129 research outputs found
What Research Has to Say About Gender-Linked Differences in CMC and Does Elementary School Children’s E-mail Use Fit This Picture?
This paper first reviews the literature on computer mediated communication (CMC) to examine whether claims about gender-linked differences in specific attitudes, styles and content in CMC have been validated. Empirical studies were limited, with considerable variation in audiences, tasks, and contexts that was related to varied outcomes. The paper next describes an empirical study on the e-mail communication of elementary school children from ten Dutch classrooms. No gender-linked preference for a person or task-oriented attitude was found. Girls significantly more often employed an elaborate style. Differences between boys and girls on content of communication were subtle rather than robust. The conclusion discusses the functional embedding of CMC and the need to examine jointly antecedents, language acts and consequences. (http://www.springerlink.com/content/28181t88lxg835q2
Patient-reported quality of life outcomes for children with serious congenital heart defects
Objective To compare patient-reported, health-related
quality of life (QoL) for children with serious congenital
heart defects (CHDs) and unaffected classmates and to
investigate the demographic and clinical factors
influencing QoL.
Design Retrospective cohort study.
Setting UK National Health Service.
Patients UK-wide cohort of children with serious CHDs
aged 10–14 years requiring cardiac intervention in the
first year of life in one of 17 UK paediatric cardiac
surgical centres operating during 1992–1995. A
comparison group of classmates of similar age and sex
was recruited.
Main outcome measures Child self-report of healthrelated QoL scores (Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory,
PedsQL) and parental report of schooling and social
activities.
Results Questionnaires were completed by 477
children with CHDs (56% boys; mean age 12.1 (SD 1.0)
years) and 464 classmates (55%; 12.0 (SD 1.1) years).
Children with CHDs rated QoL significantly lower than
classmates (CHDs: median 78.3 (IQR 65.0–88.6);
classmates: 88.0 (80.2–94.6)) and scored lower on
physical (CHDs: 84.4; classmates: 93.8; difference 9.4
(7.8 to 10.9)) and psychosocial functioning subscales
(CHDs: 76.7, classmates: 85.0; difference 8.3 (6.0 to
10.6)). Cardiac interventions, school absence, regular
medications and non-cardiac comorbidities were
independently associated with reduced QoL. Participation
in sport positively influenced QoL and was associated
with higher psychosocial functioning scores.
Conclusions Children with serious CHDs experience
lower QoL than unaffected classmates. This appears
related to the burden of clinical intervention rather than
underlying cardiac diagnosis. Participation in sports
activities is positively associated with increased
emotional well-being. Child self-report measures of QoL
would be a valuable addition to clinical outcome audit
in this age group.RLK was awarded an MRC Special Training Fellowship in Health of the Public and Health Services Research (reference G106/1083). TD was supported by an NIHR Academic Clinical Fellowship. This work was supported by a British Heart Foundation project grant (reference PG/02/065/13934). The Centre for Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics benefits from funding support from the Medical Research Council in its capacity as the MRC Centre of Epidemiology for Child Health (reference G04005546). Great Ormond St Hospital for Children NHS Trust and the UCL Institute of Child Health receives a proportion of funding from the Department of Health’s NIHR Biomedical Research Centres schem
Offline social identity and online chat partner selection
This study examines whether the impact of offline identities on computer-mediated communication is stable across different social contexts or whether it depends on which identity aspect is salient. Field experiments with 206 teenagers tested the influence of gendered, ethnic, youth and personalized identities on teenagers' chat behaviour and cognitions. The findings show that offline identity varies in its relation to Internet self-efficacy but not chat partner selection. Self-efficacy differed significantly between boys and girls when youth and gender identities were emphasized but not when stressing personal identity. Across conditions, teenagers were most likely to choose chat partners from similar ethnic and opposite sex backgrounds. This partly supports the Social Identification and Deindividuation framework and argues that offline identities impact online behaviour and self-perception but that this effect depends on which identity aspect is activated
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