13 research outputs found

    Character education motivated by ideals

    Full text link
    Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 193

    Towards an understanding of the information and support needs of surgical adolescent idiopathic scoliosis patients: a qualitative analysis

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Informed decision making for adolescents and families considering surgery for scoliosis requires essential information, including expected outcomes with or without treatment and the associated risks and benefits of treatment. Ideally families should also receive support in response to their individual concerns. The aim of this study was to identify health-specific needs for online information and support for patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis who have had or anticipate having spinal surgery.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Focus group methodology was chosen as the primary method of data collection to encourage shared understandings, as well as permit expression of specific, individual views. Participants were considered eligible to participate if they had either experienced or were anticipating surgery for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis within 12 months, were between the ages of 10 and 18 years of age, and were English-speaking.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Two focus groups consisting of 8 adolescents (1 male, 7 female) and subsequent individual interviews with 3 adolescents (1 male, 2 female) yielded a range of participant concerns, in order of prominence: (1) recovery at home; (2) recovery in hospital; (3) post-surgical appearance; (4) emotional impact of surgery and coping; (5) intrusion of surgery and recovery of daily activities; (6) impact of surgery on school, peer relationships and other social interactions; (7) decision-making about surgery; (8) being in the operating room and; (9) future worries.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In conclusion, adolescents welcomed the possibility of an accessible, youth-focused website with comprehensive and accurate information that would include the opportunity for health professional-moderated, online peer support.</p

    How Minority Consumers Use Targeted Advertising as Pathways to Self-Empowerment

    No full text
    This paper represents an interpretivist analysis of how one group of minority consumers—gay men and lesbians—respond to targeted advertising as they encounter the oppositional forces of commercial validation in the marketplace and discrimination in the political domain. Interviews conducted with 25 self-identified gay and lesbian informants indicate how these consumers construct self-empowering interpretive strategies to cope with the stigma and negotiate the subordinated social status. The findings highlight the sociocultural role of advertising and the power of consumer myth, and illuminate disenfranchised consumers' struggles to seek public validation of their subcultural identity while evading potentially stigmatic subcultural distinctiveness

    Advances in Forecast Evaluation

    No full text
    corecore