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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
191

The use of clinical, behavioral, and social determinants of health to improve identification of patients in need of advanced care for depression

Kasthurirathne, Suranga N. 30 May 2018 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Depression is the most commonly occurring mental illness the world over. It poses a significant health and economic burden across the individual and community. Not all occurrences of depression require the same level of treatment. However, identifying patients in need of advanced care has been challenging and presents a significant bottleneck in providing care. We developed a knowledge-driven depression taxonomy comprised of features representing clinical, behavioral, and social determinants of health (SDH) that inform the onset, progression, and outcome of depression. We leveraged the depression taxonomy to build decision models that predicted need for referrals across: (a) the overall patient population and (b) various high-risk populations. Decision models were built using longitudinal, clinical, and behavioral data extracted from a population of 84,317 patients seeking care at Eskenazi Health of Indianapolis, Indiana. Each decision model yielded significantly high predictive performance. However, models predicting need of treatment across high-risk populations (ROC’s of 86.31% to 94.42%) outperformed models representing the overall patient population (ROC of 78.87%). Next, we assessed the value of adding SDH into each model. For each patient population under study, we built additional decision models that incorporated a wide range of patient and aggregate-level SDH and compared their performance against the original models. Models that incorporated SDH yielded high predictive performance. However, use of SDH did not yield statistically significant performance improvements. Our efforts present significant potential to identify patients in need of advanced care using a limited number of clinical and behavioral features. However, we found no benefit to incorporating additional SDH into these models. Our methods can also be applied across other datasets in response to a wide variety of healthcare challenges.
192

Adolescent Pregnancy in Nicaragua: An Emic Perspective of Structural Influences

Tranter, Maryanne B. 08 July 2019 (has links)
No description available.
193

Time and Times: The Times in Which We Live As A Social Determinant of Health

Kinloch, Michaella, 0009-0003-0560-628X January 2022 (has links)
Where someone lives, how much education they have, their income, all are recognized as social determinants of health, and as being of greater importance in their overall health status and outcomes than are their doctors and medicines. But all of these are affected by times in which they have lived. These encompass the physical world, the social forms, institutions, economic activities, material goods, the customs, beliefs, morals, laws, norms, and arts of the world in which we move, and all change over time. The experiences of a body moving through time alter that body in direct and indirect ways, to create change that is persistent through time. A patient might reasonably say "to understand me you need to understand the times in which I have lived." Similarly the health of a population can only be fully understood if the history of that population is considered. A case study of an individual within a specific population is used to illustrate these points. / Urban Bioethics
194

Exploring the Impact of Social Determinants of Health on PTSD Treatment

Baier, Allison Lynne 26 August 2022 (has links)
No description available.
195

The Influence of Social Determinants on Late Stage Breast Cancer and the Impact of the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Program on Late Stage Breast Cancer Diagnosis

Fortune, Melody L 09 December 2011 (has links)
This dissertation research focused on breast cancer and social determinants that have been shown to influence the outcomes of this devastating disease. Although heart disease is the leading cause of death for women, more women feel that they will die from breast cancer. Breast cancer is the most common diagnosed cancer in women exacting an emotional and economic hardship for many women. There are no known causes of breast cancer, but there are certain genetic and social factors that pre-dispose women to this disease. Also, diagnosis at later stages of disease has been shown to have adverse outcomes for many. This research examined the effects that social determinants had on breast cancer stage of diagnosis. The social determinants researched to examine their influence on breast cancer outcomes were race, geographical location, health insurance, and income. Also, this research examined the influence of Public Health Law, 101-354, enacted to decrease health disparity from breast and cervical cancer for minorities and medically underserved women had on breast cancer diagnosis for women enrolled in the Mississippi Breast and Cervical Cancer Program. Complimentary to PHL 101-354, Public Health Law 106-354, the Breast and Cervical Cancer Treatment Act, was enacted giving states the option of providing health insurance through Medicaid for eligible women with a diagnosis of cancer of the breast or cervix, including precancerous conditions, for treatment services. The results of this study revealed that race and health insurance were the two major factors that negatively impacted stages of breast cancer diagnoses. Although hypothesized, geographical location and income did not significantly affect late stage breast cancer rates.
196

Socioeconomic Inequalities in Suicide and Suicidal Behaviour and Roles of Social Policy

Kim, Chungah January 2021 (has links)
There is substantial evidence that suicidal behaviour is disproportionately observed among those with lower socioeconomic positions. Prior literature suggests that policy measures tackling severe socioeconomic deprivation may have impacts on decreasing the health gaps. Yet, little research has been conducted to examine the effects of social and welfare policies on suicidal behaviour and its inequality. This is in part because the understanding of the socioeconomic inequity in suicidal behaviour has been limited by the strong biological individualism, thereby overlooking the potential importance of social and welfare policies to tackle the population-level determinants of suicide. Using jurisdictional and temporal variations in social policies and patterns of suicide, this dissertation contributes to the literature by providing a summary of the current knowledge base of socioeconomic inequality in suicide and suicidal behaviour, identifying the knowledge gaps and future research questions, and adding novel evidence on the impacts of individual social policy and aggregate welfare generosity on suicide mortality and its inequality. In Chapter Two, consists of a scoping review of studies addressing socioeconomic inequalities in suicide and suicidal behaviour or the relationship between socioeconomic positions and different outcomes of suicidal behaviour in high-income countries with quality data. The literature is summarized to map the findings on the socioeconomic inequity in suicidal behaviour. The chapter concludes with an assessment of gaps in the current knowledge base and suggests a future research agenda. In Chapter Three, I examined whether relative welfare generosity in Canadian provinces is associated with overall suicide mortality and employment-based inequalities in suicide mortality by exploiting the provincial differences within Canada. In Chapter Four, I investigated the effects of two recent social pension reforms targeting older adults—Basic Old Age Pension (BOAP) and Basic Pension (BP)—implemented in South Korea on suicide mortality. Taken together, the findings of the dissertation contribute to the existing literature by mapping the relevant literature, identifying research gaps about socioeconomic inequalities in suicide, and suicidal behaviour, and examining the roles of social policy as a moderator of socioeconomic inequalities in suicide. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / There is substantial evidence that suicide and suicidal behaviour are disproportionately observed among those with lower socioeconomic positions. Prior literature suggests that policy measures tackling severe socioeconomic deprivation may have impacts on reducing health gaps. However, little research is conducted to examine what effects can be brought by social and welfare policies on suicidal behaviour. This dissertation contains three studies on socioeconomic inequality in suicide and suicidal behaviour and examines the impacts of socioeconomic policies and welfare generosity that may tackle inequality. The overarching aim of the dissertation is to advance our understandings of socioeconomic inequality in suicide and suicidal behaviour by providing a systematic analysis of socioeconomic inequality in suicide and suicidal behaviour and roles of social policy and welfare generosity on suicide and suicide inequality. The dissertation contributes to the literature by mapping the relevant literature, identifying research gaps about socioeconomic inequalities in suicide, and suicidal behaviour and demonstrate novel findings about the roles of social policy.
197

IFRS 7 – Upplysningar gällande risker i årsredovisningar : En kvantitativ studie om företagsupplysningar gällande risker i årsredovisningar i förhållande till olika faktorer

Alstermark, Alexander, Lundahl, Sofia January 2023 (has links)
Background and problem: Accounting shall give a true and a fair view of a company, where an annual report´s compliance with IFRS 7 and risk disclosure ratio is highly valued by stakeholders. Risks are always a relevant topic, as they arise unexpectedly and society´s expectations of businesses change. The information that companies provide regarding risk, both current and potential, is highly relevant to their stakeholders. Thus, risk disclosures are arguably one of the most important elements in the analysis of annual reports. This implies that companies’ risk disclosures are actualized and problematized, where compliance with Covid-19 related risks, interest rate risk and geopolitical instability increases the complexity of risk disclosures. As a result of the preceding, there is a valid reason to examine the extent to which companies listed on Nasdaq OMX Stockholm are complying with the IFRS framework and the IFRS 7 standard regarding to risk disclosures. Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine the extent to which companies listed on Nasdaq OMX Stockholm provide information about risks in their annual reports. The study also aims to examine which factors affect the level of risk disclosure in companies’ annual reports. Research issue: To which extent do companies listed on Nasdaq OMX Stockholm provide risk disclosures in their annual reports and what are the factors that affect this choice? Method: The study adopts a quantitative research strategy in order to achieve the objectives set by there search issue. The research material consists of each company’s annual report from 2022, which implies that these are the source of information and that a content analysis is performed to quantify the content. The study has excluded the financial sector, as they are subject to special rules. The factors that are examined in the statistic models used to explain the effects on the amount of risk disclosures are: companysize, industry, audit firm, the size of the board of directors, the date of publication of the annual report and the number of pages in the annual report. The final sample size is 64 companies. Results and conclusions: The results of the study accept the hypothesis that firm size is an explanatory factor in the extent to which companies provide risk disclosures in their annual reports in relation to IFRS7. The remaining hypotheses are rejected, as the results could not prove any significance for the sevariables in relation to the extent of risk disclosures.
198

Poverty and Health in Tennessee

Beatty, Kate, Egen, Olivia, Dreyzehner, John, Wykoff, Randy 01 January 2020 (has links)
Objectives: Understanding the impact of poverty on health can inform efforts to target social programs and regional economic development. This study examined the effects of poverty on health among the 95 counties of Tennessee. Methods: All of the counties of Tennessee were ranked by 5-year median household income, from the wealthiest to the poorest. The counties were divided into quintiles, from wealthiest to poorest, to reflect the general impact of wealth on health. Next, the five wealthiest counties and the five poorest counties were identified, allowing for examination of the extremes of poverty and wealth within Tennessee. Comparisons of quintiles and five wealthiest and poorest counties on key measures were performed using the independent t test. Results: People living in the wealthiest quintile lived on average 2.5 to 4 years longer and had lower rates of all health behaviors and health outcomes investigated compared with those in the poorest quintile. This disparity was even more pronounced when comparing the wealthiest five counties to the poorest five. The five poorest counties, for example, had twice the years of potential life lost and were overwhelmingly rural in character, with similar accompanying disparities such as median income, high unemployment, and a more aged population. Conclusions: This study highlights the fact that lower income is associated with significantly worse health outcomes in Tennessee and reinforces the importance of economic development, specifically, and addresses the social determinants, more generally, in helping to improve Tennessee's overall health statistics.
199

Innovative, Intentional Doctoral Course Design: Theory, Epidemiology, and Social Determinants of Health with Rural, Vulnerable, and Underserved Populations

Hemphill, Jean Croce, Weierbach, Florence M. 01 January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
200

Determinants of the price of forest properties in Sweden : A study about factors affecting forest property prices

Eriksson, Moa, Nyberg, Joachim January 2022 (has links)
During the last decade we have seen an increase in prices of forest properties in Sweden. The study’s purpose is to identify the factors that are the driving force behind the price increase of forest properties in Sweden during the years of 2018-2021. The data used comes from a Swedish real estate agency named Areal. The study is made with an econometric model that is called multiple linear regression. The results indicate that the factors that influence the price of a forest property is the geographical position, timber storage, average growth and whether there is a residential building on the property or not. The conclusion is that the geographical position of a forest property has the highest economic significance.

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