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2022 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-25
Author(s):  
Raymond Ndubisi Anyanwu ◽  
Rosianna Jules

Action research is regarded as a dynamic strategy to galvanise teachers to determine what works best for them and their pupils. Teachers’ experience in action research has been investigated in some developing countries without involving any of the small island states in the Indian Ocean. Hence, this study explored the experience of teachers from Seychelles regarding action research focusing on their understanding of the nature, meaning, and purpose of action research; the benefits they gained from doing action research; the difficulties and the challenges they encountered while conducting action research, including their background characteristics. Its aim was to identify their successes, concerns, and issues. Participants were 33 primary school teachers enrolled in the two-year Advanced Diploma programme at the Seychelles Institute of Education during the 2019/2020 academic year. One of their assessment tasks required them to identify a difficulty that their pupils encounter and conduct action research on it with a view to finding a solution. Data collected using a self-reporting questionnaire designed by the investigators was analysed using both descriptive and interpretive techniques. Results indicated that the participants had a mixed experience of successes, concerns, and issues.


2022 ◽  
pp. 019791832110465
Author(s):  
Julia A. Behrman ◽  
Abigail Weitzman

A considerable literature explores whether the fertility of migrants from high-fertility contexts converges with that of women in lower fertility destinations. Nonetheless, much of this research compares migrants’ reproductive outcomes to those of native-born women in destination countries. Drawing on research emphasizing the importance of transnational perspectives, we standardize and integrate data collected in France (the destination) and in six high-fertility African countries (the senders). We show that African migrants in our sample had higher children ever born (CEB) than native French women but lower CEB than women in corresponding origin countries. These findings suggest that socialization into pronatalist norms is an incomplete explanation for migrant fertility in the first generation, an insight that is overlooked when analyzing destination settings only. Next, we conduct multivariate analyses that weight migrants’ background characteristics to resemble women in both origin and destination countries. Findings indicate that observed differences between African migrants in France and women in African origin countries help explain differences in CEB between the two groups, which supports selection. We also demonstrate that African migrants in France had delayed transitions into first, second, and third births and lower completed fertility compared to women in origin countries, thus disputing the disruption hypothesis. Finally, we show that observed differences between African migrants in France and native French women explain differences in CEB between the two groups, which supports adaptation. These multifaceted findings on selection, disruption, and adaptation would be obscured by analyzing destination settings only, thus validating a multisited approach to migrant fertility.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Lisbeth Lindahl ◽  

Moving accommodation in old age challenges the idea of aging in place. This study describes older people’s (M = 80 years) reasons for moving to senior housing in Sweden and whether different reasons were related to the participants’ background characteristics.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jo Yoshizawa ◽  
Ryo Yamamoto ◽  
Koichiro Homma ◽  
Hanae Kamikura ◽  
Kazuhiko Sekine ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Post-contrast acute kidney injury (PC-AKI) is a major complication of contrast media usage, and risks for PC-AKI are generally evaluated before performing computed tomography (CT) with contrast at the emergency department (ED). Although persistent hypotension (systolic blood pressure [sBP] <80 mmHg for 1 h) is associated with increased PC-AKI incidence, it remains unclear whether tentative hypotension that is hemodynamically stabilised before CT is a risk for PC-AKI. We hypothesised that hypotension on ED arrival would be associated with higher PC-AKI incidence; even if CT with contrast was performed after patients are appropriately resuscitated. Methods: This multicenter retrospective observational study was conducted at three tertiary care centres during 2013–2014. We identified 280 patients who underwent CT with contrast at ED and whose kidney function was subsequently evaluated. Patients were divided into two groups based on sBP on arrival (<80 vs ≥80 mmHg); hypotension was considered as tentative because CT with contrast has always been performed after patients were stabilised at participating hospitals. PC-AKI incidence was compared between the groups, and inverse probability weighting (IPW) was conducted to adjust background characteristics, including age, sex, comorbidities, anaemia, and acute physiology and chronic health evaluation II score. Results: Eighteen patients were excluded due to chronic haemodialysis, cardiac arrest on arrival, or died within 72 h, and 262 were eligible for this study. PC-AKI incidence was higher in the tentative hypotension group than in the normotension group (7/27 [28.6%] vs 24/235 [10.2%], odds ratio [OR] 3.08 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.18–8.03], p = 0.026), which was confirmed by IPW (OR 3.25 [95% CI 1.99–5.29], p < 0.001). Similar results were obtained in subgroups with an estimated glomerular filtration rate of <60 mL/min/1.73 m2. Conclusion: Tentative hypotension at ED was associated with PC-AKI development.


Author(s):  
Beyhan Ertanir ◽  
Wassilis Kassis ◽  
Ariana Garrote

This study aimed to explore changes in mental health outcomes (depression, anxiety, home, and school stress) from before the first COVID-19 wave (autumn 2019) to the later stages of the same wave (autumn 2020) in a sample of N = 377 Swiss adolescents (Mage = 12.67; 47% female). It also examined whether students’ background characteristics (gender, immigrant status, and socio-economic status) and reported COVID-19 burden predicted students’ outcomes and their intra-individual changes. Student’s mental health, background characteristics, and reported COVID-19 burden were assessed by a self-report questionnaire. The intra-individual changes in students’ scores were estimated using random coefficients regression analyses, with time points nested in individuals. To examine the effects of predictors (students’ background characteristics and the reported COVID-19 burden) on outcome scores and changes, multilevel intercepts-and-slopes-as-outcomes models were used. The results showed that the expected impact of the pandemic on mental health was not noticeable in the later stages of the first COVID-19 wave. Only two effects were demonstrated in terms of intra-individual changes, namely, an effect of gender on depression and anxiety symptoms and an effect of reported COVID-19 burden on school stress symptoms. Moreover, few associations were found for selected predictors and students’ mean level scores, averaged across both time points.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 431-431
Author(s):  
Charles Emlet ◽  
Karen Fredriksen Goldsen

Abstract In the Covid-19 context, researchers and policy makers have turned their attention to long-standing disparities in health equity, including by race, ethnicity, poverty, sexuality, and gender. Yet, scholarship to date does not conceptualize age as a critical aspect of difference requiring an equity lens. In this presentation, we utilize an Age Equity Framework to investigate ageism based on research findings from the 2018 National Health, Aging and Sexuality/Gender Study (NHAS): Aging with Pride. Investigating ageism, stigma, and bias, we found nearly half of LGBTQ older adults feel invisible and disrespected. After adjusting for background characteristics, experiences of ageism were associated with higher rates of stigma, lifetime victimization, discrimination, lower support and community engagement, and adverse outcomes (lower mental and physical health and quality of life). The rapidly growing older adult population highlights the pressing need to consider age inequities and the importance of achieving age equity across the life course.


2021 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 382-397
Author(s):  
Arlene Weekes

In the UK, decisions to approve adoptive parents and foster carers and authorise adoptions rest with specialist panels. While their formal role and function are clear, there is concern that their composition and the biographies and background characteristics of members could introduce bias and influence the decisions made. This article examines the validity of these criticisms with findings from a study of eight agencies, 15 panels and 22 members. It was found that the panel system achieves its aims in terms of having a representative constitution and providing considered recommendations in a timely manner to senior managers, but that individual biography affects panel members in carrying out their role to an unexpectedly high degree, possibly leading to flawed decisions. Actions to remedy this problem, at both an individual and group level, are suggested.


BMJ Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. e053357
Author(s):  
Kasiye Shiferaw ◽  
Bezatu Mengistie ◽  
Tesfaye Gobena ◽  
Merga Dheresa ◽  
Assefa Seme

ObjectivesThe purposes of the study are; (A) to identify whether Ethiopian women’s antenatal care (ANC) visits are adequate and timely and (B) to explore factors that determine these.DesignPanel study design.SettingEthiopia.ParticipantsA total of 2855 women nested within 217 enumeration areas.Primary outcome measuresAdequacy and timeliness of ANC visits.ResultsOf all the 2855 respondents, 65% had made an ANC visit once, while 26.8% initiated ANC visits in a timely way and 43.3% attended adequate ANC visits. Rural residence (adjusted OR (AOR)=0.55, 95% CI: 0.36 to 0.84), attending higher level of education (AOR=2.64, 95% CI: 1.47 to 4.77), being multipara (AOR=0.53, 95% CI: 0.32 to 0.89) and encouragement by partners to attend clinic for ANC (AOR=1.98, 95% CI: 1.14 to 3.44) were significantly associated with timeliness of ANC visit. Similarly, residing in rural areas (AOR=0.20, 95% CI: 0.12 to 0.35), attending higher level of education (AOR=2.96, 95% CI: 1.38 to 6.15), encouragement by partners to attend clinic for ANC (AOR=2.11, 95% CI: 1.31 to 3.40) and timeliness of ANC visit (AOR=4.59, 95% CI: 2.93 to 7.21) were significantly associated with adequacy of ANC visits.ConclusionsA quarter of the pregnant women started ANC visits during the first trimester and nearly half attended adequate ANC visits with wider disparities across regions of their origin and their background characteristics. Concerted efforts on tailored interventions for rural residents, female education and partner involvement are recommended for early and adequate ANC visit(s).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Mathieu Kruyen ◽  
Rick Borst ◽  
Beatrice van der Heijden ◽  
Marjolein Missler ◽  
Stéfanie André ◽  
...  

During the COVID-19 pandemic, public servants in many countries were mandated to work from home. The unprecedented nature of the situation entailed considerable challenges for providing adequate HR support. In this study, we explored how Dutch public servants experienced mandatory homeworking by conducting a template analysis. Based on in-depth analyses of 985 written accounts, we inductively expanded an a priori template derived from the Job-Demands-Resource (JD-R) framework, to understand and analyze how public servants experienced their new situation. We found that components of mandatory homeworking trigger different experienced resources and demands with divergent consequences for different employees. Our study raises awareness about the effects of contextual factors, specifically personal background characteristics and working conditions, that are important to understand their divergent experiences with mandatory homeworking. Our findings are translated into propositions that extend the JD-R model. We end with lessons to create sustainable (home)working conditions in government.


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