scholarly journals SHIFAYAAB – Centralized Platform For Vaccination Program

Author(s):  
Khizar Hayat ◽  
◽  
Mobeen Nazar ◽  
Taimoor Khalid ◽  
Wissam Amin ◽  
...  

Vaccinations are very essential for the prevention of harmful diseases. However, the implementation rate of vaccination varies in different parts of the world. Many countries struggle to achieve the maximum immunization ratio due to their vaccination practices and methodologies. However, the authors have developed a solution to strengthen the vaccination procedure. SHIFAYAAB, a centralized platform for different healthcare organizations and hospitals, working on various vaccination programs. The idea is to collectively provide a centralized database for the vaccination programs by integrating the platform with the healthcare organizations and hospitals, to enhance and improve the vaccination procedure for the workers as well as the public. SHIFAYAAB proposes automation of the vaccination procedure by replacing the old school vaccine schedule card-reports with autonomous system-generated microplans. It will assemble the vaccination records and provide a user-friendly platform for the vaccinators to carry out the vaccination process. It will also provide users a platform to keep track of their vaccination progress by monitoring their microplan along with regular notification reminders from the platform.

Author(s):  
Henry Tam

This chapter provides a critical introduction to the problem of disengagement between governments and citizens. It looks at different arguments for reforming the scope and approach adopted by the state and explains why the way forward has to be through more effective state-citizen cooperation. It also gives a general outline of the three parts of the book. The first part examines the theoretical background and recent development of state-citizen cooperation to find out why more attention should be given to advance it; how its impact should be judged; and what makes it distinctive and complementary to other proposals on improving democratic governance. The second part reviews policies and strategies that have been tried out in different parts of the world to enable citizens and state institutions to work together in an informed and collaborative manner in defining and pursuing the public good. The final part considers how various underlying barriers to effective state-citizen cooperation can be overcome, with reference to specific case examples.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 366-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vadim Pashkus ◽  
Natalie Pashkus ◽  
Asya Chemlyakova

In the present day, in the context of the toughening of global competition in the field of health care and the efforts that different countries of the world spend on improving the efficiency of the public sector of economy, the problems associated with determining the factors of competitiveness of healthcare organizations come to the forefront. The research conducted by the authors showed that assessing the competitiveness and development potential of medical companies with the Keigan-Vogel positioning map often gives incorrect results. The study showed that a significant part of errors (22-28%) is due to an incorrect evaluation of the quality and effectiveness of medical services, which necessitates a clear delineation of these concepts. The work shows how these indicators effect the competitiveness of organizations in the health sector and what happens if we do not distinguish between these two concepts.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatjana Kay

UNSTRUCTURED Vaccines have greatly reduced, if not eliminated many devastating diseases. But the number of proponents of the anti-vaccination movement has been growing as ‘anti-vaxxers’ use social media to disseminate misinformation leading to more people choosing not to vaccinate their children or receive vaccines themselves. This has resulted in a lowering of herd immunity and outbreaks around the world. Healthcare organizations need to harness social media to spread accurate information and counter misinformation. Healthcare organizations are reputable sources that can address misinformation, educate the public, accurately explain science and research, and counter misinformation. But they need to be easily accessible and readily involved in online vaccination discussions. Social media serves the anti-vaccination movement by providing several channels to reach audiences; and facilitates the dissemination of a variety of content through both different platforms and different features within a given site. It is crucial for healthcare organizations to use social media in order to (1) have early influence on users, (2) increase direct engagement with users, and (3) counter anti-vaxx claims. How healthcare organizations can harness social media is explained in terms of (1) the content that is posted and where it is posted, (2) passive monitoring of social media.


2015 ◽  
pp. 1649-1661
Author(s):  
Kelvin Joseph Bwalya

Although a lot has been achieved with regards to technology development for e-Government applications, there are still no global technological conceptual frameworks and models that define e-Government platform design and implementation the world over. This has partly been attributed to the differing local contexts and organisational cultures in the public services departments (even within the same government). Because of this scenario, there is need to review the different technology design endeavours geared towards achieving process automation and application integration in the different government departments to achieve meaningful and robust e-Government development. This lead chapter intends to review the different approaches that have been done on the technology front of e-Government (especially design of interoperability frameworks and ontology platforms) in different parts of the world and outlines the future works that e-Government researchers and practitioners need to concentrate on. This chapter sets the tone for the remaining chapters of this book, which discuss various aspects of e-Government implementation from the technological front (deployment, design, and customization of e-Government solutions). The chapter posits that with the current pace of technological advancements and efforts by the OASIS forum and other interested parties, it is not difficult to notice that global technological models of e-Government are to be realized in the foreseeable future.


2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Umesh Rao Hodeghatta ◽  
Sangeeta Sahney

Purpose – This paper aims to research as to how Twitter is influential as an electronic word-of-mouth (e-WOM) communication tool and thereby affecting movie market. In present days, social media is playing an important role in connecting people around the globe. The technology has provided a platform in the social media space for people to share their experiences through text, photos and videos. Twitter is one such online social networking media that enables its users to send and read text-based messages of up to 140 characters, known as “tweets”. Twitter has nearly 200 million users and billions of such tweets are generated by users every other day. Social media micro-blogging broadcasting networks such as Twitter are transforming the way e-WOM is disseminated and consumed in the digital world. Twitter social behaviour for the Hollywood movies has been assessed across seven countries to validate the two basic blocks of the honeycomb model – sharing and conversation. Twitter behaviour was studied for 27 movies in 22 different cities of seven countries and for six genres with a total tweets of 9.28 million. The difference of Twitter social media behaviour was compared across countries, and “sharing” and “conversation” as two building blocks of the honeycomb model were studied. t-Test results revealed that the behaviour is different across countries and across genres. Design/methodology/approach – The objective of the paper is to analyse Twitter messages on an entertainment product (movies) across different regions of the world. Hollywood movies are released across different parts of the world, and Twitter users are also in different parts of the world. The objective is to hence validate “conversation” and “sharing” building blocks of the honeycomb model. The research is confined to analysing Twitter data related to a few Hollywood movies. The tweets were collected across nine different cities spanning four different countries where English language is prominent. To understand the Twitter social media behaviour, a crawler application using Python and Java was developed to collect tweets of Hollywood movies from the Twitter database. The application has incorporated Twitter application programming interfaces (APIs) to access the Twitter database to extract tweets according to movies search queries across different parts of the world. The searching, collecting and analysing of the tweets is a rather challenging task because of various reasons. The tweets are stored in a Twitter corpus and can be accessed by the public using APIs. To understand whether tweets vary from one country to another, the analysis of variance test was conducted. To assess whether Twitter behaviour is different, and to compare the behaviour across countries, t-tests were conducted taking two countries at a time. The comparisons were made across all the six genres. In this way, an attempt was made to obtain a microscopic view of the Twitter behaviour for each of the seven countries and the six genres. Findings – The findings show that the people use social media across the world. Nearly 9.28 million tweets were from seven countries, namely, USA, UK, Canada, South Africa, Australia, India and New Zealand for 27 Hollywood movies. This is indicative of the fact that today, people are exchanging information across different countries, that people are conversing about a product on social media and people are sharing information about a product on social media and, thus, proving the hypothesis. Further, the results indicate that the users in USA, Canada and UK, tweet more than the other countries, USA and UK being the highest in tweets followed by the Canada. On the other hand, the number of tweets in Australia, India and South Africa are low with New Zealand being the lowest of all the countries. This indicates that different countries’ users have different social media behaviour. Some countries use social media to communicate about their experience more than in some other country. However, consumers from all over the world are using Twitter to express their views openly and freely. Originality/value – This research is useful to scholars and enterprises to understand opinions on Twitter social media and predict their impact. The study can be extended to any products which can lead to better customer relationship management. Companies can use the Internet and social media to promote and get feedback on their products and services across different parts of the world. Governments can inform the public about their new policies, benefits of governmental programmes to people and ways to improve the Internet reach to more people and also for creating awareness about health, hygiene, natural calamities and safety.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiou Wang

<p>Using European soccer data sets, which contain data related to common European soccer leagues, players basic information, and teams’ goals, etc., this paper analyzes the characteristics of European soccer and players, explores data visualization regarding European soccer, and makes predictions of results of matches. Based on Python 3 and some of the packages inside, such as numpy, the author improves the data set to make it clear and user-friendly. Visualizations of data and basic statistics, including Poisson Distribution, are then utilized to determine the results. Finally, this paper analyzes the attacking and defending abilities of different leagues and teams in Europe, ascertains distributions of players’ attributes, and predicts match results by using Poisson distribution and Skellam Distribution. Generally, this paper analyzes data from leagues to matches to players. All these analyses are meaningful for the public to understand the characteristics of European soccer and the world behind the numbers.</p>


2007 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 167-195
Author(s):  
Goran Basic

Policies of multiculturalism are not an inheritance of modern and liberal state, although it is often concluded in the public. Historical empires states of ?old? democracy, colonial and immigrant societies, as well as eastern European countries after the experiment with communism confronted with a problem of ?control? of multiculturalism. Models of the multicultural policy are numerous and dependable on political, social and cultural circumstances in different parts of the world, and often culturally similar states develop different multicultural policies. Historical and contemporary experiences related to the multicultural policies are discussed in the paper and the last part deals conditions in which contemporary Serbia responds on requirements and challenges of its own multiculturalism.


Author(s):  
Herza Olivina

The number of Covid-19 cases continues to increase, including in Indonesia. One of the efforts made by the Indonesian government to prevent a pandemic is to create and implement a Covid-19 vaccination program for the community. Therefore, the government is trying to urge the public to be willing to carry out a Covid-19 vaccine. This study was conducted to the willingness of the Indonesian public to the vaccination program as an effort to prevent Covid-19. The research method used is a qualitative approach by analyzing subjectively through the literature review method from PubMed, Clinical Key, Google Scholar, and Google Engine in Indonesian or English. The results showed that most Indonesians were willing to be vaccinated. However, there are also Indonesians who refuse to be vaccinated. The reason people refuse to be vaccinated against Covid-19 may be that they have different beliefs about the Covid-19 vaccine because of limited information about the type of vaccine, the availability of the vaccine, and the safety of the vaccine itself. the conclusion is that quite a lot of Indonesian people are willing to receive vaccinations but the government still needs to provide information, knowledge, and education about vaccination programs by involving all parties, both directly and the media so that Indonesian people who refuse or receive vaccines have the same perception or views as people who are willing received the Covid-19 vaccine.


2021 ◽  
pp. 659-684
Author(s):  
Sian Griffiths ◽  
Kevin A. Fenton

This chapter describes strategies for public health intervention and structures that support them. It uses examples of strategies in different parts of the world and at different levels—global, national, local, and individual—to illustrate various strategic approaches. The key elements of strategy are those of vision, mission, values, aims, plans, and their implementation, monitoring, and evaluation. The examples chosen provide descriptions of how these are articulated and also how interventions are made towards their achievement of better public health. The importance of the way health services are structured, the public health workforce, and underpinning research and use of evidence are emphasized.


2012 ◽  
Vol 10 (H16) ◽  
pp. 537-538
Author(s):  
Kevin Govender

AbstractThe IAU Office of Astronomy for Development (OAD)†, established in March 2011 as part of the implementation of the IAU Strategic Plan, is currently located in South Africa and serves as a global coordinating centre for astronomy-for-development activities. In terms of structure the OAD is required to establish regional nodes (similar offices in different parts of the world which focus on a particular geographic or cultural region) and three task forces: (i) Astronomy for Universities and Research, (ii) Astronomy for Children and Schools, and (iii) Astronomy for the Public. This paper will describe the progress of the OAD towards the realisation of the vision ‘Astronomy for a better world’.


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