679 resultados para Residential satisfaction
Resumo:
Pretendemos com este estudo caracterizar os sem abrigo, as suas redes e relações sociais, bem como os modelos de intervenção, de forma a que se possa ter um maior conhecimento acerca desta problemática. Para a consecução destes propósitos, foram delineados os seguintes objectivos: caracterizar a população sem abrigo em termos de variáveis sócio-demográficas; identificar a sua rede social de apoio; caracterizar as dimensões sociais associadas à vinculação adulta nos sem abrigo; caracterizar a incidência de psicopatologia nesta população; analisar o seu bem estar psicológico; caracterizar os acontecimentos de vida stressantes que contribuem para a emergência desta problemática. Para atingir estes objectivos foram realizados dois estudos, um de carácter quantitativo e um segundo de carácter qualitativo. Participaram 225 indivíduos (105 sem abrigo e 120 pessoas carenciadas) garantindo a homogeneidade nas variáveis sexo e idade. A média de idades da amostra total (n= 225) é de 38 anos, sendo que a maioria dos sujeitos desta investigação pertence ao sexo masculino (78,5%). O grupo dos sem abrigo foi recolhido em duas comunidades de inserção, na zona centro do país, sendo importante destacar que todos nesta fase têm apoio residencial, satisfação das necessidades básicas, acompanhamento social e psicológico, bem como, projectos de inserção em curso. O protocolo de recolha de informação inclui dados pessoais, a versão portuguesa da (ASQ)-Questionário de Estilos de Vinculação nos Sem Abrigo (QEVSA), da escala de ocorrência de acontecimentos de vida stressantes relacionados com o surgimento do primeiro episódio de sem abrigo (EAVSSA), do Questionário de Morbilidade Psiquiátrica em Adultos (QMPA), do Medical Outcomes Study’s social support scale (MOS-SSS-P), a escala de medida de manifestação de bem-estar psicológico (EMMBEP), o programa de intervenção da CINO e uma entrevista estruturada utilizada no estudo qualitativo. Os principais resultados são: a) o perfil de sem abrigo encontrado é maioritariamente homem, em média com 39 anos, solteiro ou divorciado, com 1 filho, 2.º ciclo de escolaridade, desempregado e português; b) maioria viveu na rua mais de um ano, está na instituição há menos de meio ano, não teve nos últimos seis meses consumo de substâncias (álcool e drogas), frequenta consultas (saúde mental e toxicodependência), toma medicação (terapêutica de substituição e neurolépticos), afirma não ter comportamentos de risco, e na maioria têm patologia infecciosa (HIV ou hepatite c), tendo cerca de 40% estado detidos; c) a problemática dos sem abrigo é um fenómeno multicausal apontando como principais factores o conflito familiar, o desemprego e problemas de saúde; d) em termos de vinculação população sem abrigo parece corresponder a indivíduos com vinculação insegura, denotando uma falta de confiança generalizada; e) em termos de bem estar psicológico a média foi significativamente superior no grupo de pessoas carenciadas, quando comparado com o grupo dos sem abrigo; f) no que toca à saúde mental constatamos que 80% dos sem abrigo e 42.5% das pessoas carenciadas são portadores de transtorno mental; g) no que concerne ao apoio social os sem abrigo referem menor suporte social (apoio emocional, afectivo, instrumental e menor interacção social positiva) que as pessoas carenciadas; h) os sem abrigo têm menos familiares e amigos íntimos; i) os resultados do estudo qualitativo indicam que o programa de intervenção da CINO, parece contribuir para a emergência de uma rede social estável, activa, acessível e integrada que se constitui como um sistema salutogénico para o indivíduo, diminuindo o uso dos serviços. Parece ainda eficaz aos olhos dos próprios e destacam como factor fundamental a sua participação activa no mesmo, a importância de rotinas organizadoras, de espaços de terapia de grupo e a existência de equipa multidisciplinar. Destacam ainda como positivo o facto de existir um primeiro período de regime fechado como estratégia de prevenção de recaída, um programa faseado de aquisição de responsabilidades e autonomia, acesso a emprego no exterior da comunidade e o follow-up pós autonomização. Como implicação deste trabalho salienta-se a produção de conhecimentos acerca da realidade dos sem abrigo na região centro do país e de estratégias de intervenção.
Resumo:
This article uses strategic human resource management theory to consider the ways in which volunteers can potentially enhance hospital patient satisfaction. Results of a structural equation modeling analysis of multi-source data on 107 U.S. hospitals show positive associations between hospital strategy, volunteer management practices, volunteer workforce attributes, and patient satisfaction. Although no causality can be assumed, the results shed light on the volunteer–patient satisfaction relationship and have important implications for hospital leaders, volunteer administrators, and future research.
Resumo:
This paper is a summary of an evaluation of the first two years of a three year poetry project for older people with dementia. The project was set up with a poet in residence who mentored six poets to deliver poetry activities to older people and those with dementia in residential and care homes in Herefordshire. The project was developed and run by the Courtyards Hereford. The evaluation was undertake through the use of questionnaires that were given to staff and carers undertaking training workshops and the poets, staff and carers in the homes who facilitated the activities and finally by the residents who took part in the project. The main findings were that participants that responded to the questionnaire for staff and carers it had increased confidence and assisted them in gaining more knowledge about the residents, whilst for residents it had a number of positive effects including enhanced communication, increased self-esteem and enhanced self-worth whilst making them feel less isolated.
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This paper considers a large matched employee–employer data set to estimate a model of organizational commitment. In particular, it focuses on the role of firm size and management formality to explain organizational commitment in British small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) with high and low levels of employee satisfaction. It is shown that size ‘in itself’ can explain differences in organizational commitment, and that organizational commitment tends to be higher in organizations with high employee satisfaction compared with organizations of similar size with low employee satisfaction. Crucially, the results suggest that formal human resource (HR) practices can be used as important tools to increase commitment and thus, potentially, effort and performance within underperforming SMEs with low employee satisfaction. However, formal HR practices commonly used by large firms may be unnecessary in SMEs which benefit from high employee satisfaction and positive employment relations within a context of informality.
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This document summarises work to develop a compelling business case for landlord investment in resident involvement. Its key argument is involvement not only assists in improving satisfaction and service delivery, but also provides value for money.
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This article outlines how the potential for students to be co-participants, via a critical education, risks being further co-opted through the marketization of higher education by constructing students as consumers with power over academics to make judgments on pedagogic quality through student satisfaction ratings. We start by outlining the relevant components of marketization processes, and their associated practices of financialization and managerialism that have developed in response to the “legitimation crisis” in HE and argue that these have profoundly altered the university landscape with a significant impact on our working practices. Student engagement is increasingly being appropriated as a quantifiable measurement of “student satisfaction”, which then profoundly alters the teaching and learning experience with different understandings of what acquiring knowledge requires and what it feels like. We draw on our experience of working in the post 1992 sector to describe how we are increasingly working under conditions of “reified exchange” and how this affects our relationships with students, other academics and management, eroding our pedagogic rights and theirs in the process. Specifically, we conclude that marketization is likely to further reduce the institutional space and opportunities for both lecturers and students to exercise their “pedagogic rights” to personal enhancement, social inclusion and civic participation through education.
Resumo:
Meeting European emissions targets is reliant on innovative renewable technologies, particularly ‘renewable heat’ from heat pumps. Heat pump performance is driven by Carnot efficiency and optimum performance requires the lowest possible space heating flow temperatures leading to greater sensitivity to poor design, installation and operation. Does sufficient training and installer capacity exist for this technology? This paper situates the results of heat pump field trial performance in a socio-technical context, identifying how far installer competence requirements are met within the current vocational education and training (VET) system and considers possible futures. Few UK installers have formal heat pump qualifications at National Vocational Qualification (NVQ) level 3 and heat pump VET is generally through short-course provision where the structure of training is largely unregulated with no strict adherence to a common syllabus or a detailed training centre specification. Prerequisites for short-course trainees, specifically the demand for heating system knowledge based on metric design criteria, is limited and proof of ‘experience’ is an accepted alternative to formal educational qualifications. The lack of broader educational content and deficiencies in engineering knowledge will have profound negative impacts on both the performance and market acceptance of heat pumps. Possible futures to address this problem are identified.
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We examine volunteer satisfaction with HRM practices, namely recruitment, training and reward in NPOs and attitudes regarding the appropriateness of these practices. The participants in this study are 76 volunteers affiliated with four different NPOs, who work in hospitals and have direct contact with patients and their families. Analysing aggregate results we show that volunteers are more satisfied with training, and consider the training strategies to be very appropriate. After identifying differences between organisations we discover that in some organisations volunteers are satisfied with rewards but they have negative attitudes regarding the appropriateness of the recognition strategies. We also identify the volunteers who are the most and the least satisfied.
Resumo:
Background: An asynchronous eLearning system was developed for radiographers in order to promote a better knowledge about senology and mammography. Objectives: to assess the learners’ satisfaction. Methods: Target population included radiographers and radiogr aphy students, in order to assess eLearning satisfaction according to different experience levels in breast imaging. Satisfaction was measured through a questionnaire developed especially for eLearning systems, using a seven - point Likert scale. Main topics related are content, interface, personalization and learning community. Results: Overall, 85% of learners were satisfied with the course and 87,5% considered that the course is successful. Main areas that were evaluated by most learners in a positive way were interface and content (between six and seven - point); on the other hand, learning community presented a wider distribution of answers . Conclusions: The course provides an overall high degree of learner satisfaction, thus providing more effective knowle dge gain on breast imaging for radiographers.
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The importance of the organizational relationship (senior managers) with an internal public (employees) is the main focus of this research, aiming to understand how this relationship differs between the different publics. Nowadays, the relevance attributed by Public Relations to this relationship is crucial. The main purpose is to identify two consistent models to measure the impact of an organizational relationship on the internal public. The second purpose is to identify how the internal public react to this organizational relationship, namely by gender. The research was conducted in nine Portuguese companies with a sample of 1.244 subjects in order to study the context of the relationship and validate the identified models. The results show the gender stereotypes in the relationship in these companies and that the organizational relationship has an impact on organizational commitment with a consistent model that highlights the impact of Public Relations on a company's productivity.
Resumo:
The importance of the relationship with an internal public is the main focus of our research. Nowadays, the relevance attributed by Public Relations to this relationship is crucial. Our purpose is to identify two consistent models to measure the impact of an organizational relationship on its internal public. The research was conducted in nine Portuguese companies with a sample of 1244 subjects in order to study the context of the relationship and validate the identified models. The results show us the gender stereotypes in the relationship in these companies and that it is possible to identify the impact of Public Relations on a company's productivity.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: The detection of psychosocial distress is a significant communication problem in Southern Europe and other countries. Work in this area is hampered by a lack of data. Because not much is known about training aimed at improving the recognition of psychosocial disorders in cancer patients, we developed a basic course model for medical oncology professionals. METHODS: A specific educational and experiential model (12 hours divided into 2 modules) involving formal teaching (ie, journal articles, large-group presentations), practice in small groups (ie, small-group exercises and role playing), and discussion in large groups was developed with the aim of improving the ability of oncologists to detect emotional disturbances in cancer patients (ie, depression, anxiety, and adjustment disorders). RESULTS: A total of 30 oncologists from 3 Southern European countries (Italy, Portugal, and Spain) participated in the workshop. The training course was well accepted by most participants who expressed general satisfaction and a positive subjective perception of the utility of the course for clinical practice. Of the total participants, 28 physicians (93.3%) thought that had they been exposed to this material sooner, they would have incorporated the techniques received in the workshop into their practices; 2 participants stated they would likely have done so. Half of the doctors (n = 15) believed that their clinical communication techniques were improved by participating in the workshop, and the remaining half thought that their abilities to communicate with cancer patients had improved. CONCLUSIONS: This model is a feasible approach for oncologists and is easily applicable to various oncology settings. Further studies will demonstrate the effectiveness of this method for improving oncologists skills in recognizing emotional disorders in their patients with cancer.
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This study intends to explore the impact of customer experience on customer satisfaction and loyalty by trying to understand how location-based mobile marketing might enhance the customer experience. Primary data was collected from 201 smartphone users in 24 countries. Results have indicated that targeted location-based marketing positively influences customers’ experiences. Besides, the analysis has also shown a favorable impact on customers’ satisfaction and self-perceived loyalty. This suggests that location-based mobile marketing has the potential to positively add value to a customer’s experience and should therefore be considered an important tool in marketing communications.
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This work project investigates career paths in the music field, by testing the application of general career and social theories for musicians. Using a sample from the European Union Youth Orchestra’ Alumni, the Boundaryless Career Theory, Intelligent Career Framework and Social Identity Theory were analysed through the impact on individual outcomes - musicians’ Overall work satisfaction and Affective commitment to the orchestra. Results suggest support for the three theories, and show their applicability for classical musicians’ careers.
Resumo:
Recently researchers showed that more choice is not always better. Choosing from large assortments can be overwhelming, raising expectations and decreasing overall level of consumer satisfaction. Author contributes to existing overchoice studies by using real assortment of online stores to find influence of assortment size on customer satisfaction. 90 students participated in the main experiment, where they chose a smartphone case for their friend. Results of the study show that large assortment size leads to higher expectations, higher choice difficulty and higher level of satisfaction. This research does not show overchoice presence and author suggests future studies could focus more on assortment variety and more personal characteristics of consumers, like preference uncertainty.