949 resultados para Denmark. Hæren
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Anders als in der Medizin werden die für Forschung und Praxis nötigen Daten im Bereich der Sozialwissenschaften in erster Linie über Fragebogen und nicht durch die Messung biologisch-medizinischer Parameter gewonnen. In der Gesundheitsförderung und der Prävention setzt man Fragebogen häufig dann ein, wenn man etwas über das Wissen, die Wahrnehmungen oder subjektiven Beurteilungen zu bestimmten Verhaltensweisen, Zuständen oder Bedürfnissen von Personen bzw. Personengruppen erfahren möchte. Solche systematischen Befragungen, die das Ziel haben, Daten zu einem bestimmten Thema zu erheben, nennt man auch Surveys. Kenntnisse in der Entwicklung und Anwendung von Fragebogen sind unentbehrlich, wenn es darum geht, Public-Health-Studien zu beurteilen oder gar selbst durchzuführen. In diesem Abschnitt beschäftigen wir uns zuerst mit der Formulierung von guten Fragen und möglichen Antworten. Anschließend betrachten wir unterschiedliche Methoden der Datenerhebung und diskutieren ihre Vor- und Nachteile. Dabei gehen wir auch kurz auf die Methodik der qualitativen Verfahren ein. Schweizerische Lernziele: CPH 8, CPH 20
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Ebenso wie in anderen Bereichen können sich Menschen auch in Bezug auf ihre Gesundheit unterschiedlich verhalten. Solches Gesundheitsverhalten kann sich positiv oder negativ auf die Gesundheit auswirken. Selbst Verhaltensweisen, die nicht direkt auf die Gesundheit eines Menschen ausgerichtet sind, können die Gesundheit beeinflussen: So kann sich Stress z. B. entscheidend auf die gesundheitsbezogene Lebensqualität eines Menschen auswirken. Der Erwerb von Gesundheitskompetenz, d. h. von individuellen Fähigkeiten, die es ermöglichen, förderlich mit der eigenen Gesundheit und der Gesundheit Anderer umzugehen, kann zu einem persönlichen Gesundheitsgewinn und einer Verbesserung der Rahmenbedingungen für Gesundheit führen. In diesem Abschnitt definieren wir zuerst den Begriff des Gesundheitsverhaltens und betrachten drei Public Health-relevante Erklärungsmodelle für Gesundheitsverhalten. Wir beschäftigen uns mit einem häufig verwendeten Stressmodell, gehen den möglichen Ursachen von Stress nach, erfahren etwas über die durch Stress entstehenden volkswirtschaftlichen Kosten und über Methoden zum adäquaten Umgang mit Stress. Abschließend gehen wir näher auf das Konzept des gesundheitsrelevanten Lebensstils ein und beschäftigen uns mit den verschiedenen Formen von Gesundheitskompetenz. Schweizerische Lernziele: CPH 1, CPH 33–36, CPH 65
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Der Klimawandel stellt die Menschen und Institutionen, die sich mit der globalen Gesundheit im 21. Jahrhundert beschäftigen, vor neue Herausforderungen. Zum einen führen immer häufiger auftretende Extremereignisse wie Hitzewellen, Stürme und Überschwemmungen zu direkten Gesundheitsbeeinträchtigungen. Andererseits kann es durch ökologische Veränderungen und soziale Instabilität zu einer indirekten Beeinflussung der Gesundheit kommen. So führen schon jetzt klimatische Veränderungen in bestimmten Gebieten der Erde zu akuten Nahrungsmittelknappheiten. Infolge des Hungers sind die Menschen in ihrer Abwehr geschwächt und können dadurch leichter Infektionskrankheiten zum Opfer fallen. In diesem Abschnitt erörtern wir die physikalischen Grundlagen des Klimawandels und gehen anschließend auf die ökologischen und gesundheitlichen Folgen ein. Schließlich beschreiben wir die wichtigsten politischen Aspekte dieses Themas einschließlich der Maßnahmen zur Reduktion von Treibhausgasemissionen. Schweizerische Lernziele: CPH 45
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Rund ein Drittel der weltweiten Todesfälle sind auf Herz-Kreislauf-Krankheiten zurückzuführen. In den industrialisierten Ländern sind sie die häufigste Todesursache. Den größten Anteil hat dabei die koronare Herzkrankheit, gefolgt vom Schlaganfall und der Herzinsuffizienz. In westlichen Industrienationen dürfte jede zweite Person im Lauf ihres Lebens an Herz-Kreislauf-Krankheiten erkranken. Da das Risiko mit zunehmendem Alter zunimmt, wird die Anzahl von Herz-Kreislauf- Erkrankungen aufgrund der demografischen Entwicklung in Zukunft weiter ansteigen. In diesem Abschnitt betrachten wir zuerst die epidemiologische Bedeutung der Herz-Kreislauf-Krankheiten und schauen hier insbesondere auf die globale Bedeutung, die geografischen Unterschiede sowie die sich derzeit entwickelnden zeitlichen Trends. Anschließend erörtern wir, welche Risikofaktoren zur Entstehung von Herz-Kreislauf-Krankheiten beitragen und mit welchen präventiven Maßnahmen diese Erkrankungen zu verhindern sind. Schweizerische Lernziele: CPH 34–35, CPH 37, CPH 40–41
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Bösartige Tumore, oft auch vereinfachend als „Krebs“ bezeichnet, sind in den industrialisierten Ländern nach den Herz-Kreislauf-Erkrankungen die zweithäufigste Todesursache. Etwa ein Viertel aller Todesfälle sind auf bösartige Tumore zurückzuführen. In der Schweiz und in Deutschland erkrankt fast jede zweite Person im Lauf ihres Lebens an Krebs. Für viele Krebsarten nimmt das Erkrankungsrisiko mit zunehmendem Alter zu. Aufgrund der demographischen Entwicklung in der Schweiz und in Deutschland wird die Anzahl der Tumorerkrankungen in absoluten Zahlen selbst dann zunehmen, wenn das alters- und geschlechtsspezifische Krebsrisiko gleich bleibt. In diesem Abschnitt betrachten wir zuerst die epidemiologische Bedeutung der wichtigsten Tumorerkrankungen und beachten hier insbesondere die Zunahme der Zahl an Krebserkrankungen sowie die Veränderung der Überlebensraten in den letzten Jahren. Anschließend erörtern wir, welche Risikofaktoren mit zur Entstehung von bösartigen Tumoren beitragen und mit welchen präventiven Maßnahmen diese Erkrankungen zu verhindern wären. Schweizerische Lernziele: CPH 40
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Die Erkrankungen des Bewegungsapparates, d. h. die Krankheiten der Gelenke, Knochen und Muskeln, verursachen weltweit am häufigsten Gesundheitsprobleme. Die dabei auftretenden Beschwerden reichen von leichten, vorübergehenden Beeinträchtigungen bis hin zu schweren, chronischen Behinderungen, welche schließlich zur Berentung führen können. Nur selten sind sie lebensbedrohlich – sie schränken aber den Aktionsradius und damit die Lebensqualität der Betroffenen oft massiv ein. Dies führt zu großen sozioökonomischen Belastungen, nicht nur durch kostenintensive Therapien und Betreuungsangebote, sondern auch als Folge der verminderten Produktivität der Betroffenen. In diesem Abschnitt betrachten wir die epidemiologische Bedeutung der wichtigsten Krankheitsbilder im muskuloskeletalen Bereich. Wir schauen auf die jeweiligen Risikofaktoren und erörtern, welche präventiven Maßnahmen viele dieser Krankheitsfälle verhindern könnten. Schweizerische Lernziele: CPH 40
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The main goal of this project was to identity whether an imported system of social policy can be suitable for a host country, and if not why not. Romanian social policy concerning the mentally disabled represents a paradoxical situation in that while social policy is designed to ensure both an institutional structure and a juridical environment, in practice it is far from successful. The central question which Ms. Ciumageanu asked therefore was whether this failure was due to systemic factors, or whether the problem lay in reworking an imported social policy system to meet local needs. She took a comparative approach, also considering both the Scandinavian model of social policy, particularly the Danish model which has been adopted in Romania, and the Hungarian system, which has inherited a similar universal welfare system and perpetuated it to some extent. In order to verify her hypothesis, she also studied the transformation of the welfare system in Great Britain, which meant a shift from state responsibility towards community care. In all these she concentrated on two major aspects: the structural design within the different countries and, at a micro level, the societal response. Following her analyses of the various in the other countries concerned, Ms. Ciumageanu concluded that the major differences lie first in the difference between the stages of policy design. Here Denmark is the most advanced and Romania the most backwards. Denmark has a fairly elaborate infrastructure, Britain a system with may gaps to bridge, and Hungary and Romania are struggling with severe difficulties owing both to the inherited structure and the limits imposed by an inadequate GDP. While in Denmark and Britain, mental patients are integrated into an elaborate system of care, designed and administered by the state (in Denmark) or communities (in Britain), in Hungary and Romania, the state designs and fails to implement the policy and community support is minimal, partly due to the lack of a fully developed civil society. At the micro level the differences are similar. While in Denmark and Britain there is a consensus about the roles of the state and of civil societies (although at different levels in the two countries, with the state being more supportive in Denmark), in Romania and to a considerable extent in Hungary, civil society tends to expect too much from the state, which in its turn is withdrawing faster from its social roles than from its economic ones, generating a gap between the welfare state and the market economy and disadvantaging the expected transition from a welfare state to a welfare society and, implicitly, the societal response towards those mentally disabled persons in it. On an intermediate level, the factors influencing social policy as a whole were much the same for Hungary and Romania. Economic factors include the accumulated economic resources of both state and citizens, and the inherited pattern of redistribution, as well as the infrastructure; institutional resources include the role of the state and the efficiency of the state bureaucracy, the strength and efficiency of the state apparatus, political stability and the complexity of political democratisation, the introduction of market institutions, the strength of civil society and civic sector institutions. From the standpoint of the societal response, some factors were common to all countries, particularly the historical context, the collective and institutional memories and established patterns of behaviour. In the specific case of Romania, general structural and environmental factors - industrialisation and forced urbanisation - have had a definite influence on family structure, values and behavioural patterns. The analysis of Romanian social policy revealed several causes for failure to date. The first was the instability of the policy and the failure to consider the structural network involved in developing it, rather than just the results obtained. The second was the failure to take into account the relationship between the individual and the group in all its aspects, followed by the lack of active assistance for prevention, re-socialisation or professional integration of persons with mental disabilities. Finally, the state fails to recognise its inability to support an expensive psychiatric enterprise and does not provide any incentive to the private sector. This creates tremendous social costs for both the state and the individual. NGOs working in the field in Romania have been somewhat more successful but are still limited by their lack of funding and personnel and the idea of a combined system is as yet utopian in the circumstances in the country.
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Panel 4: Transnational Memory of Mass Violence Anne Waehrens, University of Copenhagen/Danish Institute for International Studies, Denmark: “Is There a Shared European memory? Holocaust Remembrance in the European Parliament after 1989" Download paper (login required) Ran Zwigenberg, City University of New York: “The Hiroshima-Auschwitz Peace March and the Globalization of Victimhood” Download paper (login required) Mark Zaurov, University of Hamburg, Germany: "The Current Situation of Human Rights for Deaf People with Respect to the Deaf Holocaust" Download paper (login required) Chair: Natalya Lazar and Jody Manning, Clark UniversityComment: Ken McLean, Clark University
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Much controversy exists over whether the course of schizophrenia, as defined by the lengths of repeated community tenures, is progressively ameliorating or deteriorating. This article employs a new statistical method proposed by Wang and Chen (2000) to analyze the Denmark registry data in Eaton, et al (1992). The new statistical method correctly handles the bias caused by induced informative censoring, which is an interaction of the heterogeneity of schizophrenia patients and long-term follow-up. The analysis shows a progressive deterioration pattern in terms of community tenures for the full registry cohort, rather than a progressive amelioration pattern as reported for a selected sub-cohort in Eaton, et al (1992). When adjusted for the long-term chronicity of calendar time, no significant progressive pattern was found for the full cohort.
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This paper considers statistical models in which two different types of events, such as the diagnosis of a disease and the remission of the disease, occur alternately over time and are observed subject to right censoring. We propose nonparametric estimators for the joint distribution of bivariate recurrence times and the marginal distribution of the first recurrence time. In general, the marginal distribution of the second recurrence time cannot be estimated due to an identifiability problem, but a conditional distribution of the second recurrence time can be estimated non-parametrically. In literature, statistical methods have been developed to estimate the joint distribution of bivariate recurrence times based on data of the first pair of censored bivariate recurrence times. These methods are efficient in the current model because recurrence times of higher orders are not used. Asymptotic properties of the estimators are established. Numerical studies demonstrate the estimator performs well with practical sample sizes. We apply the proposed method to a Denmark psychiatric case register data set for illustration of the methods and theory.
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INTRODUCTION: Recent advances in medical imaging have brought post-mortem minimally invasive computed tomography (CT) guided percutaneous biopsy to public attention. AIMS: The goal of the following study was to facilitate and automate post-mortem biopsy, to suppress radiation exposure to the investigator, as may occur when tissue sampling under computer tomographic guidance, and to minimize the number of needle insertion attempts for each target for a single puncture. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Clinically approved and post-mortem tested ACN-III biopsy core needles (14 gauge x 160 mm) with an automatic pistol device (Bard Magnum, Medical Device Technologies, Denmark) were used for probe sampling. The needles were navigated in gelatine/peas phantom, ex vivo porcine model and subsequently in two human bodies using a navigation system (MEM centre/ISTB Medical Application Framework, Marvin, Bern, Switzerland) with guidance frame and a CT (Emotion 6, Siemens, Germany). RESULTS: Biopsy of all peas could be performed within a single attempt. The average distance between the inserted needle tip and the pea centre was 1.4mm (n=10; SD 0.065 mm; range 0-2.3 mm). The targets in the porcine liver were also accurately punctured. The average of the distance between the needle tip and the target was 0.5 mm (range 0-1 mm). Biopsies of brain, heart, lung, liver, pancreas, spleen, and kidney were performed on human corpses. For each target the biopsy needle was only inserted once. The examination of one body with sampling of tissue probes at the above-mentioned locations took approximately 45 min. CONCLUSIONS: Post-mortem navigated biopsy can reliably provide tissue samples from different body locations. Since the continuous update of positional data of the body and the biopsy needle is performed using optical tracking, no control CT images verifying the positional data are necessary and no radiation exposure to the investigator need be taken into account. Furthermore, the number of needle insertions for each target can be minimized to a single one with the ex vivo proven adequate accuracy and, in contrast to conventional CT guided biopsy, the insertion angle may be oblique. Navigation for minimally invasive tissue sampling is a useful addition to post-mortem CT guided biopsy.
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PURPOSE: The goal of this study was to identify mutations in X-chromosomal genes associated with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) in patients from Germany, The Netherlands, Denmark, and Switzerland. METHODS: In addition to all coding exons of RP2, exons 1 through 15, 9a, ORF15, 15a and 15b of RPGR were screened for mutations. PCR products were amplified from genomic DNA extracted from blood samples and analyzed by direct sequencing. In one family with apparently dominant inheritance of RP, linkage analysis identified an interval on the X chromosome containing RPGR, and mutation screening revealed a pathogenic variant in this gene. Patients of this family were examined clinically and by X-inactivation studies. RESULTS: This study included 141 RP families with possible X-chromosomal inheritance. In total, we identified 46 families with pathogenic sequence alterations in RPGR and RP2, of which 17 mutations have not been described previously. Two of the novel mutations represent the most 3'-terminal pathogenic sequence variants in RPGR and RP2 reported to date. In exon ORF15 of RPGR, we found eight novel and 14 known mutations. All lead to a disruption of open reading frame. Of the families with suggested X-chromosomal inheritance, 35% showed mutations in ORF15. In addition, we found five novel mutations in other exons of RPGR and four in RP2. Deletions in ORF15 of RPGR were identified in three families in which female carriers showed variable manifestation of the phenotype. Furthermore, an ORF15 mutation was found in an RP patient who additionally carries a 6.4 kbp deletion downstream of the coding region of exon ORF15. We did not identify mutations in 39 sporadic male cases from Switzerland. CONCLUSIONS: RPGR mutations were confirmed to be the most frequent cause of RP in families with an X-chromosomal inheritance pattern. We propose a screening strategy to provide molecular diagnostics in these families.
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BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to determine the rates of outpatient cataract surgery (ROCS) in ten European countries and to find country-specific health indicators explaining the differences. METHODS: Using data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE), 251 eligible respondents were identified for which cataract surgery was the last surgical procedure. The ROCS of ten countries were compared using logistic regression. The influence of the public expenditure on health as per cent of the total expenditure on health, of the number of acute care beds per 1,000 population, and of the number of practicing physicians per 1,000 population, was studied by multiple logistic regression. Additional information was obtained from country-specific opinion leaders in the field of cataract surgery. RESULTS: The ROCS differed significantly between the ten analysed European countries where Denmark had the highest (100%) and Austria the lowest (0%) rate of day care surgery. A decrease in the density of acute care beds (p < 0.0000001) and in the density of practicing physicians (p < 0.05) and an increase in the public expenditure on health as per cent of the total health expenditure (p < 0.01) lead to an increase in the ROCS. According to the opinion leaders, regulations and financial incentives also have a strong influence on the ROCS. CONCLUSIONS: The outpatient rate of cataract surgery in the ten European countries was mainly influenced by the acute-care beds density, but also by the density of practicing physicians, and by the public expenditure on health.