418 research outputs found

    L'actuació de Barcelona a les Corts de 1705-1706

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    Food Indicators and Their Relationship with 10 to 12 Year-olds' Subjective Well-Being

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    This study aimed to test subjective indicators designed to analyze the role food plays in children’s lives, explore children’s personal well-being, and evaluate the relationship between these two phenomena. It was conducted on 371 children aged 10 to 12 by means of a selfadministered questionnaire. Results showed a marked interest in food on the part of children, who consider taste and health the most important indicators when it comes to eating. They demonstrated a high level of personal well-being, measured using Cummins & Lau’s adapted version of the Personal Well- Being Index–School Children (PWI-SC) (2005), overall life satisfaction (OLS) and satisfaction with various life domains (friends, family, sports, food and body). Regression models were conducted to explain satisfaction with food, taking as independent variables the interest children have in food, the importance they give to different reasons for eating, scores from the PWI-SC, OLS and satisfaction with various life domains. In the final model, it was found that OLS, health indicators, satisfaction with health from the PWI-SC and satisfaction with your body contribute to explaining satisfaction with food. The results obtained suggest that satisfaction with food is a relevant indicator in the exploration of children’s subjective well-being, calling into question the widespread belief that these aspects are of exclusive interest to adults. They also seem to reinforce the importance of including food indicators in any study aimed at exploring the well-being of the 10 to 12 year-old population

    Psychosocial risk and protective factors for the health and well-being of professionals working in emergency and non-emergency medical transport services, identified via questionnaires

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    Medical transport (MT) professionals are subject to considerable emotional demands due to their involvement in life-or-death situations and their exposure to the serious health problems of their clients. An increase in the demand for MT services has, in turn, increased interest in the study of the psychosocial risk factors affecting the health of workers in this sector. However, research thus far has not distinguished between emergency (EMT) and non-emergency (non-EMT) services, nor between the sexes. Furthermore, little emphasis has been placed on the protective factors involved. The main objective of the present study is to identify any existing differential exposure - for reasons of work setting (EMT and non-EMT) or of gender - to the various psychosocial risk and protective factors affecting the health of MT workers.Descriptive and transversal research with responses from 201 professionals.The scores obtained on the various psychosocial scales in our study - as indicators of future health problems - were more unfavourable for non-EMT workers than they were for EMT workers. Work setting, but not gender, was able to account for these differences.The scores obtained for the different psychosocial factors are generally more favourable for the professionals we surveyed than those obtained in previous samples.The significant differences observed between EMT and non-EMT personnel raise important questions regarding the organization of work in companies that carry out both services at the same time in the same territory. The relationships among the set of risk/protective factors suggests a need for further investigation into working conditions as well as a consideration of the workers' sense of coherence and subjective well-being as protective factors against occupational burnout syndrom

    Barcelona i la Vint-i-quatrena de Corts a les Corts de Montsó de 1585

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    Les institucions catalanes durant la guerra de Successió, les corts de 1705-1706

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    The mental health of patients with psychotic disorder from a positive, multidimensional and recovery perspective

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    Positive mental health (PMH) and mental illness are distinct, yet interrelated, constructs. However, this relationship has yet to be adequately established. We aimed to evaluate the level of PMH and its relationship with sociodemographic and clinical determinants as well as to explore the relationship between PMH and the positive constructs of recovery, subjective wellbeing (SWB), insight and functioning in patients with psychotic disorder. A multicenter, descriptive, cross-sectional and correlational study with a sample of 347 patients with psychotic disorder was conducted. The following assessment instruments were used: Positive Mental Health Questionnaire, Maryland Assessment of Recovery in Serious Mental Illness scale, Insight Scale, Personal Wellbeing Index-Adult version (PWI-A), Overall Life Satisfaction (OLS) and Global Assessment of Functioning scale. The mean global level of PMH was 116.16 (range of 39-156, SD = 19.39). Significant differences were found in PMH in relation to sociodemographic (sex, civil status and employment situation) and clinical variables (family history of mental disorders, number of prescribed antipsychotics, treatment with anxiolytics, treatment with antidepressants and suicide attempts). PMH was significantly and positively correlated with recovery (r = 0.760), SWB (PWI-A: r = 0.728 and OLS: r = 0.602) and functioning (r = 0.243), and negatively with insight (r = -0.335). These results can lead to a major change in mental health care. If actions are taken to increase PMH, then recovery, SWB and functioning will also increase. At the same time, interventions should be carried out to boost insight, since increasing PMH could decrease insight, all resulting in better quality of life for patients with psychotic disorder

    Experiencia en gestión de redes sociales en el CRAI de la UB

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    El CRAI de la Universidad de Barcelona (CRAI UB) empezó a investigar y a utilizar las redes sociales entre finales del 2006 y principios del 2007. En aquellos momentos los blogs fueron las primeras redes que en las que participamos. El hecho de permitir comunicarnos con los usuarios a través de noticias de interés y de recibir sus comentarios hizo que los blogs fueran un medio dinámico en contraste con las tradicionales páginas web estáticas. El primer blog que elaboramos fue el del CRAI Biblioteca de Letras. Lentamente y en función de su viabilidad se impulsó, desde la unidad transversal de Proyectos del CRAI UB, la presencia del resto de CRAI Bibliotecas en las redes sociales. Con la aparición de Facebook se abrió una nueva posibilidad de comunicación e interactividad con los usuarios potenciales del CRAI UB, que se vio favorecida también con la irrupción de Twitter. En un principio, se empezaron a crear cuentas con perfiles personales y, cuando fue posible, pasaron a ser cuentas institucionales. Si hablamos de un público universitario como el nuestro, es Facebook la que arrastra mayor audiencia y, por consiguiente, la que permite llegar a un mayor número de usuarios. Esta posibilidad de compartir información de forma inmediata y sin demasiado esfuerzo añadido fue el impulso definitivo a la generalización de las redes sociales en la mayoría de los CRAI Bibliotecas

    Do humans spread zoonotic enteric bacteria in Antarctica?

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    Reports of enteric bacteria in Antarctic wildlife have suggested its spread from people to seabirds and seals, but evidence is scarce and fragmentary. We investigated the occurrence of zoonotic enteric bacteria in seabirds across the Antarctic and subantarctic region; for comparison purposes, in addition to seabirds, poultry in a subantarctic island was also sampled. Three findings suggest reverse zoonosis from humans to seabirds: the detection of a zoonotic Salmonella serovar (ser. Enteritidis) and Campylobacter species (e.g. C. jejuni), typical of human infections; the resistance of C. lari isolates to ciprofloxacin and enrofloxacin, antibiotics commonly used in human and veterinary medicine; and most importantly, the presence of C. jejuni genotypes mostly found in humans and domestic animals but rarely or never found in wild birds so far. We also show further spread of zoonotic agents among Antarctic wildlife is facilitated by substantial connectivity among populations of opportunistic seabirds, notably skuas (Stercorarius). Our results highlight the need for even stricter biosecurity measures to limit human impacts in Antarctica.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
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