69,845 results on '"public welfare"'
Search Results
2. Social investment: Your questions answered
- Author
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Grimes, Arthur and Green, Aphra
- Published
- 2024
3. How efficient is the Australian labour market?: Analysing job matching efficiency for regions, occupations and industries
- Author
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Lake, Peter, Shamiri, Samuel, Sharma, Kishor, and Bialowas, Adam
- Published
- 2024
4. Pioneer advantage or late-mover advantage? An examination of the interplay between policy diffusion sequence and policy outcomes.
- Author
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Chen, Xiangning and Wang, Yahua
- Subjects
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RIVER conservation laws , *POLICY analysis , *GOVERNMENT policy , *PUBLIC administration , *POLITICAL planning , *WATER management , *POLITICAL agenda , *PUBLIC interest , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
In policy diffusion research, considerable focus has been placed on the mechanisms and motivations underlying diffusion, yet there is a notable dearth of analysis linking the diffusion process with policy outcomes. This prompts an important inquiry: Who fares better in terms of policy outcomes—the pioneer or the late mover? Our study investigates China's River Chief System policy and classifies cities as either pioneers, followers, or laggards according to their position in the diffusion process. Our quantitative analysis of 142 cities indicates that pioneers achieve the most favorable policy outcomes, while laggards are associated with the least favorable results. Further examination of the political incentives driving pioneer advantage suggests that pioneers are driven by political aspirations, followers are driven by political signaling, and laggards are driven by political pressure. This research deepens understanding of policy diffusion by elucidating the interplay between diffusion sequence and policy outcomes, and offers significant insights for policymakers aiming to formulate effective diffusion strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. WHY AND HOW DOES A MACHINE LEARNING ALGORITHM COEXIST WITH ALTERNATIVE METHODS? THE CASE OF THE SOCIAL WELFARE BLIND SPOT IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM.
- Author
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Lee, Gwanhoo and Lee, Woo Sik
- Subjects
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MACHINE learning , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL justice , *ELIGIBILITY (Social aspects) - Abstract
The Social Security Information Service, a central government agency of South Korea, has implemented an information system using ML algorithms to identify social welfare blind spots. Social welfare blind spots refer to cases where individuals are eligible for social welfare benefits but are not current recipients for various reasons. Even though the ML-based model was performing well, the Korean government developed two additional methods, including a rule-based model and a human-driven heuristic method championed by local governments. This case study investigates why the ML-based method coexists with the other two methods and how they complement one another. We found that policymakers’ lack of understanding of ML, local government employees’ perception, and accountability concerns contributed to their coexistence. The three methods had different strengths and weaknesses. The government agencies orchestrated these methods to increase complementarities by leveraging and strengthening different problem-solving approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
6. A Collaborative Emic Methodology for Developing Practice Guidelines for Leaving Alternative Care in Resource-Constrained Settings.
- Author
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van Breda, Adrian D.
- Subjects
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MEDICAL protocols , *PUBLIC housing , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *MEDICAL personnel , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *SOCIAL workers , *SOCIAL services , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *FAMILIES , *PROFESSIONS , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *RESOURCE-limited settings , *CHILD care , *PUBLIC welfare , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *PATIENT aftercare , *POVERTY - Abstract
Preparing young people who have been removed from their parents for leaving alternative care is vital to their success as young adults. Most research on this preparation centres on care-leavers' views of their support requirements. However, there is little evidence on how to develop practice guidelines for leaving care that may work in real-world settings. This paper aims to achieve two things. First, it presents a first-hand narrative account of a qualitative, collaborative and emic methodology for developing practice guidelines. The methodology emerged over four years through a collaborative bottom-up process between researchers and practitioners in South Africa. The author argues that this methodology may be helpful in other countries and practice contexts. Second, it presents examples of the resultant care-leaving practice guidelines, structured according to set headings and designed to be practicable in resource-constrained settings. While the practice guidelines, being emic, may not transfer across contexts, the author argues that the development process, the structure of the guidelines and the larger practice matrix may transfer well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Research circles as a method for implementing new services in the public health and welfare system.
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Møgster, Birthe, Ness, Ottar, and Reime, Monika Alvestad
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PATIENT selection , *HEALTH literacy , *HUMAN services programs , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *SELF-efficacy , *MEETINGS , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *HUMAN research subjects , *PUBLIC sector , *AT-risk people , *DECISION making , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *EXPERIENCE , *BEREAVEMENT , *MEDICAL research , *PUBLIC health , *PUBLIC welfare , *STAKEHOLDER analysis , *COMMITMENT (Psychology) , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
Background: Co-creation has become a guiding principle in public service innovation, but more knowledge is still needed on overcoming barriers and increasing the effectiveness of co-creation processes. This study explores the research circle method as a concrete methodology for co-creation, and its application within two cases involving the implementation of new services for drug death-bereaved persons in Norway based on new research-based knowledge. Method: The study followed an action research design. The field notes and audio recordings were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. Results: The analysis identified two key dimensions experienced as important for the implementation of the new services when research circles were used as a method for co-creation: 1) the inclusion of participants from different contexts and 2) support structures for service interventions. Discussion: Research circles are discussed as an important support structure for promoting public value co-creation that can contribute to increasing stakeholders' capacity for implementing services in the public system, especially when the focus is on the perspectives and interests of stakeholders, such as practitioners and management in public health and welfare services. However, the discussion also points to barriers relating to the co-creation process that need to be considered when planning research circle-based interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. A comprehensive analysis of well-being frameworks applied in Australia and their suitability for Indigenous peoples.
- Author
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Sangha, Kamaljit K, Dinku, Yonatan, Costanza, Robert, and Poelina, Anne
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ENVIRONMENTAL health , *HEALTH status indicators , *MEDICAL care of indigenous peoples , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *MENTAL health , *GOVERNMENT policy , *HEALTH , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EMOTIONS , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *SPIRITUALITY , *PUBLIC administration , *PUBLIC welfare , *HEALTH of indigenous peoples , *WELL-being - Abstract
Purpose: Well-being is a complex, multi-dimensional, dynamic, and evolving concept, covering social, economic, health, cultural and spiritual dimensions of human living, and often used synonymously with happiness, life satisfaction, prosperity, and quality of life. We review the existing key wellbeing frameworks applied in Australia both for the wider public and Indigenous peoples. The aim is to provide a comprehensive overview of various applied frameworks, along with a critical analysis of domains or dimensions comprising those frameworks, and to analyse the role of nature in those frameworks. Methodology: We conducted a critical analysis of the main frameworks applied in Australia to date to measure the well-being of the mainstream (mainly non-Indigenous) and Indigenous populations. This study is particularly timely given the Australian Government's interest in revising the well-being frameworks as mentioned in the Government "Measuring What Matters" statement. Results: The existing well-being frameworks in Australia either overlook or hardly consider the role of nature and its services which are important to support human well-being. Likewise, for Indigenous peoples "Country" (Indigenous clan land) is vital for their well-being as their living is imbued with "Country". The role of nature/"Country" needs to be considered in revising the well-being frameworks, indicators and measures to inform and develop appropriate policies and programs in Australia. Conclusion: To develop appropriate welfare policies and programs for achieving socio-economic and other wellbeing outcomes, it is essential to evolve and conceptualize wellbeing frameworks (and related indicators and measures) in line with people's contemporary values, particularly considering the role of nature and its services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Towards new geographies of cohesion in a context of growing inequalities: insights from two social innovation projects in Milan metropolitan area.
- Author
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Lazzarini, Luca and Pacchi, Carolina
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SOCIAL innovation , *SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL cohesion , *PUBLIC welfare , *CIVIL society - Abstract
This contribution critically examines the possible interface between territorial cohesion and social innovation by investigating how two local social innovation initiatives in the Milan metropolitan area have tried to tackle existing territorial inequalities. The paper draws on the outcomes of the Horizon 2020 Project 'COHSMO―Inequality, Urbanization and Territorial Cohesion: developing the European social model of economic growth and democratic capacity' (2017–2021) and places emphasis on the ways in which social innovation can emerge in the public sector and be sustained by public action in connection with civil society to solve problems of socio-spatial inequalities in distressed urban neighborhoods. Findings show that social innovation in the two cases has been interpreted as a trigger for empowering socially vulnerable inhabitants and reconnecting them with existing welfare services. This has happened through a filter mechanism that allowed to create a soft space where institutional and third-sector actors could approach vulnerable individuals in informal settings, answer to their emerging social needs, and promote empowerment processes. The analysis highlighted a relationship of complementarity between social innovation and the welfare system due to the capacity of socially innovative actions to fill some gaps present in existing welfare spaces or in the market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Civil society and governance. A survey of local authority and NPO collaboration from an institutional perspective.
- Author
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Yngve, Louise and Kassman, Anders
- Subjects
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PUBLIC welfare , *PUBLIC sector , *NONPROFIT organizations , *LEISURE , *COMMUNITY organization , *INSTITUTIONAL logic - Abstract
There is a renewed interest in third sector organizations with hope for contributions to systems of new public governance and welfare services. This study is based on a survey to the local authorities in Sweden and aims to analyze how collaboration between public and third sector organizations occurs at the local level. A special focus for the study is idea-driven public partnerships (IOPs). The results indicate that collaboration mainly occurs outside of the core fields of welfare and also that the national level agreements set standards to be used in especially the larger local authorities who are more in need of formalized policies to handle the local relations. The institutionalized collaborative relations are diverse and mainly meant to promote a thriving third sector for its democratic values, but there are also certain welfare fields with less local remit such as sports, leisure time activities, and homelessness where NPOs are not crowded out by the public sector. Collaboration with IOPs are more common in larger local authorities and places with a larger proportion of immigrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Cross-class solidarity in times of crisis: the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on support for redistribution.
- Author
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Tonelli, Simone, Harris, Eloisa, and Deeg, Franziska
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GOVERNMENT policy , *INCOME , *ENDOWMENTS , *RESEARCH funding , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *FINANCIAL stress , *ECONOMIC impact , *PUBLIC welfare , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
This study investigates how the economic crisis associated with the COVID-19 pandemic impacted support for social assistance in Germany. We formulate our expectations drawing from the classical political economy literature on self-interest and the burgeoning research on the role of solidarity. On the one hand, we hypothesize that only low-income individuals impacted economically by COVID-19, who can benefit from social assistance, will support its expansion. On the other hand, we expect higher-income individuals affected economically by COVID-19 to be more supportive of social assistance, even though they do not benefit from it, and less likely to consider welfare recipients 'undeserving' compared to higher-income individuals not economically affected by the pandemic. We argue that first-hand crisis experiences update people's beliefs about how luck impacts one's economic situation in the presence of an exogenous shock. We combine observational and experimental data from an original survey collected in Germany in April 2021 to test our expectations. On average, low-income respondents appear to be the most vigorous supporters of social assistance, but their support is not conditional on their experience of the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, we find that the support for more social assistance among affluent individuals depends on the economic impact of the pandemic. We experimentally manipulated the deservingness of welfare recipients and found that better-off respondents impacted by the pandemic were less likely to penalize even the most 'undeserving' welfare beneficiaries. We suggest that solidarity between classes in hard times may occur through a convergence of the deservingness perception among individuals. The article has broader implications for studying the effect of crises on solidarity and the conditional nature of class-based explanations for support for different welfare policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Global Social Policy Digest 24.3: Adopting a gender lens to tackle gender disparities.
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GENDER role , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *GOVERNMENT policy , *RESOURCE allocation , *SELF-efficacy , *GENDER specific care , *SOCIAL justice , *WORLD health , *GENDER inequality , *GOVERNMENT aid , *SPECIAL days , *SOCIAL integration , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL problems , *WOMEN'S rights , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *COVID-19 pandemic , *WOMEN'S employment - Published
- 2024
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13. The politics of beneficiary selection: A case study of Ghana's Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) cash transfer programme.
- Author
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Akyeampong, Betty
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SOCIAL security , *SELF-efficacy , *HUMAN services programs , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIAL justice , *RESIDENTIAL patterns , *COST benefit analysis , *COMMUNITIES , *CULTURAL values , *GOVERNMENT aid , *PRACTICAL politics , *EMPLOYEE selection , *PUBLIC welfare , *POVERTY , *POLITICAL participation - Abstract
In communities of Sub-Saharan Africa, where local elites participate in the selection of households for cash transfers, there is a tendency to deviate from laid down rules for various reasons. Using qualitative data from selected districts where Ghana's Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) programme is implemented, this study investigates the reasons why district and community elites deviate from prescribed selection processes of the LEAP programme. Drawing on the concept of competitive clientelism, the findings suggest that elites are deeply guided by political patronage to fulfil one primary goal, protecting their role in office. Such ambition is facilitated by the discretionary power accorded to elites by the local government system and socio-cultural values deeply rooted in Ghanaian society. In conclusion, the study draws out key lessons from the analysis and suggests a design of beneficiary selection frameworks that acknowledges the nature of domestic politics, institutions of power and powerful actors at the subnational level. The article also highlights the implications of the findings for the broad politics of social protection literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Unraveling the Roots of Fiscal Crises in Contemporary Capitalist Nations and Strategies for Overcoming Them.
- Author
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Li, Bin
- Subjects
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COVID-19 pandemic , *SOCIAL services , *PUBLIC welfare , *PUBLIC spending , *FINANCIAL crises - Abstract
Since the 1980s, fiscal crises have notably impacted capitalist nations, a situation that intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic. Although theories of capital accumulation and economic crises often serve to explain these events, this study advocates for a broader perspective by viewing fiscal crises as a primary manifestation of the contradiction between socialized production and capitalist private ownership. This study examines the evolution of this contradiction through various stages of capitalism and highlights the potential pitfalls of common strategies adopted by capitalist nations, such as neoliberal policies that cut social welfare and public spending. The study then shifts its focus to China, exploring its unique dual fiscal system, which supports China's rapid economic growth, offering a novel perspective on addressing the global fiscal crisis. JEL Classification : P16, F63, E62 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. Welfare service reforms: Arab minority welfare bureau managers assess the outcomes.
- Author
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Mahajne, Ibrahim
- Subjects
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SOCIAL services , *REFORMS , *MINORITIES , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
Welfare bureaus constitute a safety net for the dispossessed Arab minority in Israel who are partially excluded from the state social services. The welfare bureau reforms discussed in this article are consequently crucial to improve welfare services for the underprivileged minority service users. This article partially fills a lacuna in the relevant literature by adopting a critical approach to assess the reforms' actual contributions to improving the organizations' performances for minority population social services. It did this by investigating Arab social workers' views on the outcomes of different welfare services reforms for them. An exploratory study drew data from two tools: content analysis of official documents and in‐depth semi‐structured interviews with 19 Arab welfare bureau managers. The documents indicated that the 'Change Program' (1977) produced minimal to no positive outcomes for Arab welfare bureaus. Also, the respondents indicated that the 'Reform in Local Welfare Services' (2017) produced insufficient achievements, detailed in five themes. Two Arab representatives were consulted for the proposed 'Right to Quality Welfare' program (June 2023), which aims to offer a 'uniform welfare basket' to all citizens. The findings indicate that the concept of up‐down comprehensive organizational reforms should be re‐examined, considering instead small but incremental down‐up modifications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Revisiting the role of social work in the substantial realization of social rights in local welfare systems: Transforming and changing the rules of the institutional game?
- Author
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Dewanckel, Lore, Schiettecat, Tineke, Hermans, Koen, Roose, Rudi, Van Lancker, Wim, Kessl, Fabian, and Roets, Griet
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SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL & economic rights , *PUBLIC welfare , *MUNICIPAL government - Abstract
Although diverse European welfare states have institutionalized an extensive infrastructure of public welfare services to redistribute resources, governments have been confronted with barriers in realizing the social rights of certain groups of citizens. Decentralization and increasingly local welfare provision has been promoted as a strategy to substantially realize social rights. In that sense, the vital role of frontline social work has been stressed in local welfare systems, being considered as dynamic arrangements in which local policymakers and professional social work actors are involved in the substantial realization of social rights. These trends have been frequently studied from a social policy perspective, but the role of professional social work on the frontline level has received much less attention. In this study, we accordingly rely on neo‐institutional theory to explore how frontline social workers employ their professional discretion during processes of local social policy implementation, related to the broader circumstances in which they operate. Our qualitative study aims to tease out whether their strategic actions might transform and/or change the rules of the local institutional game. The qualitative analysis is based on policy documents and qualitative interviews with key actors in two municipalities in Belgium. Our research findings reveal three central fields of tension: (1) Rescaling of responsibilities to the local welfare system and community level versus in‐built spatial concentrations of social problems and inequalities, (2) Efficient local welfare system organization versus wicked social problems, and (3) Fast local welfare system logics versus slow realities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Machinic, inadequate, entrepreneurial: Uncovering the citizen subject of the human-centric welfare state.
- Author
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Räisänen, Santeri
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PUBLIC welfare , *WELFARE state , *CULTURAL production , *CIVIL society , *CULTURAL studies - Abstract
This article argues that in the turn towards the human-centric in Finnish welfare reform, the human is a flexible signifier which arises out of technical metaphor to stand for certain neoliberal fantasies regarding welfare citizenship, market society and the state. I situate my analysis in the preceding literature on the cultural production of the citizen in market-oriented welfare reform. Through a close reading of user representations in a governmental AI Programme seeking transform the welfare state towards human centricity, I identify three dominant articulations of the human : the machinic, the inadequate and the entrepreneurial. These articulations disambiguate the human-in-the-centre as a chimaeral fantasy representing a late-neoliberal policy regime and evince the role of the imagination of engineers in government technopolitics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Pharmacy Prescription Assistance Program: Evaluation of a Health System Retail Model for Outpatients.
- Author
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Rockett, Hope, Wilkinson, Samaneh Tavalali, and Daniel, Sarah
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HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL prescriptions , *COST effectiveness , *ESSENTIAL drugs , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *HUMAN services programs , *INSURANCE , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *OUTPATIENT medical care , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EVALUATION of medical care , *RESEARCH , *GOVERNMENT programs , *PUBLIC welfare , *DRUGSTORES , *MEDICAL care costs , *HOSPITAL pharmacies - Abstract
Background: Access to essential medications remains a challenge, especially among socioeconomically disadvantaged populations. In 2021, 18 million U.S. adults struggled to afford prescribed medications, a problem exacerbated by the prevalence of chronic conditions like diabetes, hypertension, and mental health disorders. The 340B Drug Pricing Program has enabled eligible healthcare organizations to purchase drugs at reduced prices, thus enhancing medication accessibility for financially constrained patients. This study explores the impact of the Retail Pharmacy Prescription Assistance Program within a 340B-eligible health system in addressing this issue. Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of a Retail Pharmacy Prescription Assistance Program in increasing access to essential medications and reducing financial burden for eligible outpatients within a 340B-eligible health system. Methods: This exploratory study was conducted at a 340B-eligible academic medical center and focused on the implementation of the Retail Pharmacy Prescription Assistance Program (RPPA Program). Eligible patients, already enrolled in the health system's financial assistance program, were identified, and assessed for additional eligibility for the RPPA Program, ensuring prescriptions were written by internal providers and that patients did not have access to other financial assistance resources. Data collected included patient demographics, medication history, dispensed prescriptions, out-of-pocket patient savings, and pharmacist interventions. Results: During the study, 156 patients were enrolled. About half (51%; n = 79) did not utilize its services due to reasons such as the absence of active prescriptions, prescriptions from external providers, or existing coverage by the patients' insurance. Of the 563 prescriptions clinically evaluated, 72% (n = 407) were dispensed free of charge to 77 patients, resulting in $13,945 in out-of-pocket patient savings. Of the total prescriptions assessed, 28% (n = 156) were not included on the RPPA Program formulary and were not changed to a RPPA formulary alternative for various reasons, such as a formulary alternative was not available, or the patient opted not to switch to formulary alternatives. Conclusions: The RPPA Program proved effective in reducing financial barriers to accessing essential outpatient medications. While it yielded positive outcomes, the program's benefit was constrained to a limited patient demographic, underscoring the imperative to expand identification and engagement strategies to include a broader patient population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. The Politics of Social Welfare: The BJP and the Discerning Voter.
- Author
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Kailash, K. K.
- Subjects
PUBLIC welfare ,ELECTIONS ,VOTERS ,VOTING ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
Voting studies tell us that voters reward incumbents who take care of the economic self-interest of voters. However, is the relationship between services and votes simple and straightforward? Are there conditions when welfare provisioning does not convert into votes for the incumbent? Data from the National Election Studies 2024 appears to suggest that voters are discerning and concerned about access issues when it comes to welfare delivery. Voters do not cast their votes only on whether they received private (welfare) benefits but also consider factors such as their experience and well-being while accessing those goods and services. Examining the relationship between welfare services and voting, the article demonstrates that individual-level processes are politically significant enough to influence vote choices between the benefits and the votes. These findings could inform scholarly studies and policy debates on social service delivery and vote choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Editorial: Introduction to Special Issue, "Queering Clinical Social Work Praxis".
- Author
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Karpman, Hannah, Crath, Rory, and Francis, Leigh-Anne
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PROFESSIONAL practice ,SOCIAL justice ,SOCIAL services ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,PUBLIC welfare ,SEXUAL minorities ,CIVIL rights ,MEDICAL ethics - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which editor discusses various articles within the issue on topics including limits of risk-based boundary norms in clinical social work; social work education and practice through a lens of queer irreverence and LGBTQ+ youth of color.
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- 2024
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21. How Consumers Choose the Green Electricity Product Instead of Conventional Electricity? A Welfare Analysis Approach.
- Author
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Hadhri, Walid and Abderrazak, Chema
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ELECTRIC rates ,MONOPOLIES ,ELECTRIC power consumption ,ELECTRIC utilities ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The aim of this article is to analyze theoretically whether changes in an access charge pricing policy can promote green electricity use. The model considers two hypothetical firms: One firm offers green electricity product, and the other firm provides conventional electricity. Each firm pays an access charge to the natural monopoly in order to have access to the transportation network. Through using a vertical differentiation model, we try to analyze the link between the access charges paid by the two firms and the qualities offered. We also attempt to explain why the consumers do not often choose green electricity. Finally, we suggest a new policy that can lead the consumers to choose the green electricity product instead of conventional electricity. Our model shows that changes in the access charge pricing policies can constitute a relevant component in the reforms of the electricity sector and can have impacts on the consumption of the green electricity. A differentiating access charge policy could allow a better penetration of the green electricity product and an increase in the social welfare when consumers have greater preferences in environmental qualities. Otherwise, their preservation at a uniform level is desirable in order to maintain the competition. JEL Classifications : B21, C72, L13, Q21, P28 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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22. Depoliticizing DEI: Path to fulfillment of its core values and effective implementation.
- Author
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Myeong, Hwayeon
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DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,SOCIAL values ,PUBLIC welfare ,SOCIAL change ,POLARIZATION (Social sciences) - Abstract
The article argues for depoliticizing diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives to ensure their effective implementation, sustainability, and alignment with diverse moral values across the political spectrum. Topics include the rationales for depoliticizing DEI, factors contributing to its polarization, and strategies to bridge partisan divides through reframing and collaboration.
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- 2024
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23. Pricing of medical services and channel selection strategies for pharmaceutical supply chain under the zero‐markup drug policy.
- Author
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Li, Shiyang, Li, Yantao, Kong, Qianqian, Feng, Xiaoyu, Long, Yuanxue, and Zhou, Nan
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PHARMACEUTICAL policy ,PUBLIC hospitals ,PUBLIC welfare ,SUPPLY chains ,DRUG prices - Abstract
This paper studies the channel strategies of drug suppliers in the drug supply chain under the zero‐plus drug pricing policy. With the popularity of e‐commerce and online shopping, supply chain firms have begun considering expanding their business to online channels. In this paper, we construct a game model to explore the impact of the pharmaceutical supply chain's development of online channels on supply chain members. We conclude that under the zero profits policy, increasing the public hospital's public welfare level will increase the price of drugs, decrease the price of medical services, and reduce the overall cost of patients. In addition, the greater the sensitivity of medical services, the lower the likelihood that a drug supplier will open an online pharmacy, and the lower the level of public good, the greater the likelihood that a drug supplier will open an online pharmacy. In addition, under certain conditions, patients can receive a higher level of medical service and spend less on healthcare under a dual‐channel strategy. Finally, under a dual‐channel strategy, an appropriate profit‐sharing mechanism can eliminate instability in the pharmaceutical supply chain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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24. Tackling Poverty Through Feminisation of Welfare Schemes.
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Nanda, Aradhana
- Subjects
POVERTY ,POOR women ,PUBLIC welfare - Published
- 2024
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25. To shop or not to shop while traveling? Exploring the influence of shopping mall attributes on overall tourist shopping satisfaction.
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Esfandiar, Kourosh, Rahmani Seryasat, Majid, and Kozak, Metin
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SHOPPING tourism ,SHOPPING malls ,RECREATION centers ,SATISFACTION ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The shopping experience may impact tourists' overall dis/satisfaction and, subsequently, the destination's local economy. To address this importance, the current study focused on six important criteria – environmental performance, geographical location, human resources, marketing, services and welfare recreational facilities – that also include twenty-four sub-criteria that had been identified and proposed after a comprehensive review of relevant literature. Combining fuzzy set theory and Decision-Making Trial and Evaluation Laboratory (DEMATEL) method, the causal relationship of each criterion and its sub-criteria and the key influencing factors for the quality of tourists' shopping mall satisfaction were identified. Also, the links between the main criteria and sub-criteria were uncovered, and their weights were determined. The results indicate that the 'marketing' criterion has had the most substantial influence on the quality of shopping mall satisfaction, while the additional variables include 'services', 'human resources', 'welfare recreational facilities', 'environmental performance' and 'geographical location'. The study provides a list of implications for both the literature and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Modernizing smallholder agriculture and achieving food security: An exploration in machinery services and labor reallocation in China.
- Author
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Zou, Baoling and Mishra, Ashok K.
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL modernization ,FOOD security ,PUBLIC welfare ,AGRICULTURAL productivity ,FARMERS ,SMALL farms - Abstract
This study discusses the modernization of smallholder agriculture in China, where most farms are small, and farms' parcels are fragmented. The study puts forward a framework of agricultural modernization by vertical division of labor and specialized production in agriculture. We posit that hiring machinery services could be a pathway to connect smallholders with modern agriculture and achieve food security in China. Using household‐level data from China, this study examines how hiring machinery services affects farm productivity and rural households' welfare. Findings show that mechanization services increased rural Chinese families' food security and agricultural productivity. Hiring machinery services improves smallholders' income by influencing the input efficiency of maize production and increasing participation in off‐farm work. Our findings highlight the importance of technology to improve smallholder agriculture and food security, not only in China but also in other South and Southeast Asian countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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27. Housing the poor? Accessibility and exclusion in the local housing systems of Vienna and Milan.
- Author
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Wolfgring, Constanze and Peverini, Marco
- Subjects
HOUSING ,PUBLIC welfare ,LOW-income housing ,HOUSING policy ,MIDDLE class - Abstract
Despite featuring very different housing systems, both in Vienna and Milan a growing number of people struggle to access affordable and decent housing. Even though social housing policies are in place in both contexts, for many the unregulated and often unaffordable private housing market is the only option. Building upon Antonio Tosi's work, we centre our analysis on the poor and compare how two very different local housing systems create the conditions for their inclusion or exclusion. Through a comparative analysis of the Viennese and Milanese local housing regimes and adopting a mixed methodology, we discuss how both generate conditions of exclusion and who the ones excluded are, which local policies address the poor and how appropriate these are for mitigating housing exclusion. Finally, we indicate some directions for policies aimed at tackling the intersections of poverty and housing exclusion, advocating for a maximization of the 'sociality' of housing policies, involving a shift in prioritisation from the middle classes to the most vulnerable groups and the loosening of certain formal access requirements to housing or welfare services that constitute barriers to these groups, where possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Understanding the impact of working conditions on ranger vulnerability to corruption: insights from a global survey.
- Author
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Lebon, Héloïse, Singh, Rohit, Abdulla, Amal Fathima, Ahmed, Kaleem, and Aisha, Hamera
- Subjects
PUBLIC welfare ,STATISTICAL correlation ,CORRUPTION ,GENDER ,LABOR supply - Abstract
Rangers play a crucial role on the frontline of conservation; however, they often face difficult and sometimes dangerous working conditions, along with inadequate pay, equipment, training, and recognition. This study aims to determine the influence of rangers' working conditions on their vulnerability to corruption using correlation analysis. The research utilized the Global Ranger Perception Survey 2019 dataset, a global-scale survey that collected responses from 6,101 rangers across 25 countries on various aspects of their working conditions. We further analyzed the results by gender and geographic region. Key findings indicate that women have a lower propensity to engage in corrupt activities. Conversely, at the regional level, Latin America demonstrates a heightened susceptibility to corruption compared to other regions. Additionally, there is a strong correlation between corruption and certain aspects of rangers' working conditions in Latin America. Future assessments, such as the State of the Ranger Report, could provide a monitoring mechanism to evaluate the long-term effects of improvements in rangers' working conditions and their potential vulnerability to corruption worldwide. Country-specific or even landscape-specific in-depth studies would be valuable for developing targeted strategies to address corruption within the workforce while also improving rangers' working conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. ОКРЕМІ ПИТАННЯ ЩОДО КРИТЕРІЇВ ПРАВОМІРНОГО ОБМЕЖЕННЯ ПРИНЦИПУ СВОБОДИ.
- Author
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Я. П., Бондарчук
- Subjects
PUBLIC welfare ,INTERVENTION (Federal government) ,SOCIAL values ,PUBLIC interest ,PUBLIC policy (Law) - Abstract
The article is devoted to the study of the content and peculiarities of implementation of the principles and criteria for limiting human freedoms. The author concludes that the principle of freedom should be studied through the following aspects: axiological, theoretical and practical. The first one involves maximum absolutisation of the principle of freedom for its further deployment in social relations. The theoretical dimension involves the study of the specifics of the content, types, features, and nature of freedom as a legal principle, which allows for a better understanding of it and its more harmonious implementation in legal relations. The practical dimension involves studying the problems of implementing the principle of freedom, the degree of its presence in various branches of law, and the specifics of its restrictions. The article notes that the principle of proportionality means that restriction of freedom can only be a means, not an aim, freedom is always the highest value for law and its restrictions as the ultimate goal are inadmissible, but only as a regulatory means to ensure rights and freedoms, national security, healthcare, public order, etc. The principle of public welfare as a criterion for restricting freedom is more complicated, since there are two doctrines: classical liberalism, which puts freedom above all else and limits state intervention, and social liberalism, which insists on the welfare of all and therefore more active state intervention in the economic life of society. The author concludes that restrictions on freedom must be in the general public interest in the economic, social and political spheres. The author notes that limitation of the principle of freedom is a reduction of its scope, but not a restriction of its content. By restricting freedom, its content remains unchanged, otherwise it will lose its legal value. The article provides the author’s definition of restriction of the principle of freedom as a lawful interference by the State with the capabilities of a person, which is expressed in setting limits for a possible model of behaviour in a certain territory, individually or for certain groups of persons. The author emphasises that one of the key problems with the implementation of measures restricting human freedom is excessiveness. An important public interest allows for the restriction of freedom to achieve it, but other interests and values may suffer. The principles of minimum possible restriction and priority social value should apply here. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A self-eliminating allelic-drive reverses insecticide resistance in Drosophila leaving no transgene in the population.
- Author
-
Auradkar, Ankush, Corder, Rodrigo M., Marshall, John M., and Bier, Ethan
- Subjects
VOLTAGE-gated ion channels ,INSECTICIDE resistance ,DROSOPHILA melanogaster ,PUBLIC welfare ,DROSOPHILA - Abstract
Insecticide resistance (IR) poses a significant global challenge to public health and welfare. Here, we develop a locally-acting unitary self-eliminating allelic-drive system, inserted into the Drosophila melanogaster yellow (y) locus. The drive cassette encodes both Cas9 and a single gRNA to bias inheritance of the favored wild-type (1014 L) allele over the IR (1014 F) variant of the voltage-gated sodium ion channel (vgsc) target locus. When enduring a fitness cost, this transiently-acting drive can increase the frequency of the wild-type allele to 100%, depending on its seeding ratio, before being eliminated from the population. However, in a fitness-neutral "hover" mode, the drive maintains a constant frequency in the population, completely converting IR alleles to wild-type, even at low initial seeding ratios. A self-eliminating allelic drive reverses an insecticide resistance genotype back to wild-type in a Drosophila population, and then recedes from the population due to its fitness cost, thereby achieving clean population replacement with a GMO-free endpoint. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Impact of Human-Animal Interaction on Animal Welfare and Owners’ Job Performance: A Study on Cats, Dogs and Birds.
- Author
-
Çelebi, Furkan and Karabulut, Ceyda
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL welfare , *JOB performance , *SOCIAL status , *PUBLIC welfare , *WORKING dogs , *PETS - Abstract
Human-Animal Interaction (HAI) has been significant since ancient times, initially with animals, especially dogs, assisting in hunting and food gathering. Over time, this relationship evolved into domestication, companionship, and therapeutic roles in society. In urban areas, pet ownership is widespread, driven by companionship, therapeutic benefits, and social status. This study focuses on urban pet owners due to structured work environments, allowing a clear examination of the relationship between HAI, animal welfare, and work performance. The study explores HAI's dual impact on animal welfare and the work performance of dog, cat, and bird owners. Key factors include psychological, social, and physical closeness in HAI; animal hygiene, physical activity, and loneliness for welfare; and work performance for owners. Data were collected from 404 pet-owning employees in Istanbul, with statistical analyses confirming tool validity. Results reveal a significant positive correlation (
r = 0.568) between HAI and animal welfare, and a positive but smaller correlation (r = 0.215) between HAI and work performance. Findings support HAI's role in enhancing well-being, suggesting pet-friendly policies in workplaces to maximize benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Sensing spatial inequality of socio-economic factors for deploying permanent deacons in the UK.
- Author
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Islam, Md. Tariqul, Rooney, Paul, McGrail, Peter, Sikder, Sujit Kumar, and Charlesworth, Mark
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,PUBLIC welfare ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CATHOLICS ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Integrating spatial inequality perspectives in strategic decision-making can ensure positive impacts on resource distribution for public welfare and sustainable development. This study aims to apply evidence-based approaches in deploying permanent deacons. The empirical case study has been conducted at the St Helens denary of the Liverpool archdiocese, UK. Assisting with charitable works is one of three served areas by the Roman Catholic Church facilitated by deacons. The deployment of permanent deacons could benefit from being evidence-based so that a deacon can serve to ease the socio-economic (e.g., population density, long-term health conditions, housing system, employment status, education level, social status) inequality in the most deprived area. We used geographic information system (GIS) based algorithms, Getis-Ord Gi* for hot spot analysis to find the clustered area by considering the socio-economic factors. The open/freely available government census dataset was found to help extract socio-economic parameters. Furthermore, a GIS-based multi-criteria assessment technique was conducted by applying map algebra (raster calculator) to identify the deprived area with ranks considering multiple socio-economic conditions, where served areas by the existing deacons were considered to constrain. The served areas were estimated by applying network analysis where OpenStreetMap and location existing deacons were used as input. Our empirical case study identified the central and northern parts of the deanery as the most and least deprived areas, respectively. Finally, Liverpool archdiocese could consider deploying new permanent deacons in St Helens denary based on suggested deprivation ranks. Therefore, the appropriate number of deacons in the deprived areas can quickly and effectively respond to the needy and enhance communities' resilience and sustainable development by ensuring proportionate resource distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. RETRACTED ARTICLE: Examining the dynamics of pro-social rule-breaking among grassroots public servants.
- Author
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Khan, Naqib Ullah, Zhongyi, Peng, Alim, Wajid, Han, Heesup, and Ariza-Montes, Antonio
- Subjects
CIVIL service ,PROSOCIAL behavior ,PUBLIC welfare ,SOCIAL support ,PUBLIC sector ,EMPLOYEE attitudes - Abstract
Understanding contemporary organizations hinges on the comprehension of rules and rule behavior. This scholarship explores the idea of employees rule-breaking for pro-social reasons. It challenges the belief that workplace rule violations are only motivated by personal gain and self-interest. Through two surveys conducted among grassroots civil servants working in public welfare programs, this research delves into the impact of social, relational, and bureaucratic factors on employees' attitudes and behaviors toward pro-social rule-breaking. The study discovered that when individuals receive social support and witness co-workers' rule-breaking, they are likelier to exhibit pro-social rule-breaking attitudes and behaviors. In contrast, organizational structure variables bureaucratic centralization and formalization and disciplinary control factors bureaucratic rule-breaking punishment and the certainty of detection diminish employees' willingness to break the rules for pro-social reasons. The findings highlight the importance of recognizing social, relational, and bureaucratic organizational attributes to better understand pro-social rule-breaking among grassroots civil servants in public sector welfare agencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Street-level service journeys: serendipity in outreach work with unstably housed people who use drugs.
- Author
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Nygaard-Christensen, Maj
- Subjects
- *
DRUG utilization , *PUBLIC welfare , *WELFARE state , *MALE employees , *SOCIAL services - Abstract
People living in situations of homelessness and drug use experience significant barriers when seeking to access services in the Danish welfare state. Yet rarely are journeys to services examined in depth with attention to the factors that may either support or prevent their completion. Towards this aim, the article employs a ‘service journey’ approach by unfolding an ethnographic case study of a service journey pieced together at the street-level. This is achieved through the collective efforts of outreach workers and a man encountered at a drug consumption room in urgent need of medication. The article highlights the role of serendipity in the construction of such ‘street-level’ service journeys. It thus shows how possibilities for initiating or pushing a particular service journey forward occur through serendipitous outreach encounters. Further, it is shown how service journeys of unstably housed people who use drugs are both conditioned by and come up against other shifting everyday ‘itineraries’ of clients as they seek to piece together a living at the urban margins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Explaining Variation in Decision‐Making Authority for Care Managers in a Decentralised Welfare State.
- Author
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Wittberg, Sara and Kelfve, Susanne
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL services , *DECISION making in law , *ELDER care , *OLDER people - Abstract
ABSTRACT Local policy documents play a key role in the provision of social services in decentralised welfare systems. Previous Swedish research shows great municipal variation in local policies for delegation, which determines social workers' legal rights to make decisions about the welfare service given to older people. In this paper, we examine the association between local conditions and the variation of restrictiveness in local policies on delegation for elder care services, by combining data on political rule and economic, demographic, and geographic characteristics of all Swedish municipalities (n = 290), with data on delegation policy. Based on logistic regression models, the results indicate that population density, political rule and average income are correlated with the probability of restrictiveness in delegation. Our findings highlight the importance of understanding local conditions while allocating the responsibility for the provision of welfare in decentralised states with varying local prerequisites. They further highlight the need for studies investigating the consequences of varying local political policies on the outcome of the elder care services provided to older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Ethical and Regulatory Challenges of Generative Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare: A Chinese Perspective.
- Author
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Yu, Lanyi and Zhai, Xiaomei
- Subjects
- *
GENERATIVE artificial intelligence , *DATA privacy , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
ABSTRACT Aim Background Conclusion Relevance to Clinical Practice To provide practical insights that delve into the ethical issues and regulatory implications of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) in healthcare. Ethical Challenges and Regulatory Impact in China is used as an example.Despite China's efforts to strike a delicate balance between protecting public welfare and promoting technological advancement, numerous unresolved issues persist in the practical integration of generative artificial intelligence into healthcare settings.Key issues such as data application, privacy protection, cost‐effectiveness and regulatory remain areas of ambiguity that require clarification. Stringent ethical guidelines, data privacy protection measures and continuous supervision and evaluation of artificial intelligence decisions will help enhance the expected benefits of GenAI in healthcare.The potential use of GenAI in healthcare has garnered widespread attention, emerging as a significant global research topic. However, its application in this domain presents substantial ethical and regulatory challenges. Compared to other fields, GenAI's role in healthcare is more sensitive and complex, necessitating an urgent assessment of its ethical implications for future development and deployment. Challenges and ethical considerations are particularly pronounced in developing countries with limited healthcare resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Trauma-informed Financial Empowerment Programming Associated with Improved Financial Well-being.
- Author
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Weida, Emily B., Carroll-Scott, Amy, Le-Scherban, Felice, Bloom, Sandra, and Chilton, Mariana
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL security , *WOMEN of color , *REPEATED measures design , *SELF-efficacy , *RESEARCH funding , *HEALTH status indicators , *AFRICAN Americans , *VIOLENCE , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *FINANCIAL management , *SOCIAL networks , *PUBLIC welfare , *WELL-being , *POVERTY , *COMMUNITY-based social services , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Financial well-being and overall health are significantly linked, especially among those in poverty who have been exposed to violence and suffer from unaddressed trauma. Yet existing public assistance programs fail to address the presence or impact of trauma and adversity. Built specifically for families living in poverty who experience adversity, the Building Wealth and Health Network (the Network) provides a space for families to heal from the effects of trauma while also building social networks and economic security. The sample for this study was primarily Black (91%) women (92%) in Philadelphia with at least one child. A repeated measures linear regression model was performed via a Difference-in-Differences approach to test differences in financial well-being scores between two groups (full participation vs. low/no participation) at two time points (baseline vs 3 months, and baseline vs 6 months). We use this program as a field study to better understand the financial well-being of program participants who took part in fewer or more program sessions. Those who participated in more sessions reported greater increases in two measures of financial well-being at three months and six months post baseline, when compared to those with low or no participation. Highlights: Financial health and overall well-being are linked. Participation in trauma-informed, healing-centered financial empowerment programming is associated with improved financial well-being. This provides evidence for a new alternative model of public assistance programming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Policy convergence in authoritarian regimes: A comparative analysis of welfare state trajectories in post‐Soviet countries.
- Author
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Panaro, Angelo Vito
- Subjects
- *
WELFARE state , *PUBLIC welfare , *AUTHORITARIANISM , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *PENSIONS - Abstract
Do authoritarian regimes adopt similar or equal policies? Despite the large literature on policy convergence in democracies, we know little about whether and to what extent authoritarian regimes follow analogous paths. This article argues that similar policy legacy, political and institutional context, and international influences lead to policy convergence among nondemocratic regimes. Analyzing welfare state trajectories in Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, and Tajikistan, the empirical analysis finds that the welfare state in the three post‐Soviet countries has converged at the level of social spending and the source of welfare financing, while divergence persists in disaggregated levels of social spending; configuration of key welfare programs, particularly in old‐age pensions and unemployment; and the extent of welfare state reforms. Overall, the findings provide important insights into the determinants of policy convergence in nondemocratic regimes and yield critical implications for future research on the welfare state's trajectory in former Soviet countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Ethics and Cybersecurity of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics in Helping The Elderly to Manage at Home.
- Author
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Rajamäki, Jyri and Helin, Jaakko
- Subjects
- *
ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *OLDER people , *PUBLIC welfare , *INTELLIGENCE service , *POPULATION aging - Abstract
The aging population, combined with the scarcity of healthcare resources, presents significant challenges for our society. The use of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics offers a potential solution to these challenges. However, such technologies also raise ethical and cybersecurity concerns related to the preservation of privacy, autonomy, and human contact. In this case study, we examine these ethical challenges and the opportunities brought by AI and robotics in the care of old individuals at home. This article aims to describe the current fragmented state of legislation related to the development and use of AI-based services and robotics and to reflect on their ethics and cybersecurity. The findings indicate that, guided by ethical principles, we can leverage the best aspects of technology while ensuring that old people can maintain a dignified and valued life at home. The careful handling of ethical issues should be viewed as a competitive advantage and opportunity, rather than a burden. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Psychosocial Outcomes of Canadian Clubhouse Members: A Multi-Site Longitudinal Evaluation.
- Author
-
Mutschler, Christina, McShane, Kelly, and Liebman, Rachel
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *COMPETENCY assessment (Law) , *ACCREDITATION , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *STATISTICAL models , *RESEARCH funding , *SATISFACTION , *REHABILITATION of people with mental illness , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *MEMBERSHIP , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PATIENT-centered care , *RESEARCH , *CONVALESCENCE , *PUBLIC welfare , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The Clubhouse model of psychosocial rehabilitation supports individuals with mental health challenges using a person centered and recovery-oriented approach. Clubhouses around the world have been found to be effective in supporting their member's recovery. However, there is a lack of multi-site and longitudinal studies on the Clubhouse model. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to longitudinally assess the psychosocial outcomes of Clubhouse members across six accredited Clubhouses in Canada. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic occurring midway through the study, a secondary aim was to assess the impact of the pandemic on the psychosocial outcomes of Clubhouse members. A total of 462 Clubhouse members consented to participate in the study. Members completed a questionnaire battery every 6 months over a 2-year period (five data points total). The last three data points were collected during the COVID-19 pandemic. Psychosocial outcomes included mental health symptoms, substance use, community integration, and satisfaction with life, and were analyzed using multilevel growth models. The results indicated that satisfaction with life and psychological integration increased over the study period, while mental health symptoms, substance use, and physical integration decreased. Examining Clubhouse participation, length of Clubhouse membership and frequency of Clubhouse use predicted higher life satisfaction, lower substance use, and fewer mental health symptoms over the study period. The results of the present study provide invaluable insight into the psychosocial impact of Clubhouses on Canadian Clubhouse members, particularly during COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Social work, solidarity economy and decent work.
- Author
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López Peláez, Antonio, Erro-Garcés, Amaya, Aramendia-Muneta, María Elena, and Ramírez Navarro, José Manuel
- Subjects
- *
POVERTY reduction , *SOCIAL workers , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIAL cohesion , *WORK environment , *SOCIAL services , *EQUALITY , *SOCIAL case work , *PUBLIC health , *PUBLIC welfare , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *SOCIAL participation , *COVID-19 , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Eradicating poverty is a fundamental objective of social work, both at local and at global levels. After COVID-19, the United Nations Commission for Social Development and Sustainable Development Goals, the global agenda developed by the International Association of Schools of Social Work, the International Council on Social Welfare and the International Federation of Social Workers have placed the fight against poverty and the role of decent work at the forefront of the public agenda. We analyse most recent publications on decent work, highlighting two strategies to promote poverty eradication from social work: participation and education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Neighborhood Disadvantage and Birth Outcomes Among Refugees.
- Author
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Foverskov, Else, White, Justin S., Frøslev, Trine, Pedersen, Lars, Sørensen, Henrik T., and Hamad, Rita
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *IMMIGRANTS , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SMALL for gestational age , *SOCIOECONOMIC status , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *PREMATURE infants , *PREGNANCY outcomes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *LEGAL status of refugees , *LOW birth weight , *RESEARCH methodology , *PREGNANCY complications , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PUBLIC welfare , *NEIGHBORHOOD characteristics , *SOCIAL classes , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *EMPLOYMENT , *REGRESSION analysis , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage and birth outcomes among refugee women in Denmark, leveraging a natural experiment. METHODS: This register-based study included 15 118 infants born to women who arrived in Denmark as refugees during 1986 to 1998, when a dispersal policy was in place that quasirandomly assigned newcomers to neighborhoods with varying degrees of socioeconomic disadvantage. Neighborhood disadvantage was measured using a composite index representing neighborhood-level income, education, unemployment, and welfare assistance. These data were linked to individual-level birth register data. Outcomes included low birth weight, preterm birth, and small-for-gestational-age infants. Associations between neighborhood disadvantage at resettlement and birth outcomes up to 20 years after resettlement were examined using multivariable regressions adjusting for characteristics of the women at resettlement. RESULTS: Each SD of increase in neighborhood disadvantage was associated with an 18% increase in low birth weight risk (0.61 percentage points [pp], 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.19-1.02), 15% increase in preterm birth risk (0.64 pp, 95% CI: 0.22-1.07), and 7% increase in small-for-gestational-age risk (0.78 pp, 95% CI: 0.01-1.54) 5 years after resettlement. Results did not differ after adjusting for urbanicity and conational density, but associations were attenuated after adjusting for municipality-level fixed effects, suggesting that local government characteristics may partially explain the associations. CONCLUSIONS: Resettling in a disadvantaged neighborhood is associated with higher risk of adverse birth outcomes among refugee women. This highlights how policy decisions affecting settlement of refugees can have long-term consequences, including on the health of the next generation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Organization of Ignorance: The Australian 'Robodebt' Affair, Bureaucracy, Law and Politics.
- Author
-
van Krieken, Robert
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN services , *OVERPAYMENT , *PUBLIC welfare , *JOURNALISTS , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The 'Robodebt' scheme was an initiative pursued by the Australian Department of Human Services between 2016 and 2019 to increase the amount of money recovered from supposed 'overpayments' to recipients of welfare benefits. Drawing on the rich body of empirical material generated by the Royal Commission into the Robodebt Scheme as well as journalists and academic observers, this paper develops an understanding of the affair from the perspective of the sociology of organizations. Particular use is made of a growing body of research in the organizational sociology of ignorance. Following an outline of the main features of Robodebt, the paper explains the significance of the conception of ignorance as more complex than the mere absence of knowledge in organizational life. It then examines the specifics of the way in which Robodebt casts light on the role played by systemic, wilful ignorance in the relationship between law, bureaucracy and politics. The paper concludes with some reflections on the senses in which Robodebt was a manifestation not only of a crisis, fiasco or scandal, but also of the normal operation of the 'will to ignorance' (Nietzsche) in organizational life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Australian perspectives on environmental practice: A national survey with human service professionals.
- Author
-
Boetto, Heather, Bowles, Wendy, Ramsay, Sylvia, Shephard, Monique, and Cordoba, Pushkar Sebastian
- Subjects
- *
POLLUTION prevention , *ENVIRONMENTAL health , *SOCIAL workers , *CONSERVATION of natural resources , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *RESEARCH funding , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIAL services , *CLIMATE change , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *SUSTAINABILITY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ECOSYSTEMS , *SOCIAL responsibility , *SOCIAL work research , *SOCIAL case work , *SURVEYS , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC welfare , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL support , *PRACTICAL politics , *WELL-being , *INDIGENOUS Australians - Abstract
Summary: This article reports on research exploring the perspectives of Australian social work and human service professionals about environmental practice. An online survey consisting of quantitative and qualitative questions was conducted, recruiting 303 participants from the human services sector. Quantitative data were analyzed descriptively using SPSS and qualitative data analyzed thematically using NVivo. Findings: Overall, results indicated that participants strongly supported an environmental focus in human services at personal and professional levels of practice. However, while participants expressed values supporting environmental practice, its implementation was less frequently reported. The adverse impacts of climate change were reported as strongly impacting the well-being of service users, and a general lack of support from employing organizations to facilitate environmental practice was evident. Despite a strong belief in the value of Australian First Nations knowledges, limited engagement with Australian First Nations peoples was practiced. Applications: Implications suggest the need to examine the practical realities of environmental practice including the disconnect between values and action. Given that participants reported adverse impacts of climate change on people and communities, but faced significant challenges implementing environmental action, the need to disrupt barriers caused by the dominant neoliberal discourse is critical. Likewise, disrupting the prevailing colonialist discourse by working alongside First Nations peoples to decolonize society and the profession is essential for enacting principles of environmental sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Can Universal Basic Income work for disabled people? An examination of existing UK organisational and academic positions.
- Author
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Johnson, Elliott Aidan, Reed, Howard Robert, and Johnson, Matthew Thomas
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL security , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *PUBLIC welfare , *PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
Universal Basic Income (UBI) has been proposed as a means of addressing a range of issues relating to welfare systems, including by removing disincentives to economic, social and physical activity. However, UK disability organisations and figures have expressed concerns about whether UBI could lead to unintended consequences for people who currently receive support conditional on needs, means and/or behaviour. In this article, we outline prominent positions regarding disabled people in the literature on UBI and welfare reforms. We find that while there are reservations about the intentions and designs of UBI, there are means of securing positive outcomes and collaboration between its supporters and disability organisations. We also attempted a consultation but were unable to obtain a significant response. This was sometimes due to an expressed inability to respond meaningfully. This serves as a call for organisations to engage with UBI as a key issue of interest to disabled people. Points of Interest: Some disability organisations and leading figures have expressed concern about Universal Basic Income (UBI), a potential welfare system in which everyone receives a regular, secure and guaranteed payment. They feel that disabled people who currently receive support might lose out because they would not gain as much as others might or could even get less if existing spending is spread over the whole population. Some would prefer reforms that ensure disabled people receive a guaranteed minimum income that is still conditional on their income and needs. Some supporters of Universal Basic Income suggest that it is still possible to ensure that people with additional needs can receive more money alongside a guaranteed UBI payment. Most UK disability organisations appear not to have a clear (published) policy or position on Universal Basic Income. Disability organisations and leading figures in the movement must engage with Universal Basic Income as a policy that would impact disabled people's lives significantly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Banishment.
- Author
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BORRELLI, LISA MARIE, HEINDLMAIER, ANITA, LUNDBERG, ANNA, MANTU, SANDRA, PERSDOTTER, MARIA, and WERNESJÖ, ULRIKA
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *DEPORTATION , *CITIZENSHIP , *STATE governments , *DISCUSSION , *PUNISHMENT , *PRACTICAL politics , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
Banishment concludes the keyword discussion by arguing that we can understand the exclusionary practices of welfare states as a politics of destitution, which ultimately leads to the banishment of unwanted individuals. It argues that banishment can be helpful as a conceptual lens through which to understand the purposeful strategies that render individuals deportable, whether citizens or non-citizens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Governing poverty and migration in European nation-states – keywords revisited: Postscript.
- Author
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Anderson, Bridget
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH services accessibility , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *GOVERNMENT policy , *TERMS & phrases , *MEMBERSHIP , *CITIZENSHIP , *IMMIGRATION law , *HUMAN rights , *PUBLIC welfare , *POVERTY , *SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
Taken together these essays reveal both synergies and contradictions between and within immigration and welfare policies. Several common themes emerge. Firstly, while access to the welfare state is an important signifier of membership, in practice claiming certain state benefits is accompanied by suspicion, surveillance and stigma. The good citizen is a worker citizen. Secondly, the importance of the welfare state in putting the nation into the nation-state: the normative national community imagined as the rightful subject of welfare states is racialised and classed. Thirdly, deservingness functions in both welfare states and immigration regimes to prioritise victimhood rather than rights and redistribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Citizenship.
- Author
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Könönen, Jukka, Achermann, Christin, and Mantu, Sandra
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENSHIP , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIOECONOMIC disparities in health , *NOMADS , *HUMAN rights , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
As a result of increased mobility and restrictive immigration policies in Europe, a growing number of people live in conditional and deportable positions with only limited social rights and access to welfare services. In this keyword, we discuss how the conception of national citizenship that underpins immigration and welfare regimes affects the position of non-citizens, with a particular focus on legal status as an instrument of hierarchisation and social marginalisation in European societies. Immigration systems create hierarchies and divisions by establishing different legal statuses for non-citizens, with wider implications for their position in society. Legal status has become a significant factor in social exclusion and marginality in European societies, intersecting with race, class, gender, and ethnicity to (re)produce social disadvantages. At the same time, migrants' struggles are situated along the same historical continuum as other previously excluded and marginalised groups, revealing inherent contradictions related to citizenship in modern nation-states and challenging the boundaries of citizenship from the inside. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Social solidarity and deservingness.
- Author
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RATZMANN, NORA, MANTU, SANDRA, and BORRELLI, LISA MARIE
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIAL cohesion , *HELP-seeking behavior , *SOCIAL integration , *COMMUNICATION , *PUBLIC welfare , *NEEDS assessment , *SOCIAL isolation , *SOCIAL participation - Abstract
The notion of social solidarity involves formal and informal practices, with various levels of institutionalisation. It builds on normative assumptions and discourses of reciprocal expectations of mutual help, on (perceived) ideas of sameness or neediness in relation to, among other, class, ethnicity, and/or gender and on notions of deservingness that are entangled in such ideas. In this contribution, we discuss how the intersection between institutionalised social solidarity in European nation-states and notions of deservingness informs who is seen as worthy of being part of welfare arrangements. Where ideas of solidarity and deservingness intertwine with legal categorisations of belonging, the results are exclusionary policies that often restrict migrants' access to national welfare policies, and hence meaningful societal participation. Furthermore, we discuss migrants' experiences with expressions of solidarity beyond the national realm, exploring how ideas about migrants' deservingness become linked to their economic usefulness within the European (integration) project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The welfare state.
- Author
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LUNDBERG, ANNA, MANTU, SANDRA, PERSDOTTER, MARIA, TABIN, JEAN-PIERRE, and WERNESJÖ, ULRIKA
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *SOCIAL security , *GOVERNMENT policy , *INSTITUTIONAL care , *DECISION making , *HUMAN rights , *PUBLIC welfare , *PRACTICAL politics , *REFUGEES - Abstract
The first keyword, Welfare State, sets out to problematise the term itself. The welfare state is a national construct, a 'national social state' as Etienne Balibar calls it. Thus, transnational or global migration is often construed as a disruptive force, potentially destabilising the welfare state and the nation. This keyword entry critically examines common conceptions of what the welfare state should provide. It delineates some of the ways that migrants (and, more broadly foreign nationals who are not themselves necessarily migrants) are excluded or partially included, with a focus on contemporary EU social policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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