311 results
Search Results
2. Attitudes of MBA Students toward Entrepreneurship: A Cross-Cultural Study.
- Author
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Goddard, Robert D., III and Weihe, Hermann J.
- Abstract
This paper discusses a study that assessed the attitudes of MBA (Masters of Business Administration) students across two cultures, Germany and the United States, toward entrepreneurship. Specifically, the paper examines the motives for and the reservations about going into business for oneself in these countries. It is hypothesized that attitudes toward entrepreneurship vary across boundaries. Results are provided from a survey of 114 current MBA students enrolled in a German university and 84 MBA students from 2 southeastern U.S. universities. The study's results show that the a majority of German students would not consider going into business for themselves, while over 57 percent of the U.S. students indicated that going into business for themselves was at least a possibility. Some of the findings are as follows: (1) German students saw a future in the computer field while U.S. students looked at merchandising and exporting; (2) German students expressed a low interest in manufacturing; (3) lack of start-up capital was the primary fear of both U.S. and German students for going into business for themselves; and (4) both groups of students gave the ability to realize their own ideas, freedom of action and decision making, and economic independence as important motives for self-employment. Contains a 19-item bibliography. (GLR)
- Published
- 1992
3. Alternative Research Approaches: Development Strategies in Educational Technology.
- Author
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Beck, Klaus
- Abstract
It is not advisable to discuss Instructional Design (ID) problems without having previously clarified the paradigm issue. After a reconstruction of the "objectivist" and "constructivist" points of view, reasons for preferring a realistic position are outlined. On that basis the theoretical status of ID statements is elaborated as either theoretical or technological. Both statement types are shown to be the results of different research strategies, logically as well as pragmatically. Whether there are reasons to follow preferably one of these approaches is considered, but it turns out that it is not possible to make a rational choice. The growth of knowledge in the ID field will be enhanced if both strategies are followed under the condition that they keep connected to each other systematically. (Contains 24 references.) (Author/SLD)
- Published
- 2000
4. Inclusion and Intellectual Disabilities: A Cross Cultural Review of Descriptions
- Author
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Taub, Deborah and Foster, Megan
- Abstract
The benefits of inclusive practices for students with intellectual disabilities have been demonstrated in several countries; however, large-scale inclusive practices remain elusive. Having a clear understanding of how researchers define the terms inclusion and intellectual disability would support more cross-cultural collaboration and facilitate the generalization of practices. Addressed in this paper is the question of what themes, if any, exist in conceptualizing inclusion and intellectual disability across the peer-reviewed research of six countries, three of which have been identified as highly inclusive and three that have been identified as minimally inclusive. These findings may be used to further research into barriers and opportunities for inclusive practices for students with intellectual disabilities.
- Published
- 2020
5. A multicenter paper-based and web-based system for collecting patient-reported outcome measures in patients undergoing local treatment for prostate cancer: first experiences.
- Author
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Kowalski, Christoph, Roth, Rebecca, Carl, Günther, Feick, Günter, Oesterle, Alisa, Hinkel, Andreas, Steiner, Thomas, Brock, Marko, Kaftan, Björn, Borowitz, Rainer, Zantl, Niko, Heidenreich, Axel, Neisius, Andreas, Darr, Christopher, Bolenz, Christian, Beyer, Burkhard, Pfitzenmaier, Jesco, Brehmer, Bernhard, Fichtner, Jan, and Haben, Björn
- Subjects
PROSTATE cancer ,CANCER patients ,ACQUISITION of data ,IMPLEMENTATION (Social action programs) ,MEDICAL care ,PROSTATE tumors treatment ,RESEARCH ,SPECIALTY hospitals ,RADICAL prostatectomy ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,CANCER treatment ,CONTENT mining ,MEDICAL care research ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,AUTOMATIC data collection systems ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PROSTATE tumors ,DISEASE risk factors ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Purpose: To give an overview of the multicenter Prostate Cancer Outcomes (PCO) study, involving paper-based and web-based collection of patient-reported outcome measures (PROM) in patients undergoing local treatment for prostate cancer in certified centers in Germany. The PCO study is part of the larger Movember-funded TrueNTH Global Registry. The article reports on the study's design and provides a brief progress report after the first 2 years of data collection. Methods: Prostate cancer centers (PCCs) certified according to German Cancer Society requirements were invited to participate in collecting patient-reported information on symptoms and function before and at least once (at 12 months) after treatment. The data were matched with disease and treatment information. This report describes progress in patient inclusion, response rate, and variations between centers relative to online/paper use, and also data quality, including recruitment variations relative to treatment in the first participating PCCs. Results: PCC participation increased over time; 44 centers had transferred data for 3094 patients at the time of this report. Patient recruitment varied widely across centers. Recruitment was highest among patients undergoing radical prostatectomy. The completeness of the data was good, except for comorbidity information. Conclusions: The PCO study benefits from a quality improvement system first established over 10 years ago, requiring collection and harmonization of a predefined clinical dataset across centers. Nevertheless, establishing a PROM routine requires substantial effort on the part of providers and constant monitoring in order to achieve high-quality data. The findings reported here may be useful for guiding implementation in similar initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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6. The Changing Academic Profession in International and Quantitative Perspectives: A Focus on Teaching & Research Activities. Report of the International Conference on the Changing Academic Profession Project, 2010. RIHE International Seminar Reports. No.15
- Author
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Hiroshima University, Research Institute for Higher Education (Japan)
- Abstract
The Research Institute for Higher Education in Hiroshima University started a program of research on the Changing Academic Profession (CAP) in 2005. The fourth and final conference was held in Hiroshima in January 2010. The following papers are presented at the conference: (1) Differentiation and Integration of Research, Teaching and Learning in the Knowledge Society: From the Perspective of Japan (Akira Arimoto); (2) Comparing the Academic Research Productivity of Selected Societies (William K. Cummings); (3) Teaching and Research in Germany: Narrowing the Gaps between Institutional Types and Staff Categories? (Ulrich Teichler); (4) Teaching and Research in a Changing Environment: Academic Work in Italy (Michele Rostan); (5) Teaching and Research in Higher Education in South Africa: Transformation Issues (Philip Higgs, Leonie G. Higgs, Isaac M. Ntshoe, and Charste C. Wolhuter); (6) Teaching and Research Activities of the Chinese Academics (Futao Huang and Min Li); (7) Convergence and Divergence of Teaching and Research Activities in the Japanese Academic Profession (Yusuke Hasegawa and Naoyuki Ogata); (8) Teaching and Research in the Japanese Academic Profession: A Focus on Age and Gender (Hideto Fukudome and Naomi Kimoto); (9) Presenting Malaysian Academics to the World: What's Holding Us Back? (Ahmad Nurulazam Md Zain, Munir Shuib and Melissa Ng Lee Yen Abdullah); (10) Scholarship of Service: Faculty Perceptions, Workloads, and Reward Systems (Jung Cheol Shin); (11) The Divergent Worlds of Teaching and Research among Mexican Faculty: Tendencies and Implications (Jesus F. Galaz-Fontes, Jorge G. Martinez-Stack, Etty H. Estevez-Nenninger, Ana L. de-la-Cruz-Santana, Laura E. Padilla-Gonzalez, Manuel Gil-Anton, Juan J. Sevilla-Garcia, and Jose L. Arcos-Vega); (12) The Balance between Teaching and Research in the Work Life of American Academics, 1992-2007: Is It Changing? (Martin Finkelstein); and (13) Changes and Realities in Teaching and Research Activities of the Academy (Futao Huang). Appended are: (1) Conference Program; and (2) List of Participants. Individual papers contain tables, figure, footnotes and references.
- Published
- 2010
7. Coding Diagnoses from the Electronic Death Certificate with the 11th Revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems: An Exploratory Study from Germany.
- Author
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Stausberg, Jürgen and Vogel, Ulrich
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RESEARCH funding ,CAUSES of death ,DEATH certificates ,MEDICAL coding ,RESEARCH ,SEMANTICS ,NOSOLOGY - Abstract
The 11th Revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Injuries, and Causes of Death (ICD-11) will replace its predecessor as international standard for cause-of death-statistics. The digitization of healthcare is a main motivation for its introduction. In parallel, the replacement of the paper-based death certificate with an electronic format is under evaluation. At the moment, the death certificate is used in paper-based format with ICD-10 for coding in Germany. To be prepared for the switch to ICD-11, the compatibility between ICD-11 and the electronic certificate should be assured. Objectives were to check the appropriateness of diagnosis-related information found on death certificates for an ICD-11 coding and to describe enhancements to the certificate's structure needed to fully utilize the strengths of ICD-11. As part of an exploratory test of a respective application, information from 453 electronic death certificates were provided by one local health authority. From a sample of 200 certificates, 433 diagnosis texts were coded into the German version of ICD-11. The appropriateness of the results as well as the further requirements of ICD-11, particularly with regard to post-coordination, were checked. For 430 diagnosis texts, 649 ICD-11 codes were used. Three hundred and sixty two diagnosis texts were rated as appropriately represented through the coding result. Almost all certificates contained diagnosis texts that lacked details required by ICD-11 for a precise coding. The distribution of diseases was very similar between ICD-10 and ICD-11 coding. A few gaps in ICD-11 were identified. Information requested by ICD-11 for a mandatory post-coordination were almost entirely absent from the death certificates. The structure and content of the death certificate are currently not well prepared for an ICD-11 coding. Necessary information was frequently missing. The line-oriented structure of death certificates has to be supplemented with a more flexible approach. Then, the semantic knowledge base of ICD-11 should better guide the content related input fields of a future electronic death certificate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Extending Engineering Practice Research with Shared Qualitative Data
- Author
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Trevelyan, James
- Abstract
Research on engineering practice is scarce and sharing of qualitative research data can reduce the effort required for an aspiring researcher to obtain enough data from engineering workplaces to draw generalizable conclusions, both qualitative and quantitative. This paper describes how a large shareable qualitative data set on engineering practices was accumulated from 350 interviews and 12 field studies performed by the principal investigator and by students conducting PhD and capstone research projects. Ethical research practice required that sharing and reuse of qualitative data be considered from the start. The researchers' interests and methods were aligned to maintain sufficient consistency to support subsequent analysis and re-analysis of data. Analysis helped to answer questions of fundamental significance for engineering educators: what do engineers do, and why are the performances of engineering enterprises so different in South Asia compared with similar enterprises in Australia? Analysis also demonstrated the overwhelming significance of technical collaboration in engineering practice. Conceiving engineering practice as a series of technical collaboration performances requires a more elaborate understanding of social interactions than is currently the case in engineering schools. Another finding is that global engineering competency could be better described in terms of "working with people who collaborate differently". Research helped to demonstrate that formal treatment of technical collaboration in an engineering curriculum could help avoid student misconceptions about engineering practice that hinder their subsequent engineering performances.
- Published
- 2016
9. The active participation of German-speaking countries in conferences of the Association for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE) between 2005 and 2013: a reflection of the development of medical education research?
- Author
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Raes P, Bauer D, Schöppe F, and Fischer MR
- Subjects
- Austria, Forecasting, Germany, Humans, Publishing trends, Switzerland, Congresses as Topic, Education, Medical trends, International Cooperation, Research trends, Societies, Medical trends
- Abstract
Objectives: Medical education is gaining in significance internationally. A growing interest in the field has been observed in German-speaking countries (Austria, Germany, Switzerland) since the early 2000s. This interest is not, however, reflected in an increase in the number of publications on medical education of German-speaking authors in international professional journals. The following investigation examines the potential use of active participant numbers of German-speaking researchers at AMEE conferences as a means of measuring said development., Methods: The AMEE conference proceedings from the categories poster presentations, short communications, research papers and plenary presentations from the years 2005-2013 were examined for evidence of Austrian, German and Swiss participation. The abstracts were subsequently analysed in terms of content and categorised according to study design, methodology, object of study, and research topic., Results: Of the 9,446 analysed abstracts, 549 contributions show at least one first, last or co-author from Austria, Germany or Switzerland. The absolute number of contributions per conference varied between 44 in 2010 and 77 in 2013. The percentage fluctuated between 10% in 2005 and 4.1% in 2010. From the year 2010 onwards, however, participation increased continually. The research was predominantly descriptive (62.7%). Studies on fundamental questions of teaching and learning (clarification studies) were less frequent (4.0%). For the most part, quantitative methods (51.9%) were implemented in addressing subjects such as learning and teaching methods (33%), evaluation and assessment (22.4%) or curriculum development (14.4%). The study population was usually comprised of students (52.5%)., Conclusions: The number of contributions from Austria, Germany and Switzerland peak at the beginning and at the end of the evaluated period of time. A continual increase in active participation since 2005 was not observed. These observations do not reflect the actual increase of interest in medical education research in German-speaking countries.
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- 2014
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10. Collaboration and distances between German immunological institutes -- a trend analysis.
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Havemann, Frank, Heinz, Michael, and Kretschmer, Hildrun
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RESEARCH ,COPYRIGHT (Joint tenancy) ,AUTHORSHIP collaboration ,IMMUNOLOGY ,INTERNET ,WIDE area networks - Abstract
Background: The hypothesis that distance matters but that in recent years geographical proximity has become less important for research collaboration was tested. We have chosen a sample-authors at German immunological institutes-that is relatively homogeneous with regard to research field, language and culture, which beside distance are other possible factors influencing the willingness to co-operate. We analyse yearly distributions of co-authorship links between institutes and compare them with the yearly distributions of distances of all institutes producing papers in journals indexed in the Science Citation Index, editions 1992 till 2002. We weight both types of distributions properly with paper numbers. Results: One interesting result is that place matters but if a researcher has to leave the home town to find a collaborator distance does not matter any longer. This result holds for all years considered, but is statistically most significant in 2002. The tendency to leave the own town for collaborators has slightly increased in the sample. In addition, yearly productivity distributions of institutes have been found to be lognormal. Conclusion: The Internet did not change much the collaboration patterns between German immunological institutes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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11. Critics blast ‘premature’ paper on adult stem cells.
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Schiermeier, Quirin and Leeb, Martin
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STEM cells , *CELLS , *RESEARCH , *BIOLOGISTS , *SCIENCE - Abstract
Reports on the controversy created by a stem cell paper by a team of German biologists published in the 2004 issue of "Applied Physics". Public announcement of the research as a breakthrough in adult stem-cell technology; Protests against research using embryonic lines; Criticisms of the research.
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- 2004
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12. SARS-CoV-2 Seroprevalence in a Berlin Kindergarten Environment: A Cross-Sectional Study, September 2021.
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Bernhard, Julian, Theuring, Stefanie, van Loon, Welmoed, Mall, Marcus A., Seybold, Joachim, Kurth, Tobias, Rubio-Acero, Raquel, Wieser, Andreas, and Mockenhaupt, Frank P.
- Subjects
SCHOOL environment ,CROSS-sectional method ,IMMUNIZATION ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,INTERVIEWING ,BLOOD collection ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COLLEGE teachers ,FAMILIES ,ODDS ratio ,RESEARCH ,MEDICAL masks ,SEROPREVALENCE ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COVID-19 ,CHILDREN - Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 serology may be helpful to retrospectively understand infection dynamics in specific settings including kindergartens. We assessed SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence in individuals connected to kindergartens in Berlin, Germany in September 2021. Children, staff, and household members from 12 randomly selected kindergartens were interviewed on COVID-19 history and sociodemographic parameters. Blood samples were collected on filter paper. SARS-CoV-2 anti-S and anti-N antibodies were assessed using Roche Elecsys. We assessed seroprevalence and the proportion of so far unrecognized SARS-CoV-2 infections. We included 277 participants, comprising 48 (17.3%) kindergarten children, 37 (13.4%) staff, and 192 (69.3%) household members. SARS-CoV-2 antibodies were present in 65.0%, and 52.7% of all participants were vaccinated. Evidence of previous infection was observed in 16.7% of kindergarten children, 16.2% of staff, and 10.4% of household members. Undiagnosed infections were observed in 12.5%, 5.4%, and 3.6%, respectively. Preceding infections were associated with facemask neglect. In conclusion, two-thirds of our cohort were SARS-CoV-2 seroreactive in September 2021, largely as a result of vaccination in adults. Kindergarten children showed the highest proportion of non-vaccine-induced seropositivity and an increased proportion of previously unrecognized SARS-CoV-2 infection. Silent infections in pre-school children need to be considered when interpreting SARS-CoV-2 infections in the kindergarten context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) and Chemistry Education
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Burmeister, Mareike, Rauch, Franz, and Eilks, Ingo
- Abstract
The years between 2005 and 2014 have been declared as a worldwide Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD) by the United Nations. DESD's intended purpose is to promote and more thoroughly focus education as a crucial tool preparing young people to be responsible future citizens, so that our future generations can shape society in a sustainable manner. All educational levels and domains are to be involved in contributing to ESD, including chemistry. This paper reflects upon the meaning of the UN's challenge and on what ESD pedagogy will mean for chemistry education. Additionally, it provides an overview of different models suggesting how such integration of sustainability issues can be compatible with chemistry education. Various consequences and implications arising from this approach will also be discussed. (Contains 1 table and 2 figures.)
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- 2012
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14. Making the paper: Ann Holbourn.
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RESEARCH , *MIOCENE stratigraphic geology , *EARTH scientists , *OXYGEN , *CARBON isotopes - Abstract
Presents an article that assesses the work experiences of Ann Holbourn, a geoscientist at Christian Albrechts University in Kiel, Germany. Research study on Miocene epoch; Details of the study; Success of the drilling approach; Results of the study shows that Holbourn and her team found drastic changes in both oxygen and carbon isotopes.
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- 2005
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15. Stroke survivors' preferences on assessing patient-reported outcome measures.
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Schmidt, Richard, Geisler, Daniela, Urban, Daniela, Pries, Rebecca, Franzisket, Christina, Voigt, Christian, Ivanova, Galina, Neumuth, Thomas, Classen, Joseph, Wagner, Markus, and Michalski, Dominik
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TRANSIENT ischemic attack treatment ,RESEARCH ,PATIENT aftercare ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,VISUAL analog scale ,INTERVIEWING ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,ACQUISITION of data ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,SURVEYS ,STROKE units ,SEVERITY of illness index ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,SYMPTOMS ,MEDICAL records ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,CEREBRAL ischemia ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: To assess quality of life and unmet needs after stroke, patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) have gained increasing attention. However, patients' perspectives on assessing PROMs remain unclear, potentially hindering implementation into clinical practice. Therefore, this study explored patients' preferences on assessing PROMs after ischemic stroke. Methods: A paper-based questionnaire was sent to stroke survivors treated at the Department of Neurology, University of Leipzig, Germany. Health-related quality of life (HRQoL, EQ-5D-5L) and preferences regarding different aspects of data collection to assess PROMs were investigated and linked to socio-demographic and medical characteristics. Results: 158 persons were contacted and 80 replies were subsequently analyzed. Mean age was 70.16 years and mean HRQoL was 68.79 (visual analogue scale with a theoretical maximum of 100). Participants showed positive attitudes towards PROMs as they saw potential to improve care of other patients (n = 66/79; 83.54%) or to improve their own situation (n = 53/74; 71.62%). Participants preferred an annual interview after stroke (n = 39/80; 48.75%) and would preferably spend 15–30 min (n = 41/79; 51.90%) to answer a written survey (n = 69/80; 86.25%). The initially treating clinic was preferred as initiator of such surveys (n = 43/79; 54.43%). Stratification revealed that participants with more than 1 h of daily digital media usage preferred email as way of communication. Conclusions: For the first time, this study showed individual preferences on assessing PROMs after ischemic stroke, focusing on the way, time interval, duration, and initiation site of surveys. These insights might help to successfully implement PROMs after stroke and subsequently detect unmet needs and deficits in stroke care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. University Autonomy: A New Analysis.
- Author
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Lane, J. E.
- Abstract
A theory of university autonomy is evolved that considers such elements as research, student recruitment and admission, physical environment, and administrative organization. The higher education systems of Sweden (before and after reform), Germany, the United States, and Britain are compared. (MSE)
- Published
- 1981
17. Conspiracy beliefs and COVID-19 guideline adherence in adolescent psychiatric outpatients: the predictive role of adverse childhood experiences.
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Goreis, Andreas, Pfeffer, Bettina, Zesch, Heidi Elisabeth, Klinger, Diana, Reiner, Tamara, Bock, Mercedes M., Ohmann, Susanne, Sackl-Pammer, Petra, Werneck-Rohrer, Sonja, Eder, Harald, Skala, Katrin, Czernin, Klara, Mairhofer, Dunja, Rohringer, Bernhard, Bedus, Carolin, Lipp, Ronja, Vesely, Christine, Plener, Paul L., and Kothgassner, Oswald D.
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ADVERSE childhood experiences ,STATISTICAL power analysis ,RESEARCH ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,RANDOM forest algorithms ,MACHINE learning ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL protocols ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,HEALTH attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,MENTAL depression ,GENERIC drugs ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,EMOTIONS ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MENTAL illness ,OUTPATIENTS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: Conspiracy beliefs have become widespread throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous studies have shown that endorsing conspiracy beliefs leads to lower protective guideline adherence (i.e., wearing face masks), posing a threat to public health measures. The current study expands this research across the lifespan, i.e., in a sample of adolescents with mental health problems. Here, we investigated the association between conspiracy beliefs and guideline adherence while also exploring the predictors of conspiracy beliefs. Methods: N = 93 adolescent psychiatric outpatients (57% female, mean age: 15.8) were assessed using anonymous paper–pencil questionnaires. Endorsement of generic and COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs was assessed, in addition to items measuring adherence to protective guidelines and mental health (stress, depressive symptoms, emotional/behavioral problems, and adverse childhood experiences). Multiple regressions and supervised machine learning (conditional random forests) were used for analyses. Results: Fourteen percent of our sample fully endorsed at least one COVID-19 conspiracy theory, while protective guidelines adherence was relatively high (M = 4.92, on a scale from 1 to 7). The endorsement of COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs—but not of generic conspiracy beliefs—was associated with lower guideline adherence (β = − 0.32, 95% CI − 0.53 to − 0.11, p <.001). Conditional random forests suggested that adverse childhood experiences and peer and conduct problems were relevant predictors of both conspiracy belief categories. Conclusion: While a significant proportion of our sample of adolescents in psychiatric treatment endorsed conspiracy beliefs, the majority did not. Furthermore, and to some degree, contrary to public perception, we found that adolescents show relatively good adherence to public health measures—even while experiencing a high degree of mental distress. The predictive value of adverse childhood experiences and peer/conduct problems for conspiracy beliefs might be explained by compensatory mechanisms to ensure the safety, structure, and inclusion that conspiracies provide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Feasibility, use and benefits of patient-reported outcome measures in palliative care units: a multicentre observational study.
- Author
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Müller, Evelyn, Mayer-Steinacker, Regine, Gencer, Deniz, Keßler, Jens, Alt-Epping, Bernd, Schönsteiner, Stefan, Jäger, Helga, Couné, Bettina, Elster, Luise, Keser, Muhammet, Rauser, Julia, Marquardt, Susanne, and Becker, Gerhild
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,SELF-evaluation ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,PHYSICIANS ,PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
Background: Research has shown that routinely assessed, patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) have positive effects in patients with advanced oncologic diseases. However, the transferability of these results to specialist palliative care is uncertain because patients are more impaired and staff doubt the feasibility and benefits. The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of patient self-assessment of PROMs, their use by staff and the benefits in palliative care wards. Method: A multicentre observational study was conducted in the context of the implementation of the Integrated Patient Outcome Scale (IPOS) in three specialist palliative care wards at university hospitals in Germany. All admitted patients who screened positive regarding their ability to complete questionnaires were asked to participate and complete the IPOS on paper weekly, with assistance if necessary. Feasibility of questionnaire completion (e.g. proportion of patients able to complete them), use (e.g. involvement of different professional groups) and benefit (e.g. unexpected information in IPOS as rated by treating physicians) were assessed. Staff members' opinion was obtained in a written, anonymous evaluation survey, patients' opinion in a short written evaluation. Results: A total of 557 patients were screened for eligibility, 235 were assessed as able to complete the IPOS (42.2%) and 137 participated in the study (24.6%). A majority needed support in completing the IPOS; 40 staff members and 73 patients completed the evaluation. Unexpected information was marked by physicians in 95 of the 137 patient questionnaires (69.3%). The staff differed in their opinions on the question of whether this also improved treatment. A majority of 32 staff members (80.0%) were in favour of continuing the use of IPOS (4 against continuation, 4 no answer); 43 (58.9%) patients rated their overall experience of IPOS use as 'positive', 29 (39.7%) as 'neutral' and 1 (1.4%) as 'negative'. Conclusions: While most staff wished to continue using IPOS, it was a challenge to integrate the effort to support the completion of IPOS into daily practice. Digital implementation was not successful, despite various attempts. To explore the effects on care and patient outcomes, multicentre cluster-randomised trials could be employed. Trial registration: German Clinical Trials Register DRKS-ID: DRKS00016681 (24/04/2019). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. Complementary medicine usage in surgery: a cross-sectional survey in Germany.
- Author
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Lederer, Ann-Kathrin, Samstag, Yvonne, Simmet, Thomas, Syrovets, Tatiana, and Huber, Roman
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RESEARCH ,HERBAL medicine ,COUNSELING ,OPERATIVE surgery ,THORACIC surgery ,NUTRITION ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,HOLISTIC medicine ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DIETARY supplements ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,COMMUNICATION ,HOSPITAL care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EXERCISE ,ALTERNATIVE medicine - Abstract
Background: Complementary medicine (CM) is frequently used by patients, but little is known about the usage of CM in surgical patients. The study aimed to elucidate the relevance of CM in surgery. Methods: This cross-sectional, multi-center survey utilized a paper-based questionnaire consisting of 21 questions to capture CM usage and interest as well as CM communication in visceral and thoracic surgical patients being hospitalized at the corresponding departments of surgery at the University Medical Centers in Freiburg, Heidelberg und Ulm, Germany. Results: Overall, 151 patients consented to the survey. On average, current CM usage was stated by 44% of patients. Most frequently used CM approaches were physical exercise (63%), nutritional supplements (59%) and herbal medicine (56%). Strong interest in CM counselling was stated by 51% of patients. Almost 80% of patients wanted to be treated in a holistic manner and desired for reliable information about CM as well as CM informed physicians. Only 12% of patients communicated CM usage and interest with their attending physician. Review of literature revealed similar results showing an overall CM usage of 43%, preferring nutritional supplements and herbal medicine. Conclusion: The results of our cross-sectional study indicate a high percentage of CM users and a strong interest in CM among surgical patients. Indeed, the current communication about CM between patients and surgeons is poor. With respect to safety and quality reasons, but also to pay attention to patients' demands, physicians should be aware of patients' CM usage in surgery. Trial registration: German Clinical Trial register (DRKS00015445). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Designing and piloting a generic research architecture and workflows to unlock German primary care data for secondary use.
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Bahls, Thomas, Pung, Johannes, Heinemann, Stephanie, Hauswaldt, Johannes, Demmer, Iris, Blumentritt, Arne, Rau, Henriette, Drepper, Johannes, Wieder, Philipp, Groh, Roland, Hummers, Eva, and Schlegelmilch, Falk
- Subjects
GENERAL Data Protection Regulation, 2016 ,SECONDARY care (Medicine) ,PRIMARY care ,SECONDARY analysis ,DATA integration ,WORKFLOW software ,COMPLIANT mechanisms ,COMPUTER software ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,PRIMARY health care ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SYSTEM analysis - Abstract
Background: Medical data from family doctors are of great importance to health care researchers but seem to be locked in German practices and, thus, are underused in research. The RADAR project (Routine Anonymized Data for Advanced Health Services Research) aims at designing, implementing and piloting a generic research architecture, technical software solutions as well as procedures and workflows to unlock data from family doctor's practices. A long-term medical data repository for research taking legal requirements into account is established. Thereby, RADAR helps closing the gap between the European countries and to contribute data from primary care in Germany.Methods: The RADAR project comprises three phases: (1) analysis phase, (2) design phase, and (3) pilot. First, interdisciplinary workshops were held to list prerequisites and requirements. Second, an architecture diagram with building blocks and functions, and an ordered list of process steps (workflow) for data capture and storage were designed. Third, technical components and workflows were piloted. The pilot was extended by a data integration workflow using patient-reported outcomes (paper-based questionnaires).Results: The analysis phase resulted in listing 17 essential prerequisites and guiding requirements for data management compliant with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Based on this list existing approaches to fulfil the RADAR tasks were evaluated-for example, re-using BDT interface for data exchange and Trusted Third Party-approach for consent management and record linkage. Consented data sets of 100 patients were successfully exported, separated into person-identifying and medical data, pseudonymised and saved. Record linkage and data integration workflows for patient-reported outcomes in the RADAR research database were successfully piloted for 63 responders.Conclusion: The RADAR project successfully developed a generic architecture together with a technical framework of tools, interfaces, and workflows for a complete infrastructure for practicable and secure processing of patient data from family doctors. All technical components and workflows can be reused for further research projects. Additionally, a Trusted Third Party-approach can be used as core element to implement data privacy protection in such heterogeneous family doctor's settings. Optimisations identified comprise a fully-electronic consent recording using tablet computers, which is part of the project's extension phase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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21. Working to improve the management of sarcoma patients across Europe: a policy checklist.
- Author
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Kasper, Bernd, Lecointe-Artzner, Estelle, Wait, Suzanne, Boldon, Shannon, Wilson, Roger, Gronchi, Alessandro, Valverde, Claudia, Eriksson, Mikael, Dumont, Sarah, Drove, Nora, Kanli, Athanasia, and Wartenberg, Markus
- Subjects
SARCOMA ,CANCER treatment ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL quality control ,CLINICAL trials ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,MEDICAL care laws ,MEDICAL care standards ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: The Sarcoma Policy Checklist was created by a multidisciplinary expert group to provide policymakers with priority areas to improve care for sarcoma patients.Main Body: This paper draws on this research, by looking more closely at how France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom are addressing each of these priority areas. It aims to highlight key gaps in research, policy and practice, as well as ongoing initiatives that may impact the future care of sarcoma patients in different European countries. A pragmatic review of the published and web-based literature was undertaken. Telephone interviews were conducted in each country with clinical and patient experts to substantiate findings. Research findings were discussed within the expert group and developed into five core policy recommendations. The five identified priority areas were: the development of designated and accredited centres of reference; more professional training; multidisciplinary care; greater incentives for research and innovation; and more rapid access to effective treatments. Most of the countries studied have ongoing initiatives addressing many of these priorities; however, many are in early stages of development, or require additional funding and resources.Conclusion: Gaps in access to quality care are particularly concerning in many of Europe's lower-resourced countries. Equitable access to information, clinical trials, innovative treatments and quality specialist care should be available to all sarcoma patients. Achieving this across Europe will require close collaboration between all stakeholders at both the national and European level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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22. Internationally trained nurses and host nurses' perceptions of safety culture, work-life-balance, burnout, and job demand during workplace integration: a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Roth, Catharina, Berger, Sarah, Krug, Katja, Mahler, Cornelia, and Wensing, Michel
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PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,WORK environment ,RESEARCH ,SCHOOL environment ,CROSS-sectional method ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SENSORY perception ,WORK-life balance ,MEDICAL cooperation ,FOREIGN nurses ,PSYCHOLOGY of nurses ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CORPORATE culture - Abstract
Background: The shortage of qualified nurses is a problem of growing concern in many countries. Recruitment of internationally trained nurses has been used to address this shortage, but successful integration in the workplace is complex and resource intensive. For effective recruitment and retention, it is important to identify why nurses migrate and if their expectations are met to ensure their successful integration and promote a satisfying work climate for the entire nursing team. The aim of this study was to examine the perceptions of safety culture, work-life-balance, burnout and job demand of internationally trained nurses and associated host nurses in German hospitals. Methods: A multicentric, cross-sectional study was conducted with internationally trained nurses (n = 64) and host nurses (n = 103) employed at two university hospitals in the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany. An anonymous paper-based survey was conducted between August 2019 and April 2020. The questionnaire included sociodemographic questions, questions regarding factors related to migration, and the German version of the Assessment of your work setting Safety, Communication, Operational Reliability, and Engagement (SCORE) questionnaire. SCORE is divided into three sections: Safety Culture Domains (six subscales), Work-Life-Balance (one subscale), and Engagement Assessment Tool (four subscales). Results: Nurses who migrated to Germany were primarily seeking better working conditions, a higher standard of living, and professional development opportunities. Internationally trained nurses reported lower work-related burnout climate (Mean 55.4 (SD 22.5)) than host nurses (Mean 66.4 (SD 23.5)) but still at a moderately high degree (Safety Culture Domains). Host nurses indicated a higher workload (Mean 4.06 (SD 0.65)) (Engagement Assessment Tool) and a lower Work-Life-Balance (Mean 2.31 (SD 0.66)) (Work-Life-Balance) compared to nurses who trained abroad (Mean 3.67 (SD 0.81) and Mean 2.02 (SD 0.86), respectively). No differences were detected for the other subscales. The Safety Culture Domains and Engagement Assessment Tool showed room for improvement in both groups. Conclusion: The study suggest that the expectations migrant nurses had prior to migration may not be met and that in turn could have a negative impact on the integration process and their retention. With increasing recruitment of internationally trained nurses from within Europe but also overseas, it is crucial to identify factors that retain migrant nurses and assist integration. Trial registration: The study has been prospectively registered (27 June 2019) at the German Clinical Trial Register (DRKS00017465). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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23. Comparative analysis of sports consumption habits in Hungary, Poland and Germany.
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Paár, Dávid, Kovács, Antal, Stocker, Miklós, Hoffbauer, Márk, Fazekas, Attila, Betlehem, József, Bergier, Barbara, and Ács, Pongrác
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RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,SPORTS ,HABIT ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: The so-called sports consumption models are looking for the factors that influence the sports spending of households. This paper aims to examine the Hungarian, Polish and German households' sports expenditures which can be an important indicator of physical activity and sporty lifestyle.Methods: Surveying of households in three countries (Hungary, Poland and Germany) has been conducted with a self-designed questionnaire. We have used descriptive and bivariate non-parametric and parametric statistical methods: (1) χ2 test, Mann-Whitney test and Kruskal-Wallis test for checking the relationship between sociodemographic and physical activity variables and (2) independent sample t-test and ANOVA for checking the differences in sports expenditures.Results: Our research concluded that men, especially previous athletes, exercise more than women and those who have no history as registered athletes. The choice of sports venues is obviously different between the countries in the sample. Members of the study population spend the most on sports services while they spend the least on sports equipment. German households have the highest spending rates compared to the other two countries.Conclusions: Results are in line with our previous research findings and with other literatures. The difference in preferences of sports venues could have the reason of different supply of sports clubs or the different living standards too. It needs further researches to clear it. Material wealth, income level and sport socialisation can be a determining factor regarding the level of sports spending. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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24. What drives patent performance of German biotech firms? The impact of R&D subsidies, knowledge networks and their location.
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Fornahl, Dirk, Broekel, Tom, and Boschma, Ron
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BIOTECHNOLOGY ,ECONOMICS ,PATENTS ,RESEARCH ,BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
This paper aims at explaining whether R&D subsidies, the engagement in collaboration networks and the location influence the patent activities of biotech firms in Germany! We demonstrate that R&D subsidies focusing on single firms do not increase patent intensity, while subsidies which are granted to joint R&D projects do so to a certain extent. The number of knowledge links firms have is not influencing performance, but the type of network partners has an effect. We found strong evidence that some but not too much cognitive distance between collaboration partners and being located in a cluster have a positive effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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25. Knowledge diffusion from university and public research. A comparison between US, Japan and Europe using patent citations.
- Author
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Bacchiocchi, E. and Montobbio, F.
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PATENTS ,RESEARCH - Abstract
This paper estimates the process of diffusion and decay of knowledge from university, public laboratories and corporate patents in six countries and tests the differences across countries and across technological fields using data from the European Patent Office. It finds that university and public research patents are more cited relatively to companies’ patents. However these results are mainly driven by the Chemical, Drugs & Medical, and Mechanical fields and US universities. In Europe and Japan, where the great majority of patents from public research come from national agencies, there is no evidence of a superior fertility of university and public laboratory patents vis à vis corporate patents. The distribution of the citation lags shows that knowledge embedded in university and public research patents tends to diffuse more rapidly relative to corporate ones in particular in the US, Germany, France and Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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26. Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients with chronic liver diseases in Germany- a multicentric observational study.
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Gittinger, Fleur Sophie, Rahnfeld, Anna, Lacruz, Elena, Zipprich, Alexander, Lammert, Frank, and Ripoll, Cristina
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CHRONIC disease treatment ,LIVER disease treatment ,CROSS-sectional method ,T-test (Statistics) ,EXERCISE ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SEX distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,SEVERITY of illness index ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL Health Locus of Control scales ,ALTERNATIVE medicine ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,PATIENT satisfaction ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Background: The use of Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in chronic liver disease (CLD) patients in Germany is unknown. This study investigated the frequency of CAM use and associated sociodemographic, clinical and personality factors in CLD patients in Germany. Methods: This is a cross-sectional multicenter study of CLD patients attending liver outpatient clinics of university hospitals in Halle(-Saale) and Homburg between 2015 and 2017. Dedicated questionnaires recorded CAM use, sociodemographic and personality factors (evaluated with the "Big five" model, "Hospital Anxiety and Depression"-, "Multidimensional Health Locus of Control"- score). Uni- and multivariate analyses assessed factors associated to CAM use. Results: Overall 378 patients were recruited, 92 (24.3%) reported to CAM use. On univariate analysis, female CAM users were older (p = 0.001) and more physically active (p = 0.002), male CAM users more often used homeopathy (p = 0.000), actively promoted their health (p = 0.010) or had UDC in their medication (p = 0.004). Logistic regression analysis adjusted for personality factors showed significant association of age, physical exercise (females) and satisfaction with alternative medicine (females, males) to CAM use. Conclusions: CAM use is prevalent among CLD patients in Germany and is significantly associated to satisfaction with alternative medicine (females, males), physical exercise and older age (females). Doctors should actively inquire CLD patients about CAM use, as hepatotoxicity or interaction with medication can occur. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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27. Psychological stress of general practitioners in the care of patients with palliative care needs: an exploratory study.
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Lopez, Verena, van der Keylen, Piet, Kühlein, Thomas, and Sebastião, Maria
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ATTITUDES toward death ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,TIME pressure ,CONVERSATION ,GENERAL practitioners ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INTERVIEWING ,CONTENT analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,SOCIAL norms ,EMOTIONS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,RESEARCH ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,THEORY ,SOCIAL support ,ADVANCE directives (Medical care) ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Background: In Germany, general practitioners play a pivotal role in palliative care provision. Caring for patients with palliative care needs can be a burden for general practitioners, highlighting the importance of self-care and mental health support. This study aimed to explore the role of palliative care in general practitioners' daily work, the stressors they experience, their coping mechanisms, and the potential benefits of Advance Care Planning in this context. Methods: An exploratory approach was employed, combining a short quantitative survey with qualitative interviews. The analysis was based on a structuring qualitative content analysis, following a deductive-inductive procedure and integrating the Stress-Strain Model and Lazarus' Transactional Model of Stress and Coping. We recruited eleven general practitioners to take part in the study. Results: General practitioners viewed palliative care as integral to their practice but faced challenges such as time constraints and perceived expertise gaps. Societal taboos often hindered conversations on the topic of death. Most general practitioners waited for their patients to initiate the topic. Some general practitioners viewed aspects of palliative care as potentially distressing. They used problem-focused (avoiding negative stressors, structuring their daily schedules) and emotion-focused (discussions with colleagues) coping strategies. Still, general practitioners indicated a desire for specific psychological support options. Advance Care Planning, though relatively unfamiliar, was acknowledged as valuable for end-of-life conversations. Conclusions: Palliative care can be associated with negative psychological stress for general practitioners, often coming from external factors. Despite individual coping strategies in place, it is advisable to explore concepts for professional psychological relief. Trial registration: Not registered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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28. THE SELECTED ISSUES OF LABOUR MARKET POLICY IN GERMANY - IMPLEMENTATION POSSIBILITIES IN SOLAND.
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ROLLNIK-SADOWSKA, EWA
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LABOR market ,SOCIAL conditioning ,RESEARCH - Abstract
The author in the article presents the conditionings and the main changes introduced through labour market reforms implemented in Germany since the activity of the Hartz Commission. There were presented the components of all four Hartz Reforms and the directions of its continuation after 2005. The aim of the publication is to determine, which of the German solutions are possible to implement in the Polish economic and social conditionings. The research method undertaken in that paper was the analysis of secondary data - both statistical as well as reports and publications connected with German labour market policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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29. The Future of Total Elbow Arthroplasty: A Statistical Forecast Model for Germany.
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Krane, Felix, Heck, Vincent Johann, Leyendecker, Jannik, Klug, Kristina, Klug, Alexander, Hackl, Michael, Kircher, Jörn, Müller, Lars Peter, and Leschinger, Tim
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STATISTICAL models ,POISSON distribution ,SEX distribution ,TOTAL elbow replacement ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FORECASTING - Abstract
This study provides a statistical forecast for the development of total elbow arthroplasties (TEAs) in Germany until 2045. The authors used an autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA), Error-Trend-Seasonality (ETS), and Poisson model to forecast trends in total elbow arthroplasty based on demographic information and official procedure statistics. They predict a significant increase in total elbow joint replacements, with a higher prevalence among women than men. Comprehensive national data provided by the Federal Statistical Office of Germany (Statistisches Bundesamt) were used to quantify TEA's total number and incidence rates. Poisson regression, exponential smoothing with Error-Trend-Seasonality, and autoregressive integrated moving average models (ARIMA) were used to predict developments in the total number of surgeries until 2045. Overall, the number of TEAs is projected to increase continuously from 2021 to 2045. This will result in a total number of 982 (TEAs) in 2045 of mostly elderly patients above 80 years. Notably, female patients will receive TEAs 7.5 times more often than men. This is likely influenced by demographic and societal factors such as an ageing population, changes in healthcare access and utilization, and advancements in medical technology. Our projection emphasises the necessity for continuous improvements in surgical training, implant development, and rehabilitation protocols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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30. Surgical and Oncologic Outcome following Sacrectomy for Primary Malignant Bone Tumors and Locally Recurrent Rectal Cancer.
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Weidlich, Anne, Schaser, Klaus-Dieter, Weitz, Jürgen, Kirchberg, Johanna, Fritzmann, Johannes, Reeps, Christian, Schwabe, Philipp, Melcher, Ingo, Disch, Alexander, Dragu, Adrian, Winkler, Doreen, Mehnert, Elisabeth, and Fritzsche, Hagen
- Subjects
OSTEOSARCOMA ,DISCECTOMY ,WOUND healing ,CHONDROSARCOMA ,CANCER relapse ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,COMPLICATIONS of prosthesis ,ABDOMINAL surgery ,COMPUTED tomography ,IMMUNOTHERAPY ,FISHER exact test ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CANCER patients ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,POSITRON emission tomography ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,COLORECTAL cancer ,HEMATOMA ,RECTUM tumors ,SURGICAL complications ,OSTEOTOMY ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,LOG-rank test ,LIPOSARCOMA ,CANCER chemotherapy ,COMPUTER-assisted surgery ,RESEARCH ,URBAN hospitals ,COMBINED modality therapy ,SACRUM ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,RHABDOMYOSARCOMA ,PROGRESSION-free survival ,SURGICAL site infections ,GERM cell tumors ,OVERALL survival ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Simple Summary: Sacrectomy represents a radical indication for bone sarcomas (e.g., osteosarcoma or chondrosarcoma) and chordomas, as well as selected carcinomas with invasion of the sacrum. Extralesional en bloc excision is surgically demanding and associated with resection-induced neurologic deficits and risks. Due to the low incidence of bone sarcomas, the rare localization in the sacrum and the complexity of the surgical procedure, studies reporting on the oncological outcome and corresponding complications in larger patient numbers are rare. The aim was to describe the oncosurgical management and the complication profile and to analyze our own treatment results after partial/total sacrectomy, with attention paid to a possible benefit by using intraoperative 3D navigation. There was a significant difference in progression-free and metastasis-free survival between sarcoma, chordoma and carcinoma patients. Complications were common, but no independently influencing causative factors could be identified. Although there was a subjective impression of improved intraoperative 3D orientation and easier identification of resection planes, the use of navigation did not significantly influence resection status or oncological patient outcome. Introduction: Bone sarcoma or direct pelvic carcinoma invasion of the sacrum represent indications for partial or total sacrectomy. The aim was to describe the oncosurgical management and complication profile and to analyze our own outcome results following sacrectomy. Methods: In a retrospective analysis, 27 patients (n = 8/10/9 sarcoma/chordoma/locally recurrent rectal cancer (LRRC)) were included. There was total sacrectomy in 9 (incl. combined L5 en bloc spondylectomy in 2), partial in 10 and hemisacrectomy in 8 patients. In 12 patients, resection was navigation-assisted. For reconstruction, an omentoplasty, VRAM-flap or spinopelvic fixation was performed in 20, 10 and 13 patients, respectively. Results: With a median follow-up (FU) of 15 months, the FU rate was 93%. R0-resection was seen in 81.5% (no significant difference using navigation), and 81.5% of patients suffered from one or more minor-to-moderate complications (especially wound-healing disorders/infection). The median overall survival was 70 months. Local recurrence occurred in 20%, while 44% developed metastases and five patients died of disease. Conclusions: Resection of sacral tumors is challenging and associated with a high complication profile. Interdisciplinary cooperation with visceral/vascular and plastic surgery is essential. In chordoma patients, systemic tumor control is favorable compared to LRRC and sarcomas. Navigation offers gain in intraoperative orientation, even if there currently seems to be no oncological benefit. Complete surgical resection offers long-term survival to patients undergoing sacrectomy for a variety of complex diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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31. Perinatal Outcomes of Immigrant Mothers and Their Infants Born Very Preterm across Germany.
- Author
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Hüning, Britta M., Jaekel, Julia, Jaekel, Nils, Göpel, Wolfgang, Herting, Egbert, Felderhoff-Müser, Ursula, Spiegler, Juliane, and Härtel, Christoph
- Subjects
PREECLAMPSIA diagnosis ,IMMIGRANTS ,MATERNAL health services ,RESEARCH funding ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,PREGNANCY outcomes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INFECTION ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,RESEARCH ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,AMNIOTIC liquid ,HEALTH equity ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,COMMUNICATION barriers - Abstract
Background: In Germany, more than 40% of infants are born to immigrant parents. Increased survival rates of very preterm (below 32 weeks gestation at birth; VP) infants have not resulted in equally improved life chances and quality of life. More information on perinatal variations in outcomes according to social inequalities, migration background, and language barriers is needed. We tested whether mothers' immigrant status and language barriers are associated with perinatal health and short-term neonatal outcomes. Methods: The data are from the national multi-centre German Neonatal Network (GNN) cohort, including VP births from 2009 onwards. In total, 3606 (n = 1738 female) children were assessed, and 919 (n = 449 female) of these children had immigrant backgrounds. Immigrant status was operationalised as a binary variable based on the children's mothers' countries of birth (born in Germany vs. foreign-born). Self-reported home language (L1) was used to calculate the average linguistic distance to German as one continuous variable. Results: Mixed-effects models showed that two out of fourteen effects of interest survived the adjustment for known confounders and accounting for the nestedness of data within birth hospitals. Linguistic distance from mothers' L1s to German was independently associated with diagnoses of preeclampsia (OR = 1.01, 95% CI = [1.00, 1.01]). Infants of foreign-born mothers had higher odds for amniotic infection syndrome (AIS; OR = 1.45 [1.13, 1.86]) than infants of German mothers. Conclusions: Our findings from this large multi-centre longitudinal cohort of VP-born children indicate that maternal immigrant status and language barriers have limited impact on perinatal health and severe neonatal outcomes. This suggests that, regardless of background or language skills, there may be few inequalities in the perinatal health of pregnant women and their newborn preterm infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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32. Acute and Long-Term Toxicity after Planned Intraoperative Boost and Whole Breast Irradiation in High-Risk Patients with Breast Cancer—Results from the Targeted Intraoperative Radiotherapy Boost Quality Registry (TARGIT BQR).
- Author
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Goerdt, Lukas, Schnaubelt, Robert, Kraus-Tiefenbacher, Uta, Brück, Viktoria, Bauer, Lelia, Dinges, Stefan, von der Assen, Albert, Meye, Heidrun, Kaiser, Christina, Weiss, Christel, Clausen, Sven, Schneider, Frank, Abo-Madyan, Yasser, Fleckenstein, Katharina, Berlit, Sebastian, Tuschy, Benjamin, Sütterlin, Marc, Wenz, Frederik, and Sperk, Elena
- Subjects
PROTON therapy ,RADIOTHERAPY ,BREAST tumors ,CLINICAL trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTRAOPERATIVE care ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH ,LUMPECTOMY - Abstract
Simple Summary: This multicenter study (n = 1133, inclusion criteria: 3.5 cm maximum tumor size and preoperative indication for a boost) provides detailed data on acute and long-term toxicities in breast cancer patients undergoing breast-conserving surgery combined with an anticipated intraoperative boost with low-energy X-rays followed by whole breast irradiation. Toxicity assessments, based on LENT SOMA criteria, were performed annually up to 10 years of follow-up. IORT boost was completed in 90% and EBRT in 97% of cases. No grade 3 or 4 acute toxicities were observed, with mild acute side effects reported in a small proportion of patients. Chronic toxicities were seen in 16.2% of patients with teleangiectasia, 14.3% with grade ≥ 2 fibrosis, 3.4% with grade ≥ 2 pain, and 1.1% with hyperpigmentation. The results show that the therapy is safe and feasible in terms of toxicity and confirms intraoperative boost as a standard method of boost application in a large prospective cohort. In the context of breast cancer treatment optimization, this study prospectively examines the feasibility and outcomes of utilizing intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) as a boost in combination with standard external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) for high-risk patients. Different guidelines recommend such a tumor bed boost in addition to whole breast irradiation with EBRT for patients with risk factors for local breast cancer recurrence. The TARGIT BQR (NCT01440010) is a prospective, multicenter registry study aimed at ensuring the quality of clinical outcomes. It provides, for the first time, data from a large cohort with a detailed assessment of acute and long-term toxicity following an IORT boost using low-energy X-rays. Inclusion criteria encompassed tumors up to 3.5 cm in size and preoperative indications for a boost. The IORT boost, administered immediately after tumor resection, delivered a single dose of 20 Gy. EBRT and systemic therapy adhered to local tumor board recommendations. Follow-up for toxicity assessment (LENT SOMA criteria: fibrosis, teleangiectasia, retraction, pain, breast edema, lymphedema, hyperpigmentation, ulceration) took place before surgery, 6 weeks to 90 days after EBRT, 6 months after IORT, and then annually using standardized case report forms (CRFs). Between 2011 and 2020, 1133 patients from 10 centers were preoperatively enrolled. The planned IORT boost was conducted in 90%, and EBRT in 97% of cases. Median follow-up was 32 months (range 1–120, 20.4% dropped out), with a median age of 61 years (range 30–90). No acute grade 3 or 4 toxicities were observed. Acute side effects included erythema grade 1 or 2 in 4.4%, palpable seroma in 9.1%, punctured seroma in 0.3%, and wound healing disorders in 2.1%. Overall, chronic teleangiectasia of any grade occurred in 16.2%, fibrosis grade ≥ 2 in 14.3%, pain grade ≥ 2 in 3.4%, and hyperpigmentation in 1.1%. In conclusion, a tumor bed boost through IORT using low-energy X-rays is a swift and feasible method that demonstrates low rates in terms of acute or long-term toxicity profiles in combination with whole breast irradiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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33. The Union of Consumer Cooperatives and the SED's Embryonic Educational and Ideological Systems in the Soviet Occupied Zone of Germany, 1945-1949.
- Author
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McCulloch, Mark
- Subjects
CONSUMER cooperatives ,WOMEN in development ,ELECTIONS ,RESEARCH - Abstract
In 1945/46, when there were still open and free elections in the Soviet Occupation Zone (Sowjetische Besatzungszone, SBZ), the KPD/SED made extensive efforts to encourage women to participate actively in politics. Eastern Germany's newly re-established consumer cooperatives (Konsumgenossenschaften) were among the mechanisms available to the régime to organize women. Accordingly, on 13th November 1946, Helmut Lehmann, a member of the SED-Politburo, gave the following instructions to the Konsum or the Union of Consumer Cooperatives of the GDR (a Mass-Organization with various political and economic mandates): The cooperative movement has been given a decisive role to fill with women, particularly housewives… These newly formed cooperatives have to ensure that women participate in public life. As such, we have to ensure that our ideology spreads to women, so that they are not confined to the narrow realms of their families, but that they also offer their services to the wider community.1 Assessing the role of the Konsum in the political and ideological indoctrination of women, this paper is based on evidence from the Stiftung Archiv der Parteien und Massenorganisationen der DDR, but also synthesises various research methods and secondary literature. On the basis of this research, this paper will consider the following questions: What types of propaganda did the Konsum direct at women? Was the Konsum a success as a state Mass-Organisation (its official status in the state structure of the DDR)? What can we discern from the programme of study to which women were subjected in the cooperative schools? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
34. Technology transfer offices and university patenting in Sweden and Germany.
- Author
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Sellenthin, Mark O.
- Subjects
PATENTS ,RESEARCH ,TECHNOLOGY transfer - Abstract
This paper analyses the factors that impact on the decision of researchers to patent their research results. Particular emphasis is put on the role of technology transfer offices. It builds on a survey of university professors in Sweden and Germany. The regression results show that researchers that received support from the public infrastructure and researchers that have experience with the patenting system—through own previous patents or joint patent applications with firms—are much more likely to apply for patents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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35. Complementary medicine in Germany: a multi-centre cross-sectional survey on the usage by and the needs of patients hospitalized in university medical centers.
- Author
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Lederer, Ann-Kathrin, Baginski, Alexandra, Raab, Lena, Joos, Stefanie, Valentini, Jan, Klocke, Carina, Samstag, Yvonne, Hübner, Katrin, Andreeva, Ivana, Simmet, Thomas, Syrovets, Tatiana, Hafner, Susanne, Freisinger, Anna, Storz, Maximilian Andreas, and Huber, Roman
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,HOSPITAL patients ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CROSS-sectional method ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH literacy ,SURVEYS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,ALTERNATIVE medicine ,NEEDS assessment - Abstract
Background: The results of recent surveys indicate that more than 50% of the German population has experience with complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) or uses CAM regularly. This study investigated the CAM usage and CAM-related needs of hospitalized patients at university medical centres in the state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Methods: A multi-centre, paper-based, pseudonymous survey was carried out by the members of the Academic Centre for Complementary and Integrative Medicine. Patients of all ages, regardless of sex, diagnosis and treatment, who were hospitalized in the Department of Cardiology, Gastroenterology, Oncology, Gynaecology or Surgery at the university medical centres in Freiburg, Heidelberg, Tübingen and Ulm were eligible for inclusion. Results: Of the 1275 eligible patients, 67% (n = 854) consented to participate in the survey. Forty-eight percent of the study participants stated that they were currently using CAM. The most frequently used therapies were exercise (63%), herbal medicine (54%) and dietary supplements (53%). Only 16% of the patients discussed CAM usage with their attending physician. Half of the patients (48%) were interested in CAM consultations. More than 80% of the patients desired reliable CAM information and stated that physicians should be better informed about CAM. Conclusions: The frequency of CAM usage and the need for CAM counselling among hospitalized patients at university medical centres in Baden-Württemberg are high. To better meet patients' needs, CAM research and physician education should be intensified. Trial registration: German Clinical Trial register (DRKS00015445). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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36. Final Paleolithic and Mesolithic Research in Reunified Germany.
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Street, Martin, Baales, Michael, Cziesla, Erwin, Hartz, Sönke, Heinen, Martin, Jöris, Olaf, Koch, Ingrid, Pasda, Clemens, Terberger, Thomas, and Vollbrecht, Jürgen
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PALEOLITHIC Period ,MESOLITHIC Period ,STONE Age ,RESEARCH - Abstract
During the past decade research into the German Final Paleolithic and Mesolithic has experienced an important revival. One clear sign of this renewed interest in the periods are the annual meetings of the “Arbeitsgruppe Mesolithikum” (Mesolithic Working Group) which have taken place every spring since 1992. At these meetings, which take place at changing venues, topical themes of Final Paleolithic and Mesolithic interest are presented by informal lectures and it is also possible to study regional collections (artifacts, raw materials) at first hand. Numerous contributions were subsequently published together in one volume (Conard and Kind (1998) Aktuelle Forschungen zum Mesolithikum/Current Mesolithic Research, Mo Vince, Tübingen). The present paper intends to complement that collection of papers with a synthesis of developments and perspectives and to present recent research highlights in the German Final Paleolithic and Mesolithic, together with a comprehensive bibliography, to a wider international audience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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37. The Research Design in Organization Studies: Problems and Prospects.
- Author
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Grunow, Dieter
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EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH ,METHODOLOGY ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,EMPIRICAL research ,DATA analysis ,ORGANIZATIONAL research ,THEORY of knowledge ,QUANTITATIVE research ,MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
The paper is concerned with problems of research methodology in organization studies. It places the main emphasis on the "research design," which is seen as an important tool for the planning, the substantiation and the practical guidance of research procedures. The explicit discussion and improvement of research designs is proposed to be a major contribution also to concept and theory development in Organization Science. The basic content of the paper is an empirical analysis and evaluation of the status quo in design conceptions for organization studies. For this, some 300 empirical studies (in German and English) have been critically reviewed, 74 of them described in detail. The results show many deficiencies in the elaboration of the research designs, especially the ties between design and theory (or research question) are often weak or unclear. But there are also good examples which can be used as starting points for further improvements. The development over time shows shifts toward more reflection/discussion of available alternatives in the methods of data collection and more critical examinations of the data quality. This also leads to increasing applications of multi- method designs. A comparison between German and US studies show differences along the quantitative-qualitative line, which opens chances of mutual learning processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
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38. Adding spontaneity to organizations – what hospice volunteers contribute to everyday life in German inpatient hospice and palliative care units: a qualitative study.
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Nassehi, Armin, Saake, Irmhild, Breitsameter, Christof, Bauer, Anna, Barth, Niklas, and Reis, Isabell
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VOLUNTEER service ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,QUALITATIVE research ,DEATH ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EMOTIONS ,THEMATIC analysis ,JOB satisfaction ,VOLUNTEERS ,RESEARCH ,GROUNDED theory ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ORGANIZATIONAL goals ,HOSPICE care ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,HOSPITAL wards - Abstract
Background: Volunteers have always been integral to hospice and palliative care. However, their roles have been left relatively undefined and broad. Aim: This study aims to examine the role of hospice volunteers in German inpatient hospice and palliative care. The question we seek to answer is: What do hospice volunteers contribute to everyday life in inpatient hospice and palliative care units? Methods: We undertook a multicenter, on-site qualitative interview study, utilizing problem-centered interviews with 16 volunteers from five inpatient hospice units and one hospital palliative care unit. Interviews were analyzed using grounded theory. Results: Analysis of the interviews revealed three typical characteristics of how hospice volunteers' describe their own role: (1) performing small acts of kindness, (2) creating a family-like atmosphere, (3) expecting emotional experiences. A common theme across all categories is the emphasis on spontaneous actions and personal experiences. The process of dying becomes an experience interpreted by volunteers as enriching, as a gift, as a "teacher". Conclusion: Granting hospice volunteers freedom to act spontaneously and intuitively benefits hospice and palliative care delivery. Organizations should leave sufficient room for spontaneity in order to involve volunteers effectively. Open and unstandardized roles facilitate dynamic work practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
39. A remote digital memory composite to detect cognitive impairment in memory clinic samples in unsupervised settings using mobile devices.
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Berron, David, Glanz, Wenzel, Clark, Lindsay, Basche, Kristin, Grande, Xenia, Güsten, Jeremie, Billette, Ornella V., Hempen, Ina, Naveed, Muhammad Hashim, Diersch, Nadine, Butryn, Michaela, Spottke, Annika, Buerger, Katharina, Perneczky, Robert, Schneider, Anja, Teipel, Stefan, Wiltfang, Jens, Johnson, Sterling, Wagner, Michael, and Jessen, Frank
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MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,MOBILE apps ,STATISTICAL models ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,MILD cognitive impairment ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,DATA analysis ,EPISODIC memory ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGE distribution ,TELEMEDICINE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,STATISTICAL reliability ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,MEMORY ,CASE-control method ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTRACLASS correlation ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Remote monitoring of cognition holds the promise to facilitate case-finding in clinical care and the individual detection of cognitive impairment in clinical and research settings. In the context of Alzheimer's disease, this is particularly relevant for patients who seek medical advice due to memory problems. Here, we develop a remote digital memory composite (RDMC) score from an unsupervised remote cognitive assessment battery focused on episodic memory and long-term recall and assess its construct validity, retest reliability, and diagnostic accuracy when predicting MCI-grade impairment in a memory clinic sample and healthy controls. A total of 199 participants were recruited from three cohorts and included as healthy controls (n = 97), individuals with subjective cognitive decline (n = 59), or patients with mild cognitive impairment (n = 43). Participants performed cognitive assessments in a fully remote and unsupervised setting via a smartphone app. The derived RDMC score is significantly correlated with the PACC5 score across participants and demonstrates good retest reliability. Diagnostic accuracy for discriminating memory impairment from no impairment is high (cross-validated AUC = 0.83, 95% CI [0.66, 0.99]) with a sensitivity of 0.82 and a specificity of 0.72. Thus, unsupervised remote cognitive assessments implemented in the neotiv digital platform show good discrimination between cognitively impaired and unimpaired individuals, further demonstrating that it is feasible to complement the neuropsychological assessment of episodic memory with unsupervised and remote assessments on mobile devices. This contributes to recent efforts to implement remote assessment of episodic memory for case-finding and monitoring in large research studies and clinical care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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40. Perceptions of Quality of Interprofessional Collaboration, Staff Well-Being and Nonbeneficial Treatment: A Comparison between Nurses and Physicians in Intensive and Palliative Care.
- Author
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Schwarzkopf, Daniel, Bloos, Frank, Meißner, Winfried, Rüddel, Hendrik, Thomas-Rüddel, Daniel O., and Wedding, Ulrich
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PALLIATIVE treatment ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,RESEARCH funding ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,MANN Whitney U Test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NURSES' attitudes ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,RESEARCH ,DATA analysis software ,CRITICAL care medicine ,WELL-being ,CRITICAL care nurses - Abstract
This study assessed differences in interprofessional collaboration, perception of nonbeneficial care, and staff well-being between critical care and palliative care teams. In six German hospitals, a staff survey was conducted between December 2013 and March 2015 among nurses and physicians in intensive and palliative care units. To allow comparability between unit types, a matching was performed for demographic characteristics of staff. N = 313 critical care and 79 palliative care staff participated, of which 72 each were successfully matched. Critical care nurses perceived the poorest overall quality of collaboration compared with critical care physicians and palliative care physicians and nurses. They also reported less inclusive leadership from attendings and head nurses, and the least collaboration on care decisions with physicians. They were most likely to perceive nonbeneficial care, and they reported the lowest levels of job satisfaction and the highest intention to leave the job. In partial correlations, aspects of high-quality collaboration were associated with less perceived nonbeneficial care and higher staff well-being for both critical care and palliative care staff. Our findings indicate that critical care teams could improve collaboration and enhance well-being, particularly among nurses, by adopting principles of collaborative work culture as established in palliative care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Prevalence of Somatic Symptoms and Somatoform Disorders among a German Adolescent Psychiatric Inpatient Sample.
- Author
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Geremek, Adam, Lindner, Clemens, Jung, Martin, Calvano, Claudia, and Munz, Manuel
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SOMATOFORM disorders ,RISK assessment ,SELF-evaluation ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICAL correlation ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH evaluation ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,ANXIETY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FUNCTIONAL status ,DISEASE prevalence ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,PSYCHOSOMATIC disorders ,RESEARCH ,PSYCHIATRIC hospitals ,MEDICAL screening ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EARLY diagnosis ,DATA analysis software ,MENTAL depression ,DISEASE risk factors ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Somatoform disorders (SD), commencing during adolescence, represent a major problem in health care systems. While literature underlines the high presence of mental health problems among children and adolescents afflicted by somatic symptoms in the general population, limited evidence is available on the prevalence of comorbid somatic symptoms in child and adolescent psychiatric populations. We assessed the prevalence of somatic symptoms, depression, and anxiety by validated questionnaires in an inpatient cohort. We further screened for the presence of SD. Out of 434 inpatients aged 11–17 years, 371 were included and a total of n = 288 (77.6%) children and adolescents participated in the study. A total of 93.8% of the inpatients reported somatic symptoms within the past six months and still almost half (45.7%) of the sample reported at least one somatic symptom within the last seven days prior to inquiry. Relating to the past six months, 59.5% were positively screened for SD, and 44.6% reported symptoms eligible for positive screening within the past seven days prior to the survey. Somatoform symptomatology was highly associated with anxiety and depression scores, but functional decline was amenable to the number of somatic symptoms only. We provide evidence that somatic symptoms are frequent in children and adolescents being treated in child and adolescent psychiatry and are relevant to everyday functioning. Screening for somatic symptoms should be introduced in the routine diagnostic procedures for early detection of SD in the commencing stages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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42. Implementing peer support work in mental health care in Germany: The methodological framework of the collaborative, participatory, mixed‐methods study (ImpPeer‐Psy5).
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von Peter, Sebastian, Kraemer, Ute Maria, Cubellis, Lauren, Fehler, Georgia, Ruiz‐Pérez, Guillermo, Schmidt, Daniela, Ziegenhagen, Jenny, Kuesel, Madeleine, Ackers, Susanne, Mahlke, Candelaria, Nugent, Lena, and Heuer, Imke
- Subjects
MENTAL illness treatment ,AFFINITY groups ,RESEARCH ,HUMAN research subjects ,RESEARCH methodology ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,PATIENT selection ,HUMAN services programs ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CONTENT mining ,SUPPORT groups ,ACTION research ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment - Abstract
Background: Starting in the 1990s in the United States, individuals with lived experience of mental health crises and recovery have been employed as peer support workers (PSWs) internationally. However, the implementation of PSW in clinical contexts remains challenging. Methods: This manuscript presents and discusses the methodological framework of the ImpPeer‐Psy5 study on the PSW implementation in the German mental healthcare sector. This study used a mixed‐methods and collaborative research approach, as well as participatory research strategies. After describing the study design, populations, teamwork and assessments, the epistemic challenges of its methodological framework will be critically discussed and how it has iteratively shaped the object of study. Discussion and Practical Implications: The healthcare, policy and funding context of PSW implementation as well as the study's methodological framework have differently influenced the ways in which the implementation of PSW has been conceived in this study. The choice of a collaborative or participatory methodological framework is advised to better align research questions and procedures to the specific needs and challenges of PSWs and other stakeholders concerned with PSW implementation. Patient and Public Contribution: The research team of the ImpPeer‐Psy5 study was collaboratively staffed by a portion of researchers who also identify as users or survivors of psychiatric services. A nonprofit organization for the training of PSWs served as a practice partner throughout the research process. Different participatory formats involve a significant number of diverse stakeholders relevant to PSW implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Care for MRSA carriers in the outpatient sector: a survey among MRSA carriers and physicians in two regions in Germany.
- Author
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Raupach-Rosin, Heike, Rübsamen, Nicole, Szkopek, Sebastian, Schmalz, Oliver, Karch, André, Mikolajczyk, Rafael, and Castell, Stefanie
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METHICILLIN-resistant staphylococcus aureus treatment ,DRUG resistance in bacteria ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,METHICILLIN resistance ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,CARRIER state (Communicable diseases) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH attitudes ,HOSPITALS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PSYCHOLOGY of physicians ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,STAPHYLOCOCCAL diseases ,EVALUATION research ,METHICILLIN-resistant staphylococcus aureus ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background: Little is known about the management of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) carriers in the German outpatient sector and about the impact of MRSA on their daily life. Reimbursement for MRSA related costs in the German outpatient sector is available since 2012, but its impact has not been studied yet. The aim of the study was to analyze the outpatient management of MRSA carriers from both, physicians' and MRSA carriers' perspective.Methods: Paper-based questionnaires were mailed to physicians providing outpatient care and to MRSA carriers in 2013. MRSA carriers were recruited among patients tested positive for MRSA during a hospital stay in 2012. General practitioners, specialists for internal medicine, urologists, and dermatologists working in the outpatient catchment areas of the hospitals were contacted.Results: Out of 910 MRSA carriers 16.5 % completed the questionnaires; among 851 physicians 9.5 % participated. 27.3 % of the responding MRSA carriers stated that no healthcare professional had ever talked to them about MRSA. 17.4 % reported self-stigmatization in terms of restricting social contacts; 47.3 % remembered decolonization and 33.3 % reported that their MRSA status was checked after discharge. Physicians displayed heterogeneous attitude and activity towards MRSA (number of applied decolonization and MRSA screenings). A minority (15.2 %) were satisfied with the reimbursement of costs, 35.9 % reported full agreement with the general recommendations for the handling of MRSA carriers.Conclusions: MRSA carriers appear not well informed; (self-) stigmatization is occurring and should be tackled. Greater awareness of MRSA as a problem in the outpatient sector could lead to a better handling of MRSA carriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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44. Improving hospital hygiene to reduce the impact of multidrug-resistant organisms in health care--a prospective controlled multicenter study.
- Author
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Gerlich, Miriam G., Piegsa, Jens, Schäfer, Christian, Hübner, Nils-Olaf, Wilke, Florian, Reuter, Susanne, Engel, Georg, Ewert, Ralf, Claus, Franziska, Hübner, Claudia, Ried, Walter, Flessa, Steffen, Kramer, Axel, and Hoffmann, Wolfgang
- Subjects
HOSPITAL sanitation ,MULTIDRUG resistance ,NOSOCOMIAL infections ,METHICILLIN-resistant staphylococcus aureus ,COMBINED modality therapy ,HOSPITALS ,GRAM-negative bacteria ,QUALITY of life ,ANTIBIOTICS ,CROSS infection prevention ,HOSPITAL statistics ,PREVENTION of communicable diseases ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CROSS infection ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,ENTEROCOCCUS ,HYGIENE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,VANCOMYCIN resistance ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: Nosocomial infections are the most common complication during inpatient hospital care. An increasing proportion of these infections are caused by multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs). This report describes an intervention study which was designed to address the practical problems encountered in trying to avoid and treat infections caused by MDROs. The aim of the HARMONIC (Harmonized Approach to avert Multidrug-resistant Organisms and Nosocomial Infections) study is to provide comprehensive support to hospitals in a defined study area in north-east Germany, to meet statutory requirements. To this end, a multimodal system of hygiene management was implemented in the participating hospitals.Methods/design: HARMONIC is a controlled intervention study conducted in eight acute care hospitals in the 'Health Region Baltic Sea Coast' in Germany. The intervention measures include the provision of written recommendations on methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE) and multi-resistant Gram-negative bacteria (MRGN), supplemented by regional recommendations for antibiotic prescriptions. In addition, there is theoretical and practical training of health care workers (HCWs) in the prevention and handling of MDROs, as well as targeted and critically gauged applications of antibiotics. The main outcomes of the implementation and analysis of the HARMONIC study are: (i) screening rates for MRSA, VRE and MRGN in high-risk patients, (ii) the frequency of MRSA decolonization, (iii) the level of knowledge of HCWs concerning MDROs, and (iv) specific types and amounts of antibiotics used. The data are predominantly obtained by paper-based questionnaires and documentation sheets. A computer-assisted workflow-based documentation system was developed in order to provide support to the participating facilities. The investigation includes three nested studies on risk profiles of MDROs, health-related quality of life, and cost analysis. A six-month follow-up study investigates the quality of life after discharge, the long-term costs of the treatment of infections caused by MDROs, and the sustainability of MRSA eradication.Discussion: The aim of this study is to implement and evaluate an area-wide harmonized hygiene program to control the nosocomial spreading of MDROs. Comparability between the intervention and control group is ensured by matching the hospitals according to size (number of discharges per year/number of beds) and level of care (standard or maximum). The results of the study may provide important indications for the implementation of regional MDRO management programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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45. ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT RESEARCH IN GERMANY: RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT.
- Author
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KOEPPEL, JOHANN and GEISSLER, GESA
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ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,FUTURES studies ,RESEARCH management ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
This paper aims to provide an overview of German Environmental Assessment (EA) research over the recent decades. Likely reasons for previous developments as Germany's post-Cold War challenges, ongoing case study research endeavours and further prospects are outlined. This involves research on large-scale SEA making, an enhanced EA theory building and a move towards "best available science" research. Last but not least, a stronger research oriented conference series is proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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46. Subjective Health Status, Health-Related Behavior, and Health Literacy of Health Professional Students: Results from a Cross-Sectional Study.
- Author
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Jürgensen, Ivonne-Nadine, Koch, Peter, Otto, Ramona, Nock, Annike Morgane, and Petersen-Ewert, Corinna
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of medical students ,RESEARCH ,CROSS-sectional method ,HEALTH status indicators ,FISHER exact test ,MANN Whitney U Test ,HEALTH literacy ,SURVEYS ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,T-test (Statistics) ,HEALTH behavior ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,COVID-19 pandemic ,WORLD Wide Web - Abstract
The importance of health promotion for health professional students is increasingly crucial, as the rising requirements for those students can have a negative impact on their health. Despite this awareness, there is still limited knowledge in Germany about the specific health needs of this group of students. This study's aim was, therefore, to assess the subjective health of first-year students and to identify health needs. Thus, this study is based on an online survey using standardized measurement instruments. First-year students from three degree programs were included. The data were analyzed descriptively. A total of n = 98 (72.6%) participated in the survey. The results showed that a major proportion of participants (80.3%) rated their health positively, but a significant proportion reported weight disorders (24%) and pre-existing health conditions (62.1%) at baseline. Interestingly, a high proportion (59%) reported a high level of mental well-being at the time of the survey. However, worrying findings regarding lifestyle behaviors, including physical inactivity (40.6%), smoking (20%), risky alcohol use (24%), and unhealthy eating habits (37%) were determined. In terms of health literacy, around 45% of students rated their health competencies as problematic. Furthermore, it was found that students with low health literacy had a significantly higher prevalence of low mental well-being (53.3% vs. 30.8%, p = 0.036) and unhealthy eating habits (48.8% vs. 26.5%, p = 0.027) compared to students with sufficient health literacy. Health professional students should be considered a relevant target group for health and health competence promotion from the beginning of their studies. The identified fields of action should be addressed in the context of health promotion. This is of particular importance as they are not only aimed at improving the students' well-being but also will later work directly with patients and, therefore, have a direct influence on the health of others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Outpatient screening for anxiety and depression symptoms in adolescents with type 1 diabetes - a cross-sectional survey.
- Author
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Reinauer, Christina, Tittel, Sascha R., Müller-Stierlin, Annabel, Baumeister, Harald, Warschburger, Petra, Klauser, Katharina, Minden, Kirsten, Staab, Doris, Gohlke, Bettina, Horlebein, Bettina, Schwab, Karl Otfried, Meißner, Thomas, and Holl, Reinhard W.
- Subjects
PREVENTION of mental depression ,ANXIETY prevention ,RESEARCH ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,POCKET computers ,CROSS-sectional method ,SELF-evaluation ,MEDICAL screening ,TYPE 1 diabetes ,SURVEYS ,SUICIDAL ideation ,MENTAL depression ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ANXIETY ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,ELECTRONIC health records ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: The daily demands of type 1 diabetes management may jeopardize adolescents' mental health. We aimed to assess anxiety and depression symptoms by broad-scale, tablet-based outpatient screening in adolescents with type 1 diabetes in Germany. Methods: Adolescent patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (n = 2,394; mean age 15.4 y [SD 2.0]; 50.7% male) were screened for anxiety (GAD-7) and depression symptoms (PHQ-9) by self-report questionnaires and linked to clinical data from the DPV patient registry. Logistic regression was used to estimate the contribution of clinical parameters to positive screening results. Results: Altogether, 30.2% showed a positive screening (score ≥ 7 in either test), and 11.3% reported suicidal ideations or self-harm. Patients with anxiety and depression symptoms were older (15.7 y [CI 15.5–15.8] vs. 15.3 y [CI 15.2–15.4]; p < 0.0001), had higher HbA1c levels (7.9% [CI 7.8-8.0] (63 mmol/mol) vs. 7.5% [CI 7.4–7.5] (58 mmol/mol); p < 0.0001), and had higher hospitalization rates. Females (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 2.66 [CI 2.21–3.19]; p < 0.0001), patients > 15 years (aOR 1.40 [1.16–1.68]; p < 0.001), who were overweight (aOR 1.40 [CI 1.14–1.71]; p = 0.001), with HbA1c > 9% (> 75 mmol/mol; aOR 2.58 [1.83–3.64]; each p < 0.0001), with a migration background (aOR 1.46 [CI 1.17–1.81]; p < 0.001), or smoking (aOR 2.72 [CI 1.41–5.23]; p = 0.003) had a higher risk. Regular exercise was a significant protective factor (aOR 0.65 [CI 0.51–0.82]; p < 0.001). Advanced diabetes technologies did not influence screening outcomes. Conclusions: Electronic mental health screening was implemented in 42 centers in parallel, and outcomes showed an association with clinical parameters from sociodemographic, lifestyle, and diabetes-related data. It should be integrated into holistic patient counseling, enabling early recognition of mild mental health symptoms for preventive measures. Females were disproportionally adversely affected. The use of advanced diabetes technologies did not yet reduce the odds of anxiety and depression symptoms in this cross-sectional assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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48. Symptom and problem clusters in German specialist palliative home care - a factor analysis of non-oncological and oncological patients' symptom burden.
- Author
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Gesell, Daniela, Hodiamont, Farina, Wikert, Julia, Lehmann-Emele, Eva, Bausewein, Claudia, Nauck, Friedemann, and Jansky, Maximiliane
- Subjects
SYMPTOM burden ,TUMOR diagnosis ,RESEARCH ,CANCER patient psychology ,HOME care services ,CROSS-sectional method ,SYMPTOMS ,QUALITY of life ,QUALITY assurance ,FACTOR analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,RESEARCH funding ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,SECONDARY analysis ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Specialist palliative home care (SPHC) aims to maintain and improve patients' quality of life in the community setting. Symptom burden may differ between oncological and non-oncological patients. However, little is known about diagnosis-related differences of SPHC patients. This study aims to describe the prevalence of physical symptom burden and psychosocial problems of adult patients in SPHC, and to evaluate diagnosis-related symptom clusters. Methods: Secondary analysis of data from a prospective, cross-sectional, multi-centre study on complexity of patients, registered at the German Register for Clinical Studies (DRKS trial registration number: DRKS00020517, 12/10/2020). Descriptive statistics on physical symptom burden and psychosocial problems at the beginning of care episodes. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses to identify symptom and problem clusters. Results: Seven hundred seventy-eight episodes from nine SPHC teams were included, average age was 75 years, mean duration of episode 18.6 days (SD 19.4). 212/778 (27.2%) had a non-oncological diagnosis. Main burden in non-oncological episodes was due to poor mobility (194/211; 91.9%) with significant diagnosis-related differences (χ² = 8.145, df = 1, p =.004; oncological: 472/562; 84.0%), and due to weakness (522/565; 92.4%) in oncological episodes. Two symptom clusters (psychosocial and physical) for non-oncological and three clusters (psychosocial, physical and communicational/practical) for oncological groups were identified. More patients in the non-oncological group compared to the oncological group showed at least one symptom cluster (83/212; 39.2% vs. 172/566; 30.4%). Conclusion: Patients with non-oncological diseases had shorter episode durations and were more affected by symptom clusters, whereas patients with oncological diseases showed an additional communicational/practical cluster. Our findings indicate the high relevance of care planning as an important part of SPHC to facilitate anticipatory symptom control in both groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Internet Use and Perceived Parental Involvement among Adolescents from Lower Socioeconomic Groups in Europe: An Exploration.
- Author
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Willems, Roy A., Smith, Peter K., Culbert, Catherine, Purdy, Noel, Hamilton, Jayne, Völlink, Trijntje, Scheithauer, Herbert, Fiedler, Nora, Brighi, Antonella, Menin, Damiano, Mameli, Consuelo, and Guarini, Annalisa
- Subjects
HIGH schools ,RESEARCH ,INTERNET addiction in adolescence ,SOCIAL media ,PARENTING ,SURVEYS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL classes ,COMMUNICATION ,RESEARCH funding ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Internet usage is a salient developmental factor in adolescents' lives. Although relevant correlates of Internet use have been documented earlier, there is a lack of information on lower socioeconomic status groups. This is important, as these adolescents have increased risk of negative online experiences. The current survey aimed to explore Internet use and parental involvement amongst adolescents from areas of socio-economic disadvantage in 30 urban schools across five European countries. A total of 2594 students participated, of whom 90% were 14–16 years. Virtually all adolescents of socioeconomic disadvantage had Internet access, with 88.5% reporting spending more than two hours per day online, often on apps such as Instagram, Snapchat, and YouTube. Almost one-third of adolescents did not talk with their parents about their Internet use and almost two-thirds indicated that their parents were only a little or not interested in their Internet use. A consistent finding across countries was that girls more often talked with their parents about their Internet use and more often reported that their parents were interested in their Internet use than boys. The results suggest that parents have an important task in explicitly showing interest in their adolescents' Internet use, with special attention needed for boys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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50. Assessment and Diagnostic Classification Using DC:0-5 in Early Childhood Mental Health Clinics: The Protocol for the Developmental Psychiatry Diagnostic Challenges Study (DePsy).
- Author
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Bödeker, Katja, Watrin-Avino, Laura M., Martin, Annick, Schlensog-Schuster, Franziska, Janssen, Marius, Friese, Lennart, Licata-Dandel, Maria, Mall, Volker, Teich-Bělohradský, Juliane, Izat, Yonca, Correll, Christoph U., Möhler, Eva, and Paulus, Frank W.
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,CAREGIVERS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CHILD psychopathology ,PATIENT-family relations ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,PSYCHIATRIC hospitals ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Mental health problems in early childhood are common, but there is a lack of psychiatric research on this age group. DC:0-5 is a multiaxial classification system for mental disorders in early childhood, providing a framework for standardizing clinical practice and research. However, research on the validity of DC:0-5 is scarce. The Developmental Psychiatry Diagnostic Challenges Study (DePsy) is a multi-site, prospective clinical study including six German early childhood mental health (ECMH) clinics. The main objective of the study is to contribute to the validation of Axis I and Axis II of DC:0-5. A second aim of the study is to describe the population of the participating clinics regarding diagnoses, family context, and treatment outcomes. Additionally, the impact of environmental risk factors, including parental Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and media use, on child psychopathology and caregiver–child relationships will be examined. Over two years, patients aged 0.0–5.9 years old will be enrolled in the study. Assessments include ICD-10 and DC:0-5 diagnoses, developmental tests, video-based observations of caregiver—child interactions, and questionnaires on child psychopathology, media use, parental stress, and treatment satisfaction. Study results will promote the standardization of assessment and treatment in ECMH clinics aiming to improve the development of patients and their families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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