17 research outputs found

    Lay People Representations on the Common Good and Its Financial Provision

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    The financial contribution to the common good is a relevant issue to contemporary societies, especially in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis. In the economic literature, taxes and monetary donations have been regarded as two complementary ways of financially providing for the common good. In the psychological literature, instead, they have not been studied in conjunction. In-depth interviews have been conducted using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) approach and a photo-elicitation technique to investigate the representations people share on the financial provision for the common good. Results suggest that both taxes and donations are seen as indirect, rather than direct, ways of providing for the common good. From a formal and cognitive level, paying taxes and making donations can be seen as two sides of the same coin, but they present differences at the affective level. When paying taxes, people are concerned mostly about the effects and expect a material exchange in return; when making a monetary donation, people are concerned mostly about the motivations and expect an emotional exchange in return

    British Journal of Occupational Therapy:

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    British Journal of Occupational Therapy:

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    Residual breast tissue after mastectomy and reconstruction:A substudy of the Spatial location of breast cancer local rECurRence aftEr masTectomy (SECRET) project

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    The current project is part of the Spatial location of breast cancer local rECurRence aftEr masTectomy (SECRET) study (NCT06130111). Herein we compared the chest wall thickness after non-skin sparing mastectomy (non-SSM) with the chest wall thickness after SSM, as a surrogate for residual breast tissue after mastectomy. Methods: The study was approved by the ethics committee of relevant institutions. Data of patients with a local recurrence (LR) after non-SSM was collected from the Netherlands Cancer Registry (NCR); data of patients undergoing SSM were collected from Sheba Medical Center. Student's t-test was used to evaluate the difference between the cohorts. Chest wall thickness was measured on postoperative images. Results: Out of 4949 patients who underwent mastectomy from the NCR cohort, a total of 173 (3.5 %) had a LR at 5 years, of these a total of 153 patients included in the non-SSM cohort. The median age was 59 years (age 33–92), LR occurred at a median of 23.6 months (2.5–60 months). The SSM cohort included 84 patients, with a median age of 38.4 years (28–63.5), overall, 5 LRs occurred at a median of 15 months (5–46 months). The SSM cohort had significantly thicker chest walls compared to non-SSM (p &lt; 0.001). Most LRs in both groups occurred in the subcutis. Conclusion: The chest wall thickness differed according to mastectomy procedures. Most of the LR occurred at the subcutis. The role of residual breast tissue and residual cancer in relation to type of mastectomy should be further investigated.</p
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