112 results
Search Results
2. Challenges, coping responses and supportive interventions for international and migrant students in academic nursing programs in major host countries: a scoping review with a gender lens.
- Author
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Merry, Lisa, Vissandjée, Bilkis, and Verville-Provencher, Kathryn
- Subjects
SEXUAL orientation ,CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,SOCIAL support ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,DEVELOPED countries ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,TEACHING ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MALE nurses ,PSYCHOLOGY of nursing students ,CULTURAL pluralism ,NURSING education ,SEX distribution ,GENDER identity ,EXPERIENCE ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,RESEARCH funding ,STUDENTS ,ENGLISH as a foreign language ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DECISION making ,NURSING research ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,LITERATURE reviews ,NURSING students ,MEDLINE ,MANAGEMENT ,FOREIGN students ,PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) ,CLINICAL education - Abstract
Background: International and migrant students face specific challenges which may impact their mental health, well-being and academic outcomes, and these may be gendered experiences. The purpose of this scoping review was to map the literature on the challenges, coping responses and supportive interventions for international and migrant students in academic nursing programs in major host countries, with a gender lens. Methods: We searched 10 databases to identify literature reporting on the challenges, coping responses and/or supportive interventions for international and migrant nursing students in college or university programs in Canada, the United-States, Australia, New Zealand or a European country. We included peer-reviewed research (any design), discussion papers and literature reviews. English, French and Spanish publications were considered and no time restrictions were applied. Drawing from existing frameworks, we critically assessed each paper and extracted information with a gender lens. Results: One hundred fourteen publications were included. Overall the literature mostly focused on international students, and among migrants, migration history/status and length of time in country were not considered with regards to challenges, coping or interventions. Females and males, respectively, were included in 69 and 59% of studies with student participants, while those students who identify as other genders/sexual orientations were not named or identified in any of the research. Several papers suggest that foreign-born nursing students face challenges associated with different cultural roles, norms and expectations for men and women. Other challenges included perceived discrimination due to wearing a hijab and being a 'foreign-born male nurse', and in general nursing being viewed as a feminine, low-status profession. Only two strategies, accessing support from family and other student mothers, used by women to cope with challenges, were identified. Supportive interventions considering gender were limited; these included matching students with support services' personnel by sex, involving male family members in admission and orientation processes, and using patient simulation as a method to prepare students for care-provision of patients of the opposite-sex. Conclusion: Future work in nursing higher education, especially regarding supportive interventions, needs to address the intersections of gender, gender identity/sexual orientation and foreign-born status, and also consider the complexity of migrant students' contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. The state of nursing research from 2000 to 2019: A global analysis.
- Author
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Yanbing, Su, Hua, Liu, Chao, Liu, Fenglan, Wang, and Zhiguang, Duan
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BIBLIOMETRICS ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NURSING research ,PUBLISHING ,RESEARCH funding ,SERIAL publications ,DEVELOPED countries ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Advanced Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.) is the property of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
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4. Gender, refugee status and permanent settlement.
- Author
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Boyd M
- Subjects
- Americas, Canada, Demography, Geography, North America, Population, Population Dynamics, Residence Characteristics, Transients and Migrants, Developed Countries, Emigration and Immigration, Interpersonal Relations, Refugees, Women
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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5. Vancouver AIDS conference: special report. A verdict on the conference: sadly, not one world or one hope.
- Author
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Whiteside A
- Subjects
- Americas, Canada, Disease, Economics, Health Planning, North America, Organization and Administration, Technology, Virus Diseases, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, Congresses as Topic, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Goals, HIV Infections, Health Resources, Research, Therapeutics
- Published
- 1996
6. Identification and assessment of factors that impact the demand for and supply of dental hygienists amidst an evolving workforce context: a scoping review.
- Author
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Dobrow, Mark J., Valela, Angela, Bruce, Eric, Simpson, Keisha, and Pettifer, Glenn
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RESEARCH funding ,DEVELOPED countries ,CINAHL database ,MEDICAL care ,WORK environment ,PRIMARY health care ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,JOB satisfaction ,LITERATURE reviews ,RURAL conditions ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,LABOR supply ,MEDICAL practice - Abstract
Background: This study involved a scoping review to explore factors influencing dental hygienist demand and supply in high-income countries. Methods: A six-stage scoping review was conducted with separate search strategies tailored to four databases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, Google Scholar, and Google) plus a targeted scan of dental hygienist organization websites. This yielded 2,117 unique citations, leading to 148 articles included in the review. Results: Nearly half of the articles (47%) focused on the United States, with 11% on Canada. Most articles (91%) were in English, alongside 13 in Korean and one in French. Journal articles comprised 62% of the publications, followed by reports/working papers (11%) and websites (11%). Other types included conference abstracts, policy briefs, and presentation slides. Content-wise, 47% were original research, with analysis articles (14%), commentaries (11%), and reviews (8%) also present. The articles were coded into three main categories: workforce characteristics/projections, factor-specific analyses, and workforce opportunities. The articles on workforce characteristics covered demographic, geographic, and employment aspects of dental hygienists, along with projections for supply and demand using simulation modelling and geospatial analyses. Factor-specific articles investigated the (1) working environment, (2) policy/regulatory/training environment, (3) job/career satisfaction and related human resource issues, and (4) scope of practice. The third key category of articles highlighted opportunities for expanding the workforce through alternative models in different sectors/settings (e.g., public health, primary care, long-term care, hospitals, mobile outreach, and non-clinical roles including research, education and leadership) and for a range of vulnerable or underserved populations (e.g., geriatric and pediatric populations, persons with disabilities, those living in rural/remote areas, Indigenous peoples, and incarcerated people). Conclusions: This review provides a comprehensive documentation of the current state of the dental hygienist workforce, compiling factors affecting demand and supply, and highlighting opportunities for the dental hygienist workforce in Canada and other high-income countries. The findings offer a foundation for future research, highlighting the need for more focused and rigorous reviews and underscoring the necessity of high-quality studies to verify the effectiveness of various interventions and policies. This is crucial to address dental hygienist workforce challenges and ensure the sustainability and effectiveness of oral health care delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. [Migration].
- Author
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Maccotta W, Perotti A, Thebaut F, Cristofanelli L, Pittau F, Sergi N, Pittau L, Morelli A, Morsella M, and Grinover AP
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- Americas, Canada, Demography, Economics, Europe, North America, Population, Population Dynamics, Developed Countries, Emigration and Immigration, Social Problems, Socioeconomic Factors
- Published
- 1990
8. The influence of motivations on international location choice in least developed, emerging and developed countries: evidence from Chinese MNEs.
- Author
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Angulo-Ruiz, Fernando, Pergelova, Albena, and Wei, William X.
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DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,EMERGING markets ,EMPLOYEE motivation ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,BRANDING (Marketing) - Abstract
Purpose: This research aims to assess variations of motivations when studying international location decisions. In particular, this study aims to assess the influence of diverse motivations – seeking technology, seeking brand assets, seeking markets, seeking resources and escaping institutional constraints – as determinants of the international location choice of emerging market multinational enterprises (EM MNEs) entering least developed, emerging, and developed countries. Design/methodology/approach: The authors develop a set of hypotheses based on the ownership–location–internalization framework and complement it with an institutional perspective. The conceptual model posits that the different internationalization motivations (seeking technology, seeking brand assets, seeking markets, seeking resources and escaping institutional constraints) will impact the location choice of EM MNEs in developed economies, emerging markets or least developed countries. This study uses the 2013 survey data collected by the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade and the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada. The final sample of analysis of this research includes 693 observations. Findings: After controlling for several variables, two-stage Heckman regressions show there is a variation of motivations when EM MNEs enter least developed countries, emerging markets and developed economies. EM MNEs are motivated to enter least developed countries to seek markets and resources. Conversely, those firms enter developed countries in their search for technological assets and to escape institutional constraints at home. While the present study findings show a clear difference in the motivations that lead to location choice in least developed vs developed countries, the results are not as clear for location in other emerging countries. Research limitations/implications: The paper offers empirical support for the importance of motivations as crucial determinants of location choice. Originality/value: This paper provides a detailed quantitative study on the internationalization location choice of EM MNEs based on their motivations. Though theoretical models underscore the importance of motivations, we know very little about how, in practice, motivations drive location choice. This study contributes to the international location choice literature a deeper understanding of how diverse motivations drive choices of expansion into developed economies, emerging markets or least developed countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. [Trends in the sex ratio at birth in selected Western countries].
- Author
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Schtickzelle M
- Subjects
- Australia, Biology, Canada, Culture, Europe, Family Characteristics, Family Relations, Latin America, Population, Sex Distribution, Sex Factors, Social Sciences, United States, Age Factors, Birth Order, Demography, Developed Countries, Ethnicity, Politics, Population Characteristics, Sex Ratio
- Published
- 1981
10. Injury Prevention in Female Athletes: Defining the Boundaries of Scientific Literature.
- Author
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Sheikhhoseini, Rahman
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SPORTS injury prevention ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,CONTENT analysis ,HEALTH ,DEVELOPED countries ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CITATION analysis ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,MEDICAL research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,SPORTS sciences - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to perform a bibliometric analysis centered on recent advancements in injury prevention for female athletes. Methods: The study employed Excel, VOSviewer, and the bibliometric R-package tools to analyze and evaluate relevant records obtained from the Web of Science (WOS) database, using a reliable search methodology. Results: From the WOS database, a collection of 10 560 scientific records was acquired using specific keywords, covering the period between 2010 and 2023. These records were subjected to content analysis, revealing the prevalent themes in this research area. Noteworthy topics included risk, risk factors, prevention, women, exercise, physical activity, epidemiology, injuries, performance, injury, strength, and health. The investigation also indicated that the journals "American journal of sports medicine" and "journal of athletic training" demonstrated the highest level of activity in this field. Regarding research productivity, developed countries, such as the United States and Canada stood out as the most prolific contributors. Moreover, the study recognized Gregory D Myer as the most active author in this area. Conclusion: The convergence of injury prevention in female athletes continues to be a subject of significant research attention. This study highlights that the bulk of the literature on this subject originates from researchers in developed countries. However, it is crucial to recognize that a substantial segment of the global population, particularly in developing nations, lacks sufficient representation in research related to early life psychology concerning exercise and physical activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Food Is Different During the Pandemic: COVID-19 Effects on Food Security in the Developed World as Exemplified by United States and Canada.
- Author
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Jastrzębiec-Witowska, Anna
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,FOOD security ,COVID-19 pandemic ,RIGHT to food ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has left no area of human life unaffected and the food system in its global, regional, or micro manifestations is not an exception. The images of empty store shelves caused by lockdowns stirred a lot of anxiety among consumers in the so-called First World. At the same time, thousands of miles away, in the developing and underdeveloped countries, where having a meal is never taken for granted, people suffered the harshest consequences of any pandemic-related instability in the food system. Both these realities deserve intellectual reflection, with the former being far more intricate than its media portrayals and therefore will be explored further in this work. This paper aims to study the COVID-19 impact on food systems in developed countries such as the United States and Canada, as well as the challenges to the food security they face during the pandemic. It offers a top-down approach, starting with the definition of food security, and highlighting some crucial aspects of food access and food availability, which has been compromised by the spread of coronavirus in the two countries. Detailed analysis of responses to the pandemic-related food security problems in both countries will be offered as well. The right to food is presented here as a human right, and the links between that right and the concept of food security are brought out. The pandemic wreaked havoc on food security in many parts of the world, including the affluent, but at the same time revealed its fragility and the need for continuous monitoring, re-assessment, and improvement through more effective food programs. The emerging sliver of hope for a more just postpandemic food system should not be ignored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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12. Biosimilars in Developed Economies: Overview, Status, and Regulatory Considerations.
- Author
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Rathore AS and Bhargava A
- Subjects
- Canada, Europe, Japan, Republic of Korea, United States, Biosimilar Pharmaceuticals, Developed Countries, Drug Approval
- Abstract
Biotherapeutics dominate the pipelines of pharmaceutical companies across the world today with products ranging from hormones, immune-modulators, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), blood coagulation factors, enzymes and vaccines. However, they are considerably more expensive than their small molecule counterparts (pharmaceuticals) and as a result their contribution to the already unacceptably high healthcare costs in the developed economies (Europe, United States, Japan, Canada and South Korea) has been in the limelight in the last decade. This has resulted in the rise of biosimilars, seen as the affordable versions of innovator biotherapeutics. As the developed economies form the majority of the global sales of biotherapeutics, they are an attractive market for the biosimilars as well. Regulatory considerations for approval of biosimilars in these jurisdictions is likely to have a major impact on the adoption of biosimilars. In this paper, we offer a perspective on this topic while focusing on the developed markets. This article summarizes the main regulatory requirements for approval of biosimilars in Europe, United States, Japan, Canada, and South Korea. An overview on current biosimilars status and market in the aforesaid countries has also been included., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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13. Deriving literature-based benchmarks for pediatric appendectomy and cholecystectomy complications from national databases in high-income countries: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Daodu OO, Zondervan N, Urban D, MacRobie A, and Brindle M
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- Appendectomy adverse effects, Appendectomy mortality, Canada epidemiology, Cholecystectomy adverse effects, Cholecystectomy mortality, Databases, Factual, Humans, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Patient Readmission statistics & numerical data, Reoperation statistics & numerical data, United Kingdom epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Appendectomy standards, Benchmarking, Cholecystectomy standards, Developed Countries, Postoperative Complications etiology, Postoperative Complications mortality, Postoperative Complications prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Health systems must identify preventable adverse outcomes to improve surgical safety. We conducted a systematic review to determine national rates of postoperative complications associated with two common pediatric surgery operations in High-Income Countries (HICs)., Methods: National database studies of complication rates associated with pediatric appendectomies and cholecystectomies (2000-2016) in Canada, the US, and the UK were included. Outcomes included mortality, length of hospital stay (LOS), and other surgical complications. Outcome data were extracted and comparisons made between countries and databases., Results: Thirty-three papers met inclusion criteria (1 Canadian, 1 UK, and 4 US Databases). Mean LOS was 3.00 (±1.42) days and 3.44 (±1.55) days for appendectomy and cholecystectomy, respectively. Mortality was 0.06% after appendectomy and 0.24% after cholecystectomy. Readmission and reoperation rates were 6.79% and 0.32% for appendectomy, and 1.37% and 0.71% for cholecystectomy. For appendectomies, LOS was shorter in Canadian and UK studies compared to US studies, and mortality and readmission rates were lower (OR 0.46 95%CI 0.23 to 0.93, OR 3.63 to 3.77 95%CI) in UK studies compared to US studies., Conclusions: Outcomes after pediatric appendectomy and cholecystectomy are good but vary between HICs. Understanding national outcomes and intercountry differences is essential in developing health system approaches to pediatric surgical safety., Level of Evidence: II., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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14. Equity Prices, Household Wealth, and Consumption Growth in Foreign Industrial Countries: Wealth Effects in the 1990s.
- Author
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Bertaut, Carol C.
- Subjects
CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,WEALTH ,INTERNATIONAL markets ,HOUSEHOLDS ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This paper investigates the strength of the wealth effect across countries. The author uses a variety of methods and finds evidence of significant wealth effects in the United Kingdom and Canada of a size similar to that in the United States, reflecting the importance of equities in aggregate household wealth in these countries. In Japan, a significant wealth effect is also evident, but since household wealth has changed little on balance in Japan in recent years, this channel has been less significant in explaining Japanese consumption growth in the second half of the 1990s. In the major continental European countries since 1995, equities remain a less important form of household wealth in most of these countries, and the consumption response to changes in wealth remains limited. In some smaller European countries where equity issuance is more frequent, the emerging evidence suggests that wealth effects may be more important. This working paper can be found at the United States Federal Reserve Board's International Finance Discussion Papers. You can access it by going to http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/ifdp/.
- Published
- 2002
15. Consumption smoothing and housing capital gains: evidence from Australia, Canada, and New Zealand.
- Author
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Balli, Faruk, Nguyen, Thi Thu Ha, Balli, Hatice Ozer, and Syed, Iqbal
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CAPITAL gains ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,RISK sharing ,PANEL analysis ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Using regional level panel data of three developed countries, comprising Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, the study investigates the response of consumption smoothing to housing capital gains. The consumption smoothing model first revisits the theory of perfect risk sharing. After rejecting a full consumption smoothing hypothesis, the results strongly indicate that the appreciation of house values smooths consumption further. For the sake of comparison, analysing three developed economies reveals the diversification in the response of consumption to long-run output shocks. Canadian residents appear to be more sensitive to permanent domestic output shocks while Australian's consumption pattern remains unchanged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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16. Environmental Heath Professionals in Developed Countries.
- Author
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Withida Patthanaissaranukool, Prayoon Fongsatitkul, and Chaowalit Warodomrungsimun
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ENVIRONMENTAL health ,DEVELOPED countries ,MEDICAL personnel ,CAREER development ,ENVIRONMENTAL compliance ,AIR quality ,AERONAUTICAL safety measures - Abstract
An environmental health professional performs numerous job functions that have an impact on everyone's health and lifestyle. Their work is to prevent death and illness from environmentally related disease and injury. Moreover, the quality and safety of their air, food, water, and the infrastructure that supports vital environmental health services are one of the indicators separated many developed countries from undeveloped countries. This paper, environmental health professional in developed countries including the United State of America, United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia were discussed. It was revealed that the Registration of Environmental Health Specialist/Sanitarians is a process that certifies the applicant has been found by the certifying body of each state/country to meet the qualifications to protect environmental health. The result of these reviews indicates that competencies of Environmental Health Officers (EHOs) of all selected developed countries are focused on facility and system inspections and compliance and enforcement of environmental health laws. Moreover, risk assessment and management, investigation, monitor and control, and promoting environmental and public health awareness are appeared in some countries. Thus, the experiences in selected developed countries for certification of Environmental Health Specialist or sanitarian could be used as a guideline for environmental health professional development in other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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17. Reinventing public health: A New Perspective on the Health of Canadians and its international impact.
- Author
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MacDougall, Heather
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,HEALTH policy ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Study objective: To examine the Canadian origins of the Lalonde Report and its impact on British and American health promotion activities. Design: A brief history of the development of key Canadian documents and their use by politicians and public health activists in the United Kingdom and United States. Setting: This paper focuses on the impact of the Canadian model on Canada, the United Kingdom and United States. Main results: This paper argues that internal political and economic forces are as important as international trends in determining healthcare policy initiatives. Conclusions: In the 1970s all the English-speaking developed nations were facing deficits as curative costs rose. Adopting health promotion policies permitted them to shift responsibility back to local governments and individuals while limiting their expenditures. Health and community activists, however, used this concept to broaden their focus to include the social, economic and political determinants of health and thus reinvented public health discourse and practice for the 21st century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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18. The barriers and enablers to accessing sexual health and sexual well-being services for midlife women (aged 40–65 years) in high-income countries: A mixed-methods systematic review.
- Author
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Simmons, Kiersten, Llewellyn, Carrie, Bremner, Stephen, Gilleece, Yvonne, Norcross, Claire, and Iwuji, Collins
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HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH literacy ,SUPPORT groups ,ENDOWMENTS ,MEDICAL care ,DEVELOPED countries ,AFFINITY groups ,NONBINARY people ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,THEMATIC analysis ,WOMEN'S health ,ONLINE information services ,TRANS women ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SEXUAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,SOCIAL stigma ,INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,HEALTH care teams ,INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
Midlife, beginning at 40 years and extending to 65 years, a range that encompasses the late reproductive to late menopausal stages, is a unique time in women's lives, when hormonal and physical changes are often accompanied by psychological and social evolution. Access to sexual health and sexual well-being (SHSW) services, which include the prevention and management of sexually transmitted infections, contraception and the support of sexual function, pleasure and safety, is important for the health of midlife women, their relationships and community cohesion. The objective was to use the socio-ecological model to synthesise the barriers and enablers to SHSW services for midlife women in high-income countries. A systematic review of the enablers and barriers to women (including trans-gender and non-binary people) aged 40–65 years accessing SHSW services in high-income countries was undertaken. Four databases (PubMed, PsycINFO, Web of Science and Google Scholar) were searched for peer-reviewed publications. Findings were thematically extracted and reported in a narrative synthesis. Eighty-one studies were included; a minority specifically set out to study SHSW care for midlife women. The key barriers that emerged were the intersecting disadvantage of under-served groups, poor knowledge, about SHSW, and SHSW services, among women and their healthcare professionals (HCPs), and the over-arching effect of stigma, social connections and psychological factors on access to care. Enablers included intergenerational learning, interdisciplinary and one-stop women-only services, integration of SHSW into other services, peer support programmes, representation of minoritised midlife women working in SHSW, local and free facilities and financial incentives to access services for under-served groups. Efforts are needed to enhance education about SHSW and related services among midlife women and their healthcare providers. This increased education should be leveraged to improve research, public health messaging, interventions, policy development and access to comprehensive services, especially for midlife women from underserved groups. Plain language summary: Sexual health and sexual wellbeing services for midlife women in high income countries Midlife, beginning at 40 years and extending to 65 years, a range that encompasses the late reproductive to late menopausal stages, is a unique time in women's lives. Access to Sexual Health and Sexual Wellbeing (SHSW) services, which include the prevention and management of sexually transmitted infections, contraception and the support of sexual function, pleasure and safety, is important for the health of midlife women, their relationships and community cohesion. The objective of this systematic review was to use the socio-ecological model to synthesise the barriers and enablers to SHSW services for midlife women in high income countries. Eighty-one studies were included; a minority specifically set out to study SHSW care for midlife women. The key barriers that emerged were the intersecting disadvantage of under-served groups, poor knowledge, about SHSW, and SHSW services, among women and their HealthCare Professionals (HCPs), and the over-arching effect of stigma, social connections, and psychological factors on access to care. Enablers included intergenerational learning, interdisciplinary and one-stop women-only services, integration of SHSW into other services, peer support programmes, representation of minoritised midlife women working in SHSW, local and free facilities, and financial incentives for under-served groups to access services. The appetite for education about SHSW and SHSW services among midlife women and their HCPs should be capitalised upon, and utilised to improve research, public health messaging, interventions and access to holistic services, particularly for midlife women from under-served groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Affordability versus innovation: Is compulsory licensing the solution?
- Author
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Pandey, Ekta and Paul, Sourabh B.
- Subjects
DRUG laws ,PATENT law ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,DEVELOPING countries ,ENDOWMENTS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,INTELLECTUAL property ,INVESTMENTS ,POLICY sciences ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,DEVELOPED countries ,DRUG approval ,PROFESSIONAL licenses - Abstract
In an era which marks an exceptional phase of growth in science and technology, the acute disparities in access to healthcare still persist. So where on one hand scientific advancement in medicine aims at increasing life expectancy, on the other hand there are millions who are denied access to existing medicines. Patents on medicines also pose a significant barrier to access new drugs, especially in low and middle income countries which already suffer from poor health financing mechanisms. The patent laws were built on the assumption of incentivizing the innovators by rewarding them with the exclusive right to produce, sell or market the innovation. The basic premise for granting patents was based on the thought that it would increase investment in research and development promoting dynamic gains through newer innovations. However, evidence found to support this justification is meager. So in a situation where the drug gap still persists and we aim to achieve sustainable development goals by 2030, this paper attempts to focus on understanding how compulsory licensing has been used in selected cases to alleviate the major legal and political barriers to access medicines. The methodology comprises of cross-country comparison of patent framework and compulsory licensing cases. The sample selected for study includes both developed as well as developing countries. The aim is to evaluate the policy approaches used by selected countries to grant compulsory licenses and to identify the best practices for evidence-based policy making on international issues related to pharmaceutical patents. In each case, a driving factor has been the international extension of patent laws through trade agreements; first bilaterally (US-Canada) and subsequently internationally (1995 Uruguay round, under which low- and middle-income countries were granted a grace period until 2005 to comply). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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20. A System with Zero Reserves and with Clearing Outside of the Central Bank: The Canadian Case.
- Author
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Lavoie, Marc
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC funds transfers ,BANK reserves ,MONETARY policy ,CENTRAL banking industry ,BANKING industry ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
In a number of ways, implementing monetary policy in Canada stands apart from monetary policy in most other industrial countries. Commercial banks and other participants to the main clearinghouse – the large-value transfer system (LVTS) – hold no reserves at the central bank. Clearing and settlement is both in real time and net, while only settlement occurs on the books of the central bank. The Bank of Canada does not conduct open-market operations and rarely intervenes in the repo market; and despite this, the collateralized overnight rate always remains within 2 or 3 basis points of the target interest rate. The paper explains why this is so by describing the setup of the Canadian clearing and settlement system, including the rules that have been put forward in case a bank defaults on its due payments before settlement occurs. Some puzzles that arose through the years are also discussed, as well as the unlikely prospect of introducing blockchain technology in the Canadian clearing and settlement system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The ethics of international service learning as a pedagogical development practice: a Canadian study.
- Author
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Chapman, Debra D.
- Subjects
SERVICE learning ,EDUCATION ethics ,COMMUNITY services ,DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries -- Foreign relations ,EDUCATION ,SOCIAL services ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
International service learning, a form of service learning where students travel to developing countries to provide community services of varying types, has come to be common practice at universities throughout the Global North. This paper reports and discusses a case study focused on the ethical questions arising from current practice at one Canadian university. The study follows the path students take from their home university to their final placement. In the context of the political economy of North-South relations in a period of neoliberalism, the analysis considers the ethics of power differentials, reciprocity, accountability, student preparedness and qualifications in relation to host communities. The article concludes with a critique of post-secondary institutional involvement with and promotion of international service learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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22. Challenges, opportunities and future directions in hydrogen sector development in Canada.
- Author
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Razi, Faran and Dincer, Ibrahim
- Subjects
- *
FEEDSTOCK , *CARBON emissions , *HYDROGEN economy , *HYDROGEN production , *HYDROGEN , *HYDROGEN as fuel , *FOSSIL fuels ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Exploitation of fossil fuel sources in the power generation and transportation sector has been a major source of carbon dioxide emissions that contributes to global warming. Replacement of hydrocarbon-based fuel sources with cleaner fuels is imperative for environmental preservation at the global level. In this regard, hydrogen can be used as an effective non-carbonaceous fuel option as well as an energy carrier. Canada is currently one of the economically advanced countries in the world and aims at achieving a net-zero economy by 2050. However, fossil fuels are still largely utilized for both transportation and power generation purposes. Slightly less than a quarter of the total grid power in Canada is supplied through fossil fuel combustion including natural gas, coal, and petroleum. As a matter of fact, Canada, as one of the top ten global producers of hydrogen, exhibits a great potential of achieving the goal of sustainable development. Thus, this paper discusses the current status, challenges, and opportunities offered by the hydrogen sector and its development in the near- and long-term future in Canada. The potential methods of hydrogen production in Canada are described by categorizing them according to the energy and feedstock sources required for their realization. In addition, the status of hydrogen storage and distribution in Canada is also discussed. Various sectors consuming hydrogen as the end-users in Canada are categorized based on hydrogen use as a fuel, a heating source, and an industrial feedstock and are comprehensively discussed. Several challenges and the necessary line-of-actions to establish a hydrogen economy in Canada in the long-term future are also discussed, and a road map for accomplishing the net-zero economy by 2050 is further explained based on achieving certain near-term, mid-term, and long-term goals. Moreover, the job creation opportunities in Canada are discussed by considering numerous critical sectors. [Display omitted] • Overview of Canada's global position with regards to hydrogen production. • Overview of Canada's natural resources and infrastructural potential. • Comprehensive discussion on hydrogen production pathways and end-use in Canada. • Identification of several key challenges to achieve net-zero economy by 2050. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Community health workers in Canada and other high-income countries: A scoping review and research gaps.
- Author
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Najafizada SA, Bourgeault IL, Labonte R, Packer C, and Torres S
- Subjects
- Canada, Humans, Community Health Workers, Developed Countries, Professional Role, Research
- Abstract
Objectives: Community health workers (CHWs) have been deployed to provide health-related services to their fellow community members and to guide them through often complex health systems. They help address concerns about how marginalized populations in many countries experience health inequities that are due, in part, to lack of appropriate primary health care services, possibly resulting in inappropriate use of higher-cost health services or facilities. This paper reviews studies on CHW interventions in a number of high-income countries, including Canada, to identify research gaps on CHW roles., Methods: A scoping review using 68 sources of interventions involving CHWs was undertaken. The five-step Arksey and O'Malley model guided this review with the aim of summarizing research findings and identifying research gaps in the existing literature on CHWs in Canada (23 sources). A standardized extraction tool was employed to synthesize the literature., Synthesis: We found that CHWs provide a wide range of health-related services but in a manner that, in Canada, is unrecognized and unregulated. In highincome countries, CHW interventions have contributed to health-related issues in communities and demonstrated potential to both reduce health inequity in marginalized populations and reduce the cost of medical services., Conclusion: CHWs are an under-recognized, and therefore underutilized, public health workforce, which has a promising capacity to reduce health inequities in marginalized populations in Canada. There is growing support to suggest that CHW roles need to be better integrated within the broader health and social services systems to enable their full potential to be realized.
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
24. A scoping review of female drowning: an underexplored issue in five high-income countries.
- Author
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Roberts, Kym, Thom, Ogilvie, Devine, Susan, Leggat, Peter A., Peden, Amy E., and Franklin, Richard C.
- Subjects
DROWNING ,FEMALES ,SWIMMING ,ACCIDENTS ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH ,DEVELOPED countries ,RESEARCH methodology ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
Background: Drowning is a significant public health issue, with females accounting for one third of global drowning deaths. The rate of female drowning has not decreased within high-income countries and presentations to hospital have increased. This scoping review aimed to explore adult female unintentional drowning, including risk factors, clinical treatment and outcomes of females hospitalised for drowning.Methods: A systematic search of the literature following the PRISMA-ScR framework was undertaken. The databases OVID MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, OVID Emcare, Web of Science, Informit and Scopus were accessed. Study locations of focus were Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Studies from January 2003 to April 2019 were included. The quality of evidence of included studies was assessed using GRADE guidelines.Results: The final search results included 14 studies from Australia (n = 4), Canada (n = 1), New Zealand (n = 1), United States (n = 6), United Kingdom (n = 1), and one study reporting data from both Australia and United States. Nine studies reported risk factors for female drowning including age, with the proportion of female drowning incidence increasing with age. Although females are now engaging in risk-taking behaviours associated with drowning that are similar to males, such as consuming alcohol and swimming in unsafe locations, their exposure to risky situations and ways they assess risk, differ. Females are more likely to drown from accidental entry into water, such as in a vehicle during a flood or fall into water. This review found no evidence on the clinical treatment provided to females in hospital after a drowning incident, and only a small number of studies reported the clinical outcomes of females, with inconsistent results (some studies reported better and some no difference in clinical outcomes among females).Conclusion: Adult females are a group vulnerable to drowning, that have lacked attention. There was no single study found which focused solely on female drowning. There is a need for further research to explore female risk factors, the clinical treatment and outcomes of females hospitalised for drowning. This will not only save the lives of females, but also contribute to an overall reduction in drowning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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25. "It's my calling", Canadian dog rescuers' motives and experiences for engaging in international dog rescue efforts.
- Author
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von Rentzell, Kai Alain, Bratiotis, Christiana, and Protopopova, Alexandra
- Subjects
DOG rescue ,RESCUE dogs ,DOGS ,ZOONOSES ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
The importation of rescue dogs has become an increasingly common occurrence in recent years, often involving industrialized countries as the ultimate destination. However, international dog rescue activities have attracted considerable criticism from the veterinary community and the public due to the associated zoonotic disease and public health risks, as well as the potential poor behaviour of international rescue dogs. The Government of Canada has also recently placed a temporary suspension on all commercial dog imports from non-rabies free countries due to the growing concerns of the zoonotic disease risks. To understand the perspectives and experiences of stakeholders involved in dog import activities in Canada, we interviewed nine members in leadership positions of Canadian-based international dog rescue organizations. Thematic analysis of interview dialogue yielded three themes: 1) Motive, which described the reason behind participants' involvement in international dog rescue; 2) Challenge, which described the major difficulties faced in participants' dog rescue work; 3) Duty, which described participants' beliefs on responsible dog rescue practices. Members of international dog rescue organizations described being driven by strong desires to provide animal and humanitarian aid. However, local dog rescue efforts were constrained by logistical and societal barriers unique to the Canadian context. Additionally, the current study revealed both similarities and differences in occupational experiences between international dog rescue organizations and other animal care professions. Specifically, difficulties with the emotional burden associated with caregiving professions was also present within dog rescue work. However, international dog rescue members also experienced additional challenges due to the stigma surrounding international dog rescue operations. Further research on attitudes held by other stakeholders involved in dog import activities, as well as members of Canadian communities needing dog rescue aid may provide meaningful inputs on how to better support and facilitate local and international dog rescue efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Racism against healthcare users in inpatient care: a scoping review.
- Author
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Merz, Sibille, Aksakal, Tuğba, Hibtay, Ariam, Yücesoy, Hilâl, Fieselmann, Jana, Annaç, Kübra, Yılmaz-Aslan, Yüce, Brzoska, Patrick, and Tezcan-Güntekin, Hürrem
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,PATIENT psychology ,CINAHL database ,HOSPITALS ,RACISM ,REHABILITATION centers ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,LITERATURE reviews ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,ONLINE information services ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Background: Racism in the healthcare system has become a burgeoning focus in health policy-making and research. Existing research has shown both interpersonal and structural forms of racism limiting access to quality healthcare for racialised healthcare users. Nevertheless, little is known about the specifics of racism in the inpatient sector, specifically hospitals and rehabilitation facilities. The aim of this scoping review is therefore to map the evidence on racial discrimination experienced by people receiving treatment in inpatient settings (hospitals and rehabilitation facilities) or their caregivers in high-income countries, focusing specifically on whether intersectional axes of discrimination have been taken into account when describing these experiences. Methods: Based on the conceptual framework developed by Arksey and O'Malley, this scoping review surveyed existing research on racism and racial discrimination in inpatient care in high-income countries published between 2013 and 2023. The software Rayyan was used to support the screening process while MAXQDA was used for thematic coding. Results: Forty-seven articles were included in this review. Specifics of the inpatient sector included different hospitalisation, admission and referral rates within and across hospitals; the threat of racial discrimination from other healthcare users; and the spatial segregation of healthcare users according to ethnic, religious or racialised criteria. While most articles described some interactions between race and other social categories in the sample composition, the framework of intersectionality was rarely considered explicitly during analysis. Discussion: While the USA continue to predominate in discussions, other high-income countries including Canada, Australia and the UK also examine racism in their own healthcare systems. Absent from the literature are studies from a wider range of European countries as well as of racialised and disadvantaged groups other than refugees or recent immigrants. Research in this area would also benefit from an engagement with approaches to intersectionality in public health to produce a more nuanced understanding of the interactions of racism with other axes of discrimination. As inpatient care exhibits a range of specific structures, future research and policy-making ought to consider these specifics to develop targeted interventions, including training for non-clinical staff and robust, transparent and accessible complaint procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
27. Rural emergency departments: A systematic review to develop a resource typology relevant to developed countries.
- Author
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Kerr, Lachlan, Kealy, Benjamin, Lim, David, and Walters, Lucie
- Subjects
CLINICAL pathology ,RURAL hospitals ,WORK experience (Employment) ,CINAHL database ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,HEALTH services accessibility ,DEVELOPED countries ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,OPERATIVE surgery ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,WORKING hours ,MEDLINE ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,HEALTH care rationing ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Objective: Despite low patient numbers, rural emergency departments have a similar diversity of case presentations as urban tertiary hospitals, with the need to manage high‐acuity cases with limited resources. There are no consistent descriptions of the resources available to rural emergency departments internationally, limiting the capacity to compare clinical protocols and standards of care across similarly resourced units. This review aimed to describe the range of human, physical and specialist resources described in rural emergency departments in developed countries and propose a typology for use internationally. Design and setting: A systematic literature search was performed for journal articles between 2000 and 2019 describing the staffing, access to radiology and laboratory investigations, and hospital inpatient specialists. Results: Considerable diversity in defining rurality and in resource access was found within and between Australia, New Zealand, Canada and USA. Discussion: A typology was developed to account for (a) emergency department staff on‐floor, (b) emergency department staff on‐call, (c) physical resources and (d) access to a specialist surgical service. This provides a valuable tool for relevant stakeholders to effectively communicate rural emergency department resources within a country and internationally. Conclusion: The proposed five‐tiered typology draws together international literature regarding rural emergency department services. Although further research is required to test this tool, the formation of this common language allows a base for effective communication between governments, training providers and policy‐makers who are seeking to improve health systems and health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
28. The relevance of the public–private partnership paradigm to the prevention of diet-associated non-communicable diseases in wealthy countries.
- Author
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Stevenson, Michael A.
- Subjects
PREVENTION of chronic diseases ,CHRONIC disease risk factors ,NUTRITIONAL status ,POVERTY ,PRIVATE sector ,PUBLIC sector ,HEALTH equity ,INSTITUTIONAL cooperation ,FOOD security ,DEVELOPED countries ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The public–private partnership (PPP) paradigm emerged as a form of global health governance in the mid-1990s to overcome state and market failures constraining access to essential medicines among populations with limited purchasing power in low- and middle-income countries. PPPs are now ubiquitous across the development spectrum. Yet while the narrative that the private sector must be engaged if complex health challenges are to be overcome is now dominant in development discourse, it does not yet appear to be shaping government approaches to addressing health inequalities within high-income welfare states such as Canada. This is significant as both the actions and inactions of firms factor heavily into why low-income Canadians face a disproportionate risk of developing diet-associated chronic diseases, such as type II diabetes. In the same ways PPPs have been an effective policy tool for strengthening public health in poor countries, this paper illuminates how the PPP model may have utility for mitigating poverty-associated food insecurity giving rise to diet-associated non-communicable diseases within the context of wealthy states. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
29. Canada and access to medicines in developing countries: intellectual property rights first.
- Author
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Lexchin J
- Subjects
- Canada, Global Health, Humans, Commerce legislation & jurisprudence, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Drug Industry legislation & jurisprudence, Health Services Accessibility, Human Rights, Intellectual Property
- Abstract
Canadian reports have recommended that health as a human right must be Canada's overarching global commitment and that the primacy of human rights should be prioritized over other elements of international law including international trade and investment law as it applies to access to pharmaceuticals. This paper uses a series of case reports to examine Canada's commitment to this goal. Specifically it examines cases where improved access has been in conflict with increased intellectual property rights. The 6 cases are: Canada's position when 39 pharmaceutical companies took South Africa to court in 1998 over its legislation to allow parallel importation of patented medicines and to regulate the price of medications; the stance that Canada took in the negotiations around the Doha Declaration in 2001; the passage of Canada's Access to Medicines Regime in 2004 and subsequent attempts to amend the legislation in 2011 and 2012; Canada's involvement in the final declaration at the United Nations High-Level meeting on non-communicable diseases in 2012; Canada's views about the terms in the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement as expressed in 2009; and Canada's 2013 position on the extension of the exemption for least developed countries from having to comply with the terms of the Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights Agreement. In the first case Canada was neutral but in the remaining 5 cases Canada prioritized intellectual property rights over access. This position is consistent with how Canada has acted around domestic issues involving intellectual property rights for pharmaceutical products. Canada has supported strengthened rights despite the fact that their touted benefits have not been realized either domestically or in developing countries. As a result Canada has failed in its humanitarian duty to protect the human right to health in the form of safe and low cost medicines for the people in developing countries.
- Published
- 2013
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30. Methods to stimulate national and sub-national benchmarking through international health system performance comparisons: a Canadian approach.
- Author
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Veillard J, Moses McKeag A, Tipper B, Krylova O, and Reason B
- Subjects
- Canada, Delivery of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Models, Statistical, Quality Indicators, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Benchmarking, Delivery of Health Care standards, Developed Countries, Research Design
- Abstract
Objective: This paper presents, discusses and evaluates methods used by the Canadian Institute for Health Information to present health system performance international comparisons in ways that facilitate their understanding by the public and health system policy-makers and can stimulate performance benchmarking., Methods: We used statistical techniques to normalize the results and present them on a standardized scale facilitating understanding of results. We compared results to the OECD average, and to benchmarks. We also applied various data quality rules to ensure the validity of results. In order to evaluate the impact of the public release of these results, we used quantitative and qualitative methods and documented other types of impact., Results: We were able to present results for performance indicators and dimensions at national and sub-national levels; develop performance profiles for each Canadian province; and show pan-Canadian performance patterns for specific performance indicators. The results attracted significant media attention at national level and reactions from various stakeholders. Other impacts such as requests for additional analysis and improvement in data timeliness were observed., Conclusions: The methods used seemed attractive to various audiences in the Canadian context and achieved the objectives originally defined. These methods could be refined and applied in different contexts., (Copyright © 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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31. Government IT Performance and the Power of the IT Industry: A Cross-National Analysis.
- Author
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Dunleavy, Patrick, Margetts, Helen, Bastow, Simon, and Tinkler, Jane
- Subjects
- *
FEDERAL government , *INFORMATION technology ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
How national governments interface with the IT industry can have an important influence upon the delivery of government IT projects, which in most advanced industrial countries will account for at least 1 per cent of GDP. Looking across seven countries (the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Netherlands and Japan) we characterize the power of the IT industry in terms of three variables: patterns of contractual relations, the largest firms? market and technical dominance, and the extent to which government retains IT expertise or ?intelligent customer? capabilities. We assess the performance of government IT in terms of three factors: the extent of catastrophic project failures or cancellations, indications of the price competitiveness of government IT contracts, and the relative modernization of government IT compared with the private sector nationally. Using a ?fuzzy-set social science? approach we argue that an overall index of corporate power viz a viz central governments shows a clear negative association with government IT performance. Where governments are weakly placed in relation to powerful IT corporations, long-run performance outcomes are less satisfactory. Our cases also illuminate the different ways in which governments can ensure and maintain more balanced relationships with the IT industry, which in turn will foster better long-run results in the design and operations of government IT systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Supply chain strategy, flexibility, and performanceA comparative study of SMEs in Pakistan and Canada.
- Author
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Tipu, Syed Awais Ahmad and Fantazy, Kamel A.
- Subjects
SUPPLY chains ,BUSINESS planning ,SMALL business ,SURVEYS ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to compare the supply chain strategy, flexibility, and performance relationships in the context of SMEs in Canada and Pakistan. Design/methodology/approach – The research is based on a quantitative approach using a questionnaire survey from a total of 170 small and medium-sized Pakistani manufacturing companies. The current study draws upon the earlier work of Fantazy et al. (2009) for comparative purpose and employs path analysis technique. Findings – The results partially confirm the findings of previous study on Canadian SMEs with regard to the relationships among strategy, flexibility, and performance in the context of supply chain. The survey results revealed that SMEs in Pakistan adopt followers strategy in order to achieve financial and non-financial performance. Whereas in the previous study, Canadian SMEs adopted innovative strategy and customer-oriented strategy in order to enhance their performance. Originality/value – The literature did not reveal any study which attempted to compare supply chain strategy, flexibility, and performance of SMEs in developed and developing countries. The current study fills this important gap in the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
33. A bibliometric analysis by geographic area of published research in several biomedical fields, 1995-2003.
- Author
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Falagas ME, Michalopoulos AS, Bliziotis IA, and Soteriades ES
- Subjects
- Canada, Europe, Geography, Humans, Publishing standards, Retrospective Studies, United States, Bibliometrics, Biomedical Research trends, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Publishing statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
We summarized the findings of several studies of ours to compare the quantity and quality of published research from around the world for the years 1995 to 2003. We evaluated the number of articles published and their mean journal impact factor. We also studied the research productivity of various areas adjusted for gross domestic product (GDP) and population. We found that Western Europe leads the world in published research on infectious diseases-microbiology (82,342 articles [38.8%]) and in cardiopulmonary medicine (67,783 articles [39.5%]), whereas the United States ranks first in the fields of preventive medicine, public health and epidemiology both in quantity (23,918 articles [49.1%]) and quality of published papers. However, after adjustments for GDP, Canada ranked first, with the United States and Oceania following closely behind. All of the developing regions had only small research contributions in all of the biomedical fields examined.
- Published
- 2006
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- View/download PDF
34. An international comparison of women's occupational health issues in the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, Canada, Hong Kong and Singapore: the CIDA-SEAGEP study.
- Author
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Choi BC
- Subjects
- Adult, Asia epidemiology, Canada epidemiology, Female, Humans, Life Style, Obesity epidemiology, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Smoking epidemiology, Workload, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Occupational Diseases epidemiology, Occupational Health, Women's Health
- Abstract
Background: An international comparison study of women's occupational health issues was carried out in 2000 for the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, Canada, Hong Kong and Singapore. The study was funded by the Canadian International Development Agency's Southeast Asia Gender Equity Program., Aim: The objective was to compare the issues, risk factors, social determinants, and challenges in women's occupational health, according to the status of economic development as defined by the World Bank., Method: Data were collected through 27 key informant interviews of high-ranking government officials and senior researchers, self-administered questionnaires on country or regional statistics and 16 courtesy calls., Results: Results indicated that women's occupational health problems common in these countries or regions included women's long hours of work (double workday), shift work and a caring role for family and friends. Problems reported in developing countries but not developed countries included poor access to training and protective equipment, and insufficient legislation to protect women's rights. Problems reported in developed countries but not in developing countries included obesity, smoking and not including women in health research., Conclusion: This paper provides insights into the changing environment in the workplace, such as increasing participation of women in the paid workforce and changes in gender differences due to the changing country economy, for improving women's occupational health.
- Published
- 2005
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35. Under-representation of developing countries in the research literature: ethical issues arising from a survey of five leading medical journals.
- Author
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Sumathipala A, Siribaddana S, and Patel V
- Subjects
- Africa, Asia, Australia, Authorship, Canada, Europe, Journalism, Medical, New Zealand, Publication Bias statistics & numerical data, United States, Biomedical Research statistics & numerical data, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Periodicals as Topic statistics & numerical data, Publishing
- Abstract
Background: It is widely acknowledged that there is a global divide on health care and health research known as the 10/90 divide., Methods: A retrospective survey of articles published in the BMJ, Lancet, NEJM, Annals of Internal Medicine & JAMA in a calendar year to examine the contribution of the developing world to medical literature. We categorized countries into four regions: UK, USA, Other Euro-American countries (OEAC) and (RoW). OEAC were European countries other than the UK but including Australia, New Zealand and Canada. RoW comprised all other countries., Results: The average contribution of the RoW to the research literature in the five journals was 6.5%. In the two British journals 7.6% of the articles were from the RoW; in the three American journals 4.8% of articles were from RoW. The highest proportion of papers from the RoW was in the Lancet (12%). An analysis of the authorship of 151 articles from RoW showed that 104 (68.9%) involved authorship with developed countries in Europe or North America. There were 15 original papers in these journals with data from RoW but without any authors from RoW., Conclusions: There is a marked under-representation of countries in high-impact general medical journals. The ethical implications of this inequity and ways of reducing it are discussed.
- Published
- 2004
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36. Dual-Class Equity Structure, Nonaudit Fees and the Information Content of Earnings.
- Author
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Niu, Flora
- Subjects
AUDITING ,DUAL class stocks ,WAGES ,BUSINESS enterprises ,PROFESSIONAL fees ,CASH flow ,AUDIT committees ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Manuscript Type: Empirical Research Question/Issue: This paper examines the relationship between dual-class share structure and the purchase of nonaudit services, and the extent to which the market's valuation of accounting information is influenced by the perception of auditing compromise resulting from such purchases. Research Findings/Results: Using a sample of Canadian companies from 2003–2004, we find that dual-class firms pay a larger amount of nonaudit fees to the auditors, relative to single-class firms, both in the absolute dollar amount and as a ratio of total audit fees. In addition, the returns-earnings association is significantly lower for dual-class firms than for their counterparts, and there is a further valuation discount as dual-class firms increase nonaudit service purchases. Theoretical Implications: We argue that severe agency problems inherent from the deviation from the one-vote-per-share structure lead to greater demand for economic bonding with the auditors via the purchase of nonaudit services. This study contributes to the growing body of nonaudit service literature by documenting the empirical link between ownership of control and nonaudit purchases. Practical Implications: The results indicate that investors believe a larger amount of nonaudit services highlights the underlying agency problems and compromises auditor independence for firms with a separation of cash flow rights and voting rights. The findings suggest that regulators in Canada and in other developed countries, when revising their future regulations on audit committees, may need to emphasize the role of restricted-class shareholders in bolstering the audit committee function and the auditing process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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37. THE WESTERN FERTILITY DECLINE: REFLECTIONS FROM A CHRONOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE.
- Author
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Caldwell, John C.
- Subjects
HUMAN fertility ,INTERVENTION (Federal government) ,TRENDS - Abstract
The study of recent fertility trends in the West has been dominated by examinations of Europe. A better perspective on twentieth-century fertility movements can be gained by giving an equal emphasis to trends in the 'Offshoots' (USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand). This paper focuses on the periods of rapid fertility decline and to a greater extent on the intervening periods of near-equilibrium. It is suggested that the 'late twentieth century compromise' is more stable than is suggested by reports on its internal strains, and that only massive government intervention could raise fertility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. CAHIERS QUÉBÉCOIS DEDÉMOGRAPHIE: Volume 17 Ré and Abstracts.
- Subjects
POPULATION ,DEVELOPED countries ,HUMAN fertility ,ENDOGAMY & exogamy - Abstract
This article presents abstracts taken from several papers related to Canadian population studies. One paper discusses the present demographic situation of Quebec and the industrialized countries, by focusing on a few major themes. Another paper analyzes natality, linguistic mobility, endogamy and inter- provincial migration. In this paper, the author takes into account the impact of the main demographic trends in the world on the future of the French language in North America. He concludes that, in order to ensure this future, one should look to the Swiss example, that is, one should promote the interests of the minorities. Yet another paper states that socio-political climate and the dissemination of demographic results interact very closely over language matters in Quebec. In association with this paper, an examination of the decline of the French-speaking population in North America casts some doubt on the thesis of the linguistic polarization of Canada. An overview of the factors which determine the future size and linguistic composition of Quebec's population shows that French Quebec has arrived at an extremely critical turning point.
- Published
- 1989
39. The deployment of Canadian experts and teachers in international development.
- Author
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Kiggundu, Moses and Hobbs, Clement F.
- Subjects
TEACHERS ,SERVICES for poor people ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POOR women ,CANADIAN foreign relations ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Public Administration is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. "She was just lying in bed for three days" The experiences of caregivers of patients who are stuck in hospital.
- Author
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Kuluski, Kerry, Everall, Amanda, Wodchis, Walter, deGraaf-Dunlop, Joanna, Bar-Ziv, Stacey, Embuldeniya, Gayathri, and Guilcher, Sara
- Subjects
CAREGIVERS ,HOSPITAL beds ,DEVELOPED countries ,BURDEN of care ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge - Abstract
Introduction: Health systems in developed nations are striving to improve care experiences and quality. A common care quality issue is delayed hospital discharge, known in Canada as Alternate Level of Care (ALC). An ALC designation is given when a patient's treatment is complete but his/her next point of care (e.g. long-term care, assisted living, care at home) is unavailable. While ALC patients occupy hospital beds, care and activation usually decreases or even ceases, exacerbating their already heightened risk of functional decline, falls, and hospital-related adverse events. ALC is also a systems issue: hospital beds are unavailable to incoming patients, causing emergency service backlogs, cancelled surgeries and delays. ALC also impacts patients and their family caregivers who fill these care gaps; however, little is known about personal care experiences, particularly among family caregivers. Methods: Interviews were conducted with 30 caregivers across three health regions in Ontario, Canada with varying geographies, community resources and population characteristics. Interviews focused on caregivers' experiences of caring for loved ones who were designated ALC. Qualitative descriptive analysis was used to identify core themes. Results: Core themes included: patient over person (patients no longer had medical needs but still required personal care); uncertain, confusing processes (steps in care were unclear); inconsistent quality of care delivery (between providers); caregivers addressing gaps in the system (caregivers provided support to patients while in hospital); and personalization of long-term care (caregivers wanted patients to be in a place that felt homelike, stimulating and in close proximity to them). Discussion: Caregivers' roles continue while patients are hospitalized. ALC patients' physical and social needs are often neglected by the hospital, putting patients and caregivers at risk of additional decline. Caregivers strive to fill care gaps but factors related to geographic location, understanding of the health system and comfort in advocating shape their ability to do so. Conclusion (w/key findings): Caregivers play a critical, and often overlooked, role in meeting the care needs of patients during care transitions. An ALC designation creates additional uncertainty during an already vulnerable time. Ironically, patient and caregiver needs are ongoing but care within the hospital is considered 'complete'. The caregiver experience provides insight on health care system gaps, the importance of caregiver involvement within care teams and a need for tailored caregiver engagement strategies. Lessons learned: ALC is an issue that requires a collective response from health and social care systems (including acute and intermediate care hospitals, long-term care, homecare and primary care) with better engagement of caregivers, who oversee patient care within and beyond the hospital walls. Limitations: This paper shares caregiver perspectives only. An analysis of the experiences of other stakeholders, including patients, providers, managers and decision-makers is required in order to act on the identified needs of caregivers. Suggestions for future research: Future research by this team will engage patients and caregivers to co-design strategies to address delayed hospital discharge. The team will explore the experiences of providers and decision-makers and collect input on the implementation barriers and facilitators of such co-designed strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
41. Confronting the figure of the "mad scientist" in psychedelic history: LSD's use as a correctional tool in the postwar period.
- Author
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Jones, Andrew
- Subjects
LSD (Drug) ,HALLUCINOGENIC drugs ,DEVELOPED countries ,CANADIAN history ,MODERN society ,IMAGINATION - Abstract
Since reports about CIA-funded LSD studies came out in the 1970s, psychedelic drugs have invoked images of unethical experimentation and "mad scientists" in the public imagination. Even now, as the stigma surrounding psychedelics diminishes in the 21st century, the figure of the "mad scientist" continues to occupy a space in what Ido Hartogsohn calls the "collective set and setting," the larger framework of cultural understandings that shape how individuals experience psychedelic drugs. Scientists and humanities scholars who study these drugs have responded to this issue by drawing boundaries between those who used psychedelics carefully and those who used them ignorantly. Yet these boundaries were not always so clear in the past. Drawing on historical examples of LSD's use as a correctional tool in Canada, I show how enthusiasm about the drug's potential led several experienced and knowledgeable psychedelic therapists to use it on vulnerable populations in diverse institutional settings, such as correctional facilities. These examples reveal how the institutional context of modern industrial societies shaped the application of psychedelic therapy in the past and suggest that today's therapists need to carefully consider how this broader context impacts their work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. An action-oriented public health framework to reduce financial strain and promote financial wellbeing in high-income countries.
- Author
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Nykiforuk, Candace I. J., Belon, Ana Paula, de Leeuw, Evelyne, Harris, Patrick, Allen-Scott, Lisa, Atkey, Kayla, Glenn, Nicole M., Hyshka, Elaine, Jaques, Karla, Kongats, Krystyna, Montesanti, Stephanie, Nieuwendyk, Laura M., Pabayo, Roman, Springett, Jane, and Yashadhana, Aryati
- Subjects
WELL-being ,CULTURE ,DEVELOPED countries ,NONPROFIT organizations ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,PUBLIC health ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,HUMAN services programs ,OFFICE politics ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,FINANCIAL stress ,INTELLECT ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,QUALITY of life ,FINANCIAL management ,HEALTH equity ,ADULT education workshops ,CORPORATE culture - Abstract
Background: Perceived financial security impacts physical, mental, and social health and overall wellbeing at community and population levels. Public health action on this dynamic is even more critical now that the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated financial strain and reduced financial wellbeing. Yet, public health literature on this topic is limited. Initiatives targeting financial strain and financial wellbeing and their deterministic effects on equity in health and living conditions are missing. Our research-practice collaborative project addresses this gap in knowledge and intervention through an action-oriented public health framework for initiatives targeting financial strain and wellbeing. Methods: The Framework was developed using a multi-step methodology that involved review of theoretical and empirical evidence alongside input from a panel of experts from Australia and Canada. In an integrated knowledge translation approach, academics (n = 14) and a diverse group of experts from government and non-profit sectors (n = 22) were engaged throughout the project via workshops, one-on-one dialogues, and questionnaires. Results: The validated Framework provides organizations and governments with guidance for the design, implementation, and assessment of diverse financial wellbeing- and financial strain-related initiatives. It presents 17 priority actionable areas (i.e., entry points for action) likely to have long-lasting, positive effects on people's financial circumstances, contributing to improved financial wellbeing and health. The 17 entry points relate to five domains: Government (All Levels), Organizational & Political Culture, Socioeconomic & Political Context, Social & Cultural Circumstances, and Life Circumstances. Conclusions: The Framework reveals the intersectionality of root causes and consequences of financial strain and poor financial wellbeing, while also reinforcing the need for tailored actions to promote socioeconomic and health equity for all people. The dynamic, systemic interplay of the entry points illustrated in the Framework suggest opportunities for multi-sectoral, collaborative action across government and organizations towards systems change and the prevention of unintended negative impacts of initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. USING THE DELPHI METHOD TO VALIDATE INDICATORS OF RESPECTFUL MATERNITY CARE FOR HIGH RESOURCE COUNTRIES.
- Author
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Clark, Esther, Vedam, Saraswathi, Mclean, Alison, Stoll, Kathrin, Lo, Winnie, and Hall, Wendy A.
- Subjects
MATERNAL health services ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,PRIVACY ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,DEVELOPED countries ,SURVEYS ,CLINICAL medicine ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,MEDICAL ethics ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DELPHI method - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Consistent measurement of respectful maternity care (RMC) is lacking. This Delphi study assessed consensus about indicators of RMC. Methods: A multidisciplinary panel assessed items (n = 201) drawn from global literature. Over two rounds, the panel rated importance, relevance, and clarity, and ranked priority within 17 domains including communication, autonomy, support, stigma, discrimination, and mistreatment. Qualitative feedback supported the analysis. Results: In Round One, 191 indicators exceeded a content validation index of 0.80. In Round Two, Kendall's W ranged from 0.081 (p =.209) to 0.425 (p <.001) across domains. Fourteen indicators received strong support. Changes in indicator assessment between rounds prevented agreement stability assessment. Conclusion: The indicators comprise a registry of items for use in perinatal care research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Career development of international medical graduates in Canada: status of the unmatched.
- Author
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Wang, Yiming, Das, Rajkumar Luke Vijendra, Lapa, Tatiana, Marosan, Peter, Pawliuk, Rosemary, Chable, Heidi D., Lake, Deidre, and Lofters, Aisha
- Subjects
CAREER development ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,OUTREACH programs ,CANADIAN provinces ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,EDUCATIONAL films - Abstract
With limited residency positions, the majority of international medical graduates living in Canada and other developed countries cannot work as physicians. The educational experience and career development of unmatched international medical graduates (those who are not matched to a residency position) residing in Canada have never been studied. Through an innovative collaboration of provincial international medical graduate organizations, we launched an online survey targeting the career development of unmatched international medical graduates, with 356 survey responses entering data analysis. Respondents reported that at the early career planning stage, close to a third had not had adequate knowledge of their career prospects in Canada. Although official resources are available, most respondents found that the information did not match well with reality. After arriving in Canada, educational resources for unmatched international medical graduates are scarce. The majority of them work in healthcare-related fields but reported significant difficulties finding these positions, and there were limited career training opportunities. Among respondents who were no longer pursuing residency positions and had moved on to alternate career paths, we found, unexpectedly, that 69% of them reported previous residency application experience did not contribute to their current occupation, and most were not satisfied with their current career status and continuing education opportunities. In conclusion, the unmatched international medical graduates could serve as a vital reservoir of skilled medical professionals to serve the community, especially during public health crises. Continuing education and career support of unmatched international medical graduates are crucial for their career development and should be an area of priority for policymakers. Career support, especially for alternative career paths, can be built on the current services that exist in most provinces in Canada. In addition, novel online and social media tools can be utilized to increase the outreach of these programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. ESTIMATING THE SIZE OF THE SHADOW ECONOMIES OF HIGHLYDEVELOPED COUNTRIES: SELECTED NEW RESULTS.
- Author
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SCHNEIDER, FRIEDRICH
- Subjects
INFORMAL sector ,INCENTIVE grants ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
The article focuses on size and development of the global shadow economy and several methods for estimating the size of the shadow economy of highly developed countries. Topics discussed include methods such as microeconomic approaches, indicator approaches and transactions approaches, size and development of shadow economy of countries such as the U.S., Switzerland and Canada over the period of 2003–2016, and incentive-oriented measures to reduce the size of a shadow economy.
- Published
- 2016
46. Which Nationals Use Sci-Hub Mostly?
- Author
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Wan, Shu
- Subjects
MEDICAL databases ,INTERNET protocols ,DATA security failures ,DEVELOPED countries ,ACADEMIC libraries ,INTERNET searching ,SERIAL publications ,COPYRIGHT ,FULL-text databases ,ACCESS to information ,SEARCH engines ,OPEN access publishing ,WORLD Wide Web - Abstract
In the last decade, Sci-Hub has become prevalent among academic information users across the world. Providing thousands of users with millions of uncopyrighted electronic academic resources, this information pirate website has become a significant threat to copyrights in cyberspace. Information scholars have examined the unequal distribution of IP addresses of Sci-Hub users' nationality and emphasized the high proportion taken by users from the developed countries. This study finds new evidence from Google Scholar. Searching "Sci-Hub.tw" in the academic search engine, the author finds 531 results containing the keyword. Considering the result, the author argues that academic users in South American countries may use Sci-Hub more frequently than their counterparts in the rest of the world. Moreover, users in the Global North also rely on Sci-Hub to complete their research as well. The new evidence on Google Scholar proves the universal use of Sci-Hub across the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Are government energy technology research, development, and demonstration budgets converging or diverging? Insights from OECD countries.
- Author
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Kassouri, Yacouba, Bilgili, Faik, and Peter Majok Garang, Aweng
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGY convergence ,DIGITAL divide ,CLIMATE change ,DEVELOPED countries ,CLEAN energy ,POWER resources ,RENEWABLE energy sources - Abstract
Accelerating the pace of energy technological innovation is essential to curb global climate change and build a clean energy system. Based on this idea, from the perspective of renewable energy technology gaps across countries, this study presents a thorough empirical analysis of the convergence of energy technology research, development, and demonstration (RD&D) budgets across OECD countries over 1985–2017. In doing so, we apply two-regimes threshold autoregressive approach to account for heterogeneity, nonlinearity, and transition path in energy technology RD&D convergence. One observation is that only a small number of advanced countries namely Canada, Japan, and the U.S. follow a nonlinear process and exhibit partial convergence in energy technology RD&D budgets with Japan as a transition country. Interestingly, our results also provide clear support for the global convergence of energy technology RD&D budgets once accounting for the two regimes jointly. These trends in national energy innovation policies could arguably help Canada, Japan, and the U.S. to drive up their energy RD&D trajectory into the future, suggesting that these countries would be able to achieve a more sustainable energy innovation supply system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Cleaning up procedural backlogs for the elderly in a post-COVID era: a comparative review.
- Author
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Khalid, Muhammad Uzair, Grewal, Sahibjot Singh, Alis Qinyuan Xu, and Laplante, Simon
- Subjects
SURGERY -- Evaluation ,ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,TOTAL hip replacement ,TOTAL knee replacement ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EARLY detection of cancer ,CATARACT surgery ,COLORECTAL cancer ,MEDICAL appointments ,TIME management ,MEDLINE ,THEMATIC analysis ,ELDER care ,COVID-19 pandemic ,OLD age ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has produced massive procedural backlogs in many parts of the developed world, with a disproportionate impact on the elderly. Whereas it is well-known that such a backlog would cause undue morbidity and mortality in thousands of patients, it is still unclear how jurisdictions plan on catching up on their missed surgeries and screening tests. In this comparative review therefore, we examine existing literature to quantify the backlog and thereafter summarize the solutions that have been proposed to clear it. Searches were performed on Google, Google Scholar, PubMed, Ovid MEDLINE®, and Ovid Embase® to identify literature from Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. We report our findings with a focus on three representative types of procedures including cataract surgery, colorectal screening, and hip and knee replacement surgery. Common themes of potential solutions included leveraging more advanced technology, ensuring preventative care, training an appropriate allied health workforce, and innovating in the operating room to improve efficiency and surgical capacity. Although no single solution emerges to be universally applicable, a combination of proposed solutions can be considered after an individualized assessment of the hospital or clinic context, the type of surgery required, and the availability of equipment, facility, and staff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
49. Productividad local y reconversión de infraestructura hacia un territorio industrial sostenible: Canadá-Colombia.
- Author
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López-Valencia, Adriana P. and López-Bernal, Oswaldo
- Subjects
- *
REMODELING of industrial districts for other use , *SUSTAINABLE development , *INFORMATION society ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This paper provides an analysis of two cases of new infrastructure consolidation in industrial areas. The first involves the restructuring of industrial infrastructure in intraurban areas of Montreal in Quebec, Canada, carried out as a part of the technological upgrading process characteristic of transitions from industrial to knowledge-based societies. Local planning processes were identified that took into account the contribution of all social actors to a sustainable production model. The second case focuses on the consolidation of industrial infrastructure in Yumbo, Valle Department, Colombia, and suggests local strategies to ensure future territorial sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. [And then, the dinosaurs disappeared].
- Author
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Dumas J
- Subjects
- Americas, Canada, Demography, Developing Countries, North America, Population, Research, Statistics as Topic, Developed Countries, Fertility, Forecasting, Population Dynamics, Social Change
- Abstract
"This paper starts by putting the present fertility decline experienced by many industrialized countries, in a global prospect of social evolution, and shows to what extent this decline is a new phenomenon. Using a so-called 'infernal' scenario, wherein Canadian fertility continues to fall, the author then emphasizes that society would have at its disposal a remarkably long delay for bending the path leading to extinction, although some forces may also lead to an acceleration of the demographic decline." (SUMMARY IN ENG AND SPA), (excerpt)
- Published
- 1986
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