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2. Position paper of the GMA Committee Interprofessional Education in the Health Professions – current status and outlook.
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Kaap-Fröhlich, Sylvia, Ulrich, Gert, Wershofen, Birgit, Ahles, Jonathan, Behrend, Ronja, Handgraaf, Marietta, Herinek, Doreen, Mitzkat, Anika, Oberhauser, Heidi, Scherer, Theresa, Schlicker, Andrea, Straub, Christine, Waury Eichler, Regina, Wesselborg, Bärbel, Witti, Matthias, Huber, Marion, and Bode, Sebastin F. N.
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INTERPROFESSIONAL education , *MEDICAL personnel , *TEACHER development , *INTERPROFESSIONAL collaboration , *DEVELOPMENTAL programs - Abstract
In the wake of local initiatives and developmental funding programs, interprofessionality is now included in national curricula in the German-speaking countries. Based on the 3P model (presage, process, product), this position paper presents the development of interprofessional education in recent years in Germany, Austria and Switzerland and places it in an international context. Core aspects as legal frameworks, including amendments to occupational regulations as well as the formation of networks and faculty development are basic requirements for interprofessional education. New topics and educational settings take shape in the process of interprofessional education: patient perspectives and teaching formats, such as online courses, become more important or are newly established. The influence of the COVID-19 pandemic on interprofessional education is explored as well. Among many new interprofessional courses, particularly the implementation of interprofessional training wards in Germany and Switzerland are positive examples of successful interprofessional education. The objective of interprofessional education continues to be the acquisition of interprofessional competencies. The main focus is now centered on evaluating this educational format and testing for the corresponding competencies. In the future, more capacities will be required for interprofessional continuing education and post-graduate education. Structured research programs are essential to ascertain the effects of interprofessional education in the German-speaking countries. In this position paper the GMA committee on interprofessional education encourages further advancement of this topic and expresses the aim to continue cooperating with other networks to strengthen and intensify interprofessional education and collaboration in healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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3. Evaluating the efficiency of the 2020 ban of BPA and BPS in thermal papers in Switzerland.
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Demierre, Anne-Laure, Reinhard, Hans, Zeltner, Silvia, and Frey, Sabine
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BISPHENOL A , *BISPHENOLS , *PHASE transitions - Abstract
Thermal printing technology requires a color developer to activate the dye under the action of heat. Bisphenol A (BPA) has traditionally been used for this purpose, although it has increasingly been replaced by bisphenol S (BPS) in recent years. Due to concerns regarding their toxicity, the Swiss authorities have banned both BPA and BPS from thermal papers since 2020. The impact of this regulatory decision was evaluated during 3 monitoring campaigns: in 2013–2014, 2019 and 2021. They were used to describe the starting point, the transition phase, and the status after entry into force of the ban, respectively. Whereas the use of BPA as color developer dropped from 82.2% in 2013/14 to 10.8% in 2021, the fraction of BPS-based thermal paper rose from 3.1% to 19.1% during the same period, despite being banned. However, Pergafast® 201 (PF201) is now the main color developer in thermal paper in Switzerland, with an occurrence of 60.3%. Other alternatives such as D-8, TGSA, PPSMU, NKK-1304, BPS-MAE, D-90 and Blue4est® have only been marginally detected. This study demonstrates the efficiency of the regulatory measure and the feasibility to substitute BPA in thermal papers with less-toxic alternatives. [Display omitted] • Swiss authorities banned BPA and BPS from thermal papers in 2020. • Whereas BPA use dropped drastically, BPS increased slightly despite its ban. • PF201 is clearly the most frequent color developer currently in Switzerland. • D-8, TGSA, PPSMU, NKK-1304, BPS-MAE, D-90 and Blue4est® were marginally detected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. TOURISM, CULTURAL HERITAGE AND URBAN REGENERATION: Changing Spaces in Historical Places: Edited by Nicholas Wise and Takamitsu Jimura. 213 pp.; ills., bibliog. Switzerland: Springer, 2020. $199.00 (cloth), isbn9783030419042; $23.74 (ebook), asinB086R7RLF9; $92.28 (paper), isbn9783030419073
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Bryson, Jeremy
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CULTURAL property , *ELECTRONIC books , *PUBLIC spaces , *TOURISM , *HERITAGE tourism , *URBAN tourism , *TOURISM websites , *FOOD tourism - Published
- 2023
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5. Dihydropyrimidine Dehydrogenase Testing prior to Treatment with 5-Fluorouracil, Capecitabine, and Tegafur: A Consensus Paper.
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Wörmann, Bernhard, Bokemeyer, Carsten, Burmeister, Thomas, Köhne, Claus-Henning, Schwab, Matthias, Arnold, Dirk, Blohmer, Jens-Uwe, Borner, Markus, Brucker, Sara, Cascorbi, Ingolf, Decker, Thomas, de Wit, Maike, Dietz, Andreas, Einsele, Hermann, Eisterer, Wolfgang, Folprecht, Gunnar, Hilbe, Wolfgang, Hoffmann, Jürgen, Knauf, Wolfgang, and Kunzmann, Volker
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DIHYDROPYRIMIDINE dehydrogenase , *DRUG monitoring , *MEDICAL societies , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *FLUOROURACIL - Abstract
Background: 5-Fluorouracil (FU) is one of the most commonly used cytostatic drugs in the systemic treatment of cancer. Treatment with FU may cause severe or life-threatening side effects and the treatment-related mortality rate is 0.2–1.0%. Summary: Among other risk factors associated with increased toxicity, a genetic deficiency in dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD), an enzyme responsible for the metabolism of FU, is well known. This is due to variants in the DPD gene (DPYD). Up to 9% of European patients carry a DPD gene variant that decreases enzyme activity, and DPD is completely lacking in approximately 0.5% of patients. Here we describe the clinical and genetic background and summarize recommendations for the genetic testing and tailoring of treatment with 5-FU derivatives. The statement was developed as a consensus statement organized by the German Society for Hematology and Medical Oncology in cooperation with 13 medical associations from Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. Key Messages: (i) Patients should be tested for the 4 most common genetic DPYD variants before treatment with drugs containing FU. (ii) Testing forms the basis for a differentiated, risk-adapted algorithm with recommendations for treatment with FU-containing drugs. (iii) Testing may optionally be supplemented by therapeutic drug monitoring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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6. CEO compensation and market risk: moderating effect of board size and CEO duality in the Swiss context.
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Eklund, Mehtap A.
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EXECUTIVE compensation , *WAGE payment systems , *HUMAN resources departments , *AGENCY theory , *CHIEF executive officers , *FOREIGN exchange market - Abstract
This paper aims to find an answer to the questions of "whether chief executive officers (CEOs) are compensated for market risk", and "how the combined interaction of board size and CEO duality moderates this relationship" from the tenets of agency theory and managerial power theory. Even though the contracting view of agency theory posits that agents are neither to be punished nor rewarded for events that go beyond their direct control (market risk), the research findings in the corporate governance domain are contradictory. It was found that Chinese and American executives were paid for market risk, including oil prices and exchange rates, which was explained by retention risk and weaker corporate governance systems. To shed light on previous inconclusive research, this paper investigates the topic further in a new country setting, that of Switzerland, because the previous results were mostly related to Anglo-Saxon countries. Switzerland is also one of the exemplary countries for executive compensation. Furthermore, it investigates the combined (cascaded) interaction effects of the board size and CEO duality on CEO compensation and market risk from the perspective of managerial power theory, which has not been previously analyzed in the literature to date. For the direct effect, in contrast to previous findings in Anglo-Saxon countries, it has been found that CEOs were not paid for market risk in Switzerland, which confirms agency theory's contracting prediction. This finding outlines the future comparative research area in this domain. For the combined interaction effect, it has been found that board size incorporated with CEO duality is the significant cascaded moderator, and large boards with CEO duality are significantly more effective in controlling asymmetric compensation, which confirms the efficacy of large boards with CEO duality in coping with asymmetric compensation and managerial entrenchment (managerial power theory). These results have both practical and academic implications for boards of directors, Human Resources and corporate governance literature, agency theory, and managerial power theory, by providing further evidence on previous inconclusive findings on board size, CEO duality, and the role of market risk in the CEO pay structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Digital Practices of Negotiation: Social Workers at the Intersection of Migration and Social Policies in Switzerland and Belgium.
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ANDREETTA, SOPHIE and BORRELLI, LISA MARIE
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DIGITAL technology , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *DOCUMENTATION , *SOCIAL security , *SOCIAL workers , *GOVERNMENT policy , *RESEARCH funding , *NEGOTIATION , *INTERVIEWING , *ETHNOLOGY research , *FIELDWORK (Educational method) , *SOCIAL services , *NOMADS , *DECISION making , *ELECTRONIC data interchange , *INSTITUTIONAL cooperation , *RESEARCH methodology , *COMMUNICATION , *PUBLIC welfare , *AUTOMATION , *REFUGEES - Abstract
Paperwork has always been a central part of bureaucratic work. Over the last few years, bureaucratic procedures have become increasingly standardised and digitalised. Based on interviews and ethnographic fieldwork within welfare offices in Switzerland and Belgium, we reflect on the way evidence is constructed within social policy and cases built for or against noncitizen welfare recipients in order to show how paper truths are established and challenged. The focus on digital practices within public policy implementation highlights how it contributes to enhanced control mechanisms on the implementation level and how migration law continues to guide welfare governance for noncitizens. This allows targeting of the most marginalised groups, whose rights to access state support are institutionally impeded. Through database information flows, official forms, paper reports and face-to-face meetings, we further show how a hybrid form of bureaucratic work emerges, where direct contact with the client is still key, yet highly influenced by standardisation processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. A relational analysis of migration in old age: How transnational ties affect migration decisions.
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Tomás, Livia and Molina, José Luis
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OLD age , *OLDER people , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL network analysis , *GREY relational analysis - Abstract
Recently, the role of personal ties in migration decisions has received considerable attention. However, this aspect has seldom been studied in the context of retirement. This paper addresses this gap by shedding light on the composition of personal networks, types of mobility patterns and retirement locations for four groups of older adults. To this end, two methodological approaches are employed: (1) a qualitative Social Network Analysis to examine the composition of older adults' personal networks and (2) thematic coding to analyse the relational aspects of migration decisions. This paper draws on 29 semi‐structured interviews conducted in Spain and Switzerland in 2020 and 2021. The findings demonstrate that pre‐retirement migration trajectories shape personal network composition. Moreover, personal ties play a critical role in older adults' mobility patterns and choices of retirement location. Overall, this study provides valuable insights into the impact of personal networks on migration decisions of older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Biography, belonging and legacies of the Yugoslav disintegration wars in the lives of postmigrant youth in Switzerland.
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Müller-Suleymanova, Dilyara
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YUGOSLAV Wars, 1991-2001 , *YOUTH , *DIASPORA - Abstract
The article examines the life-stories of three young people who were born in Switzerland, but whose parents fled Bosnia due to the Yugoslav disintegration wars. These biographic portraits present three different ways of relating to and identifying with the country of origin, and (dis)engaging with its violent past. The paper highlights the ways in which young people are exposed to histories of violence and how these become personally relevant to them. One way of relating to this violent past is through family histories and memories, but these often remain obscure and fragmented. At the same time, young people encounter the legacies of the conflict outside the family and the home: in different diasporic and non-diasporic social spaces. The paper identifies the crucial role of diasporic divisions resulting from the conflict, social encounters in different contexts, and exposure to alternative historic narratives, in the development of young people's sense of belonging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. EXACT CONTROLLABILITY FOR A REFINED STOCHASTIC WAVE EQUATION.
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ZHONGHUA LIAO and QI LÜ
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WAVE equation , *STOCHASTIC control theory , *CONTROLLABILITY in systems engineering , *CARLEMAN theorem - Abstract
In this paper, we obtain the exact controllability for a refined stochastic wave equation with three controls by establishing a novel Carleman estimate for a backward hyperbolic-like operator. Compared with the known result [Q. L\"u and X Zhang, Mathematical Control Theory for Stochastic Partial Differential Equations, Springer, Cham, Switzerland, 2021], the novelty of this paper is twofold: (1) Our model contains the effects in the drift terms when we put controls directly in the diffusion terms, which is more sensible for practical applications; (2) We provide an explicit description of the waiting time which is sharp in the case of dimension one and is independent of the coefficents of lower terms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. CHALLENGES WITH APPLICATION OF EUROPEAN CHARTER OF REGIONAL OR MINORITY LANGUAGES.
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MALIÇI XHELILI, Nazlije and MALJICHI, Driton
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LINGUISTIC minorities , *LINGUISTIC rights , *CHARTERS , *MULTILINGUALISM - Abstract
This paper investigates the complications experienced by Switzerland and Spain in administering the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages (ECRML). The Charter is a vital legislative instrument for defending the varied languages across Europe. The paper digs into the problems encountered, including concerns with ratification, sociolinguistic obstacles, resource limits, and linguistic variety. The research highlights the need to maintain language rights while encouraging multilingualism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
12. Calibration Method and Material Constants of an Anisotropic, Linearly Elastic and Perfectly Plastic Mohr–Coulomb Constitutive Model for Opalinus Clay.
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Nordas, Alexandros N., Brauchart, Alice, Anthi, Maria, and Anagnostou, Georgios
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RADIOACTIVE wastes , *TUNNELS , *CLAY , *UNDERGROUND construction , *RADIOACTIVE waste repositories , *CALIBRATION - Abstract
Nagra, the cooperative for developing and implementing a long-term radioactive waste depository in Switzerland, identified Opalinus Clay as the most suitable host rock for deep geological containment. This paper deals with those features of Opalinus Clay that are important for the design and construction of the underground structures. Consolidated drained (CD) and consolidated undrained (CU) triaxial compression tests on specimens from deep boreholes revealed that Opalinus Clay exhibits pronounced stiffness and strength anisotropy, dependency of stiffness on the initial confining pressure, slightly non-linear pre-failure stress–strain behaviour, and a drop in axial resistance after a certain amount of shearing. Within the scope of establishing a rigorous—yet practical—design approach for the repository tunnels and caverns, the simplest possible constitutive model capable of reproducing the main aspects of the Opalinus Clay behaviour is adopted. The non-associated linear elastic and perfectly plastic MC model is chosen as a starting point, on account of its wide use in tunnel engineering practice, its simplicity, and the clear physical meaning of its parameters. This paper presents a systematic and robust calibration method for an extended version of this model, which considers the pronounced strength and stiffness anisotropy of Opalinus Clay. The paper additionally provides the full suite of the equations that describe the model behaviour under triaxial CU or CD testing conditions and for any bedding orientation relative to the specimen axis. The equations are employed to determine ranges of material constants for two varieties of Opalinus Clay, based upon the results of 73 CU and CD tests. A thorough comparison between the model predictions and the experimental response is conducted, to demonstrate the versatility and limitations of the constitutive model and of the proposed calibration approach. Highlights: A large number of CD and CU triaxial compression tests was evaluated. The adequacy of a simplified non-linear anisotropic material model was assessed. The prediction and calibration equations for the model were provided. The strength and stiffness constants of Opalinus Clay were determined based on the large experimental database. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Digital Archiving Policies of Central European Journals Registered in the Directory of Open Access Journals.
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Marijanović, Branka and Stančić, Hrvoje
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OPEN access publishing , *DIGITAL libraries , *ARCHIVES , *ELECTRONIC paper , *SCHOLARLY periodicals , *ELECTRONIC journals , *DIRECTORIES - Abstract
This paper examines digital archiving policies of open access (OA) electronic scholarly journals in Central Europe. The research sample consists of 1589 journals from nine Central European countries registered in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ). Results show that of the 1589 journals, 69% of them have an archiving policy. In terms of the number of indexed journals, Poland ranks first with 592 journals. Switzerland is at the forefront of digital archiving with 89% of archived journals. It was also found that Portico and national libraries are the most widely used archives, and that 19% of the preserved journals are archived in more than one archive. A preliminary analysis was also conducted to investigate the possible existence of a relationship between journal rank and digital archiving. The results show a higher number of JCR indexed titles, as well as a higher ranking, among archived journals. The paper also compares the status of archiving policies among Asian and Central European countries. The results reveal that archived journals are significantly more represented in Central European countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Endocrine activity of alternatives to BPA found in thermal paper in Switzerland.
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Goldinger, Daniela M., Demierre, Anne-Laure, Zoller, Otmar, Rupp, Heinz, Reinhard, Hans, Magnin, Roxane, Becker, Thomas W., and Bourqui-Pittet, Martine
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ENDOCRINE system , *BISPHENOL A , *ESTROGEN receptors , *TESTOSTERONE , *PAPER - Abstract
Alternatives to bisphenol A (BPA) are more and more used in thermal paper receipts. To get an overview of the situation in Switzerland, 124 thermal paper receipts were collected and analyzed. Whereas BPA was detected in most samples ( n = 100), some alternatives, namely bisphenol S (BPS), Pergafast® 201 and D-8 have been found in 4, 11 and 9 samples respectively. As no or few data on their endocrine activity are available, these chemicals and bisphenol F (BPF) were tested in vitro using the H295R steroidogenesis assay. 17β-Estradiol production was induced by BPA and BPF, whereas free testosterone production was inhibited by BPA and BPS. Both non-bisphenol substances did not show significant effects. The binding affinity to 16 proteins and the toxicological potential (TP) were further calculated in silico using VirtualToxLab™. TP values lay between 0.269 and 0.476 and the main target was the estrogen receptor β (84.4 nM to 1.33 μM). A substitution of BPA by BPF and BPS should be thus considered with caution, since they exhibit almost a similar endocrine activity as BPA. D-8 and Pergafast® 201 could be alternatives to replace BPA, however further analyses are needed to better characterize their effects on the hormonal system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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15. Country Bumpkin or City Slicker? The Role of Place of Living and Place-Based Identity in Explaining Place-Based Resentment.
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Zumbrunn, Alina
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GROUP identity , *RURAL-urban relations , *RESENTMENT , *POLITICAL attitudes , *SUBURBANITES - Abstract
In recent years, the rural-urban divide has not only made its way back into political science, but has also been given an entirely new angle by investigating place of living as its own social identity. However, research is still in its early stages and studies so far focus on linear explanations of place-based resentment. This paper studies place in the light of social identity theory and investigates how place of living and place-based identity interact in shaping place-based resentment. Original survey data on around 4000 respondents from Switzerland from 2022 with a novel measure of place-based identity and resentment is used. A distinction is made not only between rural and urban residents, but also between the suburbanites. Results show that rural residents hold the highest levels of identity and resentment, while suburban residents hold higher levels of resentment than urban ones do. Findings show that there is a moderating effect, whereby the rural-urban divide in resentment increases with place-based identity, while the suburban-urban gap diminishes with increasing place-based identity. These differences in place-based identity and resentment could explain the rural-urban divide in political attitudes and behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Work-related quality of life in professionals involved in pediatric palliative care: a repeated cross-sectional comparative effectiveness study.
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Gerber, Anne-Kathrin, Feuz, Ursula, Zimmermann, Karin, Mitterer, Stefan, Simon, Michael, von der Weid, Nicolas, and Bergsträsser, Eva
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QUALITY of work life , *CROSS-sectional method , *WORK , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *REPEATED measures design , *MEDICAL personnel , *PALLIATIVE treatment , *T-test (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *WORK environment , *CHILDREN'S hospitals , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *PEDIATRICS , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *SOCIAL support , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *DATA analysis software , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *HEALTH care teams , *EMPLOYEES' workload , *SHIFT systems , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Background: Working in pediatric palliative care (PPC) impacts healthcare and allied professionals' work-related quality of life (QoL). Professionals who lack specific PPC training but who regularly provide services to the affected children have articulated their need for support from specialized PPC (SPPC) teams. Objectives: This study had two objectives: (1) to evaluate whether the availability of a SPPC team impacted the work-related QoL of professionals not specialized in PPC; and (2) to explore the work-related QoL of professionals working in PPC without specialized training. Design: Repeated cross-sectional comparative effectiveness design. Methods: One hospital with an established SPPC program and affiliated institutions provided the intervention group (IG). Three hospitals and affiliated institutions where generalist PPC was offered provided the comparison group (CG). Data were collected by paper-pencil questionnaire in 2021 and 2022. The Professional Quality of Life (ProQOL 5) questionnaire was used to assess work-related QoL, yielding separate scores for burnout (BO), secondary traumatic stress (STS) and compassion satisfaction (CS). A descriptive statistical analysis was performed and general estimation equations were modelled. To increase the comparability of the IG and CG, participants were matched by propensity scores. Results: The 301 participating non-PPC-specialized professionals had overall low to moderate levels of BO and STS and moderate to high levels of CS. However, none of these scores (BO: p = 0.36; STS: p = 0.20; CS: p = 0.65) correlated significantly with support from an SPPC team. Compared to nurses, physicians showed higher levels of BO (1.70; p = 0.02) and STS (2.69; p ⩽ 0.001). Conclusion: Although the study sample's overall work-related QoL was satisfactory, it showed a considerable proportion of moderate BO and STS, as well as moderate CS. To provide tailored support to professionals working in PPC, evidence regarding key SPPC support elements and their effectiveness is needed. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov ID, NCT04236180. Plain language summary: Work-related quality of life in professionals involved in pediatric palliative care - Why was this study done? Caring for children suffering from life-limiting conditions and their families impacts professionals' work-related Quality of Life (QoL). Professionals without specific training often provide pediatric palliative care (PPC) to children and their families. - What did the researchers do? We aimed to determine whether the work-related the QoL of professionals without specialised PPC training would be positively influenced when they were supported by PPC specialists. We also wanted to explore what person-specific factors might correspond with higher or lower work-related QoL. Work-related QoL was analysed in relation to burnout (BO), secondary traumatic stress (STS), and compassion satisfaction (CS). These variables' levels were assessed with a questionnaire survey in 2021 and 2022. - What did the researchers find? The 301 participating professionals had overall low to moderate levels of BO and STS and moderate to high levels of CS. There was no substantial difference in work-related QoL in the professionals supported by PPC specialists compared to those who did not receive specialist support. Physicians showed higher levels of BO and STS than nurses. - What do the findings mean? Although the studied professionals' overall work-related QoL was satisfactory, there is a considerable proportion of moderate BO and STS scores in professionals working with children suffering from life-limiting conditions. Further research should explore the specific needs of professionals not specialised in PPC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. After Mainframes: Computer Education and Microcomputers in Western Switzerland during the 1980s and 1990s.
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Grütter, Fabian
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COMPUTER training , *PERSONAL computers , *MAINFRAME computers , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *HISTORY of computers - Abstract
This article analyses the developments in computer education in French-speaking Western Switzerland in the 1980s and 1990s. It investigates how computer education changed with the arrival of microcomputers, who the agents of these changes were, and with what sociopolitical and economic developments these pedagogical changes interacted. By analysing archival material from five cantonal departments of education and from Raymond Morel (at the time, Western Switzerland's most influential educational IT expert), it is argued that computer education in Western Switzerland's general education experienced three shifts. First, education with computers displaced education about computers in the first half of the 1980s. Second, from the mid-1980s onwards, office applications became central. Third, computer education morphed into telecommunications education around 1990. The paper contributes to the historiography of local school computers and computer education. It adds comment on the "glocal" histories of computers, which shed light on local computer cultures and economies across the globe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. Generative Bayesian modeling to nowcast the effective reproduction number from line list data with missing symptom onset dates.
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Lison, Adrian, Abbott, Sam, Huisman, Jana, and Stadler, Tanja
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MISSING data (Statistics) , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *DISEASE outbreaks , *SYMPTOMS , *BASIC reproduction number , *COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
The time-varying effective reproduction number Rt is a widely used indicator of transmission dynamics during infectious disease outbreaks. Timely estimates of Rt can be obtained from reported cases counted by their date of symptom onset, which is generally closer to the time of infection than the date of report. Case counts by date of symptom onset are typically obtained from line list data, however these data can have missing information and are subject to right truncation. Previous methods have addressed these problems independently by first imputing missing onset dates, then adjusting truncated case counts, and finally estimating the effective reproduction number. This stepwise approach makes it difficult to propagate uncertainty and can introduce subtle biases during real-time estimation due to the continued impact of assumptions made in previous steps. In this work, we integrate imputation, truncation adjustment, and Rt estimation into a single generative Bayesian model, allowing direct joint inference of case counts and Rt from line list data with missing symptom onset dates. We then use this framework to compare the performance of nowcasting approaches with different stepwise and generative components on synthetic line list data for multiple outbreak scenarios and across different epidemic phases. We find that under reporting delays realistic for hospitalization data (50% of reports delayed by more than a week), intermediate smoothing, as is common practice in stepwise approaches, can bias nowcasts of case counts and Rt, which is avoided in a joint generative approach due to shared regularization of all model components. On incomplete line list data, a fully generative approach enables the quantification of uncertainty due to missing onset dates without the need for an initial multiple imputation step. In a real-world comparison using hospitalization line list data from the COVID-19 pandemic in Switzerland, we observe the same qualitative differences between approaches. The generative modeling components developed in this work have been integrated and further extended in the R package epinowcast, providing a flexible and interpretable tool for real-time surveillance. Author summary: During an infectious disease outbreak, public health authorities require timely indicators of transmission dynamics, such as the effective reproduction number Rt. Since reporting data are delayed and often incomplete, statistical methods must be employed to obtain real-time estimates of case numbers and Rt. Existing methods involve separate steps for imputing missing data, adjusting for reporting delays, and estimating Rt. This stepwise approach impedes uncertainty quantification and can lead to inconsistent smoothing assumptions across steps. In this paper, we propose an alternative approach based on generative Bayesian modeling which integrates all steps into a single nowcasting model that can be directly fit to observed data. Using synthetic and real-world line list data, we demonstrate that the generative approach better captures uncertainty and avoids bias from inconsistent assumptions. The model components of our approach have been integrated into the R package epinowcast for easy use in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
19. Assisted dying: principles, possibilities, and practicalities. An English physician's perspective.
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Twycross, Robert
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ASSISTED suicide laws , *ASSISTED suicide , *PATIENT autonomy , *RESPECT , *DISINFORMATION , *PALLIATIVE treatment , *COMPASSION , *PHYSICIANS' attitudes , *SUFFERING , *MEDICAL referrals , *HOSPICE care - Abstract
It seems probable that some form of medically-assisted dying will become legal in England and Wales in the foreseeable future. Assisted dying Bills are at various stages of preparation in surrounding jurisdictions (Scotland, Republic of Ireland, Isle of Man, Jersey), and activists campaign unceasingly for a change in the law in England and Wales. There is generally uncritical supportive media coverage, and individual autonomy is seen as the unassailable trump card: 'my life, my death'. However, devising a law which is 'fit for purpose' is not an easy matter. The challenge is to achieve an appropriate balance between compassion and patient autonomy on the one hand, and respect for human life generally and medical autonomy on the other. More people should benefit from a change in the law than be harmed. In relation to medically-assisted dying, this may not be possible. Protecting the vulnerable is a key issue. Likewise, not impacting negatively on societal attitudes towards the disabled and frail elderly, particularly those with dementia. This paper compares three existing models of physician-assisted suicide: Switzerland, Oregon (USA), and Victoria (Australia). Vulnerability and autonomy are discussed, and concern expressed about the biased nature of much of the advocacy for assisted dying, tantamount to disinformation. A 'hidden' danger of assisted dying is noted, namely, increased suffering as more patients decline referral to palliative-hospice care because they fear they will be 'drugged to death'. Finally, suggestions are made for a possible 'least worse' way forward. One solution would seem to be for physician-assisted suicide to be the responsibility of a stand-alone Department for Assisted Dying overseen by lawyers or judges and operated by technicians. Doctors would be required only to confirm a patient's medical eligibility. Palliative-hospice care should definitely not be involved, and healthcare professionals must have an inviolable right to opt out of involvement. There is also an urgent need to improve the provision of care for all terminally ill patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. Social resilience indicators for pandemic crises.
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Busic‐Sontic, Ante and Schubert, Renate
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COVID-19 pandemic , *SOCIAL distancing , *PANDEMICS , *SOCIAL cohesion , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
Coping and recovery capabilities in disasters depend to a large part on the social resilience of the societies or regions that are hit by the respective disruptions. Prior disaster studies suggest a variety of indicators to assess social resilience in the natural hazard context. This paper discusses whether the most common disaster‐related social resilience indicators, including social cohesion and support, can meaningfully capture social resilience in pandemic crises, since pandemics typically entail physical distancing and other social restrictions. Based on a review of frequently used social resilience measures, this study proposes pandemic‐tailored indicators of social resilience to map a society's or region's coping and recovery capabilities in a meaningful way. Applying the suggested set of indicators to a sample of 1,500 residents surveyed in Switzerland during the summer 2020 phase of the COVID‐19 crisis revealed low levels of social support and community engagement, but a high level of willingness to help others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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21. A retirement mobilities approach to transnational ageing.
- Author
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Nedelcu, Mihaela, Tomás, Livia, Ravazzini, Laura, and Azevedo, Liliana
- Subjects
- *
OLDER people , *RETIREMENT , *OLD age , *RETIREMENT communities , *AGING , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
Transnational ageing processes are usually studied by focusing on the various cross-border practices and mobilities of different categories of ageing migrants. This paper introduces a retirement mobilities approach as an analytical framework that draws on both transnational studies and the new mobilities paradigm to widen the theoretical and empirical debates. It argues that both migrant and non-migrant populations, as well as human and non-human cross-border circulations, have to be taken into account when studying transnational ageing. Based on a mixed-methods study combining original data from a quantitative survey conducted in Switzerland with residents 55+ and semi-structured interviews held in Spain and Switzerland with older adults receiving a Swiss pension, we demonstrate the heuristic value of this approach. Indeed, empirical findings indicate that older adults with and without a migration background represent an internationally mobile population with similar mobility aspirations and transnational lifestyles. However, the motivations driving these two groups' transnational mobility differ significantly. Moreover, transnational circulations of financial resources, and in particular retirement pensions, are interlinked with mobility in old age. To conclude, a retirement mobilities approach sets a new research agenda, inviting scholars to examine transnational ageing beyond the ageing-migration nexus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. Preferences for innovations in healthcare delivery models in the Swiss elderly population: a latent class, choice modelling study.
- Author
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Nicolet, Anna, Perraudin, Clémence, Krucien, Nicolas, Wagner, Joël, Peytremann-Bridevaux, Isabelle, and Marti, Joachim
- Subjects
- *
DIFFUSION of innovations , *RESEARCH funding , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH insurance , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *HEALTH care reform , *SURVEYS , *ELECTRONIC health records , *MEDICAL care for older people , *HEALTH care teams , *INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
Background: With the increasing number of people affected by multiple chronic conditions, it is essential for public-health professionals to promote strategies addressing patient needs for coordinated care. We aim to explore preference heterogeneity for better-coordinated care delivery models in Swiss older adults, and identify profiles of individuals more open to healthcare reforms. Methods: A DCE (discrete choice experiment) survey was developed online and on paper for the Swiss adults aged 50þ, following best practice. To elicit preferences, we estimated a latent class model allowing grouping individuals with similar preferences into distinct classes, and examined what background characteristics contributed to specific class membership. Results: The optimal model identified three classes with different openness to reforms. Class 1 (49%) members were concerned with premium increases and were in favour of integrated care structures with care managed by interprofessional teams. Individuals in class 2 (19%) were younger, open to reforms, and expressed the needs for radical changes within the Swiss healthcare system. Class 3 respondents (32%) were strongly reluctant to changes. Conclusions: Our study goes beyond average preferences and identifies three distinct population profiles, a majority open to reforms on specific aspects of care delivery, a smallest group in favour radical changes, and a third strongly against changes. Therefore, tailored approaches around healthcare reforms are needed, e.g. explaining the role of interprofessional teams in coordinating care, electronic health records and insurance premium variation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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23. Search Engine for Open Geospatial Consortium Web Services Improving Discoverability through Natural Language Processing-Based Processing and Ranking.
- Author
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Ferrari, Elia, Striewski, Friedrich, Tiefenbacher, Fiona, Bereuter, Pia, Oesch, David, and Di Donato, Pasquale
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL language processing , *WEB services , *CONSORTIA , *WORLD Wide Web , *WEB search engines , *SEARCH engines , *INFORMATION retrieval - Abstract
The improvement of search engines for geospatial data on the World Wide Web has been a subject of research, particularly concerning the challenges in discovering and utilizing geospatial web services. Despite the establishment of standards by the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC), the implementation of these services varies significantly among providers, leading to issues in dataset discoverability and usability. This paper presents a proof of concept for a search engine tailored to geospatial services in Switzerland. It addresses challenges such as scraping data from various OGC web service providers, enhancing metadata quality through Natural Language Processing, and optimizing search functionality and ranking methods. Semantic augmentation techniques are applied to enhance metadata completeness and quality, which are stored in a high-performance NoSQL database for efficient data retrieval. The results show improvements in dataset discoverability and search relevance, with NLP-extracted information contributing significantly to ranking accuracy. Overall, the GeoHarvester proof of concept demonstrates the feasibility of improving the discoverability and usability of geospatial web services through advanced search engine techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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24. Quer im Feld? Ein Annäherungsversuch an die Fehlerkultur einer Mittelschulbibliothek aus der Perspektive einer Quereinsteigerin.
- Author
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Affeltranger, Stephanie
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL libraries , *MIDDLE schools , *CULTURE , *LITERATURE - Abstract
Im vorliegenden Aufsatz wird aus der Perspektive einer Quereinsteigerin beschrieben, wie sich die Fehlerkultur einer bestimmten Mittelschulbibliothek konkret ausgestaltet. Am Beispiel der biografischen Entwicklung der Verfasserin und der praktischen Erfahrungen sowie Beobachtungen am Arbeitsplatz werden die theoretischen Begrifflichkeiten und Konzepte der Fehlerkulturen dargelegt, wie sie in einschlägiger Fachliteratur beschrieben werden. So zeigt sich beispielhaft die positive Auswirkung eines konstruktiven Umgangs mit Fehlern im Kontext bibliothekarischer Arbeit. This paper describes, from the perspective of a career changer, the error culture of a particular middle school library. Using the example of the author's biographical development, her practical experiences and observations in the workplace, the theoretical terms, and concepts of error cultures, as described in the relevant literature, are presented. In this way, the positive impact of a constructive approach to errors in the context of librarianship is exemplified. Anm. der Verfasserin: Übersetzt mit DeepL. www.DeepL.com/Translator Zugriff: 30.08.2023. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. Landholding Inequality, Social Control, and Mass Opposition to Suffrage Extension.
- Author
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Emmenegger, Patrick, Thoma, Andreina, and Walter, André
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- *
SOCIAL control , *SUFFRAGE , *ELITE (Social sciences) , *WOMEN'S suffrage , *VOTING , *DIRECT democracy , *DEMOCRATIZATION - Abstract
Does landholding inequality undermine democratization? Recent contributions have challenged the argument that landholding elites oppose suffrage extension if geographically fixed assets are unequally distributed. We advance research on this long-standing question by exploiting exogenous variance to reinvestigate the relationship. Using multiple instruments, we find that landholding inequality decreases support for suffrage extension. By focusing on traditional patterns of social control, we explore an empirically neglected mechanism linking landholding inequality and democratization. Taking advantage of four direct democratic votes between 1866 and 1877 in Switzerland, we demonstrate that landholding inequality also influences the political preferences of ordinary citizens who do not control these resources. This paper shows that high levels of landholding inequality provide local elites with the incentive and the means to align the local population's voting behaviour with their political goals. Supplementary analyses using qualitative and quantitative data further substantiate this social control mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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26. Waiting on standby: The relevance of disaster preparedness.
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Deville, Joe
- Subjects
- *
EMERGENCY management , *PAPER arts - Abstract
This paper examines a disaster preparedness organisation for which waiting is, and has long been, an intensive yet frustrating state. Its focus is on the organisation most centrally concerned with disaster response in Switzerland: Zivilschutz, or 'Civil Protection'. Drawing on ethnographic and historical research, it explores how a particular modality of waiting - waiting on standby - is rendered fragile by the absence of disasters severe enough to authorise its activities. For many, participating in this organisational enterprise appears to incur the risk of becoming trapped in an endless present, in which training and exercises become the primary focus of organisational activity over and above responding directly to disasters. The paper suggests that a core challenge that has occupied the recent and more distant pasts of Swiss disaster preparedness is how to continue to claim its 'relevance', in the context of pasts and anticipated futures that threaten to undermine this very claim. The paper draws on work that has looked to the philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead to account for how, precisely, the world and conditions of possibility are continually made and remade. This includes in relation to practices of 'relevance-making', as well as the capturing of 'feeling'. By doing so, the paper examines how particular times and spaces, both past and future, become joined, sometimes unavoidably, to the practices, affects and devices of disaster preparedness. It adds to work on the temporal dimensions of organisational life, in particular that which has focused on the role of affect and the everyday. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
27. Children's technologies of the self within neoliberal governmentality at the educational transition to Gymnasium in Zurich.
- Author
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Landolt, Lara and Bauer, Itta
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENTALITY , *NEOLIBERALISM , *GYMNASIUMS , *SELF , *SELF-perception , *EDUCATIONAL technology - Abstract
Over the last two decades, research in children's geographies and governmentality studies have contributed significantly to the study of children's experiences in neoliberal educational contexts. This paper furthers this debate by examining the ways children govern and are governed within the neoliberal governmentality at the educational transition to Gymnasium: the only school that offers a direct path to university education within the state-funded school system in Switzerland. Drawing on an ethnography with eight students aged 13-15 during their preparation for the selective entrance examination to Gymnasium in Zurich, this article makes two points: Firstly, it demonstrates how Zurich's education system thrusts students into taking individual responsibility for their educational success at this transition. Secondly, the article draws on Foucault's later work to explore the particular 'technologies of the self' that children adopt coping with this individualized responsibility. This paper argues that these technologies reveal insights into the neoliberal governmentality of this educational transition. Finally, the article argues to critically examine children's technologies of the self to understand their relationships with the education systems they navigate. This line of inquiry serves as a pathway to answer and expand earlier calls to grant children an active voice in research on education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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28. Œnotourisme in Switzerland-Producer initiatives and policies.
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Inoue, Takako
- Subjects
- *
WINE tasting , *SUSTAINABLE agriculture , *WINE tourism , *FOOD tourism , *SUSTAINABLE tourism , *GRAPES , *FRENCH language - Abstract
According to the International Organisation of Vine and Wine (OIV), Switzerland's wine production in 2021 was 1 million hl, ranking 21st in the world. The Swiss wine production is supported by 2148 communes, where four languages are spoken (German, French, Italian and Romansh), and the vineyards, varying in altitude from 200 to 1150 m, where traditional wines characteristic of the local culture are produced. This paper discusses Œnotourisme (wine tourism) from a policy perspective, which in Switzerland, has become increasingly active in recent years. The paper considers sustainable agriculture and tourism from a policy perspective, examining the origins of the livelihood of agriculture and tourism, starting with landscape studies, and from the viewpoints of the grape and wine producers who operate Œnotourisme. The effects of the policy will be examined. Situating sustainability as it core. Wine tourism is referred to as Œnotourisme, the starting point of wine in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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29. Coverage of environmental issues in undergraduate curricula in social work in four European countries: the UK, Switzerland, Germany and Greece.
- Author
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Papadimitriou, Evripidis
- Subjects
- *
CURRICULUM , *NATURE , *ENVIRONMENTAL sociology , *SOCIAL work education - Abstract
The inclusion of the natural environment in the theory, education and practice of social work has increasingly become a matter of interest amongst scholars and social work educators. There is a large and increasing amount of literature on this topic. However, the inclusion of environmental issues in the curricula seems to be evolving very slowly to date. This paper examines 94 social work curricula in four European countries, and notes the presence of environmental issues in their content, by using term categories. Findings show that the natural environment is extremely under-represented in the education of social workers. The paper argues that social work curiccula need to undergo immediate reform on an international level. The discussion section includes suggestions on how the natural environment could be integrated into social work curricula. The first suggestion is to create new subjects with a direct reference to environmental issues and green social work. The second one is to include in existing subjects topics that will draw on environmental sociology and focus on the interconnections between social and environmental problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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30. Reclaiming Humanity in Palestinian Hunger Strikes: Revolutionary Subjectivity and Decolonizing the Body: by Ashjan Ajour. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature Switzerland AG, Palgrave Macmillan, 2021. 342 Pages. $115.50 cloth, $115.50 paper, $98.00 e-book.
- Author
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Mogannam, Jennifer
- Subjects
- *
HUNGER strikes , *TORTURE , *PALESTINIANS , *DECOLONIZATION , *POLITICAL participation , *ANTI-imperialist movements , *SOUL - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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31. Validation of self-reported cardiovascular problems in childhood cancer survivors by contacting general practitioners: feasibility and results.
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Hau, Eva-Maria, Sláma, Tomáš, Essig, Stefan, Michel, Gisela, Wengenroth, Laura, Bergstraesser, Eva, von der Weid, Nicolas X., Schindera, Christina, and Kuehni, Claudia E.
- Subjects
- *
SELF-evaluation , *MYOCARDIAL infarction , *ANGINA pectoris , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *TUMORS in children , *RESEARCH funding , *PILOT projects , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *HYPERTENSION , *DRUG therapy , *CANCER patients , *PHYSICIANS' attitudes , *HEART failure , *HEART valve diseases , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ARRHYTHMIA , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *STATISTICS , *STROKE , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DATA analysis software , *COMPARATIVE studies , *THROMBOSIS , *INTER-observer reliability , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: Epidemiological studies often rely on self-reported health problems and validation greatly improves study quality. In a study of late effects after childhood cancer, we validated self-reported cardiovascular problems by contacting general practitioners (GPs). This paper describes: (a) the feasibility of this approach; and (b) the agreement between survivor-reports and reports from their GP. Methods: The Swiss Childhood Cancer Survivor Study (SCCSS) contacts all childhood cancer survivors registered in the Swiss Childhood Cancer Registry since 1976 who survived at least 5 years from cancer diagnosis. We validated answers of all survivors who reported a cardiovascular problem in the questionnaire. Reported cardiovascular problems were hypertension, arrhythmia, congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, stroke, thrombosis, and valvular problems. In the questionnaire, we further asked survivors to provide a valid address of their GP and a consent for contact. We sent case-report forms to survivors' GPs and requested information on cardiovascular diagnoses of their patients. To determine agreement between information reported by survivors and GPs, we calculated Cohen's kappa (κ) coefficients for each category of cardiovascular problems. Results: We used questionnaires from 2172 respondents of the SCCSS. Of 290 survivors (13% of 2172) who reported cardiovascular problems, 166 gave consent to contact their GP and provided a valid address. Of those, 135 GPs (81%) replied, and 128 returned the completed case-report form. Survivor-reports were confirmed by 54/128 GPs (42%). Of the 54 GPs, 36 (28% of 128) confirmed the problems as reported by the survivors; 11 (9% of 128) confirmed the reported problem(s) and gave additional information on more cardiovascular outcomes; and seven GPs (5% of 128) confirmed some, but not all cardiovascular problems. Agreement between GPs and survivors was good for stroke (κ = 0.79), moderate for hypertension (κ = 0.51), arrhythmias (κ = 0.41), valvular problems (κ = 0.41) and thrombosis (κ = 0.56), and poor for coronary heart disease (κ = 0.15) and heart failure (κ = 0.32). Conclusions: Despite excellent GP compliance, it was found unfeasible to validate self-reported cardiovascular problems via GPs because they do not serve as gatekeepers in the Swiss health care system. It is thus necessary to develop other validation methods to improve the quality of patient-reported outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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32. Balancing Initial Copyright Ownership in Czech and Slovak Private International Law.
- Author
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Koukal, Pavel, Vlachová, Zuzana, Hodermarsky, Jan, and Jankovič, Marián
- Subjects
- *
CONFLICT of laws , *JUSTICE administration - Abstract
This paper examines the challenges associated with applying copyright laws that are limited to specific regions in today's interconnected world. It also explores how private international law regulations come into play when addressing conflicts arising from cross-border copyright disputes. The primary focus of this article is on key issues like initial ownership and the transfer of copyright as governed by private international law in the Czech and Slovak Republics. Additionally, it discusses the influence of legal doctrines from Switzerland and Germany on the legal systems of these countries, particularly their preference for the lex loci protectionis rule. Furthermore, the authors consider how private international law has evolved in the Czech and Slovak Republics when addressing cross-border copyright disputes. Both countries have adopted the lex loci protectionis connecting factor for copyright matters and address the concept of the initial copyright owner in a way that closely resembles the solution provided in Article 3:201(2) of the CLIP Principles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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33. Operation and performance of the MEG II detector.
- Author
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MEG II Collaboration, Afanaciev, K., Baldini, A. M., Ban, S., Baranov, V., Benmansour, H., Biasotti, M., Boca, G., Cattaneo, P. W., Cavoto, G., Cei, F., Chiappini, M., Chiarello, G., Corvaglia, A., Cuna, F., Maso, G. Dal, De Bari, A., De Gerone, M., Barusso, L. Ferrari, and Francesconi, M.
- Subjects
- *
DETECTORS - Abstract
The MEG II experiment, located at the Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI) in Switzerland, is the successor to the MEG experiment, which completed data taking in 2013. MEG II started fully operational data taking in 2021, with the goal of improving the sensitivity of the μ + → e + γ decay down to ∼ 6 × 10 - 14 almost an order of magnitude better than the current limit. In this paper, we describe the operation and performance of the experiment and give a new estimate of its sensitivity versus data acquisition time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. What matters to migrant women during labor and birth: Chinese mothers' experiences in Switzerland.
- Author
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Cai, Dingcui, Villanueva, Paulina, Lu, Hong, Zimmermann, Basile, and Horsch, Antje
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN migrant labor , *OVERSEAS Chinese , *INTRAPARTUM care , *MEDICAL personnel , *MOTHERS , *TRANSCULTURAL nursing , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Background: In Switzerland, foreigners account for 25.3% of the permanent resident population, and the fertility rate of migrant women is higher than that of Swiss women. However, migrant women from non-European countries are more likely to report having negative childbirth experiences than Swiss women. For example, during pregnancy, Chinese migrant mothers often felt dissatisfied with the follow-up pregnancy complications and lacked information on medical procedures and prenatal courses. In this paper, we explored their childbirth experiences in Swiss hospitals and how Swiss healthcare providers supported them. Method: A qualitative study employing in-depth, semi-structured interviews was conducted with 14 Chinese mothers and 13 family members. All interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and translated into English for data analysis. Thematic analysis was employed to generate a detailed description. Results: Three main themes were extracted from the transcripts: (1) Sense of security, (2) Intrapartum care, and (3) Postpartum needs. Conclusions: Our study shows Chinese migrant mothers prioritized giving birth in a physically and psychologically safe environment, with pain control and practical and emotional support from their intimate partners. They desired a physiological labor and birth with minimal obstetric interventions. Our research also reveals their postpartum needs, emphasizing the importance of postpartum support and obtaining culturally sensitive care during their postpartum hospital stay. The study adds new knowledge of specific migrant studies in Switzerland, as called for by the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health. The results call for the transcultural care skills training of Swiss healthcare providers to enable migrant women to have a more positive childbirth experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Open and reproducible practices in developmental psychology research: The workflow of the WomCogDev lab as an example.
- Author
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Turoman, Nora, Hautekiet, Caro, Jeanneret, Stéphanie, Valentini, Beatrice, and Langerock, Naomi
- Subjects
- *
EXPERIMENTAL design , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *INDUSTRIES , *LABORATORIES , *WORKFLOW , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *COMMUNICATION , *MEDICAL research , *SCIENCE - Abstract
The current paper presents an overview of the workflow of the Working Memory, Cognition and Development (WomCogDev) lab at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, as an example of how Open Science principles can be applied in a developmental psychology lab. We describe the importance and challenges of applying Open Science practices in developmental research and detail each step of our workflow from research design to dissemination. We provide examples and give emphasis to steps that typically receive little attention but that may hold promise for application in other labs (namely, project design, data collection and data analysis). Finally, we discuss the advantages and disadvantages of our workflow and summarize the main takeaways for other labs. By 'opening up' our lab's workflow, we want to encourage other labs to incorporate the aspects that they like into their own workflows and to share their own processes for the continued benefit of others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Die another day: explanations based on qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) for the survival and non-survival of isolated ski lifts in Switzerland.
- Author
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Schlegel, Steve and Schuck, Christoph
- Subjects
- *
COMPARATIVE studies , *SNOW accumulation , *SNOWMAKING , *SKIING competitions , *QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
In the form of an explorative empirical study, this paper deals with the reasons for the survival and demise of isolated Swiss ski lifts. For the first time, all isolated lifts documented in Switzerland have been recorded and coded according to a total of six conditions. Using a set-theoretical research method in the form of qualitative comparative analysis (QCA), the study aims to identify the necessary conditions and configurations of sufficient conditions explaining (non-)survival. It transpires that closed isolated lifts tend to be outdated and have no technical snowmaking facilities. Moreover, it has become evident that the simultaneous occurrence of the lack of lift facility replacement, lack of technical snowmaking and high ski area competition has caused the closure of most isolated lifts. Low natural snow depth and low elevation difference, conversely, have not had a measurable impact. The causes for the survival of isolated lifts, by contrast, are extremely heterogeneous. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. "Compliant Supporters," "Anxious Skeptics," and "Defiant Deniers": A Latent Profile Analysis of People's Responses to COVID-19 Communications.
- Author
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Hannawa, Annegret F. and Stojanov, Ana
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICS , *MASS media , *ANALYSIS of variance , *CROSS-sectional method , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *COMMUNICATION , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *STATISTICAL sampling , *DATA analysis software , *DATA analysis , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PUBLIC opinion , *LATENT structure analysis - Abstract
This study investigates whether people's responses to official communications about COVID-19 could be "profiled" with respect to socio-economic-demographic and behavioral characteristics. Such profiles could enhance the effectiveness of future crisis management through the use of profile-adapted communications that maximize message comprehension. A representative web panel survey (742 respondents) was conducted across Switzerland in February 2022 to assess the population's reaction to COVID-19 communications during the pandemic. Latent profile analysis was conducted to explore if distinct profiles of reactions to the communications would emerge, and how each of them relate to conspiracy mentality and SED measures. The analyses revealed three latent profiles: "Compliant supporters" (54%), "defiant deniers" (23.6%), and "anxious skeptics" (22.4%). Respondents with high conspiracy mentality were more likely to belong to "defiant deniers" or "anxious skeptics." Each profile was characterized by distinct SED and behavioral features (discussed in the paper). The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated that one communication does not work for all people. Our study evidenced three different types of respondent profiles that require profile-adapted communications for more effective crisis control. Our study is the first to profile people's responses to COVID-19 communications in a systematic, person-centered way. The results can be used for more effective future crisis management that delivers to each profile's communicative needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Dynamic Test Response of Ground Support Systems for Underground Excavations at the Walenstadt Testing Facility.
- Author
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Vallejos, Javier A., Marambio, Exequiel, Burgos, Lorena, Cuello, David, Brändle, Rico, Luis, Roberto, von Rickenbach, Gabriel, and Fischer, Germán
- Subjects
- *
DYNAMIC testing , *TESTING laboratories , *MINES & mineral resources , *EXCAVATION , *IMPACT testing - Abstract
Ground support systems must provide a safe environment to personnel while maintaining the excavation functionally to ensure continuous mine's production. In addition, in burst-prone mines, these systems must be capable of resisting dynamic loading from mining induced seismic events. Hence, dynamic testing of the ground support system (combination of different reinforcement and retention elements) is required to assess the support system capacity and improve the performance of these elements under dynamic loading. During the recent years, Geobrugg has been working on improving load transfer element products (retention elements) by testing them in conjunction with different arrangements of reinforcement elements in a field-scale impact test facility located at Walenstadt, Switzerland. The test facility is composed of a double level platform of a square-shaped pyramidal truss geometry, in the upper-level housing a loading mass that drop from a height up to 5 m. The mass is guided by a central steel pipe and impacts a support system sample located at the lower level with an area of 3.6 m × 3.6 m, where the ground support system is installed. In this paper, six dynamic tests performed between 2018 and 2021 are considered. The arrangement, measurement, results, analyses, and some recommendations (conclusions) on the design of ground support under dynamic loads based on the tests performed are presented. The results of these tests have enabled to improve the understanding of the behaviour of ground support systems under dynamic loads. The main findings include a classification of the performance of mesh types used as load transfer elements and some recommendations on the design of ground support systems under dynamic loading. Among the recommendations, it is suggested the use of embedded meshes in shotcrete, and the use of load transfers materials (gap or damping materials, such as 'gabions') between the rock mass and the ground support system to improve the performance. Highlights: New results of dynamic behaviour of ground support systems studied through field-scale dynamic impact test. Improved understanding of the dynamic behaviour of ground support systems involving mesh, shotcrete and rockbolts. Conclusions relevant for the design of ground support systems under dynamic loading. Relevant results for underground mining design under high stress conditions and burst-prone ground. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Reply to 'Assessing the hepatitis C epidemiology in Switzerland: It's not that trivial'.
- Author
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Bertisch, Barbara, Schaetti, Christian, Schmid, Patrick, Peter, Laura, Vernazza, Pietro, Isler, Marc, Oppliger, Robert, and Schmidt, Axel Jeremias
- Subjects
- *
HEPATITIS C , *HEPATITIS C virus , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
This document is a reply to a critique of a paper on the prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections in Switzerland. The authors of the reply address the criticisms made by the critique and defend their estimates of HCV prevalence in Switzerland. They argue that the critique's assumptions and methodology are flawed and provide evidence to support their own estimates. They also mention positive feedback they received from other scientists in the field. The authors conclude that Switzerland has reached the World Health Organization's elimination targets for HCV and that prevalence estimates should be revised. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Integration Through Inclusion? Probing the Effect of Government Presence on Voting Behavior in the Swiss Cantons, 1848–2022.
- Author
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Mueller, Sean
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL integration , *VOTING , *REFERENDUM , *SOCIAL marginality , *RELIGIOUS minorities , *LINGUISTIC minorities - Abstract
Switzerland is widely known for its successful integration of linguistic and religious minorities. At the same time, a prolonged absence from the collegial, seven-member central government can give rise to feelings of political exclusion. This begs the question whether inclusion really has the desired, let any alone any effect on political behavior. This paper makes use of the frequent use of referendums in Switzerland to assess the extent to which citizens vote differently when somebody from their canton of residence sits in the central government. Studied are all the 670 nationwide referendums held between 1848 and February 2022. Analyzed are cantonal turnout, approval rates, likelihood to vote as the federal government recommends, and chances of being overruled by the state-wide majority. The three main findings are that 1) government inclusion is indeed significantly associated with some of the positive effects theorized, 2) on average, these effects are very small, but also that 3) there are some stark cross-cantonal differences, which are due mostly to national minority languages. In short, including minorities matters more than including majorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Investigating the use of digital health tools in physiotherapy: facilitators and barriers.
- Author
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Keel, Sara, Schmid, Anja, Keller, Fabienne, and Schoeb, Veronika
- Subjects
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TELEREHABILITATION , *PRIVACY , *PROFESSIONS , *PHYSICAL therapy , *MOBILE apps , *USER interfaces , *DIGITAL health , *INTERVIEWING , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *ETHNOLOGY research , *HEALTH insurance reimbursement , *MEDICAL ethics , *DECISION making , *RESEARCH funding , *PATIENT education , *MANAGEMENT , *OUTPATIENT services in hospitals , *PHYSICAL therapists' attitudes , *EXERCISE therapy , *CORPORATE culture , *COMPUTER literacy - Abstract
Digital tools are becoming more and more common in healthcare. Their potential to improve treatment, monitoring, and coaching in physiotherapy has been recognized. Yet studies report that the adoption of digital health tools in ambulatory physiotherapy is rather low and that their potential is underexploited. This paper aims to investigate how digital health tools in general, and the mobile health tool physitrackTM (hereafter the app) more particularly, are used in outpatient physiotherapy clinics and also to identify what facilitates or hinders the app's use. The paper is part of a larger study and adopts an ethnographic approach. It is based on observational and interview data collected at two outpatient clinics. We reveal how physiotherapists and patients use the app in physiotherapy and identify 16 interdependent factors, on the macro-, meso-, and micro-level, that either facilitate or hinder its use. We argue that a single factor's facilitating or hindering impact cannot be grasped in isolation but needs to be investigated as one piece of a dynamic interplay. Further qualitative research is required, especially to shed more light on the app's compatibility with physiotherapy practice and use in therapist-patient interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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42. Radiological characterization of high-energy proton Tantalum targets from CERN-ISOLDE Facility.
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Menaa, Nabil, Boscher, Aurore, Catherall, Richard, Dumont, Gerald, Magistris, Matteo, De Man, Sven, Mouret, Renaud, Pisano, Paolo, othe, Sebastien, Stegemann, Simon, Theis, Chris, and Vollaire, Joachim
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RADIOLOGY , *RADIOACTIVE waste management , *RADIONUCLIDE imaging , *GAMMA rays - Abstract
Accelerator-based techniques are considered among the leading methods to produce radioactive nuclei. The ISOLDE facility (Isotope mass Separator On-Line DEvice) at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) is a unique source of beams of radioactive nuclides that are used in a wide range of research domains, from nuclear astrophysics to life sciences. Over 400 ISOLDE targets are currently stored at CERN and an average of 30 targets are irradiated every year. All these targets are planned to be dismantled and disposed of as radioactive waste in a dedicated repository in Switzerland. This paper provides an overview of the challenges related to the radionuclide activity predictions, the number of activation scenarios, dismantling and conditioning of the Radioactive Waste (RW) using a hot cell (HC), the high dose rate, uncertainties related to unknown geometry parameters of the RW packages, and finally industrializing a complex RW elimination process as ITEP for an accelerator complex. The performed work addresses each of these challenges and offers technical solutions based on state-of-the-art computational codes, statistical techniques, and state of art Non-Destructive Assay (NDA) techniques using high energy-resolution gamma spectrometry. The methodology followed can be of guidance for the development of similar processes at other facilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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43. Resilience thinking improves SEA: a discussion paper.
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Slootweg, Roel, Jones, Mike, Bond, Alan, Brownlie, Susie, Fessey, Mark, Hanusch, Marie, Hoole, Art, Marotta, Leonardo, Partidário, Maria, Pröbstl, Ulrike, and Therivel, Riki
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ECOLOGICAL resilience , *ENVIRONMENTAL management , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis - Abstract
Strategic environmental assessment is often referred to as a tool for predicting the consequences of planned development. The assumption of predictability of outcomes is inconsistent with reality which is characterised by uncertainty and complexity. Furthermore, the capacity of our life support systems to absorb disturbance and re-organise without changing into undesirable states appears to be of critical importance. Resilience thinking provides a structured way of looking at complexity, uncertainty and interrelatedness of systems and processes, and above all, provides us with new ways of dealing with planning and more effective use of SEA. Resilience thinking provides inspiration for those who want to extend their thinking about sustainability, but it also challenges some ideas underpinning the impact assessment profession (the future is unpredictable; change is inevitable; increasing stability leads to vulnerability). This paper is the result of a lively and well-visited workshop on resilience thinking and SEA at the 2010 IAIA conference in Geneva. It introduces the basic concepts of resilience thinking, and develops ideas for its integration within SEA practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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44. Swiss energy research group release white paper on Power-to-X.
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RESEARCH teams , *SCIENTISTS - Abstract
Scientists from a consortium of Swiss energy research centres and universities have prepared a white paper on 'Power-to-X' for the Swiss Federal Energy Research Commission, to collect the key insights into Power-to-X technologies. The study sheds light on contributions that could be made to Switzerland's energy strategy by different technologies based on conversion and storage of various forms of energy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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45. Waste taxes at work: Evidence from the canton of Vaud in Switzerland.
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Pfister, Naomi and Mathys, Nicole A.
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PAPER recycling , *WASTE minimization , *ORGANIC waste recycling , *GLASS recycling , *WASTE recycling , *WASTE management - Abstract
This paper estimates the impact of the introduction of a tax on unsorted waste increasing the 35-l bag price from 0.24 to 1.95 CHF in 2013 in the canton of Vaud. Using panel data for 22 districts over the period 2010–2017, we identify the effects over time of the waste tax on unsorted waste and recycling. The neighbouring cantons of Geneva and Valais form our control group. The waste tax decreases the amount of yearly unsorted household-waste by about 47 kg, corresponding to a reduction of about one fourth per inhabitant. The effect is strongest the year after the introduction of the tax and is persistent over time. We further find a robust increase in organic waste recycling. For recycling of paper and glass, the effect is not clear-cut. Interestingly, in terms of weight, the reduction in unsorted waste is not fully compensated by increased recycling. Given that there are no signs for illegal waste disposal, this means that consumers probably reduced their total packaging bought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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46. Prescribing errors in children: what is the impact of a computerized physician order entry?
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Satir, Aylin N., Pfiffner, Miriam, Meier, Christoph R., and Caduff Good, Angela
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CLINICAL decision support systems , *HYBRID systems , *MEDICATION reconciliation , *PHYSICIANS , *CHILDREN'S hospitals - Abstract
Prescribing errors represent a safety risk for hospitalized patients, especially in pediatrics. Computerized physician order entry (CPOE) might reduce prescribing errors, although its effect has not yet been thoroughly studied on pediatric general wards. This study investigated the impact of a CPOE on prescribing errors in children on general wards at the University Children's Hospital Zurich. We performed medication reviews on a total of 1000 patients before and after the implementation of a CPOE. The CPOE included limited clinical decision support (CDS) such as drug-drug interaction check and checks for duplicates. Prescribing errors, their type according to the PCNE classification, their severity (adapted NCC MERP index), as well as the interrater reliability (Cohen's kappa), were analyzed. Potentially harmful errors were significantly reduced from 18 errors/100 prescriptions (95% CI: 17–20) to 11 errors/100 prescriptions (95% CI: 9–12) after CPOE implementation. A large number of errors with low potential for harm (e.g., "missing information") was reduced after the introduction of the CPOE, and consequently, the overall severity of potential harm increased post-CPOE. Despite general error rate reduction, medication reconciliation problems (PCNE error 8), such as drugs prescribed on paper as well as electronically, significantly increased after the introduction of the CPOE. The most common pediatric prescribing errors, the dosing errors (PCNE errors 3), were not altered on a statistically significant level after the introduction of the CPOE. Interrater reliability showed moderate agreement (Κ = 0.48). Conclusion: Patient safety increased by reducing the rate of prescribing errors after CPOE implementation. The reason for the observed increase in medication reconciliation problems might be the hybrid system with remaining paper prescriptions for special medication. The lacking effect on dosing errors could be explained by the fact that a web application CDS covering dosing recommendations (PEDeDose) was already in use before the implementation of the CPOE. Further investigations should focus on eliminating hybrid systems, interventions to increase the usability of the CPOE, and full integration of CDS tools such as automated dose checks into the CPOE. What is Known: • Prescribing errors, especially dosing errors, are a common safety threat for pediatric inpatients. •The introduction of a CPOE may reduce prescribing errors, though pediatric general wards are poorly studied. What is New: •To our knowledge, this is the first study on prescribing errors in pediatric general wards in Switzerland investigating the impact of a CPOE. •We found that the overall error rate was significantly reduced after the implementation of the CPOE. The severity of potential harm was higher in the post-CPOE period, which implies that low-severity errors were substantially reduced after CPOE implementation. Dosing errors were not reduced, but missing information errors and drug selection errors were reduced. On the other hand, medication reconciliation problems increased. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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47. Covid-19 Measures in Switzerland—Considerations from a Practice Perspective.
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Jagmetti, Luca
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COVID-19 pandemic , *COVID-19 , *BANKRUPTCY - Abstract
This paper offers some observations from a practitioner perspective on Swiss measures to support businesses during the Covid-19 pandemic, as a complement to the paper 'Governmental measures in Switzerland against mass bankruptcies during the Covid-19 pandemic' by Rodriguez and Ulli in this volume. A brief overview of the main fiscal and non-fiscal measures is followed by analysis of the reasons for non-use of a major non-fiscal measure (a new moratorium), and some suggestions as to the lessons that can be learned from this for the design of analogous relief policies in future crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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48. The challenge of low visibility: immigrant activism toward enfranchisement.
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Wegschaider, Klaudia
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IMMIGRANTS , *ACTIVISM , *SUFFRAGE , *NONCITIZENS - Abstract
Low visibility activism poses a challenge for scholars wishing to understand the involvement and impact of immigrant activists in political processes. While the migrant enfranchisement literature frequently credits emigrants for their active role in efforts toward the right to vote, it often ignores or dismisses the parallel role of immigrants. I revisit Switzerland as one of the most widely studied cases of immigrant enfranchisement to analyse the cantonal case studies of Geneva and Zurich. The results show that immigrants were actively involved in various ways, and at points, their activism proved to be essential. However, their contributions were often not publicly visible due to strategic choices made by immigrant activists and institutional barriers that limited their participation. This low visibility presents a challenge for scholars studying enfranchisement processes because the official paper trail may fail to reflect immigrant activism. By comparing parliamentary debates with interview as well as archival evidence, I demonstrate that only the latter two provide glimpses into immigrant contributions to their own enfranchisement. I conclude with a call to engage deeply with sources beyond the official paper trail when reaching conclusions about the extent and impact of immigrant involvement in political processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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49. Procedural knowledge acquisition in a second‐year nursing course. Effectiveness of a digital video‐based collaborative learning‐by‐design activity using hypervideo.
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Evi‐Colombo, Alessia, Cattaneo, Alberto, and Bétrancourt, Mireille
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NURSING , *CLINICAL trials , *COMPUTER-aided design , *ANALYSIS of variance , *DIGITAL technology , *NURSING education , *ABILITY , *TRAINING , *LEARNING strategies , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *NURSING students , *DATA analysis software , *VIDEO recording , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
Background: While the use of digital technologies in collaborative design tasks have gained acceptance amongst educational researchers and instructors, few studies have analysed the application of video‐supported collaborative learning‐by‐design (VSC‐LBD) in the authentic setting of professional education and training. Objectives: This study on VSC‐LBD investigated the learning processes and outcomes of nursing students who collaboratively used a hypervideo authoring tool to learn the procedure about urinary catheter insertion. We hypothesized that the students who collaboratively used a hypervideo authoring tool to learn about a professional procedure would outperform those exposed to a traditional lesson on the same procedure. Further, we assumed that the students who created an instructional video from scratch would obtain higher learning scores than those who worked on existing footage. Methods: Participants (N = 60) worked in groups and were assigned to three conditions: in the first each group recorded a video while simulating the procedure and then turned the footage into a hypervideo (VSC‐LBD1); in the second condition each group already received the raw video to turn it into a hypervideo (VSC‐LBD1); in the third participants attended a traditional lesson (control). Pre‐ and post‐tests measured procedural knowledge acquisition. The co‐regulation episodes within the groups that produced the best and worst videos were assessed and measured. Results and Conclusions: The students in the two VSC‐LBD conditions significantly outperformed those in the control condition. No differences were found between making an original video and using existing footage. More co‐regulatory processing episodes were found in the best video group compared to the other groups. Takeaways: This study supports theoretical assumptions on the value of VSC‐LBD in authentic learning environments and provide useful information to instructors willing to adopt collaborative use of interactive video tools. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Video‐based technologies, and more in particular hypervideo with its additional affordances, results an effective tool to support procedural learning.Hypervideo designing is a fruitful Learning‐By‐Design (LBD) activity that allows learners to transform and restructure knowledge.From a pedagogical point of view, giving students collaborative design tasks on video materials showed to be quite effective. What this paper adds: Few studies have investigated the application of video‐supported collaborative learning‐by‐design (VSC‐LBD) in the authentic setting of professional education and training. The same is true when it comes to procedural knowledge acquisition applied to clinical procedures, with most studies focussing on conceptual knowledge acquisition.When working with a learning‐by‐design approach, a clear distinction between the benefit of designing a video from scratch and of designing the hyper‐ components was lacking.Adopting a VSC‐LBD pedagogical approach to support learning of professional procedures in the nursing sector showed to be very effective both looking at the learning processes and the learning outcomes. Implications for practice and/or policy: This study proposes a collaborative design activity to learn professional procedures and demonstrates its affordances in terms of learning gains compared to a traditional lesson.Giving students a collaborative design task to build a hypervideo seems more important than just giving them a design task on the starting video depicting the procedureThe paper provides instructors with the necessary information to develop pedagogically sound design VSC‐LBD activities in time‐sensitive yet effective ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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50. Peri‐implantitis: A bibliometric network analysis of top 100 most‐cited research articles.
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Sabri, Hamoun and Wang, Hom‐Lay
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BIBLIOMETRICS , *PERI-implantitis , *DATABASES , *DENTAL implants , *INTERNET searching - Abstract
Background: Over the past decades, there has been an increase in research publications focusing on peri‐implantitis. When facing limited healthcare resources, bibliometric analyses can guide researchers and funding parties toward areas where reallocation or more focus on research activity is warranted. The main objective of this study was to identify the trends of the top 100 cited articles on peri‐implantitis research as the first study of its kind. Methods: A Web of Science search, using the keywords "peri‐implantitis or periimplantitis" was built to create a database of the most‐cited articles. Articles were ranked by citation count and screened by two independent reviewers. The bibliometric characteristics of the studies were gathered and analyzed using several bibliometric software. Author collaborations, author clusters, and keyword co‐occurrence network analyses were also performed. The correlation between the citation count and the age of each article was tested. Results: The top 100 cited papers were published from 1994 to 2018 and the total citation counts ranged from 119 to 972 with 244.5 citations/paper on average. There was no correlation between the age of the articles and the citation count (p‐value = 0.67). 21% of the studies consisted of prospective clinical studies. 35% of the papers focused on treatment and prevention of peri‐implantitis while 65% concerned epidemiology. The top three most prolific countries were Sweden (n = 31), Germany (n = 15), and Switzerland (n = 13). We found 12 authors who had greater than five publications on the list. Also, the most published journal was Clinical Oral Implants Research. Conclusion: This study provides insight into the characteristics and quality of the most highly cited peri‐implantitis literature. This revealed a deficiency in terms of the number of studies on treatment strategies as well as a higher level of evidence studies among the most‐ impactful papers on peri‐implantitis at the moment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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