443 research outputs found

    How Can We Know Each Other when We are So Different? Untangling the Complexity of Diverse Life Experience and Interconnection—A Model for Navigating the Paradox of Diversity to Create Empathic Learning Space

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    We propose a model that describes how diversity, dialogue, emotion, and empathy interact in learning environments. The model provides guidance for addressing emotionally charged topics in highly diverse groups

    Supporting citizen inquiry: an investigation of Moon rock

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    Citizen inquiry is an innovative way for non-professionals to engage in practical scientific activities, in which they take the role of self-regulated scientists in informal learning contexts. This type of activity has similarities to inquiry-based learning and to citizen science, but also important differences. To understand the challenges of supporting citizen inquiry, a prototype system and activity has been developed: the Moon Rock Explorer. Based on the nQuire Toolkit, this offers people without geology expertise an open investigation into authentic specimens of Moon rock, using a Virtual Microscope. The Moon Rock Explorer inquiry has been evaluated in an informal learning context with PhD students from the Open University. Results of the evaluation raise issues related to motivation and interaction between inquiry participants. They also provide evidence that the integration of scientific tools was successful and that the nQuire Toolkit is suitable to deploy and enact citizen inquiries

    Physical and mental health correlates of status incongruence

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    The report explored the relationship between status incongruence, the degree of similarity of rankings on paired status variables, and diverse interview-based measures of physical and mental health. The subjects in the study were some 169 adult men; one half of them came from a national survey sample, while the other half represented an arthritis clinic sample with patients and controls. Data on education, occupation, income, and perceived social class (PSC) were used to construct several status incongruence indices. The major findings were: 1. Neither rheumatoid arthritis nor ulcer were related to status incongruence. 2. Education-occupation incongruence showed by far the strongest association with poor mental health. Among the two types of incongruence, education > occupation and occupation > education, the former had particularly poor mental health. 3. Education-PSC, occupation-PSC, education-income, and occupation-income types of incongruence showed weaker associations. Direction of incongruence made a difference in the education-PSC comparison: the education > PSC incongruent group had poorer mental health than the PSC > education incongruent group. Ce rapport étudie la relation entre la discordance du status («status incongruence»), le degré de similitude d'évaluation de variables couplées du status et diverses mesures de la santé physique et mentale basées sur des interviews. Les sujets de l'étude étaient 169 hommes adultes dont la moitié provenait d'un échantillon d'une investigation nationale, tandis que l'autre moitié représentait un échantillon d'une clinique d'arthritiques avec des patients et des cas de contrôle. Des données sur l'éducation, l'occupation, le revenu et la classe sociale (perceived social class = PSC) furent utilisées pour l'élaboration de divers indices de discordance de status. Les résultats principaux furent: 1) Ni l'arthrite rhumatoïde ni l'ulcère n'étaient reliés à la discordance du status. 2) La discordance éducation-occupation était de loin la plus étroitement associée à une santé mentale défaillante. Parmi les deux types de discordance, éducation > occupation et occupation > éducation, le premier était caractérisé par une santé mentale particulièrement mauvaise. 3) Les types de discordance éducation-PSC, occupation-PSC, éducation-revenu et occupationrevenu étaient plus faiblement associés. La direction de la discordance faisait une différence dans la comparaison éducationPSC: le groupe de discordance éducation > PSC se distinguait par une santé mentale moins bonne que le groupe de discordance PSC > éducation. Der Bericht gibt die Untersuchung der Beziehung zwischen der Unausgeglichenheit innerhalb des Sozialstands, dem Ausmaß der Ähnlichkeit von Einstufungen durch vorgegebene Gegensatzpaare von Statusmerkmalen und verschiedenen, auf Interviewbasis begründeten Einschätzungen der körperlichen und seelischen Gesundheit wieder. Die Probanden der Studie waren 169 erwachsene Männer; die Hälfte von ihnen stammte aus einer staatlichen Begutachtungsgruppe, die andere Hälfte verkörperten Patienten und Kontrollpersonen aus einer Arthritisklinik. Daten über Erziehung, Beruf, Einkommen und beurteilte Sozialklasse (perceived social class = PSC) wurden verwandt, um mehrere Indices für Statusinkongruenz zu bilden. Die Hauptergebnisse waren: 1) Weder rheumatische Arthritis noch Ulcus standen in Beziehung mit Statusinkongruenz. 2) Ein Mißverhältnis zwischen Erziehung und Beruf zeigte bei weitem die engste Beziehung zu schlechter seelischer Gesundheit. Von den beiden Inkongruenztypen, Erziehung > Beruf und Beruf > Erziehung, hatte der erste eine besonders schlechte seelische Gesundheit. 3) Mißverhältnisse zwischen Erziehung und PSC, Beruf und PSC, Erziehung und Einkommen und Beruf und Einkommen zeigten schwächere Beziehungen. Die Richtung der Inkongruenz bewirkte einen Unterschied im Vergleich zwischen Erziehung und PSC: die inkongruente Gruppe Erziehung > PSC war bei schlechterer seelischer Gesundheit als die inkongruente Gruppe PSC > Erziehung.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/41742/1/127_2004_Article_BF00584107.pd

    Population health and the economy: Mortality and the Great Recession in Europe

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    We analyze the evolution of mortality‐based health indicators in 27 European countries before and after the start of the Great Recession. We find that in the countries where the crisis has been particularly severe, mortality reductions in 2007–2010 were considerably bigger than in 2004–2007. Panel models adjusted for space‐invariant and time‐invariant factors show that an increase of 1 percentage point in the national unemployment rate is associated with a reduction of 0.5% (p < .001) in the rate of age‐adjusted mortality. The pattern of mortality oscillating procyclically is found for total and sex‐specific mortality, cause‐specific mortality due to major causes of death, and mortality for ages 30–44 and 75 and over, but not for ages 0–14. Suicides appear increasing when the economy decelerates—countercyclically—but the evidence is weak. Results are robust to using different weights in the regression, applying nonlinear methods for detrending, expanding the sample, and using as business cycle indicator gross domestic product per capita or employment‐to‐population ratios rather than the unemployment rate. We conclude that in the European experience of the past 20 years, recessions, on average, have beneficial short‐term effects on mortality of the adult population.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142224/1/hec3495_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142224/2/hec3495.pd

    Health status in the ambulance services: a systematic review

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    BACKGROUND: Researchers have become increasingly aware that ambulance personnel may be at risk of developing work-related health problems. This article systematically explores the literature on health problems and work-related and individual health predictors in the ambulance services. METHODS: We identified the relevant empirical literature by searching several electronic databases including Medline, EMBASE, PsychINFO, CINAHL, and ISI Web of Science. Other relevant sources were identified through reference lists and other relevant studies known by the research group. RESULTS: Forty-nine studies are included in this review. Our analysis shows that ambulance workers have a higher standardized mortality rate, higher level of fatal accidents, higher level of accident injuries and a higher standardized early retirement on medical grounds than the general working population and workers in other health occupations. Ambulance workers also seem to have more musculoskeletal problems than the general population. These conclusions are preliminary at present because each is based on a single study. More studies have addressed mental health problems. The prevalence of post-traumatic stress symptom caseness was > 20% in five of seven studies, and similarly high prevalence rates were reported for anxiety and general psychopathology in four of five studies. However, it is unclear whether ambulance personnel suffer from more mental health problems than the general working population. CONCLUSION: Several indicators suggest that workers in the ambulance services experience more health problems than the general working population and workers in other health occupations. Several methodological challenges, such as small sample sizes, non-representative samples, and lack of comparisons with normative data limit the interpretation of many studies. More coordinated research and replication are needed to compare data across studies. We discuss some strategies for future research

    Employment status and differences in the one-year coverage of physician visits: different needs or unequal access to services?

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    BACKGROUND: The dichotomy employed vs. unemployed is still a relevant, but rather crude measure of status in current labour markets. Also, studies concerning the association of employment status with health have to specify the type of the employment as well as the characteristics of the unemployment. This study aims to reveal differences and potential inequalities in physician visits among seven groups in the core-periphery structures of the labour markets. METHODS: A total of 16 000 Finns responded to a postal survey in 2003. Their visits to physicians in public primary health care, occupational health care, private health services, hospital outpatient clinics and dental care services during previous year were measured as indicators of service utilisation. Participants were classified as employees having a permanent or fixed-term and full-time or part-time contract and as those experiencing short-term, prolonged or long-term unemployment. Differences in the one-year coverage of physician visits between these groups of employees were analysed using logistic regression analyses where differences in the need for services were controlled for by including demographics and self-rated health assessments in the models. RESULTS: Permanently employed respondents had visited a physician most often, and the need-adjusted regression models showed significantly lower odds ratios for a visit among fixed-term employees (OR 0.65, 95% CI 0.53–0.81) and in particular among the long-term unemployed (OR 0.21, 95% CI 0.14–0.31). A stratified analysis according to health care sector showed the lowest odds ratios in occupational health care and private physicians (ORs between 0.05 and 0.73) and also low odds ratios for dentists (ORs between 0.45 and 0.91), whereas visits to public primary health care were more common among non-permanent employees and the unemployed (ORs between 1.46 and 2.39). CONCLUSION: The use of physician services varies according to labour market status, being relatively low among the non-permanently employed and the unemployed. This underuse is emphasised when clinical need is taken into account. The main reasons for the variance evidently lie in the structures of the Finnish health service system. The result may indicate non-optimal health care of the population on the periphery of the labour market, but it may also reflect the importance of employment status as a context for need and the decision to visit a physician
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