scholarly journals Det krevende spennet mellom arbeid, hjemmet og gamle hjelpetrengende foreldre En hermeneutisk studie om kvinners situasjon i skjæringspunktet mellom yrkesliv og dobbelt omsorgsansvar

2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 56
Author(s):  
Ingrid S. Berthinussen ◽  
Sven-Tore Dreyer Fredriksen

<p><em>The aim of this study is to describe how women experience the difficult balancing act of caring for old and frail parents, managing their professional careers and taking care of their own families. Life expectancy has increased in the western world since World War Two, leading to an increasing number of elderly, and elderly with health problems, in need of care and assistance. Additional, health care reforms reguire the elderly to continue to live in their own homes for as long as possible. Traditionally the daughters often end up with carrying the heaviest load of caring for their parents, with all emotional and physical strains entailed, these two facts creates an additional burden on top of t their regular responsibilities regarding family life and career. A<strong> </strong>qualitative approach was used which includes deep interweaves and hermeneutic analysis. Analyzing the present material we come up with seven sub-themes, and these seven sub-themes crystallized into three main themes: the moral obligations, the anguish and feelings and personal health.</em></p><p><strong><em> </em></strong></p>

Author(s):  
Michael Anderson ◽  
Corinne Roughley

The principal reported causes of death have changed dramatically since the 1860s, though changes in categorization of causes and improved diagnosis make it difficult to be precise about timings. Diseases particularly affecting children such as measles and whooping cough largely disappeared as killers by the 1950s. Deaths particularly linked to unclean environments and poor sanitary infrastructure also declined, though some can kill babies and the elderly even today. Pulmonary tuberculosis and bronchitis were eventually largely controlled. Reported cancer, stroke, and heart disease mortality showed upward trends well into the second half of the twentieth century, though some of this was linked to diagnostic improvement. Both fell in the last decades of our period, but Scotland still had among the highest rates in Western Europe. Deaths from accidents and drowning saw significant falls since World War Two but, especially in the past 25 years, suicide, and alcohol and drug-related deaths rose.


Author(s):  
Srećko Petrović

Over the Book “Bogdaj” Bitola. [For the publisher Tomislav Karadžić; consultant Mirjana Glišović; technical arrangement Dušan Solujić Sole]. Vraćevšnica [— Gornji Milanovac: Grafoprint], 2019. 158 pp. The charitable activity of Bishop Nicholai Velimirovich is little known. Although his work and service from the time before the First World War until the end of his life was associated with various charitable activities, his care for the needy and his engagement in the field of charity mostly escaped the attention of researchers, who focused their research firstly on his national work, dealing with the charitable dimensions of Velimirovich’s activities arrogantly, more often only lightly or not at all. However, the charitable activity of Bishop Nicholai Velimirovich was one of his primary activities, expressed in different ways: through efforts to collect humanitarian aid during World War I, then through the establishment of various charitable funds and societies, in the interwar period through the establishment of the church charities, feeding houses for the poor, homes for children, homes for the elderly — in dioceses where he served as a bishop and administrator, or in monasteries in his vicinity, and in the period after World War II especially through care for displaced persons and refugees (among other things through work in international church organizations), care for surviving prisoners of war and detainees who could not return to their homes, and especially through care for poor believers in the new Yugoslavia — expressed through his constant care to deliver humanitarian aid from the Western world to the unwilling in the homeland. The mentioned Bishop Nicholai’s activities have not been sufficiently researched, and it would be very interesting if in the future they would be the subject of a more thorough study, i.e. if the charitable aspect of Bishop Nicholai’s actions and ministry would be clarified. In a small number of publications and studies in which certain attention is paid to the charitable activity of Bishop Nicholai, however, several articles stand out about the Children’s Foster Home of St. Nicholas “Bogdaj,” which operated under the direction of Nadežda — in monasticism Ana — Adžić in Bitola from 1935 to the beginning of World War II in the area, i.e. until the occupation in 1941. In addition to texts and materials from churchly periodicals, the first notable publication dedicated to “Bogdaj” through which the public had the opportunity to learn about the existence and activities of this charity was the diary of mother Ana Adžić, published among the articles for the biography of Bishop Nicholai in the 1st volume of the Collected Works of Nicholai Velimirovich, i.e. in the 2nd edition of the 1st volume, printed in 2013. An interesting publication about “Bogdaj,” published in 2019, is coming from the Vraćevšnica monastery. This is the edition of the notebook of mother Ana Adžić, hegumenia of the Vraćevšnica monastery, who, as sister Nada, was invited by Bishop Nicholai in Bitola in 1935. She took over the management of the newly established Children’s Foster Home of St. Nicholas — “Bogdaj.” Namely, Sister Nada managed this institution until 1941, when after the outbreak of World War II and after the Bulgarian occupation, she had to leave Bitola. She later continued her humanitarian work and mission in Kraljevo and Trstenik. The Vraćevšnica sisterhood copied this notebook in 1976, thus preserving this valuable testimony from oblivion.


1992 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-126
Author(s):  
Hans Levy

The focus of this paper is on the oldest international Jewish organization founded in 1843, B’nai B’rith. The paper presents a chronicle of B’nai B’rith in Continental Europe after the Second World War and the history of the organization in Scandinavia. In the 1970's the Order of B'nai B'rith became B'nai B'rith international. B'nai B'rith worked for Jewish unity and was supportive of the state of Israel.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 929-932
Author(s):  
Rongrong Qian
Keyword(s):  

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