Self-efficacy Building Financial Capability to Vulnerable Consumers- Lesson to Learn from Training Project

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilla Kortesalmi
2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 12117-12117
Author(s):  
Bridgette Thom ◽  
Catherine Benedict ◽  
Danielle Novetsky Friedman ◽  
Samantha Watson ◽  
Michelle Zeitler ◽  
...  

12117 Background: Due to disruptions in education, workforce entry, and career development caused by cancer and its treatment, young adult (YA) cancer survivors face financial toxicity (i.e., cancer-related financial distress) at rates higher than older survivors. Financial toxicity in YA survivors is associated with avoiding care and diminished psychosocial well-being, but enduring effects on employment, personal finances, and healthcare use and the association with YA’s financial capability are not well studied. Methods: This was a cross-sectional survey of a national sample of YAs with cancer (n = 214) recruited online and via mailing lists. It included the Comprehensive Score for Financial Toxicity (COST), demographic/clinical self-report, and questions on medical cost-coping and healthcare use. Financial capability questions considered respondents’ knowledge about finances, self-efficacy for managing health expenses, and attitudes and behaviors regarding tracking expenses, budgeting, saving, investing, and bill paying. Multiple linear regression assessed associations among financial toxicity, financial capability, and cost-coping. Results: Mean respondent age was 35.4 years ( sd= 5.40) at survey and 27.5 years ( sd= 7.23) at diagnosis. Breast cancer (28%) and lymphoma (17%) were the most common diagnoses; most respondents were white (79%) women (87%) with college degrees (74%). Financial toxicity, as measured by COST, was high (mean = 13.9, sd= 9.3; possible range 0-44, scores < 26 indicate severe financial toxicity). Nearly all of the sample (96%) had health insurance, but 30% said their insurance does not meet their needs. One-half of the sample lacked confidence to manage health expenses. Cost-coping strategies included skipping/delaying: treatment (23%), survivorship care (35%), or medications (39%); 65% relied on a family member to pay for some/all medical bills. Negative events related to medical expenses included using money from savings (58%), taking on credit card debt (45%), post-cancer credit score decrease (44%), borrowing money to pay bills (42%), debt collection contact (37%), lacking money to pay for basic necessities (23%), loan denial (20%), and thoughts about and/or filing for bankruptcy (15%). In multivariate analyses, greater financial toxicity was associated with lower self-efficacy for managing health expenses (β = -0.88, p =.01), poorer financial behaviors (β = -0.54, p =.001), lower income (β = -5.27, p =.001), and skipping/delaying: treatment (eβ= 1.16, p <.001), survivorship care (eβ= 1.13, p <.001), or prescribed medication (eβ= 1.10, p =.001). Conclusions: Our findings illustrate the profound enduring impact of financial toxicity among YAs after cancer treatment. Multilevel interventions are needed to provide YAs the tools to navigate financial aspects of the healthcare system and connect them with resources toward gaining financial independence.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Rothwell ◽  
Shiyou Wu

Very little is known about how participation in financial education affects cognitive outcomes such as financial knowledge and self-efficacy. We used two waves of the nationally representative Canadian Financial Capability Survey along with propensity score matching to compare outcomes between persons who had taken a financial education course to those who had not. After matching and adjusting for demographic and economic factors, financial education participants exhibited significantly higher financial knowledge and financial self-efficacy scores. Post-estimation analysis showed that higher overall financial knowledge scores of participants were at least partially driven by higher scores of men. There was no difference in knowledge scores for women across all age groups. Financial education participants had higher efficacy scores for both genders and across age. Future research into the impact of financial education ought to consider cognitive dimensions in addition to strictly behavioral and financial outcomes.


This study objectives to show the effect of personality traits on entrepreneurial target by using entrepreneurial self-efficacy as a mediating variable and the financial capability as a moderating variable. The research was conducted on students as representatives of the young generation. Currently, many regions need the creation of new economic resources to improve the community welfare where one of the strategies is by creating young entrepreneurs. For that reason, the involvement of higher education institutions in shaping the student’s mindsets and encouraging their entrepreneurial intention is very important. This study focuses on personality traits accompanied by incorporating elements of entrepreneurial self-efficacy and financial capability as variables that are believed to play a role in encouraging student entrepreneurial objective as a representative of the young generation. The study involved 112 students of the Faculty of Economics who were undergoing their third year of education at the University of Ngurah Rai, Denpasar, Bali. Data was collected through questionnaires and processed using SPLS statistical tools. The findings illustrates that personality traits and entrepreneurial self-efficacy have an important influence on entrepreneurial goal. The discoveries also produce evidence that financial capability does not moderate the effect of personal behaviors on entrepreneurial target, which means that if someone does not have a financial capability, it will not prevent him from entrepreneurship because he has personality traits and/or self-efficacy as an entrepreneur. This finding also shows that higher education institutions could play a part in shaping personality traits and student entrepreneurial self-efficacy early with the preparation of a comprehensive curriculum between theory and practice in order to be able to encourage entrepreneurial intention after students graduate from their college.


2019 ◽  
Vol 64 (01) ◽  
pp. 57-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
XU CUI ◽  
JING JIAN XIAO ◽  
JINGTAO YI

Research on consumer financial capability is important for consumer financial wellbeing and emerging in the literature. However, studies on consumer financial capability in the Chinese context remain limited. To fill up the research gap, we used data from the 2011 China Household Finance Survey to investigate whether employment type and residential status were associated with consumer financial capability in China. Consumer financial capability was measured by the range of financial assets. Results from OLS and Poisson regressions showed that people employed in the government-managed system, with urban residence registration and with non-local rural residence registration had a better financial capability than their respective counterparts. The results have policy implications for improving consumer financial education and supporting vulnerable consumers.


2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 1270-1281
Author(s):  
Leah Fostick ◽  
Riki Taitelbaum-Swead ◽  
Shulamith Kreitler ◽  
Shelly Zokraut ◽  
Miriam Billig

Purpose Difficulty in understanding spoken speech is a common complaint among aging adults, even when hearing impairment is absent. Correlational studies point to a relationship between age, auditory temporal processing (ATP), and speech perception but cannot demonstrate causality unlike training studies. In the current study, we test (a) the causal relationship between a spatial–temporal ATP task (temporal order judgment [TOJ]) and speech perception among aging adults using a training design and (b) whether improvement in aging adult speech perception is accompanied by improved self-efficacy. Method Eighty-two participants aged 60–83 years were randomly assigned to a group receiving (a) ATP training (TOJ) over 14 days, (b) non-ATP training (intensity discrimination) over 14 days, or (c) no training. Results The data showed that TOJ training elicited improvement in all speech perception tests, which was accompanied by increased self-efficacy. Neither improvement in speech perception nor self-efficacy was evident following non-ATP training or no training. Conclusions There was no generalization of the improvement resulting from TOJ training to intensity discrimination or generalization of improvement resulting from intensity discrimination training to speech perception. These findings imply that the effect of TOJ training on speech perception is specific and such improvement is not simply the product of generally improved auditory perception. It provides support for the idea that temporal properties of speech are indeed crucial for speech perception. Clinically, the findings suggest that aging adults can be trained to improve their speech perception, specifically through computer-based auditory training, and this may improve perceived self-efficacy.


Author(s):  
Jacqueline A. Towson ◽  
Matthew S. Taylor ◽  
Diana L. Abarca ◽  
Claire Donehower Paul ◽  
Faith Ezekiel-Wilder

Purpose Communication between allied health professionals, teachers, and family members is a critical skill when addressing and providing for the individual needs of patients. Graduate students in speech-language pathology programs often have limited opportunities to practice these skills prior to or during externship placements. The purpose of this study was to research a mixed reality simulator as a viable option for speech-language pathology graduate students to practice interprofessional communication (IPC) skills delivering diagnostic information to different stakeholders compared to traditional role-play scenarios. Method Eighty graduate students ( N = 80) completing their third semester in one speech-language pathology program were randomly assigned to one of four conditions: mixed-reality simulation with and without coaching or role play with and without coaching. Data were collected on students' self-efficacy, IPC skills pre- and postintervention, and perceptions of the intervention. Results The students in the two coaching groups scored significantly higher than the students in the noncoaching groups on observed IPC skills. There were no significant differences in students' self-efficacy. Students' responses on social validity measures showed both interventions, including coaching, were acceptable and feasible. Conclusions Findings indicated that coaching paired with either mixed-reality simulation or role play are viable methods to target improvement of IPC skills for graduate students in speech-language pathology. These findings are particularly relevant given the recent approval for students to obtain clinical hours in simulated environments.


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