service to others
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2022 ◽  
pp. 202-224
Author(s):  
Anant Lal Karn

Leadership is a must to get the task performed. This is more so for the new hybrid work model. There are styles of leadership. Hence, the question of selecting which leadership style is an important consideration. Hybrid work is related in part to working from home, which depends on the follower's prudent conduct. Under the circumstances, servant leadership has been considered appropriate. This is follower-oriented and believes in the service to others. This has been done by judging the effectiveness of servant leadership. First, how does servant leadership work been observed? Next, the empirical studies using servant leadership have been analyzed. Based on this analysis, the superiority of this leadership style has been determined. Thereafter, the role and issues in implementing hybrid work have been identified. Finally, a model has been developed to link servant leadership to hybrid work.


Vaccines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 1320
Author(s):  
Dominik Stämpfli ◽  
Adrian Martinez-De la Torre ◽  
Elodie Simi ◽  
Sophie Du Pasquier ◽  
Jérôme Berger ◽  
...  

In response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, Swiss health authorities approved and ordered two mRNA vaccines in 2021. The canton of Zurich was the second in Switzerland to allow community pharmacists to administer the COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine Moderna to the adult population. We aimed to pilot a customer satisfaction questionnaire regarding COVID-19 vaccinations in Zurich pharmacies. Questions focused on satisfaction with different aspects of the service, motivation for getting the vaccination, and reasons for being vaccinated in a pharmacy. Zurich pharmacies administered 68,169 COVID-19 doses until June 2021, and 421 questionnaires were filled. Respondents’ mean age was 43.5 (±13.2) years, with 42.3% reporting being women and 46.1% being men. Of the 372 complete questionnaires, 98.7% of the respondents would have recommended the service to others. High levels of satisfaction were reported concerning pre-vaccination discussion (98.9%), pharmacies’ information level on COVID-19 vaccines (98.9%), general comfort with receiving the vaccination in a pharmacy (99.5%), injection technique (99.2%), and premises used (98.1%). Most respondents (57.3%) would have had the option of another vaccination provider, but the pharmacies were chosen for their opening hours, ease of access, and perceived trust. The availability of pharmacist-administered services may be an important contributor to a successful vaccination programme in Switzerland.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-232
Author(s):  
Crystal Welman ◽  
Paul J. P. Fouché ◽  
Pravani Naidoo ◽  
Roelf van Niekerk

The study investigates Sol Plaatje’s (1876–1932) spiritual wellness across his lifespan. He was purposively sampled due to his impact upon South African society. As an intellectual, novelist, journalist, and politician, Plaatje was also a founder member of the South African Native National Congress, which later became the African National Congress. His life history reflected a significant degree of spiritual wellness, which was uncovered through the systematic analysis of publicly available life-history materials, including primary and secondary sources. The Wheel of Wellness (WoW) model by Sweeney and Witmer was applied to interpret the biographical evidence of spirituality and meaning in his life. Spirituality, as the central life task of the WoW, and regarded as the most influential domain of a healthy individual, incorporates religious beliefs and other individualised aspects of meaning-making. Findings indicate that spirituality characterised Plaatje’s childhood years and continued to play a role throughout his adult years. His sense of meaning and purpose was personified in the promotion and preservation of human rights and dignity, which embraced inter-racial respect, compassion, and service to others.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (14) ◽  
pp. 7638
Author(s):  
Leon Hupkens ◽  
Jos Akkermans ◽  
Omar Solinger ◽  
Svetlana Khapova

Current perspectives on career success have yet to show whether and how subjective career success evaluations may change over time and across career phases. By adopting a retrospective life-span approach to careers, our qualitative inquiry into the career experiences of 63 professionals contributes to the temporal understanding of subjective career success by exploring patterns in how subjective career success perceptions and priorities may change over time. The temporal development of subjective career success was explored among early-career, mid-career, and late-career workers by piecing together retrospective evaluations of career success perceptions. Our findings point to common patterns in career success perceptions across the lifespan. Specifically, we found five shift components of career success perceptions during people’s careers: (1) quitting striving for financial success and recognition; (2) an increased focus on personal development across the career; (3) a stronger emphasis on work–life balance across the career; (4) a shift toward being of service to others; and (5) no change in subjective career success components across the career. These patterns reflect ways in which workers engage in motivational self-regulation and the corresponding career goal-setting across the lifespan. The theoretical implications are discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 00 (00) ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Vivien Marcow Speiser ◽  
Phillip Speiser

This article will explore themes that emerged from writings and interviews with creative arts therapy colleagues from around the world during the COVID-19 pandemic. We conducted this research from March through October 2020. During this time, everything we thought we knew about our world shifted. People are living in a ‘liminal’ in-between threshold space from pre-pandemic times to the space of the moment, in between what was and will be. Issues we are living through are immediate and also existential as we negotiate local, national and global collective anxiety, trauma and survival. Artists are familiar with navigating and working in this type of liminal space. The creative process involves learning to stay with unknowns and ambiguity as part of the act of creation. This article shares thoughts and reflections with regard to being of service to others in this time of worldwide crisis.


Author(s):  
Selina Taylor ◽  
Alice Cairns ◽  
Beverley Glass

Unaddressed hearing loss affects an estimated 466 million people worldwide, costing over $750 billion globally, with rural communities being particularly disadvantaged, due to the greater inequity in access to healthcare services. This mixed-methods study aimed to use the PRECEDE-PROCEED model to develop and pilot a rural community pharmacy-based ear health service, LISTEN UP (Locally Integrated Screening and Testing Ear aNd aUral Program). The PRECEDE process involved an assessment of the predisposing, reinforcing and enabling constructs to support practice change through a scoping review, stakeholder surveys and interviews and consultation with governing bodies and regulatory authorities. The PROCEED segment structured the evaluation of the service pilot and informed planned implementation, process, impact and outcome evaluation. The pilot study conducted in February 2021 included 20 participants, with the most common ear complaints presented being pain, pressure or blockage. All these participants reported high levels of satisfaction with the service, would recommend the service to others and would attend the pharmacy first before seeing a GP for future ear complaints. The PRECEDE-PROCEED model provides a comprehensive model to guide the design of the LISTEN UP program, an innovative model, expanding services offered by rural community pharmacies, with preliminary results demonstrating high consumer satisfaction.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 6580-6580
Author(s):  
Tiffany A. Traina ◽  
Philip W. Kantoff ◽  
Matthew J. Matasar ◽  
Lara Dunn ◽  
Claire Frances Friedman ◽  
...  

6580 Background: Outcomes for patients (pts) with cancer may vary widely based on accessibility and quality of care. Subspecialized expert care is associated with improved outcomes yet access to this scarce resource is limited. Providing SEO opinions in legacy ways is time-consuming and difficult to scale. We hypothesized that summarizing comprehensive pt records could enhance efficiency of a remote opinion process. In this prospective pilot, oncologists (MDs) at Memorial Sloan Kettering (MSK) tested the NCDM, a clinically-validated, semi-automated system which abstracts pertinent data elements from medical records into a structured summary to support SEO decision making for remote opinions. Methods: From July to December 2020, 12 MSK MDs provided remote opinions to consecutive pts from an international second opinion service who were specifically seeking MSK expertise. NCDM summaries, with relevant DICOM imaging, were provided to MDs via web and mobile app. MDs answered a brief survey about their experience after each opinion. Time spent to read and respond to an NCDM summary was tracked electronically. Pt feedback was collected by prospective phone follow up. Results: N = 101 remote opinions. Cancer type (N): breast (24), gastrointestinal (15), heme malignancy (14), prostate (12), renal (8), gynecologic (7), head & neck (11), lung (9) and skin (1). 92% MD response rate. Pt characteristics: median age (60 years, range 17-83); stage of disease (early stage 41%, advanced 59%); 86% of pts had received prior treatment. MDs survey responses: median time to complete record review and render opinion = 4.8 min (IQR 2.7 – 7.9 min); NCDM provided adequate information needed to make a decision in this case = 95.7% (89/93); Decision making was easy in this case with data presented in the NCDM format = 96.8% (90/93). Pt survey responses (71/88): 92% shared recommendation with local MD; 87% received the recommended treatment; 99% stated they would recommend a NCDM enabled remote opinion service to others. Conclusions: NCDM summaries enabled subspecialized MSK cancer experts to provide oncology remote opinions with ease. Patients reported high satisfaction with the experience. Technology assisted abstraction and case summary can facilitate access to subspecialized expert opinions at a global scale.


Horizons ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-121
Author(s):  
Nathan D. Wood-House

Given his insistence on the dual temporal and spiritual spheres in which Christians live in the tension of freedom and service to others, Martin Luther's theological ethics prove paradoxical. This conundrum unfolds at the intersection of Luther's doctrine of justification and consequent Christian freedom (1520), and his doctrine of two kingdoms, which elucidates the complex world in which we live (1523). How is one to live in service to the neighbor as an unconditional subject, love enemies, and uphold justice? This article explores the New Finnish School interpretation of Luther's doctrine of justification as theosis in order to elucidate the Reformer's convoluted ethics. We may ultimately understand Luther's tensive position in terms of the believer's soul united to Christ, thereby becoming a Christ to others albeit, simul justus et peccator, imperfectly. This more fully accounts for Luther's appreciation for the ethical contingencies faced by Christians in everyday life.


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