337 research outputs found
Smoking, physical activity and healthy aging in India
__Abstract__
Background: To identify levels of physical inactivity and smoking and examine their relationships to health among older people in India. Methods. I
High-quality chronic care delivery improves experiences of chronically ill patients receiving care
__Abstract__
Objective. Investigate whether high-quality chronic care delivery improved the experiences of patients.
Design. This study had a longitudinal design.
Setting and Participants. We surveyed professionals and patients in 17 disease management programs targeting patients with cardiovascular
diseases, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, heart failure, stroke, comorbidity and eatin
Spatially resolved observation of uniform precession modes in spin-valve systems
Using time-resolved photoemission electron microscopy the excitation of
uniform precession modes in individual domains of a weakly coupled spin-valve
system has been studied. A coupling dependence of the precession frequencies
has been found that can be reasonably well understood on the basis of a
macrospin model. By tuning the frequency of the excitation source the uniform
precession modes are excited in a resonant way.Comment: This article has been accepted by Journal of Applied Physics. After
it is published, it will be found at http://jap.aip.or
Individual- and Neighbourhood-Level Indicators of Subjective Well-Being in a Small and Poor Eastern Cape Township: The Effect of Health, Social Capital, Marital Status, and Income
Our study used multilevel regression analysis to identify individual- and neighbourhood-level factors that determine individual-level subjective well-being in Rhini, a deprived suburb of Grahamstown in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. The Townsend index and Gini coefficient were used to investigate whether contextual neighbourhood-level differences in socioeconomic status determined individual-level subjective well-being. Crime experience, health status, social capital, and demographic variables were assessed at the individual level. The indicators of subjective well-being were estimated with a two-level random-intercepts and fixed slopes model. Social capital, health and marital status (all p < .001), followed by income level (p < .01) and the Townsend score (p < .05) were significantly related to individual-level subjective well-being outcomes. Our findings showed that individual-level subjective well-being is influenced by neighbourhood-level socioeconomic status as measured by the Townsend deprivation score. Individuals reported higher levels of subjective well-being in less deprived neighbourhoods. Here we wish to highlight the role of context for subjective well-being, and to suggest that subjective well-being outcomes may also be defined in ecological terms. We hope the findings are useful for implementing programs and interventions designed to achieve greater subjective well-being for people living in deprived areas
The Importance of Neighborhood Social Cohesion and Social Capital for the Well Being of Older Adults in the Community
We aimed to investigate
whether social capital (obtaining support through
indirect ties such as from neighbors) and social cohesion
(interdependencies among neighbors) within
neighborhoods positively affect the well being of
older adults. Design and Methods: This crosssectional
study included 945 of 1,440 (66% response
rate) independently living older adults (aged !70
years) in Rotterdam. We fitted a hierarchical random
effects model to account for the hierarchical structure
of the study design: 945 older adults (Level 1) nested
in 72 neighborhoods (Level 2). Results: Univariate
analyses showed that being born in the Netherlands,
house ownership, education, income, social capital
of individuals, neighborhood security, neighborhood
services, neighborhood social capital, and neighborhood
social cohesion were significantly related to the
well being of older adults. Multilevel analyses showed
that social capital of individuals, neighborhood services,
neighborhood social capital, and neighborhood
social cohesion predicted the well being of
older adults. Single and poor older adults reported
lower well being than did better off and married
older adults. However, the effects of marital status
and income were mediated by neighborhood services,
social capital, and social cohesion. Neighborhood
services, social capital, and social cohesion
may act as buffer against the adverse effects of being
single and poor on the well being of older
adults. Implications: The results of this study support
the importance of social capital of individuals,
as well as social capital within the neighborhood and social cohesion within the neighborhood for well
being of older adults. The well being of older adults
may also be enhanced through the improvement of
quality of neighborhood services
Understanding older patients' self-management abilities: functional loss, self-management, and well-being
Purpose: This study aimed to increase our understanding of self-management abilities and identify better self-managers among older individuals. Methods: Our cross-sectional research was based on a pilot study of older people who had recently been admitted to a hospital. In the pilot study, all patients (>65 years of age) who were admitted to the Vlietland hospital between June and October 2010 were asked to participate, which led to the inclusion of 456 older patients at baseline. A total of 296 patients (65% response rate) were interviewed in their homes 3 months after admission. Measures included social, cognitive, and physical functioning, self-management abilities, and well-being. We used descriptive, correlations, and multiple regression analyses. In addition, we evaluated the mediation effect of self-management abilities on well-being. Results: Social, cognitive, and physical functioning significantly correlated with self-management abilities and well-being (all p ≤ 0.001). After controlling for background characteristics, multiple regression analysis indicated that social, cognitive, and physical functioning still related to self-management abilities (β = 0.17-0.25; all p ≤ 0.001). Older people with low levels of social, cognitive, and physical functioning were worse self-managers than were those with higher levels of functioning. Conclusions: Self-management abilities mediate the relationship between social, cognitive, and physical functioning and well-being. Interventions to improve self-management abilities may help older people better deal with function losses as they age further
A protocol for co-creating research project lay summaries with stakeholders:Guideline development for Canada's AGE-WELL Network
Background
Funding bodies increasingly require researchers to write lay summaries to communicate projects’ real-world relevance to the public in an accessible way. However, research proposals and findings are generally not easily readable or understandable by non-specialist readers. Many researchers find writing lay summaries difficult because they typically write for fellow subject specialists or academics rather than the general public or a non-specialist audience. The primary objective of our project is to develop guidelines for researchers in Canada’s AGE-WELL Network of Centres of Excellence, and ultimately various other disciplines, sectors, and institutions, to co-create lay summaries of research projects with stakeholders. To begin, we produced a protocol for co-creating a lay summary based on workshops we organized and facilitated for an AGE-WELL researcher. This paper presents the lay summary co-creation protocol that AGE-WELL researchers will be invited to use.
Methods
Eligible participants in this project will be 24 AgeTech project researchers who are funded by the AGE-WELL network in its Core Research Program 2020. If they agree to participate in this project, we will invite them to use our protocol to co-produce a lay summary of their respective projects with stakeholders. The protocol comprises six steps: Investigate principles of writing a good lay summary, identify the target readership, identify stakeholders to collaborate with, recruit the identified stakeholders to work on a lay summary, prepare for workshop sessions, and execute the sessions. To help participants through the process, we will provide them with a guide to developing an accessible, readable research lay summary, help them make decisions, and host, and facilitate if needed, their lay summary co-creation workshops.
Discussion
Public-facing research outputs, including lay summaries, are increasingly important knowledge translation strategies to promote the impact of research on real-world issues. To produce lay summaries that include information that will interest a non-specialist readership and that are written in accessible language, stakeholder engagement is key. Furthermore, both researchers and stakeholders benefit by participating in the co-creation process. We hope the protocol helps researchers collaborate with stakeholders effectively to co-produce lay summaries that meet the needs of both the public and project funders
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