; Buono, Frank D., Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, New Haven, CT USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1200450},
|
|
Article-Number = {1200450},
|
|
ISSN = {1664-0640},
|
|
Keywords = {employment; substance use disorders; veterans; vocational
|
|
rehabilitation; mental health; co-occurring disorders; psychiatric
|
|
disorders; Department of Veteran Affairs},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-DISORDERS; WORK; MILITARY; ABUSE; HEALTH; COMPENSATION; ILLNESS;
|
|
STRESS; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {mspro2@uis.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001037081800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000829011300001,
|
|
Author = {Zhang, Yuqing and Gao, Ya and Zhan, Chengcheng and Liu, Tianbao and Li,
|
|
Xueming},
|
|
Title = {Subjective Well-Being of Professional Females: A Case Study of Dalian
|
|
High-Tech Industrial Zone},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {JUL 5},
|
|
Abstract = {The education level and social participation of contemporary Chinese
|
|
women have reached their historical peak; work is fast becoming the
|
|
dominant theme of their lives. However, influenced by traditional
|
|
attitudes, women are still expected to undertake the main family care
|
|
tasks, thus, facing dual constraints of family and work, which seriously
|
|
affect their life happiness. Based on the theory of subjective
|
|
well-being and feminist geography, this study used the questionnaire
|
|
survey and in-depth interview results of professional females in Dalian
|
|
High-tech Industrial Zone as basic data to explore the life satisfaction
|
|
and emotional cognition in intra- and extra-household life of
|
|
professional females (Professional females: In this study, they are the
|
|
women who have received formal education and currently have full-time
|
|
and steady job (including regular employees in the national systems and
|
|
those who have signed labor contracts with labor units).). The following
|
|
results were obtained: (1) Most professional females reported higher
|
|
life satisfaction in intra- rather than extra-household life, and it
|
|
varied with individual attributes, reflecting the internal differences
|
|
among them. (2) The positive emotions of professional females came from
|
|
the company of family and friends in intra-household life, and
|
|
satisfaction with the working environment and treatment in
|
|
extra-household life. (3) The negative emotions came from the pressure
|
|
of ``marriage,{''} ``birth,{''} and other traditional concepts in
|
|
intra-household life. In extra-household life, it came from the health
|
|
problems caused by working stress, interpersonal problems and gender
|
|
inequality in the workplace, and the anxiety of age and future career
|
|
development. Therefore, this study committed to revealing the living
|
|
status and subjective feelings of contemporary professional females in
|
|
China, hoping to improve women's life quality and enhance their life
|
|
happiness from a theoretical and realistic perspective.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zhang, YQ (Corresponding Author), Liaoning Normal Univ, Sch Geog, Dalian, Peoples R China.
|
|
Zhang, Yuqing; Gao, Ya; Liu, Tianbao; Li, Xueming, Liaoning Normal Univ, Sch Geog, Dalian, Peoples R China.
|
|
Zhan, Chengcheng, Dalian 8 Senior High Sch, Dalian, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpsyg.2022.904298},
|
|
Article-Number = {904298},
|
|
ISSN = {1664-1078},
|
|
Keywords = {professional females; intra-household life; extra-household life; life
|
|
satisfaction; emotional cognition},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LIFE SATISFACTION; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; MODERATING ROLE; GEOGRAPHY; TIME;
|
|
SPACE; WORK; IMPACTS; CHINA; WOMEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Multidisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {zhangyuqing@lnnu.edu.cn},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {wang, xiao/HZI-9156-2023},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {116},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {37},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {50},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000829011300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000084155900009,
|
|
Author = {Williamson, DL and Reutter, L},
|
|
Title = {Defining and measuring poverty: implications for the health of Canadians},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH PROMOTION INTERNATIONAL},
|
|
Year = {1999},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {355-364},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Note = {1st Annual Conference of the Parkland Institute, EDMONTON, CANADA, NOV
|
|
06-08, 1997},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper examines the implications that the conceptualization and
|
|
measurement of poverty have for policies that aim to improve the health
|
|
of Canadians. in recent years, poverty has been identified as an issue
|
|
of policy importance within the health sector in Canada. Policy makers
|
|
are recognizing that efforts to improve the health of Canadians are
|
|
related to the development and implementation of policies that decrease
|
|
the proportion of people who live in poverty. At the same time, the
|
|
Statistics Canada Low-income Cut-Offs (LICOs), which are the most
|
|
commonly used tool for measuring poverty in Canada, are being called
|
|
into question. One of the most frequently cited criticisms of the LICOs
|
|
is that they are too high, and as such do not measure poverty. Critics
|
|
who argue that the LICOs are too high disagree with the relative
|
|
conceptualization of poverty which underlies the LICOs. In this paper,
|
|
we discuss the LICOs, their underlying assumption that poverty is
|
|
relative in nature, and the criticism that the LICOs are too high, in
|
|
addition, we discuss the Sarlo/Fraser Institute poverty lines, which are
|
|
based on the assumption that poverty is absolute in nature. The manner
|
|
in which poverty is conceptualized and measured has implications for the
|
|
types, characteristics and ultimately the success of policies that are
|
|
developed to reduce poverty and its effect on health. We argue that the
|
|
success of efforts to enhance the health of Canadians with a reduction
|
|
in poverty depends on a commitment by policy makers to a relative
|
|
conceptualization and measurement of poverty. We further contend that
|
|
policy makers in the health sector cannot independently reduce poverty
|
|
and its detrimental effects on health. The complex nature of poverty
|
|
indicates the need for policy makers in the health sector to work
|
|
collaboratively with their counterparts from a broad range of government
|
|
and non-government sectors to develop an innovative network of social
|
|
assistance, economic and employment policies that effectively reduce the
|
|
proportion of Canadians who experience material and social deprivation.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Williamson, DL (Corresponding Author), Univ Alberta, Dept Human Ecol, 302 Human Ecol Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2N1, Canada.
|
|
Univ Alberta, Dept Human Ecol, Edmonton, AB T6G 2N1, Canada.
|
|
Univ Alberta, Fac Nursing, Edmonton, AB T6G 2N1, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapro/14.4.355},
|
|
ISSN = {0957-4824},
|
|
Keywords = {Canada; healthy public policy; poverty and health; poverty definitions
|
|
and measures},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; UNITED-STATES; MORTALITY; INCOME; INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000084155900009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000664402200001,
|
|
Author = {Kanatli, Merve cicek and Yalcin, Siddika Songul},
|
|
Title = {Social Determinants Screening with Social History: Pediatrician and
|
|
Resident Perspectives from a Middle-Income Country},
|
|
Journal = {MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {1426-1436},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Social history (SH) makes it possible to learn the social
|
|
environment of children in pediatric practice and enables interventions
|
|
into social risks such as poverty. While SH has been evolving in use as
|
|
an advocacy practice in high-income countries, that seems not to be the
|
|
case in low- and middle-income countries. We explored pediatricians' and
|
|
pediatric residents' opinions and experiences of SH with an aim to
|
|
promote advocacy-based SH practices in Turkey. Methods A qualitative
|
|
study conducted involving interviews with pediatrics residents,
|
|
pediatricians and educators, and a focus group with residents.
|
|
Interviews and the focus group were transcribed and reviewed for themes
|
|
using qualitative content analysis. Results The principal objective of
|
|
SH was found to be diagnosis rather than advocacy. Although all
|
|
participants expressed opinions about socioeconomic conditions' vital
|
|
influence on child health, most reported limited use of SH. When asked
|
|
about social needs screening with SH, most participants opposed with
|
|
various reasons, primarily time concerns and doubts about the necessity
|
|
for each child. Lack of time was reported as the leading barrier to SH
|
|
by participants. Other barriers were identified as lack of structured SH
|
|
education, problems regarding referrals and interdisciplinary work, and
|
|
the biomedical health approach which defines the physician's role within
|
|
the physical health domain. Conclusions for Practice To achieve an
|
|
advocacy-based SH practice, the biomedical health approach should be
|
|
questioned. Action is needed to implement a social determinants of
|
|
health approach and equity focus to health policies and to medical and
|
|
residency education.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kanatli, MC (Corresponding Author), Ankara Univ, Sch Med, Dev Behav Pediat Div, Dept Pediat, TR-06620 Ankara, Turkey.
|
|
Kanatli, Merve cicek, Ankara Univ, Sch Med, Dev Behav Pediat Div, Dept Pediat, TR-06620 Ankara, Turkey.
|
|
Yalcin, Siddika Songul, Hacettepe Univ, Unit Social Pediat, Fac Med, Dept Pediat, TR-06100 Ankara, Turkey.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10995-021-03191-7},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1092-7875},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-6628},
|
|
Keywords = {Social history; Social determinants of health; Child health advocacy;
|
|
Low- and middle-income countries; Biomedical health approach},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; SYSTEMS; EQUITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {mervecicekkanatli@yahoo.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {YALCIN, SIDDIKA SONGUL/I-9331-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {YALCIN, SIDDIKA SONGUL/0000-0001-9061-4281
|
|
Kanatli, Merve Cicek/0000-0003-4697-9886},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000664402200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000696864700001,
|
|
Author = {Tong, Ling and Tong, Tong and Wang, Jingping and Li, Yao and Noji, Ariko},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of transcultural self-efficacy among nurses in China: A
|
|
cross-sectional study},
|
|
Journal = {NURSING \& HEALTH SCIENCES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {880-887},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {In this cross-sectional study, we explored the current status and the
|
|
correlates of self-perceived transcultural self-efficacy among nurses
|
|
working in a tertiary hospital in Hangzhou, China. A total of 336 nurses
|
|
(age range, 24-50 years) completed the Chinese version of the
|
|
Transcultural Self-Efficacy Tool. The majority of respondents were
|
|
female (94.64\%), and 67.26\% were government employees. Between group
|
|
differences were assessed using the rank sum test. Most nurses had a
|
|
below-moderate level of self-perceived transcultural self-efficacy in
|
|
all subscales (Cognitive {[}67.69\%]; Practical {[}71.65\%], Affective
|
|
{[}66.75\%]). Age, professional title, employment type, and income level
|
|
had a significant influence on all three subscale scores of the survey
|
|
instrument. Our findings highlight the need for inclusion of
|
|
transcultural nursing in the continuing education curricula for nurses.
|
|
Nursing managers should target continuing education based on the
|
|
demographic characteristics of nurses. Hospital managers should consider
|
|
minimizing the pay disparity between government-employed and temporary
|
|
nurses. These initiatives can help improve the quality of nursing care
|
|
in a cross-cultural milieu.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tong, L (Corresponding Author), Chiba Univ, Grad Sch Nursing, Chuo Ku, 1-8-1 Inohana, Chiba 2608675, Japan.
|
|
Tong, Ling; Noji, Ariko, Chiba Univ, Grad Sch Nursing, Chiba, Japan.
|
|
Tong, Tong, Chiang Mai Univ, Fac Nursing, Chiang Mai, Thailand.
|
|
Wang, Jingping; Li, Yao, Zhejiang Univ, Sch Med, Sir Run Run Shaw Hosp, Gen Surg Dept, Hangzhou, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/nhs.12876},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1441-0745},
|
|
EISSN = {1442-2018},
|
|
Keywords = {continuing education; cross-cultural; cross-sectional study; nurse;
|
|
transcultural self-efficacy},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {tongling7891@163.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {ZHOU, YUE/IZE-6277-2023
|
|
Wang, Jing/IQW-3496-2023
|
|
wang, xu/IAN-4886-2023
|
|
wang, jing/GVT-8700-2022
|
|
wang, jing/GRS-7509-2022
|
|
wang, jing/HJA-5384-2022
|
|
Wang, Jin/GYA-2019-2022
|
|
wang, jiahui/IXD-1197-2023
|
|
wang, jie/HTQ-4920-2023
|
|
wang, juan/IUO-6218-2023
|
|
wang, dan/JEF-0836-2023
|
|
wang, jian/HRB-9588-2023
|
|
WANG, JINGYI/GSJ-1241-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Wang, Jing/0000-0002-8296-2961
|
|
Tong, Ling/0000-0003-2752-662X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000696864700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000311697500039,
|
|
Author = {Chyi, Hau and Ozturk, Orgul Demet},
|
|
Title = {THE EFFECTS OF SINGLE MOTHERS' WELFARE USE AND EMPLOYMENT DECISIONS ON
|
|
CHILDREN'S COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC INQUIRY},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {51},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {675-706},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {We examine the effects of single mothers' welfare use and employment
|
|
decisions on children's short-run cognitive development, as measured by
|
|
their preschool standardized math test scores. We control for three
|
|
mechanisms through which these decisions might affect children's
|
|
outcomes: direct monetary benefits, parental time invested in the child,
|
|
and nonpecuniary benefits from in-kind transfer programs such as
|
|
Medicaid. We employ a correction function approach and control for
|
|
state-fixed effects to address the endogenous nature of welfare
|
|
participation and employment decisions. Our estimates suggest that
|
|
although each additional quarter of either mother's employment or
|
|
welfare use results in only a small increase in a child's standardized
|
|
math test score, the total effects after several quarters are sizable.
|
|
We allow mothers' decisions to have varying effects on attainment by
|
|
children's observed innate ability and by the intensity of welfare use
|
|
and employment. A child who has the mean level of observed innate
|
|
ability with a mother who simultaneously worked and used welfare in all
|
|
20 quarters after childbirth experiences an 8.25 standardized-point
|
|
increase in standardized scores. The positive impact is more pronounced
|
|
for the more disadvantaged children, who tend to be born to mothers with
|
|
low Armed Forces Qualification Test scores, or have lower birth weights.
|
|
We also examine the effects using timing of employment and welfare use,
|
|
as well as children's maturity and gender. (JEL I3, J13, J22)},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chyi, H (Corresponding Author), Renmin Univ China, Hanqing Adv Inst Econ \& Finance, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chyi, Hau, Renmin Univ China, Hanqing Adv Inst Econ \& Finance, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chyi, Hau, Renmin Univ China, Sch Econ, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Ozturk, Orgul Demet, Univ S Carolina, Dept Econ, Moore Sch Business, Columbia, SC 29208 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1465-7295.2012.00466.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0095-2583},
|
|
EISSN = {1465-7295},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; EFFECTS CONSISTENT; CARE CHOICES; HEAD-START;
|
|
MODEL; ACHIEVEMENT; WORK; EITC},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {hauchyi@gmail.com
|
|
odozturk@moore.sc.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ozturk, Orgul/ACY-8203-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000311697500039},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000300784500001,
|
|
Author = {Rollins, Chiquita and Glass, Nancy E. and Perrin, Nancy A. and
|
|
Billhardt, Kris A. and Clough, Amber and Barnes, Jamie and Hanson,
|
|
Ginger C. and Bloom, Tina L.},
|
|
Title = {Housing Instability Is as Strong a Predictor of Poor Health Outcomes as
|
|
Level of Danger in an Abusive Relationship: Findings From the SHARE
|
|
Study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {623-643},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Advocates, clinicians, policy makers, and survivors frequently cite
|
|
intimate partner violence (IPV) as an immediate cause of or precursor to
|
|
housing problems. Research has indicated an association between
|
|
homelessness and IPV, yet few studies examine IPV and housing
|
|
instability. Housing instability differs from homelessness, in that
|
|
someone experiencing housing instability may currently have a place to
|
|
live but faces difficulties with maintaining the residence. We present
|
|
baseline findings from a longitudinal cohort study of 278 female IPV
|
|
survivors with housing as a primary concern. Our analysis indicates the
|
|
greater the number of housing instability risk factors (e.g., eviction
|
|
notice, problems with landlord, moving multiple times), the more likely
|
|
the abused woman reported symptoms consistent with PTSD (p < .001),
|
|
depression (p < .001), reduced quality of life (p < .001), increased
|
|
work/school absence (OR = 1.28, p < .004), and increased
|
|
hospital/emergency department use (OR = 1.22, p < .001). These outcomes
|
|
persist even when controlling for the level of danger in the abusive
|
|
relationship and for survivors' drug and alcohol use. Importantly, both
|
|
housing instability and danger level had stronger associations with
|
|
negative health outcomes than other factors such as age, alcohol, and
|
|
drug use; both make unique contributions to negative health outcomes and
|
|
could contribute in different ways. Housing instability is an important
|
|
and understudied social determinant of health for IPV survivors. These
|
|
findings begin to address the literature gap on the relationship between
|
|
housing instability, IPV, and survivors' health, employment, and
|
|
utilization of medical care services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bloom, TL (Corresponding Author), Univ Missouri, Sinclair Sch Nursing S326, Columbia, MO 65211 USA.
|
|
Bloom, Tina L., Univ Missouri, Sinclair Sch Nursing S326, Columbia, MO 65211 USA.
|
|
Rollins, Chiquita; Clough, Amber; Barnes, Jamie, Multnomah Dept Cty Human Serv, Portland, OR USA.
|
|
Glass, Nancy E., Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Nursing, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Perrin, Nancy A.; Hanson, Ginger C., Kaiser Ctr Hlth Res, Portland, OR USA.
|
|
Billhardt, Kris A., Volunteers Amer Oregon, Portland, OR USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0886260511423241},
|
|
ISSN = {0886-2605},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-6518},
|
|
Keywords = {domestic violence; mental health and violence; assessment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; LOW-INCOME WOMEN; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; FOOD
|
|
INSECURITY; CARE ACCESS; SUPPORT; NEEDS; VALIDATION; SYMPTOMS; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Criminology \& Penology; Family Studies; Psychology, Applied},
|
|
Author-Email = {bloomt@missouri.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bloom, Tina/0000-0002-5581-1228
|
|
Hanson, Ginger/0000-0003-3306-752X
|
|
Glass, Nancy/0000-0002-6691-3684},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {105},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {48},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000300784500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000905632200005,
|
|
Author = {Khatri, Resham B. and Mengistu, Tesfaye S. and Assefa, Yibeltal},
|
|
Title = {Input, process, and output factors contributing to quality of antenatal
|
|
care services: a scoping review of evidence},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {DEC 28},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: High-quality antenatal care (ANC) provides a lifesaving
|
|
opportunity for women and their newborns through providing health
|
|
promotion, disease prevention, and early diagnosis and treatment of
|
|
pregnancy-related health issues. However, systematically synthesised
|
|
evidence on factors influencing the quality of ANC services is lacking.
|
|
This scoping review aims to systematically synthesize the factors
|
|
influencing in provision and utilisation of quality ANC services.
|
|
Methods: We conducted a scoping review of published evidence on the
|
|
quality of ANC services. We searched records on four databases (PubMed,
|
|
Scopus, Embase, and Google scholar) and grey literature from 1 to 2011
|
|
to 30 August 2021. We analysed data using Braun and Clarke's thematic
|
|
analysis approach. We followed Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic
|
|
Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR)
|
|
guideline for the review. We explained themes using the Donabedian
|
|
healthcare quality assessment model (input-process-output). Results:
|
|
Several inputs- and process-related factors contributed to suboptimal
|
|
quality of ANC in many low and lower- or middle-income countries. Input
|
|
factors included facility readiness (e.g., lack of infrastructure,
|
|
provision of commodities and supplies, health workforce, structural and
|
|
intermediary characteristics of pregnant women, and service delivery
|
|
approaches). Processes-related factors included technical quality of
|
|
care (e.g., lack of skilled adequate and timely care, and poor adherence
|
|
to the guidelines) and social quality (lack of effective communication
|
|
and poor client satisfaction). These input and process factors have also
|
|
contributed to equity gaps in utilisation of quality ANC services.
|
|
Conclusion: Several input and process factors influenced the provision
|
|
and utilization of optimum quality ANC services. Better health system
|
|
inputs (e.g., availability of trained workforces, commodities,
|
|
guidelines, context-specific programs) are essential to creating
|
|
enabling facility environment for quality ANC services. Care processes
|
|
can be improved by ensuring capacity-building activities for workforces
|
|
(training, technical support visits), and mentoring staff working at
|
|
peripheral facilities. Identifying coverage of quality ANC services
|
|
among disadvantaged groups could be the initial step in designing and
|
|
implementing targeted program approaches.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Khatri, RB (Corresponding Author), Univ Queensland, Sch Publ Hlth, Brisbane, Australia.
|
|
Khatri, RB (Corresponding Author), Hlth Social Sci \& Dev Res Inst, Kathmandu, Nepal.
|
|
Khatri, Resham B.; Mengistu, Tesfaye S.; Assefa, Yibeltal, Univ Queensland, Sch Publ Hlth, Brisbane, Australia.
|
|
Khatri, Resham B., Hlth Social Sci \& Dev Res Inst, Kathmandu, Nepal.
|
|
Mengistu, Tesfaye S., Bahir Dar Univ, Coll Med \& Hlth Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12884-022-05331-5},
|
|
Article-Number = {977},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2393},
|
|
Keywords = {Antenatal care; Quality; Health systems; Inputs; Processes; Outputs},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRENATAL-CARE; HEALTH-CARE; UNIVERSAL COVERAGE; PREGNANT-WOMEN;
|
|
DETERMINANTS; DISPARITIES; INTERVENTIONS; SATISFACTION; COUNTRIES;
|
|
DISTRICT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {rkchettri@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Khatri, Resham B/R-1532-2016
|
|
Mengistu, Tesfaye S./AAI-4027-2021
|
|
Mengistu, Tesfaye Setegn/AFQ-0237-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Khatri, Resham B/0000-0001-5216-606X
|
|
Mengistu, Tesfaye S./0000-0001-8276-5143
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {126},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000905632200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000632341700002,
|
|
Author = {Pedersen, Pernille and Laurberg, Soren and Andersen, Niels Trolle and
|
|
Steenstra, Ivan and Nielsen, Claus Vinther and Maribo, Thomas and Juul,
|
|
Therese},
|
|
Title = {Differences in work participation between incident colon and rectal
|
|
cancer patients-a 10-year follow-up study with matched controls},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CANCER SURVIVORSHIP},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {73-85},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose Work-related issues have become increasingly relevant for
|
|
colorectal cancer (CRC) patients, since the cancer is detected at an
|
|
earlier age due to screening. The aim was to evaluate work participation
|
|
up to 10 years after colon or rectal cancer diagnosis compared between
|
|
diagnosis and to a matched cancer-free population. Methods In this
|
|
national register-based cohort study, all first-time CRC patients in the
|
|
period 2000-2015 with no previous cancer, between 20 and 60 years, were
|
|
identified in the Danish Cancer Registry. A control group with no
|
|
previous cancer was matched on gender, age, education, and income. For
|
|
each year a mean Work Participation Score (WPS) was calculated (a
|
|
percentage of weeks working) for individuals part of the labour market.
|
|
Results A total of 5625 colon cancer patients and 3856 rectal cancer
|
|
patients and 25,341 and 17,256 matched controls were included in the
|
|
study, respectively. The WPS increased for colon cancer patients from
|
|
45.69\% after 1 year to 83.94\% after 4 years, while rectal cancer
|
|
patients had a score of 38.07\% after 1 year and 80.07\% after 4 years.
|
|
The WPS was lower for cancer patients compared with controls, but the
|
|
difference decreased after 4 years. Conclusion CRC patients had a lower
|
|
work participation up to 10 years after diagnosis compared with
|
|
controls, while rectal cancer patients had a lower participation the
|
|
first 7 years after diagnosis compared with colon cancer patients.
|
|
Implications for cancer survivors Work-related issues should be
|
|
considered in the early stage of rehabilitation to increase work
|
|
participation and thereby improve quality of life.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pedersen, P (Corresponding Author), Aarhus Univ, Dept Publ Hlth, Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
Pedersen, P (Corresponding Author), DEFACTUM, PP Oerums Gade 11,1B, DK-8000 Aarhus, Central Denmark, Denmark.
|
|
Pedersen, Pernille; Nielsen, Claus Vinther; Maribo, Thomas, Aarhus Univ, Dept Publ Hlth, Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
Pedersen, Pernille; Nielsen, Claus Vinther; Maribo, Thomas, DEFACTUM, PP Oerums Gade 11,1B, DK-8000 Aarhus, Central Denmark, Denmark.
|
|
Laurberg, Soren; Juul, Therese, Aarhus Univ Hosp, Dept Surg, Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
Laurberg, Soren; Juul, Therese, Danish Canc Soc, Ctr Res Survivorship \& Late Adverse Effects Canc, Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
Andersen, Niels Trolle, Aarhus Univ, Inst Publ Hlth, Sect Biostat, Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
Steenstra, Ivan, Morneau Shepell, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Nielsen, Claus Vinther, Reg Hosp West Jutland, Herning, Denmark.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11764-021-01005-x},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-2259},
|
|
EISSN = {1932-2267},
|
|
Keywords = {Colon cancer; Rectal cancer; Employment; Matched controls;
|
|
Rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COLORECTAL-CANCER; DISABILITY PENSION; SICKNESS ABSENCE; RETURN;
|
|
SURVIVORS; RISK; EXPERIENCE; DIAGNOSIS; BARRIERS; LEAVE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology; Social Sciences, Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {Pernille.Pedersen@stab.rm.dk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Maribo, Thomas/0000-0003-0856-6837
|
|
Juul, Therese/0000-0002-5411-4826
|
|
Nielsen, Claus Vinther/0000-0002-2467-1103},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000632341700002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000341703700006,
|
|
Author = {Smith, Matthew J. and Ginger, Emily J. and Wright, Michael and Wright,
|
|
Katherine and Humm, Laura Boteler and Olsen, Dale and Bell, Morris D.
|
|
and Fleming, Michael F.},
|
|
Title = {Virtual Reality Job Interview Training for Individuals With Psychiatric
|
|
Disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {202},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {659-667},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Services are available to help support existing employment for
|
|
individuals with psychiatric disabilities; however, there is a gap in
|
|
services targeting job interview skills that can help obtain employment.
|
|
We assessed the feasibility and efficacy of Virtual Reality Job
|
|
Interview Training (VR-JIT) in a randomized controlled trial.
|
|
Participants were randomized to VR-JIT (n = 25) or treatment-as-usual
|
|
(TAU) (n = 12) groups. VR-JIT consisted of 10 hours of simulated job
|
|
interviews with a virtual character and didactic online training. The
|
|
participants attended 95\% of laboratory-based training sessions and
|
|
found VR-JIT easy to use and felt prepared for future interviews. The
|
|
VR-JIT group improved their job interview role-play performance (p <=
|
|
0.05) and self-confidence (p <= 0.05) between baseline and follow-up as
|
|
compared with the TAU group. VR-JIT performance scores increased over
|
|
time (R-2 = 0.65). VR-JIT demonstrated initial feasibility and efficacy
|
|
at improving job interview skills and self-confidence. Future research
|
|
may help clarify whether this intervention is efficacious in
|
|
community-based settings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Smith, MJ (Corresponding Author), Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, 710 N Lake Shore Dr,Abbott Hall 13th Floor, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Smith, Matthew J.; Ginger, Emily J.; Wright, Michael; Wright, Katherine; Fleming, Michael F., Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Humm, Laura Boteler; Olsen, Dale, SIMmersion LLC, Columbia, MD USA.
|
|
Bell, Morris D., Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Vet Affairs, Dept Psychiat, West Haven, CT 06516 USA.
|
|
Fleming, Michael F., Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Dept Family Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/NMD.0000000000000187},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-3018},
|
|
EISSN = {1539-736X},
|
|
Keywords = {Psychiatric disability; virtual reality training; job interview skills;
|
|
vocational training},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; SOCIAL COGNITION; WORK OUTCOMES; SCHIZOPHRENIA;
|
|
SKILLS; PEOPLE; BARRIERS; EFFICACY; COMORBIDITY; COMPETENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {matthewsmith@northwestern.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Wright, Katherine/AAF-5366-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Wright, Katherine/0000-0001-5967-8156
|
|
Bell, Morris/0000-0003-0795-9196
|
|
Smith, Matthew/0000-0002-0079-1477},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {37},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {39},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000341703700006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000925590500001,
|
|
Author = {Kalamkarian, Anna and Hoon, Elizabeth and Chittleborough, Catherine R.
|
|
and Dekker, Gustaaf and Lynch, John W. and Smithers, Lisa G.},
|
|
Title = {Smoking cessation care during pregnancy: A qualitative exploration of
|
|
midwives' challenging role},
|
|
Journal = {WOMEN AND BIRTH},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {36},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {89-98},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Problem: The majority of South Australian pregnant women who smoke do
|
|
not quit during pregnancy. Addi-tionally, the prevalence of smoking is
|
|
higher among pregnant women living in socially disadvantaged
|
|
areas.Background: Understanding challenges in midwives' provision of
|
|
smoking cessation care can elucidate oppor-tunities to facilitate
|
|
women's smoking cessation.Aim: We aimed to understand midwives'
|
|
perspectives on current practices, perceived barriers and facilitators
|
|
to delivery of smoking cessation care, and potential improvements to
|
|
models of smoking cessation care.Methods: An exploratory qualitative
|
|
research methodology and thematic analysis was used to understand the
|
|
perspectives of midwives in five focus groups. Findings: Four themes
|
|
were generated from the data on how midwives perceived their ability to
|
|
provide smoking cessation care: Tensions between providing smoking
|
|
cessation care and maternal care; Organisational barriers in the
|
|
delivery of smoking cessation care; Scepticism and doubt in the
|
|
provision of smoking cessation care; and Opportunities to enable
|
|
midwives' ability to provide smoking cessation care.Discussion: A
|
|
combination of interpersonal, organisational and individual barriers
|
|
impeded on midwives' ca-pacities to approach, follow-up and prioritise
|
|
smoking cessation care. Working with women living with disad-vantage and
|
|
high rates of smoking, the midwife's role was challenging as it balanced
|
|
delivering smoking cessation care without jeopardising antenatal
|
|
care.Conclusion: Providing midwives with resources and skills may
|
|
alleviate the sense of futility that surrounds smoking cessation care.
|
|
Provision of routine training and education could also improve
|
|
understandings of the current practice guidelines.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Smithers, LG (Corresponding Author), Univ Wollongong, Sch Hlth \& Soc, Wollongong, NSW 2500, Australia.
|
|
Kalamkarian, Anna; Hoon, Elizabeth; Chittleborough, Catherine R.; Lynch, John W.; Smithers, Lisa G., Univ Adelaide, Sch Publ Hlth, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Hoon, Elizabeth, Univ Adelaide, Discipline Gen Practice, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Chittleborough, Catherine R.; Dekker, Gustaaf; Lynch, John W.; Smithers, Lisa G., Univ Adelaide, Robinson Res Inst, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Dekker, Gustaaf, Lyell McEwin Hosp, Dept Obstet \& Gynaecol, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Dekker, Gustaaf, Univ Adelaide, Fac Hlth \& Med Sci, Adelaide Med Sch, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Lynch, John W., Univ Bristol, Populat Hlth Sci, Bristol, England.
|
|
Smithers, Lisa G., Univ Wollongong, Sch Hlth \& Soc, Wollongong, NSW 2500, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.wombi.2022.03.005},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1871-5192},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-1799},
|
|
Keywords = {Smoking cessation; Pregnancy; Midwifery; Australia; Qualitative
|
|
research; Focus groups},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TOBACCO-SMOKE; WOMEN; INTERVENTIONS; EXPERIENCES; OPPORTUNITIES;
|
|
GUIDELINES; SERVICES; EXPOSURE; SUPPORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing; Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {lsmithers@uow.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Smithers, Lisa/D-1605-2009},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Smithers, Lisa/0000-0002-6585-7836},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000925590500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000368505200007,
|
|
Author = {Hoffmann, Michael and MacCarthy, Sarah and Batson, Ashley and
|
|
Crawford-Roberts, Ann and Rasanathan, Jennifer and Nunn, Amy and Silva,
|
|
Luis Augusto and Dourado, Ines},
|
|
Title = {Barriers along the care cascade of HIV-infected men in a large urban
|
|
center of Brazil},
|
|
Journal = {AIDS CARE-PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIO-MEDICAL ASPECTS OF AIDS/HIV},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {57-62},
|
|
Month = {JAN 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Global and national HIV/AIDS policies utilize the care cascade to
|
|
emphasize the importance of continued engagement in HIV services from
|
|
diagnosis to viral suppression. Several studies have documented barriers
|
|
that men experience in accessing services at specific stages of care,
|
|
but few have analyzed how these barriers operate along the care cascade.
|
|
Brazil offers a unique setting for analyzing barriers to HIV care
|
|
because it is a middle-income country with a large HIV epidemic and
|
|
free, universal access to HIV/AIDS services. Semi-structured interviews
|
|
were conducted in 2011 with HIV-infected men (n=25) receiving care at
|
|
the only HIV/AIDS state reference center in Salvador, Brazil, the third
|
|
largest city in the country. Interviews were transcribed and coded for
|
|
analysis. Researchers identified barriers to services along the care
|
|
cascade: health service-related obstacles (poor-quality care, lengthy
|
|
wait times, and drug supply problems); psychosocial and emotional
|
|
challenges (fear of disclosure and difficulty accepting HIV diagnosis);
|
|
indirect costs (transportation and absenteeism at work or school); low
|
|
perceived risk of HIV; and toxicity and complexity of antiretroviral
|
|
drug (ARV) regimens. The stages of the care cascade interrupted by each
|
|
barrier were also identified. Most barriers affected multiple, and often
|
|
all, stages of care, while toxicity and complexity of ARV regimens was
|
|
only present at a single care stage. Efforts to eliminate more prevalent
|
|
barriers have the potential to improve care continuity at multiple
|
|
stages. Going forward, assessing the relative impact of barriers along
|
|
one's entire care trajectory can help tailor improvements in service
|
|
provision, facilitate achievement of viral suppression, and improve
|
|
access to life-saving testing, treatment, and care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hoffmann, M (Corresponding Author), Brown Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, 121 South Main St,Suite 810, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
|
|
Hoffmann, Michael; Batson, Ashley; Nunn, Amy, Brown Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
|
|
Hoffmann, Michael; Batson, Ashley; Nunn, Amy, Miriam Hosp, Providence, RI 02912 USA.
|
|
MacCarthy, Sarah, RAND Corp, Santa Monica, CA 90407 USA.
|
|
Crawford-Roberts, Ann, Icahn Sch Med Mt Sinai, New York, NY 10029 USA.
|
|
Rasanathan, Jennifer, Montefiore Med Ctr, Dept Family \& Social Med, Bronx, NY 10467 USA.
|
|
Silva, Luis Augusto; Dourado, Ines, Univ Fed Bahia, Inst Collect Hlth, Salvador, BA, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09540121.2015.1062462},
|
|
ISSN = {0954-0121},
|
|
EISSN = {1360-0451},
|
|
Keywords = {HIV; AIDS; care cascade; barriers; men; delay; Brazil},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; DIAGNOSIS; AIDS; PREDICTORS; PREVENTION;
|
|
SPECTRUM; COHORT; ADULTS; SEX; MSM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health;
|
|
Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Respiratory System; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {michael.tg.hoffmann@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dourado, Ines/Q-6535-2016
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dourado, Ines/0000-0003-1675-2146
|
|
Crawford-Roberts, Ann/0000-0002-0630-4430},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000368505200007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000361060400007,
|
|
Author = {Dennis, Amanda and Manski, Ruth and Blanchard, Kelly},
|
|
Title = {A Qualitative Exploration of Low-Income Women's Experiences Accessing
|
|
Abortion in Massachusetts},
|
|
Journal = {WOMENS HEALTH ISSUES},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {463-469},
|
|
Month = {SEP-OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: At a time when most states are working to restrict abortion,
|
|
Massachusetts stands out as one of the few states with multiple
|
|
state-level policies in place that support abortion access for
|
|
low-income women. In 2006, Massachusetts passed health care reform,
|
|
which resulted in almost all residents having insurance. Also, almost
|
|
all state-level public and subsidized insurance programs cover abortion
|
|
and there are fewer restrictions on abortion in Massachusetts compared
|
|
with other states.
|
|
Methods: We explored low-income women's experiences accessing abortion
|
|
in Massachusetts through 27 in-depth telephone interviews with a
|
|
racially diverse sample of low-income women who obtained abortions.
|
|
Interviews were digitally recorded, transcribed, coded, and analyzed
|
|
thematically.
|
|
Results: Most women described having access to timely, conveniently
|
|
located, affordable, and highly acceptable abortion care. However, a
|
|
sizable minority of women had difficulty enrolling in or staying on
|
|
insurance, making abortion expensive. A small minority of women said
|
|
their abortion care could be improved by increasing emotional support
|
|
and privacy, and decreasing appointment times. Some limited data also
|
|
suggest that young women and immigrant women face specific barriers to
|
|
care.
|
|
Conclusion: This study provides important, novel information about the
|
|
need for state-level policies that support access to health insurance
|
|
and comprehensive abortion coverage. Such policies, along with a
|
|
well-functioning health care environment, help to ensure that low-income
|
|
women have access to abortion. However, not all abortion access
|
|
challenges have been resolved in Massachusetts. More work is needed to
|
|
ensure that all women can access affordable, confidential care that is
|
|
responsive to their specific needs and preferences. Copyright (C) 2015
|
|
by the Jacobs Institute of Women's Health. Published by Elsevier Inc.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dennis, A (Corresponding Author), Ibis Reprod Hlth, 17 Dunster St,Suite 201, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Dennis, Amanda; Manski, Ruth; Blanchard, Kelly, Ibis Reprod Hlth, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.whi.2015.04.004},
|
|
ISSN = {1049-3867},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-4321},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS; REFORM; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {adennis@ibisreproductivehealth.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000361060400007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000376267600003,
|
|
Author = {Standal, Karina and Winther, Tanja},
|
|
Title = {Empowerment Through Energy? Impact of Electricity on Care Work Practices
|
|
and Gender Relations},
|
|
Journal = {FORUM FOR DEVELOPMENT STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {27-45},
|
|
Abstract = {Electricity provides a range of desirable services such as the electric
|
|
light and the use of mobile phones and is regarded as a conditional
|
|
factor for economic growth. Gender equality and women's empowerment are
|
|
also promoted as a key to development on the international agenda.
|
|
However, relatively little is known about how the advent of electricity
|
|
in new contexts affects gender relations. The present analysis of
|
|
electricity's impact on gender relations engages with the concepts of
|
|
care work and empowerment. Based on two ethnographic case studies in
|
|
rural communities in Uttar Pradesh, India, and Bamiyan, Afghanistan, we
|
|
examine how and to what extent the introduction of electricity affected
|
|
women's care work practices and empowerment - and potentially
|
|
transformed gender relations. We also draw on our own empirical material
|
|
from other parts of India (West Bengal and Jharkhand). We find that
|
|
electricity affected everyday life in terms of providing important
|
|
resources and enhancing women's opportunities to perform their expected
|
|
role as care workers more efficiently and in a qualitatively better way.
|
|
The women appreciated this positive effect of electricity in their
|
|
everyday lives. However, we argue that in India, electricity at the same
|
|
time reinforced structures of gender inequality such as patriarchy and
|
|
dowry practices, and we trace this tendency to the conceptualisation of
|
|
women as care workers in combination with conventional, gender `neutral'
|
|
electricity interventions. In contrast, there are signs that women's
|
|
status increased in the Afghanistan case, which we link to the unusual
|
|
inclusion of women engineers in the electricity supply.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Standal, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Oslo, Ctr Dev \& Environm, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Standal, Karina; Winther, Tanja, Univ Oslo, Ctr Dev \& Environm, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/08039410.2015.1134642},
|
|
ISSN = {0803-9410},
|
|
EISSN = {1891-1765},
|
|
Keywords = {electricity; gender relations; empowerment; care work; India;
|
|
Afghanistan},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Winther, Tanja/Q-7021-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Winther, Tanja/0000-0002-9527-6063},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {37},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000376267600003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000521079000001,
|
|
Author = {Cuomo, Raphael E. and Davis, Daniel B. and Goetz, Stephan J. and
|
|
Shapiro, Josh D. and Walshok, Mary L.},
|
|
Title = {Religiosity and Regional Resilience to Recession},
|
|
Journal = {RISK HAZARDS \& CRISIS IN PUBLIC POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {166-187},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Literature shows that religiosity can provide individual resilience to
|
|
life shocks as well as regional resilience to disasters caused by
|
|
natural hazards. Related work has examined the complicated links between
|
|
religion and economic growth. Yet few, if any, studies examine the role
|
|
of regional levels of religiosity on a region's resilience to
|
|
recession-or how quickly the employment rate returns to pre-recession
|
|
levels (a common measure of resilience in the economics literature). As
|
|
the recovery period of the Great Recession cools and economists warn of
|
|
future economic downturns, all known variables that may be linked with
|
|
regional resilience are worthy of exploration. Using survey results from
|
|
the Gosling-Potter Internet Project and General Social Surveys, we
|
|
applied logarithmic functions to pre- and post-Great Recession
|
|
employment data for 2,836 U.S. counties. We found a modest and
|
|
statistically significant association between religious belief and
|
|
regional resilience to recession. Religiosity was the strongest of
|
|
sixteen psychosocial variables that we examined in association with the
|
|
speed of job recovery; despite having negative links with other economic
|
|
variables. This has particular salience for more rural economies; policy
|
|
implications are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cuomo, RE (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Diego, San Diego, CA 92103 USA.
|
|
Cuomo, Raphael E.; Davis, Daniel B.; Shapiro, Josh D.; Walshok, Mary L., Univ Calif San Diego, San Diego, CA 92103 USA.
|
|
Goetz, Stephan J., Penn State Univ, Northeast Reg Ctr Rural Dev, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/rhc3.12189},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1944-4079},
|
|
Keywords = {resilience to recession; economic shock; religiosity; recovery policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILD-CARE CENTERS; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; INTRINSIC RELIGIOSITY; ECONOMIC
|
|
RECESSION; RESOURCE ACCESS; GREAT RECESSION; SPIRITUALITY; RISK;
|
|
INEQUALITY; GROWTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public Administration},
|
|
Author-Email = {racuomo@ucsd.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Davis, Daniel/L-5533-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cuomo, Raphael/0000-0002-8179-0619
|
|
Davis, Daniel/0000-0001-6915-0523},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000521079000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001008692700001,
|
|
Author = {Shayo, Mathew J. and Shayo, Pendo and Haukila, Kelvin F. and Norman,
|
|
Katherine and Burke, Colleen and Ngowi, Kennedy and Goode, Adam P. and
|
|
Allen, Kelli D. and Wonanji, Vivian Timothy and Mmbaga, Blandina T. and
|
|
Bettger, Janet Prvu},
|
|
Title = {Expanding access to rehabilitation using mobile health to address
|
|
musculoskeletal pain and disability},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN REHABILITATION SCIENCES},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {3},
|
|
Month = {JAN 6},
|
|
Abstract = {IntroductionMusculoskeletal (MSK) disorders such as low back pain and
|
|
osteoarthritis are a leading cause of disability and the leading
|
|
contributor to the need for rehabilitation services globally. This need
|
|
has surpassed the availability of trained clinicians; even in urban
|
|
areas where services and providers are thought to be more abundant,
|
|
access can be challenged by transportation options and financial costs
|
|
associated with travel, care and lost time from work. However,
|
|
continuing standard of fully in-person rehabilitation care for
|
|
MSK-associated pain and disability may no longer be necessary. With
|
|
increased ownership or access to even a basic mobile phone device, and
|
|
evidence for remote management by trained clinicians, some individuals
|
|
with MSK disorders may be able to continue their rehabilitation regimen
|
|
predominantly from home after initial evaluation in primary care or an
|
|
outpatient clinic. MethodsThis manuscript describes application of a
|
|
framework we used to culturally and contextually adapt an evidence-based
|
|
approach for leveraging digital health technology using a mobile phone
|
|
(mHealth) to expand access to rehabilitation services for MSK-associated
|
|
pain and disability. We then conducted a multi-level analysis of
|
|
policies related to the adapted approach for rehabilitation service
|
|
delivery to identify opportunities to support sustainability. ResultsOur
|
|
study was conducted in Tanzania, a lower-middle income country with
|
|
their first National Rehabilitation Strategic Plan released in 2021.
|
|
Lessons learned can be applied even to countries with greater
|
|
infrastructure or fewer barriers. The seven-step adaptation framework
|
|
used can be applied in other regions to improve the likelihood of local
|
|
mHealth adoption and implementation. Our practice and policy assessment
|
|
for Tanzania can be applied in other regions and used collaboratively
|
|
with government officials in support of building or implementing a
|
|
national rehabilitation strategic plan. ConclusionThe work described,
|
|
lessons learned and components of the plan are generalizable globally
|
|
and can improve access to rehabilitation services using mHealth to
|
|
address the significant and increasing burden of disability.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bettger, JP (Corresponding Author), Duke Univ, Sch Med, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Durham, NC 27710 USA.
|
|
Bettger, JP (Corresponding Author), Temple Univ, Coll Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth \& Rehabil Sci, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.
|
|
Shayo, Mathew J.; Shayo, Pendo; Haukila, Kelvin F.; Mmbaga, Blandina T., Kilimanjaro Christian Med Univ Coll, Kilimanjaro Christian Med Ctr, Moshi, Tanzania.
|
|
Norman, Katherine; Burke, Colleen, Duke Univ, Sch Med, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, Durham, NC USA.
|
|
Burke, Colleen; Allen, Kelli D., Dept Vet Affairs Hlth Serv Res \& Dev Serv, Durham, NC USA.
|
|
Ngowi, Kennedy; Mmbaga, Blandina T., Kilimanjaro Clin Res Inst, Moshi, Tanzania.
|
|
Goode, Adam P.; Bettger, Janet Prvu, Duke Univ, Sch Med, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Durham, NC 27710 USA.
|
|
Allen, Kelli D., Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, Thurston Arthrit Res Ctr, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
|
|
Wonanji, Vivian Timothy, Minist Hlth Community Dev Gender Elderly \& Childr, Dodoma, Tanzania.
|
|
Bettger, Janet Prvu, Temple Univ, Coll Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth \& Rehabil Sci, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fresc.2022.982175},
|
|
Article-Number = {982175},
|
|
EISSN = {2673-6861},
|
|
Keywords = {rehabilitation; access; mobile health; musculoskeletal disease;
|
|
disability},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HOME EXERCISE PROGRAMS; ADHERENCE; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {janet.bettger@temple.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Haukila, Kelvin/0000-0002-6140-8566},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001008692700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000450856600006,
|
|
Author = {Gould-Werth, Alix and Morrison, Katherine and Ben-Shalom, Yonatan},
|
|
Title = {Employers' Perspectives on Accommodating and Retaining Employees with
|
|
Newly Acquired Disabilities: An Exploratory Study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {611-633},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction Timely and appropriate accommodations can help employees
|
|
who experience disabilities stay at work instead of exiting the labor
|
|
force. Employers can play a critical role in connecting such workers
|
|
with the accommodations they need. This qualitative study seeks to
|
|
inform policy makers who want to improve workforce retention outcomes by
|
|
uncovering factors that affect whether employers provide accommodations
|
|
to, and ultimately retain, employees with disabilities. Methods We
|
|
conducted semistructured interviews with a convenience sample of human
|
|
resources professionals in 14 Arkansas-based employers, yielding
|
|
detailed information on 50 cases in which an employee developed or
|
|
disclosed a disability. We analyzed the interviews using a grounded
|
|
theory approach and compared cases to identify key themes emerging
|
|
across subgroups of cases. Results Two organization-level factors and
|
|
four employee-level factors influenced employers' efforts to accommodate
|
|
and retain employees with disabilities: employer resources; employers'
|
|
communication with the employee and other stakeholders; employee tenure;
|
|
employee work performance; active/sedentary nature of employee role; and
|
|
the severity and type of employees' health conditions. Conclusions
|
|
Consistent with prior literature, employers with greater access to
|
|
resources and better ability to communicate generally made greater
|
|
effort to accommodate and retain employees with disabilities. However,
|
|
employers in the study did not deploy these resources and processes
|
|
consistently when making decisions about whether and how to provide
|
|
accommodations to workers with disabilities; employee-level
|
|
characteristics affected their actions. Policy makers should consider
|
|
intervention approaches that reach workers who may be overlooked by
|
|
employers with scarce resources.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Morrison, K (Corresponding Author), Math Policy Res, 1100 First St NE,Floor 12, Washington, DC 20002 USA.
|
|
Gould-Werth, Alix, Washington Ctr Equitable Growth, 1500 K St NW,Suite 850, Washington, DC 20005 USA.
|
|
Morrison, Katherine; Ben-Shalom, Yonatan, Math Policy Res, 1100 First St NE,Floor 12, Washington, DC 20002 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10926-018-9806-6},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-0487},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Work; Disability; Work retention; Work accommodations; Qualitative
|
|
research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUPERVISOR; WORK; EMPLOYMENT; BARRIERS; RETURN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {agouldwerth@equitablegrowth.org
|
|
kmorrison@mathematica-mpr.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ben-Shalom, Yonatan/0000-0002-8891-9470},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000450856600006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000387572700005,
|
|
Author = {Netto, Julie Ann and Yeung, Polly and Cocks, Errol and McNamara,
|
|
Beverley},
|
|
Title = {Facilitators and barriers to employment for people with mental illness:
|
|
A qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {61-72},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Employment often has a defining role that shapes a person's
|
|
identity. The aim of this study was to generate a rich description of
|
|
the meaning of employment for people with mental illness and identify
|
|
the facilitators and barriers they experience in gaining and sustaining
|
|
employment. Low workforce participation rates exist for people with
|
|
mental illness despite their ability to both benefit from, and
|
|
contribute through, employment.
|
|
OBJECTIVE: Individual in-depth interviews were used to gather
|
|
information about participants' lived experiences of mental illness,
|
|
what employment meant to them, their vocational aspirations, and the
|
|
facilitators and barriers encountered while engaging in employment
|
|
activities.
|
|
METHODS: Focus groups (N = 3) and individual in-depth interviews (N = 9)
|
|
were used to gather information about participants' lived experiences of
|
|
mental illness, what vocation meant to them, their vocational
|
|
aspirations, and the facilitators and barriers encountered while
|
|
engaging in or pursuing employment. An inclusive research approach was
|
|
employed in conducting interpretive phenomenological analysis.
|
|
RESULTS: Four themes and nine subthemes described the meaning of
|
|
employment, aspirations, and personal choices. Personal barriers to
|
|
vocation included loss of valued roles, challenges of the vocational
|
|
environment, and restrictions in opportunities. Examples of facilitators
|
|
of employment were mental health services providers, family, and
|
|
friends. Participants pursued paid employment because they wanted
|
|
outcomes that would lead to work satisfaction such as making money,
|
|
having financial security, socialising, and having a sense of
|
|
achievement.
|
|
CONCLUSION: Engaging in meaningful vocation allowed people with mental
|
|
illness to establish and re-establish their identities and valued life
|
|
roles.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Netto, JA (Corresponding Author), Curtin Univ, Sch Occupat Therapy \& Social Work, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.
|
|
Netto, Julie Ann; Cocks, Errol; McNamara, Beverley, Curtin Univ, Sch Occupat Therapy \& Social Work, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia.
|
|
Yeung, Polly, Massey Univ, Sch Social Work, Palmerston North, New Zealand.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3233/JVR-150780},
|
|
ISSN = {1052-2263},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-6316},
|
|
Keywords = {Mental illness; vocation; employment; interpretive phenomenological
|
|
analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {META-SYNTHESIS; WORK; DISCLOSURE; DISORDERS; BENEFITS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {j.netto@curtin.edu.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Netto, Julie/0000-0002-7770-2428
|
|
Yeung, Polly/0000-0002-6584-7515},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000387572700005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000072281300003,
|
|
Author = {Joseph, AE and Hallman, BC},
|
|
Title = {Over the hill and far away: Distance as a barrier to the provision of
|
|
assistance to elderly relatives},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {1998},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {631-639},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Note = {7th International Symposium on Medical Geography, PORTSMOUTH, ENGLAND,
|
|
JUL, 1996},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper considers the impact of the distance between employed
|
|
caregivers and their elderly relatives on the provision of various forms
|
|
of family-based assistance ({''}eldercare{''}), and in so doing it
|
|
contributes to two overlapping literatures, one on the geography of care
|
|
for elderly persons and the other on eldercare as a ``work and
|
|
family{''} issue. The paper also seeks to interpret and understand the
|
|
spatiality of eldercare in light of evolving public policy on the care
|
|
of dependent populations, and does so with an eye to the highly gendered
|
|
nature of family caregiving. The empirical portion of the paper draws on
|
|
a national survey of work and family conducted by GARNET (The Canadian
|
|
Aging Research Network). Analysis of data for 1149 respondents with
|
|
eldercare responsibilities reveals significant distance-decay effects in
|
|
the average (weekly) number of hours devoted to eldercare. However,
|
|
disaggregation by gender reveals that only male caregivers display this
|
|
normative behaviour. Analysis of the average time-distances at which
|
|
particular types of assistance are provided reveals a similar ``gender
|
|
gap{''}-women are willing to travel farther, more often, than male
|
|
caregivers. The results suggest that the reconceptualization of aging as
|
|
a ``private{''} problem, to be attended to (by women) in the family and
|
|
community, will particularly affect the careers and family lives of
|
|
female caregivers, for they are more likely than their male counterparts
|
|
to take on more travel and try to squeeze more into already tight time
|
|
budgets. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hallman, BC (Corresponding Author), Calif State Univ Los Angeles, Dept Geog \& Planning, Chico, CA 95929 USA.
|
|
Calif State Univ Los Angeles, Dept Geog \& Planning, Chico, CA 95929 USA.
|
|
Univ Guelph, Dept Geog, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0277-9536(97)00181-0},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {Canada; geography of the family; eldercare; time-distance; gender
|
|
effects; public policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LONG-TERM-CARE; GENDER DIFFERENCES; PARENT CARE; FAMILY; CHILDREN;
|
|
PROXIMITY; LOCATION; LABOR; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {108},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000072281300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000646856500006,
|
|
Author = {Hughes, Robert C. and Kitsao-Wekulo, Patricia and Muendo, Ruth and
|
|
Bhopal, Sunil S. and Kimani-Murage, Elizabeth and Hill, Zelee and
|
|
Kirkwood, Betty R.},
|
|
Title = {Who actually cares for children in slums? Why we need to think, and do,
|
|
more about paid childcare in urbanizing sub-Saharan Africa},
|
|
Journal = {PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {376},
|
|
Number = {1827},
|
|
Month = {JUN 21},
|
|
Abstract = {The early years are critical and inform the developmental trajectory of
|
|
children. This is justifiably attracting growing policy attention. Much
|
|
of this attention is focused on interventions and policies directed at
|
|
parents, especially mothers. Yet emerging evidence suggests that
|
|
increasing numbers of children in rapidly urbanizing low- and
|
|
middle-income countries are now spending much of their day with other
|
|
formal and informal childcare providers, including largely unregulated
|
|
paid childcare providers. This paper summarizes the limited literature
|
|
about the use of such paid childcare in low- and middle-income countries
|
|
in sub-Saharan Africa, before considering possible reasons behind the
|
|
lack of research evidence. Finally, key research gaps and their
|
|
implications for public health practice are explored, with reference to
|
|
the ongoing British Academy funded Nairobi Early Childcare in Slums
|
|
research programme in Nairobi, Kenya. We argue that improving childcare
|
|
may be an under-explored strategy to help some of the world's most
|
|
disadvantaged children in the most important period of their lives, and
|
|
that interventions in this largely informal market should be built on a
|
|
rigorous research base.
|
|
This article is part of the theme issue `Multidisciplinary perspectives
|
|
on social support and maternal-child health'.},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hughes, RC (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Dept Populat Hlth, Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England.
|
|
Hughes, Robert C.; Bhopal, Sunil S.; Kirkwood, Betty R., London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Dept Populat Hlth, Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England.
|
|
Kitsao-Wekulo, Patricia; Muendo, Ruth; Kimani-Murage, Elizabeth, African Populat \& Hlth Res Ctr, Maternal \& Child Wellbeing Unit, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Bhopal, Sunil S., Newcastle Univ, Populat Hlth Sci Inst, Fac Med Sci, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne \& Wear, England.
|
|
Hill, Zelee, UCL, Inst Global Hlth, Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1098/rstb.2020.0430},
|
|
Article-Number = {20200430},
|
|
ISSN = {0962-8436},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2970},
|
|
Keywords = {early childhood development; urban health; child health; childcare;
|
|
nurturing care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; ADVERSITY; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Biology},
|
|
Author-Email = {robert.hughes@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kimani-Murage, Elizabeth/HGB-3312-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hughes, Robert/0000-0002-1345-3063
|
|
Kitsao-Wekulo, Patricia/0000-0003-4206-9746
|
|
Bhopal, Sunil/0000-0003-1229-781X
|
|
Kirkwood, Betty/0000-0001-5274-6072},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000646856500006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000332036500008,
|
|
Author = {Benjamin Puertas, E. and Arosquipa, Carlos and Gutierrez, Daniela},
|
|
Title = {Factors that influence a career choice in primary care among medical
|
|
students from high-, middle-, and low-income countries: a systematic
|
|
review},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA PANAMERICANA DE SALUD PUBLICA-PAN AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC
|
|
HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {351-358},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective. To determine which factors influence a medical student's
|
|
decision to choose a career in primary care; and to establish if these
|
|
factors are similar or different among students in high-, middle-and
|
|
low-income countries.
|
|
Methods. An extensive search was done of PubMed, Google Scholar, and
|
|
Virtual Library of Health for articles on primary care careers published
|
|
in 2003-2013 in English, Spanish, and/or Portuguese. Initially, 600
|
|
records were identified; 74 full-text articles were assessed for
|
|
eligibility and 55 were selected (42 from high-income countries; 13 from
|
|
middle-and low-income). These were assessed to identify intrinsic and
|
|
extrinsic factors that influence career choice among medical students
|
|
from high-, middle-, and low-income countries.
|
|
Results. A comparison framework with common and specific factors that
|
|
influence career choice in primary care among medical students from
|
|
high-, middle-and low-income was developed. Factors were classified as
|
|
extrinsic or intrinsic, and as facilitators or barriers. Several factors
|
|
common to all countries were identified: facilitators were exposure to
|
|
rural location, role models, working conditions; barriers were low
|
|
income, prestige, and medical school environment. Some factors specific
|
|
to middle-and low-income countries were: understanding of rural needs
|
|
and intellectual challenge. Other factors specific to high-income
|
|
countries were: attitude towards social problems, voluntary work,
|
|
influence of family, and length of residency.
|
|
Conclusions. Further studies on the subject are needed, especially in
|
|
low-and middle-income countries. Identifying factors as barriers or
|
|
facilitators for career choice will promote a better understanding of
|
|
the reasons behind the shortage of primary care professionals and will
|
|
contribute to policy building, improved training, and recruitment and
|
|
retention of these professionals.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Puertas, EB (Corresponding Author), Pan Amer Hlth Org, Tegucigalpa, Honduras.
|
|
Benjamin Puertas, E., Pan Amer Hlth Org, Tegucigalpa, Honduras.
|
|
Arosquipa, Carlos; Gutierrez, Daniela, Pan Amer Hlth Org, Lima, Peru.},
|
|
ISSN = {1020-4989},
|
|
Keywords = {Career choice; students; medical; primary health care; human resources},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FAMILY MEDICINE; SPECIALTY CHOICE; RURAL PRACTICE; PHYSICIAN WORKFORCE;
|
|
LIFE-STYLE; DEBT; UNIVERSITIES; ASSOCIATIONS; PERSONALITY; PREFERENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {puertasb@paho.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {González-Rodríguez, Diego/F-3425-2016
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {González-Rodríguez, Diego/0000-0001-7584-9103
|
|
Puertas, Eduardo Benjamin/0000-0002-3886-7182},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {59},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000332036500008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000491105600001,
|
|
Author = {Silver, Sharon and Boiano, James and Li, Jia},
|
|
Title = {Patient care aides: Differences in healthcare coverage, health-related
|
|
behaviors, and health outcomes in a low-wage workforce by healthcare
|
|
setting},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {63},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {60-73},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives Patient care aides, who provide basic care to patients in a
|
|
variety of healthcare settings, have been observed to have higher
|
|
prevalences of adverse health metrics than the general US workforce.
|
|
However, few studies have examined how healthcare access and health
|
|
behaviors and outcomes among patient care aides differ by work setting
|
|
(home health, nursing home, and hospital). Methods Data from the 2013 to
|
|
2016 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System were used to assess the
|
|
prevalences of healthcare access, health-related behaviors, and health
|
|
outcomes among patient care aides in different work settings, and among
|
|
nurses (licensed vocational/practical and registered). Adjusted
|
|
prevalence ratios were used to compare prevalences for healthcare
|
|
workers to those for nonhealthcare clerical workers. Results Overall,
|
|
patient care aides are a low-wage workforce with high prevalences of
|
|
multiple adverse health metrics and low prevalences of positive health
|
|
behaviors compared to clerical workers. Results differed by work
|
|
setting. Home health aides had the lowest income levels and most adverse
|
|
results for multiple metrics; nursing home aides had better healthcare
|
|
access and somewhat better health outcomes. Most metrics were best
|
|
(though still quite poor) for hospital aides, who showed few significant
|
|
differences from clerical workers. Conclusions These results show the
|
|
need to focus resources on the patient care aide workforce, particularly
|
|
those in home health. While some needs of nursing home aides, such as
|
|
improving influenza vaccination coverage and reducing the prevalence of
|
|
arthritis-related conditions, would benefit from standardized workplace
|
|
interventions, alternate, workplace-specific approaches are needed for
|
|
home health aides.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Silver, S (Corresponding Author), NIOSH, DFSE, HIB, 1090 Tusculum Ave,MS R-19, Cincinnati, OH 45226 USA.
|
|
Silver, Sharon; Boiano, James; Li, Jia, NIOSH, Div Field Studies \& Engn, Hlth Informat Branch, Cincinnati, OH 45226 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/ajim.23053},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {0271-3586},
|
|
EISSN = {1097-0274},
|
|
Keywords = {health disparities; healthcare; occupation; patient care aides;
|
|
surveillance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SHORT-SLEEP DURATION; STATES; VACCINATION; PREVALENCE; INJURIES; ASTHMA;
|
|
ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {ssilver@cdc.gov},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Boiano, James/H-9257-2016
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Boiano, James/0000-0003-2738-4588
|
|
Li, Jia/0000-0003-0692-5103
|
|
Silver, Sharon/0000-0002-7679-5028},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000491105600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000455913000002,
|
|
Author = {Garg, Suneela},
|
|
Title = {Universal Health Coverage in India: Newer Innovations and the Role of
|
|
Public Health},
|
|
Journal = {INDIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {62},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {167-170},
|
|
Month = {JUL-SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {The realization of Universal Health Coverage requires adequate
|
|
healthcare financing and human resources to provide financial protection
|
|
to the economically disadvantaged population by covering their medicine,
|
|
diagnostics, and service costs. Conventionally, inadequate public
|
|
healthcare financing and the lack of skilled human resources are
|
|
considered as the major barriers towards achieving UHC in India. To
|
|
strengthen the Indian healthcare system, there has been significant
|
|
increase budgetary allocation towards healthcare, a national health
|
|
protection scheme targeting low-income households, upgrading of primary
|
|
health-care and expansion of the health work-force. Nevertheless, an
|
|
evolving paradigm for improving holistic health, sanitation, nutrition,
|
|
gender equity, drug accessibility and affordability, innovative
|
|
initiatives in national health programs for reduction of maternal
|
|
deaths, tuberculosis and HIV burden and the utilization of information
|
|
technology in healthcare provision of the underserved and the
|
|
marginalized is gaining rapid acceleration. These represent a genuine
|
|
innovation towards fulfillment of UHC goals for India.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Garg, S (Corresponding Author), Maulana Azad Med Coll, Dept Community Med, New Delhi, India.
|
|
Garg, Suneela, Maulana Azad Med Coll, Dept Community Med, New Delhi, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4103/ijph.IJPH\_221\_18},
|
|
ISSN = {0019-557X},
|
|
EISSN = {2229-7693},
|
|
Keywords = {Health financing; India; public health; universal health coverage},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {gargsuneela@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {13},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000455913000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000364927700001,
|
|
Author = {Pagan, Ricardo},
|
|
Title = {How Do Leisure Activities Impact on Life Satisfaction? Evidence for
|
|
German People with Disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {APPLIED RESEARCH IN QUALITY OF LIFE},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {557-572},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {This study analyses the effect of participating in leisure activities on
|
|
the levels of life satisfaction reported by people with and without
|
|
disabilities. Particular attention is paid to exploring how different
|
|
types of leisure activities (e.g. social gatherings, cultural events,
|
|
active sports, volunteer work, etc.) affect individuals' life
|
|
satisfaction and which of them contribute most to improving it. Using
|
|
longitudinal data at an individual level from the German Socio-Economic
|
|
Panel, we estimate a ``Probit Adapted OLS (POLS){''} model which allows
|
|
us to identity the determinants of life satisfaction by disability
|
|
status and to control for the unobserved heterogeneity and thus
|
|
determine cause and effect between the key variables. Although
|
|
participation in leisure activities increases the life satisfaction
|
|
scores reported by people with disabilities (except for the
|
|
participation in public initiatives), this effect is quite different by
|
|
leisure activity. The participation in leisure activities such as
|
|
holidays, going out, or attending cultural events and church has a
|
|
significant positive effect on the life satisfaction of people with
|
|
disabilities. Event organizers, destination managers, business owners,
|
|
professionals, governments, and the leisure industry in general must
|
|
promote and facilitate full access and participation of people with
|
|
disabilities in all leisure activities, especially in those that
|
|
contribute more intensely to increasing their life satisfaction scores.
|
|
The elimination of all disabling barriers, the understanding of their
|
|
differential needs and the existence of inclusive leisure environments
|
|
are key elements for improving the life satisfaction of people with
|
|
disabilities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pagan, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Malaga, Appl Econ Dept, Plaza El Ejido S-N, E-29071 Malaga, Spain.
|
|
Pagan, Ricardo, Univ Malaga, Appl Econ Dept, E-29071 Malaga, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11482-014-9333-3},
|
|
ISSN = {1871-2584},
|
|
EISSN = {1871-2576},
|
|
Keywords = {Leisure activities; Life Satisfaction; Disability; Germany},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; SOCIAL CONNECTEDNESS; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; SELF-ESTEEM;
|
|
HAPPINESS; HEALTH; PARTICIPATION; TOURISTS; MODELS; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {rpr@uma.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pagan, Ricardo/AAF-4906-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Pagan Rodriguez, Ricardo Braulio/0000-0002-7391-5127},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {52},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000364927700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000513899800001,
|
|
Author = {Lallukka, Tea and Pietilaeinen, Olli and Jaeppinen, Sauli and Laaksonen,
|
|
Mikko and Lahti, Jouni and Rahkonen, Ossi},
|
|
Title = {Factors associated with health survey response among young employees: a
|
|
register-based study using online, mailed and telephone interview data
|
|
collection methods},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {FEB 5},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Declining response rates are a common challenge to
|
|
epidemiological research. Response rates further are particularly low
|
|
among young people. We thus aimed to identify factors associated with
|
|
health survey response among young employees using different data
|
|
collection methods.
|
|
Methods: We included fully register-based data to identify key
|
|
socioeconomic, workplace and health-related factors associated with
|
|
response to a health survey collected via online and mailed
|
|
questionnaires. Additionally, telephone interviews were conducted for
|
|
those who had not responded via online or to the mailed survey. The
|
|
survey data collection was done in autumn 2017 among young employees of
|
|
the City of Helsinki, Finland (18-39 years, target population n=11,459).
|
|
Results: The overall response to the survey was 51.5\% (n=5898). The
|
|
overall findings suggest that differences in the distributions of
|
|
socioeconomic, workplace and health-related factors between respondents
|
|
in the online or mailed surveys, or telephone interviews, are relatively
|
|
minor. Telephone interview respondents were of lower socioeconomic
|
|
position, which helped improve representativeness of the entire cohort.
|
|
Despite the general broad representativeness of the data, some
|
|
socioeconomic and health-related factors contributed to response. Thus,
|
|
non-respondents were more often men, manual workers, from the lowest
|
|
income quartile, had part-time jobs, and had more long sickness absence
|
|
spells. In turn, job contract (permanent or temporary) and employment
|
|
sector did not affect survey response.
|
|
Conclusions: Despite a general representativeness of data of the target
|
|
population, socioeconomically more disadvantaged and those with long
|
|
sickness absence, are slightly overrepresented among non-respondents.
|
|
This suggests that when studying the associations between social factors
|
|
and health, the associations can be weaker than if complete data were
|
|
available representing all socioeconomic groups.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lallukka, T (Corresponding Author), Univ Helsinki, Dept Publ Hlth, POB 20, Helsinki 00014, Finland.
|
|
Lallukka, T (Corresponding Author), Finnish Inst Occupat Hlth, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Lallukka, Tea; Pietilaeinen, Olli; Jaeppinen, Sauli; Lahti, Jouni; Rahkonen, Ossi, Univ Helsinki, Dept Publ Hlth, POB 20, Helsinki 00014, Finland.
|
|
Lallukka, Tea, Finnish Inst Occupat Hlth, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Laaksonen, Mikko, Finnish Ctr Pens, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Jaeppinen, Sauli, Social Insurance Inst Finland, Helsinki, Finland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-020-8241-8},
|
|
Article-Number = {184},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Mail survey; Online survey; Telephone interview; Young employees;
|
|
Participation; Response; Socioeconomic factors; Workplace;
|
|
Health-related factors; Register linkages},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OCCUPATIONAL SOCIAL-CLASS; DISABILITY RETIREMENT; CLASS INEQUALITIES;
|
|
SURVEY RESPONDENTS; WORKING-CONDITIONS; FOLLOW-UP; NONRESPONSE;
|
|
NONPARTICIPATION; PARTICIPATION; BEHAVIORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {tea.lallukka@helsinki.fi},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pietiläinen, Olli/AAO-1700-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jappinen, Sauli/0000-0002-0286-3390
|
|
Lallukka, Tea/0000-0003-3841-3129
|
|
Rahkonen, Ossi/0000-0002-7202-3274},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {39},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000513899800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000670607200009,
|
|
Author = {McKee, Kelsey and Cabrera, Natasha and Alonso, Angelica and Turcios,
|
|
Miguel and Reich, Stephanie},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of Fathers' and Mothers' Involvement in a Parenting
|
|
Intervention},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHOLOGY OF MEN \& MASCULINITIES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {521-537},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Parental involvement in interventions is key to their success. Drawing
|
|
on data from an ongoing book-based parenting intervention aimed at
|
|
increasing knowledge of child development among fathers and mothers of
|
|
infants, we examined parents' participation and quality of their
|
|
engagement in the first 2 waves of the intervention, when children were
|
|
9 to 12 months old. We also examined the factors that predicted parents'
|
|
level of participation in the intervention. We report 2 sets of
|
|
findings. First, parents participated an average of 2.6 times per week,
|
|
and mothers participated more frequently than fathers. Almost all
|
|
parents reported that they enjoyed reading the books regardless of their
|
|
level of participation, though mothers reported slightly more enjoyment
|
|
than fathers. Second, results of regression tree analyses showed that
|
|
the most important predictor of mothers' and fathers' participation in
|
|
the intervention was whether or not their partner was also
|
|
participating. The other important set of predictors was the level of
|
|
resources, hours worked, education, and household income for fathers and
|
|
employment status and income for mothers. Our findings have important
|
|
implications for improving fathers' and mothers' participation in
|
|
interventions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McKee, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Dept Human Dev \& Quantitat Methodol, 3942 Campus Dr,Benjamin Bldg 143,Suite 3304, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
McKee, Kelsey; Cabrera, Natasha; Alonso, Angelica; Turcios, Miguel, Univ Maryland, Dept Human Dev \& Quantitat Methodol, 3942 Campus Dr,Benjamin Bldg 143,Suite 3304, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Reich, Stephanie, Univ Calif Irvine, Sch Educ, Irvine, CA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/men0000320},
|
|
ISSN = {1524-9220},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-151X},
|
|
Keywords = {fathers; intervention; parenting; participation; infants},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED-CONTROLLED-TRIAL; ENGAGING FATHERS; PREVENTIVE INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
ENGAGEMENT; PROGRAM; FAMILIES; PARTICIPATION; CHILDREN; BARRIERS; HOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Social},
|
|
Author-Email = {kmgarcia@umd.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Turcios, Miguel/0000-0002-3658-4357
|
|
Reich, Stephanie/0000-0002-8799-5236
|
|
McKee, Kelsey/0000-0002-1768-6067},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {82},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000670607200009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000707226800001,
|
|
Author = {Nunez, Javier and Perez, Graciela},
|
|
Title = {The Escape from Malnutrition of Chilean Boys and Girls: Height-for-Age Z
|
|
Scores in Late XIX and XX Centuries},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {19},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {We studied the trends of height-for-age (HAZ) Z scores by socioeconomic
|
|
status (SES) groups of Chilean boys and girls aged 5-18 born between
|
|
1877 and 2001, by performing a meta-analysis of 53 studies reporting
|
|
height-for-age sample data from which 1258 HAZ score datapoints were
|
|
calculated using the 2000 reference growth charts for the US of the
|
|
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). We found stagnant mean
|
|
and median HAZ scores of about -1.55 to -1.75 for the general
|
|
population, and -2.2 to -2.55 for lower SES groups up to cohorts born in
|
|
the 1940s. However, we found an upwards structural change in cohorts
|
|
born after the 1940s, a period in which HAZ scores grew at a pace of
|
|
about 0.25 to 0.30 HAZ per decade. Since this change happened in a
|
|
context of moderate Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth, high and
|
|
persistent income inequality, and stagnant wages of the working class,
|
|
we discuss the extent to which our findings are associated with the
|
|
increase in public social spending and the implementation and expansion
|
|
of a variety of social policies since the 1940s and early 1950s.</p>},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nunez, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Chile, Fac Econ \& Business, Econ Dept, Santiago 832000, Chile.
|
|
Nunez, Javier, Univ Chile, Fac Econ \& Business, Econ Dept, Santiago 832000, Chile.
|
|
Perez, Graciela, Interamer Dev Bank, Washington, DC 20577 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/ijerph181910436},
|
|
Article-Number = {10436},
|
|
EISSN = {1660-4601},
|
|
Keywords = {secular trends; stunting; height; anthropometry; Chile},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {NUTRITIONAL-STATUS; PHYSICAL STATURE; SECULAR TREND; ANTHROPOMETRIC
|
|
HISTORY; SOCIOECONOMIC GROUPS; INEQUALITY; GROWTH; CHILDREN; ARGENTINA;
|
|
MEXICO},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jnunez@fen.uchile.cl
|
|
grperez@fen.uchile.cl},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {130},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000707226800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000810407900001,
|
|
Author = {Rasooly, Alon and Pan, Yancen and Tang, Zhenqing and Jiangjiang, He and
|
|
Ellen, Moriah E. and Manor, Orly and Hu, Shanlian and Davidovitch, Nadav},
|
|
Title = {Quality and Performance Measurement in Primary Diabetes Care: A
|
|
Qualitative Study in Urban China},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH POLICY AND MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Month = {2022 JUN 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Quality measurements in primary healthcare (PHC) have become
|
|
an essential component for improving diabetes outcomes in many
|
|
high-income countries. However, little is known about their
|
|
implementation within the Chinese health-system context and how they are
|
|
perceived by patients, physicians, and policy-makers. We examined
|
|
stakeholders??? perceptions of quality and performance measurements for
|
|
primary diabetes care in Shanghai, China, and analyzed facilitators and
|
|
barriers to implementation. Methods: In-depth interviews with 26 key
|
|
stakeholders were conducted from 2018 to 2019. Participants were sampled
|
|
from two hospitals, four community healthcare centers (CHCs), and four
|
|
institutes involved in regulating CHCs. The Consolidated Framework for
|
|
Implementation Research (CFIR) guided data analysis. Results: Existing
|
|
quality measurements were uniformly implemented via a top-down process,
|
|
with daily monitoring of family doctors??? work and pay-for-performance
|
|
incentives. Barriers included excluding frontline clinicians from
|
|
indicator planning, a lack of transparent reporting, and a rigid
|
|
organizational culture with limited bottom-up feedback. Findings under
|
|
the CFIR construct ???organizational incentives??? suggested that
|
|
current pay-for-performance incentives function as a ???double-edged
|
|
sword,??? increasing family doctors??? motivation to excel while
|
|
creating pressures to ???game the system??? among some physicians. When
|
|
considering the CFIR construct ???reflecting and evaluating,???
|
|
policy-makers perceived the online evaluation application ??? which
|
|
provides daily reports on family doctors??? work ??? to be an essential
|
|
tool for improving quality; however, this information was not visible to
|
|
patients. Findings included under the ???network and communication???
|
|
construct showed that specialists support the work of family doctors by
|
|
providing training and patient consultations in CHCs. Conclusion: The
|
|
quality of healthcare could be considerably enhanced by involving
|
|
patients and physicians in decisions on quality measurement.
|
|
Strengthening hospital???community partnerships can improve the quality
|
|
of primary care in hospital-centric systems. The case of Shanghai
|
|
provides compelling policy lessons for other health systems faced with
|
|
the challenge of improving PHC.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rasooly, A (Corresponding Author), Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Sch Publ Hlth, Beer Sheva, Israel.
|
|
Rasooly, Alon; Ellen, Moriah E.; Davidovitch, Nadav, Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Sch Publ Hlth, Beer Sheva, Israel.
|
|
Pan, Yancen, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Fielding Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
Tang, Zhenqing; Jiangjiang, He, Shanghai Hlth Dev Res Ctr, Shanghai, Peoples R China.
|
|
Manor, Orly, Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Braun Sch Publ Hlth \& Community Med, Jerusalem, Israel.
|
|
Hu, Shanlian, Fudan Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Shanghai, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.34172/ijhpm.2022.6372},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2022},
|
|
EISSN = {2322-5939},
|
|
Keywords = {Quality Indicators; Primary Health Care; Diabetes Mellitus; China; CFIR;
|
|
Implementation Science},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRIMARY-HEALTH-CARE; RISK-FACTORS; PAY; PROGRAM; DISPARITIES; OUTCOMES;
|
|
TAIWAN; REFORM; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {rasooly@post.bgu.ac.il},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Davidovitch, Nadav/0000-0001-5709-9265
|
|
Ellen, Moriah/0000-0001-7127-7283
|
|
Rasooly, Alon/0000-0002-0388-9883},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {72},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000810407900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000261097900003,
|
|
Author = {Walraven, Gijs and Wanyonyi, Sikolia and Stones, William},
|
|
Title = {Management of post-partum hemorrhage in low-income countries},
|
|
Journal = {BEST PRACTICE \& RESEARCH CLINICAL OBSTETRICS \& GYNAECOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {1013-1023},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The provision of safe and effective delivery care for all women in poor
|
|
countries remains elusive, resulting in a continuing burden of mortality
|
|
in general and mortality from post-partum haemorrhage in particular.
|
|
Deployment of a functional health system and effective linkage of the
|
|
health system to communities are the necessary prerequisites for the
|
|
provision of the life-saving technical interventions that will make a
|
|
difference in individual cases. Sadly, two factors militate against
|
|
progress: the mantra that `we know what works' (resulting in some
|
|
serious gaps in evidence for best practice in resource-poor settings)
|
|
and a lack of large-scale investment in maternity services to counteract
|
|
the degradation of infrastructure and depletion of human resources
|
|
evident in many countries.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Walraven, G (Corresponding Author), Aiglemont, Secretariat His Highness Aga Khan, F-60270 Gouvieux, France.
|
|
Walraven, Gijs, Aiglemont, Secretariat His Highness Aga Khan, F-60270 Gouvieux, France.
|
|
Wanyonyi, Sikolia; Stones, William, Aga Khan Univ, Dept Obstet \& Gynaecol, Nairobi, Kenya.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.bpobgyn.2008.08.002},
|
|
ISSN = {1521-6934},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-1932},
|
|
Keywords = {barriers to access to care; developing countries; health systems;
|
|
post-partum haemorrhage},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMERGENCY OBSTETRIC SERVICES; ANTI-SHOCK GARMENT; PERINATAL-MORTALITY;
|
|
MATERNAL MORTALITY; HEALTH-SERVICES; CARE; EDUCATION; PERCEPTIONS;
|
|
REDUCTION; SURVIVAL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {gijs.walraven@aiglemont.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Stones, William/R-8618-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Stones, William/0000-0003-0699-2381},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000261097900003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000473520900005,
|
|
Author = {Hyde, Allen and Vachon, Todd E.},
|
|
Title = {Running with or against the treadmill? Labor unions, institutional
|
|
contexts, and greenhouse gas emissions in a comparative perspective},
|
|
Journal = {ENVIRONMENTAL SOCIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {5},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {269-282},
|
|
Month = {JUL 3},
|
|
Abstract = {In this paper, we examine one institution that has received less
|
|
attention in scholarly debates about greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions,
|
|
despite its inherent connection to economic activity and political
|
|
activism: labor unions. For some, unions represent particularistic
|
|
interest groups that pursue the economic interests of their members at
|
|
the expense of the environment. For others, they represent the organized
|
|
political voice of a working class demanding safe and healthy work
|
|
environments and communities. We also consider how the effect of unions
|
|
is conditioned by institutional context, including the presence of
|
|
employment protection laws and the degree of corporatist governance. We
|
|
use error correction models (ECMs) to examine the relationship between
|
|
union density and GHG emissions among 18 affluent countries between the
|
|
years of 1990 and 2010. We find union density to be associated with
|
|
reduced GHG emissions, net of controls. We also find that unions have a
|
|
greater reducing capacity when they are able to participate in policy
|
|
formation, but that capacity is reduced with the presence of strong
|
|
employment protection laws. We conclude that further research is needed
|
|
before policy decisions are made and hope that this study opens up new
|
|
discussions about the role of labor in addressing climate change.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hyde, A (Corresponding Author), Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Hist \& Sociol, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA.
|
|
Hyde, Allen, Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Hist \& Sociol, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA.
|
|
Vachon, Todd E., Rutgers State Univ, Dept Lab Studies \& Employment Relat, New Brunswick, NJ USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/23251042.2018.1544107},
|
|
ISSN = {2325-1042},
|
|
Keywords = {GHG emissions; labor unions; treadmill theory; climate change; jobs
|
|
versus the environment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE; INCOME INEQUALITY; CARBON
|
|
EMISSIONS; TRADE-UNIONS; CORPORATISM; ENERGY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {allen.hyde@hsoc.gatech.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000473520900005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000220786100022,
|
|
Author = {Armstrong, DL and Strogatz, D and Wang, R},
|
|
Title = {United States coronary mortality trends and community services
|
|
associated with occupational structure, among blacks and whites,
|
|
1984-1998},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {58},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {2349-2361},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper examines the association between US county occupational
|
|
structure, services availability, prevalence of risk factors, and
|
|
coronary mortality rates by sex and race, for 1984 1998. The 3137 US
|
|
counties were classified into five occupational structure categories;
|
|
counties with the lowest percentages of the labor force in managerial,
|
|
professional, and technical occupations were classified in category I
|
|
(5-16\%), counties with the highest percentages were in category V
|
|
(32-59\%). Directly age-adjusted coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality
|
|
rates, for aged 35-64 years, (from vital statistics and Census data),
|
|
per-capita services (County Business Patterns), and the prevalence of
|
|
CHD risk factors (Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Surveys data) were
|
|
calculated for each occupational structure category. CHD mortality rates
|
|
and the prevalence of risk factors were inversely monotonically
|
|
associated with occupational structure categories for white men and
|
|
women but not among black men and women. Numbers of producer services
|
|
for banking, business credit, overall business services and
|
|
personnel/employment services were 2-12 times greater in category V
|
|
versus I counties. Consumer services such as fruit/vegetable markets,
|
|
fitness facilities, doctor offices and social services were 1.6-3 times
|
|
greater in category V versus I counties. Residential racial segregation
|
|
scores remained high in most areas despite declines during 1980-1990;
|
|
occupational segregation by race and gender were shown indicating
|
|
continued institutional racism. An ecological model for conceptualizing
|
|
communities and health and the overall influence of state and national
|
|
occupational structure is discussed; intervention strategies such as
|
|
decreased wage disparities and `living wage' standards and development
|
|
is discussed. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Armstrong, DL (Corresponding Author), SUNY Albany, Dept Epidemiol, 1 Univ Pl, Rensselaer, NY 12144 USA.
|
|
SUNY Albany, Dept Epidemiol, Rensselaer, NY 12144 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2003.08.030},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {coronary heart disease; community health; social class; US counties},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ISCHEMIC-HEART-DISEASE; INSTITUTIONAL-RACISM; SOCIAL-CLASS;
|
|
MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION; SELF-EFFICACY; RISK-FACTORS; NEW-YORK; HEALTH;
|
|
DECLINE; WORKPLACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {dla02@health.state.ny.us},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000220786100022},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000685438800009,
|
|
Author = {Tasseron-Dries, Petra E. M. and Smaling, Hanneke J. A. and Doncker,
|
|
Sarah M. M. M. and Achterberg, Wilco P. and van der Steen, Jenny T.},
|
|
Title = {Family involvement in the Namaste care family program for dementia: A
|
|
qualitative study on experiences of family, nursing home staff, and
|
|
volunteers},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {121},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Family caregivers may experience difficulty maintaining
|
|
meaningful contact with a relative with advanced dementia. Nevertheless,
|
|
some family caregivers prefer to remain involved in the care of their
|
|
relative after admission to a nursing home. Family involvement in the
|
|
care is important but little is known about how this works in practice
|
|
and what exactly is needed to improve it. Objectives: To examine
|
|
experiences of family caregivers, staff and volunteers with family
|
|
caregiver participation in the Namaste Care Family program, a
|
|
psychosocial intervention to increase quality of life for people with
|
|
advanced dementia that may help family caregivers to connect with their
|
|
relative. Further, we aimed to examine facilitators of and barriers to
|
|
family participation. Design: Descriptive exploratory qualitative design
|
|
using semi-structured interviews. Setting: Ten nursing homes in the
|
|
Netherlands. Participants: Ten family caregivers, 31 staff members and 2
|
|
volunteers who participated in the Namaste Care Family Program. Methods:
|
|
Qualitative interview study using thematic analysis. Interviews were
|
|
held with family caregivers, staff members, and volunteers about their
|
|
experiences with the Namaste Care Family program. Results: In general,
|
|
family caregivers experienced their involvement in the Namaste Care
|
|
Family program as positive, particularly the meaningful connections with
|
|
their relative. However, putting family involvement into practice was
|
|
challenging. We identified three themes covering facilitators for and
|
|
barriers to participation: (1) Preferences of family caregivers for
|
|
activities with their relative (Activities): practical activities
|
|
matching one's own interests were seen as facilitating, while perceived
|
|
lack of knowledge and reluctance to engage with other residents were
|
|
barriers. (2) Communication between family caregivers, staff and
|
|
volunteers (Communication): providing clear information about the
|
|
program to family caregivers facilitated their involvement. Feeling
|
|
insecure inhibited family involvement. (3) Personal context of family
|
|
caregivers (Personal circumstances): feeling fulfillment and being
|
|
appreciated facilitated involvement. Older age, having a family of their
|
|
own, a job and complex family relations were barriers to family
|
|
caregiver involvement. Conclusion: To optimize family involvement, it is
|
|
important to adopt a family-centered approach and provide training and
|
|
guidance. Making a personal, comprehensive plan with family caregivers
|
|
and offering them guidance can help them overcome their uncertainty and
|
|
remove barriers to being more involved with a care program aiming to
|
|
improve the quality of life of their relative. Also recommended is
|
|
training for staff to improve communication with family caregivers. The
|
|
Namaste study is registered with the Netherlands Trial Register
|
|
(NTR5692). (c) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an
|
|
open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (
|
|
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ )},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {van der Steen, JT (Corresponding Author), Leiden Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Hippocratespad 21,Gebouw 3,Postal Zone V0-P, NL-2300 RC Leiden, Netherlands.
|
|
Tasseron-Dries, Petra E. M.; Smaling, Hanneke J. A.; Achterberg, Wilco P.; van der Steen, Jenny T., Leiden Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Hippocratespad 21,Gebouw 3,Postal Zone V0-P, NL-2300 RC Leiden, Netherlands.
|
|
Tasseron-Dries, Petra E. M., Stichting Warande Nursing Home Org, Postbus 185, NL-3700 AD Zeist, Netherlands.
|
|
Smaling, Hanneke J. A.; Doncker, Sarah M. M. M.; van der Steen, Jenny T., Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Med Ctr, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst, Dept Publ \& Occupat Hlth, Boelelaan 1117, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Doncker, Sarah M. M. M., Amsterdam UMC, Locat AMC, Dept Med Psychol, Meibergdreef 9, NL-1105 AZ Amsterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2021.103968},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {103968},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-7489},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-491X},
|
|
Keywords = {Dementia; Experiences; Family caregivers; Nursing home; Quality of life;
|
|
Family involvement; Qualitative research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OLDER-PEOPLE; CAREGIVERS; RESIDENTS; RELATIVES; COMMUNICATION;
|
|
INTERVENTION; WORKING},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {P.E.M.Tasseron@LUMC.nl
|
|
H.J.A.Smaling@lumc.nl
|
|
S.Doncker@amsterdamumc.nl
|
|
W.P.Achterberg@lumc.nl
|
|
JTvandersteen@lumc.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {van der Steen, Jenny T./E-5118-2016
|
|
Smaling, Hanneke/Y-7412-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {van der Steen, Jenny T./0000-0002-9063-7501
|
|
Achterberg, Wilco/0000-0001-9227-7135
|
|
Smaling, Hanneke/0000-0002-7836-431X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {29},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000685438800009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000880444000002,
|
|
Author = {Ralph, Kelcie and Morris, Eric A. and Kwon, Jaekyeong},
|
|
Title = {Disability, access to out-of-home activities, and subjective well-being},
|
|
Journal = {TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART A-POLICY AND PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {163},
|
|
Pages = {209-227},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {People with disabilities tend to participate in fewer out-of-home
|
|
activities, raising concerns about their well-being. This paper
|
|
investigates travel and activity barriers faced by people with
|
|
disabilities using data from the American Time Use Survey from 2008 to
|
|
2019. Our dependent variable of interest is a measure of realized
|
|
accessibility known as a travel time price: that is, the number of
|
|
travel minutes associated with each minute of out-of-home activity time.
|
|
In using this measure, we first confirm that out-of-home activities are
|
|
associated with greater subjective wellbeing, that travel is associated
|
|
with relatively low well-being, and that travel time prices are
|
|
negatively associated with life satisfaction. We next find that people
|
|
with disabilities typically pay a travel time price premium 50 percent
|
|
higher than those without disabilities for all out-of-home activities,
|
|
and 11 percent higher for work trips. These premiums narrow but persist
|
|
when accounting for personal characteristics and travel mode. We discuss
|
|
the unique contributions of simple linear and multiple regression
|
|
results, given that disability is so closely linked to personal
|
|
characteristics like employment, income, and marital status. We then
|
|
disaggregate the results by type of disability and close by presenting
|
|
ideas for removing transportation and activity barriers for the
|
|
heterogenous population of people with disabilities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ralph, K (Corresponding Author), Rutgers State Univ, Bloustein Sch Planning \& Publ Policy, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
|
|
Ralph, Kelcie; Kwon, Jaekyeong, Rutgers State Univ, Bloustein Sch Planning \& Publ Policy, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
|
|
Morris, Eric A., Clemson Univ, Nieri Family Dept Construct Dev \& Planning, Clemson, SC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.tra.2022.06.006},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0965-8564},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-2375},
|
|
Keywords = {Disability; Access; Travel time price; Out-of-home activities; Travel;
|
|
Subjective well-being},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VISUAL IMPAIRMENT; EMPLOYMENT; WORKERS; PEOPLE; TIME; MOBILITY; ADULTS;
|
|
TRANSPORTATION; PARTICIPATION; EXPLORATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Transportation; Transportation Science \& Technology},
|
|
Author-Email = {kelcie.ralph@ejb.rutgers.edu
|
|
emorri7@clemson.edu
|
|
jk1639@scarletmail.rutgers.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {91},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000880444000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000359765500001,
|
|
Author = {Stapelfeldt, Christina M. and Labriola, Merete and Jensen, Anders Bonde
|
|
and Andersen, Niels Trolle and Momsen, Anne-Mette H. and Nielsen, Claus
|
|
Vinther},
|
|
Title = {Municipal return to work management in cancer survivors undergoing
|
|
cancer treatment: a protocol on a controlled intervention study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Month = {JUL 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Cancer survivors are often left on their own to deal with
|
|
the challenges of resuming work during or after cancer treatment, mainly
|
|
due to unclear agreements between stakeholders responsible for
|
|
occupational rehabilitation. Social inequality exists in cancer risk,
|
|
survival probability and continues with regard to the chance of being
|
|
able to return to work.
|
|
The aim is to apply an early, individually tailored occupational
|
|
rehabilitation intervention to cancer survivors in two municipalities
|
|
parallel with cancer treatment focusing on enhancing readiness for
|
|
return to work.
|
|
Methods/Design: In a controlled trial municipal job consultants use
|
|
acceptance and commitment therapy dialogue and
|
|
individual-placement-and-support-inspired tools with cancer survivors to
|
|
engage them in behaviour changes toward readiness for return to work.
|
|
The workplace is involved in the return to work process.
|
|
Patients referred to surgery, radiotherapy or chemotherapy at the
|
|
Oncology Department, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark for the
|
|
diagnoses; breast, colon-rectal, head and neck, thyroid gland,
|
|
testicular, ovarian or cervix cancer are eligible for the study.
|
|
Patients must be residents in the municipalities of Silkeborg or
|
|
Randers, 18-60 years of age and have a permanent or temporary employment
|
|
(with at least 6 months left of their contract) at inclusion. Patients,
|
|
for whom the treating physician considers occupational rehabilitation to
|
|
be unethical, or who are not reading or talking Danish are excluded. The
|
|
control group has identical inclusion and exclusion criteria except for
|
|
municipality of residence.
|
|
Return to work is the primary outcome and is indentified in a social
|
|
transfer payment register. Effect is assessed as relative cumulative
|
|
incidences within 52 weeks and will be analysed in generalised linear
|
|
regression models using the pseudo values method. As a secondary
|
|
outcome; co-morbidity and socio-economic status is analysed as effect
|
|
modifiers of the intervention effect on return to work.
|
|
Discussion: The innovative element of this intervention is the timing of
|
|
the occupational rehabilitation which is much earlier initiated than
|
|
usual and the active involvement of the workplace. We anticipate that
|
|
vulnerable cancer survivors will benefit from this approach and reduce
|
|
the effects of social inequality on workability.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Stapelfeldt, CM (Corresponding Author), MarselisborgCentret, Publ Hlth \& Qual Improvement CFK, PP Oerums Gade 11,Bldg 1B, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
|
|
Stapelfeldt, Christina M.; Labriola, Merete; Momsen, Anne-Mette H.; Nielsen, Claus Vinther, MarselisborgCentret, Publ Hlth \& Qual Improvement CFK, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
|
|
Jensen, Anders Bonde, Aarhus Univ Hosp, Dept Oncol, DK-8000 Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
Andersen, Niels Trolle, Aarhus Univ, Dept Publ Hlth, Biostat Sect, Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
Nielsen, Claus Vinther, Aarhus Univ, Dept Publ Hlth, Sect Clin Social Med \& Rehabil, Aarhus, Denmark.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-015-2062-1},
|
|
Article-Number = {720},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Acceptance and commitment therapy; Cancer survivor; Controlled trial;
|
|
Individual placement and support; Intervention; Occupational
|
|
rehabilitation; Readiness for return to work; Social inequality;
|
|
Workplace},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; SICKNESS ABSENCE; BREAST-CANCER;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; REHABILITATION; RISK; PREDICTORS; DISABILITY; READINESS;
|
|
WORKPLACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {ChristinaMalmose.Stapelfeldt@stab.rm.dk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Nielsen, Claus Vinther/0000-0002-2467-1103},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {37},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000359765500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000285649200004,
|
|
Author = {Brauers, Willem Karel M. and Ginevicius, Romualdas and Podvezko,
|
|
Valentinas},
|
|
Title = {REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN LITHUANIA CONSIDERING MULTIPLE OBJECTIVES BY THE
|
|
MOORA METHOD},
|
|
Journal = {TECHNOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF ECONOMY},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {613-640},
|
|
Abstract = {The inequality between the regional incomes in a nation with a developed
|
|
fiscal and para-fiscal regime including social security will be
|
|
equilibrated automatically by transfer payments from the richer to the
|
|
poorer regions. The automatic system is not a guaranty for success.
|
|
Internationally a project oriented system of the international
|
|
organizations is known instead of an automatic system but the final goal
|
|
is not always very clear. Multiple Objectives Optimization looks more
|
|
robust to obtain regional and international development. Moreover a
|
|
system of transfer payments is not sufficient to measure the well being
|
|
of a regional population. In the well-being economy, each individual
|
|
would have to feel good concerning material wealth, health, education,
|
|
all kind of security and concerning the environment. With other words,
|
|
multiple objectives have to be fulfilled. However, these different
|
|
multiple objectives are expressed in different units. Weights are most
|
|
of the time used to equalize these different units. Introduction of
|
|
weights means introduction of subjectivity. In order to avoid this
|
|
dilemma, the internal mechanical solution of a ratio system, producing
|
|
dimensionless numbers, is preferred: MOORA. In addition, this outcome
|
|
creates the opportunity to use an additional non-subjective reference
|
|
point theory. The choice and importance of the objectives is also
|
|
non-subjective if all stakeholders involved come to an agreement. This
|
|
theory is applied on the different counties of Lithuania. At that moment
|
|
it is no more only a question of redistribution of income but also of a
|
|
national policy of new constructions, of tourism development, of
|
|
pollution abatement and of energy renewables, after the European
|
|
Commission ``related to the promotion of local employment{''}.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brauers, WKM (Corresponding Author), Vilnius Gediminas Tech Univ, Sauletekio Al 11, LT-10223 Vilnius, Lithuania.
|
|
Brauers, Willem Karel M.; Ginevicius, Romualdas; Podvezko, Valentinas, Vilnius Gediminas Tech Univ, LT-10223 Vilnius, Lithuania.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3846/tede.2010.38},
|
|
ISSN = {2029-4913},
|
|
EISSN = {2029-4921},
|
|
Keywords = {MOORA (Multiple Objectives Optimization by Ratio Analysis); ratio
|
|
system; Reference Point Theory; regional development; redistribution of
|
|
income; labor drain},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {willem.brauers@ua.ac.be
|
|
romualdas.ginevicius@vgtu.lt
|
|
valentinas.podvezko@vgtu.lt},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Brauers, Willem/AAS-5072-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ginevicius, Romualdas/0000-0003-2067-4398},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {67},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000285649200004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000572101100011,
|
|
Author = {Perez-Eransus, Begona and Martinez-Virto, Lucia},
|
|
Title = {Understanding Social Exclusion through Minimum Income Recipients' Living
|
|
Conditions: Proposals fora New Institutional Social Inclusion Strategy},
|
|
Journal = {INTERSECTIONS-EAST EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIETY AND POLITICS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {154-175},
|
|
Abstract = {There is a long academic and institutional trajectory that understands
|
|
social exclusion as an accumulation of barriers that hinder social
|
|
participation. However, stereotypes about misuse and dependency on
|
|
social benefits continue to be widespread in society. Fighting poverty
|
|
is the first objective of sustainable development and the UN's 2030
|
|
Agenda for Sustainable Development. Commitment is needed from
|
|
institutions to disseminate real information about people living in
|
|
exclusion. This study of the living conditions of Minimum Income
|
|
recipients in Navarre (Spain) shows that households that stay longer in
|
|
the scheme encounter serious obstacles accessing employment, including
|
|
unrecognized physical and mental illnesses, are required to care for
|
|
dependents, or have weak job skills. The related study was conducted
|
|
through a database analysis of 14,000 benefit recipients and in-depth
|
|
interviews with 20 recipients.(1) The results show that inclusion
|
|
through work continues to play a central role in the fight against
|
|
social exclusion. However, this remains a difficult goal to achieve for
|
|
many recipients, and employment does not always guarantee social
|
|
inclusion due to harsh conditions and low salaries. This article
|
|
recognizes the inclusive potential of economic benefits, since they
|
|
prevent the deterioration of living conditions and favor social
|
|
participation. Finally, it suggests a new institutional strategy based
|
|
on two activities: designing inclusion-based activities around the real
|
|
needs of poor people, and promoting the commitment of all actors and
|
|
agents in society in the fight against poverty.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Perez-Eransus, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Publ Navarra, Pamplona, Spain.
|
|
Perez-Eransus, Begona; Martinez-Virto, Lucia, Univ Publ Navarra, Pamplona, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.17356/ieejsp.v6i2.614},
|
|
EISSN = {2416-089X},
|
|
Keywords = {minimum income benefits; social exclusion; inclusion policy; UN
|
|
Sustainable Development Goals; poverty; institutional strategy},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing; Political Science},
|
|
Author-Email = {begonia.perez@unavarra.es
|
|
lucia.martinez@unavarra.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Virto, Lucía Martínez/ABF-9331-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Virto, Lucía Martínez/0000-0003-3348-6564},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000572101100011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000361212400029,
|
|
Author = {Pinto, Rogerio M. and Gimenez, Silvia and Spector, Anyay. and Choi, Jean
|
|
and Martinez, Omar J. D. and Wall, Melanie},
|
|
Title = {HIV practitioners in Madrid and New York improving inclusion of
|
|
underrepresented populations in research},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH PROMOTION INTERNATIONAL},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {695-705},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Practitioners have frequent contact with populations underrepresented in
|
|
scientific research-ethnic/racial groups, sexual minorities and others
|
|
at risk for poor health and whose low participation in research does not
|
|
reflect their representation in the general population. Practitioners
|
|
aspire to partner with researchers to conduct research that benefits
|
|
underrepresented groups. However, practitioners are often overlooked as
|
|
a work force that can help erase inclusion disparities. We recruited (n
|
|
= 282) practitioners (e.g. physicians, social workers, health educators)
|
|
to examine associations between their attitudes toward research
|
|
purposes, risks, benefits and confidentiality and their involvement in
|
|
recruitment, interviewing and intervention facilitation. Participants
|
|
worked in community-based agencies in Madrid and New York City (NYC),
|
|
two large and densely populated cities. We used cross-sectional data and
|
|
two-sample tests to compare attitudes toward research and practitioner
|
|
involvement in recruiting, interviewing and facilitating interventions.
|
|
We fit logistic regression models to assess associations between
|
|
practitioner attitudes toward ethical practices and recruitment,
|
|
interviewing and facilitating interventions. The likelihood of
|
|
recruiting, interviewing and facilitating was more pronounced among
|
|
practitioners agreeing more strongly with ethical research practices.
|
|
Though Madrid practitioners reported stronger agreement with ethical
|
|
research practices, NYC practitioners were more involved in recruiting,
|
|
interviewing and facilitating interventions. Practitioners can be
|
|
trained to improve attitudes toward ethical practices and increase
|
|
inclusion of underrepresented populations in research. Funders and
|
|
researchers are encouraged to offer opportunities for practitioner
|
|
involvement by supporting research infrastructure development in local
|
|
agencies. Practices that promise to facilitate inclusion herein may be
|
|
used in other countries.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pinto, RM (Corresponding Author), Columbia Univ, Sch Social Work, New York, NY 10027 USA.
|
|
Pinto, Rogerio M., Columbia Univ, Sch Social Work, New York, NY 10027 USA.
|
|
Gimenez, Silvia, Univ Rey Juan Carlos, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Spector, Anyay.; Martinez, Omar J. D., New York State Psychiat Inst \& Hosp, HIV Ctr Clin \& Behav Studies, New York, NY 10032 USA.
|
|
Spector, Anyay.; Martinez, Omar J. D., Columbia Univ, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Choi, Jean; Wall, Melanie, New York State Psychiat Inst \& Hosp, Div Biostat, New York, NY 10032 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapro/dau015},
|
|
ISSN = {0957-4824},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2245},
|
|
Keywords = {HIV practitioners; ethical inclusion of underrepresented populations;
|
|
health services research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; LATINO MEN; COLLABORATION; COMMUNITIES; PERSPECTIVES;
|
|
PREVENTION; SYPHILIS; SYSTEM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {rmp98@columbia.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Wall, Melanie/AAE-7828-2019},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000361212400029},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000397304800014,
|
|
Author = {Kiersztyn, Anna},
|
|
Title = {Fixed-Term Employment and Occupational Position in Poland: The
|
|
Heterogeneity of Temporary Jobs},
|
|
Journal = {EUROPEAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {881-894},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Occupational heterogeneity in non-standard employment is an important
|
|
and policy-relevant topic of investigation, and one which has not
|
|
received sufficient attention. The main thesis of this article is that
|
|
the function of fixed-term contracts, which in turn affects the
|
|
situation and career prospects of employees, is dependent on occupation.
|
|
Using data from European Survey of Income and Living Conditions,
|
|
2005-2008, I investigate the heterogeneities among fixed-term employees
|
|
in various occupational categories in Poland, by analysing differences
|
|
in (i) the demographic and socio-economic composition of temporary
|
|
workers, (ii) the size of the wage penalty for fixed-term employment,
|
|
and (iii) the chances of transition from fixed-term into open-ended
|
|
employment. The results suggest that in managerial and professional
|
|
occupations temporary contracts are more likely to be used during trial
|
|
periods for newly hired workers and may serve as stepping stones to
|
|
stable jobs, as reflected by the higher rates of mobility into
|
|
open-ended employment. Temporary jobs in low-status service and manual
|
|
occupations appear to result mainly from employers' attempts to
|
|
facilitate worker dismissal rather than their need to verify the skills
|
|
of new employees, and are more likely to become a dead end for workers.
|
|
However, although fixed-term workers in higher-status occupations seem
|
|
to be better off than their counterparts in services, trade, and manual
|
|
labour, the evidence does not support the claim that the former resemble
|
|
the so-called `boundaryless' employees, who suffer no negative
|
|
consequences of their fixed-term status.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kiersztyn, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Warsaw, Inst Sociol, PL-00927 Warsaw, Poland.
|
|
Kiersztyn, Anna, Univ Warsaw, Inst Sociol, PL-00927 Warsaw, Poland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/esr/jcw044},
|
|
ISSN = {0266-7215},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-2672},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKET FLEXIBILITY; FLEXIBLE EMPLOYMENT; INEQUALITY; CONTRACTS;
|
|
WORKERS; CONSEQUENCES; TRANSITIONS; GERMANY; BRIDGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {chaber@is.uw.edu.pl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kiersztyn, Anna/AAH-9353-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kiersztyn, Anna/0000-0001-8112-6059},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000397304800014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000240608500004,
|
|
Author = {Sakellariou, Chris},
|
|
Title = {Benefits of general vs vocational/technical education in Singapore using
|
|
quantile regressions},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {358-376},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose - This study sets out to investigate the pattern of benefits
|
|
from education along the earnings distribution and compares this pattern
|
|
between general and vocational/technical education in Singapore, with a
|
|
particular focus on male-female differences.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach - Quantile regression methodology is used,
|
|
which allows for estimates of education benefits that differentiate the
|
|
contribution of the quantity and quality of education along the earnings
|
|
distribution. The quantile regression estimates highlight where in the
|
|
income/ability distribution the impact of education is more pronounced.
|
|
Findings - Finds that, while the pattern of returns to an additional
|
|
year of education for general education follows that of other high
|
|
income countries, exhibiting increasing returns to education as one goes
|
|
from lower to higher income quantiles, the returns to vocational
|
|
education exhibit much lower heterogeneity. Based on the findings, the
|
|
vocational education system in Singapore has served women with secondary
|
|
vocational qualifications particularly well. They earn more, have higher
|
|
labor force participation, experience higher employment rates and are
|
|
associated with a narrower gender earnings gap compared with women with
|
|
general education. However, this is not the case for women with
|
|
polytechnic qualifications, who earn much less than men with such
|
|
qualifications.
|
|
Practical implications - The findings suggest that, by and large,
|
|
Singapore's vocational education system at the secondary level has
|
|
successfully addressed the needs of the industry and has contributed
|
|
towards narrowing gender earnings differentials. It has also contributed
|
|
towards less overall earnings inequality, because it results in less
|
|
heterogeneity in the returns to education, compared with general
|
|
education. However, the curricula of polytechnics need to be re-examined
|
|
to identify the cause of the sharply lower female benefits from this
|
|
type of education.
|
|
Originality/value - The paper contributes to the empirical literature
|
|
with its use of the quantile regression methodology in evaluating the
|
|
benefits of vocational versus general education for men and women.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sakellariou, C (Corresponding Author), Nanyang Technol Univ, Sch Humanities \& Social Sci, Dept Econ, Singapore, Singapore.
|
|
Nanyang Technol Univ, Sch Humanities \& Social Sci, Dept Econ, Singapore, Singapore.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/01437720610679214},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-7720},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6577},
|
|
Keywords = {vocational training; rate of return; gender; Singapore},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COUNTRIES; RETURN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {acsake@ntu.edu.sg},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {31},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000240608500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000943647800001,
|
|
Author = {Kleinman, Mary B. and Anvari, Morgan S. and Bradley, Valerie D. and
|
|
Felton, Julia W. and Belcher, Annabelle M. and Seitz-Brown, C. J. and
|
|
Greenblatt, Aaron D. and Dean, Dwayne and Bennett, Melanie and Magidson,
|
|
Jessica F.},
|
|
Title = {``Sometimes you have to take the person and show them how{''}: adapting
|
|
behavioral activation for peer recovery specialist-delivery to improve
|
|
methadone treatment retention},
|
|
Journal = {SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT PREVENTION AND POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAR 6},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundDespite efficacy of medication for opioid use disorder,
|
|
low-income, ethno-racial minoritized populations often experience poor
|
|
opioid use disorder treatment outcomes. Peer recovery specialists,
|
|
individuals with lived experience of substance use and recovery, are
|
|
well-positioned to engage hard-to-reach patients in treatment for opioid
|
|
use disorder. Traditionally, peer recovery specialists have focused on
|
|
bridging to care rather than delivering interventions. This study builds
|
|
on research in other low-resource contexts that has explored peer
|
|
delivery of evidence-based interventions, such as behavioral activation,
|
|
to expand access to care.MethodsWe sought feedback on the feasibility
|
|
and acceptability of a peer recovery specialist-delivered behavioral
|
|
activation intervention supporting retention in methadone treatment by
|
|
increasing positive reinforcement. We recruited patients and staff at a
|
|
community-based methadone treatment center and peer recovery specialist
|
|
working across Baltimore City, Maryland, USA. Semi-structured interviews
|
|
and focus groups inquired about the feasibility and acceptability of
|
|
behavioral activation, recommendations for adaptation, and acceptability
|
|
of working with a peer alongside methadone treatment.ResultsParticipants
|
|
(N = 32) shared that peer recovery specialist-delivered behavioral
|
|
activation could be feasible and acceptable with adaptations. They
|
|
described common challenges associated with unstructured time, for which
|
|
behavioral activation could be particularly relevant. Participants
|
|
provided examples of how a peer-delivered intervention could fit well in
|
|
the context of methadone treatment, emphasizing the importance of
|
|
flexibility and specific peer qualities.ConclusionsImproving medication
|
|
for opioid use disorder outcomes is a national priority that must be met
|
|
with cost-effective, sustainable strategies to support individuals in
|
|
treatment. Findings will guide adaptation of a peer recovery
|
|
specialist-delivered behavioral activation intervention to improve
|
|
methadone treatment retention for underserved, ethno-racial minoritized
|
|
individuals living with opioid use disorder.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kleinman, MB (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Dept Psychol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Kleinman, Mary B.; Anvari, Morgan S.; Bradley, Valerie D.; Seitz-Brown, C. J.; Dean, Dwayne; Magidson, Jessica F., Univ Maryland, Dept Psychol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Felton, Julia W., Henry Ford Hlth Syst, Ctr Hlth Policy, Hlth Serv Res, Detroit, MI USA.
|
|
Belcher, Annabelle M.; Greenblatt, Aaron D.; Bennett, Melanie, Univ Maryland, Dept Psychiat, Sch Med, Baltimore, MD USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13011-023-00524-3},
|
|
Article-Number = {15},
|
|
EISSN = {1747-597X},
|
|
Keywords = {Peer recovery specialist; Behavioral activation; Methadone; Opioid use
|
|
disorder; Health disparities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUBSTANCE USE; BUPRENORPHINE TREATMENT; USE DISORDERS; SUPPORT;
|
|
INDIVIDUALS; HEALTH; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Substance Abuse},
|
|
Author-Email = {mkleinm@umd.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Anvari, Morgan/0000-0003-0732-2574},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000943647800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000558696900013,
|
|
Author = {Olilingo, Fahruddin Zain and Putra, Aditya Halim Perdana Kusuma},
|
|
Title = {How Indonesia Economics Works: Correlation Analysis of Macroeconomics in
|
|
2010 - 2019},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ASIAN FINANCE ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {117-130},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of this study is to provide benefits and ethically-rooted
|
|
managerial implications based on theoretical underpinnings through an
|
|
empirical study using correlation between wages, bank credit, government
|
|
expenditure on economic growth, and employment via a case study in
|
|
Indonesia. Besides that, managerial implications strive to provide
|
|
benefits to the government regarding the importance of establishing
|
|
effective and pro-development regulations to realize economic growth and
|
|
employment through the efficient role of wages, bank credit, and
|
|
government spending. This study uses secondary macroeconomic data from
|
|
the period 2010-2019 with analysis using the correlation test with the
|
|
Pearson correlation method. Out of eight hypotheses tested, two
|
|
hypotheses do not have a significant correlation. The details of the
|
|
statistical results obtained the following correlations: the correlation
|
|
between bank credit and wages has a significant, but indirect (negative)
|
|
correlation. However, the correlation between bank credit and economic
|
|
growth has a direct and significant (positive) correlation. Government
|
|
expenditure correlates positively with wages, but correlates negatively
|
|
with bank credit. Wages are positively correlated with economic growth,
|
|
but have no significant effect on employment. Finally, economic growth
|
|
has a positive correlation with government expenditure, but does not
|
|
have a significant correlation with employment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Olilingo, FZ (Corresponding Author), Univ Negeri Gorontalo, Fac Econ, Dept Econ Dev Studies, Jend Sudirman St 6, Gorontalo City 96128, Gorontalo, Indonesia.
|
|
Olilingo, Fahruddin Zain, Univ Negeri Gorontalo, Fac Econ, Dept Econ Dev Studies, Jend Sudirman St 6, Gorontalo City 96128, Gorontalo, Indonesia.
|
|
Putra, Aditya Halim Perdana Kusuma, Univ Muslim Indonesia, Fac Econ \& Business, Dept Management, Makassar, Indonesia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.13106/jafeb.2020.vol7.no8.117},
|
|
ISSN = {2288-4637},
|
|
EISSN = {2288-4645},
|
|
Keywords = {Bank Credit; Wages; Government Expenditure; Economics Growth; Employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MINIMUM-WAGE; GROWTH EVIDENCE; MILITARY EXPENDITURE; POLICY UNCERTAINTY;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; CREDIT; US; INCOME; DISCRIMINATION; INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business},
|
|
Author-Email = {fzo.fekonung@gmail.com
|
|
adityatrojhan@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Putra, Aditya Halim Perdana Kusuma/AAB-6490-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Putra, Aditya Halim Perdana Kusuma/0000-0002-9530-4554},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000558696900013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000616990400001,
|
|
Author = {Cameron, Carl and Townend, Abbey},
|
|
Title = {How might we best support the effective and meaningful employment of
|
|
autistic people and improve outcomes?},
|
|
Journal = {ADVANCES IN AUTISM},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {41-48},
|
|
Month = {MAY 12},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose
|
|
To determine the most appropriate and effective support to enable
|
|
autistic people to gain and maintain employment in their chosen field.
|
|
This paper aims to determine this and by which methods are most suitable
|
|
for this kind of support, with a focus on mentoring.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach
|
|
Mentoring is an intervention that has shown promise in assisting people
|
|
who encounter barriers in finding work (for example, Roycroft, 2014).
|
|
This research was conducted to determine whether the mentoring of
|
|
autistic adults is effective in helping them to gain and maintain
|
|
employment. The study examined the mentoring records of 90 autistic
|
|
adults who were in receipt of funded mentoring with 18 separate
|
|
organisations across England.
|
|
Findings
|
|
The authors found that the nationally recognised statistic of autistic
|
|
people in full-time employment as 16\% (National Autistic Society, 2016)
|
|
was ambitious and subject to regional variation. Based on the results of
|
|
a programme providing employment and mentoring support that is available
|
|
and accessible to autistic people, however, outcomes improve and
|
|
employment is more likely to be achieved and maintained - including in
|
|
areas of, especially low employment. It was found that 48\% of autistic
|
|
job seekers who were supported by specialist mentors found paid
|
|
employment (full-time or part-time), demonstrating a 16\% increase in
|
|
paid employment between those who received mentoring support and those
|
|
who did not.
|
|
Research limitations/implications
|
|
A wider study across the UK would first determine if the nationally
|
|
recognised figure is incorrect and also highlight those areas of the
|
|
country which perform particularly well or badly.
|
|
Originality/value
|
|
This paper believes that this is the only research of it is kind in the
|
|
UK and that it is a springboard for others who have greater resources
|
|
available to them. This study is two very early-career academics on the
|
|
autism spectrum with limited resources available to us.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cameron, C (Corresponding Author), Matthews Hub, Kingston Upon Hull, N Humberside, England.
|
|
Cameron, Carl; Townend, Abbey, Matthews Hub, Kingston Upon Hull, N Humberside, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/AIA-08-2020-0046},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2056-3868},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental},
|
|
Author-Email = {carl@matthewshub.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000616990400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000224921200014,
|
|
Author = {Toroyan, T and Oakley, A and Laing, G and Roberts, I and Mugford, M and
|
|
Turner, J},
|
|
Title = {The impact of day care on socially disadvantaged families: an example of
|
|
the use of process evaluation within a randomized controlled trial},
|
|
Journal = {CHILD CARE HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {691-698},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Aim This paper describes a process evaluation that was conducted
|
|
alongside a randomized controlled trial of out-of-home pre-school day
|
|
care. The evaluation aimed to: (1) describe the intervention; (2)
|
|
document the day care received by participating families; (3) describe
|
|
the social context of the trial; and (4) provide data to assist in the
|
|
interpretation of trial outcomes.
|
|
Methods The setting for the trial was an out-of-home day care Centre in
|
|
Hackney, East London. Process data were collected through the use of
|
|
questionnaires, interviews, and researcher field-notes. Data from
|
|
questionnaires were collected from 120 mothers and included data on 143
|
|
children. Interviews were undertaken with 21 participating mothers.
|
|
Staff also completed questionnaires and the Head of the Centre was
|
|
interviewed. The quality of care provided was assessed using the Early
|
|
Childhood Environment Rating Scale.
|
|
Results Process data collected during the trial suggest that the day
|
|
care provided was education-led, flexible in catering to families'
|
|
needs, and was of a very high quality. The social context of the trial
|
|
resulted in financial pressures, which may well have influenced the
|
|
intervention provided. Data collected through in-depth interviews
|
|
suggested that it may be the flexibility of day care that is
|
|
particularly important in allowing women to return to paid employment,
|
|
but that the loss of benefits when starting work may have meant no
|
|
increase in household income.
|
|
Conclusion The paper illustrates the value of conducting a process
|
|
evaluation alongside a randomized trial, particularly where complex
|
|
interventions are involved. In this case, where the intervention was not
|
|
provided by the research team, the evaluation allowed an insight into
|
|
the content of a multifaceted intervention, which is useful in
|
|
interpreting the trial's results, and in explaining the possible effects
|
|
of the social context on the intervention.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Toroyan, T (Corresponding Author), Univ London London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Nutr \& Publ Hlth Intervent Res Unit, 1st Floor,Wolfson Bldg,Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England.
|
|
Univ London London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Nutr \& Publ Hlth Intervent Res Unit, London WC1E 7HT, England.
|
|
Univ London, Inst Educ, Social Sci Res Unit, London WC1N 1AZ, England.
|
|
City \& Hackney Primary Care Trust, Child \& Adolescent Serv, London, England.
|
|
Univ E Anglia, Sch Med Hlth Policy \& Practice, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
|
|
Mapledene Early Years Ctr, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1365-2214.2004.00481.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0305-1862},
|
|
Keywords = {evaluation; pre-school day care; household income; social intervention;
|
|
randomization},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; INTERVENTIONS; DESIGN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {toroyant@who.int},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {20},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000224921200014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000455483000066,
|
|
Author = {Goel, Sonu and Angeli, Federica and Dhirar, Nonita and Sangwan, Garima
|
|
and Thakur, Kanchan and Ruwaard, Dirk},
|
|
Title = {Factors affecting medical students' interests in working in rural areas
|
|
in North India-A qualitative inquiry},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN 10},
|
|
Abstract = {Background and Objective
|
|
The shortage of doctors, especially in rural areas, is a major concern
|
|
in India, which in turn affects the effective delivery of health care
|
|
services. To support new policies able to address this issue, a study
|
|
was conducted to determine the discouraging and encouraging factors
|
|
affecting medical students' interests towards working in rural areas.
|
|
Methods
|
|
This cross-sectional, descriptive qualitative study has been conducted
|
|
in three states of North India. It comprised six focus group
|
|
discussions, each consisting of 10-20 medical students of six government
|
|
medical colleges. The verbatim and thematic codes have been transcribed
|
|
by using a `categorical aggregation approach'. The discussions were
|
|
thematically analyzed.
|
|
Results
|
|
Ninety medical students participated in the study. The discouraging
|
|
factors were grouped under two broad themes namely unchallenging
|
|
professional environment (poor accommodation facilities and lack of
|
|
necessary infrastructure; lack of drug and equipment supplies;
|
|
inadequate human resource support; lesser travel and research
|
|
opportunities) and gap between financial rewards and social
|
|
disadvantages (lower salary and incentives, social isolation, political
|
|
interference, lack of security). Similarly, the encouraging factors were
|
|
congregated under three main themes namely willingness to give back to
|
|
disadvantaged communities (desire to serve poor, underprivileged and
|
|
home community), broader clinical exposure (preferential admission in
|
|
post-graduation after working more than 2-3 years in rural areas) and
|
|
higher status and respect (achieving higher social status).
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
This qualitative study highlights key factors affecting medical
|
|
students' interest to work in rural areas. A substantial similarity was
|
|
noted between the factors which emerge from the current study and those
|
|
documented in other countries. These findings will help policy-makers
|
|
and medical educators to design and implement a comprehensive human
|
|
resource strategy that shall target specific factors to encourage
|
|
medical students to choose job positions in rural areas.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Goel, S (Corresponding Author), Post Grad Inst Med Educ \& Res, Dept Community Med, Chandigarh, India.
|
|
Goel, S (Corresponding Author), Post Grad Inst Med Educ \& Res, Sch Publ Hlth, Chandigarh, India.
|
|
Goel, Sonu; Dhirar, Nonita; Sangwan, Garima; Thakur, Kanchan, Post Grad Inst Med Educ \& Res, Dept Community Med, Chandigarh, India.
|
|
Goel, Sonu; Dhirar, Nonita; Sangwan, Garima; Thakur, Kanchan, Post Grad Inst Med Educ \& Res, Sch Publ Hlth, Chandigarh, India.
|
|
Angeli, Federica; Ruwaard, Dirk, Maastricht Univ, Fac Hlth Med \& Life Sci, Care \& Publ Hlth Res Inst, Dept Hlth Serv Res, Maastricht, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0210251},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0210251},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; HEALTH; RECRUITMENT; CHALLENGES; RETENTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {sonugoel007@yahoo.co.in},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Goel, Sonu/F-7956-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Goel, Sonu/0000-0001-5231-7083
|
|
Angeli, Federica/0000-0003-4010-3103
|
|
Ruwaard, Dirk/0000-0003-4887-8413},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000455483000066},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000593028300016,
|
|
Author = {Ludwick, Teralynn and Morgan, Alison and Kane, Sumit and Kelaher,
|
|
Margaret and McPake, Barbara},
|
|
Title = {The distinctive roles of urban community health workers in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries: a scoping review of the literature},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {1039-1052},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Addressing urban health challenges in low- and middle-income countries
|
|
(LMICs) has been hampered by lack of evidence on effective mechanisms
|
|
for delivering health services to the poor. The urban disadvantaged
|
|
experience poor health outcomes (often worse than rural counterparts)
|
|
and face service barriers. While community health workers (CHWs) have
|
|
been extensively employed in rural communities to address inequities,
|
|
little attention has been given to understanding the roles of CHWs in
|
|
urban contexts. This study is the first to systematically examine urban
|
|
CHW roles in LMICs. It aims to understand their roles vis-a-vis other
|
|
health providers and raise considerations for informing future scope of
|
|
practice and service delivery models. We developed a framework that
|
|
presents seven key roles performed by urban CHWs and position these
|
|
roles against a continuum of technical to political functions. Our
|
|
scoping review included publications from four databases (MEDLINE,
|
|
EMBASE, CINAHL and Social Sciences Citation Index) and two CHW resource
|
|
hubs. We included all peer-reviewed, CHW studies situated in
|
|
urban/peri-urban, LMIC contexts. We identify roles (un)commonly
|
|
performed by urban CHWs, present the range of evidence available on CHW
|
|
effectiveness in performing each role and identify considerations for
|
|
informing future roles. Of 856 articles, 160 met the inclusion criteria.
|
|
Programmes spanned 34 LMICs. Studies most commonly reported evidence on
|
|
CHWs roles related to health education, outreach and elements of direct
|
|
service provision. We found little overlap in roles between CHWs and
|
|
other providers, with some exceptions. Reported roles were biased
|
|
towards home visiting and individual-capacity building, and not
|
|
well-oriented to reach men/youth/working women, support community
|
|
empowerment or link with social services. Urban-specific adaptations to
|
|
roles, such as peer outreach to high-risk, stigmatized communities, were
|
|
limited. Innovation in urban CHW roles and a better understanding of the
|
|
unique opportunities presented by urban settings is needed to fully
|
|
capitalize on their potential.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ludwick, T (Corresponding Author), Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Nossal Inst Global Hlth, 333 Exhibit St, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Ludwick, Teralynn; McPake, Barbara, Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Nossal Inst Global Hlth, 333 Exhibit St, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Morgan, Alison; Kane, Sumit, Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Nossal Inst Global Hlth, Maternal Sexual \& Reprod Hlth Unit, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Kelaher, Margaret, Univ Melbourne, Ctr Hlth Policy, Melbourne Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapol/czaa049},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-1080},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2237},
|
|
Keywords = {Urban health; community health; human resources; low- and middle-income
|
|
countries; health inequalities; review},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOUTH-AFRICA; COST-EFFECTIVENESS; SMOKING-CESSATION; RANDOMIZED-TRIAL;
|
|
PEER EDUCATION; CHILD HEALTH; NEWBORN CARE; HOME VISITS; CAPE-TOWN;
|
|
INTERVENTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {teralynn.ludwick@unimelb.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {McPake, Barbara/AAE-8655-2021
|
|
Ludwick, Teralynn/AAZ-3458-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {McPake, Barbara/0000-0002-9904-1077
|
|
Ludwick, Teralynn/0000-0003-4160-7354
|
|
Kane, Sumit/0000-0002-4858-7344
|
|
Morgan, Alison/0000-0001-5380-1619},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {131},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000593028300016},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000687920900001,
|
|
Author = {Mohanty, Sanjay K. and Pedgaonkar, Sarang P. and Upadhyay, Ashish Kumar
|
|
and Kampfen, Fabrice and Shekhar, Prashant and Mishra, Radhe Shyam and
|
|
Maurer, Jurgen and O'Donnell, Owen},
|
|
Title = {Awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension in adults aged 45
|
|
years and over and their spouses in India: A nationally representative
|
|
cross-sectional study},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Author summary Why was this study done? We found only one study that
|
|
reported estimated rates of awareness, treatment, and control (ATC) of
|
|
hypertension in India using a nationally representative sample covering
|
|
all states, but that study was restricted to adults aged 15 to 49 years.
|
|
Another study estimated rates of hypertension ATC among older adults,
|
|
but that study covered only 6 states. This study aimed to provide
|
|
nationally representative estimates of hypertension ATC in the older
|
|
population of India and to describe differences in these indicators of
|
|
hypertension management across sociodemographic groups and states. What
|
|
did the researchers do and find? We used a nationally representative
|
|
sample of adults aged 45 years and over and their spouses covering all
|
|
states (except one) of India in 2017 to 2018. We used measured blood
|
|
pressure (BP) and self-reported diagnosis and treatment for high BP to
|
|
estimate hypertension prevalence and the percentages of those with
|
|
hypertension who were aware of their condition, treated for it, and had
|
|
achieved BP control. We found that a slight majority of those with
|
|
hypertension were aware of their condition, around half were being
|
|
treated, and less than a third had controlled their BP. While these
|
|
rates indicated substantial gaps in hypertension management among the
|
|
older population of India, they were higher than estimates previously
|
|
obtained from samples restricted to, or including, younger people. We
|
|
found substantial variation in the indicators of hypertension management
|
|
across states. Older Indians who were poorer, less educated, socially
|
|
disadvantaged, male, rural, and working were less likely to be aware,
|
|
treated, and to have achieved BP control. What do these findings mean?
|
|
Hypertension prevalence is high in India, particularly in the older
|
|
population. In this critical population group, low rates of ATC point to
|
|
deficiencies in diagnosis and management of the condition and in the
|
|
prevention of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Effectively addressing
|
|
these deficiencies requires subtle targeting of interventions that
|
|
balances attention to prevalence, which is higher in the high-income
|
|
states and socioeconomically advantaged groups, with attention to gaps
|
|
in ATC, which are greater in the low- or middle-income states and
|
|
disadvantaged groups.
|
|
Background Lack of nationwide evidence on awareness, treatment, and
|
|
control (ATC) of hypertension among older adults in India impeded
|
|
targeted management of this condition. We aimed to estimate rates of
|
|
hypertension ATC in the older population and to assess differences in
|
|
these rates across sociodemographic groups and states in India. Methods
|
|
and findings We used a nationally representative survey of individuals
|
|
aged 45 years and over and their spouses in all Indian states (except
|
|
one) in 2017 to 2018. We identified hypertension by blood pressure (BP)
|
|
measurement >= 140/90 mm Hg or self-reported diagnosis if also taking
|
|
medication or observing salt/diet restriction to control BP. We
|
|
distinguished those who (i) reported diagnosis ({''}aware{''}); (ii)
|
|
reported taking medication or being under salt/diet restriction to
|
|
control BP ({''}treated{''}); and (iii) had measured systolic BP <140
|
|
and diastolic BP <90 ({''}controlled{''}). We estimated age-sex adjusted
|
|
hypertension prevalence and rates of ATC by consumption quintile,
|
|
education, age, sex, urban-rural, caste, religion, marital status,
|
|
living arrangement, employment status, health insurance, and state. We
|
|
used concentration indices to measure socioeconomic inequalities and
|
|
multivariable logistic regression to estimate fully adjusted differences
|
|
in these outcomes. Study limitations included reliance on BP measurement
|
|
on a single occasion, missing measurements of BP for some participants,
|
|
and lack of data on nonadherence to medication. The 64,427 participants
|
|
in the analysis sample had a median age of 57 years: 58\% were female,
|
|
and 70\% were rural dwellers. We estimated hypertension prevalence to be
|
|
41.9\% (95\% CI 41.0 to 42.9). Among those with hypertension, we
|
|
estimated that 54.4\% (95\% CI 53.1 to 55.7), 50.8\% (95\% CI 49.5 to
|
|
52.0), and 28.8\% (95\% CI 27.4 to 30.1) were aware, treated, and
|
|
controlled, respectively. Across states, adjusted rates of ATC ranged
|
|
from 27.5\% (95\% CI 22.2 to 32.8) to 75.9\% (95\% CI 70.8 to 81.1),
|
|
from 23.8\% (95\% CI 17.6 to 30.1) to 74.9\% (95\% CI 69.8 to 79.9), and
|
|
from 4.6\% (95\% CI 1.1 to 8.1) to 41.9\% (95\% CI 36.8 to 46.9),
|
|
respectively. Age-sex adjusted rates were lower (p < 0.001) in poorer,
|
|
less educated, and socially disadvantaged groups, as well as for males,
|
|
rural residents, and the employed. Among individuals with hypertension,
|
|
the richest fifth were 8.5 percentage points (pp) (95\% CI 5.3 to 11.7;
|
|
p < 0.001), 8.9 pp (95\% CI 5.7 to 12.0; p < 0.001), and 7.1 pp (95\% CI
|
|
4.2 to 10.1; p < 0.001) more likely to be aware, treated, and
|
|
controlled, respectively, than the poorest fifth. Conclusions
|
|
Hypertension prevalence was high, and ATC of the condition were low
|
|
among older adults in India. Inequalities in these indicators pointed to
|
|
opportunities to target hypertension management more effectively and
|
|
equitably on socially disadvantaged groups.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mohanty, SK (Corresponding Author), Int Inst Populat Sci, Dept Fertil Studies, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Mohanty, Sanjay K., Int Inst Populat Sci, Dept Fertil Studies, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Pedgaonkar, Sarang P., Int Inst Populat Sci, Dept Populat Policies \& Programmes, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Upadhyay, Ashish Kumar; Shekhar, Prashant; Mishra, Radhe Shyam, Int Inst Populat Sci, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Kampfen, Fabrice, Univ Penn, Populat Studies Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Maurer, Jurgen, Univ Lausanne, Inst Hlth Econ \& Management, Dept Econ, Lausanne, Switzerland.
|
|
O'Donnell, Owen, Erasmus Univ, Erasmus Sch Econ, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
O'Donnell, Owen, Erasmus Univ, Erasmus Sch Hlth Policy \& Management, Rotterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pmed.1003740},
|
|
Article-Number = {e1003740},
|
|
ISSN = {1549-1277},
|
|
EISSN = {1549-1676},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BLOOD-PRESSURE; PREVALENCE; MIDDLE; DISEASE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {sanjayiips@yahoo.co.in},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Mohanty, Sanjay K/AAR-7658-2020
|
|
pedgaonkar, sarang/HCH-0304-2022
|
|
O'Donnell, Owen/C-1732-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mohanty, Sanjay K/0000-0001-9041-5952
|
|
O'Donnell, Owen/0000-0002-6289-1924
|
|
Kampfen, Fabrice/0000-0001-7304-7473
|
|
Upadhyay, Ashish/0000-0003-2518-4603
|
|
/0000-0002-3923-677X
|
|
PEDGAONKAR, SARANG/0000-0002-7570-2037},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000687920900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000896694200001,
|
|
Author = {Zoellner, Don},
|
|
Title = {Fashioning groups that inhabit society's fringes: the work of Australian
|
|
VET research into disadvantage},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EDUCATION POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Month = {2022 DEC 10},
|
|
Abstract = {Describing various demographic characteristics of disadvantaged
|
|
students, the programs they study and their employment outcomes is a
|
|
significant area of research interest in the vocational education and
|
|
training (VET) sector. This article offers a preliminary exploration of
|
|
how groups are problematised and the consequent influence on VET
|
|
research into disadvantage in Australia. Creating categories provides
|
|
the historical and political contexts that allow specific practices and
|
|
descriptors to become dominant. The major methodological approach used
|
|
is a post-structuralist discourse analysis of policy documents,
|
|
government VET reviews and published research into equity groups. It is
|
|
argued that rather than envisaging VET research into disadvantage as a
|
|
repetitious recounting of these groups' lack of access to vocational
|
|
education and training, other important agendas are being served by the
|
|
continued inquiries into people that experience inequity. The influence
|
|
of long-standing Australian discourses that valorise, mostly male,
|
|
individual responsibility to be a self-regulating citizen who maintains
|
|
ongoing employment ensures that policymakers require updated productive
|
|
expert research into the population to support the specialist discourses
|
|
of disadvantage.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zoellner, D (Corresponding Author), Charles Darwin Univ, Northern Inst, Grevillea Dr, Alice Springs, NT 0870, Australia.
|
|
Zoellner, Don, Charles Darwin Univ, Northern Inst, Grevillea Dr, Alice Springs, NT 0870, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/02680939.2022.2156621},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-0939},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5106},
|
|
Keywords = {VET; problematisation; disadvantage; research; discourse analysis},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {don.zoellner@cdu.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Zoellner, Don/N-4065-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Zoellner, Don/0000-0001-8065-6728},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000896694200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000841955400011,
|
|
Author = {McClellan, Sean P. and Boyd, Tyler W. and Hendrix, Jacqueline and Pena,
|
|
Kryztal and Swider, Susan M. and Martin, Molly A. and Rothschild, Steven
|
|
K.},
|
|
Title = {Behind Closed Doors A Thematic Analysis of Diabetes Community Health
|
|
Worker Home Visit Content},
|
|
Journal = {FAMILY \& COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {45},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {299-307},
|
|
Month = {OCT-DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The present work studies how community health workers (CHWs) perform the
|
|
role of educator and how this relates to the implementation of other CHW
|
|
roles, skills, and qualities. Prior studies on this topic have relied on
|
|
interviews or focus groups rather than analysis of CHW interactions. We
|
|
conducted a thematic analysis of 24 transcripts of conversations
|
|
occurring between CHWs and participants during home visits as part of
|
|
the Mexican American Trial of Community Health Workers, a randomized
|
|
controlled trial that improved clinical outcomes among low-income
|
|
Mexican American adults with type 2 diabetes. Three themes describing
|
|
interactions related to diabetes self-management education accounted for
|
|
about half of encounter content. The other half of encounter content was
|
|
dedicated to interactions not explicitly related to diabetes described
|
|
by 4 subthemes. In a successful CHW intervention, focused educational
|
|
content was balanced with other interactions. Interactions not
|
|
explicitly related to diabetes may have provided space for the
|
|
implementation of core CHW roles, skills, and qualities other than
|
|
educator, particularly those related to relationship building. It is
|
|
important that interventions provide CHWs with sufficient time and
|
|
flexibility to develop strong relationships with participants.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McClellan, SP (Corresponding Author), Univ Illinois, Dept Family \& Community Med, 1919 W Taylor St,M-C 663, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
McClellan, Sean P., Univ Illinois, Coll Med, Dept Family \& Community Med, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Pena, Kryztal, Univ Illinois, Coll Med, Sch Publ Hlth, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Martin, Molly A., Univ Illinois, Coll Med, Dept Pediat, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Boyd, Tyler W., Rush Univ, Med Ctr, Rush Med Coll, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Rothschild, Steven K., Rush Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Family Med, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Rothschild, Steven K., Rush Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Preventat Med, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Hendrix, Jacqueline, Valley Family Med, Renton, WA USA.
|
|
Swider, Susan M., Rush Univ, Coll Nursing, Dept Community Syst \& Mental Hlth Nursing, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/FCH.0000000000000341},
|
|
ISSN = {0160-6379},
|
|
EISSN = {1550-5057},
|
|
Keywords = {community health workers; diabetes mellitus; health status disparities;
|
|
Mexican American; qualitative research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-MANAGEMENT; CARE; INTERVENTION; PROMOTORA; TRIAL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {smccle2@uic.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {McClellan, Sean/HDN-6972-2022
|
|
McClellan, Sean/HDN-6943-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000841955400011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000389207300004,
|
|
Author = {Brzinsky-Fay, Christian and Solga, Heike},
|
|
Title = {Compressed, postponed, or disadvantaged? School-to-work-transition
|
|
patterns and early occupational attainment in West Germany},
|
|
Journal = {RESEARCH IN SOCIAL STRATIFICATION AND MOBILITY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {A},
|
|
Pages = {21-36},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {We study school-to-work-transition (STWT) patterns and early
|
|
occupational attainment for five West German birth cohorts. Although
|
|
these cohorts experienced very different macro conditions, their STWTs
|
|
were facilitated by Germany's strong vocational education and training
|
|
(VET) system. The main research question is whether linearity of STWTs
|
|
differed across and within cohorts. Linearity concerns the normatively
|
|
expected order of different activity statuses during this life phase.
|
|
High linearity is ideal-typically defined as entering VET or tertiary
|
|
education programs after leaving general education, followed by rather
|
|
direct entry into employment. Non-linear patterns diverge from this
|
|
ordering or may also include other status activities, like unemployment
|
|
and inactivity. We use data of the Adult Starting Cohort of the German
|
|
National Education Panel Study (NEPS) and employ sequence analysis and
|
|
regression methods. Our analyses reveal that the proportion of young
|
|
people experiencing the ideal-typical transition patterns increased over
|
|
the cohorts. Yet, the degree of non-linearity (in terms of number of
|
|
status activities and status shifts, and some non-employment experience)
|
|
of these ideal-typical STWT patterns also increased over the cohorts.
|
|
Moreover, we find strong differences between men and women in early
|
|
occupational attainment. Higher-educated women in particular had higher
|
|
risks of long-term disadvantage, whereas men were able to compensate for
|
|
disadvantages by achieving higher educational attainment and
|
|
establishing themselves more quickly in the labor market. (C) 2016
|
|
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brzinsky-Fay, C (Corresponding Author), WZB, Reichpietschufer 50, D-10785 Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Brzinsky-Fay, Christian; Solga, Heike, WZB Berlin Social Sci Ctr, Berlin, Germany.
|
|
Solga, Heike, Free Univ Berlin, Inst Sociol, Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.rssm.2016.01.004},
|
|
ISSN = {0276-5624},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-5654},
|
|
Keywords = {School-to-work transition; Early occupational attainment; Labor market
|
|
entry; Vocational education and training; West Germany},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR-MARKET ENTRY; YOUTH; INTEGRATION; PARTICIPATION; CONSEQUENCES;
|
|
EDUCATION; INSIGHTS; EUROPE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {christian.brzinsky-fay@wzb.eu
|
|
heike.solga@wzb.eu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Brzinsky-Fay, Christian/N-2274-2014
|
|
Solga, Heike/AAY-4793-2021},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {49},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {44},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000389207300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000342138000004,
|
|
Author = {Sundby, Johanne},
|
|
Title = {A rollercoaster of policy shifts: Global trends and reproductive health
|
|
policy in The Gambia},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {8, SI},
|
|
Pages = {894-909},
|
|
Abstract = {Global trends influence strategies for health-care delivery in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries. A drive towards uniformity in the design and
|
|
delivery of healthcare interventions, rather than solid local
|
|
adaptations, has come to dominate global health policies. This study is
|
|
a participatory longitudinal study of how one country in West Africa,
|
|
The Gambia, has responded to global health policy trends in maternal and
|
|
reproductive health, based on the authors' experience working as a
|
|
public health researcher within The Gambia over two decades. The paper
|
|
demonstrates that though the health system is built largely upon the
|
|
principles of a decentralised and governed primary care system, as
|
|
delineated in the Alma-Ata Declaration, the more recent policies of The
|
|
Global Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria and the GAVI
|
|
Alliance have had a major influence on local policies. Vertically
|
|
designed health programmes have not been easily integrated with the
|
|
existing system, and priorities have been shifted according to shifting
|
|
donor streams. Local absorptive capacity has been undermined and
|
|
inequalities exacerbated within the system. This paper problematises
|
|
national actors' lack of ability to manoeuvre within this policy
|
|
context. The authors' observations of the consequences in the field over
|
|
time evoke many questions that warrant discussion, especially regarding
|
|
the tension between local state autonomy and the donor-driven trend
|
|
towards uniformity and top-down priority setting.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sundby, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Oslo, Inst Hlth \& Soc, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Univ Oslo, Inst Hlth \& Soc, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/17441692.2014.940991},
|
|
ISSN = {1744-1692},
|
|
EISSN = {1744-1706},
|
|
Keywords = {global health policy; local health systems; donor driven; public;
|
|
private},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE; ORGANIZATION; INFERTILITY; COMMUNITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {johanne.sundby@medisin.uio.no},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000342138000004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000361045000009,
|
|
Author = {Ng, Edwin and Muntaner, Carles},
|
|
Title = {Welfare generosity and population health among Canadian provinces: a
|
|
time-series cross-sectional analysis, 1989-2009},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {69},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Pages = {970-977},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Recent work in comparative social epidemiology uses an
|
|
expenditures approach to examine the link between welfare states and
|
|
population health. More work is needed that examines the impact of
|
|
disaggregated expenditures within nations. This study takes advantage of
|
|
provincial differences within Canada to examine the effects of
|
|
subnational expenditures and a provincial welfare generosity index on
|
|
population health.
|
|
Methods Time-series cross-sectional data are retrieved from the Canadian
|
|
Socio-Economic Information Management System II Tables for 1989-2009 (10
|
|
provinces and 21 years=210 cases). Expenditures are measured using 20
|
|
disaggregated indicators, total expenditures and a provincial welfare
|
|
generosity index, a ombined measure of significant predictors. Health is
|
|
measured as total, male and female age-standardised mortality rates per
|
|
1000 deaths. Estimation techniques include the Prais-Winsten regressions
|
|
with panel-corrected SEs, a first-order autocorrelation correction
|
|
model, and fixed-unit effects, adjusted for alternative factors.
|
|
Results Analyses reveal that four expenditures effectively reduce
|
|
mortality rates: medical care, preventive care, other social services
|
|
and postsecondary education. The provincial welfare generosity index has
|
|
even larger effects. For an SD increase in the provincial welfare
|
|
generosity index, total mortality rates are expected to decline by 0.44
|
|
SDs. Standardised effects are larger for women (beta=-0.57, z(19)=-5.70,
|
|
p<0.01) than for men (beta=-0.38, z(19)=-5.59, p<0.01).
|
|
Conclusions Findings show that the expenditures approach can be
|
|
effectively applied within the context of Canadian provinces, and that
|
|
targeted spending on health, social services and education has salutary
|
|
effects.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ng, E (Corresponding Author), St Michaels Hosp, Ctr Res Inner City Hlth, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, 209 Victoria St,3rd Floor, Toronto, ON M5B 1C6, Canada.
|
|
Ng, Edwin, St Michaels Hosp, Ctr Res Inner City Hlth, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, Toronto, ON M5B 1C6, Canada.
|
|
Muntaner, Carles, Univ Toronto, Bloomberg Sch Nursing, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Muntaner, Carles, Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Muntaner, Carles, Korea Univ, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Seoul, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/jech-2014-205385},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-005X},
|
|
EISSN = {1470-2738},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PUBLIC-HEALTH; SERVICES EXPENDITURES; INCOME INEQUALITY; STATE;
|
|
MORTALITY; POLITICS; BENEFITS; REGIMES; INFANT; EUROPE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {nged@smh.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000361045000009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000373306300002,
|
|
Author = {Martin-Carrasco, M. and Evans-Lacko, S. and Dom, G. and Christodoulou,
|
|
N. G. and Samochowiec, J. and Gonzalez-Fraile, E. and Bienkowski, P. and
|
|
Gomez-Beneyto, M. and Dos Santos, M. J. H. and Wasserman, D.},
|
|
Title = {EPA guidance on mental health and economic crises in Europe},
|
|
Journal = {EUROPEAN ARCHIVES OF PSYCHIATRY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {266},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {89-124},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This European Psychiatric Association (EPA) guidance paper is a result
|
|
of the Working Group on Mental Health Consequences of Economic Crises of
|
|
the EPA Council of National Psychiatric Associations. Its purpose is to
|
|
identify the impact on mental health in Europe of the economic downturn
|
|
and the measures that may be taken to respond to it. We performed a
|
|
review of the existing literature that yields 350 articles on which our
|
|
conclusions and recommendations are based. Evidence-based tables and
|
|
recommendations were developed through an expert consensus process.
|
|
Literature dealing with the consequences of economic turmoil on the
|
|
health and health behaviours of the population is heterogeneous, and the
|
|
results are not completely unequivocal. However, there is a broad
|
|
consensus about the deleterious consequences of economic crises on
|
|
mental health, particularly on psychological well-being, depression,
|
|
anxiety disorders, insomnia, alcohol abuse, and suicidal behaviour.
|
|
Unemployment, indebtedness, precarious working conditions, inequalities,
|
|
lack of social connectedness, and housing instability emerge as main
|
|
risk factors. Men at working age could be particularly at risk, together
|
|
with previous low SES or stigmatized populations. Generalized austerity
|
|
measures and poor developed welfare systems trend to increase the
|
|
harmful effects of economic crises on mental health. Although many
|
|
articles suggest limitations of existing research and provide
|
|
suggestions for future research, there is relatively little discussion
|
|
of policy approaches to address the negative impact of economic crises
|
|
on mental health. The few studies that addressed policy questions
|
|
suggested that the development of social protection programs such as
|
|
active labour programs, social support systems, protection for housing
|
|
instability, and better access to mental health care, particularly at
|
|
primary care level, is strongly needed.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Martin-Carrasco, M (Corresponding Author), Ma Josefa Recio Fdn Hospitaller Sisters, Inst Psychiat Res, Bilbao, Spain.
|
|
Martin-Carrasco, M (Corresponding Author), Ctr Invest Red Salud Mental CIBERSAM, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Martin-Carrasco, M (Corresponding Author), Dept Psychiat, Clin Padre Menni, Joaquin Beunza 45, Pamplona 31014, Spain.
|
|
Martin-Carrasco, M.; Gonzalez-Fraile, E., Ma Josefa Recio Fdn Hospitaller Sisters, Inst Psychiat Res, Bilbao, Spain.
|
|
Martin-Carrasco, M.; Gomez-Beneyto, M., Ctr Invest Red Salud Mental CIBERSAM, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Christodoulou, N. G., Univ Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2RD, England.
|
|
Evans-Lacko, S., Kings Coll London, Inst Psychiat, Hlth Serv \& Populat Res Dept, De Crespigny Pk, London WC2R 2LS, England.
|
|
Evans-Lacko, S., Univ London London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, PSSRU, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Dom, G., Univ Antwerp, Collaborat Antwerp Psychiat Res Inst, B-2610 Antwerp, Belgium.
|
|
Samochowiec, J., Pomeranian Med Univ, Dept Psychiat, Szczecin, Poland.
|
|
Bienkowski, P., Inst Psychiat \& Neurol, Dept Pharmacol, Warsaw, Poland.
|
|
Gomez-Beneyto, M., Univ Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
|
|
Dos Santos, M. J. H., Beatriz Angelo Hosp, Portuguese Soc Psychiat \& Mental Hlth, Lisbon, Portugal.
|
|
Wasserman, D., Karolinska Inst, Natl Ctr Suicide Res \& Prevent Mental Hlth, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Martin-Carrasco, M., Dept Psychiat, Clin Padre Menni, Joaquin Beunza 45, Pamplona 31014, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s00406-016-0681-x},
|
|
ISSN = {0940-1334},
|
|
EISSN = {1433-8491},
|
|
Keywords = {Economic crisis; Mental health; Psychiatric care; Depression;
|
|
Unemployment; Suicide; Welfare system; Europe},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME-RELATED INEQUALITIES; PERCEIVED JOB INSECURITY; GLOBAL FINANCIAL
|
|
CRISIS; REPEATED CROSS-SECTIONS; GREAT RECESSION; SUICIDE RATES;
|
|
PRIMARY-CARE; TIME-SERIES; RISK-FACTORS; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {martincarrasco.manuel@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Samochowiec, Jerzy/GMX-0900-2022
|
|
Evans-Lacko, Sara/F-8489-2014
|
|
Christodoulou, Nikos/HJP-5458-2023
|
|
Dom, Geert/C-7215-2017
|
|
González-Fraile, Eduardo/AAD-9355-2020
|
|
González-Fraile, Eduardo/F-5693-2019
|
|
Gonzalez-Fraile, Eduardo/AAG-7980-2019
|
|
Samochowiec, Jerzy/G-8175-2014
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Samochowiec, Jerzy/0000-0003-1438-583X
|
|
Evans-Lacko, Sara/0000-0003-4691-2630
|
|
Dom, Geert/0000-0001-6492-0429
|
|
González-Fraile, Eduardo/0000-0001-9381-3358
|
|
González-Fraile, Eduardo/0000-0001-9381-3358
|
|
Samochowiec, Jerzy/0000-0003-1438-583X
|
|
Heitor dos Santos, Maria/0000-0003-3481-091X
|
|
Christodoulou, Nikos/0000-0002-6401-0828},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {350},
|
|
Times-Cited = {80},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {51},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000373306300002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000251036200004,
|
|
Author = {Molyneux, Catherine and Hutchison, Beryl and Chuma, Jane and Gilson,
|
|
Lucy},
|
|
Title = {The role of community-based organizations in household ability to pay
|
|
for health care in Kilifi District, Kenya},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {381-392},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {There is growing concern that health policies and programmes may be
|
|
contributing to disparities in health and wealth between and within
|
|
households in low-income settings. However, there is disagreement
|
|
concerning which combination of health and non-health sector
|
|
interventions might best protect the poor. Potentially promising
|
|
interventions include those that build on the social resources that have
|
|
been found to be particularly critical for the poor in preventing and
|
|
coping with illness costs. In this paper we present data on the role of
|
|
one form of social resourcecommunity-based organizations (CBOs) - in
|
|
household ability to pay for health care on the Kenyan coast. Data were
|
|
gathered from a rural and an urban setting using individual interviews
|
|
(n = 24), focus group discussions (n = 18 in each setting) and
|
|
cross-sectional surveys (n = 294 rural and n = 576 urban households). We
|
|
describe the complex hierarchy of CBOs operating at the strategic,
|
|
intermediate and local level in both settings, and comment on the
|
|
potential of working through these organizations to reach and protect
|
|
the poor. We highlight the challenges around several interventions that
|
|
are of particular international interest at present: community-based
|
|
health insurance schemes; micro-finance initiatives; and the removal of
|
|
primary care user fees. We argue the importance of identifying and
|
|
building upon organizations with a strong trust base in efforts to
|
|
assist households to meet treatment costs, and emphasize the necessity
|
|
of reducing the costs of services themselves for the poorest households.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Molyneux, C (Corresponding Author), Ctr Geog Med Res, Wellcome Trust Collaborat Res Programme, KEMRI, POB 230, Kilifi, Kenya.
|
|
Ctr Geog Med Res, Wellcome Trust Collaborat Res Programme, KEMRI, Kilifi, Kenya.
|
|
Med San Frontieres Holland, NL-1001 EA Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Univ Witwatersrand, Ctr Hlth Policy, Johannesburg, South Africa.
|
|
Univ London London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, London WC1E 7HT, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapol/czm031},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-1080},
|
|
Keywords = {illness; ability to pay; social relations; community-based
|
|
organizations; community financing; user fees; micro-finance; trust},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA; PRIVATE-SECTOR; LOW-INCOME; INSURANCE; EXPERIENCE;
|
|
VIEWPOINT; COUNTRIES; DELIVERY; SERVICES; POVERTY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {SMolyneux@kilifi.kemri-wellcome.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gilson, Lucy/R-8846-2019
|
|
Molyneux, Catherine/HGB-8464-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gilson, Lucy/0000-0002-2775-7703
|
|
Molyneux, Catherine/0000-0001-9522-416X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000251036200004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000678158000003,
|
|
Author = {Cresswell-Smith, Johanna and Macintyre, Anna K. and Wahlbeck, Kristian},
|
|
Title = {Untapped potential? Action by non-governmental organisations on the
|
|
social determinants of mental health in high-income countries: an
|
|
integrative review},
|
|
Journal = {VOLUNTARY SECTOR REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {189-209},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Civil society in general is widely recognised as having an important
|
|
role in addressing the social determinants of health. Non-governmental
|
|
organisations (NGOs) have a long history of mental health actions,
|
|
ranging from mental health promotion and advocacy to volunteer work and
|
|
service provision. An explicit focus on the social determinants of
|
|
mental health is a more recent development. In this article we review
|
|
relevant literature on NGO actions on key social determinants of mental
|
|
health: family; friends and communities; education and skills; good
|
|
work; money and resources; housing; and surroundings. Searching of
|
|
relevant bibliographic databases was combined with searching for
|
|
relevant grey literature to identify relevant evidence and practice on
|
|
the work of NGOs in this field. We reflect on the inherent tensions
|
|
involved in understanding the role of NGOs in taking action on the
|
|
social determinants of mental health and the critical questions raised
|
|
as a result. Our review highlights a lack of documented evidence of NGO
|
|
actions, and underscores the significant untapped potential of civil
|
|
society to contribute to the Mental Health in All Policies (MHiAP)
|
|
agenda.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cresswell-Smith, J (Corresponding Author), Finnish Inst Hlth \& Welf THL, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Cresswell-Smith, Johanna, Finnish Inst Hlth \& Welf THL, Helsinki, Finland.
|
|
Macintyre, Anna K., Univ Strathclyde, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.
|
|
Wahlbeck, Kristian, Mental Hlth Finland, Mieli, Finland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1332/204080520X15874661935482},
|
|
ISSN = {2040-8056},
|
|
EISSN = {2040-8064},
|
|
Keywords = {mental health; civil society; social determinants of mental health;
|
|
mental health promotion; NGO},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOLUNTARY SECTOR; CHILD-BEHAVIOR; CIVIL-SOCIETY; COMMUNITY;
|
|
INTERVENTIONS; IDENTIFICATION; INEQUALITIES; PARTNERSHIPS; LONELINESS;
|
|
ENGAGEMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {johanna.cresswell-smith@thl.fi
|
|
anna.macintyre@strath.ac.uk
|
|
kristian.wahlbeck@famh.fi},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cresswell-Smith, Johanna/0000-0003-2740-3830},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {92},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000678158000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000397854900009,
|
|
Author = {Pisu, Maria and Azuero, Andres and Benz, Rachel and McNees, Patrick and
|
|
Meneses, Karen},
|
|
Title = {Out-of-pocket costs and burden among rural breast cancer survivors},
|
|
Journal = {CANCER MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {572-581},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Little is known about out-of-pocket (OOP) costs incurred for medical and
|
|
health needs by rural breast cancer survivors and what factors may be
|
|
associated with higher OOP costs and the associated economic burden.
|
|
Data were examined for 432 survivors participating in the Rural Breast
|
|
Cancer Survivor Intervention trial. OOP costs were collected using the
|
|
Work and Finances Inventory survey at baseline and four assessments
|
|
every 3 months. Mean and median OOP costs and burden (percent of monthly
|
|
income spent on OOP costs) were reported and factors associated with OOP
|
|
costs and burden identified with generalized linear models fitted with
|
|
over-dispersed gamma distributions and logarithmic links (OOP costs) and
|
|
with beta distributions with logit link (OOP burden). OOP costs per
|
|
month since the end of treatment were on average \$232.7 (median
|
|
\$95.6), declined at the next assessment point to \$186.5 (median
|
|
\$89.1), and thereafter remained at that level. Mean OOP burden was 9\%
|
|
at baseline and between 7\% and 8\% at the next assessments. Factors
|
|
suggestive of contributing to higher OOP costs and OOP burden were the
|
|
following: younger age, lower income, time in survivorship from
|
|
diagnosis, and use of supportive services. OOP costs burden rural breast
|
|
cancer survivors, particularly those who are younger and low income.
|
|
Research should investigate the impact of OOP costs and interventions to
|
|
reduce economic burden.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pisu, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Med, 1720 2nd Ave S,MT 636, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.
|
|
Pisu, Maria, Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Med, Div Prevent Med, Birmingham, AL USA.
|
|
Pisu, Maria; Azuero, Andres; McNees, Patrick; Meneses, Karen, Univ Alabama Birmingham, Ctr Comprehens Canc, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA.
|
|
Azuero, Andres; Benz, Rachel; Meneses, Karen, Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Nursing, Birmingham, AL USA.
|
|
McNees, Patrick, Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Hlth Profess, Birmingham, AL USA.
|
|
McNees, Patrick, Kirchner Grp, Birmingham, AL USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/cam4.1017},
|
|
ISSN = {2045-7634},
|
|
Keywords = {Burden; Cancer; costs; economics; out-of-pocket costs; rural;
|
|
survivorship},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE EXPENDITURE BURDEN; FINANCIAL BURDEN; HEALTH-CARE; ECONOMIC BURDEN;
|
|
RESIDENCE; HARDSHIP; URBAN; LIFE; EXPERIENCES; DISPARITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {mpisu@uab.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {41},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000397854900009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000379816700001,
|
|
Author = {Ochako, Rhoune and Izugbara, Chimaraoke and Okal, Jerry and Askew, Ian
|
|
and Temmerman, Marleen},
|
|
Title = {Contraceptive method choice among women in slum and non-slum communities
|
|
in Nairobi, Kenya},
|
|
Journal = {BMC WOMENS HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Month = {JUL 12},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Understanding women's contraceptive method choices is key to
|
|
enhancing family planning services provision and programming. Currently
|
|
however, very little research has addressed inter and intra-regional
|
|
disparities II in women's contraceptive method choice. Using data from
|
|
slum and non-slum contexts in Nairobi, Kenya, the current study
|
|
investigates the prevalence of and factors associated with contraceptive
|
|
method choice among women.
|
|
Methods: Data were from a cross-sectional quantitative study conducted
|
|
among a random sample of 1,873 women (aged 15-49 years) in two non-slum
|
|
and two slum settlement areas in Nairobi, Kenya. The study locations
|
|
were purposively sampled by virtue of being part of the Nairobi Urban
|
|
Health and Demographic Surveillance System. Bivariate and multivariate
|
|
logistic regression were used to explore the association between the
|
|
outcome variable, contraceptive method choice, and explanatory
|
|
variables.
|
|
Results: The prevalence of contraceptive method choice was relatively
|
|
similar across slum and non-slum settlements. 34.3 \% of women in slum
|
|
communities and 28.1 \% of women in non-slum communities reported using
|
|
short-term methods. Slightly more women living in the non-slum
|
|
settlements repotted use of long-term methods, 9.2 \%, compared to 3.6
|
|
\% in slum communities. Older women were less likely to use short-term
|
|
methods than their younger counterparts but more likely to use long-term
|
|
methods. Currently married women were more likely than never married
|
|
women to use short-term and long-term methods. Compared to those with no
|
|
children, women with three or more children were more likely to report
|
|
using long term methods. Women working outside the home or those in
|
|
formal employment also used modern methods of contraception more than
|
|
those in self-employment or unemployed.
|
|
Conclusion: Use of short-term and long-term methods is generally low
|
|
among women living in slum and non-slum contexts in Nairobi. Investments
|
|
in increasing women's access to various contraceptive options are
|
|
urgently needed to help increase contraceptive prevalence rate. Thus,
|
|
interventions that focus on more disadvantaged segments of the
|
|
population will accelerate contraceptive uptake and improve maternal and
|
|
child health in Kenya.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ochako, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Ghent, Fac Med \& Hlth Sci, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Ochako, Rhoune, Univ Ghent, Fac Med \& Hlth Sci, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Izugbara, Chimaraoke, African Populat \& Hlth Res Ctr, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Okal, Jerry, Populat Council, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Askew, Ian, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Temmerman, Marleen, Univ Ghent, Int Ctr Reprod Hlth, Ghent, Belgium.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12905-016-0314-6},
|
|
Article-Number = {35},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6874},
|
|
Keywords = {Contraceptive method choice; Contraceptive use; Slum; Non-slum; Urban
|
|
poor; Nairobi; Kenya},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNINTENDED PREGNANCY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {rochako@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000379816700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000802228500010,
|
|
Author = {Paul, Claire Donehower and Thomas, Erin Vinoski and Marelle, Chelsea and
|
|
Hussain, Sharish Z. and Doulin, Allison M. and Jimenez, Eliseo},
|
|
Title = {Using wireless technology to support individuals with intellectual and
|
|
developmental disabilities in vocational settings: A focus group study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {56},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {303-312},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: The benefits of successful integrated employment for people
|
|
with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) are immense.
|
|
However, barriers contributing to high rates of unemployment among
|
|
people with IDD, such as lack of appropriate training for employers and
|
|
inadequate supports, are still widespread. Ensuring access to technology
|
|
in the workplace is one method to support employees with IDD and
|
|
mitigate those barriers. Furthermore, assistive technology may provide a
|
|
simple and cost-effective intervention in the vocational setting.
|
|
OBJECTIVE: In this study, we conducted a series of focus groups with
|
|
adults with IDD and their family members to explore the use of
|
|
technology by individuals with IDD in vocational contexts.
|
|
METHODS: We used a qualitative descriptive approach to frame the study
|
|
design. Data were analyzed using a multi-cycle thematic coding process.
|
|
RESULTS: Four major themes emerged from the analysis: participants'
|
|
wireless/wearable technology use, benefits and facilitators of
|
|
technology use at work, barriers and challenges to technology use at
|
|
work, and expectations for and outcomes associated with technology
|
|
supports in the workplace.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: Findings have the potential to impact employer education
|
|
and training on benefits of appropriate technology use for individuals
|
|
with IDD at work, onboarding and training of individuals with IDD when
|
|
using technology at work, and funding responsibility for technology in
|
|
the workplace.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Paul, CD (Corresponding Author), Georgia State Univ, 30 Pryor St, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA.
|
|
Paul, Claire Donehower; Thomas, Erin Vinoski; Marelle, Chelsea; Hussain, Sharish Z.; Doulin, Allison M.; Jimenez, Eliseo, Georgia State Univ, 30 Pryor St, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3233/JVR-221193},
|
|
ISSN = {1052-2263},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-6316},
|
|
Keywords = {Intellectual disabilities; developmental disabilities; vocational;
|
|
wireless technology},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TIME-MANAGEMENT-SKILLS; ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY; MENTAL-RETARDATION;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; STUDENTS; PEOPLE; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {cdonehower@gsu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000802228500010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000493756600007,
|
|
Author = {Vasyltsiv, Taras and Lupak, Ruslan and Kunytska-Iliash, Marta},
|
|
Title = {SOCIAL SECURITY OF UKRAINE AND THE EU: ASPECTS OF CONVERGENCE AND
|
|
IMPROVEMENT OF MIGRATION POLICY},
|
|
Journal = {BALTIC JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {5},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {50-58},
|
|
Abstract = {Unresolved problems of social and economic development of Ukraine,
|
|
exacerbated by critical negative consequences of military aggression and
|
|
political instability, are accompanied by deep socio-economic
|
|
contradictions and aggravation of large-scale social problems. At the
|
|
same time, the qualitative system of social security, characteristic of
|
|
the EU, is not formed. As a result, negative phenomena and trends are
|
|
accumulated in social sphere there that manifest themselves in the
|
|
critical deformations of social development, with the formation of
|
|
threats of degradation and depopulation, the increase of environmental
|
|
problems, deterioration of social structure, weakening of social
|
|
guarantees of human rights that are evidenced and confirmed by mass and
|
|
active labour migration of the Ukrainians abroad. Ensuring Ukraine's
|
|
social security objectively requires an in-depth study based on a
|
|
systematic approach, applying EU principles, provisions, practices, and
|
|
standards. The purpose is to substantiate approaches and means of
|
|
convergence of social security of Ukraine and the EU and develop
|
|
recommendations for the improvement of migration policy. Methodology. As
|
|
the methodological basis of the study, theories of socio-economic
|
|
growth, modern concepts of institutional and structural economic reforms
|
|
have been worked out, methods of statistical, structural-functional, and
|
|
system analysis, grouping have been applied. Results. The imbalances of
|
|
social security of Ukraine and the EU have been determined according to
|
|
the following components: labour market and employment of population;
|
|
reproduction of population and labour potential of the state; migration
|
|
and food security. Areas of accelerated asymmetry increase in the social
|
|
development of Ukraine and the EU, which serve as a key factor in
|
|
``pushing out{''}the population and high rates of labour migration from
|
|
Ukraine to the EU Member States, have been identified. Strategic
|
|
approaches and means of equalizing critical deformations and convergence
|
|
of the system of social security of Ukraine in the process of
|
|
integration into the EU have been determined; tools for improving the
|
|
state migration policy have been developed, which implementation would
|
|
result in improvement of the systemic and structural characteristics of
|
|
labour potential migration. Conclusion. The study results obtained
|
|
represent the existence of significant disparities in key indicators and
|
|
components of the social security system of Ukraine and the EU. Low
|
|
level of living standards and social protection of population serves as
|
|
a factor in increasing the scope of external labour migration and,
|
|
correspondingly, a critical weakening of human and labour potential of
|
|
the state. Tools and means of the state policy of convergence of the
|
|
social security system of Ukraine and the EU should focus on achieving
|
|
the goal of systemic development of human capital and be implemented in
|
|
the following directions: ensuring demographic security, upgrading
|
|
health care system, renovating the quality of education, preserving
|
|
cultural values, establishing a competitive labour market, improving
|
|
housing affordability, social infrastructure development, systemic
|
|
social insurance of population.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vasyltsiv, T (Corresponding Author), Natl Acad Sci Ukraine, State Inst, Inst Reg Res, Kiev, Ukraine.
|
|
Vasyltsiv, Taras, Natl Acad Sci Ukraine, State Inst, Inst Reg Res, Kiev, Ukraine.
|
|
Lupak, Ruslan, Lviv Univ Trade \& Econ, Lvov, Ukraine.
|
|
Kunytska-Iliash, Marta, Stepan Gzhytskyi Natl Univ Vet Med \& Biotechnol L, Lvov, Ukraine.},
|
|
DOI = {10.30525/2256-0742/2019-5-4-50-58},
|
|
ISSN = {2256-0742},
|
|
EISSN = {2256-0963},
|
|
Keywords = {social security; convergence of the social policy of Ukraine and the EU;
|
|
human potential; migration},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {tgvas77@ukr.net
|
|
economist\_555@ukr.net
|
|
kunytskam@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Taras, Vasyltsiv G/I-3835-2017
|
|
Ruslan, Lupak/I-2980-2017
|
|
Marta Kunytska-Iliash, M. Kunytska-IliashMarta/I-3865-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ruslan, Lupak/0000-0002-1830-1800
|
|
Marta Kunytska-Iliash, M. Kunytska-IliashMarta/0000-0003-2559-1065
|
|
Vasyltsiv, Taras/0000-0002-2889-6924},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000493756600007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000727502000001,
|
|
Author = {James, Richard and Flemming, Kate and Hodson, Melanie and Oxley, Tammy},
|
|
Title = {Palliative care for homeless and vulnerably housed people: scoping
|
|
review and thematic synthesis},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ SUPPORTIVE \& PALLIATIVE CARE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Month = {2021 MAY 3},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction People who are homeless or vulnerably housed are subject to
|
|
disproportionately high risks of physical and mental illness and are
|
|
further disadvantaged by difficulties in access to services. Research
|
|
has been conducted examining a wide range of issues in relation to
|
|
end-of-life care for homeless and vulnerably housed people, however, a
|
|
contemporary scoping review of this literature is lacking. Objectives To
|
|
understand the provision of palliative care for people who are homeless
|
|
or vulnerably housed from the perspective of, and for the benefit of,
|
|
all those who should be involved in its provision. Design Scoping review
|
|
with thematic synthesis of qualitative and quantitative literature. Data
|
|
sources MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, Social Policy and Practice and CINAHL
|
|
databases were searched, from inception to May 2020. Citation chasing
|
|
and manual searching of grey literature were also employed. Results
|
|
Sixty-four studies, involving 2117 homeless and vulnerably housed people
|
|
were included, with wide variation in methodology, population and
|
|
perspective. The thematic synthesis identified three themes around:
|
|
experiences, beliefs and wishes; relationships; and end-of-life care.
|
|
Conclusion Discussion highlighted gaps in the evidence base, especially
|
|
around people experiencing different types of homelessness. Existing
|
|
evidence advocates for service providers to offer needs-based and
|
|
non-judgemental care, for organisations to use existing assets in
|
|
co-producing services, and for researchers to address gaps in the
|
|
evidence base, and to work with providers in transforming existing
|
|
knowledge into evaluable action.},
|
|
Type = {Review; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {James, R (Corresponding Author), Leeds Teaching Hosp NHS Trust, Publ Hlth, Leeds LS9 7TF, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
James, Richard, Leeds Teaching Hosp NHS Trust, Publ Hlth, Leeds LS9 7TF, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Flemming, Kate, Univ York, Dept Hlth Sci, York, N Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Hodson, Melanie, Hosp UK, London, England.
|
|
Oxley, Tammy, Leeds Teaching Hosp NHS Trust, Palliat Med, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjspcare-2021-003020},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2045-435X},
|
|
EISSN = {2045-4368},
|
|
Keywords = {cultural issues; communication},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OF-LIFE CARE; PERSONS EXPERIENCING HOMELESSNESS; HIGH-INCOME COUNTRIES;
|
|
ADVANCE DIRECTIVES; HEALTH-CARE; END; DEATH; INTERVENTION; INDIVIDUALS;
|
|
CHALLENGES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {richard.james14@nhs.net},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {James, Richard/GRY-6246-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {James, Richard/0000-0002-9891-7137},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {101},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000727502000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000473099400006,
|
|
Author = {Fietz, Jennifer and Stupp, Barbara},
|
|
Title = {Strengthening of social participation of Turkish seniors},
|
|
Journal = {ZEITSCHRIFT FUR GERONTOLOGIE UND GERIATRIE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {52},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {336-341},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Background. Traditional municipal services are not successful at
|
|
reaching Turkish seniors. Compared to native Germans Turkish seniors
|
|
have a lower social participation.
|
|
Objective. Do native language groups hosted by aGerman organization
|
|
promote the social participation of Turkish seniors? How does social
|
|
participation take place in the ZWAR networks (between work and
|
|
retirement; aproject to strengthen social participation of seniors) and
|
|
which factors promote or reduce social participation?
|
|
Material and methods. Qualitative structuring content analysis of two
|
|
group discussions, which were based on guided interviews.
|
|
Results. The social participation of Turkish-speaking seniors was
|
|
strengthened on three levels: (1)through regular meetings of the Turkish
|
|
ethnic group social relationships were promoted and German language
|
|
skills and other skills were improved. Through mutual sharing and
|
|
understanding of the stressors specific to migration, emotional support
|
|
was provided. The sharing of mutual cultural and linguistic backgrounds
|
|
created asense of community and meetings were perceived as an antidote
|
|
to migrants' exhausting lives in German society. (2)At the
|
|
organizational level, participation was promoted through extensive group
|
|
events. Regardless of their cultural background all participants
|
|
identified as equal ZWAR members. The ZWAR project functioned as an
|
|
umbrella organization for participation in the intercultural context.
|
|
(3)Participation in community events created contacts with community
|
|
stakeholders and fostered volunteer work. Hence, participants were able
|
|
to use their skills, and therefore broaden their horizons.
|
|
Conclusion. Turkish ZWAR networks promoted the social participation of
|
|
members because integration with their ethnic group reduced access
|
|
barriers, broadened members' scopes of action, and created new
|
|
opportunities for participation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {German},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fietz, J (Corresponding Author), Tech Univ Dortmund, Fak Erziehungs Wissensch Psychol \& Soziol 12, Emil Figge Str 50, D-44227 Dortmund, Germany.
|
|
Fietz, Jennifer, Tech Univ Dortmund, Fak Erziehungs Wissensch Psychol \& Soziol 12, Emil Figge Str 50, D-44227 Dortmund, Germany.
|
|
Stupp, Barbara, Bundesarbeitsgemeinschaft Senioren Org eV BAGSO, Bonn, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s00391-018-1400-1},
|
|
ISSN = {0948-6704},
|
|
EISSN = {1435-1269},
|
|
Keywords = {Turkish migrants; Retirement; Social relationships; Community
|
|
participation; Social support},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geriatrics \& Gerontology; Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {Jennifer.Fietz@tu-dortmund.de},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000473099400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000316148600016,
|
|
Author = {Chapin, Rosemary K. and Sergeant, Julie F. and Landry, Sarah and
|
|
Leedahl, Skye N. and Rachlin, Roxanne and Koenig, Terry and Graham,
|
|
Annette},
|
|
Title = {Reclaiming Joy: Pilot Evaluation of a Mental Health Peer Support Program
|
|
for Older Adults Who Receive Medicaid},
|
|
Journal = {GERONTOLOGIST},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {53},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {345-352},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: Stigma and lack of access to providers create barriers to
|
|
mental health treatment for older adults living in the community. In
|
|
order to address these barriers, we developed and evaluated a peer
|
|
support intervention for older adults receiving Medicaid services.
|
|
Design and Methods: Reclaiming Joy is a mental health intervention that
|
|
pairs an older adult volunteer with a participant (older adult who
|
|
receives peer support). Volunteers receive training on the
|
|
strengths-based approach, mental health and aging, goal setting and
|
|
attainment, community resources, and safety. Participantvolunteer pairs
|
|
meet once a week for 10 weeks. Participants establish and work toward
|
|
goals (e.g., better self-care, social engagement) that they feel would
|
|
improve their mental health and well-being. Aging services agencies
|
|
provide a part time person to manage the program, match volunteers and
|
|
participants, and provide ongoing support. Outcomes evaluation for this
|
|
pilot study included pre/postintervention assessments of participants.
|
|
Results: Thirty-two participants completed the intervention.
|
|
Pre/postassessment group means showed statistically significant
|
|
improvement for depression but not for symptoms of anxiety.
|
|
Quality-of-life indicators for health and functioning also improved for
|
|
participants with symptoms of both depression and anxiety. Implications:
|
|
The Reclaiming Joy peer support intervention has potential for reducing
|
|
depression and increasing quality of life in low-income older adults who
|
|
have physical health conditions. It is feasible to administer and
|
|
sustain the intervention through collaborative efforts with minimal
|
|
program resources and a small amount of technical assistance.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chapin, RK (Corresponding Author), Univ Kansas, Sch Social Welf, Off Aging \& Long Term Care, 1545 Lilac Lane, Lawrence, KS 66044 USA.
|
|
Chapin, Rosemary K.; Landry, Sarah; Leedahl, Skye N.; Rachlin, Roxanne; Koenig, Terry, Univ Kansas, Sch Social Welf, Off Aging \& Long Term Care, Lawrence, KS 66044 USA.
|
|
Sergeant, Julie F., Kansas Dept Hlth \& Environm, Bur Hlth Promot, Canc Sect, Topeka, KS USA.
|
|
Graham, Annette, Cent Plains Area Agcy Aging, Wichita, KS USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/geront/gns120},
|
|
ISSN = {0016-9013},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-5341},
|
|
Keywords = {Mental health (services therapy); Peer support; Strengths based;
|
|
Outcomes evaluation; Medicaid; Medicare},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GERIATRIC DEPRESSION SCALE; CASE-MANAGEMENT; LIFE; INDIVIDUALS;
|
|
FRAMEWORKS; SYMPTOMS; BENEFITS; ILLNESS; ANXIETY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {rchapin@ku.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {36},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000316148600016},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000456476900013,
|
|
Author = {Kim, Julia H. and Shin, Jong C. and Donovan, Sharon M.},
|
|
Title = {Effectiveness of Workplace Lactation Interventions on Breastfeeding
|
|
Outcomes in the United States: An Updated Systematic Review},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF HUMAN LACTATION},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {100-113},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Returning to work is one of the main barriers to
|
|
breastfeeding duration among working mothers in the United States.
|
|
However, the impact of workplace lactation programs is unclear. Research
|
|
Aim The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of workplace
|
|
lactation programs in the United States on breastfeeding practices.
|
|
Methods A systematic search was conducted of seven databases through
|
|
September 2017. Articles (N = 10) meeting the inclusion criteria of
|
|
describing a workplace lactation intervention and evaluation in the
|
|
United States and measuring initiation, exclusivity, or duration using
|
|
an experimental or observational study design were critically evaluated.
|
|
Two reviewers conducted quality assessments and reviewed the full-text
|
|
articles during the analysis. Results Common services provided were
|
|
breast pumps, social support, lactation rooms, and breastfeeding
|
|
classes. Breastfeeding initiation was very high, ranging from 87\% to
|
|
98\%. Several factors were significantly associated with duration of
|
|
exclusive breastfeeding: (a) receiving a breast pump for one year (8.3
|
|
versus 4.7 months), (b) return-to-work consultations (40\% versus 17\%
|
|
at 6 months), and (c) telephone support (42\% versus 15\% at 6 months).
|
|
Each additional service (except prenatal education) dose-dependently
|
|
increased exclusively breastfeeding at 6 months. Sociodemographic
|
|
information including older maternal age, working part-time, longer
|
|
maternity leave, and white ethnicity were associated with longer
|
|
breastfeeding duration. Conclusion Workplace lactation interventions
|
|
increased breastfeeding initiation, duration, and exclusive
|
|
breastfeeding, with greater changes observed with more available
|
|
services. More evidence is needed on the impact of workplace support in
|
|
low-income populations, and the cost-effectiveness of these programs in
|
|
reducing health care costs.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kim, JH (Corresponding Author), Univ Illinois, Div Nutr Sci, 905 S Goodwin Ave, Urbana, IL 61801 USA.
|
|
Kim, Julia H., Univ Illinois, Div Nutr Sci, 905 S Goodwin Ave, Urbana, IL 61801 USA.
|
|
Shin, Jong C., Univ Illinois, Dept Kinesiol \& Community Hlth, Urbana, IL USA.
|
|
Donovan, Sharon M., Univ Illinois, Dept Food Sci \& Human Nutr, Urbana, IL USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0890334418765464},
|
|
ISSN = {0890-3344},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-5732},
|
|
Keywords = {breastfeeding duration; breastfeeding initiation; breastfeeding support;
|
|
lactation workplace programs; program evaluation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORKING MOTHERS; BARRIERS; PROGRAMS; PASSAGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing; Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {haijikim@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Donovan, Sharon/AAY-6787-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shin, Jong Cheol/0000-0003-0360-2309
|
|
Donovan, Sharon/0000-0002-9785-4189},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {34},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000456476900013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000166526600002,
|
|
Author = {Higgs, ZR and Bayne, T and Murphy, D},
|
|
Title = {Health care access: A consumer perspective},
|
|
Journal = {PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2001},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {3-12},
|
|
Month = {JAN-FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {This article describes the use of action research as an information base
|
|
for policy formulation by a collaborative partnership in Spokane,
|
|
Washington. Health and social service providers recognized access to
|
|
care by uninsured persons as a major community issue. Little was known
|
|
from the consumers perspective about factors limiting access. No
|
|
benchmarks existed against which to measure progress. Investigators
|
|
collected mailed surveys from 475 residents of six Spokane neighborhoods
|
|
and 97 persons participated in 12 focus group sessions. Income,
|
|
education, and ethnicity were primary factors affecting perceptions of
|
|
degree to which medical, dental, and mental health needs were being met.
|
|
Many residents were unable to obtain needed health care; low-cost dental
|
|
and mental health services were named as their highest priorities.
|
|
Quality of care, relationships with providers, immediacy of access, and
|
|
cost were important concerns. Major barriers were cost, length of time
|
|
before one could get an appointment, lack of comfort with providers, and
|
|
having to miss work for appointments. Consumer input is critical in
|
|
understanding local issues in health care. Action research that combines
|
|
qualitative and quantitative data enhanced practice/policy decisions
|
|
through assuring ownership of the research and immediate use of findings
|
|
by involved agencies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Higgs, ZR (Corresponding Author), Washington State Univ, Coll Nursing, Intercollegiate Ctr Nursing Educ, 2917 W Fort George Wright Dr, Spokane, WA 99224 USA.
|
|
Washington State Univ, Coll Nursing, Intercollegiate Ctr Nursing Educ, Spokane, WA 99224 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1046/j.1525-1446.2001.00003.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0737-1209},
|
|
EISSN = {1525-1446},
|
|
Keywords = {health care access; consumer perspectives; health services
|
|
accessibility; consumer attitudes},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {higgsz@wsu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000166526600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000386865100007,
|
|
Author = {Onaran, Ozlem},
|
|
Title = {Wage- versus profit-led growth in the context of globalization and
|
|
public spending: the political aspects of wage-led recovery},
|
|
Journal = {REVIEW OF KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {4},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {458-474},
|
|
Month = {WIN},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper presents the empirical evidence about the impact of the
|
|
simultaneous race to the bottom in labour's share on growth after taking
|
|
global interactions into account based on the post-Kaleckian theoretical
|
|
framework developed by Bhaduri and Marglin (1990). The world economy and
|
|
large economic areas are likely to be wage-led; and parameter shifts in
|
|
different periods are unlikely to make a difference in this finding. The
|
|
effects that can come from a wage-led recovery on growth and hence
|
|
employment are positive, however they are also modest in magnitude. We
|
|
then present an alternative scenario based on a policy mix of wage
|
|
increases and public investment. A coordinated mix of polices in the G20
|
|
targeted to increase the share of wages in GDP by 1-5 per cent in the
|
|
next 5 years and to raise public investment in social and physical
|
|
infrastructure by 1 per cent of GDP in each country can create up to
|
|
5.84 per cent more growth in G20 countries. The final section addresses
|
|
the political aspects and barriers to a wage-led recovery.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Onaran, O (Corresponding Author), Univ Greenwich, London, England.
|
|
Onaran, Ozlem, Univ Greenwich, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4337/roke.2016.04.07},
|
|
ISSN = {2049-5323},
|
|
EISSN = {2049-5331},
|
|
Keywords = {wage share; wage-led growth; globalization; public investment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FUNCTIONAL INCOME-DISTRIBUTION; AGGREGATE DEMAND; ECONOMIC-GROWTH;
|
|
SOUTH-KOREA; INVESTMENT; FINANCIALISATION; ACCUMULATION; STRATEGIES;
|
|
COUNTRIES; MODEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Onaran, Ozlem/0000-0002-6345-9922},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000386865100007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000759753300014,
|
|
Author = {Li, Peiyi and Luo, Yunmei and Yu, Xuexin and Mason, Elizabeth and Zeng,
|
|
Zhi and Wen, Jin and Li, Weimin and Jalali, Mohammad S.},
|
|
Title = {Readiness of healthcare providers for e-hospitals: a cross-sectional
|
|
analysis in China before the COVID-19 period},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives The growth and development of smartphones and eHealth
|
|
technologies have enabled the potential for extended care hospitals
|
|
(e-hospitals) in China in order to facilitate the success of a primary
|
|
healthcare centre (PHC)-based integrated delivery model. Although the
|
|
adoption of e-hospitals is essential, few studies have directed their
|
|
research towards understanding the perspectives of healthcare providers.
|
|
This study aims to identify the current readiness of healthcare
|
|
providers to adopt e-hospital technologies, determine the factors
|
|
influencing this adoption and describe the perceived facilitators and
|
|
barriers in regard to working at e-hospitals. Design A cross-sectional
|
|
study conducted in Sichuan, China, between June and September 2019.
|
|
Settings Information was collected from healthcare providers who have
|
|
more than 3 years of work experience from a tertiary hospital, secondary
|
|
hospital, PHCs and private hospital. Participants 2298 medical
|
|
professionals were included in this study. Outcome measure This study
|
|
included a self-administered questionnaire that was used to assess
|
|
participants' sociodemographic characteristics, online medical
|
|
practices, willingness to use e-hospitals and perceived
|
|
facilitators/barriers to working at e-hospitals. Multivariate regression
|
|
analysis was performed in order to evaluate the independent factors
|
|
associated with e-hospital work. Results Overall, 86.3\% had a positive
|
|
response towards working at e-hospitals. Age (p<0.05), familiarity with
|
|
e-hospitals (p<0.001) and prior work practices in online healthcare
|
|
settings (p<0.001) were associated with participants' readiness to work
|
|
at e-hospitals. Gender, education level, professional level, the tier of
|
|
their affiliated hospital and workload were not statistically
|
|
associated. Healthcare providers who had positive attitudes towards
|
|
e-hospitals considered improved efficiency, patient satisfaction,
|
|
communication among physicians, increased reputation and income, and
|
|
alleviated workload to be advantages of adoption. The participants who
|
|
were unwilling to work at e-hospitals perceived lack of time,
|
|
insufficient authenticity/reliability and underdeveloped policies as
|
|
potential barriers. Conclusion Improving operative proficiency in
|
|
electronic devices, accommodating to work schedules, increasing
|
|
familiarity with e-hospitals and regulating practices will improve the
|
|
readiness of healthcare providers to work at e-hospitals.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Li, WM (Corresponding Author), Sichuan Univ, Dept Resp \& Crit Care Med, West China Hosp, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, WM (Corresponding Author), Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp, Frontiers Sci Ctr Dis Related Mol Network, Inst Resp Hlth, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, WM (Corresponding Author), Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp, Precis Med Res Ctr, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Peiyi, Sichuan Univ, Dept Anesthesiol, West China Hosp, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Peiyi, Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp, Natl Local Joint Engn Res Ctr Translat Med Anesth, Lab Anesthesia \& Crit Care Med, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Peiyi, Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp, Res Units West China 2018RU012, Chinese Acad Med Sci, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Luo, Yunmei, Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp, West China Med Publishers, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Yu, Xuexin, Sichuan Univ, Biomed Big Data Ctr, West China Hosp, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Mason, Elizabeth; Jalali, Mohammad S., Harvard Med Sch, MGH Inst Technol Assessment, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Zeng, Zhi; Wen, Jin, Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp, Inst Hosp Management, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Weimin, Sichuan Univ, Dept Resp \& Crit Care Med, West China Hosp, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Weimin, Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp, Frontiers Sci Ctr Dis Related Mol Network, Inst Resp Hlth, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Weimin, Sichuan Univ, West China Hosp, Precis Med Res Ctr, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
|
|
Jalali, Mohammad S., MIT, Sloan Sch Management, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2021-054169},
|
|
Article-Number = {e054169},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords = {health policy; health informatics; telemedicine},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRIVATE HOSPITALS; EFFICIENCY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {weimi003@scu.edu.cn},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Yu, Xuexin/ABA-8080-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Yu, Xuexin/0000-0002-6484-6035
|
|
Jalali, Mohammad/0000-0001-6769-2732
|
|
Luo, Yunmei/0000-0002-2661-3214},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000759753300014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000679713400001,
|
|
Author = {Westbrook, Marisa and Martinez, Lisette and Mechergui, Safa and
|
|
Scandlyn, Jean and Yeatman, Sara},
|
|
Title = {Contraceptive Access Through School-Based Health Centers: Perceptions of
|
|
Rural and Suburban Young People},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH PROMOTION PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {425-431},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose School-based health centers (SBHCs) have traditionally been
|
|
concentrated in urban centers but have increasingly moved to rural and
|
|
suburban settings. Adolescents living outside urban centers continue to
|
|
experience barriers accessing contraceptives and reproductive health
|
|
care. SBHCs are well positioned to reduce these barriers since they
|
|
often offer convenient, in-school reproductive health care services. We
|
|
describe the experiences of adolescents and emerging adults as they
|
|
navigate access to contraceptives at SBHCs and nonschool locations in
|
|
nonurban, low-income communities. Method We interviewed 30 sexually
|
|
active individuals aged 15 to 21 living in rural and suburban
|
|
communities in Colorado where high school SBHCs were recently
|
|
introduced. Participants reflected on their experiences with or without
|
|
in-school access to sexual and reproductive health services. Results
|
|
Overall, young people supported within-school access to contraceptives,
|
|
citing convenience, low cost, and greater confidentiality and privacy
|
|
compared with out-of-school providers, particularly in rural areas. At
|
|
the same time, findings point to the need for SBHCs to overcome
|
|
adolescents' and emerging adults' misunderstanding of age requirements
|
|
to access confidential contraceptive services and their remaining
|
|
concerns around confidentiality in the school setting. Conclusions Our
|
|
results indicate that SBHCs in low-income rural and suburban areas
|
|
provide essential contraceptive services that young people access and
|
|
value. Policy makers in nonurban communities should look to the SBHC
|
|
model to reduce barriers for young people accessing reproductive health
|
|
care, and health care providers should work to ensure confidentiality
|
|
and to correct misinformation about their right to access contraceptive
|
|
services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Westbrook, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Colorado Denver, Dept Hlth \& Behav Sci, Campus Box 188,POB 173364, Denver, CO 80217 USA.
|
|
Westbrook, Marisa; Martinez, Lisette; Mechergui, Safa; Scandlyn, Jean; Yeatman, Sara, Univ Colorado Denver, Denver, CO USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/15248399211026612},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {15248399211026612},
|
|
ISSN = {1524-8399},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-6372},
|
|
Keywords = {school-based health centers; school health; adolescent health;
|
|
reproductive health; contraception; health care access},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FAMILY-PLANNING-SERVICES; REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH; CARE; ADOLESCENTS;
|
|
BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {marisa.westbrook@ucdenver.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000679713400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000585906400008,
|
|
Author = {Oliva, Juan and Gonzalez Lopez-Varcarcel, Beatriz and Barber Perez,
|
|
Patricia and Maria Pena-Longobardo, Luz and Urbanos Garrido, Rosa M. and
|
|
Zozaya Gonzalez, Neboa},
|
|
Title = {Impact of Great Recession on mental health in Spain. SESPAS Report 2020},
|
|
Journal = {GACETA SANITARIA},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {48-53},
|
|
Abstract = {The objective of this article is to identify the effects of the Great
|
|
Recession on the mental health of people residing in Spain. After
|
|
presenting a conceptual framework on the mechanisms through which
|
|
economic crises affect mental health, we describe the main results of 45
|
|
papers identified in our search. Studies indicate a worsening of mental
|
|
health in Spain in the years of economic crisis, especially in men.
|
|
Working conditions (unemployment, low wages, instability,
|
|
precariousness) emerge as one of the main channels through which mental
|
|
health is put at risk or deteriorates. This deterioration occurs with
|
|
intensity in particularly vulnerable groups, such as immigrant
|
|
population and families with economic burdens. In the case of suicides,
|
|
the results were inconclusive. Regarding the use of health care
|
|
services, an increase in the consumption of certain drugs seems to be
|
|
identified, although the conclusions of all the studies are not
|
|
coincidental. Social inequalities in mental health do not seem to have
|
|
remitted. We conclude that Spain needs to improve information systems to
|
|
a better understanding of the health effects of economic crises. In
|
|
terms of public policies, together with the reinforcement of health
|
|
services aimed at addressing mental health problems, an income guarantee
|
|
network for people in vulnerable situations should be promoted, as well
|
|
as the development of policies aimed at the labour market. (C) 2020
|
|
SESPAS. Published by Elsevier Espana, S.L.U.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Oliva, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Castilla La Mancha, Fac Ciencias Jurid \& Sociales, Dept Anal Econ \& Finanzas, Toledo, Spain.
|
|
Oliva, Juan; Maria Pena-Longobardo, Luz, Univ Castilla La Mancha, Fac Ciencias Jurid \& Sociales, Dept Anal Econ \& Finanzas, Toledo, Spain.
|
|
Gonzalez Lopez-Varcarcel, Beatriz; Barber Perez, Patricia; Zozaya Gonzalez, Neboa, Univ Las Palmas Gran Canaria, Fac Econ Empresa \& Turismo, Dept Metodos Cuantitat Econ \& Gest, Las Palmas Gran Canaria, Spain.
|
|
Urbanos Garrido, Rosa M., Univ Complutense Madrid, Fac CC Econ \& Empresariales, Dept Econ Aplicada Publ \& Polit, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Zozaya Gonzalez, Neboa, Weber Econ \& Salud, Madrid, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.gaceta.2020.05.009},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-9111},
|
|
EISSN = {1578-1283},
|
|
Keywords = {Mental health; Economic crisis; Great Recession; Spain},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-CRISIS; UNEMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services; Public,
|
|
Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {juan.olivamoreno@uclm.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gonzalez Cordova, Nadia Lorena/GSN-4164-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {18},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000585906400008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000537392800007,
|
|
Author = {Callaghan-Koru, Jennifer A. and Islam, Munia and Khan, Marufa and Sowe,
|
|
Ardy and Islam, Jahrul and Mannan, Imteaz Ibne and George, Joby and
|
|
Bangladesh Chlorhexidine Scale Stu},
|
|
Title = {Factors that influence the scale up of new interventions in low-income
|
|
settings: a qualitative case study of the introduction of chlorhexidine
|
|
cleansing of the umbilical cord in Bangladesh},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {440-451},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {There is a well-recognized need for empirical study of processes and
|
|
factors that influence scale up of evidence-based interventions in
|
|
low-income countries to address the `know-do' gap. We undertook a
|
|
qualitative case study of the scale up of chlorhexidine cleansing of the
|
|
umbilical cord (CHX) in Bangladesh to identify and compare facilitators
|
|
and barriers for the institutionalization and expansion stages of scale
|
|
up. Data collection and analysis for this case study were informed by
|
|
the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) and the
|
|
WHO/ExpandNet model of scale up. At the national level, we interviewed
|
|
20 stakeholders involved in CHX policy or implementation. At the
|
|
district level, we conducted interviews with 31 facility-based
|
|
healthcare providers in five districts and focus group discussions
|
|
(FGDs) with eight community-based providers and eight programme
|
|
managers. At the community level, we conducted 7 FGDs with 53 mothers
|
|
who had a baby within the past year. Expanded interview notes were
|
|
thematically coded and analysed following an adapted Framework approach.
|
|
National stakeholders identified external policy and incentives, and the
|
|
engagement of stakeholders in policy development through the National
|
|
Technical Working Committee for Newborn Health, as key facilitators for
|
|
policy and health systems changes. Stakeholders, providers and families
|
|
perceived the intervention to be simple, safe and effective, and more
|
|
consistent with family preferences than the prior policy of dry cord
|
|
care. The major barriers that delayed or decreased the public health
|
|
impact of the scale up of CHX in Bangladesh's public health system
|
|
related to commodity production, procurement and distribution.
|
|
Bangladesh's experience scaling up CHX suggests that scale up should
|
|
involve early needs assessments and planning for institutionalizing new
|
|
drugs and commodities into the supply chain. While the five CFIR domains
|
|
were useful for categorizing barriers and facilitators, additional
|
|
constructs are needed for common health systems barriers in low-income
|
|
settings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Callaghan-Koru, JA (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Dept Sociol Anthropol \& Hlth Adm \& Policy, 1000 Hilltop Circle,PUP 233, Baltimore, MD 21250 USA.
|
|
Callaghan-Koru, Jennifer A.; Sowe, Ardy, Univ Maryland, Dept Sociol Anthropol \& Hlth Adm \& Policy, 1000 Hilltop Circle,PUP 233, Baltimore, MD 21250 USA.
|
|
Callaghan-Koru, Jennifer A., Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Int Hlth, 615 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Islam, Munia; Khan, Marufa; Mannan, Imteaz Ibne; George, Joby, Save Children Int, MaMoni Hlth Syst Strengthening Project, House CWN A 35,Rd 43,Gulshan 2, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh.
|
|
Khan, Marufa, Pathfinder Int, 32 Gulshan Ave,Gulshan 2, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh.
|
|
Sowe, Ardy, Howard Univ, Coll Med, 520 W St NW, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Islam, Jahrul, Minist Hlth \& Family Welf, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Mannan, Imteaz Ibne, Jhpiego, House 71,Rd 4,Dist 4, Kabul, Afghanistan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapol/czz156},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-1080},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2237},
|
|
Keywords = {Scale up; implementation; newborn health; Bangladesh; Chlorhexidine},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-SYSTEMS; SCIENCE; CARE; INITIATIVES; ADAPTATION; INNOVATION;
|
|
LESSONS; DEATHS; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {jck@umbc.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {George, Joby/AAW-1365-2021
|
|
Mannan, Imteaz/AAO-9935-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {George, Joby/0000-0002-4791-901X
|
|
Islam, Munia/0000-0002-7036-5318},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {72},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000537392800007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000284596000003,
|
|
Author = {Vasta, Ellie and Erdemir, Aykan},
|
|
Title = {Work Strategies of Immigrants and the Construction and Circulation of
|
|
Myths in London},
|
|
Journal = {ERDE},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {141},
|
|
Number = {1-2, SI},
|
|
Pages = {15-29},
|
|
Abstract = {The research presented in this paper emerges from the Immigrant Work
|
|
Strategies and Networks Project. The project focused on the experiences
|
|
of Ghanaian, Portuguese, Romanian, Turkish and British-born respondents
|
|
(both male and female) in London, between 2004 and 2006, using
|
|
questionnaires and in-depth interviews. In this article, our goal is to
|
|
explore the role of imperfect information in the immigrant settlement
|
|
process and destination society policies. More specifically, we examine
|
|
the nature of information used in two interlinked processes: 1)
|
|
information used by the destination society to debate, design, and
|
|
implement policy; 2) information used by immigrants to develop work
|
|
strategies. We aim to demonstrate that a great deal of information
|
|
immigrants and the destination society utilise, in making their
|
|
decisions, is often based on the generation, circulation and
|
|
reproduction of myths. Although migration myths of destination society
|
|
members and immigrants are often conflicting, they seem to be reproduced
|
|
within a shared regime of myth-making. In an attempt to analyse the
|
|
dynamics and inter-linkages of the myth-making regime, we offer two new
|
|
concepts, i.e. ``hegemonic myths{''} and ``opportunity myths{''}. Our
|
|
discussion on the construction and circulation of myths presents new
|
|
opportunities to reinterpret the immigrant settlement process. We
|
|
conclude that while hegemonic myths about migrants in the public arena
|
|
are rarely affirmative, opportunity myths constructed by immigrants are
|
|
far more complex. They can both reproduce inequalities or provide a
|
|
basis for immigrant empowerment. Hegemonic myths, for example, have the
|
|
potential to focus the debate on specific groups, or immigrants in
|
|
general, where they can become either heroes or, more likely, villains.
|
|
We argue that opportunity myths do play a major role in the perpetuation
|
|
of migration to the UK. The inequalities and exploitation experienced by
|
|
immigrants are essential in the circulation of opportunity myths as
|
|
immigrants attempt to maintain impressions of the good life in the UK.
|
|
Ironically, immigration myths, the erosion of social rights and ongoing
|
|
discrimination contribute to the continual flow of incoming migrants. In
|
|
other words, the more rights are eroded and the more difficult it
|
|
becomes for immigrants to succeed, the more immigrants feel compelled to
|
|
construct narratives of success. Unless migration policies deal with the
|
|
right to work, social rights of immigrants and with the elimination of
|
|
discrimination and racism, policy and public discourse are likely to
|
|
lead to unintended results.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vasta, E (Corresponding Author), Macquarie Univ, CRSI, N Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia.
|
|
Vasta, Ellie, Macquarie Univ, CRSI, N Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia.
|
|
Erdemir, Aykan, Middle E Tech Univ, Dept Sociol, TR-06531 Ankara, Turkey.},
|
|
ISSN = {0013-9998},
|
|
Keywords = {Myths; Myth-making; Immigrants; Employment; London},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography; Geography, Physical; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {ellie.vasta@mq.edu.au
|
|
aerdemir@metu.edu.tr},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000284596000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000795453600047,
|
|
Author = {Hong, Steven Y. and Winston, Anna and Mutenda, Nicholus and Hamunime,
|
|
Ndapewa and Roy, Tuhin and Wanke, Christine and Tang, Alice M. and
|
|
Jordan, Michael R.},
|
|
Title = {Predictors of loss to follow-up from HIV antiretroviral therapy in
|
|
Namibia},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite progress on population-level HIV viral suppression, unknown
|
|
outcomes amongst people who have initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART)
|
|
in low- and middle-income countries, commonly referred to as loss to
|
|
follow-up (LTFU), remains a barrier. The mean global estimate of LTFU is
|
|
20\%, exceeding the World Health Organization target of <15\%. Pervasive
|
|
predictors associated with LTFU include younger age, low body mass
|
|
index, low CD4 count, advanced HIV clinical stage and certain ART
|
|
regimens. In Namibia, ART use by eligible individuals exceeds 85\%,
|
|
surpassing the global average. Nonetheless, LTFU remains a barrier to
|
|
achieving viral suppression and requires research to elucidate
|
|
context-specific factors. An observational cohort study was conducted in
|
|
Namibia in 2012 by administering surveys to individuals who presented
|
|
for HIV care and initiated ART for the first time. Additional data were
|
|
collected from routine medical data monitoring systems. Participants
|
|
classified as LTFU at 12 months were traced to confirm their status.
|
|
Predictors of LTFU were analyzed using multivariable logistic
|
|
regression. Of those who presented consecutively to initiate ART, 524
|
|
were identified as eligible to enroll in the study, 497 enrolled, and
|
|
474 completed the baseline questionnaire. The cohort had mean age 36
|
|
years, 39\% were male, mean CD4 cell count 222 cells/mm3, 17\% were WHO
|
|
HIV clinical stage and 14\% started efavirenz-based regimens. Tracing
|
|
participants classified as LTFU yielded a re-categorization from 27.8\%
|
|
(n = 132) to 14.3\% (n = 68) LTFU. In the final multivariable model,
|
|
factors associated with confirmed LTFU status were: younger age (OR
|
|
0.97, 95\% CI 1.00-1.06, p = 0.02); male sex (OR 2.34, CI 1.34-4.06, p =
|
|
0.003); difficulty leaving work or home to attend clinic (OR 2.55, CI
|
|
1.40-4.65, p = 0.002); and baseline efavirenz-based regimen (OR 2.35, CI
|
|
1.22-4.51, p = 0.01). Interventions to reduce LTFU should therefore
|
|
target young men, particularly those who report difficulty leaving work
|
|
or home to attend clinic and are on an efavirenz-based regimen.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hong, SY (Corresponding Author), Tufts Med Ctr, Div Geog Med \& Infect Dis, Boston, MA 02111 USA.
|
|
Hong, SY (Corresponding Author), Tufts Univ, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth \& Community Med, Boston, MA 02111 USA.
|
|
Hong, Steven Y.; Wanke, Christine; Jordan, Michael R., Tufts Med Ctr, Div Geog Med \& Infect Dis, Boston, MA 02111 USA.
|
|
Hong, Steven Y.; Roy, Tuhin; Wanke, Christine; Tang, Alice M.; Jordan, Michael R., Tufts Univ, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth \& Community Med, Boston, MA 02111 USA.
|
|
Winston, Anna, Hosp Univ Penn, 3400 Spruce St, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Mutenda, Nicholus; Hamunime, Ndapewa, Republ Namibia Minist Hlth \& Social Serv, Directorate Special Programmes, Windhoek, Namibia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0266438},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0266438},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA; INFECTED PATIENTS; DRUG-RESISTANCE; ADULT PATIENTS;
|
|
SCALING-UP; OUTCOMES; INITIATION; EXPERIENCE; RETENTION; EFAVIRENZ},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {shong@tuftsmedicalcenter.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hong, Steven/0000-0002-2149-5132},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000795453600047},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000662107900001,
|
|
Author = {Chaudhuri, Sriroop and Roy, Mimi and McDonald, Louis M. and Emendack,
|
|
Yves},
|
|
Title = {Coping Behaviours and the concept of Time Poverty: a review of perceived
|
|
social and health outcomes of food insecurity on women and children},
|
|
Journal = {FOOD SECURITY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {1049-1068},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Mounting concerns over food insecurity have emerged as a key agenda in
|
|
many recent global development dialogues, on accounts of observed and
|
|
expected health outcomes. The present study attempts a reflective
|
|
summary around a yet little-explored aspect of food insecurity: health
|
|
and social ramifications of coping behaviours (adaptive strategies to
|
|
improve food availability, accessibility, utilisation, and stability),
|
|
with specific emphasis on women and children. We conducted a systematic
|
|
literature with different search engines and databases to identify a
|
|
diversity of recent journal articles, reports, working papers, white
|
|
papers, proceedings, dissertations, newspaper articles, book chapters,
|
|
and grey literature, published in the post-2000s period. We thus
|
|
identified two broad generic categories in the relevant global
|
|
literature: coping behaviours that are (a) non-food (livelihood
|
|
alterations) and (2) food-based. For women, the former includes outdoor
|
|
employment, selling asset bases, borrowing food and/or money, and
|
|
purchasing food on credit. Food-based coping strategies included reduced
|
|
daily meal portion sizes and reducing the frequency of food uptake or
|
|
skipping meals altogether (i.e., Food Rationing); nutritional switch
|
|
(i.e., Food Stretching); and Food Sharing. Coping behaviours involving
|
|
children primarily include dropping out of school, begging, stealing,
|
|
and Food Seeking (i.e., eating outside home, with relatives or friends,
|
|
or at charitable institutions). The likely health outcomes included
|
|
stunting and wasting, disrupted socio-cognitive development among
|
|
children. A subsidiary idea to conduct this study was to offer the
|
|
concerned authorities an insight into the breadth of coping behaviours,
|
|
so as to help them anticipate targeted and gender-responsive
|
|
interventions on a priori basis. We offer a discourse on what we refer
|
|
to as time poverty, especially for farm women, resulting from obligatory
|
|
outdoor employment, mostly as farm labourers to highlight a social
|
|
paradox: women provide massive contributions in the translation of high
|
|
value goods and services of a vibrant global agricultural system, and
|
|
yet are among the first victims of food insecurity themselves. This
|
|
situation contradicts a number of the UN Sustainable Development Goals
|
|
(SDGs), and aggravates gender disparity. In final section we appeal for
|
|
more targeted, evidence-based research to establish direct causal
|
|
linkages between food insecurity and coping behaviours, distinguishing
|
|
them from life-as-usual scenarios. To that end, we present a brief
|
|
critique on Coping Strategy Index (CSI) -a widely used tool to evaluate
|
|
severity of coping behaviours.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chaudhuri, S (Corresponding Author), OP Jindal Global Univ, Ctr Environm Sustainabil \& Human Dev, Jindal Sch Liberal Arts \& Humanities, Sonipat 131001, Haryana, India.
|
|
Chaudhuri, Sriroop, OP Jindal Global Univ, Ctr Environm Sustainabil \& Human Dev, Jindal Sch Liberal Arts \& Humanities, Sonipat 131001, Haryana, India.
|
|
Roy, Mimi, OP Jindal Global Univ, Jindal Sch Liberal Arts \& Humanities, Sonipat 131001, Haryana, India.
|
|
McDonald, Louis M., West Virginia Univ, Davis Coll Agr Nat Resources \& Design, Morgantown, WV 26505 USA.
|
|
Emendack, Yves, USDA ARS, Lubbock, TX 79415 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s12571-021-01171-x},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1876-4517},
|
|
EISSN = {1876-4525},
|
|
Keywords = {Food insecurity; Coping behaviour; Nutritional switch; Livelihood
|
|
alteration; Farm women; Women's time poverty; Gender discrimination;
|
|
Mental health; Child labour; School drop-out; Coping strategy index
|
|
(CSI); Sustainable development},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {NUTRITIONAL OUTCOMES; DIETARY DIVERSITY; PRICE SHOCKS; HOUSEHOLD;
|
|
SECURITY; URBAN; AGRICULTURE; EMPOWERMENT; INCOME; SCHOOL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Food Science \& Technology},
|
|
Author-Email = {schaudhuri@jgu.edu.in
|
|
mroy@jgu.edu.in
|
|
LMMcdonald@mailwvu.edu
|
|
Yves.Emendack@ars.usda.gov},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Emendack, Yves/0000-0002-2537-176X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {183},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {30},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000662107900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000475345600002,
|
|
Author = {Gonzalez, Jennifer M. Reingle and Rana, Rachel E. and Jetelina, Katelyn
|
|
K. and Roberts, Madeline H.},
|
|
Title = {The Value of Lived Experience With the Criminal Justice System: A
|
|
Qualitative Study of Peer Re-entry Specialists},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OFFENDER THERAPY AND COMPARATIVE CRIMINOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {63},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Pages = {1861-1875},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The aim of this article was to describe the implementation and
|
|
qualitative outcomes of peer reentry specialists ({''}peers{''}) on
|
|
housing attainment, mental health, and substance use problems, and
|
|
increased life domain functioning. One-on-one interviews were conducted
|
|
with peers and clients to understand the program implementation, peer
|
|
experiences, and progress toward target outcomes. Data were iteratively
|
|
coded using inductive thematic identification and data reduction.
|
|
Results suggest that peers' lived experiences were useful in building
|
|
rapport with clients. Peers applied their lived experiences to assist
|
|
clients in seeking treatment for substance use and mental health
|
|
conditions, in addition to helping them locate housing and employment.
|
|
Several structural barriers prevented peers from addressing client
|
|
needs. Peer time was routinely consumed by assisting clients in seeking
|
|
identification, requisite for treatment or use of health care services,
|
|
housing or securing employment. Findings suggested peers were working to
|
|
address many client needs. Future research should examine the
|
|
effectiveness of peer assistance on client-level health outcomes,
|
|
including recidivism.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gonzalez, JMR (Corresponding Author), Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston, Dept Epidemiol Human Genet \& Environm Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, 6011 Harry Hines Blvd,V8-110, Dallas, TX 75390 USA.
|
|
Gonzalez, Jennifer M. Reingle; Jetelina, Katelyn K.; Roberts, Madeline H., Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston, Dallas, TX USA.
|
|
Rana, Rachel E., Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston, Austin, TX USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0306624X19830596},
|
|
ISSN = {0306-624X},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-6933},
|
|
Keywords = {peer re-entry specialists; lived experience; recidivism; qualitative},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HIGH-RISK; SUPPORT; PRISON; INDIVIDUALS; EDUCATION; PROGRAM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Criminology \& Penology; Psychology, Applied},
|
|
Author-Email = {jennifer.m.reingle@uth.tmc.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000475345600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000472053900001,
|
|
Author = {Ooms, Gorik and Kruja, Krista},
|
|
Title = {The integration of the global HIV/AIDS response into universal health
|
|
coverage: desirable, perhaps possible, but far from easy},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBALIZATION AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Month = {JUN 18},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundThe international community's health focus is shifting from
|
|
achieving disease-specific targets towards aiming for universal health
|
|
coverage. Integrating the global HIV/AIDS response into universal health
|
|
coverage may be inevitable to secure its achievements in the long run,
|
|
and for expanding these achievements beyond addressing a single disease.
|
|
However, this integration comes at a time when international financial
|
|
support for the global HIV/AIDS response is declining, while political
|
|
support for universal health coverage is not translated into financial
|
|
support. To assess the risks, challenges and opportunities of the
|
|
integration of the global HIV/AIDS response into national universal
|
|
health coverage plans, we carried out assessments in Indonesia, Kenya,
|
|
Uganda and Ukraine, based on key informant interviews with civil
|
|
society, policy-makers and development partners, as well as on a review
|
|
of grey and academic literature.ResultsIn the absence of international
|
|
financial support, governments are turning towards national health
|
|
insurance schemes to finance universal health coverage, making access to
|
|
healthcare contingent on regular financial contributions. It is not
|
|
clear how AIDS treatment will be fit in. While the global HIV/AIDS
|
|
response accords special attention to exclusion due to sexual
|
|
orientation and gender identity, sex work or drug use, efforts to
|
|
achieve universal health coverage focus on exclusion due to poverty,
|
|
gender and geographical inequalities. Policies aiming for universal
|
|
health coverage try to include private healthcare providers in the
|
|
health system, which could create a sustainable framework for civil
|
|
society organisations providing HIV/AIDS-related services. While the
|
|
global HIV/AIDS response insisted on the inclusion of civil society in
|
|
decision-making policies, that is not (yet) the case for policies aiming
|
|
for universal health coverage.DiscussionWhile there are many obstacles
|
|
to successful integration of the global HIV/AIDS response into universal
|
|
health coverage policies, integration seems inevitable and is happening.
|
|
Successful integration will require expanding the principle of shared
|
|
responsibility' which emerged with the global HIV/AIDS response to
|
|
universal health coverage, rather than relying solely on domestic
|
|
efforts for universal health coverage. The preference for national
|
|
health insurance as the best way to achieve universal health coverage
|
|
should be reconsidered. An alliance between HIV/AIDS advocates and
|
|
proponents of universal health coverage requires mutual condemnation of
|
|
discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, sex work
|
|
or drug use, as well as addressing of exclusion based on poverty and
|
|
other factors. The fulfilment of the promise to include civil society in
|
|
decision-making processes about universal health coverage is long
|
|
overdue.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ooms, G (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, 15-17 Tavistock Pl, London WC1H 9SH, England.
|
|
Ooms, Gorik, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, 15-17 Tavistock Pl, London WC1H 9SH, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12992-019-0487-5},
|
|
Article-Number = {41},
|
|
EISSN = {1744-8603},
|
|
Keywords = {Global HIV; AIDS response; Universal health coverage; Integration},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-INCOME; SYSTEMS; COST},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {gorik.ooms@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ooms, Gorik/A-2537-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ooms, Gorik/0000-0002-9804-0128
|
|
Kruja, Krista/0000-0003-3130-8908},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {94},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000472053900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000411488700003,
|
|
Author = {Brooke-Sumner, Carrie and Lund, Crick and Selohilwe, One and Petersen,
|
|
Inge},
|
|
Title = {Community-based psychosocial rehabilitation for schizophrenia service
|
|
users in the north west province of South Africa: A formative study},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL WORK IN MENTAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {249-283},
|
|
Abstract = {Psychosocial support is recognized as important for recovery for service
|
|
users with schizophrenia, in addition to provision of antipsychotic
|
|
medication. This study aimed to develop a community-based psychosocial
|
|
rehabilitation programme for service users with schizophrenia to be
|
|
facilitated by auxiliary social workers, and to investigate
|
|
acceptability and feasibility of the programme. A task-sharing approach
|
|
was adopted in which auxiliary social workers were trained to facilitate
|
|
psychosocial rehabilitation groups. In-depth individual qualitative
|
|
interviews were conducted with six group members at baseline, midpoint,
|
|
and end point (18 interviews in total). NVivo 10 was used to store data
|
|
and conduct qualitative framework analysis. Participants reported
|
|
benefits of the programme, including improvements in group members'
|
|
self-esteem, social support, illness knowledge, self-care, and
|
|
contribution to their households. A key barrier to acceptability was the
|
|
lack of provision of income generating opportunities. Implementation
|
|
challenges include difficulties in tracing and engaging service users
|
|
and families, lack of an appropriate venue, and issues with supply of
|
|
antipsychotic medication. This study has provided evidence for the
|
|
benefits and acceptability of this contextually adapted programme. Key
|
|
barriers to implementation can be addressed through the provision of the
|
|
necessary resources for auxiliary social worker input in the community.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brooke-Sumner, C (Corresponding Author), Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Appl Human Sci, Durban, South Africa.
|
|
Brooke-Sumner, Carrie; Selohilwe, One; Petersen, Inge, Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Appl Human Sci, Durban, South Africa.
|
|
Lund, Crick, Univ Cape Town, Alan J Flisher Ctr Publ Mental Hlth, Dept Psychiat \& Mental Hlth, Cape Town, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/15332985.2016.1220439},
|
|
ISSN = {1533-2985},
|
|
EISSN = {1533-2993},
|
|
Keywords = {Acceptability; auxiliary social workers; feasibility; low-and
|
|
middle-income country; mental health; psychosocial intervention;
|
|
psychosocial rehabilitation; schizophrenia; social support; social work;
|
|
South Africa; task-sharing},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH-CARE; GROUP PSYCHOEDUCATION; INTERVENTION; ACCEPTABILITY;
|
|
FEASIBILITY; DISORDERS; PEOPLE; INCOME; MODEL; CAREGIVERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {Carrie.brookesumner@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Petersen, Inge/AFW-5663-2022
|
|
Lund, Crick/F-4405-2011
|
|
Brooke-Sumner, Carrie/L-3764-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Petersen, Inge/0000-0002-3573-4229
|
|
Brooke-Sumner, Carrie/0000-0002-9489-8717
|
|
Lund, Crick/0000-0002-5159-8220
|
|
Selohilwe, One/0000-0002-2692-5605},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000411488700003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000208158700006,
|
|
Author = {Kottke, Thomas E. and Isham, George J.},
|
|
Title = {Measuring Health Care Access and Quality to Improve Health in
|
|
Populations},
|
|
Journal = {PREVENTING CHRONIC DISEASE},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Poor health status, rapidly escalating health care costs, and seemingly
|
|
little association between investments in health care and health
|
|
outcomes have prompted a call for a ``pay-for-performance{''} system to
|
|
improve population health. We suggest that both health plans and
|
|
clinical service providers measure and report the rates of 5 behaviors:
|
|
1) smoking, 2) physical activity, 3) excessive drinking, 4) nutrition,
|
|
and 5) condom use by sexually active youth. Because preventive services
|
|
can improve population health, we suggest that health plans and clinical
|
|
service providers report delivery rates of preventive services. We also
|
|
suggest that an independent organization report 8 county-level
|
|
indicators of health care performance: 1) health care expenditures, 2)
|
|
insurance coverage, 3) rates of unmet medical, dental, and prescription
|
|
drug needs, 4) preventive services delivery rates, 5) childhood
|
|
vaccination rates, 6) rates of preventable hospitalizations, 7) an index
|
|
of affordability, and 8) disparities in access to health care associated
|
|
with race and income. To support healthy behaviors, access to work site
|
|
wellness and health promotion programs should be measured. To promote
|
|
coordinated care, an indicator should be developed for whether a
|
|
clinical service provider is a member of an accountable care
|
|
organization. To encourage clinical service providers and health plans
|
|
to address the social determinants of health, organizational
|
|
participation in community-benefit initiatives that address the leading
|
|
social determinants of health should be assessed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kottke, TE (Corresponding Author), HealthPartners Inc, 8170 33rd Ave S,POB 1524,MS 21111R, Minneapolis, MN 55440 USA.
|
|
Kottke, Thomas E.; Isham, George J., HealthPartners Inc, Minneapolis, MN 55440 USA.},
|
|
Article-Number = {A73},
|
|
ISSN = {1545-1151},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {E.Kottke@HealthPartners.Com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kottke, Thomas/HKN-3550-2023
|
|
Dalla Zuanna, Teresa/G-3133-2015},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000208158700006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000293757500001,
|
|
Author = {Burrows, Stephanie and Auger, Nathalie and Gamache, Philippe and
|
|
St-Laurent, Danielle and Hamel, Denis},
|
|
Title = {Influence of social and material individual and area deprivation on
|
|
suicide mortality among 2.7 million Canadians: A prospective study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Month = {JUL 19},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Few studies have investigated how area-level deprivation
|
|
influences the relationship between individual disadvantage and suicide
|
|
mortality. The aim of this study was to examine individual measures of
|
|
material and social disadvantage in relation to suicide mortality in
|
|
Canada and to determine whether these relationships were modified by
|
|
area deprivation.
|
|
Methods: Using the 1991-2001 Canadian Census Mortality Follow-up Study
|
|
cohort (N = 2,685,400), measures of individual social (civil status,
|
|
family structure, living alone) and material (education, income,
|
|
employment) disadvantage were entered into Cox proportional hazard
|
|
models to calculate hazard ratios (HR) and 95\% confidence intervals
|
|
(CI) for male and female suicide mortality. Two indices of area
|
|
deprivation were computed one capturing social, and the other material,
|
|
dimensions - and models were run separately for high versus low
|
|
deprivation.
|
|
Results: After accounting for individual and area characteristics,
|
|
individual social and material disadvantage were associated with higher
|
|
suicide mortality, especially for individuals not employed, not married,
|
|
with low education and low income. Associations between social and
|
|
material area deprivation and suicide mortality largely disappeared upon
|
|
adjustment for individual-level disadvantage. In stratified analyses,
|
|
suicide risk was greater for low income females in socially deprived
|
|
areas and males living alone in materially deprived areas, and there was
|
|
no evidence of other modifying effects of area deprivation.
|
|
Conclusions: Individual disadvantage was associated with suicide
|
|
mortality, particularly for males. With some exceptions, there was
|
|
little evidence that area deprivation modified the influence of
|
|
individual disadvantage on suicide risk. Prevention strategies should
|
|
primarily focus on individuals who are unemployed or out of the labour
|
|
force, and have low education or income. Individuals with low income or
|
|
who are living alone in deprived areas should also be targeted.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Burrows, S (Corresponding Author), Ctr Hosp Univ Montreal, Ctr Rech, 1301 Rue Sherbrooke Est Montreal, Quebec City, PQ H2L 1M3, Canada.
|
|
Burrows, Stephanie; Auger, Nathalie, Ctr Hosp Univ Montreal, Ctr Rech, Quebec City, PQ H2L 1M3, Canada.
|
|
Burrows, Stephanie; Auger, Nathalie; Gamache, Philippe; St-Laurent, Danielle; Hamel, Denis, Inst Natl Sante Publ Quebec, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Burrows, Stephanie, Univ Quebec, Montreal, PQ H3C 3P8, Canada.
|
|
Auger, Nathalie, Univ Montreal, Dept Med Sociale \& Prevent, Montreal, PQ, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1471-2458-11-577},
|
|
Article-Number = {577},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FOLLOW-UP; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; MARITAL-STATUS; RISK-FACTORS; INJURY
|
|
MORTALITY; UNITED-STATES; TIME-SCALE; ILLNESS; DENMARK; WALES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {burrows.stephanie@sympatico.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Auger, Nathalie/E-3736-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Auger, Nathalie/0000-0002-2412-0459},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {40},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000293757500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001022799500001,
|
|
Author = {Dela Cruz, Nina Ashley and Villanueva, Alyssa Cyrielle B. and Tolin,
|
|
Lovely Ann and Disse, Sabrina and Lensink, Robert and White, Howard},
|
|
Title = {PROTOCOL: Effects of interventions to improve access to financial
|
|
services for micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries: An evidence and gap map},
|
|
Journal = {CAMPBELL SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundMicro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) account
|
|
for the vast majority of firms in most economies, particularly in
|
|
developing nations, and are key contributors to job creation and global
|
|
economic development. However, the most significant impediment to MSME
|
|
development in low- and middle-income countries is a lack of access to
|
|
both investment and working capital financing. Due to a lack of
|
|
essential track record, appropriate collateral, and credit history,
|
|
MSMEs are frequently denied business loans by traditional lending
|
|
institutions. In addition, SMEs' inability to access funding is hindered
|
|
by institutional, structural, and non-financial factors. To address
|
|
this, both the public and private sectors employ indirect and direct
|
|
finance interventions to help MSMEs in developing and emerging economies
|
|
enhance and increase their financing needs. Given the importance of
|
|
MSMEs in the economy, a comprehensive overview of and systematic
|
|
synthesizing of the evidence of the effects of financial access
|
|
interventions for MSMEs, capturing a wide variety of outcome variables,
|
|
is useful. ObjectivesThe objective of this evidence and gap map (EGM) is
|
|
to describe the existing evidence on the effects of various
|
|
interventions dedicated to supporting and improving MSMEs' access to
|
|
credit, as well as the corresponding firm performance and/or welfare
|
|
outcomes. MethodsAn EGM is a systematic evidence product that displays
|
|
the existing evidence relevant to a specific research question. An EGM's
|
|
end product is a research article or report, but it can also be shared
|
|
via an interactive map drawn as a matrix of included studies and their
|
|
corresponding interventions and outcomes. Interventions in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries that target specific population subgroups are
|
|
included on the map. The EGM considers five types of interventions: (i)
|
|
strategy, legislation and regulatory; (ii) systems and institutions;
|
|
(iii) facilitate access; (iv) lending instruments or financial products;
|
|
and (v) demand-side interventions. The map, on the other hand, covers
|
|
outcome domains for policy environment, financial inclusion, firm
|
|
performance, and welfare. Impact evaluations or systematic reviews of
|
|
relevant interventions for a previously defined target population are
|
|
included in the EGM. Studies using experimental or non-experimental
|
|
designs, as well as systematic reviews, are eligible. The EGM excludes
|
|
before-and-after study designs with no suitable comparison group.
|
|
Furthermore, the map excludes literature reviews, key informant
|
|
interviews, focus group discussions, and descriptive analyses. Search
|
|
strings were used to conduct electronic searches in databases. To ensure
|
|
that the research team had identified a significant portion of relevant
|
|
research works, the search strategy was supplemented with gray
|
|
literature searches and systematic review citation tracking. We have
|
|
compiled studies that are either completed or in progress. For practical
|
|
reasons, studies are limited to papers written in English and are not
|
|
restricted by publication date. Selection CriteriaWe included studies
|
|
that examined interventions to enhance MSMEs' access to finance in low-
|
|
and middle-income countries targeting MSMEs including households,
|
|
smallholder farmers and single person enterprise as well as financial
|
|
institutions/agencies and their staff.
|
|
The EGM considers five types of interventions that aim to: (i) deliver
|
|
strategy, legislation, and regulatory aspects; (ii) systems and
|
|
institutions that enable financing; (iii) facilitate access to finance;
|
|
(iv) deliver different lending instruments or financial products,
|
|
including traditional forms of microcredit; and (v) demand-side
|
|
interventions such as programs on financial literacy. The map includes
|
|
outcome domains surrounding policy environment, financial inclusion,
|
|
firm performance, and welfare. Eligible studies must be experimental,
|
|
non-experimental, or systematic reviews. In addition, the study designs
|
|
must have a suitable comparison group before and after the
|
|
implementation of interventions. ResultsThe EGM includes 413 studies.
|
|
The majority of the studies (379 studies) analyzed microenterprises,
|
|
such as households and smallholder farmers; 7 studies analyzed community
|
|
groups; while 109 studies analyzed small and medium enterprises. There
|
|
were 147 studies on interventions that targeted multiple firm sizes.
|
|
Lending instruments/financial products are the most common intervention
|
|
across all firm types. When it comes to the types of firms that receive
|
|
the said financial intervention, the data is overwhelmingly in favor of
|
|
microenterprises (278 studies), followed by systems and organizations
|
|
(138 studies) that support better access to such financial products and
|
|
services. Welfare outcomes have the most evidence out of all of the
|
|
outcomes of interest, followed by firm performance and financial
|
|
inclusion. Among all firm types, welfare outcomes are primarily targeted
|
|
at microenterprises. With 59 studies, we can say that small businesses
|
|
have a significantly large number of enterprise performance outcomes. of
|
|
the 413 studies, 243 used non-experimental or quasi-experimental designs
|
|
(mainly propensity score matching and instrumental variable approaches),
|
|
136 used experimental methods, and 34 were systematic reviews. 175
|
|
studies (43\%) provided evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa, 142 studies
|
|
(35\%) from South Asia, 86 studies (21\%) from East Asia and the
|
|
Pacific, 66 studies (16\%) from Latin America and the Caribbean, 28
|
|
studies (7\%), Europe and Central Asia, and 21 studies (5\%) from the
|
|
Middle East and North Africa. Most of the included evidence covers
|
|
low-income (26\%) and lower-middle income countries (66\%), and to a
|
|
lesser extent upper-middle-income countries (26\%). ConclusionThis map
|
|
depicts the existing evidence and gaps on the effects of interventions
|
|
to enhance MSMEs' access to financial services in low and middle-income
|
|
countries. Interventions directed at microenterprises with welfare
|
|
outcomes have a significant number of research outcomes in the
|
|
literature. SME evaluations have looked at firm performance, with less
|
|
focus to employment and the welfare effects on owners and employees,
|
|
including poverty reduction. Microcredit/loans have been the focus of a
|
|
large number of research papers (238 studies), indicating the field's
|
|
growing popularity. However, emerging financial interventions such as
|
|
facilitating access to digital financial services are relatively
|
|
under-studied. Several studies also investigate rural or population in
|
|
remote areas with 192 studies, 126 studies on poor and disadvantaged,
|
|
and 114 papers on women. Most of the research is conducted in
|
|
Sub-Saharan Africa (175 studies) and South Asia (142 studies) so further
|
|
research in other regions could be conducted to allow a more holistic
|
|
understanding of the effects of financial inclusion interventions.
|
|
Credit lines, supply chain finance, and trade financing, which are some
|
|
of the ADB's financial tools have limited evidence. Future studies
|
|
should look into strategy, law, and regulation interventions, as well as
|
|
interventions targeted at SMEs, and examine policy and regulatory
|
|
environment outcomes as well as welfare outcomes. Interventions on the
|
|
demand side and their impact on the policy and regulatory environment,
|
|
as well as facilitating access are relatively understudied.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dela Cruz, NA (Corresponding Author), Campbell Collaborat, B8 L28 Mark St, Veraville 3, Las Pinas City 1740, Philippines.
|
|
Dela Cruz, Nina Ashley, Campbell Collaborat, Las Pinas City, Philippines.
|
|
Villanueva, Alyssa Cyrielle B., Campbell Collaborat, Meycauayan City, Philippines.
|
|
Tolin, Lovely Ann, Campbell Collaborat, Quezon City, Philippines.
|
|
Disse, Sabrina, Campbell Collaborat, Cologne, Germany.
|
|
Lensink, Robert, Univ Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
|
|
White, Howard, Campbell Collaborat, New Delhi, India.
|
|
Dela Cruz, Nina Ashley, Campbell Collaborat, B8 L28 Mark St, Veraville 3, Las Pinas City 1740, Philippines.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/cl2.1341},
|
|
Article-Number = {e1341},
|
|
EISSN = {1891-1803},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {naodelacruz@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {19},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001022799500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000531099100001,
|
|
Author = {Radford, Kathryn and Grant, I, Mary and Sinclair, Emma J. and
|
|
Kettlewell, Jade and Watkin, Connor},
|
|
Title = {DESCRIBING RETURN TO WORK AFTER STROKE: A FEASIBILITY TRIAL OF 12-MONTH
|
|
OUTCOMES},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {52},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: Stroke is the greatest cause of disability in adults. A
|
|
quarter of strokes in the UK affect people of working age, yet under
|
|
half of them return to work after stroke. There has been little
|
|
investigation into what constitutes ``return to work{''} following
|
|
stroke. The aim of this study is to describe the work metrics of stroke
|
|
survivor participants in a feasibility randomized controlled trial of an
|
|
early stroke-specific vocational rehabilitation intervention.
|
|
Methods: Retrospective analysis of trial data. Metrics on work status,
|
|
working hours, workplace accommodations and costs were extracted from
|
|
trial outcomes gathered by postal questionnaire at 3, 6, and 12 months'
|
|
post-randomization for 46 stroke participants in a feasibility
|
|
randomized controlled trial. Participants were randomized to receive
|
|
vocational rehabilitation (intervention) or usual care (control).
|
|
Results: Two-thirds (n = 29; 63\%) of participants returned to work at
|
|
some point in the 12 months following stroke. Participants took a mean
|
|
of 90 days to return to work. Most returned to the same role with an
|
|
existing employer. Only one-third of participants who were employed
|
|
full-time at stroke onset were working full-time at 12 months
|
|
post-stroke. Most participants experienced a reduction in pre-stroke
|
|
earnings. Workplace accommodations were more common among intervention
|
|
group participants. More intervention participants than control
|
|
participants reported satisfaction with work at both 6 and 12 months
|
|
post-randomization.
|
|
Conclusion: This study illustrates the heterogeneous nature of return to
|
|
work and the dramatic impact of stroke on work status, working hours and
|
|
income. Longitudinal research should explore the socioeconomic legacy of
|
|
stroke and include clear definitions of work and accurate measures of
|
|
working hours and income from all sources.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Radford, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Nottingham, Queens Med Ctr, Nottingham NG7 2UH, England.
|
|
Radford, Kathryn; Grant, Mary, I; Sinclair, Emma J.; Kettlewell, Jade; Watkin, Connor, Univ Nottingham, Sch Med, Nottingham NG7 2UH, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2340/16501977-2647},
|
|
Article-Number = {jrm00048},
|
|
ISSN = {1650-1977},
|
|
EISSN = {1651-2081},
|
|
Keywords = {stroke; rehabilitation; work; brain injuries; vocational rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TO-WORK; REHABILITATION; FACILITATORS; BARRIERS; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Sport Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {Radford@nottingham.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sinclair, Emma/GWM-4590-2022
|
|
Kettlewell, Jade/AAV-6072-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kettlewell, Jade/0000-0002-6713-4551
|
|
Radford, Kate/0000-0001-6246-3180},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000531099100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000461039100013,
|
|
Author = {Brighton, Lisa Jane and Selman, Lucy Ellen and Bristowe, Katherine and
|
|
Edwards, Beth and Koffman, Jonathan and Evans, Catherine J.},
|
|
Title = {Emotional labour in palliative and end-of-life care communication: A
|
|
qualitative study with generalist palliative care providers},
|
|
Journal = {PATIENT EDUCATION AND COUNSELING},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {102},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {494-502},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To explore generalist palliative care providers' experiences
|
|
of emotional labour when undertaking conversations around palliative and
|
|
end-of-life care with patients and families, to inform supportive
|
|
strategies.
|
|
Methods: Semi-structured interviews conducted with generalist staff
|
|
(those providing `primary' or `general' palliative care, not palliative
|
|
care specialists) who had attended a communication workshop. Sampling
|
|
was purposive (by gender, profession, experience). Data were analysed
|
|
using a framework approach; a sample of transcripts were double-coded
|
|
for rigour. Data collection and analysis were informed by theories of
|
|
emotional labour, coping, and communication.
|
|
Results: Four ambulance staff, three nurses, two speech and language
|
|
therapists, and one therapy assistant were interviewed. Five themes
|
|
emerged: emotions experienced; emotion `display rules'; emotion
|
|
management; support needs; and perceived impact of emotional labour.
|
|
Participants reported balancing `human' and `professional' expressions
|
|
of emotion. Support needs included time for emotion management,
|
|
workplace cultures that normalise emotional experiences, formal
|
|
emotional support, and palliative and end-of-life care skills training.
|
|
Conclusion: Diverse strategies to support the emotional needs of
|
|
generalist staff are crucial to ensure high-quality end-of-life care and
|
|
communication, and to support staff well-being.
|
|
Practice implications: Both formal and informal support is required,
|
|
alongside skills training, to enable a supportive workplace culture and
|
|
individual development. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brighton, LJ (Corresponding Author), Kings Coll London, Cicely Saunders Inst Palliat Care Policy \& Rehabi, Bessemer Rd, London SE5 9PJ, England.
|
|
Brighton, Lisa Jane; Bristowe, Katherine; Edwards, Beth; Koffman, Jonathan; Evans, Catherine J., Kings Coll London, Cicely Saunders Inst Palliat Care Policy \& Rehabi, Bessemer Rd, London SE5 9PJ, England.
|
|
Selman, Lucy Ellen, Univ Bristol, Bristol Med Sch, Populat Hlth Sci, Bristol, Avon, England.
|
|
Evans, Catherine J., Brighton Gen Hosp, Sussex Community NHS Fdn Trust, Brighton, E Sussex, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.pec.2018.10.013},
|
|
ISSN = {0738-3991},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5134},
|
|
Keywords = {Emotions; Communication; Education; Terminal care; Palliative care;
|
|
Qualitative research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CANCER CARE; STRESSORS; INTERVENTIONS; PERSPECTIVES; STRATEGIES;
|
|
BARRIERS; EFFICACY; BURNOUT; SKILLS; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {lisa.brighton@kcl.ac.uk
|
|
lucy.selman@bristol.ac.uk
|
|
katherine.bristowe@kcl.ac.uk
|
|
bethany.edwards@kcl.ac.uk
|
|
jonathan.koffman@kcl.ac.uk
|
|
catherine.evans@kcl.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Evans, Catherine J/AAS-4121-2020
|
|
Bristowe, Katherine R/G-4807-2012
|
|
Brighton, Lisa J/M-1632-2014
|
|
Brighton, Lisa Jane/AAF-9119-2019
|
|
Selman, Lucy/C-4373-2014
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Evans, Catherine J/0000-0003-0034-7402
|
|
Brighton, Lisa J/0000-0003-0516-0102
|
|
Brighton, Lisa Jane/0000-0003-0516-0102
|
|
Selman, Lucy/0000-0001-5747-2699
|
|
Edwards, Beth/0000-0001-7742-4432
|
|
Koffman, Jonathan/0000-0001-8513-5681
|
|
Bristowe, Katherine Rachel/0000-0003-1809-217X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {39},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000461039100013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000501237600001,
|
|
Author = {Huang, Keng-Yen and Lee, Douglas and Nakigudde, Janet and Cheng, Sabrina
|
|
and Gouley, Kathleen Kiely and Mann, Devin and Schoenthaler, Antoinette
|
|
and Chokshi, Sara and Kisakye, Elizabeth Nsamba and Tusiime, Christine
|
|
and Mendelsohn, Alan},
|
|
Title = {Use of Technology to Promote Child Behavioral Health in the Context of
|
|
Pediatric Care: A Scoping Review and Applications to Low- and
|
|
Middle-Income Countries},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Month = {NOV 13},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The burden of mental, neurological, and substance (MNS)
|
|
disorders is greater in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The
|
|
rapid growth of digital health (i.e., eHealth) approaches offer new
|
|
solutions for transforming pediatric mental health services and have the
|
|
potential to address multiple resource and system barriers. However,
|
|
little work has been done in applying eHealth to promote young
|
|
children's mental health in LMICs. It is also not clear how eHealth has
|
|
been and might be applied to translating existing evidence-based
|
|
practices/strategies (EBPs) to enable broader access to child mental
|
|
health interventions and services. Methods: A scoping review was
|
|
conducted to summarize current eHealth applications and evidence in
|
|
child mental health. The review focuses on 1) providing an overview of
|
|
existing eHealth applications, research methods, and effectiveness
|
|
evidence in child mental health promotion (focused on children of 0-12
|
|
years of age) across diverse service contexts; and 2) drawing lessons
|
|
learned from the existing research about eHealth design strategies and
|
|
usability data in order to inform future eHealth design in LMICs.
|
|
Results: Thirty-two (32) articles fitting our inclusion criteria were
|
|
reviewed. The child mental health eHealth studies were grouped into
|
|
three areas: i) eHealth interventions targeting families that promote
|
|
child and family wellbeing; ii) eHealth for improving school mental
|
|
health services (e.g., promote school staff's knowledge and management
|
|
skills); and iii) eHealth for improving behavioral health care in the
|
|
pediatric care system (e.g., promote use of integrated patient-portal
|
|
and electronic decision support systems). Most eHealth studies have
|
|
reported positive impacts. Although most pediatric eHealth studies were
|
|
conducted in high-income countries, many eHealth design strategies can
|
|
be adapted and modified to fit LMIC contexts. Most user-engagement
|
|
strategies identified from high-income countries are also relevant for
|
|
populations in LMICs. Conclusions: This review synthesizes patterns of
|
|
eHealth use across a spectrum of individual/family and system level of
|
|
eHealth interventions that can be applied to promote child mental health
|
|
and strengthen mental health service systems. This review also
|
|
summarizes critical lessons to guide future eHealth design and delivery
|
|
models in LMICs. However, more research in testing combinations of
|
|
eHealth strategies in LMICs is needed.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Huang, KY (Corresponding Author), NYU, Sch Med, Dept Populat Hlth, New York, NY 10016 USA.
|
|
Huang, Keng-Yen; Cheng, Sabrina; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely; Mann, Devin; Schoenthaler, Antoinette; Chokshi, Sara; Mendelsohn, Alan, NYU, Sch Med, Dept Populat Hlth, New York, NY 10016 USA.
|
|
Lee, Douglas, New York Inst Technol, Coll Osteopath Med, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Nakigudde, Janet, Makerere Univ, Dept Psychiat, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Kisakye, Elizabeth Nsamba, Minist Educ \& Sports, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Tusiime, Christine, Butabika Hosp, Kampala, Uganda.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00806},
|
|
Article-Number = {806},
|
|
ISSN = {1664-0640},
|
|
Keywords = {mHealth; eHealth; pediatric; behavioral health; parenting; framework;
|
|
health service; low-and-middle-income country},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; TRIPLE P ONLINE; MENTAL-HEALTH; SOCIAL
|
|
DETERMINANTS; EDUCATIONAL-PROGRAM; PARENTING PROGRAM; INTERVENTION;
|
|
IMPLEMENTATION; PREVENTION; ENGAGEMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {keng-yen.huang@nyulangone.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kiely Gouley, Kathleen/0000-0001-6828-5549
|
|
Huang, Keng-Yen/0000-0003-3245-7614
|
|
Schoenthaler, Antoinette/0000-0003-4905-5136
|
|
Mann, Devin/0000-0002-2099-0852},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {81},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000501237600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000522417300004,
|
|
Author = {Howie, Peter and Atakhanova, Zauresh},
|
|
Title = {Heterogeneous labor and structural change in low- and middle-income,
|
|
resource-dependent countries},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC CHANGE AND RESTRUCTURING},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {53},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {297-332},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {In this paper we analyse structural change and its implications for
|
|
labor productivity growth in Kazakhstan, Malawi, and Zambia, three
|
|
resource-dependent countries, during the resource boom that lasted from
|
|
2001 to 2013. We pay particular attention to the effects of labor
|
|
heterogeneity by assessing the demand for pre-determined occupations.
|
|
The effects of structural change on heterogeneous labor markets are
|
|
studied by developing a model to explain the observed patterns of labor
|
|
migration between sectors. We use labor force survey data from
|
|
Kazakhstan and census microdata for Malawi and Zambia available from the
|
|
IPUMS International database. In-depth examinations are performed using
|
|
a decomposition technique and multinomial logit regression to examine
|
|
labor demand patterns. Results show that private services experienced
|
|
the largest increase in employment across all occupations and relative
|
|
skill deepening. Substantial decreases in managers occurred in public
|
|
services. The results indicate that structural change is fundamental in
|
|
shaping the allocation of individuals across different occupations
|
|
within the labor market. Moreover, during a resource boom, the results
|
|
indicate that the public sector experiences a skill-drain that may
|
|
affect the quality of governance.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Howie, P (Corresponding Author), Nazarbayev Univ, Grad Sch Publ Policy, 53 Kabanbay Batyr Ave,Block C3, Astana 010000, Kazakhstan.
|
|
Howie, Peter, Nazarbayev Univ, Grad Sch Publ Policy, 53 Kabanbay Batyr Ave,Block C3, Astana 010000, Kazakhstan.
|
|
Atakhanova, Zauresh, Acad Publ Adm Kazakhstan, 33a Abay St, Astana 010000, Kazakhstan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10644-018-9242-9},
|
|
ISSN = {1573-9414},
|
|
EISSN = {1574-0277},
|
|
Keywords = {Structural change; Labor productivity; Resource boom; Kazakhstan;
|
|
Malawi; Zambia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SWITCHING REGRESSION-MODEL; DUTCH DISEASE; PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH;
|
|
INEQUALITY; POLICIES; SECTOR; RISK; INDUSTRIALIZATION; DIVERSIFICATION;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {peter.howie@nu.edu.kz},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Atakhanova, Zauresh/0000-0001-8004-377X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000522417300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000719958500001,
|
|
Author = {Brathwaite, Rachel and Hutchinson, Eleanor and McKee, Martin and
|
|
Palafox, Benjamin and Balabanova, Dina},
|
|
Title = {The Long and Winding Road: A Systematic Literature Review
|
|
Conceptualising Pathways for Hypertension Care and Control in Low- and
|
|
Middle-Income Countries},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH POLICY AND MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {257-268},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Hypertension control is poor everywhere, especially in
|
|
low-and middle-income countries (LMICs). An effective response requires
|
|
understanding factors acting at each stage on the patients' pathway
|
|
through the health system from entry or first contact with the health
|
|
system, through to treatment initiation and follow up. This systematic
|
|
review aimed to identify barriers to and facilitators of hypertension
|
|
control along this pathway and, respectively, ways to overcome or
|
|
strengthen them. Methods: MEDLINE, EMBASE, Global Health, CINAHL Plus,
|
|
and Africa-Wide Information (1980-April 2019) were searched for studies
|
|
of hypertensive adults in LMICs reporting details of at least 2
|
|
adequately described health system contacts. Data were extracted and
|
|
analysed by 2 reviewers. Themes were developed using NVivo in
|
|
patient-related (sociodemographic, knowledge and health beliefs, health
|
|
status and co-morbidities, trade-offs), social (social relationships and
|
|
traditions) and health system domains (resources and processes). Results
|
|
are reported according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic
|
|
Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Results: From 2584
|
|
identified records, 30 were included in the narrative synthesis. At
|
|
entry, `health systems resources and processes' and `knowledge and
|
|
beliefs about hypertension' dominated while `social relations and
|
|
traditions' and `comorbidities' assume greater importance subsequently,
|
|
with patients making `trade-offs' with family priorities during follow
|
|
up. Socio-demographic factors play a role, but to a lesser extent than
|
|
other factors. Context matters. Conclusion: Understanding the changing
|
|
barriers to hypertension control along the patient journey is necessary
|
|
to develop a comprehensive and efficient response to this persisting
|
|
problem. PROSPERO Registration: CRD42017074786 Copyright: (c) 2020 The
|
|
Author(s); Published by Kerman University of Medical Sciences. This is
|
|
an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
|
|
Commons Attribution License
|
|
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted
|
|
use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original
|
|
work is properly cited. Citation: Brathwaite R, Hutchinson E, McKee M
|
|
Palafox B, Balabanova D. The long and winding road: a systematic
|
|
literature review conceptualising pathways for hypertension care and
|
|
control in low-and middle-income countries. Int J Health Policy Manag.
|
|
2020;x(x):x-x. doi:10.34172/ijhpm.2020.105},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Balabanova, D (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Publ Hlth \& Policy, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, London, England.
|
|
Brathwaite, Rachel, Washington Univ, Brown Sch, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
|
|
Hutchinson, Eleanor; Balabanova, Dina, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Publ Hlth \& Policy, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, London, England.
|
|
McKee, Martin; Palafox, Benjamin, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Publ Hlth \& Policy, Dept Hlth Serv Res \& Policy, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.34172/ijhpm.2020.105},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2020},
|
|
EISSN = {2322-5939},
|
|
Keywords = {Systematic Review; Hypertension Control; Healthcare Delivery; Health
|
|
Systems; Pathways to Care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; QUALITATIVE-ANALYSIS; BARRIERS; DISCONTINUATION;
|
|
MANAGEMENT; ADHERENCE; LINKAGE; PROGRAM; COHORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {dina.balabanova@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {McKee, Marc D/E-2187-2011
|
|
McKee, Martin/E-6673-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {McKee, Marc D/0000-0001-8349-965X
|
|
McKee, Martin/0000-0002-0121-9683
|
|
Brathwaite, Rachel/0000-0002-9363-3581
|
|
Balabanova, Dina/0000-0001-7163-3428
|
|
Hutchinson, Eleanor/0000-0002-9718-2407},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000719958500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000183372200010,
|
|
Author = {Harrison, RL and Li, J and Pearce, K and Wyman, T},
|
|
Title = {The Community Dental Facilitator Project: Reducing barriers to dental
|
|
care},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH DENTISTRY},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {63},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {126-128},
|
|
Month = {SPR},
|
|
Note = {6th National Health Promotion Conference, VICTORIA, CANADA, APR, 2002},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: This report describes an initiative developed and
|
|
implemented by a low-income, urban, Canadian community to respond to
|
|
their children's dental problems. Methods: The first strategy pursued by
|
|
the community was the development of the Community Dental Facilitator
|
|
Project. This project facilitated children's access to existing
|
|
government funding for dental treatment, and subsequently facilitated
|
|
access to treatment at local dental offices. Children in need of
|
|
treatment were identified by a school dental screening. The facilitation
|
|
work was done by three lay workers hired from within the community who
|
|
represented the community's predominant ethnic groups. Results: Parents
|
|
revealed that barriers to dental care in local dental offices were lack
|
|
of information about funding programs, language, inflexible work
|
|
situation, and mistrust of bureaucracy. By the project's end, with the
|
|
assistance of the facilitators, a significantly increased number of
|
|
children had been enrolled for government dental benefits (<.001). In
|
|
addition to the 123 children identified at the screening as needing
|
|
treatment, another 30 children ``self-referred{''} to the program. At
|
|
the end of the project's original funding period, dental appointments
|
|
had been made for 68 children: 60 (48.8\%) of the ``screened{''} group,
|
|
8 (26.7\%) of the ``self-referred{''} group. One-year telephone
|
|
follow-up to parents of the screened children revealed that 42 of 59
|
|
(71.1\%) had completed treatment. Conclusions: Barriers to dental care
|
|
for low income children go beyond `economics. A community facilitation
|
|
model can improve low-income children's access to existing dental
|
|
services and may reduce the barriers to care for some children requiring
|
|
treatment.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Harrison, RL (Corresponding Author), Univ British Columbia, Div Pediat Dent, Fac Dent, 2199 Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3, Canada.
|
|
Univ British Columbia, Div Pediat Dent, Fac Dent, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3, Canada.
|
|
Strathcona Hlth Soc, Vancouver, BC, Canada.},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-4006},
|
|
Keywords = {health services accessibility; dental health services; dental care for
|
|
children; medically underserved area; consumer participation; ethnology},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Dentistry, Oral Surgery \& Medicine; Public, Environmental \&
|
|
Occupational Health},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Harrison, Rosamund/0000-0003-1467-6231},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {1},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000183372200010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000605345700017,
|
|
Author = {Williams, Shanele and Wei, Liang and Griffin, Susan O. and
|
|
Thornton-Evans, Gina},
|
|
Title = {Untreated caries among US working-aged adults and association with
|
|
reporting need for oral health care},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN DENTAL ASSOCIATION},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {152},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {55-64},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background. National data indicate that working-aged adults (20-64
|
|
years) are more likely to report financial barriers to receiving needed
|
|
oral health care relative to other age groups. The aim of this study was
|
|
to examine the burden of untreated caries (UC) and its association with
|
|
reporting an unmet oral health care need among working-aged adults.
|
|
Methods. The authors used National Health and Nutrition Examination
|
|
Survey data from 2011 through 2016 for 10,286 dentate adults to examine
|
|
the prevalence of mild to moderate (1-3 affected teeth) and severe (>= 4
|
|
affected teeth) UC. The authors used multivariable logistic regression
|
|
to identify factors that were associated with reporting an unmet oral
|
|
health care need.
|
|
Results. Low-income adults had mild to moderate UC (26.2\%) 2 times more
|
|
frequently and severe UC (13.2\%) 3 times more frequently than
|
|
higher-income adults. After controlling for covariates, the variables
|
|
most strongly associated with reporting an unmet oral health care need
|
|
were UC, low income, fair or poor general health, smoking, and no
|
|
private health insurance. The model-adjusted prevalence of reporting an
|
|
unmet oral health care need among low-income adults with mild to
|
|
moderate and severe UC were 35.7\% and 45.1\%, respectively.
|
|
Conclusions. The burden of UC among low-income adults is high;
|
|
prevalence was approximately 40\% with approximately 3 affected teeth
|
|
per person on average. Reporting an unmet oral health care need appears
|
|
to be capturing primarily differences in UC, health, and financial
|
|
access to oral health care.
|
|
Practical Implications. Data on self-reported unmet oral health care
|
|
need can have utility as a surveillance tool for monitoring UC and
|
|
targeting resources to decrease UC among low-income adults.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Thornton-Evans, G (Corresponding Author), Ctr Dis Control \& Prevent, Div Oral Hlth, 4770 Buford Hwy,MS S107-8, Atlanta, GA 30341 USA.
|
|
Williams, Shanele; Griffin, Susan O.; Thornton-Evans, Gina, Ctr Dis Control \& Prevent, Div Oral Hlth, 4770 Buford Hwy,MS S107-8, Atlanta, GA 30341 USA.
|
|
Williams, Shanele, LECOM Sch Dent Med, Simulat Clin, Bradenton, FL USA.
|
|
Wei, Liang, DB Consulting Grp, Atlanta, GA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.adaj.2020.09.019},
|
|
ISSN = {0002-8177},
|
|
EISSN = {1943-4723},
|
|
Keywords = {National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; untreated caries;
|
|
self-reported oral health care need; unmet dental care need; oral health
|
|
surveillance tool; oral health care for working-aged adults},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DENTAL-CARE; EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENTS; VISITS; POPULATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Dentistry, Oral Surgery \& Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {gdt4@cdc.gov},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000605345700017},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000331306100001,
|
|
Author = {McFadden, Alison and Green, Josephine M. and Williams, Victoria and
|
|
McLeish, Jenny and McCormick, Felicia and Fox-Rushby, Julia and Renfrew,
|
|
Mary J.},
|
|
Title = {Can food vouchers improve nutrition and reduce health inequalities in
|
|
low-income mothers and young children: a multi-method evaluation of the
|
|
experiences of beneficiaries and practitioners of the Healthy Start
|
|
programme in England},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Month = {FEB 11},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Good nutrition is important during pregnancy, breastfeeding
|
|
and early life to optimise the health of women and children. It is
|
|
difficult for low-income families to prioritise spending on healthy
|
|
food. Healthy Start is a targeted United Kingdom (UK) food subsidy
|
|
programme that gives vouchers for fruit, vegetables, milk, and vitamins
|
|
to low-income families. This paper reports an evaluation of Healthy
|
|
Start from the perspectives of women and health practitioners.
|
|
Methods: The multi-method study conducted in England in 2011/2012
|
|
included focus group discussions with 49 health practitioners, an online
|
|
consultation with 620 health and social care practitioners, service
|
|
managers, commissioners, and user and advocacy groups, and qualitative
|
|
participatory workshops with 85 low-income women. Additional focus group
|
|
discussions and telephone interviews included the views of 25 women who
|
|
did not speak English and three women from Traveller communities.
|
|
Results: Women reported that Healthy Start vouchers increased the
|
|
quantity and range of fruit and vegetables they used and improved the
|
|
quality of family diets, and established good habits for the future.
|
|
Barriers to registration included complex eligibility criteria,
|
|
inappropriate targeting of information about the programme by health
|
|
practitioners and a general low level of awareness among families.
|
|
Access to the programme was particularly challenging for women who did
|
|
not speak English, had low literacy levels, were in low paid work or had
|
|
fluctuating incomes. The potential impact was undermined by the rising
|
|
price of food relative to voucher value. Access to registered retailers
|
|
was problematic in rural areas, and there was low registration among
|
|
smaller shops and market stalls, especially those serving culturally
|
|
diverse communities.
|
|
Conclusions: Our evaluation of the Healthy Start programme in England
|
|
suggests that a food subsidy programme can provide an important
|
|
nutritional safety net and potentially improve nutrition for pregnant
|
|
women and young children living on low incomes. Factors that could
|
|
compromise this impact include erosion of voucher value relative to the
|
|
rising cost of food, lack of access to registered retailers and barriers
|
|
to registering for the programme. Addressing these issues could inform
|
|
the design and implementation of food subsidy programmes in high income
|
|
countries.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McFadden, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Dundee, Coll Med Dent \& Nursing, 11 Arlie Pl, Dundee DD1 4HJ, Scotland.
|
|
McFadden, Alison, Univ Dundee, Coll Med Dent \& Nursing, Dundee DD1 4HJ, Scotland.
|
|
Green, Josephine M.; McCormick, Felicia, Univ York, Dept Hlth Sci, York YO10 5DD, N Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Williams, Victoria, Food Matters, Brighthelm Ctr, Brighton BN1 1YD, E Sussex, England.
|
|
Fox-Rushby, Julia, Brunel Univ, Hlth Econ Res Grp, Uxbridge UB8 3PH, Middx, England.
|
|
Renfrew, Mary J., Univ Dundee, Coll Med Dent \& Nursing, Dundee DD1 4HJ, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1471-2458-14-148},
|
|
Article-Number = {148},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Food subsidy programme; Food vouchers; Healthy Start; Low-income
|
|
families; Maternal and young child nutrition; Fruit and vegetable
|
|
intake; Nutritional inequalities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PUBLIC-HEALTH; VEGETABLE CONSUMPTION; INSECURITY; PREGNANCY; FRUIT;
|
|
WOMEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {a.m.mcfadden@dundee.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Renfrew, Mary J/A-2440-2010
|
|
杜, 美晨/S-4063-2016
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {杜, 美晨/0000-0002-1562-1155
|
|
Renfrew, Mary/0000-0003-2905-403X
|
|
McFadden, Alison/0000-0002-5164-2025
|
|
Fox-Rushby, Julia/0000-0003-0748-0871
|
|
McLeish, Jenny/0000-0002-9289-857X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {46},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {82},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000331306100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000408885200012,
|
|
Author = {Pinnington, Ashly and Alshamsi, Abdullah and Ozbilgin, Mustafa and
|
|
Tatli, Ahu and Vassilopoulou, Joana},
|
|
Editor = {Simberova, I and Milichovsky, F and Zizlavsky, O},
|
|
Title = {TALENT MANAGEMENT IN THE UNITED ARAB EMIRATES: LOCAL AND EXPATRIATE
|
|
PERSPECTIVES},
|
|
Booktitle = {SMART AND EFFICIENT ECONOMY: PREPARATION FOR THE FUTURE INNOVATIVE
|
|
ECONOMY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Pages = {102-110},
|
|
Note = {21st International Scientific Conference on Smart and Efficient Economy
|
|
- Preparation for the Future Innovative Economy, Brno Univ Technol, Fac
|
|
Business \& Management, Brno, CZECH REPUBLIC, MAY 19-20, 2016},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose of the article Academic debates on TM generally portray GCC
|
|
countries as less advanced. This paper seeks to understand why TM is not
|
|
so well-known and is less systematically implemented in the United Arab
|
|
Emirates (UAE).
|
|
Methodology/methods Individual interviews were conducted with 84 people
|
|
to explore TM in public and private sector organisations in the UAE.
|
|
15-16 interviews were held in each of four case study organizations
|
|
(total 63 interviews) and 21 interviews with a range of TM stakeholders,
|
|
such as government officials and known TM opinion leaders. 30 of the
|
|
transcripts were selected for open and selective coding. All of the 21
|
|
TM stakeholders were analyzed along with a further 9 transcripts
|
|
selected from the four case studies. The transcripts were open coded by
|
|
the first author using NVIVO 10. This paper reports an interpretation of
|
|
the 455 open codes and research memos developed at what is an advanced
|
|
stage of the open and selective coding phases.
|
|
Scientific aim TM theories are predominantly concerned with how
|
|
employees' talents can be deployed to the competitive advantage of the
|
|
employing organization with positive outcomes for employees. This paper
|
|
is concerned with broadening the debates on to other stakeholders in TM
|
|
processes, especially, countries, governments, education, and families.
|
|
Findings TM as it is conceptualized and practiced in the UAE is
|
|
inextricably linked to issues of employment localization, often known in
|
|
the UAE as nationalization or Emiratization. TM has been organized and
|
|
implemented differently for two labour markets across all sectors of
|
|
employment; the country's nationals and the expatriate workforce.
|
|
Conclusions The extent that TM develops in the UAE similar to Western
|
|
countries depends on how much the implementation of policies for
|
|
Emiratization and expatriate workforce development are found to be
|
|
compatible.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pinnington, A (Corresponding Author), British Univ Dubai, POB 345015, Dubai, U Arab Emirates.
|
|
Pinnington, Ashly; Alshamsi, Abdullah, British Univ Dubai, POB 345015, Dubai, U Arab Emirates.
|
|
Ozbilgin, Mustafa, Brunel Univ London, Brunel Business Sch, Uxbridge UB8 3PH, Middx, England.
|
|
Tatli, Ahu, Queen Mary Univ London, Sch Business \& Management, Mile End Rd, London E1 4NS, England.
|
|
Vassilopoulou, Joana, Univ Kent, Kent Business Sch, Canterbury CT2 7NZ, Kent, England.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-80-214-5413-2},
|
|
Keywords = {Talent Management; TM Policies; Emiratization; Expatriate Labour;
|
|
Stories; UAE; GCC},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Economics; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {ashly.pinnington@buid.ac.ae},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ozbilgin, Mustafa F/A-1343-2008
|
|
PINNINGTON, ASHLY/C-6454-2011
|
|
Tatli, Ahu/B-7197-2008},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ozbilgin, Mustafa F/0000-0002-8672-9534
|
|
PINNINGTON, ASHLY/0000-0002-4814-6960
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000408885200012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000669630200004,
|
|
Author = {Ayalew, Betlihem and Dawson-Hahn, Elizabeth and Cholera, Rushina and
|
|
Falusi, Olanrewaju and Haro, Tamar Magarik and Montoya-Williams, Diana
|
|
and Linton, Julie M.},
|
|
Title = {The Health of Children in Immigrant Families: Key Drivers and Research
|
|
Gaps Through an Equity Lens},
|
|
Journal = {ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {777-792},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: The United States benefits economically and socially from the
|
|
diverse skill-set and innovative contributions of immigrants. By
|
|
applying a socioecological framework with an equity lens, we aim to
|
|
provide an overview of the health of children in immigrant families
|
|
(CIF) in the United States, identify gaps in related research, and
|
|
suggest future areas of focus to advance health equity.
|
|
METHODS: The literature review consisted of identifying academic and
|
|
gray literature using a MeSH Database, Clinical Queries, and relevant
|
|
keywords in 3 electronic databases (PubMed, Web of Science, and
|
|
BrowZine). Search terms were selected with goals of: 1) conceptualizing
|
|
a model of key drivers of health for CIF; 2) describing and classifying
|
|
key drivers of health for CIF; and 3) identifying knowledge gaps.
|
|
RESULTS: The initial search produced 1120 results which were screened
|
|
for relevance using a meta-narrative approach. Of these, 224 papers were
|
|
selected, categorized by topic, and reviewed in collaboration with the
|
|
authors. Key topic areas included patient and family outcomes,
|
|
institutional and community environments, the impact of public policy,
|
|
and opportunities for research. Key inequities were identified in health
|
|
outcomes; access to quality health care, housing, education, employment
|
|
opportunities; immigration policies; and inclusion in and funding for
|
|
research. Important resiliency factors for CIF included strong family
|
|
connections and social networks.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: Broad structural inequities contribute to poor health
|
|
outcomes among immigrant families. While resiliency factors exist,
|
|
research on the impact of certain important drivers of health, such as
|
|
structural and cultural racism, is missing regarding this population.
|
|
More work is needed to inform the development and optimization of
|
|
programs and policies aimed at improving outcomes for CIF. However,
|
|
research should incorporate expertise from within immigrant communities.
|
|
Finally, interventions to improve outcomes for CIF should be considered
|
|
in the context of the socioecological model which informs the upstream
|
|
and downstream drivers of health outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Linton, JM (Corresponding Author), UofSC Sch Med Greenville, 607 Grove Rd, Greenville, SC 29605 USA.
|
|
Ayalew, Betlihem; Linton, Julie M., UofSC Sch Med Greenville, 607 Grove Rd, Greenville, SC 29605 USA.
|
|
Dawson-Hahn, Elizabeth, Univ Washington, Harborview Med Ctr, Seattle Childrens Res Inst, 325 9Th Ave, Seattle, WA 98104 USA.
|
|
Cholera, Rushina, Duke Univ, Duke Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Natl Clinician Scholars Program, Durham, NC 27706 USA.
|
|
Cholera, Rushina, Duke Univ, Margolis Ctr Hlth Policy, Durham, NC USA.
|
|
Falusi, Olanrewaju, George Washington Univ, Sch Med \& Hlth Sci, Childrens Natl Hosp, Child Hlth Advocacy Inst, Washington, DC 20052 USA.
|
|
Falusi, Olanrewaju, George Washington Univ, Sch Med \& Hlth Sci, Childrens Natl Hosp, Div Gen \& Community Pediat, Washington, DC 20052 USA.
|
|
Haro, Tamar Magarik, Amer Acad Pediat, Fed \& State Advocacy, North Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Montoya-Williams, Diana, Childrens Hosp Philadelphia, Roberts Ctr Pediat Res 2714, Div Neonatol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Linton, Julie M., Prisma Hlth Childrens Hosp, Greenville, SC USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1876-2859},
|
|
EISSN = {1876-2867},
|
|
Keywords = {children in immigrant families; health equity; immigration policy;
|
|
prefers language other than English; socioecological model},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENCY; MENTAL-HEALTH; EPIDEMIOLOGIC PARADOX;
|
|
DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; CARE; DISPARITIES; COMMUNITY; LANGUAGE; NEEDS;
|
|
ADOLESCENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {Julie.linton@prismahealth.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {164},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000669630200004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000631875900011,
|
|
Author = {Meghji, Jamilah and Gregorius, Stefanie and Madan, Jason and Chitimbe,
|
|
Fatima and Thomson, Rachael and Rylance, Jamie and Banda, Ndaziona P. K.
|
|
and Gordon, Stephen B. and Corbett, Elizabeth L. and Mortimer, Kevin and
|
|
Squire, Stephen Bertel},
|
|
Title = {The long term effect of pulmonary tuberculosis on income and employment
|
|
in a low income, urban setting},
|
|
Journal = {THORAX},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {76},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {387-395},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Mitigating the socioeconomic impact of tuberculosis (TB) is key to the
|
|
WHO End TB Strategy. However, little known about socioeconomic
|
|
well-being beyond TB-treatment completion. In this mixed-methods study,
|
|
we describe socioeconomic outcomes after TB-disease in urban Blantyre,
|
|
Malawi, and explore pathways and barriers to financial recovery.
|
|
Methods
|
|
Adults >= 15 years successfully completing treatment for a first episode
|
|
of pulmonary TB under the National TB Control Programme were
|
|
prospectively followed up for 12 months. Socioeconomic, income,
|
|
occupation, health seeking and cost data were collected. Determinants
|
|
and impacts of ongoing financial hardship were explored through illness
|
|
narrative interviews with purposively selected participants.
|
|
Results
|
|
405 participants were recruited from February 2016 to April 2017. Median
|
|
age was 35 years (IQR: 28-41), 67.9\% (275/405) were male, and 60.6\%
|
|
(244/405) were HIV-positive. Employment and incomes were lowest at
|
|
TB-treatment completion, with limited recovery in the following year:
|
|
fewer people were in paid work (63.0\% (232/368) vs 72.4\% (293/405),
|
|
p=0.006), median incomes were lower (US\$44.13 (IQR: US\$0-US\$106.15)
|
|
vs US\$72.20 (IQR: US\$26.71-US\$173.29), p<0.001), and more patients
|
|
were living in poverty (earning <US\$1.90/day: 57.7\% (211/366) vs
|
|
41.6\% (166/399), p<0.001) 1 year after TB-treatment completion compared
|
|
with before TB-disease onset. Half of the participants (50.5\%, 184/368)
|
|
reported ongoing dissaving (use of savings, selling assets, borrowing
|
|
money) and 9.5\% (35/368) reported school interruptions in the year
|
|
after TB-treatment completion. Twenty-one participants completed
|
|
in-depth interviews. Reported barriers to economic recovery included
|
|
financial insecurity, challenges rebuilding business relationships,
|
|
residual physical morbidity and stigma.
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
TB-affected households remain economically vulnerable even after
|
|
TB-treatment completion, with limited recovery in income and employment,
|
|
persistent financial strain requiring dissaving, and ongoing school
|
|
interruptions. Measures of the economic impact of TB disease should
|
|
include the post-TB period. Interventions to protect the long-term
|
|
health and livelihoods of TB survivors must be explored.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Meghji, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Liverpool Liverpool Sch Trop Med, Dept Clin Sci, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Meghji, Jamilah; Gregorius, Stefanie; Thomson, Rachael; Rylance, Jamie; Gordon, Stephen B.; Mortimer, Kevin; Squire, Stephen Bertel, Univ Liverpool Liverpool Sch Trop Med, Dept Clin Sci, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Meghji, Jamilah; Chitimbe, Fatima; Rylance, Jamie; Gordon, Stephen B., Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Trust Clin Res Programm, Blantyre, Malawi.
|
|
Gregorius, Stefanie, Deutsche Gesell Int Zusammenarbeit, Bonn, Germany.
|
|
Madan, Jason, Univ Warwick, Warwick Clinical Trials Unit, Coventry, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Banda, Ndaziona P. K., Queen Elizabeth Cent Hosp, Dept Med, Blantyre, Malawi.
|
|
Corbett, Elizabeth L., London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Infect \& Trop Dis, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/thoraxjnl-2020-215338},
|
|
ISSN = {0040-6376},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-3296},
|
|
Keywords = {Pulmonary tuberculosis; TB sequelae; post-TB lung disease; health
|
|
economics; social determinants},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BURDEN; AFRICA; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Respiratory System},
|
|
Author-Email = {jamilah.meghji@lstmed.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rylance, Jamie/ABD-9314-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mortimer, Kevin/0000-0002-8118-8871
|
|
Madan, Jason/0000-0003-4316-1480
|
|
Rylance, Jamie/0000-0002-2323-3611
|
|
Gordon, Stephen/0000-0001-6576-1116
|
|
Meghji, Jamilah/0000-0002-4693-8884
|
|
Corbett, Elizabeth/0000-0002-3552-3181
|
|
Thomson, Rachael/0000-0001-5010-3428},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000631875900011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000656441500001,
|
|
Author = {Rungskunroch, Panrawee and Jack, Anson and Kaewunruen, Sakdirat},
|
|
Title = {Socioeconomic Benefits of the Shinkansen Network},
|
|
Journal = {INFRASTRUCTURES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {High speed rail (HSR) networks have been an essential catalyst in
|
|
stimulating and balancing regional economic growth that ultimately
|
|
benefits the society as a whole. Previous studies have revealed that HSR
|
|
services sustainably yield superior social values for people, especially
|
|
for adults and those of working age. This has become an advantage of HSR
|
|
networks over other forms of public transportation. The Shinkansen
|
|
network in Japan is one of most successful HSR models. Its services
|
|
bring significant social advantages to the communities it serves, such
|
|
as shorter travel times and increased job opportunities. Nevertheless,
|
|
the societal impact of HSR networks depends on many factors, and the
|
|
benefits of HSR could also be overrated. The goal of this research is to
|
|
measure the socioeconomic impacts of HSR on people of all genders and
|
|
age groups. The outcomes could lead to more suitable development of HSR
|
|
projects and policies. This study investigates data sets for Japanese
|
|
social factors over 55 years in order to determine the impacts of HSR.
|
|
The assessment model has been established using Python. It applies
|
|
Pearson's correlation (PCC) technique as its main methodology. This
|
|
study broadly assesses social impacts on population dynamics, education,
|
|
age dependency, job opportunities, and mortality rate using an
|
|
unparalleled dataset spanning 55 years of social factors. The results
|
|
exhibit that younger generations have the most benefits in terms of
|
|
equal educational accessibility. However, the growth of the HSR network
|
|
does not influence an increase in the employment rate or labour force
|
|
numbers, resulting in little benefit to the workforce.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kaewunruen, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Birmingham, Sch Engn, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Rungskunroch, Panrawee; Jack, Anson; Kaewunruen, Sakdirat, Univ Birmingham, Sch Engn, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/infrastructures6050068},
|
|
Article-Number = {68},
|
|
EISSN = {2412-3811},
|
|
Keywords = {socioeconomic impacts; population dynamic; high-speed rail (HSR);
|
|
sustainability; transport and policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HIGH-SPEED RAIL; IMPACT; STATIONS; DYNAMICS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Construction \& Building Technology; Engineering, Civil; Transportation
|
|
Science \& Technology},
|
|
Author-Email = {PXR615@student.bham.ac.uk
|
|
C.R.Jack@bham.ac.uk
|
|
s.kaewunruen@bham.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kaewunruen, Sakdirat/A-6793-2008},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jack, Anson/0000-0001-5735-2558
|
|
Kaewunruen, Sakdirat/0000-0003-2153-3538},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000656441500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000292681500001,
|
|
Author = {Bloch, Gary and Rozmovits, Linda and Giambrone, Broden},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to primary care responsiveness to poverty as a risk factor for
|
|
health},
|
|
Journal = {BMC FAMILY PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Month = {JUN 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Poverty is widely recognized as a major determinant of poor
|
|
health, and this link has been extensively studied and verified. Despite
|
|
the strong evidentiary link, little work has been done to determine what
|
|
primary care health providers can do to address their patients' income
|
|
as a risk to their health. This qualitative study explores the barriers
|
|
to primary care responsiveness to poverty as a health issue in a
|
|
well-resourced jurisdiction with near-universal health care insurance
|
|
coverage.
|
|
Methods: One to one interviews were conducted with twelve experts on
|
|
poverty and health in primary care in Ontario, Canada. Participants
|
|
included family physicians, specialist physicians, nurse practitioners,
|
|
community workers, advocates, policy experts and researchers. The
|
|
interviews were analysed for anticipated and emergent themes.
|
|
Results: This study reveals provider-and patient-centred structural,
|
|
attitudinal, and knowledge-based barriers to addressing poverty as a
|
|
risk to health. While many of its findings reinforce previous work in
|
|
this area, this study's findings point to a number of areas front line
|
|
primary care providers could target to address their patients' poverty.
|
|
These include a lack of provider understanding of the lived reality of
|
|
poverty, leading to a failure to collect adequate data about patients'
|
|
social circumstances, and to the development of inappropriate care
|
|
plans. Participants also pointed to prejudicial attitudes among
|
|
providers, a failure of primary care disciplines to incorporate
|
|
approaches to poverty as a standard of care, and a lack of knowledge of
|
|
concrete steps providers can take to address patients' poverty.
|
|
Conclusions: While this study reinforces, in a well-resourced
|
|
jurisdiction such as Ontario, the previously reported existence of
|
|
significant barriers to addressing income as a health issue within
|
|
primary care, the findings point to the possibility of front line
|
|
primary care providers taking direct steps to address the health risks
|
|
posed by poverty. The consistent direction and replicability of these
|
|
findings point to a refocusing of the research agenda toward an
|
|
examination of interventions to decrease the health impacts of poverty.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bloch, G (Corresponding Author), St Michaels Hosp, Dept Family \& Community Med, 80 Bond St, Toronto, ON M5B 1X2, Canada.
|
|
Bloch, Gary, St Michaels Hosp, Dept Family \& Community Med, Toronto, ON M5B 1X2, Canada.
|
|
Bloch, Gary, Univ Toronto, Fac Med, Dept Family \& Community Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Giambrone, Broden, Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1471-2296-12-62},
|
|
Article-Number = {62},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2296},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENERAL-PRACTICE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Primary Health Care; Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {gary.bloch@utoronto.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {56},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000292681500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000457716300040,
|
|
Author = {Chai, Yan and Nandi, Arijit and Heymann, Jody},
|
|
Title = {Does extending the duration of legislated paid maternity leave improve
|
|
breastfeeding practices? Evidence from 38 low-income and middle-income
|
|
countries},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {3},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction Among all barriers to breastfeeding, the need to work has
|
|
been cited as one of the top reasons for not breastfeeding overall and
|
|
for early weaning among mothers who seek to breastfeed. We aimed to
|
|
examine whether extending the duration of paid maternity leave available
|
|
to new mothers affected early initiation of breastfeeding, exclusive
|
|
breastfeeding under 6 months and breastfeeding duration in low-income
|
|
and middle-income countries (LMICs).
|
|
Methods We merged longitudinal data measuring national maternity leave
|
|
policies with information on breasffeeding related to 992 419 live
|
|
births occurring between 1996 and 2014 in 38 LMICs that participated in
|
|
the Demographic and Health Surveys. We used a difference-in-differences
|
|
approach to compare changes in the prevalence of early initiation and
|
|
exclusive breastfeeding, as well as the duration of breasffeeding, among
|
|
treated countries that lengthened their paid maternity leave policy
|
|
between 1995 and 2013 versus control countries that did not. Regression
|
|
models included country and year fixed effects, as well as measured
|
|
individual-level, household-level and country-level covariates. All
|
|
models incorporated robust SEs and respondent-level sampling weights.
|
|
Results A 1-month increase in the legislated duration of paid maternity
|
|
leave was associated with a 7.4 percentage point increase (95\% CI 3.2
|
|
to 11.7) in the prevalence of early initiation of breasffeeding, a 5.9
|
|
percentage point increase (95\% CI 2.0 to 9.8) in the prevalence of
|
|
exclusive breastfeeding and a 2.2- month increase (95\% CI 1.1 to 3.4)
|
|
in breasffeeding duration.
|
|
Conclusion Extending the duration of legislated paid maternity leave
|
|
appears to promote breasffeeding practices in LMICs. Our findings
|
|
suggest a potential mechanism to reduce barriers to breasffeeding for
|
|
working mothers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chai, Y (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Epidemiol, Fielding Sch Publ Hlth, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
|
|
Chai, Yan; Heymann, Jody, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Epidemiol, Fielding Sch Publ Hlth, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
|
|
Nandi, Arijit, MGill Univ, Dept Epidemiol Biostat \& Occupat Hlth, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Nandi, Arijit, MGill Univ, Inst Hlth \& Social Policy, Montreal, PQ, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001032},
|
|
Article-Number = {e001032},
|
|
ISSN = {2059-7908},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORKING MOTHERS; UNITED-STATES; FAMILY LEAVE; EMPLOYMENT; HEALTH;
|
|
ASSOCIATION; PROMOTION; IMPACT; POLICY; INTELLIGENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {yc448@ucla.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Heymann, Jody/0000-0003-0008-4198},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {65},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000457716300040},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000445036800006,
|
|
Author = {Altieri, Katye E. and Trollip, Hilton and Caetano, Tara and Hughes,
|
|
Alison and Merven, Bruno and Winkler, Harald},
|
|
Title = {Achieving development and mitigation objectives through a
|
|
decarbonization development pathway in South Africa},
|
|
Journal = {CLIMATE POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {S78-S91},
|
|
Abstract = {Achieving the international 2 degrees C limit climate policy requires
|
|
stringent reductions in GHG emissions by mid-century, with some
|
|
countries simultaneously facing development-related challenges. South
|
|
Africa is a middle-income developing country with high rates of
|
|
unemployment and high levels of poverty, as well as an
|
|
emissions-intensive economy. South Africa takes into account an
|
|
assessment of what a fair contribution to reducing global emissions
|
|
might be, and is committed to a `peak, plateau and decline' emissions
|
|
trajectory with absolute emissions specified for 2025 and 2030, while
|
|
noting the need to address development imperatives. This work utilizes
|
|
an economy-wide computable general equilibrium model (e-SAGE) linked to
|
|
an energy-system optimization model (TIMES) to explore improving
|
|
development metrics within a 14 GtCO(2)e cumulative energy sector carbon
|
|
constraint through to 2050 for South Africa. The electricity sector
|
|
decarbonizes by retiring coal-fired power plants or replacing with
|
|
concentrated solar power, solar photovoltaics and wind generation.
|
|
Industry and tertiary-sector growth remains strong throughout the time
|
|
period, with reduced energy intensity via fuel-switching and efficiency
|
|
improvements. From 2010 to 2050, the model results in the unemployment
|
|
rate decreasing from 25\% to 12\%, and the percentage of people living
|
|
below the poverty line decreasing from 49\% to 18\%. Total energy GHG
|
|
emissions were reduced by 39\% and per capita emissions decreased by
|
|
62\%.
|
|
Policy relevance
|
|
Lower poverty and inequality are goals that cannot be subordinated to
|
|
lower GHG emissions. Policy documents in South Africa outline objectives
|
|
such as reducing poverty and inequality with a key focus on education
|
|
and employment. In its climate policy and Intended Nationally Determined
|
|
Contribution (INDC), South Africa is committed to a peak, plateau and
|
|
decline GHG emissions trajectory. As in many developing countries, these
|
|
policy goals require major transformations in the energy system while
|
|
simultaneously increasing affordable access to safe and convenient
|
|
energy services for those living in energy poverty. The modelled
|
|
scenario in this work focuses on employment and poverty reduction under
|
|
a carbon constraint, a novel combination with results that can provide
|
|
information for a holistic climate and development policy framework.
|
|
This study has focused on the long term, which is important in
|
|
generating clear policy signals for the necessary large-scale
|
|
investments.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Altieri, KE (Corresponding Author), Univ Cape Town, Energy Res Ctr, Private Bag X3, ZA-7701 Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa.
|
|
Altieri, Katye E.; Trollip, Hilton; Caetano, Tara; Hughes, Alison; Merven, Bruno; Winkler, Harald, Univ Cape Town, Energy Res Ctr, Private Bag X3, ZA-7701 Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/14693062.2016.1150250},
|
|
ISSN = {1469-3062},
|
|
EISSN = {1752-7457},
|
|
Keywords = {development pathways; economic models; employment; energy models; GHG
|
|
reductions; mitigation scenarios},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies; Public Administration},
|
|
Author-Email = {katye.altieri@uct.ac.za},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Altieri, Katye/GWV-4512-2022
|
|
Winkler, Harald/AAF-6226-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Altieri, Katye/0000-0002-6778-4079
|
|
Winkler, Harald/0000-0002-5826-4071
|
|
Trollip, Hilton/0000-0002-2591-8139},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {30},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000445036800006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000450856600016,
|
|
Author = {Gray, Shannon E. and Hassani-Mahmooei, Behrooz and Cameron, Ian D. and
|
|
Kendall, Elizabeth and Kenardy, Justin and Collie, Alex},
|
|
Title = {Patterns and Predictors of Failed and Sustained Return-to-Work in
|
|
Transport Injury Insurance Claimants},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {740-748},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose To determine the incidence of employed people who try and fail
|
|
to return-to-work (RTW) following a transport crash. To identify
|
|
predictors of RTW failure. Methods: A historical cohort study was
|
|
conducted in the state of Victoria, Australia. People insured through
|
|
the state-based compulsory third party transport accident compensation
|
|
scheme were included. Inclusion criteria included date of crash between
|
|
2003 and 2012 (inclusive), age 15-70years at the time of crash,
|
|
sustained a non-catastrophic injury and received at least 1 day of
|
|
income replacement. A matrix was created from an administrative payments
|
|
dataset that mapped their RTW pattern for each day up to 3 years'
|
|
post-crash. A gap of 7 days of no payment followed by resumption of a
|
|
payment was considered a RTW failure and was flagged. These event flags
|
|
were then entered into a regression analysis to determine the odds of
|
|
having a failed RTW attempt. Results: 17\% of individuals had a RTW
|
|
fail, with males having 20\% lower odds of experiencing RTW failure.
|
|
Those who were younger, had minor injuries (sprains, strains,
|
|
contusions, abrasions, non-limb fractures), or were from more advantaged
|
|
socio-economic group, were less likely to experience a RTW failure. Most
|
|
likely to experience a RTW failure were individuals with whiplash,
|
|
dislocations or particularly those admitted to hospital. Conclusions:
|
|
Understanding the causes and predictors of failed RTW can help insurers,
|
|
employers and health systems identify at-risk individuals. This can
|
|
enable earlier and more targeted support and more effective employment
|
|
outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gray, SE (Corresponding Author), Monash Univ, Fac Med Nursing \& Hlth Sci, Insurance Work \& Hlth Grp, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Gray, SE (Corresponding Author), Ctr Res Excellence Recovery Following Rd Traff In, Herston, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Gray, SE (Corresponding Author), 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Gray, Shannon E.; Hassani-Mahmooei, Behrooz; Collie, Alex, Monash Univ, Fac Med Nursing \& Hlth Sci, Insurance Work \& Hlth Grp, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Cameron, Ian D., Univ Sydney, Kolling Inst, John Walsh Ctr Rehabil Res, St Leonards, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Kendall, Elizabeth, Griffith Univ, Hopkins Ctr, Menzies Hlth Inst Queensland, Meadowbrook, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Kenardy, Justin, Univ Queensland, Sch Psychol, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Gray, Shannon E.; Cameron, Ian D.; Kendall, Elizabeth; Kenardy, Justin; Collie, Alex, Ctr Res Excellence Recovery Following Rd Traff In, Herston, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Gray, Shannon E., 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10926-018-9761-2},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-0487},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Injuries; Return to work; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BRAIN-INJURY; OUTCOMES; DISABILITY; COMPENSATION; SURVIVORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {shannon.gray@monash.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gray, Shannon/GWM-5653-2022
|
|
Gray, Shannon/I-3500-2019
|
|
kendall, elizabeth/F-5065-2013
|
|
Hassani-Mahmooei, Behrooz/U-4317-2019
|
|
Kenardy, Justin A/H-6603-2014
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gray, Shannon/0000-0002-8029-6838
|
|
Hassani-Mahmooei, Behrooz/0000-0002-3616-4715
|
|
Kenardy, Justin A/0000-0001-9475-8450
|
|
Collie, Alex/0000-0003-2617-9339
|
|
Kendall, Elizabeth/0000-0003-2399-1460},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000450856600016},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000869083500001,
|
|
Author = {Alderson, Hayley and Barrett, Simon and Addison, Michelle and Burns,
|
|
Samantha and Cooling, Victoria and Hackett, Simon and Kaner, Eileen and
|
|
McGovern, William and Smart, Deborah and McGovern, Ruth},
|
|
Title = {Parental intimate partner violence and abuse during the COVID-19
|
|
pandemic: Learning from remote and hybrid working to influence future
|
|
support},
|
|
Journal = {WOMENS HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated intimate partner
|
|
violence and abuse. Incidents of intimate partner violence and abuse
|
|
have increased as a result of household tensions due to enforced
|
|
coexistence (multiple national lockdowns and working from home
|
|
practices), economic stress related to loss of income, the disruption of
|
|
social and protective networks and the decreased access to support
|
|
services. This study aimed to understand how female survivors of
|
|
parental intimate partner violence and abuse have experienced the
|
|
adapted multi-agency response to intimate partner violence and abuse
|
|
during the pandemic and consider learning from remote and hybrid working
|
|
to influence future support.
|
|
Method: This study adopted a qualitative research design, utilizing
|
|
semi-structured interviews and a focus group. Data collection took place
|
|
between March and September 2021. In total, 17 female survivors of
|
|
intimate partner violence and abuse took part in the project; we
|
|
conducted the semi-structured interviews via telephone (n = 9) and
|
|
conducted an online focus group (n =8).
|
|
Results: Findings identified that services for those experiencing
|
|
intimate partner violence and abuse need to be innovative, flexible and
|
|
adaptable and `reach out' to survivors rather than waiting for survivors
|
|
to `reach in' and ask for support. Findings show that the digital space
|
|
highlights `missed opportunities' for engagement with both professionals
|
|
and peers and the potential for digital poverty is a key implication,
|
|
which risks entrenching existing inequalities.
|
|
Conclusion: In-depth consideration needs to be given to the design,
|
|
delivery and evaluation of online interventions and provision of support
|
|
to improve access and acceptability of services, maximize their
|
|
effectiveness and to support the safety of survivors.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Alderson, H (Corresponding Author), Newcastle Univ, Populat Hlth Sci Inst, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE2 4AX, Tyne \& Wear, England.
|
|
Alderson, Hayley; Barrett, Simon; Hackett, Simon; Kaner, Eileen; Smart, Deborah; McGovern, Ruth, Newcastle Univ, Populat Hlth Sci Inst, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE2 4AX, Tyne \& Wear, England.
|
|
Addison, Michelle; Burns, Samantha, Univ Durham, Dept Sociol, Durham, England.
|
|
Cooling, Victoria, Cty Durham \& Darlington NHS Fdn Trust, Darlington, Durham, England.
|
|
McGovern, William, Northumbria Univ, Dept Social Work Educ \& Community Wellbeing, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne \& Wear, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/17455057221129399},
|
|
ISSN = {1745-5057},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-5065},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; intimate partner violence and abuse; parents; lived
|
|
experience; qualitative},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; CHILDREN; EXPOSURE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {Hayley.alderson@newcastle.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {McGovern, Ruth/0000-0002-4119-4353
|
|
Addison, Michelle/0000-0002-8017-8188
|
|
Barrett, Simon/0000-0002-8216-2999
|
|
Alderson, hayley/0000-0002-4674-561X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {69},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000869083500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000471301400002,
|
|
Author = {Kress, Victoria and Steudte-Schmiedgen, Susann and Kopp, Marie and
|
|
Foerster, Anke and Altus, Caroline and Schier, Caroline and Wimberger,
|
|
Pauline and Kirschbaum, Clemens and von Soest, Tilmann and Weidner,
|
|
Kerstin and Junge-Hoffmeister, Juliano and Garthus-Niegel, Susan},
|
|
Title = {The Impact of Parental Role Distributions, Work Participation, and
|
|
Stress Factors on Family Health-Related Outcomes: Study Protocol of the
|
|
Prospective Multi-Method Cohort ``Dresden Study on Parenting, Work, and
|
|
Mental Health{''} (DREAM)},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Month = {JUN 12},
|
|
Abstract = {The Dresden Study on Parenting, Work, and Mental Health ({''}DResdner
|
|
Studie zu Elternschaft, Arbeit, und Mentaler Gesundheit{''}, DREAM) aims
|
|
to prospectively investigate the relationship between parental work
|
|
participation, role distribution, stress factors, and their effects on
|
|
perinatal outcomes and long-term family mental and somatic health in a
|
|
community sample targeting N = 4,000 individuals, i.e., 2,000 couples,
|
|
expecting a child and residing in Dresden, Germany (interim sample of N
|
|
= 1,410 participants, recruitment ongoing). Various questionnaires are
|
|
completed at four measurement points from pregnancy to 2 years
|
|
postpartum (prolongation into middle childhood planned). Applying a
|
|
multi-method approach, long-term endocrinological data (analyses of hair
|
|
cortisol concentrations and other endogenous hormones,
|
|
``DREAM(HAIR){''}) and qualitative interview data (regarding gender role
|
|
attitudes and distribution of domestic work, child care, and paid
|
|
employment; ``DREAM(TALK){''}) are obtained. In this study protocol, the
|
|
theoretical background, methods, and preliminary results considering
|
|
sociodemographic characteristics during pregnancy and birth-related
|
|
factors at 8 weeks postpartum are presented. Additionally, there is a
|
|
focus on our endocrinological sub-study DREAM(HAIR). In this sub-study
|
|
currently comprising N = 152 participants, i.e., 88 families
|
|
(recruitment ongoing), we want to gain knowledge on the
|
|
transgenerational processes of stress regulation and psychopathology in
|
|
the whole family by analyzing hair cortisol concentrations in both
|
|
parents and children during the course from pregnancy (or after birth
|
|
regarding children) to at least 2 years postpartum. By comparing data of
|
|
the community sample to a clinical sample of mothers with postpartum
|
|
mental disorders, their children, and their partners during the period
|
|
between admission and discharge from a mother-baby unit and
|
|
post-treatment ({''}DREAM(MBU){''}), the course of mothers'
|
|
psychopathology, parent-infant interaction, and infant regulation
|
|
disorders with special regard to long-term endocrine correlates will be
|
|
examined. With previous studies neglecting the fathers or partners
|
|
involved, a major advantage of DREAM is the use of a multi-method and
|
|
multi-level approach by examining the whole family in a longitudinal
|
|
design. Therefore, the DREAM study will contribute to a better
|
|
understanding of the role of social, work, and stress factors for mental
|
|
and somatic health and its long-term endocrine correlates in the natural
|
|
course of becoming a family.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Garthus-Niegel, S (Corresponding Author), Tech Univ Dresden, Fac Med, Dept Psychotherapy \& Psychosomat Med, Dresden, Germany.
|
|
Garthus-Niegel, S (Corresponding Author), Norwegian Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Child Hlth, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Kress, Victoria; Steudte-Schmiedgen, Susann; Kopp, Marie; Foerster, Anke; Altus, Caroline; Schier, Caroline; Weidner, Kerstin; Junge-Hoffmeister, Juliano; Garthus-Niegel, Susan, Tech Univ Dresden, Fac Med, Dept Psychotherapy \& Psychosomat Med, Dresden, Germany.
|
|
Steudte-Schmiedgen, Susann; Kirschbaum, Clemens, Tech Univ Dresden, Fac Psychol, Inst Biol Psychol, Dresden, Germany.
|
|
Wimberger, Pauline, Tech Univ Dresden, Fac Med, Dept Gynecol \& Obstet, Dresden, Germany.
|
|
von Soest, Tilmann, Univ Oslo, PROMENTA Res Ctr, Dept Psychol, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Garthus-Niegel, Susan, Norwegian Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Child Hlth, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01273},
|
|
Article-Number = {1273},
|
|
ISSN = {1664-1078},
|
|
Keywords = {parental mental health; work participation; role distribution;
|
|
peripartum stress; DREAM study; hair cortisol; multi-method approach;
|
|
study protocol},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HAIR CORTISOL CONCENTRATIONS; LONG-TERM CORTISOL; GERMAN VERSION;
|
|
MATERNAL STRESS; LIFE EVENTS; METACOGNITIONS QUESTIONNAIRE; PSYCHOMETRIC
|
|
PROPERTIES; POSTNATAL DEPRESSION; PATERNAL DEPRESSION; SALIVARY CORTISOL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Multidisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {susan.garthus-niegel@uniklinikum-dresden.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {von Soest, Tilmann/P-4350-2014
|
|
Steudte-Schmiedgen, Susann/HHZ-4248-2022
|
|
Kirschbaum, Clemens/AAB-1752-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {von Soest, Tilmann/0000-0002-5576-2059
|
|
Steudte-Schmiedgen, Susann/0000-0002-1171-7133
|
|
Garthus-Niegel, Susan/0000-0002-7472-674X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {218},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000471301400002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000393465400032,
|
|
Author = {Samant, Deepti and Adya, Meera and Babirad, Jurgen and Scherer, Marcia},
|
|
Editor = {Gelderblom, GJ and Soede, M and Adriaens, L and Miesenberger, K},
|
|
Title = {A Quality Indicators Framework for effective AT service delivery},
|
|
Booktitle = {EVERYDAY TECHNOLOGY FOR INDEPENDENCE AND CARE},
|
|
Series = {Assistive Technology Research Series},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Pages = {245-253},
|
|
Note = {11th Bi-Annual AAATE Conference, Maastricht, NETHERLANDS, AUG 31-SEP 02,
|
|
2011},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective Despite initiatives promoting research and development,
|
|
financing, and distribution programs for assistive technology (AT),
|
|
people with diverse disabilities still experience a critical gap in
|
|
awareness and acquisition of suitable technology products. The nature of
|
|
significant barriers to the effective use of AT service delivery has
|
|
been the subject of considerable speculation, but has not been well
|
|
researched. There is a lack of scientifically rigorous research on which
|
|
specific elements of AT service delivery achieve improved employment
|
|
outcomes with efficient management of costs, and why. Additionally,
|
|
service providers lack an evidence-based and validated framework to
|
|
internally examine their own service delivery processes, policies, and
|
|
practices and assess their effectiveness in generating successful
|
|
employment and other participation outcomes for consumers.
|
|
Main Content This paper will discuss the conceptualization, development,
|
|
and testing of quality indicators of AT service delivery that result in
|
|
successful employment outcomes. This work is being conducted by the
|
|
Center on Effective Rehabilitation Technology (CERT) service delivery
|
|
which has used a rigorous mixed methods process to generate quality
|
|
indicators: (a) thorough literature review to identify core assessment
|
|
categories, (b) feedback from a diverse panel of stakeholders, (c)
|
|
results from a baseline survey of AT practice in the United States, and
|
|
(d) an iterative review and feedback method to generate and rate the
|
|
quality indicators with a panel of experts. The framework will be
|
|
further tested and validated through mixed-methods studies with diverse
|
|
service providers, including employers, throughout the United States.
|
|
Results Indicators of quality have been identified across nine major
|
|
categories which are: (1) Organizational Governing Structures, (2)
|
|
Personnel, (3) Consumer Outcomes, (4) Policies and Procedures, (5)
|
|
Stakeholder Collaboration, (6) Service Delivery Models, (7)
|
|
Individualized Matching of Person and Technology, (8) Funding, and (9)
|
|
Quality Control and Evaluation.
|
|
Conclusion An evidence-based framework for identifying the quality of AT
|
|
service delivery will offer service providers an efficient and important
|
|
tool to assess the quality of their systems and will work towards
|
|
bridging gaps to ensure that AT services promote consumers' employment
|
|
and other participation goals. The quality indicators framework will be
|
|
customizable for use with different types of service providers such as
|
|
Vocational Rehabilitation agencies, Independent Living Centers, and
|
|
employers.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Scherer, M (Corresponding Author), Syracuse Univ, Burton Blatt Inst, Syracuse, NY 13244 USA.
|
|
Samant, Deepti; Adya, Meera; Scherer, Marcia, Syracuse Univ, Burton Blatt Inst, Syracuse, NY 13244 USA.
|
|
Babirad, Jurgen, Rehabil Technol Associates Inc, Kinderhook, NY USA.
|
|
Scherer, Marcia, Univ Rochester, Med Ctr, Inst Matching Person \& Technol, Rochester, NY 14627 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3233/978-1-60750-814-4-245},
|
|
ISSN = {1383-813X},
|
|
ISBN = {978-1-60750-814-4; 978-1-60750-813-7},
|
|
Keywords = {assistive technology; assistive technology service delivery; quality
|
|
indicators; employment; workplace},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TECHNOLOGY OUTCOMES RESEARCH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Scherer, Marcia/0000-0001-8374-6526},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000393465400032},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000355174100001,
|
|
Author = {Kismul, Hallgeir and Hatloy, Anne and Andersen, Peter and Mapatano, Mala
|
|
and Van den Broeck, Jan and Moland, Karen Marie},
|
|
Title = {The social context of severe child malnutrition: a qualitative household
|
|
case study from a rural area of the Democratic Republic of Congo},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Month = {MAY 19},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: The magnitude of child malnutrition including severe child
|
|
malnutrition is especially high in the rural areas of the Democratic
|
|
Republic of Congo (the DRC). The aim of this qualitative study is to
|
|
describe the social context of malnutrition in a rural part of the DRC
|
|
and explore how some households succeed in ensuring that their children
|
|
are well-nourished while others do not.
|
|
Methodology: This study is based on participant observation, key
|
|
informant interviews, group discussions and in-depth interviews with
|
|
four households with malnourished children and four with well-nourished
|
|
children. We apply social field theory to link individual child
|
|
nutritional outcomes to processes at local level and to the wider
|
|
socio-economic environment.
|
|
Findings: We identified four social fields that have implications for
|
|
food security and child nutritional outcomes: 1) household size and
|
|
composition which determined vulnerability to child malnutrition, 2)
|
|
inter-household cooperation in the form of `gbisa work party' which
|
|
buffered scarcity of labour in peak seasons and facilitated capital
|
|
accumulation, 3) the village associated with usufruct rights to land,
|
|
and 4) the local NGO providing access to agricultural support, clean
|
|
drinking water and health care.
|
|
Conclusions: Households that participated in inter-household cooperation
|
|
were able to improve food and nutrition security. Children living in
|
|
households with high pressure on productive members were at danger of
|
|
food insecurity and malnutrition. Nutrition interventions need to
|
|
involve local institutions for inter-household cooperation and address
|
|
the problem of social inequalities in service provision. They should
|
|
have special focus on households with few resources in the form of land,
|
|
labour and capital.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kismul, H (Corresponding Author), Univ Bergen, Ctr Int Hlth, N-5009 Bergen, Norway.
|
|
Kismul, Hallgeir; Van den Broeck, Jan; Moland, Karen Marie, Univ Bergen, Ctr Int Hlth, N-5009 Bergen, Norway.
|
|
Hatloy, Anne, Fafo, N-0608 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Andersen, Peter, Univ Bergen, Dept Geog, N-5020 Bergen, Norway.
|
|
Mapatano, Mala, Univ Kinshasa, Sch Publ Hlth, Kinshasa 1, DEM REP CONGO.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-015-0175-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {47},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Malnutrition; Marasmus; Kwashiorkor; Food security; Subsistence
|
|
agriculture; Social inequality; Social capital; The Democratic Republic
|
|
of Congo},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; FOOD SECURITY; LAND-TENURE; NUTRITION; GENDER; INEQUALITY;
|
|
URBAN; DIFFERENTIALS; MORTALITY; UNDERNUTRITION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {hallgeir.kismul@cih.uib.no},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hatloy, Anne/0000-0002-3668-3216},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {88},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000355174100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000450677100001,
|
|
Author = {Niembro, Andres},
|
|
Title = {Globalization, productive re-location and territorial inequalities: A
|
|
comprehensive review of the approaches of global value chains and global
|
|
production networks},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS REGIONALES},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Number = {112},
|
|
Pages = {15-40},
|
|
Month = {MAY-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Socioeconomic inequalities can take different forms. Sometimes they
|
|
appear simply as disparities between individuals or households, or
|
|
between groups that differ on the basis of factors such as social class,
|
|
gender, age, ethnicity, among many others. Likewise, social and economic
|
|
inequalities can be perceived in different geographical scales of
|
|
analysis, between countries or groups of countries, as well as between
|
|
regions, provinces, cities or neighborhoods. Although this paper focuses
|
|
on territorial inequalities, there is no doubt that both levels are
|
|
deeply interrelated.
|
|
At this point, there is no longer any doubt that globalization has gone
|
|
hand in hand with increasing inequality in general and, in particular,
|
|
growing regional disparities in developing countries throughout Latin
|
|
America, Asia, Africa or Eastern Europe, as well as the continuity of
|
|
regional inequalities in developed countries such as Spain, for example.
|
|
This context poses new challenges for the academic investigation of
|
|
inequality, because to explain the phenomenon of unequal regional
|
|
development in a globalized world it is necessary to put the actors of
|
|
this process and their roots in the territory in the center of the
|
|
scene, along with issues such as their position in the economic system
|
|
and the generation and reproduction of power asymmetries.
|
|
Although for some authors globalization acts as an asymmetric process
|
|
that tends to deepen the inequalities between countries and regions, for
|
|
others the problem is not strictly the process of globalization, but the
|
|
way in which countries, regions and firms are inserted and positioned in
|
|
global economy. What is clear is that, being in some way an inevitable
|
|
scenario, globalization contains both opportunities and challenges for
|
|
regional development, while it generates winners and losers among the
|
|
actors and regions involved.
|
|
We believe that the approaches of Global Value Chains (GVC) and Global
|
|
Production Networks (GPN) can be useful tools for understanding the
|
|
relationships between globalization and unequal regional development,
|
|
and for analyzing how actors and regions participate in the global
|
|
economy, how the power and income are distributed among them and what
|
|
possibilities exist for repositioning, among other issues.
|
|
If we look at, for example, the literature on developing countries in
|
|
Latin America, the tendency in recent decades to adopt the conceptual
|
|
framework of GVC is evident, but the contributions from GPN have been
|
|
largely unnoticed so far, which has tended to limit its specific
|
|
application to the analysis of territorial inequalities. On the other
|
|
hand, several authors have highlighted the need to compatibilize, enrich
|
|
and eclectically integrate the analytical frameworks of GVC and GPN.
|
|
The article aims to cover these research niches with a comprehensive
|
|
review of the approaches of global value chains and global production
|
|
networks, hoping that it can be used as a theoretical and methodological
|
|
contribution to the analysis of regional inequalities. This review is
|
|
structured on the basis of a contrast between the respective strengths
|
|
and weaknesses of each approach, showing those points where they can
|
|
complement and enrich each other.
|
|
Throughout the literature there is an old interest in understanding the
|
|
changing forms of organization of production and trade at global level,
|
|
its evolution and its repercussions over territorial inequalities,
|
|
starting for example with dependence theories, center-periphery, world
|
|
system and commodity chains, passing through global commodity chains
|
|
(GCC) and arriving at the further development of GVC. While there are
|
|
some differences in terminology and emphases between the origins of GVC
|
|
and GPN, over the years they have tended to shrink and converge, since
|
|
these approaches are interrelated and share a common agenda of problems.
|
|
Another central aspect is that, despite theoretical discussions (and, in
|
|
particular, criticisms of GPN towards GVC), studies under one tradition
|
|
or another tend to be largely similar, since there are not great
|
|
methodological differences between them. This is directly related to the
|
|
balance of strengths and weaknesses of each approach. On the one hand,
|
|
authors that support the GPN framework value their greater
|
|
analytical-conceptual breadth (covering topics supposedly relegated by
|
|
GVC tradition), but it has the counterpart of making its implementation
|
|
more complex. In contrast, GVC analysis is best understood as a
|
|
methodological approach that can be mobilized within various theoretical
|
|
perspectives, although this greater operational versatility comes with
|
|
the cost of some degree of theoretical eclecticism.
|
|
It should be noted that, although these approaches have been developed,
|
|
such as their own names indicate, over the basis of the
|
|
internationalization and relocation of different circuits of production
|
|
and trade at a global level, their methodological contributions can also
|
|
be applied to domestic chains or networks, making a broad interpretation
|
|
of trade and exports of a particular region to analyze the interaction
|
|
between the local dimension and the extra-regional scale (national or
|
|
international factors).
|
|
As a closure, we can conclude that the GVC approach is applicable to
|
|
regional analysis (avoiding some analytical complexities of GPN) but it
|
|
needs to be strengthened with some elements of GPN tradition. In
|
|
particular, it is necessary to reinforce the territoriality of chains of
|
|
networks, to widen the spectrum of institutions taken into account and
|
|
to analyze their relations from a multidimensional (vertical,
|
|
horizontal, diagonal) and multiscalar perspective (regional, national,
|
|
international, global). At the same time, it is necessary to keep in
|
|
mind the existence of different types of networks, power relations and
|
|
possibilities of upgrading.
|
|
At this point we should also point out some possible restrictions or
|
|
weaknesses for the application of the approaches of GVC and GPN to the
|
|
analysis of uneven regional development. On the one hand, the idea of
|
|
inequality necessarily relates with economic processes that, by their
|
|
own nature, can adopt asymmetric and divergent characteristics. But
|
|
unlike the analytical (often critical) perspectives we present in this
|
|
paper, the use of the concept of global value chains has become popular
|
|
in recent years and has entered into the agendas of international
|
|
organizations and multilateral forums that tend to adopt a highly
|
|
optimistic (or uncritical) view towards globalization and its possible
|
|
impacts on the progress of underdeveloped countries and regions. By
|
|
circumventing or minimizing the potentially negative and inequitable
|
|
factors discussed in the article, this can strongly change public policy
|
|
recommendations and strategies.
|
|
On the other hand, a weakness of GVC and GPN literatures is the limited
|
|
recognition that innovation, knowledge and technology have usually
|
|
received. In any case, these approaches recognize the importance of
|
|
innovation as a basic input for upgrading processes, but little is said
|
|
about the specific nature of the complex processes of learning and
|
|
innovation, which represents an interesting line of work to be covered.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Niembro, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Nacl Rio Negro Sede Andina, San Carlos De Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina.
|
|
Niembro, Andres, Univ Nacl Rio Negro Sede Andina, San Carlos De Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina.},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-7585},
|
|
Keywords = {Territorial inequalities; Regional development; Global value chains;
|
|
Global production networks},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {REGIONAL-DEVELOPMENT; COMMODITY CHAINS; INWARD INVESTMENT; LOCAL
|
|
CLUSTERS; LATIN-AMERICA; NORTH-EAST; GOVERNANCE; GEOGRAPHIES;
|
|
INNOVATION; PERSPECTIVE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {135},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {41},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000450677100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000473102700001,
|
|
Author = {Narea, Marigen and Allel, Kasim and Arriagada, Veronica},
|
|
Title = {Center-Based Care in Toddlerhood and Child Cognitive Outcomes in Chile:
|
|
The Moderating Role of Family Socio-Economic Status},
|
|
Journal = {EARLY EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {218-233},
|
|
Month = {FEB 17},
|
|
Abstract = {There is little evidence regarding the benefits of early center-based
|
|
care attendance (before three years old) for child development and most
|
|
studies have focused on developed countries. Addressing this gap, this
|
|
study examines the relationship between center-based care attendance
|
|
during toddler years and children's cognitive outcomes. Research
|
|
Findings: Data used for this study came from the first and second wave
|
|
of the Longitudinal Survey of Early Childhood (ELPI, 2010 and 2012). The
|
|
nationally representative sample was 1,544 children aged 12 to 24 months
|
|
in 2010, who received full-time home care during this period. Propensity
|
|
score matching (PSM) and difference-in-differences techniques were used
|
|
in the study. Compared to those in full-time home care, children who
|
|
attended center-based care from the age of 24 months had higher
|
|
cognitive scores in the endline (they were measured at some point
|
|
between 36 and 48 months old). Children in center-based care scored
|
|
higher on cognitive skills compared to children who were in full-time
|
|
home care, according to the Child Development and Cognitive Evaluation
|
|
Test (Test de Aprendizaje y Desarrollo Infantil, TADI) and the Battelle
|
|
test (d = .21 p p < .01, respectively). However, we observed that
|
|
children in low-income households benefited less from early center-based
|
|
care attendance. Practice or Policy: These findings suggest that Chilean
|
|
national policies supporting increased center-based care coverage in
|
|
early years are a step in the right direction, but more work focused on
|
|
helping disadvantaged children is needed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Narea, M (Corresponding Author), Escuela Psicol, Av Vicuna Mackenna 4860, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Narea, Marigen, Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Escuela Psicol, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Narea, Marigen, Ctr Adv Studies Educ Justice CJE, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Allel, Kasim, Univ Mayor, Hlth \& Soc Res Ctr, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Allel, Kasim; Arriagada, Veronica, Adv Studies Educ Justice CJE), Santiago, Chile.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/10409289.2019.1626191},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {1040-9289},
|
|
EISSN = {1556-6935},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PROPENSITY SCORE; PRESCHOOL; QUALITY; IMPACTS; ASSOCIATIONS;
|
|
ACHIEVEMENT; CLASSROOMS; EDUCATION; LANGUAGE; PROGRAM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research; Psychology, Educational; Psychology,
|
|
Developmental},
|
|
Author-Email = {mnarea@uc.cl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Narea, Marigen/AAM-5704-2020
|
|
Allel, Kasim/C-3435-2017
|
|
Narea, Marigen/AAV-8499-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Narea, Marigen/0000-0001-7780-7425
|
|
Allel, Kasim/0000-0002-2144-7181
|
|
Arriagada, Veronica/0000-0002-4517-0957},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000473102700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000449338200043,
|
|
Author = {Liu, Shimeng and Li, Shunping and Yang, Renyong and Liu, Tongtong and
|
|
Chen, Gang},
|
|
Title = {Job preferences for medical students in China A discrete choice
|
|
experiment},
|
|
Journal = {MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {97},
|
|
Number = {38},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Although the number of medical workers has increased rapidly, its
|
|
scarcity in rural areas remains a serious problem in China. This study
|
|
aimed to investigate medical students' stated preferences when choosing
|
|
a job, so as to assist policy makers with designing alternative
|
|
interventions to address the unbalanced distribution of the health
|
|
workforce in China.
|
|
A discrete choice experiment (DCE) was conducted to elicit the job
|
|
preferences of final year medical students. Attributes include work
|
|
location, hospital type, monthly income, bianzhi (which can be loosely
|
|
regarded as state administrative staffing), work environment, Training
|
|
and career development opportunity. This study was carried out during
|
|
April to June 2017 in 4 medical universities in Shandong Province,
|
|
China. Mixed logit models were used to analyze the relative importance
|
|
of job attributes.
|
|
A total of 519 medical students participated in the survey. All 6
|
|
attributes were statistically significant with the expected sign and
|
|
demonstrated the existence of preference heterogeneity. In the main
|
|
effects mixed logit model, working in the city and a superior working
|
|
environment were most strongly associated with job preference. A
|
|
relatively unexpected finding was the relatively lower utility of
|
|
offering bianzhi in job preferences. Subgroup analysis showed that
|
|
females and those who have an urban background were significantly
|
|
willing to pay more for working in the city. The most preferred scenario
|
|
for medical students was to select a better work environment job in a
|
|
tertiary hospital in the city, which could offer 9000 CNY monthly, with
|
|
sufficient training and career development opportunities and bianzhi.
|
|
Both monetary and nonmonetary intervention could be considered by policy
|
|
makers to attract medical students to work in rural areas in China.
|
|
There exists preference heterogeneity on medical students' job
|
|
preferences, which should also be taken into account in developing more
|
|
effective policy incentive packages.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Li, SP (Corresponding Author), Shandong Univ, Sch Hlth Care Management, 44 Wenhua Xi Rd, Jinan 250012, Shandong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, SP (Corresponding Author), Shandong Univ, NHC Key Lab Hlth Econ \& Policy Res, 44 Wenhua Xi Rd, Jinan 250012, Shandong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Liu, Shimeng; Li, Shunping; Liu, Tongtong, Shandong Univ, Sch Hlth Care Management, 44 Wenhua Xi Rd, Jinan 250012, Shandong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Liu, Shimeng; Li, Shunping; Liu, Tongtong, Shandong Univ, NHC Key Lab Hlth Econ \& Policy Res, 44 Wenhua Xi Rd, Jinan 250012, Shandong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Yang, Renyong, Jining Med Univ, Dept Finance, Jining, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chen, Gang, Flinders Univ S Australia, Coll Med \& Publ Hlth, Adelaide, SA, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/MD.0000000000012358},
|
|
Article-Number = {e12358},
|
|
ISSN = {0025-7974},
|
|
EISSN = {1536-5964},
|
|
Keywords = {China; discrete choice experiment; inequality; job preference; medical
|
|
students; mixed logit model},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; REMOTE AREAS; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {lishunping@sdu.edu.cn},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000449338200043},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000268046400009,
|
|
Author = {van Campen, Cretien and Cardol, Mieke},
|
|
Title = {When work and satisfaction with life do not go hand in hand: Health
|
|
barriers and personal resources in the participation of people with
|
|
chronic physical disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {69},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {56-60},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {People with chronic physical disabilities participate less in both paid
|
|
and voluntary work and are less satisfied with their lives than people
|
|
without health problems. Governments and scientists have suggested that
|
|
participation in employment is the main road to well-being. We analysed
|
|
national survey data on the participation in work and satisfaction with
|
|
life, comparing people with a chronic illness and a physical disability
|
|
(n = 603) to people with a chronic illness but without a physical
|
|
disability (n = 1199) and the general population (n = 6128) in the
|
|
Netherlands. The results show that the relationship between happiness
|
|
and work is different for people with a chronic illness and a physical
|
|
disability, as compared to the other two populations. Fewer people with
|
|
a chronic illness and disability were categorized as `satisfied people
|
|
with work' (i.e. participating in work and satisfied with their life),
|
|
while most people belonged to a group of `satisfied people without work'
|
|
and, surprisingly, not to the expected group of `dissatisfied people
|
|
without work'. In order to explain this exceptional distribution we
|
|
modelled satisfied participation in work as an outcome of a balance
|
|
between personal resources and barriers. By means of discriminant
|
|
regression analysis, we identified the severity of motor disability as
|
|
the main barrier, and education level and age, as the main resource
|
|
factors that distinguish between `satisfied people with work' and others
|
|
among the group of people with a chronic illness and a physical
|
|
disability. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {van Campen, C (Corresponding Author), Netherlands Inst Social Res SCP, POB 16164, NL-2500 BD The Hague, Netherlands.
|
|
van Campen, Cretien, Netherlands Inst Social Res SCP, NL-2500 BD The Hague, Netherlands.
|
|
Cardol, Mieke, NIVEL Netherlands Inst Hlth Serv Res, Utrecht, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.04.014},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {Work; Life satisfaction; Physical disabilities; Chronic illnesses; The
|
|
Netherlands},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPINAL-CORD-INJURY; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; SCALE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {c.van.campen@scp.nl},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cardol, Mieke/0000-0002-7771-770X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {31},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000268046400009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000702365100001,
|
|
Author = {Forbes, Faye and Wynter, Karen and Zeleke, Berihun M. and Fisher, Jane},
|
|
Title = {Fathers' involvement in perinatal healthcare in Australia: experiences
|
|
and reflections of Ethiopian-Australian men and women},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {SEP 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Family-centred maternity care models include the expectation
|
|
that fathers prepare for and attend the birth. In Australia over 20\% of
|
|
the population is from a culturally and linguistically diverse
|
|
background. Public policies espouse culturally competent healthcare.
|
|
Little is known about the experiences of perinatal health care of men
|
|
from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities living in
|
|
high income countries. The aim was to understand the experiences,
|
|
attitudes and beliefs about father's inclusion in perinatal healthcare,
|
|
from the growing, and recently settled community of Ethiopian families
|
|
living in Australia. Methods A qualitative study using semi-structured
|
|
individual interviews with Ethiopian-Australian men and women who had
|
|
experienced Australian maternity care and were sampled for diversity of
|
|
time since migration, and parity. Interviews were in English,
|
|
audio-recorded, transcribed and then analysed thematically. Results
|
|
Participants were seven women and six men all born in Ethiopia,
|
|
including two couples. Key themes included: the loss of extended family
|
|
through migration, new roles for both parents and the need to establish
|
|
`family-like' relationships with friendship groups in Australia. There
|
|
was a willingness to involve male partners in the Ethiopian community in
|
|
Australia, although it was recognised as a cultural change. Experiences
|
|
of male partner involvement were mixed among healthcare types, with men
|
|
attending Maternal and Child Health (MCH) appointments less frequently
|
|
than antenatal (ANC) appointments. Conclusions Results suggests men may
|
|
be missing out on the education provided during antenatal appointments
|
|
and may benefit from an alternative. There were not universally high
|
|
levels of cultural competency among healthcare professionals, with
|
|
further training still required. Commitment to paid employment remains a
|
|
barrier to men's involvement, suggesting that flexible working
|
|
conditions and increased paternity leave would support their
|
|
involvement. Alternatively services could utilise flexible delivery
|
|
methods such as phone and zoom to include fathers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Forbes, F (Corresponding Author), Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, Global \& Womens Hlth, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Forbes, Faye; Fisher, Jane, Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, Global \& Womens Hlth, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Wynter, Karen, Deakin Univ, Fac Hlth, Sch Nursing \& Midwifery Western Hlth Partnership, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia.
|
|
Zeleke, Berihun M., Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Zeleke, Berihun M., Univ Gondar, Coll Med \& Hlth Sci, Inst Publ Hlth, Gondar, Ethiopia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12913-021-07058-z},
|
|
Article-Number = {1029},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Father inclusive; Male partner involvement; Perinatal healthcare;
|
|
Culturally and linguistically diverse; Maternity care; Migrant;
|
|
Pregnancy; Childbirth; Father involvement; Qualitative},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIGRANT WOMEN; CHILD HEALTH; IMMIGRANT; BIRTH; PREGNANCY; BABY;
|
|
PERCEPTIONS; VICTORIA; SUPPORT; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {faye.forbes@monash.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Wynter, Karen/0000-0003-4620-7691},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000702365100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000430764900007,
|
|
Author = {Curl, Angela and Clark, Julie and Kearns, Ade},
|
|
Title = {Household car adoption and financial distress in deprived urban
|
|
communities: A case of forced car ownership?},
|
|
Journal = {TRANSPORT POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {65},
|
|
Number = {SI},
|
|
Pages = {61-71},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Note = {International Workshop on Energy-Related Economic Stress at the
|
|
Interface Between Transport Poverty, Fuel Poverty and Residential
|
|
Location, Univ Leeds, Inst Transport Studies, Leeds, ENGLAND, MAY 20-21,
|
|
2015},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper explores the relationship between car ownership and financial
|
|
circumstances for people living in disadvantaged urban communities.
|
|
Assumptions about cars signifying status and income are problematised by
|
|
an examination of the characteristics of those who adopt cars. We
|
|
consider the possibility that, despite low incomes and financial
|
|
problems, cars may be a necessity for some urban dwellers. Patterns of
|
|
car ownership and adoption are analysed using cross-sectional and
|
|
longitudinal survey data collected from communities in Glasgow, between
|
|
2006 and 2011, before, during and after the recession. Car ownership
|
|
rates increased, as more people adopted a car than relinquished
|
|
vehicles. The likelihood of household car adoption was influenced by
|
|
changes in household size, increased financial difficulties in relation
|
|
to housing costs, and where householders gained work. A small but
|
|
growing proportion of households (up to 8.5\% by 2011) are deemed
|
|
`forced car owners' by virtue of owning a car despite also reporting
|
|
financial difficulties: three-quarters of this group maintain a car
|
|
despite financial problems whilst a quarter adopt a car despite
|
|
financial problems. Findings suggest that poor households are reluctant
|
|
to relinquish their cars to ease money problems when under financial
|
|
stress and that, for some, acquiring a car may be seen as necessary to
|
|
better their circumstances. In neither case can we see evidence that the
|
|
sustainable transport agenda is reaching disadvantaged communities and
|
|
there are concerns that regeneration strategies are failing to promote
|
|
mobility and accessibility for poor communities via transport policies.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Curl, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Canterbury, Dept Geog, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand.
|
|
Curl, Angela; Clark, Julie; Kearns, Ade, Univ Glasgow, Urban Studies, 25 Bute Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RS, Lanark, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.tranpol.2017.01.002},
|
|
ISSN = {0967-070X},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-310X},
|
|
Keywords = {Forced car ownership; Financial difficulties; Deprived communities;
|
|
Employment; Transport policy; Regeneration},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL EXCLUSION; PUBLIC TRANSPORT; INCOME; TRAVEL; UK; DISADVANTAGE;
|
|
PERSPECTIVES; EXPERIENCES; DEMAND; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {angela.curl@canterbury.ac.nz
|
|
julie.clark@uws.ac.uk
|
|
ade.kearns@glasgow.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Curl, Angela/J-5879-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Curl, Angela/0000-0002-8325-190X
|
|
Clark, Julie/0000-0002-2954-8550},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {46},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000430764900007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000701833300018,
|
|
Author = {van Duin, Danielle and de Winter, Lars and Kroon, Hans and Veling, Wim
|
|
and van Weeghel, Jaap},
|
|
Title = {Effects of IPS plus cognitive remediation in early psychosis: 18-month
|
|
functioning outcomes of a randomized controlled trial},
|
|
Journal = {SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {236},
|
|
Pages = {115-122},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: After a first episode of psychosis, cognitive impairments
|
|
present an important barrier to successful (re-)entry into work and
|
|
education. We assessed whether cognitive remediation (CR) as an add-on
|
|
to Individual Placement and Support (IPS) can improve participation in
|
|
regular employment and education.
|
|
Method: Participants with early psychosis (N = 73) were randomly
|
|
assigned to receive IPS supplemented with computerized CR, or IPS plus
|
|
an active control intervention (computer games). The primary outcome was
|
|
the number of hours spent in competitive employment or regular
|
|
education, which was assessed every month during the 18-month study
|
|
period. Secondary outcomes included employment rate, cognitive
|
|
functioning, mental health (assessed at baseline, 6 and 18 months), and
|
|
job duration (assessed after 18 months). Both patients and assessors
|
|
were blind to treatment.
|
|
Results: Participants receiving IPS + CR showed greater improvement of
|
|
competitive employment over time in terms of hours worked (during
|
|
follow-up period: 38.5 vs. 19.6 h, B = 2.94; Wald chi(2) = 5.39; P =
|
|
.02) and employment rate (at T2: 62.1\% vs. 25.9\%, chi 2 = 7.39; df =
|
|
1; P = .008), compared with the IPS + control group, particularly in the
|
|
longer term. The number of hours spent in regular education was lower in
|
|
the IPS + CR group, with more participants having ended education for a
|
|
positive reason. There was a significant beneficial effect of adjunctive
|
|
CR for executive functioning, subjective cognitive functioning, and
|
|
empowerment.
|
|
Conclusions: Augmenting IPS with CR has a significant impact on
|
|
competitive employment in people with early psychosis, with beneficial
|
|
effects being more pronounced after 18 months.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {van Duin, D (Corresponding Author), Ctr Expertise Severe Mental Illness, Da Costakade 45,POB 1203, NL-3500 BE Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
van Duin, Danielle; de Winter, Lars; van Weeghel, Jaap, Phrenos Ctr Expertise, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
van Duin, Danielle; Kroon, Hans, Trimbos Inst, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
van Duin, Danielle; Kroon, Hans; van Weeghel, Jaap, Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Tranzo, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Veling, Wim, Univ Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
|
|
Veling, Wim, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.schres.2021.07.025},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0920-9964},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-2509},
|
|
Keywords = {Early psychosis; RCT; Individual placement and support; Add-on;
|
|
Cognitive remediation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IMPLEMENTING SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; NEGATIVE SYNDROME SCALE; 1ST EPISODE
|
|
PSYCHOSIS; SEVERE MENTAL-ILLNESS; INDIVIDUAL PLACEMENT;
|
|
VOCATIONAL-REHABILITATION; PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES; 1ST-EPISODE
|
|
PSYCHOSIS; SCHIZOPHRENIA; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {dduin@kephrenos.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kroon, Hans/I-5683-2016
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kroon, Hans/0000-0002-2259-1628
|
|
Veling, Wim/0000-0002-1364-9779},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000701833300018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000805791200012,
|
|
Author = {Kumar, Ramya and Birn, Anne-Emanuelle and Bhuyan, Rupaleem and Wong,
|
|
Josephine Pui-Hing},
|
|
Title = {Universal health coverage and public-private arrangements within Sri
|
|
Lanka's mixed health system: Perspectives from women seeking healthcare},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {296},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Universal health coverage (UHC), a target of the United Nations' third
|
|
Sustainable Development Goal on health, refers to people having access
|
|
to essential healthcare services without suffering financial hardship.
|
|
The World Bank and other leading global health actors champion mixed
|
|
health systems-in which government and privately-financed market
|
|
delivery coexist-as a sustainable model for UHC. Yet, little is known
|
|
about what these public-private arrangements mean for women, a crucial
|
|
partaker of UHC in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Using a
|
|
critical feminist approach, this study explores how women negotiate
|
|
access to public and private healthcare services within Sri Lanka's
|
|
state-dominant mixed health system. Data were generated through focus
|
|
group discussions and interviews with women residents of an urban
|
|
division in Kandy, a city seeing rapid private healthcare expansion in
|
|
central Sri Lanka. Notwithstanding policies of universality guiding
|
|
public sector delivery, out-of-pocket payments burden socially and
|
|
economically disadvantaged women. They use private services to fill gaps
|
|
in the public system, and consult dual practitioners privately, to pave
|
|
way for better (public) care. By contrast, wealthier women opt for
|
|
private outpatient care, but capitalize on the dual practitioners to
|
|
obtain priority access to oversubscribed services at public hospitals.
|
|
Most women, regardless of social location, combine public with private,
|
|
albeit to varying degrees, to save on household expenses. Relying on
|
|
women's invisible care work, these public-private ``hybrid `` routes of
|
|
access within Sri Lanka's poorly regulated mixed health system,
|
|
reinforce social inequalities and individualize the responsibility for
|
|
healthcare. The article throws light on the messiness of access within
|
|
mixed systems and demands closer scrutiny of calls for private sector
|
|
engagement in the quest for UHC in LMICs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kumar, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Jaffna, Fac Med, Dept Community \& Family Med, Jaffna 40000, Sri Lanka.
|
|
Kumar, Ramya, Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, 155 Coll St,6th Floor, Toronto, ON M5T 3M7, Canada.
|
|
Birn, Anne-Emanuelle, Univ Toronto, Scarborough Campus \& Dalla Lana Sch, Toronto, ON M1C 1A4, Canada.
|
|
Birn, Anne-Emanuelle, Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, 1265 Mil Trail, Toronto, ON M1C 1A4, Canada.
|
|
Bhuyan, Rupaleem, Univ Toronto, Factor Inwentash Fac Social Work, 246 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON M5S 1V4, Canada.
|
|
Wong, Josephine Pui-Hing, Ryerson Univ, Daphne Cockwell Sch Nursing, 350 Victoria St, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114777},
|
|
Article-Number = {114777},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {Mixed health systems; Access to healthcare; Care work; Low- and
|
|
middle-income countries; Sri Lanka},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {ramyak@univ.jfn.ac.lk
|
|
ae.birn@utoronto.ca
|
|
r.bhuyan@utoronto.ca
|
|
jph.wong@ryerson.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Birn, Anne-Emanuelle/0000-0002-0314-5913},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000805791200012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000446795300006,
|
|
Author = {Trexler, Lance E. and Parrott, Devan R.},
|
|
Title = {Models of brain injury vocational rehabilitation: The evidence for
|
|
resource facilitation from efficacy to effectiveness},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {49},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {195-203},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Resource Facilitation (RF) is an intervention developed to
|
|
improve return to work (RTW) following brain injury. RF is an
|
|
individualized treatment specializing in connecting patients and
|
|
caregivers with community-based resources and services to mitigate
|
|
barriers to return to work.
|
|
OBJECTIVES: Examine the effectiveness of the RHI RF program for a
|
|
clinical prospective cohort of participants referred to this program
|
|
from the State Vocational Rehabilitation agency.
|
|
METHODS: Participants were 243 participants with data drawn from the two
|
|
sources: 33 from previous randomized controlled trial (RCT) control
|
|
groups who did not receive RF and 210 from clinical patients discharged
|
|
from the RHI RF program.
|
|
RESULTS: At discharge from RF, a greater proportion of the treatment
|
|
group obtained employment than the control group {[}X-(1)(2) = 5.39,p =
|
|
0.018]. When controlling for baseline level of disability, treatment
|
|
group significantly predicted employment outcome (Wald = 4.52, p =
|
|
0.033) and participants in the treatment group were 2.3 times more
|
|
likely to return to work than controls.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: Previous RCTs have studied the RHI RF model and
|
|
demonstrated significant efficacy. The findings from the present study
|
|
are consistent with the employment rates found in the previous RCT's
|
|
following RF, and also provide initial support for the clinical
|
|
effectiveness of RF.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Trexler, LE (Corresponding Author), Indiana Univ Sch Med, Rehabil Hosp Indiana, 9531 Valparaiso Court, Indianapolis, IN 46268 USA.
|
|
Trexler, Lance E.; Parrott, Devan R., Indiana Univ Sch Med, Rehabil Hosp Indiana, 9531 Valparaiso Court, Indianapolis, IN 46268 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3233/JVR-180965},
|
|
ISSN = {1052-2263},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-6316},
|
|
Keywords = {Brain injuries; return to work; employment; rehabilitation; vocational},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; HEAD-INJURY; SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
FOLLOW-UP; WORK; OUTCOMES; RETURN; TBI},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {lance.trexler@rhin.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000446795300006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000669433300004,
|
|
Author = {Artero Lopez, Jesus and Gomez-Alvarez Diaz, Rosario and Patino
|
|
Rodriguez, David},
|
|
Title = {Financial evaluation of a Universal Basic Income in Andalusia},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS REGIONALES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Number = {120},
|
|
Pages = {129-164},
|
|
Month = {JAN-APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Nowadays, multiple debates exist in academic area and public opinion
|
|
about the advantages and disadvantages of the implementation of a
|
|
universal basic income (UBI). This is an unconditional, nonwithdrawable
|
|
income for every individual as a right of citizenship, and
|
|
obligation-free (Parijs and Vanderborght, 2005). UBI can be received
|
|
with other public benefits in kind (education, health, etc.) or in-cash,
|
|
and therefore does not predict the Welfare State reduction. In addition,
|
|
the right is strictly applied to the individual and the extension of the
|
|
right to the family unit is not possible. Finally, its enjoyment does
|
|
not imply any type of work or other compensation.
|
|
Philosophical, political and economic justifications of UBI are of
|
|
various kinds, although we can indicate three of them. It is a tool to
|
|
reduce poverty and income inequality (Atkinson, 1993, Smith, 2014).
|
|
Likewise, individuals are only free to be able to self-govern their
|
|
private life and participate in public life when they possess the
|
|
material means that allow them not to depend on others to live, being
|
|
RBU a public policy that guarantees this fundamental right (Domenech and
|
|
Bertomeu, 2005 Petit, 2013, Van Parijs and Vanderborght, 2005). Finally,
|
|
UBI could compensate the initial unequal starting situation of
|
|
individuals in society; that is, it serves to reduce inequality in the
|
|
initial endowment of assets and resources obtained without there being a
|
|
clear reciprocity in terms of productive activity previously carried out
|
|
(Birnbaum, 2016). In this way, it is implemented as a mechanism to
|
|
create equal opportunities (Rawls, 1971, Dworking, 1985, Roemer, 1998).
|
|
But this purpose is not new, the first academic argument arises in the
|
|
work of Paine in 1797, and he called citizen income (Cunliffe and
|
|
Erreygers, 2004), which is reformulated by economists of great prestige
|
|
on the XX century (Meade, 1938, Friedman, 1962, Tobin, Pechman and
|
|
Mieszkowski, 1967). Later, Van der Veen and Van Parijs (1986), reopen
|
|
the debate on their applicability in a context with high unemployment,
|
|
being precursors of economic viability research for different
|
|
territories: Europe (Callan and Sutherland, 1997), national contexts
|
|
(Atkinson, 1995, Torry, 2015, Colombino et al., 2010) or local
|
|
communities (Boffey, 2015).
|
|
Already in the 21st century, the UBI has taken on greater relevance due
|
|
to its translation into the political discussion, including the
|
|
international arena (OECD, 2017). This interest has been propitiated by
|
|
several events: the growth of inequality worldwide, which has also
|
|
affected Spain and Andalusia (Piketty, 2014, Stiglitz, 2015, Milanovic,
|
|
2011, Ayala, 2016), technological advances and their effects on
|
|
employment (Atkinson, 2015, World Economic Forum, 2016) and the
|
|
evaluations of its real implementation in different contexts. These
|
|
empirical estudies are showed it capacity to reduce inequality without
|
|
generating disincentives to work as in the case of: Alaska (Goldsmith,
|
|
2010); Namibia (Haarmann and Haarmann, 2015); California (Altman, 2016)
|
|
Utrech or Maastrich (BIEN, 2015), among others.
|
|
Several studies about UBI viability and its impact on inequality for
|
|
Spain have been carried out (Arcarons, Raventos and Torrens, 2014b,
|
|
Oliver and Spadaro, 2004) as well as for the Basque Country and
|
|
Catalonia (Arcarons et al., 2014a, 2005). In addition, different
|
|
legislative initiatives have been promoted at the regional and state
|
|
levels to support measures of this type (Martinez, 2008), although they
|
|
have not prospered.
|
|
In our work, we draw the economic viability of the UBI in Andalusia, an
|
|
autonomous region of Spain. The funding proposal is based on replacing
|
|
redundant economic benefits and an income tax reform in 2010. This year
|
|
is significant because correspond al period of economic crisis, and
|
|
there is not extra fiscal revenues from cicle economic.
|
|
The first step affect the monetary assistance benefits. All of them are
|
|
means-tested transfers, whose individual amount is not higher than UBI
|
|
disappear and their total budget allocation is used to finance the
|
|
reform. There are two benefits that exceed the amount of RBU granted to
|
|
each individual, such as contributory pensions and unemployment
|
|
benefits. In those cases, individuals continue to receive the amount
|
|
that exceeds the UBI.
|
|
The second step is a IRPF reform. All deductions are eliminated, the
|
|
existence of an exempt minimum equal to the amount of the UBI and
|
|
application of a linear rate of 49.5\%. We model a micro-simulation
|
|
using a sample of individual respondents and non-respondents settlements
|
|
of income tax from Institute of Fiscal Studies for 2010; as well as the
|
|
information provided by different public administrations on the amounts
|
|
of means-tested transfers.
|
|
Our results show the reform makes affordable the financial viability of
|
|
UBI in Andalusia. We evaluate two schemes for a population of 8,370,975
|
|
habitants in Andalusia in 2010. In the first, all residents receive
|
|
7.500 euros per month and the total budget is 62.782,31 millions of
|
|
euros. In the second, children under 18 years old recieve 1.500 euros
|
|
per month and the budget is 52.884,22 millons of euros. The first scheme
|
|
generates a deficit estimated at 8,377.6 millions of euros. Conversely,
|
|
the second scheme creates a surplus equal to 1,520.63 millions of euros.
|
|
This surplus could allow to reduce the marginal tax or to increase the
|
|
UBI, for example.
|
|
Regarding their redistributive impacts are remarkable. The first scheme
|
|
results show that the population among the first and the seventh deciles
|
|
are winners, and three last deciles are losers. In the second scheme the
|
|
winners are all population of two first deciles, more than 50\%
|
|
population among the third and the seventh deciles, and less than 50\%
|
|
for the rest of deciles.
|
|
Effective tax rates are not quite different in both schemes. The
|
|
effective tax rates in the first scheme are negative until fourth
|
|
decile, are minor until sixth decile, and tenth decile put up 34,52\%
|
|
effective tax.
|
|
The indicators of inequality, concentration and progressivity show a
|
|
large redistributive impact of the reform. When comparing the situation
|
|
before and after the reform (gross income ex ante vs. net income ex post
|
|
plus RBU), the Gini Index decreases by 23 percentage points in scheme
|
|
one, and 19 percentage points in scheme two. This result is
|
|
underestimating the total redistributive impact of the measure, since
|
|
the population outside the microsimulation is not included in the
|
|
analysis, as it is exempt from the current IRPF, which is a great
|
|
beneficiary of the reform.
|
|
The study provides solid evidence of financial viability of the
|
|
hypothetical implementation in Andalusia of taxtransfer reforms
|
|
embodying some version of a basic income policy. The reform shows great
|
|
effectiveness as a measure to reduce inequality. However, the subsequent
|
|
economic implications (impact on the labor market, poverty, etc.),
|
|
social (criterion of justice, principle of reciprocity) or politic
|
|
(conflict and pressure from interest groups) confirm the need of
|
|
complementary studies, in order to be raised in the political agenda.
|
|
In addition, RBU could serve as an instrument to obtain information
|
|
about certain individuals and groups, that due to their personal or
|
|
group characteristics, do not access the current subsidy system: lack of
|
|
information, misunderstanding of adminstrative procedures, and other
|
|
types of barriers they limit their request. Together, better social
|
|
inclusion results would be obtained.
|
|
Finally, the digital age is generating great economic and social
|
|
changes. In this context, a RBU could play a decisive role, as an
|
|
instrument of correction of technological unemployment, avoiding the
|
|
increase of inequality and increasing equal opportunities. The fiscal
|
|
viability calculation of RBU facilitates the way to further debates that
|
|
provide useful information to design the political agenda.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lopez, JA (Corresponding Author), Univ Seville, Seville, Spain.
|
|
Artero Lopez, Jesus; Gomez-Alvarez Diaz, Rosario; Patino Rodriguez, David, Univ Seville, Seville, Spain.},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-7585},
|
|
Keywords = {Universal basic income; Financial viability; Micro-simulation; Direct
|
|
taxation; Redistributive effect; Andalusia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POVERTY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000669433300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000313499700001,
|
|
Author = {Le Anh Thi Kim and Lien Thi Lan Pham and Lan Hoang Vu and Schelling,
|
|
Esther},
|
|
Title = {Health services for reproductive tract infections among female migrant
|
|
workers in industrial zones in Ha Noi, Viet Nam: an in-depth assessment},
|
|
Journal = {REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Month = {FEB 27},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Rural-to-urban migration involves a high proportion of
|
|
females because job opportunities for female migrants have increased in
|
|
urban industrial areas. Those who migrate may be healthier than those
|
|
staying in the village and they may benefit from better health care
|
|
services at destination, but the `healthy' effect can be reversed at
|
|
destination due to migration-related health risk factors. The study
|
|
aimed to explore the need for health care services for reproductive
|
|
tract infections (RTIs) among female migrants working in the Sai Dong
|
|
industrial zone as well as their services utilization.
|
|
Methods: The cross sectional study employed a mixed method approach. A
|
|
cohort of 300 female migrants was interviewed to collect quantitative
|
|
data. Two focus groups and 20 in-depth interviews were conducted to
|
|
collect qualitative data. We have used frequency and cross-tabulation
|
|
techniques to analyze the quantitative data and the qualitative data was
|
|
used to triangulate and to provide more in-depth information.
|
|
Results: The needs for health care services for RTI were high as 25\% of
|
|
participants had RTI syndromes. Only 21.6\% of female migrants having
|
|
RTI syndromes ever seek helps for health care services. Barriers
|
|
preventing migrants to access services were traditional values, long
|
|
working hours, lack of information, and high cost of services. Employers
|
|
had limited interests in reproductive health of female migrants, and
|
|
there was ineffective collaboration between the local health system and
|
|
enterprises. These barriers were partly caused by lack of health
|
|
promotion programs suitable for migrants. Most respondents needed more
|
|
information on RTIs and preferred to receive these from their employers
|
|
since they commonly work shifts - and spend most of their day time at
|
|
work.
|
|
Conclusion: While RTIs are a common health problem among female migrant
|
|
workers in industrial zones, female migrants had many obstacles in
|
|
accessing RTI care services. The findings from this study will help to
|
|
design intervention models for RTI among this vulnerable group such as
|
|
communication for behavioural impact of RTI health care, fostered
|
|
collaboration between local health care services and employer
|
|
enterprises, and on-site service (e.g. local or enterprise health
|
|
clinics) strengthening.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Le, ATK (Corresponding Author), Hanoi Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, 138 Giang Vo St, Ba Dinh Dist, Ha Noi, Vietnam.
|
|
Le Anh Thi Kim; Lan Hoang Vu, Hanoi Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, Ba Dinh Dist, Ha Noi, Vietnam.
|
|
Le Anh Thi Kim; Schelling, Esther, Swiss Trop \& Publ Hlth Inst, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland.
|
|
Le Anh Thi Kim; Schelling, Esther, Univ Basel, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland.
|
|
Lien Thi Lan Pham, Long Bien Dist Hlth Ctr, Long Bien Dist, Ha Noi, Vietnam.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1742-4755-9-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {4},
|
|
EISSN = {1742-4755},
|
|
Keywords = {RTIs; STIs; Female migrants; Industrial zones; Health care services;
|
|
Viet Nam},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIGRATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {anhhsph@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Schelling, Esther/K-7990-2015},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Schelling, Esther/0000-0001-6444-0898},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000313499700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000312328000014,
|
|
Author = {Sly, Jamilia R. and Jandorf, Lina and Dhulkifl, Rayhana and Hall, Diana
|
|
and Edwards, Tiffany and Goodman, Adam J. and Maysonet, Elithea and
|
|
Azeez, Sulaiman},
|
|
Title = {Challenges to Replicating Evidence-Based Research in Real-World
|
|
Settings: Training African-American peers as Patient Navigators for
|
|
Colon Cancer Screening},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CANCER EDUCATION},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {680-686},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Many cancer-prevention interventions have demonstrated effectiveness in
|
|
diverse populations, but these evidenced-based findings slowly
|
|
disseminate into practice. The current study describes the process of
|
|
disseminating and replicating research (i.e., peer patient navigation
|
|
for colonoscopy screening) in real-world settings. Two large
|
|
metropolitan hospitals collaborated to replicate a peer patient
|
|
navigation model within their existing navigation systems. Six
|
|
African-American peer volunteers were recruited and trained to navigate
|
|
patients through colonoscopy scheduling and completion. Major challenges
|
|
included: (1) operating within multiple institutional settings; (2)
|
|
operating within nonacademic/research infrastructures; (3) integrating
|
|
into an established navigation system; (4) obtaining support of hospital
|
|
staff without overburdening; and (5) competing priorities and time
|
|
commitments. Bridging the gap between evidence-based research and
|
|
practice is critical to eliminating many cancer health disparities;
|
|
therefore, it is crucial that researchers and practitioners continue to
|
|
work to achieve both diffusion and fusion of evidence-based findings.
|
|
Recommendations for addressing these challenges are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sly, JR (Corresponding Author), Mt Sinai Sch Med, Dept Oncol Sci, 1 Gustave L Levy Pl,Box 1130, New York, NY 10029 USA.
|
|
Sly, Jamilia R.; Jandorf, Lina; Dhulkifl, Rayhana; Hall, Diana; Edwards, Tiffany, Mt Sinai Sch Med, Dept Oncol Sci, New York, NY 10029 USA.
|
|
Goodman, Adam J., Suny Downstate Med Ctr, Dept Med, Div Gastroenterol \& Hepatol, Brooklyn, NY 11203 USA.
|
|
Goodman, Adam J., Kings Cty Hosp Ctr, Brooklyn, NY 11203 USA.
|
|
Maysonet, Elithea; Azeez, Sulaiman, Lincoln Med \& Mental Hlth Ctr, Canc Screening Program, Bronx, NY 10451 USA.
|
|
Maysonet, Elithea; Azeez, Sulaiman, Lincoln Med \& Mental Hlth Ctr, Canc Outreach Program, Bronx, NY 10451 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s13187-012-0395-3},
|
|
ISSN = {0885-8195},
|
|
Keywords = {Evidenced based; Dissemination; African-Americans; Peer patient
|
|
navigation; Colon cancer screening},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-INCOME; DISSEMINATION RESEARCH; CARE; IMPLEMENTATION; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology; Education, Scientific Disciplines; Public, Environmental \&
|
|
Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jamilia.sly@mssm.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Goodman, Adam/0000-0002-3429-1067},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000312328000014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000282516400012,
|
|
Author = {Black, Heather L. and Priolo, Chantel and Akinyemi, D'Jahna and
|
|
Gonzalez, Rodalyn and Jackson, Danielle S. and Garcia, Laura and George,
|
|
Maureen and Apter, Andrea J.},
|
|
Title = {Clearing Clinical Barriers: Enhancing Social Support Using a Patient
|
|
Navigator for Asthma Care},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ASTHMA},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {913-919},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Background. Patients with moderate or severe asthma, particularly those
|
|
who are minority or poor, often encounter significant personal, clinical
|
|
practice, and health system barriers to accessing care. Objective. To
|
|
explore the ideas of patients and providers for potentially feasible,
|
|
individualized, cost-effective ways to reduce obstacles to care by
|
|
providing social support using a patient advocate or navigator. Methods.
|
|
The authors conducted four focus groups of adults with moderate or
|
|
severe asthma. Participants were recruited from clinics serving
|
|
low-income and minority urban neighborhoods. Data from these patient
|
|
focus groups were shared with two additional focus groups, one of nurses
|
|
and one of physicians. Researchers independently coded and agreed upon
|
|
themes from all focus groups, which were categorized by types of social
|
|
support: instrumental (physical aid), informational (educational),
|
|
emotional (empathizing), validation (comparisons to others). Results.
|
|
Patients and providers agreed that a patient navigator could help
|
|
patients manage asthma by giving social support. Both groups found
|
|
instrumental and informational support most important. However, patients
|
|
desired more instrumental help whereas providers focused on
|
|
informational support. Physicians stressed review of medical information
|
|
whereas patients wanted information to complete administrative tasks.
|
|
Providers and patients agreed that the patient navigator's role in
|
|
asthma would need to address both short-term care of exacerbations and
|
|
enhance long-term chronic self-management by working with practice
|
|
personnel. Conclusions. Along with medical information, there is a need
|
|
for providers to connect patients to instrumental support relevant to
|
|
acute and long-term asthma-self-management.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Apter, AJ (Corresponding Author), Hosp Univ Penn, 829 Gates Bldg,3600 Spruce St, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Black, Heather L.; Priolo, Chantel; Akinyemi, D'Jahna; Gonzalez, Rodalyn; Jackson, Danielle S.; Garcia, Laura; Apter, Andrea J., Univ Penn, Div Pulm Allergy \& Crit Care Med, Sect Allergy \& Immunol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
George, Maureen, Univ Penn, Sch Nursing, Family \& Community Hlth Div, Ctr Hlth Equ Res, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3109/02770903.2010.506681},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-0903},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-4303},
|
|
Keywords = {Asthma; barriers; communication; control; patient navigator;
|
|
self-management},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DISPARITIES; INTERVENTION; MANAGEMENT; NUMERACY; OUTCOMES; QUALITY;
|
|
ADULTS; SYSTEM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Allergy; Respiratory System},
|
|
Author-Email = {apter@mail.med.upenn.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Black, Heather/0000-0002-4739-3572
|
|
George, Maureen/0000-0001-9234-7842
|
|
Jackson, Danielle/0000-0001-6451-1377},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000282516400012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000334819000005,
|
|
Author = {Glied, Sherry and Oellerich, Don},
|
|
Title = {Two-Generation Programs and Health},
|
|
Journal = {FUTURE OF CHILDREN},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {79-97},
|
|
Month = {SPR},
|
|
Abstract = {Parents' health and children's health are closely intertwined healthier
|
|
parents have healthier children, and vice versa. Genetics accounts for
|
|
some of this relationship, but much of it can be traced to environment
|
|
and behavior, and the environmental and behavioral risk factors for poor
|
|
health disproportionately affect families living in poverty. Unhealthy
|
|
children are likely to become unhealthy adults, and poor health drags
|
|
down both their educational attainment and their income.
|
|
Because of the close connection between parents' and children's health,
|
|
write Sherry Glied and Don Oellerich, we have every reason to believe
|
|
that programs to improve parents' health will improve their children's
|
|
health as well. Yet few programs aim to work this way, except for a
|
|
narrow category of programs that target pregnant women, newborns, and
|
|
very young children. Glied and Oellerich assess these programs, discuss
|
|
why there are so few of them, and suggest ways to expand them. Their
|
|
chief conclusion is that structural barriers in the U.S. healthcare
|
|
system stand in the way of such programs. Some of these barriers have to
|
|
do with health insurance, access to care, and benefits, but the biggest
|
|
one is the fact that physicians typically specialize in treating either
|
|
children or adults, rather than families as a whole. The Affordable Care
|
|
Act has begun to break down some of these barriers, the authors write,
|
|
but much remains to be done.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Glied, S (Corresponding Author), NYU, Robert F Wagner Grad Sch Publ Serv, Publ Serv, New York, NY 10003 USA.
|
|
Glied, Sherry, NYU, Robert F Wagner Grad Sch Publ Serv, Publ Serv, New York, NY 10003 USA.
|
|
Oellerich, Don, US Dept Hlth \& Human Serv, Off Assistant Secretary Planning \& Evaluat, Washington, DC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1353/foc.2014.0006},
|
|
ISSN = {1054-8289},
|
|
EISSN = {1550-1558},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EARLY-CHILDHOOD ADVERSITY; PARENTAL INFLUENCE; PRENATAL-CARE;
|
|
DEPRESSION; CHILDREN; SMOKING; MOTHERS; STRESS; ABUSE; RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Health Policy \& Services; Social Sciences,
|
|
Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000334819000005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000483610400001,
|
|
Author = {Edmond, Karen M. and Strobel, Natalie A. and Adams, Claire and McAullay,
|
|
Dan},
|
|
Title = {Effect of early childhood development interventions implemented by
|
|
primary care providers commencing in the neonatal period to improve
|
|
cognitive outcomes in children aged 0-23 months: protocol for a
|
|
systematic review and meta-analysis},
|
|
Journal = {SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {AUG 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Impacts of early childhood development (ECD) interventions
|
|
(such as fostering attachment and responsiveness through communication,
|
|
play and stimulation) are well known. Globally, there is increasing
|
|
recognition of the importance of the `golden' minutes, hours and days
|
|
after birth for infant health and development. However, only one
|
|
systematic review has examined ECD interventions implemented in the
|
|
neonatal period (0-27 days), and this review only assessed interventions
|
|
implemented by specialised providers. Primary care providers have many
|
|
potential contacts with mothers and infants throughout the neonatal
|
|
period. However, it is unclear how many research studies or programmes
|
|
have examined the effectiveness of ECD interventions commencing in the
|
|
neonatal period and which methods were used. To date, there has been no
|
|
systematic review of the effect of ECD interventions delivered by
|
|
primary care providers commencing in the neonatal period. Methods Our
|
|
overall aim is to conduct a systematic review of the effect of ECD
|
|
interventions implemented by primary care providers in the neonatal
|
|
period. We will assess effects by timing and number ('dose') of contacts
|
|
with primary care providers. Subgroup assessment will include effects in
|
|
disadvantaged infants such as those born with low birth weight and to
|
|
mothers with mental health disorders. We will also assess effects in
|
|
low- and high-income countries and by type of care provider. The primary
|
|
outcome is cognitive status in children aged 0-23 months as measured
|
|
using standardised scales. Secondary outcomes include other child
|
|
neurodevelopment domains (speech, language, fine motor, gross motor,
|
|
social, emotional, behaviour, executive functioning, adaptive
|
|
functioning) in children aged 0-23 months. Effects on maternal mental
|
|
health will also be assessed between 0-23 months postpartum. Databases
|
|
such as MEDLINE (OVID), PsycINFO (OVID), EMBASE (OVID), CINAHL, Cochrane
|
|
Library, WHO databases and reference lists of papers will be searched
|
|
for relevant articles. Only randomised controlled trials will be
|
|
included. A narrative synthesis for all outcomes will be reported.
|
|
Meta-analyses will be performed where exposures and outcomes are
|
|
sufficiently homogeneous. Guidelines for PRISMA-P (Preferred Reporting
|
|
Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Protocols) will be
|
|
followed. Discussion This review appears to be the first to be conducted
|
|
in this area. The findings will be an important resource for
|
|
policymakers, primary care providers and researchers who work with young
|
|
infants in primary care settings. Systematic review registration
|
|
PROSPERO},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Edmond, KM (Corresponding Author), Univ Western Australia, Med Sch, Div Paediat, Perth, WA, Australia.
|
|
Edmond, Karen M.; Strobel, Natalie A.; Adams, Claire; McAullay, Dan, Univ Western Australia, Med Sch, Div Paediat, Perth, WA, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13643-019-1142-1},
|
|
Article-Number = {224},
|
|
EISSN = {2046-4053},
|
|
Keywords = {Primary care; Early childhood development; Neonatal; Cognition},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {NUTRITION INTERVENTIONS; RESPONSIVE STIMULATION; HEALTH-PROMOTION;
|
|
YOUNG-CHILDREN; PROGRAM; PAKISTAN; GROWTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {karen.edmond@uwa.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Adams, Claire Elizabeth/ABE-8004-2021
|
|
Strobel, Natalie A/O-9174-2014
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Adams, Claire Elizabeth/0000-0002-0667-8088
|
|
Strobel, Natalie A/0000-0002-2962-5704
|
|
McAullay, Daniel/0000-0002-0651-899X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000483610400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000459802600001,
|
|
Author = {Scott, Shannon L. and Bondoc, Salvador},
|
|
Title = {Return to Work After Stroke: A Survey of Occupational Therapy Practice
|
|
Patterns},
|
|
Journal = {OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY IN HEALTH CARE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {195-215},
|
|
Abstract = {This descriptive study, consisting of a survey followed by
|
|
semi-structured interviews, sought to describe the practice patterns and
|
|
perceived competencies of occupational therapy practitioners in the
|
|
provision of return to work (RTW) services for stroke survivors.
|
|
Respondents (n = 119) were mostly occupational therapists (95\%) working
|
|
in outpatient settings (61\%); 47\% reported a caseload of mostly stroke
|
|
survivors; and most addressing RTW (60\%). Respondents focused
|
|
predominantly on remediation of cognitive and physical skills and less
|
|
on actual work performance and supports. Respondents assert occupational
|
|
therapy's role in RTW for stroke survivors but generally reported
|
|
limited competencies and low utilization of evidence-based approaches
|
|
and theoretical models when addressing RTW. Systems, organizational
|
|
support, and practitioner factors emerged as barriers and facilitators
|
|
to RTW service provision. This study suggests there may be a critical
|
|
gap in practitioners' RTW competencies with profound implications for
|
|
entry-level education, professional development, advocacy, and research.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Scott, SL (Corresponding Author), Dept Occupat Therapy, 953 Danby Rd,Smiddy Hall 204C, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA.
|
|
Scott, Shannon L., Ithaca Coll, Dept Occupat Sci Occupat Therapy, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA.
|
|
Bondoc, Salvador, Quinnipiac Univ, Dept Occupat Therapy, Sch Hlth Sci, Hamden, CT USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/07380577.2018.1491083},
|
|
ISSN = {0738-0577},
|
|
EISSN = {1541-3098},
|
|
Keywords = {Occupational therapy; practice patterns; return to work; stroke;
|
|
interprofessionalism},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOCATIONAL-REHABILITATION; INTERVENTION; EXPERIENCES; EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
BARRIERS; OUTCOMES; QUALITY; PROGRAM; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {sscott3@ithaca.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000459802600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000560515000001,
|
|
Author = {Morello, Samantha L. and Colopy, Sara A. and Chun, Ruthanne and Buhr,
|
|
Kevin A.},
|
|
Title = {Work, life, and the gender effect: Perspectives ofACVIMDiplomates in
|
|
2017. Part 1-Specialty demographics and measures of professional
|
|
achievement},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF VETERINARY INTERNAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1825-1836},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Barriers to achieving work-life balance, as well as
|
|
gender-based differences, exist in the male-dominated surgical specialty
|
|
in veterinary medicine. Similar information does not exist for the more
|
|
feminized American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine (ACVIM).
|
|
Hypothesis/Objectives To provide data on the professional and personal
|
|
lives of Diplomates of the ACVIM so as to help define the state of the
|
|
specialty, including gender-related differences, and identify areas
|
|
requiring intervention to improve work-life balance. Sample A total of
|
|
896 surveys (781 completed) of Diplomates of the ACVIM, including
|
|
cardiology, large animal internal medicine, neurology, oncology, and
|
|
small animal internal medicine. Methods An 82-item online survey was
|
|
distributed in February 2017 to ACVIM Diplomates via their respective
|
|
ACVIM listserv. Participation was voluntary. Results Thirty percent of
|
|
the total ACVIM registered membership responded and 26\% completed
|
|
surveys; 25\% were men and 75\% were women. Specialists in academia
|
|
worked significantly more hours, with larger numbers of diplomates per
|
|
specialty section, and made less money compared with those in private
|
|
practice. Women were less likely to report full-time employment,
|
|
practice ownership, or higher academic rank, and reported 20\% lower
|
|
income overall (after adjustment for relevant factors) as compared with
|
|
men. Men and women differed in their subjective assessment of the effect
|
|
of gender in the workplace. Eighty-three percent of respondents were
|
|
somewhat satisfied or better with their career. Conclusions and Clinical
|
|
Importance Specialization in the ACVIM is a satisfying and potentially
|
|
profitable career. However, despite a highly feminized workforce,
|
|
significant gender-related imbalances are evident.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Morello, SL (Corresponding Author), Univ Wisconsin, Sch Vet Med, Dept Surg Sci, 2015 Linden Dr, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Morello, Samantha L.; Colopy, Sara A., Univ Wisconsin, Sch Vet Med, Dept Surg Sci, 2015 Linden Dr, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Chun, Ruthanne, Univ Wisconsin, Sch Vet Med, Dept Med Sci, 2015 Linden Dr, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
|
|
Buhr, Kevin A., Univ Wisconsin, Sch Med \& Publ Hlth, Dept Biomed Informat, Madison, WI 53706 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/jvim.15872},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0891-6640},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-1676},
|
|
Keywords = {advancement; career; demographics; gender; salary; work-life balance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FEMINIZATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Veterinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {sam.morello@wisc.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Morello, Samantha/0000-0001-5209-051X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000560515000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000773820900001,
|
|
Author = {Ravinskaya, Margarita and Verbeek, Jos H. and Langendam, Miranda W. and
|
|
Madan, Ira and Verstappen, Suzanne M. M. and Kunz, Regina and Hulshof,
|
|
Carel T. J. and Hoving, Jan L.},
|
|
Title = {Preferred Methods of Measuring Work Participation: An International
|
|
Survey Among Trialists and Cochrane Systematic Reviewers},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {620-628},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose Heterogeneity in work participation (WP) outcomes measurements
|
|
hampers large scale evidence synthesis in systematic reviews of trials.
|
|
In this survey we explore authors' reasons for choosing specific WP
|
|
outcomes and their measurement methods, including employment status,
|
|
absence from work, at-work productivity loss, and employability. Methods
|
|
We contacted authors of 260 trials and 69 systematic reviews and asked
|
|
closed and open-ended questions about previously used WP outcomes and
|
|
measurement methods as well as their opinion on the best way to measure
|
|
WP. Results In total, 91 authors from a wide range of professional
|
|
backgrounds completed the survey. The majority of authors (86\%) chose
|
|
WP outcomes based on their use in previous similar studies. In most
|
|
studies (88\%), patients had not been involved in the process of
|
|
selecting the WP outcome. Authors judged feasibility to be an important
|
|
factor for choosing a measurement instrument (67\%). Additionally, valid
|
|
measurement tools should be available, easy to administer and not too
|
|
time consuming. Although authors preferred registry data for long term
|
|
follow-up, the availability and validity of registries was seen as a
|
|
barrier. Most of the reviewers (72\%) struggled to pool data because of
|
|
variation in follow-up times and cut off points and varying definitions
|
|
of work outcomes. Almost all (92\%) respondents support the use of a
|
|
Core Outcome Set for Work. Conclusions There is strong support from
|
|
authors of trials and systematic reviews to develop a core outcome set
|
|
on work participation outcomes for the evaluation of interventions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ravinskaya, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Amsterdam, Acad Med Ctr, Coronel Inst Occupat Hlth, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst,Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Ravinskaya, Margarita, Univ Amsterdam, Acad Med Ctr, Coronel Inst Occupat Hlth, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst,Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Verbeek, Jos H.; Hulshof, Carel T. J.; Hoving, Jan L., Univ Amsterdam, Locat Acad Med Ctr, Coronel Inst Occupat Hlth, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst,Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Langendam, Miranda W., Univ Amsterdam, Locat Acad Med Ctr, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst, Dept Epidemiol \& Data Sci,Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Madan, Ira, Kings Coll London, Ctr Musculoskeletal Hlth \& Work, Guys \& St Thomas NHS Trust \& Fac Life Sci \& Med, London, England.
|
|
Kunz, Regina, Univ Basel, Acad Unit EbIM, Dept Clin Res, Evidence Based Insurance Med, Basel, Switzerland.
|
|
Verstappen, Suzanne M. M., Univ Manchester, Fac Biol Med \& Hlth, Ctr Epidemiol Versus Arthrit, Manchester, Lancs, England.
|
|
Verstappen, Suzanne M. M., Manchester Univ NHS Fdn Trust, Manchester Acad Hlth Sci Ctr, NIHR Manchester Biomed Res Ctr, Manchester, Lancs, England.
|
|
Verstappen, Suzanne M. M., Univ Southampton, MRC Versus Arthrit Ctr Musculoskeletal Hlth \& Wor, Southampton, Hants, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10926-022-10031-0},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1053-0487},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3688},
|
|
Keywords = {Survey; Return-to-work; Worker participation; Vocational rehabilitation;
|
|
Outcome studies},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; CORE OUTCOME DOMAINS; RETURN-TO-WORK;
|
|
METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES; PRODUCTIVITY LOSS; CLINICAL-TRIALS; DISABILITY;
|
|
ABILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {m.ravinskaya@amsterdamumc.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hoving, Jan L/O-2235-2013
|
|
hulshof, carel tj/B-3435-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hoving, Jan L/0000-0002-0461-4013
|
|
Ravinskaya, Margarita/0000-0003-4280-8887},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000773820900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000561037400001,
|
|
Author = {de Franca, Viviane Helena and Modena, Celina Maria and Confalonieri,
|
|
Ulisses Eugenio Cavalcanti},
|
|
Title = {Equality and poverty: views from managers and professionals from public
|
|
services and household heads in the Belo Horizonte Metropolitan Area,
|
|
Brazil},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {AUG 6},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Tackling poverty requires reconsideration of quantitative
|
|
factors related to ``who{''} is poor and by ``how much{''} and
|
|
qualitative factors addressing ``what poverty means in these
|
|
individuals' lives{''}. Greater understanding is required concerning the
|
|
types of access actually used by families in poverty in attempts to meet
|
|
their basic needs. Poverty must be addressed based on the question:
|
|
``Inequality of what?{''} It is in reflecting on the realities of such
|
|
groups when their basic needs are not met that public policies can be
|
|
improved and implemented with legitimate priorities. Objective: Describe
|
|
coverage and access to public health, education and social assistance
|
|
services and the related effects on the quality of life of families in
|
|
extreme poverty. Methods An exploratory mixed methods study was
|
|
conducted applying Amartya Sen's ``Basic Capability Equality{''}
|
|
framework, with: 1) 27 interviews with managers and professionals from
|
|
public services serving territories with extreme poverty; 2) Survey with
|
|
a systematic proportionate stratified sample of 336 heads of households
|
|
in extreme poverty from a total 2605 families. The resulting data was
|
|
analyzed with thematic content analysis and descriptive statistics,
|
|
respectively. Results The managers and professionals described the lives
|
|
of families in extreme poverty with phrases such as, ``These people
|
|
suffer. Sadness weighs on their lives!{''} and ``Depression is the most
|
|
common illness{''}. Their precarious circumstances and inadequate access
|
|
were cited as causes. Quality of life was considered bad or very bad by
|
|
41.4\% of heads of households. A total income of less than one-third of
|
|
the minimum wage was received by 56.9\% of the sample. One or more
|
|
people were unemployed in the family in 55.8\% of cases. For 53.3\% of
|
|
heads of households, public services ``did not meet any or few of their
|
|
needs{''}.The main social determinants of health were described as:
|
|
alcohol and drugs (68.8\%); lack of good health care (60.7\%); and
|
|
absence of income/work (37.5\%). The following were identified as
|
|
solutions to improve their quality of life: (1) health (40.5\%); (2)
|
|
education (37.8\%); and (3) employment (44.6\%). Conclusions The social
|
|
determinants of poverty and health must be addressed jointly through
|
|
intersectoral public policies and egalitarian mechanisms that promote
|
|
investment in social protection.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {de Franca, VH (Corresponding Author), Univ Fed Juiz de Fora, Dept Med, Campus Avancado Governador Valadares, BR-35032620 Governador Valadares, MG, Brazil.
|
|
de Franca, Viviane Helena, Univ Fed Juiz de Fora, Dept Med, Campus Avancado Governador Valadares, BR-35032620 Governador Valadares, MG, Brazil.
|
|
Modena, Celina Maria; Confalonieri, Ulisses Eugenio Cavalcanti, Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz Minas, Inst Rene Rachou, Ave Augusto de Lima, BR-30190009 Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-020-01243-y},
|
|
Article-Number = {132},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Quality of life; Public policies; Health promotion; Intersectoral
|
|
action; Management; Health equity},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {vivianehfranca@hotmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Reis, AlessanRSS/0000-0001-8486-7469},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000561037400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000961557300001,
|
|
Author = {Heaton, Brenda and Muzzi, Alicia and Gebel, Christina and Bernstein,
|
|
Judith and Garcia, Raul I. I.},
|
|
Title = {Recruitment and Enrollment of Low-income, Minority Residents of Urban
|
|
Public Housing into Research},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 APR 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Research participation among vulnerable populations is often limited by
|
|
the same socioeconomic factors that contribute to poor health.
|
|
Identifying best practices for inclusion is critical to addressing
|
|
health disparities. Urban public housing communities bear a
|
|
disproportionate burden of chronic disease and may represent an
|
|
opportunity to directly engage historically vulnerable populations in
|
|
research designed to ultimately reduce that burden. We used mixed-method
|
|
data to analyze recruitment effectiveness among a random sample of
|
|
households (N = 380) across two public housing developments in Boston,
|
|
MA who were approached for participation in a pre-COVID oral health
|
|
study. Quantitative data from detailed recruitment tracking methods was
|
|
analyzed to assess the relative efficiency of the methods employed.
|
|
Field journals of study staff were qualitatively analyzed to identify
|
|
community-specific recruitment barriers and facilitators. The
|
|
participation rate among randomly sampled households was 28.6\% (N =
|
|
131), with participation from primarily Hispanic (59.5\%) or Black
|
|
(26\%) residents. Door-to-door knocking with response yielded the
|
|
highest participation (44.8\%), followed by responses to informational
|
|
study flyers (31\%). Primary barriers to enrollment included references
|
|
to unemployment and employment variations, shift work, childcare
|
|
responsibilities, time demands, and managing multiple appointments and
|
|
social services. This study finds active, door-to-door knocking and
|
|
return visits resolved barriers to participation, and reduced safety
|
|
concerns and historic distrust. It's time to consider how best to adapt
|
|
effective pre-COVID recruitment practices for utilization under current
|
|
and future exposure conditions as effective recruitment of populations
|
|
such as urban public housing residents into research is only becoming
|
|
more important.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Heaton, B (Corresponding Author), Boston Univ, Henry M Goldman Sch Dent Med, Dept Hlth Policy \& Hlth Serv Res, 560 Harrison Ave,3rd Floor,Rm 329, Boston, MA 02118 USA.
|
|
Heaton, B (Corresponding Author), Boston Univ, Dept Epidemiol, Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA 02118 USA.
|
|
Heaton, Brenda; Muzzi, Alicia; Gebel, Christina; Garcia, Raul I. I., Boston Univ, Henry M Goldman Sch Dent Med, Dept Hlth Policy \& Hlth Serv Res, 560 Harrison Ave,3rd Floor,Rm 329, Boston, MA 02118 USA.
|
|
Heaton, Brenda, Boston Univ, Dept Epidemiol, Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA 02118 USA.
|
|
Bernstein, Judith, Boston Univ, Dept Community Hlth Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10900-023-01212-w},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0094-5145},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3610},
|
|
Keywords = {Subject recruitment; Public housing; Health disparities; Oral health;
|
|
Minority health; Urban health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {AFRICAN-AMERICANS; HEALTH; POPULATION; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {brenda9@bu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000961557300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000691544800014,
|
|
Author = {Chandola, Tarani and Rouxel, Patrick},
|
|
Title = {The role of workplace accommodations in explaining the disability
|
|
employment gap in the UK},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {285},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {There has been limited theoretical and empirical research into the role
|
|
of workplace accommodations in enabling workers with and without
|
|
impairments to remain in work. This study used the International
|
|
Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) model to
|
|
examine (a) whether workplace accommodations enable workers,
|
|
particularly those with different impairments, to remain economically
|
|
active; and (b) the predictors of the onset of work accommodations. Data
|
|
from two waves of a large-scale longitudinal survey of disability in
|
|
Great Britain, the Life Opportunities Survey (2009-2012) were analysed.
|
|
2307 workers with an impairment and 4308 workers without an impairment
|
|
were followed up for a year. Work accommodations appear to enable
|
|
workers with impairments to remain economically active, especially those
|
|
with mental impairments. There was no difference in the employment rates
|
|
of workers with and without mental impairments who had two or more work
|
|
accommodations, in contrast to the 10\% employment gap between workers
|
|
with and without mental impairments who did not have any work
|
|
accommodations. While there was no gender difference in the disability
|
|
employment gap, barriers to employment related to caregiving were much
|
|
greater for women compared to men. Moreover, only workers with incident
|
|
pain impairments were associated with an increase in their work
|
|
accommodations, not workers with incident mental impairments. Despite
|
|
the evidence that workers with mental impairments could benefit
|
|
considerably from workplace accommodations, they are less likely to have
|
|
their workplace adjusted. The ICF model is particularly useful in
|
|
analysing the role of work accommodations because it considers a much
|
|
wider range of factors that are relevant not just to workers with
|
|
different types of impairments, but are also relevant to the wider group
|
|
of workers who use workplace accommodations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rouxel, P (Corresponding Author), Univ Hong Kong, Fac Social Sci, 11-F Jockey Club Tower,Centennial Campus, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chandola, Tarani, Univ Manchester, CMIST \& Social Stat, Manchester, Lancs, England.
|
|
Chandola, Tarani; Rouxel, Patrick, Univ Hong Kong, Fac Social Sci, 11-F Jockey Club Tower,Centennial Campus, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114313},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {114313},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {Disability; Economically inactive; Impairment; ICF-Model; Mental health;
|
|
Unemployment; Work accommodations; Work adjustments},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TIME SICK LEAVE; EMPLOYEES; PEOPLE; INTERVENTIONS; BENEFITS; GENDER;
|
|
MODEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {plrouxel@hku.hk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Chandola, Tarani/I-3192-2013
|
|
Rouxel, Patrick/AGH-0663-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Chandola, Tarani/0000-0002-1864-3413
|
|
Rouxel, Patrick/0000-0003-0330-554X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000691544800014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000491863200015,
|
|
Author = {Lofters, Aisha K. and Baker, Natalie A. and Schuler, Andree and Rau,
|
|
Allison and Baxter, Alison and Baxter, Nancy N. and Kucharski, Edward
|
|
and Leung, Fok-Han and Weyman, Karen and Kiran, Tara},
|
|
Title = {A ``Tea and Cookies{''} Approach: Co-designing Cancer Screening
|
|
Interventions with Patients Living with Low Income},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {255-260},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background In our primary care organization, we have observed income
|
|
gradients in cancer screening for our patients despite outreach. We
|
|
hypothesized that outreach strategies could be improved upon to be more
|
|
compelling for our patients living with low income. Objective To use
|
|
co-design to adapt our current strategies and create new strategies to
|
|
improve cancer screening uptake for patients living with low income.
|
|
Design An exploratory, qualitative study in two phases: interviews and
|
|
focus groups. Participants For interviews, we recruited 25 patient
|
|
participants who were or had been overdue for cancer screening and had
|
|
been identified by their provider as potentially living with low income.
|
|
For subsequent focus groups, we recruited 14 patient participants, 11 of
|
|
whom had participated in Phase I interviews. Approach To analyse written
|
|
transcripts, we took an iterative, inductive approach using content
|
|
analysis and drawing on best practices in Grounded Theory methodology.
|
|
Emergent themes were expanded and clarified to create a derived model of
|
|
possible strategies to improve the experience of cancer screening and
|
|
encourage screening uptake for patients living with low income. Key
|
|
Results Fear and competing priorities were two key barriers to cancer
|
|
screening identified by patients. Patients believed that a warm and
|
|
encouraging outreach approach would work best to increase cancer
|
|
screening participation. Phone calls and group education were
|
|
specifically suggested as potentially promising methods. However, these
|
|
views were not universal; for example, women were more likely to be in
|
|
favour of group education. Conclusions We used input from patients
|
|
living with low income to co-design a new approach to cancer screening
|
|
in our primary care organization, an approach that could be broadly
|
|
applicable to other contexts and settings. We learned from our patients
|
|
that a multi-modal strategy will likely be best to maximize screening
|
|
uptake.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lofters, AK (Corresponding Author), St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, MAP Ctr Urban Hlth Solut, 30 Bond St, Toronto, ON M5B 1W8, Canada.
|
|
Lofters, Aisha K.; Schuler, Andree; Baxter, Alison; Kiran, Tara, St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, MAP Ctr Urban Hlth Solut, 30 Bond St, Toronto, ON M5B 1W8, Canada.
|
|
Lofters, Aisha K.; Schuler, Andree; Leung, Fok-Han; Weyman, Karen; Kiran, Tara, St Michaels Hosp, Dept Family \& Community Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Lofters, Aisha K.; Leung, Fok-Han; Weyman, Karen; Kiran, Tara, Univ Toronto, Dept Family \& Community Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Lofters, Aisha K.; Baxter, Nancy N.; Kiran, Tara, ICES, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Lofters, Aisha K.; Baker, Natalie A.; Baxter, Nancy N., Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Lofters, Aisha K., Womens Coll Hosp, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Baker, Natalie A.; Rau, Allison, St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, Appl Hlth Res Ctr, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Baxter, Nancy N., St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, Dept Surg, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kucharski, Edward, Canc Care Ontario, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kiran, Tara, Hlth Qual Ontario, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kiran, Tara, Inst Hlth Policy Management \& Evaluat, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11606-019-05400-0},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {0884-8734},
|
|
EISSN = {1525-1497},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SERVICES; ONTARIO; CANADA; BREAST},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {Aisha.lofters@utoronto.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baxter, Nancy/E-7020-2015},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Leung, Fok-Han/0000-0001-8886-3625
|
|
Baxter, Nancy/0000-0003-4793-4620},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000491863200015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000345533000001,
|
|
Author = {Lorena Ruano, Ana and Sanchez, Silvia and Jose Jerez, Fernando and
|
|
Flores, Walter},
|
|
Title = {Making the post-MDG global health goals relevant for highly inequitable
|
|
societies: findings from a consultation with marginalized populations in
|
|
Guatemala},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {OCT 10},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: The United Nations presented a set of Millennium
|
|
Development Goals that aimed to improve social and economic development
|
|
and eradicate poverty by 2015. Most low and middle-income countries will
|
|
not meet these goals and today there is a need to set new development
|
|
agenda, especially when it comes to health. The paper presents the
|
|
findings from a community consultation process carried out within the
|
|
Goals and Governance for Global Health (GO4Health) research consortium
|
|
in Guatemala, which aims to identify community needs and expectations
|
|
around public policies and health services.
|
|
Methods: Through a participative and open consultation process with
|
|
experts, civil society organizations and members of the research team,
|
|
the municipalities of Tectitan and Santa Maria Nebaj were selected. A
|
|
community consultation process was undertaken with community members and
|
|
community leaders. Group discussions and in-depth interviews were
|
|
conducted and later analyzed using thematic analysis, a qualitative
|
|
method that can be used to analyze data in a way that allows for the
|
|
identification of recurrent patterns that can be grouped into categories
|
|
and themes, was used.
|
|
Findings: Following the Go4Health framework's domains for understanding
|
|
health-related needs, the five themes identified were health, social
|
|
determinants of health, essential health needs and their provision,
|
|
roles and responsibilities of relevant stakeholders and community
|
|
participation in decision-making. Participants reported high levels of
|
|
discrimination related to ethnicity, to being poor and to living in
|
|
rural areas. Ethnicity played a major role in how community members feel
|
|
they are cared for in the health system.
|
|
Conclusion: Achieving health goals in a context of deep-rooted
|
|
inequality and marginalization requires going beyond the simple
|
|
expansion of health services and working with developing trusting
|
|
relationships between health service providers and community members.
|
|
Involving community members in decision-making processes that shape
|
|
policies will contribute to a larger process of community empowerment
|
|
and democratization. Still, findings from the region show that tackling
|
|
these issues may prove complicated and require going beyond the health
|
|
system, as this lack of trust and discrimination has permeated to all
|
|
public policies that deal with indigenous and rural populations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ruano, AL (Corresponding Author), Univ Bergen, Ctr Int Hlth, Bergen, Norway.
|
|
Lorena Ruano, Ana, Univ Bergen, Ctr Int Hlth, Bergen, Norway.
|
|
Lorena Ruano, Ana; Sanchez, Silvia; Jose Jerez, Fernando; Flores, Walter, Ctr Estudios Gobernanza Sistemas Salud, Guatemala City, Guatemala.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1475-9276-13-57},
|
|
Article-Number = {57},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Guatemala; Community participation; Community consultations; Go4Health;
|
|
Millennium development goals; Sustainable development goals},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {ana.lorena.ruano@cih.uib.no},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ruano, Ana Lorena/AAA-1656-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ruano, Ana Lorena/0000-0003-3913-4228},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000345533000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000289736300006,
|
|
Author = {Hayter, Susan and Fashoyin, Tayo and Kochan, Thomas A.},
|
|
Title = {Collective Bargaining for the 21st Century},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {53},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {225-247},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Collective bargaining has served as a cornerstone institution for
|
|
democracy, a mechanism for increasing workers' incomes, improving
|
|
working conditions and reducing inequality, a means for ensuring fair
|
|
employment relations and a source of workplace innovation. However, the
|
|
number of workers belonging to trade unions has declined in many
|
|
countries and global economic integration has tipped bargaining power in
|
|
favour of employers. This paper reviews recent trends and developments
|
|
in respect of collective bargaining. It examines the evolution of
|
|
collective bargaining institutions in different regions of the world. It
|
|
highlights the manner in which collective bargaining structures have
|
|
adapted to competitive pressures and the increasing coordination of
|
|
bargaining practices both within and across borders. In a survey of
|
|
collective bargaining agendas, the authors note the increasing diversity
|
|
of issues on the bargaining agenda. They highlight particularly
|
|
innovative practices in respect of the application of collective
|
|
agreements to non-standard workers and the role that collective
|
|
bargaining played in mitigating the effects of the recent economic
|
|
crisis on workers and enterprises. They argue that the support of public
|
|
policy is essential to promote and sustain collective bargaining. These
|
|
developments and the ongoing challenges facing collective bargaining
|
|
present a number of issues for future research.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hayter, S (Corresponding Author), Int Labor Org, Ind \& Employment Relat Dept, 4 Route Morillons, CH-1211 Geneva 22, Switzerland.
|
|
Hayter, Susan, Int Labor Org, Ind \& Employment Relat Dept, CH-1211 Geneva 22, Switzerland.
|
|
Kochan, Thomas A., MIT, Sloan Sch Management, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0022185610397144},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-1856},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-9296},
|
|
Keywords = {collective bargaining; employment relations; industrial relations; trade
|
|
unions; wages},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {hayter@ilo.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {25},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {48},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000289736300006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000322902300001,
|
|
Author = {Alvaredo, Facundo and Atkinson, Anthony B. and Piketty, Thomas and Saez,
|
|
Emmanuel},
|
|
Title = {The Top 1 Percent in International and Historical Perspective},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {3-20},
|
|
Month = {SUM},
|
|
Abstract = {The top 1 percent income share has more than doubled in the United
|
|
States over the last 30 years, drawing much public attention in recent
|
|
years. While other English-speaking countries have also experienced
|
|
sharp increases in the top 1 percent income share, many high-income
|
|
countries such as Japan, France, or Germany have seen much less increase
|
|
in top income shares. Hence, the explanation cannot rely solely on
|
|
forces common to advanced countries, such as the impact of new
|
|
technologies and globalization on the supply and demand for skills.
|
|
Moreover, the explanations have to accommodate the falls in top income
|
|
shares earlier in the twentieth century experienced in virtually all
|
|
high-income countries. We highlight four main factors. The first is the
|
|
impact of tax policy, which has varied over time and differs across
|
|
countries. Top tax rates have moved in the opposite direction from top
|
|
income shares. The effects of top rate cuts can operate in conjunction
|
|
with other mechanisms. The second factor is a richer view of the labor
|
|
market, where we contrast the standard supply-side model with one where
|
|
pay is determined by bargaining and the reactions to top rate cuts may
|
|
lead simply to a redistribution of surplus. Indeed, top rate cuts may
|
|
lead managerial energies to be diverted to increasing their remuneration
|
|
at the expense of enterprise growth and employment. The third factor is
|
|
capital income. Overall, private wealth (relative to income) has
|
|
followed a U-shaped path over time, particularly in Europe, where
|
|
inherited wealth is, in Europe if not in the United States, making a
|
|
return. The fourth, little investigated, element is the correlation
|
|
between earned income and capital income, which has substantially
|
|
increased in recent decades in the United States.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Alvaredo, F (Corresponding Author), Univ Oxford Nuffield Coll, Oxford OX1 1NF, England.
|
|
Alvaredo, Facundo; Atkinson, Anthony B., Univ Oxford Nuffield Coll, Oxford OX1 1NF, England.
|
|
Alvaredo, Facundo, Dept Econ, Oxford, England.
|
|
Alvaredo, Facundo, Consejo Nacl Invest Cient \& Tecn, Consejo Nacl Invest Cient \& Tecn, RA-1033 Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
|
|
Atkinson, Anthony B., London Sch Econ, London WC2A 2AE, England.
|
|
Piketty, Thomas, Paris Sch Econ, Paris, France.
|
|
Saez, Emmanuel, Univ Calif Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1257/jep.27.3.3},
|
|
ISSN = {0895-3309},
|
|
EISSN = {1944-7965},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME INEQUALITY; LONG-RUN; TAX},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {alvaredo@gmail.com
|
|
tony.atkinson@nuffield.ox.ac.uk
|
|
piketty@ens.fr
|
|
saez@econ.berkeley.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {MOTREB, ayoub EL/AAB-1710-2019},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {329},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {151},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000322902300001},
|
|
ESI-Highly-Cited-Paper = {Y},
|
|
ESI-Hot-Paper = {N},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000505212300006,
|
|
Author = {Thulien, Naomi S. and Kozloff, Nicole and McCay, Elizabeth and
|
|
Nisenbaum, Rosane and Wang, Andrea and Hwang, Stephen W.},
|
|
Title = {Evaluating the Effects of a Rent Subsidy and Mentoring Intervention for
|
|
Youth Transitioning Out of Homelessness: Protocol for a Mixed Methods,
|
|
Community-Based Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial},
|
|
Journal = {JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Although the risk factors associated with young people
|
|
entering and becoming entrenched in street life have been thoroughly
|
|
investigated, peer-reviewed evidence is scarce to nonexistent for
|
|
rigorous interventions targeting social integration outcomes for young
|
|
people who have experienced homelessness. From the limited research that
|
|
has been done, emerging evidence signals that, although structural
|
|
supports such as subsidized housing and social service providers are
|
|
important, these resources alone are insufficient to help young people
|
|
integrate into the mainstream society.
|
|
Objective: The overarching aim of this study is to assess whether and
|
|
how rent subsidies and mentorship influence social integration outcomes
|
|
for formerly homeless young people living in market rent housing in 3
|
|
Canadian cities. The primary outcome measures for this study are
|
|
community integration (psychological and physical) and self-esteem at 18
|
|
months. Secondary outcomes include social connectedness, hope, and
|
|
academic and vocational participation at 18 months. Exploratory outcomes
|
|
include income, perceived housing quality, engulfment, psychiatric
|
|
symptoms, and participant perspectives of intervention barriers and
|
|
facilitators.
|
|
Methods: This is a convergent mixed methods, open-label, 2-arm parallel
|
|
randomized controlled trial (RCT) with 1:1 allocation embedded within a
|
|
community-based participatory action research (CBPAR) framework. The
|
|
intervention will provide 24 young people (aged 16-26 years), who have
|
|
transitioned out of homelessness and into market rent housing within the
|
|
past year, with rent subsidies for 24 months. Half of the young people
|
|
will also be randomly assigned an adult mentor who has been recruited
|
|
and screened by 1 of our 3 community partners. Data collection will
|
|
occur every 6 months, and participants will be followed for 30 months.
|
|
Results: Ethical approval for this study has been obtained from the
|
|
Providence, St Joseph's, and St Michael's Healthcare Research Ethics
|
|
Board (number 18-251). Enrollment took place from April 2019 to
|
|
September 2019. Preliminary analysis of the baseline quantitative and
|
|
qualitative data is underway.
|
|
Conclusions: This pilot RCT will be the first to test the impact of
|
|
economic and social support on meaningful social integration for
|
|
formerly homeless young people living in market rent housing. We believe
|
|
that the mixed methods design will illuminate important contextual
|
|
factors that must be considered if the intervention is to be scaled up
|
|
and replicated elsewhere. Importantly, the CBPAR framework will
|
|
incorporate the perspectives of the community, including formerly
|
|
homeless young people, who are in the best position to determine what
|
|
might work best in the context of their lives.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Thulien, NS (Corresponding Author), McMaster Univ, Sch Nursing, 1280 Main St West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada.
|
|
Thulien, Naomi S., McMaster Univ, Sch Nursing, 1280 Main St West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada.
|
|
Thulien, Naomi S.; Nisenbaum, Rosane; Wang, Andrea; Hwang, Stephen W., St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, MAP Ctr Urban Hlth Solut, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kozloff, Nicole; McCay, Elizabeth, Univ Toronto, Dept Psychiat, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kozloff, Nicole, Slaight Family Ctr Youth Transit, Ctr Addict \& Mental Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
McCay, Elizabeth, Ryerson Univ, Daphne Cockwell Sch Nursing, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Nisenbaum, Rosane, St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, Appl Hlth Res Ctr, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Wang, Andrea, McMaster Univ, Dept Hlth Res Methods Evidence \& Impact, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
|
|
Hwang, Stephen W., Univ Toronto, Dept Med, Div Gen Internal Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Hwang, Stephen W., Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2196/15557},
|
|
Article-Number = {e15557},
|
|
ISSN = {1929-0748},
|
|
Keywords = {homeless youth; community integration; qualitative research; randomized
|
|
controlled trial; housing; mentorship},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL INTEGRATION; PEOPLE; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational
|
|
Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {thulienn@mcmaster.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hwang, Stephen W./GVR-7773-2022
|
|
Hwang, Stephen/D-2297-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Nisenbaum, Rosane/0000-0001-7124-0376
|
|
Wang, Andrea/0000-0002-9683-2498
|
|
Thulien, Naomi/0000-0003-1483-9352
|
|
Hwang, Stephen/0000-0002-1276-1101
|
|
Kozloff, Nicole/0000-0003-1389-1351},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000505212300006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000765775000002,
|
|
Author = {Hyland, Colby J. and Guo, Ruby and Dhawan, Ravi and Kaur, Manraj N. and
|
|
Bain, Paul A. and Edelen, Maria O. and Pusic, Andrea L.},
|
|
Title = {Implementing patient-reported outcomes in routine clinical care for
|
|
diverse and underrepresented patients in the United States},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PATIENT-REPORTED OUTCOMES},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAR 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Plain English summary Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) allow doctors and
|
|
researchers to understand the patient perspective, such as how they are
|
|
doing physically, mentally, or socially. When used, PROs can improve
|
|
health and increase satisfaction of patients. Many clinics and hospitals
|
|
are interested in using PROs in everyday care. Doctors, hospitals, and
|
|
insurance companies are also using information from PROs to decide if
|
|
the care they give is good quality. Unfortunately, certain groups of
|
|
patients, such as racial and ethnic minorities and patients with low
|
|
income, report worse PROs. Because of these differences, it will be
|
|
important to make sure that PROs are being collected from all people,
|
|
but not much is known regarding how this has been done. This study
|
|
demonstrates what is known so far with regard to using PROs in everyday
|
|
clinical care for these diverse patient groups. Findings from this study
|
|
show that PROs can be successfully collected, but more work is needed in
|
|
certain medical fields, and some types of patients have specific needs,
|
|
concerns, or preferences with regard to PRO collection.
|
|
Background Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are used increasingly in
|
|
routine clinical care and inform policies, reimbursements, and quality
|
|
improvement. Less is known regarding PRO implementation in routine
|
|
clinical care for diverse and underrepresented patient populations.
|
|
Objective This review aims to identify studies of PRO implementation in
|
|
diverse and underrepresented patient populations, elucidate
|
|
representation of clinical specialties, assess implementation outcomes,
|
|
and synthesize patient needs, concerns, and preferences. Methods
|
|
MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, CINAHL, and PsycINFO were searched
|
|
September 2021 for studies aiming to study PRO implementation in diverse
|
|
and underrepresented patient populations within the United States.
|
|
Studies were screened and data extracted by three independent reviewers.
|
|
Implementation outcomes were assessed according to Proctor et al.
|
|
taxonomy. A descriptive analysis of data was conducted. Results The
|
|
search yielded 8,687 records, and 28 studies met inclusion criteria. The
|
|
majority were observational cohort studies (n = 21, 75\%) and conducted
|
|
in primary care (n = 10, 36\%). Most studies included majority female (n
|
|
= 19, 68\%) and non-White populations (n = 15, 54\%), while fewer
|
|
reported socioeconomic (n = 11, 39\%) or insurance status (n = 9,
|
|
32.1\%). Most studies assessed implementation outcomes of feasibility (n
|
|
= 27, 96\%) and acceptability (n = 19, 68\%); costs (n = 3, 11\%),
|
|
penetration (n = 1, 4\%), and sustainability (n = 1, 4\%) were
|
|
infrequently assessed. Conclusion PRO implementation in routine clinical
|
|
care for diverse and underrepresented patient populations is generally
|
|
feasible and acceptable. Research is lacking in key clinical
|
|
specialties. Further work is needed to understand how health disparities
|
|
drive PRO implementation outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hyland, CJ (Corresponding Author), Harvard Med Sch, Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Hyland, Colby J.; Guo, Ruby; Kaur, Manraj N.; Edelen, Maria O.; Pusic, Andrea L., Harvard Med Sch, Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Dhawan, Ravi, Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Harvard Sch Publ Hlth, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Bain, Paul A., Harvard Med Sch, Countway Lib, Boston, MA 02115 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s41687-022-00428-z},
|
|
Article-Number = {20},
|
|
EISSN = {2509-8020},
|
|
Keywords = {Patient-reported outcome; Patient-reported outcome measure; PRO; PROM;
|
|
Clinical care; Implementation; Diverse; Underrepresented patient
|
|
population},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL DETERMINANTS; HEALTH-CARE; DISPARITIES; DEPRESSION; IMPACT;
|
|
COLLECTION; LESSONS; BURDEN; ADULTS; TRIAL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {colby.hyland@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hyland, Colby/0000-0002-9150-0144},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {74},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000765775000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001013195800001,
|
|
Author = {Bostic, Amie},
|
|
Title = {Family, Work, Economy, or Social Policy: Examining Poverty Among
|
|
Children of Single Mothers in Affluent Democracies Between 1985 and 2016},
|
|
Journal = {POPULATION RESEARCH AND POLICY REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Children of single mothers face higher rates of poverty than children in
|
|
two-parent households in practically every affluent democracy. While
|
|
this difference is widely acknowledged, there is little consensus
|
|
regarding the causes of their poverty and, as a result, little consensus
|
|
on the best way to address poverty among these children. Explanations
|
|
include both individual-level, structural, and political explanations in
|
|
four areas: family structure, labor force activity, economic
|
|
performance, and welfare generosity. Previous research, however, tends
|
|
to focus on only one of these four aspects at a time. Using data from
|
|
the Luxembourg Income Study and the Organisation for Economic
|
|
Co-operation and Development, spanning a period of 31 years and 25
|
|
countries, I test each of these four explanations, examining the effects
|
|
on children in single mother households separately (n = 105,814) and
|
|
children in both single mother households and children in two-parent
|
|
households (n = 668,549), conducting random intercept between-within
|
|
logistic regression analysis. Individual-level measures of family
|
|
structure and labor market activity affect child poverty generally in
|
|
the expected way. Taking advantage of the longitudinal data at the
|
|
country level, I focus on within-country change of the structural and
|
|
political variables. Within-country economic performance is not
|
|
significantly related to poverty, but welfare generosity, namely family
|
|
allowances, significantly reduce the odds of poverty. Further, while the
|
|
effects of family allowance spending are similar for children in both
|
|
single mother and two parent households, they are stronger for the
|
|
former than the latter. Yet, the disadvantage of living in a single
|
|
mother household persists.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bostic, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Texas Rio Grande Valley, Dept Sociol, One West Univ Blvd BMAIN 1-436, Brownsville, TX 78520 USA.
|
|
Bostic, Amie, Univ Texas Rio Grande Valley, Dept Sociol, One West Univ Blvd BMAIN 1-436, Brownsville, TX 78520 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11113-023-09805-y},
|
|
Article-Number = {59},
|
|
ISSN = {0167-5923},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-7829},
|
|
Keywords = {Poverty; Child poverty; Single mothers; Social policy; Family allowances},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WELFARE-STATE; UNITED-STATES; TRENDS; INCOME; EMPLOYMENT; MULTILEVEL;
|
|
MARRIAGE; WOMEN; DISADVANTAGE; RACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Demography},
|
|
Author-Email = {amie.bostic@utrgv.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bostic, Amie/0000-0002-9809-5014},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {109},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001013195800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000537957200005,
|
|
Author = {Janssens, K. M. E. and van Weeghel, J. and Henderson, C. and Joosen, M.
|
|
C. W. and Brouwers, E. P. M.},
|
|
Title = {Evaluation of an intervention to support decisions on disclosure in the
|
|
employment setting (DECIDES): study protocol of a longitudinal
|
|
cluster-randomized controlled trial},
|
|
Journal = {TRIALS},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAY 29},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundUnemployment rates are higher among people with mental health
|
|
issues/illness (MHI) than in the general working population, and many of
|
|
them face the dilemma of whether or not to disclose their MHI when
|
|
searching for employment. Disclosure can lead to rejection and
|
|
discrimination, but alternatively can also have important advantages
|
|
that may be necessary to retain employment. Whether disclosure decisions
|
|
lead to sustainable employment depends on many factors, of which
|
|
unemployed people themselves can only influence their decision to
|
|
disclose or not and the way in which they communicate. This study
|
|
evaluates the cost-effectiveness of an intervention to support
|
|
unemployed people with MHI in their disclosure decision and
|
|
communication.MethodsThis is a two-armed, clustered, randomized
|
|
controlled trial with longitudinal design and randomization at
|
|
organization level. An intervention will be examined, which consists of
|
|
a disclosure decision aid tool (CORAL.NL) for unemployed people and
|
|
workplace stigma-awareness training especially designed for employment
|
|
specialists, which focusses on how to support unemployed people in their
|
|
disclosure decisions. Participants in the intervention group are
|
|
unemployed people who receive support from trained employment
|
|
specialists from organizations allocated to the intervention group, and
|
|
receive the CORAL.NL decision aid after baseline. The control group
|
|
consists of unemployed people who receive support as usual from
|
|
employment specialists from different organizations allocated to the
|
|
control group. Primary outcomes are: cost-effectiveness of the
|
|
intervention, e.g. healthcare costs, having employment, days until start
|
|
of employment, independency of social security, having other forms of
|
|
employment and decision making about disclosing MHI. Secondary outcomes
|
|
are mental health and wellbeing, stigma and discrimination and
|
|
work-related factors. Financial income data are collected via the
|
|
registration systems of Dutch municipalities and Statistics Netherlands,
|
|
and by questionnaires at baseline, and at 3, 6 and 12months.DiscussionIf
|
|
using a decision aid to decide about disclosure of MHI leads to people
|
|
finding and retaining employment more often, this study will contribute
|
|
to lowering healthcare and societal costs.Trial registrationNetherlands
|
|
Trial Register: NL7798. Registered on 4 June 2019.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Janssens, KME (Corresponding Author), Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Tranzo, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Janssens, K. M. E.; van Weeghel, J.; Joosen, M. C. W.; Brouwers, E. P. M., Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Tranzo, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
van Weeghel, J., Kennisctr Phrenos, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Henderson, C., Kings Coll London, Dept Hlth Serv \& Populat Res, London, England.
|
|
Joosen, M. C. W., Tilburg Univ, Dept Human Resource Studies, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Tilburg, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13063-020-04376-1},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-6215},
|
|
Keywords = {Mental health issues; illness; Unemployed people; Employment
|
|
specialists; Disclosure; Employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-ILLNESS; INDIVIDUAL PLACEMENT; HEALTH-PROBLEMS; PRIME-MD; WORK;
|
|
VALIDATION; STIGMA; AID; EMPLOYEES; UTILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental},
|
|
Author-Email = {k.m.e.janssens@tilburguniversity.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Janssens, Kim/0000-0002-6625-3516},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000537957200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000888866900005,
|
|
Author = {Rosa, William E. and Ahmed, Ebtesam and Chaila, Mwate Joseph and Chansa,
|
|
Abidan and Adelaida Cordoba, Maria and Dowla, Rumana and Gafer, Nahla
|
|
and Khan, Farzana and Namisango, Eve and Rodriguez, Luisa and Knaul,
|
|
Felicia Marie and Pettus, Katherine I.},
|
|
Title = {Can You Hear Us Now? Equity in Global Advocacy for Palliative Care},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {E217-E226},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Evidence-based advocacy underpins the sustainable delivery of quality,
|
|
publicly guaranteed, and universally available palliative care. More
|
|
than 60 million people in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) have
|
|
no or extremely limited access to either palliative care services or
|
|
essential palliative care medicines (e.g., opioids) on the World Health
|
|
Organization Model List. Indeed, only 12\% of the global palliative care
|
|
need is currently being met. Palliative care advocacy works to bring
|
|
this global public health inequity to light. Despite their expertise,
|
|
palliative care practitioners in LMICs are rarely invited to health
|
|
policymaking tables - even in their own countries - and are
|
|
underrepresented in the academic literature produced largely in the
|
|
high-income world. In this paper, palliative care experts from
|
|
Bangladesh, Colombia, Egypt, Sudan, Uganda, and Zambia affiliated with
|
|
the International Association for Hospice \& Palliative Care Advocacy
|
|
Focal Point Program articulate the urgent need for evidence-based
|
|
advocacy, focusing on significant barriers such as urban/rural divides,
|
|
cancer-centeredness, service delivery gaps, opioid formulary
|
|
limitations, public policy, and education deficits. Their advocacy is
|
|
situated in the context of an emerging global health narrative that
|
|
stipulates palliative care provision as an ethical obligation of all
|
|
health systems. To support advocacy efforts, palliative care evaluation
|
|
and indicator data should assess the extent to which LMIC practitioners
|
|
lead and participate in global and regional advocacy. This goal entails
|
|
investment in transnational advocacy initiatives, research investments
|
|
in palliative care access and cost-effective models in LMICs, and
|
|
capacity building for a global community of practice to capture the
|
|
attention of policymakers at all levels of health system governance. (c)
|
|
2022 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by
|
|
Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rosa, WE (Corresponding Author), Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, 641 Lexington Ave,7th Floor, New York, NY 10022 USA.
|
|
Rosa, William E., Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Rosa, William E.; Knaul, Felicia Marie, Univ Miami, Inst Adv Study Amer, Coral Gables, FL USA.
|
|
Ahmed, Ebtesam, St Johns Univ, Dept Clin Hlth Profess, Coll Pharm \& Hlth Sci, Queens, NY USA.
|
|
Ahmed, Ebtesam, MJHS Inst Innovat Palliat Care, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Chaila, Mwate Joseph, Catholic Relief Serv, Lusaka, Zambia.
|
|
Chansa, Abidan, Minist Hlth, Natl Palliat Care Program, Lusaka, Zambia.
|
|
Adelaida Cordoba, Maria, Fdn Hosp Pediat La Misericordia, Pediat Palliat Sect, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Adelaida Cordoba, Maria, Hosp Univ Fdn Santa Fe Bogota, Dept Pediat, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Dowla, Rumana, United Hosp, Palliat Med Canc Care Ctr, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Gafer, Nahla, Khartoum Oncol Hosp, Integrated Palliat \& Oncol Unit, Khartoum, Sudan.
|
|
Khan, Farzana, Fasiuddin Khan Res Fdn, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Khan, Farzana, Univ Edinburgh, Global Hlth Acad, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Namisango, Eve, African Palliat Care Assoc, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Namisango, Eve, Kings Coll London, Cicely Saunders Inst, Dept Palliat Care \& Rehabil, London, England.
|
|
Rodriguez, Luisa, Univ La Sabana, Dept Anesthesia Pain \& Palliat Med, Chia, Colombia.
|
|
Rodriguez, Luisa, Asociac Colombiana Cuidados Paliat, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Knaul, Felicia Marie, Univ Miami, Miller Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Miami, FL USA.
|
|
Knaul, Felicia Marie, Tomatelo Pecho, Mexico City, DF, Mexico.
|
|
Knaul, Felicia Marie, Fdn Mexicana Salud, Mexico City, DF, Mexico.
|
|
Pettus, Katherine I., Int Assoc Hosp \& Palliat Care, Houston, TX USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2022.07.004},
|
|
ISSN = {0885-3924},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-6513},
|
|
Keywords = {Palliative care; hospice; global health; social justice; advocacy;
|
|
policy; opioids; essential medicines; partnerships},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PARTNERSHIPS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Medicine, General \& Internal;
|
|
Clinical Neurology},
|
|
Author-Email = {rosaw@mskcc.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rodriguez Campos, Luisa Fernanda/0000-0002-0649-9119
|
|
Cordoba Nunez, Maria Adelaida/0000-0001-8130-5647
|
|
Gafer, Nahla/0000-0001-6291-093X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000888866900005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000512643400001,
|
|
Author = {Joag, Kaustubh and Shields-Zeeman, Laura and Kapadia-Kundu, Nandita and
|
|
Kawade, Rama and Balaji, Madhumitha and Pathare, Soumitra},
|
|
Title = {Feasibility and acceptability of a novel community-based mental health
|
|
intervention delivered by community volunteers in Maharashtra, India:
|
|
the Atmiyata programme},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {FEB 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Many community-based intervention models for mental health
|
|
and wellbeing have undergone robust experimental evaluation; however,
|
|
there are limited accounts of the implementation of these evidence-based
|
|
interventions in practice. Atmiyata piloted the implementation of a
|
|
community-led intervention to identify and understand the challenges of
|
|
delivering such an intervention. The goal of the pilot evaluation is to
|
|
identify factors important for larger-scale implementation across an
|
|
entire district in India. This paper presents the results of a
|
|
feasibility and acceptability study of the Atmiyata intervention piloted
|
|
in Nashik district, Maharashtra, India between 2013 and 2015. Methods A
|
|
mixed methods approach was used to evaluate the Atmiyata intervention.
|
|
First, a pre-post survey conducted with 215 cases identified with a GHQ
|
|
cut-off 6 using a 3-month interval. Cases enrolled into the study in one
|
|
randomly selected month (May-June 2015). Secondly, a quasi-experimental,
|
|
pre-post design was used to conduct a population-based survey in the
|
|
intervention and control areas. A randomly selected sample (panel) of
|
|
827 women and 843 men age between 18 to 65 years were interviewed to
|
|
assess the impact of the Atmiyata intervention on common mental
|
|
disorders. Finally, using qualitative methods, 16 Champions interviewed
|
|
to understand an implementation processes, barriers and facilitators.
|
|
Results Of the 215 participants identified by the Champions as being
|
|
distressed or having a common mental disorder (CMD), n = 202 (94.4\%)
|
|
had a GHQ score at either sub-threshold level for CMD or above at
|
|
baseline. Champions accurately identified people with emotional distress
|
|
and in need of psychological support. After a 6-session counselling
|
|
provided by the Champions, the percentage of participants with a
|
|
case-level GHQ score dropped from 63.8 to 36.8\%. The second
|
|
sub-intervention consisted of showing films on Champions' mobile phones
|
|
to raise community awareness regarding mental health. Films consisted of
|
|
short scenario-based depictions of problems commonly experienced in
|
|
villages (alcohol use and domestic violence). Champions facilitated
|
|
access to social benefits for people with disability. Retention of
|
|
Atmiyata Champions was high; 90.7\% of the initial selected champions
|
|
continued to work till the end of the project. Champions stated that
|
|
they enjoyed their work and found it fulfilling to help others. This
|
|
made them willing to work voluntarily, without pay. The semi-structured
|
|
interviews with champions indicated that persons in the community
|
|
experienced reduced symptoms and improved social, occupational and
|
|
family functioning for problems such as depression, domestic violence,
|
|
alcohol use, and severe mental illness. Conclusions This study shows
|
|
that community-led interventions using volunteers from rural
|
|
neighbourhoods can serve as a locally feasible and acceptable approach
|
|
to facilitating access social welfare benefits, as well as reducing
|
|
distress and symptoms of depression and anxiety in a low and
|
|
middle-income country context. The intervention draws upon social
|
|
capital in a community to engage and empower community members to
|
|
address mental health problems. A robust evaluation methodology is
|
|
needed to test the efficacy of such a model when it is implemented at
|
|
scale.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Joag, K (Corresponding Author), Indian Law Soc, Ctr Mental Hlth Law \& Policy, Pune 411004, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Joag, Kaustubh; Kawade, Rama; Balaji, Madhumitha; Pathare, Soumitra, Indian Law Soc, Ctr Mental Hlth Law \& Policy, Pune 411004, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Shields-Zeeman, Laura, Netherlands Inst Mental Hlth \& Addict, Trimbos Inst, Da Costakade 45, NL-3521 VS Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Kapadia-Kundu, Nandita, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Johns Hopkins Ctr Commun Programs, Baltimore, MD 21202 USA.
|
|
Balaji, Madhumitha, Sangath, South Goa 403720, Goa, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12888-020-2466-z},
|
|
Article-Number = {48},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-244X},
|
|
Keywords = {Community mental health; Distress; Low and middle-income countries;
|
|
Community-based intervention; Common mental disorders},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRIMARY-CARE; DISORDERS; SERVICES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {kaustubh@cmhlp.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Fazli, Ghazal/AAE-8320-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Balaji, Madhumitha/0000-0002-7399-8057
|
|
Shields-Zeeman, Laura/0000-0003-0923-8771
|
|
Joag, Kaustubh/0000-0003-3683-1159
|
|
Pathare, Soumitra/0000-0001-9311-9024},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000512643400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000331191000002,
|
|
Author = {Audrey, S. and Langford, R.},
|
|
Title = {Dying to get out: young drivers, safety and social inequity},
|
|
Journal = {INJURY PREVENTION},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective Deaths and serious injuries among young drivers are an
|
|
important public health concern. Road safety researchers and policy
|
|
makers tend to focus on strategies to restrict the driving activities of
|
|
young people. Other social research suggests the disadvantages
|
|
experienced by young people in socially deprived groups are exacerbated
|
|
by not having a driving licence or owning a car. In this qualitative
|
|
study, we consider the views of young people from less affluent
|
|
backgrounds in the south-west of England who took part in a brief
|
|
intervention to encourage them to delay gaining a driving licence and
|
|
car ownership.
|
|
Methods Between September 2011 and January 2012, a researcher observed
|
|
four training sessions involving 173 young people. Postintervention,
|
|
digitally recorded focus groups were conducted at three venues involving
|
|
23 randomly selected young people. Data from the focus group transcripts
|
|
were sorted into charts in relation to key research questions and
|
|
scrutinised using constant comparison.
|
|
Results These young people believed the ability to drive, and car
|
|
ownership, could increase their independence, improve access to further
|
|
education, widen their employment opportunities, and enable them to
|
|
contribute to family or household responsibilities.
|
|
Conclusions We argue there is a potential conflict between some
|
|
strategies seeking to promote young driver safety and the impact this
|
|
may have on equity and social disadvantage. Interdisciplinary work is
|
|
required between professionals and researchers in transport, road
|
|
safety, public health and social equity. Government policies should
|
|
include low-cost, safe, reliable and attractive transport alternatives
|
|
for young people in more deprived communities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Audrey, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Bristol, Sch Social \& Community Med, Canynge Hall,Whatley Rd, Bristol BS8 2PS, Avon, England.
|
|
Audrey, S.; Langford, R., Univ Bristol, Sch Social \& Community Med, Bristol BS8 2PS, Avon, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/injuryprev-2013-040756},
|
|
ISSN = {1353-8047},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-5785},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DEPRIVATION; BEHAVIOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {suzanne.audrey@bristol.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Langford, Rebecca/0000-0002-7722-0808},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000331191000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000430768200010,
|
|
Author = {Clark, Daniel O. and Srinivas, Preethi and Bodke, Kunal and Keith,
|
|
NiCole and Hood, Sula and Tu, Wanzhu},
|
|
Title = {Addressing people and place microenvironments in weight loss disparities
|
|
(APP-Me): Design of a randomized controlled trial testing timely
|
|
messages for weight loss behavior in low income Black and White Women},
|
|
Journal = {CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL TRIALS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {67},
|
|
Pages = {74-80},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Behavioral interventions for weight loss have been less
|
|
effective in lower income and black women. These poorer outcomes may in
|
|
part be related to these women having more frequent exposures to social
|
|
and physical situations that are obesogenic, i.e., eating and sedentary
|
|
cues or situations.
|
|
Objectives: Working with obese, lower income Black and White Women,
|
|
Addressing People and Place Microenvironments (APP-Me) was designed to
|
|
create awareness of self-behavior at times and places of frequent eating
|
|
and sedentary behavior.
|
|
Design: APP-Me is being evaluated in a randomized controlled trial with
|
|
240 participants recruited from federally qualified health centers
|
|
located in a single Midwestern city. All participants complete four
|
|
weeks of ecological momentary assessments (EMA) of situations and
|
|
behavior. At the end of the four weeks, participants are randomized to
|
|
enhanced usual care (UC) or UC plus APP-Me.
|
|
Methods: APP-Me is an automated short messaging system (SMS). Messages
|
|
are text, image, audio, or a combination, and are delivered to
|
|
participants' mobile devices with the intent of creating awareness at
|
|
the times and places of frequent eating or sedentary behavior. The EMA
|
|
data inform the timing of message deliveries.
|
|
Summary: This project aims to create and test timely awareness messages
|
|
in a subpopulation that has not responded well to traditional behavioral
|
|
interventions for weight loss. Novel aspects of the study include the
|
|
involvement of a low income population, the use of data on time and
|
|
place of obesogenic behavior, and message delivery time tailored to an
|
|
individual's behavioral patterns.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Clark, DO (Corresponding Author), 1101 West 10th St, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
Clark, Daniel O.; Keith, NiCole; Tu, Wanzhu, Indiana Univ, Ctr Aging Res, Indianapolis, IN 46204 USA.
|
|
Clark, Daniel O.; Srinivas, Preethi; Bodke, Kunal; Keith, NiCole; Tu, Wanzhu, Regenstrief Inst Inc, Indianapolis, IN USA.
|
|
Clark, Daniel O., Indiana Univ Sch Med, Dept Med, Div Gen Internal Med \& Geriatr, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
Hood, Sula; Tu, Wanzhu, Indiana Univ, Richard M Fairbanks Sch Publ Hlth, Indianapolis, IN 46204 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.cct.2018.01.006},
|
|
ISSN = {1551-7144},
|
|
EISSN = {1559-2030},
|
|
Keywords = {Randomized controlled trial; Weight loss; Mobile health; Health
|
|
disparities; User-centered design},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {AFRICAN-AMERICAN ADULTS; PRIMARY-CARE; MANAGEMENT PROGRAM; TEXT
|
|
MESSAGES; LIFE; OBESITY; FOOD; INTERVENTIONS; PREVENTION; LITERACY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental; Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {daniclar@iupui.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hood, Sula/0000-0002-9607-5714},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000430768200010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000283056500003,
|
|
Author = {Brady, David and Fullerton, Andrew S. and Cross, Jennifer Moren},
|
|
Title = {More Than Just Nickels and Dimes: A Cross-National Analysis of Working
|
|
Poverty in Affluent Democracies},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL PROBLEMS},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {559-585},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite its centrality to contemporary inequality, working poverty is
|
|
often popularly discussed but rarely studied by sociologists. Using the
|
|
Luxembourg Income Study (2009), we analyze whether an individual is
|
|
working poor across 18 affluent democracies circa 2000. We demonstrate
|
|
that working poverty does not simply mirror overall poverty and that
|
|
there is greater cross-national variation in working than overall
|
|
poverty. We then examine four explanations for working poverty:
|
|
demographic characteristics, economic performance, unified theory, and
|
|
welfare generosity. We utilize Heckman probit models to jointly model
|
|
the likelihood of employment and poverty among the employed. Our
|
|
analyses provide the least support for the economic performance
|
|
explanation. There is modest support for unified theory as unionization
|
|
reduces working poverty in some models. However, most of these effects
|
|
appear to be mediated by welfare generosity. More substantial evidence
|
|
exists for the demographic characteristics and welfare generosity
|
|
explanations. An individual's likelihood of being working poor can be
|
|
explained by (a) a lack of multiple earners or other adults in one's
|
|
household, low education, single motherhood, having children and youth;
|
|
and (b) the generosity of the welfare state in which he or she resides.
|
|
Also, welfare generosity does not undermine employment and reduces
|
|
working poverty even among demographically vulnerable groups.
|
|
Ultimately, we encourage a greater role for the welfare state in debates
|
|
about working poverty. Keywords: poverty, work, working poor, social
|
|
policy, labor markets.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Brady, D (Corresponding Author), Duke Univ, Dept Sociol, Box 90088, Durham, NC 27708 USA.
|
|
Brady, David, Duke Univ, Dept Sociol, Durham, NC 27708 USA.
|
|
Fullerton, Andrew S., Oklahoma State Univ, Stillwater, OK 74078 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1525/sp.2010.57.4.559},
|
|
ISSN = {0037-7791},
|
|
EISSN = {1533-8533},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MACROECONOMIC PERFORMANCE; WELFARE STATES; INSTITUTIONS; POOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {brady@soc.duke.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Brady, David/0000-0002-4059-3272
|
|
Fullerton, Andrew/0000-0003-4176-5838},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {69},
|
|
Times-Cited = {72},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {43},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000283056500003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000740744700005,
|
|
Author = {Baumann, Isabel and Eyjolfsdottir, Harpa Sif and Fritzell, Johan and
|
|
Lennartsson, Carin and Darin-Mattsson, Alexander and Kareholt, Ingemar
|
|
and Andel, Ross and Dratva, Julia and Agahi, Neda},
|
|
Title = {Do cognitively stimulating activities affect the association between
|
|
retirement timing and cognitive functioning in old age?},
|
|
Journal = {AGEING \& SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {306-330},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {In response to the rising financial pressure on old-age pension systems
|
|
in industrialised economies, many European countries plan to increase
|
|
the eligibility age for retirement pensions. We used data from Sweden to
|
|
examine whether (and if so, how) retirement after age 65 - the
|
|
eligibility age for basic pension - compared to retiring earlier affects
|
|
older adults' (between ages 70 and 85) cognitive functioning. Using a
|
|
propensity score matching (PSM) approach, we addressed the selection
|
|
bias potentially introduced by non-random selection into either early or
|
|
late retirement. We also examined average and heterogeneous treatment
|
|
effects (HTEs). HTEs were evaluated for different levels of cognitive
|
|
stimulation from occupational activities before retirement and from
|
|
leisure activities after retirement. We drew from a rich longitudinal
|
|
data-set linking two nationally representative Swedish surveys with a
|
|
register data-set and found that, on average, individuals who retire
|
|
after age 65 do not have a higher level of cognitive functioning than
|
|
those who retire earlier. Similarly, we did not observe HTEs from
|
|
occupational activities. With respect to leisure activities, we found no
|
|
systematic effects on cognitive functioning among those working beyond
|
|
age 65. We conclude that, in general, retirement age does not seem to
|
|
affect cognitive functioning in old age. Yet, the rising retirement age
|
|
may put substantial pressure on individuals who suffer from poor health
|
|
at the end of their occupational career, potentially exacerbating
|
|
social- and health-related inequalities among older people.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Baumann, I (Corresponding Author), Zurich Univ Appl Sci, Ctr Hlth Sci, Winterthur, Switzerland.
|
|
Baumann, I (Corresponding Author), Zurich Univ Appl Sci, Overcoming Vulnerabil Life Course Perspect, Natl Ctr Competence Res, Winterthur, Switzerland.
|
|
Baumann, Isabel; Dratva, Julia, Zurich Univ Appl Sci, Ctr Hlth Sci, Winterthur, Switzerland.
|
|
Baumann, Isabel, Zurich Univ Appl Sci, Overcoming Vulnerabil Life Course Perspect, Natl Ctr Competence Res, Winterthur, Switzerland.
|
|
Eyjolfsdottir, Harpa Sif; Fritzell, Johan; Lennartsson, Carin; Darin-Mattsson, Alexander; Kareholt, Ingemar; Agahi, Neda, Karolinska Inst, Aging Res Ctr, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Eyjolfsdottir, Harpa Sif; Fritzell, Johan; Lennartsson, Carin; Darin-Mattsson, Alexander; Kareholt, Ingemar; Agahi, Neda, Stockholm Univ, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Kareholt, Ingemar, Jonkoping Univ, Sch Hlth Sci, Aging Res Network Jonkoping, Inst Gerontol, Jonkoping, Sweden.
|
|
Andel, Ross, Univ S Florida, Sch Aging Studies, Tampa, FL 33620 USA.
|
|
Andel, Ross, St Annes Univ Hosp, Int Clin Res Ctr, Brno, Czech Republic.
|
|
Dratva, Julia, Univ Basel, Med Fac, Basel, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/S0144686X20000847},
|
|
Article-Number = {PII S0144686X20000847},
|
|
ISSN = {0144-686X},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-1779},
|
|
Keywords = {retirement timing; retirement policy; health outcomes; cognition;
|
|
occupational activities; leisure activities; propensity score matching},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MINI-MENTAL-STATE; WORKING-CONDITIONS; LIFE-STYLE; FOLLOW-UP; HEALTH;
|
|
MIDLIFE; TRAJECTORIES; INTENTIONS; COMPLEXITY; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {isabel.baumann@zhaw.ch},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Baumann, Isabel/0000-0002-8813-9722},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000740744700005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000970159900001,
|
|
Author = {Xu, Ning and Li, Chang'an},
|
|
Title = {Migration and Rural Sustainability: Relative Poverty Alleviation by
|
|
Geographical Mobility in China},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Migration is an important way for rural labourers to break the uneven
|
|
distribution of resources, earn more income and seek their own
|
|
sustainable development. However, existing studies have focused more on
|
|
rural-urban migration and less on geographical migration. Our study
|
|
further enriches the existing research on poverty reduction and provides
|
|
a theoretical reference for policy decisions to promote a balanced
|
|
regional development. Using data from the China Family Panel Studies
|
|
(CFPS) 2012-2020, we conduct benchmark estimates through linear
|
|
probability models and estimate the impact of migration on the relative
|
|
poverty of the rural labourer through binary probit models. The results
|
|
show that migration could significantly reduce the likelihood of a
|
|
relatively poor state of rural labourers by around 4\%; the greater the
|
|
distance of migration, the greater the effects; and migration of rural
|
|
labourers in the central region has the largest and most significant
|
|
relative poverty reduction effect. Furthermore, migration could also
|
|
compensate for the disadvantages of rural labourers who are unemployed,
|
|
less educated and in poor health, making them less likely to be
|
|
relatively poor. We also use multiple linear models to examine whether
|
|
migration has a significant income-boosting effect on the rural people
|
|
and found a positive result in which the effect reaches its highest in
|
|
the central region at 22.95\%. Therefore, it is necessary to further
|
|
break down the barriers to geographical migration of rural labourers,
|
|
strengthen the public transportation system and pay greater attention to
|
|
Central China in order to better promote balanced development among
|
|
regions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Xu, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Int Business \& Econ, Sch Int Trade \& Econ, Beijing 100029, Peoples R China.
|
|
Xu, Ning, Univ Int Business \& Econ, Sch Int Trade \& Econ, Beijing 100029, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Chang'an, Univ Int Business \& Econ, Sch Govt, Beijing 100029, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su15076248},
|
|
Article-Number = {6248},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {rural labour; migration; relative poverty},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOCAL-EMPLOYMENT GROWTH; NONFARM EMPLOYMENT; HEALTH SELECTION;
|
|
LABOR-MARKET; IMPACT; INCOME; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {nxu11@foxmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {77},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000970159900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000270304400005,
|
|
Author = {Haines, Helen M. and Critchley, Jennifer},
|
|
Title = {Developing the Nurse Practitioner role in a rural Australian hospital -
|
|
a Delphi study of practice opportunities, barriers and enablers},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {30-36},
|
|
Month = {SEP-NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives
|
|
To gain a consensus view of potential roles for Nurse Practitioners
|
|
(NPs) in a rural Australian hospital and identify the barriers and
|
|
enablers in their development and implementation.
|
|
Design
|
|
A three round Delphi study.
|
|
Setting
|
|
A rural hospital.
|
|
Participants
|
|
Twenty eight nurses, five doctors, four consumers, two health service
|
|
managers, two allied health practitioners, one midwife, three community
|
|
workers, two administrators and three others with hospital affiliation.
|
|
Main Outcome Measures
|
|
Consensus at 75\% level of agreement or greater, identifying service
|
|
gaps which might benefit from NPs and the barriers and enablers
|
|
impacting on the success of developing and implementing the role.
|
|
Results
|
|
Introduce mental health, aged and critical care NPs initially. Barriers
|
|
and enablers identified as impacting on the development and
|
|
implementation of the role were:
|
|
Educational access for isolated rural nurses local cohort learning with
|
|
employment contracts encompassing fee assistance and designated study
|
|
time.
|
|
Acceptance from doctors - supported role provided the proposed service
|
|
is sustainable. Small teams of NPs would achieve this.
|
|
Inappropriate Recruitment - NP role matching service need, not
|
|
individual.
|
|
Policy and Funding Constraints - clients are best served by NPs working
|
|
across the care continuum. Co funding by acute and community providers
|
|
could overcome the current constraints of commonwealth/state payment.
|
|
Conclusion
|
|
In developing and implementing NP roles at a rural health service the
|
|
issues of access to tertiary education, creating a sustainable number of
|
|
NP positions and financial cooperation from community and acute
|
|
providers must be taken into account. Only then can nurses who wish to
|
|
take on this NP role in a rural health service have the possibility of
|
|
success.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Haines, HM (Corresponding Author), Univ Melbourne, Sch Rural Hlth, Rural Hlth Acad Network, Wangaratta, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Haines, Helen M., Univ Melbourne, Sch Rural Hlth, Rural Hlth Acad Network, Wangaratta, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Critchley, Jennifer, Univ Melbourne, Sch Rural Hlth, Shepparton, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
ISSN = {0813-0531},
|
|
EISSN = {1447-4328},
|
|
Keywords = {rural; Nurse Practitioners; Delphi study},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {hhaines@unimelb.edu.au
|
|
crj@unimelb.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Haines, Helen M/P-1598-2015},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Haines, Helen M/0000-0001-8655-4562},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000270304400005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000986236800021,
|
|
Author = {Ginsburg, Amy Sarah and Liddy, Zylee and Khazaneh, Parsa T. and May,
|
|
Susanne and Pervaiz, Farhan},
|
|
Title = {A survey of barriers and facilitators to ultrasound use in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries},
|
|
Journal = {SCIENTIFIC REPORTS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {FEB 27},
|
|
Abstract = {Point-of-care ultrasound has the potential to help inform assessment,
|
|
diagnosis, and management of illness in low- and middle-income countries
|
|
(LMIC). To better understand current ultrasound use, barriers and
|
|
facilitators to use, and perceptions and practices in LMIC, we conducted
|
|
an anonymous online global survey targeting healthcare providers
|
|
training and using ultrasound in LMIC. A total of 241 respondents
|
|
representing 62 countries participated and most were physicians working
|
|
in publicly-funded urban tertiary hospitals in LMIC. Most had received
|
|
ultrasound training (78\%), reported expertise (65\%) and confidence
|
|
(90\%) in ultrasound use, and had access to ultrasound (88\%), utilizing
|
|
ultrasound most commonly for procedures and for evaluations of lungs,
|
|
heart, and trauma. Access to an ultrasound machine was reported as both
|
|
the top barrier (17\%) and top facilitator (53\%); other common barriers
|
|
included access to education and training, cost, and competition for use
|
|
and other common facilitators included access to a probe, gel, and
|
|
electricity, and acceptance by healthcare providers, administrators, and
|
|
patients. Most (80\%) noted ultrasound access was important and 96\%
|
|
agreed that ultrasound improves quality of care and patient outcomes.
|
|
Improving access to low-cost ultrasound equipment is critical to
|
|
increasing ultrasound use among those who are trained.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ginsburg, AS (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Clin Trials Ctr, Dept Biostat, Bldg 29,Suite 250, 6200 NE 74th St, Seattle, WA 98115 USA.
|
|
Ginsburg, Amy Sarah; May, Susanne, Univ Washington, Clin Trials Ctr, Dept Biostat, Bldg 29,Suite 250, 6200 NE 74th St, Seattle, WA 98115 USA.
|
|
Liddy, Zylee, Univ Washington, Dept Genet Epidemiol, Seattle, WA USA.
|
|
Khazaneh, Parsa T., McMaster Univ, Michael G DeGroote Sch Med, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
|
|
Pervaiz, Farhan, McMaster Univ, Dept Family Med, Div Emergency Med, Hamilton, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1038/s41598-023-30454-w},
|
|
ISSN = {2045-2322},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OF-CARE ULTRASOUND; OBSTETRIC ULTRASOUND},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {messageforamy@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000986236800021},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000366146200006,
|
|
Author = {Azarpazhooh, Amir and Quinonez, Carlos},
|
|
Title = {Treatment Preferences for Toothache among Working Poor Canadians},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ENDODONTICS},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {41},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Pages = {1985-1990},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: Working poor (WP) Canadians are those who work >= 20
|
|
hours/week, are not full-time students, and have annual family incomes
|
|
<\$34,300. They have unique vulnerabilities and face significant
|
|
barriers to accessing dental care because they rarely receive.
|
|
employment-based dental benefits and are ineligible for publicly funded
|
|
dental programs. This research aimed to understand whether WP Canadians
|
|
would prefer extraction rather than tooth restoration and preservation
|
|
when they have toothache. Methods: A cross-sectional stratified sampling
|
|
study design and telephone survey methodology was used to collect data
|
|
from a nationally representative sample of 1049 WP individuals aged
|
|
18-64 years. A pretested questionnaire included sociodemographic and
|
|
self-reported oral health questions and asked participants to select
|
|
their preference for maintaining versus extracting an aching tooth. By
|
|
using bivariate and logistic regression analyses, we applied the
|
|
Gelberg-Andersen Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations to
|
|
understand what influences treatment preferences among this population
|
|
(P <= .05). Results: The majority of participants (86\%) preferred to
|
|
save and fill an aching tooth rather than take it out. Those who were
|
|
older, partially dentate, reported a history of oral pain, had their
|
|
last dental visit more than 3 years ago, or who only visited the dentist
|
|
when in pain were significantly more likely to opt for tooth extraction.
|
|
Conclusions: The majority of WP Canadians value preserving their natural
|
|
dentition. Effective dental care service delivery in both private and
|
|
public settings requires an understanding of the possible factors that
|
|
influence WP persons' preferences for essential treatment modalities in
|
|
dentistry.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Azarpazhooh, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Fac Dent, Room 515-C,124 Edward St, Toronto, ON M5G 1G6, Canada.
|
|
Azarpazhooh, Amir; Quinonez, Carlos, Univ Toronto, Fac Dent, Discipline Dent Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Azarpazhooh, Amir, Univ Toronto, Fac Dent, Discipline Endodont, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Azarpazhooh, Amir, Univ Toronto, Fac Med, Inst Hlth Policy Management \& Evaluat, Clin Epidemiol \& Hlth Care Res, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Azarpazhooh, Amir, Univ Toronto, Toronto Hlth Econ \& Technol Assessment Collaborat, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.joen.2015.08.025},
|
|
ISSN = {0099-2399},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-3554},
|
|
Keywords = {Apical periodontitis; decision making; patient preference; working poor},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {APICAL PERIODONTITIS; DENTAL-CARE; BEHAVIORAL-MODEL; MEDICAL-CARE;
|
|
POLICY; TEETH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Dentistry, Oral Surgery \& Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {amir.azarpazhooh@dentistry.utoronto.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Azarpazhooh, Amir/0000-0002-6223-158X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000366146200006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000702128800001,
|
|
Author = {Hunt, Louise and Thomson, Gill and Whittaker, Karen and Dykes, Fiona},
|
|
Title = {Non-profit breastfeeding organisations' peer support provision in areas
|
|
of socio-economic deprivation in the UK: A meta-ethnography},
|
|
Journal = {MATERNAL AND CHILD NUTRITION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {In many high-income countries such as the United Kingdom, inequalities
|
|
in breastfeeding initiation and continuation rates exist, whereby
|
|
socio-economically advantaged mothers are most likely to breastfeed.
|
|
Breastfeeding peer support interventions are recommended to address this
|
|
inequality, with non-profit breastfeeding organisations providing such
|
|
support in areas of deprivation. As these organisations' roots and
|
|
membership are often formed of relatively highly resourced women who
|
|
have different backgrounds and experiences to those living in areas of
|
|
deprivation, it is important to understand their practices in this
|
|
context. In order to explore how UK non-profit organisations practice
|
|
breastfeeding peer support in areas of socio-economic deprivation, a
|
|
systematic review and meta-ethnography of published and grey literature
|
|
was undertaken. Sixteen texts were included, and three core themes
|
|
constructed: (1) `changing communities' reveals practices designed to
|
|
generate community level change, and (2) `enabling one to one support',
|
|
explains how proactive working practices enabled individual mothers'
|
|
access to supportive environments. (3) `forging partnerships with health
|
|
professionals', describes how embedding peer support within local health
|
|
services facilitated peer supporters' access to mothers. While few
|
|
breastfeeding peer support practices were directly linked to the context
|
|
of socio-economic deprivation, those described sought to influence
|
|
community and individual level change. They illuminate the importance of
|
|
interprofessional working. Further work to consolidate the
|
|
peer-professional interface to ensure needs-led care is required.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hunt, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Cent Lancashire UCLan, Maternal \& Infant Nutr \& Nurture Unit MAINN, Sch Community Hlth \& Midwifery, Preston PR1 2HE, Lancs, England.
|
|
Hunt, Louise, Univ Cent Lancashire UCLan, Maternal \& Infant Nutr \& Nurture Unit MAINN, Sch Community Hlth \& Midwifery, Preston PR1 2HE, Lancs, England.
|
|
Thomson, Gill; Dykes, Fiona, Univ Cent Lancashire UCLan, Sch Community Hlth \& Midwifery, MAINN, Preston, Lancs, England.
|
|
Whittaker, Karen, Univ Cent Lancashire UCLan, Sch Nursing, Preston, Lancs, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/mcn.13271},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {e13271},
|
|
ISSN = {1740-8695},
|
|
EISSN = {1740-8709},
|
|
Keywords = {breastfeeding peer support; meta-ethnography; non-profit; peer support;
|
|
socio-economic deprivation; systematic review},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nutrition \& Dietetics; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {huntlouise8@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Thomson, Gill/0000-0003-3392-8182
|
|
Dykes, Fiona/0000-0002-2728-7967
|
|
Hunt, Louise/0000-0002-3895-1202
|
|
Whittaker, Karen/0000-0002-3493-9396},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {51},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000702128800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000835323300001,
|
|
Author = {Bitencourt, Fernando Valentim and Olsson, Thais Ostroski and de Souza
|
|
Lamers, Juliana Maciel and Manzolli Leite, Fabio Renato and Nascimento,
|
|
Gustavo Giacomelli and Ceriotti Toassi, Ramona Fernanda},
|
|
Title = {Impact of public health and higher education policies on the profile of
|
|
final-year Brazilian dental students: Challenges and future developments},
|
|
Journal = {EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DENTAL EDUCATION},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {547-559},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: Brazil has experienced transformations in higher education
|
|
and health services, including launching more inclusive public policies
|
|
focused on these two areas.
|
|
Objective: To evaluate the profile of final-year dental students from a
|
|
Brazilian public university from 2010 to 2019, accompanied by changes in
|
|
public health and higher education policies.
|
|
Methods: A prospective observacional study was carried out with
|
|
final-year dental students. A self-applicable semi-structured
|
|
questionnaire was applied.
|
|
Result: Six-hundred and seventy-seven students participated, of which
|
|
71.5\% were women, 72.9\% aged between 21 and 25 years, 96.2\% single,
|
|
and 96.4\% were without children. Over ten years, it was possible to
|
|
identify trends in the profile explained by implementing public policies
|
|
toward more inclusive access to Brazilian higher education by
|
|
socioeconomically disadvantaged individuals. Students who completed the
|
|
course between 2018 and 2019 did not have the state capital city (the
|
|
wealthiest area) as their origin city and had lower parental education
|
|
and income levels than dental students graduating between 2010 and 2011.
|
|
Moreover, working as a primary care dentist in the Brazilian National
|
|
Health System was considered a professional possibility by 61.4\% of the
|
|
students, and has gained prominence significantly over time, ranging
|
|
from 21.1\% in 2010 to 72.9\% in 2019 (p < .05).
|
|
Conclusion: Over the study period, concomitantly to advances in public
|
|
health and higher education policies in Brazil, more diverse access to
|
|
public dental education was observed, allowing students from low
|
|
socioeconomic positions to take the education. Changes have also
|
|
impacted the students' perspectives regarding the need for postgraduate
|
|
training and a career in public health dentistry. However, these trends
|
|
need to be consolidated, and public policies continued and strengthened.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bitencourt, FV (Corresponding Author), Aarhus Univ, Dept Dent \& Oral Hlth, Sect Periodontol, Vennelyst Blvd 9,Bldg 1610,Off 2-76, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
|
|
Bitencourt, Fernando Valentim; Manzolli Leite, Fabio Renato; Nascimento, Gustavo Giacomelli, Aarhus Univ, Dept Dent \& Oral Hlth, Sect Periodontol, Vennelyst Blvd 9,Bldg 1610,Off 2-76, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
|
|
Olsson, Thais Ostroski, Fed Univ Rio Grande do Sul UFRGS, Dept Prevent \& Social Dent, Sch Dent, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.
|
|
de Souza Lamers, Juliana Maciel, Fed Univ Rio Grande do Sul UFRGS, Educ Affairs, Fac Dent, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.
|
|
Ceriotti Toassi, Ramona Fernanda, Fed Univ Rio Grande do Sul UFRGS, Sch Dent, Dept Prevent \& Social Dent, Postgrad Program Teaching Hlth Sci, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/eje.12840},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1396-5883},
|
|
EISSN = {1600-0579},
|
|
Keywords = {curriculum; dental education; dental students; graduate education;
|
|
public health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ORAL-HEALTH; MOTIVATION; CARE; PROFESSIONALS; CURRICULA; CONTEXT;
|
|
GENDER; CHOICE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Dentistry, Oral Surgery \& Medicine; Education, Scientific Disciplines},
|
|
Author-Email = {fvbitencourt@dent.au.dk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ceriotti Toassi, Ramona Fernanda/IAQ-5346-2023
|
|
Leite, Fabio R M/G-5709-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Leite, Fabio R M/0000-0002-8053-4517
|
|
Valentim Bitencourt, Fernando/0000-0002-7310-2767
|
|
Nascimento, Gustavo/0000-0002-4288-6300
|
|
Maciel de Souza Lamers, Juliana/0000-0002-8131-6036
|
|
Ceriotti Toassi, Ramona Fernanda/0000-0003-4653-5732
|
|
Ostroski Olsson, Thais/0000-0002-5601-5637},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000835323300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000693165600005,
|
|
Author = {Detgen, Amy and Fernandez, Felix and McMahon, Amanda and Johnson, Lisa
|
|
and Dailey, Caitlin Rose},
|
|
Title = {Efficacy of a College and Career Readiness Program: Bridge to Employment},
|
|
Journal = {CAREER DEVELOPMENT QUARTERLY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {69},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {231-247},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {An important measure of success for a college and career readiness
|
|
program is the extent to which its participants achieve their higher
|
|
education and career goals. We examined one such program, Bridge to
|
|
Employment (BTE), to determine its influence on participants'
|
|
educational and career-related decisions and outcomes after they
|
|
graduated from high school. The BTE program works with 14-to-18-year-old
|
|
students in disadvantaged communities across the globe to increase their
|
|
awareness and understanding of health careers and higher education
|
|
opportunities. We interviewed 23 former BTE participants, representing
|
|
different countries and BTE participation time frames, to provide
|
|
critical qualitative insights about their experiences, years after the
|
|
program. Key recommendations for college and career readiness programs
|
|
include exposing participants to a wide variety of careers,
|
|
strengthening soft skills, clarifying practical steps to prepare for
|
|
college and careers, and providing support for interpersonal
|
|
relationships.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Detgen, A (Corresponding Author), FHI 360, Natl Inst Work \& Learning, 1825 Connecticut Ave, Washington, DC 20009 USA.
|
|
Detgen, Amy; McMahon, Amanda; Johnson, Lisa; Dailey, Caitlin Rose, FHI 360, Natl Inst Work \& Learning, 1825 Connecticut Ave, Washington, DC 20009 USA.
|
|
Fernandez, Felix, FHI 360, US Business Unit, Washington, DC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/cdq.12270},
|
|
ISSN = {0889-4019},
|
|
EISSN = {2161-0045},
|
|
Keywords = {college and career readiness; postsecondary education; soft skills;
|
|
work-based learning; global career development},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HIGH-SCHOOL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Applied},
|
|
Author-Email = {adetgen@fhi360.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000693165600005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000751446200051,
|
|
Author = {Shati, Ayed A. and Al-Saleh, Majed M. and Al-Asmari, Bander A. and
|
|
Shehata, Shehata F. and Alqahtani, Youssef A. and Aldarami, Mohammed S.
|
|
and Alqahtani, Sultan A. and Alqahtani, Yahya M.},
|
|
Title = {Awareness and perception of parents regarding well baby clinic in
|
|
primary health care centres in Abha City, Southwestern Saudi Arabia},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF FAMILY MEDICINE AND PRIMARY CARE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {3464-3469},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Well-baby clinic (WBC) service is implemented in all primary
|
|
health care centers and is provided based on international standards to
|
|
all children under 5 years in Saudi Arabia. It is a comprehensive
|
|
package of health promotion and curative care to improve and maintain
|
|
the health status and well-being of this age group. Aim: The main aim is
|
|
to assess parents' awareness and perception regarding WBC in primary
|
|
health care centers in Abha sector, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA).
|
|
Methodology: A descriptive cross-sectional approach was used in the
|
|
current study. The study targeted all babies' caregivers attending WBCs
|
|
in primary health care centers in Abha city. The children's parents were
|
|
included using three stages cluster sample technique. The questionnaire
|
|
included participants' demographic data such as age, gender, relation to
|
|
the baby, educational level, work, and monthly income. Awareness
|
|
regarding the WBC was assessed using two main items covering hearing
|
|
about the clinic provided services. Results: The study included 1593
|
|
participants whose ages ranged from 19 to 55 years old with a mean age
|
|
of 34.6 +/- 11.8 years. About 64\% of the respondents knew about the
|
|
WBC, which was significantly higher among the females than males (P =
|
|
.003). Also, 71.2\% of respondents aged 25-34 years knew about well-baby
|
|
clinic (WBC) compared to 35\% of parents aged less than 25 years (P =
|
|
.001). Exact 57.1\% of the respondents went to the nearest governmental
|
|
health office at vaccination times. About 46\% of the respondents
|
|
reported that the clinic nurse was the main person who dealt with them.
|
|
Regarding services provided by a nurse at the vaccination clinic,
|
|
registering child vaccination was the most reported (66.2\%), followed
|
|
by helping the mother make the child calm (56.8\%). Conclusions: In
|
|
conclusion, the study revealed that proper care is vital for a child's
|
|
survival as well as optimal physical and mental development. Adequately
|
|
cared child has proper well-being and happiness. Mothers and children
|
|
caregivers had adequate awareness and acceptable attitude towards WBCs
|
|
and provided services. Some barriers were declared including lack of
|
|
available WBCs within the residence range, not all WBCs usually working,
|
|
and more information should be provided about WBCs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shati, AA (Corresponding Author), King Khalid Univ, Coll Med, Dept Child Hlth, POB 641, Abha, Saudi Arabia.
|
|
Shati, Ayed A.; Alqahtani, Youssef A., King Khalid Univ, Coll Med, Dept Child Hlth, POB 641, Abha, Saudi Arabia.
|
|
Al-Saleh, Majed M.; Al-Asmari, Bander A., Aseer Hlth Affairs, Family Med Dept, Abha, Saudi Arabia.
|
|
Shehata, Shehata F., King Khalid Univ, Coll Med, Dept Family \& Community Med, Abha, Saudi Arabia.
|
|
Aldarami, Mohammed S.; Alqahtani, Sultan A.; Alqahtani, Yahya M., King Khalid Univ, Coll Med, Abha, Saudi Arabia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc\_871\_21},
|
|
ISSN = {2249-4863},
|
|
EISSN = {2278-7135},
|
|
Keywords = {Awareness; child-care; parents; perception; practice; Saudi Arabia; well
|
|
baby clinic},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Primary Health Care},
|
|
Author-Email = {shatiayed@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Alqahtani, Youssef Ali/HTM-6949-2023
|
|
Shati, Ayed A./FFC-3903-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shati, Ayed A./0000-0003-0444-5595},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {16},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000751446200051},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000680388900001,
|
|
Author = {Mongey, Simon and Pilossoph, Laura and Weinberg, Alexander},
|
|
Title = {Which workers bear the burden of social distancing?},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC INEQUALITY},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Number = {3, SI},
|
|
Pages = {509-526},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Using data from O{*}NET, we construct two measures of an occupation's
|
|
potential exposure to social distancing measures: (i) the ability to
|
|
conduct that job from home and (ii) the degree of physical proximity to
|
|
others the job requires. After validating these measures with comparable
|
|
measures from ATUS as well as realized work-from-home rates during the
|
|
pandemic, we employ the measures to study the characteristics of workers
|
|
in these types of jobs. Our results show that workers in
|
|
low-work-from-home and high-physical-proximity jobs are more
|
|
economically vulnerable across various measures constructed from the CPS
|
|
and PSID: they are less educated, of lower income, have fewer liquid
|
|
assets relative to income, and are more likely renters. Consistent with
|
|
the idea that high physical proximity or low work-from-home occupations
|
|
were more exposed to the Coronavirus shock, we show that the types of
|
|
workers predicted to be employed in them experienced greater declines in
|
|
employment during the pandemic. We conclude by comparing the aggregate
|
|
employment losses in these occupations to their employment losses in the
|
|
2008 recession, and find evidence that these occupations were
|
|
disproportionately exposed to the pandemic shock, and not just comprised
|
|
of more cyclically sensitive workers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pilossoph, L (Corresponding Author), Fed Reserve Bank New York, New York, NY 10045 USA.
|
|
Mongey, Simon; Weinberg, Alexander, Univ Chicago, Kenneth C Griffin Dept Econ, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Mongey, Simon, NBER, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Pilossoph, Laura, Fed Reserve Bank New York, New York, NY 10045 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10888-021-09487-6},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1569-1721},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-8701},
|
|
Keywords = {Coronavirus; Employment; Inequality; Social policy; Occupations;
|
|
Demographics},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {mongey@uchicago.edu
|
|
pilossoph@gmail.com
|
|
weinberga@uchicago.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {18},
|
|
Times-Cited = {78},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000680388900001},
|
|
ESI-Highly-Cited-Paper = {Y},
|
|
ESI-Hot-Paper = {N},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000503419400002,
|
|
Author = {Valiente Palma, Lidia},
|
|
Title = {Is cooperativism helping to keep the population in Andalusia?},
|
|
Journal = {CIRIEC-ESPANA REVISTA DE ECONOMIA PUBLICA SOCIAL Y COOPERATIVA},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {97},
|
|
Pages = {49-74},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Rationale and current interest in topic
|
|
Rural areas in Andalusia present clear disadvantages as compared to
|
|
urban areas, such as lack of infrastructure, scarcity of basic services
|
|
or lack of economic dynamics, causing a rural exodus and thus giving
|
|
rise to territorial imbalances in the region. This rural exodus, in
|
|
turn, has a limiting influence on the generation of economic dynamics,
|
|
resulting in an increasingly ageing population and reducing
|
|
opportunities for territorial development.
|
|
In the face of this problem, cooperatives -societies of the social
|
|
economy- may play a significant role in terms of their capacity for
|
|
attaching a population to its territory, due to the existence of a
|
|
relationship with the surroundings in which they operate, as
|
|
demonstrated by the available literature on this topic
|
|
(Garcia-Gutierrez, 1999; Buendia and Garcia, 2003; Coque, 2005; Mozas
|
|
and Bernal, 2006; Cunat and Coll, 2007; Puentes and Velasco, 2009; Calvo
|
|
and Gonzalez, 2011; Demoustier, 2011; Draperi, 2014; Guzman, Santos and
|
|
Barroso, 2016; Perez and Valiente, 2017).
|
|
Moreover, there is significant cooperativism in this region (with 19\%
|
|
of cooperatives and 18\% of the employment these generate nationwide
|
|
located in Andalusia) as well as consolidated institutional recognition
|
|
of these organisations (as evinced by the laws which regulate them, as
|
|
well as by the Pactos Andaluces por la Economia Social {[}Andalusia
|
|
Agreements for the Social Economy] or by the various support programs
|
|
for cooperative organisations).This represents an opportunity for the
|
|
creation of economic dynamics and for attaching the population to its
|
|
territory through the promotion of social economy societies.
|
|
Objectives
|
|
The main objective of this work consists in determining whether
|
|
cooperative societies in Andalusia may be contributing to the
|
|
maintenance of the region's population, especially in rural areas, to a
|
|
greater extent than mercantile businesses.
|
|
In addition to confirming whether this occurs throughout the entire
|
|
population, we have separated out the populations of women and young
|
|
people, due to the difficulties currently faced by these groups in
|
|
joining the labour market (the main reason for emigration, especially in
|
|
rural areas) and to their strategic interest in terms of consolidating
|
|
the region's population, passing the inter-generational torch in local
|
|
economic activities.
|
|
A comparison of cooperative societies with mercantile businesses is
|
|
carried out in order to lay the foundations for the establishment of
|
|
strategies and policies for the specific promotion of cooperativism, in
|
|
the event that the behaviour seen in these social economy organisations
|
|
differs from that of mercantile businesses.
|
|
Methodology
|
|
In working towards the stated objective, and after an exploratory
|
|
analysis of the variables used, spatial econometrics techniques were
|
|
applied which take into account the location of the data in a given
|
|
geographic space for the variables under study: spatial distribution and
|
|
autocorrelation analysis graph-sand the application of spatial
|
|
regression. Calculation of the models was carried out with GeoDa
|
|
software.
|
|
With respect to the variables used, these were the following: percentage
|
|
of total emigration, percentage of emigration of young people and
|
|
percentage of emigration of women were considered as dependent, proxy
|
|
variables for the attachment of population to territory; the number of
|
|
cooperatives out of the total number of businesses was established, as
|
|
well as the number of mercantile businesses (public limited companies
|
|
and limited liability companies) out of the total number of businesses,
|
|
expressed as percentages, served as explanatory variables. These
|
|
variables were obtained for the various Andalusian municipalities (a
|
|
total of 770) for 2015. In addition, for the purpose of determining
|
|
whether differences exist in emigration between rural and non-rural
|
|
municipalities, a dummy variable was added, termed rural municipality or
|
|
territory.
|
|
Results, practical conclusions and research limitations
|
|
The results obtained provide indications that cooperativism may be
|
|
contributing to an attachment of the population to its territory (as
|
|
compared to mercantile businesses, where a significant relationship was
|
|
not seen), since the regression analyses demonstrated that the variable
|
|
for percentage of cooperative societies is significant in explaining the
|
|
variability seen in emigration. Moreover, both show an inverse
|
|
relationship. The same was obtained when the said dependent variables
|
|
used were percentage of emigration of women and young people. In other
|
|
words, the proportion of cooperatives inversely influence these
|
|
emigration rates, which is not the case for mercantile businesses.
|
|
Based on the aforementioned and given that, on the one hand,
|
|
difficulties in attaching a population to its territory are further
|
|
complicated in rural Andalusian municipalities, especially for women and
|
|
young people and, on the other hand, cooperativism inversely influences
|
|
emigration from rural municipalities, the creation of quality,
|
|
sustainable employment through cooperatives societies of social economy-
|
|
may represent an opportunity for reducing problems of depopulation in
|
|
these areas.
|
|
Another result obtained is that the cooperative business culture may be
|
|
spread to neighbouring regions to a lesser extent than that of the
|
|
conventional business sector. If cooperativism can contribute to an
|
|
attachment of population to territory, the application of specific
|
|
policies and strategies for reducing emigration from rural areas
|
|
-promoting the development of cooperative societies for the creation of
|
|
quality, sustainable employment and thus spreading cooperative culture
|
|
to a greater extent-becomes at once a challenge and an opportunity for
|
|
Andalusia. From another perspective, business synergies between
|
|
cooperativism and conventional businesses may be encouraged, making the
|
|
most of the opportunity offered by the latter for spreading their
|
|
culture to neighbouring regions to a greater degree than cooperativism.
|
|
In this way, spreading the principles and values of cooperativism in the
|
|
Andalusian region can be achieved at the same time as contributing to an
|
|
attachment of population to territory, through a potential business
|
|
inter-cooperation.
|
|
Among the conclusions drawn, one also finds the need to carry out
|
|
specific strategies and policies for promoting cooperativism in
|
|
Andalusia, derived from results showing more heterogeneous behaviour in
|
|
the region than seen in the conventional business sector.
|
|
With regard to the limitations of this work, it should be noted that, in
|
|
the first place, the analysis carried out is static in nature, based on
|
|
specific moment in time (the year 2015), which represents a limitation
|
|
for analysing the evolutionary dynamic followed by both cooperatives
|
|
societies and emigration in Andalusia. In the second place, percentage
|
|
of emigration was taken as a proxy or indicative variable, with respect
|
|
to the difficulty in attaching a population to its territory. However,
|
|
the presence of other factors must be taken into account: it may be that
|
|
the percentage of emigration is low or null as a result of considerable
|
|
ageing in the population, such that depopulation or difficulty in
|
|
attaching population to territory would be caused, rather, by a lack of
|
|
demographic growth.
|
|
This work has established a number of future lines of research stemming
|
|
in part from the very limitations indicated above, among which are the
|
|
analysis of the evolutionary dynamic between cooperativism and
|
|
emigration for the purpose of identifying the relationship these have
|
|
followed over time; as well as consideration of other factors indicating
|
|
capacity for attaching population to territory, such as the previously
|
|
mentioned rate of demographic growth.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Palma, LV (Corresponding Author), Univ Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain.
|
|
Valiente Palma, Lidia, Univ Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.7203/CIRIEC-E.97.13046},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-8093},
|
|
EISSN = {1989-6816},
|
|
Keywords = {Andalusia; cooperative societies; territory; emigration; spatial
|
|
regression},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {lidia.valiente@uca.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Valiente-Palma, Lidia/GQZ-1271-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Valiente-Palma, Lidia/0000-0002-6054-3790},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000503419400002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000286342600008,
|
|
Author = {Chhea, C. and Warren, N. and Manderson, L.},
|
|
Title = {Health worker effectiveness and retention in rural Cambodia},
|
|
Journal = {RURAL AND REMOTE HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Month = {JUL-SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: A decade after health sector reform, public health
|
|
services in rural Cambodia remain under-utilised for multiple reasons
|
|
related to financial, structural and personnel factors. Ineffectiveness
|
|
of rural public health services has led to a significant increase in
|
|
private providers, often the same people who staff public facilities.
|
|
Public health clinics are often portrayed as low quality, with long
|
|
waiting times and unexpected costs; in contrast, private clinics are
|
|
seen to provide more convenient health care. Several strategies,
|
|
including contract management and health equity funds, have been
|
|
introduced to improve public sector performance and encourage
|
|
utilization; these efforts are ongoing. However, the feasibility of
|
|
these strategies remains in question, particularly in terms of
|
|
cost-effectiveness and sustainability.
|
|
Methods: In this article the strategies of and barriers met by health
|
|
workers who remain in rural areas and deliver public health services are
|
|
elucidated. Ethnographic research conducted in 2008 with health
|
|
providers involved in treating tuberculosis patients in Kampong Speu
|
|
Province, Cambodia is drawn on. Participants were recruited from the
|
|
provincial health department, provincial hospital and four health
|
|
centres. Data collection involved in-depth interviews, participation in
|
|
meetings and workshops aimed at health workers, and observation of daily
|
|
activities at the health facilities. Data were transcribed verbatim,
|
|
imported into NVivo software (www.qsrinternational.com) for management,
|
|
and analysed using a grounded theory approach.
|
|
Results: Primary healthcare service delivery in rural Cambodia was
|
|
reliant on the retention of mid-level of health staff, primarily
|
|
midwives and nurses. Its performance was influenced by institutional
|
|
characteristics relating to the structure of the health system. Personal
|
|
factors were impacted on by these structural issues and affected the
|
|
performance of health staff. Institutional factors worked against the
|
|
provision of high-quality public health services, and included the
|
|
fragmentation of service delivery and structure, limited capacity and
|
|
shortage of high-qualified health staff, competition with the private
|
|
sector, and shortage of medical supplies. These factors all de-motivated
|
|
health staff, and undermined their performance in public service
|
|
positions. Personal factors were paramount for staff retention. These
|
|
included: optimism and appreciation of work responsibilities and
|
|
position, the personal ability to cope with financial barriers, and
|
|
institutional benefits such as opportunities for professional
|
|
development, job security, financial opportunities (via
|
|
performance-based allowances), and status in society. Individual
|
|
financial coping strategies were the dominant factor underlying
|
|
retention, but alone were often de-motivating: clients were diverted
|
|
from the public services, which led to distrust, and thus undermined the
|
|
capacity of public system. There was significant interaction between
|
|
institutional and personal factors, which impacted on the effectiveness
|
|
of health staff retention in rural areas. Health workers tended to
|
|
remain in their government positions for prolonged periods of time
|
|
because they experienced personal rewards. At the same time, however,
|
|
their job performance in the public health services were hindered by
|
|
challenges related to the institutional factors.
|
|
Conclusions: The interaction between institutional factors and personal
|
|
factors was crucial for effectiveness of health staff retention in rural
|
|
Cambodia. Efforts aimed at ensuring quality of care and encouraging
|
|
health staff retention should attempt to remove the institutional
|
|
barriers that discourage the use of rural public health services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chhea, C (Corresponding Author), Monash Univ, Sch Psychol Psychiat \& Psychol Med, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Chhea, C.; Warren, N.; Manderson, L., Monash Univ, Sch Psychol Psychiat \& Psychol Med, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.},
|
|
Article-Number = {1391},
|
|
ISSN = {1445-6354},
|
|
Keywords = {Cambodia; health personnel; institutional factors; personal factors;
|
|
retention; rural health services},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INFORMAL PAYMENTS; SECTOR REFORM; CARE; PRACTITIONERS; POOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Warren, Narelle/H-9318-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Warren, Narelle/0000-0003-2623-4078
|
|
Manderson, Lenore/0000-0002-7883-1790},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {24},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {44},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000286342600008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000393985500002,
|
|
Author = {Alfa-Wali, Maryam and Osaghae, Samuel},
|
|
Title = {Practice, training and safety of laparoscopic surgery in low and
|
|
middle-income countries},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD JOURNAL OF GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {13-18},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Surgical management of diseases is recognised as a major unmet need in
|
|
low and middle-income countries ( LMICs). Laparoscopic surgery has been
|
|
present since the 1980s and offers the benefit of minimising the
|
|
morbidity and potential mortality associated with laparotomies.
|
|
Laparotomies are often carried out in LMICs for diagnosis and
|
|
management, due to lack of radiological investigative and intervention
|
|
options. The use of laparoscopy for diagnosis and treatment is globally
|
|
variable, with high-income countries using laparoscopy routinely
|
|
compared with LMICs. The specific advantages of minimally invasive
|
|
surgery such as lower surgical site infections and earlier return to
|
|
work are of great benefit for patients in LMICs, as time lost not
|
|
working could result in a family not being able to sustain themselves.
|
|
Laparoscopic surgery and training is not cheap. Cost is a major barrier
|
|
to healthcare access for a significant population in LMICs. Therefore,
|
|
cost is usually seen as a major barrier for laparoscopic surgery to be
|
|
integrated into routine practice in LMICs. The aim of this review is to
|
|
focus on the practice, training and safety of laparoscopic surgery in
|
|
LMICs. In addition it highlights the barriers to progress in adopting
|
|
laparoscopic surgery in LMICs and how to address them.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Alfa-Wali, M (Corresponding Author), Epsom \& St Helier Univ Hosp, Wrythe Lane, Carshalton SM5 1AA, Surrey, England.
|
|
Alfa-Wali, Maryam, Epsom \& St Helier Univ Hosp, Wrythe Lane, Carshalton SM5 1AA, Surrey, England.
|
|
Osaghae, Samuel, Univ Benin, Teaching Hosp, Benin, Nigeria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4240/wjgs.v9.i1.13},
|
|
ISSN = {1948-9366},
|
|
Keywords = {Laparoscopic surgery; Global surgery; Low and middle-income countries;
|
|
Laparoscopic training; Patient safety; Laparoscopy; Minimally invasive
|
|
surgery},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GLOBAL HEALTH; SURGICAL CONDITIONS; TERTIARY CENTER; PUBLIC-HEALTH;
|
|
CHOLECYSTECTOMY; COST; CARE; FEASIBILITY; APPENDECTOMY; ANESTHESIA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gastroenterology \& Hepatology; Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {malfa5@icloud.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {39},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000393985500002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000636989800013,
|
|
Author = {Bolan, Nancy and Cowgill, Karen D. and Walker, Karen and Kak, Lily and
|
|
Shaver, Theresa and Moxon, Sarah and Lincetto, Ornella},
|
|
Title = {Human Resources for Health-Related Challenges to Ensuring Quality
|
|
Newborn Care in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Scoping Review},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL HEALTH-SCIENCE AND PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {160-176},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: A critical shortage of health workers with needed maternal
|
|
and newborn competencies remains a major challenge for the provision of
|
|
quality care for mothers and newborns, particularly in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries. Supply-side challenges related to human
|
|
resources for health (HRH) worsen shortages and can negatively affect
|
|
health worker performance and quality of care. This review scoped
|
|
country-focused sources to identify and map evidence on HRH-related
|
|
challenges to quality facility-based newborn care provision by nurses
|
|
and midwives.
|
|
Methods: Evidence for this review was collected iteratively, beginning
|
|
with pertinent World Health Organization documents and extending to
|
|
articles identified via database and manual reference searches and
|
|
country reports. Evidence from country-focused sources from 2000 onward
|
|
was extracted using a data extraction tool that was designed
|
|
iteratively; thematic analysis was used to map the 10 categories of HRH
|
|
challenges.
|
|
Findings: A total of 332 peer-reviewed articles were screened, of which
|
|
22 met inclusion criteria. Fourteen additional sources were added from
|
|
manual reference search and gray literature sources. Evidence has been
|
|
mapped into 10 categories of HRH-related challenges: (1) lack of health
|
|
worker data and monitoring; (2) poor health worker preservice education;
|
|
(3) lack of HW access to evidence-based practice guidelines, continuing
|
|
education, and continuing professional development; (4) insufficient and
|
|
inequitable distribution of health workers and heavy workload; (5) poor
|
|
retention, absenteeism, and rotation of experienced staff; (6) poor work
|
|
environment, including low salary; (7) limited and poor supervision; (8)
|
|
low morale, motivation, and attitude, and job dissatisfaction; (9)
|
|
weaknesses of policy, regulations, management, leadership, governance,
|
|
and funding; and (10) structural and contextual barriers.
|
|
Conclusion: The mapping provides needed insight that informed new World
|
|
Health Organization strategies and supporting efforts to address the
|
|
challenges identified and strengthen human resources for neonatal care,
|
|
with the ultimate goal of improving newborn care and outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bolan, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Sch Nursing, Off Global Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA.
|
|
Bolan, Nancy, Univ Maryland, Sch Nursing, Off Global Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA.
|
|
Cowgill, Karen D., Univ Washington, Dept Global Hlth, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Walker, Karen, George Inst Global Hlth, Newtown, Tas, Australia.
|
|
Kak, Lily, US Agcy Int Dev, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Shaver, Theresa, Social Solut Int Inc, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Moxon, Sarah, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, London, England.
|
|
Lincetto, Ornella, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.9745/GHSP-D-20-00362},
|
|
ISSN = {2169-575X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {NEONATAL CARE; PROFESSIONAL-DEVELOPMENT; MULTICOUNTRY ANALYSIS; SYSTEM
|
|
BOTTLENECKS; INPATIENT CARE; EVERY NEWBORN; SICK NEWBORNS; CHILD HEALTH;
|
|
SCALING-UP; OF-CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {nbolan@umaryland.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bolan, Nancy/AAE-3699-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bolan, Nancy/0000-0002-4650-1834},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {90},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000636989800013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001061316300001,
|
|
Author = {Chan, V, Dara and Doran, Julie D.},
|
|
Title = {Mental health counseling is rated as most helpful by autistic adults:
|
|
Service perspectives in adulthood},
|
|
Journal = {AUTISM},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 SEP 7},
|
|
Abstract = {The growing number of autistic adults challenges the limited adult
|
|
service system. While data on service use and barriers are available,
|
|
there is limited information from the individual's perspective on which
|
|
services are most helpful in adulthood and how service use is connected
|
|
to community participation outcomes. Forty autistic adults participated
|
|
in a study combining global positioning system community participation
|
|
measures with survey and interview data on service use, including which
|
|
services are most helpful in adulthood, barriers to services, and
|
|
service needs. Participation outcomes were analyzed relative to
|
|
demographics, number and types of services received in the past 2 years,
|
|
and current mental health service use. Participants received an average
|
|
of two services in the past 2 years, most frequently mental health and
|
|
employment services. Individuals currently seeing a mental health
|
|
counselor were more likely to be working full-time and visit more
|
|
community locations compared to those who were not seeing a counselor.
|
|
Participants reported mental health services as the most helpful service
|
|
received in adulthood followed by employment services. While an emphasis
|
|
is often placed on employment services in the transition to adulthood,
|
|
findings suggest a need for integrated mental health and employment
|
|
services for autistic adults.
|
|
Lay Abstract
|
|
The number of autistic adults is growing, but there are fewer services
|
|
to support them in adulthood. Many autistic adults need some support
|
|
services to lead successful adult lives. We know a lot about the
|
|
services autistic adults use and some of the problems with using these
|
|
services, but we do not know which services are most helpful to them and
|
|
how the services they use relate to how they interact with their
|
|
communities. Forty autistic adults took part in a study about service
|
|
use and community participation. They completed surveys, interviews, and
|
|
carried a global positioning system tracker. They answered questions
|
|
about which services are most helpful in adulthood, things that make it
|
|
hard to use services, and what services they needed. Most participants
|
|
used two services in the past 2 years, most frequently mental health and
|
|
employment services. Adults who were currently seeing a mental health
|
|
counselor were more likely to be working full-time and visit more
|
|
locations in the community compared to those who were not seeing a
|
|
counselor. Mental health services were reported as the most helpful
|
|
service they received as adults, followed by employment services. We
|
|
often focus on the importance of employment services after high school,
|
|
but our findings show a need for both mental health and employment
|
|
services for autistic adults.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chan, DV (Corresponding Author), Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, Dept Hlth Sci, Div Clin Rehabil \& Mental Hlth Counseling, Bondurant Hall,CB7205, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Chan, Dara, V; Doran, Julie D., Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
|
|
Chan, Dara, V, Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, Dept Hlth Sci, Div Clin Rehabil \& Mental Hlth Counseling, Bondurant Hall,CB7205, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/13623613231197446},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2023},
|
|
Article-Number = {13623613231197446},
|
|
ISSN = {1362-3613},
|
|
EISSN = {1461-7005},
|
|
Keywords = {adults; autism; community participation; employment; mental health;
|
|
psychiatric treatment; service use},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPECTRUM DISORDERS; CUSTOMIZED EMPLOYMENT; YOUTH; INDIVIDUALS; OUTCOMES;
|
|
PARTICIPATION; POPULATION; DISABILITY; PATTERNS; SUPPORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental},
|
|
Author-Email = {dara\_chan@med.unc.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Doran, Julie/0000-0002-6705-2716
|
|
Chan, Dara/0000-0003-3751-3670},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001061316300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000733885200030,
|
|
Author = {Sharma, Anjana E. and Lyson, Helena C. and Cherian, Roy and Somsouk, Ma
|
|
and Schillinger, Dean and Sarkar, Urmimala},
|
|
Title = {A Root Cause Analysis of Barriers to Timely Colonoscopy in California
|
|
Safety-Net Health Systems},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PATIENT SAFETY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {E163-E171},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives Safety-net health care systems, serving vulnerable
|
|
populations, see longer delays to timely colonoscopy after a positive
|
|
fecal occult blood test (FOBT), which may contribute to existing
|
|
disparities. We sought to identify root causes of colonoscopy delay
|
|
after positive FOBT result in the primary care safety net. Methods We
|
|
conducted a multisite root cause analysis of cases of delayed
|
|
colonoscopy, identifying cases where there was a delay of greater than 6
|
|
months in completing or scheduling a follow-up colonoscopy after a
|
|
positive FOBT. We identified cases across 5 California health systems
|
|
serving low-income, vulnerable populations. We developed a
|
|
semistructured interview guide based on precedent work. We conducted
|
|
telephone individual interviews with primary care providers (PCPs) and
|
|
patients. We then performed qualitative content analysis of the
|
|
interviews, using an integrated inductive-deductive analytic approach,
|
|
to identify themes related to recurrent root causes of colonoscopy
|
|
delay. Results We identified 12 unique cases, comprising 5 patient and
|
|
11 PCP interviews. Eight patients completed colonoscopy; median time to
|
|
colonoscopy was 11.0 months (interquartile range, 6.3 months). Three
|
|
patients had advanced adenomatous findings. Primary care providers
|
|
highlighted system-level root causes, including inability to track
|
|
referrals between primary care and gastroenterology, lack of protocols
|
|
to follow up with patients, lack of electronic medical record
|
|
interoperability, and lack of time or staffing resources, compelling
|
|
tremendous additional effort by staff. In contrast, patients'
|
|
highlighted individual-level root causes included comorbidities, social
|
|
needs, and misunderstanding the importance of the FOBT. There was a
|
|
little overlap between PCP and patient-elicited root causes. Conclusions
|
|
Current protocols do not accommodate communication between primary care
|
|
and gastroenterology. Interventions to address specific barriers
|
|
identified include improved interoperability between PCP and
|
|
gastroenterology scheduling systems, protocols to follow-up on
|
|
incomplete colonoscopies, accommodation for support and transport needs,
|
|
and patient-friendly education. Interviewing both patients and PCPs
|
|
leads to richer analysis of the root causes leading to delayed diagnosis
|
|
of colorectal cancer.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sharma, AE (Corresponding Author), 995 Potrero Ave,Ward 83, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA.
|
|
Sharma, Anjana E., Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Family \& Community Med, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Sharma, Anjana E.; Lyson, Helena C.; Cherian, Roy; Somsouk, Ma; Schillinger, Dean; Sarkar, Urmimala, UCSF, Ctr Vulnerable Populat, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Lyson, Helena C.; Schillinger, Dean; Sarkar, Urmimala, UCSF, Div Gen Internal Med, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Somsouk, Ma, UCSF Sch Med, Dept Gastroenterol, San Francisco, CA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/PTS.0000000000000718},
|
|
ISSN = {1549-8417},
|
|
EISSN = {1549-8425},
|
|
Keywords = {colorectal neoplasms; delayed diagnosis; primary health care; root cause
|
|
analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COLORECTAL-CANCER; RACIAL DISPARITIES; FOLLOW-UP; MEDICAID; STAGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {Anjana.sharma@ucsf.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000733885200030},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000431159800004,
|
|
Author = {Atinga, Roger A. and Agyepong, Irene Akua and Esena, Reuben K.},
|
|
Title = {Ghana's community-based primary health care: Why women and children are
|
|
`disadvantaged' by its implementation},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {201},
|
|
Pages = {27-34},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Policy analysis on why women and children in low- and middle-income
|
|
settings are still disadvantaged by access to appropriate care despite
|
|
Primary Health Care (PHC) programmes implementation is limited. Drawing
|
|
on the street-level bureaucracy theory, we explored how and why
|
|
frontline providers (FLP) actions on their own and in interaction with
|
|
health system factors shape Ghana's community-based PHC implementation
|
|
to the disadvantage of women and children accessing and using health
|
|
services. This was a qualitative study conducted in 4 communities drawn
|
|
from rural and urban districts of the Upper West region. Data were
|
|
collected from 8 focus group discussions with community informants, 73
|
|
in-depth interviews with clients, 13 in-depth interviews with district
|
|
health managers and FLP, and observations. Data were recorded,
|
|
transcribed and coded deductively and inductively for themes with the
|
|
aid of Nvivo 11 software. Findings showed that apart from FLP frequent
|
|
lateness to, and absenteeism from work, that affected care seeking for
|
|
children, their exercise of discretionary power in determining children
|
|
who deserve care over others had ripple effects: families experienced
|
|
financial hardships in seeking alternative care for children, and
|
|
avoided that by managing symptoms with care provided in non-traditional
|
|
spaces. FLP adverse behaviours were driven by weak implementation
|
|
structures embedded in the district health systems. Basic obstetric
|
|
facilities such as labour room, infusion stand, and beds for deliveries,
|
|
detention and palpation were lacking prompting FLP to cope by conducting
|
|
deliveries using a patchwork of improvised delivery methods which worked
|
|
out to encourage unassisted home deliveries. Perceived poor conditions
|
|
of service weakened FLP commitment to quality maternal and child care
|
|
delivery. Findings suggest the need for strategies to induce behaviour
|
|
change in FLP, strengthen district administrative structures, and
|
|
improve on the supply chain and logistics system to address gaps in CHPS
|
|
maternal and child care delivery.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Atinga, RA (Corresponding Author), Univ Ghana, Business Sch, Dept Publ Adm \& Hlth Serv Management, Box LG 78, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
|
|
Atinga, Roger A., Univ Ghana, Business Sch, Dept Publ Adm \& Hlth Serv Management, Box LG 78, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
|
|
Agyepong, Irene Akua, Ghana Hlth Serv, Res \& Dev Div, POB MB-190, Greats Accra Region, Ghana.
|
|
Esena, Reuben K., Univ Ghana, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Policy Planning \& Management, POB LG 13, Legon, Accra, Ghana.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.02.001},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {Women; Children; PHC; CHPS; Street bureaucrats; Frontline provider;
|
|
Implementation; Ghana},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; ALMA-ATA; MATERNAL HEALTH; SCALING-UP; POLICY;
|
|
SERVICES; DELIVERY; PROGRAM; WORKERS; REBIRTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {ayimbillah@yahoo.com
|
|
iagyepong@hotmail.com
|
|
rkesena@hotmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Agyepong, Irene Akua/0000-0002-0193-5882
|
|
Atinga, Roger/0000-0001-7724-4706},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {67},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {17},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000431159800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000074364700006,
|
|
Author = {Laitner, S and Bernow, S and DeCicco, J},
|
|
Title = {Employment and other macroeconomic benefits of an innovation-led climate
|
|
strategy for the United States},
|
|
Journal = {ENERGY POLICY},
|
|
Year = {1998},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {425-432},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Climate protection policy and its analysis are pursued in the context of
|
|
other societal goals, among them the maintenance of economic growth and
|
|
high employment. Too often, however, analysis of energy and climate
|
|
policy does not realistically reflect technological conditions and the
|
|
dynamics of technological change. This tendency unnecessarily associates
|
|
the decline in energy consumption or carbon emissions with the decline
|
|
in national economic output or income. But there is ample prima facie
|
|
evidence to the contrary. Just as in the 19th century when the perceived
|
|
need to reduce labor inputs as part of the production process spurred
|
|
labor-saving technological progress, now the need to reduce energy (and
|
|
pollution) costs could spur innovation and diffusion of efficient and
|
|
clean energy technologies. This, in turn, can increase overall growth in
|
|
economic productivity. Energy technology analysts have identified many
|
|
such existing and near-term commercial technologies, as well as
|
|
innovations that can be foreseen beyond the immediate technological
|
|
horizon, which would become widely used if policies were developed to
|
|
overcome market and institutional barriers. This paper presents a
|
|
macroeconomic analysis for a set of policies that would induce the
|
|
adoption of more efficient and low-carbon technologies, and finds that
|
|
overall employment and economic output could be increased by small
|
|
amounts while significantly reducing carbon emissions. Published by
|
|
Elsevier Science Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Laitner, S (Corresponding Author), US EPA, Off Atmospher Programs, 401 M St SW, Washington, DC 20460 USA.
|
|
US EPA, Off Atmospher Programs, Washington, DC 20460 USA.
|
|
Tellus Inst, Boston, MA 02116 USA.
|
|
Amer Council Energy Efficient Econ, Washington, DC 20036 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0301-4215(97)00160-2},
|
|
ISSN = {0301-4215},
|
|
Keywords = {climate policy; economic impacts; energy/economic modeling},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Energy \& Fuels; Environmental Sciences; Environmental
|
|
Studies},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {DeCicco, John/0000-0003-4923-1398},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000074364700006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001032217900001,
|
|
Author = {Truche, Paul R. and Naus, Abbie E. and Botelho, Fabio and Ferreira,
|
|
Julia and Bowder, Alexis and Caddell, Luke and Zimmerman, Kathrin and
|
|
Faria, Isabella Maria de Freitas and Lopes, Bellisa Caldas and Costa,
|
|
Eduardo Correa and Dantas, Fernanda Lage Lima and Cavalcante, Augusto J.
|
|
S. A. and Carvalho, Carlos A. L. B. and Abib, Simone and Mooney, David
|
|
P. and Alonso, Nivaldo},
|
|
Title = {Delivery of essential pediatric congenital surgical care within Brazil's
|
|
universal health coverage system: a national survey of pediatric
|
|
surgeons},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC SURGERY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {ObjectiveIn this study, we assess the delivery of congenital pediatric
|
|
surgical care under Brazil's system of universal health coverage and
|
|
evaluate differences in delivery between public and private sectors.
|
|
MethodsA cross-sectional national survey of pediatric surgeons in Brazil
|
|
was conducted. Participants were asked which of 23 interventions
|
|
identified through the Disease Control Priorities 3 (Surgical
|
|
Interventions for Congenital Anomalies) they perform and to report
|
|
barriers faced while providing surgical care. Responses were weighted by
|
|
state and stratified by sector (public vs private). ResultsA sample of
|
|
352 responses was obtained and weighted to represent 1378 practicing
|
|
pediatric surgeons registered in Brazil during the survey time. 73\%
|
|
spend the majority of their time working in the public sector ('Sistema
|
|
unico de Saude' and Foundation hospitals), and most of them also work in
|
|
the private sector. Generally, Brazilian pediatric surgeons have the
|
|
expertise to provide thoracic, abdominal, and urologic procedures.
|
|
Surgeons working mostly in the public sector were more likely to report
|
|
a lack of access to essential medications (25\% vs 9\%, p<0.01) and a
|
|
lack of access to hospital beds for surgical patients (52\% vs 32\%,
|
|
p<0.01). ConclusionsBrazilian pediatric surgeons routinely perform
|
|
thoracic, abdominal, and urologic surgery. Those working in
|
|
government-financed hospitals face barriers related to infrastructure,
|
|
which may impact Brazilians who rely on Brazil's universal health
|
|
coverage system. Policies that support pediatric surgeons working in the
|
|
public sector may promote the workforce available to provide congenital
|
|
pediatric surgical care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Naus, AE (Corresponding Author), Harvard Med Sch, Program Global Surg \& Social Change, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Truche, Paul R.; Naus, Abbie E.; Bowder, Alexis; Caddell, Luke; Zimmerman, Kathrin, Harvard Med Sch, Program Global Surg \& Social Change, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Truche, Paul R., Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Med Sch, Dept Surg, New Brunswick, NJ USA.
|
|
Botelho, Fabio; Ferreira, Julia, McGill Univ, Dept Pediat Surg, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Bowder, Alexis, Med Coll Wisconsin, Dept Surg, Milwaukee, WI USA.
|
|
Zimmerman, Kathrin, Univ Wisconsin Madison, Sch Med \& Publ Hlth, Dept Surg, Div Otolaryngol Head \& Neck Surg, Madison, WI USA.
|
|
Faria, Isabella Maria de Freitas, Univ Fed Minas Gerais, Sch Med, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil.
|
|
Lopes, Bellisa Caldas, Inst Med Integral Prof Fernando Figueira, Dept Pediat Surg, Recife, Brazil.
|
|
Costa, Eduardo Correa, Hosp Clin Porto Alegre, Dept Pediat Surg, Porto Alegre, Brazil.
|
|
Dantas, Fernanda Lage Lima, Univ Fed Acre, Dept Pediat Surg, Rio Branco, Brazil.
|
|
Cavalcante, Augusto J. S. A., Hosp Santa Casa Belo Horizonte, Dept Pediat Surg, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
|
|
Carvalho, Carlos A. L. B., Univ Fed Mato Grosso, Dept Pediat Surg, Cuiaba, Brazil.
|
|
Abib, Simone, Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Dept Pediat Surg, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
|
|
Mooney, David P., Boston Childrens Hosp, Dept Pediat Surg, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Alonso, Nivaldo, Univ Sao Paulo, Dept Plast Surg, Inst Biomed Sci, Sao Paulo, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/wjps-2022-000534},
|
|
Article-Number = {e000534},
|
|
EISSN = {2516-5410},
|
|
Keywords = {Congenital Abnormalities; Pediatrics; Health Care Economics and
|
|
Organizations; Hospitals; Pediatric},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; GLOBAL SURGERY; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics; Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {ae.naus1@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Truche, Paul/0000-0001-6511-9887
|
|
de Freitas Faria, Isabella Maria/0000-0002-3073-5636},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001032217900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000301930500001,
|
|
Author = {Balaji, Madhumitha and Chatterjee, Sudipto and Koschorke, Mirja and
|
|
Rangaswamy, Thara and Chavan, Animish and Dabholkar, Hamid and Dakshin,
|
|
Lilly and Kumar, Pratheesh and John, Sujit and Thornicroft, Graham and
|
|
Patel, Vikram},
|
|
Title = {The development of a lay health worker delivered collaborative community
|
|
based intervention for people with schizophrenia in India},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Month = {FEB 16},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Care for schizophrenia in low and middle income countries is
|
|
predominantly facility based and led by specialists, with limited use of
|
|
non-pharmacological treatments. Although community based psychosocial
|
|
interventions are emphasised, there is little evidence about their
|
|
acceptability and feasibility. Furthermore, the shortage of skilled
|
|
manpower is a major barrier to improving access to these interventions.
|
|
Our study aimed to develop a lay health worker delivered community based
|
|
intervention in three sites in India. This paper describes how the
|
|
intervention was developed systematically, following the MRC framework
|
|
for the development of complex interventions.
|
|
Methods: We reviewed the lierature on the burden of schizophrenia and
|
|
the treatment gap in low and middle income countries and the evidence
|
|
for community based treatments, and identified intervention components.
|
|
We then evaluated the acceptability and feasibility of this package of
|
|
care through formative case studies with individuals with schizophrenia
|
|
and their primary caregivers and piloted its delivery with 30 families.
|
|
Results: Based on the reviews, our intervention comprised five
|
|
components (psycho-education; adherence management; rehabilitation;
|
|
referral to community agencies; and health promotion) to be delivered by
|
|
trained lay health workers supervised by specialists. The intervention
|
|
underwent a number of changes as a result of formative and pilot work.
|
|
While all the components were acceptable and most were feasible,
|
|
experiences of stigma and discrimination were inadequately addressed;
|
|
some participants feared that delivery of care at home would lead to
|
|
illness disclosure; some participants and providers did not understand
|
|
how the intervention related to usual care; some families were unwilling
|
|
to participate; and there were delivery problems, for example, in
|
|
meeting the targeted number of sessions. Participants found delivery by
|
|
health workers acceptable, and expected them to have knowledge about the
|
|
subject matter. Some had expectations regarding their demographic and
|
|
personal characteristics, for example, preferring only females or those
|
|
who are understanding/friendly. New components to address stigma were
|
|
then added to the intervention, the collaborative nature of service
|
|
provision was strengthened, a multi-level supervision system was
|
|
developed, and delivery of components was made more flexible. Criteria
|
|
were evolved for the selection and training of the health workers based
|
|
on participants' expectations.
|
|
Conclusions: A multi-component community based intervention, targeting
|
|
multiple outcomes, and delivered by trained lay health workers,
|
|
supervised by mental health specialists, is an acceptable and feasible
|
|
intervention for treating schizophrenia in India.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Patel, V (Corresponding Author), Sangath Ctr, 841-1 Alto Porvorim, Bardez 403521, Goa, India.
|
|
Balaji, Madhumitha; Chatterjee, Sudipto; Kumar, Pratheesh; Patel, Vikram, Sangath Ctr, Bardez 403521, Goa, India.
|
|
Koschorke, Mirja; Patel, Vikram, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, London WC1E 7HT, England.
|
|
Rangaswamy, Thara; Dakshin, Lilly; John, Sujit, Schizophrenia Res Fdn Ctr, Madras 600101, Tamil Nadu, India.
|
|
Chavan, Animish, Nirmitee, Sadar Bazar 415001, Satara, India.
|
|
Dabholkar, Hamid, Parivartan, Sadar Bazar 415001, Satara, India.
|
|
Thornicroft, Graham, Kings Coll London, Hlth Serv \& Populat Res Dept, Inst Psychiat, London SE5 8AF, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1472-6963-12-42},
|
|
Article-Number = {42},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Low and middle income countries; India; Community care; Mental health;
|
|
Schizophrenia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SEVERE MENTAL-ILLNESS; PSYCHOEDUCATIONAL INTERVENTION; FAMILIES; CARE;
|
|
CHINA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {vikram.patel@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Thornicroft, Graham/B-4027-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Thornicroft, Graham/0000-0003-0662-0879
|
|
Balaji, Madhumitha/0000-0002-7399-8057
|
|
Patel, Vikram/0000-0003-1066-8584
|
|
John, Sujit/0000-0001-7157-3533},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {89},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000301930500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000893743500001,
|
|
Author = {Hwong, Wen Yea and Ng, Sock Wen and Tong, Seng Fah and Ab Rahman,
|
|
Norazida and Law, Wan Chung and Kaman, Zurainah and Wong, Sing Keat and
|
|
Puvanarajah, Santhi Datuk and Sivasampu, Sheamini},
|
|
Title = {Stroke thrombolysis in a middle-income country: A case study exploring
|
|
the determinants of its implementation},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {NOV 24},
|
|
Abstract = {IntroductionTranslation of evidence into clinical practice for use of
|
|
intravenous thrombolysis in acute stroke care has been slow, especially
|
|
across low- and middle-income countries. In Malaysia where the average
|
|
national uptake was poor among the public hospitals in 2018, one
|
|
hospital intriguingly showed comparable thrombolysis rates to
|
|
high-income countries. This study aimed to explore and provide in-depth
|
|
understanding of factors and explanations for the high rates of
|
|
intravenous stroke thrombolysis in this hospital. MethodsThis single
|
|
case study sourced data using a multimethod approach: (1)
|
|
semi-structured in-depth interviews and focus group discussions, (2)
|
|
surveys, and (3) review of medical records. The Tailored Implementation
|
|
of Chronic Diseases (TICD) framework was used as a guide to understand
|
|
the determinants of implementation. Twenty-nine participants comprising
|
|
the Hospital Director, neurologists, emergency physicians, radiologists,
|
|
pharmacists, nurses and medical assistants (MAs) were included. Thematic
|
|
analyses were conducted inductively before triangulated with
|
|
quantitative analyses and document reviews. ResultsFavorable factors
|
|
contributing to the uptake included: (1) cohesiveness of team members
|
|
which comprised of positive interprofessional team dynamics, shared
|
|
personal beliefs and values, and passionate leadership, and (2)
|
|
facilitative work process through simplification of workflow and
|
|
understanding the rationale of the sense of urgency. Patient factors was
|
|
a limiting factor. Almost two third of ischemic stroke patients arrived
|
|
at the hospital outside the therapeutic window time, attributing
|
|
patients' delayed presentation as a main barrier to the uptake of
|
|
intravenous stroke thrombolysis. One other barrier was the availability
|
|
of resources, although this was innovatively optimized to minimize its
|
|
impact on the uptake of the therapy. As such, potential in-hospital
|
|
delays accounted for only 3.8\% of patients who missed the opportunity
|
|
to receive thrombolysis. ConclusionsDespite the ongoing challenges, the
|
|
success in implementing intravenous stroke thrombolysis as standard of
|
|
care was attributed to the cohesiveness of team members and having
|
|
facilitative work processes. For countries of similar settings, plans to
|
|
improve the uptake of intravenous stroke thrombolysis should consider
|
|
the inclusion of interventions targeting on these modifiable factors.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hwong, WY (Corresponding Author), Minist Hlth Malaysia, Natl Inst Hlth, Inst Clin Res, Bangi, Selangor, Malaysia.
|
|
Hwong, WY (Corresponding Author), Univ Utrecht, Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Julius Ctr Hlth Sci \& Primary Care, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Hwong, Wen Yea; Ng, Sock Wen; Ab Rahman, Norazida; Sivasampu, Sheamini, Minist Hlth Malaysia, Natl Inst Hlth, Inst Clin Res, Bangi, Selangor, Malaysia.
|
|
Hwong, Wen Yea, Univ Utrecht, Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Julius Ctr Hlth Sci \& Primary Care, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Tong, Seng Fah, Univ Kebangsaan Malaysia, Dept Family Med, Bangi, Selangor, Malaysia.
|
|
Law, Wan Chung; Kaman, Zurainah, Minist Hlth Malaysia, Sarawak Gen Hosp, Dept Med, Neurol Unit, Kuching, Malaysia.
|
|
Wong, Sing Keat; Puvanarajah, Santhi Datuk, Minist Hlth Malaysia, Hosp Kuala Lumpur, Dept Neurol, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fneur.2022.1048807},
|
|
Article-Number = {1048807},
|
|
ISSN = {1664-2295},
|
|
Keywords = {acute stroke care; intravenous thrombolysis; developing countries;
|
|
translational research; facilitator; barrier},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ACUTE ISCHEMIC-STROKE; CARE TEAMS; MANAGEMENT; GUIDELINES; TEAMWORK;
|
|
OUTCOMES; TIMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology; Neurosciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {amyhwong@crc.gov.my},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000893743500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000428321300023,
|
|
Author = {Watts, K. J. and Meiser, B. and Zilliacus, E. and Kaur, R. and Taouk, M.
|
|
and Girgis, A. and Butow, P. and Kissane, D. W. and Hale, S. and Perry,
|
|
A. and Aranda, S. K. and Goldstein, D.},
|
|
Title = {Perspectives of oncology nurses and oncologists regarding barriers to
|
|
working with patients from a minority background: Systemic issues and
|
|
working with interpreters},
|
|
Journal = {EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER CARE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This study aimed to ascertain the systemic barriers encountered by
|
|
oncology health professionals (HPs) working with patients from ethnic
|
|
minorities to guide the development of a communication skills training
|
|
programme. Twelve medical and five radiation oncologists and 21 oncology
|
|
nurses were invited to participate in this qualitative study.
|
|
Participants were interviewed individually or in a focus group about
|
|
their experiences working with people from minority backgrounds. All
|
|
interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed thematically. HPs
|
|
encountered language and communication barriers in their interactions
|
|
with patients and their families, which were perceived to impact
|
|
negatively on the quality and amount of information and support
|
|
provided. There was a shortage of, and poor processes for engaging,
|
|
interpreters and some HPs were concerned about the accuracy of
|
|
interpretation. HPs expressed a need for training in cultural awareness
|
|
and communication skills with a preference for face-to-face delivery. A
|
|
lack of funding, a culture of learning on the job, and time constraints
|
|
were systemic barriers to training. Oncologists and oncology nurses
|
|
encounter complex challenges in clinical interactions with minority
|
|
patients and their families, including difficulties working with
|
|
interpreters. Formal training programmes targeted to the development of
|
|
culturally competent communication skills are required.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Meiser, B (Corresponding Author), Univ New South Wales, Prince Wales Clin Sch, Lowy Canc Res Bldg C25, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Watts, K. J.; Meiser, B.; Zilliacus, E.; Kaur, R.; Taouk, M.; Goldstein, D., Univ New South Wales, Prince Wales Clin Sch, Lowy Canc Res Bldg C25, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Girgis, A., Univ New South Wales, Prince Wales Clin Sch, Psychooncol Res Grp, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Girgis, A., Univ New South Wales, South Western Sydney Clin Sch, Ctr Oncol Educ \& Res Translat, Ingham Inst Appl Med Res,Psychooncol Res Grp, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Butow, P., Univ Sydney, Psychooncol Cooperat Res Grp, Ctr Med Psychol \& Evidence Based Decis Making, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Kissane, D. W., Monash Univ, Dept Psychiat, Monash Hlth, Sch Clin Sci,Psychiat, Clayton, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Hale, S., Univ New South Wales, Fac Arts \& Social Sci, Interpreting \& Translat, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Perry, A., South Eastern Sydney Local Hlth Dist, Multicultural Hlth Serv, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Aranda, S. K., Univ Melbourne, Sch Hlth Sci, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Aranda, S. K., Canc Council Australia, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Goldstein, D., Prince Wales Hosp, Dept Med Oncol, Sydney, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/ecc.12758},
|
|
Article-Number = {e12758},
|
|
ISSN = {0961-5423},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2354},
|
|
Keywords = {communication skills; cultural competence; health professionals;
|
|
minority patients; oncology},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COMMUNICATION-SKILLS; HEALTH-CARE; CULTURAL COMPETENCE; LANGUAGE
|
|
BARRIERS; CANCER-DIAGNOSIS; KNOWLEDGE; IMPACT; DOCTOR; WOMEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology; Health Care Sciences \& Services; Nursing; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {b.meiser@unsw.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hale, Sandra B/J-6535-2012
|
|
Meiser, Bettina/AAG-5480-2021
|
|
Butow, Phyllis/JDV-8766-2023
|
|
goldstein, david/J-6711-2012
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hale, Sandra B/0000-0003-4291-4022
|
|
Butow, Phyllis/0000-0003-3562-6954
|
|
Aranda, Sanchia/0000-0003-4170-9799
|
|
Kissane, David/0000-0002-5930-4573
|
|
Meiser, Bettina/0000-0002-5086-0784},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000428321300023},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000444401500009,
|
|
Author = {Cho, Hae Lin and Danis, Marion and Grady, Christine},
|
|
Title = {The ethics of uninsured participants accessing healthcare in biomedical
|
|
research: A literature review},
|
|
Journal = {CLINICAL TRIALS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {509-521},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Background/aims Sparse literature exists on the challenges and ethical
|
|
considerations of including people with limited access to healthcare,
|
|
such as the uninsured and low-income, in clinical research in
|
|
high-income countries. However, many ethical issues should be considered
|
|
with respect to working with uninsured and low-income participants in
|
|
clinical research, including enrollment and retention, ancillary care,
|
|
and post-trial responsibilities. Attention to the uninsured and
|
|
low-income is particularly salient in the United States due to the high
|
|
rates of uninsurance and underinsurance. Thus, we conducted a scoping
|
|
review on the ethical considerations of biomedical clinical research
|
|
with uninsured and low-income participants in high-income countries in
|
|
order to describe what is known and to pinpoint areas of needed research
|
|
on this issue.
|
|
Methods MEDLINE/PubMed, Embase, and Scopus databases were searched using
|
|
terms that described main concepts of interest (e.g., uninsured,
|
|
underinsured, access to healthcare, poverty, ethics, compensation,
|
|
clinical research). Articles were included if they met four inclusion
|
|
criteria: (1) English, (2) high-income countries context, (3) about
|
|
research participants who are uninsured or low-income, which limits
|
|
their access to healthcare, and in biomedical clinical research that
|
|
either had a prospect of direct medical benefit or was offered to them
|
|
on the basis of their ill health, and (4) recognizes and/or addresses
|
|
challenges or ethical considerations of uninsured or low-income
|
|
participants in biomedical clinical research.
|
|
Results The searches generated a total of 974 results. Ultimately, 23
|
|
papers were included in the scoping review. Of 23 articles, the majority
|
|
(n = 19) discussed enrollment and retention of uninsured or low-income
|
|
participants. Several barriers to enrolling uninsured and low-income
|
|
groups were identified, including limited access to primary or
|
|
preventive care; lack of access to institutions conducting trials or
|
|
physicians with enough time or knowledge about trials; overall lack of
|
|
trust in the government, research, or medical system; and logistical
|
|
issues. Considerably fewer articles discussed treatment of these
|
|
participants during the course of research (n = 5) or post-trial
|
|
responsibilities owed to them (n = 4). Thus, we propose a research
|
|
agenda that builds upon the existing literature by addressing three
|
|
broad questions: (1) What is the current status of uninsured research
|
|
participants in biomedical clinical research in high-income countries?
|
|
(2) How should uninsured research participants be treated during and
|
|
after clinical research? (3) How, if at all, should additional
|
|
protections for uninsured research participants affect their enrollment?
|
|
Conclusions This review reveals significant gaps in both data and
|
|
thoughtful analysis on how to ethically involve uninsured research
|
|
participants. To address these gaps, we propose a research agenda to
|
|
gather needed data and theoretical analysis that addresses three broad
|
|
research questions.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cho, HL (Corresponding Author), NIH, Dept Bioeth, Ctr Clin, 10 Ctr Dr,MSC 1156,Bldg 10,Room 1C118, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.
|
|
Cho, Hae Lin; Danis, Marion; Grady, Christine, NIH, Dept Bioeth, Ctr Clin, 10 Ctr Dr,MSC 1156,Bldg 10,Room 1C118, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1740774518792277},
|
|
ISSN = {1740-7745},
|
|
EISSN = {1740-7753},
|
|
Keywords = {Ethic; clinical research; insurance; income; socioeconomic status;
|
|
enrollment; post-trial; ancillary care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CANCER CLINICAL-TRIALS; LOW-INCOME; MINORITY PARTICIPATION;
|
|
RACIAL/ETHNIC MINORITY; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; INFORMED-CONSENT;
|
|
AFRICAN-AMERICAN; INSURANCE STATUS; BREAST-CANCER; UNITED-STATES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental},
|
|
Author-Email = {hae.cho@nih.gov},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000444401500009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000265969800003,
|
|
Author = {Schwarz, Peter},
|
|
Title = {Why are countries reluctant to exchange information on interest income?
|
|
Participation in and effectiveness of the EU Savings Tax Directive},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF LAW AND ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {29},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {97-105},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Since 1.7.2005 the EU Savings Tax Directive has ensured a minimum of
|
|
taxation on foreign interest income by offering participating countries
|
|
the opportunity either to apply a withholding tax or to exchange
|
|
information on cross-border interest income. The aim of the paper is to
|
|
examine why countries do not exchange information on interest income.
|
|
The results suggest that the incentive to exchange information is
|
|
weakened if the financial sector in a country is very profitable. A high
|
|
profitability of the financial sector enables countries to maximize
|
|
revenues from the corporation tax. A second reason for discouraging
|
|
information exchange is related to the spillover effects on the domestic
|
|
labor market. An inflow of financial capital is indirectly associated
|
|
with the creation of employment and well-paid jobs. In its current form
|
|
the savings tax directive enables individuals to avoid taxation, either
|
|
by placing their income in non-participating countries or by investing
|
|
in assets which are not part of the directive. Using German revenue data
|
|
for 2005 and 2006 the paper shows that Germany receives significantly
|
|
less revenue from countries applying a withholding tax. This result
|
|
indirectly indicates that investors can take advantage of the
|
|
directive's loopholes. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Schwarz, P (Corresponding Author), Sachverstandigenrat, Drosselweg 36, D-76829 Landau, Rhineland Palat, Germany.
|
|
Sachverstandigenrat, D-76829 Landau, Rhineland Palat, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.irle.2008.12.001},
|
|
ISSN = {0144-8188},
|
|
Keywords = {European Union; Interest taxation; Information exchange; Withholding
|
|
tax; Tax havens},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TAXATION; COMPETITION; FIRMS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Law},
|
|
Author-Email = {schwarz10de@yahoo.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Vyacheslav, Gromyko/I-5054-2012},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000265969800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000361599100009,
|
|
Author = {Abraido-Lanza, Ana F. and Martins, Mariana Cunha and Shelton, Rachel C.
|
|
and Florez, Karen R.},
|
|
Title = {Breast Cancer Screening Among Dominican Latinas: A Closer Look at
|
|
Fatalism and Other Social and Cultural Factors},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH EDUCATION \& BEHAVIOR},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {633-641},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {With the marked increase of the Latino population in the United States
|
|
during the past 20 years, there has been growing interest in the social,
|
|
cultural, and structural factors that may impede breast cancer screening
|
|
among Latino women, especially among those subgroups that have been
|
|
understudied. Acculturation and fatalism are central cultural constructs
|
|
in these growing fields of research. However, there is great debate on
|
|
the extent to which acculturation and fatalism affect breast cancer
|
|
screening among Latinas relative to other social or structural factors
|
|
or logistical barriers. Moreover, little theoretical work specifies or
|
|
tests pathways between social, structural, and cultural determinants of
|
|
screening. This study tests a theoretical model of social and structural
|
|
(socioeconomic status and access to health care) and cultural factors
|
|
(acculturation and fatalism) as correlates of mammography screening
|
|
among Dominican Latinas, a group that has been understudied. The study
|
|
expands prior work by examining other factors identified as potential
|
|
impediments to mammography screening, specifically psychosocial (e.g.,
|
|
embarrassment, pain) and logistical (e.g., not knowing how to get a
|
|
mammogram, cost) barriers. Interview-administered surveys were conducted
|
|
with 318 Latinas from the Dominican Republic aged 40 years or older.
|
|
Fatalistic beliefs were not associated with mammogram screening. Greater
|
|
acculturation assessed as language use was associated with decreased
|
|
screening. The strongest predictor of decreased screening was perceived
|
|
barriers. Results highlight the importance of assessing various
|
|
self-reported psychosocial and logistical barriers to screening.
|
|
Possible avenues for screening interventions include intensifying public
|
|
health campaigns and use of personalized messages to address barriers to
|
|
screening. Results add to a limited body of research on Dominicans, who
|
|
constitute the fifth largest Latino group in the United States.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Abraido-Lanza, AF (Corresponding Author), Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Sociomed Sci, 722 West 168 St,5th Floor, New York, NY 10032 USA.
|
|
Abraido-Lanza, Ana F.; Martins, Mariana Cunha; Shelton, Rachel C., Columbia Univ, New York, NY 10032 USA.
|
|
Florez, Karen R., RAND Corp, Santa Monica, CA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/1090198115580975},
|
|
ISSN = {1090-1981},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-6127},
|
|
Keywords = {acculturation; breast cancer screening; fatalism; Latinos; mammography},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEXICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN; LOW-INCOME MEXICAN; CERVICAL-CANCER; HISPANIC
|
|
WOMEN; AFRICAN-AMERICAN; UNITED-STATES; HEALTH; ACCULTURATION;
|
|
MAMMOGRAPHY; BEHAVIORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {aabraido@columbia.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Shelton, Rachel/W-3892-2019
|
|
Florez, Karen/AAG-4036-2021
|
|
Shelton, Rachel/Y-5633-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shelton, Rachel/0000-0001-6496-6339
|
|
Florez, Karen/0000-0002-5758-433X
|
|
Shelton, Rachel/0000-0001-6496-6339
|
|
Abraido-Lanza, Ana/0000-0002-0885-8613},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {26},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000361599100009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000445689000001,
|
|
Author = {Navarro-Rosenblatt, Deborah and Garmendia, Maria-Luisa},
|
|
Title = {Maternity Leave and Its Impact on Breastfeeding: A Review of the
|
|
Literature},
|
|
Journal = {BREASTFEEDING MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {589-597},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Breastfeeding is known to be the best source of nutrition
|
|
for infants. The World Health Organization recommends to exclusively
|
|
breastfeed up to the sixth month of life and to breastfeed with
|
|
complementary foods until the age of 2. It is reported that maternity
|
|
leave (ML) is one of the most important interventions for an extended
|
|
breastfeeding duration. The aim of this review is to synthesize the
|
|
available data worldwide on the association of ML and breastfeeding
|
|
duration. We also intend to provide an overview of whether this
|
|
association is differential by socioeconomic status. Materials and
|
|
Methods: Relevant primary studies relating ML and breastfeeding were
|
|
included by searching several databases, including PubMed, SCielo,
|
|
Health Systems Evidence, Health Evidence, Cochrane Reviews, and
|
|
Epistemonikos. Articles were included up to May 2018. Results: A total
|
|
of 239 relevant articles were identified, of them 21 were included in
|
|
the review based on exposure, outcome, and study design. These studies
|
|
reported that an extended ML might be related to breastfeeding duration.
|
|
In addition, studies reporting data on work type, race, and education
|
|
showed that black women, women in less privileged position, and women
|
|
with less education have less breastfeeding duration. Conclusions: This
|
|
review showed a positive relationship between ML length and
|
|
breastfeeding duration. These results have a homogeneous trend; however,
|
|
this was different when studies reported results on ML and breastfeeding
|
|
stratified by socioeconomic status. Public health policies should ensure
|
|
that all women, especially the most vulnerable, have equal access to the
|
|
benefits that ML provides.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Garmendia, ML (Corresponding Author), Univ Chile, Inst Nutr \& Food Technol, El Libano 5524, Santiago 7830490, Chile.
|
|
Navarro-Rosenblatt, Deborah, Univ Chile, Sch Publ Hlth, Fac Med, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Garmendia, Maria-Luisa, Univ Chile, Inst Nutr \& Food Technol, El Libano 5524, Santiago 7830490, Chile.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1089/bfm.2018.0132},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2018},
|
|
ISSN = {1556-8253},
|
|
EISSN = {1556-8342},
|
|
Keywords = {breastfeeding; maternity leave; socioeconomic status; literature review},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK; DURATION; HEALTH; RETURN; PREDICTORS; EMPLOYMENT; BARRIERS;
|
|
MOTHERS; LENGTH; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {mgarmendia@inta.uchile.cl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Navarro Rosenblatt, Deborah/GPX-9048-2022
|
|
Garmendia, Maria Luisa/H-7417-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Garmendia, Maria Luisa/0000-0002-0589-6091
|
|
Navarro-Rosenblatt, Deborah/0000-0001-6752-1327},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {41},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000445689000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000771542600001,
|
|
Author = {Cohen, Mathilde and Botz, Corinne},
|
|
Title = {Lactation in quarantine: The (in)visibility of human milk feeding during
|
|
the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL BREASTFEEDING JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAR 21},
|
|
Abstract = {Background In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, billions of people were
|
|
asked by their state and local governments not to go to work and not
|
|
leave the house unless they had to. The goal of this qualitative study
|
|
was to collect the lived experiences of a small group of parents and
|
|
lactation professionals in the United States about what it was like to
|
|
feed babies human milk under these conditions of quarantine. Methods
|
|
This project is a social constructionist analysis of lactation
|
|
narratives of 24 parents feeding their children human milk and 13
|
|
lactation professionals. They were interviewed remotely in 2020-21 via
|
|
videoconferencing about their experiences and perspectives on the
|
|
pandemic's effect on lactation. Additionally, photographs of 16 of the
|
|
parents are provided to visualize their practices and how they chose to
|
|
represent them. Results Four interrelated themes were identified in
|
|
participants' narratives about how they experienced and made sense of
|
|
human milk feeding during the pandemic: the loneliness of lactation
|
|
during the pandemic, the construction of human milk as a resource to
|
|
cope with the crisis, the (in)visibility of lactation amidst heightened
|
|
multitasking, and the sense of connection created by human milk feeding
|
|
at a time of unprecedented solitude. Conclusions While the pandemic may
|
|
have had both positive and negative effects on lactation, it exposed
|
|
continuing inequities in infant feeding, generating new forms of
|
|
(in)visibility for lactating labor. Going forward, one lesson for policy
|
|
and lawmakers may be that to adequately support lactation, they should
|
|
take cues from the families who had positive experiences during the
|
|
crisis. This would call for systemically overhauling of US laws and
|
|
policies by guaranteeing: universal basic income, paid parental leave
|
|
for at least six months, paid lactation leaves and breaks, affordable
|
|
housing, universal health care, subsidized childcare programs, and equal
|
|
access to high-quality, non-discriminatory, and culturally appropriate
|
|
medical care-including lactation counseling-, among other initiatives.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cohen, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Connecticut, Sch Law, Hartford, CT 06105 USA.
|
|
Cohen, Mathilde, Univ Connecticut, Sch Law, Hartford, CT 06105 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13006-022-00451-2},
|
|
Article-Number = {22},
|
|
ISSN = {1746-4358},
|
|
Keywords = {Breastfeeding; Lactation; Pandemic; COVID-19; Gender inequality;
|
|
Parenting; Human milk feeding; Milk sharing; Donor human milk},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {mathilde.cohen@uconn.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cohen, Mathilde/0000-0002-8882-1211},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {72},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000771542600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000596927600001,
|
|
Author = {Kleinman, Mary B. and Doran, Kelly and Felton, Julia W. and Satinsky,
|
|
Emily N. and Dean, Dwayne and Bradley, Valerie and Magidson, Jessica F.},
|
|
Title = {Implementing a peer recovery coach model to reach low-income, minority
|
|
individuals not engaged in substance use treatment},
|
|
Journal = {SUBSTANCE ABUSE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {726-734},
|
|
Month = {OCT 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Low-income, racial/ethnic minority individuals face
|
|
significant barriers in access to substance use (SU) treatment. Peer
|
|
recovery coaches (PRCs), individuals with lived experience with
|
|
substance use disorder (SUD), may be uniquely well suited to assist
|
|
those encountering barriers to treatment. PRCs can also help reach those
|
|
not engaged in treatment to promote harm reduction and support
|
|
linkage-to-care when embedded in community rather than clinical
|
|
settings. This study evaluated a community-based program in which a PRC
|
|
facilitated linkage to and supported retention in SU treatment. Methods:
|
|
Guided by the RE-AIM framework, we evaluated implementation of the
|
|
intervention in a community resource center (CRC) serving homeless and
|
|
low-income residents of Baltimore City. We examined the reach,
|
|
effectiveness, adoption, and implementation of this PRC model. Results:
|
|
Of 199 clients approached by or referred to the PRC, 39 were interested
|
|
in addressing their SU. Of those interested in addressing SU, the PRC
|
|
linked 64.1\% (n = 25) to treatment and was able to follow up with
|
|
59.0\% (n = 23) at prespecified time points after linkage (24-48 hours,
|
|
2 weeks, and 1 month). Fifty-two percent (n = 13) of clients linked to
|
|
SU treatment remained in treatment at 30 days post-linkage. Of clients
|
|
who did not remain in treatment, 77\% (n = 10) continued contact with
|
|
the PRC. Conclusions: Results indicate the utility of the CRC's approach
|
|
in linking people to treatment for SU and addressing barriers to care
|
|
through work with a PRC. Findings also highlight important barriers and
|
|
facilitators to implementation of this model, including the need for
|
|
adaptation based on individual goals and fluctuations in readiness for
|
|
treatment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kleinman, MB (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Dept Psychol, 4049 Campus Dr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Kleinman, Mary B.; Satinsky, Emily N.; Bradley, Valerie; Magidson, Jessica F., Univ Maryland, Dept Psychol, 4049 Campus Dr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Doran, Kelly; Dean, Dwayne, Univ Maryland, Sch Nursing, Family \& Community Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA.
|
|
Felton, Julia W., Michigan State Univ, Dept Publ Hlth, Flint, MI USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/08897077.2020.1846663},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0889-7077},
|
|
EISSN = {1547-0164},
|
|
Keywords = {Peer recovery coach; substance-related disorders; implementation
|
|
science; linkage-to-care; vulnerable populations},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Substance Abuse},
|
|
Author-Email = {mkleinm@umd.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bradley, Valerie/AAB-7705-2021
|
|
Satinsky, Emily N./AAD-3114-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bradley, Valerie/0000-0001-6565-8493
|
|
Satinsky, Emily N./0000-0003-0666-6009},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000596927600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000323451700001,
|
|
Author = {Wang, Jinwen and Su, Jianglian and Zuo, Huijuan and Jia, Mingyan and
|
|
Zeng, Zhechun},
|
|
Title = {What interventions do rural doctors think will increase recruitment in
|
|
rural areas: a survey of 2778 health workers in Beijing},
|
|
Journal = {HUMAN RESOURCES FOR HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Month = {AUG 21},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: A shortage of health professionals in rural areas is a major
|
|
problem facing China, as more than 60\% of the population lives in such
|
|
areas. Strategies have been developed by the government to improve the
|
|
recruitment of rural doctors. However, the inequitable distribution of
|
|
doctors working in China has not improved significantly. The objective
|
|
of this study was to explore the reasons for the poor recruitment and to
|
|
propose possible strategies to improve the situation.
|
|
Methods: Between September 2009 and November 2009 data were collected
|
|
from 2778 rural doctors in Beijing, China. A quantitative survey was
|
|
used to explore health workers' perceptions as to what factors would
|
|
have the greatest impact on recruitment and whether access to training
|
|
had been effective in increasing their confidence, enhancing their
|
|
interest in practicing medicine and increasing their commitment to
|
|
recruitment.
|
|
Results: Rural doctors were generally older than average in China. Of
|
|
the 2778 participants, only 7.23\% had obtained a license as a qualified
|
|
doctor. For 53\% of the rural doctors, the job was part-time work. The
|
|
survey showed that rural doctors considered the training strategy to be
|
|
inadequate. In general, the initiatives identified by rural doctors as
|
|
being of most value in the recruitment of doctors were those targeting
|
|
retirement pension and income.
|
|
Conclusions: From the perspective of rural doctors, specific initiatives
|
|
that promised a secure retirement pension and an increased income were
|
|
considered most likely to assist in the recruitment of rural doctors in
|
|
Beijing.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zeng, ZC (Corresponding Author), Capital Med Univ Beijing, Anzhen Hosp, Beijing Inst Heart Lung \& Blood Vessel Dis, 2 Rd Anzhen, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Wang, Jinwen; Su, Jianglian; Zuo, Huijuan; Zeng, Zhechun, Capital Med Univ Beijing, Anzhen Hosp, Beijing Inst Heart Lung \& Blood Vessel Dis, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Jia, Mingyan, Beijing Assoc Med Educ, Beijing, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1478-4491-11-40},
|
|
Article-Number = {40},
|
|
EISSN = {1478-4491},
|
|
Keywords = {Rural doctor; Recruitment; Human resources},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHINA; CARE; INEQUALITY; RETENTION; SERVICE; REFORM; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {rqfz.yjs@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {29},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000323451700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000312934300003,
|
|
Author = {McCaw-Binns, Affette and Hussein, Julia},
|
|
Editor = {Hussein, J and McCawBinns, A and Webber, R},
|
|
Title = {The Millennium Development Goals},
|
|
Booktitle = {MATERNAL AND PERINATAL HEALTH IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Pages = {10-24},
|
|
Abstract = {The MDGs are a contract between the developed and the developing world
|
|
to improve the quality of life in developing countries, laying out the
|
|
responsibilities of both groups of countries in working towards
|
|
achieving these goals.
|
|
Developed countries are expected to provide 0.7\% of GNP in official
|
|
development assistance to finance development programmes. Developing
|
|
countries should provide an appropriate policy environment, while
|
|
increasing their investment in these activities.
|
|
Three of the eight goals are health related and aim to achieve between
|
|
1990 and 2015: a two-thirds reduction in child deaths (MDG 4); a
|
|
three-quarters decline in maternal deaths (MDG 5); and reversal of the
|
|
HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis epidemics (MDG 6).
|
|
Doubling the proportion of girls with a secondary education from 19\% to
|
|
38\% could reduce fertility from 5.3 to 3.9 children per woman and lower
|
|
infant mortality from 81 to 38 deaths per 1000 births.
|
|
Other MDGs focus on public health (safe water, sanitation, environmental
|
|
protection), alleviation of poverty and hunger, and the determinants of
|
|
development (education, gender equity, fair trade, debt management).
|
|
Income inequity exacerbates inequalities between the rich and the poor.
|
|
Globally, only 36\% of poor women have access to skilled care at birth
|
|
compared to 85\% among the wealthiest.
|
|
In Africa and South-east Asia, the regions with highest maternal and
|
|
child death rates, universal access to community, primary level and
|
|
preventive interventions for newborns and mothers could reduce morbidity
|
|
and mortality by half. Achieving the MDGs for maternal and child health
|
|
would require universal access to clinical services as well.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McCaw-Binns, A (Corresponding Author), Univ W Indies, Kingston 7, Jamaica.
|
|
McCaw-Binns, Affette, Univ W Indies, Kingston 7, Jamaica.
|
|
Hussein, Julia, Univ Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB9 1FX, Scotland.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-1-84593-745-4},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOLID-FUEL USE; MATERNAL MORTALITY; COST-EFFECTIVENESS; LOW-INCOME;
|
|
HEALTH; SURVIVAL; BIRTH; STRATEGIES; COUNTRIES; SETTINGS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {affette.mccawbinns@uwimona.edu.jm
|
|
j.hussein@abdn.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000312934300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000382344800011,
|
|
Author = {Chen, Na and Akar, Gulsah},
|
|
Title = {Effects of neighborhood types \& socio-demographics on activity space},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {54},
|
|
Pages = {112-121},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper examines the relationships between socio-demographic
|
|
characteristics, travel time, the built environment and resulting
|
|
average activity spaces for all activities and non-work activities
|
|
separately using data from the 2012 Northeast Ohio Regional Travel
|
|
Survey. Multiple regression models are developed to analyze these
|
|
relationships at individual level. First K-means cluster analysis is
|
|
conducted to create seven neighborhood types based on five built
|
|
environment variables. These new neighborhood types are used as discrete
|
|
explanatory variables to explain average activity spaces, while
|
|
controlling for travel time, individual and household features, access
|
|
to transit facilities and the job-population balance. The modeling
|
|
results indicate that residential location characteristics have
|
|
significant influences on activity spaces. People living in places away
|
|
from suburban and rural areas and with a high mix of population and
|
|
employment tend to have smaller activity spaces. Moreover, this study
|
|
finds out that while the effects of some explanatory variables (such as
|
|
age and gender) vary for all activities and non-work activities,
|
|
socially disadvantaged people (such as the elderly and low income
|
|
households) generally experience smaller activity spaces. (C) 2016
|
|
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Akar, G (Corresponding Author), Ohio State Univ, Knowlton Sch Architecture, City \& Reg Planning, 275 West Woodruff Ave, Columbus, OH 43210 USA.
|
|
Chen, Na; Akar, Gulsah, Ohio State Univ, Knowlton Sch Architecture, City \& Reg Planning, 275 West Woodruff Ave, Columbus, OH 43210 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2016.05.017},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-6923},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-1236},
|
|
Keywords = {Activity space; Non-work activity space; Neighborhood types; Cluster
|
|
analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRAVEL BEHAVIOR; BUILT ENVIRONMENT; LAND-USE; DENSITY; PARTICIPATION;
|
|
ACCESSIBILITY; POLICY; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Geography; Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {chen.2572@osu.edu
|
|
akar.3@osu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Akar, Gulsah/HHS-7244-2022
|
|
Akar, Gulsah/B-3716-2012},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Akar, Gulsah/0000-0003-4764-0913},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {26},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {38},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000382344800011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000710096900001,
|
|
Author = {Phyo, Aung Zaw Zaw and Gonzalez-Chica, David A. and Stocks, Nigel P. and
|
|
Woods, Robyn L. and Fisher, Jane and Tran, Thach and Owen, Alice J. and
|
|
Ward, Stephanie A. and Britt, Carlene J. and Ryan, Joanne and
|
|
Freak-Poli, Rosanne and ASPREE Study Grp},
|
|
Title = {Impact of economic factors, social health and stressful life events on
|
|
physical health-related quality of life trajectories in older
|
|
Australians},
|
|
Journal = {QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1321-1333},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose Physical health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is associated
|
|
with adverse health outcomes, including hospitalizations and all-cause
|
|
mortality. However, little is known about how physical HRQoL changes
|
|
over time in older people and the predictors of this trajectory. This
|
|
study (a) identified trajectories of physical HRQoL among older people
|
|
and (b) explored whether economic factors, social health or stressful
|
|
life events impact physical HRQoL trajectories. Method A cohort of
|
|
12,506 relatively `healthy' community-dwelling Australians aged >= 70
|
|
years (54.4\% females), enrolled in the ASPREE Longitudinal Study of
|
|
Older Persons (ALSOP) study and was followed for six years. Economic
|
|
factors, social health and life events in the last 12 months were
|
|
assessed through a questionnaire at baseline. Physical HRQoL was
|
|
measured by using the 12-item short form at baseline and annual
|
|
follow-ups. Growth mixture and structural equation modelling were used
|
|
to identify physical HRQoL trajectories and their predictors. Results
|
|
Four physical HRQoL trajectories were identified-stable low (7.1\%),
|
|
declining (9.0\%), stable intermediate (17.9\%) and stable high
|
|
(66.0\%). Living in more disadvantaged areas, having a lower household
|
|
income, no paid work, no voluntary work, loneliness and stressful life
|
|
events (i.e. spousal illness, friend/family illness, financial problem)
|
|
were associated with a 10\%-152\% higher likelihood of being in the
|
|
stable low or declining physical HRQoL trajectory than the stable high
|
|
group. Conclusion Specific stressful life events had a greater impact on
|
|
adverse physical HRQoL trajectories in older people than other factors.
|
|
Volunteering may prevent physical HRQoL decline and requires further
|
|
investigation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Freak-Poli, R (Corresponding Author), Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, Dept Epidemiol \& Prevent Med, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Freak-Poli, R (Corresponding Author), Erasmus MC, Dept Epidemiol, NL-3015 GD Rotterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Phyo, Aung Zaw Zaw; Woods, Robyn L.; Fisher, Jane; Tran, Thach; Owen, Alice J.; Ward, Stephanie A.; Britt, Carlene J.; Ryan, Joanne; Freak-Poli, Rosanne, Monash Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, Dept Epidemiol \& Prevent Med, 553 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Gonzalez-Chica, David A.; Stocks, Nigel P., Univ Adelaide, Adelaide Med Sch, Discipline Gen Practice, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Gonzalez-Chica, David A., Univ Adelaide, Adelaide Rural Clin Sch, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Ward, Stephanie A., Univ New South Wales, Ctr Hlth Brain Ageing, Sch Psychiat, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
|
|
Freak-Poli, Rosanne, Erasmus MC, Dept Epidemiol, NL-3015 GD Rotterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11136-021-03021-x},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0962-9343},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-2649},
|
|
Keywords = {Physical health-related quality of life; Economic factors; Social
|
|
health; Stressful life events; Trajectories; Older people},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LONELINESS; PARTICIPATION; ADULTS; SATISFACTION; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services; Public,
|
|
Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {Rosanne.Freak-Poli@monash.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Phyo, Aung Zaw Zaw/AAG-9815-2021
|
|
Ryan, Joanne/AAB-8324-2019
|
|
Tran, Thach Duc/H-7734-2014
|
|
Stocks, Nigel P/I-1083-2012
|
|
Tran, Tuan/HMD-9799-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Phyo, Aung Zaw Zaw/0000-0002-8834-4072
|
|
Ryan, Joanne/0000-0002-7039-6325
|
|
Tran, Thach Duc/0000-0002-4686-8601
|
|
Volpi, Elena/0000-0001-8776-0384},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000710096900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000438385300014,
|
|
Author = {Morrison, Joanna and Dulal, Sophiya and Harris-Fry, Helen and Basnet,
|
|
Machhindra and Sharma, Neha and Shrestha, Bhim and Manandhar, Dharma and
|
|
Costello, Anthony and Osrin, David and Saville, Naomi},
|
|
Title = {Formative qualitative research to develop community-based interventions
|
|
addressing low birth weight in the plains of Nepal},
|
|
Journal = {PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {377-384},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To explore the factors affecting intra-household food
|
|
allocation practices to inform the development of interventions to
|
|
prevent low birth weight in rural plains of Nepal.
|
|
Design: Qualitative methodology using purposive sampling to explore the
|
|
barriers and facilitating factors to improved maternal nutrition.
|
|
Setting: Rural Dhanusha District, Nepal.
|
|
Subjects: We purposively sampled twenty-five young daughters-in-law from
|
|
marginalised groups living in extended families and conducted
|
|
semi-structured interviews with them. We also conducted one focus group
|
|
discussion with men and one with female community health volunteers who
|
|
were mothers-in-law.
|
|
Results: Gender and age hierarchies were important in household decision
|
|
making. The mother-in-law was responsible for ensuring that a meal was
|
|
provided to productive household members. The youngest daughter-in-law
|
|
usually cooked last and ate less than other family members, and showed
|
|
respect for other family members by cooking only when permitted and
|
|
deferring to others' choice of food. There were limited opportunities
|
|
for these women to snack between main meals. Daughters-in-law' movement
|
|
outside the household was restricted and therefore family members
|
|
perceived that their nutritional need was less. Poverty affected food
|
|
choice and families considered cost before nutritional value.
|
|
Conclusions: It is important to work with the whole household,
|
|
particularly mothers-in-law, to improve maternal nutrition. We present
|
|
five barriers to behaviour change: poverty; lack of knowledge about
|
|
cheap nutritional food, the value of snacking, and cheap nutritional
|
|
food that does not require cooking; sharing food; lack of
|
|
self-confidence: and deference to household guardians. We discuss how we
|
|
have targeted our interventions to develop knowledge, discuss strategics
|
|
to overcome barriers, engage mothers-in-law, and build the confidence
|
|
and social support networks of pregnant women.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Morrison, J (Corresponding Author), UCL, Inst Global Hlth, 30 Guilford St, London WC1N 1EH, England.
|
|
Morrison, Joanna; Harris-Fry, Helen; Costello, Anthony; Osrin, David; Saville, Naomi, UCL, Inst Global Hlth, 30 Guilford St, London WC1N 1EH, England.
|
|
Dulal, Sophiya; Basnet, Machhindra; Sharma, Neha; Shrestha, Bhim; Manandhar, Dharma, MIRA, Thapathali, Kathmandu, Nepal.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/S1368980017002646},
|
|
ISSN = {1368-9800},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-2727},
|
|
Keywords = {Nutrition; Gender; Neonatal health; Qualitative; Intra-household food
|
|
allocation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; FOOD; STRATEGIES; ALLOCATION; AUTONOMY; MALARIA; GROWTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Nutrition \& Dietetics},
|
|
Author-Email = {joanna.morrison@ucl.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Osrin, David/C-5932-2008
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dulal, Sophiya/0000-0002-2244-613X
|
|
Harris-Fry, Helen/0000-0003-2367-908X
|
|
Morrison, Joanna/0000-0002-9241-8863},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000438385300014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000451055600001,
|
|
Author = {McCabe, Marita P. and Beattie, Elizabeth and Karantzas, Gery and Mellor,
|
|
David and Sanders, Kerrie and Busija, Lucy and Goodenough, Belinda and
|
|
Bennett, Michelle and von Treuer, Kathryn and Byers, Jessica},
|
|
Title = {A randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of a staff
|
|
training program to implement consumer directed care on resident quality
|
|
of life in residential aged care},
|
|
Journal = {BMC GERIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Month = {NOV 23},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundResidential Aged Care Facilities (RACFs) are moving towards a
|
|
Consumer Directed Care (CDC) model of care. There are limited examples
|
|
of CDC in ageing research, and no evaluation of a comprehensive CDC
|
|
intervention in residential care was located. This study will implement
|
|
and evaluate a staff training program, Resident at the Center of Care
|
|
(RCC), designed to facilitate and drive CDC in residential
|
|
care.MethodsThe study will adopt a cluster randomized controlled design
|
|
with 39 facilities randomly allocated to one of three conditions:
|
|
delivery of the RCC program plus additional organizational support,
|
|
delivery of the program without additional support, and care as usual. A
|
|
total of 834 staff (22 in each facility, half senior, half general
|
|
staff) as well as 744 residents (20 in each facility) will be recruited
|
|
to participate in the study. The RCC program comprises five sessions
|
|
spread over nine weeks: Session 1 clarifies CDC principles; Sessions 2
|
|
to 5 focus on skills to build and maintain working relationships with
|
|
residents, as well as identifying organizational barriers and
|
|
facilitators regarding the implementation of CDC. The primary outcome
|
|
measure is resident quality of life. Secondary outcome measures are
|
|
resident measures of choice and control, the working relationship
|
|
between resident and staff; staff reports of transformational
|
|
leadership, job satisfaction, intention to quit, experience of CDC, work
|
|
role stress, organizational climate, and organizational readiness for
|
|
change. All measures will be completed at four time points:
|
|
pre-intervention, 3-months, 6-months, and 12-month follow-up. Primary
|
|
analyses will be conducted on an intention to treat basis. Outcomes for
|
|
the three conditions will be compared with multilevel linear regression
|
|
modelling.DiscussionThe RCC program is designed to improve the knowledge
|
|
and skills of staff and encourage transformational leadership and
|
|
organizational change that supports implementation of CDC. The
|
|
overarching goal is to improve the quality of life and care of older
|
|
people living in residential care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McCabe, MP (Corresponding Author), Swinburne Univ Technol, Sch Hlth Sci, H95 POB 218, Hawthorn, Vic 3122, Australia.
|
|
McCabe, Marita P.; Byers, Jessica, Swinburne Univ Technol, Sch Hlth Sci, H95 POB 218, Hawthorn, Vic 3122, Australia.
|
|
Beattie, Elizabeth, Queensland Univ Technol, Dementia Ctr Res Collaborat, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Karantzas, Gery; Mellor, David, Deakin Univ, Sch Psychol, Geelong, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Sanders, Kerrie, Univ Melbourne, Dept Med, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Sanders, Kerrie, Sunshine Hosp, Western Hlth, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Busija, Lucy, Monash Univ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Goodenough, Belinda, Univ Wollongong, Dementia Training Australia, Melbourne, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Bennett, Michelle, Australian Catholic Univ, Sch Allied Hlth, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
von Treuer, Kathryn, Cairnmillar Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12877-018-0966-1},
|
|
Article-Number = {287},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2318},
|
|
Keywords = {Consumer directed care; Staff training; Resident quality of life;
|
|
Residential aged care; Resident choice and control},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ORGANIZATIONAL-CHANGE; DEMENTIA; SATISFACTION; PERSPECTIVES; SERVICES;
|
|
SCALE; HOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geriatrics \& Gerontology; Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {mmccabe@swin.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Busija, Lucy/Y-6064-2019
|
|
Larkin, Natasha A/O-1834-2016
|
|
von Treuer, Kathryn/HOC-4941-2023
|
|
David, Maribel/E-2812-2012
|
|
Sanders, Kerrie/E-9033-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Busija, Lucy/0000-0001-7464-9089
|
|
Karantzas, Gery/0000-0002-1503-2991
|
|
Sanders, Kerrie/0000-0002-2718-6592
|
|
Goodenough, Belinda/0000-0003-0347-7915
|
|
McCabe, Marita/0000-0002-4989-8582
|
|
Byers, Jessica/0000-0002-6812-5796},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000451055600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000258211500001,
|
|
Author = {Baumann, Michele and Spitz, Elisabeth and Guillemin, Francis and Ravaud,
|
|
Jean-Francois and Choquet, Marie and Falissard, Bruno and Chau,
|
|
Nearkasen and Lorhandicap Group},
|
|
Title = {Associations of social and material deprivation with tobacco, alcohol,
|
|
and psychotropic drug use, and gender: a population-based study},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH GEOGRAPHICS},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Month = {NOV 9},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The aim was to assess the relationships between social and
|
|
material deprivation and the use of tobacco, excessive alcohol and
|
|
psychotropic drugs by both sexes and in various age groups. Greater
|
|
knowledge concerning these issues may help public health policy-makers
|
|
design more effective means of preventing substance abuse.
|
|
Methods: The sample comprised 6,216 people aged >= 15 years randomly
|
|
selected from the population in northeastern France. Subjects completed
|
|
a post-mailed questionnaire covering socio-demographic characteristics,
|
|
occupation, employment, income, smoking habit, alcohol abuse and
|
|
``psychotropic{''} drug intake (for headache, tiredness, nervousness,
|
|
anxiety, insomnia). A deprivation score (D) was defined by the
|
|
cumulative number of: low educational level, manual worker, unemployed,
|
|
living alone, nationality other than western European, low income, and
|
|
non-home-ownership. Data were analysed using adjusted odds ratios (ORa)
|
|
computed with logistic models.
|
|
Results: Deprivation was common: 37.4\% of respondents fell into
|
|
category D = 1, 21.2\% into D = 2, and 10.0\% into D >= 3. More men than
|
|
women reported tobacco use (30.2\% vs. 21.9\%) and alcohol abuse (12.5\%
|
|
vs. 3.3\%), whereas psychotropic drug use was more common among women
|
|
(23.8\% vs. 41.0\%). Increasing levels of deprivation were associated
|
|
with a greater likelihood of tobacco use (ORa vs. D = 0: 1.16 in D = 1,
|
|
1.49 in D = 2, and 1.93 in D >= 3), alcohol abuse (1.19 in D = 1, 1.32
|
|
in D = 2, and 1.80 in D >= 3) and frequent psychotropic drug intake
|
|
(1.26 in D = 1, 1.51 in D = 2, and 1.91 in D >= 3). These patterns were
|
|
observed in working/other non-retired men and women (except for alcohol
|
|
abuse in women). Among retired people, deprivation was associated with
|
|
tobacco and psychotropic drug use only in men.
|
|
Conclusion: Preventive measures should be designed to improve work
|
|
conditions, reduce deprivation, and help deprived populations to be more
|
|
aware of risk and to find remedial measures.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chau, N (Corresponding Author), INSERM, U669, Paris, France.
|
|
Choquet, Marie; Falissard, Bruno; Chau, Nearkasen, INSERM, U669, Paris, France.
|
|
Baumann, Michele, Univ Luxembourg, Fac LSHASE, INtegrat Res Unit Social \& Individual DEv INSIDE, Luxembourg, Luxembourg.
|
|
Spitz, Elisabeth, Univ Metz, Dept Psychol, Metz, France.
|
|
Guillemin, Francis, Univ Nancy 1, Ecole Sante Publ, EA 4003, Vandoeuvre Les Nancy, France.
|
|
Ravaud, Jean-Francois, IFR25 IFRH, CERMES, INSERM, U 750, Villejuif, France.
|
|
Choquet, Marie; Falissard, Bruno; Chau, Nearkasen, Univ Paris Sud, Paris, France.
|
|
Choquet, Marie; Falissard, Bruno; Chau, Nearkasen, Univ Paris 05, UMR S0669, Paris, France.
|
|
Falissard, Bruno, AP HP, Villejuif, France.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1476-072X-6-50},
|
|
Article-Number = {50},
|
|
ISSN = {1476-072X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS; SOCIOECONOMIC INEQUALITIES; OCCUPATIONAL
|
|
INJURIES; CUMULATIVE ADVANTAGE; HEALTH; MORTALITY; ENVIRONMENT; FATIGUE;
|
|
AREA; PREVALENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {michele.baumann@uni.lu
|
|
elisa.spitz@wanadoo.fr
|
|
francis.guillemin@medecine.uhp-nancy.fr
|
|
ravaud@vjf.cnrs.fr
|
|
choquet@cochin.inserm.fr
|
|
falissard\_b@wanadoo.fr
|
|
Nearkasen.Chau@wanadoo.fr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {RAVAUD, Jean-François/F-7190-2013
|
|
Rouquette, Alexandra/ITV-3911-2023},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {RAVAUD, Jean-François/0000-0003-3959-4195
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {87},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000258211500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000440118700028,
|
|
Author = {Armiento, Mirko},
|
|
Title = {The Sustainable Welfare Index: Towards a Threshold Effect for Italy},
|
|
Journal = {ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {152},
|
|
Pages = {296-309},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {GDP, as a key parameter for macro-economic policy, has long been
|
|
criticized. One of the better known monetary alternatives to GDP is the
|
|
ISEW, a synthetic proxy of sustainable welfare. Theoretical and
|
|
methodological limitations of this indicator have been identified and
|
|
several refinements or extensions proposed, GPI for example. Building on
|
|
these approaches, this article presents a new composite flow-oriented
|
|
indicator directly comparable with GDP. The proposed Sustainable Welfare
|
|
Index (SWI) is calculated for the Italian case over the 1960-2014
|
|
period. The estimate of SWI over an extended period of fifty-four years,
|
|
provides evidence for a previously undetected ``threshold effect{''} in
|
|
Italy by means of a flow-oriented indicator - unlike GDP, SWI per capita
|
|
stops increasing in 1991. Empirical results show that the level of
|
|
sustainable welfare in Italy stops growing mainly because of a rise in
|
|
income inequality, a decline in non-paid domestic work and a worsening
|
|
of the net fixed capital formation and net international investment
|
|
position.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Armiento, M (Corresponding Author), Sapienza Univ Rome, Fac Econ, Via Castro Laurenziano 9, I-00161 Rome, Italy.
|
|
Armiento, Mirko, Sapienza Univ Rome, Fac Econ, Via Castro Laurenziano 9, I-00161 Rome, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ecolecon.2018.06.014},
|
|
ISSN = {0921-8009},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-6106},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC WELFARE; ISEW; GPI; FOUNDATIONS; INDICATORS; STATE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {mirko.armiento@uniroma1.it},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000440118700028},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000335885500098,
|
|
Author = {Vasile, Valentina},
|
|
Editor = {Luminita, C and Constantin, C and Valeriu, IF},
|
|
Title = {Labour mobility impact on sending countries. Romanian EU workers case
|
|
study},
|
|
Booktitle = {1ST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE `ECONOMIC SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH -
|
|
THEORETICAL, EMPIRICAL AND PRACTICAL APPROACHES', ESPERA 2013},
|
|
Series = {Procedia Economics and Finance},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Pages = {737-746},
|
|
Note = {1st International Conference on Economic Scientific Research -
|
|
Theoretical, Empirical and Practical Approaches (ESPERA), Bucharest,
|
|
ROMANIA, DEC 11-12, 2013},
|
|
Abstract = {Free movement of workers is one of the four freedoms of EU law and and
|
|
labour force relocation through temporary migration is a form of
|
|
efficient distribution of resources on the EU labour market. Although it
|
|
is estimated that the net effects labour mobility leads to win-win for
|
|
both countries involved, the higher demand for qualified workforce and
|
|
extending the average duration of temporary mobility increases win-win
|
|
imbalance to the detriment of the country of origin. In sending
|
|
countries, labour migration may lead to mitigation of the labour market
|
|
by reducing unemployment and wage growth, but may also emphasize
|
|
imbalances directly, or through spillover effects. As EU Romanians
|
|
mobile workers are over 2.25 million (2011, WB) and the trend of growth
|
|
continues, though more moderate in the crisis, the effects on the
|
|
Romanian economy grow and ``advantages of mobility{''} are significantly
|
|
lower. In this paper we have estimated the main effects of the free
|
|
movement of Romanian workers in the EU and identified appropriate policy
|
|
measures to manage outflows. We used labour force survey data and
|
|
estimates of BM and determined the impact on socio -economic variables
|
|
such as GDP, the level and structure of employment, on state budget
|
|
incomes, investment potential. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by
|
|
Elsevier B.V.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vasile, Valentina, Inst Natl Econ, Bucharest 050711, Romania.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S2212-5671(14)00152-X},
|
|
ISSN = {2212-5671},
|
|
Keywords = {EU workers; labour market; structural disequilibria; local development;
|
|
sending countries},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business, Finance; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {valentinavasile2009@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Vasile, Valentina/M-7795-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Vasile, Valentina/0000-0002-2368-1377},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {7},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000335885500098},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000506407500001,
|
|
Author = {Li, Li and Tsunekawa, Atsushi and MacLachlan, Ian and Li, Guicai and
|
|
Koike, Atsushi and Guo, Yuanyuan},
|
|
Title = {Conservation payments, off-farm employment and household welfare for
|
|
farmers participating in the ``Grain for Green{''} program in China
|
|
Empirical evidence from the Loess Plateau},
|
|
Journal = {CHINA AGRICULTURAL ECONOMIC REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {71-89},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the factors (including
|
|
conservation payments) that influence household decisions to participate
|
|
in off-farm work and estimate the impact of participation on household
|
|
welfare under the auspices of the Grain for Green (GfG) program.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach The authors used survey data from 225 farm
|
|
households on the Loess Plateau and addressed the possible sample
|
|
selection and endogeneity problems by employing a jointly estimated
|
|
endogenous switching regression (ESR) model. Findings The findings of
|
|
this paper are as follows: off-farm participation is positively related
|
|
to households' educational attainment and negatively related to their
|
|
land resource endowment and the presence of children; participation in
|
|
off-farm work exerts positive effects on household income and per capita
|
|
household income, but negative effects on farm productivity; and
|
|
conservation payments show no significant impact on off-farm
|
|
participation, no significant impact on any of the three household
|
|
welfare indicators for off-farm non-participant households, but a
|
|
significantly negative impact for off-farm participant households.
|
|
Originality/value This paper makes two contributions. First, the authors
|
|
address the selection bias and endogeneity problem of GfG participating
|
|
households by employing the ESR method and explicitly estimating the
|
|
treatment effects of off-farm participation on their household welfare.
|
|
Neglecting these problems leads to biased estimates and misleading
|
|
policy implications. Second, this analysis stresses the important role
|
|
of government in reducing market or institutional failure and other
|
|
barriers that impede farmers' efficient allocation choices instead of
|
|
compensating households for conserving sloping land, shedding new light
|
|
on the most effective policy options to achieve the program's goals.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Li, L (Corresponding Author), Peking Univ, Sch Urban Planning \& Design, Shenzhen Grad Sch, Shenzhen, Peoples R China.
|
|
Li, Li; MacLachlan, Ian; Li, Guicai; Guo, Yuanyuan, Peking Univ, Sch Urban Planning \& Design, Shenzhen Grad Sch, Shenzhen, Peoples R China.
|
|
Tsunekawa, Atsushi, Tottori Univ, Arid Land Res Ctr, Tottori, Japan.
|
|
Koike, Atsushi, Kobe Univ, Dept Reg Planning, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/CAER-06-2018-0124},
|
|
ISSN = {1756-137X},
|
|
EISSN = {1756-1388},
|
|
Keywords = {Off-farm employment; Grain for Green; Simultaneous equations;
|
|
Conservation payments; Endogenous switching regression},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LAND CONVERSION PROGRAM; RURAL NONFARM ACTIVITIES; AGRICULTURAL
|
|
PRODUCTIVITY; IMPACT; MIGRATION; INCOME; MARKET; CONSTRAINTS; DECISION;
|
|
POVERTY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Agricultural Economics \& Policy; Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {920421363@qq.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {MacLachlan, Ian/J-1839-2012
|
|
Tsunekawa, Atsushi/L-8526-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {MacLachlan, Ian/0000-0002-8584-4063
|
|
Tsunekawa, Atsushi/0000-0002-7690-0633
|
|
li, li/0000-0002-5976-8474},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {36},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000506407500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000484328500003,
|
|
Author = {Alrimawi, Intima and Hall, Carol and Watson, Michael Craig},
|
|
Title = {Palestinian Nurses' and Doctors' Perceptions and Practices Regarding the
|
|
Prevention of Injuries to Children in the Home: An Explorative
|
|
Qualitative Study},
|
|
Journal = {COMPREHENSIVE CHILD AND ADOLESCENT NURSING-BUILDING EVIDENCE FOR
|
|
PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {172-189},
|
|
Abstract = {Unintentional injuries are a growing global public health problem that
|
|
causes mortality, morbidity, and disability among children. These
|
|
injuries are common among under-fives and form a significant burden on
|
|
healthcare systems, particularly in low- and middle-income countries.
|
|
Nurses and doctors have a major role to play in the prevention of home
|
|
injuries, as expressed in many international reports. In Palestine,
|
|
there is a paucity of research in this area. Therefore, this study aims
|
|
to explore nurses' and doctors' perceptions and practices regarding the
|
|
prevention of home injuries among children aged under-five years. A
|
|
qualitative approach was followed, whereby semi-structured interviews
|
|
were undertaken with 24 nurses and doctors who worked with children in a
|
|
primary health care setting. The derived data were analyzed using
|
|
thematic analysis. This study found that most of the nurses and doctors
|
|
who were interviewed reported positive attitudes toward working on this
|
|
topic; the majority of them attempted to work on injury prevention.
|
|
Nevertheless, they needed further support to fulfil this potential role,
|
|
as they faced many barriers in their daily practice in this area. Policy
|
|
makers could potentially take advantage of this attitude and support
|
|
them by providing training, resources, and time for them to implement
|
|
this role.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Alrimawi, I (Corresponding Author), Stratford Univ, Sch Nursing, 7777 Lessburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22043 USA.
|
|
Alrimawi, Intima, Stratford Univ, Sch Nursing, 7777 Lessburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22043 USA.
|
|
Hall, Carol, Univ Nottingham, Queens Med Ctr, Sch Hlth Sci, Nottingham, England.
|
|
Watson, Michael Craig, Univ Nottingham, Sch Hlth Sci, Nottingham, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/24694193.2018.1446058},
|
|
ISSN = {2469-4193},
|
|
EISSN = {2469-4207},
|
|
Keywords = {Doctors' perceptions; doctors' practice; home injuries; nurses'
|
|
perceptions; nurses' practice; qualitative; unintentional injuries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNINTENTIONAL INJURIES; HEALTH-PROFESSIONALS; GLOBAL BURDEN; KNOWLEDGE;
|
|
ATTITUDES; EDUCATION; VISITORS; MIDWIVES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {ialrimawi@stratford.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Alrimawi, Intima/U-1004-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Alrimawi, Intima/0000-0001-8683-9541
|
|
Watson, Michael Craig/0000-0003-1628-2746},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000484328500003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000871406300003,
|
|
Author = {Onyango, Dickens Otieno and Tumlinson, Katherine and Chung, Stephanie
|
|
and Bullington, Brooke W. and Gakii, Catherine and Senderowicz, Leigh},
|
|
Title = {Evaluating the feasibility of the Community Score Card and subsequent
|
|
contraceptive behavior in Kisumu, Kenya},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {OCT 24},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Women seeking family planning services from public-sector
|
|
facilities in low- and middle-income countries sometimes face
|
|
provider-imposed barriers to care. Social accountability is an approach
|
|
that could address provider-imposed barriers by empowering communities
|
|
to hold their service providers to account for service quality. Yet
|
|
little is known about the feasibility and potential impact of such
|
|
efforts in the context of contraceptive care. We piloted a social
|
|
accountability intervention-the Community Score Card (CSC)-in three
|
|
public healthcare facilities in western Kenya and use a mix of
|
|
quantitative and qualitative methodologies to describe the feasibility
|
|
and impact on family planning service provision. Methods We implemented
|
|
and evaluated the CSC in a convenience sample of three public-sector
|
|
facility-community dyads in Kisumu County, Kenya. Within each dyad,
|
|
communities met to identify and prioritize needs, develop corresponding
|
|
indicators, and used a score card to rate the quality of family planning
|
|
service provision and monitor improvement. To ensure young, unmarried
|
|
people had a voice in identifying the unique challenges they face, youth
|
|
working groups (YWG) led all CSC activities. The feasibility and impact
|
|
of CSC activities were evaluated using mystery client visits,
|
|
unannounced visits, focus group discussions with YWG members and
|
|
providers, repeated assessment of score card indicators, and service
|
|
delivery statistics. Results The involvement of community health
|
|
volunteers and supportive community members - as well as the willingness
|
|
of some providers to consider changes to their own behaviors-were key
|
|
score card facilitators. Conversely, community bias against family
|
|
planning was a barrier to wider participation in score card activities
|
|
and the intractability of some provider behaviors led to only small
|
|
shifts in quality improvement. Service statistics did not reveal an
|
|
increase in the percent of women receiving family planning services.
|
|
Conclusion Successful and impactful implementation of the CSC in the
|
|
Kenyan context requires intensive community and provider sensitization,
|
|
and pandemic conditions may have muted the impact on contraceptive
|
|
uptake in this small pilot effort. Further investigation is needed to
|
|
understand whether the CSC - or other social accountability efforts -
|
|
can result in improved contraceptive access.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Onyango, DO (Corresponding Author), Kisumu Cty Dept Hlth, Kisumu, Kenya.
|
|
Onyango, DO (Corresponding Author), Univ Med Ctr, Julius Ctr Hlth Sci \& Primary Care, Julius Global Hlth, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Onyango, Dickens Otieno, Kisumu Cty Dept Hlth, Kisumu, Kenya.
|
|
Onyango, Dickens Otieno, Univ Med Ctr, Julius Ctr Hlth Sci \& Primary Care, Julius Global Hlth, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Tumlinson, Katherine; Chung, Stephanie, Univ N Carolina, Dept Maternal \& Child Hlth, Gillings Sch Global Publ Hlth, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
|
|
Tumlinson, Katherine; Bullington, Brooke W., Univ N Carolina, Carolina Populat Ctr, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
|
|
Bullington, Brooke W., Univ N Carolina, Gillings Sch Global Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
|
|
Gakii, Catherine, Innovat Poverty Act Kenya IPA K, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Senderowicz, Leigh, Univ Wisconsin, Sch Med \& Publ Hlth, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol, Madison, WI USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-022-14388-y},
|
|
Article-Number = {1960},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Social accountability; Contraception; Quality of care; Kenya; Mystery
|
|
clients; Sub-Saharan Africa; Provider bias},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH SECTOR; PROVIDERS; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {macdickens2002@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tumlinson, Katherine/E-6975-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tumlinson, Katherine/0000-0001-8314-8219
|
|
Bullington, Brooke/0000-0002-3341-087X
|
|
Chung, Stephanie/0000-0002-2383-0512
|
|
Senderowicz, Leigh/0000-0002-6713-1473},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000871406300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000505213400005,
|
|
Author = {Tangsuksan, Pornnapa and Ratinthorn, Ameporn and Sindhu, Siriorn and
|
|
Spatz, Diane L. and Viwatwongkasem, Chukiat},
|
|
Title = {Factors Influencing Exclusive Breastfeeding among Urban Employed
|
|
Mothers: A Case-Control Study},
|
|
Journal = {PACIFIC RIM INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {54-72},
|
|
Month = {JAN-MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Promoting exclusive breastfeeding among urban employed mothers is a
|
|
complex phenomenon. Understanding the multiple level factors related to
|
|
this and how they influence employed mothers' regarding exclusive
|
|
breastfeeding could help identify strategies to support mothers
|
|
continuing exclusive breastfeeding. This study aimed to identify
|
|
maternal, social, and workplace level factors and the interaction
|
|
effects among those factors that influence exclusive breastfeeding for
|
|
six months among urban employed mothers. This case-control study
|
|
investigated among 57 cases (exclusive breastfeeding for six months) and
|
|
228 controls (non-exclusive breastfeeding for six months) in six
|
|
purposively-selected hospital settings in Bangkok, Thailand between
|
|
September 2015 and June 2016. Data were collected through six
|
|
self-administered questionnaires; Demographic Questionnaire, Iowa Infant
|
|
Feeding Attitude Scale, Perceived Self-efficacy in Breastfeeding
|
|
Questionnaire, Breastfeeding Knowledge Questionnaire, Perceived
|
|
Breastfeeding Support Assessment Tool, and Infant Feeding Form, and were
|
|
analyzed by descriptive statistics, univariate and multivariate logistic
|
|
regression.
|
|
The results revealed that maternal factors (family income, attitudes,
|
|
intention, confidence, and knowledge) and workplace factors (maternity
|
|
leave and working times) co-predicted exclusive breastfeeding six
|
|
months. In the interaction effect model, the interaction effect between
|
|
workplace policy on maternity leave and attitudes toward breastfeeding
|
|
also exerted significant influence. The findings suggest that multiple
|
|
level interventions to promote exclusive breastfeeding in employed women
|
|
are needed. In clinical practice, nurses and midwives should implement
|
|
antepartum interventions including assessment of maternal attitudes and
|
|
intentions to breastfeed, providing breastfeeding knowledge to increase
|
|
mothers' confidence, and advice about planning to combine breastfeeding
|
|
and employment. Of great concern was a finding that more than 75\% of
|
|
the non-EBF mothers reported not having sufficient breastfeeding
|
|
facility support in the workplace. Workplace policies should be reviewed
|
|
in terms of sufficient paid maternity leave, workplace breastfeeding
|
|
support, and an appropriate number of working hours, and this has
|
|
implications for governments and multiple workplaces across the country.
|
|
Nurses have a significant role to play in advocating for and
|
|
contributing to such policies to increase the numbers of women
|
|
successfully breastfeeding longer whilst employed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ratinthorn, A (Corresponding Author), Mahidol Univ, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol Nursing, Fac Nursing, Phutthamonthon Dist, Nakhon Pathom, Thailand.
|
|
Tangsuksan, Pornnapa, Mahidol Univ, Ramathibodi Hosp, Fac Nursing, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
|
Tangsuksan, Pornnapa, Mahidol Univ, Ramathibodi Sch Nursing, Fac Med, Ramathibodi Hosp, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
|
Ratinthorn, Ameporn, Mahidol Univ, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol Nursing, Fac Nursing, Phutthamonthon Dist, Nakhon Pathom, Thailand.
|
|
Sindhu, Siriorn, Mahidol Univ, Fac Nursing, Dept Surg Nursing, Phutthamonthon Dist, Nakhon Pathom, Thailand.
|
|
Spatz, Diane L., Univ Penn, Sch Nursing, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Spatz, Diane L., Childrens Hosp Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Viwatwongkasem, Chukiat, Mahidol Univ, Fac Publ Hlth, Dept Biostat, Phutthamonthon Dist, Nakhon Pathom, Thailand.},
|
|
ISSN = {1906-8107},
|
|
Keywords = {Influencing factors; Exclusive breastfeeding; Employed mothers;
|
|
Case-control study},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORKING MOTHERS; BARRIERS; SUPPORT; WOMEN; WORKPLACE; KNOWLEDGE;
|
|
ATTITUDE; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {pornnapa.tan@mahidol.ac.th
|
|
ameporn.rat@mahidol.edu
|
|
siriorn.sin@mahidol.edu
|
|
spatz@nursing.upenn.edu
|
|
chukiat.viw@mahidol.ac.th},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000505213400005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000759008600001,
|
|
Author = {Habib, Hajer},
|
|
Title = {Remittances and Labor Supply: Evidence from Tunisia},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {1870-1899},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {The objective is to present our contribution to the theoretical
|
|
literature through a simple theoretical model dealing with the effect of
|
|
remittances on the labor market of the origin countries and on the other
|
|
hand to test this relationship empirically in the case of Tunisia. The
|
|
methodology used consists of estimating a panel of the nine main
|
|
destinations of the Tunisian migrants in Europe between 1997 and 2017.
|
|
The empirical results show that the main factors explaining the decision
|
|
to emigrate are the economic factors related mainly to the income
|
|
differential, the demographic factors related to the differential age
|
|
structure of the origin and host populations, and the cultural factors
|
|
linked basically to the language mastery. Indeed, the migrant stocks are
|
|
one of the main determinants of the remittances to Tunisia. But there
|
|
are other variables that do not lack importance such as the economic
|
|
conditions linked by the host countries. This shows that Tunisian
|
|
migrants react more to economic conditions in European countries than in
|
|
Tunisia. The economic situation of European countries dominates the
|
|
number of emigrants as an explanatory factor for the amount of transfers
|
|
from Tunisian emigrants. Similarly, the results confirm that an increase
|
|
in remittances significantly reduces the demand for employment and
|
|
therefore increases the unemployment rate. This positive correlation
|
|
reveals that the impact of demographic changes on the effect of
|
|
remittances occurs through an increase in unemployment due to the aging
|
|
of the population, which coincides with the case of Tunisia going
|
|
through a demographic transition period.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Habib, H (Corresponding Author), Univ Farhat Hached, Fac Econ Sci \& Management Tunis, El Manar Ii, Tunisia.
|
|
Habib, Hajer, Univ Farhat Hached, Fac Econ Sci \& Management Tunis, El Manar Ii, Tunisia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s13132-022-00952-9},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1868-7865},
|
|
EISSN = {1868-7873},
|
|
Keywords = {International migration; Remittances; Labor market participation;
|
|
Demographic changes; Tunisia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION; POVERTY; ECONOMICS; IMPACT; PRODUCTIVITY;
|
|
EMIGRATION; INEQUALITY; COUNTRIES; WORKERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {hajerhabib.k@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {93},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000759008600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000227868600004,
|
|
Author = {Khoury, AJ and Moazzem, SW and Jarjoura, CM and Carothers, C and Hinton,
|
|
A},
|
|
Title = {Breast-feeding initiation in low-income women: Role of attitudes,
|
|
support, and perceived control},
|
|
Journal = {WOMENS HEALTH ISSUES},
|
|
Year = {2005},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {64-72},
|
|
Month = {MAR-APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite the documented health and emotional benefits of breast-feeding
|
|
to women and children, breast-feeding rates are low among subgroups of
|
|
women. In this study, we examine factors associated with breast-feeding
|
|
initiation in low-income women, including Theory of Planned Behavior
|
|
measures of attitude, support, and perceived control, as well as
|
|
sociodemographic characteristics. A mail survey, with telephone
|
|
follow-up, Of 733 postpartum Medicaid beneficiaries in Mississippi was
|
|
conducted in 2000. The breast-feeding initiation rate in this population
|
|
was 38\%. Women who were older, white, non-Hispanic, college-educated,
|
|
married, not certified for the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women,
|
|
Infants, and Children, and not working full-time were more likely to
|
|
breast-feed than formula-feed at hospital discharge. Attitudes regarding
|
|
benefits and barriers to breast-feeding, as well as health care system
|
|
and social support, were associated with breast-feeding initiation at
|
|
the multivariate level. Adding the health care system support variables
|
|
to the regression model, and specifically support from lactation
|
|
specialists and hospital nurses, explained the association between
|
|
breast-feeding initiation and women's perceived control over the time
|
|
and social constraints barriers to breast-feeding. The findings support
|
|
the need for health care system interventions, family interventions, and
|
|
public health education campaigns to promote breast-feeding in
|
|
low-income women.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Khoury, AJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Florida, Dept Hlth Serv Res Management \& Policy, POB 100195, Gainesville, FL 32610 USA.
|
|
Univ Florida, Dept Hlth Serv Res Management \& Policy, Gainesville, FL 32610 USA.
|
|
Lincoln Lancaster Cty Hlth Dept, Lincoln, NE USA.
|
|
Shands Hosp AGH, Shands Healthcare, Gainesville, FL USA.
|
|
Best Start Social Marketing Inc, Tampa, FL USA.
|
|
Univ So Mississippi, Dept Community Hlth Sci, Hattiesburg, MS 39406 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.whi.2004.09.003},
|
|
ISSN = {1049-3867},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-4321},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HUMAN-MILK; INFANT ILLNESS; CANCER-RISK; KNOWLEDGE; MOTHERS;
|
|
EXPERIENCES; PHYSICIANS; INTENTION; PROTECTS; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {akhoury@phhp.ufl.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {107},
|
|
Times-Cited = {102},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000227868600004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000327391900006,
|
|
Author = {Hamilton, Alison B. and Cohen, Amy N. and Glover, Dawn L. and Whelan,
|
|
Fiona and Chemerinski, Eran and McNagny, Kirk P. and Mullins, Deborah
|
|
and Reist, Christopher and Schubert, Max and Young, Alexander S.},
|
|
Title = {Implementation of Evidence-Based Employment Services in Specialty Mental
|
|
Health},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {48},
|
|
Number = {6, 2},
|
|
Pages = {2224-2244},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {ObjectiveStudy a quality improvement approach for implementing
|
|
evidence-based employment services at specialty mental health clinics.
|
|
Data Sources/Study SettingSemistructured interviews with clinicians and
|
|
administrators before, during, and after implementation. Qualitative
|
|
field notes, structured baseline and follow-up interviews with patients,
|
|
semistructured interviews with patients after implementation, and
|
|
administrative data.
|
|
Study DesignSite-level controlled trial at four implementation and four
|
|
control sites. Hybrid implementation-effectiveness study with mixed
|
|
methods intervention evaluation design.
|
|
Data Collection/Extraction MethodsSite visits, in-person and telephone
|
|
interviews, patient surveys, patient self-assessment. A total of 801
|
|
patients completed baseline surveys and 53 clinicians and other clinical
|
|
key stakeholders completed longitudinal qualitative interviews.
|
|
Principal FindingsAt baseline, sites varied in the availability,
|
|
utilization, and quality of supported employment. Each site needed
|
|
quality improvement for this service, though for differing reasons, with
|
|
some needing development of the service itself and others needing
|
|
increased service capacity. Improvements in knowledge, attitudes,
|
|
beliefs, and referral behaviors were evident in mid- and
|
|
postimplementation interviews, though some barriers persisted. Half of
|
|
patients expressed an interest in working at baseline. Patients at
|
|
implementation sites were 2.3 times more likely to receive employment
|
|
services during the study year. Those who had a service visit were more
|
|
likely to be employed at follow-up than those who did not.
|
|
ConclusionsStudies of implementation and effectiveness require mixed
|
|
methods to both enhance implementation in real time and provide context
|
|
for interpretation of complex results. In this study, a quality
|
|
improvement approach resulted in superior patient-level outcomes and
|
|
improved clinician knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors, in the context
|
|
of substantial variation among sites.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hamilton, AB (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Psychiat \& Biobehav Sci, 11301 Wilshire Blvd 210A, Los Angeles, CA 90073 USA.
|
|
Hamilton, Alison B.; Cohen, Amy N.; Young, Alexander S., Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Psychiat \& Biobehav Sci, Los Angeles, CA 90073 USA.
|
|
Hamilton, Alison B.; Cohen, Amy N.; Glover, Dawn L.; Young, Alexander S., Greater Los Angeles VA Healthcare Ctr, Los Angeles, CA 90073 USA.
|
|
Whelan, Fiona, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Psychiat \& Biobehav Sci, Semel Inst Biostat Core SIStat, Los Angeles, CA 90073 USA.
|
|
Chemerinski, Eran, James J Peters VA Med Ctr, Bronx, NY USA.
|
|
McNagny, Kirk P.; Reist, Christopher, Long Beach VA Healthcare Syst, Long Beach, CA USA.
|
|
Mullins, Deborah, Michael E DeBakey VA Med Ctr, Houston, TX USA.
|
|
Schubert, Max, Cent Texas Vet Healthcare Syst, Waco, TX USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1475-6773.12115},
|
|
ISSN = {0017-9124},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-6773},
|
|
Keywords = {Mixed methods; implementation research; schizophrenia; supported
|
|
employment; health services},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT; ORGANIZATIONAL READINESS; COMPETITIVE EMPLOYMENT;
|
|
MIXED METHODS; QUALITY; DESIGNS; MANAGEMENT; ILLNESS; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {alisonh@ucla.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hamilton, Alison B/IUP-2045-2023
|
|
McNagny, Kelly/P-5239-2014},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hamilton, Alison B/0000-0003-3998-7212
|
|
McNagny, Kelly/0000-0003-4737-3499},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000327391900006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000248902900003,
|
|
Author = {Gould, Elise},
|
|
Title = {Health insurance eroding for working families: Employer-provided
|
|
coverage declines for fifth consecutive year},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH SERVICES},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {37},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {441-467},
|
|
Abstract = {In 2005, the percentage of Americans with employer-provided health
|
|
insurance fell for the fifth year in a row. Workers and their families
|
|
have been falling into the ranks of the uninsured at alarming rates. The
|
|
downward trend in employer-provided coverage for children also continued
|
|
into 2005. In the previous four years, children were less likely to
|
|
become uninsured as public sector health coverage expanded, but in 2005
|
|
the rate of uninsured children increased. While Medicaid and SCHIP still
|
|
work for many, the government has not picked up coverage for everybody
|
|
who lost insurance. The weakening of this system-notably for children-is
|
|
particularly difficult for workers and their families in a time of
|
|
stagnating incomes. Furthermore, these programs are not designed to
|
|
prevent low-income adults or middle- or high-income families from
|
|
becoming uninsured. Government at the federal and state levels has
|
|
responded to medical inflation with policy changes that reduce public
|
|
insurance eligibility or with proposals to reduce government costs.
|
|
Federal policy proposals to lessen the tax advantage of workplace
|
|
insurance or to encourage a private purchase system could further
|
|
destabilize the employer-provided system. Now is a critical time to
|
|
consider health insurance reform. Several promising solutions could
|
|
increase access to affordable health care. The key is to create large,
|
|
varied, and stable risk pools.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gould, E (Corresponding Author), Econ Policy Inst, 1333 H St,NW, Washington, DC 20005 USA.
|
|
Econ Policy Inst, Washington, DC 20005 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2190/C285-1547-1L23-R1X5},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-7314},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {egould@epi.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {0},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000248902900003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000363978000022,
|
|
Author = {Drake, Bettina F. and Tannan, Shivon and Anwuri, Victoria V. and
|
|
Jackson, Sherrill and Sanford, Mark and Tappenden, Jennifer and Goodman,
|
|
Melody S. and Colditz, Graham A.},
|
|
Title = {A Community-Based Partnership to Successfully Implement and Maintain a
|
|
Breast Health Navigation Program},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {1216-1223},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Breast cancer screening combined with follow-up and treatment reduces
|
|
breast cancer mortality. However, in the study clinic, only 12 \% of
|
|
eligible women >= 40 years received a mammogram in the previous year.
|
|
The objective of this project was to implement patient navigation, in
|
|
our partner health clinic to (1) identify women overdue for a mammogram;
|
|
and (2) increase mammography utilization in this population over a
|
|
2-year period. Women overdue for a mammogram were identified. One
|
|
patient navigator made navigation attempts over a 2-year period
|
|
(2009-2011). Navigation included working around systems- and
|
|
individual-level barriers to receive a mammogram as well as the
|
|
appropriate follow-up post screening. Women were contacted up to three
|
|
times to initiate navigation. The proportion of women navigated and who
|
|
received a mammogram during the study period were compared to women who
|
|
did not receive a mammogram using Chi square tests for categorical
|
|
variables and t tests for continuous variables with an alpha = 0.05.
|
|
Barriers to previous mammography were also assessed. With 94.8 \% of
|
|
eligible women navigated and 94 \% of these women completing
|
|
mammography, the implementation project reached 89 \% of the target
|
|
population. This project was a successful implementation of an
|
|
evidence-based patient navigation program that continues to provide
|
|
significant impact in a high-need area. Cost was the most commonly cite
|
|
barrier to mammography. Increasing awareness of resources in the
|
|
community for mammography and follow-up care remains a necessary adjunct
|
|
to removing structural and financial barriers to accessing preventive
|
|
services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Drake, BF (Corresponding Author), Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Surg, Div Publ Hlth Sci, 600 S Taylor Ave,Campus Box 8100, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
|
|
Drake, Bettina F.; Tappenden, Jennifer; Goodman, Melody S.; Colditz, Graham A., Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Surg, Div Publ Hlth Sci, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
|
|
Drake, Bettina F.; Goodman, Melody S.; Colditz, Graham A., Alvin J Siteman Canc Ctr, St Louis, MO USA.
|
|
Drake, Bettina F.; Anwuri, Victoria V.; Colditz, Graham A., Washington Univ, Inst Publ Hlth, St Louis, MO 63110 USA.
|
|
Tannan, Shivon; Jackson, Sherrill; Sanford, Mark, Betty Jean Kerr Peoples Hlth Ctr, St Louis, MO USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10900-015-0051-z},
|
|
ISSN = {0094-5145},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3610},
|
|
Keywords = {Breast cancer; Mammography; Screening; Patient navigation; Disparities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-INCOME WOMEN; PATIENT NAVIGATION; FOLLOW-UP; CANCER; MAMMOGRAPHY;
|
|
BARRIERS; STAGE; DISPARITIES; POPULATION; DIAGNOSIS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {drakeb@wustl.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Goodman, Melody S./H-2887-2019
|
|
Drake, Bettina/O-2072-2019
|
|
Colditz, Graham/A-3963-2009},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Goodman, Melody S./0000-0001-8932-624X
|
|
Drake, Bettina/0000-0001-9340-5848
|
|
Colditz, Graham/0000-0002-7307-0291},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000363978000022},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000696650100001,
|
|
Author = {Matli, Walter and Ngoepe, Mpho},
|
|
Title = {Extending information poverty theory to better understand the digital
|
|
access and inequalities among young people who are not in education,
|
|
employment or training in South Africa},
|
|
Journal = {HIGHER EDUCATION SKILLS AND WORK-BASED LEARNING},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {419-436},
|
|
Month = {MAY 9},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The objective of this study is to present evidence regarding how
|
|
young people, who are not in education, employment or training (NEET) in
|
|
South Africa, lack literacy skills and access to enabling resources to
|
|
actively search and navigate information services systems that are
|
|
primarily web-based. Information Poverty Theory is adopted to better
|
|
understand the technological and social strata challenges experienced by
|
|
young NEET people. Design/methodology/approach The study used
|
|
semi-structured interviews for collecting data over two months in 2018,
|
|
employing snowball sampling with 24 key participants, representing a
|
|
diversity of educational backgrounds and previous experience of economic
|
|
participation. Findings The findings of this study suggest that most
|
|
interviewed young people, who are NEET, lack advanced information
|
|
literacy and digital skills to access information services. The results
|
|
also indicate that access to information services that are primed for
|
|
online information is a challenge for most of these NEET young people
|
|
residing in underserviced communities. The high cost of an Internet
|
|
connection means that the Internet is out of reach for most low-income
|
|
households. In communities that are underserviced with no adequate
|
|
information and communication technology (ICT) infrastructure, people
|
|
residing in such areas are subjected to living in circumstances where
|
|
there is poverty and thus a lack of access to online information.
|
|
Research limitations/implications This paper reports on data collected
|
|
in 2018 using intense interviews, while acknowledging limitations in
|
|
terms of the sample size. Hence, it is not fully representative of the
|
|
whole population of young people, who are NEET, residing in the Gauteng
|
|
Province of South Africa. Practical implications The findings illustrate
|
|
the need for further collaboration among relevant stakeholders to
|
|
strengthen existing programmes and for stronger partnerships. The
|
|
arguments presented herein enhance knowledge and understanding
|
|
concerning the digital literacy skills divide that exists among young
|
|
people who are NEET. It includes a discussion to contribute to policy
|
|
development. Originality/value This study focuses on challenges young
|
|
people who are NEET experience when looking for work and developmental
|
|
opportunities. This qualitative study adopts Information Poverty Theory
|
|
and uses prior studies to link the undertaken survey and research. It is
|
|
expected that this study may serve as a pilot for future studies and may
|
|
also contribute to the ongoing discussions around the use of ICTs on
|
|
their use and access, especially the effect on young people when
|
|
searching for information related to jobs and other developmental
|
|
opportunities using online services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Matli, W (Corresponding Author), Univ South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa.
|
|
Matli, Walter; Ngoepe, Mpho, Univ South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/HESWBL-05-2020-0107},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2042-3896},
|
|
EISSN = {2042-390X},
|
|
Keywords = {Digital access; Digital inequalities; Information poverty; NEET; Digital
|
|
literacy skills; South Africa},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LITERACY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {wmatli7@gmail.com
|
|
ngoepems@unisa.ac.za},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Matli, Walter/AAQ-5255-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Matli, Walter/0000-0003-3440-900X
|
|
Ngoepe, Mpho/0000-0002-6241-161X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000696650100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000410596600006,
|
|
Author = {Borowy, Iris and Aillon, Jean-Louis},
|
|
Title = {Sustainable health and degrowth: Health, health care and society beyond
|
|
the growth paradigm},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL THEORY \& HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {346-368},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The extraordinary economic growth rates of the twentieth century are
|
|
historically exceptional and a continuation into the future seems
|
|
neither possible nor desirable. Consequently, it is in the interest of
|
|
public health to actively shape a socioeconomic transformation towards a
|
|
system that is not based on growth. ``Degrowth'' provides coherent
|
|
guidelines for such a system. Combining existing scholarship from the
|
|
degrowth and the public health fields, this paper makes seven
|
|
suggestions for a public health agenda towards sustainable health: (1)
|
|
to develop an index of health status in relation to present and future
|
|
health burden; (2) to reduce the resource burden of medical therapy; (3)
|
|
to translate increased productivity to fewer working hours and more free
|
|
time instead of more income and material consumption; (4) to make use of
|
|
non-conventional knowledge and non-commercial forms of work and product
|
|
exchange; (5) to make knowledge freely available, making use of
|
|
innovative research frameworks such as open source drug research; (6) to
|
|
relocalize economic life and health-related organization and to reshape
|
|
citizen participation and (7) to reduce socio-economic inequality
|
|
through redistribution. Generally, this paper argues that it is time for
|
|
discussions on degrowth to enter the mainstream medical and health
|
|
community and for doctors and other health workers to acknowledge that
|
|
they have a significant role to play and important experience to
|
|
contribute when our societies face the upcoming challenge of
|
|
no-longer-growing economies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Borowy, I (Corresponding Author), Shanghai Univ, Coll Liberal Arts, 99 Shangda Rd, Shanghai 200444, Peoples R China.
|
|
Borowy, Iris, Shanghai Univ, Coll Liberal Arts, 99 Shangda Rd, Shanghai 200444, Peoples R China.
|
|
Aillon, Jean-Louis, Univ Genoa, Cattedra Antropol, Via Balbi 4, I-16126 Genoa, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1057/s41285-017-0032-7},
|
|
ISSN = {1477-8211},
|
|
EISSN = {1477-822X},
|
|
Keywords = {public health; degrowth; drug production; social determinants of health;
|
|
equity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-GROWTH; RECESSION; PROSPECTS; MEDICINE; DISEASE; MODEL; TIME;
|
|
TOO},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {borowyiris@i.shu.edu.cn},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {85},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000410596600006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000598689700006,
|
|
Author = {Sawe, Hendry R. and Sirili, Nathanael and Weber, Ellen and Coats,
|
|
Timothy J. and Wallis, Lee A. and Reynolds, Teri A.},
|
|
Title = {Barriers and facilitators to implementing trauma registries in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries: Qualitative experiences from Tanzania},
|
|
Journal = {AFRICAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {S23-S28},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The burden of trauma in low and middle-income countries
|
|
(LMICs) is disproportionately high: LMICs account for nearly 90\% of the
|
|
global trauma deaths. Lack of trauma data has been identified as one of
|
|
the major challenges in addressing the quality of trauma care and
|
|
informing injury-preventing strategies in LMICs. This study aimed to
|
|
explore the barriers and facilitators of current trauma documentation
|
|
practices towards the development of a national trauma registry (TR).
|
|
Methods: An exploratory qualitative study was conducted at five regional
|
|
hospitals between August 2018 and December 2018. Five focus group
|
|
discussions (FGDs) were conducted with 49 participants from five
|
|
regional hospitals. Participants included specialists, medical doctors,
|
|
assistant medical officers, clinical officers, nurses, health clerks and
|
|
information communication and technology officers. Participants came
|
|
from the emergency units, surgical and orthopaedic inpatient units, and
|
|
they had permanent placement to work in these units as nonrotating
|
|
staff. We analysed the gathered information using a hybrid thematic
|
|
analysis.
|
|
Results: Inconsistent documentation and archiving system, the disparity
|
|
in knowledge and experience of trauma documentation, attitudes towards
|
|
documentation and limitations of human and infrastructural resources in
|
|
facilities we found as major barriers to the implementation of trauma
|
|
registry. Health facilities commitment to standardising care, Ministry
|
|
of Health and medicolegal data reporting requirements, and insurance
|
|
reimbursements criteria of documentation were found as major
|
|
facilitators to implementing trauma registry.
|
|
Conclusions: Implementation of a trauma registry in regional hospitals
|
|
is impacted by multiple barriers related to providers, the volume of
|
|
documentation, resource availability for care, and facility care flow
|
|
processes. However, financial, legal and administrative data reporting
|
|
requirements exist as important facilitators in implementing the trauma
|
|
registry at these hospitals. Capitalizing in the identified facilitators
|
|
and investing to address the revealed barriers through contextualized
|
|
interventions in Tanzania and other LMICs is recommended by this study.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sawe, HR (Corresponding Author), Muhimbili Univ Hlth \& Allied Sci, Dept Emergency Med, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
|
|
Sawe, HR (Corresponding Author), Univ Cape Town, Div Emergency Med, Fac Hlth Sci, Cape Town, South Africa.
|
|
Sawe, Hendry R., Muhimbili Univ Hlth \& Allied Sci, Dept Emergency Med, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
|
|
Sawe, Hendry R.; Wallis, Lee A.; Reynolds, Teri A., Univ Cape Town, Div Emergency Med, Fac Hlth Sci, Cape Town, South Africa.
|
|
Sirili, Nathanael, Muhimbili Univ Hlth \& Allied Sci, Sch Publ Hlth \& Social Sci, Dept Dev Studies, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
|
|
Weber, Ellen, Univ Calif San Francisco, Emergency Dept, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Coats, Timothy J., Univ Leicester, Dept Cardiovasc Sci, Leicester, Leics, England.
|
|
Reynolds, Teri A., World Hlth Org WHO, Clin Serv \& Syst, Integrated Hlth Serv, Geneva, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.afjem.2020.06.003},
|
|
ISSN = {2211-419X},
|
|
EISSN = {2211-4203},
|
|
Keywords = {Trauma registry; Tanzania; Barriers and facilitators; Trauma; Low- and
|
|
middle-income countries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MAJOR TRAUMA; CARE; BURDEN; INJURY; NEEDS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Emergency Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {hsawe@muhas.ac.tz},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Coats, Timothy/AAW-1254-2021
|
|
Weber, Ellen/GRR-9967-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Coats, Timothy/0000-0003-2736-2784
|
|
Wallis, Lee/0000-0003-2711-3139},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000598689700006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000514932400002,
|
|
Author = {Lamolla, Laura and Gonzalez Ramos, Ana M.},
|
|
Title = {Tick-tock sounds different for women working in IT areas},
|
|
Journal = {COMMUNITY WORK \& FAMILY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {125-140},
|
|
Month = {MAR 14},
|
|
Abstract = {Women represent over the half of university graduates in Spain. However,
|
|
the percentage of women graduating with degrees in Computing and
|
|
Engineering drops to 23\% (European Commission. {[}2016. She figures.
|
|
Brussels: Directorate-General for Research and Innovation]). Women are a
|
|
minority in the workplace in the IT sector, despite it being one of the
|
|
most dynamic industries with a positive future outlook. Existent
|
|
literature highlights that women face a variety of barriers that can
|
|
impede their progress in the workplace, mainly related to work-life
|
|
conflicts. However, the attempts carried out thus far to improve women's
|
|
work-life balance have had little effect in this sector, where the
|
|
numbers lag behind those of other sectors. The reasons behind those
|
|
numbers must be understood. In this sense, this study aims to gain a
|
|
deeper understanding of work/personal lives of women in IT sectors
|
|
throughout the course of their lives. The results obtained from a
|
|
tailor-made survey in Spain show that women working in IT are very
|
|
work-oriented and committed to their careers and have fewer conflicts
|
|
regarding work-life balance than was expected. It was in fact age,
|
|
income and perception of gender discrimination that stood out as
|
|
significant variables that may explain the difficulties encountered. In
|
|
light of this, flexible work policies are not enough to increase the
|
|
number of women in IT, and we suggest actions that could serve to fight
|
|
stereotypes regarding gender and age in the workplace.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lamolla, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Oberta Catalunya, Econ \& Business Studies, Ave Tibidabo 39-45, Barcelona 08035, Spain.
|
|
Lamolla, Laura, Univ Oberta Catalunya, Econ \& Business Studies, Ave Tibidabo 39-45, Barcelona 08035, Spain.
|
|
Gonzalez Ramos, Ana M., Internet Interdisciplinary Inst IN3, Parc Mediterrani Tecnol, Barcelona, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/13668803.2018.1483321},
|
|
ISSN = {1366-8803},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-3615},
|
|
Keywords = {Work centrality; gender; work-life integration; life course; IT},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LIFE BALANCE; GENDER IN/AUTHENTICITY; FLEXIBILITY; CAREERS; FAMILY;
|
|
TIME; NEGOTIATION; EMPLOYMENT; POLICIES; JOB},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {llamollak@uoc.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gonzalez, Ana Maria/A-1424-2015
|
|
Ramos, Ana Maria Baltazar/GPX-8056-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gonzalez, Ana Maria/0000-0003-1808-0291
|
|
Lamolla, Laura/0000-0002-2476-0261},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000514932400002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001038762400001,
|
|
Author = {Hartwig, Sophie A. and Youm, Awa and Contreras, Alyssa and Mosley,
|
|
Elizabeth A. and McCloud, Candace and Goedken, Peggy and Carroll, Erin
|
|
and Lathrop, Eva and Cwiak, Carrie and Hall, Kelli Stidham},
|
|
Title = {``The right thing to do would be to provide care ... and we can't{''}:
|
|
Provider experiences with Georgia's 22-week abortion ban ...},
|
|
Journal = {CONTRACEPTION},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {124},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: In 2015, the Georgia (US) legislature implemented a
|
|
gestational limit, or ``ban{''} on abortion at or beyond 22 weeks from
|
|
the last menstrual period. In this study, we qualitatively examined
|
|
abortion provider perspectives on the ban's impact on abortion care
|
|
access and provision.Study design: Between May 2018 and September 2019,
|
|
we conducted in-depth individual interviews with 20 abortion providers
|
|
(clinicians, staff, and administrators) from four clinics in Georgia.
|
|
Interviews explored perceptions of and experiences with the ban and its
|
|
effects on abortion care. Team members coded tran-scripts to 100\%
|
|
agreement using an iterative, group consensus process, and conducted a
|
|
thematic analysis.Results: Participants reported strict adherence to the
|
|
ban and also its negative consequences: additional labor plus
|
|
service-delivery restrictions, legally constructed risks for providers,
|
|
intrusion into the provider-patient relationship, and impact of limited
|
|
services felt by patients and, thus, providers. Participants commonly
|
|
mentioned disparities in the ban's impact and viewed the ban as
|
|
disproportionately affecting people of color, those experiencing
|
|
financial insecurity, and those with underlying medical conditions.
|
|
Nonetheless, participants described a clear, unrelenting commitment to
|
|
providing quality patient-centered care and dedication to and
|
|
satisfaction in their work. Conclusions: Georgia's ban operates as
|
|
legislative interference, adversely affecting the provision of quality,
|
|
patient-centered abortion care, despite providers' resilience and
|
|
commitment. These experiences in Georgia have timely and clear
|
|
implications for the entire country following the Supreme Court's
|
|
decision to overturn Roe v Wade, thus reducing care access and
|
|
increasing negative health and social consequences and in-equities for
|
|
patients and communities on a national scale. Implications: Our findings
|
|
from Georgia (US) indicate an urgent need for coordinated efforts to
|
|
challenge the Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health Organization decision and
|
|
for proactive policies that protect access to later abortion care.
|
|
Research that identifies strategies for supporting providers and
|
|
patients faced with continuing restrictive legal environments is
|
|
warranted.\& COPY; 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is
|
|
an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license
|
|
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hartwig, SA (Corresponding Author), Ctr Reprod Hlth Res Southeast RISE, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA.
|
|
Hartwig, SA (Corresponding Author), Emory Univ, Rollins Sch Publ Hlth, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA.
|
|
Hartwig, Sophie A.; Youm, Awa; Contreras, Alyssa; Mosley, Elizabeth A.; McCloud, Candace; Carroll, Erin; Lathrop, Eva; Cwiak, Carrie; Hall, Kelli Stidham, Ctr Reprod Hlth Res Southeast RISE, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA.
|
|
Hartwig, Sophie A.; Youm, Awa; Contreras, Alyssa; Mosley, Elizabeth A.; McCloud, Candace; Lathrop, Eva; Cwiak, Carrie; Hall, Kelli Stidham, Emory Univ, Rollins Sch Publ Hlth, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA.
|
|
Goedken, Peggy; Lathrop, Eva; Cwiak, Carrie; Hall, Kelli Stidham, Emory Univ, Sch Med, Dept Gynecol \& Obstet, Atlanta, GA USA.
|
|
Carroll, Erin, Univ Alabama Birmingham, Dept Hlth Care Org \& Policy, Birmingham, AL USA.
|
|
Mosley, Elizabeth A., Univ Pittsburgh, Ctr Innovat Res Gender Hlth Equ CONVERGE, Sch Med, Div Gen Internal Med, 230 McKee Pl, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA.
|
|
Lathrop, Eva, PSI, 1120 19th St,NW, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
|
|
Hall, Kelli Stidham, Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, 60 Haven Ave,B3 312, New York, NY 10032 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.contraception.2023.110059},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2023},
|
|
Article-Number = {110059},
|
|
ISSN = {0010-7824},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-0518},
|
|
Keywords = {Abortion; Abortion clinic; Abortion policy; Health care delivery;
|
|
Qualitative research; United States},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CONSTANT COMPARATIVE METHOD; HEALTH; WOMEN; LAW},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {sophie.anne.hartwig@emory.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hartwig, Sophie/0000-0003-3044-8220},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001038762400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000408000600001,
|
|
Author = {Goldstone, Daniel and Bantjes, Jason},
|
|
Title = {Mental health care providers' perceptions of the barriers to suicide
|
|
prevention amongst people with substance use disorders in South Africa:
|
|
a qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEMS},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Month = {AUG 11},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Substance use is a well-established, and potentially
|
|
modifiable, risk factor for suicide. Suicide prevention interventions
|
|
are typically framed within the biomedical paradigm and focus on
|
|
addressing individual risk factors, improving access to psychiatric
|
|
care, and improving the skills of medical personnel to recognise at-risk
|
|
individuals. Few studies have focused on contextual factors that hinder
|
|
suicide prevention in people with substance use disorders, particularly
|
|
in low-resource settings. The aim of this qualitative study was to
|
|
explore mental health care providers' perceptions of barriers to suicide
|
|
prevention in people with substance use disorders in South Africa.
|
|
Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 18 mental health
|
|
care providers who worked with suicidal people with substance use
|
|
disorders in Cape Town, South Africa. Data were analysed using thematic
|
|
analysis and Atlas. ti software was used to code the data inductively.
|
|
Results: Two superordinate themes were identified: structural issues in
|
|
service provision and broad contextual issues that pose barriers to
|
|
suicide prevention. Participants thought that inadequate resources and
|
|
insufficient training hindered them from preventing suicide. Fragmented
|
|
service provision was perceived to lead to patients not receiving the
|
|
psychiatric, psychological, and social care that they needed. Contextual
|
|
problems such as poverty and inequality, the breakdown of family, and
|
|
stigma made participants think that preventing suicide in people with
|
|
substance use disorders was almost impossible.
|
|
Conclusions: These findings suggest that structural, social, and
|
|
economic issues serve as barriers to suicide prevention. This challenges
|
|
individual risk-factor models of suicide prevention and highlights the
|
|
need to consider a broad range of contextual and socio-cultural factors
|
|
when planning suicide prevention interventions. Findings suggest that
|
|
the responsibility for suicide prevention may need to be distributed
|
|
between multiple stakeholders, necessitating intersectoral
|
|
collaboration, more integrated health services, cautious use of task
|
|
shifting, and addressing contextual factors in order to effectively
|
|
prevent suicide in people with substance use disorders.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Goldstone, D (Corresponding Author), Stellenbosch Univ, Dept Psychol, Stellenbosch, South Africa.
|
|
Goldstone, Daniel; Bantjes, Jason, Stellenbosch Univ, Dept Psychol, Stellenbosch, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13033-017-0153-3},
|
|
Article-Number = {46},
|
|
ISSN = {1752-4458},
|
|
Keywords = {South Africa; Suicide prevention; Substance use disorder; Mental health
|
|
care; Qualitative research; Low- and middle-income country},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DRUG-USE; PREVALENCE; IDEATION; ALCOHOL; INDIA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {dgdanielgoldie@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bantjes, Jason/AFP-1140-2022
|
|
Bantjes, Jason/T-8294-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bantjes, Jason/0000-0002-3626-9883
|
|
Bantjes, Jason/0000-0002-3626-9883},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000408000600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000397104500004,
|
|
Author = {Hampshire, Kate and Porter, Gina and Mariwah, Simon and Munthali,
|
|
Alister and Robson, Elsbeth and Owusu, Samuel Asiedu and Abane, Albert
|
|
and Milner, James},
|
|
Title = {Who bears the cost of `informal mhealth'? Health-workers' mobile phone
|
|
practices and associated political-moral economies of care in Ghana and
|
|
Malawi},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {34-42},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Africa's recent communications `revolution' has generated optimism that
|
|
using mobile phones for health (mhealth) can help bridge healthcare
|
|
gaps, particularly for rural, hard-to-reach populations. However, while
|
|
scale-up of mhealth pilots remains limited, health-workers across the
|
|
continent possess mobile phones. This article draws on interviews from
|
|
Ghana and Malawi to ask whether/how health-workers are using their
|
|
phones informally and with what consequences. Healthworkers were found
|
|
to use personal mobile phones for a wide range of purposes: obtaining
|
|
help in emergencies; communicating with patients/colleagues;
|
|
facilitating community-based care, patient monitoring and medication
|
|
adherence; obtaining clinical advice/information and managing logistics.
|
|
However, the costs were being borne by the health-workers themselves,
|
|
particularly by those at the lower echelons, in rural communities, often
|
|
on minimal stipends/salaries, who are required to `care' even at
|
|
substantial personal cost. Although there is significant potential for
|
|
`informal mhealth' to improve (rural) healthcare, there is a risk that
|
|
the associated moral and political economies of care will reinforce
|
|
existing socioeconomic and geographic inequalities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hampshire, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Durham, Dept Anthropol, Durham DH1 3LE, England.
|
|
Hampshire, Kate; Porter, Gina, Univ Durham, Dept Anthropol, Durham DH1 3LE, England.
|
|
Mariwah, Simon; Abane, Albert, Univ Cape Coast, Dept Geog \& Reg Planning, Cape Coast, Ghana.
|
|
Munthali, Alister; Milner, James, Univ Malawi, Ctr Social Res, Zomba, Malawi.
|
|
Robson, Elsbeth, Univ Hull, Dept Geog Environm \& Earth Sci, Kingston Upon Hull, N Humberside, England.
|
|
Owusu, Samuel Asiedu, Univ Cape Coast, Dept Populat \& Hlth, Cape Coast, Ghana.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapol/czw095},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-1080},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2237},
|
|
Keywords = {Care work; community health-workers; mobile phones; moral economy;
|
|
political economy; Sub-Saharan Africa; task shifting},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME COUNTRIES; COMMUNITY; VOLUNTEER; SUPPORT; IMPLEMENTATION; AFRICA;
|
|
SUSTAINABILITY; INTERVENTIONS; COMMUNICATION; PERCEPTIONS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {K.R.Hampshire@durham.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Owusu, Samuel Asiedu/AIC-6915-2022
|
|
Mariwah, Simon/Q-5636-2018
|
|
Owusu, Samuel Asiedu/T-8212-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Owusu, Samuel Asiedu/0000-0002-9249-6036
|
|
Mariwah, Simon/0000-0003-0803-9746
|
|
Hampshire, Kate/0000-0003-4184-849X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {41},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000397104500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000828120300005,
|
|
Author = {Mkandawire, Elizabeth and Bisai, Clement and Dyke, Elizabeth and
|
|
Dressel, Anne and Kantayeni, Hazel and Molosoni, Billy and Kako,
|
|
Peninnah M. and Gondwe, Kaboni W. and Mkandawire-Valhmu, Lucy},
|
|
Title = {A qualitative assessment of gender roles in child nutrition in Central
|
|
Malawi},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JUL 20},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Child malnutrition persists globally with men and women
|
|
playing distinct roles to support children's nutrition. Women frequently
|
|
carry the bulk of the workload related to food, care, and health, all of
|
|
which are critical factors in child nutrition. For this reason,
|
|
development efforts have emphasised women ignoring the potential role of
|
|
men in supporting children's nutrition. This study sought to understand
|
|
the different roles that Malawian men and women play in children's
|
|
nutrition. Methods This qualitative was conducted in rural Central
|
|
Malawi as part of a baseline study in 2017 for the CARE Southern Africa
|
|
Nutrition Initiative. Seventy-six participants were interviewed,
|
|
including 19 men and 57 women, using focus group discussions and
|
|
in-depth interviews. We sought to understand the gender distribution of
|
|
men's and women's roles and how these roles influence child nutrition.
|
|
Results We found that both men and women were involved in productive,
|
|
reproductive, and community work. However, consistent with the
|
|
literature, women carried a disproportionate workload in supporting
|
|
child nutrition compared to men. Women's heavier workloads often
|
|
prevented them from being able to meet children's food needs.
|
|
Nevertheless, shifts in gender roles were observed in some of the
|
|
sampled communities, with men taking up responsibilities that have been
|
|
typically associated with women. These changes in gender roles, however,
|
|
did not necessarily increase women's power within the household.
|
|
Conclusions Traditional gender roles remain prevalent in the sampled
|
|
communities. Women continue to be primarily responsible for the food,
|
|
care, and health of the household. Women's heavy workloads prevent them
|
|
from providing optimal care and nutrition for children. While efforts to
|
|
advance gender equality by encouraging men to participate in child care
|
|
and other household responsibilities appear to have had marginal
|
|
success, the extent to which these efforts have successfully encouraged
|
|
men to share power remains unclear. Improving gender equality and child
|
|
nutrition will require efforts to redistribute gendered work and
|
|
encourage men to move towards shared power with women over household
|
|
decision-making and control over income.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mkandawire, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Pretoria, Old Coll House, Pretoria, South Africa.
|
|
Mkandawire, Elizabeth, Univ Pretoria, Old Coll House, Pretoria, South Africa.
|
|
Bisai, Clement; Kantayeni, Hazel; Molosoni, Billy, CARE Malawi, Pamodzi House,Off Presidential Dr, Lilongwe, Malawi.
|
|
Dressel, Anne; Kako, Peninnah M.; Gondwe, Kaboni W.; Mkandawire-Valhmu, Lucy, Univ Wisconsin, Coll Nursing, Cunningham Hall, Milwaukee, WI 53201 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-022-13749-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {1392},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Child nutrition; Food Security; Inequalities; Care-giving; Low-income
|
|
countries; Focus group},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HOUSEHOLD FOOD SECURITY; MENS INVOLVEMENT; HEALTH; WOMEN; AGRICULTURE;
|
|
EQUALITY; POLICY; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {elizabeth.mkandawire@up.ac.za},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gondwe, Kaboni Whitney/AGM-5219-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gondwe, Kaboni Whitney/0000-0001-7333-0930},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000828120300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000478122300001,
|
|
Author = {Bryant-Stephens, Tyra and Kenyon, C. and Apter, A. J. and Wolk, Courtney
|
|
and Williams, Yolanda S. and Localio, R. and Toussaint, K. and Hui, A.
|
|
and West, C. and Stewart, Yvonne and McGinnis, S. and Gutierrez, M. and
|
|
Beidas, R.},
|
|
Title = {Creating a community-based comprehensive intervention to improve asthma
|
|
control in a low-income, low-resourced community},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ASTHMA},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {820-828},
|
|
Month = {AUG 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: Asthma evidence-based interventions (EBI) are implemented
|
|
in the home, school, community or primary care setting. Although
|
|
families are engaged in one setting, they often have to navigate
|
|
challenges in another setting. Objective: Our objective is to design and
|
|
implement a comprehensive plan which integrates EBI's and connects the
|
|
four sectors in underserved communities such as Philadelphia. Methods:
|
|
September 2015-April 2016 we implemented a three-pronged strategy to
|
|
understand needs and resources of the community including 1) focus
|
|
groups and key informant interviews, 2) secondary data analysis and 3)
|
|
pilot testing for implementation to determine gaps in care, and
|
|
opportunities to overcome those gaps. Results: Analysis of the focus
|
|
group and key informant responses showed themes: diagnosis fear,
|
|
clinician time, home and school asthma trigger exposures, school
|
|
personnel training and communication gaps across all four sectors. EBI's
|
|
were evaluated and selected to address identified themes. Pilot testing
|
|
of a community health worker (CHW) intervention to connect home, primary
|
|
care and school resulted in an efficient transfer of asthma medications
|
|
and medication administration forms to the school nurse office for
|
|
students with uncontrolled asthma addressing a common delay leading to
|
|
poor asthma management in school. Conclusion: Thus far there has been
|
|
limited success in reducing asthma disparities for low-income minority
|
|
children. This study offers hope that strategically positioning CHWs may
|
|
work synergistically to close gaps in care and result in improved asthma
|
|
control and reduced asthma disparities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bryant-Stephens, T (Corresponding Author), Childrens Hosp Philadelphia, Community Asthma Prevent Program, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Bryant-Stephens, Tyra; Kenyon, C.; Williams, Yolanda S.; Toussaint, K., Childrens Hosp Philadelphia, Community Asthma Prevent Program, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Bryant-Stephens, Tyra; Kenyon, C.; Apter, A. J.; Wolk, Courtney; Localio, R., Univ Penn, Perelman Sch Med, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Wolk, Courtney; Beidas, R., Univ Penn, Dept Perelman Sch Med, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Hui, A.; West, C.; McGinnis, S.; Gutierrez, M., Philadelphia Hlth Management Corp, Philadelphia, PA USA.
|
|
Stewart, Yvonne, Parent Asthmat Child, Philadelphia, PA USA.
|
|
Beidas, R., Univ Penn, Perelman Sch Med, Dept Med Eth \& Hlth Policy, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Beidas, R., Univ Penn, Leonard Davis Inst Hlth Econ PISCE LDI, Penn Implementat Sci Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/02770903.2019.1619083},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-0903},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-4303},
|
|
Keywords = {Asthma; community health workers; integration; pediatrics;
|
|
implementation science},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ENVIRONMENTAL INTERVENTION; EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT; COCKROACH ALLERGEN;
|
|
SELF-MANAGEMENT; UNITED-STATES; HEALTH; CHILDREN; MORBIDITY; EXPOSURE;
|
|
VIOLENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Allergy; Respiratory System},
|
|
Author-Email = {stephenst@email.chop.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Beidas, Rinad/ABG-2094-2021
|
|
Beidas, Rinad/AAD-8693-2022
|
|
Kenyon, Chen/HLW-8726-2023},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000478122300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001032984300001,
|
|
Author = {Wilson, Alyce N. and Melepia, Pele and Suruka, Rose and Hezeri, Priscah
|
|
and Kabiu, Dukduk and Babona, Delly and Wapi, Pinip and Morgan, Alison
|
|
and Vogel, Joshua P. and Beeson, James and Morgan, Christopher and
|
|
Kelly-Hanku, Angela and Scoullar, Michelle J. L. and Nosi, Somu and
|
|
Vallely, Lisa M. and Kennedy, Elissa and Bohren, Meghan A. and Homer,
|
|
Caroline S. E.},
|
|
Title = {Community perspectives and experiences of quality maternal and newborn
|
|
care in East New Britain, Papua New Guinea},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JUL 20},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundQuality maternal and newborn care is essential for improving
|
|
the health of mothers and babies. Low- and middle-income countries, such
|
|
as Papua New Guinea (PNG), face many barriers to achieving quality care
|
|
for all. Efforts to improve the quality of maternal and newborn care
|
|
must involve community in the design, implementation, and evaluation of
|
|
initiatives to ensure that interventions are appropriate and relevant
|
|
for the target community. We aimed to describe community members'
|
|
perspectives and experiences of maternal and newborn care, and their
|
|
ideas for improvement in one province, East New Britain, in
|
|
PNG.MethodsWe undertook a qualitative descriptive study in partnership
|
|
with and alongside five local health facilities, health care workers and
|
|
community members, using a Partnership Defined Quality Approach. We
|
|
conducted ten focus group discussions with 68 community members
|
|
(identified through church, market and other community-based groups) in
|
|
East New Britain PNG to explore perspectives and experiences of maternal
|
|
and newborn care, identify enablers and barriers to quality care and
|
|
interventions to improve care. Discussions were transcribed verbatim. A
|
|
mixed inductive and deductive analysis was conducted including
|
|
application of the World Health Organisation (WHO) Quality Maternal and
|
|
Newborn Care framework.ResultsUsing the WHO framework, we present the
|
|
findings in accordance with the five experience of care domains. We
|
|
found that the community reported multiple challenges in accessing care
|
|
and facilities were described as under-staffed and under resourced.
|
|
Community members emphasised the importance of good communication and
|
|
competent, caring and respectful healthcare workers. Both women and men
|
|
expressed a strong desire for companionship during labor and birth.
|
|
Several changes were suggested by the community that could immediately
|
|
improve the quality of care.ConclusionsCommunity perspectives and
|
|
experiences are critical for informing effective and sustainable
|
|
interventions to improve the quality of maternal and newborn care and
|
|
increasing facility-based births in PNG. A greater understanding of the
|
|
care experience as a key component of quality care is needed and any
|
|
quality improvement initiatives must include the user experience as a
|
|
key outcome measure.
|
|
Plain English summaryImproving the care provided to, and experienced by,
|
|
women and their families during pregnancy and childbirth is important
|
|
for improving the health of mothers and babies. Community members should
|
|
be involved in thinking about appropriate ways to improve care. Papua
|
|
New Guinea (PNG) is a country in the Pacific which faces multiple
|
|
challenges to improving care during pregnancy and birth. We aimed to
|
|
understand what community members think about care provided and
|
|
experienced during labour and birth in East New Britain, a rural
|
|
province of PNG. We worked with five health facilities, health workers
|
|
and community members in East New Britain to develop a qualitative
|
|
research project. We carried out 10 focus group discussions with
|
|
community members in East New Britain to understand what the provision
|
|
and experience of care was like during labour and birth, and ways that
|
|
it could be improved. We found that community members identified
|
|
multiple challenges in getting to facilities and many facilities were
|
|
found to have not enough supplies, equipment, or staff. Community
|
|
members wanted staff that were good at their work but also caring and
|
|
respectful. Women wanted to have support people present during labour
|
|
and birth and many men wanted to be present too. Our results show that
|
|
it is important to understand what the community thinks about the
|
|
quality of care during labour and birth and this information is helpful
|
|
to design effective activities to improve the care provided and
|
|
experienced.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wilson, AN (Corresponding Author), Burnet Inst, Maternal Child \& Adolescent Hlth Program, Melbourne, Australia.
|
|
Wilson, AN (Corresponding Author), Univ Melbourne, Nossal Inst Global Hlth, Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Melbourne, Australia.
|
|
Wilson, Alyce N.; Melepia, Pele; Suruka, Rose; Hezeri, Priscah; Kabiu, Dukduk; Vogel, Joshua P.; Beeson, James; Scoullar, Michelle J. L.; Kennedy, Elissa; Homer, Caroline S. E., Burnet Inst, Maternal Child \& Adolescent Hlth Program, Melbourne, Australia.
|
|
Wilson, Alyce N., Univ Melbourne, Nossal Inst Global Hlth, Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Melbourne, Australia.
|
|
Melepia, Pele; Suruka, Rose; Hezeri, Priscah; Kabiu, Dukduk, Burnet Inst, Hlth Mothers, Hlth Babies, Kokopo, Papua N Guinea.
|
|
Babona, Delly, St Marys Hosp, Kokopo, Papua N Guinea.
|
|
Wapi, Pinip, Nonga Gen Hosp, Rabaul, Papua N Guinea.
|
|
Morgan, Alison, World Bank, Global Financing Facil, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Beeson, James; Scoullar, Michelle J. L., Univ Melbourne, Dept Med, Melbourne, Australia.
|
|
Morgan, Christopher, Johns Hopkins Univ, Immunizat Program, JHPIEGO, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Kelly-Hanku, Angela; Nosi, Somu; Vallely, Lisa M., Papua New Guinea Inst Med Res, Goroka, Papua N Guinea.
|
|
Kelly-Hanku, Angela; Vallely, Lisa M., Univ New South Wales, Kirby Inst, Kensington, Australia.
|
|
Bohren, Meghan A., Univ Melbourne, Ctr Hlth Equity, Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Gender \& Womens Hlth Unit, Melbourne, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12913-023-09723-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {780},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Quality Care; Maternal and Newborn Health; Papua New Guinea; Quality
|
|
Improvement; Community},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILDBIRTH; HEALTH; PERCEPTIONS; WOMEN; MORTALITY; PATIENT; DEATHS;
|
|
ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {alyce.wilson@burnet.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Vogel, Joshua/K-7649-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Vogel, Joshua/0000-0002-3214-7096
|
|
Beeson, James/0000-0002-1018-7898},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001032984300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000222071100002,
|
|
Author = {Gaughan, M and Robin, S},
|
|
Title = {National science training policy and early scientific careers in France
|
|
and the United States},
|
|
Journal = {RESEARCH POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {33},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {569-581},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {The economic health of nations and regions is increasingly coming to
|
|
rest on the scientific and technical labor force conducting scientific
|
|
research. As such, enormous social resources are directed to educating
|
|
and training those who will fire the engines of economic growth. In the
|
|
first part of this paper, we compare recent investment in the scientific
|
|
and technical labor forces by two giants of nationally-supported
|
|
research endeavors: France and the United States. We find that France is
|
|
more invested in scientific and technical training, but that both
|
|
nations invest directly and indirectly in the scientific and technical
|
|
labor force. French policy is more likely to support the individual
|
|
graduate student directly through a national grant, while graduate
|
|
students in the US tend to rely indirectly on federal support through
|
|
research grants to other researchers. We then use duration models on
|
|
individual data to predict entry into a permanent academic position
|
|
within three years of completing a Ph.D. We do not find that industrial
|
|
support of graduate training has any effect on later success in
|
|
obtaining a position. There is, however, evidence of different academic
|
|
labor markets operating in each country. In France, entry into a
|
|
position has not depended on period factors, while in the US more recent
|
|
cohorts have been more successful in obtaining permanent employment.
|
|
Furthermore, postdoctoral positions in France delay or deter academic
|
|
careers, but have no impact on entry in the US: this suggest that two
|
|
different modes of scientific human resources management operate in
|
|
France and in the USA. In the USA, Ph.D.s are seen as an essential
|
|
element in the process of knowledge transfer, and early mobility does
|
|
not affect entry into permanent academic careers. In France, few
|
|
incentives are given to encourage mobility, which merely deters the
|
|
access to permanent jobs. Finally, we found that graduates of the most
|
|
prestigious undergraduate institutions were systematically advantaged in
|
|
obtaining permanent academic employment, suggesting that academic
|
|
stratification occurs very early in the training path in each country.
|
|
(C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gaughan, M (Corresponding Author), Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Publ Policy, 685 Cherry St NW, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA.
|
|
Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Publ Policy, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA.
|
|
Catholic Univ Louvain, IRES, B-3000 Louvain, Belgium.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.respol.2004.01.005},
|
|
ISSN = {0048-7333},
|
|
Keywords = {scientific research; United States; France; scientific and technical
|
|
human capital; scientific labor force},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ENGINEERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {monica.gaughan@pubpolicy.gatech.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gaughan, Monica/0000-0001-9638-9521},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {57},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000222071100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000563218600001,
|
|
Author = {Halvorsen, Cal J. and Saran, Indrani and Pitt-Catsouphes, Marcie},
|
|
Title = {Assessments of fit and usability of work-life supports in the context of
|
|
diversity and perceptions of fairness},
|
|
Journal = {COMMUNITY WORK \& FAMILY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {23},
|
|
Number = {5, SI},
|
|
Pages = {556-575},
|
|
Month = {OCT 19},
|
|
Abstract = {There is a robust literature that examines outcomes associated with
|
|
work-life supports. Scholars have considered the `fit' between employee
|
|
needs and the supports available while others have examined the
|
|
`usability'-or the potential consequences of using-work-life supports.
|
|
In this article, we suggest that `fit' and `usability' could be related
|
|
to both employees' own demographic, social, and cultural identities, as
|
|
well as perceptions of fairness at the workplace. While scholars have
|
|
focused on organizational justice and workplace fairness for quite some
|
|
time, the context of diversity-in its many forms-has rarely been
|
|
included in this conversation or has simply been added as a series of
|
|
controls in statistical analyses without regard to diversity's various
|
|
forms. In response, we review the work-life literature to consider the
|
|
broad context of diversity as well as various domains of workplace
|
|
fairness. We then present a conceptual framework that aims to guide
|
|
future work-life research on the fit and usability of work-life supports
|
|
in the context of diversity and perceptions of fairness. We also offer
|
|
research propositions to stimulate future scholarship and present
|
|
findings from an exploratory study to illustrate the importance of
|
|
considering the context of diversity in studies on workplace fairness.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Halvorsen, CJ (Corresponding Author), Boston Coll, Sch Social Work, 140 Commonwealth Ave, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 USA.
|
|
Halvorsen, Cal J.; Saran, Indrani; Pitt-Catsouphes, Marcie, Boston Coll, Sch Social Work, 140 Commonwealth Ave, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 USA.
|
|
Halvorsen, Cal J.; Pitt-Catsouphes, Marcie, Boston Coll, Ctr Aging \& Work, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/13668803.2020.1809996},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1366-8803},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-3615},
|
|
Keywords = {Diversity; organizational justice; workplace fairness;
|
|
intersectionality; work-life supports; usability},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ORGANIZATIONAL JUSTICE; BENEFIT UTILIZATION; FAMILY CONFLICT;
|
|
FLEXIBILITY; DISPARITIES; INCLUSION; POLICY; INTERSECTIONALITY;
|
|
SATISFACTION; EMPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {cal.halvorsen@bc.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Halvorsen, Cal J./0000-0002-9184-633X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000563218600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000497746000002,
|
|
Author = {Hall, Teresa and Kakuma, Ritsuko and Palmer, Lisa and Minas, Harry and
|
|
Martins, Joao and Armstrong, Greg},
|
|
Title = {Intersectoral collaboration for people-centred mental health care in
|
|
Timor-Leste: a mixed-methods study using qualitative and social network
|
|
analysis},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEMS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {NOV 16},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Intersectoral collaboration is fundamental to the provision
|
|
of people-centred mental health care, yet there is a dearth of research
|
|
about how this strategy operates within mental health systems in low-
|
|
and middle-income countries. This is problematic given the known
|
|
attitudinal, structural and resource barriers to intersectoral
|
|
collaboration in high-income country mental health systems. This study
|
|
was conducted to investigate intersectoral collaboration for
|
|
people-centred mental health care in Timor-Leste, a South-East Asian
|
|
country in the process of strengthening its mental health system.
|
|
Methods This study employed a mixed-methods convergent design.
|
|
Qualitative data elicited from in-depth interviews with 85 key
|
|
stakeholders and document review were complemented with quantitative
|
|
social network analysis to assess understandings of, the strength and
|
|
structure of intersectoral collaboration in the Timorese mental health
|
|
system. Results There was consensus among stakeholder groups that
|
|
intersectoral collaboration for mental health is important in
|
|
Timor-Leste. Despite resource restrictions discussed by participants,
|
|
interview data and social network analysis revealed evidence of
|
|
information and resource sharing among organisations working within the
|
|
health and social (disability and violence support) sectors in
|
|
Timor-Leste (network density = 0.55 and 0.30 for information and
|
|
resource sharing, respectively). Contrary to the assumption that mental
|
|
health services and system strengthening are led by the Ministry of
|
|
Health, the mixed-methods data sources identified a split in stewardship
|
|
for mental health between subnetworks in the health and social sectors
|
|
(network degree centralisation = 0.28 and 0.47 for information and
|
|
resource sharing, respectively). Conclusions Overall, the findings
|
|
suggest that there may be opportunities for intersectoral collaborations
|
|
in mental health systems in LMICs which do not exist in settings with
|
|
more formalised mental health systems such as HICs. Holistic
|
|
understandings of health and wellbeing, and a commitment to working
|
|
together in the face of resource restrictions suggest that intersectoral
|
|
collaboration can be employed to achieve people-centred mental health
|
|
care in Timor-Leste.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hall, T (Corresponding Author), Univ Melbourne, Nossal Inst Global Hlth, 333 Exhibit St, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Hall, Teresa; Armstrong, Greg, Univ Melbourne, Nossal Inst Global Hlth, 333 Exhibit St, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Kakuma, Ritsuko, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Ctr Global Mental Hlth, London, England.
|
|
Kakuma, Ritsuko; Minas, Harry, Univ Melbourne, Ctr Mental Hlth, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Palmer, Lisa, Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Martins, Joao, Natl Univ Timor Leste, Fac Med \& Hlth Sci, Dili, Timor-Leste.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13033-019-0328-1},
|
|
Article-Number = {72},
|
|
ISSN = {1752-4458},
|
|
Keywords = {Intersectoral collaboration; Governance; Global mental health;
|
|
Timor-Leste; Asia Pacific},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GOVERNANCE; SYSTEMS; DISORDERS; FRAMEWORK; SECTORS; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {teresa.hall@unimelb.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Armstrong, Gregory/K-1068-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Armstrong, Gregory/0000-0002-8073-9213
|
|
Kakuma, Ritsuko/0000-0002-0196-2100
|
|
Palmer, Lisa/0000-0003-3571-5404},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000497746000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000640658300001,
|
|
Author = {Borgkvist, Ashlee and Moore, Vivienne and Crabb, Shona and Eliott,
|
|
Jaklin},
|
|
Title = {Critical considerations of workplace flexibility ``for all{''} and
|
|
gendered outcomes: Men being flexible about their flexibility},
|
|
Journal = {GENDER WORK AND ORGANIZATION},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {6, SI},
|
|
Pages = {2076-2090},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Flexible working arrangements (FWA) ``for all, from the CEO down{''},
|
|
have begun to be promoted in Australia, heralded as a means to finally
|
|
achieve gender equity in the workplace. However, workplaces are gendered
|
|
spaces in which masculine traits and unconstrained availability are
|
|
usually highly valued, as encapsulated in the notion of the ideal
|
|
worker, and women are seen as lacking or ``other{''}. We undertook a
|
|
study to examine how upper level managers in large, male-dominated
|
|
organizations endorsing FWA for all perceived and reflected on the use
|
|
of FWA within their organizations and by themselves. Interviews were
|
|
undertaken with 12 upper level managers (9 men). Applying a social
|
|
constructionist perspective and critical theoretical lens informed by
|
|
theories of Acker and Ahmed, qualitative analysis suggested that,
|
|
despite being ``for all{''} in organizational rhetoric, FWA remains
|
|
viewed as ``for women{''}, and appropriate to lower level, routinized
|
|
roles. Upper level managers described themselves and other men as able
|
|
to be ``flexible about their flexibility{''} thus maintaining their
|
|
standing as ideal workers. This framing of flexibility has implications
|
|
for men, women and society. It enabled ongoing positioning of women as
|
|
other in workplace settings, rendering invisible structural inequality.
|
|
Thus, FWA for all does not necessarily transform workplace gender
|
|
equity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Borgkvist, A (Corresponding Author), Univ South Australia, Safe Relationships \& Communities Res Grp, Magill Campus,Bldg D,St Bernards Rd, Magill, SA 5072, Australia.
|
|
Borgkvist, Ashlee, Univ South Australia, Safe Relationships \& Communities Res Grp, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Borgkvist, Ashlee; Moore, Vivienne; Crabb, Shona, Univ Adelaide, Fay Gale Ctr Res Gender, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Moore, Vivienne; Crabb, Shona; Eliott, Jaklin, Univ Adelaide, Sch Publ Hlth, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
|
|
Moore, Vivienne, Univ Adelaide, Robinson Res Inst, Adelaide, SA, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/gwao.12680},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0968-6673},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-0432},
|
|
Keywords = {flexible working arrangements; gender; ideal worker norm; managers;
|
|
parenting},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK ARRANGEMENTS; FAMILY; EMPLOYMENT; DIVERSITY; FATHERS; LIFE;
|
|
ENTITLEMENT; POLITICS; POLICIES; SUPPORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Management; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {ashlee.borgkvist@unisa.edu.au},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {74},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000640658300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000888523000001,
|
|
Author = {Voermans, Moniek A. C. and den Boer, Maria C. and Wilthagen, Ton and
|
|
Embregts, Petri J. C. M.},
|
|
Title = {Long-term social restrictions and lack of work activities during the
|
|
COVID-19 pandemic: impact on the daily lives of people with intellectual
|
|
disabilities},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Month = {2022 NOV 17},
|
|
Abstract = {PurposeLockdowns due to the Covid-19 pandemic may have had a
|
|
disproportionate impact on the daily lives of people with intellectual
|
|
disabilities. Many of them had to deal with limited social contacts for
|
|
an extended period. This study explores in depth how people with
|
|
intellectual disabilities in the Netherlands experienced their daily
|
|
lives, in particular due to lack of access to regular work
|
|
activities.Materials and methodsEight participants with intellectual
|
|
disabilities were interviewed. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis
|
|
(IPA) was employed in conducting and analysing interviews.Results and
|
|
conclusionsAnalysis yielded three overarching themes that are
|
|
conceptually linked. Participants experienced a prolonged lack of social
|
|
connections that resulted in experiences of social isolation and
|
|
feelings of loneliness. This led to different kinds of struggles: either
|
|
internal struggles involving negative thoughts or depressive feelings,
|
|
or a perceived threat to their autonomous position in society. Meanwhile
|
|
participants had to sustain their sense of self-worth in the absence of
|
|
work activities. The findings emphasise the importance of social
|
|
opportunities through the access to work activities for people with
|
|
intellectual disabilities. Interventions are suggested to help reverse
|
|
the increased social inequalities and enhance rehabilitation via work
|
|
activities for people with intellectual disabilities.IMPLICATIONS FOR
|
|
REHABLITATIONMore awareness may be raised among authorities, employers
|
|
and the general public about the significant value people with
|
|
intellectual disabilities attribute to meaningful social connections, in
|
|
particular through work activities.Also, more awareness may be raised
|
|
about the potential adverse effects of the loss of work activities and
|
|
social connections on the quality of life of people with intellectual
|
|
disabilities.Providing social support to others may help people with
|
|
intellectual disabilities to construct social valued roles, either in or
|
|
outside the work situation.Professionals and employers can support
|
|
people with intellectual disabilities to find opportunities to provide
|
|
social support to others.It is important to invest in sustainable and
|
|
innovative post-pandemic community participation initiatives and
|
|
particularly in accessible post-pandemic employment support, for example
|
|
by organising paid in-company training placements.It is essential that
|
|
professionals support people with intellectual disabilities to enhance
|
|
their sources of resilience and coping strategies, that may have
|
|
diminished as a result of the pandemic.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Voermans, MAC (Corresponding Author), Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Tranzo, POB 90153, NL-5000 LE Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Voermans, Moniek A. C.; den Boer, Maria C.; Embregts, Petri J. C. M., Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Tranzo, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Voermans, Moniek A. C., Amarant, Healthcare Org People Intellectual Disabil, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Wilthagen, Ton, Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Law Sch, Publ Law \& Governance, Tilburg, Netherlands.
|
|
Voermans, Moniek A. C., Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Sch Social \& Behav Sci, Tranzo, POB 90153, NL-5000 LE Tilburg, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09638288.2022.2147227},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Covid-19; daytime activities; employment; intellectual disabilities;
|
|
interpretative phenomenological analysis; job loss; social contacts;
|
|
meaning of work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; OPPORTUNITIES; EMPLOYMENT; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {m.a.c.voermans@tilburguniversity.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {den Boer, Maria/Y-2449-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {den Boer, Maria/0000-0003-4945-7303
|
|
Embregts, Petri/0000-0003-3567-1528
|
|
Voermans, Moniek/0000-0001-8552-7378},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000888523000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1994QU11700004,
|
|
Author = {SHUCKSMITH, M and CHAPMAN, P and CLARK, G and BLACK, S},
|
|
Title = {SOCIAL-WELFARE IN RURAL EUROPE},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {1994},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {343-356},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Rural development has been identified by EU leaders as one of the
|
|
priorities of European structural policies, and as one of the objectives
|
|
of cohesion policy. Yet despite this commitment, we are very poorly
|
|
informed about how ordinary people live across the rural areas of
|
|
Europe, their incomes and quality of life, and their perceptions of
|
|
policies and economic and social change. This paper argues that greater
|
|
attention should be devoted to issues of poverty, disadvantage and
|
|
social exclusion in rural Europe by both policymakers and researchers.
|
|
This is particularly crucial at the present time as rural Europe is
|
|
subject to major structural changes deriving both from changes in rural
|
|
economy and society and from policy initiatives such as the Maastricht
|
|
Treaty and the Single European Act. These are over and above the wider
|
|
trends operating throughout Europe in relation to employment, fiscal
|
|
crisis and ageing, for example. A central requirement is for the
|
|
articulation of policies for tackling economic and social exclusion
|
|
(e.g. Poverty 3, Exclusion 1), on the one hand, with those directed
|
|
towards rural development (e.g. Leader 2), on the other. Fundamental
|
|
household survey work is required to increase our understanding of what
|
|
constitutes rural disadvantage, which client groups are affected, and
|
|
how policies can contribute towards relieving their disadvantage,
|
|
preferably through client-based instruments rather than less appropriate
|
|
area-based approaches. The last part of this paper presents preliminary
|
|
results of such a survey, focusing on issues of employment, housing,
|
|
poverty and quality of life.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {SHUCKSMITH, M (Corresponding Author), UNIV ABERDEEN, ST MARYS KINGS COLL, DEPT LAND ECON, ABERDEEN AB9 1FX, SCOTLAND.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/0743-0167(94)90044-2},
|
|
ISSN = {0743-0167},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DEPRIVATION; ENGLAND; WALES; AREAS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography; Regional \& Urban Planning},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1994QU11700004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000553304903130,
|
|
Author = {Bueno-Sanchez, L. and Martinez-Molina, S. and de Almeida Cunha, S.
|
|
Marques and Garces, J. and Perez, D. and Quilez, M.},
|
|
Editor = {Chova, LG and Martinez, AL and Torres, IC},
|
|
Title = {DIGITAL INCLUSION OF SENIOR COLLECTIVES THROUGH PARTICIPATORY PROCESSES
|
|
OF CO-CREATION OF DIGITAL TOOLS: DESIGN OF A MOOC},
|
|
Booktitle = {EDULEARN19: 11TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATION AND NEW LEARNING
|
|
TECHNOLOGIES},
|
|
Series = {EDULEARN Proceedings},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Pages = {9295-9298},
|
|
Note = {11th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies
|
|
(EDULEARN), Palma, SPAIN, JUL 01-03, 2019},
|
|
Abstract = {In a historical moment where senior citizens in advanced societies
|
|
increase their life expectancy and, in turn, new information and
|
|
communication technologies evolve, develop and advance at breakneck
|
|
speed; the participatory inclusion of the senior generations in the
|
|
digital society becomes necessary.
|
|
Life expectancy has increased in recent years, as shown in the report
|
|
``Evolution of the family in Europe 2018 European Parliament{''}: on
|
|
average about 10 years in the last 50 years. On the other hand, 1 in 5
|
|
Europeans (19.2\% of the population) is over 65 years old, surpassing
|
|
97.7 million people. The population over 80 years old reaches 25 million
|
|
people, and now represents 5.1\% of the population(1).
|
|
The Committee on Culture and Education of the European Parliament, at
|
|
its meeting on education in the digital age: challenges, opportunities
|
|
and lessons for the design of the Union's policies carried out in
|
|
December 2018, warned that 44\% of the population of the Union The
|
|
European population between the ages of 16 and 74 years lack basic
|
|
digital capabilities, which causes a situation that threatens to create
|
|
a new social fracture and significant gaps between men and women and
|
|
between generations and social groups'. For this reason, the commission
|
|
proposes lifelong learning in digital competencies of different
|
|
governments in cooperation with all stakeholders, such as companies and
|
|
civil society organizations, and through formal and non-formal
|
|
frameworks, to guarantee a sustainable digital transformation. in which
|
|
no one is excluded.
|
|
The social constructions on aging, where care principles prevailed, have
|
|
been transformed in the last decades towards some improvements in which
|
|
potentiality and active aging form the pillars of previous generations.
|
|
In this sense, new technologies stand out as necessary entry doors for
|
|
digital inclusion, empowerment and the ``activation{''} of the elders of
|
|
our time.
|
|
For all the above, this article aims to serve as an example of the
|
|
achievement of the appropriation of digital skills by including older
|
|
people in the processes of co-creation and co-validation of online tools
|
|
and their content, specifically through the Design of Massive Online
|
|
Open Courses (MOOC) designed to promote the active life of older people
|
|
through the collaborative economy. MOOCs, as demonstrated in recent
|
|
years, allow to facilitate and guarantee the quality training of any
|
|
group, regardless of their geographical situation or age(2).
|
|
The participants of this project met in two sessions (co-creation and
|
|
co-validation) in Spain, Greece, Germany, France and Austria, at two
|
|
different times to determine the structure and content of a MOOC for the
|
|
elderly and the General population interested in the processes of
|
|
activation of older people and in the collaborative economy. In them, 40
|
|
people participated with the following population profiles: elderly
|
|
people, local representatives of older people and professionals who work
|
|
daily with these groups. At the conclusion of the sessions, significant
|
|
improvements were made in aspects such as the autonomy in the management
|
|
of ICT, the adaptation of tools to all groups, the construction of new
|
|
meanings on the opportunities offered by ICT for the elderly, overcoming
|
|
barriers and encouraging creativity through assets. Participation of the
|
|
entire process of gestation of the tool.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bueno-Sanchez, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
|
|
Bueno-Sanchez, L.; Martinez-Molina, S.; de Almeida Cunha, S. Marques; Garces, J., Univ Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
|
|
Perez, D.; Quilez, M., Coordina, Barcelona, Spain.},
|
|
ISSN = {2340-1117},
|
|
ISBN = {978-84-09-12031-4},
|
|
Keywords = {digital society; MOOCs; active aging; co-creation},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {5},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000553304903130},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000460198500004,
|
|
Author = {Marom, Batia S. and Ratzon, Navah Z. and Carel, Rafael S. and Sharabi,
|
|
Moshe},
|
|
Title = {Return-to-Work Barriers Among Manual Workers After Hand Injuries: 1-Year
|
|
Follow-up Cohort Study},
|
|
Journal = {ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {100},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {422-432},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To determine time of return to work (TRTW) in relation to
|
|
multivariable predictors among male manual workers after hand injury
|
|
(HI) over a 12-month follow-up.
|
|
Design: A cohort study with baseline medical information, functional
|
|
evaluation, and 3-, 6-, 9-, and 12-month follow-up telephone interviews.
|
|
Setting: Seven physical rehabilitation community occupational therapy
|
|
clinics.
|
|
Participants: Participants (N=178) with acute HI aged 22-65. Two
|
|
participants were lost to follow-up.
|
|
Intervention: Not applicable.
|
|
Main Outcome Measure: The dependent variable was TRTW. The independent
|
|
variables originated from 4 domains: personal factors, environmental
|
|
factors, body function and structure, and activity limitation and
|
|
participation restriction. The proportion of return to work (RTW) at
|
|
each time point was calculated. Multiple Cox regressions established a
|
|
predictive model for TRTW.
|
|
Results: At the end of the study, 75.3\% participants returned to work.
|
|
The median TRTW was 94 days. In the final model, only compensation
|
|
factors and education contributed significantly to overall RTW, but when
|
|
separate analyses were performed, decreased level of self-efficacy,
|
|
higher workplace demands, level of pain, level of emotional response to
|
|
trauma, reduced physical capability of the hand, and higher level of
|
|
disability were significantly associated with delayed TRTW.
|
|
Conclusions: TRTW was determined by the physical capability of the hand,
|
|
pain, and psychosocial factors, but it was also affected by legal
|
|
factors. Participants who did not return to work during the first 9
|
|
months are at risk for long-term disability. Developing treatment
|
|
programs for those who are at risk for not returning to work, taking
|
|
into consideration these factors, is recommended. (C) 2018 by the
|
|
American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Marom, BS (Corresponding Author), Clalit Hlth Serv, Occupat Therapy Unit, 1 Hachashmonaim St, IL-1426401 Tiberias, Israel.
|
|
Marom, Batia S., Univ Haifa, Sch Publ Hlth, Clalit Hlth Serv, Occupat Therapy Unit, Haifa, Israel.
|
|
Ratzon, Navah Z., Tel Aviv Univ, Dept Occupat Therapy, Sackler Fac Med, Tel Aviv, Israel.
|
|
Carel, Rafael S., Univ Haifa, Sch Publ Hlth, Haifa, Israel.
|
|
Sharabi, Moshe, Max Stern Yezreel Valley Coll, Sociol \& Anthropol Dept, Yezreel Valley, Israel.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.apmr.2018.07.429},
|
|
ISSN = {0003-9993},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-821X},
|
|
Keywords = {Hand; Injuries; International Classification of Functioning; Disability
|
|
and Health; Rehabilitation; Return to work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRAUMATIC BRAIN-INJURY; EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES; PAIN; DISABILITY;
|
|
COMPENSATION; HEALTH; TIME; VALIDATION; SURGERY; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Sport Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {batiamarom2@clalit.org.il},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sharabi, Moshe/0000-0001-8570-8769},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000460198500004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000294857600001,
|
|
Author = {Henrickson, Michael},
|
|
Title = {Policy challenges for the pediatric rheumatology workforce: Part II.
|
|
Health care system delivery and workforce supply},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRIC RHEUMATOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Month = {AUG 16},
|
|
Abstract = {The United States pediatric population with chronic health conditions is
|
|
expanding. Currently, this demographic comprises 12-18\% of the American
|
|
child and youth population. Affected children often receive fragmented,
|
|
uncoordinated care. Overall, the American health care delivery system
|
|
produces modest outcomes for this population. Poor, uninsured and
|
|
minority children may be at increased risk for inferior coordination of
|
|
services. Further, the United States health care delivery system is
|
|
primarily organized for the diagnosis and treatment of acute conditions.
|
|
For pediatric patients with chronic health conditions, the typical acute
|
|
problem-oriented visit actually serves as a barrier to care. The
|
|
biomedical model of patient education prevails, characterized by
|
|
unilateral transfer of medical information. However, the evidence basis
|
|
for improvement in disease outcomes supports the use of the chronic care
|
|
model, initially proposed by Dr. Edward Wagner. Six inter-related
|
|
elements distinguish the success of the chronic care model, which
|
|
include self-management support and care coordination by a prepared,
|
|
proactive team.
|
|
United States health care lacks a coherent policy direction for the
|
|
management of high cost chronic conditions, including rheumatic
|
|
diseases. A fundamental restructure of United States health care
|
|
delivery must urgently occur which places the patient at the center of
|
|
care. For the pediatric rheumatology workforce, reimbursement policies
|
|
and the actions of health plans and insurers are consistent barriers to
|
|
chronic disease improvement. United States reimbursement policy and
|
|
overall fragmentation of health care services pose specific challenges
|
|
for widespread implementation of the chronic care model. Team-based
|
|
multidisciplinary care, care coordination and self-management are
|
|
integral to improve outcomes.
|
|
Pediatric rheumatology demand in the United States far exceeds available
|
|
workforce supply. This article reviews the career choice decision-making
|
|
process at each medical trainee level to determine best recruitment
|
|
strategies. Educational debt is an unexpectedly minor determinant for
|
|
pediatric residents and subspecialty fellows. A two-year fellowship
|
|
training option may retain the mandatory scholarship component and
|
|
attract an increasing number of candidate trainees. Diversity, work-life
|
|
balance, scheduling flexibility to accommodate part-time employment, and
|
|
reform of conditions for academic promotion all need to be addressed to
|
|
ensure future growth of the pediatric rheumatology workforce.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Henrickson, M (Corresponding Author), Cincinnati Childrens Hosp, Med Ctr, Div Rheumatol, MLC 4010,3333 Burnet Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45229 USA.
|
|
Cincinnati Childrens Hosp, Med Ctr, Div Rheumatol, Cincinnati, OH 45229 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1546-0096-9-23},
|
|
Article-Number = {24},
|
|
EISSN = {1546-0096},
|
|
Keywords = {pediatric rheumatology; pediatric subspecialty; policy; workforce},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CONTROLLABLE LIFE-STYLE; CHRONIC ILLNESS CARE; SPECIALTY CHOICE;
|
|
SUBSPECIALTY WORKFORCE; FELLOWS PERSPECTIVES; MEDICAL-STUDENTS; FUTURE
|
|
SCOPE; CHILDREN; MODEL; MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics; Rheumatology},
|
|
Author-Email = {michael.henrickson@cchmc.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Henrickson, Michael/AAE-8221-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {80},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000294857600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000407295600001,
|
|
Author = {Lall, Priya and Shaw, Stacey A. and Saifi, Rumana and Sherman, Susan G.
|
|
and Azmi, Nuruljannah Nor and Pillai, Veena and El-Bassel, Nabila and
|
|
Kamarulzaman, Adeeba and Wickersham, Jeffrey A.},
|
|
Title = {Acceptability of a microfinance-based empowerment intervention for
|
|
transgender and cisgender women sex workers in Greater Kuala Lumpur,
|
|
Malaysia},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL AIDS SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Month = {AUG 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: Cisgender and transgender woman sex workers (CWSWs and
|
|
TWSWs, respectively) are key populations in Malaysia with higher
|
|
HIV-prevalence than that of the general population. Given the impact
|
|
economic instability can have on HIV transmission in these populations,
|
|
novel HIV prevention interventions that reduce poverty may reduce HIV
|
|
incidence and improve linkage and retention to care for those already
|
|
living with HIV. We examine the feasibility of a microfinance-based HIV
|
|
prevention intervention among CWSW and TWSWs in Greater Kuala Lumpur,
|
|
Malaysia.
|
|
Methods: We conducted 35 in-depth interviews to examine the
|
|
acceptability of a microfinance-based HIV prevention intervention,
|
|
focusing on: (1) participants' readiness to engage in other occupations
|
|
and the types of jobs in which they were interested in; (2) their level
|
|
of interest in the components of the potential intervention, including
|
|
training on financial literacy and vocational education; and (3)
|
|
possible barriers and facilitators to the successful completion of the
|
|
intervention. Using grounded theory as a framework of analysis,
|
|
transcripts were analysed through Nvivo 11.
|
|
Results: Participants were on average 41 years old, slightly less than
|
|
half (48\%) were married, and more than half (52\%) identified as
|
|
Muslim. Participants express high motivation to seek employment in other
|
|
professions as they perceived sex work as not a ``proper job{''} with
|
|
opportunities for career growth but rather as a short-term option
|
|
offering an unstable form of income. Participants wanted to develop
|
|
their own small enterprise. Most participants expressed a high level of
|
|
interest in microfinance intervention and training to enable them to
|
|
enter a new profession. Possible barriers to intervention participation
|
|
included time, stigma, and a lack of resources.
|
|
Conclusion: Findings indicate that a microfinance intervention is
|
|
acceptable and desirable for CWSWs and TWSWs in urban Malaysian contexts
|
|
as participants reported that they were ready to engage in alternative
|
|
forms of income generation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wickersham, JA (Corresponding Author), Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Internal Med, Sect Infect Dis,AIDS Program, New Haven, CT 06510 USA.
|
|
Lall, Priya; Saifi, Rumana; Azmi, Nuruljannah Nor; Pillai, Veena; Kamarulzaman, Adeeba; Wickersham, Jeffrey A., Univ Malaya, Dept Med, Fac Med, Ctr Excellence Res AIDS, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
|
|
Shaw, Stacey A., Brigham Young Univ, Dept Social Work, Provo, UT 84602 USA.
|
|
Sherman, Susan G., Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Behav \& Soc, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
El-Bassel, Nabila, Columbia Univ, Sch Social Work, Social Intervent Grp, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Kamarulzaman, Adeeba; Wickersham, Jeffrey A., Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Internal Med, Sect Infect Dis,AIDS Program, New Haven, CT 06510 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.7448/IAS.20.1.21723},
|
|
Article-Number = {21723},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-2652},
|
|
Keywords = {HIV; transgender women; cisgender women; sex work; microfinance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HIV RISK BEHAVIOR; DRUG-USE; INJECT DRUGS; MAK-NYAH; PREVENTION; HEALTH;
|
|
PREVALENCE; CHALLENGES; VALIDITY; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Immunology; Infectious Diseases},
|
|
Author-Email = {jeffrey.wickersham@yale.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {SAIFI, RUMANA AKHTER/HPD-8522-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {SAIFI, RUMANA AKHTER/0000-0001-9114-4728
|
|
Lall, Priya/0000-0002-5313-4278},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {28},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000407295600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000418556300005,
|
|
Author = {Laflamme, Anne-Marie},
|
|
Title = {Mental Disorders and Reasonable Accommodation at Work: The Potential of
|
|
Quebec Law},
|
|
Journal = {SANTE MENTALE AU QUEBEC},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {39-56},
|
|
Month = {FAL},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives Being able to work constitutes a powerful social integration
|
|
vector for those suffering from mental health disorders, while also
|
|
providing therapeutic benefits for them. Yet, despite some advances in
|
|
this regard, such persons are still denied employment. The obstacles to
|
|
their full workforce integration reside in the prejudices surrounding
|
|
the disorders affecting them and the need to adapt tasks to their needs
|
|
and abilities. The International Convention on the Rights of Persons
|
|
with Disabilities, adopted by the United Nations in 2006, points out
|
|
that disability results from the interaction between persons with
|
|
impairments and attitudinal and environmental barriers that hinder their
|
|
full and effective participation in society on the basis of equality
|
|
with others. It stresses the importance of the right to work of persons
|
|
with disabilities and, in particular, the implementation of reasonable
|
|
accommodation for these persons in all workplaces. From this
|
|
perspective, this article aims to explore the impacts of the legal
|
|
obligation of accommodation.
|
|
Methods In Canada, the fundamental rights approach and, in particular,
|
|
the obligation for reasonable accommodation with regard to handicapped
|
|
workers, has been well established in case law since the mid 1980s. This
|
|
obligation is of a constitutional nature and its extended range is
|
|
limited only by the proof of undue hardship. It thus forcefully prompts
|
|
labour markets to take into consideration the needs and capacities of
|
|
disabled workers. Through a study of Quebec case law, this article looks
|
|
at the potential of the duty to accommodate with regard to promoting
|
|
access to and retention of employment among people with mental
|
|
disorders.
|
|
Results The study found that the duty to accommodate imposes an
|
|
innovative approach that takes into account the particular situation of
|
|
the disabled person and involves the participation of all stakeholders.
|
|
Accommodation allows employees to maintain an employment relationship
|
|
despite repeated absences caused by illness, thus enabling them to do
|
|
their work. Employers must provide adjustments relating to working time
|
|
and allow gradual return when necessary. Moreover, the accommodation may
|
|
involve changing the work itself or its psychosocial aspects.
|
|
Conclusion By implementing measures to change the psychosocial work
|
|
environment, accommodation not only promotes access to and retention of
|
|
employment among people with mental disorders, but also opens the way to
|
|
first stage prevention for the benefit of all.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {French},
|
|
Affiliation = {Laflamme, AM (Corresponding Author), Univ Laval, Fac Droit, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Laflamme, AM (Corresponding Author), CRIMT, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Laflamme, Anne-Marie, Univ Laval, Fac Droit, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Laflamme, Anne-Marie, CRIMT, Montreal, PQ, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.7202/1041913ar},
|
|
ISSN = {0383-6320},
|
|
EISSN = {1708-3923},
|
|
Keywords = {accommodation; discrimination; right to equality; mental health;
|
|
employment; job retention},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RETURN-TO-WORK; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000418556300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000303334200001,
|
|
Author = {Collins, Patricia A.},
|
|
Title = {Do great local minds think alike? Comparing perceptions of the social
|
|
determinants of health between non-profit and governmental actors in two
|
|
Canadian cities},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH EDUCATION RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {371-384},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Cities are important sites for intervention on social determinants of
|
|
health (SDOH); yet, little is known about how influential local actors,
|
|
namely workers in municipal governments (GOVs) and community-based
|
|
organizations (CBOs), perceive the SDOH. Capturing and comparing
|
|
perceptions between these groups are important for assessing how SDOH
|
|
discourse has permeated local actors' thinking-a meaningful endeavour as
|
|
local-level health equity action often invokes inter-institutional
|
|
partnerships. This paper compares SDOH perceptions between CBO workers
|
|
in Hamilton, Ontario, with politicians and senior-level staff in GOVs in
|
|
Vancouver, British Columbia, based on two studies with surveys
|
|
containing identical questions on SDOH perceptions. Overall, there was
|
|
high comparability between the groups in their relative ratings of the
|
|
SDOH. Both groups assigned high levels of `influence' and `priority' to
|
|
`healthy lifestyles' and `clean air and water' and lower levels to
|
|
`strong community' and `income'. Given the importance of a shared vision
|
|
in collaborative enterprises, the comparability of perceptions between
|
|
the groups found here holds promise for the prospect of
|
|
inter-institutional partnerships. However, the low rating assigned to
|
|
more structural health determinants suggests that more work is needed
|
|
from researchers and advocates to effectively advance a health equity
|
|
agenda at the local level in Canada.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Collins, PA (Corresponding Author), Queens Univ, Sch Urban \& Reg Planning, 138 Union St, Kingston, ON K7L 4N6, Canada.
|
|
Queens Univ, Sch Urban \& Reg Planning, Kingston, ON K7L 4N6, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/her/cys009},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-1153},
|
|
EISSN = {1465-3648},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CIVIL-SERVANTS; CARE; INEQUALITIES; INEQUITIES; PARTNERS; OBESITY;
|
|
DESIGN; POLICY; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research; Public, Environmental \& Occupational
|
|
Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {patricia.collins@queensu.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {95},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000303334200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000354183000001,
|
|
Author = {Yelland, Jane and Riggs, Elisha and Szwarc, Josef and Casey, Sue and
|
|
Dawson, Wendy and Vanpraag, Dannielle and East, Chris and Wallace, Euan
|
|
and Teale, Glyn and Harrison, Bernie and Petschel, Pauline and Furler,
|
|
John and Goldfeld, Sharon and Mensah, Fiona and Biro, Mary Anne and
|
|
Willey, Sue and Cheng, I-Hao and Small, Rhonda and Brown, Stephanie},
|
|
Title = {Bridging the Gap: using an interrupted time series design to evaluate
|
|
systems reform addressing refugee maternal and child health inequalities},
|
|
Journal = {IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Month = {APR 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The risk of poor maternal and perinatal outcomes in
|
|
high-income countries such as Australia is greatest for those
|
|
experiencing extreme social and economic disadvantage. Australian data
|
|
show that women of refugee background have higher rates of stillbirth,
|
|
fetal death in utero and perinatal mortality compared with Australian
|
|
born women. Policy and health system responses to such inequities have
|
|
been slow and poorly integrated. This protocol describes an innovative
|
|
programme of quality improvement and reform in publically funded
|
|
universal health services in Melbourne, Australia, that aims to address
|
|
refugee maternal and child health inequalities.
|
|
Methods/design: A partnership of 11 organisations spanning health
|
|
services, government and research is working to achieve change in the
|
|
way that maternity and early childhood health services support families
|
|
of refugee background. The aims of the programme are to improve access
|
|
to universal health care for families of refugee background and build
|
|
organisational and system capacity to address modifiable risk factors
|
|
for poor maternal and child health outcomes. Quality improvement
|
|
initiatives are iterative, co-designed by partners and implemented using
|
|
the Plan Do Study Act framework in four maternity hospitals and two
|
|
local government maternal and child health services. Bridging the Gap is
|
|
designed as a multi-phase, quasi-experimental study. Evaluation methods
|
|
include use of interrupted time series design to examine health service
|
|
use and maternal and child health outcomes over a 3-year period of
|
|
implementation. Process measures will examine refugee families'
|
|
experiences of specific initiatives and service providers' views and
|
|
experiences of innovation and change.
|
|
Discussion: It is envisaged that the Bridging the Gap program will
|
|
provide essential evidence to support service and policy innovation and
|
|
knowledge about what it takes to implement sustainable improvements in
|
|
the way that health services support vulnerable populations, within the
|
|
constraints of existing resources.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Yelland, J (Corresponding Author), Murdoch Childrens Res Inst, Hlth Mothers Hlth Families Res Grp, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Yelland, Jane; Riggs, Elisha; Dawson, Wendy; Vanpraag, Dannielle; Brown, Stephanie, Murdoch Childrens Res Inst, Hlth Mothers Hlth Families Res Grp, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Yelland, Jane; Riggs, Elisha; Furler, John; Brown, Stephanie, Univ Melbourne, Dept Gen Practice, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Yelland, Jane; Riggs, Elisha, Univ Melbourne, Primary Hlth Care Acad Unit, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Szwarc, Josef; Casey, Sue, Victorian Fdn Survivors Torture, Brunswick, Vic, Australia.
|
|
East, Chris; Wallace, Euan, Monash Hlth, Monash Womens Matern Serv, Clayton, Vic, Australia.
|
|
East, Chris; Biro, Mary Anne; Willey, Sue, Monash Univ, Sch Nursing \& Midwifery, Clayton, Vic, Australia.
|
|
East, Chris; Wallace, Euan, Monash Univ, Ritchie Ctr, Clayton, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Wallace, Euan, Monash Univ, Dept Obstet \& Gynaecol, Clayton, Vic 3168, Australia.
|
|
Teale, Glyn, Western Hlth, Womens \& Childrens Serv, Sunshine, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Teale, Glyn, Univ Melbourne, Dept Obstet \& Gynaecol, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Harrison, Bernie, City Greater Dandenong, Maternal \& Child Hlth, Dandenong, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Petschel, Pauline, City Wyndham, Maternal \& Child Hlth, Wyndham, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Goldfeld, Sharon, Royal Childrens Hosp, Ctr Commun Child Hlth, Murdoch Childrens Res Inst, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Goldfeld, Sharon; Mensah, Fiona, Univ Melbourne, Dept Paediat, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Mensah, Fiona, Royal Childrens Hosp, Murdoch Childrens Res Inst, Clin Epidemiol \& Biostat Unit, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Cheng, I-Hao, South Eastern Melbourne Medicare Local, Dandenong, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Cheng, I-Hao, Monash Univ, Southern Acad Primary Care Res Unit, Clayton, Vic 3800, Australia.
|
|
Small, Rhonda, La Trobe Univ, Judith Lumley Ctr, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Brown, Stephanie, Univ Melbourne, Sch Populat Hlth, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13012-015-0251-z},
|
|
Article-Number = {62},
|
|
ISSN = {1748-5908},
|
|
Keywords = {Quality improvement; Partnerships; Universal health services; Refugee
|
|
families; Time series design; Process evaluation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ANTENATAL CARE; SERVICES; WOMEN; BIRTH; REFLECTIONS; AUSTRALIA;
|
|
DIFFUSION; COUNTRIES; FRAMEWORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {jane.yelland@mcri.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Mensah, Fiona K/G-3382-2018
|
|
Brown, Stephanie/AAE-1662-2019
|
|
Furler, John S/A-7858-2010
|
|
Riggs, Elisha/K-4267-2019
|
|
Wallace, Euan M/K-6774-2015
|
|
East, Christine/H-4938-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mensah, Fiona K/0000-0002-6951-9949
|
|
Furler, John S/0000-0003-0339-5848
|
|
Riggs, Elisha/0000-0003-0799-7467
|
|
Wallace, Euan M/0000-0002-4506-5233
|
|
East, Christine/0000-0002-1196-8426
|
|
Willey, Suzanne/0000-0002-1314-0745
|
|
Yelland, Jane/0000-0003-0377-5824
|
|
Goldfeld, Sharon/0000-0001-6520-7094
|
|
Brown, Stephanie/0000-0001-9812-0067
|
|
Biro, Mary Anne/0000-0003-2000-8571
|
|
Small, Rhonda/0000-0003-0345-4676},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {26},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000354183000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000852400500001,
|
|
Author = {Gehring, Nicole D. and Speed, Kelsey A. and Dong, Kathryn and Pauly,
|
|
Bernie and Salvalaggio, Ginetta and Hyshka, Elaine},
|
|
Title = {Social service providers' perspectives on caring for structurally
|
|
vulnerable hospital patients who use drugs: a qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {SEP 8},
|
|
Abstract = {Background People who use drugs and are structurally vulnerable (e.g.,
|
|
experiencing unstable and/or lack of housing) frequently access acute
|
|
care. However, acute care systems and providers may not be able to
|
|
effectively address social needs during hospitalization. Our objectives
|
|
were to: 1) explore social service providers' perspectives on addressing
|
|
social needs for this patient population; and 2) identify what possible
|
|
strategies social service providers suggest for improving patient care.
|
|
Methods We completed 18 semi-structured interviews with social service
|
|
providers (e.g., social workers, transition coordinators, peer support
|
|
workers) at a large, urban acute care hospital in Western Canada between
|
|
August 8, 2018 and January 24, 2019. Interviews explored staff
|
|
experiences providing social services to structurally vulnerable
|
|
patients who use drugs, as well as continuity between hospital and
|
|
community social services. We conducted latent content analysis and
|
|
organized our findings in relation to the socioecological model. Results
|
|
Tensions emerged on how participants viewed patient-level barriers to
|
|
addressing social needs. Some providers blamed poor outcomes on
|
|
perceived patient deficits, while others emphasized structural factors
|
|
that impede patients' ability to secure social services. Within the
|
|
hospital, some participants felt that acute care was not an appropriate
|
|
location to address social needs, but most felt that hospitalization
|
|
affords a unique opportunity to build relationships with structurally
|
|
vulnerable patients. Participants described how a lack of housing and
|
|
financial supports for people who use drugs in the community limited
|
|
successful social service provision in acute care. They identified
|
|
potential policy solutions, such as establishing housing supports that
|
|
concurrently address medical, income, and substance use needs.
|
|
Conclusions Broad policy changes are required to improve care for
|
|
structurally vulnerable patients who use drugs, including: 1) ending
|
|
acute care's ambivalence towards social services; 2) addressing
|
|
multi-level gaps in housing and financial support; 3) implementing
|
|
hospital-based Housing First teams; and, 4) offering sub-acute care with
|
|
integrated substance use management.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hyshka, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Alberta, Sch Publ Hlth, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
|
|
Hyshka, E (Corresponding Author), Royal Alexandra Hosp, Inner City Hlth \& Wellness Program, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
|
|
Gehring, Nicole D.; Speed, Kelsey A.; Hyshka, Elaine, Univ Alberta, Sch Publ Hlth, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
|
|
Gehring, Nicole D.; Speed, Kelsey A.; Dong, Kathryn; Salvalaggio, Ginetta; Hyshka, Elaine, Royal Alexandra Hosp, Inner City Hlth \& Wellness Program, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
|
|
Dong, Kathryn; Salvalaggio, Ginetta, Univ Alberta, Fac Med \& Dent, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
|
|
Pauly, Bernie, Univ Victoria, Sch Nursing, Victoria, BC, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12913-022-08498-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {1138},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Social needs; Social work; Social services; Structural vulnerability;
|
|
Illegal drugs; Houseless; Acute care; Qualitative research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE PROVIDERS; SUBSTANCE USE; EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT; HOMELESS
|
|
ADULTS; MENTAL-ILLNESS; SAFETY; STIGMA; WORK; INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
DETERMINANTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {ehyshka@ualberta.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dong, Kathryn/JBS-4781-2023
|
|
Hyshka, Elaine/AGG-3812-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dong, Kathryn/0000-0002-0843-4618
|
|
Speed, Kelsey/0000-0002-5728-5209},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000852400500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000266520200017,
|
|
Author = {Agudelo-Suarez, Andres and Gil-Gonzalez, Diana and Ronda-Perez, Elena
|
|
and Porthe, Victoria and Paramio-Perez, Gema and Garcia, Ana M. and
|
|
Gari, Aitana},
|
|
Title = {Discrimination, work and health in immigrant populations in Spain},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {68},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Pages = {1866-1874},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {One of the most important social phenomena in the global context is the
|
|
flow of immigration from developing countries, motivated by economic and
|
|
employment related issues. Discrimination can be approached as a health
|
|
risk factor within the immigrant population's working environment,
|
|
especially for those immigrants at greater risk from social exclusion
|
|
and marginalisation. The aim of this study is to research perceptions of
|
|
discrimination and the specific relationship between discrimination in
|
|
the workplace and health among Spain's immigrant population. A
|
|
qualitative study was performed by means of 84 interviews and 12 focus
|
|
groups held with immigrant workers in five cities in Spain receiving a
|
|
large influx of immigrants (Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Alicante and
|
|
Huelva), covering representative immigrant communities in Spain
|
|
(Romanians, Moroccans, Ecuadorians, Colombians and Sub-Saharan
|
|
Africans). Discourse narrative content analysis was performed using
|
|
pre-established categories and gradually incorporating other emerging
|
|
categories from the immigrant interviewees themselves. The participants
|
|
reported instances of discrimination in their community and working
|
|
life, characterised by experiences of racism, mistreatment and
|
|
precarious working conditions in comparison to the Spanish-born
|
|
population. They also talked about limitations in terms of accessible
|
|
occupations (mainly construction, the hotel and restaurant trade,
|
|
domestic service and agriculture), and described major difficulties
|
|
accessing other types of work (for example public administration). They
|
|
also identified political and legal structural barriers related with
|
|
social institutions. Experiences of discrimination can affect their
|
|
mental health and are decisive factors regarding access to healthcare
|
|
services. Our results suggest the need to adopt integration policies in
|
|
both the countries of origin and the host country, to acknowledge labour
|
|
and social rights, and to conduct further research into individual and
|
|
social factors that affect the health of the immigrant populations. (C)
|
|
2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Agudelo-Suarez, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Antioquia, Fac Dent, Calle 64 52-59, Medellin, Antioquia, Colombia.
|
|
Agudelo-Suarez, Andres, Univ Antioquia, Fac Dent, Medellin, Antioquia, Colombia.
|
|
Agudelo-Suarez, Andres; Gil-Gonzalez, Diana; Ronda-Perez, Elena, Univ Alicante, Prevent Med \& Publ Hlth Area, Alicante, Spain.
|
|
Porthe, Victoria, Univ Pompeu Fabra, Dept Expt \& Hlth Sci, Occupat Hlth Res Unit, Barcelona, Spain.
|
|
Paramio-Perez, Gema, Univ Huelva, Dept Environm Biol \& Publ Hlth, Huelva, Spain.
|
|
Garcia, Ana M., Univ Valencia, Dept Prevent Med \& Publ Hlth, E-46003 Valencia, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.02.046},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {Immigration; Discrimination; Working conditions; Spain; Racism},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RACIAL-DISCRIMINATION; UNITED-STATES; AMERICANS; PRESSURE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {agudeloandres@odontologia.udea.edu.co},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gema, Paramio/AAS-2286-2020
|
|
Benavides, Fernando G./A-5137-2008
|
|
Gil-González, Diana/ABC-5122-2021
|
|
Gema, Paramio/N-8932-2015
|
|
Ronda, Elena/E-6956-2012
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gema, Paramio/0000-0002-3359-1981
|
|
Benavides, Fernando G./0000-0003-0747-2660
|
|
Gema, Paramio/0000-0002-3359-1981
|
|
Ronda, Elena/0000-0003-1886-466X
|
|
Agudelo-Suarez, Andres/0000-0002-8079-807X
|
|
Garcia, Ana M/0000-0001-9429-289X
|
|
Gil-Gonzalez, Diana/0000-0002-8989-448X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {93},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {76},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000266520200017},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000450332600002,
|
|
Author = {Gould, Carol C.},
|
|
Title = {Solidarity and the problem of structural injustice in healthcare},
|
|
Journal = {BIOETHICS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {9, SI},
|
|
Pages = {541-552},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {The concept of solidarity has recently come to prominence in the
|
|
healthcare literature. When understood descriptively, it usefully
|
|
supplements other conceptions like reciprocity (e.g., between healthcare
|
|
providers and their patients), patient-centered medicine, or care
|
|
ethics. In the context of health insurance (especially in Europe), an
|
|
appeal to solidarity effectively addresses the problem of the motivation
|
|
for taking seriously the medical needs of compatriots by emphasizing
|
|
shared vulnerabilities and needs. If understood more broadly as human
|
|
solidarity, the notion proposes attention to the health of distant
|
|
others, as a condition of their dignity. And taken normatively, it fills
|
|
in some of the requirements of the abstract norms of justice and
|
|
equality by advocating `standing with' or aiding fellow community
|
|
members or possibly also distant others in regard to their medical
|
|
needs. Solidarity may be understood be required either for its own sake,
|
|
when taken as a separate norm, or as a way to realize the demands of
|
|
justice and equal treatment in matters of health. The current focus on
|
|
solidarity in the healthcare literature is useful and important, in my
|
|
view. Yet, to my mind, the understanding of it tends to be unduly
|
|
restricted. For one thing, the literature has most often focused on
|
|
solidarity within nation-states, as a relation among compatriots that
|
|
supports universal healthcare. The notion is also seen as having import
|
|
for contemporary developments like large health databases, biobanks,
|
|
personalized medicine, and organ donation. A few authors extend
|
|
solidarity more widely, particularly in interpreting the Universal
|
|
Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights, with its reference to
|
|
solidarity in Article 13 and its implication in some other articles.
|
|
Yet, these various uses of the conception of solidarity in healthcare
|
|
have thus far tended to either disregard or even to actively eschew its
|
|
traditional meanings of labor solidarity or social movement solidarity,
|
|
or indeed, any use of the term that posits an `other' against which
|
|
solidarity might be practiced (although it is generally recognized that
|
|
the concept is bounded and particular). I suggest that the neglect of
|
|
some important historical (and contemporary) senses of solidarity-and
|
|
especially social movement solidarity-leads to a blind spot in the
|
|
current bioethical theories. An alternative reading of solidarity in
|
|
healthcare drawing on social movement and labor contexts would highlight
|
|
a crucial dimension of contemporary healthcare provision, namely,
|
|
structural injustice. Systemic forms of injustice militate against
|
|
adequate healthcare for all, and suggest the need for solidaristic
|
|
action to struggle against and to remedy existing entrenched
|
|
inequalities. Omitting an account of structural injustice and even of
|
|
justice itself from the core meaning of solidarity leads, I argue, to a
|
|
rather weak and too easy sense of what solidarity requires, and is ill
|
|
suited to serve as an adequate normative guide for improving healthcare
|
|
in the present. This is the case most obviously in regard to healthcare
|
|
in the United States with its unequal health system, but I suggest it
|
|
applies more generally and even in Europe, and certainly if we take the
|
|
obligations of solidarity to extend transnationally. While traditional
|
|
notions of solidarity within existing communities and nation-states
|
|
remain significant, I believe that an adequate conception of solidarity
|
|
needs to show how it is connected to justice.
|
|
It also needs to extend transnationally, given our increasingly
|
|
interconnected world, which raises difficult questions of the relation
|
|
between national and transnational solidarities, and the justifications
|
|
we can give for prioritizing the health and healthcare of those closer
|
|
to us. In this essay, I will begin by briefly indicating how the
|
|
existing approaches to solidarity in healthcare, despite their trenchant
|
|
analyses of many of its features and applications, remain abstract and
|
|
without sufficient critical import by not directly considering the
|
|
impact of structural injustices. I will then attempt to sketch how an
|
|
understanding of institutional barriers to equal treatment, along with
|
|
the commitment to achieving justice concretely, need to inform not only
|
|
our application of solidarity in practice but also our understanding of
|
|
the core meaning of solidarity itself. I will not be able to address
|
|
here the complex question of the priority that is often given to the
|
|
needs of those close to us and the related question of negotiating our
|
|
obligations to engage in national vs. transnational solidarity efforts,
|
|
but I have taken this up in other work. In a series of books and
|
|
articles, Barbara Prainsack and Alena Buyx have taken the lead in
|
|
calling attention to the relevance of the concept of solidarity for
|
|
bioethics. They have articulated a general conception and sketched
|
|
several potential implications for healthcare and bioethics more widely.
|
|
They advance the following definition: `Solidarity is an enacted
|
|
commitment to carry ``costs{''} (financial, social, emotional, or
|
|
otherwise) to assist others with whom a person or persons recognize
|
|
similarity in a relevant respect.' Prainsack and Buyx usefully develop
|
|
the notion of solidarity as a practice and see it as operating within
|
|
three domains: the interpersonal, the group, and the
|
|
administrative/legal. Their conception is largely descriptive, although
|
|
it has some normative preconditions, and involves what they call
|
|
axiological/axiomatic normativity of some sort. The difficulty of this
|
|
latter phrase aside, Prainsack and Buyx seem willing to countenance
|
|
morally negative expressions of solidarity (e.g., among members of a
|
|
gang or even a terror group) in the interest of preserving the analytic
|
|
utility of the concept. Moreover, they sharply distinguish solidarity
|
|
from justice, regarding the latter as deontic and thus as not part of
|
|
the concept of solidarity itself. But given their attention to the
|
|
context of the practice of solidarity, they expect that norms like
|
|
justice would be brought to bear, presumably to qualify the practice of
|
|
solidarity. Since Prainsack and Buyx's approach is perhaps the most
|
|
highly developed conception of solidarity in the bioethics literature,
|
|
it can serve as a useful foil for elaborating my own account, drawing on
|
|
and extending my previous work on this theme. The main strength of their
|
|
approach, it seems to me, lies in its aptness for understanding
|
|
solidarity as a group practice, and especially within nation-states.
|
|
Indeed, their view, with its emphasis on bearing costs to assist others
|
|
within a group, seems to line up primarily with what has been called a
|
|
`civic solidarity' conception, one that has been prominent in connection
|
|
with European welfare states. The idea that solidarity can come to be
|
|
entrenched administratively and legally also points to the dominance of
|
|
that European model in their understanding (though their conception is
|
|
supplemented with what they call interpersonal solidarity).
|
|
Importantly, these authors' emphasis on solidarity as a practice
|
|
helpfully ties solidarity to action. They suggest that this action
|
|
orientation serves to distinguish solidarity from empathy or other
|
|
sentiments. However, the centrality in their account of bearing `costs'
|
|
with the aim of assisting others brings the model close to the Christian
|
|
tradition of solidarity with its emphasis on relieving suffering and
|
|
aiding the poor. Their perspective likewise focuses on individual
|
|
activity in aiding others, rather than on collective action. (The term
|
|
`costs', however, has financial connotations that do not sit altogether
|
|
easily with this religious perspective.) The Christian tradition of
|
|
solidarity can be distinguished (at least in its older forms) from the
|
|
alternative socialist tradition of labor union solidarity, where
|
|
solidarity is aimed at promoting shared interests and overcoming
|
|
domination and exploitation with the aim of achieving justice. In this
|
|
article, I will suggest that this latter understanding of solidarity
|
|
introduces an important normative aspect of the concept of solidarity,
|
|
one that is largely lacking in Prainsack and Buyx's account. Although
|
|
Prainsack and Buyx are at pains to differentiate between solidarity and
|
|
charity (which is indeed an important distinction), I find their
|
|
argument on this point unconvincing. They claim that charity is marked
|
|
by assistance for others who are perceived as `different' from oneself,
|
|
rather than as being `similar in a relevant respect.' The problem is
|
|
that this distinction could be seen as having a question-begging aspect,
|
|
inasmuch as the authors seem to posit by definition that in cases where
|
|
people choose to donate to charities for people with a similar condition
|
|
to their own (e.g., a particular illness), they are in fact acting in
|
|
solidarity rather than charity. At the very least, more argument would
|
|
be needed to establish the difference in question. Indeed, the issue of
|
|
what is perceived as `similar' and what counts as `a relevant respect,'
|
|
remains rather vague in their account. Clearly, perceptions of
|
|
similarity and difference are notably various and variable. Can the
|
|
perception of similarity with another in a relevant respect always be
|
|
explained in a way that itself makes no reference to the solidarity that
|
|
is supposed to follow from it, as it would have to be to avoid
|
|
circularity? Is it, for example, the abstract status of being a fellow
|
|
citizen that generates solidarity or does our tie to these others
|
|
already presuppose pre-existing solidarities, e.g., as being members of
|
|
our nation? The account would need to explicitly address questions such
|
|
as these and also explicate what counts as `similar in a relevant
|
|
respect' to concretize this notion and give it real utility. In my own
|
|
view, as developed elsewhere and as will become clear below, the
|
|
distinction of solidarity from charity turns rather on the connection
|
|
that solidarity bears to justice, and to the overcoming of domination
|
|
and exploitation. It can also be seen to involve reciprocity in a sense
|
|
to be indicated, which charity does not. Indeed, Prainsack and Buyx
|
|
sharply distinguish between solidarity and reciprocity, taking the
|
|
latter in the narrow sense of what I have elsewhere called instrumental
|
|
reciprocity or `tit for tat' reciprocity.
|
|
In my view, reciprocity is a fundamental social relation that in fact
|
|
takes several forms besides such instrumental ones, and I believe that
|
|
reciprocity remains important for properly understanding solidarity.
|
|
This potential for reciprocity helps to distinguish solidarity from
|
|
charity, since charity evidently does not presuppose reciprocation from
|
|
the needy or those aided. The reciprocity that applies to solidarity
|
|
actions can be seen in the notion of mutual aid, which has been part of
|
|
traditional understandings of labor and social movement solidarity. The
|
|
mutuality involved here is itself a developed form of reciprocity, but
|
|
one characterized not instrumentally in the manner of Prainsack and
|
|
Buyx. Rather, reciprocity and the solidarity that incorporates it are
|
|
here seen as aiming at improving the situation of the other, at least
|
|
partly for its own sake, and not only for the subsequent return of
|
|
benefit that could be expected from doing so. Although they do not
|
|
explicitly tie solidarity to the overcoming of domination and
|
|
exploitation, Prainsack and Buyx do helpfully take note of the dangers
|
|
for healthcare posed by commercial interests, as well as entrenched
|
|
inequalities. This is evident, for example, in their account of the
|
|
problems that afflict the use of large databases and biobanks, as well
|
|
as the perils that attend some proposed uses of personalized medicine.
|
|
But these problematic dimensions of contemporary life are treated more
|
|
as background conditions rather than as structural and institutional
|
|
features against which solidarity actions with others need to struggle.
|
|
Moreover, we can observe that the prevalence of commercial interests in
|
|
regard to health databases can undercut the very possibilities for
|
|
solidarity that these authors seek, by deterring people from
|
|
contributing their information to them from fear of such commercial use.
|
|
This lends an additional practical motivation to taking these structural
|
|
background conditions seriously, if solidarity is to be encouraged.
|
|
Certainly, these authors are right to highlight forms of solidarity that
|
|
may arise in pursuit of common aims or shared goals, as within a
|
|
political community (often taken as national). But I would suggest that
|
|
solidarity is also centrally a process aimed at overcoming forms of
|
|
domination and structural injustice, where people share an interest in
|
|
doing so. This struggle against domination can sometimes itself take an
|
|
instrumental form. But when it involves normative solidarity, it is
|
|
properly understood as motivated by a shared interest in justice rather
|
|
than simply the pursuit of benefits. As I have suggested, the classic
|
|
account of solidarity in this sense is that of labor movement
|
|
solidarity, but similar notions have characterized a range of social
|
|
movements, e.g., in Latin America and elsewhere, whether aimed at
|
|
agrarian reform or at overcoming authoritarian rule, where they take the
|
|
form also of democratic movements. I propose that these examples, with
|
|
the processive and critical notion of solidarity they imply, have
|
|
implications for an adequate conception of solidarity for healthcare and
|
|
for its applications there. Before turning to this socially critical
|
|
notion of solidarity, we can note a drawback in the standard reading
|
|
that takes solidarity as a unitary notion within a single group or
|
|
community like the nation-state. Insofar as the group is limited to
|
|
compatriots, or to members of smaller pre-existing groups, it evidently
|
|
does not address the needs or vulnerabilities of others situated outside
|
|
these groups' borders.
|
|
Although there may be unitary groups or communities that are
|
|
transnational, within which traditional forms of solidarity can be
|
|
found, increasingly we see that cross-border or transnational
|
|
relationships take a networked form and involve relations to
|
|
`outsiders'. What sorts of solidarities are possible there both
|
|
generally and in the context of healthcare? Some bioethicists have
|
|
recently addressed this issue by introducing a notion of human
|
|
solidarity or global solidarity. In the analysis given by Gunson, the
|
|
notion of solidarity held to be suitable for global contexts and seen as
|
|
underlying the Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights is
|
|
explicitly understood as `weak solidarity,' namely, `the willingness to
|
|
take the perspective of others seriously.' It does not add the
|
|
requirement `to act in support of it,' which he holds is characteristic
|
|
of `strong solidarity,' such as is involved in political solidarities or
|
|
in social movements to counter exploitation or achieve justice. Gunson
|
|
explicates weak solidarity as involving listening to others and `caring
|
|
for others,' but not necessarily as including efforts at reducing
|
|
inequalities, or even a specific concern with those. He sees the
|
|
Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights as appealing to a
|
|
notion of human dignity, but seems to think that weak solidarity is
|
|
sufficient to respect and uphold that dignity. I would suggest that the
|
|
appropriate sense of dignity is the robust and demanding one that we
|
|
find explicitly enunciated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
|
|
where dignity is taken in an egalitarian sense, and is held to imply
|
|
certain labor rights, along with health itself as a human right. A
|
|
related notion of dignity is likewise appealed to numerous times in the
|
|
Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights, which also includes
|
|
a specific reference to solidarity, as a goal of international
|
|
cooperation, along with demands on governments for meeting health
|
|
research and healthcare needs. But this Declaration could usefully go
|
|
further to specify some of the practices that would help to realize
|
|
these aims, and I suggest that strong, rather than weak, forms of
|
|
solidarity would be required in order to fulfill them, and not merely
|
|
the caring for and aiding others that Gunson and also Prainsack and Buyx
|
|
emphasize in their accounts. We can distinguish two main senses of
|
|
solidarity, as already adumbrated, each of which has import for
|
|
healthcare and the structural injustice that may constrain it. One sense
|
|
is unitary solidarity, often taken as pertaining to the relations among
|
|
citizens within a state, but applying as well to the relations among
|
|
members of smaller pre-existing groups. The second is what I call
|
|
networking solidarity, evident when groups (often, though not
|
|
necessarily, transnational), or sometimes also individuals, link up to
|
|
work on projects aimed at overcoming oppression or exploitation. The
|
|
first form of solidarity-unitary group solidarity-is often illustrated
|
|
with the motto of the three musketeers: `One for all and all for one,'
|
|
but that is a rather specific and highly demanding version of it.
|
|
Nonetheless, it has the advantage of calling attention to solidarity as
|
|
involving a clear awareness of a `we' or `us'. Although some sense of a
|
|
`we' can be discerned in both forms of solidarity analyzed here, it
|
|
applies to each type somewhat differently, as we shall see.
|
|
In contrast, the individualist approach to solidarity advanced by
|
|
Prainsack and Buyx tends to diminish the role of shared or collective
|
|
activity, although it helpfully includes a notion of identification with
|
|
an other who in their view are aided because they are regarded as
|
|
`similar in some respect.' In the account that I have developed, the
|
|
first sense of solidarity pertains to relations among co-participants in
|
|
an ongoing group, oriented to shared goals. Not all of the participants
|
|
necessarily share all the goals of the group though they are generally
|
|
committed to the main ones and to the group's persistence and viability
|
|
as a whole. Note that solidarity here may not always require a
|
|
pre-existing shared identity or culture (although it often does), but
|
|
may emerge from the constitution of an ongoing `we' in the context of
|
|
collective or group agency. The shared goals of the group are not
|
|
aggregative, that is, a sum of each individual's similar goals, but
|
|
arise in common endeavors (normally including a multiplicity of
|
|
overlapping subordinate goals), where the overarching goals are at least
|
|
partly constitutive of the group itself. The various aims and goals are
|
|
not always explicitly reflected on and are often embedded or
|
|
institutionalized in the practices of the group. While such a conception
|
|
of solidarity is often thought to be merely descriptive, I see it (as
|
|
will be the case for the second sense as well) as grounded in a social
|
|
ontology of what I have called individuals-in-relations, and as having
|
|
normative dimensions. In this first case of group solidarity, as an
|
|
instance of what I have elsewhere called `common activities,' the norms
|
|
go beyond the commitments involved in the constitution of any group
|
|
whatever, and extend to the recognition (though often only implicit) of
|
|
the fundamentally equal status of the individuals who constitute the
|
|
group as agents. In virtue of this equality, I have argued elsewhere
|
|
that the members should be granted equal rights to participate in
|
|
processes of affirming and revising the goals of the group and should
|
|
also have some say in how the various shared goals are carried out. This
|
|
follows from an understanding of justice as what I have termed `equal
|
|
positive freedom,' or prima facie equal rights to the conditions of
|
|
self-development, where such social contexts of activity are among these
|
|
necessary conditions for individuals. In virtue of their equal agency,
|
|
no individual has a right to dominate others in determining these common
|
|
activities, that is, they have equal rights of co-determination of them.
|
|
In this perspective, solidarity can be seen as an integral part of a set
|
|
of norms that encompasses justice, as requiring the equal freedom of
|
|
these relational individuals to develop themselves over time, and the
|
|
norm of democracy, going beyond its traditional meanings of voting and
|
|
majority rule to include equal rights of participation in co-determining
|
|
group ends. In this account, which emphasizes people's interdependence
|
|
and their embodied nature, the sort of mutual support involved in group
|
|
solidarity emerges as a crucial condition for the self-transformative
|
|
activity of individuals and for the persistence of the group itself. We
|
|
can say then that the requirement to realize justice along with a broad
|
|
range of human rights through solidaristic activity arises from people's
|
|
interdependence and from the fact that their free development as agents
|
|
requires a set of conditions, both material and social.
|
|
Justice calls for the protection of the traditionally recognized
|
|
negative liberties, but goes beyond it to require the availability of
|
|
conditions that support people's self-developing activity (both as
|
|
individuals and as collectives) over time, that is, their positive
|
|
freedom. Crucial among these conditions are health and healthcare, as
|
|
well as education and other central social needs. Given the individuals'
|
|
fundamental equality as agents, with both individual dignity and shared
|
|
needs, the norm of justice as requiring action to realize equality not
|
|
only qualifies any potential group solidarity, as it does on the
|
|
Prainsack and Buyx account, but is properly a core aspect of solidarity
|
|
itself as a normative practice. From this perspective, the solidarities
|
|
that obtain within a group not only help to realize justice concretely,
|
|
but also can be said to constitute `the other side of justice' (in
|
|
Habermas's phrase). Solidarity actions not only reflect people's
|
|
pre-existing feelings of connection to each other, but also can function
|
|
in practice to solidify their understanding of shared neediness and
|
|
their interdependence in meeting these needs and pursuing shared goals.
|
|
The interdependence involved in common endeavors like political
|
|
communities, together with the equal vulnerability of members of such
|
|
communities, involves forms of reciprocity and gives rise to the
|
|
requirement of mutual aid that is characteristic of solidarity. Further,
|
|
the conditions for the realization of both individual freedom and of the
|
|
shared goals of the group can in fact be seen to require the absence of
|
|
domination and exploitation, that is, the overcoming of these one-sided
|
|
forms of recognition not only in interpersonal relations, but also as
|
|
they are entrenched in structural or institutional forms. Included here
|
|
are types of economic functioning that systematically disadvantage large
|
|
groups of people, along with other forms of institutional discrimination
|
|
on the basis of race or gender, or other minority characteristics.
|
|
Although existing solidarity groups are not always fully aware of the
|
|
relevance to them of overcoming such injustices, I believe that such
|
|
demands of justice are in fact integral to solidarity as a norm and not
|
|
external to it, as on the empirically oriented account advanced by
|
|
Prainsack and Buyx. Moreover, we can see that ongoing (and not merely
|
|
pre-given) solidaristic social action within a collectivity and
|
|
community is needed as a way to more fully achieve justice within it.
|
|
These interrelations between solidarity and justice are even more
|
|
evident in the second sense of solidarity, which I have called
|
|
networking solidarities. This second form is most often found in social
|
|
movements. Conceptually it arises primarily from classic notions of
|
|
labor solidarity, which I have suggested can be extended to these
|
|
movements and can even characterize the relations that are increasingly
|
|
evident among civil society associations, e.g., NGOs. Networking
|
|
solidarity is a form particularly apt for capturing constructive
|
|
relations of support toward distantly situated others, but it can also
|
|
apply within, as well as across, borders. This form of solidarity is
|
|
generally aimed at overcoming forms of domination and exploitation, but
|
|
may also include networking to help alleviate suffering.
|
|
As a relation among groups (or sometimes even among individuals), I have
|
|
elsewhere argued that it manifests a type of social empathy or the
|
|
understanding of another group's situation and perspective, but such
|
|
solidarity does not consist in sentiment per se. Rather, it necessarily
|
|
involves action or a readiness to take action on behalf of, and in
|
|
support of, others. Here, too, there is generally a commitment to a
|
|
common cause, and when properly understood, I think, a commitment to
|
|
justice. Although this form of solidarity in practice has tended to
|
|
involve better-off people working to help those who are less advantaged,
|
|
we can find a form of reciprocity implicit even here, in particular, an
|
|
expectation of reciprocal action and mutual aid were it needed. More
|
|
direct reciprocity is evident in traditional labor union solidarity, as
|
|
well as in some social movements, where the solidarity actions are among
|
|
people perceived to be similarly situated. In these various cases of
|
|
networking solidarity, I have argued that normatively solidarity
|
|
requires deference to the needs and goals of others as they themselves
|
|
understand them. And ideally, solidarity movements should embody
|
|
democratic modes of decision making among the participants, given their
|
|
equal status as members, and their shared commitment to the overarching
|
|
goals of their movement. Although there are some fully shared goals that
|
|
motivate these forms of networking solidarity, especially inasmuch as
|
|
they often take a project-oriented form, different subgroups act to
|
|
realize these goals in ways they themselves determine, and they liaise
|
|
or link up with each other to decide how each group can best participate
|
|
and contribute. As groups or associations of their own, they tend to
|
|
have their own sets of goals and plans unrelated to these solidarity
|
|
actions. But they take themselves to be part of the larger movement or
|
|
set of associations, aimed at overcoming forms of domination or
|
|
suffering. Moreover, they often make use of online forms of networking
|
|
and social media to coordinate their efforts with each other, and they
|
|
offer each other mutual support and encouragement. Although the groups
|
|
or individuals linking up in these networks can in some sense be
|
|
regarded as themselves constituting a superordinate group, and thus from
|
|
an abstract perspective as not being essentially different from the
|
|
first form of group solidarity, the latter is unitary and understood by
|
|
the members as a single group, most often pre-existing, while the former
|
|
involves loose relations among groups (or sometimes also individuals)
|
|
undertaken for the purpose of a given project or aim. In practice, then,
|
|
we can regard these two forms of solidarity as distinct, and see them as
|
|
manifested in two different types of social phenomena. The `we' in the
|
|
case of networking solidarity is constructed serially and diversely by
|
|
its member groups (or individuals), and is oriented to a particular
|
|
cause. Nonetheless, insofar as they take overcoming domination,
|
|
oppression, or exploitation as their aim, they are at least partly
|
|
defined by an egalitarian commitment to justice, and the `we' should
|
|
remain open to others similarly committed. It must be granted that labor
|
|
solidarity and most social movement solidarity have often involved
|
|
shared interests and an antagonistic relation to others regarded as
|
|
exploitative or authoritarian. Indeed, the first sense of solidarity, as
|
|
group solidarity, admits of a similar antagonistic relation to
|
|
outsiders, e.g., in the case of hostility toward other nation-states.
|
|
Nonetheless, we can see how normatively each of these forms of
|
|
solidarity has the potential to develop in ways that are more inclusive
|
|
rather than exclusive. In the national case this is possible if borders
|
|
are not understood to reflect unitary shared identities but come to be
|
|
regarded as contingent and indeed as porous, or at least much more so
|
|
than at present. Likewise, labor and social movement solidarity are in
|
|
principle open to all those who wish to join in their efforts to work
|
|
toward social (and indeed global) justice, even though it must be
|
|
admitted that in practice those benefiting from exploitation are
|
|
unlikely to join in. The connection of solidarity to social and global
|
|
justice suggests the need to theorize more fully how structural or
|
|
systemic forms of injustice set the frame and motivation for many
|
|
solidarity movements and can serve to orient their practices. The notion
|
|
of structural injustice is perhaps most relevant to networking
|
|
solidarities, especially where they explicitly aim at establishing
|
|
justice and therefore would have to address such institutional forms of
|
|
injustice. But this notion can also apply to unitary solidarity groups,
|
|
if they seek to adequately meet the basic needs and respect the human
|
|
rights of their members, who are affected by these forms of injustice.
|
|
That structures or systems may operate so as to consistently produce
|
|
injustices has been a prime insight in Marxist theories, which highlight
|
|
the way the capitalist economic system exploits workers, apart from the
|
|
specific intentions of individuals, who often do not aim at such
|
|
exploitation. While classical liberal theories tend to put great weight
|
|
on individual action and intention, the Marxist emphasis on structure
|
|
and on the functioning of the capitalist system focuses us on the
|
|
underlying ways in which corporations operate in accordance with the
|
|
requirement to increase profits by way of the exploitation of labor.
|
|
Marxist theory also brings to the forefront the notion of
|
|
objectification. This refers to the significance of the embodiment of
|
|
intentions and plans in artifacts and on the need to be recognized by
|
|
others if people are to understand themselves. That is, it introduces
|
|
elements of externality required for self-transformation, whether
|
|
individual or cultural. In such an approach, not only the social, but
|
|
the material, environment for human action can in various ways reflect
|
|
existing class and other salient group differences. This environment for
|
|
action also generates steady expectations and encourages certain modes
|
|
of comportment in people who tend to operate in accordance with
|
|
prevailing social practices and rules. At the same time, people have the
|
|
capacity to change these practices and rules over time, though often
|
|
only through collective choices and action. (This point may not always
|
|
be duly appreciated in theories of structural injustice themselves.)
|
|
More contemporary analyses of the structural factors that contribute to
|
|
injustice, as found for example in the work of Anthony Giddens and Iris
|
|
Young, cast light on how individuals can reproduce problematic practices
|
|
through their choices within these structural constraints. While Giddens
|
|
focused on processes of what he called structuration, Young highlighted
|
|
consumer choices and other social practices that serve to produce and
|
|
reproduce injustices, in a certain sense unwittingly, for example, by
|
|
impacting sweatshop workers at a distance or by limiting access to the
|
|
existing housing stock.
|
|
According to Young:Structural injustices are harms that come to people
|
|
as a result of structural processes in which many people participate.
|
|
These participants may well be aware that their actions contribute to
|
|
the processes that produce the outcomes, but for many it is not possible
|
|
to trace the specific causal relation between their particular actions
|
|
and some particular part of the outcome. This emphasis on structure,
|
|
Young argues, turns our attention to `how the institutions of a society
|
|
work together to produce outcomes that support or minimize the threat of
|
|
domination,' where these outcomes largely depend on the social
|
|
positioning that conditions people's diverse life prospects. In later
|
|
work, Young's emphasis turns more to the ways that practices that
|
|
connect people to each other implicate them in these processes of social
|
|
and structural reproduction. On her view, the connections in which
|
|
people stand give rise to what she calls a `forward looking' sense of
|
|
political responsibility, and evoke the need to stand in solidarity with
|
|
others. Leaving aside the difficult issue of responsibility, we can
|
|
observe that focusing primarily on the amorphous practices of social
|
|
life can lead us away from understanding the workings of contemporary
|
|
political economy and its detrimental effects on those who lack the
|
|
power to take any part in determining its direction. I have also
|
|
criticized a view that would simply characterize everyone-whether
|
|
workers or top executives-as implicated in these processes and
|
|
practices, seeing these groups as distinguished only by degree. Rather,
|
|
some have substantial control over the processes to which others are
|
|
subjected. But for the purpose of the analysis here, we can take
|
|
structural or systemic injustice to refer both to the operation of the
|
|
formal political-economic institutions of capitalism (along with racism
|
|
and patriarchy), and to the more informal practices and rules of social
|
|
life, which also contribute to the production and reproduction of
|
|
inequalities. How, then, are these structures and the injustices they
|
|
produce connected to solidarity, as analyzed here? Without attempting a
|
|
thorough account, we can observe that capitalist economic institutions
|
|
have in fact disrupted earlier forms of solidarity, such as those
|
|
characteristic of pre-capitalist political economies, marked by what
|
|
Durkheim called mechanical solidarity. At the same time, new forms of
|
|
solidarity have been created, e.g., through the division of labor (as
|
|
described in Durkheim's term organic solidarity). In political contexts
|
|
as well, older solidarities within local communities have tended to give
|
|
way to national, or even transnational, forms. Yet, of greater relevance
|
|
for us here are the ways in which political economic institutions, with
|
|
the inequalities and forms of domination and exploitation they may
|
|
generate, frame and motivate new solidarity movements to address these
|
|
injustices. Recognizing how institutions and practices function in ways
|
|
that assign differential power to various groups in society is essential
|
|
if justice is to be constructed through solidaristic action. Even where
|
|
solidarity actions aim only at relieving suffering and do not directly
|
|
attempt to eliminate oppression or explanation, some understanding of
|
|
the social and institutional context of those to be aided is needed if
|
|
the solidarity actions are to be effective.
|
|
For example, efforts to address the aftermath of hurricanes and also to
|
|
mitigate them going forward call for attention to the social conditions
|
|
that lead impoverished or minority groups to be disproportionately
|
|
affected by such natural events-by reason of where they live, or the
|
|
ways they lack protection against excessive damage from these natural
|
|
events. In such situations, empathy with the situation of others, and
|
|
even specific action to assist them, however important they may be, are
|
|
insufficient unless they are coupled with an understanding of the
|
|
impacts of the structural features of political economy and the
|
|
injustices to which the operations of these institutions give rise. This
|
|
is even more evidently the case where solidarity movements aim directly
|
|
at overcoming oppression and exploitation, e.g., ending sweatshop labor.
|
|
In such cases, effective action must not only support workers
|
|
individually or remedy their specific situation but requires a socially
|
|
critical analysis of the prevailing context that gives rise to the
|
|
exploitation in the first place, which may also provide indications of
|
|
how to address it. We can grant that solidaristic practices, whether in
|
|
healthcare or other contexts, may well have their own utility as an
|
|
expression of our sociality and our enjoyment of acting in common, and
|
|
in this sense solidarity can even be said to have some value apart from
|
|
its functioning to help in constructing justice. But the argument here
|
|
is that these practices can be truly effective in meeting their aims
|
|
only if they go well beyond charity and also beyond practices that
|
|
simply `incur costs to assist others recognized as similar' (in the
|
|
Prainsack/Buyx formulation). If they are to conduce toward justice,
|
|
these solidarity practices and movements need to address the ways that
|
|
social, economic, and political institutions systematically function to
|
|
deny some groups of people the basic means of life, and give rise to
|
|
pervasive inequalities in people's opportunities for self-development
|
|
and for participating in processes of collective self-determination.
|
|
This is the case most clearly for what I have called networking
|
|
solidarities, but it can apply to solidarity within more unitary
|
|
contexts like nation-states to the degree that the bonds involved (e.g.,
|
|
among citizens) are not merely pre-existing but affirmed and reinvented
|
|
over time. Even more demandingly, at a normative level, we can say that
|
|
solidaristic action needs to take seriously the requirement for deep
|
|
social transformation in the direction of social, and indeed global,
|
|
justice. In this way, as I have argued elsewhere, although solidarity
|
|
remains particularistic in its orientation to specific problems and
|
|
specific groups or individuals, it can keep in view the demands of
|
|
universal human dignity. And solidarity movements can verify that their
|
|
particular goals contribute (in however limited a way) to the broader
|
|
goal of egalitarian social transformation. Thus, dispositions to
|
|
empathy, deference, and mutual aid remain important components of
|
|
solidaristic social action, but a critical analysis of the social
|
|
context and concretely taking action oriented to alleviating structural
|
|
injustices are needed as well. In addition, since the institutional
|
|
context, with its given power relations, frames the various solidarity
|
|
movements, sometimes the prevailing power formations are replicated
|
|
within these movements themselves.
|
|
I suggest that this calls for groups and agents to be self-reflective
|
|
about these effects of the structural context in which they function,
|
|
and to be on guard about the dangers of their own possible complicity in
|
|
its replication and perpetuation. An important proviso should be
|
|
mentioned before returning to the case of healthcare and considering the
|
|
impact of the notions of solidarity analyzed here. That is, although
|
|
solidarity has here been related to justice, with the concomitant need
|
|
to analyze and address the structural injustices that frame solidarity
|
|
action, there is no implication that solidarity movements or other
|
|
solidarity activities are sufficient for achieving the institutional
|
|
changes that justice requires. For that, democratic legislation and
|
|
various political and economic transformations are also needed. But
|
|
solidarity, whether binding the members of a nation-state, or
|
|
interpreted in newer networking forms, are one important way of
|
|
constructing the conditions for these transformations, or even, in some
|
|
cases of prefiguring more just relations within the social relations of
|
|
solidarity themselves. There is no question that the new focus on
|
|
solidarity holds considerable import for healthcare, as Prainsack and
|
|
Buyx have effectively argued. But the issue for us is what further
|
|
benefit would result from incorporating solidarity's connection to
|
|
justice, holding in view the significance of countering structural or
|
|
systemic injustices. Given the vast range and specifics of healthcare
|
|
and the social and economic factors conducive to health, I will focus on
|
|
only a few of the most obvious implications for the practice of
|
|
healthcare and for the potentially solidaristic activities of
|
|
practitioners. We can ask: what difference would it make if we take
|
|
seriously the need to address the differential structural power of the
|
|
individuals and groups involved in healthcare, whether as practitioners
|
|
or those served by them? And what is the scope and nature of the
|
|
solidarity thus required? I will suggest in this final section that
|
|
understanding solidarity in relation to structural injustice can not
|
|
only shed new light on the sorts of examples that Prainsack and Buyx
|
|
consider, but also, more importantly perhaps, highlight an entirely
|
|
different range of examples of healthcare solidarity from the ones those
|
|
authors consider. It takes us beyond such cases as the readiness to
|
|
assist others through participating in healthcare databases or biobanks
|
|
to cases of active participation in social movements aimed at improving
|
|
healthcare nationally or transnationally, or, more defensively, to
|
|
protesting structural injustices that lead to the wrongful denial of
|
|
healthcare or to deep inequalities in its allocation. An obvious case of
|
|
structural injustice in healthcare is provided by the deficiencies
|
|
evident in the U.S. health insurance system (or lack of a system).
|
|
Europeans have long recognized the centrality of solidarity with fellow
|
|
citizens needed to undergird a willingness to contribute through taxes
|
|
to a universal healthcare system. The types of provision in fact vary
|
|
considerably, from socialized medicine as in the UK to state-funded
|
|
support for private insurance provision, as in the Netherlands, along
|
|
with dual systems mixing public and private support. But the
|
|
universality at which these systems aim reflects the recognition of
|
|
people's shared vulnerabilities in matters of health, and even an
|
|
understanding that healthcare is a human right required by justice.
|
|
There is also the acknowledgement that systematic or structural
|
|
provision (or at least a guarantee) of healthcare is required in order
|
|
to realize the universality at stake here. It is perhaps worth
|
|
mentioning that despite their achievements, structural injustices do
|
|
nonetheless persist in many of the European systems themselves. This is
|
|
particularly the case where there are two tiers of provision such that
|
|
private insurance is needed in order to gain superior care that (ideally
|
|
at least) should be available to all. (Granted that in some European
|
|
countries the public providers may actually be superior to private ones
|
|
in some respects.) The lack of universal healthcare in the United States
|
|
is evidently primarily due to the existence of structural injustice,
|
|
rather than simply reflecting an absence of solidarity among
|
|
compatriots. To state the obvious: the U.S. private insurance
|
|
industry-and especially its leading large for-profit companies-is
|
|
immensely powerful and, currently at least, enormously profitable. As
|
|
part of the dominion of capitalist economic forms, these private firms
|
|
also have inordinate influence over politics, as do the large drug
|
|
companies. The activities of these companies exemplify the role of the
|
|
`power of money' that is widely prevalent in U.S. politics and society,
|
|
which in turn circumscribes the possibilities for public policy and law.
|
|
Corporate lobbying and campaign contributions from corporations and the
|
|
wealthy notably undercut political equality in the United States and can
|
|
also prevent attention to the basic tasks involved in meeting human
|
|
needs in equitable ways. Beyond this, it can be argued that the
|
|
systematic differences between people's starting positions, depending on
|
|
their class and race, in large measure fall out of existing economic
|
|
functioning, particularly given the resistance of the powerful to the
|
|
redistributions that would be needed for genuinely equal opportunities.
|
|
Moreover, these differential and deleterious starting positions conduce
|
|
to worse health outcomes for children affected by them, and for many
|
|
adults over the course of their lives. In view of this systemic
|
|
injustice, the sort of solidarity needed, then, is not only an empathic
|
|
identification with other citizens (or better, with all members of the
|
|
political community, including non-citizens). Rather, for meaningful
|
|
change, attention also needs to be paid to the structural barriers to
|
|
equal and universal healthcare. Although improvements and reforms can
|
|
probably be made even without fundamental changes in these background
|
|
structural economic and political conditions, realizing the goal of
|
|
genuinely equal treatment would require transforming those basic
|
|
economic structures themselves. And this in turn calls for social
|
|
movements aimed at these transformations. In the case of the United
|
|
States, some healthcare workers in fact have taken the lead in
|
|
solidarity actions to preserve the existing limited forms of health
|
|
insurance against efforts to strip vulnerable people of their coverage
|
|
altogether. This represents an example of a type of solidarity action in
|
|
the service of justice. Needless to say, much more needs to be done to
|
|
develop a fully critical solidarity movement of the sort required.
|
|
Indeed, some healthcare worker groups-notably National Nurses United and
|
|
Physicians for Universal Healthcare-have taken the lead in spearheading
|
|
the movement for Medicare for All, going considerably beyond the efforts
|
|
to prevent repeal of the Affordable Care Act.
|
|
They originally argued for a public option when that healthcare law was
|
|
under development, and have gone on to organize healthcare consumers in
|
|
various locales across the United States, including rural areas and
|
|
those with large industries, to press for systemic changes in health
|
|
insurance and in healthcare delivery, such as through establishing
|
|
non-profit community health centers. In both domestic contexts and more
|
|
global ones, connecting solidarity to structural injustice has been
|
|
important for understanding and addressing the social and economic
|
|
factors that greatly magnify the health impacts of natural disasters,
|
|
e.g., of hurricanes or tsunamis or volcanic eruptions. Whereas
|
|
solidarity with affected people has most often been episodic and
|
|
motivated by empathy with them, attention to the structural factors that
|
|
exacerbate the impact of these disasters on vulnerable populations
|
|
expands the scope of what needs to be done in a forward-looking
|
|
justice-oriented perspective. As suggested earlier, structural
|
|
injustices that lead impoverished people to live in weak dwellings or in
|
|
insecure geographical areas also expose them differentially to the
|
|
health and other effects of weather or environmental catastrophes.
|
|
Beyond the specific catastrophes, we can see that climate change itself
|
|
has greater impacts on those groups as well, effects that will only
|
|
increase over time. Cases that illustrate the ways that structural
|
|
injustices intensify natural disasters (if not also contributing to
|
|
causing them) are manifold, and the solidarity movements that have
|
|
responded to these disasters are instructive for our purposes. A well
|
|
known case is Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005, where African
|
|
Americans made up 80\% of the people in flooded low-lying communities,
|
|
sometimes residing in inadequate housing like trailers, and without the
|
|
means to escape the rising waters (especially due to low rates of car
|
|
ownership). Not only did these minority communities bear the large part
|
|
of the deaths and injuries from the hurricane, but also they experienced
|
|
abiding health problems, e.g., those due to mold. Yet, despite the
|
|
grossly inadequate federal response to this disaster, residents offered
|
|
each other mutual assistance and were also aided by solidarity groups
|
|
like Common Ground, which helped with community rebuilding, including
|
|
founding a free health clinic, and aiding with wetlands restoration. A
|
|
related example is the response to Hurricane Sandy in the New York/New
|
|
Jersey area, where healthcare workers set up free clinics in trucks, and
|
|
helped to raise money for much needed medical supplies for the various
|
|
communities that lacked adequate resources of their own to deal with the
|
|
storm aftermath. Internationally, structural injustices significantly
|
|
contributed to the grave impact of the 2010 Haiti Earthquake, in which
|
|
over 200,000 people were killed and over 300,000 injured, with more than
|
|
1.5 million rendered homeless. Before the quake, many Haitians were
|
|
impoverished and lived in slum conditions, leaving them highly
|
|
vulnerable to floods and other natural disasters. The International
|
|
Monetary Fund had implemented austerity programs in the preceding
|
|
decades, which contributed to an evisceration of the public health
|
|
systems and in turn to the health crisis following the earthquake, where
|
|
there were radically insufficient medical supplies available.
|
|
In the period that preceded the quake, an estimated 75\% of Haiti's
|
|
healthcare services had been provided by multinational and faith-based
|
|
non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and its entire health supply
|
|
system was externally run. The aid following the quake likewise involved
|
|
a massive influx of international non-governmental organizations
|
|
(INGOs), but Haitian NGOs were marginalized, as were the Haitian
|
|
authorities, and over 90\% of the aid money went to international
|
|
actors, including the UN and INGOs, and to the private sector. This aid,
|
|
too, was unequally distributed between the capital and rural areas, and
|
|
between well-off and less well-off areas of Port-au-Prince itself. In
|
|
contrast, more adequately addressing the medical needs arising from the
|
|
quake, some international healthcare NGOs succeeded in working in
|
|
solidarity with local Haitians, in particular, the INGO Partners in
|
|
Health, which explicitly incorporated a focus on the impacts of
|
|
structural factors in their efforts. A more recent case is provided by
|
|
Hurricane Maria, which devastated Puerto Rico in the summer of 2017.
|
|
This natural disaster likewise calls attention to political economic and
|
|
social structural factors that greatly aggravated the situation. Years
|
|
of austerity, this time managed by the U.S. government and banks, along
|
|
with massive debt, left hospitals without many doctors and with
|
|
inadequate medical supplies needed to deal with injuries following the
|
|
storm. Puerto Rico's defective electrical grid also hampered the
|
|
recovery from the hurricane. The inadequacies of this grid were
|
|
exacerbated by the freeze imposed on a public infrastructure fund, which
|
|
was instead used to funnel support to public-private partnerships under
|
|
the same restructuring program. Moreover, in Puerto Rico, as in Haiti,
|
|
we observe inequalities in the response to affected communities in the
|
|
capital vs. in poorer rural areas. Solidarity work by healthcare
|
|
workers, including doctors from Cuba, along with aid from the Puerto
|
|
Rican diaspora, has been important in recovery and rebuilding efforts,
|
|
but has not been able to make up for the lack of support from the U.S.
|
|
government. It is evident, then, that effective action requires
|
|
understanding the economic and social factors that condition people's
|
|
life chances and their health, including the limitations imposed by
|
|
their places of residence. Indeed, the economic functioning of
|
|
capitalism seems to be a major causal factor not only in these discrete
|
|
natural events but also in climate change itself. While no single
|
|
solidarity movement can counter these structural or systemic effects,
|
|
establishing a linkage between a particular event and the deeper
|
|
structural conditions for its differential impact on impoverished or
|
|
vulnerable populations is important for adequate public policy going
|
|
forward, and for the provision of the right forms of assistance in the
|
|
present. It suggests the need for aid that not only restores the
|
|
situation to the one that preceded the environmental event in question
|
|
but that establishes a better, and more resilient, situation going
|
|
forward. Clearly, an interlinking and networking of solidarity movements
|
|
and of civil society organizations, as well as of public policy, would
|
|
be necessary for the social transformative changes required.
|
|
Similar arguments concerning the need for solidarity activity to remedy
|
|
structural injustices can be advanced in regard to other central
|
|
national or global health problems: for example, the provision of clean
|
|
water, as in the case of Flint, Michigan, or the protection of the water
|
|
supplies from fracking, or from underwater pipelines as in the case of
|
|
Standing Rock, where there was a substantial solidarity struggle in
|
|
support of the affected Sioux indigenous people in 2016-2017.
|
|
Internationally, the health challenges include the need for wider and
|
|
cheaper provision of drugs to counter HIV-AIDS along with a host of
|
|
other illnesses; ways of dealing with malaria and with preventable
|
|
epidemics; providing clean water worldwide; and addressing the range of
|
|
health issues that result from trafficking, child labor, and slave
|
|
labor. In all these cases, solidarity movements would need to join up
|
|
with others working to counter exploitation and the dominion of the
|
|
profit motive, or struggling to rectify the deep inequalities in social
|
|
and economic conditions, along with the effects of absolute poverty.
|
|
Likewise, in regard to the overarching problem of climate change itself,
|
|
we have already seen the emergence of major transnational solidarity
|
|
movements, often taking the form of networks of local groups, and
|
|
including the participation of numerous healthcare workers. Examples are
|
|
the older Via Campesina, the People's Climate Movement, and 350.org,
|
|
among many others. In the international context, mention should also be
|
|
made of the way structural injustice frames medical problems arising
|
|
from illness and other natural causes, but also those arising from war
|
|
and other forms of violence. Some solidarity movements in those contexts
|
|
have focused on offering aid to the injured, as with the `White Helmets'
|
|
operating in rebel-held areas of Syria, extracting the living from the
|
|
rubble following Syrian government bombings. While this group is
|
|
composed mainly of volunteers and is anti-authoritarian, it otherwise
|
|
eschews any specific political affiliation. The Kurdish YPG (People's
|
|
Defense Units) in northern Syria, which also has healthcare units
|
|
operating in areas under attack, presents a somewhat different case,
|
|
since it is explicitly anti-capitalist in orientation. However, a full
|
|
discussion of these complex cases would take us beyond the scope of the
|
|
present discussion. We can, in conclusion, return to two of the cases
|
|
analyzed by Prainsack and Buyx and attempt to view them through the lens
|
|
of structural injustice, with the resulting transformed interpretation
|
|
of the solidaristic action required in those bioethical contexts. While
|
|
less dramatic than the leading examples analyzed above, where solidarity
|
|
needs to be directed explicitly towards countering structural
|
|
injustices, the Prainsack and Buyx cases pose some interesting issues
|
|
for consideration. The two applications of solidarity are those of
|
|
governing health databases (as they put it), and personalized medicine
|
|
and healthcare. As we have noted, in the course of their acute analysis,
|
|
Prainsack and Buyx occasionally point to the dangers of the commercial
|
|
uses of medical databases. But we can ask whether their recognition of
|
|
these dangers fully informs their own account. Perhaps because they wish
|
|
to make proposals that can be adopted immediately, the authors employ
|
|
the notion of solidarity to recommend only modest restrictions on the
|
|
use of these databases.
|
|
For example, they urge that their use contribute to some public good at
|
|
the same time as they retain their commercial or profit-oriented
|
|
purposes, where these latter can even remain primary. The authors also
|
|
tend to accept the existing limits on public funding for research as a
|
|
given, rather than strongly arguing for its expansion by way of
|
|
solidarity actions, however difficult accomplishing this might be in the
|
|
present. In fact, the use of health databases for the purpose of private
|
|
profit is a social choice that a society need not endorse. Likewise, the
|
|
scope and extent of public funding is also a matter of policy and
|
|
legislation, even if alternative directions would be difficult to
|
|
implement in the context of a capitalist political economy. It is
|
|
constraints posed by the latter that I would highlight in an alternative
|
|
structural perspective on solidarity, taking us beyond the commitment to
|
|
assist others that these authors foreground in their analysis. Indeed,
|
|
one can further argue that the solidarity that Prainsack and Buyx seek,
|
|
as a willingness to share one's own data in large databases, can
|
|
actually be undercut by structural injustices. This is evident
|
|
especially in regard to the potential commercial use of the data.
|
|
Informed people, aware of the dangers that this background structural
|
|
feature poses, may well be resistant to taking a chance on acting in the
|
|
solidaristic ways that these authors recommend. People may be wary of
|
|
these commercial uses and indeed, may even come to expect them, so they
|
|
would decide against contributing their own information, despite
|
|
assurances of confidentiality. In this way, the existing tendency toward
|
|
an overriding concern with private self-interest is reinforced by the
|
|
very existence and continuation of these structural background
|
|
conditions. In this context, efforts to eliminate structural injustice,
|
|
if effective, could be expected to assist in promoting the sorts of
|
|
solidarities that Prainsack and Buyx seek. Another specific difference I
|
|
have with these authors' otherwise excellent account of databases and
|
|
their governance has to do with their rather puzzling remarks about
|
|
dealing with the risks that must be accepted by those who contribute
|
|
their health data to the database. For Prainsack and Buyx, solidarity is
|
|
supposed to motivate people to provide their own health data to these
|
|
databases and they argue that only `broad consent' is needed for the use
|
|
of this data by researchers rather than more traditional forms of
|
|
informed consent, which they regard as excessively demanding and costly
|
|
in this context. The authors propose that less attention should be given
|
|
to preventing the risks of re-identification (with the potential
|
|
discrimination that might follow) and more attention given to mitigating
|
|
or compensating for harms that may accrue to individuals from misuse of
|
|
their data in the future. This includes, they suggest, making fewer
|
|
efforts to assure individual consent in a strong sense, and instead
|
|
placing more emphasis on putting funds aside to remedy harms or injuries
|
|
arising from misidentification or, more generally, from the misuse of
|
|
information. I believe that encouraging solidaristic actions and
|
|
practices of the sort these authors seek to engender would instead be
|
|
aided by focusing even more than is presently done on preventing and
|
|
limiting the risks that inevitably attend contributing one's personal
|
|
health data for use in medical databases.
|
|
This is so not only for instrumental reasons, namely, because otherwise
|
|
people will not participate out of (largely rational) fear of these
|
|
untoward consequences. A greater emphasis on limiting risk is also
|
|
essential in recognition of the real structural problems that frame
|
|
these databases, namely, the great commercial potential they hold and
|
|
their openness to corporate use of the included health information in
|
|
the interests of profits, along with the deep challenges involved in
|
|
safeguarding privacy online. These structural features would not be
|
|
meliorated by the authors' otherwise fine proposals to allow
|
|
contributors to access their own raw data, and to be informed of
|
|
possible health impacts on them personally that emerge from the research
|
|
the databases facilitate. To adequately deal with the various social,
|
|
technological, and medical challenges posed by these large databanks
|
|
requires solidarity action in the interest of structural change besides
|
|
the reforms the authors have sketched. Further, although Prainsack and
|
|
Buyx helpfully suggest in passing that a few patients should be included
|
|
among those who serve on the proposed governance boards for large
|
|
databanks, it seems that the majority on these boards would be made up
|
|
of standing groups of people whose only requirement is not to have
|
|
conflicts of interest in regard to the potential uses of the databanks.
|
|
This delimitation seems insufficient to assure the responsibility owed
|
|
to the contributors of data, particularly in view of the background
|
|
functioning of social and economic institutions that give managers and
|
|
other elites the preponderance of power. Inasmuch as ethics boards are
|
|
also ruled out by the authors as trustees (because they are
|
|
overburdened, in their view, or may not be knowledgeable about the
|
|
specific research in question), it is unclear how these governance
|
|
boards would best be constituted on their approach. A strongly
|
|
solidaristic view would require that a substantial number should be
|
|
drawn from patients or their representatives, though it would clearly
|
|
also be important to include a sizable number of scientists and other
|
|
experts. We can see then that quasi-democratic requirements emerge for
|
|
the governance of these databanks, such that those affected by them
|
|
would have some say in overseeing them. This follows as well from the
|
|
feature of deference, which I suggested is an important aspect of an
|
|
adequate conception of solidarity. Deference is required toward those
|
|
one is assisting, who should have a major role in specifying their needs
|
|
and how they want to be assisted. Efforts must thus be made to hear from
|
|
them systematically. This involves new forms of democratic, or perhaps
|
|
quasi-democratic, input into the policies or actions in question. I use
|
|
the qualification `quasi' here to indicate that the input in question
|
|
may not always have to be formal, though there is certainly a place for
|
|
formal rights of participation on governance boards by some
|
|
representatives of patients or even the public at large. This sort of
|
|
deference to patients and democratic input by them also casts light on
|
|
the final example of solidarity in action, drawing again from the
|
|
Prainsack and Buyx account. They analyze the case of `personalized
|
|
medicine' or `precision medicine,' which most often refers to the use of
|
|
analytical software and databases to target medicine and healthcare to
|
|
individuals in ways that are unique to them, e.g., by the use of
|
|
genomics and through such software systems as IBM's Watson.
|
|
The authors rightly point out that group characteristics continue to be
|
|
important to these analyses, since data about groups provide the
|
|
parameters for evaluating the medical status of individuals. But in
|
|
personalized or precision medicine, the focus comes to be on the
|
|
intersection of these group findings within particular differentiated
|
|
individuals. Moreover, the authors usefully propose to extend the
|
|
characteristics that are taken into account in personalized practices to
|
|
include also social ones, as well as individuals' cultural and personal
|
|
preferences. In regard to the identification of group characteristics
|
|
and their embodiment in unique ways in individuals, it is clearly
|
|
important to adopt a socially critical perspective as to what
|
|
constitutes a relevant group. That is, taking structure into account
|
|
suggests the importance of becoming aware of social preconceptions and
|
|
potential bias in the identification of a group. This holds not only for
|
|
standard ascriptive group identifications along the lines of gender,
|
|
race, etc., but also of newer sets of subgroups or emerging crosscutting
|
|
groups. It would also affect the ways both researchers and clinicians
|
|
identify the social background conditions and the social and cultural
|
|
preferences of the individuals, if these are to be taken into account
|
|
and added to personalized medicine and healthcare, as Prainsack and Buyx
|
|
propose. We can delineate one final implication of the importance of
|
|
participation in healthcare by those affected, which I have suggested
|
|
follows from a conception of solidarity that includes deference and
|
|
hearing from others as to how they want to be aided or assisted.
|
|
Clearly, a fuller view of personalized medicine would not only look at
|
|
evidence-based therapies targeted at individuals drawing from large
|
|
databases of relevant research, but should be open to input from
|
|
patients themselves about the aims and methods of therapy. Even the
|
|
basic interpretation of health and wellness, both of which are clearly
|
|
shared goals of patients and clinicians, can be open to patients' input.
|
|
This sort of participation by those affected by the practice of medicine
|
|
and healthcare need not be understood in a way that diminishes the role
|
|
of science or expertise. Rather, it reflects the recognition that
|
|
solidarity with patients requires openness to their own perspectives and
|
|
goals, and ideally involves their participation in co-determining their
|
|
own care. Given the range of research knowledge and existing therapies,
|
|
a truly personalized medicine would not only home in on targeted precise
|
|
therapies, but would involve an interactive and cooperative process of
|
|
health building and health sustenance. As argued here, it would also
|
|
require practices of attunement to, and solidarity with, a patient's
|
|
social context, needs, and aspirations. Further, understanding that
|
|
social context, in turn, requires a focus on the differential power and
|
|
inequalities that result from prevailing political and economic
|
|
institutions, that is, an attention to structural injustice. The author
|
|
declares no conflict of interest. Carol C. Gould is Distinguished
|
|
Professor in Philosophy at Hunter College and in the Doctoral Programs
|
|
in Philosophy and Political Science at the Graduate Center of The City
|
|
University of New York, where she is also Director of the Center for
|
|
Global Ethics and Politics. She is Editor of the Journal of Social
|
|
Philosophy. Her most recent book is Interactive democracy: The social
|
|
roots of global justice (Cambridge University Press, 2014.) Prainsack,
|
|
B., \& Buyx, A. (2017).
|
|
Solidarity in biomedicine and beyond.
|
|
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. See for example, Gunson, D.
|
|
(2009). Solidarity and the universal declaration on bioethics and human
|
|
rights. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 34, 241-260. I discuss this
|
|
question in Gould, C. C. (2014). Interactive democracy: The social roots
|
|
of global justice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Prainsack \&
|
|
Buyx, op. cit. note 1; and Prainsack, B., \& Buyx, A. (2011).
|
|
Solidarity: Reflections on an emerging concept in bioethics. Retrieved
|
|
February 25, 2018, from
|
|
https://nuffieldbioethics.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Solidarity\_rep
|
|
ort\_FINAL.pdf Prainsack \& Buyx, op. cit. note 1, p. 52. Ibid., pp. 68,
|
|
77, 93. Ibid., pp. 76, 77, 93. Gould, C. C. (2007). Transnational
|
|
solidarities. Journal of Social Philosophy, 38(1) (Special Issue on
|
|
Solidarity, C. Gould \& S. Scholz), 146-162; Gould, op. cit. note 3, pp.
|
|
99-131. Bayertz, K. (1999). Four uses of `solidarity'. In K. Bayertz
|
|
(Ed.), Solidarity (pp. 3-28). Dordrecht: Kluwer. More recent
|
|
articulations of the Catholic notion of solidarity, in particular, have
|
|
seen it as tied labor, e.g., in the Polish Solidarnosc movement or to
|
|
Latin American social movements. See for example, Beyer, G. J. (2014).
|
|
The meaning of solidarity in Catholic social teaching. Political
|
|
Theology, 15(1), 7-25. Clearly, too, as Beyer points out, Christianity
|
|
is not unique among religions in appealing to some conception of
|
|
solidarity. See also Schoenfeld, E. \& Mestrovic, S. G. (1989).
|
|
Durkheim's concept of justice and its relationship to social solidarity.
|
|
Sociology of Religion, 50(2), 111-127. For a discussion of the some of
|
|
the meanings of solidarity in historical context, see Brunkhorst, H.
|
|
(2005). Solidarity: From civic friendship to a global legal community.
|
|
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; Pensky, M. (2008). The ends of solidarity:
|
|
Discourse theory in ethics and politics. Albany, NY: State University of
|
|
New York Press. For a discussion of the distinction of solidarity from
|
|
charity and from humanitarian aid, see Gould, op.cit. note 8. Gould, C.
|
|
C. (1983). Beyond causality in the social sciences: Reciprocity as a
|
|
model of non-exploitative social relations. In R. S. Cohen \& M. W.
|
|
Wartofsky (Eds.), Epistemology, methodology and the social sciences:
|
|
Boston studies in the philosophy of science (Vol. 71, pp. 53-88).
|
|
Boston: D. Reidel; Gould, C. C. (1988). Rethinking democracy: Freedom
|
|
and social cooperation in politics, economy, and society (pp. 31-90).
|
|
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Gould, op. cit. note 8. Note that
|
|
Andrea Sangiovanni adds this sort of national solidarity as a third
|
|
traditional root of the notion, in addition to those derived from the
|
|
Christian and socialist traditions. See Sangiovanni, A. (2015).
|
|
Solidarity as joint action. Journal of Applied Philosophy, 32, 340-359.
|
|
Eckenwiler, L., Straehle, C., \& Chung, R. (2012). Global solidarity,
|
|
migration, and global health inequity. Bioethics, 26, 382-390. Gunson,
|
|
op. cit. note 2, p. 247. Ibid. For an intensive discussion of the
|
|
concept of political solidarity and its forms, see Scholz, S. J. (2008).
|
|
Political solidarity. University Park: Penn State University Press.
|
|
Gunson, op. cit. note 2, p. 248. Gould, C. C. (1978). Marx's social
|
|
ontology: Individuality and community in Marx's theory of social
|
|
reality. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; Gould (1988), op. cit. note 13, pp.
|
|
91-132. For a development of the implications of this social ontology
|
|
for understanding human rights and solidarity, see Gould, op. cit. note
|
|
3.
|
|
See especially Gould (1988), op. cit. note 13, pp. 31-90 and Gould, op.
|
|
cit. note 3. Ibid. Ibid. For a related argument, see Young, I. M.
|
|
(1990). Justice and the politics of difference. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
|
|
University Press; Young, I. M. (2000). Inclusion and democracy. Oxford:
|
|
Oxford University Press. On interdependence and vulnerability, see Held,
|
|
V. (2006). The ethics of care: Personal, political, and global. New
|
|
York, NY: Oxford University Press. For a discussion of the material and
|
|
social conditions for human agency, including healthcare, see Gould, C.
|
|
C. (2004). Globalizing democracy and human rights. Cambridge: Cambridge
|
|
University Press. Regarding the connection of these conditions to
|
|
economic and social human rights, see also Gould (1988), op. cit. note
|
|
13, pp. 190-214, and Gould, op. cit. note 3, pp. 13-57. My own treatment
|
|
of the notion of negative and positive freedom was indebted especially
|
|
to Macpherson, C. B. (1973). Democratic theory: Essays in retrieval.
|
|
Oxford: Oxford University Press. See Gould, op. cit. note 13, pp. 18-20,
|
|
38-40, where I also discuss some differences from his view. Gould
|
|
(1988), op. cit. note 13. Habermas, J. (1990). Justice and solidarity:
|
|
On the discussion concerning Stage 6. Tr. S. W. Nicholson. In T. E. Wren
|
|
(Ed.), The moral domain: Essays in the ongoing discussion between
|
|
philosophy and the social sciences (pp. 244-245). Cambridge, MA: MIT
|
|
Press. Gould (2004), op. cit. note 24; Gould, op. cit. note 8. Gould,
|
|
op. cit. note 8. See also the account of solidarity and justice in
|
|
Ferguson, A. (2009). Iris Young, global responsibility, and solidarity.
|
|
In A. Ferguson \& M. Nagel (Eds.), Dancing with Iris: Between
|
|
phenomenology and the body politic in the political philosophy of Iris
|
|
Marion Young (pp. 185-197). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
|
|
Gould, ibid: 157; Gould, op. cit. note 3, p. 111. Rippe, K. P. (1998).
|
|
Diminishing solidarity. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, 1(3),
|
|
355-373. I have discussed inclusiveness and democracy in social
|
|
movements in Gould, op. cit. note 3, pp. 99-131. Giddens, A. (1984). The
|
|
constitution of society. Cambridge: Polity Press. Young, I. M. (2003).
|
|
Political responsibility and structural injustice. Lawrence: University
|
|
of Kansas, p. 7. Ibid, p. 6. Young, I. M. (2006). Responsibility and
|
|
global justice: A social connections model. Social Philosophy and
|
|
Policy, 23(1), 102-130. I discuss Young's conception of responsibility
|
|
for global justice in Gould, C. C. (2009). Varieties of global
|
|
responsibility: Reflections on Iris Marion Young's last writings. In
|
|
Ferguson \& Nagel, op. cit. note 29, pp. 199-211. Ibid. Although the
|
|
focus in this article is primarily on the injustice and exploitation
|
|
resulting from capitalist structures, it is evident that political
|
|
economic institutions serve to replicate racism and patriarchy in
|
|
addition to economic exploitation. A fuller account would need to
|
|
consider the interrelations among these various forms of systemic or
|
|
structural injustice, and the ways they produce unequal access to
|
|
healthcare, along with deeply problematic impacts on health and
|
|
well-being. Durkheim, E. (1964). The division of labor in society. Tr.
|
|
G. Simpson. New York, NY: The Free Press. For further discussion, see
|
|
Gould, op. cit. note 3, chapter 6. For a discussion of a range of
|
|
environmental injustices and movements to address them, see Bullard, R.
|
|
D. (Ed.). (2005). The quest for environmental justice: Human rights and
|
|
the politics of pollution. San Francisco, CA: Sierra Club Books.
|
|
For a useful discussion of the interaction of natural and social factors
|
|
in Katrina and other U.S. disasters, see Tierney, K. (2006). Social
|
|
inequality, hazards, and disasters. In R. J. Daniels, D. F. Kettl, \& H.
|
|
Kunreuther (Eds.), On risk and disaster: Lessons from Hurricane Katrina
|
|
(pp. 109-128). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. See also
|
|
the helpful analyses in Bullard R. D. \& Wright, B. (Eds.). (2009).
|
|
Race, place, and environmental justice after Hurricane Katrina:
|
|
Struggles to reclaim, rebuild and revitalize New Orleans and the Gulf
|
|
Coast. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. Disasters Emergency Committee. Haiti
|
|
earthquake facts and figures. UK. Retrieved February 24, 2018, from
|
|
https://www.dec.org.uk/articles/haiti-earthquake-facts-and-figures The
|
|
Haiti Case Study. (2012). NATO-Harvard Working Paper. Retrieved February
|
|
24, 2018, from
|
|
https://www.jallc.nato.int/products/docs/haiti\_case\_study.pdf Luge, T.
|
|
(2010). Haiti case study. Retrieved February 24, 2018, from
|
|
https://www.slideshare.net/Timoluege/2010-haiti-earthquake-response-case
|
|
-study Chen, M. (2017, June 8). The bankers behind Puerto Rico's debt
|
|
crisis. The Nation. New York, NY. Retrieved February 23, 2018, from
|
|
https://www.thenation.com/article/bankers-behind-puerto-ricos-debt-crisi
|
|
s/ Prainsack \& Buyx, op. cit. note 1, p. 104. Ibid., pp. 114, 115.
|
|
Ibid., p. 115. Ibid., p. 119. INTRODUCTION CURRENT INTERPRETATIONS OF
|
|
SOLIDARITY IN HEALTHCARE TWO SENSES OF SOLIDARITY AND THEIR RELATION TO
|
|
JUSTICE STRUCTURAL INJUSTICE AND SOLIDARITY SOME IMPLICATIONS FOR
|
|
HEALTHCARE CONFLICT OF INTEREST Footnotes The concept of solidarity has
|
|
recently come to prominence in the healthcare literature, addressing the
|
|
motivation for taking seriously the shared vulnerabilities and medical
|
|
needs of compatriots and for acting to help them meet these needs. In a
|
|
recent book, Prainsack and Buyx take solidarity as a commitment to bear
|
|
costs to assist others regarded as similar, with implications for
|
|
governing health databases, personalized medicine, and organ donation.
|
|
More broadly, solidarity has been understood normatively to call for
|
|
`standing with' or assisting fellow community members and possibly also
|
|
distant others in regard to their needs, whether for its own sake or in
|
|
order to realize the demands of justice. I argue here that the
|
|
understanding of solidarity in the existing bioethics literature is
|
|
unduly restricted by not sufficiently theorizing the notion of
|
|
structural (or systemic) injustice and its import for understanding
|
|
solidarity. Extending traditional conceptions of labor and social
|
|
movement solidarity, I contrast unitary solidarity within a given group
|
|
with `networking solidarities' across groups. I analyze the meaning of
|
|
structural injustice and its significance for solidarity, including
|
|
countering institutionally entrenched inequalities and economic
|
|
exploitation. I then apply this broadened conception to healthcare,
|
|
discussing structural problems with the U.S. insurance system and the
|
|
solidarity movements addressing its deficiencies. I analyze some natural
|
|
disasters and global health challenges that were aggravated by
|
|
structural injustices, along with the solidarity movements they
|
|
engendered. Finally, I revisit the questions of governing health
|
|
databases and of personalized medicine with the enlarged conception of
|
|
solidarity in view.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gould, CC (Corresponding Author), 333 Cent Pk West,Apt 16, New York, NY 10025 USA.
|
|
Gould, Carol C., CUNY, Hunter Coll, Dept Philosophy, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Gould, Carol C., CUNY, Grad Ctr, Doctoral Program Philosophy, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Gould, Carol C., CUNY, Grad Ctr, Doctoral Program Polit Sci, New York, NY 10021 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/bioe.12474},
|
|
ISSN = {0269-9702},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-8519},
|
|
Keywords = {healthcare; justice; solidarity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JUSTICE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Ethics; Medical Ethics; Social Issues; Social Sciences, Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {carolcgould@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baldissera, Annalisa/AHD-6334-2022
|
|
Fazli, Ghazal/AAE-8320-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {34},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {85},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1528},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000450332600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000449710900009,
|
|
Author = {Foreman, Kyle J. and Marquez, Neal and Dolgert, Andrew and Fukutaki, Kai
|
|
and Fullman, Nancy and McGaughey, Madeline and Pletcher, Martin A. and
|
|
Smith, Amanda E. and Tang, Kendrick and Yuan, Chun-Wei and Brown,
|
|
Jonathan C. and Friedman, Joseph and He, Jiawei and Heuton, Kyle P. and
|
|
Holmberg, Mollie and Patel, Disha J. and Reidy, Patrick and Carter,
|
|
Austin and Cercy, Kelly and Capin, Abigail and Douwes-Schultz, Dirk and
|
|
Frank, Tahvi and Goettsch, Falko and Liu, Patrick Y. and Nandakumar,
|
|
Vishnu and Reitsma, Marissa B. and Reuter, Vince and Sadat, Nafis and
|
|
Sorensen, Reed J. D. and Srinivasan, Vinay and Updike, Rachel L. and
|
|
York, Hunter and Lopez, Alan D. and Lozano, Rafael and Lim, Stephen S.
|
|
and Mokdad, Ali H. and Vollset, Stein Emil and Murray, Christoper J. L.},
|
|
Title = {Forecasting life expectancy, years of life lost, and all-cause and
|
|
cause-specific mortality for 250 causes of death: reference and
|
|
alternative scenarios for 2016-40 for 195 countries and territories},
|
|
Journal = {LANCET},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {392},
|
|
Number = {10159},
|
|
Pages = {2052-2090},
|
|
Month = {NOV 10},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Understanding potential trajectories in health and drivers of
|
|
health is crucial to guiding long -Lentil investments and policy
|
|
itnpletnentation. Past work on forecasting has provided an incomplete
|
|
landscape of future health scenarios, highlighting a need for a more
|
|
robust modelling platform from which policy options and potential health
|
|
trajectories can be assessed. This study provides a novel approach to
|
|
modelling life expectancy, all -cause mortality and cause of death
|
|
forecasts and alternative future scenarios for 250 causes of death from
|
|
2016 to 2040 in 195 countries and territories.
|
|
Methods We modelled 250 causes and cause groups organised by the Global
|
|
Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) hierarchical
|
|
cause structure, using GBD 2016 estimates from 1990-2016, to generate
|
|
predictions for 2017-40. Our modelling framework used data from the GBD
|
|
2016 study to systematically account for the relationships between risk
|
|
factors and health outcomes for 79 independent drivers of health. We
|
|
developed a three-component model of cause-specific mortality: a
|
|
component due to changes in risk factors and select interventions; the
|
|
underlying mortality rate for each cause that is a function of income
|
|
per capita, educational attainment, and total fertility rate under 25
|
|
years and time; and an autoregressive integrated moving average model
|
|
for unexplained changes correlated with time. We assessed the
|
|
performance by fitting models with data from 1990-2006 and using these
|
|
to forecast for 2007-16. Our final model used for generating forecasts
|
|
and alternative scenarios was fitted to data from 1990-2016. We used
|
|
this model for 195 countries and territories to generate a reference
|
|
scenario or forecast through 2040 for each measure by location.
|
|
Additionally, we generated better health and worse health scenarios
|
|
based on the 85th and 15th percentiles, respectively, of annualised
|
|
rates of change across location-years for all the GBD risk factors,
|
|
income per person, educational attainment, select intervention coverage,
|
|
and total fertility rate under 25 years in the past. We used the model
|
|
to generate all-cause age-sex specific mortality, life expectancy, and
|
|
years of life lost (YLLs) for 250 causes. Scenarios for fertility were
|
|
also generated and used in a cohort component model to generate
|
|
population scenarios. For each reference forecast, better health, and
|
|
worse health scenarios, we generated estimates of mortality and YLLs
|
|
attributable to each risk factor in the future.
|
|
Findings Globally, most independent drivers of health were forecast to
|
|
improve by 2040, but 36 were forecast to worsen. As shown by the better
|
|
health scenarios, greater progress might be possible, yet for some
|
|
drivers such as high body-mass index (BMI), their toll will rise in the
|
|
absence of intervention. We forecasted global life expectancy to
|
|
increase by 4.4 years (95\% UI 2.2 to 6.4) for men and 4.4 years (2.1 to
|
|
6.4) for women by 2040, but based on better and worse health scenarios,
|
|
trajectories could range from a gain of 7.8 years (5.9 to 9.8) to a
|
|
non-significant loss of 0.4 years (-2.8 to 2.2) for men, and an increase
|
|
of 7.2 years (5.3 to 9.1) to essentially no change (0.1 years {[}-2.7 to
|
|
2. 5]) for women. In 2040, Japan, Singapore, Spain, and Switzerland had
|
|
a forecasted life expectancy exceeding 85 years for both sexes, and 59
|
|
countries including China were projected to surpass a life expectancy of
|
|
80 years by 2040. At the same time, Central African Republic, Lesotho,
|
|
Sotnalia, and Zimbabwe had projected life expectancies below 65 years in
|
|
2040, indicating global disparities in survival are likely to persist if
|
|
current trends hold. Forecasted YLLs showed a rising toll from several
|
|
non-communicable diseases (NCDs), partly driven by population growth and
|
|
ageing. Differences between the reference forecast and alternative
|
|
scenarios were most striking for HIV/AIDS, for which a potential
|
|
increase of 120-2\% (95\% UI 67.2-190.3) in YLLs (nearly 118 million)
|
|
was projected globally from 2016-40 under the worse health scenario.
|
|
Compared with 2016, NCDs were forecast to account for a greater
|
|
proportion of YLLs in all GB D regions by 2040 (67.3\% of YLLs {[}95\%
|
|
UI 61.9-72.3] globally); nonetheless, in many lower-income countries,
|
|
communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional (CMNN) diseases still
|
|
accounted for a large share of YLLs in 2040 (eg, 53.5\% of YLLs {[}95\%
|
|
UI 48.3-58.5] in Sub-Saharan Africa). There were large gaps for many
|
|
health risks between the reference forecast and better health scenario
|
|
for attributable YLLs. In most countries, metabolic risks amenable to
|
|
health care (eg, high blood pressure and high plasma fasting glucose)
|
|
and risks best targeted by population -level or intersectoral
|
|
interventions (eg, tobacco, high BMI, and ambient particulate matter
|
|
pollution) had some of the largest differences between reference and
|
|
better health scenarios. The main exception was sub-Saharan Africa,
|
|
where many risks associated with poverty and lower levels of development
|
|
(eg, unsafe water and sanitation, household air pollution, and child
|
|
malnutrition) were projected to still account for substantive
|
|
disparities between reference and better health scenarios in 2040.
|
|
Interpretation With the present study, we provide a robust, flexible
|
|
forecasting platform from which reference forecasts and alternative
|
|
health scenarios can be explored in relation to a wide range of
|
|
independent drivers of health. Our reference forecast points to overall
|
|
improvements through 2040 in most countries, yet the range found across
|
|
better and worse health scenarios renders a precarious vision of the
|
|
future a world with accelerating progress from technical innovation but
|
|
with the potential for worsening health outcomes in the absence of
|
|
deliberate policy action. For some causes of YLLs, large differences
|
|
between the reference forecast and alternative scenarios reflect the
|
|
opportunity to accelerate gains if countries move their trajectories
|
|
toward better health scenarios or alarming challenges if countries fall
|
|
behind their reference forecasts. Generally, decision makers should plan
|
|
for the likely continued shift toward NCDs and target resources toward
|
|
the modifiable risks that drive substantial premature mortality. If such
|
|
modifiable risks are prioritised today, there is opportunity to reduce
|
|
avoidable mortality in the future. However, CMNN causes and related
|
|
risks will remain the predominant health priority among lower -income
|
|
countries. Based on our 2040 worse health scenario, there is a real risk
|
|
of HIV mortality rebounding if countries lose momentum against the HIV
|
|
epidemic, jeopardising decades of progress against the disease.
|
|
Continued technical innovation and increased health spending, including
|
|
development assistance for health targeted to the world's poorest
|
|
people, are likely to remain vital components to charting a future where
|
|
all populations can live full, healthy lives. Copyright 2018 The
|
|
Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article
|
|
under the CC BY 4.0 license.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Murray, CJL (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Inst Hlth Metr \& Evaluat, Seattle, WA 98121 USA.
|
|
Foreman, Kyle J.; Dolgert, Andrew; Fukutaki, Kai; Fullman, Nancy; McGaughey, Madeline; Pletcher, Martin A.; Smith, Amanda E.; Tang, Kendrick; Yuan, Chun-Wei; Brown, Jonathan C.; Patel, Disha J.; Carter, Austin; Cercy, Kelly; Douwes-Schultz, Dirk; Frank, Tahvi; Goettsch, Falko; Nandakumar, Vishnu; Reitsma, Marissa B.; Sadat, Nafis; Sorensen, Reed J. D.; Srinivasan, Vinay; Updike, Rachel L.; Lim, Stephen S.; Mokdad, Ali H.; Vollset, Stein Emil; Murray, Christoper J. L., Univ Washington, Inst Hlth Metr \& Evaluat, Seattle, WA 98121 USA.
|
|
Marquez, Neal, Univ Washington, Dept Sociol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Friedman, Joseph, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Sch Publ Hlth, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
Liu, Patrick Y., Univ Calif Los Angeles, Sch Med, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
He, Jiawei, Baidu, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Heuton, Kyle P., OM1, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Holmberg, Mollie, Univ British Columbia, Dept Geog, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Reidy, Patrick, Wellframe, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Reuter, Vince, Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr, 1275 York Ave, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Lopez, Alan D., Univ Melbourne, Sch Populat \& Global Hlth, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Lozano, Rafael, Natl Inst Publ Hlth, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31694-5},
|
|
ISSN = {0140-6736},
|
|
EISSN = {1474-547X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GLOBAL BURDEN; UNITED-STATES; PROJECTIONS; HEALTH; TRENDS; DISABILITY;
|
|
EDUCATION; SMOKING; DISEASE; OBESITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {cjlm@uw.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lopez, Alan/AAA-2734-2022
|
|
Reitsma, Marissa/AAE-7719-2020
|
|
Sorensen, Reed/HSH-0549-2023
|
|
Mokdad, Ali H./AAD-1232-2022
|
|
Lozano, Rafael/T-5352-2018
|
|
Lopez, Alan D/F-1487-2010
|
|
Friedman, Joseph/ABA-5864-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mokdad, Ali H./0000-0002-4994-3339
|
|
Lozano, Rafael/0000-0002-7356-8823
|
|
Lopez, Alan D/0000-0001-5818-6512
|
|
Friedman, Joseph/0000-0002-5225-3267
|
|
Srinivasan, Vinay/0000-0001-5779-5068
|
|
York, Hunter/0000-0001-5084-5966
|
|
Frank, Tahvi/0000-0002-1972-782X
|
|
Douwes-Schultz, Dirk/0000-0002-6186-2275
|
|
Carter, Austin/0000-0002-3588-6142},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {923},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {248},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000449710900009},
|
|
ESI-Highly-Cited-Paper = {Y},
|
|
ESI-Hot-Paper = {N},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000865611600001,
|
|
Author = {Bifarin, Oladayo and Quinn, Catherine and Breen, Liz and Zhang, Bing and
|
|
Oyebode, Jan},
|
|
Title = {Intersections between the culture of Xiao and caring for older relatives
|
|
in China: perspectives of United Kingdom-based Chinese students on
|
|
future care for their parents},
|
|
Journal = {AGEING \& SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Month = {2022 OCT 11},
|
|
Abstract = {Emphasis placed on Xiao (filial piety) in Chinese culture highlights
|
|
parents' investment in their children with the expectation of being
|
|
cared for when older. An increasing number of Chinese students come to
|
|
the United Kingdom (UK) to study, with the majority returning home and
|
|
likely to become future care-givers for their parents. Little attention
|
|
has been paid to the implications of transnational mobility of Chinese
|
|
students on the reciprocal aspects of future care responsibility. With
|
|
the uniquely changing family structure due to consequences of the
|
|
One-Child Policy, we conducted proactive research on the opportunities
|
|
and challenges that Chinese transnational students anticipate they may
|
|
face in future care-giving for elderly parents. Hence, this study's aim
|
|
was to make a novel contribution to knowledge through exploration of the
|
|
perspectives of Chinese students in England on intergenerational ties
|
|
and filial obligations. Adopting a social constructivist philosophical
|
|
position, we conducted three focus groups with 19 UK-based Chinese
|
|
students, using a semi-structured topic guide with informed consent.
|
|
Interviews were translated, transcribed and analysed using reflective
|
|
thematic analysis, capturing semantic and latent meanings, and employed
|
|
a descriptive and interpretative approach. Six themes were discovered,
|
|
revealing a `culture of duty' where familial obligation and societal
|
|
expectations were prominent. Prospective care-givers anticipated a
|
|
future dilemma between balancing work commitments and providing care as
|
|
mandated by Xiao. Furthermore, it appeared that lack of preparedness
|
|
might further exacerbate barriers faced when accessing support. We
|
|
surmised that the changing demographics and absence of formal support
|
|
could compound stressors over time, especially if cognitive dissonance
|
|
arises as realities of life do not fit with societal expectations. Our
|
|
findings imply that policy makers, practitioners and the government will
|
|
need to adequately support prospective family care-givers who are
|
|
returnees in caring for older generations.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bifarin, O (Corresponding Author), Univ Bradford, Fac Hlth Studies, Ctr Appl Dementia Studies, Bradford, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Bifarin, O (Corresponding Author), Liverpool John Moores Univ, Fac Hlth, Sch Nursing \& Allied Hlth, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Bifarin, O (Corresponding Author), Mersey Care NHS Fdn Trust, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Bifarin, Oladayo; Quinn, Catherine; Zhang, Bing; Oyebode, Jan, Univ Bradford, Fac Hlth Studies, Ctr Appl Dementia Studies, Bradford, W Yorkshire, England.
|
|
Bifarin, Oladayo, Liverpool John Moores Univ, Fac Hlth, Sch Nursing \& Allied Hlth, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Bifarin, Oladayo, Mersey Care NHS Fdn Trust, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Breen, Liz, Univ Bradford, Fac Life Sci, Sch Pharm \& Med Sci, Bradford, W Yorkshire, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/S0144686X22001118},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {OCT 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {PII S0144686X22001118},
|
|
ISSN = {0144-686X},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-1779},
|
|
Keywords = {autonomy and self-efficacy; filial piety; care obligation; formal
|
|
care-giving; intergenerational relationships},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CAREGIVERS; STRESS; PEOPLE; MOBILITY; ADULTS; IMPACT; ABUSE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Gerontology},
|
|
Author-Email = {o.o.bifarin@ljmu.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bifarin, Oladayo/0000-0002-8247-2508},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000865611600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000274654300007,
|
|
Author = {Joyce, Kerry and Pabayo, Roman and Critchley, Julia A. and Bambra, Clare},
|
|
Title = {Flexible working conditions and their effects on employee health and
|
|
wellbeing},
|
|
Journal = {COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Flexible working conditions are increasingly popular in developed
|
|
countries but the effects on employee health and wellbeing are largely
|
|
unknown.
|
|
Objectives
|
|
To evaluate the effects ( benefits and harms) of flexible working
|
|
interventions on the physical, mental and general health and wellbeing
|
|
of employees and their families.
|
|
Search strategy
|
|
Our searches ( July 2009) covered 12 databases including the Cochrane
|
|
Public Health Group Specialised Register, CENTRAL; MEDLINE; EMBASE;
|
|
CINAHL; PsycINFO; Social Science Citation Index; ASSIA; IBSS;
|
|
Sociological Abstracts; and ABI/Inform. We also searched relevant
|
|
websites, handsearched key journals, searched bibliographies and
|
|
contacted study authors and key experts.
|
|
Selection criteria
|
|
Randomised controlled trials (RCT), interrupted time series and
|
|
controlled before and after studies (CBA), which examined the effects of
|
|
flexible working interventions on employee health and wellbeing. We
|
|
excluded studies assessing outcomes for less than six months and
|
|
extracted outcomes relating to physical, mental and general health/ill
|
|
health measured using a validated instrument. We also extracted
|
|
secondary outcomes ( including sickness absence, health service usage,
|
|
behavioural changes, accidents, work-life balance, quality of life,
|
|
health and wellbeing of children, family members and co-workers) if
|
|
reported alongside at least one primary outcome.
|
|
Data collection and analysis
|
|
Two experienced review authors conducted data extraction and quality
|
|
appraisal. We undertook a narrative synthesis as there was substantial
|
|
heterogeneity between studies.
|
|
Main results
|
|
Ten studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Six CBA studies reported
|
|
on interventions relating to temporal flexibility: self-scheduling of
|
|
shift work (n = 4), flexitime ( n = 1) and overtime ( n = 1). The
|
|
remaining four CBA studies evaluated a form of contractual flexibility:
|
|
partial/gradual retirement ( n = 2), involuntary part-time work ( n = 1)
|
|
and fixed-term contract ( n = 1). The studies retrieved had a number of
|
|
methodological limitations including short follow-up periods, risk of
|
|
selection bias and reliance on largely self-reported outcome data.
|
|
Four CBA studies on self-scheduling of shifts and one CBA study on
|
|
gradual/partial retirement reported statistically significant
|
|
improvements in either primary outcomes ( including systolic blood
|
|
pressure and heart rate; tiredness; mental health, sleep duration, sleep
|
|
quality and alertness; self-rated health status) or secondary health
|
|
outcomes (co-workers social support and sense of community) and no ill
|
|
health effects were reported. Flexitime was shown not to have
|
|
significant effects on self-reported physiological and psychological
|
|
health outcomes. Similarly, when comparing individuals working overtime
|
|
with those who did not the odds of ill health effects were not
|
|
significantly higher in the intervention group at follow up. The effects
|
|
of contractual flexibility on self-reported health ( with the exception
|
|
of gradual/partial retirement, which when controlled by employees
|
|
improved health outcomes) were either equivocal or negative. No studies
|
|
differentiated results by socio-economic status, although one study did
|
|
compare findings by gender but found no differential effect on
|
|
self-reported health outcomes.
|
|
Authors' conclusions
|
|
The findings of this review tentatively suggest that flexible working
|
|
interventions that increase worker control and choice ( such as
|
|
self-scheduling or gradual/partial retirement) are likely to have a
|
|
positive effect on health outcomes. In contrast, interventions that were
|
|
motivated or dictated by organisational interests, such as fixed-term
|
|
contract and involuntary part-time employment, found equivocal or
|
|
negative health effects. Given the partial and methodologically limited
|
|
evidence base these findings should be interpreted with caution.
|
|
Moreover, there is a clear need for well-designed intervention studies
|
|
to delineate the impact of flexible working conditions on health,
|
|
wellbeing and health inequalities.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bambra, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Durham, Dept Geog, Wolfson Res Inst, Queens Campus, Stockton On Tees TS17 6BH, Teesside, England.
|
|
Bambra, Clare, Univ Durham, Dept Geog, Wolfson Res Inst, Stockton On Tees TS17 6BH, Teesside, England.
|
|
Pabayo, Roman, Univ Montreal, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Critchley, Julia A., Newcastle Univ, Inst Hlth \& Soc, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU, Tyne \& Wear, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/14651858.CD008009.pub2},
|
|
Article-Number = {CD008009},
|
|
ISSN = {1469-493X},
|
|
EISSN = {1361-6137},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SELF-RATED HEALTH; BRITISH CIVIL-SERVANTS; CORONARY-HEART-DISEASE;
|
|
WORKPLACE REORGANIZATION; SOCIAL INTERVENTIONS; SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS;
|
|
GRADUAL RETIREMENT; DECISION LATITUDE; SICKNESS ABSENCE; SHIFT SYSTEM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {clare.bambra@durham.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {P, Roman/AAO-3485-2020
|
|
Bambra, Clare l/C-1392-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {P, Roman/0000-0003-4018-4898
|
|
Bambra, Clare l/0000-0002-1294-6851
|
|
Critchley, Julia/0000-0002-5248-4188},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {165},
|
|
Times-Cited = {197},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {260},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000274654300007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000681676300370,
|
|
Author = {Vojtkova, Maria},
|
|
Editor = {Kliestik, T},
|
|
Title = {GLOBAL PROBLEM OF POVERTY WITH A FOCUS ON INCOME AND MATERIAL
|
|
DEPRIVATION IN SLOVAKIA},
|
|
Booktitle = {GLOBALIZATION AND ITS SOCIO-ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Pages = {2894-2901},
|
|
Note = {18th International Scientific Conference on Globalization and Its
|
|
Socio-Economic Consequences, Rajecke Teplice, SLOVAKIA, OCT 10-11, 2018},
|
|
Abstract = {Poverty as a global problem is also associated with a solution to
|
|
material deprivation. In connection with the membership of Slovakia in
|
|
the European Union, we have adopted European legislation in this area.
|
|
Currently, there is a European 2020 strategy in the countries of the
|
|
European Union, in which one of the five main targets are ``Combating
|
|
Poverty and Social Exclusion{''}. Target groups of the strategy are also
|
|
people at the risk of material deprivation, disadvantaged job seekers,
|
|
or people at risk of losing their job. Material deprivation is not only
|
|
a threat to people who have problems with employment, but generally to
|
|
persons who face some form of shortage in the items that their household
|
|
cannot afford, because of their financial possibilities. Wages or other
|
|
forms of income that represent the basic income of households may not be
|
|
sufficient as an indicator of material deprivation. The relationship
|
|
between income and material deprivation requires global attention in all
|
|
EU countries as well as in Slovakia. The main objective of this article
|
|
is to quantify the influence of selected factors on the equivalent
|
|
disposable income of materially deprived and non-deprived Slovak
|
|
households, their comparison and interpretation. The analysis will be
|
|
based on the statistical survey on Income and Living conditions EU SILC.
|
|
The effect of listed factors will be verified using the GLM procedure in
|
|
SAS Enterprise Guide 5.1.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vojtkova, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Econ, Fac Econ Informat, Dolnozemska 1-b, Bratislava 85235, Slovakia.
|
|
Vojtkova, Maria, Univ Econ, Fac Econ Informat, Dolnozemska 1-b, Bratislava 85235, Slovakia.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-80-8154-249-7},
|
|
Keywords = {poverty; material deprivation; equivalent disposable income; generalized
|
|
linear model; EU SILC},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK INTENSITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Business, Finance; Economics; International Relations;
|
|
Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {maria.vojtkova@euba.sk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {15},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000681676300370},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000849179900028,
|
|
Author = {de Oliveira, Fernanda Artimos and da Silva, Angela Malaquias and da
|
|
Hora, Senir Santos and de Oliveira, Solange Artimos and da Silva Junior,
|
|
Aluisio Gomes and Araujo Cardoso, Claudete Aparecida},
|
|
Title = {Healthcare for children with congenital Zika syndrome: analysis of
|
|
access to social rights},
|
|
Journal = {CIENCIA \& SAUDE COLETIVA},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {3679-3688},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Niteroi Coletiva, Abstract The objective of this study was to des-cribe
|
|
if the victims of the Zika have access to es-sential public policies to
|
|
guarantee social rights. Methods: We used a cross-sectional study of a
|
|
historical cohort of children with congenital Zika syndrome (CZS) in a
|
|
reference hospital. CZS diagnosis was based on the Ministry of Health
|
|
protocol. The variables analyzed were sociode-mographic and social
|
|
rights of children. Results: Of the 161 children seen from April 2016 to
|
|
July 2018, 42 were diagnosed with CZS. Of these, 37 children
|
|
participated in the study and 75.7\% of them had severe neurological
|
|
disorders. Anticon-vulsants were used by 73\% of the children, with 81\%
|
|
paid by families. The families were also res-ponsible for purchasing
|
|
nutritional formulas and diapers in, respectively, 79\% and 100\% of
|
|
cases, and 89\% of the children had access to rehabilita-tion therapy,
|
|
although 70\% of them faced several barriers to do it. Of the 24 working
|
|
mothers, 83\% did not return to the labor market after the birth of
|
|
their children. Conclusions: The results showed that the families were
|
|
at an intersection between the integral activity of caring for a child
|
|
with se-vere disabilities and inefficient and omissive pu-blic
|
|
authorities, a disincentive and discouraging context that made them give
|
|
up in seeking their rights.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {de Oliveira, FA (Corresponding Author), Univ Fed Fluminense UFF, Fac Med, Programa Posgrad Ciencias Med, R Marques de Parana 303,4o Andar, BR-24033900 Niteroi, RJ, Brazil.
|
|
de Oliveira, Fernanda Artimos; de Oliveira, Solange Artimos, Univ Fed Fluminense UFF, Fac Med, Programa Posgrad Ciencias Med, R Marques de Parana 303,4o Andar, BR-24033900 Niteroi, RJ, Brazil.
|
|
da Silva, Angela Malaquias, Ctr Atencao Portador Deficiencias, Ctr Especializado Reabilitacao 2, Duque De Caxias, RJ, Brazil.
|
|
da Hora, Senir Santos, Univ Fed Fluminense, Hosp Univ Antonio Pedro, Niteroi, RJ, Brazil.
|
|
da Silva Junior, Aluisio Gomes, Univ Fed Fluminense, Inst Saude Colet, Niteroi, RJ, Brazil.
|
|
Araujo Cardoso, Claudete Aparecida, Univ Fed Fluminense, Fac Med, Dept Maternoinfantil, Niteroi, RJ, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1590/1413-81232022279.02972022},
|
|
ISSN = {1413-8123},
|
|
EISSN = {1678-4561},
|
|
Keywords = {Public policies; Human rights; Conge-nital Zika syndrome},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {fartimosdeoliveira@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cardoso, Claudete/0000-0002-7638-6814
|
|
da Hora, senir/0000-0002-0161-3701
|
|
Artimos de Oliveira, Solange/0000-0002-1862-2348
|
|
Gomes da Silva Junior, Aluisio/0000-0003-2445-3963},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000849179900028},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000403590800005,
|
|
Author = {Lewis, Gregory B. and Pitts, David W.},
|
|
Title = {LGBT-Heterosexual Differences in Perceptions of Fair Treatment in the
|
|
Federal Service},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN REVIEW OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {47},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {574-587},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Although we still lack objective data on treatment of lesbians, gays,
|
|
bisexuals, and transgenders (LGBTs) in the federal service, a huge
|
|
recent survey of federal employees allows us to compare LGBT and
|
|
heterosexual employees' perceptions of the treatment they receive. LGBTs
|
|
have several reasons for more negative perceptions of their treatment:
|
|
70 years of federal policies that explicitly discriminated against LGBTs
|
|
in large and small ways; sizable minorities who still condemn
|
|
homosexuality even as public attitudes are increasingly accepting; and
|
|
continuing pay gaps between comparably educated and experienced gay,
|
|
bisexual, and transgender (GBT) and heterosexual men in the general
|
|
economy. We examine differences in satisfaction with pay, performance
|
|
appraisals, promotions, raises, prohibited personnel practices,
|
|
commitment to diversity, agency leadership, and relationships with
|
|
supervisors and co-workers. LGBTs are less satisfied with their
|
|
treatment across the board.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lewis, GB (Corresponding Author), Georgia State Univ, POB 3992, Atlanta, GA 30302 USA.
|
|
Lewis, Gregory B., Georgia State Univ, Andrew Young Sch Policy Studies, Dept Publ Management \& Policy, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA.
|
|
Pitts, David W., Amer Univ, Washington, DC 20016 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0275074015605378},
|
|
ISSN = {0275-0740},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-3357},
|
|
Keywords = {LGBTs; federal government; social equity; public management},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SEXUAL ORIENTATION DISCRIMINATION; GAY MEN; JOB-SATISFACTION; NONPROFIT
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; LESBIANS; ATTITUDES; EARNINGS; GENDER; INCOME; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public Administration},
|
|
Author-Email = {glewis@gsu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {36},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000403590800005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000678124300036,
|
|
Author = {Singh, Devendra Raj and Sunuwar, Dev Ram and Shah, Sunil Kumar and Sah,
|
|
Lalita Kumari and Karki, Kshitij and Sah, Rajeeb Kumar},
|
|
Title = {Food insecurity during COVID-19 pandemic: A genuine concern for people
|
|
from disadvantaged community and low-income families in Province 2 of
|
|
Nepal},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {JUL 21},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Food insecurity is a serious social and public health problem
|
|
which is exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic especially in
|
|
resource-poor countries such as Nepal. However, there is a paucity of
|
|
evidence at local levels. This study aims to explore food insecurity
|
|
among people from the disadvantaged community and low-income families
|
|
during the COVID-19 pandemic in Province-2 of Nepal. Methods The
|
|
semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted virtually among
|
|
purposively selected participants (n = 41) from both urban and rural
|
|
areas in eight districts of Province 2 in Nepal. All the interviews were
|
|
conducted in the local language between July and August 2020. The data
|
|
analysis was performed using thematic network analysis in Nvivo 12 Pro
|
|
software. Results The results of this study are grouped into four global
|
|
themes: i) Impact of COVID-19 on food security; ii) Food insecurity and
|
|
coping strategies during the COVID-19 pandemic, iii) Food relief and
|
|
emergency support during the COVID-19 pandemic, and iv) Impact of
|
|
COVID-19 and food insecurity on health and wellbeing. Most participants
|
|
in the study expressed that families from low socioeconomic backgrounds
|
|
and disadvantaged communities such as those working on daily wages and
|
|
who rely on remittance had experienced increased food insecurity during
|
|
the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants used different forms of coping
|
|
strategies to meet their food requirements during the pandemic.
|
|
Community members experienced favouritism, nepotism, and partiality from
|
|
local politicians and authorities during the distribution of food
|
|
relief. The food insecurity among low-income and disadvantaged families
|
|
has affected their health and wellbeing making them increasingly
|
|
vulnerable to the COVID-19 infection. Conclusion Food insecurity among
|
|
low-income and disadvantaged families was found to be a serious problem
|
|
during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study suggests that the relief support
|
|
plan and policies should be focused on the implementation of immediate
|
|
sustainable food security strategies to prevent hunger, malnutrition,
|
|
and mental health problems among the most vulnerable groups in the
|
|
community.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Singh, DR (Corresponding Author), Purbanchal Univ, Asian Coll Adv Studies, Dept Publ Hlth, Lalitpur, Nepal.
|
|
Singh, DR (Corresponding Author), Southeast Asia Dev Act Network SADAN, Res \& Innovat Sect, Lalitpur, Nepal.
|
|
Singh, DR (Corresponding Author), Swadesh Dev Fdn SDF, Res Sect, Prov 2, Siraha, Nepal.
|
|
Singh, Devendra Raj; Karki, Kshitij, Purbanchal Univ, Asian Coll Adv Studies, Dept Publ Hlth, Lalitpur, Nepal.
|
|
Singh, Devendra Raj, Southeast Asia Dev Act Network SADAN, Res \& Innovat Sect, Lalitpur, Nepal.
|
|
Singh, Devendra Raj, Swadesh Dev Fdn SDF, Res Sect, Prov 2, Siraha, Nepal.
|
|
Sunuwar, Dev Ram, Armed Police Force Hosp, Dept Nutr \& Dietet, Kathmandu, Nepal.
|
|
Shah, Sunil Kumar, Bagmati Welf Soc Nepal, Program Sect, Prov 2, Sarlahi, Nepal.
|
|
Sah, Lalita Kumari, Canterbury Christ Church Univ, Fac Med Hlth \& Social Care, Canterbury, Kent, England.
|
|
Sah, Rajeeb Kumar, Univ Huddersfield, Sch Human \& Hlth Sci, Dept Allied Hlth Profess Sports \& Exercise, Huddersfield, W Yorkshire, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0254954},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0254954},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; CHALLENGES; INTERVIEWS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {dsingh3797@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Karki, Kshitij/ABE-7737-2020
|
|
Sah, Rajeeb Kumar/AAW-6654-2021
|
|
Singh, Devendra Raj/R-2197-2019
|
|
Sah, Rajeeb/ABD-1449-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sah, Rajeeb Kumar/0000-0001-8430-5343
|
|
Singh, Devendra Raj/0000-0003-1450-9476
|
|
Sah, Lalita Kumari/0000-0002-4347-3970
|
|
Karki, Kshitij/0000-0002-6039-8909},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {22},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000678124300036},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000460516800002,
|
|
Author = {Argento, Elena and Goldenberg, Shira and Shannon, Kate},
|
|
Title = {Preventing sexually transmitted and blood borne infections (STBBIs)
|
|
among sex workers: a critical review of the evidence on determinants and
|
|
interventions in high-income countries},
|
|
Journal = {BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {19},
|
|
Month = {MAR 5},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundAcross diverse regions globally, sex workers continue to face
|
|
a disproportionate burden of HIV and other sexually transmitted and
|
|
blood borne infections (STBBIs). Evidence suggests that behavioural and
|
|
biomedical interventions are only moderately successful in reducing
|
|
STBBIs at the population level, leading to calls for increased
|
|
structural and community-led interventions. Given that structural
|
|
approaches to mitigating STBBI risk beyond HIV among sex workers in
|
|
high-income settings remain poorly understood, this critical review
|
|
aimed to provide a comprehensive synthesis of the global research and
|
|
literature on determinants of HIV and other STBBIs and promising
|
|
intervention practices for sex workers of all genders in high-income
|
|
countries.MethodsWe searched for publications over the last decade
|
|
(January 2005-March 2016) among sex workers (cis women, cis men, and
|
|
trans individuals). Data obtained from quantitative peer-reviewed
|
|
studies were triangulated with publicly available reports and
|
|
qualitative/ethnographic research where quantitative evidence was
|
|
limited.ResultsResearch demonstrates consistent evidence of the direct
|
|
and indirect impacts of structural factors (e.g., violence, stigma,
|
|
criminalization, poor working conditions) on increasing risk for STBBIs
|
|
among sex workers, further compounded by individual and interpersonal
|
|
factors (e.g., mental health, substance use, unprotected sex).
|
|
Sub-optimal access to health and STBBI prevention services remains
|
|
concerning. Full decriminalization of sex work has been shown to have
|
|
the largest potential to avert new infections in sex work, through
|
|
reducing workplace violence and increasing access to safer workspaces.
|
|
Promising practices and strategies that should be scaled-up and
|
|
evaluated to prevent STBBIs are highlighted.ConclusionsThe high burden
|
|
of STBBIs among sex workers across high-income settings is of major
|
|
concern. This review uniquely contributes to our understanding of
|
|
multilevel factors that potentiate and mitigate STBBI risk for sex
|
|
workers of all genders. Research suggests that multipronged structural
|
|
and community-led approaches are paramount to addressing STBBI burden,
|
|
and are necessary to realizing health and human rights for sex workers.
|
|
Given the heterogeneity of sex worker populations, and distinct
|
|
vulnerabilities faced by cis men and trans sex workers, further research
|
|
utilizing mixed-methods should be implemented to delineate the
|
|
intersections of risk and ameliorate critical health inequalities.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shannon, K (Corresponding Author), Univ British Columbia, Dept Med, Ctr Gender \& Sexual Hlth Equ, 1190 Hornby St, Vancouver, BC V6Z 2K5, Canada.
|
|
Shannon, K (Corresponding Author), Univ British Columbia, Sch Populat \& Publ Hlth, Fac Med, 2206 East Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z9, Canada.
|
|
Argento, Elena; Goldenberg, Shira; Shannon, Kate, Univ British Columbia, Dept Med, Ctr Gender \& Sexual Hlth Equ, 1190 Hornby St, Vancouver, BC V6Z 2K5, Canada.
|
|
Argento, Elena, Univ British Columbia, Interdisciplinary Studies Grad Program, 2357 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
|
|
Goldenberg, Shira, Simon Fraser Univ, Fac Hlth Sci, 8888 Univ Dr, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada.
|
|
Shannon, Kate, Univ British Columbia, Sch Populat \& Publ Hlth, Fac Med, 2206 East Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z9, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12879-019-3694-z},
|
|
Article-Number = {212},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2334},
|
|
Keywords = {Sex workers; HIV prevention; STBBI; Risk environment; High-income
|
|
countries; Structural interventions},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CROSS-SECTIONAL DATA; HIV-PREVENTION; TRANSGENDER WOMEN; CONDOM USE;
|
|
STRUCTURAL DETERMINANTS; INTERNET ESCORTS; ENGLAND ANALYSIS; SOCIAL
|
|
COHESION; RISK BEHAVIORS; HEALTH-CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Infectious Diseases},
|
|
Author-Email = {Dr.Shannon@cgshe.ubc.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Goldenberg, Shira/C-9627-2009},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Goldenberg, Shira/0000-0003-1633-9749},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {112},
|
|
Times-Cited = {22},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000460516800002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000401865600003,
|
|
Author = {Hangulu, Lydia and Akintola, Olagoke},
|
|
Title = {Health care waste management in community-based care: experiences of
|
|
community health workers in low resource communities in South Africa},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Month = {MAY 15},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: In South Africa, community health workers (CHWs) working in
|
|
community-based care (CBC) programmes provide care to patients most of
|
|
whom are living with HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis (TB). Although studies
|
|
have shown that the caregiving activities provided by the CHWs generate
|
|
health care waste (HCW), there is limited information about the
|
|
experiences of CHWs on health care waste management (HCWM) in CBC. This
|
|
study explored HCWM in CBC in Durban, South Africa from the perspectives
|
|
CHWs.
|
|
Methods: We used three ethnographic approaches to collect data: focus
|
|
group discussions, participant observations and informal discussions.
|
|
Data was collected from 85 CHWs working in 29 communities in the Durban
|
|
metropolis, South Africa. Data collection took place from July 2013 to
|
|
August 2014.
|
|
Results: CHWs provided nursing care activities to patients many of whom
|
|
were incontinent or bedridden. Some the patients were living with
|
|
HIV/AIDS/TB, stroke, diabetes, asthma, arthritis and high blood
|
|
pressure. These caregiving activities generate sharps and infectious
|
|
waste but CHWs and family members did not segregate HCW according to the
|
|
risk posed as stipulated by the HCWM policy. In addition, HCW was left
|
|
with domestic waste. Major barriers to proper HCWM identified by CHWs
|
|
include, lack of assistance from family members in assisting patients to
|
|
use the toilet or change diapers and removing HCW from homes, irregular
|
|
waste collection by waste collectors, inadequate water for practicing
|
|
hygiene and sanitation, long distance between the house and the toilets
|
|
and poor conditions of communal toilets and pit latrines. As a result of
|
|
these barriers, HCW was illegally dumped along roads or in the bush,
|
|
burnt openly and buried within the yards. Liquid HCW such as vomit,
|
|
urine and sputum were disposed in open spaces near the homes.
|
|
Conclusion: Current policies on primary health care (PHC) and HCWM in
|
|
South Africa have not paid attention to HCWM. Findings suggest the need
|
|
for primary health care reform to develop the competencies of CHWs in
|
|
HCWM. In addition, PHC and HCWM policies should address the
|
|
infrastructure deficit in low resource communities. In order for
|
|
low-and-middle-income-countries (LMICs) to develop effective community
|
|
health worker programmes, there is a need for synergies in PHC and HCWM
|
|
policies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hangulu, L (Corresponding Author), Univ KwaZulu Natal, Discipline Psychol, Hlth Promot Postdoctoral Programme, MTB Ground Floor,1X09, ZA-4041 Durban, South Africa.
|
|
Hangulu, Lydia, Univ KwaZulu Natal, Discipline Psychol, Hlth Promot Postdoctoral Programme, MTB Ground Floor,1X09, ZA-4041 Durban, South Africa.
|
|
Akintola, Olagoke, Univ KwaZulu Natal, Discipline Psychol, Hlth Promot Programme, 4041King George Ave, ZA-4041 Durban, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-017-4378-5},
|
|
Article-Number = {448},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Community-based care; Community health workers; Health care waste;
|
|
HIV/AIDS},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENERATION; SANITATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {lydiamudenda@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000401865600003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000612359800001,
|
|
Author = {Solano, Neyra and Lopez-Ercilla, Ines and Fernandez-Rivera Melo,
|
|
Francisco J. and Torre, Jorge},
|
|
Title = {Unveiling Women's Roles and Inclusion in Mexican Small-Scale Fisheries
|
|
(SSF)},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {7},
|
|
Month = {JAN 15},
|
|
Abstract = {The contributions of women to fisheries are often invisible, ignored,
|
|
and unrecognized even though they represent 47\% of the global fisheries
|
|
workforce, especially in pre- and post-production activities. Poor data
|
|
systems lead to incorrect assumptions about the gender division of labor
|
|
in fisheries. This causes the role of women in fisheries to be
|
|
overlooked. To evaluate the contribution of women in the value chain, a
|
|
participatory methodology was implemented in three small-scale,
|
|
fisheries in Mexico: California spiny lobster (Panulirus interruptus)
|
|
fishery from the northern Mexican Pacific, penshell (Atrina maura)
|
|
fishery from the Gulf of California, and Caribbean spiny lobster
|
|
(Panulirus argus) fishery from the Mesoamerican Reef region. This study
|
|
shows an unequal inclusion of men and women as members of the fishing
|
|
cooperatives where only 4\%, 5\%, and 20\% are women in spiny lobster,
|
|
red lobster, and penshell, respectively, and in the distribution of
|
|
direct jobs (1 out of 6.7 jobs was held by a woman). These results
|
|
indicate limited opportunities for women to access leadership positions.
|
|
However, the participation percentages increased dramatically when we
|
|
considered the fishery system (i.e., both direct and indirect jobs),
|
|
with women accounting for 43\%, 21\%, and 37\% of the California spiny
|
|
lobster, penshell, and Caribbean spiny lobster fishery workforce,
|
|
respectively. Women represented 39\% of the workforce in pre-production
|
|
activities, 2\% in production, 29\% in post-production, and 56\% in
|
|
complementary to production. Women tended to participate in two or more
|
|
activities at the same time, generally combining work, household, and
|
|
community activities. The participation of women in fisheries could be
|
|
equivalent to a second working day, and even when this effort is present
|
|
in similarly in three fisheries, their contribution is yet to be
|
|
acknowledged in order to incorporate women in decision-making. The
|
|
analysis of the value chain and the fishery system provided a more
|
|
realistic picture of the contribution of women to fisheries than an
|
|
analysis focused solely on extraction. This work further analyzed the
|
|
importance and degree of participation of women in fishing cooperatives
|
|
and the decision-making process. Strategies to reduce gender disparity
|
|
are needed to encourage inclusion of women in fisheries decision-making.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lopez-Ercilla, I (Corresponding Author), Comunidad \& Biodiversidad AC, Guaymas, Mexico.
|
|
Solano, Neyra; Lopez-Ercilla, Ines; Fernandez-Rivera Melo, Francisco J.; Torre, Jorge, Comunidad \& Biodiversidad AC, Guaymas, Mexico.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fmars.2020.617965},
|
|
Article-Number = {617965},
|
|
EISSN = {2296-7745},
|
|
Keywords = {fishery system; employment; Mexico; small-scale fishery; fisheries value
|
|
chain; gender division of labor; women; gender equality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RESOURCE-MANAGEMENT; ISLA ARENA; GENDER; CONSERVATION; ACCESS;
|
|
SUSTAINABILITY; FISH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Marine \& Freshwater Biology},
|
|
Author-Email = {ilopez@cobi.org.mx},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Melo, Francisco Javier Fernández-Rivera/AAU-2241-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Melo, Francisco Javier Fernández-Rivera/0000-0003-4569-917X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000612359800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000450332600004,
|
|
Author = {Eckenwiler, Lisa},
|
|
Title = {Displacement and solidarity: An ethic of place-making},
|
|
Journal = {BIOETHICS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {9, SI},
|
|
Pages = {562-568},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {When the sick, injured, or dying arrive in a hospital - often along with
|
|
family members - they find themselves on an alien landscape. Elderly
|
|
people enter unfamiliar territory as they move from home or hospital
|
|
into a long-term care setting, which may be the first in a series of
|
|
placements for their final years. African Americans have been subjected
|
|
for decades to oppressive urban planning policies, including `serial
|
|
displacement', which have systematically uprooted and dispersed them,
|
|
their homes, and their places of business and worship. Around the world
|
|
currently, 65 million people are displaced, most trying to escape
|
|
uninhabitable environs involving war, persecution, drought, and famine.
|
|
Some of these migrants and asylum-seekers reside in and around refugee
|
|
camps but many are in urban enclaves or isolated outside them in
|
|
desperately inhospitable conditions. Some are trying to integrate and
|
|
make homes in new countries. Still more people are coming in perilous
|
|
flight from the unfurling effects of climate change. `We are
|
|
place-lings,' according to Ed Casey, `never without emplaced
|
|
experiences'. Lorraine Code, explaining our social and geographical
|
|
embeddedness and interdependence, describes us as `ecological subjects'.
|
|
By recognizing place, we can deepen our appreciation for the ways in
|
|
which we are radically relational, that is, interdependent with people,
|
|
non-human others, and particular locations. This robust and realistic
|
|
conception of our relational nature and its implications for health and
|
|
ethics deserves more attention. Elsewhere I have argued for `ethical
|
|
place-making' as morally obligatory for supporting the capability to be
|
|
healthy, or health justice, for ecological subjects. Drawing on this
|
|
conception of persons as creatures situated in specific social
|
|
relations, geographic locations, and atmospheric and material
|
|
environments, here I emphasize the importance of place and argue for an
|
|
ideal and practice of `ethical place-making' as an essential and,
|
|
indeed, ethically required way of demonstrating and forging future
|
|
solidarity and advancing justice, particularly health justice. The paper
|
|
is organized as follows. In Section 2, I explain what I mean by place
|
|
and examine the relationships, revealed by contemporary research in
|
|
social epidemiology, between place and health. In Section 3, I build on
|
|
the conception of persons as ecological subjects to ground what Carol
|
|
Gould has called `solidaristic recognition', which, as I will interpret
|
|
it, requires us to reckon with the significance of place in our
|
|
relational nature. I then link solidaristic recognition to the ideal and
|
|
practice of ethical place-making and, in turn, the capability to be
|
|
healthy, that is, health justice. I argue that place-based interventions
|
|
should be principal and prioritized ways of showing solidarity and
|
|
promoting justice - especially health justice - for ecological subjects,
|
|
above all those who are displaced and/or insecurely placed. Where
|
|
solidaristic relations do not prevail, ethical place-making has the
|
|
potential to catalyze and nurture them and, over time, to advance
|
|
justice.
|
|
A full discussion of the complex and contested relationship between
|
|
solidarity and global justice is beyond the scope of what I can expound
|
|
on here; I follow - and present concrete manifestations of - the views
|
|
of Iris Marion Young and Carol Gould in seeing solidarity as having, as
|
|
Gould puts it, a crucial `role not only in motivating people's
|
|
commitment to the realization of global justice but {[}also]
|
|
contribut{[}ing] to its construction or constitution.' In Section 4, I
|
|
present examples of ethical place-making inspired by solidaristic
|
|
recognition in a range of domains significant for bioethics - clinical
|
|
and long-term care and urban planning in the United States and
|
|
Netherlands, and refugee care and resettlement in Lebanon and Germany.
|
|
In the cases presented, I describe how the particular elements of
|
|
ethical place-making, emerging from solidaristic recognition, are
|
|
realized, and so support the conditions for the capability to healthy,
|
|
or health justice. Following this discussion, I move on to the
|
|
conclusion. Place `is no fixed thing'. The accounts of geographers,
|
|
philosophers, and some architects emphasize our embodied experience in
|
|
or around place(s), place's significance for the development of our
|
|
subjectivity and identity, and, finally, the complex social processes
|
|
that help to create, maintain, and transform places (and, in turn,
|
|
bodies and subjectivities). The understanding I follow here defines
|
|
`place' in terms of the material environment, and how we, as embodied
|
|
beings, move in, absorb, shape and are shaped by it, and how we, as
|
|
social agents, interact with and within it, gather and attach particular
|
|
meanings, and forge relationships and identities. A growing body of
|
|
research in social epidemiology using realist methods explains in
|
|
increasingly rich, if grim, detail the ways in which social conditions
|
|
and features of the external environment, including place-related
|
|
factors, affect health and longevity, and contribute to preventable
|
|
health inequities. We are talking about components of the built
|
|
environment, like land use, housing design, materials and quality,
|
|
street layout and transportation, exposure to toxins, and violence,
|
|
access to food and activity options; and urban design or decline. Air
|
|
and water quality, and access to green space are other place-related
|
|
factors. We should also include climate and the potential in specific
|
|
locations for climate-related disasters in our scope of concern.
|
|
So-called `determinants' such as these operate independently and
|
|
interactively at various levels and in different contexts to generate
|
|
harms to health and health inequities. On terrain more typical for
|
|
bioethics, clinical and other care settings, as currently configured,
|
|
are notoriously disorienting, anxiety-inducing, and in some ways
|
|
dangerous for physical, psychological, and existential health.
|
|
Researchers have detailed a range of effects of institutional design,
|
|
including the effects of noise and light on recovery times, and the ways
|
|
architecture can shape interactions and experiences. Long-term care
|
|
settings are infamous for poor conditions. A lack of light, private
|
|
space, and access to the outdoors, for example, and isolation from
|
|
broader social surroundings, adversely affect the health of elderly
|
|
people. People fleeing war, persecution, and famine endure desperate
|
|
conditions that threaten health. Many reside in camps (in the form of
|
|
transit camps and official refugee camps, detention centers, etc.
|
|
) while others dwell in slums or other settlements - primarily in urban
|
|
areas - segregated from the majority population. These people suffer
|
|
from a range of complex physical and mental health conditions. Before or
|
|
during transit and in camps and other settings, they face food
|
|
insecurity, risk of communicable disease, fear, violence, loss, and
|
|
other experiences. If there is access to health services it is often
|
|
restricted to acute medical care, and not equipped to adequately address
|
|
chronic or mental health conditions or the social determinants of health
|
|
needs. Migrants and asylum-seeking people thus lack crucial capabilities
|
|
to be healthy. It is not that a relationship between place and health is
|
|
a modern epiphany. Hippocrates' Airs, waters, and places, the
|
|
epidemiological work of Louis-Rene Villerme and Rudolph Virchow in the
|
|
19th century, and the histories of public health and urban planning, all
|
|
recognized the importance of environmental conditions. The asylums for
|
|
the mentally ill in the late 19th century reveal an attention, if not
|
|
yet evidence-based, for place in care and healing. Inspired by the Moral
|
|
Treatment movement, New Enlightenment intellectuals, and health
|
|
advocates like Dorthea Dix, Thomas Kirkbride established professional
|
|
guidelines on institutional layout and room design for patients. Realist
|
|
methods in social epidemiology, more recently, have deepened our
|
|
appreciation and understanding of the processes at work on our corporeal
|
|
nature, and our entanglement with the world around us. We are situated
|
|
socially, materially, and geographically, and vulnerable as creatures
|
|
who need care and who also need to `fit' with the places in which we
|
|
dwell and through which we navigate. We are, in short, ecological
|
|
subjects, beings for whom social interdependence and geographic
|
|
locatedness are vital. As I will argue below, health justice, or the
|
|
capability to be healthy, therefore demands thoughtful attention to
|
|
place and the conditions that create and sustain places. In the next
|
|
section, I explain the relationship between recognizing people as
|
|
ecological subjects and the ideal and practice of solidarity.
|
|
Solidarity, as I will define it, refers to reaching out through engaging
|
|
our moral imaginations across social and/or geographic distance and
|
|
asymmetry to recognize and assist others who are vulnerable, in some
|
|
cases, acutely, and, over time, advance justice. As a practice,
|
|
solidarity involves two core `enacted commitments'. The first commitment
|
|
is to engaging our moral imaginations and recognizing others in need, or
|
|
what I will describe below as solidaristic recognition. The second
|
|
commitment is to responsive action. This hybrid definition draws upon
|
|
the inspirational work of Iris Marion Young, Carol Gould, Fuyuki
|
|
Kurasawa, and Prainsack and Buyx, all of whom build upon a long and rich
|
|
history of interpretations of solidarity. Recognizing the suffering of
|
|
the displaced and others who are `implaced' in conditions unable to
|
|
sustain them follows from the most minimal appreciation of people as
|
|
ecological subjects, relational creatures who are densely enmeshed in
|
|
social relations as well as spatial locations. While my analysis differs
|
|
substantially, to describe this here I use Carol Gould's term,
|
|
`solidaristic recognition'. Gould distinguishes between what she calls
|
|
`rigorous recognition' and `generous recognition'.
|
|
Rigorous recognition appreciates the equality of all people through an
|
|
essentially cognitive process involving an acknowledgment of our fellow
|
|
humanity. The generous genre, which she recasts as `solidaristic
|
|
recognition', involves empathy, or an affective link with others, and
|
|
focuses on our `mutual interdependence and common needs'. Solidaristic
|
|
recognition conceives of others as `equal in their difference', that is,
|
|
their distinctive social group membership and individual particularity.
|
|
On my own interpretation, solidaristic recognition has two varieties,
|
|
neither of which relies on empathy: basic and relational, responsible
|
|
recognition. If we conceive of people in ecological terms, basic
|
|
recognition (similar to Gould's `rigorous recognition') might be
|
|
expanded beyond its appreciation of everyone's equal moral worth to take
|
|
account of the significance of place for the equitable flourishing of
|
|
all ecological subjects. This most basic form of recognition
|
|
acknowledges that we are equal in part because we all share a need to be
|
|
`in place' in settings that can sustain us and support our capacities. A
|
|
second, more ethically responsible, form of recognition I will call
|
|
relational solidaristic recognition emerges from reckoning more
|
|
thoroughly with our radically relational nature as ecological subjects.
|
|
This reckoning demands that we conceive of ourselves and others as
|
|
embedded but also that we understand that we are constitutive of one
|
|
another and our environs. Geographers have described this in terms of
|
|
the intersubjectivity of identity and place. In her philosophical
|
|
account of ecological subjectivity, Lorraine Code underscores the idea
|
|
that we are `made by and making {[}our] relations in {[}asymmetrical]
|
|
reciprocity with other subjects and with horizontal ellipsis multiple,
|
|
diverse locations'. Seeing not just identities, but also, critically,
|
|
place in relational terms, highlights `the variety of interactions
|
|
between people who are located differently that go into making places'.
|
|
As Iris Young puts it, we `dwell together' in `complex, causal'
|
|
relations of interdependence and in specific atmospheric and material
|
|
conditions on earth in geographic regions and neighborhoods, in homes,
|
|
and institutions of care and employment. We ecological subjects, then,
|
|
contribute to the construction of place - often unintentionally -
|
|
through actions and interactions within a larger context of social
|
|
structures and processes. These structures and processes serve to enable
|
|
some people in the realization of their capacities, yet constrain
|
|
others, creating and/or sustaining structural injustice. This is
|
|
evidenced, for example, in urban planning policies that spawn
|
|
residential segregation or global economic and trade policies that
|
|
compel health care workers to migrate and deepen health inequities in
|
|
source countries. While basic solidaristic recognition can allow for or
|
|
has the potential to generate ethical place-making, relational
|
|
recognition understands the ways that our own subjectivities,
|
|
identities, and places of dwelling as ecological subjects are formed in
|
|
relation to other identities in other places and, crucially, that this
|
|
generates responsibilities for justice. It is in this sense that
|
|
relational solidaristic recognition is a more responsible form: it
|
|
appreciates better-situated ecological subjects' contributions to the
|
|
injustice suffered by the displaced or precariously placed, and aspires
|
|
to respond and work toward promoting justice.
|
|
Responsiveness , an important epistemic and, in turn, ethical capacity,
|
|
is a crucial element for enactments of solidarity in the view I want to
|
|
develop. Both Joan Tronto and Elise Springer assign `responsiveness' a
|
|
prominent place in their work. Springer situates `responsiveness' within
|
|
virtue ethics. On her view, it involves a kind of adaptability,
|
|
particularly in unfamiliar moral terrain, or in the face of concerns
|
|
that `resist clear representation'. Springer posits responsiveness as
|
|
also involving a commitment to `extend a temporally continuous thread of
|
|
attention' or giving one's moral attention over time, not episodically
|
|
or reactively. Tronto identifies responsiveness as one of four ethical
|
|
elements of care, casting it as a moral capacity that involves vigilance
|
|
`to the possibilities for abuse that arise with vulnerability'. I would
|
|
add another element as integral to responsiveness, drawn specifically
|
|
from ecological epistemology: an ability to show finely tuned
|
|
sensitivity to context, that is, the particularity of people and
|
|
circumstance, and give attention and action that is fitting. Solidarity,
|
|
enacted, should emerge from a disposition committed to responsiveness
|
|
understood in terms of these capacities, if it is to meet the mark. In
|
|
the next section I turn to responsive action that arises from
|
|
solidaristic recognition, in particular, efforts at place-making for the
|
|
displaced. Innovation, inspired by ecological thinking and increasingly
|
|
evidence-based, is underway. `Place-making' is a set of intentional
|
|
practices spanning different disciplines that targets neighborhoods,
|
|
parks and paths, features of landscape, housing developments,
|
|
streetscapes, long-term care facilities, and hospitals. With and without
|
|
attention to health, it is either referenced explicitly or somehow
|
|
central to key international documents and declarations including the
|
|
Sustainable Development Goals and UN Habitat's New Urban Agenda. It is
|
|
on the agendas of the World Health Organization (WHO), the US Centers
|
|
for Disease Control (CDC), even the World Bank, some think tanks and
|
|
foundations, and a major US corporation. Public health leaders point to
|
|
place-based interventions as `the new frontier'. In other work I have
|
|
interpreted ethical place-making, a notion that first surfaced in the
|
|
geography literature, as a core component of an enabling,
|
|
capabilities-oriented conception of justice. Grounded in ecological
|
|
thinking and an ecological conception of persons, ethical place-making
|
|
understands all people as embedded socially and spatially, and often
|
|
enmeshed in relationships of structural injustice that threaten health.
|
|
Key elements of ethical place-making include: nurturing relations of
|
|
care and interdependence; protecting bodily integrity; supporting
|
|
autonomy, not interpreted in terms of individual self-reliance, but in
|
|
the relational sense that sees us as originating, persisting, and
|
|
flourishing within relations of care and interdependence, given ongoing
|
|
opportunities for self-directed thought and action; promoting stability
|
|
and a sense of rootedness and, at the same time, supporting generative
|
|
movement; and finally, where necessary, responding to inequities. Below
|
|
I offer selected examples of place-making drawn from a range of domains
|
|
pertinent to bioethics.
|
|
After describing them, I explain why they count as instances of ethical
|
|
place-making inspired by (and potentially generating more) solidaristic
|
|
recognition and how they stand to promote - especially health - justice
|
|
and in some cases address health inequities. I start at the level of
|
|
community and public health with an urban planning example, and from
|
|
there, turn to a clinical and then a long-term care setting. These three
|
|
case studies come from the global north. The final examples explore
|
|
(mostly health-centered) place-making efforts in refugee reception and
|
|
resettlement, sketching innovations in Germany and also Lebanon, a
|
|
country that borders the war in Syria and ranks fourth worldwide as a
|
|
host to refugees. Further research will yield additional instances of
|
|
solidarity and place-making, particularly for health, in other parts of
|
|
the world.
|
|
In {[}a] system of the city as weaving, {[}creating] crosswise threads
|
|
enables solidarity, and fundamental to solidarity is the free system of
|
|
movement horizontal ellipsis `Intentional shrinkage', `sorting', and
|
|
`serial displacement' are terms given to the urban land use and
|
|
`development' policies that systematically shredded the social and
|
|
material fabric in and around African American neighborhoods in New York
|
|
City. Public health researchers have linked these policies and the
|
|
consequent displacement of families, businesses, churches and more, to
|
|
the AIDS epidemic, addiction, asthma, post-traumatic stress, and
|
|
obesity. Working together, citizens, planners, and researchers responded
|
|
with the Giraffe Path (GP), a 6-mile trail from Central Park to the
|
|
Cloisters. The walking and biking path is a project emerging explicitly
|
|
from the kind of solidarity described above: the recognition of the city
|
|
and its people as ecologically embedded, with enduring health inequities
|
|
as a result of displacements, and responsive action in the form of
|
|
(re)creating place with and for ecological subjects. The GP is based on
|
|
a conception of the city and its neighborhoods and residents as
|
|
interdependent - and is designed to restore connections between formerly
|
|
fractured communities around and across the Harlem River and, at the
|
|
same time, to support outdoor physical activity. The closure of the
|
|
bridge, that had long linked neighbors, as a `crime-prevention' measure
|
|
for gentrifying neighborhoods, severed (in a pattern repeated in cities
|
|
everywhere) relationships between people according to categories of
|
|
class and race. By (re)connecting places and people and mending - as its
|
|
designers say, `weaving', `re-stitching' - the GP helps restore these
|
|
and cultivate new relations. At the same time, as part of the City Life
|
|
Is Moving Bodies (CLIMB) Project, the GP's creation of flow and
|
|
unimpeded movement is being celebrated as `a victory for the city's
|
|
entire circulatory system'. The attention paid to (solidaristic
|
|
recognition of) the importance of place for health and most
|
|
significantly, health inequities, in this instance of ethical
|
|
place-making is an exception and not the norm. Urban renewal policies
|
|
and planning tend to prioritize physical, economic, and social issues,
|
|
yet few focus explicitly on health or show concern for health equity.
|
|
Another essential dimension for future solidarity is the potential for
|
|
political engagement generated by the GP.
|
|
As Iris Young argues (and the inset quote implies), segregation obscures
|
|
from the affluent an appreciation of their privilege, and, by limiting
|
|
interaction, constrains political communication. This erodes the
|
|
potential for solidarity and perpetuates social injustice. The GP
|
|
designers aspire to promote solidaristic recognition through
|
|
facilitating new interactions, forging new relations, and evolving as
|
|
ecological subjects.
|
|
We must pay attention to the lived spatial significance of patients'
|
|
experience of health and illness if we are going to treat them fully and
|
|
well. Doing so is one step of paying attention to a person horizontal
|
|
ellipsis The terrain and overall ambience of the clinical setting is
|
|
famously hostile to non-medical people, notably the ones it exists to
|
|
serve. Place-centered innovation in hospitals and other centers of care
|
|
is a growing niche, recognizing the harms done to ecological subjects -
|
|
here patients and their families - in the `care' of institutions built
|
|
as medical assembly lines organized around time until discharge or
|
|
demise. One neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at the Royal United
|
|
Hospital in Bath, U.K., recognizes the importance of place for the
|
|
health and well-being of vulnerable ecological subjects and puts into
|
|
practice a concept known as `secure base', which wraps around patients
|
|
and families `like a hug'. The unit's design also demonstrates
|
|
solidarity with them in recognizing the effects of typical clinical
|
|
settings and, in contrast, boasts lots of natural light, greatly reduced
|
|
noise, private nooks, and a horseshoe-shape design that reflects the
|
|
progression a newborn will take from intensive care to a neonatal room.
|
|
In this case of ethical place-making, innovators aim to create a habitat
|
|
that nurtures overlapping relations of care wherein babies sleep longer,
|
|
and parents are perhaps a little less distressed, and more able to
|
|
participate in care and interact with clinical care providers. As noted
|
|
above, the structure of this temporary dwelling enables families to
|
|
better understand, through their embodied experience, the clinical
|
|
pathway the infants will follow until discharge, which in turn likely
|
|
gives a boost to their sense of agency and empowerment and helps to
|
|
level the playing field with clinicians. Designed by a long-term care
|
|
nurse in response to her observations and experience of existing
|
|
institutions, Hogeway Village accommodates elderly people with dementia
|
|
in a setting meant to resemble a real European neighborhood. It has a
|
|
market, cafe, salon, theater, sidewalks, and ample green space.
|
|
Different models, tailored to appeal to specific social and cultural
|
|
groups, are available. Staff engage with residents without clinical garb
|
|
and simultaneously provide skilled care. Family members are integrally
|
|
involved in care plans. Hogeway is built to protect yet not restrict,
|
|
allowing residents a wide range of movement and access to the outdoors.
|
|
The availability of palliative care ensures that residents do not have
|
|
to relocate at the end of life, which allows for continuity of care and
|
|
relationships. Another benefit is that family members need not navigate
|
|
new terrains, or settings, of care or transportation as elders' needs
|
|
evolve. Emerging research on long-term care settings designed more like
|
|
homes and communities suggests that residents are more socially engaged
|
|
and active, and experience better overall `well-being'.
|
|
Preliminary evidence also suggests that integrating families in care can
|
|
improve relations with care workers, as well as resident care and
|
|
health.
|
|
European cities and regions have demonstrated their horizontal ellipsis
|
|
willingness to express solidarity with horizontal ellipsis the world's
|
|
refugees via participation in resettlement. Solidarity is at the moral
|
|
center of humanitarian action, and place-making by other names has long
|
|
been integral to humanitarian operations. From an emphasis on emergency
|
|
and temporary assistance, humanitarians have expanded the scope and
|
|
practice of `solidarity' given the nature of current conflicts and the
|
|
creation of dependencies that may lead to more sustained commitments.
|
|
Their work now increasingly overlaps with development efforts to bolster
|
|
host countries' capacities to receive, resettle, and integrate
|
|
asylum-seekers and other migrants for the long term. Solidarity, indeed,
|
|
is the basis of commitments to refugee resettlement in international
|
|
humanitarian law. In 2004, the Mexico Plan of Action to Strengthen
|
|
International Protection of Refugees in Latin America (MPA), which
|
|
encompassed regional responsibility sharing, the expansion of
|
|
resettlement space, reception capacity, and long-term integration,
|
|
highlighted solidarity as a guiding principle for support of refugees
|
|
from Columbia and their host countries. Northern Europe has been the
|
|
preferred destination for refugees from Syria and other places where war
|
|
has driven people from their homes. Germany, especially its cities,
|
|
hosts more recent asylum-seekers than any other EU nation. Urban areas
|
|
have absorbed two-thirds of the world's refugees and now face the work
|
|
of integration. The region offers myriad examples of efforts in ethical
|
|
place-making spawned by solidaristic recognition. In both Hamburg and
|
|
Berlin, organizing around place has been a key strategy in welcoming and
|
|
helping to integrate new arrivals. In Berlin, city planners have
|
|
employed a strategy of creating container villages to help refugees feel
|
|
secure and foster a sense of embeddedness-in-community. While
|
|
formalized, state-administered efforts have unfolded, citizen volunteers
|
|
have designed innovative responses to link refugees with needed
|
|
services, helping to integrate them and provide a sense of place. The
|
|
coordinated state and civil society effort, in particular, is an
|
|
inspiring example of politically and socially constructed solidarity,
|
|
supported and advanced by what Christine Straehle calls a `cosmopolitan
|
|
avant-garde' of citizens. Hamburg is also innovative in linking services
|
|
across sectors like food, shelter, education, work skills, and legal
|
|
advice, appreciating the importance of integrating services for those
|
|
who have endured profound dispersion and fragmentation. The city
|
|
addressed housing needs by redesigning existing buildings and engaged
|
|
local communities in deciding on locations in order to help ensure a
|
|
welcoming, safe environment and avoid the possibility of local
|
|
neighborhood resistance. The countries, such as Jordan, Lebanon, and
|
|
Turkey that serve as the principal hosts to refugees fleeing Syria,
|
|
Afghanistan, and elsewhere, are organizing around so-called `resilience'
|
|
strategies, which aim at bolstering host countries' capacities to accept
|
|
and integrate asylum-seekers and other migrants for the long-term. This
|
|
management philosophy deserves more sustained discussion. I highlight
|
|
here another civil society initiative involving ethical place-making.
|
|
In Lebanon during the war (1975-1990) public spaces were among the most
|
|
dangerous places. Now they serve as temporary shelter areas for migrants
|
|
and refugees displaced from neighboring conflict who face fear,
|
|
discrimination, and violence in their new environs. In this context, one
|
|
architect saw an opportunity: `I thought by promoting place-making in
|
|
Lebanon we can join the efforts of local {[}civil society] actors, since
|
|
horizontal ellipsis place-making is based on networking and bringing
|
|
people together.' With his guidance, youth in Beirut participated in
|
|
identifying and recreating public spaces with the aims of reducing
|
|
violence, promoting inclusion, interaction, and community-building.
|
|
Along with place-making for the sake of social integration, place-based
|
|
interventions in healthcare services are surfacing in response to
|
|
contemporary migration patterns. Adapting to the mobility of many
|
|
displaced people who are, not accessing services in camps, for instance,
|
|
humanitarian and local actors have reorganized healthcare delivery. The
|
|
Blue Dot Hubs developed by UNHCR and partners to provide care and
|
|
services to people en route are a specific example of a response - a
|
|
place-making intervention to `changing therapeutic geographies' in
|
|
modern crises. In the context of resettlement, interventions focused on
|
|
the creation of `therapeutic landscapes' aim specifically at displaced
|
|
children as they resettle in new countries. Through recultivating
|
|
cultural traditions, building social networks, and creating safe places,
|
|
young people can create new homes. These examples depict different modes
|
|
of displacement and distinct populations situated in specific kinds of
|
|
settings and in particular - yet in all cases asymmetrical - relations
|
|
of power. In each case, responsive action, keenly sensitive to context,
|
|
emerges from solidaristic recognition, either basic or relational. In
|
|
some cases it aims explicitly at justice. We can see specific elements
|
|
of solidarity-sparked ethical place-making across cases. Support for
|
|
relations of care is at the heart of the efforts made in the Bath NICU
|
|
and Hogeway Village designs, and also in the GP and initiatives for
|
|
refugees. Attention to the need for rootedness and movement is
|
|
manifested in these civil society efforts to welcome and create
|
|
material, social, economic, and political space for refugees; it is also
|
|
an organizing principle for the GP, Hogeway, and Bath's NICU.
|
|
Transformative autonomy is evident in the GP, the therapeutic landscape
|
|
projects, Hogeway, and the NICU. Attention to inequities, especially
|
|
health inequities, motivates the GP and Blue Dot Hubs. In all, the
|
|
creators - architects, designers, planners, carers, and citizens -
|
|
recognize the `users', let us say `dwellers', as ecological subjects and
|
|
respond with concerned attention to their distinctive needs, in real
|
|
time and over time with the aim of supporting their capabilities,
|
|
chiefly to be healthy, and in some cases to remedy injustice. I have
|
|
argued that recognizing all people as ecological subjects enables us,
|
|
indeed compels us, to forge relations of solidarity and promote justice
|
|
through ethical place-making with those who are vulnerable through their
|
|
insecure relationship to place.
|
|
On the moral landscape(s) of bioethics, an ethic of place-making
|
|
expresses and has rich potential for nurturing bonds of solidarity along
|
|
with advancing health, social, and global justice with patients and
|
|
families, elderly people transitioning to long-term care, urban
|
|
populations confronting health inequities, asylum-seekers dwelling in
|
|
precarious conditions, and perhaps others. The author declares no
|
|
conflict of interest. Casey, E. (2009). Getting back into place: Toward
|
|
a renewed understanding of the place-world. Bloomington, IN: Indiana
|
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University Press, p. 321. Code, L. (2006). Ecological thinking. New
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York, NY: Oxford University Press. See also Bradotti, R. (2013).
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Posthuman relational subjectivity. In P. Rawes (Ed.), Relational
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architectural ecologies: Architecture, nature, and subjectivity. New
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York, NY: Routledge; Bennett, J. (2010). Vibrant matter: A political
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ecology of things. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Eckenwiler, L.
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(2016). Defining ethical place-making for place-based interventions.
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Amer J Pub Health 106, 1944-1946; Eckenwiler, L. (2012). Long-term care,
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globalization, and justice. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
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Gould, C. (2007). Recognition, empathy, and solidarity. In G. W.
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Bertram, R. Celikates, C. Laudou, \& D. Lauer (Eds.), Socialite et
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L'Harmattan, p. 260. Gould, C. (2014). Interactive democracy: The social
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Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, p. 286. See also Grosz, E.
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(Ed.) (2004). Place: A short introduction. Malden, MA: Blackwell;
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Tschumi, B. (2001). Architecture and disjunction. Cambridge, MA: MIT
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and phenomenology: Implications for human rights and environmental
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Marmot, M. (2005). Social determinants of health inequities. Lancet,
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365, 1099-1104; Browning, C. R., Bjornstorm, E. E. S., \& Cagney, K. A.
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(2011). Health and mortality consequences of the physical environment.
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In R. G. Rogers \& E.M. Crimmins (Eds.), International handbook of adult
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Joseph, A. (2008). A review of the research literature on evidence based
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Sternberg, E. (2009). Healing spaces: The science of place and
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Post-traumatic stress disorder among asylum seekers and refugees in
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Istanbul may be predicted by torture and loss due to violence. Nordic
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(2014). Impact of conflict in Syria on Syrian children at the Zaatari
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Refugee Camp in Jordan. Early Child Development and Care, 184(9-10),
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1507-1530; Buckley-Zistel, S., Krause, U., \& Loeper, L. (2014). Sexual
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camps: A literature overview. Peripherie, 34(133), 71-89. Wild, V.
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(2013). Asylum seekers and public health ethics. In D. Strech, I.
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Hirschberg, \& G. Marckmann (Eds.), Ethics in public health and health
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policy. Concepts, methods, case studies (pp. 193-208). Dordrecht,
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Netherlands: Springer International. Ackerknecht, E. H. (1948). Hygiene
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in France, 1815-1848. Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 22, 117-155;
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Coleman, W. (1982). Death is a social disease: Public health and
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political economy in early industrial France. Madison, WI: University of
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Wisconsin Press; Erickson, A. (2012, Aug 24). A brief history of urban
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planning. CityLab.
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https://www.citylab.com/life/2012/08/brief-history-birth-urban-planning/
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2365/. Yanni, C. (2007). The architecture of madness: Insane asylums in
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the United States. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. Code,
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op. cit. note 2, p. 128. For discussion of these tiers see: Prainsack,
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B., \& Buyx, A. (2017). Solidarity in biomedicine and beyond. Cambridge,
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UK: Cambridge University Press. Gould, op. cit. note 4; Gould, C.
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(2007). Transnational solidarities. Journal of Social Philosophy, 38(1),
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148-164; Kurasawa, F. (2007). The work of global justice: Human rights
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as practices. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press; Young, I. M.
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(2000). Inclusion and democracy. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press;
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Prainsack and Buyx, op. cit. note 17. Gould, op. cit. note 4. Space
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|
constraints preclude a more elaborate discussion of how my account is
|
|
situated among the many rich philosophical accounts of `recognition'.
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|
See Schmidt am Busch, H. C., \& Zurn, C. F. (2010). The philosophy of
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|
recognition: Historical and contemporary perspectives. Lanham, MD:
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Lexington Books. Gould, op. cit. note 4, p. 259. Code, op. cit. note 2,
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p. 128. Raghuram, P., Madge C., \& Noxolo, P. (2009). Rethinking
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responsibility and care for a postcolonial world. Geoforum, 40(1), 5-13,
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p. 8. Young, op. cit. note 18, p. 224. Eckenwiler 2012. op cit. note 3.
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Tronto, J. (1994). Moral boundaries: A political argument for an ethic
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of care. New York, NY: Routledge; Springer, E. (2013). Communicating
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moral concern: An ethics of critical responsiveness. Cambridge, MA: MIT
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Press. Springer, op. cit. note 26, p. 141. Ibid: 137. Tronto, op. cit.
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note 26, p. 135. Project for Public Spaces. (2016). What is
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place-making? New York, NY: PPS; Silerberg, S. (2013). Places in the
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making: How place making builds places and communities. Boston, MA: MIT
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Press. United Nations (UN). (2015). Sustainable development goals. See
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\#11. UN Habitat. The New Urban Agenda. (draft September 2016); United
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Nations Task Team on Habitat III. (2015). Habitat III issue papers:
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Migration and refugees in urban areas. New York. Available at:
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\_11-April.pdf. World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Office for
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Europe. (2012). Addressing the social determinants of health: The urban
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dimension and the role of local government. Copenhagen: WHO; U.S.
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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). (2014). About healthy
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places. Atlanta: CDC; Zhan, M., for the World Bank. (2016, Sept 15).
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Investing in better public spaces. Presented at Future of Places
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Leadership Forum, Vancouver, BC, Canada. Amaro, H. (2014). The action is
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health equity. American Journal of Public Health, 104(6), 964. Raghuram
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et al., op. cit. note 22. Eckenwiler 2012, op. cit. note 3. Fullilove,
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M. T. (2013). Urban alchemy: Restoring joy in America's sorted out
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(2004). Root shock: How tearing up city neighborhoods hurts America and
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Mehdipanah, R., Manzano, A., Borrell, C., Malmusi, D., Rodriguez-Sanz,
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complex causal pathways between urban renewal, health and health
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inequality using a theory-driven realist approach. Social Science \&
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Medicine, 124, 266-274. Young, op. cit. note 18, p. 205. Jacobson, K.
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(2017). The living arena of existential health: Space, autonomy, and
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Rowman and Littlefield, p. 137; Kaufman, S. (2005). And a time to die:
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How American hospitals shape the end of life. Chicago, IL: University of
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Chicago Press. Barton, H., Thompson, S., Burgess, S., \& Grant, M.
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(2015). The Routledge handbook of planning for health and well-being.
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New York, NY: Routledge; Ulrich et al., op. cit. note 9; Rube, K.
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(2016). The case for healthy places: How health institutions and others
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can support public places that improve health and well-being. New York,
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NY: Project for Public Spaces. Tooley, M., \& Marden, B. (2013). Inside
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Bath's new neonatal unit. HSJ. Available at:
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https://www.hsj.co.uk/technology-and-innovation/inside-baths-new-neonata
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l-unit-/5064365. article Zimmerman, S., Bowers, J., Cohen, L. W.,
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Grabowski, D. C., Horn, S. D., Kemper, P., for the THRIVE Research
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Collaborative. (2016). New evidence on the green house model of nursing
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home care: Synthesis of findings and implications for policy, practice,
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and research. Health Services Research, 51(Suppl), 475-495.
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International Catholic Migration Commission. (2014). A place to live, a
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place to stay: A good practice guide for housing in refugee
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resettlement. p. 3. Available at:
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https://www.resettlement.eu/sites/icmc.tttp.eu/files/ICMC\_SHARE\%20A\%2
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0Place\%20to\%20Live\_Housing\%20Good\%20Practice\%20Guide.pdf Kaldor.
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M. (1999). New and old wars: Organized violence in a global era.
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Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press; Fassin, D. (2012). Humanitarian
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reason: A moral history of the present. Berkeley, CA: University of
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California Press. UNHCR. (1988). EXCOM Conclusion no 52, International
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solidarity and refugee protection. http://www.unhcr.org/3ae68c433c.html.
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Regional Refugee Instruments \& Related (2004).
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Mexico Declaration and Plan of Action to Strengthen International
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Protection of Refugees in Latin America. Available at:
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https://www.oas.org/dil/mexico\_declaration\_plan\_of\_action\_16nov2004
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.pdf; Jubilut, L. L., \& Carneiro, W. P. (2011). Resettlement in
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solidarity: A new regional approach towards a more humane, durable
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solution. Refugee Survey Quarterly, 30(3): 63-86; White, A. G. (2012). A
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pillar of protection: Solidarity resettlement for refugees in Latin
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America. Washington, DC: UNHCR US Committee for Refugee and Immigrants,
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p. 21. International Organization for Migration. (2015). World Migration
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Report 2015 - Migrants and cities: New partnerships to manage mobility.
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Le Grand-Saconnex: Switzerland. See Katz, B., Noring, L., \& Garrelts,
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N. (2016). Cities and refugees - The German experience. Washington, DC:
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Brookings Institution. Adenauer Stiftung, K. (2016). Local refugee aid,
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sustainable local integration measures and identity-creating borough
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management.
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http://www.kas.de/wf/doc/kas\_43128-544-1-30.pdf?160513115517. See also
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Martin, C. (2016). Designing homes to welcome refugees. Lancet,
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388(10050), 1150. Straehle, C. (2009). Politically constructed
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solidarity: The idea of a cosmopolitan avant-garde. Contemporary
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Political Theory, 9(1), 22-32. Bellamy, C., Haysom, S., Wake, C., \&
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Barbelet, V. (2017). The lives and livelihoods of Syrian refugees: A
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study of refugee perspectives on their institutional environment in
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Turkey and Jordan. London, UK: Humanitarian Policy Group. Placemaking
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for Peacemaking in Beirut. (2017) . An interview with Rony Al Jalkh. The
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City at Eye Level. p. 6.
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https://thecityateyelevel.files.wordpress.com/2017/06/placemaking-for-pe
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acemaking-rony.pdf. UNICEF. (2016). UNHCR, UNICEF launch Blue Dot hubs
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to boost protection for children and families on the move across Europe.
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Available at: http://www.unicef.org/media/media\_90316.html?p=print me.
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Dewachi, O., Skelton, M., Nguyen, V. K., Fouad, F. M., Sitta, G. A.,
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Maasri, Z., \& Giacaman, R. (2014). Changing therapeutic geographies of
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the Iraqi and Syrian wars. Lancet, 383, 449-457. Denov, M., \& Akesson,
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B. (2013). Neither here nor there: Place and place-making in the lives
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of separated children. International Journal of Migration, Health \&
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Social Care, 9(2), 56-70; Sampson, R., \& Gifford, S. M. (2010).
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|
Place-making, settlement, and well-being: The therapeutic landscapes of
|
|
recently arrived refugee youth. Health and Place, 16, 116-131.
|
|
INTRODUCTION PLACE AND HEALTH: ECOLOGICAL SUBJECTS ECOLOGICAL
|
|
SUBJECTIVITY AND SOLIDARITY Solidaristic recognition Responsiveness
|
|
SOLIDARITY (AND HEALTH JUSTICE) ENACTED: ETHICAL PLACE-MAKING Community
|
|
and public health Care settings Refugee assistance and integration The
|
|
elements of ethical place-making CONCLUSION CONFLICT OF INTEREST
|
|
Footnotes Drawing on a conception of people as `ecological subjects',
|
|
creatures situated in specific social relations, locations, and material
|
|
environments, I want to emphasize the importance of place and
|
|
place-making for basing, demonstrating, and forging future solidarity.
|
|
Solidarity, as I will define it here, involves reaching out through
|
|
moral imagination and responsive action across social and/or geographic
|
|
distance and asymmetry to assist other people who are vulnerable, and to
|
|
advance justice. Contained in the practice of solidarity are two core
|
|
`enacted commitments', first, to engaging our moral imaginations and
|
|
recognizing others in need and, second, to responsive action.
|
|
Recognizing the suffering of displacement and responding through
|
|
place-making should follow from even the most simplistic understanding
|
|
of people as `implaced'. Recognition, furthermore, that places are
|
|
created and sustained, transformed, or neglected in ways that foster or
|
|
perpetuate inequities, including health inequities, generates
|
|
responsibilities concerning place-making. Place-based interventions, on
|
|
either count, should be principal and, indeed, prioritized ways of
|
|
showing solidarity for the vulnerable and promoting justice. Where
|
|
solidaristic relations do not prevail, place-making can catalyze and
|
|
nurture them, and over time advance justice. On the moral landscapes of
|
|
bioethics, the terrain where care and health are or should be at the
|
|
center of attention, an ethic of place and place-making for those who
|
|
have been displaced - patients, the elderly, urban populations, and
|
|
asylum-seekers, for instance - expresses and has rich potential for
|
|
nurturing bonds of solidarity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Eckenwiler, L (Corresponding Author), George Mason Univ, Dept Philosophy, 4400 Univ Dr, Fairfax, VA 22030 USA.
|
|
Eckenwiler, Lisa, George Mason Univ, Dept Philosophy, 4400 Univ Dr, Fairfax, VA 22030 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/bioe.12538},
|
|
ISSN = {0269-9702},
|
|
EISSN = {1467-8519},
|
|
Keywords = {displacement; justice; migrants; migration; place-making; refugees;
|
|
solidarity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; CARE; PLACEMAKING; REFUGEES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Ethics; Medical Ethics; Social Issues; Social Sciences, Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {leckenwi@GMU.EDU},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baldissera, Annalisa/AHD-6334-2022
|
|
Marques, Isabel Cristina/P-8319-2019
|
|
Leung, Wing Yin/HLW-3074-2023
|
|
Fazli, Ghazal/AAE-8320-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {77},
|
|
Times-Cited = {33},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {147},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2205},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000450332600004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000961071600001,
|
|
Author = {Shorey Fennell, Bethany and Cottrell-Daniels, Cherell and Hoover, Diana
|
|
Stewart and Spears, Claire A. and Nguyen, Nga and Pineiro, Barbara and
|
|
McNeill, Lorna H. and Wetter, David W. and Vidrine, Damon J. and
|
|
Vidrine, I, Jennifer},
|
|
Title = {The implementation of ask-advise-connect in a federally qualified health
|
|
center: a mixed methods evaluation using the re-aim framework},
|
|
Journal = {TRANSLATIONAL BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {551-560},
|
|
Month = {AUG 11},
|
|
Abstract = {Lay Summary Ask-Advise-Connect (AAC) simplifies and streamlines the
|
|
process of asking patients about their smoking status, advising smokers
|
|
to quit, and connecting patients through the electronic health record
|
|
with free, evidence-based tobacco cessation treatment offered by state
|
|
Quitlines. This study is the first to evaluate perceptions of AAC among
|
|
clinic leadership and staff. After an 18-month implementation of AAC at
|
|
a clinic serving mostly low-income Latinos and Latinas, clinic staff
|
|
(e.g., medical assistants) and leaders were interviewed. Respondents
|
|
reported that AAC streamlined their efforts to get patients to quit
|
|
smoking, was easy to carry out, and fit well into the clinic flow. Staff
|
|
wanted to keep AAC as the standard of care and made suggestions to
|
|
improve how AAC works. They reported positive feedback from patients. In
|
|
addition, a similar proportion of smokers enrolled in Quitline treatment
|
|
as in other AAC trials. Thus, AAC worked well for patients and clinic
|
|
staff. Having AAC in other clinics could improve enrollment in
|
|
evidence-based smoking cessation treatment, facilitate successful
|
|
smoking cessation among low-income primary care patients, and reduce
|
|
burden on healthcare providers.
|
|
This study is the first to evaluate clinic staff and leadership
|
|
perceptions of Ask-Advise-Connect (AAC), which seamlessly connects
|
|
smokers in healthcare settings with evidence-based tobacco treatment
|
|
using the EHR. Clinic staff and leadership reported enthusiasm for AAC
|
|
implementation, as the procedure streamlined the clinic's smoking
|
|
cessation efforts, fit well into clinic flow, and was beneficial to
|
|
patients.
|
|
Ask-Advise-Connect (AAC) efficiently links smokers in healthcare
|
|
settings with evidence-based Quitline-delivered tobacco treatment
|
|
through training clinic staff to systematically ask patients about
|
|
smoking status, advise smokers to quit, and connect patients with state
|
|
Quitlines using the electronic health record. This study utilized a
|
|
mixed-methods approach, guided by the RE-AIM framework, to evaluate the
|
|
implementation of AAC in a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC). AAC
|
|
was implemented for 18 months at a FQHC serving primarily
|
|
low-socioeconomic status (SES) Latinos and Latinas. Results are
|
|
presented within the RE-AIM conceptual framework which includes
|
|
dimensions of reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and
|
|
maintenance. Quantitative patient-level outcomes of reach,
|
|
effectiveness, and Impact were calculated. Post-implementation, in-depth
|
|
interviews were conducted with clinic leadership and staff (N = 9) to
|
|
gather perceptions and inform future implementation efforts. During the
|
|
implementation period, 12.0\% of GNHC patients who reported current
|
|
smoking both agreed to have their information sent to the Quitline and
|
|
were successfully contacted by the Quitline (Reach), 94.8\% of patients
|
|
who spoke with the Quitline enrolled in treatment (Effectiveness), and
|
|
11.4\% of all identified smokers enrolled in Quitline treatment
|
|
(Impact). In post-implementation interviews assessing RE-AIM dimensions,
|
|
clinic staff and leadership identified facilitators and advantages of
|
|
AAC and reported that AAC was easy to learn and implement, streamlined
|
|
existing procedures, and had a positive impact on patients. Staff and
|
|
leadership reported enthusiasm about AAC implementation and believed AAC
|
|
fit well in the clinic. Staff were interested in AAC becoming the
|
|
standard of care and made suggestions for future implementation. Clinic
|
|
staff at a FQHC serving primarily low-SES Latinos and Latinas viewed the
|
|
ACC implementation process positively. Findings have implications for
|
|
streamlining clinical smoking cessation procedures and the potential to
|
|
reduce tobacco-related disparities.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fennell, BS (Corresponding Author), H Lee Moffitt Canc Ctr \& Res Inst, Dept Hlth Outcomes \& Behav, Tampa, FL 33612 USA.
|
|
Shorey Fennell, Bethany; Cottrell-Daniels, Cherell; Vidrine, Damon J.; Vidrine, Jennifer, I, H Lee Moffitt Canc Ctr \& Res Inst, Dept Hlth Outcomes \& Behav, Tampa, FL 33612 USA.
|
|
Hoover, Diana Stewart, Hoover Editing, Asheville, NC USA.
|
|
Spears, Claire A., Georgia State Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Hlth Promot \& Behav, Atlanta, GA USA.
|
|
Nguyen, Nga, Univ Texas MD Anderson Canc Ctr, Dept Biostat, Houston, TX USA.
|
|
Pineiro, Barbara, Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Ctr Estudis Demograf, Catalonia 08193, Spain.
|
|
McNeill, Lorna H., Univ Texas MD Anderson Canc Ctr, Dept Hlth Dispar Res, Houston, TX USA.
|
|
Wetter, David W., Univ Utah, Huntsman Canc Inst, Ctr Hlth Outcomes \& Populat Equ, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, Salt Lake City, UT USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/tbm/ibad007},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1869-6716},
|
|
EISSN = {1613-9860},
|
|
Keywords = {Implementation; Qualitative; Smoking cessation; Quitline; Latinos;
|
|
Latinas; low-SES},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SMOKING-CESSATION; CIGARETTE-SMOKING; UNITED-STATES; PRIMARY-CARE;
|
|
TOBACCO; INTERVENTION; SMOKERS; IMPACT; DISPARITIES; QUITLINES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {Bethany.ShoreyFennell@moffitt.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Shorey Fennell, Bethany/0000-0003-2188-6544},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000961071600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001043962500005,
|
|
Author = {Witteveen, A. B. and Young, S. and Cuijpers, P. and Ayuso-Mateos, J. L.
|
|
and Barbui, C. and Bertolini, F. and Cabello, M. and Cadorin, C. and
|
|
Downes, N. and Franzoi, D. and Gasior, M. and John, A. and Melchior, M.
|
|
and McDaid, D. and Palantza, C. and Purgato, M. and Van der Waerden, J.
|
|
and Wang, S. and Sijbrandij, M.},
|
|
Title = {Remote mental health care interventions during the COVID-19 pandemic: An
|
|
umbrella review},
|
|
Journal = {BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {159},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Mitigating the COVID-19 related disruptions in mental health care
|
|
services is crucial in a time of increased mental health disorders.
|
|
Numerous reviews have been conducted on the process of implementing
|
|
technology-based mental health care during the pandemic. The research
|
|
question of this umbrella review was to examine what the impact of
|
|
COVID-19 was on access and delivery of mental health services and how
|
|
mental health services have changed during the pandemic. A systematic
|
|
search for systematic reviews and meta-analyses was conducted up to
|
|
August 12, 2022, and 38 systematic reviews were identified. Main
|
|
disruptions during COVID-19 were reduced access to outpatient mental
|
|
health care and reduced admissions and earlier discharge from inpatient
|
|
care. In response, synchronous telemental health tools such as
|
|
videoconferencing were used to provide remote care similar to pre-COVID
|
|
care, and to a lesser extent asynchronous virtual mental health tools
|
|
such as apps. Implementation of synchronous tools were facilitated by
|
|
time-efficiency and flexibility during the pandemic but there was a lack
|
|
of accessibility for specific vulnerable populations. Main barriers
|
|
among practitioners and patients to use digital mental health tools were
|
|
poor technological literacy, particularly when preexisting inequalities
|
|
existed, and beliefs about reduced therapeutic alliance particularly in
|
|
case of severe mental disorders. Absence of organizational support for
|
|
technological implementation of digital mental health interventions due
|
|
to inadequate IT infrastructure, lack of funding, as well as lack of
|
|
privacy and safety, challenged implementation during COVID-19. Reviews
|
|
were of low to moderate quality, covered heterogeneously designed
|
|
primary studies and lacked findings of implementation in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries. These gaps in the evidence were particularly
|
|
prevalent in studies conducted early in the pandemic. This umbrella
|
|
review shows that during the COVID-19 pandemic, practitioners and mental
|
|
health care institutions mainly used synchronous telemental health
|
|
tools, and to a lesser degree asynchronous tools to enable continued
|
|
access to mental health care for patients. Numerous barriers to these
|
|
tools were identified, and call for further improvements. In addition,
|
|
more high quality research into comparative effectiveness and working
|
|
mechanisms may improve scalability of mental health care in general and
|
|
in future infectious disease outbreaks.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Witteveen, AB (Corresponding Author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Inst, Clin Neuro \& Dev Psychol, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Witteveen, AB (Corresponding Author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Inst, WHO Collaborating Ctr Res \& Disseminat Psychol In, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Witteveen, A. B.; Young, S.; Cuijpers, P.; Franzoi, D.; Gasior, M.; Palantza, C.; Wang, S.; Sijbrandij, M., Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Inst, Clin Neuro \& Dev Psychol, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Witteveen, A. B.; Young, S.; Cuijpers, P.; Franzoi, D.; Gasior, M.; Palantza, C.; Wang, S.; Sijbrandij, M., Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Inst, WHO Collaborating Ctr Res \& Disseminat Psychol In, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Ayuso-Mateos, J. L., Hosp Univ La Princesa, Inst Invest Sanitaria Princesa IIS Princesa, Dept Psychiat, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Ayuso-Mateos, J. L.; Cabello, M., Univ Autonoma Madrid, Dept Psychiat, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Ayuso-Mateos, J. L.; Cabello, M., CIBERSAM, Inst Salud Carlos III, Ctr Invest Biomed Red Salud Mental, Madrid, Spain.
|
|
Barbui, C.; Bertolini, F.; Cadorin, C.; Purgato, M., Univ Verona, Sect Psychiat, Dept Neurosci Biomed \& Movement Sci, WHO Collaborating Ctr Res \& Training Mental Hlth, Verona, Italy.
|
|
John, A., Swansea Univ, Hlth Data Sci, Med Sch, Swansea, W Glam, Wales.
|
|
Downes, N.; Melchior, M.; Van der Waerden, J., Sorbonne Univ, Inst Pierre Louis dEpidemiol \& Sante Publ IPLESP, Fac Med St Antoine, INSERM,Equipe Rech Epidemiol Sociale ERES, Paris, France.
|
|
McDaid, D., London Sch Econ \& Polit Sci, Dept Hlth Policy, Care Policy \& Evaluat Ctr, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.brat.2022.104226},
|
|
Article-Number = {104226},
|
|
ISSN = {0005-7967},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-622X},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; Mental health service delivery; e-mental health psychological
|
|
interventions; Implementation; Scalability; Continuity of care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS; CORONAVIRUS; DISORDERS; SERVICES; PEOPLE; INCOME; UK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Clinical},
|
|
Author-Email = {a.b.witteveen@vu.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {McDaid, David/E-5959-2014
|
|
Sijbrandij, Marit/N-6131-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {McDaid, David/0000-0003-0744-2664
|
|
Sijbrandij, Marit/0000-0001-5430-9810
|
|
Bertolini, Federico/0000-0003-0936-2908
|
|
Cabello, Maria/0000-0003-2362-6092
|
|
Cadorin, Camilla/0000-0002-7642-2096
|
|
Young, Susanne/0000-0001-5803-907X
|
|
van der Waerden, Judith/0000-0002-5324-1372
|
|
Witteveen, Anke/0000-0002-9636-7522
|
|
Cuijpers, Pim/0000-0001-5497-2743},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {94},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001043962500005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000703599100011,
|
|
Author = {Colby, Amy and Yanco, Abigail and Inson, Ann and Gance-Cleveland, Bonnie},
|
|
Title = {ReImagine: A multi-disciplinary quality improvement plan to work at top
|
|
of scope},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC NURSING-NURSING CARE OF CHILDREN \& FAMILIES},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {60},
|
|
Pages = {92-99},
|
|
Month = {SEP-OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: There is a growing need for quality, community care models
|
|
centered on the care of the child with medical complexity. This quality
|
|
improvement project was conducted in a community-based medical daycare
|
|
program within a large, metropolitan, pediatric hospital network of care
|
|
location. A multi-disciplinary team, led by a clinical nurse specialist,
|
|
occupational therapist, and early childhood special education teacher,
|
|
addressed staff frustrations and low morale related to barriers to
|
|
working at top of scope and feelings of a chaotic care and learning
|
|
environment for children. Aims: To improve staff satisfaction through a
|
|
decrease in perceived barriers to practicing at top of scope and to
|
|
refocus each discipline's role. A secondary aim was to improve child
|
|
engagement through restructuring the ther-apeutic and learning
|
|
environment and reducing distractions to better meet the unique needs of
|
|
the children the program serves. Methods: This quality improvement (QI)
|
|
project used multiple methods, including staff surveys, child
|
|
observa-tions and timecard review, to measure the project's impact on
|
|
ability to work at top scope, child engagement and staff satisfaction.
|
|
Results: The QI project resulted in positively impacting work culture
|
|
and structure by increased time professional staff practiced at the top
|
|
of scope, decreased perceived barriers to do so, improved overall job
|
|
satisfaction and im -proved child engagement. Conclusion: Increased
|
|
multidisciplinary collaboration and increased structure promoted an
|
|
enhanced learning environment, healthier staff environment, and a more
|
|
fiscally responsible program. There is little knowledge about medical
|
|
daycares and further investigations in this setting is warranted. (c)
|
|
2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Colby, A (Corresponding Author), 860 N Potomac Circle,Box 295, Aurora, CO 80011 USA.
|
|
Colby, Amy; Yanco, Abigail; Inson, Ann, Childrens Hosp Colorado, KidSt 3615 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, Denver, CO 80205 USA.
|
|
Gance-Cleveland, Bonnie, Univ Colorado, Coll Nursing, 13120 E 19th Ave, Aurora, CO 80045 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.pedn.2021.02.023},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0882-5963},
|
|
Keywords = {Multidisciplinary; Staff satisfaction; Quality improvement; Medical
|
|
daycare; Top of scope},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {JOB; INTERVENTION; CHILDREN; NURSE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {amy.colby@childrenscolorado.org
|
|
ann.inson@childrenscolorado.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {17},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000703599100011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000867515600003,
|
|
Author = {Ma, Huiting and Yiu, Kristy C. Y. and Baral, Stefan D. and Fahim,
|
|
Christine and Moloney, Gary and Darvin, Dariya and Landsman, David and
|
|
Chan, Adrienne K. and Straus, Sharon and Mishra, Sharmistha},
|
|
Title = {COVID-19 Cases Among Congregate Care Facility Staff by Neighborhood of
|
|
Residence and Social and Structural Determinants: Observational Study},
|
|
Journal = {JMIR PUBLIC HEALTH AND SURVEILLANCE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Disproportionate risks of COVID-19 in congregate care
|
|
facilities including long-term care homes, retirement homes, and
|
|
shelters both affect and are affected by SARS-CoV-2 infections among
|
|
facility staff. In cities across Canada, there has been a consistent
|
|
trend of geographic clustering of COVID-19 cases. However, there is
|
|
limited information on how COVID-19 among facility staff reflects urban
|
|
neighborhood disparities, particularly when stratified by the social and
|
|
structural determinants of community-level transmission. Objective: This
|
|
study aimed to compare the concentration of cumulative cases by
|
|
geography and social and structural determinants across 3 mutually
|
|
exclusive subgroups in the Greater Toronto Area (population: 7.1
|
|
million): community, facility staff, and health care workers (HCWs) in
|
|
other settings.Methods: We conducted a retrospective, observational
|
|
study using surveillance data on laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases
|
|
(January 23 to December 13, 2020; prior to vaccination rollout). We
|
|
derived neighborhood-level social and structural determinants from
|
|
census data and generated Lorenz curves, Gini coefficients, and the
|
|
Hoover index to visualize and quantify inequalities in cases.Results:
|
|
The hardest-hit neighborhoods (comprising 20\% of the population)
|
|
accounted for 53.87\% (44,937/83,419) of community cases, 48.59\%
|
|
(2356/4849) of facility staff cases, and 42.34\% (1669/3942) of other
|
|
HCW cases. Compared with other HCWs, cases among facility staff
|
|
reflected the distribution of community cases more closely. Cases among
|
|
facility staff reflected greater social and structural inequalities
|
|
(larger Gini coefficients) than those of other HCWs across all
|
|
determinants. Facility staff cases were also more likely than community
|
|
cases to be concentrated in lower-income neighborhoods (Gini 0.24, 95\%
|
|
CI 0.15-0.38 vs 0.14, 95\% CI 0.08-0.21) with a higher household density
|
|
(Gini 0.23, 95\% CI 0.17-0.29 vs 0.17, 95\% CI 0.12-0.22) and with a
|
|
greater proportion working in other essential services (Gini 0.29, 95\%
|
|
CI 0.21-0.40 vs 0.22, 95\% CI 0.17-0.28).Conclusions: COVID-19 cases
|
|
among facility staff largely reflect neighborhood-level heterogeneity
|
|
and disparities, even more so than cases among other HCWs. The findings
|
|
signal the importance of interventions prioritized and tailored to the
|
|
home geographies of facility staff in addition to workplace measures,
|
|
including prioritization and reach of vaccination at home (neighborhood
|
|
level) and at work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mishra, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Dept Med, Div Infect Dis, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Mishra, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Mishra, S (Corresponding Author), St Michaels Hosp, Unity Hlth Toronto, Room 315,209 Victoria St, Toronto, ON M5B 1T8, Canada.
|
|
Ma, Huiting; Yiu, Kristy C. Y.; Fahim, Christine; Moloney, Gary; Darvin, Dariya; Landsman, David; Straus, Sharon; Mishra, Sharmistha, St Michaels Hosp, Unity Hlth Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Baral, Stefan D., Johns Hopkins Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Chan, Adrienne K.; Mishra, Sharmistha, Univ Toronto, Dept Med, Div Infect Dis, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Chan, Adrienne K.; Mishra, Sharmistha, Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Chan, Adrienne K., Univ Toronto, Div Infect Dis, Sunnybrook Hlth Sci, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Chan, Adrienne K.; Mishra, Sharmistha, Univ Toronto, Inst Hlth Policy Management \& Evaluat, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Straus, Sharon, Univ Toronto, Dept Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Mishra, Sharmistha, St Michaels Hosp, Unity Hlth Toronto, Room 315,209 Victoria St, Toronto, ON M5B 1T8, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2196/34927},
|
|
Article-Number = {e34927},
|
|
ISSN = {2369-2960},
|
|
Keywords = {long-term care; nursing home; staff; essential worker; retirement home;
|
|
shelter; congregate living; COVID-19; observational; risk; transmission;
|
|
elderly; older adults; retirement; nurse; health care worker;
|
|
congregate; trend; geography; Canada; Toronto},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRANSMISSION; SARS-COV-2; CANADA; HEALTH; INDEX; HOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {sharmistha.mishra@utoronto.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Yiu, Kristy/0000-0002-7378-9773
|
|
Mishra, Sharmistha/0000-0001-8492-5470
|
|
Ma, Huiting/0000-0003-1910-5614},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000867515600003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000289242800030,
|
|
Author = {Desjardins, Claude and Bach, Mark A. and Cappola, Anne R. and Seely,
|
|
Ellen W. and Ehrenberg, Ronald G.},
|
|
Title = {Dissecting the Workforce and Workplace for Clinical Endocrinology, and
|
|
the Work of Endocrinologists Early in Their Careers},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY \& METABOLISM},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {96},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {923-933},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Context: The United States lacks timely reliable mechanisms for
|
|
assessing the professional work of subspecialty physicians.
|
|
Objective: The aim was to use early-career members of The Endocrine
|
|
Society as a model to estimate subspecialty physician involvement in
|
|
patient care, teaching, research, and administration among clinical,
|
|
academic, federal, and pharmaceutical/biotech workplaces and to assess
|
|
the workforce for research within individual workplaces.
|
|
Methods: Physicians joining The Endocrine Society from 1991-2005 and
|
|
residing in North America were invited to complete a Web-based survey.
|
|
This report relies on 817 early-career endocrinologists or 29.6\% of
|
|
eligible respondents.
|
|
Results: Respondents from all types of workplaces engaged in patient
|
|
care, teaching, research, and administration. The time committed to the
|
|
four tasks, however, differed significantly among workplaces. Research
|
|
(basic, translational, disease, patient, population, and prevention) was
|
|
accomplished within all workplaces, but the scope and scale of
|
|
investigative work was employer dependent. Recipients of National
|
|
Institutes of Health K08/23 awards succeeded in receiving federal
|
|
research project grants (P < 0.001). Respondents associated research
|
|
with lowered incomes, a perception validated by an estimated drop in
|
|
annual earnings of 2.8\% per half-day spent on research (P < 0.001).
|
|
Women in academic settings earned less than men (P < 0.01) and were less
|
|
likely to occupy tenure-eligible positions (P < 0.01).
|
|
Conclusions: Web-based surveys offer a simple tool for estimating the
|
|
work of subspecialty physicians and provide a framework for improving
|
|
biomedical investigation. Several interventions should be considered for
|
|
endocrinology: recruit physicians from underrepresented demographic
|
|
groups, increase K08/23 awards, incentivize investigative careers, and
|
|
improve the national infrastructure for biomedical research. (J Clin
|
|
Endocrinol Metab 96: 923-933, 2011)},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Desjardins, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Illinois, Coll Med, Dept Physiol \& Biophys, Clin Scholars Project, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Desjardins, Claude, Univ Illinois, Coll Med, Dept Physiol \& Biophys, Clin Scholars Project, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Bach, Mark A., Janssen Pharmaceut KK, Div Res \& Dev, Chiyoda Ku, Tokyo 1010065, Japan.
|
|
Cappola, Anne R., Univ Penn, Sch Med, Div Endocrinol Diabet \& Metab, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Seely, Ellen W., Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Endocrinol Diabet \& Hypertens, Boston, MA 01215 USA.
|
|
Ehrenberg, Ronald G., Cornell Univ, Sch Ind \& Labor Relat, Cornell Higher Educ Res Inst, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.
|
|
Ehrenberg, Ronald G., Cornell Univ, Sch Ind \& Labor Relat, Dept Labor Econ, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1210/jc.2010-1568},
|
|
ISSN = {0021-972X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; ACADEMIC MEDICINE; PHYSICIAN-SCIENTISTS; RESEARCH
|
|
ENTERPRISE; RACIAL DISPARITIES; FAMILY-HISTORY; NIH; CHALLENGES;
|
|
PREVENTION; DISEASES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Endocrinology \& Metabolism},
|
|
Author-Email = {clauded@uic.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000289242800030},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000975601100006,
|
|
Author = {Gowda, Niraj and Patel, Nisha M. M. and Ellenbogen, Michael I. I. and
|
|
Miller, Brian J. J.},
|
|
Title = {The Local Market of Major Teaching Hospitals},
|
|
Journal = {SOUTHERN MEDICAL JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {116},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {410-414},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to describe the local communities
|
|
served by major teaching hospitals.MethodsUsing a dataset of hospitals
|
|
around the United States provided by the Association of American Medical
|
|
Colleges, we identified major teaching hospitals (MTHs) using the
|
|
Association of American Medical Colleges' definition of those with an
|
|
intern-to-resident bed ratio above 0.25 and more than 100 beds. We
|
|
defined the local geographic market surrounding these hospitals as the
|
|
Dartmouth Atlas hospital service area (HSA). Using MATLAB R2020b
|
|
software, data from each ZIP Code Tabulation Area from the US Census
|
|
Bureau's 2019 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimate Data tables were
|
|
grouped by HSA and attributed to each MTH. One-sample t tests were used
|
|
to evaluate for statistical differences between the HSAs and the US
|
|
average data. We further stratified the data into regions as defined by
|
|
the US Census Bureau: West, Midwest, Northeast, and South. One-sample t
|
|
tests were used to evaluate for statistical differences between MTH HSA
|
|
regional populations with their respective US regional
|
|
population.ResultsThe local population surrounding 299 unique MTHs
|
|
covered 180 HSAs and was 57\% White, 51\% female, 14\% older than 65
|
|
years old, 37\% with public insurance coverage, 12\% with any
|
|
disability, and 40\% with at least a bachelor's degree. Compared with
|
|
the overall US population, HSAs surrounding MTHs had higher percentages
|
|
of female residents, Black/African American residents, and residents
|
|
enrolled in Medicare. In contrast, these communities also showed higher
|
|
average household and per capita income, higher percentages of
|
|
bachelor's degree attainment, and lower rates of any disability or
|
|
Medicaid insurance.ConclusionsOur analysis suggests that the local
|
|
population surrounding MTHs is representative of the wide-ranging ethnic
|
|
and economic diversity of the US population that is advantaged in some
|
|
ways and disadvantaged in others. MTHs continue to play an important
|
|
role in caring for a diverse population. To support and improve policy
|
|
related to the reimbursement of uncompensated care and care of
|
|
underserved populations, researchers and policy makers must work to
|
|
better delineate and make transparent local hospital markets.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Miller, BJ (Corresponding Author), Johns Hopkins Univ Hosp, 600 N Wolfe St, Meyer 8-143, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA.
|
|
Gowda, Niraj, Emory Univ, Dept Med, Div Pulm Allergy Crit Care \& Sleep Med, Sch Med, Atlanta, GA USA.
|
|
Patel, Nisha M. M., Univ Florida, Dept Med, Div Gen Internal Med, Coll Med, Gainesville, FL USA.
|
|
Ellenbogen, Michael I. I., Johns Hopkins Univ, Div Hosp Med, Dept Med, Sch Med, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Miller, Brian J. J., Johns Hopkins Univ Hosp, Div Hosp Med, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.14423/SMJ.0000000000001554},
|
|
ISSN = {0038-4348},
|
|
EISSN = {1541-8243},
|
|
Keywords = {academic medical centers; demography; health catchment area; hospital
|
|
service area; teaching hospitals},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {ngowda2015@gmail.com
|
|
nmpatel012@gmail.com
|
|
mellenb6@jhmi.edu
|
|
brian@brianjmillermd.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ellenbogen, Michael/0000-0003-0701-8054},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {20},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000975601100006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000695635700003,
|
|
Author = {Kumar, Navin and Janmohamed, Kamila and Nyhan, Kate and Forastiere,
|
|
Laura and Zhang, Wei-Hong and Kagesten, Anna and Uhlich, Maximiliane and
|
|
Sarpong Frimpong, Afia and Van de Velde, Sarah and Francis, Joel M. and
|
|
Erausquin, Jennifer Toller and Larrson, Elin and Callander, Deton and
|
|
Scott, John and Minichiello, Victor and Tucker, Joseph},
|
|
Title = {Sexual health (excluding reproductive health, intimate partner violence
|
|
and gender-based violence) and COVID-19: a scoping review},
|
|
Journal = {SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {97},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {402-410},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed and exacerbated existing
|
|
socioeconomic and health disparities, including disparities in sexual
|
|
health and well-being. While there have been several reviews published
|
|
on COVID-19 and population health disparities generally-including some
|
|
with attention to HIV-none has focused on sexual health (ie, STI care,
|
|
female sexual health, sexual behaviour). We have conducted a scoping
|
|
review focused on sexual health (excluding reproductive health (RH),
|
|
intimate partner violence (IPV) and gender-based violence (GBV)) in the
|
|
COVID-19 era, examining sexual behaviours and sexual health outcomes.
|
|
Methods A scoping review, compiling both peer-reviewed and grey
|
|
literature, focused on sexual health (excluding RH, IPV and GBV) and
|
|
COVID-19 was conducted on 15 September 2020. Multiple bibliographical
|
|
databases were searched. Study selection conformed to Joanna Briggs
|
|
Institute (JBI) Reviewers' Manual 2015 Methodology for JBI Scoping
|
|
Reviews. We only included English-language original studies. Results We
|
|
found that men who have sex with men may be moving back toward
|
|
pre-pandemic levels of sexual activity, and that STI and HIV testing
|
|
rates seem to have decreased. There was minimal focus on outcomes such
|
|
as the economic impact on sexual health (excluding RH, IPV and GBV) and
|
|
STI care, especially STI care of marginalised populations. In terms of
|
|
population groups, there was limited focus on sex workers or on women,
|
|
especially women's sexual behaviour and mental health. We noticed
|
|
limited use of qualitative techniques. Very few studies were in
|
|
low/middle-income countries (LMICs). Conclusions Sexual health research
|
|
is critical during a global infectious disease pandemic and our review
|
|
of studies suggested notable research gaps. Researchers can focus
|
|
efforts on LMICs and under-researched topics within sexual health and
|
|
explore the use of qualitative techniques and interventions where
|
|
appropriate.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kumar, N (Corresponding Author), Yale Univ, Dept Sociol, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
|
|
Kumar, Navin; Janmohamed, Kamila; Sarpong Frimpong, Afia, Yale Univ, Dept Sociol, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
|
|
Nyhan, Kate, Yale Univ, Sch Med, Harvey CushingJohn Hay Whitney Med Lib, New Haven, CT USA.
|
|
Nyhan, Kate, Yale Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Environm Hlth Sci, New Haven, CT USA.
|
|
Forastiere, Laura, Yale Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Biostat, New Haven, CT USA.
|
|
Zhang, Wei-Hong, Free Univ Brussels, Sch Publ Hlth, Brussels, Belgium.
|
|
Zhang, Wei-Hong, Univ Ghent, Internat Ctr Reprod Hlth, Dept Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Kagesten, Anna; Larrson, Elin, Karolinska Inst, Dept Global Publ Hlth, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Uhlich, Maximiliane, Univ Friborg, Dept Psychol, Fribourg, Switzerland.
|
|
Van de Velde, Sarah, Univ Antwerp, Ctr Populat Family \& Hlth, Dept Sociol, Antwerp, Belgium.
|
|
Francis, Joel M., Univ Witwatersrand, Fac Hlth Sci, Sch Clin Med, Dept Family Med \& Primary Care, Gauteng, South Africa.
|
|
Erausquin, Jennifer Toller, Univ North Carolina Greensboro, Publ Hlth Educ, Greensboro, NC USA.
|
|
Larrson, Elin, Karolinska Inst, Dept Womens \& Childrens Hlth, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Callander, Deton, Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Scott, John; Minichiello, Victor, Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Social Justice, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Minichiello, Victor, Univ New England, Fac Med \& Hlth, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Tucker, Joseph, Univ N Carolina, Chapel Hill Sch Med, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
|
|
Tucker, Joseph, Univ N Carolina, Sch Med, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
|
|
Tucker, Joseph, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Infect \& Trop Dis, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/sextrans-2020-054896},
|
|
ISSN = {1368-4973},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-3263},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; sexual health; HIV; sex work; sexual and gender minorities},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CORONAVIRUS DISEASE 2019; SOCIAL DISTANCING MEASURES; RISK-FACTORS;
|
|
LARGE COHORT; HIV CARE; IMPACT; PEOPLE; BEHAVIORS; TIME; MEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Infectious Diseases},
|
|
Author-Email = {navin183@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Nyhan, Kate/AFU-6706-2022
|
|
Zhang, Wei/HOF-7252-2023
|
|
Larsson, Elin C/AAQ-5596-2020
|
|
Kumar, Navin/HII-4609-2022
|
|
Forastiere, Laura/AAF-2300-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Forastiere, Laura/0000-0003-3721-9826
|
|
Uhlich, Maximiliane/0000-0001-5294-4984
|
|
Nyhan, Kate/0000-0001-5397-2303
|
|
Callander, Denton/0000-0002-4116-4250
|
|
Erausquin, Jennifer Toller/0000-0003-4271-6077
|
|
Kumar, Navin/0000-0003-4502-069X
|
|
Larsson, Elin C./0000-0002-5189-808X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {137},
|
|
Times-Cited = {19},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000695635700003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000320050100001,
|
|
Author = {Gari, Sara and Doig-Acuna, Camilo and Smail, Tino and Malungo, Jacob R.
|
|
S. and Martin-Hilber, Adriane and Merten, Sonja},
|
|
Title = {Access to HIV/AIDS care: a systematic review of socio-cultural
|
|
determinants in low and high income countries},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {MAY 28},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The role of socio-cultural factors in influencing access to
|
|
HIV/AIDS treatment, care and support is increasingly recognized by
|
|
researchers, international donors and policy makers. Although many of
|
|
them have been identified through qualitative studies, the evidence
|
|
gathered by quantitative studies has not been systematically analysed.
|
|
To fill this knowledge gap, we did a systematic review of quantitative
|
|
studies comparing surveys done in high and low income countries to
|
|
assess the extent to which socio-cultural determinants of access,
|
|
identified through qualitative studies, have been addressed in
|
|
epidemiological survey studies.
|
|
Methods: Ten electronic databases were searched (Cinahl, EMBASE, ISI Web
|
|
of Science, IBSS, JSTOR, MedLine, Psyinfo, Psyindex and Cochrane). Two
|
|
independent reviewers selected eligible publications based on the
|
|
inclusion/exclusion criteria. Meta-analysis was used to synthesize data
|
|
comparing studies between low and high income countries.
|
|
Results: Thirty-four studies were included in the final review, 21
|
|
(62\%) done in high income countries and 13 (38\%) in low income
|
|
countries. In low income settings, epidemiological research on access to
|
|
HIV/AIDS services focused on socio-economic and health system factors
|
|
while in high income countries the focus was on medical and psychosocial
|
|
factors. These differences depict the perceived different barriers in
|
|
the two regions. Common factors between the two regions were also found
|
|
to affect HIV testing, including stigma, high risk sexual behaviours
|
|
such as multiple sexual partners and not using condoms, and alcohol
|
|
abuse. On the other hand, having experienced previous illness or other
|
|
health conditions and good family communication was associated with
|
|
adherence to ART uptake. Due to insufficient consistent data, a
|
|
meta-analysis was only possible on adherence to treatment.
|
|
Conclusions: This review offers evidence of the current challenges for
|
|
interdisciplinary work in epidemiology and public health. Quantitative
|
|
studies did not systematically address in their surveys important
|
|
factors identified in qualitative studies as playing a critical role on
|
|
the access to HIV/AIDS services. The evidences suggest that the problem
|
|
lies in the exclusion of the qualitative information during the
|
|
questionnaire design. With the changing face of the epidemic, we need a
|
|
new and improved research strategy that integrates the results of
|
|
qualitative studies into quantitative surveys.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Merten, S (Corresponding Author), Swiss Trop \& Publ Hlth Inst, Dept Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, Basel, Switzerland.
|
|
Gari, Sara; Martin-Hilber, Adriane; Merten, Sonja, Swiss Trop \& Publ Hlth Inst, Dept Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, Basel, Switzerland.
|
|
Gari, Sara; Martin-Hilber, Adriane; Merten, Sonja, Univ Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
|
|
Doig-Acuna, Camilo, CUNY, Sophie Davis Sch Biomed Educ, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Smail, Tino, Particip GmBH, Freiburg, Germany.
|
|
Malungo, Jacob R. S., Univ Zambia, Dept Populat Studies, Lusaka, Zambia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1472-6963-13-198},
|
|
Article-Number = {198},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Socio-cultural barriers; Access; Adherence; HIV/AIDS; Antiretroviral
|
|
therapy; Survey study; Systematic review},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY ADHERENCE; PATIENT-REPORTED BARRIERS; SUB-SAHARAN
|
|
AFRICA; MEDICATION ADHERENCE; HIV PATIENTS; HAART; NONADHERENCE;
|
|
DEPRESSION; FAILURE; STIGMA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {sonja.merten@unibas.ch},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Merten, Sonja/0000-0003-4115-106X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {62},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000320050100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000822386100001,
|
|
Author = {Fernandez-Reino, Marina and Di Stasio, Valentina and Veit, Susanne},
|
|
Title = {Discrimination Unveiled: A Field Experiment on the Barriers Faced by
|
|
Muslim Women in Germany, the Netherlands, and Spain},
|
|
Journal = {EUROPEAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {479-497},
|
|
Month = {MAY 30},
|
|
Abstract = {We examine the penalties faced by veiled and unveiled Muslim women when
|
|
applying for jobs in three European labour markets: Germany, the
|
|
Netherlands, and Spain. We rely on recent literature comparing public
|
|
opposition towards Muslims in general and opposition to Muslims'
|
|
religious practices, such as the wearing of the hijab. Based on a
|
|
cross-nationally harmonized field experiment on hiring discrimination,
|
|
we use two different signals of Muslimness (volunteering activities in a
|
|
Muslim community centre or wearing the Muslim headscarf) to identify
|
|
whether employers discriminate against Muslims as a group or against
|
|
Muslims adhering to specific Muslim practices-in this case, wearing the
|
|
headscarf. We present robust evidence that veiled Muslim women are
|
|
discriminated against in Germany and the Netherlands, but only when
|
|
applying for jobs that require a high level of customer contact. In
|
|
Spain, however, the level of discrimination against veiled Muslim women
|
|
is much smaller than in the other two countries. The high level of
|
|
discrimination we found in the Netherlands, where the institutional
|
|
context has traditionally been open to the accommodation of religious
|
|
minority rights, is particularly surprising and points to the possibly
|
|
stigmatizing effect of recent policies geared towards the cultural
|
|
assimilation of immigrants.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fernandez-Reino, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Oxford, Ctr Migrat Policy \& Soc COMPAS, Oxford, England.
|
|
Fernandez-Reino, Marina, Univ Oxford, Ctr Migrat Policy \& Soc COMPAS, Oxford, England.
|
|
Di Stasio, Valentina, Univ Utrecht, Dept Interdisciplinary Social Sci, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Di Stasio, Valentina, Univ Utrecht, European Res Ctr Migrat \& Ethn Relat ERCOMER, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Veit, Susanne, DeZIM Inst, Berlin, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/esr/jcac032},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0266-7215},
|
|
EISSN = {1468-2672},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTEGRATION; IMMIGRANTS; ATTITUDES; GENDER; ISLAM; CITIZENSHIP;
|
|
PREJUDICE; RELIGION; EUROPE; RIGHTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {marina.fernandez-reino@compas.ox.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Veit, Susanne/K-5842-2015
|
|
Fernandez-Reino, Marina/G-4889-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Veit, Susanne/0000-0002-9611-1105
|
|
Fernandez-Reino, Marina/0000-0003-3146-0336},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000822386100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000894095800001,
|
|
Author = {Chakrapani, Venkatesan and Newman, Peter A. and Sebastian, Aleena and
|
|
Rawat, Shruta and Mittal, Sandeep and Gupta, Vanita and Kaur, Manmeet},
|
|
Title = {Mental health, economic well-being and health care access amid the
|
|
COVID-19 pandemic: a mixed methods study among urban men who have sex
|
|
with men in India},
|
|
Journal = {SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH MATTERS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {DEC 31},
|
|
Abstract = {Scant empirical research from Asia has addressed the impact of COVID-19
|
|
on sexual minority health. We aimed to explore and understand the impact
|
|
of COVID-19 on income security, mental health, HIV risk and access to
|
|
health services among men who have sex with men (MSM) in India. We
|
|
conducted a concurrent mixed methods study from April to June 2020,
|
|
including a cross-sectional survey and in-depth semi-structured
|
|
interviews with MSM recruited from three non-governmental organisations
|
|
providing HIV prevention services in Chandigarh, India. We examined the
|
|
associations of sexual minority stressors (sexual stigma, internalised
|
|
homonegativity), economic stressors, and stress due to social
|
|
distancing, with depression and anxiety, HIV risk, and access to health
|
|
services. Survey findings (n = 132) indicated that internalised
|
|
homonegativity and stress related to social distancing were
|
|
significantly associated with depressive and anxiety symptoms. Results
|
|
also showed reduced access to condoms, HIV testing and counselling
|
|
services. Qualitative findings (n = 10) highlighted adverse economic
|
|
impacts of COVID-19, including loss of employment/wages and engaging in
|
|
survival sex work, which contributed to psychological distress and HIV
|
|
risk. The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in considerable psychological
|
|
and financial distress among low socioeconomic status MSM in India,
|
|
including those involved in sex work - communities already marginalised
|
|
in economic, family and healthcare sectors. Structural interventions to
|
|
improve access to mental health and HIV services and decrease financial
|
|
burden are critical to mitigate the impact of COVID-19.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chakrapani, V (Corresponding Author), Ctr Sexual \& Hlth Res \& Policy C SHaRP, Chennai, India.
|
|
Chakrapani, V (Corresponding Author), Humsafar Trust, Mumbai, India.
|
|
Chakrapani, Venkatesan, Ctr Sexual \& Hlth Res \& Policy C SHaRP, Chennai, India.
|
|
Newman, Peter A., Univ Toronto, Factor Inwentash Fac Social Work, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Sebastian, Aleena, Natl Inst Adv Studies NIAS, Bangalore, India.
|
|
Chakrapani, Venkatesan; Rawat, Shruta, Humsafar Trust, Mumbai, India.
|
|
Mittal, Sandeep, Chandigarh State AIDS Control Soc CSACS, Targeted Intervent, Chandigarh, India.
|
|
Gupta, Vanita, Chandigarh State AIDS Control Soc CSACS, Chandigarh, India.
|
|
Kaur, Manmeet, Postgrad Inst Med Educ \& Res PGIMER, Chandigarh, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/26410397.2022.2144087},
|
|
Article-Number = {2144087},
|
|
EISSN = {2641-0397},
|
|
Keywords = {MSM; COVID-19; depression; anxiety; social distancing; income security},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRANSGENDER WOMEN; MINORITY STRESS; HIV; MSM; DEPRESSION; BARRIERS;
|
|
CHENNAI; RISK; PREVALENCE; INSIGHTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {venkatesan.chakrapani@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Newman, Peter A/P-7056-2019
|
|
sebastian, aleena/AAX-6970-2020
|
|
Chakrapani, Venkatesan/P-8056-2014
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Newman, Peter A/0000-0003-0444-5915
|
|
Chakrapani, Venkatesan/0000-0001-9998-9135
|
|
SEBASTIAN, ALEENA/0000-0002-2049-4445},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000894095800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000629314500001,
|
|
Author = {Roche, Ann M. and Skinner, Natalie},
|
|
Title = {The non-government alcohol and other drug workforce in Australia:
|
|
Findings from a national survey},
|
|
Journal = {DRUG AND ALCOHOL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {1003-1012},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction There is growing interest in the role of the non-government
|
|
sector in the alcohol and other drug (AOD) service delivery system. This
|
|
study examined the demographic profile of AOD workers in the
|
|
non-government (NGO) compared to government sector, to ascertain their
|
|
professional development needs, job satisfaction, retention and
|
|
turnover.
|
|
Methods This study utilised cross-sectional data from an Australian AOD
|
|
workforce online survey that assessed participants' demographics,
|
|
employment profile, professional development needs and barriers. The
|
|
sample comprised 888 workers in direct client service roles.
|
|
Results Binomial logistic regression analysis indicated that NGO workers
|
|
were more likely to be younger (<35 years), have AOD lived experience
|
|
and have an AOD vocational qualification. NGO workers were more likely
|
|
to earn below the national average salary and report job insecurity; but
|
|
nonetheless were more likely to feel respected and supported at work,
|
|
believe their work was meaningful and be satisfied working in the AOD
|
|
sector. Their top professional development barrier was personal
|
|
financial cost. NGO workers were more likely to report employer
|
|
financial costs as a professional development barrier, whereas
|
|
government workers were more likely to report staff shortages.
|
|
Discussion and Conclusions AOD services in Australia rely increasingly
|
|
on the NGO sector. Quality services and care pivot on the size,
|
|
capability and maturity of the workforce. This study highlights the need
|
|
for systemic interventions addressing structural issues, and the
|
|
professional development and ongoing support needs of the NGO AOD
|
|
workforce. Without such support, Australia's AOD services will be
|
|
potentially jeopardised.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Roche, AM (Corresponding Author), Flinders Univ S Australia, Natl Ctr Educ \& Training Addict, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
|
|
Roche, Ann M.; Skinner, Natalie, Flinders Univ S Australia, Natl Ctr Educ \& Training Addict, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/dar.13278},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0959-5236},
|
|
EISSN = {1465-3362},
|
|
Keywords = {health workforce; non\&\#8208; government sector; professional
|
|
development need; capacity building},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Substance Abuse},
|
|
Author-Email = {Ann.Roche@flinders.edu.au
|
|
natalie.skinner@flinders.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Skinner, Natalie/A-4778-2012
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Skinner, Natalie/0000-0002-9713-8545
|
|
roche, ann/0000-0002-5992-8757},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000629314500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000414676500007,
|
|
Author = {Chan, Raymond Javan and Yates, Patsy and Li, Qiuping and Komatsu, Hiroko
|
|
and Lopez, Violeta and Thandar, Myat and Chacko, Selva Titus and So,
|
|
Winnie Kwok Wei and Pongthavornkamol, Kanaungnit and Yi, Myungsun and
|
|
Pittayapan, Pongpak and Butcon, Jessica and Wyld, David and Molassiotis,
|
|
Alex and STEP Study Collaborators},
|
|
Title = {Oncology practitioners' perspectives and practice patterns of
|
|
post-treatment cancer survivorship care in the Asia-Pacific region:
|
|
results from the STEP study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC CANCER},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Month = {NOV 6},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Most efforts to advance cancer survivorship care have
|
|
occurred in Western countries. There has been limited research towards
|
|
gaining a comprehensive understanding of survivorship care provision in
|
|
the Asia-Pacific region. This study aimed to establish the perceptions
|
|
of responsibility, confidence, and frequency of survivorship care
|
|
practices of oncology practitioners and examine their perspectives on
|
|
factors that impede quality survivorship care.
|
|
Methods: A cross-sectional survey of hospital-based oncology
|
|
practitioners in 10 Asia-Pacific countries was undertaken between May
|
|
2015-October 2016. The participating countries included Australia, Hong
|
|
Kong, China, Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Singapore, India, Myanmar,
|
|
and The Philippines. The survey was administered using paper-based or
|
|
online questionnaires via specialist cancer care settings, educational
|
|
meetings, and professional organisations.
|
|
Results: In total, 1501 oncology practitioners participated in the
|
|
study. When comparing the subscales of responsibility perception,
|
|
frequency and confidence, Australian practitioners had significantly
|
|
higher ratings than practitioners in Hong Kong, Japan, Thailand, and
|
|
Singapore (all p < 0.05). Surprisingly, practitioners working in Low-and
|
|
Mid-Income Countries (LMICs) had higher levels of responsibility
|
|
perception, confidence and frequencies of delivering survivorship care
|
|
than those working in High-Income Countries (HICs) (p < 0.001), except
|
|
for the responsibility perception of care coordination where no
|
|
difference in scores was observed (p = 0.83). Physicians were more
|
|
confident in delivering most of the survivorship care interventions
|
|
compared to nurses and allied-health professionals. Perceived barriers
|
|
to survivorship care were similar across the HICs and LMICs, with the
|
|
most highly rated items for all practitioners being lack of time,
|
|
dedicated educational resources for patients and family members, and
|
|
evidence-based practice guidelines informing survivorship care.
|
|
Conclusions: Different survivorship practices have been observed between
|
|
HICs and LMICs, Australia and other countries and between the
|
|
professional disciplines. Future service planning and research efforts
|
|
should take these findings into account and overcome barriers identified
|
|
in this study.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chan, RJ (Corresponding Author), Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Nursing, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Chan, RJ (Corresponding Author), Queensland Univ Technol, Inst Hlth \& Biomed Innovat, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Chan, RJ (Corresponding Author), Royal Brisbane \& Womens Hosp, Canc Care Serv, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Chan, Raymond Javan; Yates, Patsy, Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Nursing, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Chan, Raymond Javan; Yates, Patsy, Queensland Univ Technol, Inst Hlth \& Biomed Innovat, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Chan, Raymond Javan; Yates, Patsy; Wyld, David, Royal Brisbane \& Womens Hosp, Canc Care Serv, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Li, Qiuping, Jiangnan Univ, Wuxi Med Sch, Wuxi, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
|
|
Komatsu, Hiroko, Keio Univ, Fac Nursing \& Med Care, Tokyo, Japan.
|
|
Lopez, Violeta, Natl Univ Singapore, Yong Loo Lin Sch Med, Alice Lee Ctr Nursing Studies, Singapore, Singapore.
|
|
Thandar, Myat, Univ Nursing, Yangon, Myanmar.
|
|
Chacko, Selva Titus, Christian Med Coll \& Hosp, Coll Nursing, Vellore, Tamil Nadu, India.
|
|
So, Winnie Kwok Wei, Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Nethersole Sch Nursing, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Pongthavornkamol, Kanaungnit, Mahidol Univ, Fac Nursing, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
|
Yi, Myungsun, Seoul Natl Univ, Coll Nursing, Seoul, South Korea.
|
|
Yi, Myungsun, Seoul Natl Univ, Res Inst Nursing Sci, Seoul, South Korea.
|
|
Pittayapan, Pongpak, Mahidol Univ, Nursing Dept, Siriraj Hosp, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
|
Butcon, Jessica, Bicol Univ, Coll Med, Bicol, Philippines.
|
|
Molassiotis, Alex, Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Sch Nursing, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12885-017-3733-3},
|
|
Article-Number = {715},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2407},
|
|
Keywords = {Cancer survivorship; Asia-Pacific region; Health professionals; Oncology
|
|
practitioner; Practice patterns; Perspectives; Barriers},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {raymond.chan@qut.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {So, Winnie/A-3994-2015
|
|
Chan, Raymond J/K-8415-2019
|
|
Wyld, David K/B-8893-2015
|
|
Lopez, Violeta/C-6899-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {So, Winnie/0000-0001-9243-2924
|
|
Chan, Raymond J/0000-0003-0248-7046
|
|
Wyld, David K/0000-0001-9523-4333
|
|
MOLASIOTIS, Alex/0000-0002-5225-1739
|
|
Yates, Patsy/0000-0001-8946-8504
|
|
Lopez, Violeta/0000-0001-8844-0331
|
|
Molassiotis, Alex/0000-0001-6351-9991},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {17},
|
|
Times-Cited = {24},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000414676500007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000446181900181,
|
|
Author = {Gathara, David and Serem, George and Murphy, Georgina A. V. and Abuya,
|
|
Nancy and Kuria, Rose and Tallam, Edna and English, Mike},
|
|
Title = {Quantifying nursing care delivered in Kenyan newborn units: protocol for
|
|
a cross-sectional direct observational study},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction In many African countries, including Kenya, a major barrier
|
|
to achieving child survival goals is the slow decline in neonatal
|
|
mortality that now represents 45\% of the under-5 mortality. In newborn
|
|
care, nurses are the primary caregivers in newborn settings and are
|
|
essential in the delivery of safe and effective care. However, due to
|
|
high patient workloads and limited resources, nurses may often
|
|
consciously or unconsciously prioritise the care they provide resulting
|
|
in some tasks being left undone or partially done (missed care). Missed
|
|
care has been associated with poor patient outcomes in high-income
|
|
countries. However, missed care, examined by direct observation, has not
|
|
previously been the subject of research in low/middle-income countries.
|
|
Methods and analysis The aim of this study is to quantify essential
|
|
neonatal nursing care provided to newborns within newborn units. We will
|
|
undertake a cross-sectional study using direct observational methods
|
|
within newborn units in six health facilities in Nairobi City County
|
|
across the public, private-for-profit and private-not-for-profit
|
|
sectors. A total of 216 newborns will be observed between 1 September
|
|
2017 and 30 May 2018. Stratified random sampling will be used to select
|
|
random 12-hour observation periods while purposive sampling will be used
|
|
to identify newborns for direct observation. We will report the overall
|
|
prevalence of care left undone, the common tasks that are left undone
|
|
and describe any sharing of tasks with people not formally qualified to
|
|
provide care.
|
|
Ethics and dissemination Ethical approval for this study has been
|
|
granted by the Kenya Medical Research Institute Scientific and Ethics
|
|
Review Unit. Written informed consent will be sought from mothers and
|
|
nurses. Findings from this work will be shared with the participating
|
|
hospitals, an expert advisory group that comprises members involved in
|
|
policy-making and more widely to the international community through
|
|
conferences and peer-reviewed journals.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gathara, D (Corresponding Author), Kenya Govt Med Res Ctr, Dept Publ Hlth Res, Wellcome Trust Res Programme, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Gathara, David; Serem, George; Murphy, Georgina A. V.; Abuya, Nancy; English, Mike, Kenya Govt Med Res Ctr, Dept Publ Hlth Res, Wellcome Trust Res Programme, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Murphy, Georgina A. V.; English, Mike, Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Med, Oxford, England.
|
|
Murphy, Georgina A. V.; English, Mike, Univ Oxford, Dept Paediat, Oxford, England.
|
|
Abuya, Nancy, Nairobi City Cty, Dept Curat \& Preventat Serv, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Kuria, Rose, Kenya Med Training Coll, Dept Nursing, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Tallam, Edna, Nursing Council Kenya, Dept Registrat \& Licensing, Nairobi, Kenya.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022020},
|
|
Article-Number = {e022020},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords = {neonatology},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY EVALUATION; LEFT UNDONE; HOSPITALS; COUNTRIES; HEALTH; PATTERNS;
|
|
WEEKEND; DEATHS; NURSES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {DGathara@kemri-wellcome.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Gathara, David/0000-0002-0958-0713},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000446181900181},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000719922500001,
|
|
Author = {Gajewski, Jakub and Wallace, Marisa and Pittalis, Chiara and Mwapasa,
|
|
Gerald and Borgstein, Eric and Bijlmakers, Leon and Brugha, Ruairi},
|
|
Title = {Why Do They Leave? Challenges to Retention of Surgical Clinical Officers
|
|
in District Hospitals in Malawi},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH POLICY AND MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {354-361},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Low-and middle-income countries (LMICs) are the worst
|
|
affected by a lack of safe and affordable access to safe surgery. The
|
|
significant unmet surgical need can be in part attributed to surgical
|
|
workforce shortages that disproportionately affect rural areas of these
|
|
countries. To combat this, Malawi has introduced a cadre of
|
|
non-physician clinicians (NPCs) called clinical officers (COs), trained
|
|
to the level of a Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Surgery. This study
|
|
explored the barriers and enablers to their retention in rural district
|
|
hospitals (DHs), as perceived by the first cohort of COs trained to BSc
|
|
in Surgery level in Malawi. Methods: A longitudinal qualitative research
|
|
approach was used based on interviews with 16 COs, practicing at DHs,
|
|
during their BSc training (2015); and again with 15 of them after their
|
|
graduation (2019). Data from both time points were analysed and compared
|
|
using a top-down thematic analysis approach. Results: Of the 16 COs
|
|
interviewed in 2015, 11 intended to take up a post at a DH following
|
|
graduation; however, only 6 subsequently did so. The major barriers to
|
|
remaining in a DH post as perceived by these COs were lack of promotion,
|
|
a more attractive salary elsewhere; and unclear, stagnant career
|
|
progression within surgery. For those who remained working in DH posts,
|
|
the main enablers are a willingness to accept a low salary, to generate
|
|
greater opportunities to engage in additional earning opportunities; the
|
|
hope of promotional opportunities within the government system; and
|
|
greater responsibility and recognition of their surgical knowledge and
|
|
skills as a BSc-holder at the district level. Conclusion: The
|
|
sustainability of surgically trained NPCs in Malawi is not assured and
|
|
further work is required to develop and implement successful retention
|
|
strategies, which will require a multi-sector approach. This paper
|
|
provides insights into barriers and enablers to retention of this
|
|
newly-introduced cadre and has important lessons for policy makers in
|
|
Malawi and other countries employing NPCs to deliver essential surgery.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gajewski, J (Corresponding Author), Royal Coll Surgeons Ireland, Inst Global Surg, Dublin 2, Ireland.
|
|
Gajewski, Jakub, Royal Coll Surgeons Ireland, Inst Global Surg, Dublin 2, Ireland.
|
|
Wallace, Marisa, Maastricht Univ, Fac Hlth Med \& Life Sci, Maastricht, Netherlands.
|
|
Pittalis, Chiara; Brugha, Ruairi, Royal Coll Surgeons Ireland, Div Populat Hlth Sci, Dublin 2, Ireland.
|
|
Mwapasa, Gerald; Borgstein, Eric, Coll Med Malawi, Dept Surg, Blantyre, Malawi.
|
|
Bijlmakers, Leon, Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Med Ctr, Nijmegen, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.34172/ijhpm.2020.142},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2020},
|
|
EISSN = {2322-5939},
|
|
Keywords = {Non-physician Clinicians; Task-Sharing; Global Surgery; Malawi},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-PROFESSIONALS; BRAIN-DRAIN; NONPHYSICIAN CLINICIAN; INTERNATIONAL
|
|
NGOS; WORKFORCE; AFRICA; PROGRAM; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {jakubgajewski@rcsi.ie},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Brugha, Ruairi/C-8420-2012
|
|
Bijlmakers, Leon/P-6949-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Brugha, Ruairi/0000-0003-0729-0197
|
|
Bijlmakers, Leon/0000-0003-2252-0579
|
|
Pittalis, Chiara/0000-0003-3465-9850},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000719922500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000292011300005,
|
|
Author = {Cavalieri, Shelley},
|
|
Title = {Between Victim and Agent: A Third-Way Feminist Account of Trafficking
|
|
for Sex Work},
|
|
Journal = {INDIANA LAW JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {86},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {1409-1458},
|
|
Month = {FAL},
|
|
Abstract = {Feminist legal theorists have devoted enormous attention to
|
|
conceptualizing the issues of sex work and trafficking for sexual
|
|
purposes. While these theories vary, they typically fall into one of two
|
|
camps. The abolitionist perspective, having grown out of dominance
|
|
feminist theory, perceives sex work as inherently exploitative. In
|
|
contrast, a second group of theorists adopts a liberal notion of
|
|
individual choice and draws on the poststructuralist rejection of gender
|
|
essentialism to envision a theoretical model of sex-worker rights. The
|
|
legal and public policies that grow from these two models are similarly
|
|
polarized. Radical feminist abolitionists are often strange bedfellows
|
|
with evangelical Christian organizations, working to end all sex work by
|
|
rescuing women, regardless of any individual volition exercised in
|
|
choosing the profession. On the other hand, organizations focused on
|
|
sex-worker rights seek to help sex workers take care of themselves
|
|
without fully questioning the social circumstances that lead women to
|
|
make such a choice.
|
|
This Article proposes a new theoretical model of trafficking for sexual
|
|
purposes: a third-way feminist account of sex trafficking. Leveraging
|
|
the feminist literature on constrained autonomy, the author draws on her
|
|
own experience working with trafficked African and Asian populations to
|
|
offer this new approach. This model relies on the dominance feminist
|
|
critique of social conditions generative of women's economic
|
|
desperation, which often underlies women's choice to engage in sexual
|
|
labor. At the same time, the author rejects gender essentialism and
|
|
endorses a liberal notion of the individual woman as an actor with real,
|
|
though constrained, personal autonomy. Having explored this theoretical
|
|
model, the Article identifies a series of interventions in trafficking
|
|
for sexual purposes that recognize the individual and her personal
|
|
resources while ultimately seeking to further her own autonomy.
|
|
In proposing these interventions, this Article directly offers a vision
|
|
of how feminist legal theory can work to alleviate poverty and other
|
|
social barriers that third-world women encounter in trying to support
|
|
themselves and their families. Finally, the Article closes with a
|
|
consideration of the relationship between the author's proposed
|
|
third-way feminist model and the international development literature on
|
|
the capabilities approach. The interventions that arise from this
|
|
third-way conception of feminist theory complement the capabilities
|
|
model of development, as both seek to broaden the individual's life
|
|
options in pursuit of a more robust individual agency.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cavalieri, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Toledo, Coll Law, Toledo, OH 43606 USA.
|
|
Univ Toledo, Coll Law, Toledo, OH 43606 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0019-6665},
|
|
EISSN = {2169-3218},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER; WOMEN; RAPE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Law},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {91},
|
|
Times-Cited = {25},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000292011300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000564286200003,
|
|
Author = {Hamad, Rita and Ozturk, Buket and Foverskov, Else and Pedersen, Lars and
|
|
Sorensen, Henrik T. and Botker, Hans E. and White, Justin S.},
|
|
Title = {Association of Neighborhood Disadvantage With Cardiovascular Risk
|
|
Factors and Events Among Refugees in Denmark},
|
|
Journal = {JAMA NETWORK OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {3},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Month = {AUG 21},
|
|
Abstract = {Question Is there an association of neighborhood socioeconomic
|
|
disadvantage with the development of cardiovascular risk factors,
|
|
myocardial infarction, and stroke among refugees? Findings In this
|
|
quasi-experimental cohort study, 49.305 refugees who were assigned to
|
|
more disadvantaged neighborhoods across Denmark were at increased risk
|
|
of developing hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, and myocardial
|
|
infarction over subsequent decades. No associations were found for
|
|
stroke. Meaning Neighborhood characteristics may be associated with
|
|
long-term cardiovascular risk among refugees.
|
|
This quasi-experimental cohort study uses data from the Danish
|
|
population register of adult immigrants arriving from 1986 to 1998 and
|
|
health outcomes from the inpatient clinic register, outpatient clinic
|
|
register, and prescription drug register to assess the association
|
|
between disadvantaged neighborhoods and cardiovascular disease risk
|
|
among refugees.
|
|
Importance Refugees are among the most disadvantaged individuals in
|
|
society, and they often have elevated risks of cardiovascular risk
|
|
factors and events. Evidence is limited regarding factors that may
|
|
worsen cardiovascular health among this vulnerable group. Objective To
|
|
test the hypothesis that refugee placement in socioeconomically
|
|
disadvantaged neighborhoods is associated with increased cardiovascular
|
|
risk. Design, Setting, and Participants The study population of this
|
|
quasi-experimental, registry-based cohort study included 49.305 adults
|
|
18 years and older who came to Denmark as refugees from other countries
|
|
during the years of Denmark's refugee dispersal policy from 1986 to
|
|
1998. Refugees were dispersed to neighborhoods with varying degrees of
|
|
socioeconomic disadvantage in an arbitrary manner conditional on
|
|
observed characteristics. The association of neighborhood disadvantage
|
|
on arrival with several cardiovascular outcomes in subsequent decades
|
|
was evaluated using regression models that adjusted for individual,
|
|
family, and municipal characteristics. Health outcomes were abstracted
|
|
from the inpatient register, outpatient specialty clinic register, and
|
|
prescription drug register through 2016. Data analysis was conducted
|
|
from May 2018 to July 2019. Exposures A composite index of neighborhood
|
|
disadvantage was constructed using 8 neighborhood-level socioeconomic
|
|
characteristics derived from Danish population register data. Main
|
|
Outcomes and Measures Primary study outcomes included hypertension,
|
|
hyperlipidemia, type 2 diabetes, myocardial infarction, and stroke.
|
|
Before data analysis commenced, it was hypothesized that higher levels
|
|
of neighborhood disadvantage were associated with an increased risk of
|
|
cardiovascular risk factors and events. Results A total of 49 305
|
|
participants were included (median {[}interquartile range] age, 30.5
|
|
{[}24.9-39.8] years; 43.3\% women). Participant region of origin
|
|
included 6318 from Africa (12.8\%), 7253 from Asia (14.7\%), 3446 from
|
|
Eastern Europe (7.0\%), 5416 from Iraq (11.0\%), 6206 from Iran
|
|
(12.6\%), 5558 from Palestine (via Lebanon, Israel, Occupied Palestinian
|
|
Territories; 11.3\%), and 15 108 from Yugoslavia (30.6\%). Adjusted
|
|
models revealed an association between placement in disadvantaged
|
|
neighborhoods and increased risk of hypertension (0.71 {[}95\% CI,
|
|
0.30-1.13] percentage points per unit of disadvantage index; P < .01),
|
|
hyperlipidemia (0.44 {[}95\% CI, 0.06-0.83] percentage points; P = .01),
|
|
diabetes (0.45 {[}95\% CI, 0.09-0.81] percentage points; P = .01), and
|
|
myocardial infarction (0.14 {[}95\% CI, 0.03-0.25] percentage points; P
|
|
= .01). No association was found for stroke. Individuals who arrived in
|
|
Denmark before age 35 years had an increased risk of hyperlipidemia
|
|
(1.16 {[}95\% CI, 0.41-1.92] percentage points; P < .01), and there were
|
|
no differences by sex. Conclusions and Relevance In this
|
|
quasi-experimental cohort study, neighborhood disadvantage was
|
|
associated with increased cardiovascular risk in a relatively young
|
|
population of refugees. Neighborhood characteristics may be an important
|
|
consideration when refugees are placed by resettlement agencies and host
|
|
countries. Future work should examine additional health outcomes as well
|
|
as potential mediating pathways to target future interventions (eg,
|
|
neighborhood ease of walking, employment opportunities).},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hamad, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Med, Philip R Lee Inst Hlth Policy Studies, 995 Potrero Ave,Bldg 80,Ward 83, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA.
|
|
Hamad, Rita; Foverskov, Else; White, Justin S., Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Med, Philip R Lee Inst Hlth Policy Studies, 995 Potrero Ave,Bldg 80,Ward 83, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA.
|
|
Hamad, Rita, Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Family \& Community Med, Sch Med, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA.
|
|
Ozturk, Buket; Foverskov, Else; Pedersen, Lars; Sorensen, Henrik T., Aarhus Univ, Dept Clin Epidemiol, Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
Sorensen, Henrik T., Stanford Univ, Ctr Populat Hlth Sci, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
|
|
Botker, Hans E., Aarhus Univ Hosp, Dept Cardiol, Aarhus, Denmark.
|
|
White, Justin S., Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, Sch Med, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.14196},
|
|
Article-Number = {e2014196},
|
|
ISSN = {2574-3805},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CORONARY-HEART-DISEASE; MENTAL-HEALTH; SOCIOECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT;
|
|
RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION; DEPRIVATION; OUTCOMES; STRESS; HYPERTENSION;
|
|
IMMIGRANTS; MULTILEVEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {rita.hamad@ucsf.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sørensen, Henrik Toft/Z-6181-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sørensen, Henrik Toft/0000-0003-4299-7040
|
|
Esen, Buket Ozturk/0000-0003-2957-7797
|
|
Botker, Hans Erik/0000-0001-6358-8962
|
|
Foverskov, Else/0000-0003-4407-0759},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000564286200003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000282403300005,
|
|
Author = {Diepart, Jean-Christophe},
|
|
Title = {Cambodian peasant's contribution to rural development: a perspective
|
|
from Kampong Thom Province},
|
|
Journal = {BIOTECHNOLOGIE AGRONOMIE SOCIETE ET ENVIRONNEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {321-340},
|
|
Abstract = {The paper aims to identify the rationality of peasant communities and
|
|
their contribution to rural development in Kampong Thom province. To do
|
|
so, an interdisciplinary analytical framework addresses the dynamics of
|
|
land use and land tenure, the strategies of labor force allocation as
|
|
well as the determinants of land and labor agricultural productivities
|
|
amongst peasant communities. It rests on details field surveys in two
|
|
communes located in very distinct agro-ecological settings of Kampong
|
|
Thom province. A land use change analysis based on time-series aerial
|
|
photos is conducted with participatory inventories of natural resources.
|
|
It shows that endogenous management of forest and fisheries resources
|
|
generate significant incomes and, at the same time, contribute to
|
|
maintaining biodiversity. The paper analyses how this contribution is
|
|
challenged by the non-peasant actors involved in massive State land
|
|
privatization. Aiming to full employment, peasant households enjoy a
|
|
great flexibility in the way they allocate labor force, especially in
|
|
line with the age of active labor and the fluctuation of labor
|
|
opportunity costs. Principally due to an unequal land holding
|
|
distribution, agricultural income is unfairly distributed but this
|
|
inequality is actually balanced by the access to common-pool resources
|
|
of crucial importance for the poorest and by the recourse to non farming
|
|
activities, which is an important factor of socio-economic
|
|
differentiation amongst households. The main economic indicators of rice
|
|
production confirm that peasant households always try to maximize their
|
|
income in step with the production factor they have in relatively less
|
|
amount. A land market simulation stresses that, contrarily to
|
|
theoretical assumptions, land access through sale ( and purchase) does
|
|
not result in a fairer land distribution. Nevertheless, land leases
|
|
amongst peasant households seem more promising to ensure equitable
|
|
access to land as they are embedded in collective security mechanisms
|
|
activated by peasantry. The paper argues that peasant communities in the
|
|
studied area constitute a solid basis for rural development as they
|
|
offer a very good articulation between economic efficiency, social
|
|
justice and environmental sustainability. Finally, recommendations are
|
|
formulated to properly address peasant contribution to rural development
|
|
in the new national agrarian policies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Diepart, JC (Corresponding Author), Univ Liege, Gembloux Agrobio Tech Econ \& Rural Dev Unit, Passage Deportes 2, B-5030 Gembloux, Belgium.
|
|
Diepart, Jean-Christophe, Univ Liege, Gembloux Agrobio Tech Econ \& Rural Dev Unit, B-5030 Gembloux, Belgium.
|
|
Diepart, Jean-Christophe, German Dev Serv, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.},
|
|
ISSN = {1370-6233},
|
|
Keywords = {Agricultural economics and policies; decision rules; farming systems and
|
|
practices; geographic information system and remote sensing; land
|
|
tenure; rural development; sustainable natural resources management;
|
|
rural livelihoods; rural sociology; Cambodia},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Agronomy; Biotechnology \& Applied Microbiology; Environmental Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {jc\_diepart@online.com.kh},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Diepart, Jean-Christophe/AEM-2382-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Diepart, Jean-Christophe/0000-0001-8979-0632},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {34},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000282403300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000996119900001,
|
|
Author = {Poma, Erica and Pistoresi, Barbara and Giovinazzo, Chiara},
|
|
Title = {Mental well-being and government support in Europe. The mediating role
|
|
of trust in people and institutions},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 MAY 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose - This paper investigates the determinants of subjective
|
|
well-being in Europe using the European Living, Working and COVID-19
|
|
(ELWC) Survey carried out by Eurofound (2021). Socio-demographics
|
|
characteristics, employment status, measures of economic distress,
|
|
inequality and work life balance are considered. Particular attention is
|
|
paid to how quality of government support (QGS), that considers the
|
|
dimensions of good governance such as integrity, fairness, reliability,
|
|
responsiveness and influences subjective mental well-being (WHO-5)
|
|
through the mediation of trust in other people and in institutions.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach - To this end, the authors estimate a
|
|
moderated mediation model for analysing the indirect role of QGS on
|
|
WHO-5 through institutional trust and trust in people.
|
|
Findings - The results support the hypothesis that the reduction in
|
|
WHO-5 in the European population during coronavirus disease 2019
|
|
(COVID-19), particularly marked in the 18-34 age group, is related to
|
|
the perceived inadequacy of government interventions in managing
|
|
economic and social uncertainty through supportive measures. This
|
|
outcome is also due to reduced trust in institutions and other people,
|
|
as both are significant mediators that reinforce the impact of public
|
|
support on WHO-5.
|
|
Practical implications - Government should pay greater attention to this
|
|
relationship amongst good governance, trust and mental health of
|
|
citizens because a healthy human capital is a significant factor for the
|
|
long-run economic growth, in a special way when the authors refer to the
|
|
young workforce with a greater life expectancy.
|
|
Originality/value - In the literature, the role of trust as a mediator
|
|
has been analysed in the relationship between individual economic
|
|
situations and subjective well-being before and during the COVID-19
|
|
pandemic. To the best of the authors' knowledge, no studies have
|
|
examined the role of perceived QGS on subjective mental well-being using
|
|
the mediating and backing effects of trust in people and institutions.
|
|
Peer review - The peer review history for this article is available at:
|
|
https://publons.com/publon/10.1108/IJSE-08-2022-0549.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Poma, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Modena \& Reggio Emilia, Dept Econ Marco Biagi, Modena, Italy.
|
|
Poma, Erica; Giovinazzo, Chiara, Univ Modena \& Reggio Emilia, Dept Econ Marco Biagi, Modena, Italy.
|
|
Pistoresi, Barbara, Univ Modena \& Reggio Emilia, Dept Econ Marco Biagi, Modena, Italy.
|
|
Pistoresi, Barbara, RECent, Modena, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJSE-08-2022-0549},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0306-8293},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6712},
|
|
Keywords = {Subjective well-being; Quality of government support; Institutional
|
|
trust; Trust in people; Europe; Young population; Mediation model},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LIFE; SATISFACTION; HOWS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {erica.poma@unimore.it
|
|
barbara.pistoresi@unimore.it
|
|
chiara.giovinazzo@unimore.it},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Poma, Erica/0000-0002-0601-7335},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000996119900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000463494100003,
|
|
Author = {Kimport, Katrina and Rowland, Brenly},
|
|
Editor = {Kronenfeld, JJ},
|
|
Title = {TAKING INSURANCE IN ABORTION CARE: POLICY, PRACTICES, AND THE ROLE OF
|
|
POVERTY},
|
|
Booktitle = {HEALTH AND HEALTH CARE CONCERNS AMONG WOMEN AND RACIAL AND ETHNIC
|
|
MINORITIES},
|
|
Series = {Research in the Sociology of Health Care},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Pages = {39-57},
|
|
Abstract = {Most women seeking abortion pay out-of-pocket for care, partly due to
|
|
legal restrictions on insurance coverage. These costs can constitute a
|
|
hardship for many women. Advocates have sought to ensure insurance
|
|
coverage for abortion, but we do not know whether the intermediaries
|
|
between policy and patient - abortion-providing facilities - are able
|
|
and willing to accept insurance.
|
|
We interviewed 22 abortion facility administrators, representing 64
|
|
clinical sites in 21 states that varied in their legal allowance of
|
|
public and private insurance coverage for abortion, about their
|
|
facility's insurance practices, and experiences.
|
|
Respondents described challenges in accepting public and/or private
|
|
insurance that included, but were not limited to, legal regulations.
|
|
When public insurance broadly covered abortion, its low reimbursement
|
|
failed to cover the costs of care. Because of the predominance of low
|
|
income patients in abortion care, this caused financial challenges for
|
|
facilities, leading one in a state that allows broad coverage to
|
|
nonetheless decline public insurance. Accepting private insurance
|
|
carried its own risks, including nonpayment because costs fell within
|
|
patients' deductibles. Respondents described work-arounds to protect
|
|
their facility from nonpayment and enable patients to use their private
|
|
insurance.
|
|
The structure of insurance and the population of abortion patients mean
|
|
that changes at the political level may not translate into changes in
|
|
individual women's experience of paying for abortion.
|
|
This research illustrates how legal regulations, insurer practices, and
|
|
the socioeconomics of the patient population matter for
|
|
abortion-providing facilities' decision-making about accepting
|
|
insurance.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kimport, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, ANSIRH, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Kimport, Katrina; Rowland, Brenly, Univ Calif San Francisco, ANSIRH, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/S0275-495920170000035003},
|
|
ISSN = {0275-4959},
|
|
ISBN = {978-1-78743-149-2; 978-1-78743-150-8},
|
|
Keywords = {Abortion; insurance; Medicaid; poverty},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PROVIDERS EXPERIENCES; UNITED-STATES; COVERAGE; DISPARITIES; MULTISTATE;
|
|
PREGNANCY; COSTS; RATES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Ethnic Studies; Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \&
|
|
Occupational Health; Sociology; Women's Studies},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000463494100003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000296020800004,
|
|
Author = {Christensen, Kathleen and Schneider, Barbara and Butler, Donnell},
|
|
Title = {Families with School-Age Children},
|
|
Journal = {FUTURE OF CHILDREN},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {69-90},
|
|
Month = {FAL},
|
|
Abstract = {Most working parents face a common dilemma-how to care for their
|
|
children when they are not in school but the parents are at work. In
|
|
this article Kathleen Christensen, Barbara Schneider, and Donnell Butler
|
|
describe the predictable and unpredictable scheduling demands school-age
|
|
children place on working couples and single working parents.
|
|
The authors assess the potential capacity of schools to help meet the
|
|
needs of working families through changes in school schedules and
|
|
after-school programs and conclude that the flexibility parents need to
|
|
balance family-work responsibilities probably cannot be found in the
|
|
school setting. They argue that workplaces are better able than schools
|
|
to offer the flexibility that working parents need to attend to basic
|
|
needs of their children, as well as to engage in activities that enhance
|
|
their children's academic performance and emotional and social
|
|
well-being.
|
|
Two types of flexible work practices seem especially well suited to
|
|
parents who work: flextime arrangements that allow parents to coordinate
|
|
their work schedules with their children's school schedules, and
|
|
policies that allow workers to take short periods of time off-a few
|
|
hours or a day or two-to attend a parent-teacher conference, for
|
|
example, or care for a child who has suddenly fallen ill. Many companies
|
|
that have instituted such policies have benefited through employees'
|
|
greater job satisfaction and employee retention.
|
|
Yet despite these measured benefits to employers, workplaces often fall
|
|
short of being family friendly. Many employers do not offer such
|
|
policies or offer them only to employees at certain levels or in certain
|
|
types of jobs. Flexible work practices are almost nonexistent for
|
|
low-income workers, who are least able to afford alternative child care
|
|
and may need flexibility the most.
|
|
Moreover the authors find that even employees in firms with flexible
|
|
practices such as telecommuting may be reluctant to take advantage of
|
|
them, because the workplace culture explicitly or implicitly stigmatizes
|
|
or penalizes employees for choosing these work arrangements. The authors
|
|
conclude by making a case for creating a workplace culture that supports
|
|
flexibility. Such a culture, they argue, would enable working parents to
|
|
better meet the responsibilities of their jobs as they care for and
|
|
build strong relationships with their children.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Schneider, Barbara, Michigan State Univ, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1054-8289},
|
|
EISSN = {1550-1558},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT; EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES; ACADEMIC-ACHIEVEMENT;
|
|
AFRICAN-AMERICAN; METAANALYSIS; PATHWAYS; WORK; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Health Policy \& Services; Social Sciences,
|
|
Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {97},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000296020800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000616286600060,
|
|
Author = {Kovach, Kevin A. and Reid, Kathy and Grandmont, Jene and Jones, Danielle
|
|
and Wood, Julie and Schoof, Bellinda},
|
|
Title = {How Engaged Are Family Physicians in Addressing the Social Determinants
|
|
of Health? A Survey Supporting the American Academy of Family
|
|
Physician's Health Equity Environmental Scan},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH EQUITY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {3},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {449-457},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: Public health leaders have advocated for clinical and
|
|
population-based interventions to address the social determinants of
|
|
health (SDoH). The American Academy of Family Physicians has worked to
|
|
support family physicians with addressing the SDoH. However, the extent
|
|
that family physicians are engaged and the factors that influence this
|
|
are unknown. Methods: A survey was used to identify actions family
|
|
physicians had taken to address the SDoH and perceived barriers.
|
|
Physician and community characteristics were linked. Ordinal logistic
|
|
regression was used to identify factors associated with engagement in
|
|
clinical and population-based actions, separately. Results: There were
|
|
434 (8.7\%) responses. Among respondents, 81.1\% were engaged in at
|
|
least one clinical action, and 43.3\% were engaged in at least one
|
|
population-based action. Time (80.0\%) and staffing (64.5\%) were the
|
|
most common barriers. Physician experience was associated with higher
|
|
levels of clinical engagement, lower median household income was
|
|
associated with higher levels of population-based engagement, and
|
|
working for a federally qualified health center (FQHC) was associated
|
|
with both. Conclusions: The study provides preliminary information
|
|
suggesting that family physicians are engaged in addressing the SDoH
|
|
through clinical and population-based actions. Newer family physicians
|
|
and those working in FQHCs may be good targets for piloting clinical
|
|
actions to address SDoH and family physician advocates may be more
|
|
likely to come from an FQHC or in a lower socioeconomic neighborhood.
|
|
The study also raises questions about the value family physicians
|
|
serving disadvantaged communities place on clinical interventions to
|
|
address the SDoH.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kovach, KA (Corresponding Author), Amer Acad Family Phys, 11400 Tomahawk Creek Pkwy, Leawood, KS 66211 USA.
|
|
Kovach, Kevin A.; Reid, Kathy; Jones, Danielle; Wood, Julie; Schoof, Bellinda, Amer Acad Family Phys, 11400 Tomahawk Creek Pkwy, Leawood, KS 66211 USA.
|
|
Grandmont, Jene, Amer Acad Family Phys, HealthLandscape, Cincinnati, OH USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1089/heq.2019.0022},
|
|
EISSN = {2473-1242},
|
|
Keywords = {social determinants of health; family physician; health equity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COMMUNITY-VITAL-SIGNS; PRIMARY-CARE; FRAMEWORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {kkovach@aafp.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kovach, Kevin/Y-1110-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jones PhD MPH, Danielle D/0000-0002-2526-9861},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000616286600060},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000318944600001,
|
|
Author = {Purtell, Kelly M. and McLoyd, Vonnie C.},
|
|
Title = {Parents' Participation in a Work-Based Anti-Poverty Program Can Enhance
|
|
Their Children's Future Orientation: Understanding Pathways of Influence},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF YOUTH AND ADOLESCENCE},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {777-791},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Planning and preparing for life after high school is a central
|
|
developmental task of American adolescents, and may be even more
|
|
critical for low-income youth who are less likely to attend a four year
|
|
college. This study investigates factors that led to the effects of the
|
|
New Hope Project, a work-based, anti-poverty program directed at parents
|
|
on youths' career-related thoughts and planning. The New Hope project
|
|
was implemented in Milwaukee, WI, during the mid-1990s. 745 families
|
|
participated (52 \% male children; 56 \% African American; 30 \% Latino,
|
|
and 15 \% White non-Hispanic) and half were randomly selected to receive
|
|
New Hope benefits, which included earnings supplements, job search
|
|
assistance, and child and health care subsidies for 3 years.
|
|
Importantly, effects on youths' future orientation were found 8 years
|
|
after the program began (5 years after benefits ended). The present
|
|
study investigates what factors sustained these positive impacts over
|
|
time. Results indicate that parental perceptions of reading performance
|
|
mediate the effects of New Hope on youths' cynicism about work.
|
|
Additionally, parental perceptions of reading performance and youths'
|
|
educational expectations mediate the effects of New Hope on boys'
|
|
pessimism about future employment. These findings highlight the
|
|
importance of youths' educational development to their career-related
|
|
thoughts and planning.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Purtell, KM (Corresponding Author), Univ Texas Austin, Populat Res Ctr, 1 Univ Stn,A2702, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
|
|
Purtell, Kelly M., Univ Texas Austin, Populat Res Ctr, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
|
|
McLoyd, Vonnie C., Univ Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10964-012-9802-7},
|
|
ISSN = {0047-2891},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-6601},
|
|
Keywords = {Future orientation; Welfare; Poverty; Reading skills; Adolescence},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PERCEIVED BARRIERS; LOW-INCOME; ADOLESCENTS; EXPECTATIONS; ASPIRATIONS;
|
|
POVERTY; FAMILY; EMPLOYMENT; MEDIATION; SUPPORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental},
|
|
Author-Email = {kpurtell@prc.utexas.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Purtell, Kelly/0000-0002-7744-7543},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {43},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000318944600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000398503700001,
|
|
Author = {Bangert, Mathieu and Molyneux, David H. and Lindsay, Steve W. and
|
|
Fitzpatrick, Christopher and Engels, Dirk},
|
|
Title = {The cross-cutting contribution of the end of neglected tropical diseases
|
|
to the sustainable development goals},
|
|
Journal = {INFECTIOUS DISEASES OF POVERTY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Month = {APR 4},
|
|
Abstract = {The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) call for an integrated
|
|
response, the kind that has defined Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs)
|
|
efforts in the past decade.
|
|
NTD interventions have the greatest relevance for SDG3, the health goal,
|
|
where the focus on equity, and its commitment to reaching people in need
|
|
of health services, wherever they may live and whatever their
|
|
circumstances, is fundamentally aligned with the target of Universal
|
|
Health Coverage. NTD interventions, however, also affect and are
|
|
affected by many of the other development areas covered under the 2030
|
|
Agenda. Strategies such as mass drug administration or the programmatic
|
|
integration of NTD and WASH activities (SDG6) are driven by effective
|
|
global partnerships (SDG17). Intervention against the NTDs can also have
|
|
an impact on poverty (SDG1) and hunger (SDG2), can improve education
|
|
(SDG4), work and economic growth (SDG8), thereby reducing inequalities
|
|
(SDG10). The community-led distribution of donated medicines to more
|
|
than 1 billion people reinforces women's empowerment (SDG5), logistics
|
|
infrastructure (SDG9) and non-discrimination against disability (SDG16).
|
|
Interventions to curb mosquito-borne NTDs contribute to the goals of
|
|
urban sustainability (SDG11) and resilience to climate change (SDG13),
|
|
while the safe use of insecticides supports the goal of sustainable
|
|
ecosystems (SDG15). Although indirectly, interventions to control
|
|
waterand animal-related NTDs can facilitate the goals of small-scale
|
|
fishing (SDG14) and sustainable hydroelectricity and biofuels (SDG7).
|
|
NTDs proliferate in less developed areas in countries across the income
|
|
spectrum, areas where large numbers of people have little or no access
|
|
to adequate health care, clean water, sanitation, housing, education,
|
|
transport and information. This scoping review assesses how in this
|
|
context, ending the epidemic of the NTDs can impact and improve our
|
|
prospects of attaining the SDGs.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bangert, M (Corresponding Author), WHO, Dept Control Neglected Trop Dis, 20 Ave Appia, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Bangert, Mathieu; Fitzpatrick, Christopher; Engels, Dirk, WHO, Dept Control Neglected Trop Dis, 20 Ave Appia, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Molyneux, David H., Univ Liverpool Liverpool Sch Trop Med, Dept Parasitol, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Lindsay, Steve W., Univ Durham, Dept Biosci, Durham, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s40249-017-0288-0},
|
|
Article-Number = {73},
|
|
ISSN = {2095-5162},
|
|
EISSN = {2049-9957},
|
|
Keywords = {Neglected tropical diseases; Sustainable development goals},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOIL-TRANSMITTED HELMINTHS; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; CHAGAS-DISEASE; LYMPHATIC
|
|
FILARIASIS; LATIN-AMERICA; UROGENITAL SCHISTOSOMIASIS; GENITAL
|
|
SCHISTOSOMIASIS; INSECTICIDE RESISTANCE; SOCIOECONOMIC ASPECTS;
|
|
TREATMENT PROGRAMS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Infectious Diseases; Parasitology; Tropical Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {bangertm@who.int},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bangert, Mathieu/K-7233-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bangert, Mathieu/0000-0003-1320-8145
|
|
Fitzpatrick, Christopher/0000-0002-3067-8328
|
|
Lindsay, Steve/0000-0002-3461-9050},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {199},
|
|
Times-Cited = {93},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {74},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000398503700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000313299500015,
|
|
Author = {Roll, John M. and Kennedy, Jae and Tran, Melanie and Howell, Donelle},
|
|
Title = {Disparities in Unmet Need for Mental Health Services in the United
|
|
States, 1997-2010},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {80-82},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: This study estimated unmet need for mental health services,
|
|
identified population risk factors related to unmet need, and
|
|
established baseline data to assess the impact of the Affordable Care
|
|
Act (ACA) and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act.
|
|
Methods: National Health Interview Survey data (1997-2010) were
|
|
analyzed. Results: Unmet need increased from 4.3 million in 1997 to 7.2
|
|
million in 2010. Rates in 2010 were about five times higher for
|
|
uninsured than for privately insured persons. In a multivariate logistic
|
|
model, likelihood was higher among children (age two to 17), working-age
|
|
adults (age 18-64), women, uninsured persons, persons with low incomes,
|
|
in fair or poor health, and with chronic conditions. Conclusions: Unmet
|
|
need is widespread, particularly among the uninsured. Expansion of
|
|
coverage under the ACA, in conjunction with federal parity, should
|
|
improve access, but ongoing monitoring of access is a research and
|
|
policy priority. (Psychiatric Services 64:80-82, 2013; doi:
|
|
10.1176/appi.ps.201200071)},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Roll, JM (Corresponding Author), Washington State Univ, Div Hlth Sci, POB 1495, Spokane, WA 99210 USA.
|
|
Roll, John M., Washington State Univ, Div Hlth Sci, Spokane, WA 99210 USA.
|
|
Kennedy, Jae, Washington State Univ, Dept Hlth Policy \& Adm, Spokane, WA 99210 USA.
|
|
Howell, Donelle, Washington State Univ, Coll Nursing, Spokane, WA 99210 USA.
|
|
Tran, Melanie, Univ Colorado, Dept Hlth \& Behav Sci, Denver, CO 80202 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1176/appi.ps.201200071},
|
|
ISSN = {1075-2730},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MEDICAL-CARE; EXCESS MORTALITY; INTERVIEW SURVEY; ACCESS; SCHIZOPHRENIA;
|
|
DISORDERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health;
|
|
Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {johnroll@wsu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kennedy, James/A-5868-2008},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kennedy, James/0000-0002-4521-3590},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {15},
|
|
Times-Cited = {91},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000313299500015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001001781700001,
|
|
Author = {Ameh, Emmanuel A.},
|
|
Title = {Realigning Global Health Realities Towards Children's Surgery: Progress
|
|
and Possibilities},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC SURGERY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {58},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {1039-1047},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite the high population of children, increasing surgical disease
|
|
burden and shortage of pediatric surgeons, as well as limited
|
|
infrastructure, children's surgical care in low-and middle-income
|
|
countries (LMICs) has been neglected for decades. This has contributed
|
|
to unacceptably high morbidity and mortality, long term disabilities and
|
|
economic loss to families. The work of the global initiative for
|
|
children's surgery (GICS) has raised the profile and visibility of
|
|
children's surgery in the global health space. This has been achieved a
|
|
philosophy of inclusiveness, LMIC participation, focus on LMIC needs and
|
|
high income country (HIC) support, and driven by implementation to
|
|
change on the ground situations. Children's operating rooms are being
|
|
installed to strengthen infrastructure and children's surgery is being
|
|
gradually included in national surgical plans to provide the policy
|
|
framework to support children's surgical care. In Nigeria, pediatric
|
|
surgery workforce has increased from 35 in 2003 to 127 in 2002, but the
|
|
density remains low at 0.14 per 100,000 population <15 years. Education
|
|
and training have been strengthened with the publication of a pediatric
|
|
surgery textbook for Africa and creation of a Pan Africa pediatric
|
|
surgery e-learning platform. However, financing children's surgery in
|
|
LMICs remains a barrier as many families are at risk of catastrophic
|
|
healthcare expenditure. The success of these efforts provides
|
|
encouraging examples of what can be collectively achieve by appropriate
|
|
and mutually beneficial global north-south collaborations. Pediatric
|
|
surgeons need to commit their time, knowledge and skills, as well as
|
|
experience and voices to strengthen children's surgery globally to
|
|
impact more lives, for the overall good of more.(c) 2023 Elsevier Inc.
|
|
All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ameh, EA (Corresponding Author), Natl Hosp, Dept Surg, Div Pediat Surg, POB 187, Garki 900001, Abuja, Nigeria.
|
|
Ameh, Emmanuel A., Natl Hosp, Dept Surg, Div Pediat Surg, POB 187, Garki 900001, Abuja, Nigeria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2023.02.006},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-3468},
|
|
EISSN = {1531-5037},
|
|
Keywords = {Children; Surgery; Workforce; Infrastructure; Global health; Progress},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics; Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {eaameh@yahoo.co.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001001781700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000467448000025,
|
|
Author = {Mogre, Victor and Johnson, Natalie A. and Tzelepis, Flora and Paul,
|
|
Christine},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to diabetic self-care: A qualitative study of patients' and
|
|
healthcare providers' perspectives},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {11-12},
|
|
Pages = {2296-2308},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Aims and objectives To explore patient and healthcare provider (HCP)
|
|
perspectives about patients' barriers to the performance of diabetic
|
|
self-care behaviours in Ghana. Background Sub-Saharan African urban
|
|
populations are increasingly affected by type 2 diabetes due to
|
|
nutrition transition, sedentary lifestyles and ageing. Diabetic
|
|
self-care is critical to improving clinical outcomes. However, little is
|
|
known about barriers to diabetic self-care (diet, exercise, medication
|
|
taking, self-monitoring of blood glucose and foot care) in sub-Saharan
|
|
Africa. Design Qualitative study that followed the Consolidated Criteria
|
|
for Reporting Qualitative Research (COREQ) guidelines. Methods
|
|
Semi-structured interviews were conducted among 23 people living with
|
|
type 2 diabetes and 14 HCPs recruited from the diabetes clinics of three
|
|
hospitals in Tamale, Ghana. Interviews were audiotaped and transcribed
|
|
verbatim. The constant comparative method of data analysis was used and
|
|
identified themes classified according to constructs of the theory of
|
|
planned behaviour (TPB): attitudes/behavioural beliefs, subjective norms
|
|
and perceived behavioural control. Results Barriers relating to
|
|
attitudes included misconceptions that diabetes was caused by spiritual
|
|
forces or curses, use of herbal medicines, intentional nonadherence,
|
|
difficulty changing old habits, and feeling or lacking motivation to
|
|
exercise. Barriers relating to subjective norms were inadequate family
|
|
support, social stigma (usually by spouses and other members of the
|
|
community) and cultural beliefs. Perceived behavioural control barriers
|
|
were poor income levels, lack of glucometers, busy work schedules, long
|
|
distance to the hospital and inadequate access to variety of foods due
|
|
to erratic supply of foods or seasonality. Conclusions Both patients and
|
|
HCPs discussed similar barriers and those relating to attitude and
|
|
behavioural control were commonly discussed. Relevance to Clinical
|
|
Practice Interventions to improve adherence to diabetic self-care should
|
|
focus on helping persons with diabetes develop favourable attitudes and
|
|
how to overcome behavioural control barriers. Such interventions should
|
|
have both individualised and community-wide approaches.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mogre, V (Corresponding Author), Univ Dev Studies, Sch Med \& Hlth Sci, Dept Hlth Profess Educ \& Innovat Learning, Tamale, Ghana.
|
|
Mogre, Victor, Univ Dev Studies, Sch Med \& Hlth Sci, Dept Hlth Profess Educ \& Innovat Learning, Tamale, Ghana.
|
|
Mogre, Victor; Johnson, Natalie A.; Tzelepis, Flora; Paul, Christine, Univ Newcastle, Sch Med \& Publ Hlth, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Johnson, Natalie A.; Tzelepis, Flora; Paul, Christine, Hunter Med Res Inst, New Lambton, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Tzelepis, Flora, Hunter New England Local Hlth Dist, Hunter New England Populat Hlth, Wallsend, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/jocn.14835},
|
|
ISSN = {0962-1067},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2702},
|
|
Keywords = {barriers; diabetic patients; Ghana; qualitative; self-care; sub-Saharan
|
|
Africa},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; BLOOD-GLUCOSE; MANAGEMENT; EXERCISE; ADHERENCE;
|
|
IMPROVEMENTS; ASSOCIATION; GUIDELINES; OUTCOMES; SUPPORT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {vmogre@uds.edu.gh},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {TZELEPIS, FLORA/GLN-2873-2022
|
|
Mogre, Victor/H-2883-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {TZELEPIS, FLORA/0000-0002-9914-2732
|
|
Mogre, Victor/0000-0003-0230-5783},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {65},
|
|
Times-Cited = {47},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {37},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000467448000025},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000384644200005,
|
|
Author = {Nosratnejad, Shirin and Rashidian, Arash and Mehrara, Mohsen and Jafari,
|
|
Nahid and Moeeni, Maryam and Babamohamadi, Hassan},
|
|
Title = {Factors Influencing Basic and Complementary Health Insurance Purchasing
|
|
Decisions in Iran: Analysis of Data From a National Survey},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD MEDICAL \& HEALTH POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {179-196},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Expanding the coverage of health-care insurance is a tool toward
|
|
achieving universal health coverage and reducing financial barriers to
|
|
care. Therefore, understanding the factors that affect the expansion of
|
|
health insurance is important for policymakers. The study aimed at
|
|
assessing the variables that affected the decisions to purchase health
|
|
insurance in Iran. We analyzed data gathered from a national survey of
|
|
health-care utilization in Iran that covered over 23,000 households. We
|
|
identified subsets of the data that represented purchasing decisions.
|
|
Increase in age, education, income, wealth, and the opportunity of
|
|
working in the governmental sector increased the probability of
|
|
purchasing BHI and CHI coverage. Past utilization of inpatient and
|
|
outpatient care increased the probability of purchasing BHI and CHI,
|
|
respectively. Evidence of adverse selection and wide socioeconomic
|
|
differences in insurance purchase decisions were observed throughout the
|
|
study. However, most significant factors were not easily influenced by
|
|
policy decisions. The findings suggest that it might be very difficult
|
|
to achieve universal insurance coverage unless nation-wide nonvoluntary
|
|
policies are implemented.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rashidian, A (Corresponding Author), Tehran Univ Med Sci Hlth, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Management \& Econ, Tehran, Iran.
|
|
Nosratnejad, Shirin, Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Tabriz Hlth Serv Management Res Ctr, Sch Management \& Med Informat, Dept Hlth Serv Management,Iranian Ctr Excellence, Tabriz, Iran.
|
|
Rashidian, Arash, Tehran Univ Med Sci Hlth, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Management \& Econ, Tehran, Iran.
|
|
Mehrara, Mohsen, Univ Tehran, Sch Econ, Dept Econ, Tehran, Iran.
|
|
Jafari, Nahid, Minist Hlth \& Med Educ, Hlth Network Dev Ctr, Tehran, Iran.
|
|
Moeeni, Maryam, Isfahan Univ Med Sci, Hlth Management \& Econ Res Ctr, Esfahan, Iran.
|
|
Babamohamadi, Hassan, Semnan Univ Med Sci, Sch Nursing \& Allied Hlth, Dept Nursing, Semnan, Iran.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/wmh3.187},
|
|
ISSN = {1948-4682},
|
|
Keywords = {basic health insurance; complementary health insurance; Iran; national
|
|
survey},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; UNIVERSAL HEALTH; COVERAGE; DEMAND; SECTOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {arashidian@tums.ac.ir},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Moeeni, Maryam/K-3589-2016
|
|
Moeeni, Maryam/I-1344-2018
|
|
Jafari, Nahid/O-4556-2019
|
|
mehrara, mohsen/Y-3963-2019
|
|
Rashidian, Arash/E-5061-2011
|
|
Babamohamadi, Hassan/J-7002-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Moeeni, Maryam/0000-0002-4525-6574
|
|
Jafari, Nahid/0000-0002-5936-2191
|
|
Babamohamadi, Hassan/0000-0003-3786-7348
|
|
Rashidian, Arash/0000-0002-4005-5183},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000384644200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000701061400001,
|
|
Author = {Al-Soleiti, Majd and Abu Adi, Mahmoud and Nashwan, Ayat and Rafla-Yuan,
|
|
Eric},
|
|
Title = {Barriers and opportunities for refugee mental health services: clinician
|
|
recommendations from Jordan},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL MENTAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Month = {SEP 28},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Jordan has received more than three million refugees from
|
|
bordering countries during times of conflict, including over 600 000
|
|
Syrian refugees between 2011 and 2021. Amidst this humanitarian crisis,
|
|
a new mental health system for Syrian refugees has developed in Jordan,
|
|
with most clinical services administered through non-governmental
|
|
organizations. Prior studies have identified increased risk of
|
|
psychiatric disorders in refugee populations and significant barriers
|
|
for Syrian refugees seeking mental health treatment, but few have
|
|
reviewed the organization or ability of local systems to meet the needs
|
|
of this refugee population.
|
|
Methods Qualitative interviews of mental health professionals working
|
|
with refugees in Jordan were conducted and thematically analyzed to
|
|
assess efficacy and organizational dynamics.
|
|
Results Interviewees described barriers to care inherent in many refugee
|
|
settings, including financial limitations, shortages of mental health
|
|
professionals, disparate geographic accessibility, stigma, and limited
|
|
or absent screening protocols. Additional barriers not previously
|
|
described in Jordan were identified, including clinician burnout,
|
|
organizational metrics restricting services, insufficient visibility of
|
|
services, and security restrictions. Advantages of the Jordanian system
|
|
were also identified, including a receptive sociopolitical response
|
|
fostering coordination and collaboration, open-door policies for
|
|
accessing care, the presence of community and grassroots approaches, and
|
|
improvements to health care infrastructure benefiting the local
|
|
populace.
|
|
Conclusions These findings highlight opportunities and pitfalls for
|
|
program development in Jordan and other middle- and low-income
|
|
countries. Leveraging clinician input can promote health system efficacy
|
|
and improve mental health outcomes for refugee patients.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rafla-Yuan, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Psychiat, San Diego, CA 92103 USA.
|
|
Al-Soleiti, Majd, Univ Jordan, Sch Med, Amman, Jordan.
|
|
Abu Adi, Mahmoud, CIVIC Social Enterprise, Amman, Jordan.
|
|
Nashwan, Ayat, Yarmouk Univ, Dept Sociol \& Social Work, Irbid, Jordan.
|
|
Rafla-Yuan, Eric, Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Psychiat, San Diego, CA 92103 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/gmh.2021.36},
|
|
Article-Number = {e38},
|
|
ISSN = {2054-4251},
|
|
Keywords = {Refugee mental health; refugee camps; conflict; displacement; health
|
|
policy; barriers to care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SYRIAN REFUGEES; CARE; ACCESS; NEEDS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {eraflayuan@ucsd.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rafla-Yuan, Eric/HSA-6399-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rafla-Yuan, Eric/0000-0002-7505-0550
|
|
Al-Soleiti, Majd/0000-0002-0680-0549},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000701061400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000453092500006,
|
|
Author = {Crooks, Roderic N.},
|
|
Title = {Times Thirty: Access, Maintenance, and Justice},
|
|
Journal = {SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY \& HUMAN VALUES},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {118-142},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Based on an ethnographic project in a public high school in a low-income
|
|
neighborhood in South Los Angeles, this paper argues that access to
|
|
information and communication technologies (ICTs) cannot be taken as
|
|
helpful or empowering on its own terms; instead, concerns about justice
|
|
must be accounted for by the local communities technology is meant to
|
|
benefit. This paper juxtaposes the concept of technological access with
|
|
recent work in feminist science and technology studies (STS) on
|
|
infrastructure, maintenance, and ethics. In contrast to popular
|
|
descriptions of ICTs as emancipatory and transformative, in the setting
|
|
of an urban school, access produced extensive demands for attention,
|
|
time, and information. This paper focuses on the labor of a group of
|
|
student workers, Student Technology Leaders (STLs), and how they became
|
|
responsible for the significant amount of repair and maintenance work
|
|
involved in keeping hundreds of new computing devices available for use.
|
|
An expanded process of accounting can more realistically frame issues of
|
|
justice and its relationship to ICTs. I use a town hall meeting held
|
|
with these students as an example of a processual vision of justice, one
|
|
that encourages the beneficiaries of technological access to evaluate
|
|
costs, benefits, and ethical concerns together.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Crooks, RN (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Informat, 5019 Donald Bren Hall, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.
|
|
Crooks, Roderic N., Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Informat, 5019 Donald Bren Hall, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0162243918783053},
|
|
ISSN = {0162-2439},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-8251},
|
|
Keywords = {engagement; intervention; ethics; justice; inequality; protest;
|
|
maintenance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DIGITAL DIVIDE; CARE; ACCOUNTABILITY; OBJECTS; REPAIR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Issues},
|
|
Author-Email = {crooksr@uci.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Crooks, Roderic/0000-0001-7514-7021},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000453092500006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000302479900001,
|
|
Author = {Esteves, Roberto J. F.},
|
|
Title = {The quest for equity in Latin America: a comparative analysis of the
|
|
health care reforms in Brazil and Colombia},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Month = {FEB 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: Brazil and Colombia have pursued extensive reforms of
|
|
their health care systems in the last couple of decades. The purported
|
|
goals of such reforms were to improve access, increase efficiency and
|
|
reduce health inequities. Notwithstanding their common goals, each
|
|
country sought a very different pathway to achieve them. While Brazil
|
|
attempted to reestablish a greater level of State control through a
|
|
public national health system, Colombia embraced market competition
|
|
under an employer-based social insurance scheme. This work thus aims to
|
|
shed some light onto why they pursued divergent strategies and what that
|
|
has meant in terms of health outcomes.
|
|
Methods: A critical review of the literature concerning equity
|
|
frameworks, as well as the health care reforms in Brazil and Colombia
|
|
was conducted. Then, the shortfall inequality values of crude mortality
|
|
rate, infant mortality rate, under-five mortality rate, and life
|
|
expectancy for the period 1960-2005 were calculated for both countries.
|
|
Subsequently, bivariate and multivariate linear regression analyses were
|
|
performed and controlled for possibly confounding factors.
|
|
Results: When controlling for the underlying historical time trend, both
|
|
countries appear to have experienced a deceleration of the pace of
|
|
improvements in the years following the reforms, for all the variables
|
|
analyzed. In the case of Colombia, some of the previous gains in
|
|
under-five mortality rate and crude mortality rate were, in fact,
|
|
reversed.
|
|
Conclusions: Neither reform seems to have had a decisive positive impact
|
|
on the health outcomes analyzed for the defined time period of this
|
|
research. This, in turn, may be a consequence of both internal
|
|
characteristics of the respective reforms and external factors beyond
|
|
the direct control of health reformers. Among the internal
|
|
characteristics: underfunding, unbridled decentralization and
|
|
inequitable access to care seem to have been the main constraints.
|
|
Conversely, international economic adversities, high levels of rural and
|
|
urban violence, along with entrenched income inequalities seem to have
|
|
accounted for the highest burden among external factors.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Esteves, RJF (Corresponding Author), Esplanada Minist, Secretariat Labor \& Educ Management Hlth SGTES, Minist Hlth Brazil, Bloco G,Ed Sede,Sala 704, BR-70680350 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
|
|
Esplanada Minist, Secretariat Labor \& Educ Management Hlth SGTES, Minist Hlth Brazil, BR-70680350 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1475-9276-11-6},
|
|
Article-Number = {6},
|
|
ISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {Brazil; Colombia; health care reform; health care system; equity; health
|
|
inequities; comparative analysis; health policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INEQUALITIES; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {resteves@mail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000302479900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000410904700023,
|
|
Author = {Kazis, Lewis E. and Marino, Molly and Ni, Pengsheng and Bori, Marina
|
|
Soley and Amaya, Flor and Dore, Emily and Ryan, Colleen M. and
|
|
Schneider, Jeff C. and Shie, Vivian and Acton, Amy and Jette, Alan M.},
|
|
Title = {Development of the life impact burn recovery evaluation (LIBRE) profile:
|
|
assessing burn survivors' social participation},
|
|
Journal = {QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Pages = {2851-2866},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Measuring the impact burn injuries have on social participation is
|
|
integral to understanding and improving survivors' quality of life, yet
|
|
there are no existing instruments that comprehensively measure the
|
|
social participation of burn survivors. This project aimed to develop
|
|
the Life Impact Burn Recovery Evaluation Profile (LIBRE), a
|
|
patient-reported multidimensional assessment for understanding the
|
|
social participation after burn injuries.
|
|
192 questions representing multiple social participation areas were
|
|
administered to a convenience sample of 601 burn survivors. Exploratory
|
|
factor analysis and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) were used to
|
|
identify the underlying structure of the data. Using item response
|
|
theory methods, a Graded Response Model was applied for each identified
|
|
sub-domain. The resultant multidimensional LIBRE Profile can be
|
|
administered via Computerized Adaptive Testing (CAT) or fixed short
|
|
forms.
|
|
The study sample included 54.7\% women with a mean age of 44.6 (SD 15.9)
|
|
years. The average time since burn injury was 15.4 years (0-74 years)
|
|
and the average total body surface area burned was 40\% (1-97\%). The
|
|
CFA indicated acceptable fit statistics (CFI range 0.913-0.977, TLI
|
|
range 0.904-0.974, RMSEA range 0.06-0.096). The six unidimensional
|
|
scales were named: relationships with family and friends, social
|
|
interactions, social activities, work and employment, romantic
|
|
relationships, and sexual relationships. The marginal reliability of the
|
|
full item bank and CATs ranged from 0.84 to 0.93, with ceiling effects
|
|
less than 15\% for all scales.
|
|
The LIBRE Profile is a promising new measure of social participation
|
|
following a burn injury that enables burn survivors and their care
|
|
providers to measure social participation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Marino, M (Corresponding Author), Boston Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Hlth \& Disabil Res Inst, 715 Albany St,T5W, Boston, MA 02118 USA.
|
|
Kazis, Lewis E.; Bori, Marina Soley; Amaya, Flor; Dore, Emily, Boston Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, CAPP, Dept Hlth Law Policy \& Management, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Marino, Molly; Ni, Pengsheng; Jette, Alan M., Boston Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Hlth \& Disabil Res Inst, 715 Albany St,T5W, Boston, MA 02118 USA.
|
|
Ryan, Colleen M., Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Surg, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
|
|
Ryan, Colleen M.; Schneider, Jeff C., Harvard Med Sch, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Ryan, Colleen M., Shriners Hosp Children Boston, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Schneider, Jeff C.; Shie, Vivian, Spaulding Rehabil Hosp, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Acton, Amy, Phoenix Soc Burn Survivors, Grand Rapids, MI USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11136-017-1588-3},
|
|
ISSN = {0962-9343},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-2649},
|
|
Keywords = {Item response theory; Computerized adaptive test; Burns; Social
|
|
reintegration},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ITEM RESPONSE THEORY; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; OUTCOMES MEASUREMENT;
|
|
HEALTH-STATUS; INJURY; ADJUSTMENT; RETURN; WORK; BARRIERS; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services; Public,
|
|
Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {memarino@bu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baldissera, Annalisa/AHD-6334-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Marino, Molly/0000-0002-9978-3038
|
|
Soley-Bori, Marina/0000-0002-8348-3575
|
|
Ryan, Colleen/0000-0002-6455-936X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {28},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000410904700023},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000346051500025,
|
|
Author = {Rehman, Shafiq Ur and Ahmed, Jamil and Bahadur, Sher and Ferdoos, Amber
|
|
and Shahab, Muhammad and Masud, Nazish},
|
|
Title = {Exploring operational barriers encountered by community midwives when
|
|
delivering services in two provinces of Pakistan: A qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {MIDWIFERY},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {177-183},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: to explore barriers experienced by community midwives (CMWs)
|
|
when delivering services, from their own and their managers
|
|
perspectives, at provincial and district level in the context of
|
|
organisational factors, and to determine other factors linked with the
|
|
poor performance of CMWs in the delivery of maternal, neonatal and child
|
|
health (MNCH)-related services within their communities.
|
|
Design: qualitative study design using in-depth interviews (IDIs) and
|
|
focus group discussions (FGDs).
|
|
Setting: two districts in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab provinces in
|
|
Pakistan.
|
|
Participants.: 41 participants were interviewed in depth; they included
|
|
CMWs, lady health supervisors and managerial staff of the MNCH
|
|
programme.
|
|
Measurements: participants were interviewed about administrative issues
|
|
including Financial and policy areas, training and deployment in the
|
|
community, functioning in the community, and supervision and referral
|
|
for emergency cases.
|
|
Findings: CMWs reported financial constraints, training needs and
|
|
difficulty with building relationships in the community. They required
|
|
support in terms of logistics, essential supplies, and mechanisms for
|
|
referral of complicated cases to higher-level health facilities.
|
|
Conclusions: CMWs working in developing countries face many challenges;
|
|
starting from their training. deployment in the field and delivery of
|
|
services in their respective communities. Facilitating their work and
|
|
efforts through improved programming of the CMW's services can overcome
|
|
these challenges.
|
|
Implications for practice: the MNCH programme, provincial government and
|
|
other stakeholders need to take ownership of the CMW programme and
|
|
implement it comprehensively. Long-term adequate resource allocation is
|
|
needed to sustain the programme so that improvements in maternal and
|
|
child health are visible. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ahmed, J (Corresponding Author), B-54 Liaquat Town, Tandojam, Sindh, Pakistan.
|
|
Ahmed, Jamil, Hlth Serv Acad, Islamabad, Pakistan.
|
|
Ferdoos, Amber, Int Islamic Univ Islamabad, Islamabad, Pakistan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.midw.2014.08.006},
|
|
ISSN = {0266-6138},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-3099},
|
|
Keywords = {Community; Midwives; Maternal; Operational; Barriers; Qualitative},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MATERNAL MORTALITY; HEALTH-CARE; INTERVENTIONS; SURVIVAL; SALARIES;
|
|
INCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {jamil.ahmed.dr@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Shahab, Muhammad/F-9132-2015
|
|
Ahmed, Jamil/GLS-0443-2022
|
|
Masud, Nazish/AAB-6988-2020
|
|
Ahmed, Jamil/T-1426-2019
|
|
Masud, Nazish/ISA-4746-2023},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ahmed, Jamil/0000-0002-3635-7912
|
|
Masud, Nazish/0000-0003-2366-9770
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000346051500025},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000673715500001,
|
|
Author = {Borger, Christine and Weinfield, Nancy S. and Paolicelli, Courtney and
|
|
Sun, Brenda and May, Laurie},
|
|
Title = {Prenatal and Postnatal Experiences Predict Breastfeeding Patterns in the
|
|
WIC Infant and Toddler Feeding Practices Study-2},
|
|
Journal = {BREASTFEEDING MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {869-877},
|
|
Month = {NOV 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To examine pre- and postnatal experiential factors associated
|
|
with desirable breastfeeding patterns in a nationally representative
|
|
population of low-income women who prenatally enrolled in the Special
|
|
Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)
|
|
and initiated breastfeeding. Materials and Methods: Using data from the
|
|
longitudinal WIC Infant and Toddler Feeding Practices Study-2,
|
|
multivariable, hierarchical logistic regression analyses identified
|
|
prenatal and postnatal experiential factors associated with three
|
|
breastfeeding patterns: (1) breastfeeding at 6 months, (2) breastfeeding
|
|
at 1 year, and (3) breastfeeding at 1 year without introducing formula
|
|
through age 6 months. Results: After controlling for covariates, one
|
|
prenatal factor, breastfeeding intentions, and one postnatal factor,
|
|
receipt of a doctor's recommendation to breastfeed, raised the odds of
|
|
exhibiting the patterns analyzed. Another postnatal factor, returning to
|
|
full-time employment before infant age 3 months, lowered the odds of
|
|
exhibiting the patterns. Prior WIC participation significantly increased
|
|
the odds of breastfeeding at 1 year, while postnatal employment before
|
|
infant age 3 months significantly decreased the odds of exhibiting this
|
|
pattern. Conclusions: Health care providers and those working in public
|
|
health programs, including WIC, play an important role in helping
|
|
low-income women mitigate shorter breastfeeding durations. Their efforts
|
|
should continue focusing on bolstering women's prenatal breastfeeding
|
|
intentions, reducing structural barriers to breastfeeding in the early
|
|
postnatal period, particularly among those women returning to work, and
|
|
connecting low-income families with WIC if they are not already enrolled
|
|
in the program. This study is registered at clinicaltrials.gov as
|
|
Feeding My Baby-A National WIC Study, NCT02031978.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Borger, C (Corresponding Author), 1600 Res Blvd, Rockville, MD 20850 USA.
|
|
Borger, Christine; Sun, Brenda; May, Laurie, Westat Corp, Rockville, MD USA.
|
|
Weinfield, Nancy S., Kaiser Permanente Midatlant Permanente Res Inst, Rockville, MD USA.
|
|
Paolicelli, Courtney, USDA, Off Policy Support, Food \& Nutr Serv, Alexandria, VA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1089/bfm.2021.0054},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1556-8253},
|
|
EISSN = {1556-8342},
|
|
Keywords = {breastfeeding patterns; WIC participants; doctor's recommendation to
|
|
breastfeed},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DURATION; WOMEN; PARTICIPATION; NUTRITION; POSITION; CHILDREN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {christineborger@westat.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Weinfield, Nancy/0000-0002-1417-2271},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000673715500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000964889700010,
|
|
Author = {Severin, Marianne},
|
|
Title = {FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF SOMALILAND},
|
|
Journal = {AFRICAN DISABILITY RIGHTS YEARBOOK},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Pages = {202-228},
|
|
Abstract = {According to the World Bank (WB), the Federal Republic of Somalia
|
|
population is estimated in 2020 at a total of 15 893.13 inhabitants.
|
|
According to the 2020-2023 roadmap of the Ministry of the Promotion of
|
|
Women and Human Rights, the percentage of people with disabilities in
|
|
Somalia is over 15 per cent of the total population. The Federal
|
|
Republic of Somalia does not provide information on common forms of
|
|
disability; there are still no databases due to the lack of a census.
|
|
Somalia signed and ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights
|
|
of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) on 2 October 2018 and 6 August 2019
|
|
respectively. It did not sign and ratify the Optional Protocol, however.
|
|
The Federal Republic of Somalia has not submitted any report, although
|
|
it was due in September 2021. The reasons for the delay may be related
|
|
to the Covid-19 pandemic.
|
|
According to article 35 of the 2012 Constitution of Somalia,
|
|
international agreements apply directly in domestic courts, which is the
|
|
monist approach to international laws. The ratification of the CRPD
|
|
meant its incorporation into the legislation of Somalia; the Law N
|
|
degrees 134 creating the National Disability Agency (NDA) was
|
|
promulgated in December 2018 and the Disability Bill drafted in 2019.
|
|
The Constitution of Somalia contains provisions directly relating to
|
|
persons with disabilities. According article 11 there is an equality
|
|
between all citizens independently of their gender, religion (.)
|
|
disability. No person shall be discriminated against based on (.)
|
|
disability. In addition, the Constitution indirectly addresses
|
|
disabilities through its article 12 which states that it is the State's
|
|
responsibility to ensure that it does not violate rights through its
|
|
actions, and makes reasonable decisions to protect the rights of any
|
|
person from abuse by others. Furthermore, article 13 states that
|
|
everyone has the right to life, and article 27 provides for
|
|
socioeconomic rights such as a right to care. No one can be deprived of
|
|
urgent care whatever the reason, including the lack of economic means.
|
|
Somalia has numerous pieces of legislation that directly addresses
|
|
disability. The key ones are:
|
|
center dot Law 134 of 31 December 2018 creating the National Agency for
|
|
Persons with Disabilities which is `mandated under paragraph 5(2)(e) to
|
|
oversee the delivery of services, including social services for persons
|
|
with disabilities'.
|
|
center dot Article 2 of the Provisional Constitution sets out 14 grounds
|
|
of discrimination including disability.
|
|
center dot Article 27(5) recognises that persons with disabilities who
|
|
have long suffered from discrimination must have the necessary support
|
|
to realise their socio-economic rights.
|
|
center dot The Ministry of Women and Human Rights drafted a disability
|
|
law. This law is in its final phase of public consultation. Participants
|
|
in this consultation process included persons with disabilities,
|
|
representatives of civil society organisations and the Somali Bar
|
|
Association.
|
|
We did not find any case law in Somalia. However, the policies that
|
|
directly address persons with disabilities are: center dot Roadmap
|
|
2020-2023 - Persons with disabilities and disability rights in Somalia.
|
|
Following an audit on the implementation of a first roadmap, 2017-2019,
|
|
this programme develops new issues, not foreseen in the previous one.
|
|
center dot Development of a national social protection policy by the
|
|
Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs (18 July 2019). Its implementation
|
|
(17 September 2019) aimed at establishing an inclusive social protection
|
|
system that meets the needs of employable people with disabilities, to
|
|
combat poverty and social exclusion. Social service programmes are thus
|
|
planned and will consider existing policies, rights stipulated in the
|
|
Constitution and laws.
|
|
center dot Better protection and management of people with mental and
|
|
mental disabilities: a) In response to allegations of mistreatment of
|
|
these persons, the Government launches criminal investigations into the
|
|
private institutions in charge of these persons with disabilities. The
|
|
National Disability Agency will now be responsible for monitoring their
|
|
living conditions. b) Creation of a toll-free telephone number for
|
|
reporting abuse of persons with disabilities. c) Provision of legal
|
|
defense for persons with mental and mental disabilities, by the Penal
|
|
Code.
|
|
Other than ordinary courts or tribunals, the Federal Republic of Somalia
|
|
has an official body that specifically addresses the violation of the
|
|
rights of persons with disabilities; the National Disability Agency
|
|
whose role is to file a criminal complaint against any public and
|
|
private entity that violates the rights of people with disabilities.
|
|
Somalia has a National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). Its mandate
|
|
includes the protection of disability rights. The NHRC has a broad
|
|
mandate that includes monitoring the human rights situation in Somalia,
|
|
investigating human rights violations, including torture or cruel,
|
|
inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, and an advisory mission
|
|
to the Government on the integration of human rights into legislation
|
|
and policies. There are numerous organisations that represent and
|
|
advocate for the rights and welfare of persons with disabilities in
|
|
Somalia. These include Somali Union for the Blind (SUB), Somali
|
|
Disability Empowerment Organization (SODEN), SAFDI Somalia Association
|
|
Female Disability, Somali Women Development Centre (SWDC), Somali
|
|
National Association for the Deaf (SONAD). These organisations
|
|
contribute to the promotion of disability rights through
|
|
awareness-raising. To improve their efficiency, they need to organise
|
|
themselves in a national federation and improve their capacity through
|
|
training including on disability and financial subventions. In the
|
|
Federal Republic of Somalia, the Ministry of the Promotion of Women and
|
|
Human Rights is initiated a comprehensive process to allow Somalia to
|
|
overcome its delay in reporting to conventional bodies, due to the
|
|
country's protracted civil war. The Ministry for the Promotion of Women
|
|
and Human Rights and other line ministries are working on comprehensive
|
|
legislation and policies for the protection of people with mental
|
|
disabilities. The NDA (Law 134 of 31 December 2018) is responsible for
|
|
removing barriers faced by persons with disabilities, holding the
|
|
Government accountable for the protection of the rights of persons with
|
|
disabilities, and ensuring the effective participation of persons with
|
|
disabilities in all aspects of society; notably in the areas of
|
|
governance and development.
|
|
People with mental disabilities are very often victims of ill-treatment
|
|
in private and public institutions. In view of the increasing number of
|
|
allegations of ill-treatment, the State has launched criminal
|
|
investigations against these institutions. The NDA is now responsible
|
|
for monitoring the living conditions of these people with disabilities.
|
|
In addition, a free telephone number has been created to report any
|
|
mistreatment against them. Finally, persons with a mental disability now
|
|
have a specific legal defense under the Criminal Code. A person who
|
|
`does not possess the capacity for understanding and willpower' at the
|
|
time of the commission of an offence should not be punished for an act
|
|
constituting a crime. As a result, these individuals are not detained
|
|
for offences committed because they are not found guilty. Although there
|
|
are some good laws to foster disability rights, it is imperative that
|
|
they are implemented if they are to make a difference in the protection
|
|
of disability rights. A special attention should be called for women,
|
|
girls, children as well as elderly people with disabilities. Moreover,
|
|
the Federal Republic of Somalia has a duty to carry out a census of its
|
|
population in general and of the population with disabilities in order
|
|
to obtain precise data broken down by age, sex, region, and category of
|
|
disability.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {French},
|
|
Affiliation = {Severin, M (Corresponding Author), Sci Po Bordeaux, LAM, Bordeaux, France.
|
|
Severin, Marianne, Sci Po Bordeaux, LAM, Bordeaux, France.},
|
|
ISSN = {2311-8970},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Law},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000964889700010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000368262500014,
|
|
Author = {Kozhimannil, Katy B. and Jou, Judy and Gjerdingen, Dwenda K. and
|
|
McGovern, Patricia M.},
|
|
Title = {Access to Workplace Accommodations to Support Breastfeeding after
|
|
Passage of the Affordable Care Act},
|
|
Journal = {WOMENS HEALTH ISSUES},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {6-13},
|
|
Month = {JAN-FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: This study examines access to workplace accommodations for
|
|
breastfeeding, as mandated by the Affordable Care Act, and its
|
|
associations with breastfeeding initiation and duration. We hypothesize
|
|
that women with access to reasonable break time and private space to
|
|
express breast milk would be more likely to breastfeed exclusively at 6
|
|
months and to continue breastfeeding for a longer duration.
|
|
Methods: Data are from Listening to Mothers III, a national survey of
|
|
women ages 18 to 45 who gave birth in 2011 and 2012. The study
|
|
population included women who were employed full or part time at the
|
|
time of survey. Using two-way tabulation, logistic regression, and
|
|
survival analysis, we characterized women with access to breastfeeding
|
|
accommodations and assessed the associations between these
|
|
accommodations and breastfeeding outcomes.
|
|
Results: Only 40\% of women had access to both break time and private
|
|
space. Women with both adequate break time and private space were 2.3
|
|
times (95\% CI, 1.03-4.95) as likely to be breastfeeding exclusively at
|
|
6 months and 1.5 times (95\% CI, 1.08-2.06) as likely to continue
|
|
breastfeeding exclusively with each passing month compared with women
|
|
without access to these accommodations.
|
|
Conclusions: Employed women face unique barriers to breastfeeding and
|
|
have lower rates of breastfeeding initiation and shorter durations,
|
|
despite compelling evidence of associated health benefits. Expanded
|
|
access to workplace accommodations for breastfeeding will likely entail
|
|
collaborative efforts between public health agencies, employers,
|
|
insurers, and clinicians to ensure effective workplace policies and
|
|
improved breastfeeding outcomes. Copyright (C) 2016 by the Jacobs
|
|
Institute of Women's Health. Published by Elsevier Inc.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kozhimannil, KB (Corresponding Author), Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Hlth Policy \& Management, 420 Delaware St SE,MMC 729, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
|
|
Kozhimannil, Katy B.; Jou, Judy, Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Hlth Policy \& Management, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
|
|
Gjerdingen, Dwenda K., Univ Minnesota, Sch Med, Dept Family Med \& Community Hlth, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
|
|
McGovern, Patricia M., Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Environm Hlth Sci, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.whi.2015.08.002},
|
|
ISSN = {1049-3867},
|
|
EISSN = {1878-4321},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; WORK STATUS; INITIATION; EMPLOYMENT; DURATION; WOMEN;
|
|
EMPLOYERS; FAMILY; IMPACT; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Women's Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {kbk@umn.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jou, Judy/0000-0003-2446-1744},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {77},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000368262500014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000489050500023,
|
|
Author = {Hansen, Bjarke Brandt and Kirkeskov, Lilli and Begtrup, Luise Moelenberg
|
|
and Boesen, Mikael and Bliddal, Henning and Christensen, Robin and
|
|
Andreasen, Ditte Lundsgaard and Kristensen, Lars Erik and Flachs, Esben
|
|
Meulengracht and Kryger, Ann Isabel},
|
|
Title = {Early occupational intervention for people with low back pain in
|
|
physically demanding jobs: A randomized clinical trial},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Occupational medicine seeks to reduce sick leave; however,
|
|
evidence for an add-on effect to usual care is sparse. The objective of
|
|
the GOBACK trial was to test whether people with low back pain (LBP) in
|
|
physically demanding jobs and at risk of sick leave gain additional
|
|
benefit from a 3-month complex intervention that involves occupational
|
|
medicine consultations, a work-related evaluation and workplace
|
|
intervention plan, an optional workplace visit, and a physical activity
|
|
program, over a single hospital consultation and an MRI. Methods and
|
|
findings We enrolled people from the capital region of Denmark to an
|
|
open-label, parallel-group randomized controlled trial with a
|
|
superiority design from March 2014 through December 2015. In a hospital
|
|
setting 305 participants (99 women) with LBP and in physically demanding
|
|
jobs were randomized to occupational intervention (n = 153) or no
|
|
additional intervention (control group; n = 152) added to a single
|
|
hospital consultation giving a thorough explanation of the pain (i.e.,
|
|
clinical examination and MRI) and instructions to stay active and
|
|
continue working. Primary outcome was accumulated sick leave days due to
|
|
LBP during 6 months. Secondary outcomes were changes in neuropathic pain
|
|
(painDETECT questionnaire {[}PDQ]), pain 0-10 numerical rating scale
|
|
(NRS), Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ), Roland-Morris
|
|
Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ), Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) for
|
|
physical and mental health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and
|
|
self-assessed ability to continue working (range 0-10). An
|
|
intention-to-treat analysis of sick leave at 6 months showed no
|
|
significant difference between groups (mean difference in days
|
|
suggestively in favor of no additional intervention: 3.50 {[}95\% CI
|
|
-5.08 to 12.07], P = 0.42). Both groups showed significant improvements
|
|
in average pain score (NRS), disability (RMDQ), fear-avoidance beliefs
|
|
about physical activities and work (FABQ), and physical HRQoL (SF-36
|
|
physical component summary); there were no significant differences
|
|
between the groups in any secondary outcome. There was no statistically
|
|
significant improvement in neuropathic pain (PDQ score), mental HRQoL
|
|
(SF-36 mental component summary), and self-assessed ability to stay in
|
|
job. Four participants could not complete the MRI or the intervention
|
|
due to a claustrophobic attack or accentuated back pain. Workplace
|
|
visits may be an important element in the occupational intervention,
|
|
although not always needed. A per-protocol analysis that included the 40
|
|
participants in the intervention arm who received a workplace visit as
|
|
part of the additional occupational intervention did not show an add-on
|
|
benefit in terms of sick leave (available cases after 6 months, mean
|
|
difference: -0.43 days {[}95\% CI -12.8 to 11.94], P = 0.945). The main
|
|
limitations were the small number of sick leave days taken and that the
|
|
comprehensive use of MRI may limit generalization of the findings to
|
|
other settings, for example, general practice. Conclusions When given a
|
|
single hospital consultation and MRI, people in physically demanding
|
|
jobs at risk of sick leave due to LBP did not benefit from a complex
|
|
additional occupational intervention. Occupational interventions aimed
|
|
at limiting biopsychological obstacles (e.g., fear-avoidance beliefs and
|
|
behaviors), barriers in the workplace, and system barriers seem
|
|
essential to reduce sick leave in patients with LBP. This study
|
|
indicates that these obstacles and barriers may be addressed by thorough
|
|
usual care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hansen, BB (Corresponding Author), Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Parker Inst, Bispebjerg, Denmark.
|
|
Hansen, BB (Corresponding Author), Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Parker Inst, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
|
|
Hansen, BB (Corresponding Author), Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Bispebjerg, Denmark.
|
|
Hansen, BB (Corresponding Author), Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
|
|
Hansen, Bjarke Brandt; Bliddal, Henning; Christensen, Robin; Kristensen, Lars Erik, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Parker Inst, Bispebjerg, Denmark.
|
|
Hansen, Bjarke Brandt; Bliddal, Henning; Christensen, Robin; Kristensen, Lars Erik, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Parker Inst, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
|
|
Hansen, Bjarke Brandt; Begtrup, Luise Moelenberg; Andreasen, Ditte Lundsgaard; Flachs, Esben Meulengracht; Kryger, Ann Isabel, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Bispebjerg, Denmark.
|
|
Hansen, Bjarke Brandt; Begtrup, Luise Moelenberg; Andreasen, Ditte Lundsgaard; Flachs, Esben Meulengracht; Kryger, Ann Isabel, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Dept Occupat \& Environm Med, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
|
|
Kirkeskov, Lilli, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Ctr Social Med, Bispebjerg, Denmark.
|
|
Kirkeskov, Lilli, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Ctr Social Med, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
|
|
Boesen, Mikael, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Dept Radiol, Bispebjerg, Denmark.
|
|
Boesen, Mikael, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Dept Radiol, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
|
|
Christensen, Robin, Univ Southern Denmark, Odense Univ Hosp, Dept Clin Res, Res Unit Rheumatol, Odense, Denmark.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pmed.1002898},
|
|
Article-Number = {e1002898},
|
|
ISSN = {1549-1277},
|
|
EISSN = {1549-1676},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; SICK-LEAVE; QUESTIONNAIRE; WORKPLACE; MANAGEMENT; WORKERS;
|
|
RETURN; RATES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {dr.bjarke@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Kristensen, Lars Erik/AAZ-2615-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bliddal, Henning/0000-0002-7951-1668
|
|
Boesen, Mikael/0000-0002-8774-6563
|
|
Christensen, Robin/0000-0002-6600-0631
|
|
Hansen, Bjarke Brandt/0000-0002-4440-1960
|
|
Flachs, Esben Meulengracht/0000-0002-2252-8426},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000489050500023},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000517669900005,
|
|
Author = {Hafiz, Hiba},
|
|
Title = {Labor Antitrust's Paradox},
|
|
Journal = {UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO LAW REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {87},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {381-411},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Growing inequality, the decline in labor's share of national income, and
|
|
increasing evidence of labor-market concentration and employer buyer
|
|
power are all subjects of national attention, eliciting wide-ranging
|
|
proposals for legal reform. Many proposals hinge on labor-market fixes
|
|
and empowering workers within and beyond existing work law or through
|
|
tax-and-transfer schemes. But a recent surge of interest focuses on
|
|
applying antitrust law in labor markets, or ``labor antitrust.{''} These
|
|
proposals call for more aggressive enforcement by the Department of
|
|
Justice (DOJ) and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) as well as stronger
|
|
legal remedies for employer collusion and unlawful monopsony that
|
|
suppresses workers' wages.
|
|
The turn to labor antitrust is driven in part by congressional gridlock
|
|
and the collapse of labor law as a dominant source of labor market
|
|
regulation, inviting regulation through other means. Labor antitrust
|
|
promises an effective attack because agency discretion and judicial
|
|
enforcement can police labor markets without substantial amendments to
|
|
existing law, bypassing the current impasse in Congress. Further, unlike
|
|
labor and employment law, labor antitrust is uniquely positioned to
|
|
challenge industry-wide wage suppression: suing multiple employers is
|
|
increasingly challenging in work law as a statutory, doctrinal, and
|
|
procedural matter.
|
|
But current labor-antitrust proposals, while fruitful, are fundamentally
|
|
limited in two ways. First, echoing a broader antitrust policy crisis,
|
|
they inherit and reinvigorate debates about the current consumer welfare
|
|
goal of antitrust. The proposals ignore that, as a theoretical and
|
|
practical matter, employers' anticompetitive conduct in labor markets
|
|
does not necessarily harm consumers. As a result, workers'
|
|
labor-antitrust challenges will face an uphill battle under current law:
|
|
when consumers are not harmed, labor antitrust can neither effectively
|
|
police employer buyer power nor fill gaps in labor market regulation
|
|
left by a retreating labor law. Second, the proposals ignore real
|
|
synergies between antitrust enforcement and labor regulation that could
|
|
preempt the rise of employer buyer power and contain its exercise.
|
|
This Essay analyzes the limitations of current labor-antitrust proposals
|
|
and argues for ``regulatory sharing{''} between antitrust and labor law
|
|
to combat the adverse effects of employer buyer power. It makes three
|
|
key contributions. First, it frames the new labor antitrust as
|
|
disrupting a grand regulatory bargain, reinforced by the Chicago School,
|
|
that separated labor and antitrust regulation to resolve a perceived
|
|
paradox in serving two masters: workers and consumers. The dominance of
|
|
the consumer welfare standard resolved that paradox. Second, it explains
|
|
how scholarly attempts to invigorate labor antitrust fail to overcome
|
|
this paradox and ignore theoretical and doctrinal roadblocks to
|
|
maximizing both worker and consumer welfare, leaving worker-plaintiffs
|
|
vulnerable to failure. Third, it proposes a novel restructuring of labor
|
|
market regulation that integrates antitrust and labor law enforcement to
|
|
achieve coherent and effective regulation of employer buyer power. It
|
|
refocuses labor-antitrust claims on consumer welfare ends. In doing so,
|
|
it also relegates worker welfare considerations to a labor law
|
|
supplemented and fortified by the creation of substantive presumptions
|
|
and defenses triggered by labor-antitrust findings as well as labor
|
|
agency involvement in merger review.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hafiz, H (Corresponding Author), Boston Coll, Law Sch, Law, Newton Ctr, MA 02459 USA.
|
|
Hafiz, Hiba, Boston Coll, Law Sch, Law, Newton Ctr, MA 02459 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0041-9494},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LAW},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Law},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {82},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000517669900005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000322318400007,
|
|
Author = {Merritt, Judith and Perkins, David and Boreland, Frances},
|
|
Title = {Regional and remote occupational therapy: A preliminary exploration of
|
|
private occupational therapy practice},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {60},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {276-287},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Background/aim: Private providers of Medicare funded services are an
|
|
integral part of the Australian primary health-care system. Evidence on
|
|
private occupational therapy practice in rural and remote Australian
|
|
settings is sparse.
|
|
Methods: Providers of private occupational therapy services in outer
|
|
regional and remote areas were surveyed regarding location and type of
|
|
services provided, practice models and demographics. Descriptive
|
|
statistics were used to summarise the findings.
|
|
Results: Thirty-seven respondents completed the survey. In remote areas
|
|
a number of occupational therapy services are not provided and no
|
|
practices are based in very remote towns. One quarter of respondents
|
|
visit at least five towns each week and one third had other paid
|
|
employment. Nearly half indicated they will leave private practice
|
|
within the next five years and nearly one third believed they could not
|
|
sustain their practice. Medicare Chronic Disease Management was the main
|
|
income source of only around half the respondents.
|
|
Conclusions: There is a potential market failure of private occupational
|
|
therapy in rural and remote areas, impacting on people who need these
|
|
services and on work-force replacement. Contributing factors include
|
|
population imbalance between cities and regional/remote areas, financial
|
|
implications where only face-to-face contact is paid for and low incomes
|
|
and levels of health insurance in regional/remote areas. Potential
|
|
strategies include addressing the lack of reimbursement for travel,
|
|
enabling private providers to overcome barriers to providing student
|
|
placements and recognising rural practice as a specialist field.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Merritt, J (Corresponding Author), Broken Hill Univ, Dept Rural Hlth, Ctr Remote Hlth Res, POB 457, Broken Hill, NSW 2880, Australia.
|
|
Merritt, Judith; Perkins, David; Boreland, Frances, Broken Hill Univ, Dept Rural Hlth, Ctr Remote Hlth Res, Broken Hill, NSW 2880, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1440-1630.12042},
|
|
ISSN = {0045-0766},
|
|
EISSN = {1440-1630},
|
|
Keywords = {primary health care; private practice; rural; remote},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ENHANCED PRIMARY-CARE; ALLIED HEALTH-PROFESSIONALS; SPEECH PATHOLOGISTS
|
|
VIEWS; SERVICES; INTERVENTIONS; COMMUNITY; RECRUITMENT; RETENTION;
|
|
AUSTRALIA; WORKFORCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {jmerritt@gwahs.health.nsw.gov.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Boreland, Frances/0000-0003-0914-5428
|
|
Perkins, David/0000-0001-9739-7339},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {71},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000322318400007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000563033600010,
|
|
Author = {Tiderington, Emmy and Henwood, Benjamin F. and Padgett, Deborah K. and
|
|
Smith, Bikki Tran},
|
|
Title = {Employment Experiences of Formerly Homeless Adults With Serious Mental
|
|
Illness in Housing First Versus Treatment First Supportive Housing
|
|
Programs},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHIATRIC REHABILITATION JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {253-260},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: This paper examines how formerly homeless adults with serious
|
|
mental illness living in Housing First (HF) and ``treatment first{''}
|
|
(TF) supportive housing programs experience employment. Research
|
|
questions include: How do these individuals experience employment in the
|
|
context of their mental health recovery? What do they perceive as the
|
|
benefits of and obstacles to attaining employment? Are there
|
|
programmatic differences in their employment experiences? Method: Case
|
|
study analyses of data from a federally funded qualitative study were
|
|
conducted of 40 individuals purposively sampled from HF and TF programs.
|
|
Data were independently analyzed and consensually discussed to develop
|
|
crass-case themes. Results: Three themes emerged: (a) the meaning of
|
|
work, (b) working within the system, and (c) balancing treatment
|
|
requirements and work. While none of the study participants had
|
|
full-time jobs, more HF program clients had part-time employment than
|
|
their TF counterparts. Of the 12 employed participants. all but 2 worked
|
|
within their respective programs. Participants in both groups described
|
|
similar benefits of obtaining employment. but TF program requirements
|
|
inhibited job-seeking. Conclusions and Implications for Practice: These
|
|
findings provide insight into the challenges of obtaining employment for
|
|
formerly homeless individuals with serious mental illness residing in
|
|
supportive housing. Despite the motivation to work, individual,
|
|
structural. and organizational factors impeded employment. To address
|
|
this problem. factors at each of these levels will need to be
|
|
considered. Interventions such as supported employment offer promise to
|
|
supportive housing programs committed to employment as a contributor to
|
|
recovery.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tiderington, E (Corresponding Author), Rutgers State Univ, Sch Social Work, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
|
|
Tiderington, Emmy, Rutgers State Univ, Sch Social Work, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
|
|
Henwood, Benjamin F., Univ Southern Calif, Suzanne Dworak Peck Sch Social Work, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.
|
|
Padgett, Deborah K., NYU, Silver Sch Social Work, New York, NY 10003 USA.
|
|
Smith, Bikki Tran, Univ Chicago, Sch Social Serv Adm, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/prj0000391},
|
|
ISSN = {1095-158X},
|
|
EISSN = {1559-3126},
|
|
Keywords = {employment; recovery; homeless; supportive housing; Housing First},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PSYCHIATRIC DISABILITIES; PEOPLE; INDIVIDUALS; RECOVERY; BARRIERS;
|
|
HEALTH; WORK; SERVICES; QUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry; Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {emmy.tiderington@rutgers.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tiderington, Emmy/AAF-7137-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tiderington, Emmy/0000-0001-7934-0961},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000563033600010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000615080700003,
|
|
Author = {Roels, Ellen H. and Reneman, Michiel F. and New, Peter W. and Kiekens,
|
|
Carlotte and Van Roey, Lot and Townson, Andrea and Scivoletto, Giorgio
|
|
and Smith, Eimear and Eriks-Hoogland, Inge and Staubli, Stefan and Post,
|
|
Marcel W. M.},
|
|
Title = {International Comparison of Vocational Rehabilitation for Persons With
|
|
Spinal Cord Injury: Systems, Practices, and Barriers},
|
|
Journal = {TOPICS IN SPINAL CORD INJURY REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {21-35},
|
|
Month = {WIN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Employment rates among people with spinal cord injury or
|
|
spinal cord disease (SCI/D) show considerable variation across
|
|
countries. One factor to explain this variation is differences in
|
|
vocational rehabilitation (VR) systems. International comparative
|
|
studies on VR however are nonexistent. Objectives: To describe and
|
|
compare VR systems and practices and barriers for return to work in the
|
|
rehabilitation of persons with SCI/D in multiple countries. Methods: A
|
|
survey including clinical case examples was developed and completed by
|
|
medical and VR experts from SCI/D rehabilitation centers in seven
|
|
countries between April and August 2017. Results: Location
|
|
(rehabilitation center vs community), timing (around admission, toward
|
|
discharge, or after discharge from clinical rehabilitation), and funding
|
|
(eg, insurance, rehabilitation center, employer, or community) of VR
|
|
practices differ. Social security services vary greatly. The age and
|
|
preinjury occupation of the patient influences the content of VR in some
|
|
countries. Barriers encountered during VR were similar. No participant
|
|
mentioned lack of interest in VR among team members as a barrier, but
|
|
all mentioned lack of education of the team on VR as a barrier. Other
|
|
frequently mentioned barriers were fatigue of the patient (86\%), lack
|
|
of confidence of the patient in his/her ability to work (86\%), a gap in
|
|
the team's knowledge of business/legal aspects (86\%), and inadequate
|
|
transportation/accessibility (86\%). Conclusion: VR systems and
|
|
practices, but not barriers, differ among centers. The variability in VR
|
|
systems and social security services should be considered when comparing
|
|
VR study results.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Roels, EH (Corresponding Author), Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
|
|
Roels, Ellen H.; Reneman, Michiel F.; Post, Marcel W. M., Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Ctr Rehabil, Dept Rehabil Med, Groningen, Netherlands.
|
|
New, Peter W., Alfred Hlth, Spinal Rehabil Serv, Caulfield Hosp, Caulfield, Vic, Australia.
|
|
New, Peter W., Monash Univ, Epworth Monash Rehabil Med Unit, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Kiekens, Carlotte, Univ Hosp Leuven, Dept Phys \& Rehabil Med, Leuven, Belgium.
|
|
Kiekens, Carlotte; Van Roey, Lot, KU Leuven Univ Leuven, Dept Dev \& Regenerat, Leuven, Belgium.
|
|
Townson, Andrea, Univ British Columbia, GF Strong Rehabil Ctr, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Scivoletto, Giorgio, IRCCS Fdn S Lucia, Spinal Unit, Rome, Italy.
|
|
Scivoletto, Giorgio, IRCCS Fdn S Lucia, Spinal Rehabil SpiRe Lab, Rome, Italy.
|
|
Smith, Eimear, Natl Rehabil Hosp, Dun Laoghaire, Co Dublin, Ireland.
|
|
Eriks-Hoogland, Inge; Staubli, Stefan, Swiss Parapleg Ctr, Nottwil, Switzerland.
|
|
Post, Marcel W. M., Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Ctr Excellence Rehabil Med, UMC Utrecht Brain Ctr, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Post, Marcel W. M., De Hoogstr Rehabil, Utrecht, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1310/sci2601-21},
|
|
ISSN = {1082-0744},
|
|
EISSN = {1945-5763},
|
|
Keywords = {employment; spinal cord diseases; spinal injuries; work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY-OF-LIFE; EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES; RETURN; WORK; INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {e.h.roels@umcg.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Post, Marcel/AAS-2502-2021
|
|
Kiekens, Carlotte/V-7545-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kiekens, Carlotte/0000-0001-8500-7751
|
|
Post, Marcel/0000-0002-2205-9404},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000615080700003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000369963400018,
|
|
Author = {Labonte, Ronald and Stuckler, David},
|
|
Title = {The rise of neoliberalism: how bad economics imperils health and what to
|
|
do about it},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {70},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {312-318},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {The 2008 global financial crisis, precipitated by high-risk,
|
|
under-regulated financial practices, is often seen as a singular event.
|
|
The crisis, its recessionary consequences, bank bailouts and the
|
|
adoption of `austerity' measures can be seen as a continuation of a
|
|
40-year uncontrolled experiment in neoliberal economics. Although public
|
|
spending and recapitalisation of failing banks helped prevent a
|
|
1930s-style Great Depression, the deep austerity measures that followed
|
|
have stifled a meaningful recovery for the majority of populations. In
|
|
the short term, these austerity measures, especially cuts to health and
|
|
social protection systems, pose major health risks in those countries
|
|
under its sway. Meanwhile structural changes to the global labour
|
|
market, increasing under-employment in high-income countries and
|
|
economic insecurity elsewhere, are likely to widen health inequities in
|
|
the longer term. We call for four policy reforms to reverse rising
|
|
inequalities and their harms to public health. First is re-regulating
|
|
global finance. Second is rejecting austerity as an empirically and
|
|
ethically unjustified policy, especially given now clear evidence of its
|
|
deleterious health consequences. Third, there is a need to restore
|
|
progressive taxation at national and global scales. Fourth is a
|
|
fundamental shift away from the fossil fuel economy and policies that
|
|
promote economic growth in ways that imperil environmental
|
|
sustainability. This involves redistributing work and promoting fairer
|
|
pay. We do not suggest these reforms will be politically feasible or
|
|
even achievable in the short term. They nonetheless constitute an
|
|
evidence-based agenda for strong, public health advocacy and practice.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Labonte, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Ottawa, Sch Epidemiol, Dept Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, 850 Peter Morand Crescent, Ottawa, ON K1G 3Z7, Canada.
|
|
Labonte, Ronald, Univ Ottawa, Sch Epidemiol, Dept Publ Hlth \& Prevent Med, 850 Peter Morand Crescent, Ottawa, ON K1G 3Z7, Canada.
|
|
Stuckler, David, Univ Oxford, Dept Sociol, Oxford, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/jech-2015-206295},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-005X},
|
|
EISSN = {1470-2738},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FINANCIAL CRISIS; RECESSION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {rlabonte@uottawa.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Stuckler, David/H-2261-2012
|
|
Labonte, Ronald/G-4229-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Stuckler, David/0000-0002-1288-8401},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {95},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {41},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000369963400018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000513509700001,
|
|
Author = {Nguyen, Amanda J. and Rykiel, Natalie and Murray, Laura and Amin, Ahmed
|
|
and Haroz, Emily and Lee, Catherine and Bolton, Paul},
|
|
Title = {Stakeholder perspectives on integration of mental health services into
|
|
primary care: a mixed methods study in Northern Iraq},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEMS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {DEC 28},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundIntegrating evidence-based mental health services into primary
|
|
care has been identified as one strategy for overcoming the treatment
|
|
gap in low and middle-income countries, yet their uptake into standard
|
|
practice remains poor. The purpose of this study was to understand
|
|
stakeholder perspectives regarding barriers and facilitators to
|
|
integration of mental health services into primary care settings in
|
|
Northern Iraq.MethodsUsing a convergent mixed methods study design,
|
|
quantitative and qualitative questionnaires assessed respondent
|
|
perceptions of implementation factors under the domains of Autonomy,
|
|
Acceptability, Appropriateness, Feasibility, Penetration/Accessibility,
|
|
Sustainability, and Organizational Climate. We interviewed four types of
|
|
stakeholders: clients, providers of mental health services, non-mental
|
|
health (MH) staff working at the centers, and center directors.
|
|
Interviews were conducted with clients at the completion of services,
|
|
and with all other stakeholder groups in the latter half of the first
|
|
year of program implementation, by Kurdish-speaking interviewer pairs.
|
|
Qualitative and quantitative data were analyzed separately and merged
|
|
using qualitative data transformation to quantify frequency of theme and
|
|
integrate with quantitative findings through woven narrative.Results123
|
|
clients, 26 providers, 40 non-MH staff, and 12 directors provided data.
|
|
Positive perceptions of the program's acceptability, appropriateness,
|
|
feasibility, and positive impacts were reported across all stakeholder
|
|
levels. Providers reported that the program length (8-12 sessions) was a
|
|
challenge. Clients described logistical challenges (e.g.:
|
|
transportation, childcare, home duties); support from family and friends
|
|
appeared to be critical. Lack of private space, insufficient staffing,
|
|
and need for greater government support were also important
|
|
issues.ConclusionsThis mixed methods study is unique in its inclusion of
|
|
non-MH staff and director perspectives on integration of mental health
|
|
services in primary care clinics. Their inclusion proved vital since
|
|
they included critical human resource barriers to feasibility. Providers
|
|
reported generally positive integration experiences but that some
|
|
colleagues (clinic staff not involved in mental health services) were
|
|
unsupportive. Most non-MH staff were supportive, but some did report
|
|
negative impacts on their working environment. Future studies of
|
|
integration of mental health services into other service platforms
|
|
should include the perspectives of stakeholders not involved in
|
|
provision of mental health services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nguyen, AJ (Corresponding Author), Univ Virginia, Curry Sch Educ \& Human Dev, Dept Human Serv, Charlottesville, VA 22904 USA.
|
|
Nguyen, Amanda J., Univ Virginia, Curry Sch Educ \& Human Dev, Dept Human Serv, Charlottesville, VA 22904 USA.
|
|
Rykiel, Natalie, Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Div Pulm \& Crit Care, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Murray, Laura; Haroz, Emily, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Mental Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Amin, Ahmed, Wchan Org Victims Human Rights Violat, Sulaymaniyah, Iraq.
|
|
Amin, Ahmed, Sulaimani Polytech Univ, Tech Coll Hlth, Sulaymaniyah, Iraq.
|
|
Lee, Catherine; Bolton, Paul, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Int Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13033-019-0330-7},
|
|
ISSN = {1752-4458},
|
|
Keywords = {Mental health; Implementation; Iraq; Primary care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME; ACCEPTABILITY; INTERVENTIONS; FEASIBILITY; DEPRESSION;
|
|
KURDISTAN; ISSUES; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {ajnguyen@virginia.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000513509700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000791640100002,
|
|
Author = {Marti-Castaner, Maria and Pavlenko, Tonya and Engel, Ruby and Sanchez,
|
|
Karen and Crawford, Allyson E. and Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne and Wimer,
|
|
Christopher},
|
|
Title = {Poverty after Birth: How Mothers Experience and Navigate US Safety Net
|
|
Programs to Address Family Needs},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {2248-2265},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Although pregnancy and the first year of life are sensitive windows for
|
|
child development, we know very little about the lived experiences of
|
|
mothers living in poverty or near poverty during the perinatal period;
|
|
specifically, how they perceive and use public resources to support
|
|
themselves and their newborn. In this qualitative study, we explore how
|
|
predominantly Black and Latinx mothers with infants living in or near
|
|
poverty and engaged in public assistance manage to meet their family's
|
|
needs with available resources from safety net programs and social
|
|
supports. We conducted 20 qualitative interviews with mothers living in
|
|
(85\%) or near poverty in New York City (NYC). All participants (mean
|
|
age = 24) had an 11-month-old infant at the time of the interview. Using
|
|
thematic analysis, we identified five main themes reflecting how mothers
|
|
experience and navigate living with very low incomes while engaging in
|
|
public assistance programs: (1) experiencing cascading effects of
|
|
hardships during pregnancy, (2) relying on food assistance and informal
|
|
supports amid scarcity, (3) waiting for limited affordable housing:
|
|
`life on hold', (4) finding pathways towards stability after the baby's
|
|
birth, (5) making it work: efforts to look forward. Results describe how
|
|
the current focus on ``work first{''} of existing federal and state
|
|
policies adds a layer of stress and burden on the lives of single
|
|
mothers experiencing low incomes and entangled hardships during
|
|
pregnancy and after birth. We document how mothers experience coverage
|
|
gaps and implementation challenges navigating the patchwork of public
|
|
assistance programs, yet how the support of flexible caseworkers
|
|
accessing, using, and coordinating assistance has the potential to help
|
|
mothers plan for longer-term goals.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Marti-Castaner, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Copenhagen, Dept Publ Hlth, Sect Hlth Serv Res, Copenhagen, Denmark.
|
|
Marti-Castaner, Maria, Univ Copenhagen, Dept Publ Hlth, Sect Hlth Serv Res, Copenhagen, Denmark.
|
|
Pavlenko, Tonya, New Sch Social Res, New York, NY 10011 USA.
|
|
Engel, Ruby; Sanchez, Karen; Wimer, Christopher, Columbia Univ, Ctr Poverty \& Social Policy, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Crawford, Allyson E., Evolutionforward, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne, Columbia Univ, Teachers Coll, New York, NY 10027 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10826-022-02322-0},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1062-1024},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-2843},
|
|
Keywords = {Poverty; Maternal health; Qualitative research; Homelessness; Housing;
|
|
Early childcare},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-INCOME; CHILD POVERTY; MENTAL-HEALTH; UNITED-STATES; WELFARE; CARE;
|
|
TRENDS; HOMELESSNESS; EDUCATION; BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Family Studies; Psychology, Developmental; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {maria.castaner@sund.ku.dk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Marti Castaner, Maria/0000-0001-7816-2059},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {91},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000791640100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000333488900013,
|
|
Author = {Rind, Esther and Jones, Andy and Southall, Humphrey},
|
|
Title = {How is post-industrial decline associated with the geography of physical
|
|
activity? Evidence from the Health Survey for England},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {104},
|
|
Pages = {88-97},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {In recent decades, the prevalence of physical activity has declined
|
|
considerably in many developed countries, which has been related to
|
|
rising levels of obesity and several weight-related medical conditions,
|
|
such as coronary heart disease. There is evidence that areas exhibiting
|
|
particularly low levels of physical activity have undergone a strong
|
|
transition away from employment in physically demanding occupations. It
|
|
is proposed that such processes of deindustrialisation may be causally
|
|
linked to unexplained geographical disparities in physical activity.
|
|
This study investigates how geographical variations in
|
|
deindustrialisation are associated with current levels of physical
|
|
activity across different activity domains and relevant macro-economic
|
|
time periods in England. The analysis includes data on 27,414 adults
|
|
from the Health Survey for England 2006 and 2008 who reported total,
|
|
occupational, domestic, recreational and walking activity. Based on
|
|
employment change in industries associated with heavy manual work, a
|
|
local measurement of industrial decline was developed, covering the
|
|
period 1841-2001. We applied a multilevel modelling approach to study
|
|
associations between industrial decline and physical activity. Results
|
|
indicate that the process of deindustrialisation appears to be
|
|
associated with patterns of physical activity and that this is
|
|
independent of household income. The effects observed were generally
|
|
similar for men and women. However, the nature of the association
|
|
differed across areas, time periods and employment types; in particular,
|
|
residents of districts characterised by a history of manufacturing and
|
|
mining employment had increased odds of reporting low activity levels.
|
|
We conclude that post-industrial change may be a factor in explaining
|
|
present-day variations in physical activity, emphasising the plausible
|
|
impact of inherited cultures and regional identities on health related
|
|
behaviours. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rind, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Edinburgh, Sch GeoSci, Drummond St, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Rind, Esther, Univ Edinburgh, Sch GeoSci, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Jones, Andy, Univ E Anglia, Norwich Med Sch, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
|
|
Southall, Humphrey, Univ Portsmouth, Dept Geog, Portsmouth PO1 2UP, Hants, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.12.004},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {England; Physical activity; Geography; Deindustrialisation; Multilevel
|
|
analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE; TEMPORAL TRENDS; GREAT-BRITAIN; LEISURE-TIME;
|
|
ADULTS; PARTICIPATION; ADJUSTMENT; COUNTRIES; WOMEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {e.rind@ed.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jones, Andy/0000-0002-3130-9313},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000333488900013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000529064000028,
|
|
Author = {Hanna, Joseph S. and Herrera-Almario, Gabriel E. and Pinilla-Roncancio,
|
|
Monica and Tulloch, David and Valencia, Sergio A. and Sabatino, Marlena
|
|
E. and Hamilton, Charles and Rehman, Shahyan U. and Mendoza, Ardi Knobel
|
|
and Bernal, Liliana Carolina Gomez and Salas, Maria Fernanda Moreno and
|
|
Navarro, Maria Alejandra Pena and Nemoyer, Rachel and Scott, Michael and
|
|
Pardo-Bayona, Mariana and Rubiano, Andres M. and Ramirez, Mauricio Vasco
|
|
and Londono, Dario and Dario-Gonzalez, Ivan and Gracias, Vicente and
|
|
Peck, Gregory L.},
|
|
Title = {Use of the six core surgical indicators from the Lancet Commission on
|
|
Global Surgery in Colombia: a situational analysis},
|
|
Journal = {LANCET GLOBAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {E699-E710},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Surgical, anaesthetic, and obstetric (SAO) health-care system
|
|
strengthening is needed to address the emergency and essential surgical
|
|
care that approximately 5 billion individuals lack globally. To our
|
|
knowledge, a complete, non-modelled national situational analysis based
|
|
on the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery surgical indicators has not
|
|
been done. We aimed to undertake a complete situation analysis of SAO
|
|
system preparedness, service delivery, and financial risk protection
|
|
using the core surgical indicators proposed by the Commission in
|
|
Colombia, an upper-middle-income country.
|
|
Methods Data to inform the six core surgical system indicators were
|
|
abstracted from the Colombian national health information system and the
|
|
most recent national health survey done in 2007. Geographical access to
|
|
a Bell wether hospital (defined as a hospital capable of providing
|
|
essential and emergency surgery) within 2 h was assessed by determining
|
|
2 h drive time boundaries around Bellwether facilities and the
|
|
population within and outside these boundaries. Physical 2 h access to a
|
|
Bellwether was determined by the presence of a motor vehicle suitable
|
|
for individual transportation. The Department Administrativo Nacional de
|
|
Estadistica population projection for 2016 and 2018 was used to
|
|
calculate the SAO provider density. Total operative volume was
|
|
calculated for 2016 and expressed nationally per 100 000 population. The
|
|
total number of postoperative deaths that occurred within 30 days of a
|
|
procedure was divided by the total operative volume to calculate the
|
|
all-cause, non-risk-adjusted postoperative mortality. The proportion of
|
|
the population subject to impoverishing costs was calculated by
|
|
subtracting the baseline number of impoverished individuals from those
|
|
who fell below the poverty line once out-of-pocket payments were
|
|
accounted for. Individuals who incurred out-of-pocket payments that were
|
|
more than 10\% of their annual household income were considered to have
|
|
experienced catastrophic expenditure. Using GIS mapping, SAO system
|
|
preparedness, service delivery, and cost protection were also
|
|
contextualised by socioeconomic status.
|
|
Findings In 2016, at least 7.1 million people (15.1\% of the population)
|
|
in Colombia did not have geographical access to SAO services within a 2
|
|
h driving distance. SAO provider density falls short of the Commission's
|
|
minimum target of 20 providers per 100 000 population, at an estimated
|
|
density of 13.7 essential SAO health-care providers per 100 000
|
|
population in 2018. Lower socioeconomic status of a municipality, as
|
|
indicated by proportion of people enrolled in the subsidised insurance
|
|
regime, was associated with a smaller proportion of the population in
|
|
the municipality being within 2 h of a Bellwether facility, and the most
|
|
socioeconomically disadvantaged municipalities often had no SAO
|
|
providers. Furthermore, Colombian providers appear to be working at or
|
|
beyond capacity, doing 2690-3090 procedures per 100 000 population
|
|
annually, but they have maintained a relatively low median postoperative
|
|
mortality of 0.74\% (IQR 0.48-0.84). Finally, out-of-pocket expenses for
|
|
indirect health-care costs were a key barrier to accessing surgical
|
|
care, prompting 3.1 million (6.4\% of the population) individuals to
|
|
become impoverished and 9.5 million (19.4\% of the population)
|
|
individuals to incur catastrophic expenditures in 2007.
|
|
Interpretation We did a non-modelled, indicator-based situation analysis
|
|
of the Colombian SAO system, finding that it has not yet met, but is
|
|
working towards achieving, the targets set by the Lancet Commission on
|
|
Global Surgery. The observed interdependence of these indicators and
|
|
correlation with socioeconomic status are consistent with well
|
|
recognised factors and outcomes of social, health, and health-care
|
|
inequity. The internal consistency observed in Colombia's situation
|
|
analysis validates the use of the indicators and has now informed
|
|
development of an early national SAO plan in Colombia, to set a
|
|
data-informed stage for implementation and evaluation of timely, safe,
|
|
and affordable SAO health care, within the National Public Health
|
|
Decennial Plan, which is due in 2022. Copyright (C) 2020 The Author(s).
|
|
Published by Elsevier Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hanna, JS (Corresponding Author), Rutgers State Univ, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Med Sch, New Brunswick, NJ 08903 USA.
|
|
Hanna, Joseph S.; Sabatino, Marlena E.; Hamilton, Charles; Rehman, Shahyan U.; Mendoza, Ardi Knobel; Nemoyer, Rachel; Scott, Michael; Gracias, Vicente; Peck, Gregory L., Rutgers State Univ, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Med Sch, New Brunswick, NJ 08903 USA.
|
|
Herrera-Almario, Gabriel E.; Valencia, Sergio A.; Londono, Dario, Fdn Santa Fe Bogota, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Herrera-Almario, Gabriel E.; Pinilla-Roncancio, Monica; Bernal, Liliana Carolina Gomez; Salas, Maria Fernanda Moreno; Navarro, Maria Alejandra Pena, Univ los Andes, Sch Med, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Tulloch, David, State Univ New Jersey, Rutgers Sch Environm \& Biol Sci, Ctr Remote Sensing \& Spatial Anal, New Brunswick, NJ USA.
|
|
Pardo-Bayona, Mariana; Dario-Gonzalez, Ivan, Colombian Minist Hlth \& Social Protect, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Rubiano, Andres M., Univ Bosque, Sch Med, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Rubiano, Andres M., Univ Bosque, Neurosci Inst, Bogota, Colombia.
|
|
Ramirez, Mauricio Vasco, Univ CES, Medellin, Colombia.
|
|
Gracias, Vicente, Rutgers State Univ, Rutgers New Jersey Med Sch, Newark, NJ USA.
|
|
Peck, Gregory L., Rutgers Biomed \& Hlth Sci, Rutgers Sch Publ Hlth, Piscataway, NJ USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {2214-109X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INFORMING NATIONAL STRATEGIES; SCALING-UP SURGERY; HEALTH; CARE;
|
|
COUNTRIES; MORTALITY; ACCESS; SYSTEM; PLAN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {joseph.hanna@rutgers.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Scott, Michael/AAY-3110-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sabatino, Marlena/0000-0003-3029-3468
|
|
Moreno Salas, Maria Fernanda/0000-0001-8046-8479
|
|
Hamilton, Charles/0000-0003-1042-9575
|
|
Tulloch, David/0000-0002-0692-9190
|
|
Valencia, Sergio Alfonso/0000-0002-0605-411X
|
|
Pinilla-Roncancio, Monica/0000-0002-1443-4649
|
|
Rehman, Shahyan/0000-0002-9667-3255},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {36},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000529064000028},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000294072400004,
|
|
Author = {Silva, Hudson P. and Viana, Ana L. D.},
|
|
Title = {Health technology diffusion in developing countries: a case study of CT
|
|
scanners in Brazil},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {385-394},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background The development of products and services for health care
|
|
systems is one of the most important phenomena to have occurred in the
|
|
field of health care over the last 50 years. It generates significant
|
|
commercial, medical and social results. Although much has been done to
|
|
understand how health technologies are adopted and regulated in
|
|
developed countries, little attention has been paid to the situation in
|
|
low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Here we examine the
|
|
institutional environment in which decisions are made regarding the
|
|
adoption of expensive medical devices into the Brazilian health care
|
|
system.
|
|
Methods We used a case study strategy to address our research question.
|
|
The empirical work relied on in-depth interviews (N = 16) with
|
|
representatives of a wide range of actors and stakeholders that
|
|
participate in the process of diffusion of CT (computerized tomography)
|
|
scanners in Brazil, including manufacturers, health care organizations,
|
|
medical specialty societies, health insurance companies, regulatory
|
|
agencies and the Ministry of Health.
|
|
Results The adoption of CT scanners is not determined by health policy
|
|
makers or third-party payers of public and private sectors. Instead,
|
|
decisions are primarily made by administrators of individual hospitals
|
|
and clinics, strongly influenced by both physicians and sales
|
|
representatives of the medical industry who act as change agents.
|
|
Because this process is not properly regulated by public authorities,
|
|
health care organizations are free to decide whether, when and how they
|
|
will adopt a particular technology.
|
|
Conclusions Our study identifies problems in how health care systems in
|
|
LMICs adopt new, expensive medical technologies, and suggests that a set
|
|
of innovative approaches and policy instruments are needed in order to
|
|
balance the institutional and professional desire to practise a modern
|
|
and expensive medicine in a context of health inequalities and basic
|
|
health needs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Silva, HP (Corresponding Author), Univ Sao Paulo, Fac Med, Dept Prevent Med, Sch Med, Av Dr Arnaldo 455, BR-01246903 Sao Paulo, Brazil.
|
|
Silva, Hudson P.; Viana, Ana L. D., Univ Sao Paulo, Fac Med, Dept Prevent Med, Sch Med, BR-01246903 Sao Paulo, Brazil.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/heapol/czq076},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-1080},
|
|
EISSN = {1460-2237},
|
|
Keywords = {Health technology diffusion; CT scanners; Brazil},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {hudson@usp.br},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Silva, Hudson/ISU-3802-2023
|
|
Silva, Hudson P/C-3969-2012
|
|
Viana, Ana LD/B-2617-2013},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Silva, Hudson P/0000-0001-7507-0917
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {16},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000294072400004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000260934600002,
|
|
Author = {Bautz-Holter, E. and Sveen, U. and Cieza, A. and Geyh, S. and Roe, C.},
|
|
Title = {Does the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and
|
|
Health (ICF) Core Set for low back pain cover the patients' problems? A
|
|
cross-sectional content-validity study with a Norwegian population},
|
|
Journal = {EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL AND REHABILITATION MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {387-397},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Aim. The aim of this work was to evaluate the Norwegian form of the
|
|
international Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF)
|
|
Core Set for low back pain patients and investigate the feasibility of
|
|
the Core Set in clinical practice.
|
|
Methods. This was part of an international multicenter study, with 118
|
|
participating Norwegian patients referred to Departments of Physical
|
|
Medicine and rehabilitation with low back pain (LBP). The ICF Core Set
|
|
for LBP was filled in by the health professionals. The patients reported
|
|
their problems using the Medical Outcome Study Short Form 36 (SF-36) and
|
|
the Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questiomiaire (ODI).
|
|
Results. The ICF Core Set categories capture the problems of the LBP
|
|
patients, and few categories were reported to be missing. Many problems
|
|
were reported within body function, and problems within work and
|
|
employment were captured by the activity and participation component.
|
|
The environmental factors in ICF were most frequently scored as
|
|
facilitators, but the same factor could also represent a barrier in
|
|
other individuals. Health professionals, family and friends were
|
|
important factors within this domain. Few problems were scored as severe
|
|
or complete indicating the need of collapsing the qualifier levels.
|
|
Scoring of the ICF Core Set was feasibly, but rather time-consuming.
|
|
Conclusion. The ICF Core Set for LBP captures the problems of LBP, and
|
|
adds important aspects to clinical practice in the field of LBP.
|
|
However, the ICF Core Set for LBP needs further elaboration in order to
|
|
improve the clinical feasibility.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Roe, C (Corresponding Author), Ullevaal Univ Hosp, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, N-0407 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Bautz-Holter, E.; Sveen, U.; Roe, C., Ullevaal Univ Hosp, Dept Phys Med \& Rehabil, N-0407 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Bautz-Holter, E.; Roe, C., Univ Oslo, Fac Med, Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Cieza, A., Univ Munich, ICF Res Branch, Munich, Germany.
|
|
Cieza, A.; Geyh, S., Swiss Parapleg Res, Nottwil, Switzerland.},
|
|
ISSN = {1973-9087},
|
|
EISSN = {1973-9095},
|
|
Keywords = {Low back pain; Disability evaluation; Feasibility study},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FEAR-AVOIDANCE BELIEFS; QUESTIONNAIRE; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {eller@medisin.uio.no},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tordoir, Jan/AAE-4083-2020
|
|
Geyh, Szilvia/F-6994-2011},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {28},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000260934600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000346283000021,
|
|
Author = {Tanga, Pius Tangwe and Tangwe, Magdaline Nji},
|
|
Title = {Interplay between economic empowerment and sexual behaviour and
|
|
practices of migrant workers within the context of HIV and AIDS in the
|
|
Lesotho textile industry},
|
|
Journal = {SAHARA J-JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ASPECTS OF HIV-AIDS},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {187-201},
|
|
Abstract = {Economic empowerment brings with it a wide range of consequences, both
|
|
positive and negative. The objective of this paper was to examine the
|
|
relationship between economic empowerment and the sexual behaviour and
|
|
practices of migrant workers within the context of HIV and AIDS in the
|
|
Lesotho textile industry. Data for this paper were extracted from the
|
|
findings of a larger study which had been conducted concerning HIV and
|
|
AIDS in the textile industry in Lesotho. Using in-depth interviews, data
|
|
were collected from 40 participants who were purposively selected from
|
|
five factories which had been chosen randomly. Empowerment theory was
|
|
used as a lens to provide meanings for the experiences of the
|
|
participants. The findings show that the participants were empowered
|
|
only in certain respects in terms of Kabeer's empowerment model of
|
|
`power to' and `power within', on one hand, and in terms of Malhotra's
|
|
comprehensive empowerment framework at the household level, on the
|
|
other, as being employed in the industry enabled them to participate in
|
|
the economy. Employment in the sector provided the participants with the
|
|
means to be able to acquire basic needs and the ability to participate
|
|
in household decision-making: for the female participants, the ability
|
|
to make independent sexual decisions was also enhanced. These
|
|
improvements were greeted enthusiastically, particularly by the female
|
|
participants, given their previously disadvantaged status as a result of
|
|
coming from rural patriarchal villages with gender-defined hegemonic
|
|
notions of respectability. The findings also indicate that environmental
|
|
factors and others, such as meagre salaries, encouraged some of the
|
|
female workers to engage in transactional sex, while some of the male
|
|
participants tended to increase their sexual relationships as a result
|
|
of acquiring employment and income from the industry. It is the
|
|
contention of the authors of this study that true empowerment requires
|
|
both vital resources and individual and collective participation,
|
|
particularly for the women, who are more vulnerable than men. Finally,
|
|
we conclude that the opportunities provided by economic empowerment have
|
|
given the participants a new social meaning for their situation and an
|
|
awareness about their place in power relations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tanga, PT (Corresponding Author), Univ Ft Hare, Dept Social Work Social Dev, PB X1314, ZA-5700 Alice, South Africa.
|
|
Tanga, Pius Tangwe, Univ Ft Hare, Dept Social Work Social Dev, ZA-5700 Alice, South Africa.
|
|
Tangwe, Magdaline Nji, Univ Ft Hare, Fac Educ, ZA-5700 Alice, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/17290376.2014.976250},
|
|
ISSN = {1729-0376},
|
|
EISSN = {1813-4424},
|
|
Keywords = {economic empowerment; migrant workers; sexual behaviour and practices;
|
|
HIV and AIDS; options and choices},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR MIGRATION; RISK; TRANSMISSION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {tanga8\_2000@yahoo.co.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000346283000021},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000672698900007,
|
|
Author = {Perry, J. Adam and Scott, Diane},
|
|
Title = {Car Consumption Among Recent Immigrants And Refugees to Rural Nova
|
|
Scotia: An Exploratory Study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF RURAL AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {121-137},
|
|
Abstract = {The problem of attracting and retaining immigrants and refugees to rural
|
|
parts of Canada has recently emerged as a policy response to declining
|
|
population growth outside of urban areas, with particular policy
|
|
attention focused on immigration to the Atlantic Provinces. While there
|
|
has been increased scholarly attention paid to the integration outcomes
|
|
of recent immigrants and refugees to Canada who settle outside of major
|
|
cities, the bulk of this research has focused on the settlement
|
|
experiences of newcomers to smaller cities and suburban regions. Little
|
|
attention has been paid to the settlement experiences of immigrants and
|
|
refugees to rural parts of the country. Given the dominance of private
|
|
car ownership for getting around rural Canada, this article examines how
|
|
car consumption arises as a crucial component of the rural settlement
|
|
process, both from the point of view of accessing services and
|
|
employment, but also from the point of view of forming an affective
|
|
connection to rural places. Grounded in an analysis of interviews with
|
|
immigrants and refugees to North-eastern Nova Scotia, the authors
|
|
develop two key findings. First, the lack of public transportation
|
|
options in rural areas pushes newcomers to prioritize car ownership as a
|
|
means of accessing employment and other crucial services. Second,
|
|
participant narratives of car consumption reveal rural newcomers'
|
|
complex affective relationship to cars that highlight the importance of
|
|
vehicles to developing a sense of independence and belonging, further
|
|
underlining the role that cars play in rural Canada's evolving identity
|
|
as an immigration destination.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Perry, JA (Corresponding Author), St Francis Xavier Univ, Antigonish, NS, Canada.
|
|
Perry, J. Adam, St Francis Xavier Univ, Antigonish, NS, Canada.
|
|
Scott, Diane, Mem Univ Newfoundland, St John, NF, Canada.},
|
|
ISSN = {1712-8277},
|
|
Keywords = {rural immigration; privately sponsored refugees; transportation
|
|
disadvantage; car consumption; Nova Scotia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ONTARIO; AUTOMOBILITY; GEOGRAPHY; MOBILITY; WORKERS; LABOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {aperry@stfx.ca
|
|
dascott@mun.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Perry, J. Adam/AAZ-4264-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Perry, J. Adam/0000-0002-6983-6581},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000672698900007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000235656600024,
|
|
Author = {Rosenblatt, RA and Andrilla, CHA and Curtin, T and Hart, LG},
|
|
Title = {Shortages of medical personnel at community health centers -
|
|
Implications for planned expansion},
|
|
Journal = {JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {295},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {1042-1049},
|
|
Month = {MAR 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Context The US government is expanding the capacity of community health
|
|
centers (CHCs) to provide care to underserved populations.
|
|
Objective To examine the status of workforce shortages that may limit
|
|
CHC expansion.
|
|
Design and Setting Survey questionnaire of all 846 federally funded US
|
|
CHCs that directly provide clinical services and are within the 50
|
|
states and the District of Columbia, conducted between May and September
|
|
2004. Questionnaires were completed by the chief executive officer of
|
|
each grantee. Information was supplemented by data from the 2003 Bureau
|
|
of Primary Health Care Uniform Data System and weighted to be nationally
|
|
representative.
|
|
Main Outcome Measures Staffing patterns and vacancies for major clinical
|
|
disciplines by rural and urban location, use of federal and state
|
|
recruitment programs, and perceived barriers to recruitment.
|
|
Results Overall response rate was 79.3\%. Primary care physicians made
|
|
up 89.4\% of physicians working in the CHCs, the majority of whom are
|
|
family physicians. In rural CHCs, 46\% of the direct clinical providers
|
|
of care were nonphysician clinicians compared with 38.9\% in urban CHCs.
|
|
There were 428 vacant funded full-time equivalents (FTEs) for family
|
|
physicians and 376 vacant FTEs for registered nurses. There were
|
|
vacancies for 13.3\% of family physician positions, 20.8\% of
|
|
obstetrician/ gynecologist positions, and 22.6\% of psychiatrist
|
|
positions. Rural CHCs had a higher proportion of vacancies and
|
|
longer-term vacancies and reported greater difficulty filling positions
|
|
compared with urban CHCs. Physician recruitment in CHCs was heavily
|
|
dependent on National Health Service Corps scholarships, loan repayment
|
|
programs, and international medical graduates with J-1 visa waivers.
|
|
Major perceived barriers to recruitment included low salaries and, in
|
|
rural CHCs, cultural isolation, poor-quality schools and housing, and
|
|
lack of spousal job opportunities.
|
|
Conclusions CHCs face substantial challenges in recruitment of clinical
|
|
staff, particularly in rural areas. The largest numbers of unfilled
|
|
positions were for family physicians at a time of declining interest in
|
|
family medicine among graduating US medical students. The success of the
|
|
current US national policy to expand CHCs may be challenged by these
|
|
workforce issues.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rosenblatt, RA (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Dept Family Med, Rural Hlth Res Ctr, Box 354696, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Univ Washington, Dept Family Med, Rural Hlth Res Ctr, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Natl Assoc Community Hlth Ctr, Bethesda, MD USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1001/jama.295.9.1042},
|
|
ISSN = {0098-7484},
|
|
EISSN = {1538-3598},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PHYSICIAN WORKFORCE; FAMILY PHYSICIANS; SERVICE-CORPS; FOLLOW-UP; CARE;
|
|
AREAS; RETENTION; URBAN; RECRUITMENT; EXPERIENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {rosenb@u.washington.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Andrilla, Holly/AAC-6264-2019},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {218},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000235656600024},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000695469100003,
|
|
Author = {Wang, Kailu and Wong, Eliza Lai Yi and Ho, Kin Fai and Cheung, Annie Wai
|
|
Ling and Chan, Emily Ying Yang and Wong, Samuel Yeung Shan and Yeoh, Eng
|
|
Kiong},
|
|
Title = {Unequal availability of workplace policy for prevention of coronavirus
|
|
disease 2019 across occupations and its relationship with personal
|
|
protection behaviours: a cross-sectional survey},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {SEP 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Background The evolving pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
|
|
has become a severe threat to public health, and the workplace presents
|
|
high risks in terms of spreading the disease. Few studies have focused
|
|
on the relationship between workplace policy and individual behaviours.
|
|
This study aimed to identify inequalities of workplace policy across
|
|
occupation groups, examine the relationship of workplace guidelines and
|
|
measures with employees' behaviours regarding COVID-19 prevention.
|
|
Methods A cross-sectional online survey using a structured questionnaire
|
|
was conducted to gather employees' access to workplace guidelines and
|
|
measures as well as their personal protection behaviours. Statistical
|
|
associations between these two factors in different occupations were
|
|
examined using multiple ordinal logistic regressions. Results A total of
|
|
1048 valid responses across five occupational groups were analysed.
|
|
Manual labourers reported lower availability of workplace guidelines and
|
|
measures (76.9\% vs. 89.9\% for all, P = 0.003). Employees with
|
|
available workplace guidelines and measures had higher compliance of
|
|
hand hygiene, wearing masks, and social distancing, and this association
|
|
was more significant among managers/administrators and manual labourers.
|
|
Conclusions Protection of the quantity and quality of employment is
|
|
important. Awareness about the disease and its prevention among
|
|
employers and administrators should be promoted, and resources should be
|
|
allocated to publish guidelines and implement measures in the workplace
|
|
during the pandemic. Both work-from-home arrangement and other policies
|
|
and responses for those who cannot work from home including guidelines
|
|
encouraging the health behaviours, information transparency, and
|
|
provision of infection control materials by employers should be
|
|
established to reduce inequality. Manual labourers may require specific
|
|
attention regarding accessibility of relevant information and
|
|
availability of medical benefits and compensation for income loss due to
|
|
the sickness, given their poorer experience of workplace policy and the
|
|
nature of their work. Further studies are needed to test the
|
|
effectiveness of specific workplace policies on COVID-19 prevention.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wong, ELY (Corresponding Author), Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Fac Med, JC Sch Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Ctr Hlth Syst \& Policy Res, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Wang, Kailu; Wong, Eliza Lai Yi; Cheung, Annie Wai Ling; Yeoh, Eng Kiong, Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Fac Med, JC Sch Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Ctr Hlth Syst \& Policy Res, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Ho, Kin Fai; Chan, Emily Ying Yang; Wong, Samuel Yeung Shan, Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Fac Med, JC Sch Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12939-021-01527-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {200},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-9276},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; Prevention; Workplace policy; Personal protection behaviour;
|
|
Occupation},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {lywong@cuhk.edu.hk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ho, Kin Fai/E-6131-2011
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ho, Kin Fai/0000-0001-7464-3437
|
|
Wong, Eliza/0000-0001-9983-6219},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000695469100003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000564358100009,
|
|
Author = {Ahmed, Syed A. K. Shifat and Ajisola, Motunrayo and Azeem, Kehkashan and
|
|
Bakibinga, Pauline and Chen, Yen-Fu and Choudhury, Nazratun Nayeem and
|
|
Fayehun, Olufunke and Griffiths, Frances and Harris, Bronwyn and Kibe,
|
|
Peter and Lilford, Richard J. and Omigbodun, Akinyinka and Rizvi, Narjis
|
|
and Sartori, Jo and Smith, Simon and Watson, I, Samuel and Wilson, Ria
|
|
and Yeboah, Godwin and Aujla, Navneet and Azam, Syed Iqbal and Diggle,
|
|
Peter J. and Gill, Paramjit and Iqbal, Romaina and Kabaria, Caroline and
|
|
Kisia, Lyagamula and Kyobutungi, Catherine and Madan, Jason J. and
|
|
Mberu, Blessing and Mohamed, Shukri F. and Nazish, Ahsana and Odubanjo,
|
|
Oladoyin and Osuh, Mary E. and Owoaje, Eme and Oyebode, Oyinlola and
|
|
Porto de Albuquerque, Joao and Rahman, Omar and Tabani, Komal and Taiwo,
|
|
Olalekan John and Tregonning, Grant and Uthman, Olalekan A. and Yusuf,
|
|
Rita and Improving Hlth Slums Collaborative},
|
|
Title = {Impact of the societal response to COVID-19 on access to healthcare for
|
|
non-COVID-19 health issues in slum communities of Bangladesh, Kenya,
|
|
Nigeria and Pakistan: results of pre-COVID and COVID-19 lockdown
|
|
stakeholder engagements},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {5},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction With COVID-19, there is urgency for policymakers to
|
|
understand and respond to the health needs of slum communities.
|
|
Lockdowns for pandemic control have health, social and economic
|
|
consequences. We consider access to healthcare before and during
|
|
COVID-19 with those working and living in slum communities. Methods In
|
|
seven slums in Bangladesh, Kenya, Nigeria and Pakistan, we explored
|
|
stakeholder perspectives and experiences of healthcare access for
|
|
non-COVID-19 conditions in two periods: pre-COVID-19 and during COVID-19
|
|
lockdowns. Results Between March 2018 and May 2020, we engaged with 860
|
|
community leaders, residents, health workers and local authority
|
|
representatives. Perceived common illnesses in all sites included
|
|
respiratory, gastric, waterborne and mosquitoborne illnesses and
|
|
hypertension. Pre-COVID, stakeholders described various preventive,
|
|
diagnostic and treatment services, including well-used antenatal and
|
|
immunisation programmes and some screening for hypertension,
|
|
tuberculosis, HIV and vectorborne disease. In all sites, pharmacists and
|
|
patent medicine vendors were key providers of treatment and advice for
|
|
minor illnesses. Mental health services and those addressing
|
|
gender-based violence were perceived to be limited or unavailable. With
|
|
COVID-19, a reduction in access to healthcare services was reported in
|
|
all sites, including preventive services. Cost of healthcare increased
|
|
while household income reduced. Residents had difficulty reaching
|
|
healthcare facilities. Fear of being diagnosed with COVID-19 discouraged
|
|
healthcare seeking. Alleviators included provision of healthcare by
|
|
phone, pharmacists/drug vendors extending credit and residents receiving
|
|
philanthropic or government support; these were inconsistent and
|
|
inadequate. Conclusion Slum residents' ability to seek healthcare for
|
|
non-COVID-19 conditions has been reduced during lockdowns. To encourage
|
|
healthcare seeking, clear communication is needed about what is
|
|
available and whether infection control is in place. Policymakers need
|
|
to ensure that costs do not escalate and unfairly disadvantage slum
|
|
communities. Remote consulting to reduce face-to-face contact and
|
|
provision of mental health and gender-based violence services should be
|
|
considered.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Griffiths, F (Corresponding Author), Univ Warwick, Warwick Med Sch, Div Hlth Sci, Coventry, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Ahmed, Syed A. K. Shifat; Choudhury, Nazratun Nayeem; Yusuf, Rita, Independent Univ Bangladesh, Ctr Hlth Populat \& Dev, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Ajisola, Motunrayo, Univ Ibadan, Natl Inst Hlth Res Project, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.
|
|
Azeem, Kehkashan; Rizvi, Narjis; Azam, Syed Iqbal; Iqbal, Romaina; Nazish, Ahsana; Tabani, Komal, Aga Khan Univ, Community Hlth Sci Dept, Karachi, Pakistan.
|
|
Bakibinga, Pauline; Kibe, Peter; Kabaria, Caroline; Kisia, Lyagamula; Kyobutungi, Catherine; Mberu, Blessing; Mohamed, Shukri F., African Populat \& Hlth Res Ctr, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Chen, Yen-Fu; Griffiths, Frances; Harris, Bronwyn; Smith, Simon; Watson, Samuel, I; Wilson, Ria; Aujla, Navneet; Gill, Paramjit; Mohamed, Shukri F.; Oyebode, Oyinlola; Uthman, Olalekan A., Univ Warwick, Warwick Med Sch, Div Hlth Sci, Coventry, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Fayehun, Olufunke, Univ Ibadan, Fac Social Sci, Dept Sociol, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.
|
|
Griffiths, Frances, Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Publ Hlth, Ctr Hlth Policy, Johannesburg, South Africa.
|
|
Lilford, Richard J.; Sartori, Jo; Watson, Samuel, I, Univ Birmingham, Inst Appl Hlth Res, Coll Med \& Dent Sci, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Omigbodun, Akinyinka, Univ Ibadan, Coll Med, Fac Clin Sci, Dept Obstet \& Gynaecol, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.
|
|
Yeboah, Godwin; Porto de Albuquerque, Joao; Tregonning, Grant, Univ Warwick, Inst Global Sustainable Dev, Coventry, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Diggle, Peter J., Univ Lancaster, Lancaster Med Sch, Lancaster, England.
|
|
Madan, Jason J., Univ Warwick, Warwick Med Sch, Warwick Clin Trials Unit, Coventry, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Odubanjo, Oladoyin, Nigerian Acad Sci, Lagos, Nigeria.
|
|
Osuh, Mary E., Univ Ibadan, Coll Med, Dept Periodontol \& Community Dent, Fac Dent, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.
|
|
Owoaje, Eme, Univ Ibadan, Fac Publ Hlth, Coll Med, Dept Community Med, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.
|
|
Rahman, Omar, Univ Liberal Arts Bangladesh, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
|
|
Taiwo, Olalekan John, Univ Ibadan, Dept Geog, Fac Social Sci, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003042},
|
|
Article-Number = {e003042},
|
|
ISSN = {2059-7908},
|
|
Keywords = {health policy; health systems; public health; other infection; disease;
|
|
disorder; or injury; qualitative study},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; MODEL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {f.e.griffiths@warwick.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Yeboah, Godwin/D-5080-2015
|
|
de Albuquerque, Joao Porto/O-2972-2019
|
|
Kibe, Peter Mwangi/AAA-7500-2022
|
|
Oyebode, Oyinlola/ABE-1256-2021
|
|
Diggle, Peter J/A-3025-2009
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Yeboah, Godwin/0000-0003-4618-3175
|
|
de Albuquerque, Joao Porto/0000-0002-3160-3168
|
|
Kibe, Peter Mwangi/0000-0002-9027-9054
|
|
Oyebode, Oyinlola/0000-0003-0925-9839
|
|
Ajisola, Motunrayo/0000-0002-1704-0944
|
|
Owoaje, Eme/0000-0002-0491-6732
|
|
Griffiths, Frances/0000-0002-4173-1438
|
|
Kisia, Lyagamula/0000-0002-2045-6158
|
|
Madan, Jason/0000-0003-4316-1480
|
|
Lilford, Richard/0000-0002-0634-984X
|
|
Sartori, Jo/0000-0002-8681-9329
|
|
Fayehun, Olufunke/0000-0002-3769-2130
|
|
Watson, Sam/0000-0002-8972-769X
|
|
OSUH PhD, Mary Ebelechukwu/0000-0003-2367-6487
|
|
Kyobutungi, Catherine/0000-0002-5344-5631
|
|
Harris, Bronwyn/0000-0003-4695-008X
|
|
Bakibinga, Pauline/0000-0001-7097-5450
|
|
Ahmed, Syed A K Shifat/0000-0001-8166-7971
|
|
Chen, Yen-Fu/0000-0002-9446-2761},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {144},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000564358100009},
|
|
ESI-Highly-Cited-Paper = {Y},
|
|
ESI-Hot-Paper = {N},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000270909400009,
|
|
Author = {Yip, Winnie and Hanson, Kara},
|
|
Editor = {Chernichovsky, D and Hanson, K},
|
|
Title = {PURCHASING HEALTH CARE IN CHINA: EXPERIENCES, OPPORTUNITIES AND
|
|
CHALLENGES},
|
|
Booktitle = {INNOVATIONS IN HEALTH SYSTEM FINANCE IN DEVELOPING AND TRANSITIONAL
|
|
ECONOMIES},
|
|
Series = {Advances in Health Economics and Health Services Research},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Pages = {197-218},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives - Purchasing has been promoted as a key policy instrument to
|
|
improve health system performance. Despite its widespread adoption,
|
|
there is little empirical evidence on how it works, the challenges
|
|
surrounding its implementation, its impact, and the preconditions for it
|
|
to function effectively, particularly in low- and middle-income
|
|
settings. The objective of this chapter is to analyze critically the
|
|
extent to which purchasing could be, and has been used strategically in
|
|
China and to identify modifications that are needed for purchasing to be
|
|
effective in assuring that the government's new funding for health care
|
|
will result in efficient and effective health services.
|
|
Methods - We present a conceptual framework for purchasing, which
|
|
identifies three critical principal-agent relationships in purchasing.
|
|
We draw on evidence from secondary data, results of other research
|
|
studies, interviews, and the impact evaluation of a social experiment in
|
|
rural China that explicitly used purchasing to improve quality and
|
|
efficiency. This information is used to examine purchasing relationships
|
|
in urban social health insurance (SHI), the rural medical insurance
|
|
scheme, and purchasing of public health services.
|
|
Findings - To date, use of strategic purchasing is limited in China.
|
|
Both the urban and the rural health insurance schemes act as passive
|
|
third-party payers, failing to take advantage of the opportunities to
|
|
strengthen incentives to improve quality and efficiency. This may be
|
|
because as government agencies, the extent to which the Ministries of
|
|
Health and Labor and Social Security can act independently from provider
|
|
interests, or act in the best interest of the population, is unclear.
|
|
Other important challenges include ensuring adequate representation of
|
|
the population's views and preferences and making better use of the
|
|
leverage provided by purchasing to create appropriate provider
|
|
incentives, through better integration of financing and improved
|
|
coordination among purchasers.
|
|
Implications for policy - In designing purchasing arrangements,
|
|
attention needs to be paid to all three principal agent relationships.
|
|
Successful purchasing appears to require mechanisms to mobilize and
|
|
represent community preferences and more strategic contracting with
|
|
providers. More research is needed to strengthen the evidence on which
|
|
purchasing arrangements work, which no not work, and under what
|
|
conditions different purchasing configurations can work most
|
|
effectively.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Yip, W (Corresponding Author), Univ Oxford, Dept Publ Hlth, Hlth Econ Res Ctr, Oxford, England.
|
|
Yip, Winnie, Univ Oxford, Dept Publ Hlth, Hlth Econ Res Ctr, Oxford, England.
|
|
Hanson, Kara, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Publ Hlth \& Policy, Hlth Econ \& Financing Programme, London WC1, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/S0731-2199(2009)0000021011},
|
|
ISSN = {0731-2199},
|
|
ISBN = {978-1-84855-664-5},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; SYSTEM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000270909400009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000576290700001,
|
|
Author = {Mpango, Richard and Kalha, Jasmine and Shamba, Donat and Ramesh, Mary
|
|
and Ngakongwa, Fileuka and Kulkarni, Arti and Korde, Palak and Nakku,
|
|
Juliet and Ryan, Grace K.},
|
|
Title = {Challenges to peer support in low- and middle-income countries during
|
|
COVID-19},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBALIZATION AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {SEP 25},
|
|
Abstract = {Background A recent editorial urged those working in global mental
|
|
health to ``change the conversation{''} on coronavirus disease
|
|
(Covid-19) by putting more focus on the needs of people with severe
|
|
mental health conditions. UPSIDES (Using Peer Support In Developing
|
|
Empowering mental health Services) is a six-country consortium carrying
|
|
out implementation research on peer support for people with severe
|
|
mental health conditions in high- (Germany, Israel), lower middle-
|
|
(India) and low-income (Tanzania, Uganda) settings. This commentary
|
|
briefly outlines some of the key challenges faced by UPSIDES sites in
|
|
low- and middle-income countries as a result of Covid-19, sharing early
|
|
lessons that may also apply to other services seeking to address the
|
|
needs of people with severe mental health conditions in similar
|
|
contexts. Challenges and lessons learned The key take-away from
|
|
experiences in India, Tanzania and Uganda is that inequalities in terms
|
|
of access to mobile technologies, as well as to secure employment and
|
|
benefits, put peer support workers in particularly vulnerable situations
|
|
precisely when they and their peers are also at their most isolated.
|
|
Establishing more resilient peer support services requires attention to
|
|
the already precarious situation of people with severe mental health
|
|
conditions in low-resource settings, even before a crisis like Covid-19
|
|
occurs. While it is essential to maintain contact with peer support
|
|
workers and peers to whatever extent is possible remotely, alternatives
|
|
to face-to-face delivery of psychosocial interventions are not always
|
|
straightforward to implement and can make it more difficult to observe
|
|
individuals' reactions, talk about emotional issues and offer
|
|
appropriate support. Conclusions In environments where mental health
|
|
care was already heavily medicalized and mostly limited to medications
|
|
issued by psychiatric institutions, Covid-19 threatens burgeoning
|
|
efforts to pursue a more holistic and person-centered model of care for
|
|
people with severe mental health conditions. As countries emerge from
|
|
lockdown, those working in global mental health will need to redouble
|
|
their efforts not only to make up for lost time and help individuals
|
|
cope with the added stressors of Covid-19 in their communities, but also
|
|
to regain lost ground in mental health care reform and in broader
|
|
conversations about mental health in low-resource settings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ryan, GK (Corresponding Author), London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Dept Populat Hlth, London, England.
|
|
Mpango, Richard, Butabika Natl Referral Hosp, Res \& Training Sect, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Mpango, Richard, MRC UVRI \& LSHTM Uganda Res Unit, Mental Hlth Sect, Entebbe, Uganda.
|
|
Mpango, Richard, Soroti Univ, Sch Hlth Sci, Dept Mental Hlth, Arapai, Uganda.
|
|
Kalha, Jasmine; Kulkarni, Arti; Korde, Palak, Ctr Mental Hlth Law \& Policy, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
|
|
Shamba, Donat; Ramesh, Mary; Ngakongwa, Fileuka, Ifakara Hlth Inst, Dept Hlth Syst Impact Evaluat \& Policy, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
|
|
Ngakongwa, Fileuka, Muhimbili Univ Hlth \& Allied Sci, Dept Psychiat \& Mental Hlth, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
|
|
Nakku, Juliet, Butabika Natl Referral Hosp, Psychiat, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Ryan, Grace K., London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Fac Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Dept Populat Hlth, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12992-020-00622-y},
|
|
Article-Number = {90},
|
|
EISSN = {1744-8603},
|
|
Keywords = {Peer support; Global mental health; Covid-19},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {grace.ryan@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Wheatley, Dorothy/HGC-9224-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kalha, Jasmine/0000-0001-7357-2366},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {14},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000576290700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000967203700001,
|
|
Author = {Gruson-Wood, Julia and Haines, Jess and Rice, Carla and Chapman, Gwen E.},
|
|
Title = {The problem of heteronormativity in family-based health promotion:
|
|
centring gender transformation in Ontario, Canada},
|
|
Journal = {CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE SANTE PUBLIQUE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {114},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {659-670},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {ObjectivesSocial scientists have demonstrated that family health work is
|
|
interlinked with heteronormative gender inequities. Yet family-based
|
|
public health interventions rarely incorporate a gender transformative
|
|
approach or address heteronormativity as a potential health barrier in
|
|
North America. Instead, attention to gender surfaces primarily in family
|
|
health interventions conducted in low- to middle-income countries with
|
|
majority Black and racialized populations. The objective of this article
|
|
is to establish the importance of designing health interventions that
|
|
account for heteronormative relations in Ontarian families by drawing on
|
|
empirical data from the Guelph Family Health Study (GFHS).MethodsWe draw
|
|
on data (February-October 2019) from (1) semi-structured interviews with
|
|
20 families and with 4 health educators facilitating the GFHS home
|
|
visits and (2) observational data of 11 GFHS home visits and 1 health
|
|
educator training day. Informed by gender transformation theory, data
|
|
were analyzed and coded to understand the impact of gender, sexuality,
|
|
and place in family health interventions.ResultsPre-existing
|
|
heteronormative parenting relations were reinforced through GFHS
|
|
participation: the GFHS was mother-led, increasing some mothers' stress
|
|
levels. Fathers tended to consider paid work a justification for
|
|
disengaging from the GFHS, and their detachment sometimes obstructed
|
|
mothers' intervention efforts. Health educators (all women) were caught
|
|
in these relations, feeling like because of their gender, they were
|
|
viewed by parents as confidants and marriage
|
|
counsellors.ConclusionFindings emphasize the need for expanding the
|
|
epistemic and methodological approaches to family-based health
|
|
interventions, changing the demographic and geographic emphasis within
|
|
the field, and designing interventions that focus on societal-level
|
|
changes. Heterosexuality has not been analyzed as a risk factor within
|
|
the public health field, but our findings indicate the need for further
|
|
study.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gruson-Wood, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Guelph, Social Practice \& Transformat Change Program, Guelph, ON, Canada.
|
|
Gruson-Wood, Julia, Univ Guelph, Social Practice \& Transformat Change Program, Guelph, ON, Canada.
|
|
Haines, Jess; Rice, Carla; Chapman, Gwen E., Univ Guelph, Family Relat \& Appl Nutr, Guelph, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.17269/s41997-023-00760-x},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0008-4263},
|
|
EISSN = {1920-7476},
|
|
Keywords = {Family-based health intervention; Gender transformation;
|
|
Heterosexuality; Heteronormativity; Colonialism; Canada},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FATHERS; INTERVENTIONS; PERCEPTIONS; DIVISION; MATTERS; OBESITY; FOOD;
|
|
CARE; SEX; MEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jgrusonw@uoguelph.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {58},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000967203700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000448223900006,
|
|
Author = {Asweto, Collins Otieno and Alzain, Mohamed Ali and Andrea, Sebastian and
|
|
Alexander, Rachel and Wang, Wei},
|
|
Title = {Integration of community health workers into health systems in
|
|
developing countries: Opportunities and challenges},
|
|
Journal = {FAMILY MEDICINE AND COMMUNITY HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {4},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {37-45},
|
|
Month = {JAN 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Developing countries have the potential to reach vulnerable
|
|
and underserved populations marginalized by the country's health care
|
|
systems by way of community health workers (CHWs). It is imperative that
|
|
health care systems focus on improving access to quality continuous
|
|
primary care through the use of CHWs while paying attention to the
|
|
factors that impact on CHWs and their effectiveness.
|
|
Objective: To explore the possible opportunities and challenges of
|
|
integrating CHWs into the health care systems of developing countries.
|
|
Methods: Six databases were examined for quantitative, qualitative, and
|
|
mixed-methods studies that included the integration of CHWs, their
|
|
motivation and supervision, and CHW policy making and implementation in
|
|
developing countries. Thirty-three studies met the inclusion criteria
|
|
and were double read to extract data relevant to the context of CHW
|
|
programs. Thematic coding was conducted and evidence on the main
|
|
categories of contextual factors influencing integration of CHWs into
|
|
the health system was synthesized.
|
|
Results: CHWs are an effective and appropriate element of a health care
|
|
team and can assist in addressing health disparities and social
|
|
determinants of health. Important facilitators of integration of CHWs
|
|
into health care teams are support from other health workers and
|
|
inclusion of CHWs in case management meetings. Sustainable integration
|
|
of CHWs into the health care system requires the formulation and
|
|
implementation of polices that support their work, as well as financial
|
|
and nonfinancial incentives, motivation, collaborative and supportive
|
|
supervision, and a manageable workload.
|
|
Conclusions: For sustainable integration of CHWs into health care
|
|
systems, high-performing health systems with sound governance, adequate
|
|
financing, well-organized service delivery, and adequate supplies and
|
|
equipment are essential. Similarly, competent communities could
|
|
contribute to better CHW performance through sound governance of
|
|
community resources, promotion of inclusiveness and cohesion, engagement
|
|
in participatory decision making, and mobilization of local resources
|
|
for community welfare.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wang, W (Corresponding Author), Edith Cowan Univ, Sch Med Sci, Global Hlth \& Genom, Joondalup, WA 6027, Australia.
|
|
Asweto, Collins Otieno; Alzain, Mohamed Ali; Andrea, Sebastian; Wang, Wei, Capital Med Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Asweto, Collins Otieno, Great Lakes Univ Kisumu, Sch Hlth Sci, Kisumu, Kenya.
|
|
Asweto, Collins Otieno; Alzain, Mohamed Ali; Andrea, Sebastian; Wang, Wei, Beijing Municipal Key Lab Clin Epidemiol, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Alzain, Mohamed Ali, Univ Dongola, Fac Med \& Hlth Sci, Community Med Dept, Dongola, Sudan.
|
|
Alexander, Rachel; Wang, Wei, Edith Cowan Univ, Sch Med Sci, Syst \& Intervent Res Ctr Hlth, Perth, WA, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.15212/FMCH.2016.0102},
|
|
ISSN = {2305-6983},
|
|
EISSN = {2009-8774},
|
|
Keywords = {Community health workers; health care systems and policy; supportive
|
|
supervision; developing countries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INCOME COUNTRIES; PERFORMANCE; FACILITATORS; SURVIVAL; NEWBORN; PROGRAM;
|
|
AFRICA; MIDDLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Primary Health Care},
|
|
Author-Email = {wei.wang@ecu.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Alzain, Mohamed Ali/AAF-5957-2019
|
|
Alzain, Mohamed Ali/AAR-8314-2021
|
|
ASWETO, COLLINS/AAK-7261-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Alzain, Mohamed Ali/0000-0002-0085-5805
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000448223900006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000454103900006,
|
|
Author = {Spagnolo, Jessica and Champagne, Francois and Leduc, Nicole and Melki,
|
|
Wahid and Piat, Myra and Laporta, Marc and Bram, Nesrine and Guesmi,
|
|
Imen and Charfi, Fatma},
|
|
Title = {``We find what we look for, and we look for what we know{''}: factors
|
|
interacting with a mental health training program to influence its
|
|
expected outcomes in Tunisia},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Month = {DEC 20},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundPrimary care physicians (PCPs) working in mental health care
|
|
in Tunisia often lack knowledge and skills needed to adequately address
|
|
mental health-related issues. To address these lacunas, a training based
|
|
on the Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP) Intervention Guide
|
|
(IG) was offered to PCPs working in the Greater Tunis area between
|
|
February and April 2016. While the mhGAP-IG has been used extensively in
|
|
low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) to help build non-specialists'
|
|
mental health capacity, little research has focused on how contextual
|
|
factors interact with the implemented training program to influence its
|
|
expected outcomes. This paper's objective is to fill that lack.MethodsWe
|
|
conducted a case study with a purposeful sample of 18 trained PCPs. Data
|
|
was collected by semi-structured interviews between March and April
|
|
2016. Qualitative data was analyzed using thematic
|
|
analysis.ResultsParticipants identified more barriers than facilitators
|
|
when describing contextual factors influencing the mhGAP-based
|
|
training's expected outcomes. Barriers were regrouped into five
|
|
categories: structural factors (e.g., policies, social context, local
|
|
workforce development, and physical aspects of the environment),
|
|
organizational factors (e.g., logistical issues for the provision of
|
|
care and collaboration within and across healthcare organizations),
|
|
provider factors (e.g., previous mental health experience and personal
|
|
characteristics), patient factors (e.g., beliefs about the health system
|
|
and healthcare professionals, and motivation to seek care), and
|
|
innovation factors (e.g., training characteristics). These contextual
|
|
factors interacted with the implemented training to influence knowledge
|
|
about pharmacological treatments and symptoms of mental illness,
|
|
confidence in providing treatment, negative beliefs about certain mental
|
|
health conditions, and the understanding of the role of PCPs in mental
|
|
health care delivery. In addition, post-training, participants still
|
|
felt uncomfortable with certain aspects of treatment and the management
|
|
of some mental health conditions.ConclusionsFindings highlight the
|
|
complexity of implementing a mhGAP-based training given its interaction
|
|
with contextual factors to influence the attainment of expected
|
|
outcomes. Results may be used to tailor structural, organizational,
|
|
provider, patient, and innovation factors prior to future
|
|
implementations of the mhGAP-based training in Tunisia. Findings may
|
|
also be used by decision-makers interested in implementing the mhGAP-IG
|
|
training in other LMICs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Spagnolo, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Montreal, IRSPUM, Sch Publ Hlth, Montreal, PQ H3N 1X9, Canada.
|
|
Spagnolo, Jessica; Champagne, Francois, Univ Montreal, IRSPUM, Sch Publ Hlth, Montreal, PQ H3N 1X9, Canada.
|
|
Leduc, Nicole, Univ Montreal, Sch Publ Hlth, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Melki, Wahid; Bram, Nesrine, Univ Tunis El Manar, Razi Hosp, Tunis, Tunisia.
|
|
Piat, Myra, McGill Univ, Douglas Mental Hlth Univ Inst, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Laporta, Marc, McGill Univ, Montreal WHO PAHO Collaborating Ctr Res \& Trainin, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Guesmi, Imen, Ctr Sch \& Univ Med Manouba, Manouba, Tunisia.
|
|
Charfi, Fatma, Univ Tunis El Manar, Mongi Slim Hosp, Tunis, Tunisia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-018-6261-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {1398},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Implementation; mhGAP; Training; Mental health; Primary care;
|
|
Physicians; Case study; Tunisia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; DISORDERS; GAP},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jessica.maria-violanda.spagnolo@umontreal.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Charfi, Fatma/AAZ-8912-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Spagnolo, Jessica/0000-0002-1125-3121
|
|
Charfi, Fatma/0000-0002-5171-2767},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {71},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000454103900006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000383296400024,
|
|
Author = {Trujillo, Matthew D. and Plough, Alonzo},
|
|
Title = {Building a culture of health: A new framework and measures for health
|
|
and health care in America},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {165},
|
|
Pages = {206-213},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {For generations, Americans' health has been unequally influenced by
|
|
income, education, ethnicity, and geography. Health care systems have
|
|
operated largely apart from each other and from community life. The
|
|
definition of health has been the ``absence of illness,{''} rather than
|
|
the recognition that all aspects of our lives should support health.
|
|
Today, a growing number of communities, regions, and states are working
|
|
to redefine what it means to get and stay healthy by addressing the
|
|
multiple determinants of health. The requirements of federal health care
|
|
reform are changing who has access to care, how care is paid for and
|
|
delivered, and how patients and providers interact. Coordinated efforts
|
|
to promote wellness and prevent diseases are proliferating among a
|
|
diverse set of stakeholders. These developments in health and in society
|
|
present a window of opportunity for real societal transformation-a
|
|
chance to catalyze a national movement that demands and supports a
|
|
widely shared, multifaceted vision for a Culture of Health.
|
|
To address this challenge, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has
|
|
embarked on a strategic direction to use the tools of a large national
|
|
philanthropy to catalyze a social movement which we are calling Building
|
|
a Culture of Health. This article presents the Foundation's new model
|
|
for a Culture of Health, the trans-disciplinary research that developed
|
|
a set of metrics that tie to the model, and the community engagement
|
|
activities undertaken in the development of both the model and metrics.
|
|
The model and associated metrics and extensive communication, in
|
|
addition to partnership, and grant funding strategies, represent a
|
|
culture change strategy being implemented over 20 years. Addressing
|
|
underlying inequities in health affirming life conditions and improving
|
|
social cohesion across diverse groups to take action to improve theses
|
|
condition lay at the heart of this strategy. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All
|
|
rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Trujillo, MD (Corresponding Author), Robert Wood Johnson Fdn, Route 1 \& Coll Rd East,POB 2316, Princeton, NJ 08543 USA.
|
|
Trujillo, Matthew D.; Plough, Alonzo, Robert Wood Johnson Fdn, Route 1 \& Coll Rd East,POB 2316, Princeton, NJ 08543 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.06.043},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
Keywords = {Health; Values; Social cohesion; Social capital; Civic engagement;
|
|
Community},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; UNITED-STATES; MENTAL-HEALTH; COMMUNITY; SENSE;
|
|
INEQUALITY; PARTICIPATION; ENVIRONMENT; DEATH; RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {mtrujillo@rwjf.org},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {30},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000383296400024},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000363458200007,
|
|
Author = {Nomura, Kyoko and Yamazaki, Yuka and Gruppen, Larry D. and Horie, Saki
|
|
and Takeuchi, Masumi and Illing, Jan},
|
|
Title = {The difficulty of professional continuation among female doctors in
|
|
Japan: a qualitative study of alumnae of 13 medical schools in Japan},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {5},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: To investigate the difficulties Japanese female doctors face
|
|
in continuing professional practice.
|
|
Design: A qualitative study using the Kawakita Jiro method.
|
|
Setting: A survey conducted in 2011 of 13 private Japanese medical
|
|
school alumni associations.
|
|
Participants: 359 female doctors.
|
|
Primary outcome measures: Barriers of balancing work and gender role.
|
|
Results: The female doctors reported that professional practice was a
|
|
struggle with long working hours due to a current shortage of doctors in
|
|
Japan. There was also a severe shortage of childcare facilities in the
|
|
workplace. Some women appeared to have low confidence in balancing the
|
|
physician's job and personal life, resulting in low levels of
|
|
professional pursuit. There appeared to be two types of stereotypical
|
|
gender roles, including one expected from society, stating that ``child
|
|
rearing is a woman's job{''}, and the other perceived by the women
|
|
themselves, that some women had a very strong desire to raise their own
|
|
children. Male doctors and some female doctors who were single or older
|
|
were perceived to be less enthusiastic about supporting women who worked
|
|
while raising children because these coworkers feared that they would
|
|
have to perform additional work as a result of the women taking long
|
|
periods of leave.
|
|
Conclusions: Important factors identified for promoting the continuation
|
|
of professional practice among female doctors in Japan were the need to
|
|
improve working conditions, including cutting back on long working
|
|
hours, a solution to the shortage of nurseries, a need for the
|
|
introduction of educational interventions to clarify professional
|
|
responsibilities, and redefinition of the gender division of labour for
|
|
male and female doctors. In addition, we identified a need to modernise
|
|
current employment practices by introducing temporary posts to cover
|
|
maternity leave and introducing flexible working hours during specialist
|
|
training, thus supporting and encouraging more women to continue their
|
|
medical careers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nomura, K (Corresponding Author), Teikyo Univ, Sch Med, Dept Hyg \& Publ Hlth, Tokyo 173, Japan.
|
|
Nomura, Kyoko, Teikyo Univ, Sch Med, Dept Hyg \& Publ Hlth, Tokyo 173, Japan.
|
|
Yamazaki, Yuka, Juntendo Univ, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth, Tokyo 113, Japan.
|
|
Gruppen, Larry D., Univ Michigan, Sch Med, Dept Med Educ, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Horie, Saki; Takeuchi, Masumi, Support Ctr Women Phys \& Researchers, Dept Teikyo, Tokyo, Japan.
|
|
Illing, Jan, Univ Durham, Sch Med Pharm \& Hlth, Dept Ctr Med Educ Res, Durham, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005845},
|
|
Article-Number = {e005845},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER; WOMEN; PHYSICIANS; CONFIDENCE; OBSTACLES; WORK; TIME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {kyoko@med.teikyo-u.ac.jp},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Illing, Jan/0000-0001-6218-9775},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {41},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000363458200007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000701397800039,
|
|
Author = {Karimova, R. M.},
|
|
Editor = {Solovev, DB},
|
|
Title = {The Participation of the Tajiks in the Development of Small and
|
|
Medium-Sized Businesses in the Russian Far East},
|
|
Booktitle = {PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE - FAR EAST CON
|
|
(ISCFEC 2020)},
|
|
Series = {AEBMR-Advances in Economics Business and Management Research},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {128},
|
|
Pages = {277-281},
|
|
Note = {International Scientific Conference on Far East Con (ISCFEC),
|
|
Vladivostok, RUSSIA, OCT 01-04, 2019},
|
|
Abstract = {The paper deals with the problem of the small and medium-sized
|
|
businesses development in the Far East. It is noted the importance of
|
|
small business development in the region, which has a number of
|
|
advantages in comparison with large-scale production, namely: it
|
|
provides wide freedom of market choice and the additional job places,
|
|
etc. The development of small and medium-sized businesses in the Far
|
|
East is primarily the interests of the state to attract foreign as well
|
|
as domestic investment and contribution to the economy of the Russian
|
|
Federation. So, as the population of the Far East tends to leave, the
|
|
influx of migrants including the Tajiks - is increasing more and more.
|
|
Mostly Tajiks are engaged in small and medium business in the Far East.
|
|
The development of small and medium-sized businesses for Tajik
|
|
entrepreneurs is primarily a permanent place of work, profit from
|
|
business income, as well as meeting the needs of the population.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Karimova, RM (Corresponding Author), Komsomolsk On Amur State Univ, Komsomolsk On Amur 681013, Russia.
|
|
Karimova, R. M., Komsomolsk On Amur State Univ, Komsomolsk On Amur 681013, Russia.},
|
|
ISSN = {2352-5428},
|
|
ISBN = {978-94-6252-929-8},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Economics; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {raksana-92@list.ru},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {12},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000701397800039},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000448730500008,
|
|
Author = {Gong, Jing and Hong, Yili and Zentner, Alejandro},
|
|
Title = {Role of Monetary Incentives in the Digital and Physical Inter-Border
|
|
Labor Flows},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {35},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {866-899},
|
|
Abstract = {By allowing individuals to engage in remote relationships with foreign
|
|
employers, online labor markets have the potential to mitigate the
|
|
inefficiency costs due to the legal barriers and other frictions
|
|
deterring international physical migration. This study investigates how
|
|
the supply of foreign labor in digital and physical markets responds
|
|
differently to monetary incentives. We use a unique data set containing
|
|
information on digital labor flows from a major global online labor
|
|
platform in conjunction with data on physical labor flows. We exploit
|
|
short-term fluctuations in the exchange rate as a source of econometric
|
|
identification: a depreciation of a country's currency against the U.S.
|
|
dollar increases the incentives of its workers to seek digital and
|
|
physical employment from employers based in the United States. Using a
|
|
panel count data model, we find that monetary incentives induced by
|
|
depreciations of foreign currencies against the U.S. dollar are
|
|
positively associated with the supply of foreign labor in digital
|
|
markets, as expected from the frictionless nature of electronic markets.
|
|
However, we fail to find a positive relationship between monetary
|
|
incentives and the supply of foreign labor in physical markets, which
|
|
might be expected due to the substantial bureaucratic restrictions and
|
|
transaction costs associated with physical migration. We further examine
|
|
how countries' income and information and communications technologies
|
|
development levels moderate the positive relationship between monetary
|
|
incentives and digital labor flows. Our findings are useful for gauging
|
|
the extent to which digital labor flows can alleviate the economic
|
|
inefficiencies from the restrictions on physical migration.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gong, J (Corresponding Author), Temple Univ, Informat Syst, Dept Management Informat Syst, Fox Sch Business, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.
|
|
Gong, Jing, Temple Univ, Informat Syst, Dept Management Informat Syst, Fox Sch Business, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.
|
|
Hong, Yili, Arizona State Univ, Informat Syst, WP Carey Sch Business, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.
|
|
Hong, Yili, Arizona State Univ, Digital Soc Initiat, WP Carey Sch Business, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.
|
|
Hong, Yili, Arizona State Univ, Dept Informat Syst, WP Carey Sch Business, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.
|
|
Zentner, Alejandro, Univ Texas Dallas, Naveen Jindal Sch Management, Managerial Econ, Richardson, TX 75083 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/07421222.2018.1481661},
|
|
ISSN = {0742-1222},
|
|
EISSN = {1557-928X},
|
|
Keywords = {Economics of information systems; electronic markets; income elasticity;
|
|
information policy; monetary incentive theory; online labor markets;
|
|
outsourcing; remote employment; digital labor markets},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INFORMATION; MARKETS; ECONOMICS; PREFERENCES; IMMIGRATION; REPUTATION;
|
|
MIGRATION; BUSINESS; COMMERCE; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Computer Science, Information Systems; Information Science \& Library
|
|
Science; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {gong@temple.edu
|
|
hong@asu.edu
|
|
azentner@utdallas.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hong, Yili/M-6093-2016
|
|
N'Dri, Amoin Bernadine/IWD-7811-2023
|
|
Gong, Jing/N-1374-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hong, Yili/0000-0002-0577-7877
|
|
Gong, Jing/0000-0003-4659-4900},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {59},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {59},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000448730500008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000278891300013,
|
|
Author = {Laens, Silvia and Perera, Marcelo},
|
|
Editor = {Vos, R and Ganuza, E and Morley, S and Robinson, S},
|
|
Title = {Uruguay - export growth, poverty and income distribution},
|
|
Booktitle = {WHO GAINS FROM FREE TRADE: EXPORT-LED GROWTH, INEQUALITY AND POVERTY IN
|
|
LATIN AMERICA},
|
|
Series = {Routledge Studies in Development Economics},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {50},
|
|
Pages = {361-392},
|
|
Abstract = {Uruguay began liberalizing its economy in the 1970s. The process
|
|
continued through the 1990s when the country joined Mercosur. The
|
|
reforms were mainly oriented at liberalizing trade and financial flows,
|
|
much less was done in terms of privatization and public sector reform.
|
|
Uruguay established itself as a regional financial and offshore banking
|
|
centre. In the early 1990s, inflation was stabilized on the basis of
|
|
high capital inflows and a stabilization policy that used the exchange
|
|
rate as a nominal anchor. The ensuing real exchange rate appreciation
|
|
harmed export growth with the rest of the world and, along with the
|
|
surge in capital inflows, pushed up import demand. Real appreciation of
|
|
the exchange rate against Uruguay's trading partners in Mercosur was
|
|
virtually nil and exports benefited from the new set of trade
|
|
preferences within the group. This made macroeconomic performance in
|
|
Uruguay strongly dependent on the business cycle in Argentina and
|
|
Brazil. When these two countries shifted away from a fix on the nominal
|
|
exchange rate, starting with the floating of the Brazilian real,
|
|
Uruguay's exports were severely hit pushing the economy into recession.
|
|
The recession was deepened with Argentina's crisis at the turn of the
|
|
century. Uruguay's economic recovery from the sharp decline in the first
|
|
half of the 1980s thus lasted until 1998. Employment increased, despite
|
|
job losses in agriculture and manufacturing following productivity
|
|
growth associated with the opening process. Employment growth was
|
|
particularly strong in services. Job shedding in manufacturing was also
|
|
associated with a fall-out of many firms in import-competing sectors.
|
|
Real labour incomes also increased during this period of growth. Skilled
|
|
workers were the main beneficiaries as structural adjustment made
|
|
production more skill intensive. Labour income inequality increased, but
|
|
overall employment and real wage increases allowed for a visible
|
|
reduction in poverty. These trends reversed after 1998. Simulations with
|
|
the computable general equilibrium for Uruguay confirm the positive
|
|
effects of trade liberalization in the context of an appreciated
|
|
exchange rate on growth and poverty reduction. The simulations also
|
|
suggest that further negotiated trade liberalization in the context of
|
|
the Free Trade Area of the Americas or the World Trade Organization
|
|
(WTO) would reinforce these effects. With further unilateral trade
|
|
liberalization export growth would require maintaining the exchange rate
|
|
competitive, while employment growth would be served with allowing for
|
|
some appreciation of the currency. In the case of negotiated,
|
|
multilateral trade liberalization the nature of the exchange rate regime
|
|
does not appear to matter for Uruguay in order to reap the gains from
|
|
trade. World market prices would move in favour of Uruguay's exports,
|
|
particularly under a WTO scenario that would benefit its agricultural
|
|
exports. Unskilled workers would be the principal beneficiaries of such
|
|
a scenario and poverty and inequality would be reduced. It seems to
|
|
confirm Uruguay's paradoxical relationship with trade integration.
|
|
Mercosur brought both trade benefits and greater vulnerability to the
|
|
volatility of the economies of its large neighbours, Argentina and
|
|
Brazil, while WTO equally would bring trade gains but enhance the
|
|
country's vulnerability to the volatility in primary commodity markets.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Laens, S (Corresponding Author), CINVE, Montevideo, Uruguay.
|
|
Laens, Silvia; Perera, Marcelo, CINVE, Montevideo, Uruguay.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-0-203-96583-2},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {21},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000278891300013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000530593800001,
|
|
Author = {Inam, Hina and Janjua, Mahin and Martins, Russell S. and Zahid, Nida and
|
|
Khan, Sadaf and Sattar, Abida K. and Darbar, Aneela and Akram, Sharmeen
|
|
and Faruqui, Nuzhat and Khan, Shaista M. and Lakhani, Gulzar and
|
|
Gillani, Mishal and Hashmi, Syeda Amrah and Enam, Ather and Haider, Adil
|
|
H. and Malik, Mahim A.},
|
|
Title = {Cultural Barriers for Women in Surgery: How Thick is the Glass Ceiling?
|
|
An Analysis from a Low Middle-Income Country},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Pages = {2870-2878},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Background This study aimed to highlight cultural barriers faced by
|
|
surgeons pursuing a surgical career faced by surgeons at a tertiary care
|
|
hospital in Pakistan. As more females opt for a surgical career,
|
|
barriers faced by female surgeons are becoming increasingly evident,
|
|
many of which are rooted in cultural norms. In Pakistan, a predominantly
|
|
Muslim-majority, low middle-income country, certain societal
|
|
expectations add additionally complexity and challenges to existing
|
|
cultural barriers. Methods A cross-sectional survey was administered via
|
|
e-mail to the full-time faculty and trainees in the Department of
|
|
Surgery at the Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan, from
|
|
July 2019 to November 2019. Results In total, 100 participants were
|
|
included in this study, with the majority being residents (55.6\%) and
|
|
consultants (33.3\%). 71.9\% of female surgeons felt that cultural
|
|
barriers towards a surgical career existed for their gender, as compared
|
|
to 25.4\% of male surgeons (p < 0.001). 40.6\% of females reported
|
|
having been discouraged by family/close friends from pursuing surgery,
|
|
as compared to only 9.0\% of males (p < 0.001). Moreover, a greater
|
|
percentage of females surgeons were responsible for household cooking,
|
|
cleaning and laundry, as compared to male surgeons (all p < 0.001).
|
|
Lastly, 71.4\% of female surgeons felt that having children had hindered
|
|
their surgical career, as compared to 4.8\% of males (p < 0001).
|
|
Conclusion Our study shows that significant cultural barriers exist for
|
|
females pursuing a surgical career in our setting. Findings such as
|
|
these emphasize the need for policy makers to work towards overcoming
|
|
cultural barriers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Malik, MA (Corresponding Author), Aga Khan Univ Hosp, Dept Surg, Stadium Rd, Karachi 74800, Pakistan.
|
|
Inam, Hina; Zahid, Nida; Khan, Sadaf; Sattar, Abida K.; Darbar, Aneela; Akram, Sharmeen; Faruqui, Nuzhat; Khan, Shaista M.; Lakhani, Gulzar; Enam, Ather; Malik, Mahim A., Aga Khan Univ Hosp, Dept Surg, Stadium Rd, Karachi 74800, Pakistan.
|
|
Janjua, Mahin; Martins, Russell S.; Gillani, Mishal; Hashmi, Syeda Amrah, Aga Khan Univ Hosp, Stadium Rd, Karachi 74800, Pakistan.
|
|
Haider, Adil H., Aga Khan Univ Hosp, Med Coll, Stadium Rd, Karachi 74800, Pakistan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s00268-020-05544-9},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0364-2313},
|
|
EISSN = {1432-2323},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENDER-DIFFERENCES; PHYSICIANS; BURNOUT; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {mahim.malik@aku.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Martins, Russell Seth/HDN-7193-2022
|
|
faruqui, nuzhat/AAS-2378-2021
|
|
Zahid, Nida/M-2696-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Zahid, Nida/0000-0001-8812-9463
|
|
sattar, abida K./0000-0002-9836-7825},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {19},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000530593800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000316622300004,
|
|
Author = {Yousafzai, Aisha K. and Rasheed, Muneera A. and Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.},
|
|
Title = {Annual Research Review: Improved nutrition - a pathway to resilience},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {54},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {367-377},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Early child nutritional deficiencies are prevalent in low-
|
|
and middle-countries with consequences linked not only to poor survival
|
|
and growth, but also to poor development outcomes. Children in
|
|
disadvantaged communities face multiple risks for nutritional
|
|
deficiencies, yet some children may be less susceptible or may recover
|
|
more quickly from malnutrition. A greater understanding is needed about
|
|
factors which moderate the effects of nutrition-related risks and foster
|
|
resilience to protect against or ameliorate poor development outcomes.
|
|
Methods: A literature review was undertaken from August to December 2011
|
|
and updated in August 2012. Key word searches using terms Nutrition,
|
|
Malnutrition, Child Development, Responsive Care, Stimulation, Low and
|
|
Middle Income Countries and Resilience were undertaken using PubMed and
|
|
Psychinfo. Results: Dietary adequacy is critical for growth and
|
|
development, but current evidence indicates that nutrition
|
|
supplementation alone is insufficient to foster resilience to protect
|
|
against, mitigate, and recover from nutritional threats and to promote
|
|
healthy development. The combination of nutrition interventions with
|
|
stimulation and responsive care is necessary. Combined nutrition and
|
|
psychosocial stimulation approaches can potentially work effectively
|
|
together to promote protective factors and mitigate risks for poor
|
|
cognitive, motor, social, and affective functioning helping children to
|
|
adapt in times of adversity. However, there are gaps in our existing
|
|
knowledge to combine nutrition and psychosocial stimulation
|
|
interventions effectively and promote these interventions at scale.
|
|
Conclusions: Research needs to address barriers at the level of family,
|
|
community, programme, and policy which have prevented thus far the
|
|
uptake of combined nutrition and psychosocial intervention strategies.
|
|
Further investigations are needed on how to provide support to
|
|
caregivers, enabling them to implement appropriate care for feeding and
|
|
stimulation. Finally, the effect of combined interventions on pathways
|
|
of care and protective mediators that foster resilience need to be
|
|
better understood to determine focus areas for content of combined
|
|
intervention curricula which help families in high-risk settings.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Yousafzai, AK (Corresponding Author), Aga Khan Univ, Dept Paediat \& Child Hlth, Div Women \& Child Hlth, Karachi, Pakistan.
|
|
Yousafzai, Aisha K.; Rasheed, Muneera A.; Bhutta, Zulfiqar A., Aga Khan Univ, Dept Paediat \& Child Hlth, Div Women \& Child Hlth, Karachi, Pakistan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/jcpp.12019},
|
|
ISSN = {0021-9630},
|
|
EISSN = {1469-7610},
|
|
Keywords = {Maternal and child nutrition deficiencies; responsive feeding;
|
|
psychosocial stimulation; resilience; low- and middle-income countries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-BIRTH-WEIGHT; CHILD-DEVELOPMENT; PSYCHOSOCIAL STIMULATION;
|
|
DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; MICRONUTRIENT SUPPLEMENTATION;
|
|
COGNITIVE-DEVELOPMENT; FEEDING INTERVENTION; MATERNAL DEPRESSION;
|
|
YOUNG-CHILDREN; MENTAL-HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental; Psychiatry; Psychology},
|
|
Author-Email = {aisha.yousafzai@aku.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {30},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {53},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000316622300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000719320700008,
|
|
Author = {Nizame, Fosiul Alam and Shoaib, Dewan Muhammad and Rousham, Emily K. and
|
|
Akter, Salma and Islam, Mohammad Aminul and Khan, Afsana Alamgir and
|
|
Rahman, Mahbubur and Unicomb, Leanne},
|
|
Title = {Barriers and facilitators to adherence to national drug policies on
|
|
antibiotic prescribing and dispensing in Bangladesh},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL POLICY AND PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {SUPPL 1, 1, SI},
|
|
Month = {NOV 16},
|
|
Abstract = {Background The National Drug Policy in Bangladesh prohibits the sale and
|
|
distribution of antibiotics without prescription from a registered
|
|
physician. Compliance with this policy is poor; prescribing antibiotics
|
|
by unqualified practitioners is common and over-the-counter dispensing
|
|
widespread. In Bangladesh, unqualified practitioners such as drug shop
|
|
operators are a major source of healthcare for the poor and
|
|
disadvantaged. This paper reports on policy awareness among drug shop
|
|
operators and their customers and identifies current dispensing
|
|
practices, barriers and facilitators to policy adherence. Methods We
|
|
conducted a qualitative study in rural and urban Bangladesh from June
|
|
2019 to August 2020. This included co-design workshops (n = 4) and
|
|
in-depth interviews (n = 24) with drug shop operators and
|
|
customers/household members, key informant interviews (n = 12) with key
|
|
personnel involved in aspects of the antibiotic supply chain including
|
|
pharmaceutical company representatives, and model drug shop operators;
|
|
and a group discussion with stakeholders representing key actors in
|
|
informal market systems namely: representatives from the government,
|
|
private sector, not-for-profit sector and membership organizations.
|
|
Results Barriers to policy compliance among drug shop operators included
|
|
limited knowledge of government drug policies, or the government-led
|
|
Bangladesh Pharmacy Model Initiative (BPMI), a national guideline
|
|
piloted to regulate drug sales. Drug shop operators had no clear
|
|
knowledge of different antibiotic generations, how and for what diseases
|
|
antibiotics work contributing to inappropriate antibiotic dispensing.
|
|
Nonetheless, drug shop operators wanted the right to prescribe
|
|
antibiotics based on having completed related training. Drug shop
|
|
customers cited poor healthcare facilities and inadequate numbers of
|
|
attending physician as a barrier to obtaining prescriptions and they
|
|
described difficulties differentiating between qualified and unqualified
|
|
providers. Conclusion Awareness of the National Drug Policy and the BPMI
|
|
was limited among urban and rural drug shop operators. Poor antibiotic
|
|
prescribing practice is additionally hampered by a shortage of qualified
|
|
physicians; cultural and economic barriers to accessing qualified
|
|
physicians, and poor implementation of regulations. Increasing qualified
|
|
physician access and increasing training and certification of drug shop
|
|
operators could improve the alignment of practices with national policy.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nizame, FA (Corresponding Author), Int Ctr Diarrhoea Dis Res Bangladesh Icddr B, Environm Intervent Unit, Infect Dis Div, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh.
|
|
Nizame, Fosiul Alam; Shoaib, Dewan Muhammad; Akter, Salma; Islam, Mohammad Aminul; Rahman, Mahbubur; Unicomb, Leanne, Int Ctr Diarrhoea Dis Res Bangladesh Icddr B, Environm Intervent Unit, Infect Dis Div, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh.
|
|
Rousham, Emily K., Loughborough Univ, Sch Sport Exercise \& Hlth Sci, Ctr Global Hlth \& Human Dev, Loughborough, Leics, England.
|
|
Islam, Mohammad Aminul, Washington State Univ, Paul G Allen Sch Global Anim Hlth, Pullman, WA 99164 USA.
|
|
Khan, Afsana Alamgir, Directorate Gen Hlth Serv DGHS, Dhaka, Bangladesh.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s40545-021-00342-7},
|
|
Article-Number = {85},
|
|
EISSN = {2052-3211},
|
|
Keywords = {Antimicrobial resistance (AMR); Irrational antibiotic use; Drug policy;
|
|
Qualified physicians; Quack; village doctor; Low- and middle-income
|
|
countries (LMICs)},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; SECTOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {fosiul@icddrb.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rahman, Mahbubur/HKM-9754-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rahman, Mahbubur/0000-0003-0520-2683
|
|
Shoaib, Dewan Muhammad/0000-0002-0168-0031
|
|
Islam, Mohammad Aminul/0000-0001-5107-5289},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000719320700008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000385805000004,
|
|
Author = {Valentova, Marie},
|
|
Title = {Generation and the propensity of long career interruptions due to
|
|
childcare under different family policy regimes: A multilevel approach},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL SOCIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {701-725},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {This article analyses the generation gap in the duration of long-term
|
|
career interruptions due to childcare among mothers of two children, and
|
|
how the differences are moderated by a country's predominant family
|
|
policy regime. The outcomes of the multilevel analysis reveal that
|
|
mothers born after 1960 have significantly lower odds of interrupting
|
|
their career for longer than 10 years compared with older women. A
|
|
country's predominant family policy model plays a significant role in
|
|
explaining the propensity of long career breaks. Mothers from countries
|
|
with post-socialist, Southern European and pro-egalitarian models
|
|
exhibit lower odds of having long-term career interruptions than those
|
|
in pro-traditionalist countries. Differences between generations are
|
|
moderated by countries' family policy models. Among younger generations,
|
|
the propensity to take long career breaks is lower in post-socialist and
|
|
non-interventionist regimes than in countries with a pro-traditionalist
|
|
family policy legacy.
|
|
Resume Cet article analyse le fosse entre les generations au travers de
|
|
la duree des interruptions prolongees de carriere liees a la garde des
|
|
enfants chez les meres de deux enfants, et comment ces differences sont
|
|
influencees par le regime predominant de politique familiale en vigueur
|
|
dans chaque pays. Les resultats de l'analyse multiniveau montrent que
|
|
les meres nees apres 1960 sont nettement moins susceptibles que les
|
|
femmes plus agees d'interrompre leur carriere plus de dix annees
|
|
d'affilee. Le modele predominant de politique familiale d'un pays
|
|
contribue de maniere significative a expliquer la propension aux
|
|
interruptions de carriere de longue duree. Dans les pays aux modeles
|
|
postsocialistes, du sud de l'Europe et qui favorisent l'egalite, les
|
|
meres sont moins susceptibles d'interrompre durablement leur carriere
|
|
que celles de pays protraditionalistes. Les differences entre les
|
|
generations sont moderees par les modeles de politique familiale du
|
|
pays. Parmi les jeunes generations, la propension aux interruptions de
|
|
carriere prolongees est moindre dans les regimes postsocialistes et non
|
|
interventionnistes que dans les pays au passe de politique familiale
|
|
protraditionaliste.
|
|
Resumen En este articulo se analiza la brecha generacional en la
|
|
duracion de las interrupciones de largo plazo en la carrera profesional
|
|
debido al cuidado de los ninos entre las madres de dos hijos, y como las
|
|
diferencias se ven afectadas por el regimen de politica familiar
|
|
predominante en cada pais. Los resultados del analisis multinivel
|
|
revelan que las madres nacidas despues de 1960 tienen probabilidades
|
|
significativamente menores de interrumpir su carrera durante mas de diez
|
|
anos en comparacion con las mujeres de mas edad. El modelo de politica
|
|
familiar predominante en cada pais juega un papel importante para
|
|
explicar la propension a tener interrupciones largas en la carrera
|
|
profesional. Las madres de los paises con modelos post-socialistas, del
|
|
Sur de Europa y pro-igualitarios tienen menores probabilidades de tener
|
|
interrupciones de largo plazo en su carrera que las madres de paises
|
|
pro-tradicionalistas. Las diferencias entre generaciones son moderadas
|
|
por los modelos de politica familiar de los paises. Entre las
|
|
generaciones mas jovenes, la propension a tener interrupciones largas de
|
|
carrera es mas baja en los regimenes post-socialistas y no
|
|
intervencionistas que en paises con una herencia politica familiar
|
|
pro-tradicionalista.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Valentova, M (Corresponding Author), LISER, 11 Porte Sci,Campus Belval, L-4366 Esch Sur Alzette, Luxembourg.
|
|
Valentova, Marie, LISER, 11 Porte Sci,Campus Belval, L-4366 Esch Sur Alzette, Luxembourg.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0268580916662387},
|
|
ISSN = {0268-5809},
|
|
EISSN = {1461-7242},
|
|
Keywords = {Career interruptions; childcare; family policy; multilevel analysis;
|
|
policy regimes; analyse multiniveau; garde des enfants; interruptions de
|
|
carriere; politique familiale; regimes de politique publique; Analisis
|
|
multinivel; cuidado de ninos; interrupciones de carrera profesional;
|
|
politica familiar; regimenes de politica publica},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK INTERRUPTIONS; MOTHERS EMPLOYMENT; GENDER INEQUALITY; WOMENS
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; LABOR; ATTITUDES; DIVISION; LEAVE; CONSEQUENCES;
|
|
DETERMINANTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {Marie.valentova@liser.lu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Valentova, Marie/HRB-9802-2023},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Valentova, Marie/0000-0003-2190-9179},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {31},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000385805000004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000456316000015,
|
|
Author = {Vukoja, Marija and Riviello, Elisabeth D. and Schultz, Marcus J.},
|
|
Title = {Critical care outcomes in resource-limited settings},
|
|
Journal = {CURRENT OPINION IN CRITICAL CARE},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {421-427},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose of reviewThe burden of critical illness in low-income and
|
|
middle-income countries (LMICs) is substantial. A better understanding
|
|
of critical care outcomes is essential for improving critical care
|
|
delivery in resource-limited settings. In this review, we provide an
|
|
overview of recent literature reporting on critical care outcomes in
|
|
LMICs. We discuss several barriers and potential solutions for a better
|
|
understanding of critical care outcomes in LMICs.Recent
|
|
findingsEpidemiologic studies show higher in-hospital mortality rates
|
|
for critically ill patients in LMICs as compared with patients in
|
|
high-income countries (HICs). Recent findings suggest that critical care
|
|
interventions that are effective in HICs may not be effective and may
|
|
even be harmful in LMICs. Little data on long-term and morbidity
|
|
outcomes exist. Better outcomes measurement is beginning to emerge in
|
|
LMICs through decision support tools that report process outcome
|
|
measures, studies employing mobile health technologies with community
|
|
health workers and the development of context-specific severity of
|
|
illness scores.SummaryOutcomes from HICs cannot be reliably extrapolated
|
|
to LMICs, so it is important to study outcomes for critically ill
|
|
patients in LMICs. Specific challenges to achieving meaningful outcomes
|
|
studies in LMICs include defining the critically ill population when few
|
|
ICU beds exist, the resource-intensiveness of long-term follow-up, and
|
|
the need for reliable severity of illness scores to interpret outcomes.
|
|
Although much work remains to be done, examples of studies overcoming
|
|
these challenges are beginning to emerge.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Vukoja, M (Corresponding Author), Inst Pulm Dis Vojvodina, Put Dr Goldmana 4, Sremska Kamenica 21204, Serbia.
|
|
Vukoja, Marija, Inst Pulm Dis Vojvodina, Put Dr Goldmana 4, Sremska Kamenica 21204, Serbia.
|
|
Vukoja, Marija, Univ Novi Sad, Fac Med, Novi Sad, Serbia.
|
|
Riviello, Elisabeth D., Harvard Med Sch, Beth Israel Deaconess Med Ctr, Div Pulm Crit Care \& Sleep Med, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Schultz, Marcus J., Mahidol Univ, Mahidol Oxford Trop Med Res Unit MORU, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
|
Schultz, Marcus J., Acad Med Ctr, Dept Intens Care, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Schultz, Marcus J., Acad Med Ctr, LEICA, Amsterdam, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/MCC.0000000000000528},
|
|
ISSN = {1070-5295},
|
|
EISSN = {1531-7072},
|
|
Keywords = {clinical trials; critical care; intensive care; low-income and
|
|
middle-income countries; outcomes; resource-limited settings},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RESPIRATORY-DISTRESS-SYNDROME; LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES; LOW-MIDDLE-INCOME;
|
|
INTENSIVE-CARE; ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE; SEPSIS; MORTALITY; UNITS;
|
|
MULTICENTER; AFRICA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Critical Care Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {kojicic.marija@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Schultz, Marcus/AAB-6379-2021
|
|
Vukoja, Marija/AAA-5850-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Schultz, Marcus/0000-0003-3969-7792
|
|
Vukoja, Marija/0000-0001-9560-3653
|
|
Riviello, Elisabeth/0000-0002-9443-3928},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000456316000015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000271341900005,
|
|
Author = {Swendeman, Dallas and Basu, Ishika and Das, Sankari and Jana, Smarajit
|
|
and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane},
|
|
Title = {Empowering sex workers in India to reduce vulnerability to HIV and
|
|
sexually transmitted diseases},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE \& MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {69},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {1157-1166},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {The Sonagachi Project was initiated in Kolkata, India in 1992 as a
|
|
STD/HIV intervention for sex workers. The project evolved to adopt
|
|
strategies common to women's empowerment programs globally (i.e.,
|
|
community mobilization, rights-based framing, advocacy, micro-finance)
|
|
to address common factors that support effective, evidence-based HIV/STD
|
|
prevention. The Sonagachi model is now a broadly diffused evidence-based
|
|
empowerment program.
|
|
We previously demonstrated significant condom use increases among female
|
|
sex workers in a 16 month replication trial of the Sonagachi empowerment
|
|
intervention (n = 110) compared to a control community (n = 106)
|
|
receiving standard care of STD clinic, condom promotion, and peer
|
|
education in two randomly assigned rural towns in West Bengal, India
|
|
(Basu et al., 2004). This article examines the intervention's impacts on
|
|
21 measured variables reflecting five common factors of effective
|
|
HIV/STD prevention programs to estimate the impact of empowerment
|
|
strategies on HIV/STD prevention program goals. The intervention which
|
|
was conducted in 2000-2001 significantly: 1) improved knowledge of STDs
|
|
and condom protection from STD and HIV, and maintained STD/HIV risk
|
|
perceptions despite treatment: 2) provided a frame to motivate change
|
|
based on reframing sex work as valid work, increasing disclosure of
|
|
profession, and instilling a hopeful future orientation reflected in
|
|
desire for more education or training; 3) improved skills in sexual and
|
|
workplace negotiations reflected in increased refusal, condom
|
|
decision-making, and ability to change work contract, but not ability to
|
|
take leave; 4) built social support by increasing social interactions
|
|
outside work, social function participation, and helping other sex
|
|
workers; and 5) addressed environmental barriers of economic
|
|
vulnerabilities by increasing savings and alternative income, but not
|
|
working in other locations, nor reduced loan taking, and did not
|
|
increase voting to build social capital. This study's results
|
|
demonstrate that, compared to narrowcast clinical and prevention
|
|
services alone, empowerment strategies can significantly impact a
|
|
broader range of factors to reduce vulnerability to HIV/STDs. (c) 2009
|
|
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Swendeman, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Ctr Community Hlth, Semel Inst Neurosci \& Human Behav, 10920 Wilshire Blvd,Suite 350, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
Swendeman, Dallas; Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Ctr Community Hlth, Semel Inst Neurosci \& Human Behav, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
Basu, Ishika; Das, Sankari; Jana, Smarajit, Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Comm, Kolkata, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.07.035},
|
|
ISSN = {0277-9536},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-5347},
|
|
Keywords = {HIV; Sexually transmitted diseases (STD); Prevention; Sex workers;
|
|
Empowerment; Replication; Intervention trial; India; Common factors},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CONDOM USE; COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT; HEALTH-PROMOTION; PREVENTION; RISK;
|
|
INTERVENTIONS; SONAGACHI; CALCUTTA; IDENTITY; PROJECT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {dswendeman@mednet.ucla.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {157},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {37},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000271341900005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000326239301034,
|
|
Author = {Roddin, R. and Sidi, N. S. Sultan and Ab Hadi, M. Y. and Yusof, Y.},
|
|
Editor = {Chova, LG and Torres, IC and Martinez, AL},
|
|
Title = {POVERTY ERADICATION THROUGH `PRO-POOR TOURISM' (PPT) APPROACH AMONG
|
|
ORANG ASLI COMMUNITIES IN MALAYSIA},
|
|
Booktitle = {EDULEARN12: 4TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATION AND NEW LEARNING
|
|
TECHNOLOGIES},
|
|
Series = {EDULEARN Proceedings},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Pages = {1175-1183},
|
|
Note = {4th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies
|
|
(EDULEARN), Barcelona, SPAIN, JUL 02-04, 2012},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of this paper is to discuss potential of the Orang Asli
|
|
(Indigenous people) communities in Malaysia to escape from poverty
|
|
through tourism activity. Poor and poverty are identified as key
|
|
challenges in developing effective Orang Asli communities. The high
|
|
level of poverty is closely related to the type of work, the problem of
|
|
land ownership status and low education levels among Orang Asli
|
|
communities. These problems not only hinder the development process, but
|
|
also being obstacle to the integration effort of Orang Asli cluster with
|
|
the current national progress as achieved by other ethnics (Malay,
|
|
Chinese, Indian). Majority of the Orang Asli who live in rural areas are
|
|
still relying to the traditional economic system which focuses to
|
|
self-sufficiency and dependence on forest resources for survival. These
|
|
economic resources are seen could not guarantee employment and good and
|
|
stable income to them due to low market prices or defrauded by a middle
|
|
man who controls the price of goods sold. Besides that, other problems
|
|
arise among Orang Asli are migrations many of the youth to city area due
|
|
to lack of job opportunities that could ensure their future. `Pro-Poor
|
|
Tourism' (PPT) is an approach that aims to use tourism medium as a
|
|
strategic method to reduce poverty among the marginalized communities.
|
|
PPT implemented in many developing countries as a way to improve the
|
|
local economy by providing employment or micro enterprise spaces. To
|
|
ensure the success of this approach, specific rules should be identified
|
|
in which tourism businesses and tourists are directly and indirectly can
|
|
be developed to generate benefits for the poor. This is because the PPT
|
|
is defined as tourism that provides a net benefit to the poor. PPT is a
|
|
holistic approach to tourism development and management aimed in giving
|
|
opportunities for the poor to get benefit from it. In addition, tourism
|
|
has an advantage compared to other sectors in its ability to reduce
|
|
poverty. This is clearly proof that tourism is a diverse industry and
|
|
has more room for participation, especially from the informal and small
|
|
sector. Through tourism, the customers are welcome to buy products and
|
|
at the same time could offer opportunities to extend the market and
|
|
sales and to establish networks. Tourism products can be developed
|
|
through the nature resources and cultural goods that are priceless asset
|
|
that belong to the poor. However, the Orang Asli communities hardly
|
|
understand on how the assets could be commercialized and the benefits
|
|
that can be generated via their own assets. On awareness that poverty
|
|
should be eradicated and not inherited, the tourism sector through the
|
|
PPT approach is believe could be a source of income, particularly for
|
|
Orang Asli communities and other communities in general. Therefore, this
|
|
study is carried out to produce a conceptual framework of implementation
|
|
of PPT to help reduce, and eventually stop the poverty among Orang Asli
|
|
Communities. Through the framework, it is hoped could be a reference for
|
|
the Orang Asli communities to be involved in the new job sector and
|
|
ensuring they would gain a better source of income.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
ISSN = {2340-1117},
|
|
ISBN = {978-84-695-3491-5},
|
|
Keywords = {Pro-Poor Tourism (PPT); Poverty; Orang Asli (Indegenouse People)},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research},
|
|
Author-Email = {rohayu@uthm.edu.my
|
|
noorsharipah@utm.my
|
|
marwati@uthm.edu.my
|
|
yusop@uthm.edu.my},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Yusof, Yusmarwati/AAS-9086-2021},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000326239301034},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000766302000027,
|
|
Author = {Kachwaha, Shivani and Phuong H Nguyen and Lan Mai Tran and Avula, Rasmi
|
|
and Young, Melissa F. and Ghosh, Sebanti and Forissier, Thomas and
|
|
Escobar-Alegria, Jessica and Sharma, Praveen Kumar and Frongillo, Edward
|
|
A. and Menon, Purnima},
|
|
Title = {Specificity Matters: Unpacking Impact Pathways of Individual
|
|
Interventions within Bundled Packages Helps Interpret the Limited
|
|
Impacts of a Maternal Nutrition Intervention in India},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF NUTRITION},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {152},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {612-629},
|
|
Month = {FEB 8},
|
|
Abstract = {Background To address gaps in coverage and quality of nutrition
|
|
services, Alive \& Thrive (A\&T) strengthened the delivery of maternal
|
|
nutrition interventions through government antenatal care (ANC) services
|
|
in Uttar Pradesh, India. The impact evaluation of the A\&T interventions
|
|
compared intensive ANC (I-ANC) with standard ANC (S-ANC) areas and found
|
|
modest impacts on micronutrient supplementation, dietary diversity, and
|
|
weight-gain monitoring. Objectives This study examined
|
|
intervention-specific program impact pathways (PIPs) and identified
|
|
reasons for limited impacts of the A\&T maternal nutrition intervention
|
|
package. Methods We used mixed methods: frontline worker (FLW) surveys
|
|
(n = similar to 500), counseling observations (n = 407), and qualitative
|
|
in-depth interviews with FLWs, supervisors, and block-level staff (n =
|
|
59). We assessed 7 PIP domains: training and materials, knowledge,
|
|
supportive supervision, supply chains, data use, service delivery, and
|
|
counseling. Results Exposure to training improved in both I-ANC and
|
|
S-ANC areas with more job aids used in I-ANC compared with S-ANC (90\%
|
|
compared with 70\%), but gaps remained for training content and
|
|
refresher trainings. FLWs' knowledge improvement was higher in I-ANC
|
|
than S-ANC (22-36 percentage points), but knowledge of micronutrient
|
|
supplement benefits and recommended foods was insufficient (<50\%). Most
|
|
FLWs received supervision (>90\%), but supportive supervision was
|
|
limited by staff vacancies and competing work priorities. Supplies of
|
|
iron-folic acid and calcium supplements were low in both areas (30-50\%
|
|
stock-outs). Use of monitoring data during review meetings was higher in
|
|
I-ANC than S-ANC (52\% compared with 36\%) but was constrained by time,
|
|
understanding, and data quality. Service provision improved in both
|
|
I-ANC and S-ANC areas, but counseling on supplement benefits and
|
|
weight-gain monitoring was low (30-40\%). Conclusions
|
|
Systems-strengthening efforts improved maternal nutrition interventions
|
|
in ANC, but gaps remained. Taking an intervention-specific perspective
|
|
to the PIP analysis in this package of services was critical to
|
|
understand how common and specific barriers influenced overall program
|
|
impact.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nguyen, PH (Corresponding Author), Int Food Policy Res Inst IFPRI, Washington, DC 20005 USA.
|
|
Kachwaha, Shivani; Phuong H Nguyen; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima, Int Food Policy Res Inst IFPRI, Washington, DC 20005 USA.
|
|
Lan Mai Tran; Young, Melissa F., Emory Univ, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA.
|
|
Ghosh, Sebanti; Forissier, Thomas; Escobar-Alegria, Jessica; Sharma, Praveen Kumar, FHI Solut, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Frongillo, Edward A., Univ South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/jn/nxab390},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {0022-3166},
|
|
EISSN = {1541-6100},
|
|
Keywords = {maternal nutrition; micronutrient supplementation; diet diversity;
|
|
weight-gain monitoring; systems strengthening; service delivery;
|
|
counseling; India},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; CHILD FEEDING PRACTICES; MIXED-METHODS
|
|
RESEARCH; UNDERNUTRITION; HEALTH; IMPLEMENTATION; PROGRAMS; ACHIEVE;
|
|
INFANT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nutrition \& Dietetics},
|
|
Author-Email = {p.h.nguyen@cgiar.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Young, Melissa Fox/AAW-2016-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Young, Melissa Fox/0000-0002-2768-1673
|
|
Nguyen, Phuong H/0000-0003-3418-1674},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000766302000027},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000311268800004,
|
|
Author = {Al-Waqfi, Mohammed A. and Forstenlechner, Ingo},
|
|
Title = {Of private sector fear and prejudice The case of young citizens in an
|
|
oil-rich Arabian Gulf economy},
|
|
Journal = {PERSONNEL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {41},
|
|
Number = {5-6},
|
|
Pages = {609-629},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose - The uncompromising preference of citizens for public sector
|
|
employment throughout the Middle East is not new. However, with the
|
|
recent saturation of the public sector job market and demographic
|
|
pressures, it has grown to become a problem of unpredictable economic
|
|
and social consequences. This paper aims to explore the factors
|
|
determining career choice behaviour and the underlying career
|
|
expectations and perceptions of young citizens in one Middle Eastern
|
|
country, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), where the preference for public
|
|
sector employment is not only very strong, but is also perceived as
|
|
increasingly problematic.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach - Semi-structured interviews were conducted
|
|
with a total of 60 UAE citizens in the age group of 18-23.
|
|
Findings - The authors explore and discuss cognitive, social, and
|
|
institutional factors that influence the job-seeking behaviour of young
|
|
Emiratis and lead to negative attitudes towards the private sector. They
|
|
further suggest potential causes of the very low private sector
|
|
employment levels among UAE citizens and discuss their implications for
|
|
policy makers. The authors argue for two main approaches: first, a focus
|
|
on training and orientation of young citizens to enable them to
|
|
confidently pursue job opportunities in the private sector. This may
|
|
also include ways for providing young UAE citizens with private sector
|
|
exposure, as 98 per cent of the national workforce is currently working
|
|
in the public sector and a lot of what young UAE citizens think they
|
|
know about the private sector is not founded in reality. Second,
|
|
interventions to address structural and institutional challenges
|
|
hindering employment of citizens including gaps in employment conditions
|
|
and remuneration levels for citizens between the public and private
|
|
employment sectors.
|
|
Originality/value - While much previous research in this field has
|
|
focused on the perceptions of employers, this is the first paper to
|
|
actually explore the perceptions of those at the centre of the
|
|
discussion young UAE citizens themselves.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Forstenlechner, I (Corresponding Author), United Arab Emirates Univ, Fac Business \& Econ, Al Ain, U Arab Emirates.
|
|
Al-Waqfi, Mohammed A.; Forstenlechner, Ingo, United Arab Emirates Univ, Fac Business \& Econ, Al Ain, U Arab Emirates.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/00483481211249139},
|
|
ISSN = {0048-3486},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6933},
|
|
Keywords = {Localization; Jobseekers; Transitional economy; Middle East; Young UAE
|
|
citizens; Emiratization; United Arab Emirates},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY; CAREER CHOICE; EMIRATISATION; UNEMPLOYMENT;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; BARRIERS; TIME; HRM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor; Psychology, Applied; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {ingo@uaeu.ac.ae},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Al Waqfi, Mohammed/0000-0001-5673-3818},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {36},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000311268800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000879572000001,
|
|
Author = {Karwa, Rakhi and Schellhase, Ellen and Malati, Christine Y. and
|
|
Pastakia, Sonak D. and Manji, Imran and Samuel, Jeffrey M. and Miller,
|
|
Monica L.},
|
|
Title = {Implementation of a Global Health Equity fellowship established in
|
|
partnership between an academic institution and governmental agency},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CLINICAL PHARMACY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {2, SI},
|
|
Pages = {135-144},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Health disparities exist globally in high-income and low- and
|
|
middle-income countries. They are driven by social determinants of
|
|
health (SDOH). While a role for pharmacists in addressing SDOH exists, a
|
|
lack of structured postgraduate training limits pharmacists from being
|
|
equipped to build innovative programs and contribute to health policy on
|
|
SDOH in an impactful way. Postgraduate training, specifically,
|
|
fellowships provides opportunities for pharmacists to develop the needed
|
|
skills for working with SDOH. The Purdue University College of Pharmacy
|
|
(PUCOP)-United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
|
|
Global Health Equity Fellowship was developed to meet this training
|
|
need. This 2-y fellowship represents a partnership between USAID and
|
|
PUCOP. During the fellowship, time is split between USAID in Washington
|
|
DC, PUCOP in Indianapolis, Indiana, and the Purdue Kenya Partnership
|
|
(PKP) in Eldoret, Kenya. The fellowship was developed with a foundation
|
|
of core values, the creation of a logic model, strategic partnerships,
|
|
maintaining an adaptable structure, and intentional partner
|
|
communication. Fellow outcomes were evaluated in three categories:
|
|
engagement, education, and scholarship. Fellows completed 10
|
|
experiential opportunities between three sites and participated in the
|
|
development of new and supported ongoing care programs and policy
|
|
implementation in both local and international settings. Fellows
|
|
completed the following educational outcomes: completed an online Master
|
|
of Public Health (MPH) through Purdue Global, provided 13 educational
|
|
presentations and lectures at various sites, and precepted a total of 12
|
|
PUCOP advanced pharmacy practice experience (APPE) students and 16
|
|
Kenyan pharmacy interns and Master of Pharmacy (MPharm) students.
|
|
Fellows completed three publications and two abstracts at international
|
|
conferences. This established training model provides pharmacists with a
|
|
structured path to gain the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to be
|
|
leaders in addressing Global Health Equity.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Miller, ML (Corresponding Author), Purdue Univ, Coll Pharm, Fifth Third Bank Bldg,640 Eskenazi Ave, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
Karwa, Rakhi; Schellhase, Ellen; Pastakia, Sonak D.; Miller, Monica L., Purdue Univ, Coll Pharm, Fifth Third Bank Bldg,640 Eskenazi Ave, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
Malati, Christine Y., US Agcy Int Dev, Alexandria, VA USA.
|
|
Manji, Imran, Moi Teaching \& Referral Hosp, Eldoret, Kenya.
|
|
Samuel, Jeffrey M., US Agcy Int Dev, Purdue Univ, Coll Pharm, Springfield, VA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/jac5.1711},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2022},
|
|
EISSN = {2574-9870},
|
|
Keywords = {fellowship; global health; government; health equity; pharmacy
|
|
education; social determinants of health},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {mille355@purdue.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Manji, Imran/K-8514-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Manji, Imran/0000-0001-8715-9804
|
|
Pastakia, Sonak/0000-0003-4259-695X
|
|
Miller, Monica/0000-0003-2156-9469
|
|
Malati, Christine/0000-0002-3174-1077},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000879572000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000386894600021,
|
|
Author = {Chawla, Sagar S. and Khanal, Subrat and Ghimire, Pranita and Nagarajan,
|
|
Neeraja and Gupta, Shailvi and Varadaraj, Varshini and Nwomeh, Benedict
|
|
C. and Kushner, Adam L.},
|
|
Title = {Musculoskeletal disease in Nepal: A countrywide cross-sectional survey
|
|
on burden and surgical access},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {34},
|
|
Pages = {122-126},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: Musculoskeletal disease (MSD) is a major cause of
|
|
disability in the global burden of disease, yet data regarding the
|
|
magnitude of this burden in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) are
|
|
lacking. The Surgeons OverSeas Assessment of Surgical Need (SOSAS)
|
|
survey was designed to measure incidence and prevalence of surgically
|
|
treatable conditions, including MSD, in patients in LMICs.
|
|
Methods: A countrywide survey was done in Nepal using SOSAS in May-June
|
|
2014. Clusters were chosen based on population weighted random sampling.
|
|
Chi squared tests and multivariate logistic regression assessed
|
|
associations between demographic variables and MSD.
|
|
Results: Self-reported MSDs were seen in 14.8\% of survey respondents
|
|
with an unmet need of 60\%. The majority of MSDs (73.9\%) occurred
|
|
between 1 and 12 months prior to the survey. Female sex (OR = 0.6; p <
|
|
0.000), access to motorized transport (for secondary facility, OR =
|
|
0.714; p < 0.012), and access to a tertiary health facility (OR = 0.512;
|
|
p < 0.008) were associated with lower odds of MSD.
|
|
Discussion: Based on this study, there are approximately 2.35 million
|
|
people living with MSDs in Nepal. As the study identified
|
|
non-availability, lack of money, and fear and/or lack of trust as the
|
|
major barriers to orthopedic care in Nepal, future work should consider
|
|
interventions to address these barriers.
|
|
Conclusion: There is a need to increase surgical capacity in LMICs; in
|
|
particular, there is a need to bolster trauma and orthopedic care.
|
|
Previous studies have suggested ways to allocate resources to build
|
|
capacity. We recommend targeting the alleviation of these identified
|
|
barriers in parallel with capacity building. (C) 2016 IJS Publishing
|
|
Group Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chawla, SS (Corresponding Author), Mayo Clin \& Mayo Grad Sch Med, Rochester, MN 55905 USA.
|
|
Chawla, Sagar S., Mayo Clin \& Mayo Grad Sch Med, Rochester, MN 55905 USA.
|
|
Khanal, Subrat; Ghimire, Pranita, BP Koirala Inst Hlth Sci, Dharan, Nepal.
|
|
Nagarajan, Neeraja, Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med Baltimore, Dept Surg, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA.
|
|
Gupta, Shailvi, Univ Calif San Francisco East Bay, 1411 East 31st St, Oakland, CA 94602 USA.
|
|
Gupta, Shailvi; Kushner, Adam L., Surg OverSeas, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Varadaraj, Varshini, Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Dept Ophthalmol, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA.
|
|
Nwomeh, Benedict C., Nationwide Childrens Hosp, Pediat Surg, Columbus, OH 43205 USA.
|
|
Kushner, Adam L., Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Int Hlth, Baltimore, MD USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ijsu.2016.08.522},
|
|
ISSN = {1743-9191},
|
|
EISSN = {1743-9159},
|
|
Keywords = {Essential surgery; Orthopedic surgery; Musculoskeletal disease; Surgical
|
|
capacity; Low- and middle-income countries; Nepal},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRAUMA SERVICES; NONORTHOPAEDISTS; ORTHOPEDISTS; DISORDERS; INJURIES;
|
|
CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {sagarschawla@gmail.com
|
|
subratkhanal033@gmail.com
|
|
pranitaghimire690@gmail.com
|
|
nnagara2@jhu.edu
|
|
shailvi.gupta@gmail.com
|
|
vvarada2@jhu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Khanal, Subrat/AAU-3638-2021
|
|
Chawla, Sagar/AAR-1553-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Chawla, Sagar/0000-0003-1431-0766
|
|
Kushner, Adam/0000-0002-7797-4837},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {26},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000386894600021},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000344674000004,
|
|
Author = {Cambron, Christopher and Gringeri, Christina and Vogel-Ferguson, Mary
|
|
Beth},
|
|
Title = {Physical and Mental Health Correlates of Adverse Childhood Experiences
|
|
among Low-Income Women},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH \& SOCIAL WORK},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {39},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {221-229},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {The present study used secondary data gathered from a statewide random
|
|
sample of 1,073 adult women enrolled in Utah's single-parent cash
|
|
assistance program and logistic regression to examine associations
|
|
between self-reported physical, emotional, and sexual abuse during
|
|
childhood and later life physical and mental health indicators. Results
|
|
demonstrated significant associations between low-income women's
|
|
self-reports of physical, emotional, or sexual abuse in childhood, and
|
|
current and lifetime anxiety disorder, domestic violence, current
|
|
posttraumatic stress disorder, bipolar disorder, physical health or
|
|
mental health issues, and any mental health diagnosis. These results
|
|
build on previous research to paint a fuller picture of the associations
|
|
between childhood abuse and physical and mental health for low-income
|
|
women in Utah. Consistent with research by the Centers for Disease
|
|
Control and Prevention, findings suggest the applicability of
|
|
conceptualizing childhood abuse as a public health issue. Social workers
|
|
can play an integral role in promoting and implementing broader
|
|
screening practices, connecting affected individuals with long-term
|
|
interventions, and applying research findings to the design and
|
|
provision of services within a public health model.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cambron, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Sch Social Work, 4101 15th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105 USA.
|
|
Cambron, Christopher, Univ Washington, Sch Social Work, Seattle, WA 98105 USA.
|
|
Gringeri, Christina; Vogel-Ferguson, Mary Beth, Univ Utah, Coll Social Work, Salt Lake City, UT USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/hsw/hlu029},
|
|
ISSN = {0360-7283},
|
|
EISSN = {1545-6854},
|
|
Keywords = {adverse childhood experiences; barriers to work; child abuse; mental
|
|
health; welfare},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SEXUAL-ABUSE; MALTREATMENT; VIOLENCE; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {ccambron@uw.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Cambron, Christopher/AAA-2552-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Cambron, Christopher/0000-0002-6129-0959},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {26},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000344674000004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000727716100004,
|
|
Author = {Yan, Connie H. and Naveed, Maryam and Alobaidi, Ali and Kopfman, Miranda
|
|
and Nutescu, Edith A. and Sharp, Lisa K.},
|
|
Title = {Association between transportation barriers and anticoagulation control
|
|
among an inner-city, low-income population: A prospective observational
|
|
cohort study},
|
|
Journal = {RESEARCH AND PRACTICE IN THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {5},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Anticoagulation with warfarin represents a
|
|
transportation-sensitive treatment state. Transportation barrier is a
|
|
common reason for not using health care services.
|
|
Objective To assess the association between transportation barriers to
|
|
anticoagulation clinic and anticoagulation control (AC) among an
|
|
inner-city, low-income population.
|
|
Patients/Methods Adults expected to be on chronic warfarin therapy were
|
|
recruited from an ambulatory anticoagulation clinic. Participants
|
|
completed a validated questionnaire that assessed transportation
|
|
barriers to clinic, defined as self-reported trouble getting
|
|
transportation to a clinic and a composite score of the presence of
|
|
transportation barriers. Suboptimal AC was defined as time in
|
|
therapeutic range (TTR) <60\% over 6 months. Prevalence ratios with 95\%
|
|
confidence intervals (CIs), adjusted for age, sex, and annual household
|
|
income, described the association of transportation trouble and barriers
|
|
with AC.
|
|
Results Of 133 participants, 42.9\% had suboptimal AC. Mean age was 60.4
|
|
(SD, 13.6) years, and the majority of participants were women (62.2\%).
|
|
Participants with transportation trouble were more likely to report
|
|
being disabled/unable to work (63.6\%) and annual household income <\$15
|
|
000 (45.5\%). Mean TTR was significantly lower for participants with
|
|
transportation trouble compared to those without (53.8\% {[}SD, 24.7\%]
|
|
vs 64.7\% {[}SD, 25.0\%]; P = .03). Participants reporting
|
|
transportation trouble or at least one transportation barrier were 1.60
|
|
(95\% CI, 1.07-2.39) and 1.68 (95\% CI, 1.01-2.80) times more likely,
|
|
respectively, to have suboptimal AC compared to those without.
|
|
Conclusion Inner-city, low-income individuals with transportation
|
|
barriers were more likely to have suboptimal AC. Further research is
|
|
warranted to evaluate the impact of alleviating patient-specific
|
|
transportation barriers on anticoagulation outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Yan, CH (Corresponding Author), Univ Illinois, Dept Pharm Syst Outcomes \& Policy, 833 S Wood St,MC 871, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Yan, Connie H.; Naveed, Maryam; Alobaidi, Ali; Kopfman, Miranda; Nutescu, Edith A.; Sharp, Lisa K., Univ Illinois, Coll Pharm, Dept Pharm Syst Outcomes \& Policy, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
Nutescu, Edith A.; Sharp, Lisa K., Univ Illinois, Ctr Pharmacoepidemiol \& Pharmacoecon Res, Chicago, IL USA.
|
|
Nutescu, Edith A., Univ Illinois, Coll Pharm, Dept Pharm Practice, Chicago, IL USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/rth2.12605},
|
|
Article-Number = {e12605},
|
|
EISSN = {2475-0379},
|
|
Keywords = {anticoagulants; health outcome; health care services; transportation;
|
|
warfarin},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; ORAL ANTICOAGULANT; UNITED-STATES; THERAPEUTIC RANGE;
|
|
NATIONAL TRENDS; WARFARIN; TIME; INTERVENTIONS; VISITS; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Hematology; Peripheral Vascular Disease},
|
|
Author-Email = {yan33@uic.edu
|
|
aaloba3@uic.edu
|
|
enutescu@uic.edu
|
|
sharpl@uic.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Yan, Connie/0000-0003-1467-4666
|
|
Sharp, Lisa/0000-0002-7809-9042
|
|
Nutescu, Edith/0000-0002-2651-0020},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000727716100004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000424069900003,
|
|
Author = {Pogoda, Terri K. and Carlson, Kathleen F. and Gormley, Katelyn E. and
|
|
Resnick, Sandra G.},
|
|
Title = {Supported Employment for Veterans With Traumatic Brain Injury: Provider
|
|
Perspectives},
|
|
Journal = {ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {99},
|
|
Number = {2, 1},
|
|
Pages = {S14-S22},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Note = {Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic
|
|
Brain Injury Summit, Falls Church, VA, SEP 13, 2016},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To identify any pilot and nonpilot site differences regarding
|
|
current (1) provision of supported employment (SE) to veterans with
|
|
traumatic brain injury (TBI); (2) staffing and communication between the
|
|
SE and polytrauma/TBI teams; and (3) provider perceptions on
|
|
facilitators and barriers to providing, and suggestions for improving,
|
|
SE.
|
|
Design: Mixed methods cross-sectional survey study.
|
|
Setting: Veterans Health Administration SE programs.
|
|
Participants: Respondents (N=144) included 54 SE supervisors and 90
|
|
vocational rehabilitation specialists.
|
|
Interventions: Not applicable.
|
|
Main Outcome Measures: Web-based surveys of forced-choice and open-ended
|
|
items included questions on SE team characteristics, communication with
|
|
polytrauma/TBI teams, and experiences with providing SE to veterans with
|
|
TBI history.
|
|
Results: SE was provided to veterans with TBI at 100\% of pilot and
|
|
59.2\% of nonpilot sites (P=.09). However, vocational rehabilitation
|
|
specialists at pilot sites reported that communication with the
|
|
polytrauma/TBI team about SE referrals was more frequent than at
|
|
nonpilot sites (P=.003). In open-ended items, suggestions for improving
|
|
SE were similar across pilot and nonpilot sites, and included increasing
|
|
staffing for vocational rehabilitation specialists and case management,
|
|
enhancing communication and education between SE and polytrauma/TBI
|
|
teams, and expanding the scope of the SE program so that eligibility is
|
|
based on employment support need, rather than diagnosis.
|
|
Conclusions: These findings may contribute to an evidence base that
|
|
informs SE research and clinical directions on service provision,
|
|
resource allocation, team integration efforts, and outreach to veterans
|
|
with TBI who have employment support needs. Published by Elsevier Inc.
|
|
on behalf of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pogoda, TK (Corresponding Author), VA Boston Healthcare Syst, Ctr Healthcare Org \& Implementat Res, Bldg 9,Off 218,150 S Huntington Ave,152M, Boston, MA 02130 USA.
|
|
Pogoda, Terri K.; Gormley, Katelyn E., VA Boston Healthcare Syst, Ctr Healthcare Org \& Implementat Res, Bldg 9,Off 218,150 S Huntington Ave,152M, Boston, MA 02130 USA.
|
|
Pogoda, Terri K., Boston Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Law Policy \& Management, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Carlson, Kathleen F., VA Portland Hlth Care Syst, Ctr Improve Vet Involvement Care, Portland, OR USA.
|
|
Carlson, Kathleen F., VA Portland Hlth Care Syst, Natl Ctr Rehabilitat Auditory Res, Portland, OR USA.
|
|
Carlson, Kathleen F., Oregon Hlth \& Sci Univ, Portland State Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Portland, OR 97201 USA.
|
|
Resnick, Sandra G., VA Connecticut Healthcare Syst, Res \& Clin Ctr, New England Mental Illness, West Haven, CT USA.
|
|
Resnick, Sandra G., Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, New Haven, CT USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.apmr.2017.06.029},
|
|
ISSN = {0003-9993},
|
|
EISSN = {1532-821X},
|
|
Keywords = {Brain injuries, traumatic; Community integration; Employment, supported;
|
|
Rehabilitation; Veterans},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; PERSISTENT POSTCONCUSSIVE SYMPTOMS;
|
|
POLYTRAUMA REHABILITATION; VOCATIONAL-REHABILITATION; RETURN; WORK;
|
|
IMPLEMENTATION; UNEMPLOYMENT; STRATEGIES; DEPLOYMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation; Sport Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {terri.pogoda@va.gov},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Resnick, Sandra G/F-3883-2014
|
|
Pogoda, Terri/F-6243-2012},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Resnick, Sandra G/0000-0001-6373-1482
|
|
Pogoda, Terri/0000-0003-1397-8780},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {57},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000424069900003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000926098800023,
|
|
Author = {Chopra, Sahil and Lahiff, Tahne Joseph and Franklin, Richard and Brown,
|
|
Alex and Rasalam, Roy},
|
|
Title = {Effective primary care management of type 2 diabetes for indigenous
|
|
populations: A systematic review},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Month = {NOV 10},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Indigenous peoples in high income countries are
|
|
disproportionately affected by Type 2 Diabetes. Socioeconomic
|
|
disadvantages and inadequate access to appropriate healthcare are
|
|
important contributors.
|
|
Objectives This systematic review investigates effective designs of
|
|
primary care management of Type 2 Diabetes for Indigenous adults in
|
|
Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States. Primary outcome
|
|
was change in mean glycated haemoglobin. Secondary outcomes were
|
|
diabetes-related hospital admission rates, treatment compliance, and
|
|
change in weight or Body Mass Index.
|
|
Methods Included studies were critically appraised using Joanna Briggs
|
|
Institute appraisal checklists. A mixed-method systematic review was
|
|
undertaken. Quantitative findings were compared by narrative synthesis,
|
|
meta-aggregation of qualitative factors was performed.
|
|
Results Seven studies were included. Three reported statistically
|
|
significant reductions in means HbA1c following their intervention.
|
|
Seven components of effective interventions were identified. These were:
|
|
a need to reduce health system barriers to facilitate access to primary
|
|
care (which the other six components work towards), an essential role
|
|
for Indigenous community consultation in intervention planning and
|
|
implementation, a need for primary care programs to account for and
|
|
adapt to changes with time in barriers to primary care posed by the
|
|
health system and community members, the key role of community-based
|
|
health workers, Indigenous empowerment to facilitate community and
|
|
self-management, benefit of short-intensive programs, and benefit of
|
|
group-based programs.
|
|
Conclusions This study synthesises a decade of data from communities
|
|
with a high burden of Type 2 Diabetes and limited research regarding
|
|
health system approaches to improve diabetes-related outcomes.
|
|
Policymakers should consider applying the seven identified components of
|
|
effective primary care interventions when designing primary care
|
|
approaches to mitigate the impact of Type 2 Diabetes in Indigenous
|
|
populations. More robust and culturally appropriate studies of Type 2
|
|
Diabetes management in Indigenous groups are needed.
|
|
Trail registration Registered with PROSPERO (02/04/2021:
|
|
CRD42021240098).},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chopra, S (Corresponding Author), Princess Alexandra Hosp, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Chopra, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Chopra, Sahil, Princess Alexandra Hosp, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Chopra, Sahil, Univ Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Lahiff, Tahne Joseph, Royal Brisbane \& Womens Hosp, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Franklin, Richard, James Cook Univ, Coll Publ Hlth Med \& Vet Sci, Townsville, Qld, Australia.
|
|
Brown, Alex, Australian Natl Univ, Indigenous Genom, Nedlands, WA, Australia.
|
|
Brown, Alex, Telethon Kids Inst, Nedlands, WA, Australia.
|
|
Rasalam, Roy, Queensland Hlth, Publ Hlth Med, Townsville, Qld, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0276396},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0276396},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; AMERICAN-INDIANS; CHALLENGES; BARRIERS; CANADA; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {sahilchopra018@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rasalam, Roy/N-4558-2017
|
|
Brown, Alex D/E-8614-2010
|
|
Brown, Allison/JCO-5157-2023
|
|
Franklin, Richard Charles/H-1731-2012
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rasalam, Roy/0000-0002-6822-7936
|
|
Franklin, Richard Charles/0000-0003-1864-4552
|
|
Brown, Alex/0000-0003-2112-3918
|
|
Chopra, Sahil/0000-0002-7835-9131
|
|
Lahiff, Tahne/0000-0003-4873-6802},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000926098800023},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000481763000005,
|
|
Author = {Maldonado, Luis and Olivos, Francisco and Carlos Castillo, Juan and
|
|
Atria, Jorge and Azar, Ariel},
|
|
Title = {Risk Exposure, Humanitarianism and Willingness to Pay for Universal
|
|
Healthcare: A Cross-National Analysis of 28 Countries},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL JUSTICE RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Number = {3, SI},
|
|
Pages = {349-383},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {In this article, we explore the associations of people's valuations of
|
|
universal healthcare with risk exposure and humanitarianism across
|
|
diverse institutional contexts. We argue that both micro-level factors
|
|
increase the valuations. Furthermore, interactions between material
|
|
interests and humanitarians are expected. This work also hypothesizes
|
|
that institutional contexts with employment-independent healthcare
|
|
systems should modify the effect of risk exposure. Following a
|
|
comparative framework, we test the expectations by using the
|
|
International Social Survey Programme 2011 health module for 28
|
|
developed and developing countries. Results suggest opposite effects for
|
|
the factors under analysis. While risk exposure decreases the
|
|
willingness to pay taxes for the provision of universal healthcare,
|
|
humanitarianism strongly fosters the valuation. Furthermore, we find
|
|
statistical significant interactions between material interests and
|
|
humanitarianism. Results also suggest substantive cross-level
|
|
interactions between risk exposure and healthcare systems. Findings are
|
|
robust to different modeling strategies that control for standard
|
|
micro-level variables (income and egalitarianism), individual factors
|
|
and observed and unobserved country characteristics. The article lays
|
|
out implications of these findings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Maldonado, L (Corresponding Author), Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Inst Sociol, Ave Vicuna Mackenna, Santiago 4860, Chile.
|
|
Maldonado, L (Corresponding Author), Natl Res Ctr Integrated Disaster Risk Management, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Maldonado, Luis; Atria, Jorge, Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Inst Sociol, Ave Vicuna Mackenna, Santiago 4860, Chile.
|
|
Maldonado, Luis, Natl Res Ctr Integrated Disaster Risk Management, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Olivos, Francisco, Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Carlos Castillo, Juan, Ctr Social Conflict \& Cohes Studies COES, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Carlos Castillo, Juan, Univ Chile, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Azar, Ariel, Univ Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11211-019-00336-6},
|
|
ISSN = {0885-7466},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-6725},
|
|
Keywords = {ISSP; Public attitude; Risk; Humanitarianism; Cross-national
|
|
comparisons; Institutional contexts},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WELFARE-STATE; PUBLIC-ATTITUDES; POPULAR SUPPORT; JOB INSECURITY;
|
|
MENTAL-HEALTH; LOW-COST; PREFERENCES; POLICY; REDISTRIBUTION; INEQUALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Social; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {lmaldona@uc.cl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Olivos, Francisco/M-9638-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Olivos, Francisco/0000-0001-6395-6593
|
|
Maldonado, Luis/0000-0002-0028-4766
|
|
Azar, Ariel/0000-0002-4868-8081},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {84},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000481763000005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000405052600046,
|
|
Author = {Chaudhuri, Sarbajit and Dwibedi, Jayanta Kumar and Biswas, Anindya},
|
|
Title = {Subsidizing healthcare in the presence of market distortions},
|
|
Journal = {ECONOMIC MODELLING},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Pages = {539-552},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The paper develops a three-sector full-employment general equilibrium
|
|
model for a small open developing economy with exogenous labour market
|
|
imperfection and a non-traded sector providing healthcare services, the
|
|
consumption of which generates positive externalities. Our main
|
|
objective is :to show that the optimal consumption subsidy to
|
|
healthcare, if solely judged from the standpoint of economic growth, is
|
|
strictly positive (zero) when the production technology of the
|
|
healthcare sector is of the variable (fixed) coefficient type. However,
|
|
in the variable coefficient case, the optimal per capita expenditure on
|
|
healthcare crucially hinges on the degree of labour market imperfection
|
|
and the quality of services provided by the healthcare sector. The
|
|
latter result can possibly be considered as a theoretical justification
|
|
why the magnitude of per capita public spending on healthcare services
|
|
is significantly lower in the developing countries compared to that in
|
|
the developed nations. Besides, using the Sen's (1974) index of social
|
|
welfare that takes into consideration both the growth and income
|
|
inequality aspects, we have proved that the optimal health subsidy is
|
|
positive irrespective of the nature of production technology of the
|
|
healthcare sector. Furthermore, most of these results are found to be
|
|
valid even in the presence of Harris-Todaro type unemployment. Finally,
|
|
the results lead to a few important policy implications in the context
|
|
of the developing countries.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chaudhuri, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Calcutta, Dept Econ, Kolkata, W Bengal, India.
|
|
Chaudhuri, Sarbajit, Univ Calcutta, Dept Econ, Kolkata, W Bengal, India.
|
|
Dwibedi, Jayanta Kumar, BKC Coll, Dept Econ, Kolkata, India.
|
|
Biswas, Anindya, Spring Hill Coll, Div Business, Mobile, AL USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.econmod.2017.04.011},
|
|
ISSN = {0264-9993},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-6122},
|
|
Keywords = {Consumption externality; Healthcare; Efficiency of labour; Health
|
|
subsidy; Sen's (1974) welfare index; Developing countries; General
|
|
equilibrium},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DEVELOPING-ECONOMY; WELFARE; GROWTH; GOODS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {sarbajitch19@gmail.com
|
|
jayantadw@rediffmail.com
|
|
abiswas@shc.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {CHAUDHURI, Sarbajit/AAE-6343-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Chaudhuri, Sarbajit/0000-0003-1471-0460},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000405052600046},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000529295100006,
|
|
Author = {Rositch, Anne F. and Unger-Saldana, Karla and DeBoer, Rebecca J. and
|
|
Ng'ang'a, Anne and Weiner, Bryan J.},
|
|
Title = {The role of dissemination and implementation science in global breast
|
|
cancer control programs: Frameworks, methods, and examples},
|
|
Journal = {CANCER},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {126},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Pages = {2394-2404},
|
|
Month = {MAY 15},
|
|
Abstract = {Global disparities in breast cancer outcomes are attributable to a
|
|
sizable gap between evidence and practice in breast cancer control and
|
|
management. Dissemination and implementation science (D\&IS) seeks to
|
|
understand how to promote the systematic uptake of evidence-based
|
|
interventions and/or practices into real-world contexts. D\&IS methods
|
|
are useful for selecting strategies to implement evidence-based
|
|
interventions, adapting their implementation to new settings, and
|
|
evaluating the implementation process as well as its outcomes to
|
|
determine success and failure, and adjust accordingly. Process models,
|
|
explanatory theories, and evaluation frameworks are used in D\&IS to
|
|
develop implementation strategies, identify implementation outcomes, and
|
|
design studies to evaluate these outcomes. In breast cancer control and
|
|
management, research has been translated into evidence-based,
|
|
resource-stratified guidelines by the Breast Health Global Initiative
|
|
and others. D\&IS should be leveraged to optimize the implementation of
|
|
these guidelines, and other evidence-based interventions, into practice
|
|
across the breast cancer care continuum, from optimizing public
|
|
education to promoting early detection, increasing guideline-concordant
|
|
clinical practice among providers, and analyzing and addressing barriers
|
|
and facilitators in health care systems. Stakeholder engagement through
|
|
processes such as co-creation is critical. In this article, the authors
|
|
have provided a primer on the contribution of D\&IS to phased
|
|
implementation of global breast cancer control programs, provided 2 case
|
|
examples of ongoing D\&IS research projects in Tanzania, and concluded
|
|
with recommendations for best practices for researchers undertaking this
|
|
work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rositch, AF (Corresponding Author), Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 615 N Wolfe St,Room E6150, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Rositch, Anne F., Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 615 N Wolfe St,Room E6150, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Unger-Saldana, Karla, CONACYT Natl Canc Inst, Mexico City, DF, Mexico.
|
|
DeBoer, Rebecca J., Univ Calif San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehens Canc Ctr, Global Canc Program, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Ng'ang'a, Anne, Minist Hlth, Natl Canc Control Program, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Weiner, Bryan J., Univ Washington, Dept Global Hlth, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/cncr.32877},
|
|
ISSN = {0008-543X},
|
|
EISSN = {1097-0142},
|
|
Keywords = {breast cancer; Breast Health Global Initiative; Consolidated Framework
|
|
for Implementation Research (CFIR); dissemination and implementation
|
|
science; Tanzania},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GUIDELINE IMPLEMENTATION; HEALTH-CARE; STRATEGIES; INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
IMPROVEMENT; ONCOLOGY; INCOME; INNOVATIONS; PREVENTION; EVALUATE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {arositch@jhu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Unger-Saldaña, Karla/AFI-7335-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Unger-Saldaña, Karla/0000-0002-9689-498X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {27},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000529295100006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000914687900001,
|
|
Author = {Califf, Robert M.},
|
|
Title = {Now is the time to fix the evidence generation system},
|
|
Journal = {CLINICAL TRIALS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {3-12},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite enormous advances in biomedical science, corresponding
|
|
improvements in health outcomes lag significantly. This is particularly
|
|
true in the United States, where life expectancy trails far behind that
|
|
of other high-income countries. In addition, substantial disparities in
|
|
life expectancy and other health outcomes exist as a function of race,
|
|
ethnicity, wealth, education, and geographic location. A major
|
|
reformation of our national system for generating medical evidence-the
|
|
clinical research enterprise-is needed to facilitate the translation of
|
|
biomedical research into useful products and interventions. Currently,
|
|
premarket systems for generating and evaluating evidence work reasonably
|
|
well, but the postmarket phase is disaggregated and often fails to
|
|
answer essential questions that must be addressed to provide optimal
|
|
clinical care and public health interventions for all Americans. Solving
|
|
these problems will require a focus on three key domains: (1) improving
|
|
the integration of and access to high-quality data from traditional
|
|
clinical trials, electronic health records, and personal devices and
|
|
wearable sensors; (2) restructuring clinical research operations to
|
|
support and incentivize the involvement of patients and frontline
|
|
clinicians; and (3) articulating ethical constructs that enable
|
|
responsible data sharing to support improved implementation. Finally, we
|
|
must also address the systemic tendency to optimize individual
|
|
components of the clinical research enterprise without considering the
|
|
effects on the system as a whole. Overcoming suboptimization by creating
|
|
incentives for integration and sharing will be essential to achieve more
|
|
timely and equitable improvement in health outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Califf, RM (Corresponding Author), US FDA, Off Commissioner, White Oak Campus,10903 New Hampshire Ave, Silver Spring, MD 20993 USA.
|
|
Califf, Robert M., US FDA, Silver Spring, MD USA.
|
|
Califf, Robert M., US FDA, Off Commissioner, White Oak Campus,10903 New Hampshire Ave, Silver Spring, MD 20993 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/17407745221147689},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1740-7745},
|
|
EISSN = {1740-7753},
|
|
Keywords = {Randomized controlled trials; pragmatic clinical trials; clinical trial
|
|
protocol; evidence-based medicine; precision medicine; healthcare
|
|
delivery; healthcare systems},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental},
|
|
Author-Email = {commissioner@fda.hhs.gov},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000914687900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001029408200001,
|
|
Author = {Barri, Elnaz Yousefzadeh and Farber, Steven and Jahanshahi, Hadi and
|
|
Tiznado-Aitken, Ignacio and Beyazit, Eda},
|
|
Title = {Exploring the joint impacts of income, car ownership, and built
|
|
environment on daily activity patterns: a cluster analysis of trip
|
|
chains},
|
|
Journal = {TRANSPORTMETRICA A-TRANSPORT SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 JUL 19},
|
|
Abstract = {Clustering activity patterns and identifying homogeneous travel
|
|
behaviour through trip chain sequences offer valuable insight for
|
|
transportation planners and policymakers in addressing transport equity
|
|
problems and travel demand management. This study explores how income
|
|
and car-ownership levels determine mobility patterns and travellers'
|
|
decisions. Unlike previous studies that investigated the travel mode and
|
|
destinations separately, we designed a novel, aggregated form
|
|
considering the trip purpose and associated transport mode use as a unit
|
|
of our analysis. To mitigate the subjectivity of rule-based approaches
|
|
for trip chain analysis, we employ a novel sequence clustering framework
|
|
to extract homogeneous clusters of activity patterns. Our results reveal
|
|
that income and car-ownership levels influence travellers' travel
|
|
decisions and mobility patterns. Among low-income carless households,
|
|
37\% of their daily trips include care activities where women more
|
|
frequently than men play this traditional role in a household by either
|
|
public transit or a car as a passenger. In the low-income car-owner
|
|
subsample, females still use public transit for their work trips,
|
|
whereas males more often use the available car to commute to work. Males
|
|
of wealthy carless households integrate public transit and active
|
|
transportation for their daily trips when they live in high-density and
|
|
more accessible neighbourhoods. While our findings demonstrate the
|
|
impact of car ownership, income, and built environment on trip-chaining
|
|
behaviour, we recognise that achieving transport equity will require
|
|
tailored transportation and land use policies and investments that
|
|
address the specific needs and barriers faced by different household
|
|
types, particularly the most vulnerable ones in terms of
|
|
sociodemographic characteristics, accessibility levels, and
|
|
affordability issues. Hence, we recommend that policymakers and planners
|
|
take a more holistic approach to transportation planning that considers
|
|
the interplay of these factors to ensure that transportation systems and
|
|
services are accessible, affordable, and equitable for all.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Barri, EY (Corresponding Author), Istanbul Tech Univ, Dept Urban \& Reg Planning, Istanbul, Turkiye.
|
|
Barri, Elnaz Yousefzadeh; Beyazit, Eda, Istanbul Tech Univ, Dept Urban \& Reg Planning, Istanbul, Turkiye.
|
|
Farber, Steven; Tiznado-Aitken, Ignacio, Univ Toronto Scarborough, Dept Human Geog, Scarborough, ON, Canada.
|
|
Jahanshahi, Hadi, Ryerson Univ, Data Sci Lab, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/23249935.2023.2236235},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUL 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {2324-9935},
|
|
EISSN = {2324-9943},
|
|
Keywords = {Travel behaviour; trip chain; mode choice; low-income; car-ownership; >},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRAVEL BEHAVIOR; MODE CHOICE; ACTIVITY SEQUENCES; PUBLIC-TRANSIT; TIME;
|
|
COMPLEXITY; DEMAND; GENDER; CHINA; FOCUS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Transportation; Transportation Science \& Technology},
|
|
Author-Email = {Elnaz.yousefzadeh@mail.utoronto.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Farber, Steven/ABE-6061-2021
|
|
BEYAZIT, EDA/AAG-4848-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {BEYAZIT, EDA/0000-0002-5526-501X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {76},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001029408200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000537860400006,
|
|
Author = {Mayo-Wilson, Larissa Jennings and Benotsch, Eric G. and Grigsby, Sheila
|
|
and Wagner, Sarah and Timbo, Fatmata and Poteat, Tonia and Cathers,
|
|
Lauretta and Sawyer, Ashlee N. and Smout, Shelby A. and Zimmerman, Rick
|
|
S.},
|
|
Title = {Combined effects of gender affirmation and economic hardship on
|
|
vulnerability to HIV: a qualitative analysis among US adult transgender
|
|
women},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAY 26},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Transgender women ({''}trans women{''}), particularly
|
|
African-American and Latina trans women, have disproportionately high
|
|
prevalence of HIV in the United States (U.S.). In order to decrease
|
|
gender dysphoria and overcome discrimination, trans women affirm their
|
|
gender through social and medical transition, often in contexts of
|
|
economic hardship and sexual risk. This study qualitatively examined how
|
|
gender-affirming behaviors enhance or diminish vulnerability to HIV in
|
|
light of structural and economic barriers to gender transition. Methods
|
|
We conducted individual interviews with 19 adult trans women in two U.S.
|
|
cities (Richmond, VA and St. Louis, MO) who reported one or more sexual
|
|
risk behaviors and recent economic hardship related to
|
|
employment/income, housing, or food security. Interviews were recorded,
|
|
transcribed, and analyzed using thematic content analysis. Results The
|
|
majority (74\%) of trans women were racial/ethnic minorities with mean
|
|
age of 26.3 years. Gender-affirming behaviors varied with 58\% of trans
|
|
women having legally changed their name and gender marker; 79\% having
|
|
initiated hormone therapy; and 11\% having not initiated any medical or
|
|
legal changes. None had undertaken surgical changes. Findings suggested
|
|
that the process of gender transitioning resulted in both increasing and
|
|
decreasing HIV risk. The high need for gender affirmation by male sex
|
|
partners contributed to trans women's exposure to sexual
|
|
objectification, sexual risk behaviors, and conflicting interests in HIV
|
|
prevention messaging. Loss of housing and employment due to transition
|
|
along with the high costs of transition products and medical visits
|
|
increased reliance on sex work and created new obstacles in accessing
|
|
HIV services. Trans women experienced lower HIV risk as they acquired
|
|
legal and medical transition services, reshaped interactions with sex
|
|
partners, and received gender-affirming support by others, including
|
|
health providers, employers, peers, and housing professionals. Sexual
|
|
abstinence was viewed as a negative consequence of incomplete
|
|
transition, although characterized as a period of low HIV risk.
|
|
Conclusions Structural and policy initiatives that promote safe gender
|
|
transition and economic stability in trans women may play a critical
|
|
role in reducing HIV in this population. Addressing the harmful
|
|
pressures for U.S. trans women to conform to perceived feminine
|
|
stereotypes may also serve an important role.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mayo-Wilson, LJ (Corresponding Author), Indiana Univ, Ctr Sexual Hlth Promot, Dept Appl Hlth Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, 1025 E 7th St, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
|
|
Mayo-Wilson, LJ (Corresponding Author), Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Int Hlth, Social \& Behav Intervent Program, 615 N Wolfe St,Room E5038, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Mayo-Wilson, Larissa Jennings; Wagner, Sarah; Timbo, Fatmata, Indiana Univ, Ctr Sexual Hlth Promot, Dept Appl Hlth Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, 1025 E 7th St, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
|
|
Mayo-Wilson, Larissa Jennings, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Int Hlth, Social \& Behav Intervent Program, 615 N Wolfe St,Room E5038, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
|
|
Benotsch, Eric G.; Sawyer, Ashlee N.; Smout, Shelby A., Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Psychol, 806 West Franklin St, Richmond, VA 23284 USA.
|
|
Grigsby, Sheila; Cathers, Lauretta, Univ Missouri, Coll Nursing, 221 NAB South Campus,Univ Blvd, St Louis, MO 63121 USA.
|
|
Poteat, Tonia, Univ N Carolina, Dept Social Med, CB 7240, Chapel Hill, NC 27516 USA.
|
|
Zimmerman, Rick S., Louisiana State Univ Hlth New Orleans, Sch Nursing, 1900 Gravier St,Room 5B14, New Orleans, LA 70112 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12889-020-08902-3},
|
|
Article-Number = {782},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords = {Transgender women; Housing; Employment; Economic; Qualitative; U; s;
|
|
HIV; Minority},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RISK BEHAVIORS; SEX WORK; MEN; FRAMEWORK; HIV/STI; HEALTH; DRUGS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {ljmayowi@iu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Smout, Shelby/AHD-7847-2022
|
|
Sawyer, Ashlee/AAI-3584-2021},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000537860400006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000638661200001,
|
|
Author = {Sanchez-Recio, Raquel and Garcia-Ael, Cristina and Topa, Gabriela},
|
|
Title = {Investigating the Relationship between Stress and Self-Rated Health
|
|
during the Financial Crisis and Recession in 2008: The Mediating Role of
|
|
Job Satisfaction and Social Support in Spain},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: the 2008 financial crisis and subsequent recession had a
|
|
strong impact on employment and certain health indicators, such as
|
|
mental health. Many studies carried out with diverse samples attest to
|
|
the negative influence of stress on health. However, few studies focus
|
|
on stress and self-rated health among the Spanish workforce, or analyse
|
|
which variables can act as a buffer against the negative effects of
|
|
stress on self-perceived health. Aim: to analyse the mediator role of
|
|
social support and job satisfaction in the relationship between
|
|
work-related stress and self-rated health among the Spanish working
|
|
population between 2006 and 2017. Method: repeated cross-sectional study
|
|
using Spanish Surveys from 2006 to 2017, a total of 32.105 participants
|
|
(47.4\% women) aged 16 years and over (M = 42.3, SD = 10.7) answered a
|
|
series of questions about work-related stress (PV), self-rated health
|
|
(CV), job satisfaction, and social support (mediator variables) through
|
|
the National Health Survey (NHS) prevalences of work-related stress,
|
|
self-rated health, job satisfaction, and social support were calculated
|
|
(standardised by age). We performed mediation/moderation analysis with
|
|
Macro Process for SPSS to analyse the role of social support and job
|
|
satisfaction in the relationship between self-rated health and
|
|
work-related stress among the Spanish working population. Results: three
|
|
mediation analyses were conducted, one for each time point in the study
|
|
period. The results revealed a significant direct association between
|
|
stress and job satisfaction. In the 2006 model, both job satisfaction
|
|
and social support acted as mediators between stress and self-rated
|
|
health, while in the 2011 and 2017 models, only job satisfaction acted
|
|
as a mediator. The data reveal that the working population in Spain has
|
|
a good capacity for resilience, since no drop in health indicators was
|
|
observed. Conclusion: following the economic recession, employment has
|
|
partially recovered. However, social and employment policies are
|
|
required to help the population face the recent situation triggered by
|
|
the Coronavirus crisis.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Garcia-Ael, C (Corresponding Author), Natl Distance Univ UNED, Fac Psychol, Madrid 28046, Spain.
|
|
Sanchez-Recio, Raquel, Univ Zaragoza, Fac Med, Dept Prevent Med \& Publ Hlth, Zaragoza 50009, Spain.
|
|
Garcia-Ael, Cristina; Topa, Gabriela, Natl Distance Univ UNED, Fac Psychol, Madrid 28046, Spain.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/jcm10071463},
|
|
Article-Number = {1463},
|
|
EISSN = {2077-0383},
|
|
Keywords = {mediation; work-related Stress; self-rated health; social support; job
|
|
satisfaction and economic recession},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-CRISIS; MORTALITY EVIDENCE; INSECURITY; INEQUALITIES; GENDER;
|
|
IMPACT; DETERMINANTS; WORKFORCE; OUTCOMES; DEMANDS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {rzanchez@unizar.es
|
|
cgarciaael@psi.uned.es
|
|
gtopa@psi.uned.es},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Topa, Gabriela/L-9061-2014
|
|
García-Ael, Cristina/L-1099-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Topa, Gabriela/0000-0002-9181-8603
|
|
García-Ael, Cristina/0000-0002-9460-9268
|
|
Sanchez Recio, Raquel/0000-0002-0078-0663},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {76},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000638661200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000934568500001,
|
|
Author = {Bradshaw, Sally and Graco, Marnie and Holland, Anne},
|
|
Title = {Barriers and facilitators to guideline-recommended care of benign
|
|
paroxysmal positional vertigo in the ED: a qualitative study using the
|
|
theoretical domains framework},
|
|
Journal = {EMERGENCY MEDICINE JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Month = {2023 FEB 15},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundBenign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) is a common
|
|
presentation to the ED. Evidence suggests low adherence to
|
|
guideline-recommended care, but the reasons underlying this are poorly
|
|
understood. This study used the theoretical domains framework (TDF) to
|
|
explore the barriers and facilitators to medical and physiotherapy
|
|
clinical practices in the management of BPPV in an Australian
|
|
metropolitan ED. MethodsFrom May to December 2021, semistructured
|
|
interviews were conducted with 13 medical staff and 13 physiotherapists
|
|
who worked at an ED in Melbourne, Australia. Interviews used the TDF to
|
|
explore the perceived barriers and facilitators to the delivery of
|
|
guideline-recommended assessment and treatment techniques for BPPV. Data
|
|
were analysed thematically to identify relevant domains and generate
|
|
themes and belief statements. ResultsFifteen belief statements
|
|
representing eight domains of the TDF were identified as key factors in
|
|
the management of BPPV in the ED. The most prominent domains were
|
|
knowledge and skills due to their conflicting belief statements between
|
|
professions concerning education, skill development and self-confidence;
|
|
memory, attention and decision processes for the perceived complexity of
|
|
the presentation including difficulty recalling diagnostic and treatment
|
|
techniques; and environmental context and resources for their shared
|
|
belief statements concerning time and workload pressures. The
|
|
availability of vestibular physiotherapy was considered both a barrier
|
|
and facilitator to the delivery of recommended care by medical staff,
|
|
but a barrier to independent practice as it unintentionally limited the
|
|
opportunities for skill development in medical staff. ConclusionSeveral
|
|
modifiable barriers and facilitators to the management of BPPV in the ED
|
|
have been identified. Differences were observed between the professional
|
|
groups, and these findings will guide a future intervention to improve
|
|
the use of guideline-recommended assessment and treatment techniques for
|
|
BPPV in ED.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bradshaw, S (Corresponding Author), Alfred Hlth, Physiotherapy Dept, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Bradshaw, S (Corresponding Author), Alfred Hlth, Emergency Dept, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Bradshaw, Sally, Alfred Hlth, Emergency \& Trauma Ctr, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Bradshaw, Sally, La Trobe Univ, Sch Allied Hlth, Bundoora Campus, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Bradshaw, Sally; Graco, Marnie; Holland, Anne, Alfred Hlth, Physiotherapy Dept, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Graco, Marnie; Holland, Anne, Austin Hlth, Inst Breathing \& Sleep, Heidelberg, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Graco, Marnie, Univ Melbourne, Sch Hlth Sci, Dept Physiotherapy, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Holland, Anne, Monash Univ, Cent Clin Sch, Resp Res, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Bradshaw, Sally, Alfred Hlth, Emergency Dept, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/emermed-2022-212585},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1472-0205},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-0213},
|
|
Keywords = {qualitative research; clinical management; guideline; emergency
|
|
department},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Emergency Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {s.bradshaw@alfred.org.au},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000934568500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000351250500003,
|
|
Author = {Dodson, Kyle},
|
|
Title = {Globalization and Protest Expansion},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL PROBLEMS},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {62},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {15-39},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Evidence of protest expansion both in the United States and abroad has
|
|
stimulated theoretical discussion of a ``movement society,{''} with some
|
|
arguing that protest activities are becoming a standard feature of
|
|
democratic politics. In advancing this claim, many have highlighted the
|
|
role of domestic factors for example, generational change or economic
|
|
affluence without fully accounting for the possibility that
|
|
international dynamics may play an important role as well. The lack of
|
|
work is surprising not only because the trend in protest is
|
|
international in scope, but also because work in comparative sociology
|
|
suggests globalization may make an important contribution. This study
|
|
addresses the empirical gap by examining how political globalization (as
|
|
measured by memberships in international organizations) and economic
|
|
globalization (as measured by trade activity and foreign investment)
|
|
influence trends in protest participation. Using data from World Values
|
|
Surveys of 37,716 respondents in 17 advanced democracies merged with
|
|
data on several national and international indicators, this study
|
|
examines how the probability of participating in protest has changed
|
|
over time as a result of these two forms of globalization. The results
|
|
of multivariate, multilevel analysis combined with simulations indicate
|
|
that trends in political globalization have expanded protest activity,
|
|
while trends in economic globalization have limited that expansion.
|
|
These results suggest that social movement scholarship should continue
|
|
to examine the implications of globalization for protest behavior and
|
|
other social movement dynamics.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dodson, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Merced, Sch Social Sci Humanities \& Arts, 5200 North Lake Rd, Merced, CA 95343 USA.
|
|
Dodson, Kyle, Univ Calif Merced, Merced, CA 95343 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/socpro/spu004},
|
|
ISSN = {0037-7791},
|
|
EISSN = {1533-8533},
|
|
Keywords = {social movements; world society; globalization; protest expansion;
|
|
comparative politics},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GLOBAL CIVIL-SOCIETY; TRANSNATIONAL ADVOCACY NETWORKS; INCOME
|
|
INEQUALITY; ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION; WORLDWIDE EXPANSION; UNITED-STATES;
|
|
MOVEMENT; MOBILIZATION; RIGHTS; DEINDUSTRIALIZATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {kdodson2@ucmerced.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {114},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {38},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000351250500003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000990745300001,
|
|
Author = {Verrall, Claire and Willis, Eileen and Henderson, Julie},
|
|
Title = {Practice nursing: A systematic literature review of facilitators and
|
|
barriers in three countries},
|
|
Journal = {COLLEGIAN},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {254-263},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Practice Nurses (PN) play an increasing role in chronic
|
|
disease management, however, this role is poorly defined. Question: How
|
|
do Practice Nurses in New Zealand, Canada and the United Kingdom manage
|
|
chronic disease? Aim: This systematic review aims to identify the
|
|
barriers and facilitators for practice nurses in New Zealand (NZ),
|
|
Canada and the United Kingdom (UK) when caring for patients with a
|
|
chronic disease. To determine how Practice Nurses in three high income
|
|
countries manage chronic disease. Methods: We searched Scopus, Web of
|
|
Science, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Liter-ature,
|
|
(CINAHL), and MEDLINE in February 2021. The initial search yielded 495
|
|
articles. Four hundred and sixty-four articles were excluded because
|
|
they did not address the research question or included the community
|
|
nurse or nurse practitioner. Nine articles with a total sample size of
|
|
1050 PN participants met the inclusion criteria. Findings: Six main
|
|
themes were identified that outline the barriers and facilitators to the
|
|
role of the practice nurse when managing chronic disease: financial
|
|
incentives, funding, power differences between the nurse and patient and
|
|
the nurse and doctor, time, education, and role ambiguity. Discussion:
|
|
Policy initiatives across the three countries were replicated with
|
|
similar barriers and facilita-tors to the PN role. Conclusion: Working
|
|
within a context driven by incentive funding and competing demands can
|
|
be pro-hibitive to the effective management of chronic disease by the
|
|
PN. (c) 2022 Australian College of Nursing Ltd. Published by Elsevier
|
|
Ltd.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Verrall, C (Corresponding Author), Adelaide Nursing Sch, Acad Off, Level 4,Adelaide Hlth \& Med Sci Bldg,Cnr North Ter, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
|
|
Verrall, Claire, Univ Adelaide, Fac Hlth \& Med Sci, Adelaide Nursing Sch, Adelaide, Australia.
|
|
Willis, Eileen, Flinders Univ South Australia, Coll Nursing \& Hlth Sci, Adelaide, Australia.
|
|
Willis, Eileen, Cent Queensland Univ, Sch Nursing Midwifery \& Social Sci, Rockhampton, Australia.
|
|
Henderson, Julie, Flinders Univ South Australia, Coll Nursing \& Hlth Sci, Adelaide, Australia.
|
|
Verrall, Claire, Adelaide Nursing Sch, Acad Off, Level 4,Adelaide Hlth \& Med Sci Bldg,Cnr North Ter, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.colegn.2022.09.005},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1322-7696},
|
|
EISSN = {1876-7575},
|
|
Keywords = {Chronic disease; Management; General practice; Nurse; Primary health
|
|
care; Policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRIMARY-HEALTH-CARE; CHRONIC DISEASE MANAGEMENT; GENERAL-PRACTICE;
|
|
SELF-MANAGEMENT; NEW-ZEALAND; NURSES; POLICY; PRACTITIONERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {claire.verrall@adelaide.edu.au},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Willis, Eileen/0000-0001-7576-971X
|
|
Verrall, Claire/0000-0001-5557-7067},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000990745300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000464006000001,
|
|
Author = {Calderon-Auaricio, Ali and Orue, Andrea},
|
|
Title = {Precision oncology in Latin America: current situation, challenges and
|
|
perspectives},
|
|
Journal = {ECANCERMEDICALSCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {APR 3},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Anti-cancer cytotoxic treatments like platinum-derived
|
|
compounds often show low therapeutic efficacy, high-risk side effects
|
|
and resistance. Hence, targeted treatments designed to attack only
|
|
tumour cells avoiding these harmful side effects are highly needed in
|
|
clinical practice. Due to this, precision oncology has arisen as an
|
|
approach to specifically target alterations present only in cancer
|
|
cells, minimising side effects for patients. It involves the use of
|
|
molecular biomarkers present in each kind of tumour for diagnosis,
|
|
prognosis and treatment. Since these biomarkers are specific for each
|
|
cancer type, physicians use them to stratify, diagnose or take the best
|
|
therapeutic options for each patient depending on the features of the
|
|
specific tumour.
|
|
Aim: This review aims to describe the current situation, limitations,
|
|
advantages and perspectives about precision oncology in Latin America.
|
|
Main body: For many years, many biomarkers have been used in a clinical
|
|
setting in developed countries. However, in Latin American countries,
|
|
their broad application has not been affordable partially due to
|
|
financial and technical limitations associated with precarious health
|
|
systems and poor access of low-income populations to quality health
|
|
care. Furthermore, the genetic mixture in Latin American populations
|
|
could generate differences in treatment responses from one population to
|
|
another (pharmacoethnicity) and this should be evaluated before
|
|
establishing precision therapy in particular populations. Some research
|
|
groups in the region have done a lot of work in this field and these
|
|
data should be taken as a starting point to establish networks oriented
|
|
to finding clinically useful cancer biomarkers in Latin American
|
|
populations.
|
|
Conclusion: Latin America must create policies allowing excluded
|
|
populations to gain access to health systems and next generation
|
|
anti-cancer drugs, i.e. high-cost targeted therapies to improve
|
|
survival. Also, cancer clinical research must be oriented to establish
|
|
cancer biomarkers adapted to specific populations with different
|
|
ethnicity, allowing the improvement of patient outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Orue, A (Corresponding Author), IVIC, Ctr Microbiol, Tumor Cell Biol Lab, Caracas 1020A, Venezuela.
|
|
Calderon-Auaricio, Ali; Orue, Andrea, IVIC, Ctr Microbiol, Tumor Cell Biol Lab, Caracas 1020A, Venezuela.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3332/ecancer.2019.920},
|
|
Article-Number = {920},
|
|
ISSN = {1754-6605},
|
|
Keywords = {precision oncology; biomarkers; cancer; targeted therapy; access to
|
|
health care; Latin America},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CELL LUNG-CANCER; ANDROGEN RECEPTOR; PERSONALIZED MEDICINE; OPEN-LABEL;
|
|
METHYLATION; EPIGENOMICS; MUTATIONS; THERAPY; DRUGS; EGFR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {andreaorue@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Calderon-Aparicio, Ali/0000-0003-0656-1434},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {78},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000464006000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000471607000001,
|
|
Author = {de Wolff, Mie Gaarskjaer and Backhausen, Mette Gronbaek and Iversen,
|
|
Mette Langeland and Bendix, Jane Marie and Rom, Ane Lilleore and
|
|
Hegaard, Hanne Kristine},
|
|
Title = {Prevalence and predictors of maternal smoking prior to and during
|
|
pregnancy in a regional Danish population: a cross-sectional study},
|
|
Journal = {REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Month = {JUN 14},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundMaternal smoking is still a major public health problem posing
|
|
the risk of several negative health outcomes for both the pregnant woman
|
|
and her offspring. The prevalence of maternal smoking in Denmark and
|
|
other high-income countries has decreased continuously since the 1980s,
|
|
and a prevalence below 10\% of women who continue to smoke during
|
|
pregnancy has been reported in studies after 2010. Previous studies have
|
|
shown that low socioeconomic status is associated with maternal smoking.
|
|
Information from the Danish Birth Register about maternal smoking shows
|
|
that the prevalence of women who report to smoke in pregnancy has
|
|
decreased continuously with 23.3\% who reported ever smoking in
|
|
pregnancy in 2000, 12.9\% in 2010 and 9.0\% in 2017. The aim of this
|
|
study was to estimate the prevalence of maternal smoking at the time of
|
|
conception and at 20weeks of gestation in a regional Danish population,
|
|
to describe differences in maternal characteristics among smokers,
|
|
quitters and never-smokers, and to estimate predictors of smoking at the
|
|
time of conception.MethodsA cross-sectional study was conducted among
|
|
pregnant women receiving antenatal care at the Department of Obstetrics,
|
|
Zealand University Hospital, Denmark from August 2015 to March 2016
|
|
(n=566). The main outcome was smoking at the time of conception and at
|
|
20weeks of gestation. The questionnaire also collected information about
|
|
maternal, health-related and sociodemographic characteristics.
|
|
Descriptive analysis was conducted, and multivariate logistic regression
|
|
analysis was used to assess the potential associated predictors
|
|
(adjusted odds ratio).ResultsThe prevalence of self-reported smoking at
|
|
the time of conception was 16\% (n=90) and 6\% smoked at 20weeks of
|
|
gestation (n=35), as 61\% of smokers quit smoking during early
|
|
pregnancy. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that significant
|
|
predictors for smoking at conception were the socioeconomic factors;
|
|
12years of education, shift work and being unemployed.ConclusionThe
|
|
prevalence of self-reported maternal smoking in this regional Danish
|
|
population of pregnant women is lower than seen in previous studies.
|
|
However, predictors for smoking at the time of conception remain to be
|
|
factors of low socioeconomic status confirming a social inequality in
|
|
maternal smoking. Women at risk of smoking during pregnancy must be
|
|
identified in early pregnancy or even before pregnancy and be offered
|
|
interventions to help them quit smoking.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Backhausen, MG (Corresponding Author), Zealand Univ Hosp, Dept Gynecol \& Obstet, Sygehusvej 10, DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark.
|
|
de Wolff, Mie Gaarskjaer; Rom, Ane Lilleore; Hegaard, Hanne Kristine, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Rigshosp, Dept Obstet, Copenhagen, Denmark.
|
|
de Wolff, Mie Gaarskjaer; Rom, Ane Lilleore; Hegaard, Hanne Kristine, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Rigshosp, Juliane Marie Ctr, Res Unit Womens \& Childrens Hlth, Blegdamsvej 9, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.
|
|
Backhausen, Mette Gronbaek; Iversen, Mette Langeland, Zealand Univ Hosp, Dept Gynecol \& Obstet, Sygehusvej 10, DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark.
|
|
Bendix, Jane Marie, Univ Copenhagen, Nordsjaellands Hosp, Dept Gynecol \& Obstet, Dyrehavevej 29, DK-3400 Hillerod, Denmark.
|
|
Hegaard, Hanne Kristine, Univ Copenhagen, Fac Hlth \& Med Sci, Inst Clin Med, Blegdamsvej 3, Copenhagen, Denmark.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12978-019-0740-7},
|
|
Article-Number = {82},
|
|
ISSN = {1742-4755},
|
|
Keywords = {Maternal smoking; Pregnancy; Socioeconomic status; Antenatal care;
|
|
Health inequality},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FOR-GESTATIONAL-AGE; RISK; CESSATION; WOMEN; ASSOCIATION; HEALTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {mie.gaarskjaer.de.wolff.01@regionh.dk
|
|
mgb@regionsjaelland.dk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Bendix, Jesper/H-5468-2012
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bendix, Jesper/0000-0003-1255-2868
|
|
Backhausen, Mette/0000-0002-8312-5567
|
|
Hegaard, Hanne Kristine/0000-0002-7093-0719
|
|
de Wolff, Mie Gaarskjaer/0000-0002-9483-6559
|
|
Bendix, Jane M./0000-0003-3341-6689
|
|
Rom, Ane Lilleore/0000-0003-2474-2677},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {30},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000471607000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000485848000001,
|
|
Author = {Paudyal, Vibhu and MacLure, Katie and Forbes-McKay, Katrina and
|
|
McKenzie, Myra and MacLeod, Joan and Smith, Ann and Stewart, Derek},
|
|
Title = {`If I die, I die, I don't care about my health': Perspectives on
|
|
self-care of people experiencing homelessness},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH \& SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {160-172},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Self-care, which refers to what people do to prevent disease and
|
|
maintain good health, can alleviate negative health consequences of
|
|
people experiencing homelessness. The aim of the study was to apply a
|
|
theoretically informed approach in exploring engagement of people
|
|
experiencing homelessness in self-care and to identify factors that can
|
|
be targeted in future health and social care interventions. Qualitative
|
|
semi-structured interviews were conducted with 28 participants
|
|
opportunistically recruited from a specialist homelessness healthcare
|
|
centre of North East Scotland, the United Kingdom (UK). An interview
|
|
schedule was developed based on the theoretical domains framework (TDF).
|
|
Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Six aspects of
|
|
self-care were explored, including (a) self-awareness of physical and
|
|
mental health, (b) health literacy, including health seeking behaviour,
|
|
(c) healthy eating, (d) risk avoidance or mitigation, (v) physical
|
|
activity and sleep and (e) maintaining personal hygiene. Thematic
|
|
analysis was conducted by two independent researchers following the
|
|
Framework Approach. Participants described low engagement in self-care.
|
|
Most of the barriers to engagement in self-care by participants were
|
|
related to `environmental context and resources' domain of TDF.
|
|
Participants often resorted to stealing or begging for food. Many
|
|
perceived having low health literacy to interpret health-related
|
|
information. Visits to churches and charities to get a shower or to
|
|
obtain free meals were commonplace. Participants expressed pessimism
|
|
that there was `nothing' they could do to improve their health and
|
|
described perceived barriers often too big for them to overcome.
|
|
Alienation, lack of social support and the perception that they had done
|
|
irreversible damage to their health prevented their involvement in
|
|
self-care. The theme of `social circle' held examples of both enabler
|
|
and barriers in participants' uptake of risky behaviours. Health and
|
|
social services should work with persons experiencing homelessness in
|
|
designing and delivering targeted interventions that address contextual
|
|
barriers, multi-morbidity, health literacy and self-efficacy.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Paudyal, V (Corresponding Author), Univ Birmingham, Sch Pharm, Insititute Clin Sci, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Paudyal, Vibhu, Univ Birmingham, Inst Clin Sci, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
MacLure, Katie; McKenzie, Myra, Robert Gordon Univ, Fac Hlth \& Social Care, Aberdeen, Scotland.
|
|
Forbes-McKay, Katrina, Robert Gordon Univ, Appl Social Studies, Aberdeen, Scotland.
|
|
MacLeod, Joan, Aberdeen City Community Hlth Partnership, NHS Grampian South Cluster, Aberdeen, Scotland.
|
|
Smith, Ann, Aberdeen City Community Hlth Partnership, NHS Grampian North Cluster, Aberdeen, Scotland.
|
|
Stewart, Derek, Qatar Univ, Coll Pharm, Doha, Qatar.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/hsc.12850},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2019},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-0410},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2524},
|
|
Keywords = {health behaviours; homelessness; self-care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ASSERTIVE COMMUNITY TREATMENT; HIGH-INCOME COUNTRIES; USE DISORDERS;
|
|
HOUSING 1ST; MORTALITY; INTERVENTIONS; OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {v.paudyal@bham.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {MacLure, Katie/GRJ-8912-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {MacLure, Katie/0000-0003-0686-948X
|
|
Paudyal, Vibhu/0000-0002-4173-6490},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {17},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000485848000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000731087200003,
|
|
Author = {Alfaro-Serrano, David and Balantrapu, Tanay and Chaurey, Ritam and
|
|
Goicoechea, Ana and Verhoogen, Eric},
|
|
Title = {Interventions to promote technology adoption in firms: A systematic
|
|
review},
|
|
Journal = {CAMPBELL SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background The adoption of improved technologies is generally associated
|
|
with better economic performance and development. Despite its desirable
|
|
effects, the process of technology adoption can be quite slow and market
|
|
failures and other frictions may impede adoption. Interventions in
|
|
market processes may be necessary to promote the adoption of beneficial
|
|
technologies. This review systematically identifies and summarizes the
|
|
evidence on the effects of interventions that shape the incentives of
|
|
firms to adopt new technologies. Following Foster and Rosenzweig,
|
|
technology is defined as ``the relationship between inputs and
|
|
outputs,{''} and technology adoption as ``the use of new mappings
|
|
between input and outputs and the corresponding allocations of inputs
|
|
that exploit the new mappings.{''} The review focuses on studies that
|
|
include direct evidence on technology adoption, broadly defined, as an
|
|
outcome. The term intervention refers broadly to sources of exogenous
|
|
variation that shape firms' incentives to adopt new technologies,
|
|
including public policies, interventions carried out by private
|
|
institutions (such as NGOs), experimental manipulations implemented by
|
|
academic researchers trying to understand technology adoption, and
|
|
natural experiments. Objective The objective of this review is to answer
|
|
the following research questions: To what extent do interventions affect
|
|
technology adoption in firms? To what extent does technology adoption
|
|
affect profits, employment, productivity, and yields? Are these effects
|
|
heterogeneous across sectors, firm size, countries, workers' skill
|
|
level, or workers' gender? 1.2.3. Selection Criteria To be included,
|
|
papers had to meet the inclusion criteria described in detail in Section
|
|
3.1 which is grouped into four categories: (1) Participants, (2)
|
|
Interventions, (3) Methodology, and (4) Outcomes. Regarding
|
|
participants, our focus was on firms, and we omitted studies at the
|
|
country or region level. In terms of interventions, we included studies
|
|
that analyzed a source of exogenous variation in incentives for firms to
|
|
adopt new technologies and estimated their effects. Thus, we left out
|
|
studies that only looked at correlates of technology adoption, without a
|
|
credible strategy to establish causality, and only included studies that
|
|
used experimental or quasi-experimental methods. Regarding outcomes,
|
|
papers were included only if they estimated effects of interventions
|
|
(broadly defined) on technology adoption, although we also considered
|
|
other firm outcomes as secondary outcomes in studies that reported them.
|
|
Search Methods The first step in selecting the studies to be included in
|
|
the systematic review was to identify a set of candidate papers. This
|
|
set included both published and unpublished studies. To look for
|
|
candidate papers, we implemented an electronic search and, in a
|
|
subsequent step, a manual search. The electronic search involved running
|
|
a keyword search on the most commonly used databases for published and
|
|
unpublished academic studies in the broad topic area. The words and
|
|
their Boolean combinations were carefully chosen (more details in
|
|
Section 3.2). The selected papers were initially screened on title and
|
|
abstract. If papers passed this screen, they were screened on full text.
|
|
Those studies that met the stated criteria were then selected for
|
|
analysis. The manual search component involved asking for references
|
|
from experts and searching references cited by papers selected through
|
|
the electronic search. These additional papers were screened based on
|
|
title and abstract and the remaining were screened on full text.
|
|
If they met the criteria they were added to the list of selected
|
|
studies. Data Collection and Analysis For the selected studies, the
|
|
relevant estimates of effects and their associated standard errors (SEs)
|
|
were entered into an Excel spreadsheet along with other related
|
|
information such as sample size, variable type, and duration for flow
|
|
variables. Other information such as authors, year of publication, and
|
|
country and/or region where the study was implemented was also included
|
|
in the spreadsheet. Once the data were entered for each of the selected
|
|
studies, the information on sample size, effect size and SE of the
|
|
effect size was used to compute the standardized effect size for each
|
|
study to make the results comparable across studies. For those studies
|
|
for which relevant data were not reported, we contacted the authors by
|
|
email and incorporated the information they provided. Forest plots were
|
|
then generated and within-study pooled average treatment effects were
|
|
computed by outcome variable. In addition, an assessment of reporting on
|
|
potential biases was conducted including (1) reporting on key aspects of
|
|
selection bias and confounding, (2) reporting on spillovers of
|
|
interventions to comparison groups, (3) reporting of SEs, and (4)
|
|
reporting on Hawthorne effects and the collection of retrospective data.
|
|
Results The electronic and manual searches resulted in 42,462 candidate
|
|
papers. Of these, 80 studies were ultimately selected for the review
|
|
after screenings to apply the selection criteria. Relevant data were
|
|
extracted for analysis from these 80 studies. Overall, 1108 regression
|
|
coefficients across various interventions and outcomes were included in
|
|
the analysis, representing a total of 4,762,755 firms. Even though the
|
|
search methods included both high-income and developing countries, only
|
|
1 of the 80 studies included in the analysis was in a high-income
|
|
country, while the remaining 79 were in developing countries. We discuss
|
|
the results in two parts, looking at firms in manufacturing and services
|
|
separately from firms (i.e., farms) in agriculture. In each case, we
|
|
consider both technology adoption and other firm outcomes. Authors'
|
|
Conclusions Overall, our results suggest that some interventions led to
|
|
positive impacts on technology adoption among firms across
|
|
manufacturing, services, and agriculture sectors, but given the wide
|
|
variation in the time periods, contexts, and study methodologies, the
|
|
results are hard to generalize. The effects of these interventions on
|
|
other firm performance measures such as farm yields, firm profits,
|
|
productivity, and employment were mixed. Policy-makers must be careful
|
|
in interpreting these results as a given intervention may not work
|
|
equally well across contexts and may need to be adjusted to each
|
|
specific regional context. There is great need for more research on the
|
|
barriers to technology adoption by firms in developing countries and
|
|
interventions that may help alleviate these obstacles. One major
|
|
implication for researchers from our review is that there is a need to
|
|
carefully measure technology adoption.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Goicoechea, A (Corresponding Author), World Bank Grp, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
|
|
Alfaro-Serrano, David, Cornerstone Res, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Balantrapu, Tanay; Goicoechea, Ana, World Bank Grp, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
|
|
Chaurey, Ritam, Johns Hopkins Univ, SAIS, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Verhoogen, Eric, Columbia Univ, Dept Econ, New York, NY 10027 USA.
|
|
Verhoogen, Eric, Columbia Univ, Sch Int \& Publ Affairs, New York, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/cl2.1181},
|
|
Article-Number = {e1181},
|
|
EISSN = {1891-1803},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA; FEMALE ENTREPRENEURSHIP; TECHNICAL CHANGE; IMPACT;
|
|
BUSINESS; FARMERS; PRODUCTIVITY; INFORMATION; SELECTION; MARKETS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {agoicoechea@worldbank.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pereira, Fernanda/AID-4926-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {111},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000731087200003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000493097500005,
|
|
Author = {Williams, Tricia S. and McDonald, Kyla P. and Roberts, Samantha D. and
|
|
Chau, Vann and Seed, Mike and Miller, Steven P. and Sananes, Renee},
|
|
Title = {From Diagnoses to Ongoing Journey: Parent Experiences Following
|
|
Congenital Heart Disease Diagnoses},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC PSYCHOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {924-936},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Despite improved survival among children with congenital heart disease
|
|
(CHD), the risk of psychosocial difficulties remains largely unchanged
|
|
with an increased emphasis of improving support for parents as a
|
|
mechanism to optimize outcomes. Objective: Using qualitative and
|
|
quantitative methods, the current cross-sectional study examined
|
|
parents' experiences at the time of their child's diagnosis, what they
|
|
thought helped their child recover, barriers to support, and identified
|
|
needs for future models of care. Method: The sample included 26 parents
|
|
(22 mothers, 3 fathers, and 1 mother/father pair) of children with CHD,
|
|
ranging in age between 6 months and 4 years with a mean age of 2 years.
|
|
Results: Qualitative results were organized around five themes: (a) They
|
|
(medical team) saved my child's life, (b) My child is going to be okay,
|
|
(c) Not out of the woods, (d) Optimizing support for my child and
|
|
myself, and (e) What still gets in the way. Parents uniformly expressed
|
|
a need for greater mental health support for their children as well as
|
|
programs to improve parents' skill and confidence, with no difference
|
|
between age groups (< 2 years and > 2 years of age). Common barriers to
|
|
service included distance and time off work. Conclusion: Parents'
|
|
experiences informed both acute and long term implications following CHD
|
|
diagnoses, and highlight current gaps in mental health care. Direction
|
|
for clinical care and improved intervention opportunities are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Williams, TS (Corresponding Author), Hosp Sick Children, Dept Psychol, 555 Univ Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada.
|
|
Williams, Tricia S.; McDonald, Kyla P.; Roberts, Samantha D.; Sananes, Renee, Hosp Sick Children, Dept Psychol, Div Neurol, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Williams, Tricia S.; Chau, Vann; Seed, Mike; Miller, Steven P.; Sananes, Renee, Univ Toronto, Dept Pediat, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
McDonald, Kyla P.; Roberts, Samantha D., York Univ, N York, ON, Canada.
|
|
Chau, Vann; Miller, Steven P., Hosp Sick Children, Dept Paediat, Div Neurol, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Seed, Mike, Hosp Sick Children, Dept Paediat, Div Cardiol, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/jpepsy/jsz055},
|
|
ISSN = {0146-8693},
|
|
EISSN = {1465-735X},
|
|
Keywords = {CHD; mental health; needs assessment; parent experiences; support},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EARLY INTERVENTION SERVICES; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; YOUNG-CHILDREN;
|
|
BRAIN-INJURY; OUTCOMES; INFANTS; SCHOOL; AGE; NEWBORNS; ILLNESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental},
|
|
Author-Email = {tricia.williams@sickkids.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Miller, Steven/0000-0001-9102-9105
|
|
Seed, Mike/0000-0001-7330-234X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000493097500005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000478016900025,
|
|
Author = {Shanafelt, Tait D. and Schein, Edgar and Minor, Lloyd B. and Trockel,
|
|
Mickey and Schein, Peter and Kirch, Darrell},
|
|
Title = {Healing the Professional Culture of Medicine},
|
|
Journal = {MAYO CLINIC PROCEEDINGS},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {94},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {1556-1566},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The past decade has been a time of great change for US physicians. Many
|
|
physicians feel that the care delivery system has become a barrier to
|
|
providing high-quality care rather than facilitating it. Although
|
|
physician distress and some of the contributing factors are now widely
|
|
recognized, much of the distress physicians are experiencing is related
|
|
to insidious issues affecting the cultures of our profession, our health
|
|
care organizations, and the health care delivery system. Culture refers
|
|
to the shared and fundamental beliefs of a group that are so widely
|
|
accepted that they are implicit and often no longer recognized. When
|
|
challenges with culture arise, they almost always relate to a problem
|
|
with a subcomponent of the culture even as the larger culture does many
|
|
things well. In this perspective, we consider the role of culture in
|
|
many of the problems facing our health care delivery system and
|
|
contributing to the high prevalence of professional burnout plaguing US
|
|
physicians. A framework, drawn from the field of organizational science,
|
|
to address these issues and heal our professional culture is considered.
|
|
(C) 2019 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Published
|
|
by Elsevier Inc.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Shanafelt, TD (Corresponding Author), Stanford Univ, Sch Med, 300 Pasteur Dr,Room 3215, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
|
|
Shanafelt, Tait D., Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Med, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
|
|
Minor, Lloyd B., Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Otolaryngol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
|
|
Trockel, Mickey, Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
|
|
Schein, Edgar; Schein, Peter, Org Culture \& Leadership Inst, Menlo Pk, CA USA.
|
|
Kirch, Darrell, Assoc Amer Med Coll, Washington, DC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.mayocp.2019.03.026},
|
|
ISSN = {0025-6196},
|
|
EISSN = {1942-5546},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WORK-LIFE BALANCE; PHYSICIAN BURNOUT; SUICIDAL-IDEATION;
|
|
JOB-SATISFACTION; CARE; WELLNESS; PROMOTE; TIME; INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
COMMUNICATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {Tshana@stanford.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {75},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000478016900025},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000457705500001,
|
|
Author = {Yotebieng, Marcel and Brazier, Ellen and Addison, Diane and Kimmel,
|
|
April D. and Cornell, Morna and Keiser, Olivia and Parcesepe, Angela M.
|
|
and Onovo, Amobi and Lancaster, Kathryn E. and Castelnuovo, Barbara and
|
|
Murnane, Pamela M. and Cohen, Craig R. and Vreeman, Rachel C. and
|
|
Davies, Mary-Ann and Duda, Stephany N. and Yiannoutsos, Constantin T.
|
|
and Bono, Rose S. and Agler, Robert and Bernard, Charlotte and
|
|
Syvertsen, Jennifer L. and Sinayobye, Jean d'Amour and Wikramanayake,
|
|
Radhika and Sohn, Annette H. and von Groote, Per M. and Wandeler, Gilles
|
|
and Leroy, Valeriane and Williams, Carolyn F. and Wools-Kaloustian, Kara
|
|
and Nash, Denis and Addison, Diane and Althoff, Keri and Brazier, Ellen
|
|
and Casteln-Uovo, Barbara and Cohen, Craig R. and Cornell, Morna and
|
|
Davies, Mary-Ann and Dominguez, Geral-Dina and Duda, Stephany N. and
|
|
Freeman, Aimee and Jaquet, Antoine and Keiser, Olivia and Kimmel, April
|
|
D. and Lancaster, Kathryn E. and Leroy, Valeriane and Markus, Janne and
|
|
McKaig, Rosemary and Murnane, Pamela M. and Nash, Denis and Nsonde,
|
|
Dominique and Onovo, Amobi and Parcesepe, Angela M. and Sinayobye, Jean
|
|
d'Amour and Sohn, Ann-Ette H. and Von Groote, Per M. and Vreeman, Rachel
|
|
C. and Wandeler, Gilles and Wikramanayake, Radhika and Williams, Carolyn
|
|
F. and Wools-Kaloustian, Kara and Yiannoutsos, Constantin and Yotebieng,
|
|
Marcel and IeDEA Treat Sub-Saharan Africa Co},
|
|
Title = {Research priorities to inform ``Treat All{''} policy implementation for
|
|
people living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa: a consensus statement from
|
|
the International epidemiology Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA)},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL AIDS SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {IntroductionTreat All - the treatment of all people with HIV,
|
|
irrespective of disease stage or CD4 cell count - represents a paradigm
|
|
shift in HIV care that has the potential to end AIDS as a public health
|
|
threat. With accelerating implementation of Treat All in sub-Saharan
|
|
Africa (SSA), there is a need for a focused agenda and research to
|
|
identify and inform strategies for promoting timely uptake of HIV
|
|
treatment, retention in care, and sustained viral suppression and
|
|
addressing bottlenecks impeding implementation.
|
|
MethodsThe Delphi approach was used to develop consensus around research
|
|
priorities for Treat All implementation in SSA. Through an iterative
|
|
process (June 2017 to March 2018), a set of research priorities was
|
|
collectively formulated and refined by a technical working group and
|
|
shared for review, deliberation and prioritization by more than 200
|
|
researchers, implementation experts, policy/decision-makers, and HIV
|
|
community representatives in East, Central, Southern and West Africa.
|
|
Results and discussionThe process resulted in a list of nine research
|
|
priorities for generating evidence to guide Treat All policies,
|
|
implementation strategies and monitoring efforts. These priorities
|
|
highlight the need for increased focus on adolescents, men, and those
|
|
with mental health and substance use disorders - groups that remain
|
|
underserved in SSA and for whom more effective testing, linkage and care
|
|
strategies need to be identified. The priorities also reflect consensus
|
|
on the need to: (1) generate accurate national and sub-national
|
|
estimates of the size of key populations and describe those who remain
|
|
underserved along the HIV-care continuum; (2) characterize the
|
|
timeliness of HIV care and short- and long-term HIV care continuum
|
|
outcomes, as well as factors influencing timely achievement of these
|
|
outcomes; (3) estimate the incidence and prevalence of HIV-drug
|
|
resistance and regimen switching; and (4) identify cost-effective and
|
|
affordable service delivery models and strategies to optimize uptake and
|
|
minimize gaps, disparities, and losses along the HIV-care continuum,
|
|
particularly among underserved populations.
|
|
ConclusionsReflecting consensus among a broad group of experts,
|
|
researchers, policy- and decision-makers, PLWH, and other stakeholders,
|
|
the resulting research priorities highlight important evidence gaps that
|
|
are relevant for ministries of health, funders, normative bodies and
|
|
research networks.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nash, D (Corresponding Author), CUNY ISPH 55 West 125th St,6th Floor, New York, NY 10027 USA.
|
|
Nash, D (Corresponding Author), CUNY, Inst Implementat Sci Populat Hlth, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Nash, D (Corresponding Author), CUNY, Grad Sch Publ Hlth \& Hlth Policy, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Yotebieng, Marcel; Lancaster, Kathryn E.; Agler, Robert, Ohio State Univ, Columbus, OH 43210 USA.
|
|
Brazier, Ellen; Addison, Diane; Wikramanayake, Radhika; Nash, Denis, CUNY, Inst Implementat Sci Populat Hlth, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Brazier, Ellen; Addison, Diane; Wikramanayake, Radhika; Nash, Denis, CUNY, Grad Sch Publ Hlth \& Hlth Policy, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, New York, NY 10021 USA.
|
|
Kimmel, April D.; Bono, Rose S., Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Hlth Behav \& Policy, Sch Med, Richmond, VA USA.
|
|
Cornell, Morna, Univ Cape Town, Sch Publ Hlth \& Family Med, Ctr Infect Dis Epidemiol \& Res, Cape Town, South Africa.
|
|
Keiser, Olivia, Univ Geneva, Inst Global Hlth, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Parcesepe, Angela M.; Onovo, Amobi, Univ N Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
|
|
Castelnuovo, Barbara, Makerere Univ, Infect Dis Inst, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Murnane, Pamela M., Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Med, Ctr AIDS Prevent Studies, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Cohen, Craig R., Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Obstet Gynecol \& Reprod Sci, Bixby Ctr Global Reprod Hlth, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Vreeman, Rachel C., Indiana Univ Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
Davies, Mary-Ann, Univ Cape Town, Fac Hlth Sci, Sch Publ Hlth \& Family Med, Cape Town, South Africa.
|
|
Duda, Stephany N., Vanderbilt Univ, Sch Med, Nashville, TN 37212 USA.
|
|
Yiannoutsos, Constantin T., Fairbanks Sch Publ Hlth, Indianapolis, IN USA.
|
|
Bernard, Charlotte, Univ Bordeaux, Sch Publ Hlth ISPED, INSERM, Ctr Epidemiol Biostat,U1219, Bordeaux, France.
|
|
Syvertsen, Jennifer L., Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Anthropol, Riverside, CA 92521 USA.
|
|
Sinayobye, Jean d'Amour, Rwanda Mil Hosp, Kigali, Rwanda.
|
|
Sohn, Annette H., AmfAR, TREAT Asia, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
|
von Groote, Per M.; Wandeler, Gilles, Univ Bern, ISPM, Bern, Switzerland.
|
|
Leroy, Valeriane, Univ Toulouse 3, UMR 1027, French Inst Hlth \& Med Res, INSERM, Toulouse, France.
|
|
Williams, Carolyn F., NIAID, Epidemiol Branch, Div AIDS, NIH, Rockville, MD USA.
|
|
Wools-Kaloustian, Kara, Indiana Univ Sch Med, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/jia2.25218},
|
|
Article-Number = {e25218},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-2652},
|
|
Keywords = {Treat All; universal HIV treatment; 90-90-90 targets; sub-Saharan
|
|
Africa; implementation science},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; FEMALE SEX WORKERS; INJECTING DRUG-USE;
|
|
ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; MENTAL-HEALTH; SUBSTANCE-USE; VIRAL SUPPRESSION;
|
|
COST-EFFECTIVENESS; SERVICE DELIVERY; USE DISORDERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Immunology; Infectious Diseases},
|
|
Author-Email = {denis.nash@sph.cuny.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Leroy, Valeriane/AAO-5175-2020
|
|
Leroy, Valeriane/F-8129-2013
|
|
Leroy, Valeriane/GQB-1102-2022
|
|
Althoff, Keri N/HGC-5595-2022
|
|
Wandeler, Gilles/ABB-2961-2020
|
|
Nash, Denis/AFI-7485-2022
|
|
Syvertsen, Jennifer/AAO-9292-2020
|
|
Jaquet, Antoine/T-2794-2019
|
|
Yotebieng, Marcel/L-2083-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Leroy, Valeriane/0000-0003-3542-8616
|
|
Leroy, Valeriane/0000-0003-3542-8616
|
|
Leroy, Valeriane/0000-0003-3542-8616
|
|
Jaquet, Antoine/0000-0002-3426-9492
|
|
Yotebieng, Marcel/0000-0003-2110-2631
|
|
Cornell, Morna/0000-0001-7149-8799
|
|
Bernard, Charlotte/0000-0003-2677-4023
|
|
Althoff, Keri/0000-0002-5068-6595
|
|
von Groote, Per/0009-0005-5179-4423
|
|
Syvertsen, Jennifer/0000-0002-2387-7273
|
|
Nash, Denis/0000-0002-3280-5386
|
|
Lancaster, Kathryn/0000-0003-2389-6973
|
|
Castelnuovo, Barbara/0000-0001-7756-5032},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {137},
|
|
Times-Cited = {20},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000457705500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000536018101149,
|
|
Author = {Juzeleniene, S. and Baranauskiene, R. and Mourettou, G.},
|
|
Editor = {Chova, LG and Martinez, AL and Torres, IC},
|
|
Title = {FATI PROJECT: FROM ALIENATION TO INCLUSION},
|
|
Booktitle = {13TH INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE
|
|
(INTED2019)},
|
|
Series = {INTED Proceedings},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Pages = {1881-1890},
|
|
Note = {13th International Technology, Education and Development Conference
|
|
(INTED), Valencia, SPAIN, MAR 11-13, 2019},
|
|
Abstract = {As the configuration of the recent European political scene testifies,
|
|
there is an upward trend of the nationalistic and xenophobic atmosphere
|
|
within the EU societies, which is undoubtedly being reinforced in the
|
|
recent years, due to both the large refugee flows and the terrorist acts
|
|
occurring across Europe. Accordingly, the Gallup study of attitudes
|
|
toward immigration found people in Europe the most negative in the world
|
|
towards immigration. The majority of residents (52\%) said immigration
|
|
levels in their countries should be decreased. And all that while
|
|
migrants constitute the 4.6\% of the European population, a percentage
|
|
which could be `translated' into numbers as 20 million of migrants.
|
|
Consequently, the aforementioned situation invokes a matter of intricacy
|
|
in order for the NGOs and other organizations, who are dealing with the
|
|
issue of the integration of migrants and refugees, to work and emphasize
|
|
on the notions of global interdependencies and equality, with the
|
|
oversimplified argumentation occurs to be the wide range of resources
|
|
that strengthen the dominant narrative.
|
|
The innovative character of the project FATI (From Alienation to
|
|
Inclusion, https://www.projectfati.com) lies on the effective
|
|
collaboration of the project partners, who are seeking to create
|
|
activities by developing a unique on-line environment which contains
|
|
comprehensive training modules on social integration of migrants and
|
|
refugees into EU societies, while seeking to eliminate all those social,
|
|
linguistic and psychological barriers which prevent migrants and
|
|
refugees from being integrated in the new environment. Also, the
|
|
environment of the project is being endowed with a variety of other
|
|
pioneer digital tools and applications, specially designed for the
|
|
creation and establishment of a strong network amongst European NGOs,
|
|
social enterprises and charities for migrants and refugees, thus forming
|
|
strong alliances.
|
|
Accordingly, the ultimate aim of the project is to bring together such
|
|
organizations, thus adopting a more collective and therefore effective
|
|
action. Simultaneously, the e-platform involves the wider EU public,
|
|
mainly through the `Library of Commodities' which operates for the
|
|
purpose of provision of humanitarian aid, as the wider European public
|
|
gains the opportunity to offer its used objects to refugee settlements
|
|
located in the partner-countries. Additionally, through a `Directory of
|
|
European NGOs, social enterprises and charities for migrants and
|
|
refugees', being created as a part of the outputs of the project, a
|
|
strong network of such organizations emerges, therefore allowing their
|
|
actions to acquire global dimension, primarily by using volunteers and
|
|
services of other EU organizations located in other countries; such
|
|
operation is being considered the initial point for the development of a
|
|
mutual European policy on migrants and refugees.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Juzeleniene, S (Corresponding Author), Vilnius Univ, Vilnius, Lithuania.
|
|
Juzeleniene, S.; Baranauskiene, R., Vilnius Univ, Vilnius, Lithuania.
|
|
Mourettou, G., Citizens Power, Lakatamia, Cyprus.},
|
|
ISSN = {2340-1079},
|
|
ISBN = {978-84-09-08619-1},
|
|
Keywords = {Migrants; refugees; social integration; on-line environment},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education \& Educational Research; Psychology, Educational},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Olson, Anna/HGB-9512-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {0},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000536018101149},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:A1997WZ61300005,
|
|
Author = {Champion, VL and Skinner, CS and Miller, AM and Goulet, RJ and Wagler, K},
|
|
Title = {Factors influencing effect of mammography screening in a university
|
|
workplace},
|
|
Journal = {CANCER DETECTION AND PREVENTION},
|
|
Year = {1997},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {231-241},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between
|
|
theoretically identified variables and participation in mammography
|
|
screening in a university workplace. A sample of 1093 women 50 and over
|
|
returned a questionnaire following the offer of a free workplace breast
|
|
cancer screening. Anderson's Behavioral Model of Health Services Use
|
|
identified factors predisposing and enabling women to have mammograms.
|
|
Predisposing variables included attitudes and experience related to
|
|
mammography. Enabling variables included income, willingness to pay for
|
|
mammography, health insurance coverage, and regular source of health
|
|
care. Comparisons were made among: (i) those who were screened in the
|
|
workplace, (ii) those who were screened elsewhere, and (iii) those who
|
|
were not screened. Differences in perceived barriers, perceived
|
|
benefits, practice of breast self-examination (BSE), and education
|
|
surfaced. Results indicated, among other things, that women who were
|
|
older, had no more than 12 years of education, had a family member with
|
|
breast cancer, and were proficient with breast self-examination were
|
|
more likely to have participated in the university work-site screening.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Champion, VL (Corresponding Author), INDIANA UNIV,SCH NURSING,1111 MIDDLE DR,INDIANAPOLIS,IN 46202, USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0361-090X},
|
|
Keywords = {mammography; cancer screening; mammography utilization; workplace
|
|
screening},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BREAST-CANCER; SELF-REPORTS; PROGRAM; WOMEN; PARTICIPATION; PHYSICIANS;
|
|
MESSAGES; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Champion, Victoria/0000-0002-6153-0713},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:A1997WZ61300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000730056600001,
|
|
Author = {Vanderburg, Juliana L. and Bhattarai, Surekha and Ferrarone, Peter and
|
|
Giri, Priscilla and Lamb, Molly M. and Giardina, Aileen A. and Hampanda,
|
|
Karen and Gaynes, Bradley N. and Matergia, Michael and Cruz, Christina
|
|
M.},
|
|
Title = {Teacher and caregiver perceptions of family engagement in teacher-led
|
|
task-shifted child mental health care in a low-and-middle-income country},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {2946-2961},
|
|
Month = {NOV 2},
|
|
Abstract = {The mental health needs of children in low-and-middle income countries
|
|
(LMICs) often go unmet due to a lack of qualified mental health
|
|
professionals. Task-shifting the provision of mental health services to
|
|
teachers may facilitate access to care. Family engagement in
|
|
task-shifting may support mental health outcomes but is understudied in
|
|
this context. The current study explored teacher and caregiver
|
|
perceptions of family engagement within a teacher-led, task-shifted
|
|
mental health intervention in an LMIC. Primary school teachers from five
|
|
schools in Darjeeling, India delivered evidence-based, indicated mental
|
|
health care to children with mental health needs throughout the school
|
|
day. We conducted semi-structured interviews (SSIs) with teachers (n=17)
|
|
and caregivers (n=21). SSIs were coded for themes related to family
|
|
engagement. Teachers and caregivers were compared based on perceived
|
|
levels of engagement. Participants reported three patterns of
|
|
engagement: families who fully engaged; families who felt positively
|
|
about teachers but displayed little engagement; and families with
|
|
limited engagement. Barriers included logistical challenges and
|
|
misconceptions about the programme. Many teachers implicated family
|
|
engagement as a facilitator of the programme, suggesting that family
|
|
involvement may support intervention outcomes. Future work could involve
|
|
the development of an intervention component to better facilitate
|
|
engagement in this context.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Matergia, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Colorado, Ctr Global Hlth, Colorado Sch Publ Hlth, Anschutz Med Campus,131999 E Montview Blvd, Aurora, CO 80045 USA.
|
|
Cruz, CM (Corresponding Author), Univ N Carolina, Dept Psychiat, Sch Med, 101 Manning Dr,CB 7160, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Vanderburg, Juliana L.; Cruz, Christina M., Univ N Carolina, Sch Psychol Program, Sch Educ, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
|
|
Bhattarai, Surekha; Giri, Priscilla, Darjeeling Ladenla Rd Prerna, Darjeeling, India.
|
|
Ferrarone, Peter, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Dept Global Hlth \& Dev, London, England.
|
|
Lamb, Molly M., Colorado Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Aurora, CO USA.
|
|
Lamb, Molly M.; Hampanda, Karen; Matergia, Michael, Univ Colorado, Ctr Global Hlth, Colorado Sch Publ Hlth, Anschutz Med Campus,131999 E Montview Blvd, Aurora, CO 80045 USA.
|
|
Giardina, Aileen A.; Matergia, Michael, Broadleaf Hlth \& Educ Alliance, Stroudsburg, PA USA.
|
|
Hampanda, Karen, Univ Colorado, Dept Obstet \& Gynaecol, Anschutz Med Campus, Aurora, CO 80045 USA.
|
|
Gaynes, Bradley N.; Cruz, Christina M., Univ N Carolina, Dept Psychiat, Sch Med, 101 Manning Dr,CB 7160, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Gaynes, Bradley N., Univ N Carolina, Dept Epidemiol, Gillings Sch Global Publ Hlth, Chapel Hill, NC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/17441692.2021.2002924},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1744-1692},
|
|
EISSN = {1744-1706},
|
|
Keywords = {Task-shifting; global mental health; family engagement; child mental
|
|
health; LMIC},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PARENT; INTERVENTIONS; PROGRAM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {christina\_cruz@med.unc.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lamb, Molly/0000-0002-2331-2555
|
|
Gaynes, Bradley/0000-0002-8283-5030
|
|
Giardina, Aileen/0000-0001-5792-4341
|
|
Hampanda, Karen/0000-0002-7577-5500
|
|
Giri, Priscilla/0000-0001-9419-8553
|
|
Vanderburg, Juliana/0000-0001-9283-0842
|
|
Cruz, Christina/0000-0003-4466-1487},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {31},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000730056600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000331337200006,
|
|
Author = {McMahon, James H. and Manoharan, Anand and Wanke, Christine and Mammen,
|
|
Shoba and Jose, Hepsibah and Malini, Thabeetha and Kadavanu, Tony and
|
|
Jordan, Michael R. and Elliott, Julian H. and Lewin, Sharon R. and
|
|
Mathai, Dilip},
|
|
Title = {Targets for intervention to improve virological outcomes for patients
|
|
receiving free antiretroviral therapy in Tamil Nadu, India},
|
|
Journal = {AIDS CARE-PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIO-MEDICAL ASPECTS OF AIDS/HIV},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {559-566},
|
|
Month = {MAY 4},
|
|
Abstract = {Operational research to identify factors predicting poor clinical
|
|
outcomes is critical to maximize patient care and prolong first-line
|
|
regimens for those receiving free antiretroviral therapy (ART) in India.
|
|
We sought to identify social or clinical factors amenable to
|
|
intervention that predict virological outcomes after 12 months of ART.
|
|
We examined a retrospective cohort of consecutive adults initiating free
|
|
nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-based regimens.
|
|
Individuals remaining in care 12 months post-ART initiation were tested
|
|
for HIV viral load and surveyed to identify barriers and facilitators to
|
|
adherence, and to determine clinic travel times and associated costs.
|
|
Uni- and multivariate logistic regression identified factors predicting
|
|
HIV viral load >200 copies/mL after 12 months of ART. Of 230 adults
|
|
initiating ART, 10\% of patients died, 8\% transferred out, 5\% were
|
|
lost to follow-up, and 174/230 (76\%) completed 12 months of ART, the
|
|
questionnaire, and viral load testing. HIV viral load was <200 copies/mL
|
|
in 140/174 (80\%) patients. In multivariate models, being busy with work
|
|
or caring for others (OR 2.9, p < 0.01), having clinic transport times 3
|
|
hours (OR 3.0, p = 0.02), and alcohol use (OR 4.8, p = 0.03) predicted
|
|
viral load >200 copies/mL after 12 months of ART. Clinical outcomes
|
|
following ART are related to programmatic factors such as prolonged
|
|
travel time and individual factors such as being busy with family or
|
|
using alcohol. Simple interventions that alter these factors should be
|
|
evaluated to improve clinical outcomes for populations receiving free
|
|
ART in similar settings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {McMahon, JH (Corresponding Author), Alfred Hosp, Infect Dis Unit, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
McMahon, James H.; Elliott, Julian H.; Lewin, Sharon R., Alfred Hosp, Infect Dis Unit, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
McMahon, James H.; Wanke, Christine; Jordan, Michael R., Tufts Univ, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth \& Community Med, Boston, MA 02111 USA.
|
|
Manoharan, Anand; Jose, Hepsibah; Malini, Thabeetha; Kadavanu, Tony; Mathai, Dilip, Christian Med Coll \& Hosp, Dept Med, Vellore, Tamil Nadu, India.
|
|
Mammen, Shoba, Christian Med Coll \& Hosp, Dept Clin Virol, Vellore, Tamil Nadu, India.
|
|
Elliott, Julian H.; Lewin, Sharon R., Monash Univ, Dept Infect Dis, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia.
|
|
Elliott, Julian H.; Lewin, Sharon R., Burnet Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09540121.2013.845282},
|
|
ISSN = {0954-0121},
|
|
EISSN = {1360-0451},
|
|
Keywords = {HIV; intervention targets; antiretroviral therapy; India; virological
|
|
outcomes; adherence},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DRUG-RESISTANCE; MEDICATION ADHERENCE; INCOME COUNTRIES; HIV; CARE;
|
|
CHENNAI; SUPPRESSION; PREDICTORS; RETENTION; CLINICS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health;
|
|
Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Respiratory System; Social Sciences,
|
|
Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {ja.mcmahon@alfred.org.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Lewin, Sharon/Z-3297-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {McMahon, James/0000-0003-1460-5572
|
|
Lewin, Sharon Ruth/0000-0002-0330-8241},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000331337200006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000797722000001,
|
|
Author = {Lunke, Erik B. and Fearnley, Nils and Aarhaug, Jorgen},
|
|
Title = {The geography of public transport competitiveness in thirteen medium
|
|
sized cities},
|
|
Journal = {ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING B-URBAN ANALYTICS AND CITY SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Month = {2022 MAY 9},
|
|
Abstract = {Securing sufficient accessibility with public transport is essential for
|
|
reducing private car commuting. While most studies of transport
|
|
accessibility are based on travel times, other quality factors such as
|
|
the perceived disadvantage of congestion and service frequency are also
|
|
of importance for transport mode choice. In this study, we use
|
|
generalized journey times to calculate accessibility and public
|
|
transport competitiveness, allowing us to account for other
|
|
characteristics of commute trips than just travel time. We use detailed
|
|
trip data to calculate generalized journey times to typical employment
|
|
areas in thirteen urban regions in Norway. The results show that public
|
|
transport services compete better with the car in the largest cities.
|
|
Specifically, public transport is competitive for access to central
|
|
employment areas but less so for less central employment areas. In the
|
|
smaller cities, the private car is the most competitive mode on most
|
|
commute trips. With detailed travel data, the method developed in this
|
|
study can be replicated in other contexts to provide a more holistic
|
|
measure of accessibility than traditional methods.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lunke, EB (Corresponding Author), Inst Transport Econ ToI, Gaustadalleen 21, N-0349 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Lunke, Erik B.; Fearnley, Nils; Aarhaug, Jorgen, Inst Transport Econ ToI, Gaustadalleen 21, N-0349 Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/23998083221100265},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAY 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {23998083221100265},
|
|
ISSN = {2399-8083},
|
|
EISSN = {2399-8091},
|
|
Keywords = {accessibility; regional analysis; transport networks; travel-to-work
|
|
areas; Norway},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRAVEL-TIME; ACCESSIBILITY; QUALITY; CAR; POLICY; SATISFACTION;
|
|
EMPLOYMENT; SERVICE; EQUITY; INCOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies; Geography; Regional \& Urban Planning; Urban
|
|
Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {ebl@toi.no},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Fearnley, Nils/AAE-7449-2020
|
|
Lunke, Erik/GXG-1225-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Fearnley, Nils/0000-0001-5665-0246
|
|
Aarhaug, Jorgen/0000-0003-1052-0010
|
|
Lunke, Erik Bjornson/0000-0002-4003-6388},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000797722000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000484574300001,
|
|
Author = {Hawkes, Claire A. and Brown, Terry P. and Booth, Scott and Fothergill,
|
|
Rachael T. and Siriwardena, Niroshan and Zakaria, Sana and Askew, Sara
|
|
and Williams, Julia and Rees, Nigel and Ji, Chen and Perkins, Gavin D.},
|
|
Title = {Attitudes to Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Defibrillator Use: A
|
|
Survey of UK Adults in 2017},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Month = {APR 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Background-Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and public
|
|
access defibrillator (PAD) use can save the lives of people who
|
|
experience out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Little is known about the
|
|
proportions of UK adults trained, their characteristics and willingness
|
|
to act if witnessing an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, or the public's
|
|
knowledge regarding where the nearest PAD is located.
|
|
Methods and Results-An online survey was administered by YouGov to a
|
|
nonprobabilistic purposive sample of UK adults, achieving 2084
|
|
participants, from a panel that was matched to be representative of the
|
|
population. We used descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic
|
|
regression modeling for analysis. Almost 52\% were women, 61\% were aged
|
|
<55 years, and 19\% had witnessed an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
|
|
Proportions ever trained were 57\% in chest-compression-only CPR, 59\%
|
|
in CPR, and 19.4\% in PAD use. Most with training in any resuscitation
|
|
technique had trained at work (54.7\%). Compared with people not
|
|
trained, those trained in PAD use said they were more likely to use one
|
|
(odds ratio: 2.61), and those trained in CPR or chest-compression-only
|
|
CPR were more likely to perform it (odds ratio: 5.39). Characteristics
|
|
associated with being trained in any resuscitation technique included
|
|
youth, female sex, higher social grade, and full-time employment.
|
|
Conclusions-In the United Kingdom, training makes a difference in
|
|
people's willingness to act in the event of a cardiac arrest. Although
|
|
there is considerable opportunity to increase the proportion of the
|
|
general population trained in CPR, consideration should be also given to
|
|
encouraging training in PAD use and targeting training for those who are
|
|
older or from lower social grades.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hawkes, CA (Corresponding Author), Univ Warwick, Warwick Med Sch, Warwick Clin Trials Unit, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Hawkes, Claire A.; Brown, Terry P.; Booth, Scott; Ji, Chen; Perkins, Gavin D., Univ Warwick, Warwick Med Sch, Warwick Clin Trials Unit, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Perkins, Gavin D., Univ Hosp Birmingham NHS Fdn Trust, Intens Care Med, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
|
|
Fothergill, Rachael T., London Ambulance Serv NHS Trust, Clin Audit \& Res, London, England.
|
|
Siriwardena, Niroshan, Univ Lincoln, Sch Hlth \& Social Care, Lincoln, England.
|
|
Zakaria, Sana, British Heart Fdn, Strategy \& Int Affairs, London, England.
|
|
Askew, Sara, British Heart Fdn, Healthcare Innovat Directorate, London, England.
|
|
Williams, Julia, South East Coast Ambulance Serv NHS Fdn Trust, Res \& Dev Dept, Crawley, England.
|
|
Rees, Nigel, Univ Hertfordshire, Sch Hlth \& Social Work, Hatfield, Herts, England.
|
|
Rees, Nigel, Swansea Univ, Inst Life Sci, Welsh Ambulance Serv NHS Trust Res \& Innovat, Swansea, W Glam, Wales.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1161/JAHA.117.008267},
|
|
Article-Number = {e008267},
|
|
EISSN = {2047-9980},
|
|
Keywords = {cardiac arrest; education; education campaigns; out-of-hospital cardiac
|
|
arrest; prehospital care; resuscitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HOSPITAL CARDIAC-ARREST; PUBLIC-ACCESS DEFIBRILLATION; SURVIVAL;
|
|
FACILITATORS; KNOWLEDGE; BARRIERS; OUTCOMES; REGISTRY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Cardiac \& Cardiovascular Systems},
|
|
Author-Email = {c.a.hawkes@warwick.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Brown, Terry/HNR-2911-2023
|
|
Williams, Julia/AAQ-8655-2021
|
|
Perkins, Gavin/E-7613-2010
|
|
Hawkes, Claire/AAF-5929-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Williams, Julia/0000-0003-0796-5465
|
|
Hawkes, Claire/0000-0001-8236-3558
|
|
Perkins, Gavin/0000-0003-3027-7548
|
|
Ji, Chen/0000-0003-4919-3299
|
|
Fothergill, Rachael/0000-0003-1341-6200
|
|
Zakaria, Sana/0000-0002-2834-8530},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000484574300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000380826100002,
|
|
Author = {Dale, Hannah and Lee, Alyssa},
|
|
Title = {Behavioural health consultants in integrated primary care teams: a model
|
|
for future care},
|
|
Journal = {BMC FAMILY PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Month = {JUL 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Significant challenges exist within primary care services in
|
|
the United Kingdom (UK). These include meeting current demand, financial
|
|
pressures, an aging population and an increase in multi-morbidity.
|
|
Psychological services also struggle to meet waiting time targets and to
|
|
ensure increased access to psychological therapies. Innovative ways of
|
|
delivering effective primary care and psychological services are needed
|
|
to improve health outcomes.
|
|
Summary: In this article we argue that integrated care models that
|
|
incorporate behavioural health care are part of the solution, which has
|
|
seldom been argued in relation to UK primary care. Integrated care
|
|
involves structural and systemic changes to the delivery of services,
|
|
including the co-location of multi-disciplinary primary care teams.
|
|
Evidence from models of integrated primary care in the United States of
|
|
America (USA) and other higher-income countries suggest that embedding
|
|
continuity of care and collaborative practice within integrated care
|
|
teams can be effective in improving health outcomes. The Behavioural
|
|
Health Consultant (BHC) role is integral to this, working
|
|
psychologically to support the team to improve collaborative working,
|
|
and supporting patients to make changes to improve their health across
|
|
management of long-term conditions, prevention and mental wellbeing.
|
|
Patients' needs for higher-intensity interventions to enable changes in
|
|
behaviour and self-management are, therefore, more fully met within
|
|
primary care. The role also increases accessibility of psychological
|
|
services, delivers earlier interventions and reduces stigma, since
|
|
psychological staff are seen as part of the core primary care service.
|
|
Although the UK has trialled a range of approaches to integrated care,
|
|
these fall short of the highest level of integration. A single short
|
|
pilot of integrated care in the UK showed positive results. Larger
|
|
pilots with robust evaluation, as well as research trials are required.
|
|
There are clearly challenges in adopting such an approach, especially
|
|
for staff who must adapt to working more collaboratively with each other
|
|
and patients. Strong leaderss needed to assist in this, particularly to
|
|
support organisations to adopt the shift in values and attitudes towards
|
|
collaborative working.
|
|
Conclusions: Integrated primary care services that embed behavioural
|
|
health as part of a multi-disciplinary team may be part of the solution
|
|
to significant modern day health challenges. However, developing this
|
|
model is unlikely to be straight-forward given current primary care
|
|
structures and ways of working. The discussion, developed in this
|
|
article, adds to our understanding of what the BHC role might consist
|
|
off and how integrated care may be supported by such behavioural health
|
|
expertise. Further work is needed to develop this model in the UK, and
|
|
to evaluate its impact on health outcomes and health care utilisation,
|
|
and test robustly through research trials.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dale, H (Corresponding Author), Lynebank Hosp, Dept Psychol, NHS Fife, Halbeath Rd, Dunfermline KY11 4UW, Fife, Scotland.
|
|
Dale, H (Corresponding Author), Univ St Andrews, Sch Med, Med \& Biol Sci Bldg,North Haugh, St Andrews KY16 9TF, Fife, Scotland.
|
|
Dale, Hannah, Lynebank Hosp, Dept Psychol, NHS Fife, Halbeath Rd, Dunfermline KY11 4UW, Fife, Scotland.
|
|
Dale, Hannah; Lee, Alyssa, Univ St Andrews, Sch Med, Med \& Biol Sci Bldg,North Haugh, St Andrews KY16 9TF, Fife, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12875-016-0485-0},
|
|
Article-Number = {97},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2296},
|
|
Keywords = {Primary Care; Behavioural Health; Psychology; Collaboration;
|
|
Integration; Biopsychosocial; Health Inequalities; Prevention; Service
|
|
Improvement},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UK PRIMARY-CARE; RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; SHARED DECISION-MAKING;
|
|
COLLABORATIVE CARE; GENERAL-PRACTICE; MENTAL-HEALTH; QUALITATIVE
|
|
EVALUATION; COMPLEX INTERVENTIONS; DEPRESSION; MULTIMORBIDITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Primary Health Care; Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {hannahdale@nhs.net},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {100},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {25},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000380826100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000354173900001,
|
|
Author = {Strachan, Daniel Llywelyn and Kallander, Karin and Nakirunda, Maureen
|
|
and Ndima, Sozinho and Muiambo, Abel and Hill, Zelee and inSCALE Study
|
|
Grp},
|
|
Title = {Using theory and formative research to design interventions to improve
|
|
community health worker motivation, retention and performance in
|
|
Mozambique and Uganda},
|
|
Journal = {HUMAN RESOURCES FOR HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {APR 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Community health workers (CHWs) are increasingly being used
|
|
in low-income countries to address human resources shortages, yet there
|
|
remain few effective, evidence-based strategies for addressing the
|
|
enduring programmatic constraints of worker motivation, retention and
|
|
performance. This paper describes how two interventions were designed by
|
|
the Innovations at Scale for Community Access and Lasting Effects
|
|
(inSCALE) project to address these constraints in Uganda and Mozambique
|
|
drawing on behavioural theory and formative research results.
|
|
Methods: A review of the work motivation and CHW motivation
|
|
literature-incorporating influences on retention and performance-was
|
|
conducted on articles sourced through electronic web searches. Formative
|
|
research with a focus on the barriers and facilitators to CHW
|
|
motivation, retention and performance was conducted with community
|
|
health workers and key stakeholders in Uganda and Mozambique. An
|
|
analytical induction approach to the thematic analysis of transcripts
|
|
from 98 in-depth interviews and 26 focus group discussions was adopted
|
|
across the country settings.
|
|
Results: From the theoretical review, it was determined that the
|
|
interventions should promote CHWs as members of a collective by
|
|
highlighting a sense of shared experience, focus on alignment between
|
|
worker and programme goals, and emphasise the actions that lead to good
|
|
performance. The Social Identity Approach was selected as the theory
|
|
most likely to lead to the development of effective, scalable and
|
|
sustainable interventions by addressing the identified gap in the
|
|
literature of the influence of CHW working context. The formative
|
|
research indicated that CHWs value feedback and feeling connected to the
|
|
health system and their community, are motivated by status and community
|
|
standing, and want to be provided with the necessary tools to perform.
|
|
Two interventions based on these results were developed: a
|
|
participatory, local community approach and an information communication
|
|
technology (ICT) approach.
|
|
Conclusions: Drawing on contextual data and theory that is sensitive to
|
|
context can potentially lead to the development of appropriate and
|
|
effective interventions when aiming to improve the motivation, retention
|
|
and performance of CHWs in Uganda and Mozambique and other comparable
|
|
settings. Evaluation of the developed interventions is crucial to assess
|
|
this potential.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Strachan, DL (Corresponding Author), UCL Inst Global Hlth, 30 Guilford St, London WC1N 1EH, England.
|
|
Strachan, Daniel Llywelyn; Hill, Zelee, UCL Inst Global Hlth, London WC1N 1EH, England.
|
|
Kallander, Karin, Malaria Consortium, London EC2A 4LT, England.
|
|
Kallander, Karin, Karolinska Inst, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Nakirunda, Maureen, Malaria Consortium Uganda, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Ndima, Sozinho; Muiambo, Abel, Malaria Consortium Mozamb, Coop, Maputo, Mozambique.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12960-015-0020-8},
|
|
Article-Number = {25},
|
|
EISSN = {1478-4491},
|
|
Keywords = {Community health workers; Motivation; Retention; Performance; Social
|
|
Identity Approach; Human resources for health; Uganda; Mozambique},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL IDENTITY; PUBLIC-HEALTH; CARE; IDENTIFICATION; PERCEPTIONS; POOR},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {d.strachan@ucl.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Strachan, Daniel/0000-0001-6143-1742
|
|
Soremekun, Seyi/0000-0002-5531-0220
|
|
Kallander, Karin/0000-0002-5778-5780
|
|
Ndima, Sozinho/0000-0003-4650-379X
|
|
Kirkwood, Betty/0000-0001-5274-6072},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {52},
|
|
Times-Cited = {46},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000354173900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000394976600032,
|
|
Author = {Ahmad, Farah and Ferrari, Manuela and Moravac, Catherine and Lofters,
|
|
Aisha and Dunn, Sheila},
|
|
Title = {Expanding the meaning of `being a peer leader': qualitative findings
|
|
from a Canadian community-based cervical and breast cancer screening
|
|
programme},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH \& SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {630-640},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Engagement of community members to act as peer workers is a key feature
|
|
of many community-centred health promotion programmes. However, little
|
|
is known about their experiences beyond the commonly reported themes of
|
|
fulfilment through helping people in need and improvement of personal
|
|
confidence, self-esteem and self-care. This gap in the literature is of
|
|
particular interest given increasing involvement of peer workers in
|
|
community-centred programmes addressing health disparities, such as
|
|
uptake of cancer screening. This paper aims to explore experiences of
|
|
the peer leaders who worked for the Cancer Awareness: Ready for
|
|
Education and Screening (CARES) project to promote awareness, knowledge,
|
|
and uptake of breast and cervical cancer screening among
|
|
under-/never-screened women who belonged to ethnic minority, recent
|
|
immigrant and low-income communities in Toronto, Canada. In 2013, three
|
|
focus groups were conducted with 14 peer leaders to explore their
|
|
experiences. All were immigrant women between 30 and 50 years of age.
|
|
All discussions were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. We used
|
|
situational maps and analysis to create a visual representation of the
|
|
data, and to investigate peer leaders experiences. Situational analysis
|
|
was chosen to bring to light dominant and also silent underlying aspects
|
|
which define the meaning of being a peer leader. The first level of
|
|
analysis identified main themes that characterised peer leaders'
|
|
experience: (i) Helping others (women, friends and family) and
|
|
themselves by improved self-confidence, self-awareness and self-care and
|
|
(ii) Redefining professional and social positions through their project
|
|
activities leading to professional development and networking. The
|
|
second level of analysis explored the redefining process and identified
|
|
some peer leaders' negotiations in relation to knowledge (science vs.
|
|
myth), beliefs (fear vs. assurance) and boundaries (private vs. work).
|
|
Adding to the literature on the peer workers' experience, the findings
|
|
are discussed in relation to empowerment of peer workers, training
|
|
implications and theoretical contributions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ahmad, F (Corresponding Author), York Univ, Sch Hlth Policy \& Management, 4700 Keele St,HNES Bldg Rm 414, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada.
|
|
Ahmad, Farah; Ferrari, Manuela, York Univ, Sch Hlth Policy \& Management, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada.
|
|
Ahmad, Farah; Lofters, Aisha, St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, Ctr Res Inner City Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Moravac, Catherine; Lofters, Aisha; Dunn, Sheila, Univ Toronto, Dept Family \& Community Med, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Moravac, Catherine, Univ Toronto, Fac Med, Inst Med Sci, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Dunn, Sheila, Womens Coll Hosp, Womens Coll Res Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/hsc.12352},
|
|
ISSN = {0966-0410},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2524},
|
|
Keywords = {breast cancer; cervical cancer; health promotion; lay worker; peer
|
|
worker; screening},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; EDUCATION; SUPPORT; INTERVENTION; INVOLVEMENT; PREVENTION;
|
|
NUTRITION; FOOD},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {farahmad@yorku.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Moravac, Catherine/ABA-5315-2020
|
|
Ahmad, Farah/B-4261-2008
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ahmad, Farah/0000-0001-9747-1148
|
|
Ferrari, Manuela/0000-0002-7530-6210},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000394976600032},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000283651500012,
|
|
Author = {Dwight-Johnson, Megan and Lagomasino, Isabel T. and Hay, Joel and Zhang,
|
|
Lily and Tang, Lingqi and Green, Jennifer M. and Duan, Naihua},
|
|
Title = {Effectiveness of Collaborative Care in Addressing Depression Treatment
|
|
Preferences Among Low-Income Latinos},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {61},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {1112-1118},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: This study assessed treatment preferences among low-income
|
|
Latino patients in public-sector primary care clinics and examined
|
|
whether a collaborative care intervention that included patient
|
|
education and allowed patients to choose between medication, therapy, or
|
|
both would increase the likelihood that patients received preferred
|
|
treatment. Methods: A total of 339 Latino patients with probable
|
|
depressive disorders were recruited; participants completed a baseline
|
|
conjoint analysis preference survey and were randomly assigned to
|
|
receive the intervention or enhanced usual care. At 16 weeks, a patient
|
|
survey assessed depression treatment received during the study period.
|
|
Logistic regression models were constructed to estimate treatment
|
|
preferences, examine patient characteristics associated with treatment
|
|
preferences, and examine patient characteristics associated with a match
|
|
between stated preference and actual treatment received. Results: The
|
|
conjoint analysis preference survey showed that patients preferred
|
|
counseling or counseling plus medication over antidepressant medication
|
|
alone and that they preferred treatment in primary care over specialty
|
|
mental health care, but they showed no significant preference for
|
|
individual versus group treatment. Patients also indicated that
|
|
individual education sessions, telephone sessions, transportation
|
|
assistance, and family involvement were barrier reduction strategies
|
|
that would enhance their likelihood of accepting treatment. Compared
|
|
with patients assigned to usual care, those in the intervention group
|
|
were 21 times as likely to receive preferred treatment. Among all
|
|
participants, women, unemployed persons, those who spoke English, and
|
|
those referred by providers were more likely to receive preferred
|
|
treatment. Conclusions: Collaborative care interventions that include
|
|
psychotherapy can increase the likelihood that Latino patients receive
|
|
preferred care; however, special efforts may be needed to address
|
|
preferences of working persons, men, and Spanish-speaking patients.
|
|
(Psychiatric Services 61: 1112-1118, 2010)},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Dwight-Johnson, M (Corresponding Author), RAND Corp, 1776 Main St, Santa Monica, CA 90401 USA.
|
|
Dwight-Johnson, Megan, RAND Corp, Santa Monica, CA 90401 USA.
|
|
Lagomasino, Isabel T.; Green, Jennifer M., Univ So Calif, Dept Psychiat, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
Hay, Joel, Univ So Calif, Sch Pharm, Los Angeles, CA USA.
|
|
Zhang, Lily; Tang, Lingqi, Univ Calif Los Angeles, Inst Neuropsychiat, Hlth Serv Res Ctr, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA.
|
|
Duan, Naihua, Columbia Univ, Dept Biostat, New York, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1176/appi.ps.61.11.1112},
|
|
ISSN = {1075-2730},
|
|
EISSN = {1557-9700},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS; CONJOINT-ANALYSIS; PRIME-MD; PATIENT
|
|
PREFERENCES; MEXICAN-AMERICANS; HEALTH; ACCEPTABILITY; INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
VALIDATION; DISORDERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health;
|
|
Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {meganj@rand.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Duan, Naihua/0000-0001-9411-2924},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {52},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000283651500012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000759789200001,
|
|
Author = {Acosta, Laura M. and Canchila, M. Natalia Acosta and Reyes, Sara L. and
|
|
Holland, Kathryn J. and Holt, Natalie R. and Andrews, III, Arthur R.},
|
|
Title = {Examining Recipient and Provider Perceptions of Mental Health Treatments
|
|
and Written Exposure Therapy for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder With a
|
|
Spanish-Speaking Sample},
|
|
Journal = {PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {1, SI},
|
|
Pages = {157-169},
|
|
Abstract = {Treatments of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) often evidence high
|
|
rates of dropout, ranging from 25\% to 40\%, among English-speaking
|
|
samples. Written Exposure Therapy (WET), a novel manualized treatment
|
|
for PTSD, evidences lower dropout rates and noninferiority to CPT, one
|
|
of the most efficacious interventions for PTSD. Spanish-speaking Latinxs
|
|
often experience greater dropout and barriers to care. WET appears
|
|
promising for this population, but acceptability and perceived barriers
|
|
to WET have not been examined among Spanish-speaking Latinxs. The
|
|
present study assessed perceptions and acceptability of a
|
|
Spanish-language version of WET among Spanish-speaking Latinxs who
|
|
scored greater than 45 on the Spanish-language version of the PCL-IV,
|
|
indicating likely PTSD (n = 20) and providers (n = 12). Participants
|
|
completed a mixed-methods interview regarding reasons they/clients would
|
|
not want to receive the treatment, why they/clients would want to
|
|
receive the treatment, potential solutions for any identified barriers,
|
|
and reasons for not seeking mental health services generally. Providers,
|
|
but not potential recipients, identified low literacy as a barrier for
|
|
WET. Providers and potential recipients identified time as a barrier to
|
|
WET and other mental health services, but the time reduction was
|
|
perceived as a potential facilitator of WET. Results also suggest no
|
|
specific cultural barriers were identified for WET (e.g., provider
|
|
cultural competency) and that Spanish WET may reduce time-related
|
|
barriers and is perceived as effective and acceptable among
|
|
Spanish-speaking Latinxs. Additional work is needed to expand the reach
|
|
of the intervention, given that mental health services were often
|
|
perceived as untrustworthy.
|
|
Impact Statement This study suggests that a Spanish-language adaptation
|
|
of Written Exposure Therapy, a novel manualized treatment for PTSD
|
|
symptoms, may be effective in reducing some structural barriers that
|
|
Spanish-speaking Latinx populations encounter when using mental health
|
|
services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Acosta, LM (Corresponding Author), Univ Nebraska, Dept Psychol, 238 Burnett Hall, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA.
|
|
Acosta, Laura M.; Canchila, M. Natalia Acosta; Reyes, Sara L.; Holland, Kathryn J.; Holt, Natalie R.; Andrews, Arthur R., III, Univ Nebraska, Dept Psychol, 238 Burnett Hall, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA.
|
|
Holland, Kathryn J., Univ Nebraska, Womens \& Gender Studies Program, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA.
|
|
Andrews, Arthur R., III, Univ Nebraska, Inst Ethn Studies, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1037/ser0000621},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1541-1559},
|
|
EISSN = {1939-148X},
|
|
Keywords = {posttraumatic stress disorder; written exposure therapy;
|
|
Spanish-speaking populations; mental health treatments},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COGNITIVE PROCESSING THERAPY; TRAUMA; LATINOS; INTERVENTION;
|
|
DISPARITIES; IMMIGRANTS; DEPRESSION; SERVICES; INCOME; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Clinical},
|
|
Author-Email = {laura.mur.acosta@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Acosta Canchila, Maria Natalia/0000-0002-0828-0540
|
|
Acosta, Laura/0000-0001-5705-1907
|
|
Andrews III, Arthur/0000-0001-9071-0089},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000759789200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000404928000013,
|
|
Author = {Wehby, George L. and Hockenberry, Jason M.},
|
|
Title = {Impact of child health and disability on subsequent maternal fertility},
|
|
Journal = {REVIEW OF ECONOMICS OF THE HOUSEHOLD},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {995-1016},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {The prevalence of chronic conditions among children has been rising in
|
|
the past four decades. Despite the policy relevance and plausible
|
|
mechanisms through which child disability and severe early life health
|
|
conditions can impact subsequent maternal reproductive behavior, there
|
|
has been limited investigation of this question particularly in the US.
|
|
Child disability or severe early life health problems such as very
|
|
preterm birth (VPTB) and very low birth weight (VLBW) can constrain
|
|
household resources to have another child but may also increase parental
|
|
demand for healthy children and modify allocation of resources between
|
|
children. Empirical assessment of this question is complicated by
|
|
unobservables such as maternal health and preferences. We examine
|
|
whether giving birth to a child with disabilities or severe adverse
|
|
birth outcomes including VPTB and VLBW impacts subsequent maternal
|
|
fertility. We employ a mother fixed-effect duration model for maternal
|
|
fertility over time as a function of the proportion of previously born
|
|
children with disabilities/health conditions in order to account for
|
|
time-invariant unobservables, using merged data from the 1993 National
|
|
Health Interview Survey and 1995 National Survey of Family Growth. We
|
|
find no evidence that having disabled children reduces subsequent live
|
|
births when using the mother fixed-effect model, in contrast to the
|
|
classical model using within and between mother variation which suggests
|
|
a fertility decline. Similarly, we find no evidence that having VPTB or
|
|
VLBW children reduces fertility. Overall, our findings indicate no
|
|
impact of child disability or health conditions on subsequent maternal
|
|
fertility. Additional analyses excluding women who may qualify for AFDC
|
|
show overall a similar pattern of results, suggesting that the findings
|
|
may be generalizable post the AFDC. Time-varying unobservables may still
|
|
be at work, but they likely result in an opposite (negative) bias toward
|
|
reduction in fertility.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wehby, GL (Corresponding Author), Natl Bur Econ Res, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Wehby, GL (Corresponding Author), Univ Iowa, Dept Hlth Management \& Policy, 145 N Riverside Dr,100 Coll Publ Hlth Bldg, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA.
|
|
Wehby, GL (Corresponding Author), Univ Iowa, Dept Econ, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA.
|
|
Wehby, George L.; Hockenberry, Jason M., Natl Bur Econ Res, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
|
|
Wehby, George L., Univ Iowa, Dept Hlth Management \& Policy, 145 N Riverside Dr,100 Coll Publ Hlth Bldg, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA.
|
|
Wehby, George L., Univ Iowa, Dept Econ, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA.
|
|
Hockenberry, Jason M., Emory Univ, Rollins Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Policy \& Management, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11150-015-9311-z},
|
|
ISSN = {1569-5239},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-7152},
|
|
Keywords = {Disability; Child health; Fertility; Intergenerational effects;
|
|
Disparities; Household economics},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {UNITED-STATES; ADULT HEALTH; BIRTH-WEIGHT; MOTHERS; EMPLOYMENT; DIVORCE;
|
|
QUALITY; DISEASE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics},
|
|
Author-Email = {george-wehby@uiowa.edu
|
|
jason.hockenberry@emory.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000404928000013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000405393000002,
|
|
Author = {Chanda, Michael M. and Perez-Brumer, Amaya G. and Ortblad, Katrina F.
|
|
and Mwale, Magdalene and Chongo, Steven and Kamungoma, Nyambe and
|
|
Kanchele, Catherine and Fullem, Andrew and Barresi, Leah and
|
|
Baernighausen, Till and Oldenburg, Catherine E.},
|
|
Title = {Barriers and Facilitators to HIV Testing Among Zambian Female Sex
|
|
Workers in Three Transit Hubs},
|
|
Journal = {AIDS PATIENT CARE AND STDS},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {290-296},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Zambia has a generalized HIV epidemic, and HIV is concentrated along
|
|
transit routes. Female sex workers (FSWs) are disproportionately
|
|
affected by the epidemic. HIV testing is the crucial first step for
|
|
engagement in HIV care and HIV prevention activities. However, to date
|
|
little work has been done with FSWs in Zambia, and little is known about
|
|
barriers and facilitators to HIV testing in this population. FSW peer
|
|
educators were recruited through existing sex worker organizations for
|
|
participation in a trial related to HIV testing among FSWs. We conducted
|
|
five focus groups with FSW peer educators (N=40) in three transit towns
|
|
in Zambia (Livingstone, Chirundu, and Kapiri Mposhi) to elicit community
|
|
norms related to HIV testing. Emerging themes demonstrated barriers and
|
|
facilitators to HIV testing occurring at multiple levels, including
|
|
individual, social network, and structural. Stigma and discrimination,
|
|
including healthcare provider stigma, were a particularly salient
|
|
barrier. Improving knowledge, social support, and acknowledgment of FSWs
|
|
and women's role in society emerged as facilitators to testing.
|
|
Interventions to improve HIV testing among FSWs in Zambia will need to
|
|
address barriers and facilitators at multiple levels to be maximally
|
|
effective.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Oldenburg, CE (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, Francis I Proctor Fdn, 513 Parnassus Ave,Room S334, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Chanda, Michael M.; Mwale, Magdalene; Chongo, Steven; Kamungoma, Nyambe; Kanchele, Catherine, John Snow Inc, Lusaka, Zambia.
|
|
Perez-Brumer, Amaya G., Columbia Univ, Dept Sociomed Sci, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Ortblad, Katrina F.; Baernighausen, Till, Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Global Hlth \& Populat, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Fullem, Andrew, John Snow Inc, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Barresi, Leah, Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Baernighausen, Till, Heidelberg Univ, Inst Publ Hlth, Fac Med, Heidelberg, Germany.
|
|
Baernighausen, Till, Africa Hlth Res Inst, Mtubatuba, South Africa.
|
|
Oldenburg, Catherine E., Univ Calif San Francisco, Francis I Proctor Fdn, 513 Parnassus Ave,Room S334, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1089/apc.2017.0016},
|
|
ISSN = {1087-2914},
|
|
EISSN = {1557-7449},
|
|
Keywords = {HIV testing; female sex workers; Zambia},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {STIGMA; PREVENTION; CARE; HIV/AIDS; BURDEN; INCOME; RISK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Infectious Diseases},
|
|
Author-Email = {catherine.oldenburg@ucsf.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ortblad, Katrina/ABF-9070-2020
|
|
Perez-Brumer, Amaya/AAF-6336-2021
|
|
Bärnighausen, Till/Y-2388-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ortblad, Katrina/0000-0002-5675-8836
|
|
Perez-Brumer, Amaya/0000-0003-2441-4358},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {42},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000405393000002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000509531700019,
|
|
Author = {Norton, Andrew and Seddon, Nathalie and Agrawal, Arun and Shakya, Clare
|
|
and Kaur, Nanki and Porras, Ina},
|
|
Title = {Harnessing employment-based social assistance programmes to scale up
|
|
nature-based climate action},
|
|
Journal = {PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {375},
|
|
Number = {1794, SI},
|
|
Month = {MAR 16},
|
|
Abstract = {As the severity of the triple challenges of global inequality, climate
|
|
change and biodiversity loss becomes clearer, governments and
|
|
international development institutions must find effective policy
|
|
instruments to respond. We examine the potential of social assistance
|
|
policies in this context. Social assistance refers to transfers to poor,
|
|
vulnerable and marginalized groups to reduce their vulnerability and
|
|
livelihood risks, and to enhance their rights and status. Substantial
|
|
public funds support social assistance programmes globally.
|
|
Collectively, lower- and middle-income countries spend approximately
|
|
1.5\% of their GDP on social assistance annually. We focus on the
|
|
potential of paid employment schemes to promote effective ecosystem
|
|
stewardship. Available evidence suggests such programmes can offer
|
|
multiple benefits in terms of improvements in local ecosystems and
|
|
natural capital, carbon sequestration and local biodiversity
|
|
conservation. We review evidence from three key case studies: in India
|
|
(the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme),
|
|
Ethiopia (the Productive Safety Nets Programme) and Mexico (the
|
|
Temporary Employment Programme). We conclude that, to realize the
|
|
potential of employment-based social assistance for ecosystem benefits
|
|
it will be necessary to address two challenges: first, the weak design
|
|
and maintenance of local public works outputs in many schemes, and
|
|
second, the concern that social protection schemes may become less
|
|
effective if they are overburdened with additional objectives.
|
|
Overcoming these challenges requires an evolution of institutional
|
|
systems for delivering social assistance to enable a more effective
|
|
combination of social and environmental objectives. This article is part
|
|
of the theme issue `Climate change and ecosystems: threats,
|
|
opportunities and solutions'.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Seddon, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Oxford, Dept Zool, Nat Based Solut Initiat, Oxford, England.
|
|
Norton, Andrew; Shakya, Clare; Porras, Ina, Int Inst Environm \& Dev, London, England.
|
|
Seddon, Nathalie, Univ Oxford, Dept Zool, Nat Based Solut Initiat, Oxford, England.
|
|
Agrawal, Arun, Univ Michigan, Sch Environm \& Sustainabil, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Kaur, Nanki, Int Ctr Integrated Mt Dev, Adaptat \& Resilience Bldg, Kathmandu, Nepal.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1098/rstb.2019.0127},
|
|
Article-Number = {20190127},
|
|
ISSN = {0962-8436},
|
|
EISSN = {1471-2970},
|
|
Keywords = {social protection; ecosystem stewardship; climate change},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CASH TRANSFER PROGRAMS; SAFETY NET PROGRAM; POVERTY; FOOD; IMPACT;
|
|
INDIA; DEFORESTATION; PROTECTION; MANAGEMENT; COUNTRIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Biology},
|
|
Author-Email = {nathalie.seddon@zoo.ox.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Agrawal, Arun/A-4257-2009
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Agrawal, Arun/0000-0001-6796-2958
|
|
Seddon, Nathalie/0000-0002-1880-6104},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {75},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {25},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000509531700019},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000330969400008,
|
|
Author = {Gray, Lisa A. and Price, Sarah Kye},
|
|
Title = {Partnering for Mental Health Promotion: Implementing Evidence Based
|
|
Mental Health Services Within a Maternal and Child Home Health Visiting
|
|
Program},
|
|
Journal = {CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK JOURNAL},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {70-80},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {This article details the clinical foundations of a social work focused
|
|
community-based participatory research project promoting women's mental
|
|
health during and around the time of pregnancy. Specifically, we discuss
|
|
the theoretical, empirical and organizational implementation of an
|
|
enhanced engagement model of mental health service delivery that
|
|
integrates evidenced based practices into the structure and services of
|
|
an existing non-profit maternal and child health home visiting agency.
|
|
The model is grounded in literature addressing barriers to accessing
|
|
mental health care among minority women living in low-income
|
|
communities. We discuss informing the intervention through direct
|
|
consumer involvement, as well the rationale supporting the inclusion of
|
|
Interpersonal Psychotherapy and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy into the
|
|
design and implementation of the model which emphasizes adequate
|
|
training of staff with varying levels of mental health experience.
|
|
Finally, we describe typical client situations and responses reflected
|
|
by the Enhanced Engagement model and discuss future implications of this
|
|
approach as a way to offer meaningful intervention to women and families
|
|
who may not have access or eligibility to utilize specialty mental
|
|
health services.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gray, LA (Corresponding Author), Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Sch Social Work, 1001 West Franklin St, Richmond, VA 23284 USA.
|
|
Gray, Lisa A.; Price, Sarah Kye, Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Sch Social Work, Richmond, VA 23284 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10615-012-0426-x},
|
|
ISSN = {0091-1674},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-3343},
|
|
Keywords = {Depression; Perinatal depression; Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT);
|
|
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT); Maternal and child health;
|
|
Community-based participatory research (CBPR)},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PERINATAL DEPRESSION; LOW-INCOME; INTERPERSONAL PSYCHOTHERAPY;
|
|
POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION; CULTURALLY RELEVANT; MOTHERS; PREVALENCE;
|
|
PREGNANCY; BARRIERS; TRIAL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {grayla2@vcu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Price, Sarah K/G-9140-2012},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {31},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000330969400008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000899418900034,
|
|
Author = {Adesanya, Adenike Motunrayo and Barrett, Simon and Moffat, Malcolm and
|
|
Aquino, Maria Raisa Jessica and Nicholson, Wendy and Turner, Gillian and
|
|
Cook, Emma and Tyndall, Sarah and Rankin, Judith},
|
|
Title = {Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on expectant and new parents' experience
|
|
of pregnancy, childbirth, breast feeding, parental responsiveness and
|
|
sensitivity, and bonding and attunement in high-income countries: a
|
|
systematic review of the evidence},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {ObjectivesTo review the evidence on how pregnancy, birth experience,
|
|
breast feeding, parental responsiveness and sensitivity, and bonding and
|
|
attunement were impacted by COVID-19.MethodsWe searched eight literature
|
|
databases and websites of relevant UK-based organisations. The review
|
|
focused on evidence during pregnancy and the early years (0-5 years).
|
|
Studies of any study design published in English from 1 March 2020 to 15
|
|
March 2021 and conducted in high-income countries were included.
|
|
Screening and data extraction were undertaken in duplicate. Evidence was
|
|
synthesised using a narrative approach. Study quality of included
|
|
studies was assessed using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool.ResultsThe
|
|
search yielded 9776 publications, of which 26 met our inclusion
|
|
criteria. Significant knowledge gaps on how COVID-19 affected pregnancy
|
|
and breast feeding limited healthcare providers' ability to provide
|
|
consistent evidence-based information and care at the start of the
|
|
pandemic. There was an enduring sense of loss about loved ones being
|
|
restricted from taking part in key moments. Parents were concerned about
|
|
the limitations of virtual healthcare provision. Some parents reported
|
|
more opportunities for responsive breast feeding and improved
|
|
parent-infant bonding due to reduced social and work pressures. Women
|
|
from minoritised ethnic groups were less likely to continue breast
|
|
feeding and attributed this to a lack of face-to-face
|
|
support.ConclusionsThe evidence suggests that new and expectant families
|
|
have been both negatively and positively impacted by the COVID-19
|
|
pandemic and the resulting restrictions. The impacts on parents'
|
|
opportunities to bond with their young children and to be attuned to
|
|
their needs were felt unequally. It is important that emergency response
|
|
policies consider the mother and the partner as a family unit when
|
|
making changes to the delivery of maternal and child health and care
|
|
services, so as to mitigate the impact on the family and existing health
|
|
inequalities.PROSPERO registration numberCRD42021236769.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rankin, J (Corresponding Author), Newcastle Univ, Populat Hlth Sci Inst, Fac Med Sci, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England.
|
|
Rankin, J (Corresponding Author), NIHR Appl Res Collaborat North East \& North Cumbri, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England.
|
|
Adesanya, Adenike Motunrayo; Barrett, Simon; Moffat, Malcolm; Aquino, Maria Raisa Jessica; Rankin, Judith, Newcastle Univ, Populat Hlth Sci Inst, Fac Med Sci, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England.
|
|
Aquino, Maria Raisa Jessica; Rankin, Judith, NIHR Appl Res Collaborat North East \& North Cumbri, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England.
|
|
Nicholson, Wendy; Turner, Gillian; Cook, Emma; Tyndall, Sarah, UK Dept Hlth \& Social Care, Off Hlth Improvement \& Dispar, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066963},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords = {PUBLIC HEALTH; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; PERINATOLOGY},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MATERNAL SENSITIVITY; HEALTH; DEPRESSION; STRESS; BEHAVIOR; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {judith.rankin@newcastle.ac.uk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Adesanya, Adenike/GMW-8332-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Adesanya, Adenike/0000-0002-8252-1162
|
|
Aquino, Maria Raisa Jessica/0000-0002-3989-1221
|
|
Barrett, Simon/0000-0002-8216-2999
|
|
Moffat, Malcolm/0000-0001-8808-2626
|
|
Rankin, Judith/0000-0001-5355-454X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000899418900034},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000482408800007,
|
|
Author = {Ouko, Jacob Joseph Ochieng and Gachari, Moses Karoki and Sichangi,
|
|
Arthur Wafula and Alegana, Victor},
|
|
Title = {Geographic information system-based evaluation of spatial accessibility
|
|
to maternal health facilities in Siaya County, Kenya},
|
|
Journal = {GEOGRAPHICAL RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {57},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {286-298},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Maternal mortality is a major problem in middle-income and low-income
|
|
countries, and the availability and accessibility of healthcare
|
|
facilities offering safe delivery is important in averting maternal
|
|
deaths. Siaya County, in Kenya, has one of the highest maternal
|
|
mortality rates in the country-far more than the national average. This
|
|
study aimed to evaluate geographic access to health facilities offering
|
|
delivery services in Siaya County. A mixed-methods approach
|
|
incorporating geographic information system analysis and individual data
|
|
from semi-structured interviews was used to derive travel time maps to
|
|
facilities using different travel scenarios: AccessMod5 and ArcGIS were
|
|
used for these tasks. The derived maps were then linked to georeferenced
|
|
household survey data in a multilevel logistic regression model in R to
|
|
predict the probability of expectant women delivering in a health
|
|
facility. Based on the derived travel times, 26 per cent (13,140) and 67
|
|
per cent (32,074) of the estimated 46,332 pregnant women could reach any
|
|
facility within one and two hours, respectively, while walking with the
|
|
percentage falling to seven per cent (3,415) and 20 per cent (8,845)
|
|
when considering referral facilities. Motorised transport significantly
|
|
increased coverage. The findings revealed that the predicted probability
|
|
of a pregnant woman delivering in a health facility ranged between 0.14
|
|
and 0.86. Significant differences existed in access levels with
|
|
transportation-based interventions significantly increasing coverage.
|
|
The derived maps can help health policy planners identify underserved
|
|
areas and monitor future reductions in inequalities. This work has
|
|
theoretical implications for conceptualising healthcare accessibility
|
|
besides advancing the literature on mixed methodologies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ouko, JJO (Corresponding Author), Kenya Govt Med Res Ctr, Wellcome Trust Res Programme, Populat Hlth Unit, POB 43640-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Ouko, Jacob Joseph Ochieng; Gachari, Moses Karoki; Sichangi, Arthur Wafula, Kenya Govt Med Res Ctr, Wellcome Trust Res Programme, Populat Hlth Unit, POB 43640-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Alegana, Victor, Univ Southampton, Geog \& Environm Sci, Highfield Campus, Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hants, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1745-5871.12339},
|
|
ISSN = {1745-5863},
|
|
EISSN = {1745-5871},
|
|
Keywords = {maternal health; geographic information systems; travel times;
|
|
healthcare access; multilevel modelling; Kenya},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SERVICES; ACCESS; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Geography},
|
|
Author-Email = {oukojacob1@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sichangi, Arthur/Y-6599-2019
|
|
Alegana, Victor/P-6579-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sichangi, Arthur/0000-0001-6266-8741
|
|
Alegana, Victor/0000-0001-5177-9227},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000482408800007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000433304500001,
|
|
Author = {Tapela, Neo M. and Peluso, Michael J. and Kohler, Racquet E. and
|
|
Setlhako, Irene I. and Botebele, Kerapetse and Gabegwe, Kemiso and
|
|
Nkele, Isaac and Narasimhamurthy, Mohan and Mmalane, Mompati and Grover,
|
|
Surbhi and Barak, Tomer and Shulman, Lawrence N. and Lockman, Shahin and
|
|
Dryden-Peterson, Scott},
|
|
Title = {A Step Toward Timely Referral and Early Diagnosis of Cancer:
|
|
Implementation and Impact on Knowledge of a Primary Care-Based Training
|
|
Program in Botswana},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Month = {MAY 29},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: Health system delays in diagnosis of cancer contribute to
|
|
the glaring disparities in cancer mortality between high-income
|
|
countries and low- and middle-income countries. In Botswana,
|
|
approximately 70\% of cancers are diagnosed at late stage and median
|
|
time from first health facility visit for cancer-related symptoms to
|
|
specialty cancer care was 160 days (IQR 59-653). We describe the
|
|
implementation and early outcomes of training targeting primary care
|
|
providers, which is a part of a multi-component implementation study in
|
|
Kweneng-East district aiming to enhance timely diagnosis of cancers.
|
|
Methods: Health-care providers from all public facilities within the
|
|
district were invited to participate in an 8-h intensive short-course
|
|
program developed by a multidisciplinary team and adapted to the
|
|
Botswana health system context. Participants' performance was assessed
|
|
using a 25-multiple choice question tool, with pre- and post assessments
|
|
paired by anonymous identifier. Statistical analysis with Wilcoxon
|
|
signed-rank test to compare performance at the two time points across
|
|
eight sub-domains (pathophysiology, epidemiology, social context,
|
|
symptoms, evaluation, treatment, documentation, follow-up). Linear
|
|
regression and negative binomial modeling were used to determine change
|
|
in performance. Participants' satisfaction with the program was measured
|
|
on a separate survey using a 5-point Likert scale.
|
|
Results: 176 participants attended the training over 5 days in April
|
|
2016. Pooled linear regression controlling for test version showed an
|
|
overall performance increase of 16.8\% after participation (95\% 01
|
|
15.2-18.4). Statistically significant improvement was observed for seven
|
|
out of eight subdomains on test A and all eight subdomains on test B.
|
|
Overall, 71 (40.3\%) trainees achieved a score greater than 70\% on the
|
|
pretest, and 161 (91.5\%) did so on the posttest. Participants reported
|
|
a high degree of satisfaction with the training program's content and
|
|
its relevance to their daily work.
|
|
Conclusion: We describe a successfully implemented primary health care
|
|
provider focused training component of an innovative intervention aiming
|
|
to reduce health systems delays in cancer diagnosis in sub-Saharan
|
|
Africa. The training achieved district-wide participation, and
|
|
improvement in the knowledge of primary health-care providers in this
|
|
setting.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tapela, NM (Corresponding Author), Botswana Harvard AIDS Inst Partnership, Gaborone, Botswana.
|
|
Tapela, NM (Corresponding Author), Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Global Hlth Equ, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Tapela, Neo M.; Botebele, Kerapetse; Gabegwe, Kemiso; Nkele, Isaac; Mmalane, Mompati; Barak, Tomer; Lockman, Shahin; Dryden-Peterson, Scott, Botswana Harvard AIDS Inst Partnership, Gaborone, Botswana.
|
|
Tapela, Neo M.; Peluso, Michael J., Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Global Hlth Equ, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Peluso, Michael J., Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Dept Med, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Kohler, Racquet E., Dana Farber Canc Inst, Ctr Community Based Res, Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social \& Behav Sci, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Setlhako, Irene I., Princess Marina Hosp, Minist Hlth \& Wellness, Gaborone, Botswana.
|
|
Narasimhamurthy, Mohan, Univ Botswana, Fac Med, Dept Pathol, Gaborone, Botswana.
|
|
Grover, Surbhi, Univ Penn, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Grover, Surbhi, Botswana Upenn Partnership, Gaborone, Botswana.
|
|
Barak, Tomer, Beth Israel Deaconess Med Ctr, Dept Med, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
|
|
Shulman, Lawrence N., Univ Penn, Abramson Canc Ctr, Ctr Global Canc Med, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Lockman, Shahin; Dryden-Peterson, Scott, Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Lockman, Shahin; Dryden-Peterson, Scott, Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Infect Dis, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fonc.2018.00187},
|
|
Article-Number = {187},
|
|
ISSN = {2234-943X},
|
|
Keywords = {cancer early diagnosis; health system delays; primary care; primary care
|
|
providers; Botswana; sub-Saharan Africa; training},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BREAST-CANCER; ORAL-CANCER; DELAYS; INDIA; CHALLENGES; PATHOLOGY;
|
|
SERVICES; ONCOLOGY; WORKERS; ACCESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {ntapela@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {narasimahmurthy, mohan/AAM-8077-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dryden-Peterson, Scott/0000-0002-8487-9731
|
|
Tapela, Neo/0000-0002-2048-3973},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000433304500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000446989500018,
|
|
Author = {Cain, Joanna M. and Denny, Lynette},
|
|
Title = {Palliative care in women's cancer care: Global challenges and advances},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GYNECOLOGY \& OBSTETRICS},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {143},
|
|
Number = {2, SI},
|
|
Pages = {153-158},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Women's cancer rates are increasing in low- and middle-income countries,
|
|
with presentations that are often far advanced requiring intense symptom
|
|
management, thus advancing the urgent need to address palliative care.
|
|
Most resource settings have some options available to assist women with
|
|
advanced gynecologic cancer, and a combination of leveraging these and
|
|
expanding on emerging models for palliative care could lessen suffering
|
|
and improve care for women with gynecologic cancers globally. Providing
|
|
palliative care for women with cancer is constrained by resources (human
|
|
and physical), lack of equipment, lack of access, and policy absence or
|
|
barriers. There is important work to be done in advocating for
|
|
appropriate infrastructure development and legislation to assure that
|
|
these options are available to women and their families. Access to
|
|
adequate opioid and other pain relief options for cancer-related pain is
|
|
a particular concern given that availability, cost, and legislative
|
|
prohibitions create barriers that cause suffering for patients and grief
|
|
for their families who are unable to address their suffering. All of
|
|
these require ongoing advocacy for continual advances to improve access
|
|
and infrastructure for palliative care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cain, JM (Corresponding Author), 3483 SW Patton Rd, Portland, OR 97201 USA.
|
|
Cain, Joanna M., Univ Massachusetts, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol, Worcester, MA 01605 USA.
|
|
Denny, Lynette, Univ Cape Town, Dept Obstet \& Gynecol, Groote Schuur Hosp, Cape Town, South Africa.
|
|
Denny, Lynette, Univ Cape Town, South African Med Res Council, Gynaecol Canc Res Ctr, Cape Town, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/ijgo.12624},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-7292},
|
|
EISSN = {1879-3479},
|
|
Keywords = {FIGO Cancer Report; Global palliative care; Gynecologic oncology;
|
|
Women's cancers},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BOWEL OBSTRUCTION; LATIN-AMERICA; CHEMOTHERAPY; EXPERIENCE; AFRICA;
|
|
PEOPLE; LIFE; LAST; HOME},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology},
|
|
Author-Email = {Joanna.cain3@gmail.com},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000446989500018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000895981500001,
|
|
Author = {Williams, Sian and Barnard, Amanda and Collis, Phil and de Sousa, Jaime
|
|
Correia and Ghimire, Suraj and Habib, Monsur and Jelen, Tessa and
|
|
Kanniess, Frank and Mak, Vince and Martins, Sonia and Paulino, Ema and
|
|
Pinnock, Hilary and Roman, Miguel and Sandelowsky, Hanna and
|
|
Tsiligianni, Ioanna and van der Steen, Laurine and Donatelli, Fabio
|
|
Weber},
|
|
Title = {Remote consultations in primary care across low-, middle- and
|
|
high-income countries: Implications for policy and care delivery},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH \& POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {181-189},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {The COVID-19 pandemic mandated a substantial switch in primary health
|
|
care delivery from an in-person to a mainly remote telephone or video
|
|
service. As the COVID-19 pandemic approaches its third year, limited
|
|
progress appears to have been made in terms of policy development around
|
|
consultation methods for the post-acute phase of the pandemic. In
|
|
September 2020, the International Primary Care Respiratory Group
|
|
convened a global panel of primary care clinicians - including family
|
|
physicians, paediatricians, pharmacists, academics and patients - to
|
|
consider the policy and health management implications of the move to
|
|
remote consultations in the primary care setting. The group gave special
|
|
consideration to how and how far remote consultations should be
|
|
integrated into routine primary health care delivery. Remote
|
|
consultations can be a useful alternative to in-person consultations in
|
|
primary care not only in situations where there is a need for viral
|
|
infection control but also for the routine delivery of chronic disease
|
|
management. However, they may not be more time efficient for the
|
|
clinician, and they can add to the workload and work-related stress for
|
|
primary care practitioners if they remain the dominant consultation
|
|
mode. Remote consultations are also less appropriate than in-person
|
|
consultations for new disease diagnosis, dealing with multiple issues
|
|
and providing complex care. Ensuring health care professionals have the
|
|
appropriate skill set to effectively deliver remote consultations,
|
|
administrative and/or IT support and appropriate reimbursement will be
|
|
key to achieving optimal integration of remote consultations into
|
|
routine clinical practice. Addressing digital access and digital
|
|
literacy issues at a societal level will also be essential to ensure
|
|
individuals have fair and equitable access to the internet and
|
|
sufficient security for exchange of personal and health-related data.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Williams, S (Corresponding Author), 30 Uplands Rd, London N8 9NL, England.
|
|
Williams, Sian, Int Primary Care Resp Grp, Edinburgh, Scotland.
|
|
Barnard, Amanda, Australian Natl Univ, Sch Gen Practice Rural \& Indigenous Hlth, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
|
|
Collis, Phil, European Lung Fdn, Royal Leamington Spa, England.
|
|
de Sousa, Jaime Correia, Univ Minho, Life \& Hlth Sci Res Inst ICVS, Sch Med, Braga, Portugal.
|
|
Ghimire, Suraj, Tribhuvan Univ, Teaching Hosp, Inst Med, Kathmandu, Nepal.
|
|
Habib, Monsur, Bangladesh Primary Care Resp Soc, Khulna, Bangladesh.
|
|
Jelen, Tessa, British Lung Fdn Support Grp, London, England.
|
|
Kanniess, Frank, Practice Family Med \& Allergy, Reinfeld, Germany.
|
|
Mak, Vince, Imperial Coll Healthcare NHS Trust, London, England.
|
|
Martins, Sonia; Donatelli, Fabio Weber, ABC Med Sch Brazil, Santo Andre, Brazil.
|
|
Paulino, Ema, Ezfy, Lisbon, Portugal.
|
|
Pinnock, Hilary, Univ Edinburgh, Usher Inst, Edinburgh, Scotland.
|
|
Roman, Miguel, IdSBa, Palma De Mallorca, Spain.
|
|
Sandelowsky, Hanna, Karolinska Inst, Inst NVS, Dept Family Med \& Primary Care, Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Tsiligianni, Ioanna, Univ Crete, Fac Med, Dept Social Med, Iraklion, Greece.
|
|
Williams, Sian, 30 Uplands Rd, London N8 9NL, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/13558196221140318},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2022},
|
|
ISSN = {1355-8196},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-1060},
|
|
Keywords = {remote consultations; primary health care; health inequalities},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {sian@ipcrg.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tsiligianni, Ioanna/IUN-4739-2023
|
|
de Sousa, Jaime Correia/H-5607-2015
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tsiligianni, Ioanna/0000-0001-7922-7491
|
|
de Sousa, Jaime Correia/0000-0001-6459-7908
|
|
MARTINS, SONIA/0000-0001-5405-5064
|
|
Paulino, Ema/0000-0002-4087-375X
|
|
Williams, Sian/0000-0002-0527-2254},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {30},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000895981500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000972073900002,
|
|
Author = {Benson, Jennifer and Brand, Tilman and Christianson, Lara and Lakeberg,
|
|
Meret},
|
|
Title = {Localisation of digital health tools used by displaced populations in
|
|
low and middle-income settings: a scoping review and critical analysis
|
|
of the Participation Revolution},
|
|
Journal = {CONFLICT AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {APR 15},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Forced displacement is a crucial determinant of poor health.
|
|
With 31 people displaced every minute worldwide, this is an important
|
|
global issue. Addressing this, the Participation Revolution workstream
|
|
from the World Humanitarian Summit's Localisation commitments has gained
|
|
traction in attempting to improve the effectiveness of humanitarian aid.
|
|
Simultaneously, digital health initiatives have become increasingly
|
|
ubiquitous tools in crises to deliver humanitarian assistance and
|
|
address health burdens.
|
|
Objective This scoping review explores how the localisation agenda's
|
|
commitment to participation has been adopted within digital health
|
|
interventions used by displaced people in low-and-middle-income
|
|
countries.
|
|
Methods This review adopted the Arksey and O'Malley approach and
|
|
searched five academic databases and three online literature
|
|
repositories with a Population, Concept and Context inclusion criteria.
|
|
Data were synthesised and analysed through a critical power lens from
|
|
the perspective of displaced people in low-and-middle-income- countries.
|
|
Results 27 papers demonstrated that a heterogeneous group of health
|
|
issues were addressed through various digital health initiatives,
|
|
principally through the use of mobile phones. The focus of the
|
|
literature lay largely within technical connectivity and feasibility
|
|
assessments, leaving a gap in understanding potential health
|
|
implications. The varied conceptualisation of the localisation
|
|
phenomenon has implications for the future of participatory humanitarian
|
|
action: Authorship of reviewed literature primarily descended from
|
|
high-income countries exposing global power dynamics leading the
|
|
narrative. However, power was not a central theme in the literature:
|
|
Whilst authors acknowledged the benefit of local involvement,
|
|
participatory activities were largely limited to informing content
|
|
adaptations and functional modifications within pre-determined projects
|
|
and objectives.
|
|
Conclusion With over 100 million people displaced globally, effective
|
|
initiatives that meaningfully address health needs without perpetuating
|
|
harmful inequalities are an essential contribution to the humanitarian
|
|
arena. The gap in health outcomes evidence, the limited constructions of
|
|
health, and the varying and nuanced digital divide factors are all
|
|
indicators of unequal power in the digital health sphere. More needs to
|
|
be done to address these gaps meaningfully, and more meaningful
|
|
participation could be a crucial undertaking to achieve this.
|
|
Registration The study protocol was registered before the study
|
|
(10.17605/OSF.IO/9D25R) at https://osf.io/9d25r.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Benson, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Bremen, Fac Human \& Hlth Sci, Publ Hlth, Bremen, Germany.
|
|
Benson, J (Corresponding Author), Leibniz Inst Prevent Res \& Epidemiol BIPS, Dept Prevent \& Evaluat, Bremen, Germany.
|
|
Benson, J (Corresponding Author), Leibniz Sci Campus Digital Publ Hlth, Bremen, Germany.
|
|
Benson, Jennifer; Lakeberg, Meret, Univ Bremen, Fac Human \& Hlth Sci, Publ Hlth, Bremen, Germany.
|
|
Benson, Jennifer; Brand, Tilman; Christianson, Lara; Lakeberg, Meret, Leibniz Inst Prevent Res \& Epidemiol BIPS, Dept Prevent \& Evaluat, Bremen, Germany.
|
|
Benson, Jennifer, Leibniz Sci Campus Digital Publ Hlth, Bremen, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13031-023-00518-9},
|
|
Article-Number = {20},
|
|
ISSN = {1752-1505},
|
|
Keywords = {Humanitarian; Localisation; Participation Digital health; Displaced
|
|
populations; Digital divide; Health inequities; Low-and-middle-income
|
|
countries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH; TELEPSYCHIATRY; REFUGEES; SYSTEM; CONFLICT; WORK; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {benson@leibniz-bips.de},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Benson, Jennifer/0000-0001-8909-1233},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {136},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000972073900002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000304149300005,
|
|
Author = {Garikipati, Supriya},
|
|
Title = {Microcredit and Women's Empowerment: Through the Lens of Time-Use Data
|
|
from Rural India},
|
|
Journal = {DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {719-750},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {This study examines the impact of microcredit on male and female time
|
|
use, and draws on this analysis to explore the linkages between credit
|
|
and women's empowerment. A study of time use can help understand these
|
|
linkages, because if credit is intended to improve women's livelihoods,
|
|
it can also be expected to influence the way women allocate their time.
|
|
Its other advantages are that it does not suffer from much time lag and
|
|
can be objectively measured. Using household survey data from rural
|
|
India, the findings show that while microcredit has little impact on
|
|
women's time use, it helps their husbands move away from wage work
|
|
(associated with bad pay and low status) to self-employment. This is
|
|
because women's loans are typically used to enhance male ownership of
|
|
the household's productive assets. Further, it is found that it is only
|
|
women who use loans in self-managed enterprises who are able to allocate
|
|
more time to self-employment. If credit is intended to increase the
|
|
value of women's work time, it follows that it is not access to loans
|
|
but use of loans that matters. Ensuring women's control over
|
|
loan-created assets must therefore be a critical policy objective.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Garikipati, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Liverpool, Sch Management, Liverpool L69 3BX, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Univ Liverpool, Sch Management, Liverpool L69 3BX, Merseyside, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1467-7660.2012.01780.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0012-155X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ALLOCATION; CREDIT; IMPACT; LABOR; BANGLADESH; MICROFINANCE; GENDER;
|
|
RIGHTS; NEPAL; LAND},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Development Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {S.Garikipati@liv.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Garikipati, Supriya/0000-0001-8576-8227},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {46},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {62},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000304149300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000580626800009,
|
|
Author = {Rumrill, Phillip and Li, Jian and Strauser, David and Roessler, Richard
|
|
T. and Bishop, Malachy and Chan, Fong and Adams, Chithra and Leslie,
|
|
Mykal},
|
|
Title = {Personal, health and function, and career maintenance factors as
|
|
determinants of quality of life among employed people with multiple
|
|
sclerosis},
|
|
Journal = {WORK-A JOURNAL OF PREVENTION ASSESSMENT \& REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {67},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {81-94},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an intrusive disease that
|
|
significantly affects labor force participation.
|
|
OBJECTIVE: This study examined the extent to which factors at the
|
|
personal, health and function, and environmental/career maintenance
|
|
levels contribute to the predictability power for quality of life among
|
|
employed people with MS.
|
|
METHOD: Participants consisted of 523 members of nine National Multiple
|
|
Sclerosis Society chapters representing 21 states and Washington, DC.
|
|
These individuals were employed at the time of the survey, and they were
|
|
primarily middle age (average age of 48 years) and Caucasian (74\%).
|
|
RESULTS: The final hierarchical multiple regression model explained 54
|
|
percent of the variability in participants' quality of life scores,
|
|
although none of the hypothesized personal/demographic predictors were
|
|
significant. Participants who perceived better overall health and lower
|
|
levels of stress, who experienced less severe cognitive and
|
|
mobility-related MS symptoms, and who expressed stronger job-person
|
|
matches and higher levels of job satisfaction reported higher quality of
|
|
life scores than did other participants.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: The findings underscore the complexity involved in
|
|
predicting perceived quality of life among employed people with MS.
|
|
Implications of these findings for future research and clinical practice
|
|
are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rumrill, P (Corresponding Author), Univ Kentucky, Human Dev Inst, 126 Graham Ave, Lexington, KY 40508 USA.
|
|
Rumrill, Phillip, Univ Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40508 USA.
|
|
Li, Jian; Leslie, Mykal, Kent State Univ, Kent, OH 44242 USA.
|
|
Strauser, David; Adams, Chithra, Univ Illinois, Champaign, IL 61820 USA.
|
|
Bishop, Malachy; Chan, Fong, Univ Wisconsin, Madison, WI USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3233/WOR-203254},
|
|
ISSN = {1051-9815},
|
|
EISSN = {1875-9270},
|
|
Keywords = {Employment; chronic illness; vocational rehabilitation; quality of life;
|
|
multiple sclerosis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOCATIONAL-REHABILITATION SERVICES; ENVIRONMENTAL-FACTORS; WORK;
|
|
AMERICANS; IMPACT; UNEMPLOYMENT; ASSOCIATIONS; DISABILITIES; SYMPTOMS;
|
|
BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {Phillip.Rumrill@uky.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {91},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000580626800009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000348666000021,
|
|
Author = {Stewart, Barclay T. and Pathak, John and Gupta, Shailvi and Shrestha,
|
|
Sunil and Groen, Reinou S. and Nwomeh, Benedict C. and Kushner, Adam L.
|
|
and McIntyre, Thomas},
|
|
Title = {An estimate of hernia prevalence in Nepal from a countrywide community
|
|
survey},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Pages = {111-114},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Herniorrhaphy is one of the most frequently performed
|
|
general surgical operations worldwide. However, most low- and
|
|
middle-income countries (LMICs) are unable to provide this essential
|
|
surgery to the general public, resulting in considerable morbidity and
|
|
mortality. This study aimed to estimate the prevalence, barriers to care
|
|
and disability of untreated hernias in Nepal. Methods: Nepal is a
|
|
low-income country in South Asia with rugged terrain, infrastructure
|
|
deficiencies and a severely under-resourced healthcare system resulting
|
|
in substantial unmet surgical need. A cluster randomized,
|
|
cross-sectional household survey was performed using the validated
|
|
Surgeons OverSeas Assessment of Surgical (SOSAS) tool. Fifteen
|
|
randomized clusters consisting of 30 households with two randomly
|
|
selected respondents each were sampled to estimate surgical need. The
|
|
prevalence of and disability from groin hernias and barriers to
|
|
herniorrhaphy were assessed. Results: The survey sampled 1350
|
|
households, totaling 2695 individuals (97\% response rate). There were
|
|
1434 males (53\%) with 1.5\% having a mass or swelling in the groin at
|
|
time of survey (95\% CI 1.8-4.0). The age-standardized rate for inguinal
|
|
hernias in men ranged from 1144 per 100,000 persons between age 5 and 49
|
|
years and 2941 per 100,000 persons age >= 50 years. Extrapolating
|
|
nationally, there are nearly 310,000 individuals with groin masses and
|
|
66,000 males with soft/reducible groin masses in need of evaluation in
|
|
Nepal. Twenty-nine respondents were not able to have surgery due to lack
|
|
of surgical services (31\%), fear or mistrust of the surgical system
|
|
(31\%) and inability to afford care (21\%). Twenty percent were unable
|
|
to work as previous or perform self-care due to their hernia.
|
|
Conclusions: Despite the lower than expected prevalence of inguinal
|
|
hernias, hundreds of thousands of people in Nepal are currently in need
|
|
of surgical evaluation. Given that essential surgery is a necessary
|
|
component in health systems, the prevalence of inguinal hernias and the
|
|
cost-effectiveness of herniorrhaphy, this disease is an important target
|
|
for LMICs planning surgical capacity improvements. (C) 2014 Surgical
|
|
Associates Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Stewart, BT (Corresponding Author), Univ Washington, Dept Surg, 1959 NE Pacific St,Suite BB 487,POB 356410, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Stewart, Barclay T., Univ Washington, Dept Surg, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Pathak, John, Kathmandu Med Coll, Kathmandu, Nepal.
|
|
Gupta, Shailvi; Nwomeh, Benedict C.; Kushner, Adam L., Surg OverSeas SOS, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Gupta, Shailvi, Univ Calif San Francisco East Bay, Dept Surg, Oakland, CA USA.
|
|
Shrestha, Sunil, Nepal Med Coll, Dept Surg, Kathmandu, Nepal.
|
|
Groen, Reinou S., Johns Hopkins Univ Hosp, Dept Gynecol \& Obstet, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA.
|
|
Nwomeh, Benedict C., Nationwide Childrens Hosp, Dept Pediat Surg, Columbus, OH USA.
|
|
Kushner, Adam L., Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Int Hlth, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Kushner, Adam L., Columbia Univ, Dept Surg, New York, NY USA.
|
|
McIntyre, Thomas, SUNY Downstate Med Sch, Kings Cty Hosp Ctr, Program Surg \& Publ Hlth, Brooklyn, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.ijsu.2014.12.003},
|
|
ISSN = {1743-9191},
|
|
EISSN = {1743-9159},
|
|
Keywords = {Hernia; Surgical capacity; Nepal; Low-income; Community assessment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CATARACT SURGICAL COVERAGE; MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; INGUINAL-HERNIA;
|
|
SIERRA-LEONE; COST-EFFECTIVENESS; GROIN HERNIA; RISK-FACTORS; SURGERY;
|
|
BARRIERS; EPIDEMIOLOGY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Surgery},
|
|
Author-Email = {stewarb@uw.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Stewart, Barclay/0000-0002-8099-9218
|
|
Kushner, Adam/0000-0002-7797-4837},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000348666000021},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000695363700001,
|
|
Author = {Park, Sunggeun (Ethan) and Pinto, Rogerio Meireles},
|
|
Title = {Factors that Influence Co-production among Student Interns, Consumers,
|
|
and Providers of Social and Public Health Services: Implications for
|
|
Interprofessional Collaboration and Training},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL WORK IN PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {37},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {71-83},
|
|
Month = {JAN 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Providers of public health and social services ({''}providers{''})
|
|
develop and deliver services by engaging in interprofessional
|
|
collaboration (IPC), from seeking external advice to making referrals
|
|
and linkages to various social and public health services. Providers
|
|
collaborate with consumers of social and public health services
|
|
({''}consumers{''}) and student interns (e.g., social work, public
|
|
health) to explore, determine, and deliver relevant services through a
|
|
process referred to as co-production. Both IPC and co-production are
|
|
widespread strategies with the potential to improve service
|
|
accessibility and quality. However, the intersection of co-production
|
|
and IPC remains understudied. This study examines factors that influence
|
|
co-production in IPC among service providers, consumers, and student
|
|
interns. We used cross-sectional survey data from an NIMH-funded study,
|
|
including 379 providers in 36 HIV-service organizations in New York
|
|
City. We examined the relationships between providers' perspectives on
|
|
co-production in IPC and multiple provider- and organization-level
|
|
variables using random-effects logistic regression. Most respondents
|
|
said that consumers and students in their agency participate in IPC on
|
|
the issues that concern them. Providers who perceive greater flexibility
|
|
in the IPC process were more likely to agree that their organizations'
|
|
providers co-produced IPC. Organizational service offerings (i.e.,
|
|
multilingual services, a comprehensive range of services), job
|
|
positions, and full-time employment status were strong predictors of
|
|
co-production. Our findings indicate that intentional and inclusive
|
|
models of flexible IPC are needed. Fostering co-production in the HIV
|
|
service field requires more institutional support and incentives for
|
|
organizations, providers, and student interns. Implications for research
|
|
and practice are discussed.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Park, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Michigan, Sch Social Work, 1080 S Univ Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
|
|
Park, Sunggeun (Ethan); Pinto, Rogerio Meireles, Univ Michigan, Sch Social Work, 1080 S Univ Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/19371918.2021.1974638},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {SEP 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {1937-1918},
|
|
EISSN = {1937-190X},
|
|
Keywords = {Co-production; service consumer; student intern; interprofessional
|
|
collaboration; social and health services; HIV; AIDS},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PATIENT-CENTERED CARE; UNITED-STATES; OUTCOMES; SYSTEMS;
|
|
RECOMMENDATIONS; PARTICIPATION; PERCEPTIONS; MANAGEMENT; CAPACITY;
|
|
BARRIERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {sunggeun@umich.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {60},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {49},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000695363700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000323004200001,
|
|
Author = {Robert, Emilie and Ridde, Valery},
|
|
Title = {Global health actors no longer in favor of user fees: a documentary
|
|
study},
|
|
Journal = {GLOBALIZATION AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Month = {JUL 26},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Since the advent of health user fees in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries in the 1980s, the discourse of global health
|
|
actors (GHAs) has changed to the disadvantage of this type of healthcare
|
|
financing mechanism. The aim of the study was to identify and analyze
|
|
the stance of GHAs in the debate on user fees.
|
|
Methods: We conducted documentary research using public documents
|
|
published by and officially attributed to GHAs from 2005 to 2011. We
|
|
categorized GHAs into four groups: intergovernmental organizations,
|
|
international non-governmental organizations, government agencies, and
|
|
working groups and networks. We then classified the GHAs according to
|
|
their stance relative to the abolition of user fees, and conducted a
|
|
thematic analysis of their discourse to understand the arguments used by
|
|
each GHA to justify its stance.
|
|
Results: We identified 56 GHAs, for which we analyzed 140 documents.
|
|
Among them, 55\% were in favor of the abolition of user fees or in favor
|
|
of free care at the point of delivery. None of the GHAs stated that they
|
|
were in favor of user fees; however, 30\% did not take a stand. Only the
|
|
World Bank declares that it is both in favor of user fees and in favor
|
|
of free care at point of service. GHAs generally circumscribe their
|
|
stance to specific populations (pregnant women, children under 5 years,
|
|
etc.) or to specific health services (primary, basic, essential). Three
|
|
types of arguments are used by GHAs to justify their stance: economic,
|
|
moral and ethical, and pragmatic.
|
|
Conclusions: The principle of ``user pays{''} seems to have fizzled.
|
|
Production and dissemination of evidence, as well as certain advocacy
|
|
networks, may have contributed to this change in discourse. However,
|
|
GHAs should go a step further and translate their words into action, so
|
|
that free healthcare at the point of delivery becomes a reality in low-
|
|
and middle-income countries. They should provide technical and financial
|
|
support to those countries that have chosen to implement user fee
|
|
exemption policies, sometimes influenced by a GHA.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Robert, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Montreal, Fac Med, CRCHUM, Pavillon Masson,3850,Rue St Urbain, Montreal, PQ H2W 1T7C, Canada.
|
|
Robert, Emilie; Ridde, Valery, Univ Montreal, Fac Med, CRCHUM, Montreal, PQ H2W 1T7C, Canada.
|
|
Ridde, Valery, Univ Montreal, Dept Med Social \& Prevent, Montreal, PQ H2W 1T7C, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1744-8603-9-29},
|
|
Article-Number = {29},
|
|
EISSN = {1744-8603},
|
|
Keywords = {User fees; LMICs; International health policy; Global health actors;
|
|
Policy change},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES; STAKEHOLDER ANALYSIS; PUBLIC-HEALTH; POLICY; CARE;
|
|
COVERAGE; LESSONS; REFORMS; AFRICA; NEED},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {emilie.robert.3@umontreal.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {ridde, valery/AAV-1016-2020
|
|
Ridde, Valery/AAD-2736-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ridde, Valery/0000-0001-9299-8266
|
|
Robert, Emilie/0000-0002-2260-1873},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {111},
|
|
Times-Cited = {32},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000323004200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000394300900001,
|
|
Author = {Fauk, Nelsensius Klau and Mwakinyali, Silivano Edson and Putra, Sukma
|
|
and Mwanri, Lillian},
|
|
Title = {Understanding the strategies employed to cope with increased numbers of
|
|
AIDS-orphaned children in families in rural settings: a case of Mbeya
|
|
Rural District, Tanzania},
|
|
Journal = {INFECTIOUS DISEASES OF POVERTY},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Month = {FEB 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The purpose of this study was to understand the strategies
|
|
employed by families that adopt Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
|
|
(AIDS)-orphaned children (Adoptive families) for coping with and
|
|
mitigating the impact of AIDS in Mbeya Rural District, Tanzania. High
|
|
numbers of AIDS orphaned children aged below 18 years in Mbeya Region
|
|
have led to increasing the burden of families caring for them.
|
|
Understanding the coping strategies and impact mitigation activities
|
|
employed by adoptive families is important in order to develop
|
|
programmes to help them.
|
|
Methods: This study employed a qualitative method for data collection
|
|
(one-on-one in-depth interviews). The respondents included 12 male and 8
|
|
female heads of families that provide essential care for AIDS-orphaned
|
|
children in Mbeya Rural District in Tanzania. The framework approach was
|
|
used to analyse the data that were collected from 15 July to 15 August
|
|
2010.
|
|
Results: The study findings revealed that adoptive families faced
|
|
several challenges including financial constraints due to increased
|
|
needs for basic essentials such as health care expenses, school fees and
|
|
food. Further impacts on adoptive families included shortage of work
|
|
opportunities and limited time to address these challenges. To mitigate
|
|
these challenges, adoptive families employed a range of coping
|
|
strategies including selling family assets and renting out parts of
|
|
cultivable land for extra cash. Task reallocation which involved the
|
|
AIDS-orphaned children entering the labour force was also employed as a
|
|
strategy to mitigate challenges and involved de-enrolling of children
|
|
from schools so they could take part in income-generating activities in
|
|
order to earn supplementary family income. The creation of additional
|
|
income-generating activities such as poultry farming were other coping
|
|
mechanisms employed, and these received support from both
|
|
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and governmental organisations,
|
|
including the Isangati Agricultural Development Organization (local NGO)
|
|
and the local government respectively.
|
|
Conclusions: The current study identified challenges that adoptive
|
|
families as well as the AIDS- orphaned children themselves faced in
|
|
Mbeya Rural District, Tanzania. Recognition of these issues highlights
|
|
the need for targeted interventions to address the underlying social
|
|
determinants of human immunodeficiency virus or HIV and AIDS in affected
|
|
populations in order to prevent further imposition of social, cultural
|
|
and economic disadvantages on families that provide care for
|
|
AIDS-orphaned children and the children themselves. These findings may
|
|
prove useful in provoking discussions that may lead to HIV/AIDS
|
|
prevention and the development of broader mitigation strategies to
|
|
alleviate the impact of this scourge on families and communities in
|
|
rural Tanzania, and in similar settings across the world.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mwanri, L (Corresponding Author), Flinders Univ S Australia, Sch Hlth Sci, Discipline Publ Hlth, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
|
|
Fauk, Nelsensius Klau, Inst Resource Governance \& Social Change, Jl R W Monginsidi II,2 Kel Kelapa Lima, Kupang, Nusa Tenggara T, Indonesia.
|
|
Mwakinyali, Silivano Edson, Natl Food Reserve Agcy, POB 5384, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
|
|
Putra, Sukma, Binus Univ Int, Jl Hang Lekir I 6, Jakarta 10270, Indonesia.
|
|
Mwanri, Lillian, Flinders Univ S Australia, Sch Hlth Sci, Discipline Publ Hlth, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s40249-016-0233-7},
|
|
Article-Number = {21},
|
|
ISSN = {2095-5162},
|
|
EISSN = {2049-9957},
|
|
Keywords = {Adoptive families; AIDS-orphaned children; Coping strategies; HIV; AIDS;
|
|
Mbeya Rural District; Tanzania},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IMPACT; HIV/AIDS; EPIDEMIC; HEALTH; SUPPORT; LABOR; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Infectious Diseases; Parasitology; Tropical Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {lillian.mwanri@flinders.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Fauk, Nelsensius/L-8024-2015
|
|
Mwanri, Lillian/AGG-3711-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Fauk, Nelsensius/0000-0002-1325-2640
|
|
Mwanri, Lillian/0000-0002-5792-7785},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000394300900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000627105000001,
|
|
Author = {de Wet, Anneliese and Pretorius, Chrisma},
|
|
Title = {From darkness to light: Barriers and facilitators to mental health
|
|
recovery in the South African context},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {68},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {82-89},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Background:
|
|
South Africa is a low and middle income country facing many challenges
|
|
in public mental health care and implementation of recovery.
|
|
Aims:
|
|
To contribute to what barriers and facilitators to recovery might be for
|
|
service users in South Africa, from the perspective of service users,
|
|
carers and service providers from three psychiatric hospitals in the
|
|
Western Cape province.
|
|
Method:
|
|
Interviews and focus groups were conducted with service users, carers
|
|
and service providers. Interviews and focus groups were transcribed and
|
|
analysed using atlas.ti software and reflexive thematic analysis, from
|
|
the bottom up.
|
|
Results:
|
|
The barriers, environment, family, public mental health services, stigma
|
|
and service users' attitude or behaviour generated, were found to be the
|
|
most salient. The facilitators to recovery generated were support,
|
|
family or friends, service providers, structure and empowerment. The
|
|
need for support was identified as an underlying component to all these
|
|
themes.
|
|
Conclusion:
|
|
Barriers and facilitators to recovery seemed to have both intrapersonal
|
|
and external sources that intersect at times. Recovery needs to be
|
|
supported at an individual level, especially through an under-utilised
|
|
resource such as peer support work, but in conjunction with the
|
|
development of recovery-enabling environments in services and
|
|
communities in South Africa.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {de Wet, A (Corresponding Author), Stellenbosch Univ, Dept Psychol, Private Bag X1, ZA-7602 Matieland, Western Cape, South Africa.
|
|
de Wet, Anneliese; Pretorius, Chrisma, Stellenbosch Univ, Dept Psychol, Private Bag X1, ZA-7602 Matieland, Western Cape, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0020764020981126},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2020},
|
|
Article-Number = {0020764020981126},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-7640},
|
|
EISSN = {1741-2854},
|
|
Keywords = {Barriers; facilitators; mental health recovery; South Africa;
|
|
qualitative; peer support work},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PEER SUPPORT; SERVICES; CARE; ILLNESS; POLICY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {anneliesedewet@sun.ac.za},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pretorius, Chrisma/U-8258-2017
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Pretorius, Chrisma/0000-0002-9188-0255
|
|
de Wet, Anneliese/0000-0002-8121-8698},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {33},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000627105000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000249488100006,
|
|
Author = {Hannes, Karin and Vandersmissen, Jo and De Blaeser, Liesbeth and
|
|
Peeters, Gert and Goedhuys, Jo and Aertgeerts, Bert},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to evidence-based nursing: a focus group study},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2007},
|
|
Volume = {60},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {162-171},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Aim. This paper reports a study to explore the barriers to
|
|
evidence-based nursing among Flemish (Belgian) nurses.
|
|
Background. Barriers obstructing the call for an increase in
|
|
evidence-based nursing have been explored in many countries, mostly
|
|
through quantitative study designs. Authors report on lack of time,
|
|
resources, evidence, authority, support, motivation and resistance to
|
|
change. Relationships between barriers are seldom presented.
|
|
Methods. We used a grounded theory approach, and five focus groups were
|
|
organized between September 2004 and April 2005 in Belgium. We used
|
|
purposeful sampling to recruit 53 nurses working in different settings.
|
|
A problem tree was developed to establish links between codes that
|
|
emerged from the data.
|
|
Findings. The majority of the barriers were consistent with previous
|
|
findings. Flemish (Belgian) nurses added a potential lack of
|
|
responsibility in the uptake of evidence-based nursing, their `guest'
|
|
position in a patient's environment leading to a culture of adaptation,
|
|
and a future `two tier' nursing practice, which refers to the different
|
|
education levels of nurses. The problem tree developed serves as (1) a
|
|
basic model for other researchers who want to explore barriers within
|
|
their own healthcare system and (2) a useful tool for orienting change
|
|
management processes.
|
|
Conclusion. Despite the fact that the problem tree presented is
|
|
context-specific for Flanders (Belgium), it gives an opportunity to
|
|
develop clear objectives and targeted strategies for tackling obstacles
|
|
to evidence-based nursing.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hannes, K (Corresponding Author), Beldgian Branch Cochrane Collaborat, Belgian Ctr Evidence Based Med, Louvain, Belgium.
|
|
Beldgian Branch Cochrane Collaborat, Belgian Ctr Evidence Based Med, Louvain, Belgium.
|
|
Univ Hosp Leuven, Nursing Unit, Louvain, Belgium.
|
|
Belgian Hlth Care Knolwledge Ctr, Brussels, Belgium.
|
|
Catholic Univ, Acad Ctr Gen Pratice, Louvain, Belgium.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/j.1365-2648.2007.04389.x},
|
|
ISSN = {0309-2402},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2648},
|
|
Keywords = {barriers; empirical research report; evidence; based nursing; focus
|
|
groups; qualitative research},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE NURSES; IMPLEMENTATION; EXPLORATION; INFORMATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {Karin.hannes@med.kuleuven.be},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hannes, Karin/H-3857-2018
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hannes, Karin/0000-0002-5011-3615
|
|
Aertgeerts, Bert/0000-0003-1142-5402},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {42},
|
|
Times-Cited = {44},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000249488100006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001045474900018,
|
|
Author = {Rueda, Zulma Vanessa and Haworth-Brockman, Margaret and Sobie, Cheryl
|
|
and Villacis, Enrique and Larcombe, Linda and Maier, Katharina and
|
|
Deering, Kathleen and Sanguins, Julianne and Templeton, Kimberly and
|
|
MacKenzie, Lauren and Ireland, Laurie and Kasper, Ken and Payne, Michael
|
|
and Bullard, Jared and Krusi, Andrea and Pick, Neora and Myran, Tara and
|
|
Meyers, Adrienne and Keynan, Yoav},
|
|
Title = {Social and structural barriers and facilitators to HIV healthcare and
|
|
harm reduction services for people experiencing syndemics in Manitoba:
|
|
study protocol},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction In Manitoba, Canada, there has been an increase in the
|
|
number of people newly diagnosed with HIV and those not returning for
|
|
regular HIV care. The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in increased sex and
|
|
gender disparities in disease risk and mortalities, decreased harm
|
|
reduction services and reduced access to healthcare. These health crises
|
|
intersect with increased drug use and drug poisoning deaths,
|
|
houselessness and other structural and social factors most acutely among
|
|
historically underserved groups. We aim to explore the social and
|
|
structural barriers and facilitators to HIV care and harm reduction
|
|
services experienced by people living with HIV (PLHIV) in Manitoba.
|
|
Methods and analysis Our study draws on participatory action research
|
|
design. Guiding the methodological design are the lived experiences of
|
|
PLHIV. In-depth semi-structured face-to- face interviews and
|
|
quantitative questionnaires will be conducted with two groups: (1)
|
|
persons aged >= 18 years living or newly diagnosed with HIV and (2)
|
|
service providers who work with PLHIV. Data collection will include sex,
|
|
gender, sociodemographic information, income and housing, experiences
|
|
with the criminal justice system, sexual practices, substance use
|
|
practices and harm reduction access, experiences with violence and
|
|
support, HIV care journey (since diagnosis until present), childhood
|
|
trauma and a decision-making questionnaire. Data will be analysed
|
|
intersectionally, employing grounded theory for thematic analysis,
|
|
sex-based and gender-based analysis and social determinants of health
|
|
and syndemic framework to understand the experiences of PLHIV in
|
|
Manitoba.
|
|
Ethics and dissemination We received approval from the University of
|
|
Manitoba Health Ethics Research Board (HS25572; H2022:218), First
|
|
Nations Health and Social Secretariat of Manitoba, Nine Circles
|
|
Community Health Centre, Shared Health Manitoba (SH2022:194) and 7th
|
|
Street Health Access Centre. Findings will be disseminated using
|
|
community-focused knowledge translation strategies identified by
|
|
participants, peers, community members and organisations, and reported
|
|
in conferences, peer-reviewed journals and a website (www.
|
|
alltogether4ideas.org).},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rueda, ZV (Corresponding Author), Univ Manitoba, Max Rady Coll Med, Rady Fac Hlth Sci, Dept Med Microbiol \& Infect Dis, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Rueda, Zulma Vanessa; Sobie, Cheryl; Villacis, Enrique; Bullard, Jared; Keynan, Yoav, Univ Manitoba, Max Rady Coll Med, Rady Fac Hlth Sci, Dept Med Microbiol \& Infect Dis, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Haworth-Brockman, Margaret; Keynan, Yoav, Univ Manitoba, Natl Collaborating Ctr Infect Dis, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Haworth-Brockman, Margaret; Sanguins, Julianne; Keynan, Yoav, Univ Manitoba, Rady Fac Hlth Sci, Dept Community Hlth Sci, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Larcombe, Linda; MacKenzie, Lauren; Kasper, Ken; Keynan, Yoav, Univ Manitoba, Max Rady Coll Med, Rady Fac Hlth Sci, Dept Internal Med, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Maier, Katharina, Univ Winnipeg, Criminal Justice, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Deering, Kathleen; Krusi, Andrea, Univ British Columbia, Dept Med, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Deering, Kathleen; Krusi, Andrea, Univ British Columbia, Ctr Gender \& Sexual Hlth Equ, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Templeton, Kimberly; MacKenzie, Lauren; Ireland, Laurie; Kasper, Ken, Manitoba HIV Program, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Templeton, Kimberly; Ireland, Laurie; Payne, Michael, Nine Circles Community Hlth Ctr, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Bullard, Jared, Shared Hlth, Cadham Prov Lab, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Pick, Neora, Univ British Columbia, Div Infect Dis, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Myran, Tara, Univ Winnipeg, Indigenous Dev, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
|
|
Meyers, Adrienne, Indigenous Serv Canada, Lab Integrat, Off Populat \& Publ Hlth, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2022-067813},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords = {COVID-19; HIV \& AIDS; qualitative research; sexual and gender
|
|
minorities; substance misuse; health services accessibility},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTERVENTIONS; HIV/AIDS; TRAUMA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {zulma.rueda@umanitoba.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rueda, Zulma Vanessa/0000-0001-6342-1812
|
|
Villacis, Enrique/0000-0003-0033-9410},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {51},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001045474900018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000769618400001,
|
|
Author = {Bakkeli, Nan Zou},
|
|
Title = {Predicting Psychological Distress During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Do
|
|
Socioeconomic Factors Matter?},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {41},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {1227-1251},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Background and purpose: The COVID-19 pandemic has posed considerable
|
|
challenges to people's mental health, and the prevalence of anxiety and
|
|
depression increased substantially during the pandemic. Early detection
|
|
of potential depression is crucial for timely preventive interventions;
|
|
therefore, there is a need for depression prediction. Data and methods:
|
|
This study was based on survey data collected from 5001 Norwegians (3001
|
|
in 2020 and 2000 in 2021). Machine learning models were used to predict
|
|
depression risk and to select models with the best performance for each
|
|
pandemic phase. Probability thresholds were chosen based on
|
|
cost-sensitive analysis, and measures such as accuracy (ACC) and the
|
|
area under the receiver operating curve (AUC) were used to evaluate the
|
|
models' performance. Results: The study found that decision tree models
|
|
and regularised regressions had the best performance in both 2020 and
|
|
2021. For the 2020 predictions, the highest accuracies were obtained
|
|
using gradient boosting machines (ACC = 0.72, AUC = 0.74) and random
|
|
forest algorithm (ACC = 0.71, AUC = 0.75). For the 2021 predictions, the
|
|
random forest (ACC = 0.76, AUC = 0.78) and elastic net regularisation
|
|
(ACC = 0.76, AUC = 0.78) exhibited the best performances. Highly ranked
|
|
predictors of depression that remained stable over time were
|
|
self-perceived exposure risks, income, compliance with nonpharmaceutical
|
|
interventions, frequency of being outdoors, contact with family and
|
|
friends and work-life conflict. While epidemiological factors (having
|
|
COVID symptoms or having close contact with the infected) influenced the
|
|
level of psychological distress to a larger extent in the relatively
|
|
early stage of pandemic, the importance of socioeconomic factors
|
|
(gender, age, household type and employment status) increased
|
|
substantially in the later stage. Conclusion: Machine learning models
|
|
consisting of demographic, socioeconomic, behavioural and
|
|
epidemiological features can be used for fast `first-hand' screening to
|
|
diagnose mental health problems. The models may be helpful for
|
|
stakeholders and healthcare providers to provide early diagnosis and
|
|
intervention, as well as to provide insight into forecasting which
|
|
social groups are more vulnerable to mental illness in which social
|
|
settings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bakkeli, NZ (Corresponding Author), Oslo Metropolitan Univ, Ctr Res Pandem \& Soc, Consumpt Studies Norway, POB 4,St Olavs Plass, N-0130 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Bakkeli, Nan Zou, Oslo Metropolitan Univ, Ctr Res Pandem \& Soc, Consumpt Studies Norway, POB 4,St Olavs Plass, N-0130 Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/08944393211069622},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {FEB 2022},
|
|
Article-Number = {08944393211069622},
|
|
ISSN = {0894-4393},
|
|
EISSN = {1552-8286},
|
|
Keywords = {mental health; depression; COVID-19; social determinants of health;
|
|
inequality; machine learning},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH; SOCIAL DETERMINANTS; PRIMARY-CARE; DEPRESSION; ANXIETY;
|
|
POPULATION; DISORDERS; WORKERS; IMPACT; WUHAN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Information Science \&
|
|
Library Science; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary},
|
|
Author-Email = {Nan.Bakkeli@OsloMet.no},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bakkeli, Nan/0000-0002-4089-020X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {70},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000769618400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000747559800003,
|
|
Author = {Zewdu, Selamawit and Hanlon, Charlotte and Fekadu, Abebaw and Medhin,
|
|
Girmay and Teferra, Solomon},
|
|
Title = {``We improved our life because I cut my drinking{''}: Qualitative
|
|
analysis of a brief intervention for people with alcohol use disorder in
|
|
Ethiopian primary health care},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {132},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Despite global recommendations that brief, task-shared
|
|
interventions are effective for addressing problematic alcohol use in
|
|
primary health care (PHC), low-income countries have made few attempts
|
|
to implement and scale-up these interventions. Aim: To explore
|
|
perspectives and experiences of service users and providers on a brief
|
|
intervention (BI) for alcohol use disorders (AUDs) delivered by
|
|
nonspecialist health workers who are health officers and clinical nurses
|
|
in PHC in a rural Ethiopian district. Methods: The study team conducted
|
|
a qualitative study, comprising in-depth interviews with 26 purposively
|
|
selected participants. The participants were 14 people who had been
|
|
screened for probable AUD and were receiving the brief intervention;
|
|
four caregivers without any intervention; and eight nonspecialist health
|
|
workers who provided a single session brief intervention at four primary
|
|
care health centers in Sodo district, south Ethiopia. The study used
|
|
framework analysis. We grouped findings into five themes: acceptability,
|
|
engagement in and barriers to care, implementation of the service,
|
|
perceived impact of the BI, and unmet needs and expectations. Results:
|
|
Participants perceived the intervention to be useful, and it was
|
|
well-accepted by most service users and relatives. Participants reported
|
|
reductions in alcohol consumption and benefits in terms of their
|
|
capacity to work, increased earnings, less money wasted, and ability to
|
|
provide for their families. However, most did not attend follow-up
|
|
visits, often influenced by the belief that they did not have a serious
|
|
problem and could handle it alone. Some did not believe AUDs to be
|
|
treatable; others did not attend because of lack of money for
|
|
transportation and stigma from peers. Providing BI did not affect PHC
|
|
workers' routine work. However, they noticed a reluctance from people
|
|
with probable AUD to speak openly about their drinking, and they were
|
|
constrained by a shortage of space. They recommended training and
|
|
involvement from community members, leaders, and health extension
|
|
workers to raise awareness, increase acceptability, refer cases, and
|
|
reduce stigma. Conclusion: The brief intervention that nonspecialist
|
|
health workers in PHC delivered was acceptable, feasible, and perceived
|
|
to have positive benefits. To extend the impact of the intervention, the
|
|
community needs to be involved to address low awareness and to tackle
|
|
stigma.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Zewdu, S (Corresponding Author), Addis Ababa Univ, Coll Hlth Sci, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
|
|
Zewdu, Selamawit; Hanlon, Charlotte; Fekadu, Abebaw; Teferra, Solomon, Addis Ababa Univ, Coll Hlth Sci, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat,Who Collaborating Ctr Mental Hlth R, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
|
|
Zewdu, Selamawit, Debre Markos Univ, Coll Hlth Sci, Debre Markos, Ethiopia.
|
|
Hanlon, Charlotte, Kings Coll London, Ctr Global Mental Hlth, Inst Psychiat Psychol \& Neurosci, Hlth Serv \& Populat Res Dept, London, England.
|
|
Hanlon, Charlotte; Fekadu, Abebaw, Addis Ababa Univ, Coll Hlth Sci, Ctr Innovat Drug Dev \& Therapeut Trials Africa CD, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
|
|
Fekadu, Abebaw, Brighton \& Sussex Med Sch, Global Hlth \& Infect Dept, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
|
|
Fekadu, Abebaw, Kings Coll London, Ctr Affect Disorders, Inst Psychiat Psychol \& Neurosci, London, England.
|
|
Medhin, Girmay, Addis Ababa Univ, Aklilu Lemma Inst Pathobiol, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
|
|
Teferra, Solomon, Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jsat.2021.108636},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {108636},
|
|
ISSN = {0740-5472},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-6483},
|
|
Keywords = {Alcohol use disorders; Task-shifting; Brief intervention;
|
|
Implementation; Primary health care; and middle-income countries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOUTH-AFRICA; PREDICTORS; MAGNITUDE; DISTRICT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Clinical; Substance Abuse},
|
|
Author-Email = {dr.selamawit.zewdu@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Hanlon, Charlotte/AAH-7769-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Hanlon, Charlotte/0000-0002-7937-3226
|
|
Medhin, Girmay/0000-0003-2146-4261},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000747559800003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000253869300001,
|
|
Author = {Sagbakken, Mette and Frich, Jan C. and Bjune, Gunnar},
|
|
Title = {Barriers and enablers in the management of tuberculosis treatment in
|
|
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: a qualitative study},
|
|
Journal = {BMC PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Month = {JAN 11},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Non-adherence to tuberculosis (TB) treatment is an important
|
|
barrier for TB control programs because incomplete treatment may result
|
|
in prolonged infectiousness, drug resistance, relapse, and death. The
|
|
aim of the present study is to explore enablers and barriers in the
|
|
management of TB treatment during the first five months of treatment in
|
|
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
|
|
Methods: Qualitative study which included 50 in-depth interviews and two
|
|
focus groups with TB patients, their relatives and health personnel.
|
|
Results: We found that loss of employment or the possibility to work led
|
|
to a chain of interrelated barriers for most TB patients. Daily
|
|
treatment was time-consuming and physically demanding, and rigid
|
|
routines at health clinics reinforced many of the emerging problems.
|
|
Patients with limited access to financial or practical help from
|
|
relatives or friends experienced that the total costs of attending
|
|
treatment exceeded their available resources. This was a barrier to
|
|
adherence already during early stages of treatment. A large group of
|
|
patients still managed to continue treatment, mainly because relatives
|
|
or community members provided food, encouragement and sometimes money
|
|
for transport. Lack of income over time, combined with daily
|
|
accumulating costs and other struggles, made patients vulnerable to
|
|
interruption during later stages of treatment. Patients who were poor
|
|
due to illness or slow progression, and who did not manage to restore
|
|
their health and social status, were particularly vulnerable to
|
|
non-adherence. Such patients lost access to essential financial and
|
|
practical support over time, often because relatives and friends were
|
|
financially and socially exhausted by supporting them.
|
|
Conclusion: Patients' ability to manage TB treatment is a product of
|
|
dynamic processes, in which social and economic costs and other burdens
|
|
change and interplay over time. Interventions to facilitate adherence to
|
|
TB treatment needs to address both time-specific and local factors.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sagbakken, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Oslo, Sect Int Hlth, Inst Gen Practice \& Community Med, POB 1130, NO-0318 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Sagbakken, Mette, Univ Oslo, Sect Int Hlth, Inst Gen Practice \& Community Med, NO-0318 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Frich, Jan C., Univ Oslo, Res Unit Gen Practice, Inst Gen Practice \& Community Med, NO-0318 Oslo, Norway.
|
|
Bjune, Gunnar, Univ Oslo, Sect Int Hlth, Inst Gen Practise \& Community Med, NO-0318 Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1471-2458-8-11},
|
|
Article-Number = {11},
|
|
ISSN = {1471-2458},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DIRECTLY OBSERVED THERAPY; PATIENT COMPLIANCE; RURAL DISTRICT; TB CLUBS;
|
|
COMMUNITY; OPPORTUNITIES; AFRICA; DOTS; CARE; DETERMINANTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {mette.sagbakken@medisin.uio.no
|
|
j.c.d.frich@medisin.uio.no
|
|
g.a.bjune@medisin.uio.no},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Frich, Jan C./0000-0001-9079-7508},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {75},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000253869300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000594388000001,
|
|
Author = {Golembeski, Cynthia A. and Irfan, Ans and Dong, Kimberly R.},
|
|
Title = {Food Insecurity and Collateral Consequences of Punishment Amidst the
|
|
COVID-19 Pandemic},
|
|
Journal = {WORLD MEDICAL \& HEALTH POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {357-373},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Bipartisan governmental representatives and the public support
|
|
investment in health care, housing, education, and nutrition programs,
|
|
plus resources for people leaving prison and jail (Halpin, 2018; Johnson
|
|
\& Beletsky, 2020; USCCR, 2019). The Personal Responsibility and Work
|
|
Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 banned people with felony drug
|
|
convictions from receiving food stamps or Supplemental Nutrition
|
|
Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. Food insecurity, recidivism, and
|
|
poor mental and physical health outcomes are associated with such bans.
|
|
Several states have overturned SNAP benefit bans, yet individuals with
|
|
criminal convictions are still denied benefits due to eligibility
|
|
criteria modifications. COVID-19 has impaired lower-income,
|
|
food-insecure communities, which disproportionately absorb people
|
|
released from prison and jail. Reentry support is sorely lacking.
|
|
Meanwhile, COVID-19 introduces immediate novel health risks, economic
|
|
insecurity, and jail and prison population reductions and early release.
|
|
Thirty to 50 percent of people in prisons and jails, which are COVID-19
|
|
hotspots, have been released early (Flagg \& Neff, 2020; New York Times,
|
|
2020; Vera, 2020). The Families First Coronavirus Response Act increases
|
|
flexibility in providing emergency SNAP supplements and easing program
|
|
administration during the pandemic. Meanwhile, the U.S. Commission on
|
|
Civil Rights recommends eliminating SNAP benefit restrictions based on
|
|
criminal convictions, which fail to prevent recidivism, promote public
|
|
safety, or relate to underlying crimes. Policy improvements,
|
|
administrative flexibility, and cross-sector collaboration can
|
|
facilitate SNAP benefit access, plus safer, healthier transitioning from
|
|
jail or prison to the community.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Golembeski, CA (Corresponding Author), Rutgers State Univ, Law \& Publ Adm, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
|
|
Golembeski, Cynthia A., Rutgers State Univ, Law \& Publ Adm, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
|
|
Irfan, Ans, DrPH Coalit, Policy \& Programming, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Irfan, Ans, Milken Inst Sch Publ Hlth, Washington, DC USA.
|
|
Irfan, Ans, Robert Wood Johnson Fdn, Baltimore, MD USA.
|
|
Dong, Kimberly R., Tufts Univ, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth \& Community Med, Medford, MA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/wmh3.378},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {DEC 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {1948-4682},
|
|
Keywords = {nutrition; equity; COVID; criminal justice},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PUBLIC-HEALTH; PATERNAL INCARCERATION; CRIMINAL-JUSTICE; RISK BEHAVIORS;
|
|
DISPARITIES; ASSISTANCE; SECURITY; HIV; LANGUAGE; GENDER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {cag348@rutgers.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Golembeski, Cynthia A/AAI-6895-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Golembeski, Cynthia A/0000-0002-0749-5566
|
|
Dong, Kimberly/0000-0001-9941-2942
|
|
Irfan, Ans/0000-0002-4404-5812},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {87},
|
|
Times-Cited = {9},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000594388000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000254576800069,
|
|
Author = {Cabana, Michael D. and Chaffin, D. Curt and Jarlsberg, Leah G. and
|
|
Thyne, Shannon M. and Clark, Noreen M.},
|
|
Title = {Selective provision of asthma self-management tools to families},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {121},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {E900-E905},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE. Providing asthma education in a primary care setting can be
|
|
challenging because of time and resource constraints. The purpose of
|
|
this work was to determine factors associated with the provision of
|
|
different asthma self-management tools.
|
|
METHODS. We conducted a cross-sectional survey with 896 parents of
|
|
children with asthma (age 2-12 years). We collected information
|
|
regarding demographics and asthma care, including parent receipt of an
|
|
asthma action plan, a symptom diary, and asthma information materials;
|
|
whether an asthma management plan was sent to the child's school; and
|
|
whether the physician reviewed written instructions on use of a
|
|
metereddose inhaler. We used multivariate logistic regression methods to
|
|
determine factors associated with receipt of different asthma
|
|
self-management tools controlling for demographic factors.
|
|
RESULTS. For families where parents only completed high school, there
|
|
was greater likelihood of receipt of an asthma action plan and physician
|
|
review of written instructions about how to use an inhaler. For families
|
|
with a household income less than twice the poverty line, there was
|
|
greater likelihood of receipt of an asthma action plan, the physician
|
|
sending a letter to the child's school regarding the child's asthma, and
|
|
receipt of an asthma symptom diary.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS. In our sample, primary care pediatricians do not routinely
|
|
provide asthma education in accordance with National Heart, Lung, and
|
|
Blood Institute asthma guidelines and ``triage{''} which families
|
|
receive additional asthma education. We believe that the use of targeted
|
|
asthma education is a symptom of the limited time and competing demands
|
|
during a typical visit. As a result, those involved in quality
|
|
improvement need to help physicians become more efficient and effective
|
|
at providing asthma education within such time constraints or develop
|
|
alternative systems of providing asthma education.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cabana, MD (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, Div Gen Pediat, 3333 Calif St,Laurel Hts,Bldg 245, San Francisco, CA 94118 USA.
|
|
Cabana, Michael D.; Jarlsberg, Leah G.; Thyne, Shannon M., Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Pediat, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Cabana, Michael D., Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Epidemiol \& Biostat, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Cabana, Michael D., Univ Calif San Francisco, Inst Hlth Policy Studies, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Chaffin, D. Curt, Univ Michigan Hlth Syst, Dept Med, Div Allergy, Ann Arbor, MI USA.
|
|
Clark, Noreen M., Univ Michigan, Ctr Managing Chron Dis, Ann Arbor, MI USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1542/peds.2007-1559},
|
|
ISSN = {0031-4005},
|
|
Keywords = {asthma action plan; asthma diary; physician practice patterns; physician
|
|
guideline adherence},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE UTILIZATION; INNER-CITY; CHILDREN; PHYSICIANS; MEDICATIONS;
|
|
GUIDELINES; PREDICTORS; ADHERENCE; BARRIERS; OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {michael.cabana@ucsf.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jarlsberg, Leah/0000-0001-6548-6337},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {24},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000254576800069},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000387229900012,
|
|
Author = {Merenlender, Adina M. and Crall, Alycia W. and Drill, Sabrina and
|
|
Prysby, Michelle and Ballard, Heidi},
|
|
Title = {Evaluating environmental education, citizen science, and stewardship
|
|
through naturalist programs},
|
|
Journal = {CONSERVATION BIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {30},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {1255-1265},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Amateur naturalists have played an important role in the study and
|
|
conservation of nature since the 17th century. Today, naturalist groups
|
|
make important contributions to bridge the gap between conservation
|
|
science and practice around the world. We examined data from 2 regional
|
|
naturalist programs to understand participant motivations, barriers, and
|
|
perspectives as well as the actions they take to advance science,
|
|
stewardship, and community engagement. These programs provide
|
|
certification-based natural history and conservation science training
|
|
for adults that is followed by volunteer service in citizen science,
|
|
education, and stewardship. Studies in California and Virginia include
|
|
quantitative and qualitative evaluation data collected through pre- and
|
|
postcourse surveys, interviews, and long-term tracking of volunteer
|
|
hours. Motivations of participants focused on learning about the local
|
|
environment and plants and animals, connecting with nature, becoming
|
|
certified, and spending time with people who have similar interests.
|
|
Over half the participants surveyed were over 50 years old, two-thirds
|
|
were women, and a majority reported household incomes of over \$50,000
|
|
(60\% in California, 85\% in Virginia), and <20\% of those surveyed in
|
|
both states described themselves as nonwhite. Thus, these programs need
|
|
to improve participation by a wider spectrum of the public. We
|
|
interviewed younger and underrepresented adults to examine barriers to
|
|
participation in citizen science. The primary barrier was lack of time
|
|
due to the need to work and focus on career advancement. Survey data
|
|
revealed that participants' ecological knowledge, scientific skills, and
|
|
belief in their ability to address environmental issues increased after
|
|
training. Documented conservation actions taken by the participants
|
|
include invasive plant management, habitat restoration, and cleanups of
|
|
natural areas and streams. Long-term data from Virginia on volunteer
|
|
hours dedicated to environmental citizen science show an increase from
|
|
14\% in 2007 to 32\% in 2014. In general, participants in the naturalist
|
|
programs we examined increased their content knowledge about ecosystems,
|
|
had greater confidence in conserving them, and continued to engage as
|
|
citizen scientists after completing the program.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Merenlender, AM (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy \& Management, 137 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
|
|
Merenlender, Adina M., Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy \& Management, 137 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
|
|
Crall, Alycia W.; Prysby, Michelle, Virginia Tech, 460 Stagecoach Rd,Suite E201, Charlottesville, VA 22902 USA.
|
|
Drill, Sabrina, Los Angeles Ventura Counties, UC Cooperat Extens, 669 Cty Sq Dr, Ventura, CA 93003 USA.
|
|
Ballard, Heidi, Univ Calif Davis, Sch Educ, One Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/cobi.12737},
|
|
ISSN = {0888-8892},
|
|
EISSN = {1523-1739},
|
|
Keywords = {diversity; ecological monitoring; natural history; UC California
|
|
Naturalist; Virginia Master Naturalist; volunteers},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {VOLUNTEERS; KNOWLEDGE; ATTITUDES; BEHAVIOR; HISTORY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {adinam@berkeley.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Drill, Sabrina/0000-0001-8243-7422
|
|
MERENLENDER, Adina/0000-0002-0681-8642},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {69},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {224},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000387229900012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000413985000006,
|
|
Author = {Beukes, Rochelle and Jansen, Ada and Moses, Mariana and Yu, Derek},
|
|
Title = {Exploring the Eligibility Criteria of the Child Support Grant and its
|
|
Impact on Poverty},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {134},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {511-529},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {One of the most important policy objectives in the post-apartheid South
|
|
African economy is to reduce poverty. Although economic growth and job
|
|
creation are the preferred sources of alleviating poverty and
|
|
inequality, social grant spending has contributed significantly to
|
|
reduce poverty (Van der Berg et al. in Poverty trends since the
|
|
transition: what we know. Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers: 19/09.
|
|
Stellenbosch: Stellenbosch University, 2009). Recently proposals were
|
|
tabled by the Department of Social Development of South Africa (Fin24 in
|
|
R3.3bn plan to extend child support grant to 21.
|
|
http://www.fin24.com/Economy/R33bn-child-care-grant-extension-to-21-on-c
|
|
ards-20150316. Accessed August 7, 2015, 2015) to extend the age
|
|
eligibility of the child support grant (CSG) to 21 years (at the time of
|
|
writing children aged up to 18 years are eligible). This sparked an
|
|
interest to investigate the impact on poverty of changes to the
|
|
eligibility criteria of CSG, as well as its fiscal implications. Using
|
|
person and household data from the 2010/2011 Income and Expenditure
|
|
Survey, various simulations are performed to assess the impact on
|
|
poverty rates and changes to social spending, given the following
|
|
changes: (1) if all age-eligible children applied; (2) if all
|
|
beneficiaries received the grant amount for the full 12-month duration;
|
|
(3) if the age eligibility criterion is extended; and (4) if the monthly
|
|
child grant income amount is revised upwards. We also examine how
|
|
changes in the eligibility criteria affect the income distribution.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Yu, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Western Cape, Dept Econ, Private Bag X17, ZA-7535 Bellville, South Africa.
|
|
Beukes, Rochelle; Moses, Mariana; Yu, Derek, Univ Western Cape, Dept Econ, Private Bag X17, ZA-7535 Bellville, South Africa.
|
|
Jansen, Ada, Stellenbosch Univ, Dept Econ, Private Bag X1, ZA-7602 Matieland, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11205-016-1433-z},
|
|
ISSN = {0303-8300},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-0921},
|
|
Keywords = {Child support grant; South Africa; Poverty; Simulations; Fiscal impact;
|
|
Equity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOUTH-AFRICA},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {rgallant01@gmail.com
|
|
ada@sun.ac.za
|
|
mmoses@uwc.ac.za
|
|
dyu@uwc.ac.za},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Jansen, Ada/0000-0003-1430-2221},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000413985000006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000913167500001,
|
|
Author = {Sachar, Amrit and Breslin, Niki and Ng, Sze May},
|
|
Title = {An integrated care model for mental health in diabetes: Recommendations
|
|
for local implementation by the Diabetes and Mental Health Expert
|
|
Working Group in England},
|
|
Journal = {DIABETIC MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {ContextIn 2019, NHS England and Diabetes UK convened an Expert Working
|
|
Group (EWG) in order to develop a Model and recommendations to guide
|
|
commissioning and provision of mental health care in diabetes pathways
|
|
and diabetes care in mental health pathways. The recommendations are
|
|
based on a combination of evidence, national guidance, case studies and
|
|
expert opinion from across the UK and form other long term conditions.
|
|
The case for integrationThere is good the evidence around the high
|
|
prevalence of co-morbidity between diabetes and mental illness of all
|
|
severities and, the poorer diabetes and mental health outcomes for
|
|
patients when this co-morbidity exists. Detecting and managing the
|
|
mental health co-morbidity improves these outcomes, but the evidence
|
|
suggests that detection of mental illness is poor in the context of
|
|
diabetes care in community and acute care settings and that when it is
|
|
detected, the access to appropriate mental health resource is variable
|
|
and generally inadequate. The Model of integrated care for diabetesThe
|
|
EWG developed a one-page Model with five core principles and five
|
|
operational work-streams to support the delivery of integration, with
|
|
examples of local case studies for local implementation. The five core
|
|
principals are: Care for all-describing how care for all PWD needs to
|
|
explore what matters to them and that emotional wellbeing is supported
|
|
at diagnosis and beyond; Support and information-describing how HCPs
|
|
should appropriately signpost to mental health support and the need for
|
|
structured education programmes to include mental healthcare
|
|
information; Needs identified-describing how PWD should have their
|
|
mental health needs identified and acted on; Integrated care-describing
|
|
how people with mental illness and diabetes should have their diabetes
|
|
considered within their mental health care; Specialist care-describing
|
|
how PWD should be able to access specialist diabetes mental health
|
|
professionals. The five cross cutting work-streams for operationalising
|
|
the principles are: Implementing training and upskilling of HCPs;
|
|
Embedding mental health screening and assessment into diabetes pathways;
|
|
Ensuring access to clear, integrated local pathways; Ensuring addressing
|
|
health inequalities is incorporated at every stage of service
|
|
development; Improving access to specialist mental health services
|
|
through commissioning. Discussion and conclusionsThe Model can be
|
|
implemented in part or completely, at an individual level, all the way
|
|
up to system level. It can be adapted across the life span and the UK,
|
|
and having learnt from other long term conditions, there is a lot of
|
|
transferability across all long term conditions There is an opportunity
|
|
for ICBs to consider economies of scale across multiple long term
|
|
conditions for which there will be a significant overlap of patients
|
|
within the local population. Any local implementation should be in
|
|
co-production with experts by experience and third sector providers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sachar, A (Corresponding Author), Imperial Coll Healthcare NHS Trust, Charing Cross \& Hammersmith Hosp, Liaison Psychiat Serv, London, England.
|
|
Sachar, A (Corresponding Author), West London NHS Trust, London, England.
|
|
Sachar, Amrit, Imperial Coll Healthcare NHS Trust, Charing Cross \& Hammersmith Hosp, Liaison Psychiat Serv, London, England.
|
|
Sachar, Amrit, West London NHS Trust, London, England.
|
|
Ng, Sze May, Southport \& Ormskirk NHS Trust, Paediat Dept, Southport, England.
|
|
Ng, Sze May, Univ Liverpool, Dept Womens \& Childrens Hlth, Liverpool, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/dme.15029},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0742-3071},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5491},
|
|
Keywords = {commissioning; diabetes pathway; integration; mental health; mental
|
|
illness; psychological; self care},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IMPROVE GLYCEMIC CONTROL; PSYCHOLOGICAL INTERVENTIONS;
|
|
PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS; RISK; PEOPLE; ADULTS; METAANALYSIS; DEPRESSION;
|
|
OUTCOMES; ILLNESS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Endocrinology \& Metabolism},
|
|
Author-Email = {amrit.sachar@nhs.net},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Ng, Sze/E-2646-2012},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Ng, Sze/0000-0002-3449-0541},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000913167500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000473753700014,
|
|
Author = {Grasso, Alessandra C. and Olthof, Margreet R. and Boeve, Anja J. and van
|
|
Dooren, Corne and Lahteenmaki, Liisa and Brouwer, Ingeborg A.},
|
|
Title = {Socio-Demographic Predictors of Food Waste Behavior in Denmark and Spain},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Month = {JUN 2},
|
|
Abstract = {Food waste generated at the household level represents about half of the
|
|
total food waste in high-income countries, making consumers a target for
|
|
food waste reduction strategies. To successfully reduce consumer food
|
|
waste, it is necessary to have an understanding of factors influencing
|
|
food waste behaviors (FWB). The objective of this study was to
|
|
investigate socio-demographic predictors of FWB among consumers in two
|
|
European countries: Denmark and Spain. Based on a survey involving 1518
|
|
Danish and 1511 Spanish consumers, we examined the associations of age,
|
|
sex, education, marital status, employment status, and household size
|
|
with FWB. By using structural equation modeling based on confirmatory
|
|
factor analysis, we created the variable FWB from self-reported food
|
|
waste and two activities that have been correlated with the amount of
|
|
food wasted in previous studies: namely, shopping routines and food
|
|
preparation. Results show that being older, unemployed, and working
|
|
part-time were associated with less food waste behavior in both
|
|
countries. In Denmark, being male was associated with more food waste
|
|
behavior, and living in a household with four or more people was
|
|
associated with less food waste behavior. These results underscore the
|
|
modest role of socio-demographic characteristics in predicting food
|
|
waste behavior in Europe.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Grasso, AC (Corresponding Author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Fac Sci, Dept Hlth Sci, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Grasso, AC (Corresponding Author), Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst, NL-1081 BT Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Grasso, Alessandra C.; Olthof, Margreet R.; Boeve, Anja J.; Brouwer, Ingeborg A., Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Fac Sci, Dept Hlth Sci, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
Grasso, Alessandra C.; Olthof, Margreet R.; Boeve, Anja J.; Brouwer, Ingeborg A., Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst, NL-1081 BT Amsterdam, Netherlands.
|
|
van Dooren, Corne, Netherlands Nutr Ctr, Voedingsctr, NL-2594 AC The Hague, Netherlands.
|
|
Lahteenmaki, Liisa, Aarhus Univ, MAPP Ctr, DK-8210 Aarhus V, Denmark.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su11123244},
|
|
Article-Number = {3244},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {food waste; behavior; socio-demographic; predictors; SEM},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HOUSEHOLD; CONSUMER; COVARIANCE; GENERATION; BARRIERS; VALIDITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {alessandra.grasso@vu.nl
|
|
margreet.olthof@vu.nl
|
|
a.j.boeve@vu.nl
|
|
dooren@voedingscentrum.nl
|
|
liisal@mgmt.au.dk
|
|
ingeborg.brouwer@vu.nl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Brouwer, Inge D/K-8455-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Grasso, Alessandra/0000-0002-2962-9502
|
|
Brouwer, Ingeborg/0000-0002-8762-382X
|
|
, Margreet/0000-0002-1982-9244},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {37},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {23},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000473753700014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000268892000001,
|
|
Author = {Nzinga, Jacinta and Mbindyo, Patrick and Mbaabu, Lairumbi and Warira,
|
|
Ann and English, Mike},
|
|
Title = {Documenting the experiences of health workers expected to implement
|
|
guidelines during an intervention study in Kenyan hospitals},
|
|
Journal = {IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {4},
|
|
Month = {JUL 23},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Although considerable efforts are directed at developing
|
|
international guidelines to improve clinical management in low-income
|
|
settings they appear to influence practice rarely. This study aimed to
|
|
explore barriers to guideline implementation in the early phase of an
|
|
intervention study in four district hospitals in Kenya.
|
|
Methods: We developed a simple interview guide based on a simple
|
|
characterisation of the intervention informed by review of major
|
|
theories on barriers to uptake of guidelines. In-depth interviews,
|
|
non-participatory observation, and informal discussions were then used
|
|
to explore perceived barriers to guideline introduction and general
|
|
improvements in paediatric and newborn care. Data were collected four to
|
|
five months after in-service training in the hospitals. Data were
|
|
transcribed, themes explored, and revised in two rounds of coding and
|
|
analysis using NVivo 7 software, subjected to a layered analysis,
|
|
reviewed, and revised after discussion with four hospital staff who
|
|
acted as within-hospital facilitators.
|
|
Results: A total of 29 health workers were interviewed. Ten major themes
|
|
preventing guideline uptake were identified: incomplete training
|
|
coverage; inadequacies in local standard setting and leadership; lack of
|
|
recognition and appreciation of good work; poor communication and
|
|
teamwork; organizational constraints and limited resources;
|
|
counterproductive health worker norms; absence of perceived benefits
|
|
linked to adoption of new practices; difficulties accepting change; lack
|
|
of motivation; and conflicting attitudes and beliefs.
|
|
Conclusion: While the barriers identified are broadly similar in theme
|
|
to those reported from high-income settings, their specific nature often
|
|
differs. For example, at an institutional level there is an almost
|
|
complete lack of systems to introduce or reinforce guidelines, poor
|
|
teamwork across different cadres of health worker, and failure to
|
|
confront poor practice. At an individual level, lack of interest in the
|
|
evidence supporting guidelines, feelings that they erode
|
|
professionalism, and expectations that people should be paid to change
|
|
practice threaten successful implementation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nzinga, J (Corresponding Author), KEMRI Wellcome Trust Programme, KEMRI Ctr Geog Med Res Coast, POB 43640, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
Nzinga, Jacinta; Mbindyo, Patrick; Mbaabu, Lairumbi; Warira, Ann; English, Mike, KEMRI Wellcome Trust Programme, KEMRI Ctr Geog Med Res Coast, Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
English, Mike, Univ Oxford, John Radcliffe Hosp, Dept Paediat, Oxford OX3 9DU, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1748-5908-4-44},
|
|
Article-Number = {44},
|
|
ISSN = {1748-5908},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CLINICAL-PRACTICE GUIDELINES; DISTRICT HOSPITALS; CHILDHOOD ILLNESS;
|
|
PLANNED BEHAVIOR; PEDIATRIC CARE; PUBLIC-SECTOR; NEWBORN CARE; QUALITY;
|
|
MOTIVATION; MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {jnzinga@nairobi.kemri-wellcome.org
|
|
pmbindyo@nairobi.kemri-wellcome.org
|
|
lmbaabu@nairobi.kemri-wellcome.org
|
|
awarira@nairobi.kemri-wellcome.org
|
|
menglish@nairobi.kemri-wellcome.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mbindyo, Patrick/0000-0003-0388-0026
|
|
Wanjuhi, Anne/0000-0002-4182-6939
|
|
English, Michael/0000-0002-7427-0826},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {44},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000268892000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000659982900001,
|
|
Author = {Mojtahedzadeh, Natascha and Rohwer, Elisabeth and Neumann, Felix
|
|
Alexander and Nienhaus, Albert and Augustin, Matthias and Zyriax,
|
|
Birgit-Christiane and Harth, Volker and Mache, Stefanie},
|
|
Title = {The Health Behaviour of German Outpatient Caregivers in Relation to
|
|
Their Working Conditions: A Qualitative Study},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {18},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Ongoing demographic change is leading to an increasingly older society
|
|
and a rising proportion of people in need of care in the German
|
|
population. Therefore, the professional group of outpatient caregivers
|
|
is highly relevant. Their work is characterised not only by interacting
|
|
with patients in a mobile setting but also by working in shifts. Health
|
|
behaviour under these specific working conditions is crucial for
|
|
ensuring long-term work ability and performance. Little is known about
|
|
the health behaviour of German outpatient caregivers and its potential
|
|
impact on their work. The aims of the study were (1) to examine health
|
|
behavioural patterns (nutrition, exercise, smoking, regeneration) of
|
|
outpatient caregivers, (2) to illuminate their personal health-promoting
|
|
behaviours, and (3) to identify potential work-related factors
|
|
influencing their health behaviour. Fifteen problem-centred interviews
|
|
were conducted with outpatient caregivers working in Northern Germany in
|
|
the period January-April 2020. Interviews were analysed by using
|
|
qualitative content analysis. Outpatient caregivers reported improvable
|
|
nutrition and hydration, with simultaneous high coffee consumption, low
|
|
physical activity, poor regeneration (breaks and sleep quality), and
|
|
good personal health-promoting behaviour (e.g., back-friendly habits),
|
|
although the majority were smokers. Barriers to the implementation of
|
|
health-promoting behaviours were a high perception of stress due to
|
|
increased workload and time pressure, while aids to better
|
|
health-promoting behaviour were described as being social support and
|
|
personal resources. The respondents perceived their working conditions
|
|
as potentially influencing their health behaviour. On the basis of their
|
|
descriptions, various practice-relevant strategies were derived. The
|
|
data explore a potential need for outpatient care services to develop
|
|
interventions on behavioural and structural levels that can help create
|
|
healthier working conditions for their employees so these caregivers can
|
|
adopt better health behaviours.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mache, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Med Ctr, Hamburg Eppendorf UKE, Inst Occupat \& Maritime Med ZfAM, Seewartenstr 10, D-20459 Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Mojtahedzadeh, Natascha; Rohwer, Elisabeth; Harth, Volker; Mache, Stefanie, Univ Med Ctr, Hamburg Eppendorf UKE, Inst Occupat \& Maritime Med ZfAM, Seewartenstr 10, D-20459 Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Neumann, Felix Alexander; Zyriax, Birgit-Christiane, Univ Med Ctr Hamburg Eppendorf UKE, Inst Hlth Serv Res Dermatol \& Nursing IVDP, Midwifery Sci Hlth Serv Res \& Prevent, Martinistr 52, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Nienhaus, Albert, Inst Statutory Accid Insurance \& Prevent Hlth \& W, Dept Occupat Med Hazardous Subst \& Publ Hlth, Pappelallee 33-35-37, D-22089 Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Nienhaus, Albert, Univ Med Ctr Hamburg Eppendorf UKE, Competence Ctr Epidemiol \& Hlth Serv Res Healthca, Inst Hlth Serv Res Dermatol \& Nursing IVDP, Martinistr 52, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany.
|
|
Augustin, Matthias, Univ Med Ctr Hamburg Eppendorf UKE, Competence Ctr Hlth Serv Res Vasc Dis CVvasc, Inst Hlth Serv Res Dermatol \& Nursing IVDP, Martinistr 52, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/ijerph18115942},
|
|
Article-Number = {5942},
|
|
EISSN = {1660-4601},
|
|
Keywords = {health behaviour; outpatient care; regeneration; nutrition; physical
|
|
activity; stress},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SHIFT WORK; SLEEP QUALITY; JOB STRESS; REGISTERED NURSES;
|
|
PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; MENTAL-HEALTH; GENDER BIAS; OCCUPATIONAL STRESS;
|
|
WORKPLACE STRESS; NURSING-STUDENTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {n.mojtahedzadeh@uke.de
|
|
e.rohwer@uke.de
|
|
fe.neumann@uke.de
|
|
a.nienhaus@uke.de
|
|
m.augustin@uke.de
|
|
b.zyriax@uke.de
|
|
harth@uke.de
|
|
s.mache@uke.de},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Neumann, Felix Alexander/ABG-4394-2021
|
|
Harth, Volker/AGG-1586-2022
|
|
Nienhaus, Albert/ISS-7060-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Neumann, Felix Alexander/0000-0003-3107-075X
|
|
Harth, Volker/0000-0003-4308-223X
|
|
Nienhaus, Albert/0000-0003-1881-7302
|
|
Mache, Stefanie/0000-0003-4979-0587
|
|
Rohwer, Elisabeth/0000-0003-0940-0150},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {178},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000659982900001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000919414700001,
|
|
Author = {Bisio, Laura and Cardinaleschi, Stefania and Leoni, Riccardo},
|
|
Title = {Complementary collective bargaining and firm performance: new evidence
|
|
for Italian firms},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {44},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {728-754},
|
|
Month = {MAY 31},
|
|
Abstract = {PurposeWithin the two-tier bargaining system, the role of complementary
|
|
collective bargaining is somewhat controversial. In this paper, the
|
|
authors analyse collective agreements from a triple perspective:
|
|
scanning the contents of firm-level complementary collective agreements
|
|
(CCAs); identifying the factors that determine the probability of
|
|
signing a CCA and analysing the relationship between the latter and firm
|
|
performance with a focus on the role of different negotiated
|
|
topics.Design/methodology/approachThe empirical procedure is based on 2
|
|
main linked sources: longitudinal balance sheet data and a
|
|
cross-sectional dataset of a representative sample of Italian firms with
|
|
at least 15 employees, including some retrospective information. The
|
|
innovative dataset derives from integrating multiple sources. The main
|
|
empirical approaches include Generalized Method of Moments (GMM)
|
|
estimations, multivariate regressions, as well as instrumental variable
|
|
(IV) estimations to overcome simultaneity issues.FindingsWith respect to
|
|
the probability of signing a CCA, on the firms' side, the authors find a
|
|
positive role of the degree of firm capitalisation and affiliation with
|
|
an employers' association and a negative role of family firms compared
|
|
to non-family firms; on the workers' side, a positive role of the
|
|
workers' unionisation rate and a positive but differentiated weight of
|
|
workers' union representations and industrial conflicts. With regard to
|
|
firm performance, the authors' estimates suggest that signing a CCA is
|
|
associated with an average increase of 3\% in total factor productivity
|
|
(TFP) and 7.8\% in labour productivity. By investigating the contents of
|
|
the complementarity agreements, the authors show that bargaining a wider
|
|
range of topics implies advantages that are not homogenous, benefitting
|
|
more efficient firms. Moreover, the authors find a specific positive and
|
|
significant role for three main interacting issues: economic incentives,
|
|
organisation and employment.Research limitations/implicationsThe
|
|
cross-sectional structure of the data on bargaining practices prevents
|
|
detecting causal relationships due to either potential common driver(s)
|
|
of both the target variables (firm performance) and bargaining practices
|
|
(simultaneity bias) and unobservable time-invariant firm-level
|
|
characteristics (heterogeneity bias).Practical implicationsAccording to
|
|
the authors' results, policymakers should operate along four fiscal
|
|
channels to spur the efficiency of firms, via CCA. First, tax incentives
|
|
stimulate higher firm capitalisation, as this seems to be a
|
|
CCA-favouring factor. Second, deduction in taxable income for union
|
|
members, which should led to higher membership rates, hence raising the
|
|
likelihood of obtaining a CCA. Third, incentives aimed at directly
|
|
promoting the greater diffusion of CCAs as a source of improved
|
|
performance. Fourth, fiscal tools aimed at favouring the negotiation of
|
|
either specific contents or ``bundles{''} of contents, which the
|
|
authors' estimates show as an additional performance-enhancing tool of
|
|
CCA practices.Originality/valueThe conceptualisation of the contents of
|
|
CCA as organisational investments and the whole probability function of
|
|
signing a CCA are quite innovative. Moreover, the econometric strategy
|
|
takes account of several potential sources of bias when estimating the
|
|
relevant coefficients at each stage, which is currently not fully
|
|
considered in the literature.
|
|
Finally, this is the first study to shed light on both the diverse
|
|
outcomes associated with different negotiated topics (in terms of
|
|
quantity and quality) and the distinction between short and medium-long
|
|
term effects.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bisio, L; Cardinaleschi, S (Corresponding Author), ISTAT Italian Natl Inst Stat, Rome, Italy.
|
|
Leoni, R (Corresponding Author), Univ Bergamo, Dept Econ, Bergamo, Italy.
|
|
Bisio, Laura; Cardinaleschi, Stefania, ISTAT Italian Natl Inst Stat, Rome, Italy.
|
|
Leoni, Riccardo, Univ Bergamo, Dept Econ, Bergamo, Italy.
|
|
Leoni, Riccardo, Interuniv Res Ctr Ezio Tarantelli, Rome, Italy.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJM-06-2021-0373},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JAN 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {0143-7720},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6577},
|
|
Keywords = {Productivity; Employee participation; Collective bargaining; Labour and
|
|
management relations},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LABOR PRODUCTIVITY; INFORMATION-TECHNOLOGY; WORKS COUNCILS; FLEXIBLE
|
|
PAY; WAGES; PANEL; FAMILY; REPRESENTATION; COMPETE; REFORM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {bisio@istat.it
|
|
cardinal@istat.it
|
|
riccardo.leoni08@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Leoni, Riccardo/0000-0002-8649-3672},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000919414700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000515092200015,
|
|
Author = {Magwood, Olivia and Leki, Vanessa Ymele and Kpade, Victoire and Saad,
|
|
Ammar and Alkhateeb, Qasem and Gebremeskel, Akalewold and Rehman, Asia
|
|
and Hannigan, Terry and Pinto, Nicole and Sun, Annie Huiru and Kendall,
|
|
Claire and Kozloff, Nicole and Tweed, Emily J. and Ponka, David and
|
|
Pottie, Kevin},
|
|
Title = {Common trust and personal safety issues: A systematic review on the
|
|
acceptability of health and social interventions for persons with lived
|
|
experience of homelessness},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Month = {DEC 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Persons experiencing homelessness and vulnerable housing or those with
|
|
lived experience of homelessness have worse health outcomes than
|
|
individuals who are stably housed. Structural violence can dramatically
|
|
affect their acceptance of interventions. We carried out a systematic
|
|
review to understand the factors that influence the acceptability of
|
|
social and health interventions among persons with lived experience of
|
|
homelessness.
|
|
Methods
|
|
We searched through eight bibliographic databases and selected grey
|
|
literature sources for articles that were published between 1994 and
|
|
2019. We selected primary studies that reported on the experiences of
|
|
homeless populations interacting with practitioners and service
|
|
providers working in permanent supportive housing, case management,
|
|
interventions for substance use, income assistance, and women- and
|
|
youth-specific interventions. Each study was independently assessed for
|
|
its methodological quality. We used a framework analysis to identify key
|
|
finding and used the GRADE-CERQuaI approach to assess confidence in the
|
|
key findings.
|
|
Findings
|
|
Our search identified 11,017 citations of which 35 primary studies met
|
|
our inclusion criteria. Our synthesis highlighted that individuals were
|
|
marginalized, dehumanized and excluded by their lived homelessness
|
|
experience. As a result, trust and personal safety were highly valued
|
|
within human interactions. Lived experience of homelessness influenced
|
|
attitudes toward health and social service professionals and sometimes
|
|
led to reluctance to accept interventions. Physical and structural
|
|
violence intersected with low self-esteem, depression and
|
|
homeless-related stigma. Positive self-identity facilitated links to
|
|
long-term and integrated services, peer support, and patient-centred
|
|
engagement.
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
Individuals with lived experience of homelessness face considerable
|
|
marginalization, dehumanization and structural violence. Practitioners
|
|
and social service providers should consider anti-oppressive approaches
|
|
and provide, refer to, or advocate for health and structural
|
|
interventions using the principles of trauma-informed care. Accepting
|
|
and respecting others as they are, without judgment, may help
|
|
practitioners navigate barriers to inclusiveness, equitability, and
|
|
effectiveness for primary care that targets this marginalized
|
|
population.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pottie, K (Corresponding Author), Bruyere Res Inst, CT Lamont Primary Hlth Care Res Ctr, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
|
|
Pottie, K (Corresponding Author), Univ Ottawa, Dept Family Med, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
|
|
Magwood, Olivia; Saad, Ammar; Alkhateeb, Qasem; Gebremeskel, Akalewold; Rehman, Asia; Hannigan, Terry; Sun, Annie Huiru; Kendall, Claire; Pottie, Kevin, Bruyere Res Inst, CT Lamont Primary Hlth Care Res Ctr, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
|
|
Leki, Vanessa Ymele, MyHlth Ctr, PET CT Dept, Mississauga, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kpade, Victoire, McGill Univ Montreal, Fac Med, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Saad, Ammar; Kendall, Claire; Pottie, Kevin, Univ Ottawa, Sch Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
|
|
Pinto, Nicole, Univ Guelph, Dept Populat Med, Guelph, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kendall, Claire; Ponka, David; Pottie, Kevin, Univ Ottawa, Dept Family Med, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kendall, Claire, OHRI, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kendall, Claire, St Michaels Hosp, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kozloff, Nicole, Univ Toronto, Ctr Addict \& Mental Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kozloff, Nicole, Univ Toronto, Dept Psychiat, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Kozloff, Nicole, Univ Toronto, Inst Hlth Policy Management \& Evaluat, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Tweed, Emily J., Univ Glasgow, MRC CSO Social \& Publ Hlth Sci Unit, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0226306},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0226306},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PEOPLES VIEWS; FRAMEWORK; PROGRAM; SERVICE; WOMEN; CARE; PERSPECTIVES;
|
|
GENDER; DETERMINANTS; PERCEPTIONS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {kpottie@uottawa.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pottie, Kevin/ABC-4385-2020
|
|
LI, LINGJUAN/IAR-7701-2023
|
|
Magwood, Olivia/IST-7319-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Magwood, Olivia/0000-0003-0262-5621
|
|
Tweed, Emily J./0000-0001-6659-812X
|
|
Saad, Ammar/0000-0002-3145-4596
|
|
Sun, Annie H./0000-0003-2002-7115
|
|
Gebremeskel, Akalewold Tadesse/0000-0001-5141-8018
|
|
Pottie, Kevin/0000-0002-1874-8346
|
|
Ponka, David/0000-0003-0902-8520
|
|
Kozloff, Nicole/0000-0003-1389-1351},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {105},
|
|
Times-Cited = {40},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000515092200015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000257951900005,
|
|
Author = {Haughton, Betsy and George, Alexa},
|
|
Title = {The Public Health Nutrition workforce and its future challenges: the US
|
|
experience},
|
|
Journal = {PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION},
|
|
Year = {2008},
|
|
Volume = {11},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {782-791},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: To describe the US public health nutrition workforce and its
|
|
future social, biological and fiscal challenges.
|
|
Design: Literature review primarily for the four workforce Surveys
|
|
conducted since 1985 by the Association of State and Territorial Public
|
|
Health Nutrition Directors.
|
|
Setting: The United States.
|
|
Subjects: Nutrition personnel working in governmental health agencies.
|
|
The 1985 and 1987 subjects were personnel in full-time budgeted
|
|
positions employed in governmental health agencies providing
|
|
predominantly population-based services. In 1994 and 1999 subjects were
|
|
both full-time and part-time, employed in or funded by governmental
|
|
health agencies, and provided both direct-care and population-based
|
|
services.
|
|
Results: The workforce primarily focuses on direct-care services for
|
|
pregnant and breast-feeding women, infants and children. The US
|
|
Department of Agriculture funds 81-7 \% of full-time equivalent
|
|
positions, primarily through the WIC Program (Special Supplemental
|
|
Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children). Of those personnel
|
|
working in WIC, 45\% have at least 10 years of experience compared to
|
|
over 65\% of the non-WIC workforce. Continuing education needs of the
|
|
WIC and non-WIC workforces differ. The workforce is increasingly more
|
|
racially/ethnically diverse and with 18-2\% speaking Spanish as a second
|
|
language.
|
|
Conclusions: The future workforce will need to focus on increasing its
|
|
diversity and cultural competence, and likely will need to address
|
|
retirement within leadership positions. Little is known about the
|
|
workforce's capacity to address the needs of the elderly, emergency
|
|
preparedness and behavioural interventions. Fiscal challenges will
|
|
require evidence-based practice demonstrating both costs and impact.
|
|
Little is known about the broader public health nutrition workforce
|
|
beyond governmental health agencies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Haughton, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Tennessee, Dept Nutr, 1215 W Cumberland Ave 229,Jessie Harris Bldg, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA.
|
|
Haughton, Betsy; George, Alexa, Univ Tennessee, Dept Nutr, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/S1368980008001821},
|
|
ISSN = {1368-9800},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-2727},
|
|
Keywords = {Public Health Nutrition; workforce; United States},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WEIGHT-GAIN; STATE HEALTH; LOW-INCOME; OVERWEIGHT; FOOD; PREVALENCE;
|
|
CHILDREN; OBESITY; ADOLESCENTS; DISPARITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Nutrition \& Dietetics},
|
|
Author-Email = {haughton@utk.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {68},
|
|
Times-Cited = {21},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000257951900005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000904729000009,
|
|
Author = {Hordiyenko, Vyacheslav and Hordiyenko, Halina},
|
|
Title = {DISABLED PEOPLE OF GREAT PATRIOTIC WAR IN POST-WAR UKRAINE 1945-1950},
|
|
Journal = {EMINAK},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {130-146},
|
|
Month = {APR-JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of the paper is to highlight the living conditions of
|
|
disabled people of the Great Patriotic War in post-war Ukraine, which
|
|
were resulted from certain measures for the social protection of that
|
|
social group, implemented by the party-government leadership of the
|
|
republic.
|
|
The scientific novelty is in the fact that the study focuses on
|
|
manifestations of discrimination by the authorities against certain
|
|
groups of the social community of disabled front-line soldiers in the
|
|
Ukrainian SSR.
|
|
Conclusions. The process of legal registration of the social group
|
|
`invalids of the Great Patriotic War' in the USSR and the Ukrainian SSR
|
|
began in 1940 and continued until the end of the Second World War. The
|
|
disabled of the Soviet-German War were legally separated from all social
|
|
groups of the social security system and had a number of rights and
|
|
privileges. At the same time, the practice of implementing the policy of
|
|
the disabled WWII soldiers' social protection by the party-government
|
|
leadership of the USSR and Ukrainian SSR testified to a general tendency
|
|
to ignore those rights and privileges.
|
|
The facts of the encroachment of the highest-ranking Communist party and
|
|
government of the USSR and Ukraine representatives upon the process of
|
|
determining the degree of loss of labor capacity of disabled veterans
|
|
with the aim of reducing expenses for supporting their incomes are found
|
|
out. The reasons for such actions of the authorities are analyzed. The
|
|
dependence of the social protection of the war disabled on the
|
|
ideological guidelines of the communist state as well as the
|
|
command-administrative system of managing the economy and social policy
|
|
is revealed. Disabled WWII soldiers who lived in the villages were
|
|
discriminated against as well. They were paid a smaller pension, were
|
|
not given food stamps for a guaranteed supply of bread, and were not
|
|
exempted from taxes in kind in the form of harvesting agricultural
|
|
products. It was discrimination on social grounds.
|
|
The administrative and coercive character of the solution to the problem
|
|
of employment of disabled WWII soldiers in post-war Ukraine is proven.
|
|
The paper shows the facts of discrimination against disabled war
|
|
veterans with severe injuries who tried to survive on their own in hard
|
|
living conditions, engaging in petty trade or begging. Authorities
|
|
deprived them of freedom of movement, freedom of choice of occupation,
|
|
and even personal freedom, forcibly sending them to specialized
|
|
institutions. The top officials of the republic were also involved in
|
|
that.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Ukrainian},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hordiyenko, V (Corresponding Author), Pavlo Tychyna Uman State Pedag Univ, Uman, Ukraine.
|
|
Hordiyenko, Vyacheslav; Hordiyenko, Halina, Pavlo Tychyna Uman State Pedag Univ, Uman, Ukraine.},
|
|
DOI = {10.33782/eminak2022.2(38).586},
|
|
ISSN = {1998-4634},
|
|
EISSN = {2708-0226},
|
|
Keywords = {disabled of the Great Patriotic War; social protection; disability
|
|
category; pension; employment; discrimination; repressions},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DISABILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Archaeology; History; History \& Philosophy Of Science},
|
|
Author-Email = {liskovets62@gmail.com
|
|
galinagordienko@ukr.net},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {22},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000904729000009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000227335100001,
|
|
Author = {Hunt, KL and Czerwinski, J},
|
|
Book-Group-Author = {TRB},
|
|
Title = {Regional transit program for welfare to work in Chicago, Illinois -
|
|
Three years later},
|
|
Booktitle = {TRANSIT PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT, MANAGEMENT AND PERFORMANCE, MARKETING
|
|
AND FARE POLICY, AND CAPACITY AND QUALITY OF SERVICE},
|
|
Series = {TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH RECORD-SERIES},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Number = {1887},
|
|
Pages = {3-9},
|
|
Note = {83rd Annual Meeting of the Transportation-Research-Board, Washington,
|
|
DC, JAN 11-15, 2004},
|
|
Abstract = {The impact of the welfare-to-work (WtW) regional public transportation
|
|
program on participants in Chicago, Illinois, is reviewed 3 years after
|
|
an initial study. The regional transportation program provided free
|
|
transit passes and vanpool services to participants during their first 6
|
|
months of employment and training on regional transit options for job
|
|
developers. WtW participants' travel patterns were noted, social service
|
|
contractors were interviewed, and Temporary Aid to Needy Families (TANF)
|
|
clients were examined. In 2000, pass use for WtW participants and
|
|
regular 30-day pass users was determined to be almost identical because
|
|
of the strong economy of the late 1990s. Three years later, travel
|
|
patterns suggested that participants were beginning to find employment
|
|
farther from home, many in the job-rich O'Hare Airport corridor, and
|
|
that the costs and benefits of sending low-income workers to distant
|
|
work locations needed to be assessed. Although providing fare subsidies
|
|
that allow low-income workers to take advantage of existing
|
|
infrastructure may be helpful, transportation solutions probably will
|
|
not be enough to make a meaningful and sustained impact. The regional
|
|
transportation program illustrates the need for holistic approaches to
|
|
social policy. The disproportionate level of transit dependency, longer
|
|
travel times, and significantly higher use of public transit in many of
|
|
the Chicago communities that have the highest numbers of TANF clients
|
|
than in the city as a whole point to a serious need for affordable
|
|
housing near job centers in the Chicago region.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Hunt, KL (Corresponding Author), Univ Chicago, Harris Sch Publ Policy Studies, 5514 S Woodlawn Ave, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Univ Chicago, Harris Sch Publ Policy Studies, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
|
|
Chicago Transit Author, Serv Planning, Chicago, IL 60607 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0361-1981},
|
|
ISBN = {0-309-09482-8},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Engineering, Civil; Transportation; Transportation Science \& Technology},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {16},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000227335100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000847188200001,
|
|
Author = {Virola-V, Brenda Sofia and Abrego, Jeancarlos and Castillo, Dilma and
|
|
Bonilla, Eleodoro and Galvez, Dumas},
|
|
Title = {Who is working on ant physiology? There is room to improve international
|
|
collaborations},
|
|
Journal = {MYRMECOLOGICAL NEWS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {32},
|
|
Pages = {115-125},
|
|
Abstract = {Ants are an abundant and diverse group with worldwide distribution.
|
|
Given their omnipresence, ecosystem services, and potential
|
|
applications, ants may be excellent models for multiple lines of
|
|
research such as physiology. However, the focus and worldwide
|
|
distribution of ant physiology research are unknown. Given the evidence
|
|
of scientific colonialism in multiple scientific areas -where credit and
|
|
reward are not given to local scientists from developing nations when
|
|
scien-tist s from wealthier nations travel for research -we examined the
|
|
potential for such trends in studies of ant physiology. We investigated
|
|
the frequency of studies and collaborations across countries during 2015
|
|
-2019, which simultaneously allowed us to estimate the most studied
|
|
taxa. We found that the largest proportion of studies was done in Europe
|
|
and North America. Collaboration trends were mainly among high-income
|
|
countries. Nearly one third of the countries that served as sampling
|
|
sites were not represented in authorship (mostly low-and middle-income).
|
|
Furthermore, low-and middle-income countries show a lower proportion of
|
|
authorship or co-authorship when these countries served as sampling
|
|
sites, as compared with high-income countries. This disparity might
|
|
indicate scientific colonialism in the field. However, collaborations
|
|
between institutions from the sampling country and their foreign
|
|
counterparts increased with the per capita Gross Domestic Product,
|
|
suggesting a link between country's participation in international
|
|
collaboration and its economic prosperity. How publications are
|
|
circulated may further influence trends in scientific colonialism. Both
|
|
the probability that a study reaches the public sphere (Altmetric) and
|
|
the number of citations increase with the impact factor (IF) of the
|
|
journal in which the article was published. Unfortunately, high-IF
|
|
journals often show the highest Article Processing Charges, which can be
|
|
a financial impediment for institutions in low-and middle-income
|
|
countries. Our study highlights factors that influence the process of
|
|
research in this field. The evidence of scientific colonialism in ant
|
|
physiology that we highlight in this study calls for urgent measures to
|
|
promote more equitable collaborative efforts.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Galvez, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Panama, Programa Centroamer Maestria Entomol, Ciudad Univ,Apartado 3366, Panama City 4, Panama.
|
|
Virola-V, Brenda Sofia; Abrego, Jeancarlos; Castillo, Dilma; Galvez, Dumas, Univ Panama, Programa Centroamer Maestria Entomol, Ciudad Univ,Apartado 3366, Panama City 4, Panama.
|
|
Abrego, Jeancarlos; Galvez, Dumas, Sistema Nacl Invest, Edificio 205,Clayton Apartado 0816, Panama City 02852, Panama.
|
|
Bonilla, Eleodoro, Univ Panama, Escuela Biol, Ciudad Univ,Apartado 3366, Panama City 4, Panama.
|
|
Galvez, Dumas, Smithsonian Trop Res Inst, POB 0843, Panama City 03092, Panama.
|
|
Galvez, Dumas, Coiba Scienhf Stn, Calle Gustavo Lara,Bld 145B, Clayton, Vic 0843, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.25849/myrmecol.news\_032:115},
|
|
ISSN = {1994-4136},
|
|
Keywords = {Altmetric; ant physiology; Formicidae; global science; Hymenoptera;
|
|
impact factor; parachute science; systematic review; scientific
|
|
colonialism},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HYMENOPTERA-FORMICIDAE; TEMPERATE; DIVERSITY; ABUNDANCE; JOURNALS;
|
|
ECOLOGY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Entomology},
|
|
Author-Email = {dumas.galvezs@up.ac.pa},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Gálvez, Dumas/GRY-0855-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {81},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000847188200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000603700700018,
|
|
Author = {Chamberlain, Rosemary C. and Barnetson, Calum and Clegg, Gareth R. and
|
|
Halbesma, Nynke},
|
|
Title = {Association of measures of socioeconomic position with survival
|
|
following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A systematic review},
|
|
Journal = {RESUSCITATION},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {157},
|
|
Pages = {49-59},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Survival following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is
|
|
low, and poor survival appears associated with low socioeconomic
|
|
position (SEP). We aimed to synthesise the evidence regarding
|
|
association of specific SEP measures with OHCA survival, as well as
|
|
effect modification and potential mediators, with the goal of informing
|
|
efforts to improve survival by highlighting characteristics of
|
|
populations requiring additional resources, and identifying modifiable
|
|
factors. Methods: MEDLINE and Embase databases were searched on 23 May
|
|
2019. Quantitative primary studies considering the association of any
|
|
SEP measure with any OHCA survival measure were eligible. SEP could be
|
|
measured at the level of the patient, their residential area, or OHCA
|
|
location. Data on study characteristics and outcomes were extracted and
|
|
a narrative review performed; this considered the evidence for overall
|
|
SEP-survival association, variation in association of different SEP
|
|
measures with survival, effect modification, and mediation. Results:
|
|
Twenty-three studies were included. These were highly heterogeneous,
|
|
particularly regarding SEP measures and eligibility criteria. Several
|
|
studies report a SEP-survival association, with this being almost
|
|
exclusively in the direction of lower survival with lower SEP. There is
|
|
some indication that the education-survival association is particularly
|
|
consistent but further work is needed to increase confidence here. No
|
|
evidence of effect modification by age, sex or other factors was seen,
|
|
although few studies considered this. No mediators were conclusively
|
|
identified. Conclusions: Low SEP is associated with poorer OHCA survival
|
|
in at least some settings. It may be appropriate to consider
|
|
populations' socioeconomic characteristics when targeting interventions
|
|
to improve OHCA survival.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Halbesma, N (Corresponding Author), Univ Edinburgh, Usher Inst, Teviot Pl, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Chamberlain, Rosemary C.; Halbesma, Nynke, Univ Edinburgh, Usher Inst, Teviot Pl, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Barnetson, Calum, NHS Lothian, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
|
|
Clegg, Gareth R.; Halbesma, Nynke, Univ Edinburgh, Resuscitat Res Grp, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.resuscitation.2020.09.025},
|
|
ISSN = {0300-9572},
|
|
EISSN = {1873-1570},
|
|
Keywords = {Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survival; Socioeconomic position;
|
|
Education; Income; Systematic review; Epidemiology},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {EXTERNAL DEFIBRILLATOR USE; BYSTANDER CPR; OUTCOMES; RESUSCITATION;
|
|
DISPARITIES; CARE; RACE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Critical Care Medicine; Emergency Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {nynke.halbesma@ed.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Clegg, Gareth/0000-0002-4314-611X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {40},
|
|
Times-Cited = {11},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000603700700018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001001813600003,
|
|
Author = {Prieto, B. Cecilia and Ibarra, B. Gloria and Guzman, V. Pablo and Werth,
|
|
C. Alejandra and Espinoza, O. Romina and Sepulveda, C. Roberto},
|
|
Title = {Risk factors associated with adherence to medical oncology treatment in
|
|
pediatrics},
|
|
Journal = {ANDES PEDIATRICA},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {94},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {144-152},
|
|
Month = {MAR-APR},
|
|
Abstract = {In Chile, between 450 and 500 cases of cancer are diagnosed annually in
|
|
children and adolescents. Treatment is financed by the state, but there
|
|
are non-financial elements that could condition ad-herence to treatment.
|
|
Objective: to explore family, socioeconomic, housing, and support
|
|
network risk factors that could affect adherence to medical treatment in
|
|
children and adolescents diagnosed with cancer. Patients and Method:
|
|
Descriptive observational study in pediatric oncology hospitals of a
|
|
national cancer program. Through a ``Social Care Form{''} applied to 104
|
|
caregivers of children and adolescents, between August 2019 and March
|
|
2020, socioeconomic data of children diagnosed with cancer were recorded
|
|
in four dimensions: i) Individual/family/health; ii)
|
|
Work/education/so-cioeconomic; iii) Housing/environment; and iv)
|
|
Participation/support networks. Results: 99\% of the children and
|
|
adolescents were registered in the public health system; 69\% belonged
|
|
to the lowest income brackets. Care for children and adolescents was
|
|
mainly provided by the mother (91\%). 79\% reported living in a house;
|
|
48\% owned or were paying for their home. Housing quality was described
|
|
as good (70\%), with low levels of overcrowding. 56\% of households had
|
|
access to Wi-Fi internet con-nection, while 27\% reported no access. The
|
|
main support network reported was the family (84\%). Conclusions:
|
|
Family, socioeconomic, housing, and support network risk factors were
|
|
observed in children and adolescents diagnosed with cancer;
|
|
socioeconomic and gender aspects highlight the social inequalities in
|
|
these families. Descriptive baseline results were obtained, so it is
|
|
suggested to re-observe its evolution and thus measure its impact on
|
|
adherence to treatment.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Prieto, BC (Corresponding Author), Univ Edinburgh, Usher Inst, Edinburgh, Scotland.
|
|
Prieto, BC (Corresponding Author), Fdn Nuestros Hijos, Area Invest \& Desarrollo, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Prieto, B. Cecilia, Univ Edinburgh, Usher Inst, Edinburgh, Scotland.
|
|
Prieto, B. Cecilia, Fdn Nuestros Hijos, Area Invest \& Desarrollo, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Ibarra, B. Gloria, Hosp Ninos Luis Calvo Mackenna, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Guzman, V. Pablo, Univ Diego Portales, Fac Comunicac \& Letras, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Werth, C. Alejandra, Hosp Ninos Roberto Rio, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Espinoza, O. Romina, Hosp Dr Sotero del Rio, Santiago, Chile.
|
|
Sepulveda, C. Roberto, Hosp Exequiel Gonzalez Cortes, Santiago, Chile.},
|
|
DOI = {10.32641/andespediatr.v94i2.4041},
|
|
ISSN = {{*}{*}{*}{*}\_{*}{*}{*}{*}},
|
|
EISSN = {2452-6053},
|
|
Keywords = {Cancer; Oncology; Tumors; Poverty; Adherence},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {cecilia.Prieto@ed.ac.uk},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {16},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001001813600003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000449281600006,
|
|
Author = {Oyelade, Oyeyemi Olajumoke and Ayandiran, Emmanuel Olufemi},
|
|
Title = {Violence Management in a Nigerian Psychiatric Facility
|
|
Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurses' Current Practices and Their
|
|
Effectiveness},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOCIAL NURSING AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {56},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {37-45},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Patient violence in mental health care settings is daunting and
|
|
stressful, as well as increasingly burdensome for professionals in
|
|
low/middle income countries, specifically Africa. Patient violence has
|
|
contributed to increased work hazards for health care professionals and
|
|
may lead to patients being sedated or restrained, potentially resulting
|
|
in injury to either the patient or provider. The current study assessed
|
|
Nigerian psychiatric-mental health nurses'current practices of violence
|
|
management in a hospital in Southwest Nigeria. A qualitative approach,
|
|
specifically focus group discussion, was used. Results of the study show
|
|
that patients and providers are prone to maltreatment. Professionals
|
|
desire involvement of armed military officials to combat acts of
|
|
violence by psychiatric patients who take advantage of nurses' gender,
|
|
inexperience, or being lonely on duty, as well as the time of day, to
|
|
attack nurses. Professionals have reportedly died in the process of
|
|
violence management. Intervention studies on violence management in
|
|
African mental health care settings are a priority for future research.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Oyelade, OO (Corresponding Author), Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Dept Nursing Sci, Ife 220282, Osun State, Nigeria.
|
|
Oyelade, Oyeyemi Olajumoke; Ayandiran, Emmanuel Olufemi, Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Dept Nursing Sci, Ife 220282, Osun State, Nigeria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3928/02793695-20180503-02},
|
|
ISSN = {0279-3695},
|
|
EISSN = {1938-2413},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PATIENT; AGGRESSION; ATTITUDES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {yemilad13@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Oyelade, Oyeyemi/X-9758-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Oyelade, Oyeyemi/0000-0002-0173-9208},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000449281600006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000497787600192,
|
|
Author = {Nemetchek, Brooklyn and Khowaja, Asif and Kavuma, Anthony and Kabajaasi,
|
|
Olive and Owilli, Alex Olirus and Ansermino, J. Mark and Fowler-Kerry,
|
|
Susan and Jacob, Shevin T. and Kenya-Mugisha, Nathan and Kabakyenga,
|
|
Jerome and Wiens, Matthew O.},
|
|
Title = {Exploring healthcare providers' perspectives of the paediatric discharge
|
|
process in Uganda: a qualitative exploratory study},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {9},
|
|
Month = {SEP},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction The burden of childhood mortality continues to be born
|
|
largely by low-income and middle-income countries. The critical
|
|
postdischarge period has been largely neglected despite evidence that
|
|
mortality rates during this period can exceed inpatient mortality rates.
|
|
However, there is a paucity of data on the paediatric discharge process
|
|
from the perspective of the healthcare provider. Provider perspectives
|
|
may be important in the development of an improved understanding of the
|
|
barriers and facilitators to improving the transition from hospital to
|
|
home.
|
|
Objectives To explore healthcare providers' and facility administrators'
|
|
perspectives of the paediatric discharge process with respect to: (1)
|
|
current procedures, (2) barriers and challenges, (3) ideas for change,
|
|
(4) facilitators for change and (5) the importance of discharge
|
|
planning.
|
|
Design A qualitative exploratory approach using focus groups (14) and
|
|
in-depth interviews (7).
|
|
Setting This study was conducted at seven hospitals providing paediatric
|
|
care in Uganda.
|
|
Results Current discharge procedures are largely based on
|
|
hospital-specific protocols or clinician opinion, as opposed to national
|
|
guidelines. Some key barriers to an improved discharge process included
|
|
caregiver resources and education, critical communication gaps,
|
|
traditional practices, and a lack of human and physical resources.
|
|
Teamwork and motivation to see improved paediatric transitions to home
|
|
were identified as facilitators to implementing the ideas for change
|
|
proposed by participants. The need for a standardised national policy
|
|
guiding paediatric discharges, implemented through education at many
|
|
levels and coupled with appropriate community referral and follow-up,
|
|
was broadly perceived as essential to improving outcomes for children.
|
|
Conclusions Although significant challenges and gaps were identified
|
|
within the current health system, participants' ideas and the identified
|
|
facilitators provide a significant basis from which change may occur.
|
|
This work can facilitate the development of sustainable and effective
|
|
interventions to improve postdischarge outcomes in Uganda and other
|
|
similar settings.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wiens, MO (Corresponding Author), BC Childrens Hosp, Ctr Int Child Hlth, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Wiens, MO (Corresponding Author), Mbarara Univ Sci \& Technol, Fac Med, Mbarara, Uganda.
|
|
Nemetchek, Brooklyn; Owilli, Alex Olirus; Fowler-Kerry, Susan, Univ Saskatchewan, Coll Nursing, Saskatoon, SK, Canada.
|
|
Khowaja, Asif, Univ British Columbia, Sch Populat \& Publ Hlth, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Kavuma, Anthony; Kabajaasi, Olive; Jacob, Shevin T.; Kenya-Mugisha, Nathan, Walimu, Mbarara, Uganda.
|
|
Ansermino, J. Mark, Univ British Columbia, Dept Anesthesiol Pharmacol \& Therapeut, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Ansermino, J. Mark; Wiens, Matthew O., BC Childrens Hosp, Ctr Int Child Hlth, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
|
|
Jacob, Shevin T., Univ Liverpool Liverpool Sch Trop Med, Dept Clin Serv, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
|
|
Kabakyenga, Jerome, Mbarara Univ Sci \& Technol, Maternal Newborn \& Child Hlth Inst, Mbarara, Uganda.
|
|
Wiens, Matthew O., Mbarara Univ Sci \& Technol, Fac Med, Mbarara, Uganda.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2019-029526},
|
|
Article-Number = {e029526},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords = {Pediatrics; Patient Discharge; Qualitative Research; Uganda},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CHILDREN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {mowiens@outlook.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Jacob, Shevin/CAF-0449-2022
|
|
Wiens, Matthew/J-9249-2019
|
|
Kabakyenga, Jerome/IXN-6998-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Kabakyenga, Jerome/0000-0003-1912-1032
|
|
Kenya Mugisha, Nathan/0000-0002-2100-1833
|
|
Derksen, Brooklyn/0000-0002-7842-3287
|
|
Ansermino, J Mark/0000-0001-8427-2035
|
|
Jacob, Shevin/0000-0003-2425-9394
|
|
Wiens, Matthew/0000-0002-3287-5181},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {12},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000497787600192},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@incollection{ WOS:000291326200023,
|
|
Author = {Geiger-Brown, Jeanne and McPhaul, Kathleen M.},
|
|
Editor = {Redeker, NS and McEnany, GP},
|
|
Title = {Sleep Promotion in Occupational Health Settings},
|
|
Booktitle = {SLEEP DISORDERS AND SLEEP PROMOTION IN NURSING PRACTICE},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Pages = {355-369},
|
|
Abstract = {Most adults spend a significant number of their waking hours at work.
|
|
The work relatedness of employees' sleep is not always obvious to
|
|
employers, as sleep is usually a private behavior. Yet there is much
|
|
about how work is organized that influences the opportunity to sleep,
|
|
the quality of sleep that is achieved, and the risk for sleep disorders.
|
|
Circadian rhythm disruptions influence sleep when work schedules include
|
|
very early start times, night shift work, or shift rotation. Reduced
|
|
sleep opportunity from long working hours, shift overruns and overtime,
|
|
long commutes, and being called in during time off may cause sleep
|
|
deprivation. The physical surroundings of the job (light, noise) can
|
|
increase or inhibit alertness, and over time can alter circadian
|
|
rhythms. When work is physically or psychologically stressful, it can
|
|
inhibit sleep by increasing sympathetic nervous system activity that is
|
|
incompatible with restful sleep. Certain occupational groups (health
|
|
care, transportation, public safety, food service, mining, construction,
|
|
executive travel) are at particular risk for impaired sleep because of
|
|
work stress and the scheduling of work hours. Because nurses care for
|
|
workers throughout the life span in all health care settings, the
|
|
nursing curriculum must teach the basics of sleep to entry-level nurses,
|
|
nurse practitioners, and occupational health nurses (OHNs). (See Chapter
|
|
24, Future Directions in Sleep Promotion: Nursing Practice, Research,
|
|
and Education.) This chapter discusses the work-related impediments to
|
|
sleep and interventions to improve sleep, with implications for health
|
|
promotion and occupational health programs in the workplace.
|
|
The consequences of acute and chronic sleep deprivation for workers are
|
|
well documented. Workplace injuries and accidents are more frequent,
|
|
causing pain and suffering, as well as lost productivity for the worker
|
|
who is sleep deprived. Frequent or high cost claims can lead to higher
|
|
costs to the employer for health benefits. Chronic sleep deprivation
|
|
increases the risk for cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension,
|
|
stroke, and heart disease, as well as metabolic disorders such as
|
|
obesity and diabetes. These work-related health hazards can be addressed
|
|
with active health promotion and occupational health programs and
|
|
practices that minimize serious adverse outcomes.
|
|
Sleep promotion is ideally a shared responsibility of workers, their
|
|
employers, and health care providers. Workers themselves must consider
|
|
the priority they place on sleep when competing demands threaten to
|
|
derail a healthy lifestyle and performance at work. They must also be
|
|
aware when their sleep is abnormal, seek treatment, and adhere to
|
|
treatment recommendations if a sleep disorder is detected. Employers who
|
|
are trying to create a healthy work environment must have a systematic
|
|
plan at all levels of the organization to recognize sleep-related
|
|
aspects of the physical work environment, the intensity of workplace
|
|
stressors, and how work is organized to advantage workers' sleep. They
|
|
must provide health insurance coverage to ensure that workers receive
|
|
specialty treatment for their sleep disorder-related symptoms and
|
|
provide accommodations if chronic sleep disorders continue to impair
|
|
functioning.
|
|
The employee health unit is the best place to coordinate the health
|
|
promotion activities at work as well as screening, clinical care,
|
|
referrals, and accommodation. The personnel in the employee health
|
|
and/or safety departments should conduct exposure assessments of
|
|
scheduling practices and monitor trends in injuries to inform healthy
|
|
scheduling practices. When the exposure assessment identifies possible
|
|
risk factors for sleep deprivation or sleep disorders, the occupational
|
|
health nurse clinicians must incorporate thorough sleep and occupational
|
|
exposure histories, provide health education regarding sleep and work,
|
|
and tailor interventions to improve sleep quantity and quality. The
|
|
health care providers in the employee health department can also
|
|
recognize sentinel occupational health events, such as sleep complaints,
|
|
drowsiness at work, and accidents and injuries which might indicate
|
|
additional workers at risk for occupational sleep disorders (Figure
|
|
22.1). In the ideal situation, all are motivated to create a healthy
|
|
workplace where workers can be safe and productive and then go home,
|
|
sleep restfully and long enough, and enjoy a high quality of life.
|
|
Combined, these concerns clearly have implications for workplace policy
|
|
development to ensure worker safety and productivity.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Book Chapter},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Geiger-Brown, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Maryland, Sch Nursing, Work \& Hlth Res Ctr, Dept Family \& Community Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA.
|
|
Geiger-Brown, Jeanne, Univ Maryland, Sch Nursing, Work \& Hlth Res Ctr, Dept Family \& Community Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-0-8261-0658-2},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BRIGHT-LIGHT EXPOSURE; NIGHT-SHIFT WORK; CIRCADIAN-RHYTHMS; IMPROVE
|
|
SLEEP; ALERTNESS; PERMANENT; FATIGUE; ADAPTATION; MELATONIN; DISORDER},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Primary Health Care; Clinical Neurology; Nursing},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {McPhaul, Kathleen/AAC-3205-2021
|
|
Redeker, Nancy S/Q-8252-2016},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {McPhaul, Kathleen/0000-0002-7008-142X
|
|
Redeker, Nancy S/0000-0001-7817-2708},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {22},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000291326200023},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000282247400001,
|
|
Author = {del Carmen Lara-Munoz, Maria and Robles-Garcia, Rebeca and Orozco,
|
|
Ricardo and Real, Tania and Chisholm, Dan and Elena Medina-Mora, Ma.},
|
|
Title = {Cost-effectiveness study of depression management in Mexico},
|
|
Journal = {SALUD MENTAL},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {33},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {301-308},
|
|
Month = {JUL-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction
|
|
Depression is a public health problem that carries substantial costs for
|
|
the individual and the society. In order to establish evidence-based
|
|
priorities for resource allocation in mental health care, it is
|
|
necessary to integrate the costs and effectiveness of interventions and
|
|
specify the essential packages for their treatment.
|
|
The following are pioneering studies of cost-effectiveness for the
|
|
treatment of depression: 1. compared psychopharmacology options
|
|
(fluoxetine, imipramine and desipramine) to found no difference between
|
|
drugs in terms of clinical efficacy, effect on quality of life and
|
|
costs, and 2. evaluated cost-effectiveness of collaborative program of
|
|
stepped care in primary care of persistent depression, to demonstrate a
|
|
substantial increase in the effectiveness and additional moderate cost
|
|
increase in comparison with usual treatment.
|
|
Recently, the World Health Organization convened the National Institute
|
|
of Psychiatry Ramon de la Fuente, as a collaborating center, to
|
|
participate in the ``Selecting interventions that are
|
|
cost-effective{''}. labeled WHO-CHOICE (CHOosing Interventions that are
|
|
Cost-Effective).
|
|
This paper presents the findings of the evaluation of cost-effectiveness
|
|
of different clinical interventions for the treatment of depression in
|
|
Mexico, considering its implementation in primary care services.
|
|
Method
|
|
The cost-effectiveness unit of measure gathered by WHO (and used in this
|
|
work) are the years of healthy life lost because of disease, named DALYs
|
|
(Disability Adjusted Life Years).
|
|
DALYs result from the sum of years lost by premature mortality over the
|
|
years that are lost through living in disability status.
|
|
The advantages of using a measure of health at the population level as
|
|
lost DALYs is that it allows comparing interventions for different
|
|
diseases and addresses a relevant question from the avoidable burden
|
|
health policy standpoint.
|
|
Interventions evaluated included: 1. tricyclic antidepressants, 2. new
|
|
antidepressants (SSRIs), 3. brief psychotherapy, 4. trycliclic
|
|
antidepressants + brief psychotherapy, 5. new antidepressants + brief
|
|
psychotherapy, 6. tricyclic antidepressants + brief psychotherapy +
|
|
proactive case management, and 7. new antidepressants + brief
|
|
psychotherapy + proactive case management.
|
|
DALYs avoided as a result of each intervention or combination were
|
|
calculated to determine its effectiveness. Both patients and program
|
|
costs, a 3\% discount by the process of converting future values to
|
|
present ones, as well as an age adjustment giving less weight to year
|
|
lived by the young were included. Finally, the cost of averted DALYs for
|
|
each intervention was estimated to determine their cost effectiveness.
|
|
Results
|
|
The combined strategies of proactive case management with psychotherapy
|
|
plus antidepressants can be considered as the most effective one.
|
|
With the combination with tricyclic antidepressants, the number of DALYs
|
|
averted was 207,171, and with SSRI of 217,568, corresponding to more
|
|
than double of DALYs when tricyclic antidepressants are used alone and
|
|
almost double when using only SSRIs.
|
|
The most expensive intervention was the combination of SSRIs with brief
|
|
psychotherapy, with a total of \$12,256 million pesos (972 million
|
|
dollars), the least expensive treatment were tricyclic antidepressants,
|
|
which involved \$4,523 million pesos (359 million dollars).
|
|
Over 99\% of the costs were from patient medications, and less than 1\%
|
|
from program and training costs. It is clear that the greatest cost is
|
|
for added proactive case management.
|
|
The use of SSRI was the most cost-effective treatment (no combination)
|
|
for the management of depression in Mexican primary care.
|
|
The most cost-effective combination was tryciclic antidepressants plus
|
|
brief psychotherapy plus proactive case management.
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
Although the are some studies on health economics in Mexico, most are
|
|
directed to consider costs, and few ones have evaluated the
|
|
cost-effectiveness relationship of diagnostic and therapeutic
|
|
interventions, lees son in the mental health field.
|
|
Antecedents of the present study in Mexico included a study that
|
|
observed that psychiatric patients require more medical consultations,
|
|
laboratory analysis, hospitalization days, surgeries and medication, in
|
|
contrast with patients that never needed mental attention.
|
|
Nevertheless, investigations about cost-effectiveness relationship are
|
|
rare. Just one study evaluates the costs of positive changes in
|
|
psychopathology with antipsychotic medication for the treatment of
|
|
schizophrenic patients. In this direction, the present work is the first
|
|
effort to evaluate cost-effectiveness of different communitarian
|
|
interventions to treat depression in Mexico.
|
|
According with our findings, also in Mexico, the interventions available
|
|
to treat depression in primary care level prevent a substantial number
|
|
of DALYs: almost six times when SSRIs plus brief psychotherapy plus
|
|
proactive case management are administered.
|
|
The specific effect of proactive case management is preventing relapses
|
|
and increasing the time free of disease, which results in greater
|
|
benefit to the patient, his family and the society. Thus, interventions
|
|
are cost-effective despite the proactive case management significantly
|
|
increases the cost of care to these patients.
|
|
In conclusion, the inclusion of psychosocial treatments is advantageous
|
|
from a cost-effectiveness standpoint. Averted DALYs with these
|
|
interventions are more ``economic{''}.
|
|
As observed in previous studies, a modest investment in improving
|
|
depression produces greater gains in resource-limited environments. In
|
|
Mexico, there is evidence that such interventions in primary care are
|
|
effective when they are given by medical staff with a brief training,
|
|
making them a promising tool for a cost-effective and evidence-based
|
|
public policy.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Medina-Mora, ME (Corresponding Author), Inst Nacl Psiquiatria Ramon de la Fuente Muniz, Calzada Mexico Xochimilco 101, Mexico City 14370, DF, Mexico.
|
|
del Carmen Lara-Munoz, Maria; Robles-Garcia, Rebeca; Orozco, Ricardo; Real, Tania; Elena Medina-Mora, Ma., Inst Nacl Psiquiatria Ramon de la Fuente Muniz, Mexico City 14370, DF, Mexico.
|
|
del Carmen Lara-Munoz, Maria, B Univ Autonoma Puebla, Fac Med, Puebla, Mexico.},
|
|
ISSN = {0185-3325},
|
|
Keywords = {Depression; treatment; cost-effectiveness},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PRIMARY-CARE PATIENTS; LOW-INCOME WOMEN; COLLABORATIVE CARE; MAJOR
|
|
DEPRESSION; GLOBAL BURDEN; DISORDERS; HEALTH; PHARMACOTHERAPY;
|
|
PSYCHOTHERAPY; POPULATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {medinam@imp.edu.mx},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Orozco, Ricardo/I-3518-2015
|
|
Medina-Mora, María Elena I/T-5937-2018
|
|
Robles, Rebeca/GOV-6128-2022
|
|
Garcia, Rebeca/GRJ-1228-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Orozco, Ricardo/0000-0002-6580-585X
|
|
Medina-Mora, María Elena I/0000-0001-9300-0752
|
|
Robles, Rebeca/0000-0001-5958-7393
|
|
},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {43},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {32},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000282247400001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000336657000018,
|
|
Author = {Horvat, Lidia and Horey, Dell and Romios, Panayiota and Kis-Rigo, John},
|
|
Title = {Cultural competence education for health professionals},
|
|
Journal = {COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Cultural competence education for health professionals aims to ensure
|
|
all people receive equitable, effective health care, particularly those
|
|
from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds. It has
|
|
emerged as a strategy in high-income English-speaking countries in
|
|
response to evidence of health disparities, structural inequalities, and
|
|
poorer quality health care and outcomes among people from minority CALD
|
|
backgrounds. However there is a paucity of evidence to link cultural
|
|
competence education with patient, professional and organisational
|
|
outcomes. To assess efficacy, for this review we developed a
|
|
four-dimensional conceptual framework comprising educational content,
|
|
pedagogical approach, structure of the intervention, and participant
|
|
characteristics to provide consistency in describing and assessing
|
|
interventions. We use the term `CALDparticipants' when referring to
|
|
minority CALD populations as a whole. When referring to participants in
|
|
included studies we describe them in terms used by study authors.
|
|
Objectives
|
|
To assess the effects of cultural competence education interventions for
|
|
health professionals on patient-related outcomes, health professional
|
|
outcomes, and healthcare organisation outcomes.
|
|
Search methods
|
|
We searched: MEDLINE (OvidSP) (1946 to June 2012); Cochrane Central
|
|
Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL, The Cochrane Library) (June
|
|
2012); EMBASE (OvidSP) (1988 to June 2012); CINAHL (EbscoHOST) (1981 to
|
|
June 2012); PsycINFO (OvidSP) (1806 to June 2012); Proquest
|
|
Dissertations and Theses database (1861 to October 2011); ERIC (CSA)
|
|
(1966 to October 2011); LILACS (1982 to March 2012); and Current
|
|
Contents (OvidSP) (1993 Week 27 to June 2012).
|
|
Searches in MEDLINE, CENTRAL, PsycINFO, EMBASE, Proquest Dissertations
|
|
and Theses, ERIC and Current Contents were updated in February 2014.
|
|
Searches in CINAHL were updated in March 2014.
|
|
There were no language restrictions.
|
|
Selection criteria
|
|
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cluster RCTs, and
|
|
controlled clinical trials of educational interventions for health
|
|
professionals working in health settings that aimed to improve: health
|
|
outcomes of patients/consumers of minority cultural and linguistic
|
|
backgrounds; knowledge, skills and attitudes of health professionals in
|
|
delivering culturally competent care; and healthcare organisation
|
|
performance in culturally competent care.
|
|
Data collection and analysis
|
|
We used the conceptual framework as the basis for data extraction. Two
|
|
review authors independently extracted data on interventions, methods,
|
|
and outcome measures and mapped them against the framework. Additional
|
|
information was sought from study authors. We present results in
|
|
narrative and tabular form.
|
|
Main results
|
|
We included five RCTs involving 337 healthcare professionals and 8400
|
|
patients; at least 3463 (41\%) were from CALD backgrounds. Trials
|
|
compared the effects of cultural competence training for health
|
|
professionals, with no training. Three studies were from the USA, one
|
|
from Canada and one from The Netherlands. They involved health
|
|
professionals of diverse backgrounds, although most were not from CALD
|
|
minorities. Cultural background was determined using a validated scale
|
|
(one study), self-report (two studies) or not reported (two studies).
|
|
The design effect from clustering meant an effective minimum sample size
|
|
of 3164 CALD participants. No meta-analyses were performed. The quality
|
|
of evidence for each outcome was judged to be low.
|
|
Two trials comparing cultural competence training with no training found
|
|
no evidence of effect for treatment outcomes, including the proportion
|
|
of patients with diabetes achieving LDL cholesterol control targets
|
|
(risk difference (RD) -0.02, 95\% CI -0.06 to 0.02; 1 study, USA, 2699
|
|
``black{''} patients, moderate quality), or change in weight loss
|
|
(standardised mean difference (SMD) 0.07, 95\% CI -0.41 to 0.55, 1
|
|
study, USA, effective sample size (ESS) 68 patients, low quality).
|
|
Health behaviour (client concordance with attendance) improved
|
|
significantly among intervention participants compared with controls
|
|
(relative risk (RR) 1.53, 95\% CI 1.03 to 2.27, 1 study, USA, ESS 28
|
|
women, low quality). Involvement in care by ``non-Western{''} patients
|
|
(described as ``mainly Turkish, Moroccan, Cape Verdean and Surinamese
|
|
patients{''}) with largely ``Western{''} doctors improved in terms of
|
|
mutual understanding (SMD 0.21, 95\% CI 0.00 to 0.42, 1 study, The
|
|
Netherlands, 109 patients, low quality). Evaluations of care were mixed
|
|
(three studies). Two studies found no evidence of effect in: proportion
|
|
of patients reporting satisfaction with consultations (RD 0.14, 95\% CI
|
|
-0.03 to 0.31, 1 study, The Netherlands, 109 patients, low quality);
|
|
patient scores of physician cultural competency (SMD 0.11 95\% CI -0.63
|
|
to 0.85, 1 study, USA, ESS 68 ``Caucasian{''} and ``non-Causcasian{''}
|
|
patients (described as Latino, African American, Asian and other, low
|
|
quality). Client perceptions of health professionals were significantly
|
|
higher in the intervention group (SMD 1.60 95\% CI 1.05 to 2.15, 1
|
|
study, USA, ESS 28 ``Black{''} women, low quality).
|
|
No study assessed adverse outcomes.
|
|
There was no evidence of effect on clinician awareness of ``racial{''}
|
|
differences in quality of care among clients at a USA health centre (RR
|
|
1.37, 95\% CI 0.97 to 1.94. P = 0.07) with no adjustment for clustering.
|
|
Included studies did not measure other outcomes of interest. Sensitivity
|
|
analyses using different values for the Intra-cluster coefficient (ICC)
|
|
did not substantially alter the magnitude or significance of summary
|
|
effect sizes.
|
|
All four domains of the conceptual framework were addressed, suggesting
|
|
agreement on core components of cultural competence education
|
|
interventions may be possible.
|
|
Authors' conclusions
|
|
Cultural competence continues to be developed as a major strategy to
|
|
address health inequities. Five studies assessed the effects of cultural
|
|
competence education for health professionals on patient-related
|
|
outcomes. There was positive, albeit low-quality evidence, showing
|
|
improvements in the involvement of CALD patients. Findings either showed
|
|
support for the educational interventions or no evidence of effect. No
|
|
studies assessed adverse outcomes. The quality of evidence is
|
|
insufficient to draw generalisable conclusions, largely due to
|
|
heterogeneity of the interventions in content, scope, design, duration,
|
|
implementation and outcomes selected.
|
|
Further research is required to establish greater methodological rigour
|
|
and uniformity on core components of education interventions, including
|
|
how they are described and evaluated. Our conceptual framework provides
|
|
a basis for establishing consensus to improve reporting and allow
|
|
assessment across studies and populations. Future studies should measure
|
|
the patient outcomes used: treatment outcomes; health behaviours;
|
|
involvement in care and evaluations of care. Studies should also measure
|
|
the impact of these types of interventions on healthcare organisations,
|
|
as these are likely to affect uptake and sustainability.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Horvat, L (Corresponding Author), Dept Hlth, Qual \& Rural Hlth Branch, Sect Performance, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Horvat, Lidia, Dept Hlth, Qual \& Rural Hlth Branch, Sect Performance, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Horvat, Lidia; Kis-Rigo, John, La Trobe Univ, Sch Publ Hlth \& Human Biosci, Cochrane Consumers \& Commun Review Grp, Bundoora, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Horey, Dell, La Trobe Univ, Fac Hlth Sci, Bundoora, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Romios, Panayiota, Australian Red Cross Soc, Carlton, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/14651858.CD009405.pub2},
|
|
Article-Number = {CD009405},
|
|
ISSN = {1469-493X},
|
|
EISSN = {1361-6137},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION; PROMOTION PROGRAM; CONTROLLED-TRIAL;
|
|
DIABETES CARE; LOW-INCOME; INTERVENTION; ETHNICITY; OUTCOMES; RACE;
|
|
DISPARITIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {lidia.horvat@health.vic.gov.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Horey, Dell/AAE-1918-2021},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Horey, Dell/0000-0001-7594-7694},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {113},
|
|
Times-Cited = {241},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {105},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000336657000018},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000304181700009,
|
|
Author = {Cvetkovski, Stefan and Reavley, Nicola J. and Jorm, Anthony F.},
|
|
Title = {The prevalence and correlates of psychological distress in Australian
|
|
tertiary students compared to their community peers},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2012},
|
|
Volume = {46},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {457-467},
|
|
Month = {MAY},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To examine differences between university students,
|
|
vocational education and training (VET) students, tertiary students
|
|
combined and non-students in the prevalence of psychological distress
|
|
and the socio-demographic and economic characteristics associated with
|
|
psychological distress.
|
|
Method: The Kessler Psychological Distress Scale was used to estimate
|
|
the prevalence of moderate (16-21) and high (22-50) distress with data
|
|
from three national surveys: the 2007 Household, Income and Labour
|
|
Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey, the 2007-08 National Health Survey
|
|
(NHS), and the 2007 National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing
|
|
(NSMHWB). Multinomial logistic regression models were also estimated
|
|
using the HILDA survey to examine any differences in the characteristics
|
|
associated with moderate and high distress between the groups.
|
|
Results: There was evidence of a higher prevalence of moderate distress
|
|
in tertiary students than non-students in the HILDA survey (27.1\% vs
|
|
21.2\%, p < 0.05) and the NSMHWB (27.4\% vs 19.5\%, p < 0.05), but not
|
|
the NHS (26.1\% vs 22.5\%, p > 0.05). However, standardized rates for
|
|
age and gender attenuated the difference in moderate distress in the
|
|
HILDA survey and the NSMHWB. The prevalence of high distress was similar
|
|
between the groups in all three surveys. The multinomial regression
|
|
analyses using the HILDA survey showed the following subgroups of
|
|
students to be at a greater risk of high distress relative to those with
|
|
low distress: younger university students, and university and VET
|
|
students with financial problems. Compared to VET students and
|
|
non-students, younger university students and those who worked 1-39
|
|
hours per week in paid employment were at a greater risk of high
|
|
distress.
|
|
Conclusions: There is evidence that tertiary students have a greater
|
|
prevalence of moderate, but not high distress than non-students.
|
|
Financial factors increase the risk of high distress and are likely to
|
|
take on more importance as the participation rate of socio-economically
|
|
disadvantaged students increases.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Cvetkovski, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Melbourne, Orygen Youth Hlth Res Ctr, Ctr Youth Mental Hlth, Locked Bag 10, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
|
|
Cvetkovski, Stefan; Reavley, Nicola J.; Jorm, Anthony F., Univ Melbourne, Orygen Youth Hlth Res Ctr, Ctr Youth Mental Hlth, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0004867411435290},
|
|
ISSN = {0004-8674},
|
|
EISSN = {1440-1614},
|
|
Keywords = {Psychological distress; tertiary students},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {2007 NATIONAL-SURVEY; MENTAL-HEALTH; UNIVERSITY-STUDENTS;
|
|
GENERAL-POPULATION; HIGHER-EDUCATION; DISORDERS; DEPRESSION; ANXIETY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {stefanc@unimelb.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Reavley, Nicola/ABE-6510-2020
|
|
Jorm, Anthony F/B-5555-2009},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Reavley, Nicola/0000-0001-5513-8291
|
|
Jorm, Anthony F/0000-0002-1424-4116},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {27},
|
|
Times-Cited = {133},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {35},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000304181700009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000450817200003,
|
|
Author = {Villotti, Patrizia and Corbiere, Marc and Dewa, Carolyn S. and
|
|
Fraccaroli, Franco and Sultan-Taieb, Helene and Zaniboni, Sara and
|
|
Lecomte, Tania},
|
|
Title = {A serial mediation model of workplace social support on work
|
|
productivity: the role of self-stigma and job tenure self-efficacy in
|
|
people with severe mental disorders},
|
|
Journal = {DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {40},
|
|
Number = {26},
|
|
Pages = {3113-3119},
|
|
Month = {DEC 18},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose: Compared to groups with other disabilities, people with a
|
|
severe mental illness face the greatest stigma and barriers to
|
|
employment opportunities. This study contributes to the understanding of
|
|
the relationship between workplace social support and work productivity
|
|
in people with severe mental illness working in Social Enterprises by
|
|
taking into account the mediating role of self-stigma and job tenure
|
|
self-efficacy. Method: A total of 170 individuals with a severe mental
|
|
disorder employed in a Social Enterprise filled out questionnaires
|
|
assessing personal and work-related variables at Phase-1 (baseline) and
|
|
Phase-2 (6-month follow-up). Process modeling was used to test for
|
|
serial mediation. Results: In the Social Enterprise workplace, social
|
|
support yields better perceptions of work productivity through lower
|
|
levels of internalized stigma and higher confidence in facing
|
|
job-related problems. When testing serial multiple mediations, the
|
|
specific indirect effect of high workplace social support on work
|
|
productivity through both low internalized stigma and high job tenure
|
|
self-efficacy was significant with a point estimate of 1.01 (95\% CI =
|
|
0.42, 2.28). Conclusions: Continued work in this area can provide
|
|
guidance for organizations in the open labor market addressing the
|
|
challenges posed by the work integration of people with severe mental
|
|
illness.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Villotti, P (Corresponding Author), Univ Sherbrooke, Ctr Rech Hop Charles LeMoyne, 150 Pl Charles Le Moyne, Longueuil, PQ J4K 0A8, Canada.
|
|
Villotti, Patrizia, Univ Sherbrooke, Ctr Rech Hop Charles LeMoyne, 150 Pl Charles Le Moyne, Longueuil, PQ J4K 0A8, Canada.
|
|
Villotti, Patrizia; Corbiere, Marc; Lecomte, Tania, Univ Sante Mentale Montreal, Ctr Rech Inst, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Corbiere, Marc, Univ Quebec Montreal, Dept Educ Career Counselling, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Dewa, Carolyn S., Univ Calif Davis, Dept Psychiat \& Behav Sci, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
|
|
Fraccaroli, Franco, Univ Trento, Dept Psychol \& Cognit Sci, Rovereto, Italy.
|
|
Sultan-Taieb, Helene, Univ Quebec Montreal, Ecole Sci Gest, Dept Org \& Ressources Humaines, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
|
|
Zaniboni, Sara, Univ Bologna, Dept Psychol, Bologna, Italy.
|
|
Lecomte, Tania, Univ Montreal, Dept Psychol, Montreal, PQ, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/09638288.2017.1377294},
|
|
ISSN = {0963-8288},
|
|
EISSN = {1464-5165},
|
|
Keywords = {Severe mental illness; social enterprise; self-stigma; social support;
|
|
work productivity},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS; ILLNESS; EMPLOYMENT; HEALTH; RECOVERY; IMPACT;
|
|
DISCRIMINATION; INTERVENTION; CONSEQUENCES; SATISFACTION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {patrizia.villotti@usherbrooke.ca},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dewa, Carolyn/0000-0001-5647-3905},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {54},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000450817200003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000433922900004,
|
|
Author = {Wang, I-Ting and Lee, Shwn-Jen and Bezyak, Jill and Tsai, Mei-Wun and
|
|
Luo, Hong-Ji and Wang, Jhin-Ren and Chien, Ming-Shan},
|
|
Title = {Factors Associated With Recommendations for Assistive Technology Devices
|
|
for Persons With Mobility Limitations Using Workplace Accommodation
|
|
Services},
|
|
Journal = {REHABILITATION COUNSELING BULLETIN},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {61},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {228-235},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {The objective of this study was to identify the interactions between
|
|
impairment-related and work-related factors associated with
|
|
recommendations for specific assistive technology devices (ATDs) for
|
|
persons with mobility limitations who used workplace accommodation (WA)
|
|
services. A retrospective and secondary data analysis was conducted on
|
|
132 WA service users with mobility limitations in Taipei City from 2008
|
|
to 2012 using chi-square automatic interaction detector (CHAID). The
|
|
CHAID analyses revealed interactions between impairment-related factors
|
|
(difficulty walking and upper extremity pain) and work-related factors
|
|
(frequent moving around outdoors), which were significantly associated
|
|
with the recommendation of powered wheelchairs (p < .05). Interactions
|
|
between the impairment-related factor (difficulty walking) and the
|
|
work-related factor (frequent sitting for long periods of time) were
|
|
associated with the recommendation of ergonomic chairs (p < .001) for
|
|
persons with mobility limitations. By identifying the interactions
|
|
between impairment-related and work-related factors in recommending
|
|
workplace ATDs for persons with mobility limitations, this study
|
|
provides evidence-based ATDs recommendations for persons with mobility
|
|
limitations.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lee, SJ (Corresponding Author), Natl Yang Ming Univ, Dept Phys Therapy \& Assist Technol, 155 Li Nong St,Sec 2, Taipei 112, Taiwan.
|
|
Lee, SJ (Corresponding Author), Natl Yang Ming Univ, Res Ctr ICF \& Assist Technol, 155 Li Nong St,Sec 2, Taipei 112, Taiwan.
|
|
Wang, I-Ting; Lee, Shwn-Jen; Tsai, Mei-Wun; Luo, Hong-Ji; Wang, Jhin-Ren, Natl Yang Ming Univ, Taipei, Taiwan.
|
|
Bezyak, Jill, Univ Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO 80639 USA.
|
|
Chien, Ming-Shan, Taipei City Foreign \& Disabled Labor Off, Taipei, Taiwan.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0034355217711865},
|
|
ISSN = {0034-3552},
|
|
EISSN = {1538-4853},
|
|
Keywords = {technology assessment; decision tree; vocational rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPINAL-CORD-INJURY; EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES; WHEELCHAIR USERS; ADULTS;
|
|
DISABILITIES; POLIOMYELITIS; PARTICIPATION; FRAMEWORK; BARRIERS; PEOPLE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Rehabilitation},
|
|
Author-Email = {sjlee@ym.edu.tw},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Chien, Ming-Shan/G-9115-2017},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Chien, Ming-Shan/0000-0003-3626-676X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {38},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000433922900004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000722829800001,
|
|
Author = {Cavanagh, Jillian and Meacham, Hannah and Pariona-Cabrera, Patricia and
|
|
Bartram, Timothy},
|
|
Title = {Subtle workplace discrimination inhibiting workers with intellectual
|
|
disability from thriving at the workplace},
|
|
Journal = {PERSONNEL REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {50},
|
|
Number = {7-8, SI},
|
|
Pages = {1739-1756},
|
|
Month = {OCT 17},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of the article is to examine the experiences of
|
|
workers with intellectual disability (WWID) and subtle discriminatory
|
|
practices that hold these workers back from thriving at the workplace.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach The research design employs the Shore et al.
|
|
(2011) framework of inclusion supported by optimal distinctiveness
|
|
theory (ODT) (Brewer, 1991). These theoretical frames are used to
|
|
examine the potential for WWID to become members of a work group and
|
|
experience the opportunity to develop their unique selves, negotiate and
|
|
thrive through their work for purposeful career outcomes. A qualitative
|
|
case study approach was adopted through interviews and focus groups with
|
|
a total of 91 participants: 41 WWID, 5 human resource (HR) managers, 5
|
|
duty/department managers (DMs), 24 colleagues and 16 supervisors.
|
|
Findings The authors found that enhancing inclusion is underpinned by
|
|
the positive impact of human resource management (HRM) practices and
|
|
line management support for WWID feelings of belongingness and
|
|
uniqueness that enable them to thrive through their work activities. The
|
|
authors demonstrate that WWID need manager support and positive social
|
|
interactions to increase their learning and vitality for work to embrace
|
|
opportunities for growth. However, when WWID do not have these
|
|
conditions, there are fewer opportunities for them to thrive at the
|
|
workplace. Practical implications There is a need for formal HRM and
|
|
management support and inclusive organisational interventions to
|
|
mitigate discriminatory practices and better support WWID at work. There
|
|
is an opportunity for HRM to design training and development around
|
|
belongingness and uniqueness for this cohort of workers to maximise WWID
|
|
opportunities to thrive through their work. Originality/value This study
|
|
examines a cohort of WWID who are often forgotten and subtly
|
|
discriminated against more so than other minority or vulnerable cohorts
|
|
in the workplace, especially in terms of their development and reaching
|
|
their full potential at work, which has an impact on their ability to
|
|
thrive through their work. The paper makes an innovative contribution to
|
|
the HRM literature through unpacking the processes through which Shore
|
|
et al.'s (2011) conceptualisation of belongingness and uniqueness
|
|
contributes to thriving for a marginalised and often overlooked cohort
|
|
of workers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pariona-Cabrera, P (Corresponding Author), RMIT Univ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Cavanagh, Jillian; Pariona-Cabrera, Patricia; Bartram, Timothy, RMIT Univ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Meacham, Hannah, Monash Univ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/PR-10-2021-0723},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0048-3486},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-6933},
|
|
Keywords = {Discrimination; Intellectual disability; Line managers; HRM;
|
|
Belongingness; Uniqueness; Thriving and inclusion},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SOCIAL INCLUSION; SELF-EFFICACY; EMPLOYMENT; DIVERSITY; PEOPLE;
|
|
EMPLOYEES; PERSPECTIVES; PERCEPTIONS; EXCLUSION; IDENTITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor; Psychology, Applied; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {patricia.pariona-cabrera@rmit.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Pariona-Cabrera, Patricia/ISB-3348-2023
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Pariona-Cabrera, Patricia/0000-0002-4578-2005
|
|
Bartram, Timothy/0000-0003-4496-7048},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {66},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {20},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000722829800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000742769500016,
|
|
Author = {George, Tayo O. and Oladosun, Muyiwa and Oyesomi, Kehinde and Orbih,
|
|
Mary U. and Nwokeoma, Nwanne and Iruonagbe, Charles and Ajayi, Lady and
|
|
Lawal-Solarin, Esther},
|
|
Title = {Usefulness and expectations on skills development and entrepreneurship
|
|
among women of low socioeconomic status in Ogun State, Nigeria},
|
|
Journal = {AFRICAN JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {25},
|
|
Number = {5S, 5},
|
|
Pages = {170-186},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {The acquisition of vocational training skills and entrepreneurial
|
|
know-how is acknowledged as an added advantage and a safety net to
|
|
navigate poverty, especially in dwindling economic recession time and
|
|
massive unemployment. This study examined the factors influencing the
|
|
usefulness and perceived realization of skills development/empowerment
|
|
to encourage more women's involvement in small scale businesses and
|
|
promote its effect on poverty alleviation in households across Nigeria.
|
|
Data collection involved a structured questionnaire and in-depth
|
|
interviews conducted post-the vocational skill/empowerment training. The
|
|
training was organized among Campus Keepers in a private university in
|
|
Ogun State, Nigeria. Forty Campus Keepers were selected using the
|
|
systematic sampling technique from a total population of 224, and 37 of
|
|
the 40 selected voluntarily participated in this study. The Campus
|
|
Keepers were women with low socioeconomic status who worked as cleaners
|
|
on the university campus. Five of the Campus Keepers were purposively
|
|
selected as key informants for the study. Results showed that
|
|
respondents who had earlier knowledge and vocational skills training
|
|
reported that it leads to self-employment. This view was higher for
|
|
respondents who had more people in their household than those with fewer
|
|
people (OR = 22.7 {[}CI= .56, 921.31]). The perception that the training
|
|
can lead to additional income was lower for respondents who reported
|
|
that either they or their spouses were sole breadwinners in their
|
|
household than for those who reported that both/others/none were
|
|
breadwinners (OR = .05 {[}CI=0, 1.2]). The odds that the skills
|
|
development/empowerment training will result in perceived improved
|
|
business was higher for respondents who gained more
|
|
knowledge/information from the training than those who did not (OR=29.19
|
|
{[}CI = 1.1, 777.48]). Findings from the qualitative study suggest that
|
|
key informants who participated in past training were yet to establish a
|
|
profitable business of their dream fully. Governmental policy and
|
|
program intervention that incorporates these findings will lead to
|
|
increased participation of the target population in similar training in
|
|
the future, leading to poverty alleviation towards achieving the SDGs
|
|
for Nigeria. (Afr J Reprod Health 2021; 25{[}5s]: 170-186).},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Oladosun, M (Corresponding Author), Covenant Univ, Women Dev \& Human Secur Initiat WDHSI, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
Oladosun, M (Corresponding Author), Covenant Univ Ctr Res Innovat \& Discovery, Publ Private Partnership Res Cluster, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
Oladosun, M (Corresponding Author), Covenant Univ, Dept Econ \& Dev Studies, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
George, Tayo O.; Oladosun, Muyiwa; Oyesomi, Kehinde; Orbih, Mary U.; Nwokeoma, Nwanne; Iruonagbe, Charles; Ajayi, Lady; Lawal-Solarin, Esther, Covenant Univ, Women Dev \& Human Secur Initiat WDHSI, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
Oladosun, Muyiwa, Covenant Univ Ctr Res Innovat \& Discovery, Publ Private Partnership Res Cluster, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
George, Tayo O.; Orbih, Mary U.; Iruonagbe, Charles, Covenant Univ, Dept Sociol, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
Oladosun, Muyiwa, Covenant Univ, Dept Econ \& Dev Studies, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
Oyesomi, Kehinde, Covenant Univ, Dept Mass Commun, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
Nwokeoma, Nwanne; Lawal-Solarin, Esther, Covenant Univ, Ctr Learning Resources, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.
|
|
Ajayi, Lady, Covenant Univ, Dept Polit Sci \& Int Relat, Ota, Ogun, Nigeria.},
|
|
DOI = {10.29063/ajrh2021/v25i5s.16},
|
|
ISSN = {1118-4841},
|
|
EISSN = {2141-3606},
|
|
Keywords = {Skills development; women entrepreneurship; low socioeconomic status;
|
|
expectations on skills; perceived realization},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {muyiwa.oladosun@covenantuniversity.edu.ng},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Oladosun, Muyiwa/AHC-3752-2022
|
|
Oladosun, Muyiwa/AFU-3017-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Oladosun, Muyiwa/0000-0003-3654-4862
|
|
Lawal-Solarin, Esther/0000-0003-2126-9618},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {36},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000742769500016},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000327539900031,
|
|
Author = {Chowdhury, A. Mushtaque R. and Bhuiya, Abbas and Chowdhury, Mahbub Elahi
|
|
and Rasheed, Sabrina and Hussain, Zakir and Chen, Lincoln C.},
|
|
Title = {Bangladesh: Innovation for Universal Health Coverage 1 The Bangladesh
|
|
paradox: exceptional health achievement despite economic poverty},
|
|
Journal = {LANCET},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {382},
|
|
Number = {9906},
|
|
Pages = {1734-1745},
|
|
Month = {NOV 23},
|
|
Abstract = {Bangladesh, the eighth most populous country in the world with about 153
|
|
million people, has recently been applauded as an exceptional health
|
|
performer. In the first paper in this Series, we present evidence to
|
|
show that Bangladesh has achieved substantial health advances, but the
|
|
country's success cannot be captured simplistically because health in
|
|
Bangladesh has the paradox of steep and sustained reductions in birth
|
|
rate and mortality alongside continued burdens of morbidity. Exceptional
|
|
performance might be attributed to a pluralistic health system that has
|
|
many stakeholders pursuing women-centred, gender-equity-oriented, highly
|
|
focused health programmes in family planning, immunisation, oral
|
|
rehydration therapy, maternal and child health, tuberculosis, vitamin A
|
|
supplementation, and other activities, through the work of widely
|
|
deployed community health workers reaching all households. Government
|
|
and non-governmental organisations have pioneered many innovations that
|
|
have been scaled up nationally. However, these remarkable achievements
|
|
in equity and coverage are counterbalanced by the persistence of child
|
|
and maternal malnutrition and the low use of maternity-related services.
|
|
The Bangladesh paradox shows the net outcome of successful direct health
|
|
action in both positive and negative social determinants of health-ie,
|
|
positives such as women's empowerment, widespread education, and
|
|
mitigation of the effect of natural disasters; and negatives such as low
|
|
gross domestic product, pervasive poverty, and the persistence of income
|
|
inequality. Bangladesh offers lessons such as how gender equity can
|
|
improve health outcomes, how health innovations can be scaled up, and
|
|
how direct health interventions can partly overcome socioeconomic
|
|
constraints.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Chowdhury, AMR (Corresponding Author), BRAC, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh.
|
|
Chowdhury, A. Mushtaque R., BRAC, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh.
|
|
Chowdhury, A. Mushtaque R., Columbia Univ, New York, NY USA.
|
|
Bhuiya, Abbas; Chowdhury, Mahbub Elahi; Rasheed, Sabrina, Int Ctr Diarrhoeal Dis Res, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
|
|
Hussain, Zakir, WHO, Southeast Asia Reg Off, New Delhi, India.
|
|
Chen, Lincoln C., China Med Board, Cambridge, MA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62148-0},
|
|
ISSN = {0140-6736},
|
|
EISSN = {1474-547X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CIVIL-SOCIETY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {mushtaque.chowdhury@brac.net},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {rasheed, sabrina/A-4145-2010
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {rasheed, sabrina/0000-0002-7444-200X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {77},
|
|
Times-Cited = {213},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000327539900031},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000485792600019,
|
|
Author = {Houck, Kelly K. and Ifeachor, Amanda P. and Fleming, Breanne S. and
|
|
Andres, Audrey M. and O'Donovan, Kristin N. and Johnson, Andrew J. and
|
|
Liangpunsakul, Suthat},
|
|
Title = {Pharmacist-driven multidisciplinary pretreatment workup process for
|
|
hepatitis C care: A novel model for same-day pretreatment workup},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN PHARMACISTS ASSOCIATION},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {59},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {710-716},
|
|
Month = {SEP-OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives: The objective is to describe and quantify the impact of a
|
|
novel practice model for pharmacist involvement in care coordination and
|
|
patient education in hepatitis C virus (HCV) care.
|
|
Setting: This practice model was implemented in the gastroenterology
|
|
clinic at the Richard L. Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center in
|
|
Indianapolis, Indiana.
|
|
Practice description: Traditional pretreatment workup for HCV requires
|
|
multiple on-site appointments to complete imaging and laboratory
|
|
assessments and for provider and social work appointments. High
|
|
pretreatment time burden and increasing psychosocial complexity of the
|
|
patient population present significant barriers to HCV eradication.
|
|
Patients frequently miss appointments, and each on-site visit creates a
|
|
separate opportunity for patients to be lost to follow-up.
|
|
Practice innovation: The pharmacist-driven multidisciplinary
|
|
pretreatment workup process was launched by HCV pharmacists to mitigate
|
|
barriers. Patients complete the pretreatment evaluation process, which
|
|
includes same-day pharmacy education, provider visit, social work
|
|
assessment, FibroScan, and laboratory assessments, in approximately 2.5
|
|
hours.
|
|
Evaluation: Forty-six patients who completed the pharmacist-driven
|
|
multidisciplinary pretreatment workup process versus 235 patients who
|
|
completed traditional workup were analyzed for time from date of HCV
|
|
consultation placement to treatment start and time from most recent HCV
|
|
provider visit to treatment start.
|
|
Results: From time of HCV consult entry to date of treatment start,
|
|
patients were initiated on HCV treatment in an average of 42.2 +/- 7.5
|
|
days and 184.1 +/- 27.6 days (P = 0.0001) within the intervention and
|
|
traditional workup groups, respectively. A decreased time from most
|
|
recent HCV provider visit to treatment initiation was noted between
|
|
groups with 38.2 +/- 7.1 days and 54.7 +/- 3.6 days (P = 0.04) in the
|
|
intervention and traditional workup groups, respectively.
|
|
Conclusion: The pharmacist-driven multidisciplinary pretreatment workup
|
|
process is an effective way to engage patients and decrease time to
|
|
treatment initiation. This model could be replicated in other practice
|
|
settings, especially those challenged by multi-step care coordination.
|
|
Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Pharmacists
|
|
Association.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Houck, KK (Corresponding Author), 1481 W 10th St, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
Houck, Kelly K.; Ifeachor, Amanda P.; Fleming, Breanne S.; Andres, Audrey M., Richard L Roudebush Vet Affairs Med Ctr, Pharm Serv, 1481 W 10th St, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
O'Donovan, Kristin N.; Johnson, Andrew J., Butler Univ, Coll Pharm \& Hlth Sci, Indianapolis, IN 46208 USA.
|
|
Liangpunsakul, Suthat, Indiana Univ Sch Med, Div Gastroenterol \& Hepatol, Dept Med, Dept Biochem \& Mol Biol, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
|
|
Liangpunsakul, Suthat, Richard L Roudebush Vet Affairs Med Ctr, Sect Gastroenterol \& Hepatol, Med Serv, 1481 W 10th St, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.japh.2019.05.003},
|
|
ISSN = {1544-3191},
|
|
EISSN = {1544-3450},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {kellykyrouac@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Johnson, Andrew/0000-0003-0178-1462},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {7},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000485792600019},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001059414400004,
|
|
Author = {Chen, Ningjing and Fong, Daniel Yee Tak and Wong, Janet Yuen Ha},
|
|
Title = {Health and Economic Outcomes Associated With Musculoskeletal Disorders
|
|
Attributable to High Body Mass Index in 192 Countries and Territories in
|
|
2019},
|
|
Journal = {JAMA NETWORK OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {IMPORTANCE The degree to which health and economic outcomes of
|
|
musculoskeletal disorders are attributable to high body mass index (BMI)
|
|
has not been quantified on a global scale.
|
|
OBJECTIVE To estimate global health and economic outcomes associated
|
|
with musculoskeletal disorders-low back pain (LBP), gout, and
|
|
osteoarthritis attributable to high BMI in 2019.
|
|
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This cross-sectional study used data
|
|
of 192 countries and territories from the Global Burden of Diseases,
|
|
Injuries, and Risk Factors Study, World Health Organization Global
|
|
Health Expenditure, World Bank, and International Labour Organization
|
|
databases. Data analyses were conducted from February 24 to June 16,
|
|
2022.
|
|
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Prevalence, years lived with disability
|
|
(YLDs), health care costs, and productivity losses due to morbidity from
|
|
LBP, gout, and osteoarthritis attributable to high BMI by region and
|
|
country. Prevalence and YLDs were calculated with the population
|
|
attributable fraction approach. The economic burden, including health
|
|
care costs and productivity losses due to morbidity, was also
|
|
quantified. Health care costs borne by the public, private, and
|
|
out-of-pocket sectors were estimated based on their corresponding
|
|
payment shares. Productivity losses were estimated based on the output
|
|
per worker. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to arrive at the base,
|
|
minimum, and maximum estimates (ie, uncertainty interval {[}UI]) by
|
|
using the mean, lower, and upper bounds of all input variables.
|
|
RESULTS High BMI was estimated to be responsible for 36.3 million (UI,
|
|
18.4-61.0 million), 16.9 million (UI, 7.5-32.5 million), and 73.0
|
|
million (UI, 32.4-131.1 million) prevalent cases of LBP, gout, and
|
|
osteoarthritis, respectively, which accounted for 7.3 million (UI,
|
|
3.0-15.0 million) YLDs across 192 countries and territories in 2019.
|
|
Globally, the YLDs of musculoskeletal disorders attributable to high BMI
|
|
accounted for 1.0\% of all-cause YLDs in the working-age population aged
|
|
15 to 84 years. The global total costs of musculoskeletal disorders
|
|
attributable to high BMI reached \$180.7 billion (UI, \$83.8-\$333.1
|
|
billion), including \$60.5 billion (UI, \$30.7-\$100.5 billion) in
|
|
health care costs and \$120.2 billion (UI, \$53.1-\$232.7 billion) in
|
|
productivity losses. In terms of the global health care costs, 58.9\%
|
|
(\$35.6 billion; UI, \$17.8-\$59.6 billion) was borne by the public
|
|
sector, 24.0\% (\$14.5 billion; UI, \$7.8-\$23.2 billion) by the private
|
|
sector, and 17.1\%(\$10.3 billion; UI, \$5.1-\$17.6 billion) by the
|
|
out-of-pocket sector. On average, the total costs accounted for 0.2\% of
|
|
global gross domestic product. Great inequalities in the disease and
|
|
economic burden existed across regions and countries. Nearly 80\% of
|
|
global health care (82.4\%) and morbidity-related costs (82.9\%) were
|
|
paid by high-income countries, whereas more than 60\%(61.4\%) of global
|
|
YLDs occurred in middle-income countries.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this cross-sectional study of 192 countries
|
|
and territories, a substantial amount of the health and economic impact
|
|
of musculoskeletal disorders was attributable to high BMI. Developing
|
|
effective policies and active participation from health professionals to
|
|
prevent excessive weight gain are needed. More available estimates are
|
|
also needed to facilitate a global analysis.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fong, DYT (Corresponding Author), Univ Hong Kong, Li Ka Shing Fac Med, Sch Nursing, 3 Sassoon Rd, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chen, Ningjing; Fong, Daniel Yee Tak; Wong, Janet Yuen Ha, Univ Hong Kong, Li Ka Shing Fac Med, Sch Nursing, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Wong, Janet Yuen Ha, Hong KongMetropolitan Univ, Sch Nursing \& Hlth Studies, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.50674},
|
|
Article-Number = {e2250674},
|
|
ISSN = {2574-3805},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOW-BACK; OBESITY; IMPACT; PAIN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {dytfong@hku.hk},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Fong, Daniel/C-4269-2009},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Fong, Daniel/0000-0001-7365-9146},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001059414400004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000729238200070,
|
|
Author = {Meyer, Sarah R. and Rege, Sangeeta and Avalaskar, Prachi and Deosthali,
|
|
Padma and Garcia-Moreno, Claudia and Amin, Avni},
|
|
Title = {Strengthening health systems response to violence against women:
|
|
protocol to test approaches to train health workers in India},
|
|
Journal = {PILOT AND FEASIBILITY STUDIES},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Abstract = {BackgroundGlobally, including in low- and middle-income {[}LMIC]
|
|
countries, there is increased attention to and investment in
|
|
interventions to prevent and respond to violence against women; however,
|
|
most of these approaches are delivered outside of formal or informal
|
|
health systems. The World Health Organization published clinical and
|
|
policy guidelines Responding to intimate partner violence and sexual
|
|
violence against women in 2013. Further evidence is needed concerning
|
|
implementation of the Guidelines, including how health care providers
|
|
perceive training interventions, if the training approach meets their
|
|
needs and is of relevance to them and how to ensure sustainability of
|
|
changes in practice due to training. This manuscript describes a study
|
|
protocol for a mixed methods study of the implementation of the
|
|
Guidelines and related tools in tertiary hospitals in two districts in
|
|
Maharashtra, India.MethodsThe study will employ a mixed-methods study
|
|
design. A quantitative assessment of health care providers' and
|
|
managers' knowledge, attitudes, and practices will be conducted pre,
|
|
post, and 6months after the training. Qualitative methods will include a
|
|
participatory stakeholders' meeting to inform the design of the training
|
|
intervention design, in-depth interviews {[}IDIs] and focus-group
|
|
discussions {[}FGDs] with health care providers and managers 3-6months
|
|
after training, and IDIs with women who have disclosed violence to a
|
|
trained health care provider, approximately 6months after training. The
|
|
study will also validate two tools: a readiness assessment of health
|
|
facilities and a health management information system form in a facility
|
|
register format which will be used to document cases of
|
|
violence.DiscussionThe multiple components of this study will generate
|
|
data to improve our understanding of how implementation of the
|
|
Guidelines works, what barriers and facilitators to implementation exist
|
|
in this context, and how current implementation practices result in
|
|
changes in terms of health services and providers' practices of
|
|
responding to women affected by violence. The results will be useful for
|
|
governmental and non-governmental and United Nations Agency efforts to
|
|
improve health systems and services for women affected by violence, as
|
|
well as for researchers working on health systems responses to violence
|
|
against women in India and possibly other contexts.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Meyer, SR (Corresponding Author), WHO, Dept Sexual \& Reprod Hlth \& Res, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Meyer, Sarah R.; Garcia-Moreno, Claudia; Amin, Avni, WHO, Dept Sexual \& Reprod Hlth \& Res, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Rege, Sangeeta; Avalaskar, Prachi; Deosthali, Padma, CEHAT Ctr Inquiry Hlth \& Allied Themes, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s40814-020-00609-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {63},
|
|
EISSN = {2055-5784},
|
|
Keywords = {Violence against women; Training; Implementation science; Guidelines;
|
|
Study protocol},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; MULTICOUNTRY;
|
|
INTERVENTION; PREGNANCY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental},
|
|
Author-Email = {smeyer@who.int},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000729238200070},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000954279300001,
|
|
Author = {Njagi, Purity and Groot, Wim and Arsenijevic, Jelena and Dyer, Silke and
|
|
Mburu, Gitau and Kiarie, James},
|
|
Title = {Financial costs of assisted reproductive technology for patients in low-
|
|
and middle-income countries: a systematic review},
|
|
Journal = {HUMAN REPRODUCTION OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {2023},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Month = {MAR 7},
|
|
Abstract = {STUDY QUESTION What are the direct costs of assisted reproductive
|
|
technology (ART), and how affordable is it for patients in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries (LMICS)? SUMMARY ANSWER Direct medical costs
|
|
paid by patients for infertility treatment are significantly higher than
|
|
annual average income and GDP per capita, pointing to unaffordability
|
|
and the risk of catastrophic expenditure for those in need. WHAT IS
|
|
KNOWN ALREADY Infertility treatment is largely inaccessible to many
|
|
people in LMICs. Our analysis shows that no study in LMICs has
|
|
previously compared ART medical costs across countries in international
|
|
dollar terms (US\$PPP) or correlated the medical costs with economic
|
|
indicators, financing mechanisms, and policy regulations. Previous
|
|
systematic reviews on costs have been limited to high-income countries
|
|
while those in LMICs have only focussed on descriptive analyses of these
|
|
costs. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION Guided by the preferred reporting
|
|
items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA), we searched
|
|
PubMed, Web of Science, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health
|
|
Literature, EconLit, PsycINFO, Latin American \& Caribbean Health
|
|
Sciences Literature, and grey literature for studies published in all
|
|
languages from LMICs between 2001 and 2020. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS,
|
|
SETTING, METHODS The primary outcome of interest was direct medical
|
|
costs paid by patients for one ART cycle. To gauge ART affordability,
|
|
direct medical costs were correlated with the GDP per capita or average
|
|
income of respective countries. ART regulations and public financing
|
|
mechanisms were analyzed to provide information on the healthcare
|
|
contexts in the countries. The quality of included studies was assessed
|
|
using the Integrated Quality Criteria for Review of Multiple Study
|
|
designs. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE Of the 4062 studies
|
|
identified, 26 studies from 17 countries met the inclusion criteria.
|
|
There were wide disparities across countries in the direct medical costs
|
|
paid by patients for ART ranging from USD2109 to USD18 592. Relative ART
|
|
costs and GDP per capita showed a negative correlation, with the costs
|
|
in Africa and South-East Asia being on average up to 200\% of the GDP
|
|
per capita. Lower relative costs in the Americas and the Eastern
|
|
Mediterranean regions were associated with the presence of ART
|
|
regulations and government financing mechanisms. LIMITATIONS, REASONS
|
|
FOR CAUTION Several included studies were not primarily designed to
|
|
examine the cost of ART and thus lacked comprehensive details of the
|
|
costs. However, a sensitivity analysis showed that exclusion of studies
|
|
with below the minimum quality score did not change the conclusions on
|
|
the outcome of interest. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS Governments
|
|
in LMICs should devise appropriate ART regulatory policies and implement
|
|
effective mechanisms for public financing of fertility care to improve
|
|
equity in access. The findings of this review should inform advocacy for
|
|
ART regulatory frameworks in LMICs and the integration of infertility
|
|
treatment as an essential service under universal health coverage. STUDY
|
|
FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S) This work received funding from the
|
|
UNDP-UNFPA-UNICEF-WHO-World Bank Special Programme of Research,
|
|
Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP), a
|
|
cosponsored programme executed by the World Health Organization (WHO).
|
|
The authors declare no competing interests.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Njagi, P (Corresponding Author), Maastricht Univ, United Nations Univ MERIT, Maastricht Grad Sch Governance, NL-6211 Maastricht, Netherlands.
|
|
Njagi, Purity; Groot, Wim, Maastricht Univ, United Nations Univ MERIT, Maastricht Grad Sch Governance, Maastricht, Netherlands.
|
|
Groot, Wim, Maastricht Univ, Fac Hlth Med \& Life Sci, Dept Hlth Serv Res, Maastricht, Netherlands.
|
|
Arsenijevic, Jelena, Univ Utrecht, Fac Law Econ \& Governance, Sch Governance, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Dyer, Silke, Univ Cape Town, Dept Obstet \& Gynaecol, Cape Town, South Africa.
|
|
Mburu, Gitau, WHO, Dept Sexualand Reprod Hlth \& Res SRH, UNDP UNFPA UNICEF WHO World Bank Special Programme, Dev \& Res Training Human Reprod HRP, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Njagi, Purity, Maastricht Univ, United Nations Univ MERIT, Maastricht Grad Sch Governance, NL-6211 Maastricht, Netherlands.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/hropen/hoad007},
|
|
Article-Number = {hoad007},
|
|
EISSN = {2399-3529},
|
|
Keywords = {assisted reproductive technology; in vitro fertilization; infertility;
|
|
medical costs; out of pocket; systematic review; low- and middle-income
|
|
countries},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PUBLIC-HEALTH SECTOR; SOUTH-AFRICA; INFERTILITY CARE; ECONOMIC-IMPACT;
|
|
EMBRYO-TRANSFER; ACCESS; IVF; CONSEQUENCES; SERVICES; WOMEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Obstetrics \& Gynecology; Reproductive Biology},
|
|
Author-Email = {njagi@merit.unu.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {kiarie, james/0000-0003-4180-7858},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {73},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {4},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000954279300001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000337324000001,
|
|
Author = {Drummond, Jane and Schnirer, Laurie and So, Sylvia and Mayan, Maria and
|
|
Williamson, Deanna L. and Bisanz, Jeffrey and Fassbender, Konrad and
|
|
Wiebe, Natasha},
|
|
Title = {The protocol for the Families First Edmonton trial (FFE): a randomized
|
|
community-based trial to compare four service integration approaches for
|
|
families with low-income},
|
|
Journal = {BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {14},
|
|
Month = {MAY 19},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: Families with low incomes experience an array of health and
|
|
social challenges that compromise their resilience and lead to negative
|
|
family outcomes. Along with financial constraints, there are barriers
|
|
associated with mental and physical health, poorer education and
|
|
language. In addition, vulnerable populations experience many services
|
|
as markedly unhelpful. This combination of family and service barriers
|
|
results in reduced opportunities for effective, primary-level services
|
|
and an increased use of more expensive secondary-level services (e. g.,
|
|
emergency room visits, child apprehensions, police involvement). A
|
|
systematic review of effective interventions demonstrated that promotion
|
|
of physical and mental health using existing service was critically
|
|
important.
|
|
Methods/Design: The Families First Edmonton Trial (FFE) tests four
|
|
service integration approaches to increase use of available health and
|
|
social services for families with low-income. It is a randomized,
|
|
two-factor, single-blind, longitudinal effectiveness trial where
|
|
low-income families (1168) were randomly assigned to receive either (1)
|
|
Family Healthy Lifestyle plus Family Recreation service integration
|
|
(Comprehensive), (2) Family Healthy Lifestyle service integration, (3)
|
|
Family Recreation service integration, or (4) existing services. To be
|
|
eligible families needed to be receiving one of five government income
|
|
assistance programs. The trial was conducted in the City of Edmonton
|
|
between January 2006 and August 2011. The families were followed for a
|
|
total of three years of which interventional services were received for
|
|
between 18 and 24 months. The primary outcome is the number of family
|
|
linkages to health and social services as measured by a customized
|
|
survey tool ``Family Services Inventory{''}. Secondary outcomes include
|
|
type and satisfaction with services, cost of services, family member
|
|
health, and family functioning. Where possible, the measures for
|
|
secondary outcomes were selected because of their standardization, the
|
|
presence of published norming data, and their utility as comparators to
|
|
other studies of low-income families. As an effectiveness trial,
|
|
community and government partners participated in all committees through
|
|
a mutually agreed upon governance model and helped manage and problem
|
|
solve with researchers.
|
|
Discussion: Modifications were made to the FFE trial based on the
|
|
pragmatics of community-based trials.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Drummond, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Alberta, Edmonton Clin Hlth Acad, Fac Nursing, 11405 87 Ave, Edmonton, AB T6G 1C9, Canada.
|
|
Drummond, Jane, Univ Alberta, Edmonton Clin Hlth Acad, Fac Nursing, Edmonton, AB T6G 1C9, Canada.
|
|
Schnirer, Laurie; So, Sylvia; Mayan, Maria, Univ Alberta, Fac Extens, Edmonton, AB T5J 4P6, Canada.
|
|
Williamson, Deanna L., Univ Alberta, Fac Agr Life \& Environm Sci, Dept Human Ecol, Edmonton, AB T6G 2R3, Canada.
|
|
Bisanz, Jeffrey, Univ Alberta, Fac Arts, Dept Psychol, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E9, Canada.
|
|
Fassbender, Konrad, Univ Alberta, Fac Med Dent, Dept Oncol, Edmonton, AB T6G 1C9, Canada.
|
|
Wiebe, Natasha, Univ Alberta, Dept Med, Div Nephrol, Edmonton, AB T6G 1C9, Canada.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/1472-6963-14-223},
|
|
Article-Number = {223},
|
|
EISSN = {1472-6963},
|
|
Keywords = {Low-income families; Service integration; Healthy families; Recreation;
|
|
Pragmatic trial},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WELFARE-TO-WORK; MENTAL-HEALTH PROBLEMS; HOME VISITATION; EARLY
|
|
INTERVENTION; EDUCATION-PROGRAM; CHILDREN; CARE; MOTHERS; PREVALENCE;
|
|
CHILDHOOD},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {jane.drummond@ualberta.ca},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Wiebe, Natasha/V-7803-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Wiebe, Natasha/0000-0002-5613-1582},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {99},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000337324000001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000471157200025,
|
|
Author = {Zhu, Jingrong and Li, Jinlin and Zhang, Zengbo and Li, Hao and Cai,
|
|
Lingfei},
|
|
Title = {Exploring determinants of health provider choice and heterogeneity in
|
|
preference among outpatients in Beijing: a labelled discrete choice
|
|
experiment},
|
|
Journal = {BMJ OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective For a long time in China, public hospitals have been the most
|
|
prominent provider of healthcare. However, recent policy reforms mean
|
|
the private sector is experiencing rapid development. Thus, the purpose
|
|
of this study is to detect whether the policies published by the
|
|
government aimed to improve the quality of healthcare services were
|
|
catering to patient's preferences.
|
|
Participants and methods Our work uses dental care as an example of
|
|
services provided in outpatient setting and takes advantage of a
|
|
labelled discrete choice experiment with a random sample of respondents
|
|
from Beijing. Participants were asked to make a choice between four
|
|
healthcare providers with different attributes. Mixed logit and latent
|
|
class models were used for the analysis.
|
|
Result Care provided by high-level private hospitals and community
|
|
hospitals were valued RMB154 and 216 less, respectively, than care
|
|
provided by class A tertiary hospitals, while the most disliked provider
|
|
was private clinics. This was the most valued attribute of dental care.
|
|
Respondents also value: lower waiting times, the option to choose their
|
|
doctor, lower treatment costs, shorter travel times and a clean waiting
|
|
room. However, when the level of provider was analysed, the prevailing
|
|
notion that patients in China were always likely to choose public
|
|
services than private services no longer holds. Four classes of patients
|
|
with distinct preferences for dental care provider choice were
|
|
identified, which can partly be explained by age, income, experience and
|
|
Hukou status-a household registration permit.
|
|
Discussion The study to some extent challenged the overwhelming
|
|
predominance of public healthcare providers in China. The preference
|
|
heterogeneity we found was relatively large. Our findings are
|
|
significant for providers in developing more specific services for
|
|
patients and for policymakers in weighing the pros and cons of future
|
|
initiatives in medical reform.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Li, JL (Corresponding Author), Beijing Inst Technol, Sch Management \& Econ, Beijing, Peoples R China.
|
|
Zhu, Jingrong; Li, Jinlin; Zhang, Zengbo; Li, Hao; Cai, Lingfei, Beijing Inst Technol, Sch Management \& Econ, Beijing, Peoples R China.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023363},
|
|
Article-Number = {e023363},
|
|
ISSN = {2044-6055},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {URBAN CHINA; CARE; SATISFACTION; HOSPITALS; PHYSICIAN; REFORM},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {1013899896@qq.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Zhu, Jingrong/0000-0002-5607-0329
|
|
Zhu, Jingrong/0000-0002-4508-2340
|
|
Li, Hao/0000-0001-9149-9457},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000471157200025},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000694201900002,
|
|
Author = {Lazo-Porras, Maria and Liu, Hueiming and Miranda, J. Jaime and Moore,
|
|
Graham and Burri, Mafalda and Chappuis, Francois and Perel, Pablo and
|
|
Beran, David},
|
|
Title = {Process evaluation of complex interventions in chronic and neglected
|
|
tropical diseases in low- and middle-income countries-a scoping review
|
|
protocol},
|
|
Journal = {SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {10},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {SEP 7},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: The use of process evaluations is a growing area of interest
|
|
in research groups working on complex interventions. This methodology
|
|
tries to understand how the intervention was implemented to inform
|
|
policy and practice. A recent systematic review by Liu et al. on process
|
|
evaluations of complex interventions addressing non-communicable
|
|
diseases found few studies in low- and middle- income countries (LMIC)
|
|
because it was restricted to randomized controlled trials, primary
|
|
healthcare level and non-communicable diseases. Yet, LMICs face
|
|
different barriers to implement interventions in comparison to
|
|
high-income countries such as limited human resources, access to health
|
|
care and skills of health workers to treat chronic conditions especially
|
|
at primary health care level. Therefore, understanding the challenges of
|
|
interventions for non-communicable diseases and neglected tropical
|
|
diseases (diseases that affect poor populations and have chronic
|
|
sequelae) will be important to improve how process evaluation is
|
|
designed, conducted and used in research projects in LMICs. For these
|
|
reasons, in comparison to the study of Liu et al., the current study
|
|
will expand the search strategy to include different study designs,
|
|
languages and settings.
|
|
Objective: Map research using process evaluation in the areas of
|
|
non-communicable diseases and neglected tropical diseases to inform the
|
|
gaps in the design and conduct of this type of research in LMICs.
|
|
Methods: Scoping review of process evaluation studies of randomized
|
|
controlled trials (RCTs) and non-RCTs of complex interventions
|
|
implemented in LMICs including participants with non-communicable
|
|
diseases or neglected tropical diseases and their health care providers
|
|
(physicians, nurses, technicians and others) related to achieve better
|
|
health for all through reforms in universal coverage, public policy,
|
|
service delivery and leadership. The aspects that will be evaluated are
|
|
as follows: (i) available evidence of process evaluation in the areas of
|
|
non-communicable diseases and neglected tropical diseases such as
|
|
frameworks and theories, (ii) methods applied to conduct process
|
|
evaluations and (iii) gaps between the design of the intervention and
|
|
its implementation that were identified through the process evaluation.
|
|
Studies published from January 2008. Exclusion criteria are as follows:
|
|
not peer reviewed articles, not a report based on empirical research,
|
|
not reported in English or Spanish or Portuguese or French, reviews and
|
|
non-human research.
|
|
Discussion: This scoping review will map the evidence of process
|
|
evaluations conducted in LMICs. It will also identify the methods they
|
|
used to collect and interpret data, how different theories and
|
|
frameworks were used and lessons from the implementation of complex
|
|
interventions. This information will allow researchers to conduct better
|
|
process evaluations considering special characteristics from countries
|
|
with limited human resources, scarce data available and limited access
|
|
to health care.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lazo-Porras, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Geneva, Div Trop \& Humanitarian Med, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Lazo-Porras, M (Corresponding Author), Geneva Univ Hosp, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Lazo-Porras, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, CRONICAS Ctr Excellence Chron Dis, Armendariz 455, Lima, Peru.
|
|
Lazo-Porras, Maria; Chappuis, Francois; Beran, David, Univ Geneva, Div Trop \& Humanitarian Med, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Lazo-Porras, Maria; Chappuis, Francois; Beran, David, Geneva Univ Hosp, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Lazo-Porras, Maria; Miranda, J. Jaime, Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, CRONICAS Ctr Excellence Chron Dis, Armendariz 455, Lima, Peru.
|
|
Liu, Hueiming, Univ New South Wales, George Inst Global Hlth, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Miranda, J. Jaime, Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Sch Med, Lima, Peru.
|
|
Moore, Graham, Cardiff Univ, UKCRC Ctr Excellence, DECIPHer, Cardiff, Wales.
|
|
Burri, Mafalda, Univ Geneva, Lib, Fac Med, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Perel, Pablo, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, Epidemiol \& Publ Hlth, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s13643-021-01801-7},
|
|
Article-Number = {244},
|
|
EISSN = {2046-4053},
|
|
Keywords = {Process evaluation; Complex interventions; Non-communicable diseases;
|
|
Neglected tropical diseases},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH; SYSTEMS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {maria.lazo.porras@gmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Lazo-Porras, Maria/0000-0003-0062-5476
|
|
/0000-0002-2342-301X
|
|
Chappuis, Francois/0000-0003-0442-7610},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {34},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000694201900002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000416056600013,
|
|
Author = {Kavle, Justine A. and LaCroix, Elizabeth and Dau, Hallie and Engmann,
|
|
Cyril},
|
|
Title = {Addressing barriers to exclusive breast-feeding in low- and
|
|
middle-income countries: a systematic review and programmatic
|
|
implications},
|
|
Journal = {PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {17},
|
|
Pages = {3120-3134},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective Despite numerous global initiatives on breast-feeding, trend
|
|
data show exclusive breast-feeding (EBF) rates have stagnated over the
|
|
last two decades. The purpose of the present systematic review was to
|
|
determine barriers to exclusive breast-feeding in twenty-five low- and
|
|
middle-income countries and discuss implications for programmes.
|
|
Design A search of Scopus, MEDLINE, CINAHL and PsychINFO was conducted
|
|
to retrieve studies from January 2000 to October 2015. Using inclusion
|
|
criteria, we selected both qualitative and quantitative studies that
|
|
described barriers to EBF.
|
|
Setting Low- and middle-income countries.
|
|
Subjects Following application of systematic review criteria,
|
|
forty-eight articles from fourteen countries were included in the
|
|
review.
|
|
Results Sixteen barriers to EBF were identified in the review. There is
|
|
moderate evidence of a negative association between maternal employment
|
|
and EBF practices. Studies that examined EBF barriers at childbirth and
|
|
the initial 24 h post-delivery found strong evidence that caesarean
|
|
section can impede EBF. There is moderate evidence for early initiation
|
|
of breast-feeding and likelihood of practising EBF. Breast-feeding
|
|
problems were commonly reported from cross-sectional or observational
|
|
studies. Counselling on EBF and the presence of family and/or community
|
|
support have demonstrated improvements in EBF.
|
|
Conclusions Improving the counselling skills of health workers to
|
|
address breast-feeding problems and increasing community support for
|
|
breast-feeding are critical components of infant and young child feeding
|
|
programming, which will aid in attaining the 2025 World Health Assembly
|
|
EBF targets. Legislation and regulations on marketing of breast-milk
|
|
substitutes, paid maternity leave and breast-feeding breaks for working
|
|
mothers require attention in low- and middle-income countries.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kavle, JA (Corresponding Author), MCSP, 1776 Massachusetts Ave NW,Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
|
|
Kavle, JA (Corresponding Author), PATH, Maternal Newborn \& Child Hlth \& Nutr, Washington, DC 20001 USA.
|
|
Kavle, JA (Corresponding Author), George Washington Univ, Milken Inst, Sch Publ Hlth, Washington, DC 20037 USA.
|
|
Kavle, Justine A., MCSP, 1776 Massachusetts Ave NW,Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
|
|
Kavle, Justine A.; LaCroix, Elizabeth; Dau, Hallie, PATH, Maternal Newborn \& Child Hlth \& Nutr, Washington, DC 20001 USA.
|
|
Kavle, Justine A.; LaCroix, Elizabeth; Dau, Hallie, George Washington Univ, Milken Inst, Sch Publ Hlth, Washington, DC 20037 USA.
|
|
Engmann, Cyril, PATH, Maternal Newborn \& Child Hlth \& Nutr, Seattle, WA USA.
|
|
Engmann, Cyril, Univ Washington, Dept Pediat, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
|
|
Engmann, Cyril, Univ Washington, Dept Global Hlth, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1017/S1368980017002531},
|
|
ISSN = {1368-9800},
|
|
EISSN = {1475-2727},
|
|
Keywords = {Breast-feeding; Exclusive breast-feeding; Barriers; Infant and young
|
|
child feeding programmes; Infant and young child nutrition},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {1ST 6 MONTHS; CESAREAN DELIVERY; RURAL-POPULATION; MILK SUBSTITUTES;
|
|
DONOR MILK; INFANT; MOTHERS; DETERMINANTS; PROMOTION; COMMUNITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Nutrition \& Dietetics},
|
|
Author-Email = {jkavle@path.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Dau, Hallie/ABC-8946-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Dau, Hallie/0000-0001-6193-4032
|
|
Kavle, Justine/0000-0003-0439-6308},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {98},
|
|
Times-Cited = {96},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {24},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000416056600013},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000626407700006,
|
|
Author = {Mueller, Jenna L. and Rozman, Natalie and Sunassee, Enakshi D. and
|
|
Gupta, Aryaman and Schuval, Cayla and Biswas, Arushi and Knight, Bailey
|
|
and Kulkarni, Shreyas and Brown, Meredith and Ramanujam, Nimmi and
|
|
Fitzgerald, Tamara N.},
|
|
Title = {An Accessible Laparoscope for Surgery in Low- and Middle- Income
|
|
Countries},
|
|
Journal = {ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {49},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {1657-1669},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Laparoscopic surgery is the standard of care in high-income countries
|
|
for many procedures in the chest and abdomen. It avoids large incisions
|
|
by using a tiny camera and fine instruments manipulated through keyhole
|
|
incisions, but it is generally unavailable in low- and middle-income
|
|
countries (LMICs) due to the high cost of installment, lack of qualified
|
|
maintenance personnel, unreliable electricity, and shortage of
|
|
consumable items. Patients in LMICs would benefit from laparoscopic
|
|
surgery, as advantages include decreased pain, improved recovery time,
|
|
fewer wound infections, and shorter hospital stays. To address this
|
|
need, we developed an accessible laparoscopic system, called the
|
|
ReadyView laparoscope for use in LMICs. The device includes an
|
|
integrated camera and LED light source that can be displayed on any
|
|
monitor. The ReadyView laparoscope was evaluated with standard optical
|
|
imaging targets to determine its performance against a state-of-the-art
|
|
commercial laparoscope. The ReadyView laparoscope has a comparable
|
|
resolving power, lens distortion, field of view, depth of field, and
|
|
color reproduction accuracy to a commercially available endoscope,
|
|
particularly at shorter, commonly-used working distances (3-5 cm).
|
|
Additionally, the ReadyView has a cooler temperature profile, decreasing
|
|
the risk for tissue injury and operating room fires. The ReadyView
|
|
features a waterproof design, enabling sterilization by submersion, as
|
|
commonly performed in LMICs. A custom desktop software was developed to
|
|
view the video on a laptop computer with a frame rate greater than 30
|
|
frames per second and to white balance the image, which is critical for
|
|
clinical use. The ReadyView laparoscope is capable of providing the
|
|
image quality and overall performance needed for laparoscopic surgery.
|
|
This portable low-cost system is well suited to increase access to
|
|
laparoscopic surgery in LMICs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fitzgerald, TN (Corresponding Author), Duke Global Hlth Inst, Durham, NC 27710 USA.
|
|
Mueller, Jenna L., Univ Maryland, Clark Sch Engn, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
|
|
Rozman, Natalie; Sunassee, Enakshi D.; Gupta, Aryaman; Schuval, Cayla; Biswas, Arushi; Kulkarni, Shreyas; Ramanujam, Nimmi, Duke Univ, Pratt Sch Engn, Durham, NC USA.
|
|
Knight, Bailey; Brown, Meredith, Duke Univ, Trinity Sch Arts \& Sci, Durham, NC USA.
|
|
Ramanujam, Nimmi; Fitzgerald, Tamara N., Duke Global Hlth Inst, Durham, NC 27710 USA.
|
|
Fitzgerald, Tamara N., Duke Univ, Sch Med, Durham, NC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s10439-020-02707-6},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {MAR 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {0090-6964},
|
|
EISSN = {1573-9686},
|
|
Keywords = {Biomedical devices; Laparoscopic surgery; Global surgery},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SURGICAL CARE; COST},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Engineering, Biomedical},
|
|
Author-Email = {tnfitz@hotmail.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Knight, Bailey/0000-0001-7813-5624
|
|
Biswas, Arushi/0000-0001-9785-1466
|
|
Kulkarni, Shreyas/0000-0002-6723-515X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000626407700006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000173451400005,
|
|
Author = {Stubbe, DE and Thomas, WJ},
|
|
Title = {A survey of early-career child and adolescent psychiatrists:
|
|
Professional activities and perceptions},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2002},
|
|
Volume = {41},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {123-130},
|
|
Month = {FEB},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective: To assess the career paths and work perceptions of
|
|
early-career child and adolescent psychiatrists in the United States.
|
|
Method: Analysis of survey data of 392/797 (49.2\%) of all U.S. child
|
|
and adolescent psychiatrists graduating from training in 1996-1998 and
|
|
on the mailing list of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
|
|
Psychiatry. Results: Slightly more than half of those surveyed were
|
|
women, and most were in their late thirties, white, married, and living
|
|
in the geographic area in which they trained, with a median income for
|
|
full-time workers between \$121,000 and \$150,000. Those with
|
|
educational debt owed an average of \$69,741. The sample was generally
|
|
very satisfied with their work. They identified clinical work, variety,
|
|
autonomy, and making a difference as the best aspects, and managed care,
|
|
paperwork, and overwork as the least desirable aspects. The bulk of
|
|
hours worked were in solo private practice, public sector, and group
|
|
practice, with children and adolescents making up 73\% of patients
|
|
treated. The most common treatment modality was medication management.
|
|
Conclusions: The present study uses a database approach to defining
|
|
current practice and workforce issues among early-career child and
|
|
adolescent psychiatrists. These data may facilitate objective discussion
|
|
about public policies concerning workforce priorities, barriers, and
|
|
facilitators to recruitment in this understaffed field.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Stubbe, DE (Corresponding Author), Yale Univ, Sch Med, Ctr Child Study, 230 S Frontage Rd,POB 207900, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
|
|
Yale Univ, Sch Med, Ctr Child Study, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
|
|
Quinnipiac Univ, Sch Law, Hamden, CT USA.
|
|
Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/00004583-200202000-00005},
|
|
ISSN = {0890-8567},
|
|
EISSN = {1527-5418},
|
|
Keywords = {child and adolescent psychiatrist; career; workforce; practice},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MENTAL-HEALTH-CARE; MANAGED CARE; DELIVERY; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychology, Developmental; Pediatrics; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {dorothy.stubbe@yale.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Stubbe, Dorothy/0000-0003-3826-045X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000173451400005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000586041700001,
|
|
Author = {Chen, Ying-Ju and Seshadri, Sridhar and Sohoni, Milind G.},
|
|
Title = {A demand partitioning framework to reserve production for small
|
|
enterprises},
|
|
Journal = {NAVAL RESEARCH LOGISTICS},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {68},
|
|
Number = {8, SI},
|
|
Pages = {1037-1053},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The reservation of goods to be produced in the micro, small, and medium
|
|
enterprises (MSME) sector, in the early years after India's
|
|
independence, addressed the dual needs of development of the industrial
|
|
sector and production of goods. However, these industrial policies
|
|
created an incentive for firms to remain small so that they can continue
|
|
to avail of the benefits provided by the Government. On the positive
|
|
side, the MSMEs typically employ more labor intensive production
|
|
processes and consequently contribute significantly to the provision of
|
|
employment opportunities, generation of income, and poverty reduction.
|
|
But, on the negative side, the policies have also partly facilitated the
|
|
creation of a divide in terms of productivity between the MSMEs and
|
|
large sized firms. In particular the policy raises important questions
|
|
for a firm auctioning supply contracts among suppliers with a
|
|
significant cost differential. In this paper we propose an idea to
|
|
allocate supply contracts wherein a manufacturing firm partitions the
|
|
stochastic demand into mutually exclusive portions and awards each
|
|
portion to a different supplier. We characterize such an optimal
|
|
procurement mechanism when there are two types of suppliers and an
|
|
arbitrary number of demand portions. We show that the optimal
|
|
procurement may require the manufacturer to intentionally withhold some
|
|
demand portion, and this arises when one type of supplier is
|
|
considerably inefficient in serving a demand portion. We extend our
|
|
analysis to the cases with multiple types with two suppliers and two
|
|
types with multiple suppliers. The optimal partition is composed of at
|
|
most six contiguous demand portions, and it may include a detrimental
|
|
demand portion that only generates a negative expected payoff to both
|
|
supplier types. Our demand partitioning mechanism leads to a strictly
|
|
higher manufacturer's expected payoff than the conventional
|
|
winner-take-all case unless one supplier type completely dominates the
|
|
other. We present numerical experiments that indicate when such a
|
|
mechanism holds the greatest advantage for the buyer.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sohoni, MG (Corresponding Author), Indian Sch Business, Hyderabad, India.
|
|
Chen, Ying-Ju, Hong Kong Univ Sci \& Technol, Sch Business \& Management, Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Chen, Ying-Ju, Hong Kong Univ Sci \& Technol, Sch Engn, Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
|
|
Seshadri, Sridhar, Univ Illinois, Gies Coll Business, Urbana, IL 61801 USA.
|
|
Sohoni, Milind G., Indian Sch Business, Hyderabad, India.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/nav.21953},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {NOV 2020},
|
|
ISSN = {0894-069X},
|
|
EISSN = {1520-6750},
|
|
Keywords = {demand partitioning; industrial policy; mechanism design; procurement},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INFORMATION; AUCTIONS; POLICIES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Operations Research \& Management Science},
|
|
Author-Email = {milind\_sohoni@isb.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Sohoni, Milind/E-4894-2015
|
|
chen, ying/HHS-8254-2022
|
|
Sohoni, Milind/E-4894-2015},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sohoni, Milind/0000-0002-5236-2375
|
|
Sohoni, Milind/0000-0003-0510-7109},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {21},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {29},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000586041700001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000297146100009,
|
|
Author = {Grayson, Martha S. and Newton, Dale A. and Patrick, Patricia A. and
|
|
Smith, Lawrence},
|
|
Title = {Impact of AOA Status and Perceived Lifestyle on Career Choices of
|
|
Medical School Graduates},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2011},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {12},
|
|
Pages = {1434-1440},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Based upon student ratings of such factors as predictable
|
|
work hours and personal time, medical specialties have been identified
|
|
as lifestyle friendly, intermediate, or unfriendly. Lifestyle friendly
|
|
programs may be more desirable, more competitive, and for students
|
|
elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) Honor Medical Society, more
|
|
attainable.
|
|
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to evaluate whether AOA
|
|
students increasingly entered lifestyle friendly residency programs and
|
|
whether trends in program selection differed between AOA and non-AOA
|
|
graduates.
|
|
DESIGN: This retrospective cohort study examined PGY-2 data from the
|
|
Association of American Medical Colleges and the 12 allopathic schools
|
|
in the Associated Medical Schools of New York.
|
|
PARTICIPANTS: Data on 1987-2006 graduates from participating schools
|
|
were evaluated.
|
|
MAIN MEASURES: Residency program selection over the 20-year period
|
|
served as the main outcome measure.
|
|
KEY RESULTS: AOA graduates increasingly entered lifestyle-friendly
|
|
residencies-from 12.9\% in 1987 to 32.6\% in 2006 (p < 0.01). There was
|
|
also a significant decrease in AOA graduates entering lifestyle
|
|
unfriendly residencies, from 31.6\% in 1987 to 12.6\% in 2006 (p <
|
|
0.01). Selection of lifestyle intermediate residencies among AOA
|
|
graduates remained fairly stable at an average of 53\%. Similar trends
|
|
were found among non-AOA students. However, within these categories, AOA
|
|
graduates increasingly selected radiology, dermatology, plastic surgery
|
|
and orthopedics while non-AOA graduates increasingly selected
|
|
anesthesiology and neurology.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: While lifestyle factors appear to influence residency
|
|
program selection, AOA graduates differentially were more likely to
|
|
either choose or attain certain competitive, lifestyle-friendly
|
|
specialties. Health care reform should be targeted to improve lifestyle
|
|
and decrease income disparities for specialties needed to meet health
|
|
manpower needs.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Grayson, MS (Corresponding Author), Albert Einstein Coll Med, Off Med Educ, Bronx, NY 10467 USA.
|
|
Grayson, Martha S., Albert Einstein Coll Med, Off Med Educ, Bronx, NY 10467 USA.
|
|
Grayson, Martha S., Albert Einstein Coll Med, Dept Med, Bronx, NY 10467 USA.
|
|
Newton, Dale A., E Carolina Univ, Dept Med, Greenville, NC 27834 USA.
|
|
Newton, Dale A., E Carolina Univ, Dept Pediat, Brody Sch Med, Greenville, NC 27834 USA.
|
|
Patrick, Patricia A., Winthrop Univ Hosp, Off Hlth Outcomes Res, Mineola, NY 11501 USA.
|
|
Patrick, Patricia A., New York Med Coll, Sch Hlth Sci \& Practice, Valhalla, NY 10595 USA.
|
|
Smith, Lawrence, Hofstra N Shore LIJ Sch Med, Hempstead, NY USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1007/s11606-011-1811-9},
|
|
ISSN = {0884-8734},
|
|
Keywords = {career choice; medical students; workforce; residency; lifestyle},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {SPECIALTY CHOICE; GENERAL-SURGERY; STUDENTS; WORKFORCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {marti.grayson@einstein.yu.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Patrick, Patricia/0000-0001-5101-6967},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {32},
|
|
Times-Cited = {18},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000297146100009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000951299200001,
|
|
Author = {Kolie, Delphin and Van De Pas, Remco and Codjia, Laurence and Zurn,
|
|
Pascal},
|
|
Title = {Increasing the availability of health workers in rural sub-Saharan
|
|
Africa: a scoping review of rural pipeline programmes},
|
|
Journal = {HUMAN RESOURCES FOR HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {MAR 14},
|
|
Abstract = {IntroductionRural pipeline approach has recently gain prominent
|
|
recognition in improving the availability of health workers in
|
|
hard-to-reach areas such as rural and poor regions. Understanding
|
|
implications for its successful implementation is important to guide
|
|
health policy and decision-makers in Sub-Saharan Africa. This review
|
|
aims to synthesize the evidence on rural pipeline implementation and
|
|
impacts in sub-Saharan Africa.MethodsWe conducted a scoping review using
|
|
Joanna Briggs Institute guidebook. We searched in PubMed and Google
|
|
scholar databases and the grey literature. We conducted a thematic
|
|
analysis to assess the studies. Data were reported following the PRISMA
|
|
extension for Scoping reviews guidelines.ResultsOf the 443 references
|
|
identified through database searching, 22 met the inclusion criteria.
|
|
Rural pipeline pillars that generated impacts included ensuring that
|
|
more rural students are selected into programmes; developing a
|
|
curriculum oriented towards rural health and rural exposure during
|
|
training; curriculum oriented to rural health delivery; and ensuring
|
|
retention of health workers in rural areas through educational and
|
|
professional support. These impacts varied from one pillar to another
|
|
and included: increased in number of rural health practitioners;
|
|
reduction in communication barriers between healthcare providers and
|
|
community members; changes in household economic and social
|
|
circumstances especially for students from poor family; improvement of
|
|
health services quality; improved health education and promotion within
|
|
rural communities; and motivation of community members to enrol their
|
|
children in school. However, implementation of rural pipeline resulted
|
|
in some unintended impacts such as perceived workload increased by
|
|
trainee's supervisors; increased job absenteeism among senior health
|
|
providers; patients' discomfort of being attended by students; perceived
|
|
poor quality care provided by students which influenced health
|
|
facilities attendance. Facilitating factors of rural pipeline
|
|
implementation included: availability of learning infrastructures in
|
|
rural areas; ensuring students' accommodation and safety; setting no age
|
|
restriction for students applying for rural medical schools; and
|
|
appropriate academic capacity-building programmes for medical students.
|
|
Implementation challenges included poor preparation of rural health
|
|
training schools' candidates; tuition fees payment; limited access to
|
|
rural health facilities for students training; inadequate living and
|
|
working conditions; and perceived discrimination of rural health
|
|
workers.ConclusionThis review advocates for combined implementation of
|
|
rural pipeline pillars, taking into account the specificity of country
|
|
context. Policy and decision-makers in sub-Saharan Africa should extend
|
|
rural training programmes to involve nurses, midwives and other allied
|
|
health professionals. Decision-makers in sub-Saharan Africa should also
|
|
commit more for improving rural living and working environments to
|
|
facilitate the implementation of rural health workforce development
|
|
programmes.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Kolie, D (Corresponding Author), Minist Hlth, Maferinyah Natl Training \& Res Ctr Rural Hlth, Forecariah, Guinea.
|
|
Kolie, Delphin, Minist Hlth, Maferinyah Natl Training \& Res Ctr Rural Hlth, Forecariah, Guinea.
|
|
Van De Pas, Remco, Inst Trop Med Antwerp, Dept Publ Hlth, Antwerp, Belgium.
|
|
Codjia, Laurence; Zurn, Pascal, World Hlth Org, Dept Hlth Workforce, Geneva, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12960-023-00801-z},
|
|
Article-Number = {20},
|
|
EISSN = {1478-4491},
|
|
Keywords = {Rural pipeline programmes; Medical education reforms; Health workers;
|
|
Sub-Saharan Africa; Scoping review},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {RETENTION; DOCTORS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services; Industrial Relations \& Labor},
|
|
Author-Email = {dkolie@maferinyah.org},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {KOLIE, Delphin/0000-0003-4705-0964},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {61},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000951299200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000283701800007,
|
|
Author = {Young, Amanda E.},
|
|
Title = {Return to work following disabling occupational injury - facilitators of
|
|
employment continuation},
|
|
Journal = {SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF WORK ENVIRONMENT \& HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2010},
|
|
Volume = {36},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {473-483},
|
|
Month = {NOV},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective Return to work following occupational injury is an important
|
|
rehabilitation milestone; however, it does not mark the end of the
|
|
return-to-work process. Following a return to the workplace, workers can
|
|
experience difficulties that compromise their rehabilitation gains.
|
|
Although there has been investigation of factors related to a return to
|
|
the workplace, little attention has been paid to understanding what
|
|
facilitates continued retum-to-work success as this paper aims to do.
|
|
Methods This study used data gathered during one-on-one telephone
|
|
interviews with 146 people who experienced a work-related injury that
|
|
resulted in their being unable to return to their pre-injury job, but
|
|
who returned to work following an extended period of absence and the
|
|
receipt of vocational services.
|
|
Results Numerous return-to-work facilitators were reported, including
|
|
features of the workers' environmental and personal contexts, as well as
|
|
body function, activities, and participation. Influences that stood out
|
|
included a perception that the work was appropriate, supportive
|
|
workplace relationships, and a sense of satisfaction/achievement
|
|
associated with being at work.
|
|
Conclusions The findings support the contention that initiatives aimed
|
|
at improving return-to-work outcomes can go beyond the removal of
|
|
barriers to include interventions to circumvent difficulties before they
|
|
are encountered. Together with providing ideas for interventions, the
|
|
study's findings offer an insight into research and theoretical
|
|
development that might be undertaken to further the understanding of the
|
|
return-to-work process and the factors that impact upon it.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Young, AE (Corresponding Author), 71 Frankland Rd, Hopkinton, MA 01748 USA.
|
|
Young, Amanda E., Liberty Mutual Res Inst Safety, Ctr Disabil Res, Hopkinton, MA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.5271/sjweh.2986},
|
|
ISSN = {0355-3140},
|
|
EISSN = {1795-990X},
|
|
Keywords = {disablement; long-term sickness absence; return-to-work; vocational
|
|
rehabilitation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TO-WORK; MUSCULOSKELETAL DISORDERS; REDUCED PRODUCTIVITY; BACK-PAIN;
|
|
BARRIERS; DISABILITY; HEALTH; REHABILITATION; EXPERIENCES; PERCEPTIONS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {amandae.young@libertymutual.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Normandeau, Amanda/HHN-8881-2022
|
|
Young, Amanda Ellen/HDN-1629-2022},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Young, Amanda Ellen/0000-0002-7288-3469},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {47},
|
|
Times-Cited = {49},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000283701800007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000424550700007,
|
|
Author = {Barrios Gonzalez, Ma Candelaria and Martinez Navarro, Ma Angeles},
|
|
Title = {Patterns of convergence in Spanish regions: An application of
|
|
Phillips-Sul's methodology},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS REGIONALES},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Number = {109},
|
|
Pages = {165-190},
|
|
Month = {MAY-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The literature on economic growth has placed special focus on analysing
|
|
the convergence processes between countries and regions. Within the
|
|
growth theories, two alternative approaches have been developed to
|
|
explain the differences observed in per capita income across countries
|
|
over time. Neoclassical growth models predict a process of convergence
|
|
between economies where the relatively poor economies will grow at a
|
|
faster rate than the relatively rich ones, while endogenous growth
|
|
models describe a situation of non-convergence.
|
|
Theoretical developments and empirical studies on convergence have led
|
|
to the development of different definitions of the term and to the use
|
|
of different methodologies for its investigation (Islam, 2003). The
|
|
concepts of sigma and beta convergence have been widely used in
|
|
empirical papers. Sigma convergence refers to the reduction in the per
|
|
capita income dispersion across economies over time, while beta
|
|
convergence refers to the existence of a negative correlation between
|
|
income growth over time and its initial level.
|
|
The concept of absolute or unconditional convergence assumes that per
|
|
capita incomes in the regions will tend to converge in the long term to
|
|
a single steady state, regardless of their initial conditions. In
|
|
contrast, the conditional convergence hypothesis holds that each economy
|
|
converges to its own stationary state, so that economies will converge
|
|
with one another in the long run if they have similar structural
|
|
characteristics (Galor, 1996).
|
|
Neoclassical growth models lead to the hypothesis of conditional
|
|
convergence between economies, but also to the hypothesis of convergence
|
|
clubs, which proposes that regions with similar economic structures can
|
|
converge to different steady states if they start from different initial
|
|
conditions. Therefore, although certain regions have globally
|
|
heterogeneous growth paths, they may be gathered into subgroups that
|
|
exhibit homogeneous growth dynamics.
|
|
At the international level, the empirical evidence confirms the
|
|
existence of convergence clubs between countries (Durlauf and Johnson,
|
|
1995; Canova, 2004, Phillips and Sul, 2007, Monfort et al., 2013, Borsi
|
|
and Metiu, 2015), as well as between regions (Postiglioni et al., 2010;
|
|
Bartkowska and Riedl, 2012; Rodriguez et al., 2016; Tian et al., 2016;
|
|
von Lyncker and Thoennessen, 2016). However, there is still little
|
|
empirical evidence for the existence of convergence clubs in the Spanish
|
|
economy, even though a few papers have been written in this regard.
|
|
Indeed, some research has provided evidence of convergence clubs between
|
|
Spanish regions since the late 1970s, clubs that remain to this day
|
|
(Perez, 2000, Goerlich et al., 2002, Montanes and Olmos, 2014, Brida et
|
|
al., 2015), although none has used a methodology like the one used in
|
|
this article. Perez (2000) notes that the convergence process for per
|
|
capita income in Spain's Autonomous Communities during the period
|
|
1955-1995 can be characterised by subgroups of regions that converge to
|
|
different stationary states. Goerlich et al. (2002), examining the
|
|
convergence of Spanish regions during the period 19552000, find, by the
|
|
end of the period, the existence of two convergence clubs both when they
|
|
use per capita income and labour productivity as a variable. Brida et
|
|
al. (2015) apply a nonparametric clustering approach to the per capita
|
|
income data of the Spanish Autonomous Communities to analyse regional
|
|
convergence during the period 1955-2009. Their results indicate the
|
|
presence, since the late seventies, of two convergence clubs, one more
|
|
homogeneous composed by the richer regions, and another more
|
|
heterogeneous formed by the remaining regions. They also note that there
|
|
has been more convergence among the regions in the first club and a gap
|
|
between clubs in the last two decades. However, as the authors point
|
|
out, these clubs have not remained stable over time, with their numbers
|
|
ranging from three to five. Finally, Montanes and Olmos (2014), using
|
|
two different indicators, per capita income and an indicator of human
|
|
development, study the possible stochastic convergence between Spanish
|
|
regions for the period 1980-2010. The results show, for the end of the
|
|
period, the existence of two distinct geographical areas (for the two
|
|
indicators used), which is interpreted by the authors as evidence of
|
|
different convergence clubs.
|
|
Bearing this in mind, this paper contributes to the existing literature
|
|
by providing some new evidence on the regional converge process in
|
|
Spain. More specifically, the aim of this work is to analyse whether
|
|
Spanish regions display a full convergence process among them or if, on
|
|
the contrary, they form convergence clubs.
|
|
The contributions of this work are twofold. On the one hand, this paper
|
|
provides new evidence on the existence of regional convergence clubs in
|
|
Spain. On the other hand, even though there are various estimation
|
|
methods that can be applied to test club convergence hypotheses, this
|
|
paper focuses on the implementation of a new methodology, which to the
|
|
best of our knowledge, has not been applied to the Spanish case. In
|
|
particular, this work uses the new panel convergence methodology
|
|
developed by Phillips and Sul (2007).
|
|
Phillips and Sul's methodology introduces a cross-sectional study, by
|
|
means of an analysis of heterogeneous time series in the parameters of a
|
|
neoclassical growth model, in order to take into account the
|
|
heterogeneity of the transitional temporary variable analysed. This
|
|
approach has clear advantages over other alternative methods. Firstly,
|
|
it can be used to endogenously identify groups of regions converging
|
|
towards the same growth path, and not by applying a predetermined
|
|
criterion. Secondly, although a full convergence hypothesis can be
|
|
rejected, this approach makes it possible to identify convergence clubs
|
|
among regions, as well as the divergent regions. In addition, the speed
|
|
of the convergence parameter can also be estimated with this
|
|
methodology, which allows distinguishing the relative convergence
|
|
empirically.
|
|
The regional convergence process is analysed considering three
|
|
variables: income per capita and its main components, GDP per worker and
|
|
employment per capita for 17 Spanish regions in the period 1980-2008.
|
|
Data comes from the regional dataset BD. MORES.
|
|
The empirical results obtained in this research confirm the existence of
|
|
full convergence for GDP per worker. However, there is also evidence for
|
|
the existence of convergence clubs in terms of both income per capita
|
|
and employment in Spanish regions.
|
|
Regarding income per capita, our findings suggest the existence of three
|
|
convergence clubs, which converge to different income levels: high,
|
|
medium and low; whereas no divergent region was identified.
|
|
With respect to employment per capita, the results are quite similar to
|
|
those above for income per capita. We identify three clubs, but no
|
|
divergent region was detected.
|
|
The composition of clubs respect both variables, income and per capita
|
|
employment, which remained relatively stable in the period analysed.
|
|
Only four regions (Asturias, Cantabria, Castile and Leon and the Basque
|
|
Country) exhibited differences in the composition of the clubs. The
|
|
differences in the clubs' configuration may be explained by the
|
|
different behaviour of labour productivity in these regions.
|
|
Finally, it is worth noting that this paper is the first step in our
|
|
research. A deeper analysis of the factors responsible for the formation
|
|
of convergence clubs in Spain must be undertaken in order to provide
|
|
useful insight to policy makers regarding the mechanisms needed to
|
|
achieve economic and social cohesion amongst regions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gonzalez, MCB (Corresponding Author), Univ La Laguna, San Cristobal De La Lagu, Spain.
|
|
Barrios Gonzalez, Ma Candelaria, Univ La Laguna, San Cristobal De La Lagu, Spain.
|
|
Martinez Navarro, Ma Angeles, Univ Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain.},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-7585},
|
|
Keywords = {Convergence clubs; Log t test; Spain; Regional analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PER-CAPITA; GROWTH; INCOME; INEQUALITY; SPAIN; CLUBS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {MARTÍNEZ, M. ÁNGELES/AAA-7893-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Flores, Esther/0000-0001-5698-6559
|
|
Martinez Navarro, Maria Angeles/0000-0002-3583-2726},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {54},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {6},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000424550700007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000349400300026,
|
|
Author = {Buckley, Jessie P. and Keil, Alexander P. and McGrath, Leah J. and
|
|
Edwards, Jessie K.},
|
|
Title = {Evolving Methods for Inference in the Presence of Healthy Worker
|
|
Survivor Bias},
|
|
Journal = {EPIDEMIOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {204-212},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Healthy worker survivor bias may occur in occupational studies due to
|
|
the tendency for unhealthy individuals to leave work earlier, and
|
|
consequently accrue less exposure, compared with their healthier
|
|
counterparts. If occupational data are not analyzed using appropriate
|
|
methods, this bias can result in attenuation or even reversal of the
|
|
estimated effects of exposures on health outcomes. Recent advances in
|
|
computing power, coupled with state-of-the-art statistical methods, have
|
|
greatly increased the ability of analysts to control healthy worker
|
|
survivor bias. However, these methods have not been widely adopted by
|
|
occupational epidemiologists. We update the seminal review by Arrighi
|
|
and Hertz-Picciotto (Epidemiology. 1994; 5: 186-196) of the sources and
|
|
methods to control healthy worker survivor bias. In our update, we
|
|
discuss methodologic advances since the publication of that review,
|
|
notably with a consideration of how directed acyclic graphs can inform
|
|
the choice of appropriate analytic methods. We summarize and discuss
|
|
methods for addressing this bias, including recent work applying
|
|
g-methods to account for employment status as a time-varying covariate
|
|
affected by prior exposure. In the presence of healthy worker survivor
|
|
bias, g-methods have advantages for estimating less biased parameters
|
|
that have direct policy implications and are clearly communicated to
|
|
decision-makers.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Buckley, JP (Corresponding Author), Univ N Carolina, Dept Epidemiol, CB 7435, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
Buckley, Jessie P.; Keil, Alexander P.; McGrath, Leah J.; Edwards, Jessie K., Univ N Carolina, Dept Epidemiol, Gillings Sch Global Publ Hlth, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
|
|
McGrath, Leah J., RTI Hlth Solut, Chapel Hill, NC USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/EDE.0000000000000217},
|
|
ISSN = {1044-3983},
|
|
EISSN = {1531-5487},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LUNG-CANCER MORTALITY; OCCUPATIONAL ASBESTOS EXPOSURE;
|
|
FAILURE-TIME-MODELS; ACTIVE ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; MARGINAL STRUCTURAL
|
|
MODELS; PARAMETRIC G-FORMULA; MEASUREMENT ERROR; INTERNAL COMPARISONS;
|
|
CUMULATIVE EXPOSURE; CAUSAL INFERENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {jessbuck@unc.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Keil, Alexander/CAE-8705-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Keil, Alexander/0000-0002-0955-6107
|
|
Edwards, Jessie/0000-0002-1741-335X
|
|
Buckley, Jessie/0000-0001-7976-0157},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {62},
|
|
Times-Cited = {70},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000349400300026},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000343322800004,
|
|
Author = {de Thierry, Ebony and Lam, Helen and Harcourt, Mark and Flynn, Matt and
|
|
Wood, Geoff},
|
|
Title = {Defined benefit pension decline: the consequences for organizations and
|
|
employees},
|
|
Journal = {EMPLOYEE RELATIONS},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {36},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {654-673},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to use the theoretical and
|
|
empirical pension literatures to question whether employers are likely
|
|
to gain any competitive advantage from degrading or eliminating their
|
|
employees' defined benefit (DB) pensions.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach - Critical literature review, bringing
|
|
together and synthesizing the industrial relations, economics, social
|
|
policy, and applied pensions literature.
|
|
Findings - DB pension plans do deliver a number of potential performance
|
|
benefits, most notably a decrease in turnover and establishment of
|
|
longer-term employment relationships. However, benefits are more
|
|
pronounced in some conditions than others, which are identified.
|
|
Research limitations/implications - Most of the analysis of pension
|
|
effects to date focuses primarily on DB plans. Yet, these are declining
|
|
in significance. In the years ahead, more attention needs to be paid to
|
|
the potential consequences of defined contribution plans and other types
|
|
of pension.
|
|
Practical implications - In re-evaluating DB pensions, firms have tended
|
|
to focus on savings made through cost cutting. Yet, this approach tends
|
|
to view a firm's people as an expense rather a potential asset. Attempts
|
|
to abandon, modify, or otherwise reduce such schemes has the potential
|
|
to save money in the short term, but the negative long-term consequences
|
|
may be considerable, even if they are not yet obvious.
|
|
Originality/value - This paper is topical in that it consolidates
|
|
existing research evidence from a number of different bodies of
|
|
literature to make a case for the retention of DB pension plans, when,
|
|
in many contexts, they are being scaled back or discarded. It raises a
|
|
number of important issues for reflection by practitioners, and
|
|
highlights key agendas for future scholarly research.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Harcourt, M (Corresponding Author), Univ Waikato, Waikato Management Sch, Dept Strategy \& Human Resource Management, Hamilton, New Zealand.
|
|
de Thierry, Ebony; Harcourt, Mark, Univ Waikato, Waikato Management Sch, Dept Strategy \& Human Resource Management, Hamilton, New Zealand.
|
|
Lam, Helen, Athabasca Univ, Fac Business, Ctr Innovat Management, St Albert, AB, Canada.
|
|
Flynn, Matt, Newcastle Univ, Sch Business, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU, Tyne \& Wear, England.
|
|
Wood, Geoff, Univ Warwick, Warwick Business Sch, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/ER-02-2013-0020},
|
|
ISSN = {0142-5455},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-7069},
|
|
Keywords = {Organizational performance; Performance; Commitment; Economic crisis;
|
|
Pensions; Terms and conditions of employment},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OCCUPATIONAL PENSIONS; LABOR-MARKET; RETIREMENT; INCOME; PORTABILITY;
|
|
MANAGEMENT; COMMITMENT; TENURE; WORK},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Industrial Relations \& Labor; Management},
|
|
Author-Email = {mark@waikato.ac.nz},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Wood, Geoffrey/ABA-5274-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Wood, Geoffrey/0000-0001-9709-1823
|
|
Flynn, Matt/0000-0003-4566-9464},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {74},
|
|
Times-Cited = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {18},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000343322800004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000222672400012,
|
|
Author = {Mendis, S and Abegunde, D and Oladapo, O and Celletti, F and Nordet, P},
|
|
Title = {Barriers to management of cardiovascular risk in a low-resource setting
|
|
using hypertension as an entry point},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION},
|
|
Year = {2004},
|
|
Volume = {22},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {59-64},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective Assess capacity of health-care facilities in a low-resource
|
|
setting to implement the absolute risk approach for assessment of
|
|
cardiovascular risk in hypertensive patients and effective management of
|
|
hypertension
|
|
Design and setting A descriptive cross-sectional study in Egbeda and
|
|
Oluyole local government areas of Oyo State in Nigeria in 56 randomly
|
|
selected primary- (n = 42) and secondary-level (n = 2) health-care and
|
|
private health-care (n = 12) facilities.
|
|
Participants One thousand consecutive, known hypertensives attending the
|
|
selected facilities for follow-up, and health-care providers working in
|
|
the above randomly selected facilities, were interviewed.
|
|
Results About two-thirds of hypertensives utilized primary-care centers
|
|
both for diagnosis and for follow-up. Laboratory and other
|
|
investigations to exclude secondary hypertension or to assess target
|
|
organ damage were not available in the majority of facilities,
|
|
particularly in primary care. A considerable knowledge and awareness gap
|
|
related to hypertension and its complications was found, both among
|
|
patients and health-care providers. Blood pressure control rates were
|
|
poor {[}28\% with systolic blood pressure (SBP) < 140 mmHg and diastolic
|
|
blood pressure (DBP) < 90 mmHg] and drug prescription patterns were not
|
|
evidence based and cost effective. The majority of patients (73\%) in
|
|
this low socio-economic group (mean monthly income US\$73) had to pay
|
|
fully, out of their own pocket, for consultations and medications.
|
|
Conclusions If the absolute risk approach for assessment of risk and
|
|
effective management of hypertension is to be implemented in
|
|
low-resource settings, appropriate policy measures need to be taken to
|
|
improve the competency of health-care providers, to provide basic
|
|
laboratory facilities and to develop affordable financing mechanisms.
|
|
(C) 2004 Lippincott Williams Wilkins.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mendis, S (Corresponding Author), WHO, Bur 4034, 20 Ave Appia, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
WHO, Bur 4034, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1097/00004872-200401000-00013},
|
|
ISSN = {0263-6352},
|
|
EISSN = {1473-5598},
|
|
Keywords = {hypertension; cardiovascular risk; absolute risk; low-resource settings},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {GENERAL-PRACTICE; BLOOD-PRESSURE; NATIONAL-SURVEY; HEALTH; POPULATION;
|
|
CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Peripheral Vascular Disease},
|
|
Author-Email = {mendiss@who.int},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Mendis, Shanthi/GLT-0465-2022
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {mendis, shanthi/0000-0002-8959-5738},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {56},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {3},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000222672400012},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000885976800006,
|
|
Author = {Pena Sanchez, Antonio Rafael and Jimenez Garcia, Mercedes and Ruiz
|
|
Chico, Jose},
|
|
Title = {Public spending in health and socio-economic development in the Spanish
|
|
Regions: Evolution of disparities in last decades},
|
|
Journal = {REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS REGIONALES},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Number = {124},
|
|
Pages = {157-199},
|
|
Month = {MAY-AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {The general objective of this work is to study the level of
|
|
socio-economic development of an economy as an explanatory factor for
|
|
public health expenditure. To do so, this general objective will be
|
|
broken down into three specific ones: firstly, the Spanish position in
|
|
terms of health expenditure in the countries of the Economic and
|
|
Monetary Union as a whole will be studied; secondly, the relationship
|
|
between public health expenditure per capita and GDP per capita will be
|
|
analysed; and thirdly, the level of convergence experienced by public
|
|
health expenditure at a regional level in the Spanish economy will be
|
|
studied.
|
|
This analysis allows us to observe whether territorial public spending
|
|
has evolved in a similar way in all Spanish regions, placing the
|
|
country's inhabitants in the same situation in this respect, or if, on
|
|
the contrary, the evolution of health spending has been more unequal in
|
|
the period analysed. This would show whether disparities in health
|
|
expenditure are occurring between people living in the same country,
|
|
according to the region in which they reside, establishing a pattern
|
|
which allows us to distinguish whether health expenditure is and has
|
|
been greater in regions with a higher socio-economic level or the
|
|
opposite. In this way, it will be possible to define the level of
|
|
socio-economic development (measured by the GDP per capita) as a
|
|
determining factor of health expenditure per capita in all the Spanish
|
|
regions in the period analysed (in principle 2000-2018), since it covers
|
|
the last two decades and there is sufficient data to carry out a serious
|
|
and rigorous study.
|
|
The availability of databases on health expenditure implies that several
|
|
statistical sources can be used. The aim of this research was to have a
|
|
variety of statistical sources to enable a sufficiently long period of
|
|
time to be covered for the study to be focused on structural issues, and
|
|
not just on purely conjunctural aspects. This undoubtedly favours the
|
|
achievement of more rigorous and timely reflections in studies of this
|
|
type.
|
|
The statistical sources used in this paper are as follows: Satellite
|
|
Accounts on Public Health Expenditure (Ministry of Health, Consumption
|
|
and Social Welfare of the Government of Spain); Satellite Accounts on
|
|
Public Health Expenditure (Spanish Regional Accounts of the National
|
|
Statistics Institute); Data on Health, Dependency and Pensions
|
|
(Foundation for Applied Economic Studies); Public Health Expenditure
|
|
(Valencian Institute of Economic Research); General State Budgets
|
|
General Intervention of the State Administration (Ministry of Finance of
|
|
the Government of Spain); and Health Accounts System (Ministry of
|
|
Health, Consumption and Social Welfare of the Government of Spain); and
|
|
Macroeconomic Data (Expansion Edition).
|
|
With regard to the methodology used to address the proposed objectives,
|
|
in addition to the description of the data presented, based on a
|
|
territorial approach, the evolution of these variables and the possible
|
|
relationship between them will be analysed, based on the correlation
|
|
between them. Furthermore, an attempt has been made to establish the
|
|
link between territorial economic development and the level of regional
|
|
health expenditure by means of an econometric estimate. Similarly,
|
|
another attempt will be made to measure the evolution of existing
|
|
territorial disparities on the basis of indicators such as sigma
|
|
convergence, beta convergence, the Theil index, and other indices that
|
|
will make it possible to examine whether regional differences have been
|
|
reduced or, on the contrary, intensified in the period analysed.
|
|
An analysis of the evolution of public health expenditure per inhabitant
|
|
and its link with the level of socio-economic development of the Spanish
|
|
regions shows that the levels of public health expenditure per capita
|
|
and socio-economic development are closely linked in these regions. The
|
|
conclusions drawn from the study are presented below.
|
|
Public health expenditure is an aspect that has a relevant influence on
|
|
the whole population, so it guarantees equal opportunities and its
|
|
distribution undoubtedly allows for social and territorial cohesion. In
|
|
general, the public administrations of the countries with the highest
|
|
level of income in the Economic and Monetary Union tend to make a
|
|
greater effort to invest in public health, which may reflect the fact
|
|
that health expenditure is closely linked to the level of economic
|
|
development of the countries. Public health expenditure in Spain has
|
|
accounted for around 70\% of total public expenditure over the period
|
|
analysed, and is, therefore, an element that can be used by territorial
|
|
public administrations to try to stimulate the equalisation of
|
|
opportunities for the population in each of the Autonomous Communities,
|
|
as well as to promote the socio-economic cohesion of the Spanish
|
|
regions. The distribution of public health expenditure among the Spanish
|
|
geographical areas has been closely related to the territorial
|
|
distribution of the population in the period analysed, but there are
|
|
still strong regional differences in public health expenditure per
|
|
inhabitant, which makes it somewhat difficult to achieve socio-economic
|
|
equality among the Spanish Autonomous Communities.
|
|
Furthermore, the growth of public health expenditure has been more
|
|
positive than that of the Gross Domestic Product in the Spanish economy
|
|
in the period studied, which has meant that public health expenditure
|
|
per GDP has advanced positively not only at a national level, but also
|
|
in all Spanish regions. However, it is necessary to point out that the
|
|
intensity of growth at a regional level has not been equitable, but
|
|
rather has been very uneven.
|
|
It is also noted that the level of economic development is a determining
|
|
factor in public health expenditure per capita. Logically, this has a
|
|
fundamental impact on the process of territorial cohesion and equal
|
|
opportunities that the Spanish economy is seeking. Regional disparities
|
|
in public health expenditure per inhabitant have increased in the period
|
|
1995-2017 in the Spanish economy, as shown by the sigma convergence
|
|
indicator, the Theil index and the applied inequality index. The
|
|
breakdown of the Theil index shows how the increase in territorial
|
|
differences in public health expenditure has been due to an increase of
|
|
almost 30\% in the regional investment effort in public health
|
|
expenditure per GDP and almost 70\% in the level of economic development
|
|
of the Spanish regions. Moreover, according to the indicator of
|
|
contribution to inequality, the regions with the highest share of
|
|
inequality are Andalusia, the Basque Country and Madrid.
|
|
The study shows that it would be desirable to reduce the range of
|
|
dispersion between regions in the level of public health expenditure per
|
|
inhabitant. Moreover, it is essential to identify the determinants of
|
|
these interregional differences since they are a real obstacle to
|
|
guarantee equal opportunities in the access to this type of services and
|
|
to achieve higher levels of welfare in the population. Furthermore, it
|
|
is crucial to establish a system that adequately protects the public
|
|
health services provided by the territorial administrations in the face
|
|
of the economic crisis and the fall in public revenue experienced in
|
|
Spain over the last decade.
|
|
Four key issues for the future are considered necessary: a) the
|
|
sustainability of public health expenditure requires medium and
|
|
long-term financial planning that is prudent and complemented by
|
|
predictable funds provided in years of economic prosperity; b) the high
|
|
territorial disparities in public health expenditure need to be
|
|
carefully monitored and reviewed as they call into question equal
|
|
opportunities policies; c) institutional loyalty must be adequately
|
|
promoted so that territorial public administrations share the priority
|
|
of these policies and can provide them with the corresponding funds; in
|
|
this sense, a serious and rigorous debate on the level of sustainable
|
|
public health expenditure must be addressed as soon as possible, taking
|
|
into account the restrictions established by the high public deficit and
|
|
the high public debt of the Spanish economy; and d) the regional
|
|
financing systems must be adapted to the constitutional commitments to
|
|
inter-territorial equity.
|
|
In any case, it is suggested to maintain the economic growth that allows
|
|
contracting the economic disparities of the Spanish regions, in order to
|
|
reduce the current differences in the public health expenditure per
|
|
inhabitant.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Sanchez, ARP (Corresponding Author), Univ Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain.
|
|
Pena Sanchez, Antonio Rafael; Jimenez Garcia, Mercedes; Ruiz Chico, Jose, Univ Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain.},
|
|
ISSN = {0213-7585},
|
|
Keywords = {Pubic health expenditure; Level of economic development; Sigma
|
|
convergence; Theil index; Regional analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CARE EXPENDITURE; GROWTH; SPAIN; DETERMINANTS; CONVERGENCE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Studies},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {83},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000885976800006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000389314600059,
|
|
Author = {Turner, Benjamin L. and Tidwell, Vincent and Fernald, Alexander and
|
|
Rivera, Jose A. and Rodriguez, Sylvia and Guldan, Steven and Ochoa,
|
|
Carlos and Hurd, Brian and Boykin, Kenneth and Cibils, Andres},
|
|
Title = {Modeling Acequia Irrigation Systems Using System Dynamics: Model
|
|
Development, Evaluation, and Sensitivity Analyses to Investigate Effects
|
|
of Socio-Economic and Biophysical Feedbacks},
|
|
Journal = {SUSTAINABILITY},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {10},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Agriculture-based irrigation communities of northern New Mexico have
|
|
survived for centuries despite the arid environment in which they
|
|
reside. These irrigation communities are threatened by regional
|
|
population growth, urbanization, a changing demographic profile,
|
|
economic development, climate change, and other factors. Within this
|
|
context, we investigated the extent to which community resource
|
|
management practices centering on shared resources (e.g., water for
|
|
agricultural in the floodplains and grazing resources in the uplands)
|
|
and mutualism (i.e., shared responsibility of local residents to
|
|
maintaining traditional irrigation policies and upholding cultural and
|
|
spiritual observances) embedded within the community structure influence
|
|
acequia function. We used a system dynamics modeling approach as an
|
|
interdisciplinary platform to integrate these systems, specifically the
|
|
relationship between community structure and resource management. In
|
|
this paper we describe the background and context of acequia communities
|
|
in northern New Mexico and the challenges they face. We formulate a
|
|
Dynamic Hypothesis capturing the endogenous feedbacks driving acequia
|
|
community vitality. Development of the model centered on major
|
|
stock-and-flow components, including linkages for hydrology, ecology,
|
|
community, and economics. Calibration metrics were used for model
|
|
evaluation, including statistical correlation of observed and predicted
|
|
values and Theil inequality statistics. Results indicated that the model
|
|
reproduced trends exhibited by the observed system. Sensitivity analyses
|
|
of socio-cultural processes identified absentee decisions, cumulative
|
|
income effect on time in agriculture, and land use preference due to
|
|
time allocation, community demographic effect, effect of employment on
|
|
participation, and farm size effect as key determinants of system
|
|
behavior and response. Sensitivity analyses of biophysical parameters
|
|
revealed that several key parameters (e.g., acres per animal unit or
|
|
percentage of normal acequia ditch seepage) which created less variable
|
|
system responses but which utilized similar pathways to that of the
|
|
socio-cultural processes (e.g., socio-cultural or physical parameter
|
|
change ! agricultural profit ! time in spent in agriculture ! effect on
|
|
socio-cultural or physical processes). These processes also linked
|
|
through acequia mutualism to create the greatest variability in system
|
|
outputs compared to the remainder of tests. Results also point to the
|
|
important role of community mutualism in sustaining linkages between
|
|
natural and human systems that increase resilience to stressors. Future
|
|
work will explore scenario development and testing, integration with
|
|
upland and downstream models, and comparative analyses between acequia
|
|
communities with distinct social and landscape characteristics.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Turner, BL (Corresponding Author), Texas A\&M Univ Kingsville, Dick \& Mary Lewis Coll Agr Nat Resources \& Human, 700 Univ Blvd,MSC 228, Kingsville, TX 78363 USA.
|
|
Turner, Benjamin L., Texas A\&M Univ Kingsville, Dick \& Mary Lewis Coll Agr Nat Resources \& Human, 700 Univ Blvd,MSC 228, Kingsville, TX 78363 USA.
|
|
Tidwell, Vincent, Sandia Natl Labs, POB 5800, Albuquerque, NM 87185 USA.
|
|
Fernald, Alexander; Hurd, Brian; Boykin, Kenneth; Cibils, Andres, New Mexico State Univ, Coll Agr Consumer \& Environm Sci, POB 30003,MSC 3-1, Las Cruces, NM 88003 USA.
|
|
Rivera, Jose A., Ctr Reg Studies, MSC05 3020,1 Univ New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA.
|
|
Rodriguez, Sylvia, Dept Anthropol, MSC01-1040,1 Univ New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA.
|
|
Guldan, Steven, New Mexico State Univ, Sustainable Agr Sci Ctr Alcalde, 371 Cty Rd 40,POB 159, Alcalde, NM 87511 USA.
|
|
Ochoa, Carlos, Oregon State Univ, Dept Anim \& Rangeland Sci, 124 Withycombe Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3390/su8101019},
|
|
Article-Number = {1019},
|
|
EISSN = {2071-1050},
|
|
Keywords = {acequia irrigation; community sustainability; system dynamics; coupled
|
|
natural-human systems; connected hydrologic-human systems; dynamic
|
|
hypothesis; leverage points; model development; sensitivity analysis},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {WATER; SIMULATION; ENVIRONMENT; VALIDATION},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Green \& Sustainable Science \& Technology; Environmental Sciences;
|
|
Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {benjamin.turner@tamuk.edu
|
|
vctidwe@sandia.gov
|
|
afernald@nmsu.edu
|
|
jrivera@unm.edu
|
|
sylrodri@unm.edu
|
|
sguldan@nmsu.edu
|
|
carlos.ochoa@oregonstate.edu
|
|
bhurd@nmsu.edu
|
|
kboykin@nmsu.edu
|
|
acibils@nmsu.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Boykin, Ken/D-2863-2009
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Boykin, Ken/0000-0001-6381-0463
|
|
Ochoa, Carlos G/0000-0002-4958-919X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {55},
|
|
Times-Cited = {29},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {44},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000389314600059},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000478072900015,
|
|
Author = {Martyn, Julie-Anne and Scott, Jackie and van der Westhuyzen, Jasper H.
|
|
and Spanhake, Dale and Zanella, Sally and Martin, April and Newby, Ruth},
|
|
Title = {Combining participatory action research and appreciative inquiry to
|
|
design, deliver and evaluate an interdisciplinary continuing education
|
|
program for a regional health workforce},
|
|
Journal = {AUSTRALIAN HEALTH REVIEW},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {43},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {345-351},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective Continuing education (CE) is essential for a healthcare
|
|
workforce, but in regional areas of Australia there are challenges to
|
|
providing and accessing relevant, reliable and low-cost opportunities.
|
|
The aim of the present study was to collaborate with the local regional
|
|
healthcare workforce to design, deliver and evaluate an
|
|
interdisciplinary CE (ICE) program.
|
|
Methods A participatory action research (PAR) model combined with an
|
|
appreciative inquiry (AI) framework was used to design, deliver and
|
|
evaluate an ICE program. A focus group of 11 health professionals
|
|
developed an initial program. Evaluation data from 410 program
|
|
participants were analysed using AI.
|
|
Results The ICE program addressed the CE barriers for the regional
|
|
healthcare workforce because the locally derived content was delivered
|
|
at a reasonable cost and in a convenient location. Program participants
|
|
identified that they most valued shared experiences and opportunities
|
|
enabling them to acquire and confirm relevant knowledge.
|
|
Conclusion ICE programs enhance interdisciplinary collaboration.
|
|
However, attendance constraints for regional healthcare workforce
|
|
include location, cost, workplace and personal factors. Through
|
|
community engagement, resource sharing and cooperation, a local
|
|
university and the interdisciplinary focus group members successfully
|
|
designed and delivered the local education and research nexus program to
|
|
address a CE problem for a regional healthcare workforce.
|
|
What is known about the topic? Participation in CE is mandatory for most
|
|
health professionals. However, various barriers exist for regional
|
|
health workers to attending CE. Innovative programs, such as webinars
|
|
and travelling workshops, address some of the issues but create others.
|
|
Bringing various health workers together for the simultaneous education
|
|
of multiple disciplines is beneficial. Collectively, this is called ICE.
|
|
What does this paper add? Using PAR combined with AI to design an ICE
|
|
program will focus attention on the enablers of the program and meet the
|
|
diverse educational needs of the healthcare workforce in regional areas.
|
|
Engaging regional health professionals with a local university to design
|
|
and deliver CE is one way to increase access to quality, cost-effective
|
|
education.
|
|
What are the implications for practitioners? Regional healthcare
|
|
workers' CE needs are more likely to be met when education programs are
|
|
designed by them and developed for them. ICE raises awareness of the
|
|
roles of multiple healthcare disciplines. Learning together strengthens
|
|
healthcare networks by bolstering relationships through a greater
|
|
understanding of each other's roles. Enriching communication between
|
|
local health workers has the potential to enhance patient care.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Martyn, JA (Corresponding Author), Univ Sunshine Coast, Fraser Coast Campus,Old Maryborough Rd, Hervey Bay, Qld 4655, Australia.
|
|
Martyn, Julie-Anne, Univ Sunshine Coast, Fraser Coast Campus,Old Maryborough Rd, Hervey Bay, Qld 4655, Australia.
|
|
Martin, April, Univ Sunshine Coast, Nursing, Fraser Coast Campus,Old Maryborough Rd, Hervey Bay, Qld 4655, Australia.
|
|
Newby, Ruth, Univ Sunshine Coast, Biosci Nursing, Fraser Coast Campus,Old Maryborough Rd, Hervey Bay, Qld 4655, Australia.
|
|
van der Westhuyzen, Jasper H., Galangoor Duwalami Primary Hlth Serv, 7-11 Cent Ave, Pialba, Qld 4655, Australia.
|
|
Spanhake, Dale, Wide Bay Hosp \& Hlth Serv, Div Family \& Communities, POB 592, Hervey Bay, Qld 4655, Australia.
|
|
Zanella, Sally, Bolton Clarke, 99 Doolong Rd, Kawungan, Qld 4655, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1071/AH17124},
|
|
ISSN = {0156-5788},
|
|
EISSN = {1449-8944},
|
|
Keywords = {community engagement; interprofessional; multidisciplinary; professional
|
|
development},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PROFESSIONAL-DEVELOPMENT; COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT; INTERPROFESSIONAL
|
|
EDUCATION; NEEDS; WORK; CPD},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {jmartyn@usc.edu.au
|
|
ja.scott888@bigpond.com.au
|
|
jazwest@westnet.com.au
|
|
dale.spanhake@health.qld.gov.au
|
|
szanella@boltonclarke.com.au
|
|
amartin2@usc.edu.au
|
|
rnewby@usc.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Newby, Ruth/AAQ-7220-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Newby, Ruth/0000-0002-4900-0349
|
|
Martin, April Ilene/0000-0003-0506-3919},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {11},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000478072900015},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000872584500001,
|
|
Author = {Dumornay, Nathalie M. and Finegold, Katherine E. and Chablani, Anisha
|
|
and Elkins, Lili and Krouch, Sotun and Baldwin, Molly and Youn, Soo
|
|
Jeong and Marques, Luana and Ressler, Kerry J. and Moreland-Capuia,
|
|
Alisha},
|
|
Title = {Improved emotion regulation following a trauma-informed CBT-based
|
|
intervention associates with reduced risk for recidivism in
|
|
justice-involved emerging adults},
|
|
Journal = {FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {OCT 5},
|
|
Abstract = {ObjectiveMale youth who have been involved in the juvenile legal system
|
|
have disproportionate rates of trauma and violence exposure. Many
|
|
justice-involved youth have untreated mental illness, with an estimated
|
|
66\% of young men who are incarcerated meeting criteria for at least one
|
|
mental health disorder, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD),
|
|
depression, and substance abuse. While Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
|
|
(CBT) approaches are considered among effective evidence-based
|
|
treatments for addressing and treating behavioral and emotional
|
|
difficulties, male youth with a history of incarceration and youth who
|
|
are at risk for (re)incarceration, violence, emotion dysregulation, and
|
|
trauma face significant barriers in accessing these services.
|
|
MethodsRoca, Inc. (Roca), an internationally recognized organization
|
|
moving the needle on urban violence by working relentlessly with young
|
|
people at the center of violence in Massachusetts and Maryland, employs
|
|
a trauma-informed CBT-based skills curriculum and approach in their
|
|
intervention model, to improve youths' educational, employment,
|
|
parenting, and life skills opportunities, while decreasing risk for
|
|
recidivism, addressing trauma and increasing skills for emotion
|
|
regulation. The aim of this analysis was to assess the effectiveness of
|
|
Roca's trauma-informed CBT skills curriculum on youths' emotional and
|
|
behavioral outcomes. We analyzed data from over 300 participating
|
|
emerging adult men from four sites in Massachusetts and one site in
|
|
Baltimore, Maryland who had at least three series of data collection
|
|
across multiple skills-based sessions. ResultsWe found improvements in
|
|
outcomes in overall mean scores related to decreased distress about
|
|
employment and education, as are expected with standard intervention
|
|
approaches for justice-involved youth. Participants who show improvement
|
|
in emotion regulation across engagement (approximately half the cohort),
|
|
were found to have significant improvements in distress related to
|
|
relationship and family functioning and self-care, and decreased
|
|
substance use, along with other outcomes compared to those participants
|
|
with less improvement in emotion regulation. Furthermore, improvement in
|
|
different aspects of emotion regulation were associated with improved
|
|
relationships, life distress, substance use, and improved prosocial
|
|
thinking. ConclusionsTogether, these data suggest that adding mental
|
|
health support and skills training, such as with trauma-informed CBT
|
|
models, to programs for justice-involved youth may lead to significant
|
|
improvements in functioning, quality of life, and mental health
|
|
outcomes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Ressler, KJ (Corresponding Author), McLean Hosp, Div Depress \& Anxiety Disorders, Belmont, MA 02478 USA.
|
|
Ressler, KJ (Corresponding Author), Harvard Med Sch, Dept Psychiat, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Dumornay, Nathalie M.; Finegold, Katherine E.; Ressler, Kerry J.; Moreland-Capuia, Alisha, McLean Hosp, Div Depress \& Anxiety Disorders, Belmont, MA 02478 USA.
|
|
Dumornay, Nathalie M., Univ Minnesota, Inst Child Dev, Minneapolis, MN USA.
|
|
Finegold, Katherine E., Univ Toronto, Sch \& Child Clin Psychol, Toronto, ON, Canada.
|
|
Chablani, Anisha; Elkins, Lili; Krouch, Sotun; Baldwin, Molly, Roca Inc, Chelsea, MA USA.
|
|
Youn, Soo Jeong; Marques, Luana, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Boston, MA USA.
|
|
Youn, Soo Jeong; Marques, Luana; Ressler, Kerry J.; Moreland-Capuia, Alisha, Harvard Med Sch, Dept Psychiat, Boston, MA 02115 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3389/fpsyt.2022.951429},
|
|
Article-Number = {951429},
|
|
ISSN = {1664-0640},
|
|
Keywords = {trauma-informed; juvenile justice; system change; PTSD; institutional
|
|
racism; brain development; adverse childhood experiences (ACE's);
|
|
healing},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL PROGRAMS;
|
|
MENTAL-HEALTH; JUVENILE JUSTICE; YOUTH VIOLENCE; ADOLESCENTS;
|
|
AGGRESSION; PREVENTION; EXPOSURE; THERAPY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {kressler@mclean.harvard.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {72},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000872584500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000182392200005,
|
|
Author = {Bergmark, A and Palme, J},
|
|
Title = {Welfare and the unemployment crisis: Sweden in the 1990s},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WELFARE},
|
|
Year = {2003},
|
|
Volume = {12},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {108-122},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Note = {International Symposium on the Uncertain Future of Social Security, UNIV
|
|
CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA, 2001},
|
|
Abstract = {In the 1990s Sweden went through a deep economic recession accompanied
|
|
by a massive increase in unemployment and a rapidly growing budget
|
|
deficit. The crisis had large repercussions for the welfare of many
|
|
citizens and it generated cutbacks in virtually all social policy
|
|
programmes. This halted a welfare-state expansion that had been going on
|
|
for decades. It also caused great concern about the state of welfare of
|
|
the nation. In 1999 the Swedish Government appointed a `Welfare
|
|
Commission', a team of academic researchers who were assigned the task
|
|
of drawing up a balance sheet for the development of welfare in the
|
|
1990s. The Commission delivered its final report in October 2001. This
|
|
article is a condensed account of one of the more central issues for the
|
|
Commission; namely, how the unemployment crisis affected already
|
|
socially and economically vulnerable groups. Looking at the development
|
|
over the entire decade, three groups stand out as particularly
|
|
disadvantaged in terms of individual welfare resources: young adults,
|
|
immigrants and single mothers. The downturn for these groups was
|
|
especially accentuated in terms of employment and income. Young people
|
|
and immigrants trying to get into the labour market during the crisis
|
|
years faced the problems of newcomers to the systems of social
|
|
protection. The poor economic development for single mothers could
|
|
essentially be attributed to the shortage of work in general and of
|
|
full-time work in particular that followed from the unemployment crisis.
|
|
As a consequence, the importance of selective benefits increased and the
|
|
relative size of all public transfers - despite rationing measures -
|
|
stayed fairly unchanged. The results highlight the great influence of
|
|
macroeconomic conditions and policy making for the welfare of vulnerable
|
|
groups in society.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bergmark, A (Corresponding Author), Mid Univ, Dept Social Work, SE-83185 Ostersund, Sweden.
|
|
Mid Univ, Dept Social Work, SE-83185 Ostersund, Sweden.
|
|
Stockholm Univ, Swedish Inst Social Res, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
|
|
Inst Future Studies, Stockholm, Sweden.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/1468-2397.00249},
|
|
ISSN = {1369-6866},
|
|
Keywords = {Swedish welfare; unemployment crisis; single mothers; immigrants; young
|
|
adults; Welfare Commission},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {12},
|
|
Times-Cited = {38},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000182392200005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000323144000003,
|
|
Author = {Nover, Cynthia Helen},
|
|
Title = {Mental Health in Primary Care: Perceptions of Augmented Care for
|
|
Individuals With Serious Mental Illness},
|
|
Journal = {SOCIAL WORK IN HEALTH CARE},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {52},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {656-668},
|
|
Month = {AUG 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Individuals with serious mental illness are at increased risk of
|
|
developing secondary physical illnesses because of lifestyle and
|
|
psychiatric treatment-related factors. Many individuals with mental
|
|
illness participate in primary care clinics, such as Placer County
|
|
Community Clinic (PCCC), which provides primary care and medication-only
|
|
psychiatric services to low-income county residents. This qualitative
|
|
study describes an augmented care program provided to this population at
|
|
PCCC and explores participant experiences with that program. The
|
|
augmented program consisted of a full-time social worker and part-time
|
|
registered nurse working as a team to coordinate care between providers,
|
|
and provide psychosocial education and illness management support.
|
|
Previous studies have demonstrated that similar programs result in
|
|
improved clinical outcomes for people with mental illness but have
|
|
largely not included perspectives of participants in these pilot
|
|
programs. This article includes participant reports about medical
|
|
service needs, barriers, and beneficial elements of the augmented
|
|
program. Medical service needs included the need to provide input in
|
|
treatment and to be personally valued. Barriers ranged from doubts about
|
|
provider qualifications to concerns about medication. Elements of the
|
|
augmented care program that participants found beneficial were those
|
|
involving care coordination, social support, and weight management
|
|
support.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Nover, CH (Corresponding Author), Eastern Washington Univ, 208 Senior Hall, Cheney, WA 99004 USA.
|
|
Nover, Cynthia Helen, Eastern Washington Univ, Sch Social Work, Cheney, WA 99004 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/00981389.2013.797537},
|
|
ISSN = {0098-1389},
|
|
EISSN = {1541-034X},
|
|
Keywords = {mental health; primary care; care coordination; integrated care;
|
|
qualitative; serious mental health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {METABOLIC SYNDROME; LIFE-STYLE; CARDIOVASCULAR RISK; SCHIZOPHRENIA;
|
|
INTERVENTION; PEOPLE; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Social Work},
|
|
Author-Email = {cnover@ewu.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {13},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000323144000003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000455262400005,
|
|
Author = {Kobylanska, Marzena and Kowalska, Joanna and Neustein, Jolanta and
|
|
Mazurek, Justyna and Wojcik, Bartosz and Belza, Malgorzata and Cichosz,
|
|
Michal and Szczepanska-Gieracha, Joanna},
|
|
Title = {The role of biopsychosocial factors in the rehabilitation process of
|
|
individuals with a stroke},
|
|
Journal = {WORK-A JOURNAL OF PREVENTION ASSESSMENT \& REHABILITATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {61},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {523-535},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: A large proportion of individuals with a stroke are unable
|
|
to return to work, although figures vary greatly. Due to the very high
|
|
cost of post-stroke care, both tangible and intangible, in the form of
|
|
long-term social consequences, it seems extremely important to search
|
|
for factors responsible for the low efficiency of the rehabilitation and
|
|
recovery process, because this fact has direct influence on future
|
|
employment. Such knowledge would enable physiotherapists to quickly
|
|
identify those patients who are at risk of rehabilitation breakdown, in
|
|
order to provide them with special care and include them in intensive
|
|
therapeutic treatments.
|
|
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to assess the efficacy of
|
|
post-stroke rehabilitation, evaluated within the biopsychosocial aspect.
|
|
METHODS: The study consisted of 120 patients after first stroke,
|
|
including 48 women and 72 men aged 58.0 (+/- 8.6). The measure of the
|
|
effects of physiotherapy in the present study was not only the
|
|
improvement of the functional state (simple and complex activities of
|
|
daily life, locomotive activities), but also the improvement of the
|
|
mental state (mood and the sense of well-being, level of acceptance of
|
|
illness, perceived self-efficacy) and the reduction of pain. The
|
|
Mini-Mental State Examination, the Geriatric Depression Scale, the
|
|
Generalized Self-Efficacy Scale, the Acceptance of Illness Scale, the
|
|
Visual Analogue Scale, the Barthel Index, the Instrumental Activity of
|
|
Daily Living and the Rivermead Mobility Index were used. All parameters
|
|
were measured twice: on admission to the ward and after three weeks of
|
|
physiotherapy. The characteristics of the study group were presented
|
|
using descriptive statistics. The analysis of interdependence of the
|
|
efficacy of physiotherapy used two non-parametric tests: the
|
|
Mann-Whitney U test to compare two groups, and the Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA
|
|
test to compare a greater number of groups. Correlations between
|
|
characteristics with continuous distributions were assessed using
|
|
Spearman's rank correlation coefficient (rho), and in case of
|
|
categorical variables, Pearson's chi-squared (chi(2)) correlation
|
|
coefficient. Linear regression was used to determine the hierarchy of
|
|
the influence of particular characteristics on the efficacy of
|
|
physiotherapy.
|
|
RESULTS: Statistical analyzes show that patient's age, time since
|
|
stroke, number of comorbidities, family care capacity, marital status of
|
|
the patient and also a low level of acceptance of illness, depression
|
|
symptoms and lack of a sense of self-efficacy were related with low
|
|
efficacy of post-stroke rehabilitation
|
|
CONCLUSIONS: Comprehensive neurological rehabilitation, taking into
|
|
account mental challenges and socio-economic circumstances of
|
|
individuals with a stroke is essential in order to achieve high efficacy
|
|
of physiotherapy. Important external factors may play a pivotal role in
|
|
returning to work as well and should be taken into account during
|
|
rehabilitation. Of interest should be to assess more biopsychological
|
|
factors, such as acceptance of illness and a sense of self-efficacy
|
|
referred to as barriers to return to work.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mazurek, J (Corresponding Author), Dept \& Div Med Rehabil, Ul Borowska 213, Wroclaw, Poland.
|
|
Neustein, Jolanta; Wojcik, Bartosz; Belza, Malgorzata; Cichosz, Michal, Wroclaw Ctr Rehabil \& Sports Med, Dept Neurol Rehabil, Wroclaw, Poland.
|
|
Kobylanska, Marzena; Kowalska, Joanna; Szczepanska-Gieracha, Joanna, Univ Sch Phys Educ, Dept Physiotherapy, Wroclaw, Poland.
|
|
Mazurek, Justyna, Wroclaw Med Univ, Dept \& Div Med Rehabil, Wroclaw, Poland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.3233/WOR-162823},
|
|
ISSN = {1051-9815},
|
|
EISSN = {1875-9270},
|
|
Keywords = {Post-stroke rehabilitation; physiotherapy; occupational therapy;
|
|
neurological rehabilitation; depression symptoms; return to work;
|
|
younger adults; intervention; clinical practice},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LENGTH-OF-STAY; DISCHARGE DESTINATION; POSTSTROKE DEPRESSION;
|
|
PROGNOSTIC-FACTORS; WORK; RETURN; EXPERIENCES; YOUNG; OUTCOMES; ADULTS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {justyna\_mazurek@poczta.onet.pl},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Mazurek, Justyna/AAX-9871-2020
|
|
Kowalska, Joanna/ABC-5637-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mazurek, Justyna/0000-0001-8983-0286
|
|
Kowalska, Joanna/0000-0002-5232-1688
|
|
Szczepanska-Gieracha, Joanna/0000-0001-5191-3799},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {56},
|
|
Times-Cited = {26},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000455262400005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@inproceedings{ WOS:000443640504064,
|
|
Author = {Raluca, Popescu Gh. Cristina and Gheorghe, Popescu N. and Adriana,
|
|
Popescu A. V. Veronica},
|
|
Editor = {Soliman, KS},
|
|
Title = {The What, Why and How of Performance-Driven Funding In Sports Industry -
|
|
Economics and Management of Sports Industry's Competitive Strategy},
|
|
Booktitle = {VISION 2020: SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, INNOVATION MANAGEMENT,
|
|
AND GLOBAL GROWTH, VOLS I-IX, 2017},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Pages = {5793-5809},
|
|
Note = {30th International Business-Information-Management-Association
|
|
Conference, Madrid, SPAIN, NOV 08-09, 2017},
|
|
Abstract = {The paper titled ``The What, Why and How of Performance-Driven Funding
|
|
in Sports Industry Economics and Management of Sports Industry's
|
|
Competitive Strategy{''} focuses on the economic and managerial
|
|
opportunities, challenges and future perspectives of the spectacular
|
|
ascension of the spurts industry. First of all, the work focuses on
|
|
emphasising three key elements, the ``what{''}, ``why{''} and ``how{''}
|
|
that defines and supports this industry's role, with a clear focus on
|
|
performance-driven and performance enhancing factors that arise in
|
|
today's society. Second of all, the work relies on the sports industry's
|
|
economic and managerial attributes capable to generate competition, and
|
|
to enable and enhance its benefits on the long run. Third of all, the
|
|
work bases its structure on the idea that the sports industry focuses
|
|
itself, like any other type of industry, on key triggers such as profit,
|
|
net worth, growth, market quota, investments, recent results and
|
|
potential opportunities, importance of brand, fierce fully competition,
|
|
and sports marketing, being in essence a segmented market largely based
|
|
on enhanced revenues, strongly dependent on governmental and investors'
|
|
money infusions, eager to attract new customers and willing to attract
|
|
more and more attention, even though its major trends and challenges
|
|
come from the fact that it is an industry ``full of passion{''}. In
|
|
addition, the research paper stresses the connections that exist between
|
|
elements such as, for example, gross domestic product (G.D.P.) and
|
|
sports' investments, governmental influence and policy in sports,
|
|
advertising and media and sports' investments, health and tourism
|
|
sectors and sports industry. However, specialists believe that
|
|
particularly due to the sports industry's diversity and segmentation, it
|
|
was not sufficiently enough explored and not profoundly enough valued at
|
|
its true capacity and potential in numerous countries, such as India,
|
|
China and Turkey, for example, where the sports market represents a huge
|
|
untapped opportunity. In general lines, the sports industry confronts
|
|
itself with numerous moral and ethical issues, mainly because it is not
|
|
an independent sector; on the contrary, being a mass market, the
|
|
activities that take place in this industry closely affect other sectors
|
|
of the society, such as marketing, health and tourism, being interesting
|
|
and aggressive enough to constantly attract customers and investors.},
|
|
Type = {Proceedings Paper},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Raluca, PGC (Corresponding Author), Univ Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania.
|
|
Raluca, PGC (Corresponding Author), Bucharest Univ Econ Studies, Bucharest, Romania.
|
|
Raluca, Popescu Gh. Cristina, Univ Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania.
|
|
Raluca, Popescu Gh. Cristina; Gheorghe, Popescu N.; Adriana, Popescu A. V. Veronica, Bucharest Univ Econ Studies, Bucharest, Romania.},
|
|
ISBN = {978-0-9860419-9-0},
|
|
Keywords = {leadership; success; potential; profit; performance-driven funding;
|
|
diversity; inclusion; equality competitiveness; sports industry;
|
|
competitive strategy; competitive advantage; economic and managerial
|
|
challenges; economic growth; gross domestic product (GDP); sustainable
|
|
economic development},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Business; Management; Regional \& Urban Planning},
|
|
Author-Email = {Popescu\_Cr@Yahoo.Com
|
|
Popescu\_Gh\_Cafr@Yahoo.Com
|
|
Popescu\_Va@Yahoo.Com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Popescu, Cristina Raluca Gh./T-8658-2019},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Popescu, Cristina Raluca Gh./0000-0002-5876-0550},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {25},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {10},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000443640504064},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000508750500014,
|
|
Author = {Degeling, Chris and Carroll, Jane and Denholm, Justin and Marais, Ben
|
|
and Dawson, Angus},
|
|
Title = {Ending TB in Australia: Organizational challenges for regional
|
|
tuberculosis programs},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH POLICY},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {124},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {106-112},
|
|
Month = {JAN},
|
|
Abstract = {The World Health Organization's End TB Strategy aims to eliminate
|
|
tuberculosis (TB) by 2050. Low-burden countries such as Australia are
|
|
targeted for early elimination (2035), which will require an increase in
|
|
the intensity and scope of case finding and treatment of people with
|
|
latent TB infection (LTBI). Because 80 \% of TB disease in Australia
|
|
occurs in metropolitan Sydney (New South Wales) and Melbourne
|
|
(Victoria), the commitment to move towards elimination has major
|
|
implications for TB programs in these jurisdictions. We report on a case
|
|
study analysis that compares and contrasts key attributes of each of
|
|
these healthcare organizations. Such analysis has important implications
|
|
for all countries seeking to implement international agreements within
|
|
local health structures. Differences in the organizational structure,
|
|
culture and systems of care in NSW and Victoria may facilitate or create
|
|
barriers to changes in organizational system functions, especially the
|
|
way in which TB prevention and LTBI treatment is delivered. Ratification
|
|
of global health treaties and the development of national strategies,
|
|
alone, is insufficient for realizing the promised outcomes. Even in high
|
|
income countries, global health agendas such as TB elimination can be
|
|
complicated by differences in local system structure and funding. As the
|
|
timelines tighten towards 2035, more work must be done to identify the
|
|
organizational conditions and service models that will facilitate
|
|
progress towards TB elimination. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights
|
|
reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Degeling, C (Corresponding Author), Univ Wollongong, Australian Ctr Hlth Engagement Evidence \& Values, Bldg 15,Room 230, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia.
|
|
Degeling, Chris, Univ Wollongong, Fac Social Sci, Australian Ctr Hlth Engagement Evidence \& Values, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Carroll, Jane, Bupa Med Visa Serv, Commonwealth, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Denholm, Justin, Univ Melbourne, Victorian TB Program, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Denholm, Justin, Univ Melbourne, Doherty Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
|
|
Marais, Ben, Univ Sydney, Western Sydney Local Hlth Dist, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Marais, Ben; Dawson, Angus, Univ Sydney, Marie Bashir Inst, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
|
|
Dawson, Angus, Univ Sydney, Sch Publ Hlth, Sydney Hlth Eth, Sydney, NSW, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.healthpol.2019.11.009},
|
|
ISSN = {0168-8510},
|
|
EISSN = {1872-6054},
|
|
Keywords = {Australia; Health system reform; Organizational analysis; Population
|
|
screening; Global health; Policy implementation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HEALTH-CARE; SOCIAL-ORGANIZATION; DECENTRALIZATION; INNOVATIONS;
|
|
CLINICIAN; HOSPITALS; NETWORKS; TAXONOMY; CULTURE; SYSTEMS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {degeling@uow.edu.au
|
|
Jane.Carroll@bupa.com.au
|
|
justin.denholm@mh.org.au
|
|
ben.marais@health.nsw.gov.au
|
|
angus.dawson@sydney.edu.au},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Marais, Ben/AAX-2626-2021
|
|
Degeling, Chris/ABE-2049-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Degeling, Chris/0000-0003-4279-3443},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {50},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000508750500014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001005704800001,
|
|
Author = {Bocquier, Aurelie and Bruel, Sebastien and Michel, Morgane and Le
|
|
Duc-Banaszuk, Anne-Sophie and Bonnay, Stephanie and Branchereau, Marion
|
|
and Chevreul, Karine and Chyderiotis, Sandra and Gauchet, Aurelie and
|
|
Giraudeau, Bruno and Hagiu, Dragos-Paul E. and Mueller, Judith and
|
|
Gagneux-Brunon, Amandine and Thilly, Nathalie and PrevHPV Study Group},
|
|
Title = {Co-development of a school-based and primary care-based multicomponent
|
|
intervention to improve HPV vaccine coverage amongst French adolescents
|
|
(the PrevHPV Study)},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH EXPECTATIONS},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {26},
|
|
Number = {5},
|
|
Pages = {1843-1853},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {IntroductionDespite various efforts to improve human papillomavirus
|
|
(HPV) vaccine coverage in France, it has always been lower than in most
|
|
other high-income countries. The health authorities launched in 2018 the
|
|
national PrevHPV research programme to (1) co-develop with stakeholders
|
|
and (2) evaluate the impact of a multicomponent complex intervention
|
|
aimed at improving HPV vaccine coverage amongst French adolescents.
|
|
ObjectiveTo describe the development process of the PrevHPV intervention
|
|
using the GUIDance for rEporting of intervention Development framework
|
|
as a guide. MethodsTo develop the intervention, we used findings from
|
|
(1) published evidence on effective strategies to improve vaccination
|
|
uptake and on theoretical frameworks of health behaviour change; (2)
|
|
primary data on target populations' knowledge, beliefs, attitudes,
|
|
preferences, behaviours and practices as well as the facilitators and
|
|
barriers to HPV vaccination collected as part of the PrevHPV Programme
|
|
and (3) the advice of working groups involving stakeholders in a
|
|
participatory approach. We paid attention to developing an intervention
|
|
that would maximise reach, adoption, implementation and maintenance in
|
|
real-world contexts. ResultsWe co-developed three components: (1)
|
|
adolescents' and parents' education and motivation using eHealth tools
|
|
(web conferences, videos, and a serious video game) and participatory
|
|
learning at school; (2) general practitioners' e-learning training on
|
|
HPV using motivational interviewing techniques and provision of a
|
|
decision aid tool and (3) easier access to vaccination through
|
|
vaccination days organised on participating middle schools' premises to
|
|
propose free of charge initiation of the HPV vaccination. ConclusionWe
|
|
co-developed a multicomponent intervention that addresses a range of
|
|
barriers and enablers of HPV vaccination. The next step is to build on
|
|
the results of its evaluation to refine it before scaling it up if
|
|
proven efficient. If so, it will add to the small number of
|
|
multicomponent interventions aimed at improving HPV vaccination
|
|
worldwide. Patient or Public ContributionThe public (adolescents, their
|
|
parents, school staff and health professionals) participated in the
|
|
needs assessment using a mixed methods approach. The public was also
|
|
involved in the components' development process to generate ideas about
|
|
potential activities/tools, critically revise the successive versions of
|
|
the tools and provide advice about the intervention practicalities,
|
|
feasibility and maintenance.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bocquier, A (Corresponding Author), Universitede Lorraine, UR APEMAC, 9 Ave Foret Haye,BP 20199, F-54505 Nancy, France.
|
|
Bocquier, Aurelie; Bonnay, Stephanie; Thilly, Nathalie, Univ Lorraine, APEMAC, Nancy, France.
|
|
Bruel, Sebastien, St Etienne Lyon Univ, Jacques Lisfranc Fac Med, Dept Gen Practice, St etienne, France.
|
|
Bruel, Sebastien, Univ Claude Bernard, Univ Lyon, Hlth System Proc UR Res Unit 4129, Lyon, France.
|
|
Michel, Morgane, Univ Paris Cite, ECEVE UMR 1123, Paris, France.
|
|
Chevreul, Karine, Assistance Publ Hop Paris, URC Eco Ile Defrance Hop Robert Debre, Un epidemiol Clin, Hotel Dieu, Paris, France.
|
|
Branchereau, Marion, Ctr Reg Coordinat Depistages Canc Pays Loire, Angers, France.
|
|
Chyderiotis, Sandra, Univ Paris Cite, Inst Pasteur, Emerging Dis Epidemiol Unit, Paris, France.
|
|
Gauchet, Aurelie, Univ Grenoble Alpes, LIP PC2S, Grenoble, France.
|
|
Gauchet, Aurelie, Univ Savoie Mont Blanc, LIP PC2S, Chambery, France.
|
|
Giraudeau, Bruno, Univ Tours, Univ Nantes, SPHERE U1246, INSERM, Tours, France.
|
|
Giraudeau, Bruno, CHRU Tours, INSERM CIC 1415, Tours, France.
|
|
Hagiu, Dragos-Paul E., CHU, CIC INSERM 1408, St etienne, France.
|
|
Mueller, Judith, Univ Rennes, RSMS Rech Serv \& Management Sante U 1309, EHESP, CNRS, Rennes, France.
|
|
Gagneux-Brunon, Amandine, Univ Lyon, Univ Jean Monnet, Univ Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Ctr Int Rech Infectiol, St etienne, France.
|
|
Thilly, Nathalie, Univ Lorraine, Dept Methodol Promot Invest, Nancy, France.
|
|
Bocquier, Aurelie, Universitede Lorraine, UR APEMAC, 9 Ave Foret Haye,BP 20199, F-54505 Nancy, France.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/hex.13778},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {JUN 2023},
|
|
ISSN = {1369-6513},
|
|
EISSN = {1369-7625},
|
|
Keywords = {co-construction; complex Intervention; eHealth tools; human
|
|
papillomavirus; motivational interview; vaccination behaviours},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS VACCINATION; HEALTH; COMMUNICATION; STRATEGIES;
|
|
DISEASES; IMPACT},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services; Public,
|
|
Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {aurelie.bocquier@univ-lorraine.fr},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Josselin, LE BEL/GYV-2052-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {64},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001005704800001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000539174500029,
|
|
Author = {Pfeiffer, Beth and Sell, Annalisa and Bevans, Katherine B.},
|
|
Title = {Initial evaluation of a public transportation training program for
|
|
individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities: Short
|
|
report},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT \& HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {16},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction: People with intellectual and developmental disabilities
|
|
(IDD) including Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) often face serious
|
|
transportation challenges that impede healthcare access, community
|
|
participation, and employment opportunities. Travel training, which
|
|
makes use of one-on-one instruction, may help people with IDD overcome
|
|
transportation barriers. The purpose of this study was to examine the
|
|
impact of a comprehensive travel training program on the travel skills
|
|
of individuals with IDD.
|
|
Methods: Participants were a convenience sample of all individuals with
|
|
IDD (n = 87) who received travel training from the Kennedy Center in
|
|
2016 and 2017. Pre- and post-test scores on the Progressive Evaluation
|
|
of Travel Skills, as well as primary mode(s) of public transportation
|
|
used, purpose of use, and number of training sessions were recorded in a
|
|
secure database. Data was de-identified which involved a process of
|
|
removing any personally identifiable information. A secondary analysis
|
|
was completed to test the effect of travel training on transportation
|
|
skill acquisition by using multilevel analyses. Specifically, the
|
|
effects of condition (Intellectual Disability (ID) without ASD, ID and
|
|
ASD, ASD without ID), time (pre-training, post-training), and condition
|
|
x time interactions on transportation skill T-scores were analyzed.
|
|
Results: Participants were 69 men and 18 women with IDD and/or ASD (mean
|
|
age = 23.6). Trainees made statistically significant gains on the
|
|
competencies needed for independent travel. A significant condition x
|
|
time (training) interaction was observed. Prior to training, people with
|
|
ID (with and without ASD) had less developed travel skills than those
|
|
with ASD (and no ID). Upon completion of the training, those with ID
|
|
made larger gains in travel skills than those with ASD/no ID in which
|
|
both groups had comparable skill levels.
|
|
Conclusions: The results of this study provide preliminary support for
|
|
the use of a structured and comprehensive travel training program to
|
|
improve overall travel skills needed for public transportation.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Pfeiffer, B (Corresponding Author), Temple Univ, 1913 North Broad St, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.
|
|
Pfeiffer, Beth; Sell, Annalisa; Bevans, Katherine B., Temple Univ, 1913 North Broad St, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.jth.2019.100813},
|
|
Article-Number = {100813},
|
|
ISSN = {2214-1405},
|
|
Keywords = {Travel training; Intellectual and developmental disabilities; Public
|
|
transportation},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ADULTS; PEOPLE; ACCESS; WORK; PARTICIPATION; STUDENTS; OUTCOMES; YOUTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Transportation},
|
|
Author-Email = {bpfeiffe@temple.edu
|
|
annalisa.sell@temple.edu
|
|
katherine.bevans@temple.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Pfeiffer, Beth/0000-0002-2017-8848},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000539174500029},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000635910500001,
|
|
Author = {Fenta, Setegn Muche and Biresaw, Hailegebrael Birhan and Fentaw, Kenaw
|
|
Derebe and Gebremichael, Shewayiref Geremew},
|
|
Title = {Determinants of full childhood immunization among children aged 12-23
|
|
months in sub-Saharan Africa: a multilevel analysis using Demographic
|
|
and Health Survey Data},
|
|
Journal = {TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {49},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {APR 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Background Sub-Saharan Africa is one of the highest under-five mortality
|
|
and low childhood immunization region in the world. Children in
|
|
Sub-Saharan Africa are 15 times more likely to die than children from
|
|
high-income countries. In sub-Saharan Africa, more than half of
|
|
under-five deaths are preventable through immunization. Therefore, this
|
|
study aimed to identify the determinant factors of full childhood
|
|
immunization among children aged 12-23 months in sub-Saharan Africa.
|
|
Methods Data for the study was drawn from the Demographic and Health
|
|
Survey of nine sub-Saharan African countries. A total of 21,448 children
|
|
were included. The two-level mixed-effects logistic regression model was
|
|
used to identify the individual and community-level factors associated
|
|
with full childhood immunization Result The prevalence of full childhood
|
|
immunization coverage in sub-Saharan Africa countries was 59.40\% (95\%
|
|
CI: 58.70, 60.02). The multilevel logistic regression model revealed
|
|
that secondary and above maternal education (AOR = 1.38; 95\% CI: 1.25,
|
|
1.53), health facility delivery (AOR = 1.51; 95\% CI: 1.41, 1.63),
|
|
fathers secondary education and above (AOR = 1.28, 95\% CI: 1.11, 1.48),
|
|
four and above ANC visits (AOR = 2.01; 95\% CI: 1.17, 2.30), PNC
|
|
visit(AOR = 1.55; 95\% CI: 1.46, 1.65), rich wealth index (AOR = 1.26;
|
|
95\% CI: 1.18, 1.40), media exposure (AOR = 1.11; 95\% CI: 1.04, 1.18),
|
|
and distance to health facility is not a big problem (AOR = 1.42; 95\%
|
|
CI: 1.28, 1.47) were significantly associated with full childhood
|
|
immunization. Conclusion The full childhood immunization coverage in
|
|
sub-Saharan Africa was poor with high inequalities. There is a
|
|
significant variation between SSA countries in full childhood
|
|
immunization. Therefore, public health programs targeting uneducated
|
|
mothers and fathers, rural mothers, poor households, and those who have
|
|
not used maternal health care services to promote full childhood
|
|
immunization to improve child health. By enhancing institutional
|
|
delivery, antenatal care visits and maternal tetanus immunization, the
|
|
government and other stakeholders should work properly to increase child
|
|
immunization coverage. Furthermore, policies and programs aimed at
|
|
addressing cluster variations in childhood immunization need to be
|
|
formulated and their implementation must be strongly pursued.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fenta, SM (Corresponding Author), Debre Tabor Univ, Dept Stat Fac Nat \& Computat Sci, Debre Tabor, Ethiopia.
|
|
Fenta, Setegn Muche; Biresaw, Hailegebrael Birhan; Fentaw, Kenaw Derebe; Gebremichael, Shewayiref Geremew, Debre Tabor Univ, Dept Stat Fac Nat \& Computat Sci, Debre Tabor, Ethiopia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s41182-021-00319-x},
|
|
Article-Number = {29},
|
|
ISSN = {1348-8945},
|
|
EISSN = {1349-4147},
|
|
Keywords = {Full immunization; Multi-level analysis; Sub-Saharan Africa},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {LOGISTIC-REGRESSION; COVERAGE; ETHIOPIA; MORTALITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Tropical Medicine},
|
|
Author-Email = {setegn14@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Fenta, Setegn Muche/ABB-7296-2020},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Fenta, Setegn Muche/0000-0003-4006-3455},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {14},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000635910500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000088211800006,
|
|
Author = {Berry, C and Butler, P and Perloff, L and Budetti, P},
|
|
Title = {Child development services in Medicaid managed care organizations: What
|
|
does it take?},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2000},
|
|
Volume = {106},
|
|
Number = {1, S},
|
|
Pages = {191-198},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Objective. We sought to understand why certain Medicaid managed care
|
|
organizations (MMCOs) implemented child development services or programs
|
|
and how they had done so. We also sought to identify barriers and
|
|
facilitators to successful initiation and implementation of child
|
|
development programs.
|
|
Methods. We conducted 9 key informant interviews and 4 site visits, and
|
|
performed qualitative analyses to identify major themes across
|
|
responses.
|
|
Results. We identified a small number of MMCOs with child development
|
|
services. High-level support was crucial for program initiation;
|
|
physician buy-in, staff support, and strong working relationships with
|
|
outside health professionals or agencies were principal factors in
|
|
successful program implementation.
|
|
Conclusions. MMCOs that were committed to implementing child development
|
|
services were successful in doing so, without external funding or
|
|
regulatory mandate. The results provide valuable strategies for MMCOs
|
|
interested in developing programs and for researchers and advocates
|
|
interested in promoting child development services for low-income
|
|
children.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Berry, C (Corresponding Author), Northwestern Univ, Inst Hlth Serv Res \& Policy Studies, 339 E Chicago Ave, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.
|
|
Northwestern Univ, Inst Hlth Serv Res \& Policy Studies, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {0031-4005},
|
|
Keywords = {Medicaid managed care; child development services},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COGNITIVE-DEVELOPMENT; EARLY INTERVENTION; PROGRAMS; OUTCOMES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Berry, Carolyn/0000-0003-3671-3080},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {16},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000088211800006},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000683371200001,
|
|
Author = {Buwule, Robert Stalone and Ssebunya, Margaret and Kisitu, Gyaviira},
|
|
Title = {Implications of the Covid-19 mitigation model on people's right to
|
|
health in Uganda},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN HEALTH CARE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {15},
|
|
Number = {4, SI},
|
|
Pages = {388-398},
|
|
Month = {AUG 11},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose The purpose of this paper is to review the approach used by the
|
|
Ugandan Government in implementing the Covid-19 mitigation model and
|
|
establish whether it did not expose government's failure to soundly
|
|
protect and respect all her citizens' right to health during the first
|
|
four months of the Covid-19 crisis in the country.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach The study was qualitative focusing on a
|
|
population of households of vulnerable and chronically ill patients in
|
|
Mukono and Wakiso districts of Uganda. The sample was identified through
|
|
purposive and snowball sampling techniques. Purposive and snowball
|
|
sampling was chosen for this study to select unique informative cases
|
|
which were subjected to in-depth interviews. Findings The findings of
|
|
the study revealed that disadvantaged and vulnerable citizens of Uganda
|
|
experienced severe and increased shortages of food, increased cases of
|
|
ill-health, compromised ability and mobility to access health services
|
|
as a result of the government's Covid-19 mitigation model. Research
|
|
limitations/implications The data collection exercise was conducted
|
|
during the Covid-19 lockdown when the mobility was restricted to only
|
|
essential services so data was collected in the two districts of Mukono
|
|
and Wakiso in Uganda. Practical implications Pandemic mitigation models
|
|
ought to be people-centred executed by a multidisciplinary team which
|
|
are empathetic towards the views of disadvantaged communities and
|
|
thereby cultivate a culture of care over time. Social implications
|
|
Public health models and policies work more effectively if they are
|
|
contextualized to work for both the high and low classes of people
|
|
across the whole spectrum. Originality/value Given this awareness of the
|
|
Covid-19 mitigation model, this paper unveils the immediate
|
|
consequential effects of the model considering the manner under which it
|
|
was formulated and implemented in the Ugandan society. While the
|
|
government implemented the model in exercise of its obligations,
|
|
contextual factors had advance limitations to the efficacy of the model.
|
|
Most significantly, among the expectant mothers, the old, the sick with
|
|
terminal illnesses, the physically challenged and hunger-stricken
|
|
families with no daily sources of income.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Buwule, RS (Corresponding Author), Kyambogo Univ, Univ Lib, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Buwule, Robert Stalone, Kyambogo Univ, Univ Lib, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Ssebunya, Margaret, Univ Kisubi, Eth \& Philosophy, Entebbe, Uganda.
|
|
Kisitu, Gyaviira, Univ KwaZulu Natal, Relig \& Class, Pietermaritzburg Campus, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/IJHRH-01-2021-0017},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {AUG 2021},
|
|
ISSN = {2056-4902},
|
|
Keywords = {Uganda; Right to health; Coronavirus; Covid-19; Covid-19 mitigation
|
|
model},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {burosta@gmail.com},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Buwule, Robert Stalone/IZE-8475-2023},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Buwule, Robert Stalone/0000-0003-1233-1053},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {24},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000683371200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000235250100005,
|
|
Author = {Gorn, SB and Sainz, MT and Icaza, MEMM},
|
|
Title = {Demographic variables related to depression: Differences between males
|
|
and females living in low income urban-areas},
|
|
Journal = {SALUD MENTAL},
|
|
Year = {2005},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Pages = {33-40},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {This paper is aimed at exploring the relationship of some
|
|
sociodemographic variables with the presence of depressive disorders
|
|
among a low-income urban sample. Different variables have consistently
|
|
been associated with such disorders, for instance, marital status, sex,
|
|
and socio-economic status.
|
|
As to marital Status, some studies show that married people have better
|
|
health conditions and feel more satisfied with their lives than their
|
|
unmarried counterparts. Similarly, it has been found that widowed or
|
|
divorced people present a number of psychological problems.
|
|
Low-income population is also at high risk of suffering depressive
|
|
symptoms, in this sense, some researchers have stated that the lack of
|
|
resources is associated with sadness, high stress levels, isolation,
|
|
uncertainty, and low access to health care and/or other Sources of
|
|
support.
|
|
According to the Mexican National Survey on Mental Health conducted With
|
|
urban population over 18, the prevalence of depressive disorders is
|
|
higher among widowers and divorced individuals -both males and females-
|
|
than among their married counterparts. In addition, an association was
|
|
found between depression, low schooling and unemployment.
|
|
A survey undertaken in Mexico City yielded similar results though gender
|
|
differences were not explored; higher prevalences of depression were
|
|
found for those who reported having lost their Couple or marital break
|
|
LIP than for those who were married or single. Other groups that had
|
|
high depression prevalence were lower income individuals, and those with
|
|
less schooling.
|
|
Couple relationships and other socio-demographic variables play a key
|
|
role in the presence of depressive disorders. Thus, the present Study is
|
|
aimed at: a) analysing how marital status affects the presence of
|
|
depressive disorders in men and women; b) exploring the role of low
|
|
socio-economic level in the presence of depressive symptoms; c)
|
|
exploring which combination of sociodemographic variables better predict
|
|
the presence of depressive disorder in males and females.
|
|
Method: This research was carried Out in four low-income communities
|
|
located in southern Mexico City. The selected communities include
|
|
Topilejo, Isidro Fabela and San Pedro Martir within the Tlalpan
|
|
district, and the fourth community was Constituted by the neighbourhoods
|
|
of San Marcos and San Juan, in the Xochimilco district.
|
|
The research design was multistage; blocks were selected at the first
|
|
stage, dwelling segments, at second stage, and finally, ill the third
|
|
stage the interviewed individual was selected. After this procedure, the
|
|
Final sample consisted of 1156 interviewees, 49\% were males and 51\%,
|
|
females.
|
|
The information was gathered through a household questionnaire that
|
|
explores the general characteristics of the people living in the same
|
|
dwelling Listed on the questionnaire, Such as relationship to the Family
|
|
head, age, sex, schooling and income. Some other aspects related to the
|
|
dwelling characteristics were also explored.
|
|
Diagnosis of depressive disorder was obtained through the diagnostic
|
|
interview CID] version 1.1, which assesses the presence of mental
|
|
disorders according to the criteria of the International Classification
|
|
of Diseases (ICD) and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
|
|
Disorders (DSM) of the American Psychiatric Association.
|
|
The selected interviewees participated volunatrily after the research
|
|
objectives were explained; in addition, the terms of confidentiality
|
|
were Particularly emphasized. Each interview lasted 90 minutes on
|
|
average. Data analysis were performed with the statistical program SPSS
|
|
v. 10 for Windows.
|
|
Results: The findings showed higher prevalence of depressive disorders
|
|
among females, among people that experienced loss or family rupture and
|
|
among those with lower econornic resources. Similarly, prevalence of
|
|
depression was higher for men (6.1\%) and women (18.3\%) who had lost
|
|
their Spouse than for their married Counterpart. As to differences
|
|
between married and single people, the prevalence of depressive
|
|
disorders in the group of men that had ever married was lower (4.9\%)
|
|
than the prevalence found in the group of married men (5.8\%). The
|
|
opposite was observed among females, since single women present more
|
|
depressive problems (13.2\%) than married women (5.3\%).
|
|
Results also showed how economic difficulties have an effect on the
|
|
presence of depressive disorders. However, differences between married
|
|
and single men with the lowest income were minimal.
|
|
Two logistic regression models show that, particularly among women, the
|
|
presence of depressive disorder is related to the lack of a couple,
|
|
economic disadvantages; for instance, low family income, belonging to a
|
|
large extended family and playing the social role of family head,,which
|
|
implies responsibility to a large extent.
|
|
Discussion: The findings of the present study are consistent with
|
|
previous research that report higher prevalence of depression among
|
|
females, People without a couple and those with less economic resources.
|
|
Different authors have confirmed that problems of economic nature are
|
|
consistently associated with depression problems. Lack of resources
|
|
leads to high stress levels, sadness, isolation, among other troubles.
|
|
This situation is more severe for females. Women play a number of social
|
|
roles that put them at higher risk of suffering mental disorders.
|
|
Nowadays, women still bear the responsibility of being wives, mothers,
|
|
educators and care providers for many people, and have become an
|
|
important part of the work force at the same time.
|
|
The deficiencies that female family heads Must face in different areas
|
|
not only increase the risk of suffering disorders such as depression and
|
|
poor quality Of life, but also jeopardize their children's opportunities
|
|
in the future.
|
|
Dejarlais and colleagues suggest that in order to improve these women's
|
|
oriental health it is necessary to take actions in two ways. On the one
|
|
hand, it is essential to deal with the factors related to the presence
|
|
of female distress; on the other, it is crucial to provide attention to
|
|
reduce the negative consequences.
|
|
In this way, any prevention or intervention program Must include, among
|
|
other elements, tools to expand women's capabilities to have an income,
|
|
reinforce social Support networks, and to stimulate Social and community
|
|
participation in order to improve their cognitive and relational
|
|
resources as well as self-esteem.
|
|
In addition, women must have information about the pathological process
|
|
they undergo and attention Options at their disposal, but to make these
|
|
programs effective it is above all necessary to tailor them according to
|
|
women's concerns and needs. This can only be possible if women act as
|
|
active collaborators.
|
|
Finally, to work on intervention and prevention programs for female
|
|
family heads encloses the possibility of breaking the cycle that
|
|
reproduces distress among their children.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {Spanish},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gorn, SB (Corresponding Author), Inst Nacl Psiquiatria Ramon Fuente, Direcc Invest Epidemiol \& Psicosociales, Calz Mexico Xochimilco 101, Mexico City 14370, DF, Mexico.
|
|
Inst Nacl Psiquiatria Ramon Fuente, Direcc Invest Epidemiol \& Psicosociales, Mexico City 14370, DF, Mexico.},
|
|
ISSN = {0185-3325},
|
|
Keywords = {depressive disorders; poverty; marital status; Mexico; urban population},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MARRIAGE; DIVORCE; ADULTS; HEALTH; WOMEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {berenz@imp.edu.mx},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tiburcio, Marcela/J-4494-2015},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tiburcio, Marcela/0000-0001-7548-7800},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {19},
|
|
Times-Cited = {5},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {16},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000235250100005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000863567200001,
|
|
Author = {Butt, Thomas and Mohareb, Eugene and Egbor, Kelvin and Hashemi, Arman
|
|
and Heidrich, Oliver},
|
|
Title = {Analysis of greenhouse gas mitigation performance in UK urban areas},
|
|
Journal = {CARBON MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Pages = {463-481},
|
|
Month = {SEP 3},
|
|
Abstract = {As the threat of irreversible climate change has increased over time,
|
|
the UK has continued to set increasingly ambitious policies to reduce
|
|
its carbon emission. An assessment of mitigation progress to date at the
|
|
local authority level clarifies the factors that have affected
|
|
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions on the path to carbon neutrality. This
|
|
research uses regression analyses between local authorities' GHG
|
|
emission redcutions and selected explanatory variables (including
|
|
population density, household income, and manufacturing employment)
|
|
identified from the literature to explore mitigation performance over
|
|
time, focusing on GHG emissions changes between 2005 and 2016.
|
|
Substantial and relatively consistent GHG emissions reductions were
|
|
achieved in this time frame, with average total reductions across UK
|
|
local authorities of 31.2\%. Population density was
|
|
moderately-to-strongly correlated with the success of transportation GHG
|
|
emissions mitigation, though this sector has seen the smallest
|
|
percentage declines over this period. Local authorities with densities
|
|
below 25 inhabitants per hectare were generally among the poorest
|
|
performers in transportation GHG mitigation. This underscores the need
|
|
to support remote working and electrification of personal transportation
|
|
in areas where public/active transportation options are not viable
|
|
alternatives. Furthermore, consideration of population density in
|
|
conjunction with domestic and urban planning will allow for future
|
|
emissions reductions to occur across the UK. Fundamentally, GHG
|
|
emissions reductions to date are largely driven by historic factors
|
|
(density), shifting economic structures (deindustrialisation), and
|
|
centralised initiatives (decarbonisation of electricity generation).},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mohareb, E (Corresponding Author), Univ Reading, Sch Construct Management \& Engn, Reading, Berks, England.
|
|
Butt, Thomas; Mohareb, Eugene; Egbor, Kelvin, Univ Reading, Sch Construct Management \& Engn, Reading, Berks, England.
|
|
Hashemi, Arman, Univ East London, Sch Architecture Comp \& Engn, London, England.
|
|
Heidrich, Oliver, Newcastle Univ, Sch Engn, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne \& Wear, England.
|
|
Heidrich, Oliver, Newcastle Univ, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne \& Wear, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1080/17583004.2022.2120418},
|
|
ISSN = {1758-3004},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-3012},
|
|
Keywords = {Local authorities; United Kingdom; transportation emissions; domestic
|
|
emissions; industrial \& commercial emissions},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CO2 EMISSIONS; ENERGY USE; ELECTRICITY-GENERATION; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
|
|
CARBON; REDUCTION; BARRIERS; DRIVERS; LIFE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies},
|
|
Author-Email = {e.mohareb@reading.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Mohareb, Eugene/0000-0003-0344-2253
|
|
Hashemi, Arman/0000-0002-6311-000X
|
|
Heidrich, Oliver/0000-0002-6581-5572},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {79},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {7},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000863567200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000892027900066,
|
|
Author = {Camlin, Carol S. and Marson, Kara and Ndyabakira, Alex and Getahun,
|
|
Monica and Emperador, Devy and Byamukama, Ambrose and Kwarisiima,
|
|
Dalsone and Thirumurthy, Harsha and Chamie, Gabriel},
|
|
Title = {Understanding the role of incentives for achieving and sustaining viral
|
|
suppression: A qualitative sub-study of a financial incentives trial in
|
|
Uganda},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS ONE},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {17},
|
|
Number = {6},
|
|
Month = {JUN 30},
|
|
Abstract = {Background
|
|
Viral suppression among people living with HIV (PLHIV) is essential for
|
|
protecting health and preventing HIV transmission, yet globally, rates
|
|
of viral suppression are sub-optimal. Interventions to improve HIV
|
|
prevention and care cascade outcomes remain vital. Financial incentives
|
|
hold promise for improving these outcomes, yet to date, clinical trial
|
|
results have been mixed.
|
|
Methods
|
|
This qualitative sub-study, embedded in a trial (NCT02890459) in Uganda
|
|
to test whether incentives are effective for achieving viral suppression
|
|
in PLHIV, sought to enhance our understanding of the factors that
|
|
influence this outcome. Forty-nine (n = 49) PLHIV, purposely sampled to
|
|
balance across gender, study arm, and viral suppression status, were
|
|
interviewed to explore barriers and motivations for care engagement,
|
|
adherence, and viral suppression, and attributions for decision-making,
|
|
including perceived influence of incentives on behaviors.
|
|
Results
|
|
While many participants with undetectable viral load (VL) who received
|
|
incentives said the incentives motivated their ART adherence, others
|
|
expressed intrinsic motivation for adherence. All felt that incentives
|
|
reduced burdens of transport costs, lost income due to time spent away
|
|
from work, and food insecurity. Incentives may have activated attention
|
|
and memory for some, as excitement about anticipating incentives helped
|
|
them adhere to medication schedules. In comparison, participants who
|
|
were randomized to receive incentives but had detectable VL faced a
|
|
wider range, complexity and severity of challenges to care engagement.
|
|
Notably, their narratives included more accounts of poor treatment in
|
|
clinics, food insecurity, and severe forms of stigma. With or without
|
|
incentives, adherence was reinforced through experiencing restored
|
|
health due to ART, social support (especially from partners), and good
|
|
quality counseling and clinical care.
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
In considering why incentives sometimes fail to achieve behavior change,
|
|
it may be helpful to attend to the full set of factors- psychological,
|
|
interpersonal, social and structural- that militate against the behavior
|
|
change required to achieve behavioral outcomes. To be effective,
|
|
incentives may need to be combined with other interventions to address
|
|
the spectrum of barriers to care engagement.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Camlin, CS (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Obstet Gynecol \& Reprod Sci, San Francisco, CA 94115 USA.
|
|
Camlin, Carol S.; Getahun, Monica, Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Obstet Gynecol \& Reprod Sci, San Francisco, CA 94115 USA.
|
|
Marson, Kara; Emperador, Devy; Chamie, Gabriel, Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Med, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Ndyabakira, Alex; Byamukama, Ambrose; Kwarisiima, Dalsone, Infect Dis Res Collaborat, Kampala, Uganda.
|
|
Thirumurthy, Harsha, Univ Penn, Perelman Sch Med, Philadelphia, PA USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pone.0270180},
|
|
Article-Number = {e0270180},
|
|
ISSN = {1932-6203},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {CONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS; ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; CARE; ADULTS;
|
|
RETENTION; ADHERENCE; LINKAGE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Multidisciplinary Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {carol.camlin@ucsf.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Camlin, Carol/0000-0001-5615-1164},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {23},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000892027900066},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000418556300003,
|
|
Author = {Joly, Laurene},
|
|
Title = {Employment of People with Mental Disorders in Terms of the Policies
|
|
Developed by the European and International Institutions},
|
|
Journal = {SANTE MENTALE AU QUEBEC},
|
|
Year = {2017},
|
|
Volume = {42},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {17-30},
|
|
Month = {FAL},
|
|
Abstract = {Objectives The aim of this article is to present an overview of the
|
|
reflections led by various European and international organizations on
|
|
the employment of people with mental disorders.
|
|
Methods This study is based on data from websites of international
|
|
organizations and interviews taken place with a disability specialist at
|
|
the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and members of the European
|
|
Commission.
|
|
Results Unlike the French law of 11 February 2005 which refers expressly
|
|
to psychic disability, this notion is not explicitly dedicated by
|
|
various European and international legal rules. However, these standards
|
|
like the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with
|
|
Disabilities have adopted the contemporary model which presents
|
|
disability as the result of an interaction between person and
|
|
environment. Thus they acknowledge that disabled people include people
|
|
suffering from mental disorders because in the person's environment, a
|
|
psychiatric impairment could lead to limitations of activities or
|
|
restrictions of social participation that constitute a situation of
|
|
disability of psychiatric origin. Therefore, the legal mechanisms often
|
|
do not provide appropriate answers to the characteristics of psychiatric
|
|
disability.
|
|
Besides, negative attitudes, stereotypes and discrimination towards
|
|
people with a psychiatric disability are still observed in the
|
|
workplace, in spite of intensified anti-discrimination legislation.
|
|
This study inventories the different proposals to remedy to substantial
|
|
barriers to the employment of people with a psychiatric condition. In
|
|
the European Union's strategy for increasing the employment of these
|
|
persons, particular consideration is given to put forward a series of
|
|
key recommendations to improve practices of reasonable accommodation in
|
|
the workplace. Nonetheless, it must be emphasized that it is necessary
|
|
to conceive adequate measures in order to take into account the
|
|
changeability and the unpredictability of mental disorders. Indeed,
|
|
situations of psychiatric disability require flexibility and reactivity
|
|
more than any other situation of disability. The discrimination
|
|
experienced by people with a psychiatric disability is likely to
|
|
continue as long as specific responses are not implemented. In this
|
|
perspective, ILO highlights a number of best practices addressing the
|
|
challenges of psychiatric disabled people's employment. That is why a
|
|
disability network was created to share knowledge. The great added value
|
|
of this network is the opportunity to share best practices between
|
|
companies, best practices between countries in order to increase the
|
|
ability to include people with mental disorders. Focus is put on
|
|
strategies to combat discrimination in employment, by raising awareness,
|
|
exploring measures and good practices to improve mental health in the
|
|
workplace.
|
|
Conclusion Finally, this study shows similar challenges in the
|
|
prevention of the mental health and the issue of the psychiatric
|
|
handicap, including to remedy to the insufficient attention paid to
|
|
provide reasonable accommodation to persons with mental disorders.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {French},
|
|
Affiliation = {Joly, L (Corresponding Author), Univ Bordeaux, COMPTRASEC, UMR CNRS 5114, Bordeaux, France.
|
|
Joly, Laurene, Univ Bordeaux, COMPTRASEC, UMR CNRS 5114, Bordeaux, France.},
|
|
DOI = {10.7202/1041911ar},
|
|
ISSN = {0383-6320},
|
|
EISSN = {1708-3923},
|
|
Keywords = {psychiatric disability; definition; disabled workers; mental health in
|
|
the workplace; international organizations; European Union},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Psychiatry},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {20},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {9},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000418556300003},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000355951800009,
|
|
Author = {Colvin, Roddrick},
|
|
Title = {Shared workplace experiences of lesbian and gay police officers in the
|
|
United Kingdom},
|
|
Journal = {POLICING-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLICE STRATEGIES \& MANAGEMENT},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {333-349},
|
|
Abstract = {Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to explores the contemporary
|
|
workplace experiences of lesbian and gay officers who serve across the
|
|
UK.
|
|
Design/methodology/approach - Using an online survey, the research asked
|
|
lesbian and gay officers to share their experiences in law enforcement
|
|
environments. Acknowledging the changing climate in many law enforcement
|
|
environments, this respondents here were asked to focus on both positive
|
|
and negative experiences in the workplace.
|
|
Findings - The responses of 243 police officers revealed that lesbian
|
|
and gay officers face barriers to equal employment opportunities similar
|
|
to those faced by women and other minorities in law enforcement, but
|
|
lesbian officers appear to experience and witness lower levels of
|
|
discrimination than gay male police officers. Attitudinal bias against
|
|
lesbian and gay officers remains a significant problem in the force.
|
|
Lesbian officers report feelings of tokenism at higher levels than gay
|
|
male police officers.
|
|
Research limitations/implications - Future research endeavors should
|
|
analyze any differences between the experiences of different lesbians
|
|
and gay men at different levels of visibility within law enforcement,
|
|
including ``out{''} and ``closeted{''} officers. Research about when
|
|
officers come out as lesbian or gay - during training, on the force,
|
|
after they retire - would be insightful in understanding officers'
|
|
perceptions.
|
|
Practical implications - The research suggests that police departments
|
|
in the UK have made good strides in opening the law enforcement
|
|
workforce, but continue to face on-going challenges in creating fair,
|
|
diverse, and representative work environments for lesbian and gay
|
|
officers. Specifically, agencies should review policies where supervisor
|
|
have discretion over the employment-related actions. By not meetings the
|
|
challenges of a more diverse workplace, agencies risk lower job
|
|
satisfaction, and decreased police effectiveness, especially on
|
|
community policing environments.
|
|
Originality/value - This research joins a small, but growing body of
|
|
research that offers specific barriers and opportunities - as perceived
|
|
by the officers. As other agencies engage in efforts to recruit and
|
|
retain diversity police forces, the results of this research can enhance
|
|
policies and practices, with regards to lesbian and gay officers.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Colvin, R (Corresponding Author), CUNY John Jay Coll Criminal Justice, Dept Publ Management, New York, NY 10019 USA.
|
|
CUNY John Jay Coll Criminal Justice, Dept Publ Management, New York, NY 10019 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1108/PIJPSM-11-2014-0121},
|
|
ISSN = {1363-951X},
|
|
EISSN = {1758-695X},
|
|
Keywords = {Gender; Training; Police; Police culture; Discrimination; Quality of
|
|
policing},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {IDENTITY DISCLOSURE; MANAGEMENT; RACE; DISCRIMINATION; PERCEPTIONS;
|
|
ATTITUDES; BARRIERS; MEN; SEX},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Criminology \& Penology},
|
|
Author-Email = {rcolvin@jjay.cuny.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {45},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {21},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000355951800009},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000646189600001,
|
|
Author = {Wang, Yong},
|
|
Title = {Stability and mutual impact of perception of parental pressure and
|
|
infants' social support - A study based on the difference between
|
|
employment status and household income},
|
|
Journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING EDUCATION},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Month = {2021 APR 23},
|
|
Abstract = {The purpose of this study is to explore the stability and interaction
|
|
between parental pressure and social research report, as well as the
|
|
role of employment status and family income levels in this process. This
|
|
study used a special study on Korean children (PSKC) 2-4 waves. Use
|
|
t-test, correlation and autoregressive cross-delay modeling to analyze
|
|
the data. The main findings of this study are: First, over time,
|
|
parental pressure and mother's social research report are consistent.
|
|
Secondly, the pressure of motherhood and childcare has an obvious
|
|
lagging effect on upbringing, and vice versa. Third, there is no
|
|
significant difference between working mothers and non-working mothers
|
|
in terms of the stability of working parents' pressure, social research
|
|
report and social research report for children's pressure channels.
|
|
However, parental pressure can only predict the social research report
|
|
of working mothers. Fourth, there is no significant difference between
|
|
the stability and interaction of these two structures in household
|
|
income levels. In short, the results show that, over time, parental
|
|
pressure is consistent with mother's social research report. The results
|
|
also show that there is a significant cross-lag effect between the
|
|
mothers' perceptions of mutual pressure analysis. In the process from
|
|
parental pressure to social research report, I found the difference
|
|
between working and non-working mothers. The advantage of this study is
|
|
that the expected longitudinal design was adopted during infancy and the
|
|
priority between the two structures can be considered. The results of
|
|
this study can be used as a source of intervention plans to help parents
|
|
withstand severe parenting pressure and lack of social research report.},
|
|
Type = {Article; Early Access},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Wang, Y (Corresponding Author), Sejong Univ, Dept Econ, Seoul 05006, South Korea.
|
|
Wang, Yong, Sejong Univ, Dept Econ, Seoul 05006, South Korea.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0020720921997059},
|
|
EarlyAccessDate = {APR 2021},
|
|
Article-Number = {0020720921997059},
|
|
ISSN = {0020-7209},
|
|
EISSN = {2050-4578},
|
|
Keywords = {Stability and mutual impact; perception of parental pressure;
|
|
infants\' social research report},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; STRESS; MOTHERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Education, Scientific Disciplines; Engineering, Electrical \& Electronic},
|
|
Author-Email = {1036373640@qq.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {, Yong Wang/0000-0002-2737-362X},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {19},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {5},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000646189600001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000236540500005,
|
|
Author = {Garfield, CF and Isacco, A},
|
|
Title = {Fathers and the well-child visit},
|
|
Journal = {PEDIATRICS},
|
|
Year = {2006},
|
|
Volume = {117},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {E637-E645},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE. Societal and economic shifts have expanded the roles that
|
|
fathers play in their families. Father involvement is associated with
|
|
positive cognitive, developmental, and sociobehavioral child outcomes
|
|
such as improved weight gain in preterm infants, improved breastfeeding
|
|
rates, higher receptive language skills, and higher academic
|
|
achievement. However, father involvement in health care has been studied
|
|
little, especially among nonmarried, minority fathers. Fathers are a
|
|
significant part of the child's medical home, and comprehensive
|
|
involvement of both parents is ideal for the child's well-being and
|
|
health. Well-child visits (WCVs) represent opportunities for fathers to
|
|
increase their involvement in their child's health care while learning
|
|
valuable information about the health and development of their child.
|
|
The objective of this study was to explore fathers' involvement in,
|
|
experience and satisfaction with, and barriers to WCVs using qualitative
|
|
methods.
|
|
METHODS. In-depth, semistructured, qualitative interviews were conducted
|
|
in 2 cities with a subsample of fathers who were participating in the
|
|
national Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study. The 32 fathers who
|
|
participated in our study come from a nested qualitative study called
|
|
Time, Love, and Cash in Couples with Children. Fathers in our study
|
|
reside in Chicago or Milwaukee and were interviewed about health care
|
|
issues for 1.5 hours when the focal child was 3 years of age. Questions
|
|
focused on the father's overall involvement in his child's health care,
|
|
the father's attendance and experiences at the doctor, health care
|
|
decision-making between mother and father, assessment of focal child's
|
|
health, gender/normative roles, and the father's health. The open-ended
|
|
questions were designed to allow detailed accounts and personal stories
|
|
as told by the fathers. Coding and analysis were done using content
|
|
analysis to identify themes. Particular themes that were used for this
|
|
study focused on ideals of father involvement and dis/satisfaction,
|
|
barriers to, and experiences in the health care system.
|
|
RESULTS. Of the 50 fathers from the Time, Love, and Cash in Couples with
|
|
Children study in the 2 cities, 3 had moved out of the state, 6 were in
|
|
jail, 7 had been lost in earlier follow-up, and 1 had died, leaving 33
|
|
eligible respondents. Of those, 1 refused to participate, resulting in a
|
|
final sample of 32 fathers and an adjusted response rate of 97\%. The
|
|
mean age was 31 years, and the sample was 56\% black, 28\% Hispanic, and
|
|
15\% white; 53\% were nonmarried. Only 2 fathers had attained a college
|
|
degree or higher, and 84\% of the fathers were employed at the time of
|
|
the interview. The majority (53\%) had attended a WCV and 84\% had been
|
|
to see a doctor with their child in the past year. Reasons for attending
|
|
a WCV included (1) to gather information about their child, (2) to
|
|
support their child, (3) to ask questions and express concerns, and (4)
|
|
to gain firsthand experience of the doctor and the WCV. Fathers reported
|
|
positive and negative experiences in their encounters with the health
|
|
care system. The 3 main contributors to fathers' satisfaction with
|
|
health care professionals were (1) inclusive interactions with the
|
|
physician, (2) the perception of receiving quality care, and (3)
|
|
receiving clear explanations. The negative experiences were often
|
|
specific instances and noted along with positive comments. The negative
|
|
experiences that were mentioned by the fathers included feeling viewed
|
|
suspiciously by health care staff, being perceived as having a lesser
|
|
emotional bond with their child than the mother, and the perception that
|
|
they were receiving a lower quality of service compared with the mother.
|
|
Major barriers to attending WCVs include employment schedules as well as
|
|
their relationship with the focal child's mother. For example, some
|
|
fathers stated that they did not attend WCVs because that was a
|
|
responsibility that the mother assumed within the family. Other fathers
|
|
lacked confidence in their parenting skills, which resulted in lower
|
|
involvement levels. Also mentioned were health care system barriers such
|
|
as inconvenient office hours and a lack of access to their child's
|
|
records. Despite the presence of several barriers that seem to prevent
|
|
fathers from attending WCVs, many fathers (20 of 32; 63\%) mentioned
|
|
``situational flexibility,{''} which enables them to overcome the stated
|
|
barriers and attend doctor visits. For example, some fathers viewed the
|
|
seriousness of the visit such as ``ear surgery{''} as a reason to
|
|
rearrange their schedules and attend a doctor visit with their child.
|
|
CONCLUSION. The majority of fathers from our sample have attended a WCV,
|
|
and most have been to their child's doctor in the past year; WCVs and
|
|
doctor appointments are ways in which fathers are involved in their
|
|
child's health care. Fathers detailed specific reasons for why they
|
|
attend WCVs, such as to support their child, ask questions, express
|
|
concerns, and gather information firsthand. The fathers reported more
|
|
positive than negative experiences with the health care staff, and,
|
|
overall, they are satisfied with their experiences with the health care
|
|
system. Reasons for satisfaction include feeling as though their
|
|
questions had been dealt with seriously and answered appropriately.
|
|
However, the fathers in our study did report a variety of barriers to
|
|
health care involvement, including conflicting work schedules, a lack of
|
|
confidence in their parental role, and health care system barriers.
|
|
Professionals who care for children and families need to explore
|
|
creative ways to engage fathers in the structured health care of their
|
|
children. For example, pediatricians can stress the benefits of both
|
|
parents being involved in their child's health care while reframing the
|
|
importance of WCVs. Understanding that many fathers have situational
|
|
flexibility when it comes to health care encounters may encourage
|
|
physicians to suggest more actively that fathers attend WCVs.
|
|
Pediatricians can also support existing public policies such as the
|
|
national 2003 Responsible Fatherhood Act that provides grants and
|
|
programs that promote the father's role in the family and advocate for
|
|
additional policies that would foster quality father involvement.
|
|
Continued collaboration among families, physicians, and other health
|
|
care professionals is essential to support father involvement and ensure
|
|
positive health outcomes for children.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Garfield, CF (Corresponding Author), Evanston NW Healthcare Res Inst, 1001 Univ Ave, Evanston, IL 60201 USA.
|
|
Evanston NW Healthcare Res Inst, Evanston, IL 60201 USA.
|
|
Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Chicago, IL 60611 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1542/peds.2005-1612},
|
|
ISSN = {0031-4005},
|
|
EISSN = {1098-4275},
|
|
Keywords = {fathers; medical home; parenting; pediatric; well-child visit},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {AFRICAN-AMERICAN FATHERS; LOW-INCOME; INVOLVEMENT; PREDICTION;
|
|
ATTITUDES; DECISION; OUTCOMES; DADS; MEN},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pediatrics},
|
|
Author-Email = {c-garfield@northwestern.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Garfield, Craig/AAE-2525-2020
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Garfield, Craig/0000-0002-6512-6005},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {48},
|
|
Times-Cited = {83},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {41},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000236540500005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000485989700032,
|
|
Author = {Mertens, Fien and De Gendt, Anneleen and Deveugele, Myriam and Van
|
|
Hecke, Ann and Pype, Peter},
|
|
Title = {Interprofessional collaboration within fluid teams: Community nurses'
|
|
experiences with palliative home care},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2019},
|
|
Volume = {28},
|
|
Number = {19-20},
|
|
Pages = {3680-3690},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {Aims and objectives To explore how community nurses experience the
|
|
collaboration with general practitioners and specialist palliative home
|
|
care team nurses in palliative home care and the perceived factors
|
|
influencing this collaboration. Background The complexity of, and the
|
|
demand for, palliative home care is increasing. Primary palliative care
|
|
is provided by community nurses and general practitioners, often in
|
|
collaboration with palliative home care team nurses. Although these
|
|
professionals may each individually be part of a fixed team, a new
|
|
temporary team is often composed for every new palliative patient. These
|
|
membership changes, referred to as team membership fluidity, challenge
|
|
professionals to work effectively. Design and methods A qualitative
|
|
research design, using semi-structured interviews with community nurses.
|
|
Participant selection happened through regional palliative care networks
|
|
in Belgium. The network's palliative home care team nurses selected
|
|
community nurses with whom they recently collaborated. Twenty interviews
|
|
were conducted. A constant comparative analysis approach was used.
|
|
Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research guidelines were
|
|
followed. Results Formal interprofessional team meetings were not common
|
|
practice. The other's approachability and knowing each other positively
|
|
influenced the collaboration. Time constraints, the general
|
|
practitioners' lack of expertise, communication style, hierarchy
|
|
perception and income dependency negatively influenced the collaboration
|
|
with general practitioners and determined palliative home care team
|
|
nurses' involvement. The coping strategies of community nurses balanced
|
|
between a behaviour focused to the patient and to the professional
|
|
relationship. Specialist palliative home care team nurses were relied
|
|
upon for their expertise but also to mediate when community nurses
|
|
disagreed with general practitioners. Conclusion Community nurses showed
|
|
to be highly adaptable within the fluid team. Strikingly, dynamics
|
|
described in the doctor-nurse game 50 years ago are still present today
|
|
and affect the interprofessional communication. Interprofessional
|
|
education interventions can contribute to improved interprofessional
|
|
collaboration. Relevance to clinical practice The study findings
|
|
uncovered critical knowledge gaps in interprofessional collaboration in
|
|
palliative home care. Insights are relevant for and related to
|
|
professional well-being and workplace learning.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Mertens, F (Corresponding Author), Univ Ghent, Dept Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Mertens, Fien; De Gendt, Anneleen, Univ Ghent, Dept Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Deveugele, Myriam, Univ Ghent, Dept Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Commun Hlth Care, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Pype, Peter, Univ Ghent, Dept Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Interprofess Collaborat Educ \& Practice, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Van Hecke, Ann, Univ Ghent, Dept Publ Hlth \& Primary Care, Univ Ctr Nursing \& Midwifery, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Mertens, Fien, Univ Ghent, End Of Life Care Res Grp, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Mertens, Fien, Vrije Univ Brussel, Brussels, Belgium.
|
|
Pype, Peter, Univ Ghent, End Of Life Care Res Grp, Interprofess Collaborat Educ \& Practice, Ghent, Belgium.
|
|
Pype, Peter, Vrije Univ Brussel, Interprofess Collaborat Educ \& Practice, Brussels, Belgium.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/jocn.14969},
|
|
ISSN = {0962-1067},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2702},
|
|
Keywords = {ad hoc team; community nursing; fluid team; interprofessional
|
|
collaboration; palliative care; primary health care; qualitative
|
|
research; teamwork},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OF-LIFE CARE; GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS; HEALTH-CARE; END; BARRIERS;
|
|
FACILITATORS; PHYSICIANS; MEDICINE; TEAMWORK; WORKING},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing},
|
|
Author-Email = {Fientje.mertens@ugent.be},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Van Hecke, Ann/0000-0003-3576-7159
|
|
Pype, Peter/0000-0003-2273-0250},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {13},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {3},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {27},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000485989700032},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000323894600014,
|
|
Author = {Eberman, Lindsey E. and Kahanov, Leamor},
|
|
Title = {Athletic Trainer Perceptions of Life-Work Balance and Parenting Concerns},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF ATHLETIC TRAINING},
|
|
Year = {2013},
|
|
Volume = {48},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {416-423},
|
|
Month = {MAY-JUN},
|
|
Abstract = {Context: Life-work balance may be one reason for retention concerns
|
|
among athletic trainers (ATs), yet evidence does not exist to support
|
|
the supposition.
|
|
Objective: To assess the perceptions of ATs regarding life-work balance,
|
|
specifically on parenting issues.
|
|
Design: Survey.
|
|
Setting: Online survey at www.surveymonkey.com.
|
|
Patients or Other Participants: A random sample of National Athletic
|
|
Trainers' Association members (N = 9516) received the survey; 20.6\% (n
|
|
= 1962; male 954, female 816; age = 37 +/- 10 years, experience = 13 +/-
|
|
9 years) completed any portion of the survey. Most respondents worked in
|
|
the college/university (34.5\%, n = 657 of 1908) and secondary school
|
|
settings (25.9\%, n = 476 of 1908). A majority of participants (50.7\%,
|
|
n = 898 of 1770) were parents.
|
|
Intervention(s): We calculated frequencies and percentages and used
|
|
Mann-Whitney U tests and Kruskal-Wallis tests to identify the
|
|
differences between sexes and among job settings on life-work balance
|
|
measures among parents.
|
|
Main Outcome Measures: The questionnaire included 8 life-work balance
|
|
items, 7 parenting challenge items, and 3 nonparent items.
|
|
Results: The results indicate that sex and setting significantly
|
|
affected perceptions about parenting. Males articulated a stronger sense
|
|
of difficulty in finding balance as a working parent (P < .001; 1.95 +/-
|
|
1.98). Females felt more strongly than males that managing work and
|
|
family was stressful (P = .04; 3.86 +/- 1.13) and caused burnout (P =
|
|
.004; 3.50 +/- 1.24), and that their energy tended to fall short of
|
|
their needs (P < .001; 3.74 +/- 1.15). The decision not to have children
|
|
was strongly affected by the work setting (P = .014; 3.37 +/- 1.42).
|
|
Both college/university (4.14 +/- 0.85) and secondary school (4.03 +/-
|
|
0.90) ATs would prefer to spend more time at home, as compared with ATs
|
|
in other settings (P < .001). College/university ATs (P = .025; 3.17 +/-
|
|
1.23) felt most strongly that their families were neglected because of
|
|
work. In none of the settings did ATs feel that their employment
|
|
settings were particularly tolerant of their parenting responsibilities
|
|
(P = .027; 1.72 +/- 1.97).
|
|
Conclusions: Male and female employees had similar perceptions of
|
|
life-work balance, but occupational setting may affect these
|
|
perceptions.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Eberman, LE (Corresponding Author), Indiana State Univ, Dept Appl Med \& Rehabil, Sycamore Ctr Wellness \& Appl Med Bldg, Room 257, Terre Haute, IN 47809 USA.
|
|
Eberman, Lindsey E.; Kahanov, Leamor, Indiana State Univ, Dept Appl Med \& Rehabil, Terre Haute, IN 47809 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.4085/1062-6050-48.2.01},
|
|
ISSN = {1062-6050},
|
|
EISSN = {1938-162X},
|
|
Keywords = {life-work integration; professional barriers; retention; sex; employment
|
|
setting},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {FAMILY CONFLICT; SECONDARY-SCHOOL; PERSPECTIVES; BURNOUT; GENDER; JOB},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Sport Sciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {lindsey.eberman@indstate.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {23},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {15},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000323894600014},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000273272300005,
|
|
Author = {Tantivess, Sripen and Teerawattananon, Yot and Mills, Anne},
|
|
Title = {Strengthening Cost-Effectiveness Analysis in Thailand through the
|
|
Establishment of the Health Intervention and Technology Assessment
|
|
Program},
|
|
Journal = {PHARMACOECONOMICS},
|
|
Year = {2009},
|
|
Volume = {27},
|
|
Number = {11},
|
|
Pages = {931-945},
|
|
Abstract = {Capacity is limited in the developing world to conduct
|
|
cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) of health interventions. In Thailand,
|
|
there have been concerted efforts to promote evidence-based policy
|
|
making, including the introduction of economic, appraisals within health
|
|
technology assessment (HTA). This paper reviews the experience of this
|
|
lower middle-income country, with an emphasis on the creation of the
|
|
Health Intervention and Technology Assessment Program (HITAP), including
|
|
its mission, management structures and activities.
|
|
Over the past 3 decades, several HTA programmes were implemented in
|
|
Thailand but not sustained or developed further into a national
|
|
institute. As a response to increasing demands for HTA evidence
|
|
including CEA information, the HITAP was created in 2007 as an affiliate
|
|
unit of a semi-autonomous research arm of the Ministry Of Public Health.
|
|
An advantage of this HTA programme over previous initiatives was that it
|
|
was hosted by a research institute with long-term experience in
|
|
conducting health systems and policy research and capacity building of
|
|
its research staff, and excellent research and policy networks. To deal
|
|
with existing impediments to conducting health economics research, the
|
|
main strategies of the HITAP were carefully devised to include not only
|
|
capacity strengthening of its researchers and administrative staff, but
|
|
also the development of essential elements for the country's health
|
|
economic evaluation methodology. These included, for example,
|
|
methodological guidelines, standard protocols and benchmarks for
|
|
resource allocation, many of which have been adopted by national
|
|
policy-making bodies including the three major public health insurance
|
|
plans. Networks and collaborations with domestic and foreign institutes
|
|
have been sought as a means of resource mobilization and exchange.
|
|
Although the HITAP is well financed by a number of government agencies
|
|
and international organizations, the programme is vulnerable to
|
|
shortages of qualified research staff, as most staff work on a part-time
|
|
or temporary basis.
|
|
To enhance the utilization of its research findings by policy makers,
|
|
practitioners and consumers, the HITAP has adopted the principles of
|
|
technical excellence, policy relevance, transparency, effective
|
|
communication and participation of key stakeholders. These principles
|
|
have been translated into good practice at every step of HTA management.
|
|
In 2007 and 2008, the HITAP carried out assessments of a wide range of
|
|
health products, medical procedures and public health initiatives.
|
|
Although CEA and other economic evaluation approaches were employed in
|
|
these studies, the tools and underlying efficiency goal were considered
|
|
inadequate to provide complete information for prioritization. As
|
|
suggested by official stakeholders, some of the projects investigated
|
|
broader issues of management, feasibility, performance and
|
|
socio-political implications of interventions. As yet, it is unclear
|
|
what role HITAP research and associated recommendations have played in
|
|
policy decisions.
|
|
It is hoped that the lessons drawn on the creation of the HITAP and its
|
|
experience during the first 2 years, as well as information on its main
|
|
strategies and management structures, may be helpful for other
|
|
resource-constrained countries when considering how best to strengthen
|
|
their capacity to conduct economic appraisals of health technologies and
|
|
interventions.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Tantivess, S (Corresponding Author), Minist Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth, Hlth Intervent \& Technol Assessment Program, 6th Floor,Bldg 6, Nonthaburi 11000, Thailand.
|
|
Tantivess, Sripen, Minist Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth, Hlth Intervent \& Technol Assessment Program, Nonthaburi 11000, Thailand.
|
|
Mills, Anne, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med, London WC1, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.2165/11314710-000000000-00000},
|
|
ISSN = {1170-7690},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {ECONOMIC-EVALUATION; POLICY; SYSTEMS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Economics; Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services;
|
|
Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {sripen@ihpp.thaigov.net},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Teerawattananon, Yot/0000-0003-2217-2930
|
|
Mills, Anne/0000-0001-9863-9950},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {35},
|
|
Times-Cited = {36},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000273272300005},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000390354300004,
|
|
Author = {Fisher, Maxine D. and Rajput, Yamina and Gu, Tao and Singer, Joseph R.
|
|
and Marshall, Amanda R. and Ryu, Seonyoung and Barron, John and MacLean,
|
|
Catherine},
|
|
Title = {Evaluating Adherence to Dilated Eye Examination Recommendations Among
|
|
Patients with Diabetes, Combined with Patient and Provider Perspectives},
|
|
Journal = {AMERICAN HEALTH AND DRUG BENEFITS},
|
|
Year = {2016},
|
|
Volume = {9},
|
|
Number = {7},
|
|
Pages = {385-392},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Diabetes mellitus remains the leading cause of new cases of
|
|
blindness among US adults. Routine dilated eye examinations can
|
|
facilitate early detection and intervention for diabetes-related eye
|
|
disease, providing an opportunity to reduce the risk for
|
|
diabetes-related blindness in working-aged Americans. The Healthcare
|
|
Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) established criteria for
|
|
performing dilated eye examination in patients with diabetes.
|
|
OBJECTIVES: To obtain information about adherence and nonadherence to
|
|
diabetic eye examinations among insured patients to understand the
|
|
barriers to routine dilated eye examinations, and to identify ways to
|
|
improve the quality of care for these patients.
|
|
METHODS: This retrospective claims analysis is based on administrative
|
|
claims from the HealthCore Integrated Research Database, a broad
|
|
database representing claims from a large commercially insured
|
|
population. Patients with diabetes and who had >= 1 dilated eye
|
|
examinations between August 1, 2011, and July 31, 2013, were defined as
|
|
adherent to the HEDIS recommendations. The analysis was augmented with
|
|
findings from focus groups. The patient focus groups included adherent
|
|
and nonadherent patients. The provider focus group participants were
|
|
general practice or internal medicine physicians and ophthalmologists
|
|
who provided medical care for the study population. For the
|
|
administrative claims analysis, comparisons between the adherent and
|
|
nonadherent patients were performed using t-tests for continuous data
|
|
and chi-square tests for categorical data.
|
|
RESULTS: Of 339,646 patients with diabetes identified in a claims data
|
|
set, 43\% were adherent and 57\% were nonadherent to the HEDIS eye
|
|
examination performance measure. The common barriers to routine eye
|
|
examination cited by 29 patients across 4 focus groups included a lack
|
|
of understanding of insurance benefits (N = 15), a lack of awareness of
|
|
the importance of dilated eye examinations (N = 12), and time
|
|
constraints (N = 12). The common barriers cited by 18 providers included
|
|
the patient's level of education (N = 13), eye examinations as a lower
|
|
priority than the management of other diabetes-related health issues (N
|
|
= 12), and a lack of symptoms (N = 11).
|
|
CONCLUSION: Several reasons for patient nonadherence to routine eye
|
|
examination were identified, including a lack of understanding of
|
|
insurance benefits, a lack of awareness or low prioritization of having
|
|
an examination, patient education level, time constraints, and a lack of
|
|
symptoms. These may be considered by providers and payers when
|
|
developing programs to increase the rates of eye examinations and
|
|
improve outcomes among patients with diabetes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fisher, MD (Corresponding Author), Real World Evidence, Vector Oncol, Memphis, TN 38119 USA.
|
|
Fisher, Maxine D., Real World Evidence, Vector Oncol, Memphis, TN 38119 USA.
|
|
Fisher, Maxine D.; Gu, Tao; Singer, Joseph R.; Barron, John, HealthCore, Wilmington, DE USA.
|
|
Rajput, Yamina; Ryu, Seonyoung, Genentech Inc, San Francisco, CA 94080 USA.
|
|
Marshall, Amanda R., HealthCore, Res Data Collect, Wilmington, DE USA.
|
|
MacLean, Catherine, Hosp Special Surg, 535 E 70th St, New York, NY 10021 USA.},
|
|
ISSN = {1942-2962},
|
|
EISSN = {1942-2970},
|
|
Keywords = {adherence; diabetes mellitus; dilated eye examination; HEDIS measures;
|
|
nonadherence; ophthalmologists; primary care physicians},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {AFRICAN-AMERICANS; CARE; INTERVENTION; KNOWLEDGE; REMINDERS},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {29},
|
|
Times-Cited = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {1},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000390354300004},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000332046300011,
|
|
Author = {Fisher, J. E.},
|
|
Title = {The use of psychological therapies by mental health nurses in Australia},
|
|
Journal = {JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC AND MENTAL HEALTH NURSING},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {21},
|
|
Number = {3},
|
|
Pages = {264-270},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Accessible summary
|
|
This paper examines the usage of psychological therapies by mental
|
|
health nurses. The paper presents the findings from a questionnaire
|
|
survey of 528 practising mental health nurses in Australia. Key findings
|
|
include:
|
|
Mental health nurses believe employing psychological therapies such as
|
|
cognitive behaviour therapy in their practice will improve therapeutic
|
|
outcomes for consumers.
|
|
Mental health nurses overwhelmingly want to employ psychological
|
|
therapies in their practice.
|
|
They think mental health nursing and hospital and community health
|
|
management is too focussed on medical treatment and risk management,
|
|
which means that their nursing practice is dominated by the
|
|
administration of medication, excessive documentation, and patient
|
|
observation.
|
|
They identify barriers preventing them from practising psychological
|
|
therapies. These include lack of confidence, low nurse morale, no
|
|
support from other nurses, low staffing levels, lack of training
|
|
opportunities, and inadequate support from nursing management.
|
|
This paper reports on a research project which examines the feasibility
|
|
of mental health nurses employing psychological therapies in the nursing
|
|
care of people with severe mental illness. Attitudes towards current
|
|
usage and factors influencing the adoption of psychological therapies
|
|
are investigated. The paper addresses the gap in the Australian nursing
|
|
literature regarding the therapeutic role of mental health nurses (MHN)s
|
|
in relation to the use of evidence-based psychological therapies. This
|
|
paper presents the findings from an online questionnaire survey of 528
|
|
practising MHNs in Australia. The findings demonstrate enthusiastic
|
|
support among nurses towards employing psychological therapies, with
|
|
93\% of respondents indicating they would like to use psychological
|
|
therapies in their current practice. Correspondingly, there is strong
|
|
demand for education and training in applying psychological therapies. A
|
|
number of barriers to implementing psychological therapies are
|
|
identified. It is noted that place of employment is a significant
|
|
factor, with mental health nurses working in the public sector more
|
|
likely to state institutional barriers are restricting their therapeutic
|
|
potential and preventing them from implementing psychological therapies.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Fisher, JE (Corresponding Author), Univ Sydney, Sydney Nursing Sch, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
|
|
Univ Sydney, Sydney Nursing Sch, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1111/jpm.12079},
|
|
ISSN = {1351-0126},
|
|
EISSN = {1365-2850},
|
|
Keywords = {evidence-based nursing; psychological therapies; mental health nursing;
|
|
cognitive behavioural therapy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL THERAPY; NURSING-EDUCATION; DIRECT-ENTRY;
|
|
SCHIZOPHRENIA; INTERVENTION; SETTINGS; TRIAL; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Nursing; Psychiatry},
|
|
Author-Email = {jacklinfisher@optusnet.com.au},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {39},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {30},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000332046300011},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000573409300008,
|
|
Author = {Bejan, Anca and Xi, Min and Parker, David L.},
|
|
Title = {Outcomes of a Safety and Health Educational Intervention in Auto Body
|
|
and Machine Tool Technologies Vocational College Programs: The Technical
|
|
Education Curricula for Health and Safety (TECHS) Study},
|
|
Journal = {ANNALS OF WORK EXPOSURES AND HEALTH},
|
|
Year = {2020},
|
|
Volume = {64},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {185-201},
|
|
Month = {MAR},
|
|
Abstract = {Technical Education Curricula for Health and Safety (TECHS) is a
|
|
research collaboration between safety and health professionals and
|
|
vocational instructors in three Minnesota colleges. Curriculum
|
|
materials, including full and refresher modules with of classroom
|
|
presentations, lab activities, homework, and quizzes, were developed for
|
|
auto body collision technology (ABCT) and machine tool technology (MTT)
|
|
programs. Curricula were implemented during the 2015-2018 academic
|
|
years. Graduates' safety-related knowledge, skills, work practices, and
|
|
workplace safety climate were assessed 1 year postgraduation using an
|
|
electronic survey. Responses were received from 71 ABCT and 115 MTT
|
|
graduates. Classroom presentations were used consistently throughout the
|
|
study. Instructors cited a lack of time as the main barrier to using
|
|
other materials (lab activities, homework, and quizzes). Graduates with
|
|
TECHS instruction had significantly greater safety-related knowledge
|
|
overall (both trades) as well as in two topic areas: eye and respiratory
|
|
protection (ABCT) and hearing protection and machine guarding (MTT). Our
|
|
data confirm that nearly all graduates consistently engage in practices
|
|
such as use of safety glasses, hearing protection, and respirators, use
|
|
of machine guards, material handling strategies. At 1 year
|
|
postgraduation, MTT graduates' work practices related to machine
|
|
guarding improved significantly. Graduates with TECHS instruction had
|
|
improved in about half of the work practices, but statistical
|
|
significance was not achieved. Graduates' self-reported work practices
|
|
were not significantly correlated with their knowledge or skills. Work
|
|
practices variability was best explained by graduates' attitudes toward
|
|
safety rules and their rating of the workplace safety climate. TECHS
|
|
findings confirm that classroom instruction alone has little impact on
|
|
graduates' work practices. We propose institutions formalize their
|
|
commitment to safety and health education by ear-marking teaching time
|
|
for this subject and providing assistance to instructors to facilitate
|
|
curricula integration. Instructors would benefit from learning more
|
|
about trade-specific safety and health, and adult education teaching
|
|
methods. Additional research is needed to understand how students'
|
|
attitudes toward safety change during vocational college attendance and
|
|
the first year of employment in the trade, explore implementation
|
|
supports and barriers at institutional and instructor levels, and assess
|
|
educational effectiveness beyond the end of the academic program. The
|
|
entire curricula are available on the study website
|
|
www.votechsafety.net.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Bejan, A (Corresponding Author), HealthPartners Inst, Minneapolis, MN 55440 USA.
|
|
Bejan, Anca; Xi, Min; Parker, David L., HealthPartners Inst, Minneapolis, MN 55440 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1093/annweh/wxz092},
|
|
ISSN = {2398-7308},
|
|
EISSN = {2398-7316},
|
|
Keywords = {auto body collision; machine manufacturing; safety and health; technical
|
|
college; vocational education; young workers},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {OCCUPATIONAL-SAFETY; WORKPLACE SAFETY; CLIMATE; WORKERS; PREVENTION;
|
|
EMPLOYEES; ATTITUDES; INJURIES; STUDENTS; YOUTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health},
|
|
Author-Email = {anca.x.bejan@healthpartners.com},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Bejan, Anca/0000-0002-7702-0494},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {63},
|
|
Times-Cited = {4},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {19},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000573409300008},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:001053116500001,
|
|
Author = {Rosa, Arthur Accioly and de Sousa, Cecilia Felix Penido Mendes and
|
|
Pimentel, Leonardo Cunha Furbino and Martins, Homero Lavieri and Moraes,
|
|
Fabio Ynoe and Marta, Gustavo Nader and Castilho, Marcus Simoes},
|
|
Title = {Radiotherapy resources in Brazil (RT2030): a comprehensive analysis and
|
|
projections for 2030},
|
|
Journal = {LANCET ONCOLOGY},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {24},
|
|
Number = {8},
|
|
Pages = {903-912},
|
|
Month = {AUG},
|
|
Abstract = {Background The demand for radiotherapy in Brazil is unfulfilled, and the
|
|
scarcity of data on the national network hampers the development of
|
|
effective policies. We aimed to evaluate the current situation, estimate
|
|
demands and requirements, and provide an action plan to ensure access to
|
|
radiotherapy for those in need by 2030.Methods The Brazilian Society for
|
|
Radiation Oncology created a task force (RT2030) including physicians,
|
|
medical physicists, policy makers, patient advocates, and suppliers, all
|
|
of whom were major stakeholders involved in Brazilian radiotherapy care.
|
|
The group was further divided into seven working groups to address
|
|
themes associated with radiotherapy care in Brazil. From March 1, 2019,
|
|
to Aug 3, 2020, there were monthly meetings between the group's leaders
|
|
and the Central Committee and six general meetings. First, a
|
|
comprehensive search of all different national databases was done to
|
|
identify all radiotherapy centres. Questionnaires evaluating
|
|
radiotherapy infrastructure and human resources and assing the
|
|
availability, distribution, capacity, and workload of resources were
|
|
created and sent to the radioprotection supervisor of each centre.
|
|
Results were analysed nationally and across the country's regions and
|
|
health-care systems. A pre-planned review of available databases was
|
|
done to gather data on active radiation oncology centres and the
|
|
distribution of radiotherapy machines (linear accelerators {[}LINACs])
|
|
across Brazil. We used national population and cancer incidence
|
|
projections, recommended radiotherapy usage from the medical literature,
|
|
and national working patterns to project radiotherapy demands in 2030.
|
|
An action plan was established with suggestions to address the gaps and
|
|
meet the demands.Findings The database search yielded 279 centres with
|
|
an active radiotherapy registry. After applying predefined exclusion
|
|
criteria, 263 centres were identified that provided external beam
|
|
radiotherapy machines with or without brachytherapy. All 263 operational
|
|
centres answered the questionnaires sent on Dec 9, 2019, which were then
|
|
returned between Jan 1 and June 30, 2020. There were 409 therapy
|
|
machines, 646 radiation oncologists, 533 physicists, and 230 989
|
|
patients undergoing radiotherapy (150 628 {[}65 \& BULL;2\%] in the
|
|
public health-care system and 80 937 {[}35 \& BULL;0\%] in private). The
|
|
mean annual occupation rate was 566 patients per treatment machine (SD
|
|
250). The number of residents per treatment machine ranged from 258 333
|
|
to 1 800 000. Technology availability varied considerably among regions
|
|
and systems. In 2030, 639 994 new cancer cases are expected, which will
|
|
require 332 797 radiotherapy courses. Therefore, 530 LINACs, 1079
|
|
radiation oncologists, and 1060 medical physicists will be needed.
|
|
Interpretation The expected increase in cancer incidence in the coming
|
|
years will probably increase the disparities in cancer care and the
|
|
burden for Brazilian patients. We provide a roadmap of the current
|
|
situation and the particularities of the Brazilian radiotherapy network,
|
|
which can serve as a starting point for cancer policy planning to
|
|
improve this scenario.Copyright \& COPY; 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights
|
|
reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Moraes, FY (Corresponding Author), Queens Univ, Kingston Gen Hosp, Dept Oncol, Div Radiat Oncol, Kingston, ON K7L 5P9, Canada.
|
|
Rosa, Arthur Accioly, Grp Oncoclin, Salvador, BA, Brazil.
|
|
Rosa, Arthur Accioly; Moraes, Fabio Ynoe; Marta, Gustavo Nader, Latin Amer Cooperat Oncol Grp, Porto Alegre, Brazil.
|
|
de Sousa, Cecilia Felix Penido Mendes; Marta, Gustavo Nader, Hosp Sirio Libanes, Dept Radiat Oncol, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
|
|
Pimentel, Leonardo Cunha Furbino; Castilho, Marcus Simoes, Hosp Felicio Rocho, Dept Radiat Oncol, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
|
|
Martins, Homero Lavieri, Brazilian Assoc Phys \& Rehabil Med, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
|
|
Moraes, Fabio Ynoe, Queens Univ, Kingston Gen Hosp, Dept Oncol, Div Radiat Oncol, Kingston, ON K7L 5P9, Canada.},
|
|
ISSN = {1470-2045},
|
|
EISSN = {1474-5488},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES; RADIATION-THERAPY; CANCER; ACCESS; RETREATMENT;
|
|
FRACTIONS; PATTERNS; DEMAND; NUMBER; TOOL},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Oncology},
|
|
Author-Email = {fydm@queensu.ca},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {44},
|
|
Times-Cited = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {0},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:001053116500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000340301400002,
|
|
Author = {Meredith, Lisa S. and Eisenman, David P. and Green, Bonnie L. and
|
|
Kaltman, Stacey and Wong, Eunice C. and Han, Bing and Cassells, Andrea
|
|
and Tobin, Jonathan N.},
|
|
Title = {Design of the Violence and Stress Assessment (ViStA) study: A randomized
|
|
controlled trial of care management for PTSD among predominantly Latino
|
|
patients in safety net health centers},
|
|
Journal = {CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL TRIALS},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {38},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {163-172},
|
|
Month = {JUL},
|
|
Abstract = {Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common problem in primary
|
|
care. Although effective treatments are available, little is known about
|
|
whether such treatments are effective within the context of Federally
|
|
Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) that serve as national ``safety
|
|
nets{''} for providing primary care for low income and underinsured
|
|
patients. The Violence and Stress Assessment (ViStA) study is the first
|
|
randomized controlled trial (RCT) to test the impact of a care
|
|
management intervention for treating PTSD in FQHCs. To develop a PTSD
|
|
management intervention appropriate for lower resource FQHCs and the
|
|
predominantly Latino patients they serve, formative work was conducted
|
|
through a collaborative effort between researchers and an FQHC
|
|
practice-based research network. This article describes how FQHC
|
|
stakeholders were convened to review, assess, and prioritize
|
|
evidence-based strategies for addressing patient, clinician, and
|
|
system-level barriers to care. This multi-component care management
|
|
intervention incorporates diagnosis with feedback, patient education and
|
|
activation; navigation and linkage to community resources; clinician
|
|
education and medication guidance; and structured cross-disciplinary
|
|
communication and continuity of care, all facilitated by care managers
|
|
with FQHC experience. We also describe the evaluation design of this
|
|
five-year RCT and the characteristics of the 404 English or Spanish
|
|
speaking patients enrolled in the study and randomized to either the
|
|
intervention or to usual care. Patients are assessed at baseline, six
|
|
months, and 12 months to examine intervention effectiveness on PTSD,
|
|
other mental health symptoms, health-related quality-of-life, health
|
|
care service use; and perceived barriers to care and satisfaction with
|
|
care. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Meredith, LS (Corresponding Author), RAND Corp, 1776 Main St,M3W, Santa Monica, CA 90407 USA.
|
|
Meredith, Lisa S.; Eisenman, David P.; Wong, Eunice C.; Han, Bing, RAND Corp, Santa Monica, CA 90407 USA.
|
|
Meredith, Lisa S., VA HSR\&D Ctr Study Healthcare Provider Behav, North Hills, CA 91343 USA.
|
|
Eisenman, David P., Univ Calif Los Angeles, David Geffen Sch Med, Dept Med, Div Gen Internal Med \& Hlth Serv Res, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
|
|
Green, Bonnie L.; Kaltman, Stacey, Georgetown Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, Washington, DC 20007 USA.
|
|
Cassells, Andrea; Tobin, Jonathan N., Clin Directors Network, New York, NY 10018 USA.
|
|
Tobin, Jonathan N., Yeshiva Univ, Albert Einstein Coll Med, Dept Epidemiol \& Populat Hlth, Bronx, NY 10461 USA.
|
|
Tobin, Jonathan N., Rockefeller Univ, Ctr Clin \& Translat Sci, New York, NY 10065 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.cct.2014.04.005},
|
|
ISSN = {1551-7144},
|
|
EISSN = {1559-2030},
|
|
Keywords = {Post-traumatic stress disorder; Care management; Safety net Federally
|
|
Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs); Hispanic/Latino; Primary care;
|
|
Integrating primary care and mental health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {NATIONAL COMORBIDITY SURVEY; QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS;
|
|
CONNOR-DAVIDSON RESILIENCE; INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; ABUSE
|
|
SCREENING-TEST; SCALE CD-RISC; ANXIETY DISORDERS; PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS;
|
|
SOCIAL-CONSEQUENCES; DRUG-ABUSE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, Research \& Experimental; Pharmacology \& Pharmacy},
|
|
Author-Email = {lisa\_meredith@rand.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Tobin, Jonathan N./R-2413-2019
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Tobin, Jonathan/0000-0003-4722-539X
|
|
Kaltman, Stacey/0000-0002-5805-5536},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {99},
|
|
Times-Cited = {12},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {28},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000340301400002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000830120200001,
|
|
Author = {Marquez, David X. and Perez, Adriana and Johnson, Julene K. and Jaldin,
|
|
Michelle and Pinto, Juan and Keiser, Sahru and Thi Tran and Martinez,
|
|
Paula and Guerrero, Javier and Portacolone, Elena},
|
|
Title = {Increasing engagement of Hispanics/Latinos in clinical trials on
|
|
Alzheimer's disease and related dementias},
|
|
Journal = {ALZHEIMERS \& DEMENTIA-TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH \& CLINICAL INTERVENTIONS},
|
|
Year = {2022},
|
|
Volume = {8},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Abstract = {Introduction Despite evidence that Hispanic/Latino populations are 1.5
|
|
times more likely than non-Latino Whites to develop Alzheimer's disease
|
|
and related dementias (ADRD), Latinos are underrepresented in clinical
|
|
trials testing treatments for ADRD. Data are needed on facilitators of
|
|
ADRD clinical trial participation in Latinos. We leveraged in-depth
|
|
qualitative methods to elucidate barriers and facilitators to
|
|
participating in ADRD clinical trials in a large and diverse sample of
|
|
Latinos; and to provide timely and actionable strategies to accelerate
|
|
representation of Latinos in clinical trials on ADRD. Methods Data were
|
|
collected in California between January 2019 and June 2020 from 25 focus
|
|
groups (FGs): eight with Latino adults ages 18 to 49 (n = 54), nine with
|
|
Latino adults ages 50+ (n = 75), and eight with caregivers of Latino
|
|
older adults with ADRD (n = 52). Twelve community-based organization
|
|
administrators were also interviewed. Transcripts of FGs and interviews
|
|
were entered into Atlas.ti software. Three independent team members
|
|
analyzed the transcripts with inductive/deductive qualitative content
|
|
analysis. We triangulated data from stakeholder groups across sites, we
|
|
used collaborative coding, and used the Consolidated Criteria for
|
|
Reporting Qualitative Research. Results An overarching theme was a
|
|
tension between wanting to learn more about ADRD and to participate in
|
|
ADRD research but having limited awareness and opportunity. Five themes
|
|
were identified: (1) remaining in limbo, (2) wanting information about
|
|
ADRD, (3) wanting information on research about ADRD, (4) clearing
|
|
researchers through trusted local organizations, and (5) practicing
|
|
altruism through engagement in research opportunities. Discussion To
|
|
increase representation of Latino communities in clinical trials on
|
|
ADRD, bilingual information and education on ADRD and clinical trials
|
|
needs to be better disseminated. Also, working with trusted local,
|
|
regional, and national organizations can increase participation.
|
|
Importantly, Latino participation can increase when research teams
|
|
demonstrate altruistic actions and inform participants of public health
|
|
reasons requiring their involvement. HIGHLIGHTS Participation in
|
|
clinical trials on Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) is
|
|
limited among Latinos/Hispanics. Knowing the high prevalence of ADRD in
|
|
Latinos increases willingness to participate. Observing altruism from
|
|
researchers increases willingness to participate. Invitations from
|
|
multiple organizations increases willingness to participate. Researchers
|
|
should include public health reasons requiring Latinos' involvement.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Marquez, DX (Corresponding Author), Univ Illinois, Dept Kinesiol \& Nutr, Rush Alzheimers Dis Ctr, 1919 W Taylor, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Marquez, David X.; Jaldin, Michelle; Pinto, Juan, Univ Illinois, Dept Kinesiol \& Nutr, Rush Alzheimers Dis Ctr, 1919 W Taylor, Chicago, IL 60612 USA.
|
|
Perez, Adriana; Johnson, Julene K., Univ Penn, Sch Nursing, Dept Family \& Community Hlth, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
|
|
Keiser, Sahru; Thi Tran; Martinez, Paula; Guerrero, Javier, Univ Calif San Francisco, Inst Hlth \& Aging, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Portacolone, Elena, Univ Calif San Francisco, Philip Lee Inst Hlth Policy Studies, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1002/trc2.12331},
|
|
Article-Number = {e12331},
|
|
EISSN = {2352-8737},
|
|
Keywords = {aged; Alzheimer's disease and related dementias; clinical trials; focus
|
|
groups; Hispanic; Latino},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; POPULATIONS; CHALLENGES; IMPACT; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Clinical Neurology; Neurosciences},
|
|
Author-Email = {marquezd@uic.edu},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {37},
|
|
Times-Cited = {6},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {2},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000830120200001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000227100600002,
|
|
Author = {Gifford, B},
|
|
Title = {Combat casualties and race: What can we learn from the 2003-2004 Iraq
|
|
conflict?},
|
|
Journal = {ARMED FORCES \& SOCIETY},
|
|
Year = {2005},
|
|
Volume = {31},
|
|
Number = {2},
|
|
Pages = {201+},
|
|
Month = {WIN},
|
|
Abstract = {Since the end of the draft in 1973, African Americans have been
|
|
overrepresented among volunteers for the US Armed Forces.(1) While many
|
|
commentators have hailed the military as a uniquely egalitarian avenue
|
|
for social and economic advancement in a society beset with racial
|
|
inequities, the high participation rate among blacks has periodically
|
|
led to concerns that they (and more recently, other ethnic minorities
|
|
such as Hispanics) would disproportionately suffer from casualties in
|
|
the event of military hostilities.(2) However, after numerous US
|
|
military engagements since the 1970s, these fears have not been borne
|
|
out. In fact, African Americans seem less likely to die in combat than
|
|
their overall representation in uniform would suggest. Taken at face
|
|
value, the racial composition of US combat casualties stands in stark
|
|
contrast to the racial pattern of morbidity and mortality in the larger
|
|
society, where African Americans as a group fare worse than whites on
|
|
measures such as death rates, infant mortality, and life expectancy.(3)
|
|
It would seem that, as a comparatively disadvantaged group, African
|
|
Americans in the all-volunteer era have reaped the benefits of military
|
|
service without unduly bearing its ultimate burdens. However,
|
|
explanations for the unexpectedly low African American casualty rate
|
|
have not been rigorously examined. Furthermore, assessing the racial
|
|
equity of military service based on historical casualty patterns assumes
|
|
that future combat operations will closely resemble those that have
|
|
occurred since Vietnam-an assumption that in this new century looks
|
|
increasingly untenable.
|
|
Extending the work of Martin Binkin and his collaborators,(4) this study
|
|
argues that the racial composition of combat casualties reflects three
|
|
factors: the social processes that sort volunteers into various military
|
|
units and occupational specialties; the mix of units and specialties
|
|
that participate in military operations; and the battlefield conditions
|
|
they encounter. Or put another way, given a particular environment
|
|
within which armed conflict occurs, the probability of any person
|
|
becoming a casualty is a function of their representation in those units
|
|
most likely to make hostile contact with enemy forces. Following this,
|
|
the underrepresentation of African Americans in the units most involved
|
|
in combat operations since Vietnam may partly explain the disjuncture
|
|
between their military participation and casualty rates. By extension,
|
|
the higher propensity of whites to serve in combat capacities could
|
|
explain their higher-than-expected, post-Vietnam casualty rate. The same
|
|
may be true of ethnic Hispanics, who are also overrepresented in the
|
|
combat arms, though their reasons for volunteering for such assignments
|
|
may differ from those of their non-Hispanic white counterparts.
|
|
The short duration of post-Vietnam US ground combat engagements such as
|
|
Panama and Somalia-as well as the prominent roles played by special
|
|
operations and light-infantry units for which blacks are less likely to
|
|
volunteer(5)-has thus far prevented a rigorous evaluation of such
|
|
propositions. However, the 2003-2004 conflict in Iraq presents one
|
|
opportunity to assess the race distribution of US casualties under
|
|
varying combat conditions. First, compared to other combat engagements
|
|
since Vietnam, many diverse military units have been operating in Iraq
|
|
for a relatively long time. Second, the US military experience in Iraq
|
|
has been, broadly speaking, marked by differing conflict environments.
|
|
In the relatively brief opening period, coalition ground combat forces
|
|
(mainly US and British infantry and armor) rapidly penetrated deep into
|
|
enemy territory and carried out offensive actions primarily against
|
|
Iraqi military forces. The subsequent-and ongoing-mission involves
|
|
efforts by combat and noncombat personnel (e.g., intelligence, police,
|
|
logistical, and civil affairs) to consolidate US control, restore civil
|
|
order, pacify hostile forces, and administer occupied areas.
|
|
This study assesses the racial equity of military service by examining
|
|
the racial distribution of US casualties in Iraq for the first twelve
|
|
months national dialogue on the equity of military service may shift
|
|
back to the social process that impels whites-particularly those from
|
|
the lower socioeconomic strata-into the ranks. However, should US troops
|
|
resume large-scale offensive campaigns against a number of seerningly
|
|
growing and increasingly well-organized insurgent threats, casualties
|
|
among blacks and Hispanics may creep up to a point where the fairness of
|
|
military sacrifice again becomes an uncomfortable racial issue.
|
|
On a final note, the findings of this study are not germane only to the
|
|
military experiences of the United States. As of 2000, several advanced
|
|
industrial democracies with long histories of conscription had abandoned
|
|
the practice in favor of voluntary service, or had plans to phase it out
|
|
by 2004. (36) Some nations with rising immigration rates have
|
|
experienced increased racial and ethnic diversity in their volunteer
|
|
militaries,(37) while others (such as Spain and France) actively recruit
|
|
foreign volunteers. At the same time, conflicts such as Kosovo in 1999
|
|
and contemporary operations in Afghanistan and Iraq have subjected the
|
|
militaries of many nations to their first hostile fire in decades (for
|
|
example, coalition casualties in Iraq include personnel from Italy,
|
|
Spain, Poland, Denmark, and Bulgaria). To the degree that ethnic
|
|
enlistment patterns are similarly structured by socioeconomic factors,
|
|
debates about military equity and recruitment policies in the US case
|
|
may presage similar dialogues elsewhere.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Gifford, B (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Robert Wood Johnson Fdn, 140 Warren Hall,MC 7360, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
|
|
Univ Calif Berkeley, Robert Wood Johnson Fdn, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1177/0095327X0503100203},
|
|
ISSN = {0095-327X},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {BRITISH-ARMED-SERVICES; UNITED-STATES MILITARY; PARTICIPATION;
|
|
ENLISTMENTS; UNIFORM; FORCES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Political Science; Sociology},
|
|
Author-Email = {gifford@berkeley.edu},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Baltutyte, Gerda/AGH-5630-2022},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {41},
|
|
Times-Cited = {35},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {14},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000227100600002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000362064100002,
|
|
Author = {Beran, David and Jaime Miranda, J. and Kathia Cardenas, Maria and
|
|
Bigdeli, Maryam},
|
|
Title = {Health systems research for policy change: lessons from the
|
|
implementation of rapid assessment protocols for diabetes in low- and
|
|
middle-income settings},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTH RESEARCH POLICY AND SYSTEMS},
|
|
Year = {2015},
|
|
Volume = {13},
|
|
Month = {OCT 1},
|
|
Abstract = {Background: As many challenges exist for access to diabetes care in
|
|
developing countries, the International Insulin Foundation developed a
|
|
Rapid Assessment tool and implemented this approach to identify barriers
|
|
to care and propose concrete recommendations for decision makers. The
|
|
objective of this paper is to identify the factors that contributed to
|
|
informing and influencing policymakers with regards to this work.
|
|
Methods: A documentary review comprised Stage 1. Stage 2 used an online
|
|
questionnaire to gain insight from users of the Rapid Assessment
|
|
results. Based on Stages 1 and 2, Stage 3 comprised in-depth interviews
|
|
with a total of nine individuals (one individual each from the six
|
|
participating countries; two individuals from the World Health
|
|
Organization; one ``Global Diabetes Advocate{''}). Interviews were
|
|
analyzed based on a list of themes developed from Stage 2.
|
|
Results: Stage 1 led to the identification of various types of documents
|
|
referring to the results. The online questionnaire had a response rate
|
|
of 33\%. Respondents directly involved in the assessment had a
|
|
``Good{''} or ``Very Good{''} appreciation of most aspects and scored
|
|
these higher than those not directly involved. From the interviews,
|
|
formalized methods and close collaboration between the international
|
|
team and local partners were strengths. Trust and a relationship with
|
|
local partners were also seen as assets. All stakeholders valued the
|
|
results and the credibility of the data generated. Local partners felt
|
|
that more could have been done for dissemination.
|
|
Conclusion: This study shows the importance of specific results from the
|
|
different assessments. In addressing complex issues having external
|
|
experts involved was seen as an advantage. The uptake of results was due
|
|
to the credibility of the research which was influenced by a mix of the
|
|
people involved, past assessments, trusted local partners, and the use
|
|
of the results by knowledge brokers, such as the World Health
|
|
Organization. Through these brokers, others gained ownership of the
|
|
data. The methods used and the fact that this data was grounded in a
|
|
local context also reinforced its value. Despite limitations, this study
|
|
offers a unique perspective where a similar research approach was taken
|
|
in six countries.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Beran, D (Corresponding Author), Univ Hosp Geneva, Div Trop \& Humanitarian Med, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Beran, David, Univ Hosp Geneva, Div Trop \& Humanitarian Med, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Beran, David, Univ Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
|
|
Jaime Miranda, J.; Kathia Cardenas, Maria, Univ Peruana Cayetano Heredia, CRONICAS Ctr Excellence Chron Dis, Lima, Peru.
|
|
Bigdeli, Maryam, WHO, Alliance Hlth Syst \& Policy Res, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1186/s12961-015-0029-4},
|
|
Article-Number = {41},
|
|
ISSN = {1478-4505},
|
|
Keywords = {Diabetes; Health systems; Health systems research; Policy},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRANSLATING RESEARCH; CARE},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {david.beran@unige.ch},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Miranda, J. Jaime/A-8482-2008
|
|
Beran, David/E-4422-2013
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Miranda, J. Jaime/0000-0002-4738-5468
|
|
Beran, David/0000-0001-7229-3920
|
|
CARDENAS, MARIA KATHIA/0000-0002-3173-9284},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {49},
|
|
Times-Cited = {10},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {7},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000362064100002},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000343352600010,
|
|
Author = {Edlin, Brian R. and Winkelstein, Emily R.},
|
|
Title = {Can hepatitis C be eradicated in the United States?},
|
|
Journal = {ANTIVIRAL RESEARCH},
|
|
Year = {2014},
|
|
Volume = {110},
|
|
Pages = {79-93},
|
|
Month = {OCT},
|
|
Abstract = {The advent of highly effective antiviral regimens will make the
|
|
eradication of hepatitis C in high-income countries such as the United
|
|
States technically feasible. But eradicating hepatitis C will require
|
|
escalating our response to the epidemic in key domains, including
|
|
surveillance and epidemiology, prevention, screening, care and
|
|
treatment, policy, research, and advocacy. Surveillance must be nimble
|
|
enough to quickly assess the magnitude of new transmission patterns as
|
|
they emerge. Basic prevention strategies - community-based outreach and
|
|
education, testing and counseling, and access to sterile injection
|
|
equipment and opioid substitution therapies - must be scaled up and
|
|
adapted to target groups in which new epidemics are emerging. All adults
|
|
should be screened for hepatitis C, but special efforts must focus on
|
|
groups with increased prevalence through community outreach and rapid
|
|
testing. Government, industry, and payers must work together to assure
|
|
full access to health services and antiviral drugs for everyone who is
|
|
infected. Access to the new regimens must not be compromised by
|
|
excessively high prices or arbitrary payer restrictions. Partnerships
|
|
must be forged between hepatitis providers and programs that serve
|
|
people who inject illicit drugs. Healthcare providers and systems,
|
|
especially primary care practitioners, need education and training in
|
|
treating hepatitis C and caring for substance-using populations.
|
|
Services must be provided to the disadvantaged and stigmatized members
|
|
of society who bear a disproportionate burden of the epidemic.
|
|
Environments must be created where people who use drugs can receive
|
|
prevention and treatment services without shame or stigma. Action is
|
|
needed to end the policy of mass incarceration of people who use drugs,
|
|
reduce the stigma associated with substance use, support the human
|
|
rights of people who use drugs, expand social safety net services for
|
|
the poor and the homeless, remove the legal barriers to hepatitis C
|
|
prevention, and build public health infrastructure to reach, engage, and
|
|
serve marginalized populations. Governments must take action to bring
|
|
about these changes. Public health agencies must work with penal
|
|
institutions to provide prevention and treatment services, including
|
|
antiviral therapy, to those in need in jails and prisons or on probation
|
|
or parole. Research is needed to guide efforts in each of these domains.
|
|
Strong and sustained political advocacy will be needed to build and
|
|
sustain support for these measures. Leadership must be provided by
|
|
physicians, scientists, and the public health community in partnership
|
|
with community advocates and people living with or at risk for hepatitis
|
|
C. Eliminating hepatitis C from the United States is possible, but will
|
|
require a sustained national commitment to reach, test, treat, cure, and
|
|
prevent every case. With strong political leadership, societal
|
|
commitment, and community support, hepatitis C can be eradicated in the
|
|
United States. If this is to happen in our lifetimes, the time for
|
|
action is now. This article forms part of a symposium in Antiviral
|
|
Research on ``Hepatitis C: next steps toward global eradication.{''} (C)
|
|
2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.},
|
|
Type = {Editorial Material},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Edlin, BR (Corresponding Author), Natl Dev \& Res Inst, 71 West 23rd St,4th Floor, New York, NY 10010 USA.
|
|
Edlin, Brian R., Weill Cornell Med Coll, New York, NY 10065 USA.
|
|
Winkelstein, Emily R., Natl Dev \& Res Inst, New York, NY 10010 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.antiviral.2014.07.015},
|
|
ISSN = {0166-3542},
|
|
EISSN = {1872-9096},
|
|
Keywords = {Hepatitis C; Disease eradication; Epidemiology; Prevention; Antiviral
|
|
therapy; Social determinants of health},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {INJECTION-DRUG USERS; NEW-YORK-CITY; HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS;
|
|
SYRINGE EXCHANGE PROGRAMS; HEALTH-CARE-DELIVERY; INFECTIOUS-DISEASE;
|
|
SAN-FRANCISCO; PUBLIC-HEALTH; HIV-INFECTION; CORRECTIONAL FACILITY},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Pharmacology \& Pharmacy; Virology},
|
|
Author-Email = {bredlin.nyc@gmail.com
|
|
winkelstein@ndri.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Edlin, Brian R/F-2966-2018},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Edlin, Brian R/0000-0001-8172-8797},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {186},
|
|
Times-Cited = {35},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {36},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000343352600010},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000450806500001,
|
|
Author = {Colom, Marcela and Austad, Kirsten and Sacuj, Neftali and Larson, Karen
|
|
and Rohloff, Peter},
|
|
Title = {Expanding access to primary healthcare for women through a microfinance
|
|
institution: A case study from rural Guatemala},
|
|
Journal = {HEALTHCARE-THE JOURNAL OF DELIVERY SCIENCE AND INNOVATION},
|
|
Year = {2018},
|
|
Volume = {6},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Pages = {223-230},
|
|
Month = {DEC},
|
|
Abstract = {The utilization of existing social networks is increasingly being
|
|
recognized as a powerful strategy for delivering healthcare services to
|
|
underserved populations in low- and middle-income countries. In
|
|
Guatemala, multiple barriers prevent access to healthcare services for
|
|
rural and indigenous populations, and strategies for delivering
|
|
healthcare in more efficient ways are needed. The case study we describe
|
|
here is a unique collaboration between a microfinance institution
|
|
(Friendship Bridge) and a primary care organization (Wuqu' Kawoq
|
|
vertical bar Maya Health Alliance) to scale up healthcare through an
|
|
existing lending-borrowing social network. The program provides primary
|
|
care services to female clients of Friendship Bridge in rural areas of
|
|
Guatemala, with nurses working as frontline primary care providers,
|
|
providing door-to-door healthcare services. Over the first 22 months of
|
|
the project, we have reached over 3500 of Friendship Bridge's clients,
|
|
with overall high acceptance of services. All clinical documentation and
|
|
program monitoring and evaluation are done through audit trails within
|
|
an electronical medical record system, which improves efficiency and
|
|
lowers the associated time and resources costs. We utilize quality
|
|
improvement methodologies to aid in decision making and programmatic
|
|
adjustments scale up. These strategies have allowed us to expand
|
|
services rapidly under challenging geographic and logistical
|
|
constraints, while concurrently iteratively improving staff training and
|
|
supervision, clinical care, and client engagement processes.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Rohloff, P (Corresponding Author), Wuqu Kawoq Maya Hlth Alliance, Santiago Sacatepequez, Guatemala.
|
|
Colom, Marcela; Austad, Kirsten; Sacuj, Neftali; Rohloff, Peter, Wuqu Kawoq Maya Hlth Alliance, Santiago Sacatepequez, Guatemala.
|
|
Austad, Kirsten, Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Womens Hlth, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
|
|
Larson, Karen, Friendship Bridge, Lakewood, CO USA.
|
|
Rohloff, Peter, Brigham \& Womens Hosp, Div Global Hlth Equ, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115 USA.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1016/j.hjdsi.2017.12.003},
|
|
ISSN = {2213-0764},
|
|
EISSN = {2213-0772},
|
|
Keywords = {Primary healthcare; Guatemala; Women's health; Quality improvement;
|
|
Social networks; Microfinance},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {PANEL-DATA; BANGLADESH; IMPROVEMENT; POVERTY; AFRICA; IMPACT;
|
|
INTERVENTIONS; FRAMEWORK; HIV},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Health Care Sciences \& Services; Health Policy \& Services},
|
|
Author-Email = {peter@wuqukawoq.org},
|
|
ResearcherID-Numbers = {Rohloff, Peter/P-8722-2017
|
|
Austad, Kirsten/ABC-7684-2021
|
|
},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Rohloff, Peter/0000-0001-7274-8315
|
|
Austad, Kirsten/0000-0001-5237-2955
|
|
Sacuj, Neftali/0000-0001-9838-9293},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {46},
|
|
Times-Cited = {2},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {0},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {12},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000450806500001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000610371200007,
|
|
Author = {Lebares, Carter C. and Greenberg, Anya L. and Ascher, Nancy L. and
|
|
Delucchi, Kevin L. and Reilly, Linda M. and Van der Schaaf, Marieke and
|
|
Baathe, Fredrik and O'Sullivan, Patricia and Isaksson Ro, Karin},
|
|
Title = {Exploration of Individual and System-Level Well-being Initiatives at an
|
|
Academic Surgical Residency Program A Mixed-Methods Study},
|
|
Journal = {JAMA NETWORK OPEN},
|
|
Year = {2021},
|
|
Volume = {4},
|
|
Number = {1},
|
|
Month = {JAN 6},
|
|
Abstract = {IMPORTANCE Physician well-being is a critical component of sustainable
|
|
health care. There are few data on the effects of multilevel well-being
|
|
programs nor a clear understanding of where and how to target resources.
|
|
OBJECTIVE To inform the design of future well-being interventions by
|
|
exploring individual and workplace factors associated with surgical
|
|
trainees' well-being, differences by gender identity, and end-user
|
|
perceptions of these initiatives.
|
|
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This mixed-methods study among
|
|
surgical trainees within a single US academic surgical department
|
|
included a questionnaire in January 2019 (98 participants, including
|
|
general surgery residents and clinical fellows) and a focus group (9
|
|
participants, all clinical residents who recently completed their third
|
|
postgraduate year {[}PGY 3]) in July 2019. Participants self-reported
|
|
gender (man, woman, nonbinary).
|
|
EXPOSURES Individual and organizational-level initiatives, including
|
|
mindfulness-based affective regulation training (via Enhanced Stress
|
|
Resilience Training), advanced scheduling of time off, wellness
|
|
half-days, and the creation of a resident-driven well-being committee.
|
|
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Well-being was explored using validated
|
|
measures of psychosocial risk (emotional exhaustion, depersonalization,
|
|
perceived stress, depressive symptoms, alcohol use, languishing,
|
|
anxiety, high psychological demand) and resilience (mindfulness, social
|
|
support, flourishing) factors. End-user perceptions were assessed
|
|
through open-ended responses and a formal focus group.
|
|
RESULTS Of 98 participants surveyed, 64 responded (response rate, 65\%),
|
|
of whom 35 (55\%) were women. Women vs men trainees were significantly
|
|
more likely to report high depersonalization (odds ratio {[}OR], 5.50;
|
|
95\% CI, 1.38-21.85) and less likely to report high mindfulness
|
|
tendencies (OR, 0.17; 95\% CI, 0.05-0.53). Open-ended responses
|
|
highlighted time and priorities as the greatest barriers to using
|
|
well-being resources. Focus group findings reflected Job Demand-Resource
|
|
theory tenets, revealing the value of individual-level interventions to
|
|
provide coping skills, the benefit of advance scheduling of time off for
|
|
maintaining personal support resources, the importance of work quality
|
|
rather than quantity, and the demoralizing effect of inefficient or
|
|
nonresponsive systems.
|
|
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this study, surgical trainees indicated
|
|
that multilevel well-being programs would benefit them, but tailoring
|
|
these initiatives to individual needs and specific workplace elements is
|
|
critical to maximizing intervention effects.},
|
|
Type = {Article},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Lebares, CC (Corresponding Author), Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Surg, 513 Parnassus Ave,HSW 1601, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Lebares, Carter C.; Greenberg, Anya L.; Ascher, Nancy L.; Reilly, Linda M.; O'Sullivan, Patricia, Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Surg, 513 Parnassus Ave,HSW 1601, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA.
|
|
Delucchi, Kevin L., Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Psychiat, San Francisco, CA USA.
|
|
Van der Schaaf, Marieke, Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Ctr Res \& Dev Hlth Profess Educ, Utrecht, Netherlands.
|
|
Baathe, Fredrik, Univ Gothenburg, Inst Care \& Hlth Serv, Gothenburg, Sweden.
|
|
Baathe, Fredrik, Inst Stress Med, Gothenburg, Sweden.
|
|
Baathe, Fredrik; Isaksson Ro, Karin, Univ Oslo, Inst Studies Med Profess, Oslo, Norway.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.32676},
|
|
Article-Number = {e2032676},
|
|
ISSN = {2574-3805},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {TRAIT ANXIETY; JOB DEMANDS; BURNOUT; DEPRESSION; MINDFULNESS;
|
|
RESILIENCE; STRESS; MODEL; ENGAGEMENT; RESOURCES},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {carter.lebares@ucsf.edu},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Edwards, Anya/0000-0002-6174-5976
|
|
Baathe, Fredrik/0000-0002-3799-1077},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {53},
|
|
Times-Cited = {15},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {13},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000610371200007},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
@article{ WOS:000971493100001,
|
|
Author = {Waddington, Hugh Sharma and Masset, Edoardo and Bick, Sarah and
|
|
Cairncross, Sandy},
|
|
Title = {Impact on childhood mortality of interventions to improve drinking
|
|
water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) to households: Systematic review
|
|
and meta-analysis},
|
|
Journal = {PLOS MEDICINE},
|
|
Year = {2023},
|
|
Volume = {20},
|
|
Number = {4},
|
|
Month = {APR},
|
|
Abstract = {Author summary Why was this study done? The biggest contributor to the
|
|
global burden of infectious disease in childhood in developing countries
|
|
is mortality due to respiratory and diarrhoeal infections, both of which
|
|
are closely linked to deficient water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH)
|
|
availability and use by households.Multiple systematic reviews and
|
|
meta-analyses of WASH-related morbidity have been conducted, but there
|
|
is a shortage of rigorous, systematic evidence on the effectiveness of
|
|
WASH interventions in reducing mortality. What did the researchers do
|
|
and find? We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of the
|
|
impacts of WASH interventions on all-cause and diarrhoea-related
|
|
mortality in L\&MICs, incorporating evidence from 35 studies comprising
|
|
48 distinct WASH intervention arms.We found significant effects on
|
|
all-cause mortality among children aged under 5 of interventions to
|
|
improve the quantity of water available (34\% reduction), hygiene
|
|
promotion when water supplies were accessible to households (29\%
|
|
reduction), and community-wide sanitation (21\% reduction).We also found
|
|
significant effects of WASH interventions on diarrhoea mortality among
|
|
under 5s (45\% reduction), which were significantly larger when provided
|
|
to communities that were at the lowest rungs of the sanitation ladder,
|
|
compared to those that already had improved WASH. What do these findings
|
|
mean? Interventions to prevent water-related mortality in childhood in
|
|
endemic disease circumstances provide adequate water supplies to
|
|
households, enabling domestic hygiene and safe excreta disposal in the
|
|
household and community.Systematic reviews can provide new evidence for
|
|
decision making, but the approach we present is reliant on trial authors
|
|
and journals adhering to agreed standards of reporting.
|
|
BackgroundIn low- and middle-income countries (L\&MICs), the biggest
|
|
contributing factors to the global burden of disease in childhood are
|
|
deaths due to respiratory illness and diarrhoea, both of which are
|
|
closely related to use of water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services
|
|
by households. However, current estimates of the health impacts of WASH
|
|
interventions use self-reported morbidity, which may fail to capture
|
|
longer-term or more severe impacts. Reported mortality is thought to be
|
|
less prone to bias than other reported measures. This study aimed to
|
|
answer the question: What are the impacts of WASH interventions on
|
|
reported childhood mortality in L\&MICs? Methods and findingsWe
|
|
conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis, using a published
|
|
protocol. Systematic searches of 11 academic databases and trial
|
|
registries, plus organisational repositories, were undertaken to locate
|
|
studies of WASH interventions, which were published in peer review
|
|
journals or other sources (e.g., organisational reports and working
|
|
papers). Intervention studies of WASH improvements implemented under
|
|
endemic disease circumstances in L\&MICs were eligible, which reported
|
|
findings at any time until March 2020. We used the participant flow data
|
|
supplied in response to journal editors' calls for greater transparency.
|
|
Data were collected by two authors working independently.We included
|
|
evidence from 24 randomized and 11 nonrandomized studies of WASH
|
|
interventions from all global regions, incorporating 2,600 deaths.
|
|
Effects of 48 WASH treatment arms were included in analysis. We
|
|
critically appraised and synthesised evidence using meta-analysis to
|
|
improve statistical power. We found WASH interventions are associated
|
|
with a significant reduction of 17\% in the odds of all-cause mortality
|
|
in childhood (OR = 0.83, 95\% CI = 0.74, 0.92, evidence from 38
|
|
interventions), and a significant reduction in diarrhoea mortality of
|
|
45\% (OR = 0.55, 95\% CI = 0.35, 0.84; 10 interventions).Further
|
|
analysis by WASH technology indicated interventions providing improved
|
|
water in quantity to households were most consistently associated with
|
|
reductions in all-cause mortality. Community-wide sanitation was most
|
|
consistently associated with reductions in diarrhoea mortality. Around
|
|
one-half of the included studies were assessed as being at ``moderate
|
|
risk of bias{''} in attributing mortality in childhood to the WASH
|
|
intervention, and no studies were found to be at ``low risk of bias.{''}
|
|
The review should be updated to incorporate additional published and
|
|
unpublished participant flow data. ConclusionsThe findings are congruent
|
|
with theories of infectious disease transmission. Washing with water
|
|
presents a barrier to respiratory illness and diarrhoea, which are the
|
|
two biggest contributors to all-cause mortality in childhood in L\&MICs.
|
|
Community-wide sanitation halts the spread of diarrhoea. We observed
|
|
that evidence synthesis can provide new findings, going beyond the
|
|
underlying data from trials to generate crucial insights for policy.
|
|
Transparent reporting in trials creates opportunities for research
|
|
synthesis to answer questions about mortality, which individual studies
|
|
of interventions cannot be reliably designed to address.},
|
|
Type = {Review},
|
|
Language = {English},
|
|
Affiliation = {Waddington, HS (Corresponding Author), London Int Dev Ctr LIDC, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med LSHTM, Dept Dis Control, Environm Hlth Grp, London, England.
|
|
Waddington, Hugh Sharma, London Int Dev Ctr LIDC, London Sch Hyg \& Trop Med LSHTM, Dept Dis Control, Environm Hlth Grp, London, England.
|
|
Masset, Edoardo, LSHTM, Ctr Excellence Dev Impact \& Learning CEDIL, LIDC, Dept Publ Hlth Environm \& Soc, London, England.
|
|
Bick, Sarah; Cairncross, Sandy, LSHTM, Dept Dis Control, Environm Hlth Grp, London, England.},
|
|
DOI = {10.1371/journal.pmed.1004215},
|
|
Article-Number = {e1004215},
|
|
ISSN = {1549-1277},
|
|
EISSN = {1549-1676},
|
|
Keywords-Plus = {DIARRHEAL DISEASE; NUTRITIONAL INTERVENTIONS; SOLAR DISINFECTION;
|
|
CONTROLLED-TRIALS; INFANT-MORTALITY; RANDOMIZED-TRIAL; YOUNG-CHILDREN;
|
|
WESTERN KENYA; HEALTH; GROWTH},
|
|
Web-of-Science-Categories = {Medicine, General \& Internal},
|
|
Author-Email = {Hugh.waddington@lshtm.ac.uk},
|
|
ORCID-Numbers = {Sharma Waddington, Hugh/0000-0003-3859-3342
|
|
Bick, Sarah/0000-0001-6870-5320
|
|
Masset, Edoardo/0000-0002-8826-0776},
|
|
Number-of-Cited-References = {106},
|
|
Times-Cited = {1},
|
|
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {8},
|
|
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {8},
|
|
Unique-ID = {WOS:000971493100001},
|
|
DA = {2023-09-28},
|
|
}
|