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Context Matters: Work, Health, and Quality of Life of Regulated Home-Based Childcare Workers in Quebec & OntarioStitou, Mariam January 2017 (has links)
Home Based Childcare (HBC) workers have demanding work conditions, enjoy no or few social benefits, are paid less than the national average wage, and many of them intend to leave this occupation (Doherty, Lero, Goelman, Tougas, Lagrange, 2000). The available studies on early childcare workers in Canada have often excluded HBC workers from their analyses or grouped them with other types of early childcare workers in their analyses, which make it difficult to tackle the particularities of this specific subgroup of workers. In light of the limited studies on regulated HBC workers in the Canadian context, this thesis aimed to provide insight on these workers' health and broader social determinants of health in two Canadian provinces where they are the most concentrated.
The overall purpose of this thesis is to document the perceived health and chronic conditions of HBC workers, highlighting the broader social determinants of their health (e.g. work, lifestyle). This thesis had four objectives:
1. Assess regulated HBC workers' health-related quality of life and investigate the relationships with socio-demographic characteristics.
2. Examine chronic health conditions affecting regulated HBC workers and identify the social determinants of health factors associated with chronic conditions.
3. Draw an overview on broader social determinants of health factors among regulated HBC workers using the Dahlgren and Whitehead model.
4. Undertake a job analysis of regulated HBC workers
In the first Manuscript, the perceived health-related quality of life of home-based childcare workers in two Canadian provinces, Quebec and Ontario, was assessed using survey methods. Results show that HBC workers in Quebec positively perceive their overall physical health and negatively perceive their overall mental health. Those working in Ontario report both good overall physical and mental health-related quality of life and also report better mental and physical health-related quality of life compared to those in Quebec. That is, they have fewer problems with work or other daily activities due to their health, feel less physical pain, less fatigue, less nervousness, and are less depressed than workers in Quebec. HBC workers experience more pain, more fatigue, more interference of health problems with social activities, and more psychosocial distress compared to Canadian women in general. Finally, our study supports that being over 40 years old, being married or in a common-law union, and working in Ontario were factors relating positively to the perceived health-related quality of life among HBC workers when controlling for the level of education and the annual gross income.
In the second manuscript, chronic health conditions affecting regulated HBC workers in Quebec and in Ontario and the broader social determinants of health factors associated with these were examined using survey methods. The study revealed that one out of two HBC workers had a chronic condition. Chronic back pain, asthma, hypertension, skin diseases, and arthritis are the main five chronic conditions among HBC workers. Also, five out of ten HBC workers with a chronic condition report chronic back pain as their main health condition. Finally, workers over 40 years of age, those who were somewhat physically active or inactive, having poor relationships with their supervisors or parents of children, and working for five years or more reported more chronic conditions as diagnosed by a health professional.
In the third manuscript, the broader social determinants of health among regulated HBC workers in Quebec and in Ontario were examined using a mixed methods approach. Results showed significant differences in social determinants of health between HBC workers in Quebec and in Ontario in terms of age and factors related to individual lifestyles, social and community networks, structural factors, and general socio-economic conditions.
In the fourth manuscript, HBC workers’ job content, context, and requirements were described and factors that affect their health and well-being were identified using qualitative methods and emphasizing the workers’ perspectives. Results showed that HBC workers’ job differs from centre-based childcare workers. They perform business administration tasks and more housekeeping and domestic work than workers in the centre-based childcare, which affect their health and well-being. They are paid on a per child basis but their level of education, experience or input into care is not taken into consideration. In addition, HBC workers reported factors related to the context and the content of their job such as the high physical and mental efforts, the absence of contact with other adults during working hours, the lack of external help during working hours, the difficulty of filling available spots, the exposure to noise and bad odours, the interference of work with personal and family life, the low and precarious remuneration and the lack of benefits as potential factors that may affect their health.
Finally, the thesis conclusion provides an overview of HBC workers’ health and determinants of their health identifying remaining gaps in our knowledge of HBC workers’ health and determinants of health where future research is required. Future studies are encouraged to consider using multiple approaches (e.g. online surveys, paper survey, etc.) and multiple languages (e.g. Chinese) to reach a larger number of participants. Stakeholders and decision makers are encouraged to consider provincial differences in social determinants of health to implement interventions to reduce disparities and health inequities among HBC workers.
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Acceptability of a home-based antiretroviral therapy delivery model among HIV patients in Lusaka districtBwalya, Chiti January 2018 (has links)
Master of Public Health - MPH / BACKGROUND: The Zambian anti-retroviral therapy (ART) program has successfully enrolled
over 770, 000 people living with HIV (PLWH), out of a population of 1.2 million PLWH.
This tremendous success has overburdened the clinic system resulting in many challenges for
both patients and healthcare staff. To promote ART initiation, adherence, and retention and at
the same time relieve pressure on the health system, a home-based ART delivery model
(HBM) was piloted in two urban communities of Lusaka. This study explored levels of
acceptability of the model and factors influencing this among PLWH living in the two
communities. Acceptability was defined as degree of fit between the patient’s expectations
and circumstances and the home-based delivery model of ART, taking into consideration all
the contextual elements surrounding the patient.
METHODOLOGY: A qualitative study of HBM acceptability was nested within a clusterrandomized
trial comparing outcomes in patients receiving HBM intervention compared to the
standard of care in two communities in Lusaka, Zambia. Using an exploratory qualitative
study design and a purposive sampling technique, qualitative data were collected using
observations of HBM delivery (n=12), in-depth interviews with PLWH (n=15) and Focus
Group Discussions with a cadre of community health workers called community HIV care
providers (CHiPs) administering the HBM (n=2). Data were managed and coded using Atlas.ti
7 and analysed thematically.
RESULTS: Overall, the HBM was found to be a good fit with the lives and expectations of
PLWH and therefore highly acceptable to them. This acceptability was influenced by a
combination of cross cutting clinic based, program design and socio-economic factors that
have been categorized into push and pull factors. Push factors were those related to the
challenges that PLWH faced when accessing ART from the clinic and included congestion,
long waiting times, confidentiality breaches and stigma arising from attending a dedicated
clinic. These factors resulted in considerable direct and indirect livelihood opportunity costs.
The HBM as an alternative had a number of ‘pull factors’. PLHW described services offered
through the model as convenient, confidential, trusted, personalized, less stigmatizing,
comprehensive, client centred, responsive, and respectful. Disclosure of client’s HIV status to
people they lived with was found to be critical for the acceptability of the model.
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS: The HBM is highly acceptable and this acceptability is
influenced by a combination of crosscutting push and pull factors. Key to the HBM’s
acceptability was its delivery design that was responsive to individual patient needs and the
steps CHiPs took to minimize the ever-present threat of disclosure and stigma. Future
adoption and scaling up of HBM should recognize the importance of these design features.
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Acceptability of a home-based antiretroviral therapy delivery model among HIV patients in Lusaka districtBwalya, Chiti January 2018 (has links)
Magister Public Health - MPH / Background: The Zambian anti-retroviral therapy (ART) program has successfully enrolled
over 770, 000 people living with HIV (PLWH), out of a population of 1.2 million PLWH.
This tremendous success has overburdened the clinic system resulting in many challenges for
both patients and healthcare staff. To promote ART initiation, adherence, and retention and at
the same time relieve pressure on the health system, a home-based ART delivery model
(HBM) was piloted in two urban communities of Lusaka. This study explored levels of
acceptability of the model and factors influencing this among PLWH living in the two
communities. Acceptability was defined as degree of fit between the patient’s expectations
and circumstances and the home-based delivery model of ART, taking into consideration all
the contextual elements surrounding the patient.
Methodology: A qualitative study of HBM acceptability was nested within a clusterrandomized
trial comparing outcomes in patients receiving HBM intervention compared to the
standard of care in two communities in Lusaka, Zambia. Using an exploratory qualitative
study design and a purposive sampling technique, qualitative data were collected using
observations of HBM delivery (n=12), in-depth interviews with PLWH (n=15) and Focus
Group Discussions with a cadre of community health workers called community HIV care
providers (CHiPs) administering the HBM (n=2). Data were managed and coded using Atlas.ti
7 and analysed thematically.
Results: Overall, the HBM was found to be a good fit with the lives and expectations of
PLWH and therefore highly acceptable to them. This acceptability was influenced by a
combination of cross cutting clinic based, program design and socio-economic factors that
have been categorized into push and pull factors. Push factors were those related to the
challenges that PLWH faced when accessing ART from the clinic and included congestion,
long waiting times, confidentiality breaches and stigma arising from attending a dedicated
clinic. These factors resulted in considerable direct and indirect livelihood opportunity costs.
The HBM as an alternative had a number of ‘pull factors’. PLHW described services offered
through the model as convenient, confidential, trusted, personalized, less stigmatizing,
comprehensive, client centred, responsive, and respectful. Disclosure of client’s HIV status to
people they lived with was found to be critical for the acceptability of the model.
Conclusions and recommendations: The HBM is highly acceptable and this acceptability is
influenced by a combination of crosscutting push and pull factors. Key to the HBM’s
acceptability was its delivery design that was responsive to individual patient needs and the
steps CHiPs took to minimize the ever-present threat of disclosure and stigma. Future
adoption and scaling up of HBM should recognize the importance of these design features.
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Self-Care Practices and Therapist Beliefs Among Home-Based Mental Health Professionals in Relation to BurnoutMyers, Heidi C 01 January 2019 (has links)
In 2012, research suggested that 21% to 67% of mental health professionals experience burnout. Burnout is described as a negative experience resulting in workplace stress that produces psychological, emotional, physical, and somatic symptoms. The purpose of this study was to examine a quantitative, correlational relationship between self-care practices and therapist beliefs in relation to burnout among home-based mental health therapists. The research question concerned whether there is a relationship between therapist beliefs, self-care, and burnout among home-based therapists. Equity theory was the base theory used for this project, indicating that reciprocity between therapist and client or therapist and supervisor may be a factor of burnout. While burnout has been researched extensively in the helping professions, this research focused specifically on those working as home-based mental health therapists (N = 80) from local community-based mental health care centers. Results of the quantitative correlational analyses showed that rigid adherence to therapeutic model, low tolerance for distress, belief in responsibility, workplace or professional balance, and balance significantly predicted burnout. Positive social change may result from this study through improved knowledge of symptoms of burnout, therapist beliefs, and self-care methods, which may allow agencies to combat early signs of burnout and promote appropriate training on burnout and approaches to self-care. The early detection and prevention of burnout would allow clinicians to be more effective in making a difference in the lives of clients. In addition, better training and awareness would lead to improvement in the lives of the clinicians and their families.
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A critical appraissal of the home-based food security projects with reference to layers at Makhuduthamaga Sekhukhune District in Limpopo ProvinceMonyela, Mante Thabitha Daisy January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc) (Agriculture) --University of Limpopo, 2007. / It is beyond doubt that a large proportion of the population in the rural areas are experiencing great difficulty in securing adequate food in both amount and quality. Poverty alleviation programs are embarked in various countries with Makhuduthamaga being no exception.
The study was designed to evaluate the home-based egg production projects. The study was conducted at Makhuduthamaga sub- District of Sekhukhune District of Limpopo province.
Two instruments were used for data collection namely Delphi technique and two structured questionnaires. The Delphi technique was used for both the beneficiaries and the extension officers to identify, list and rank in order of importance the constraints which impacted negatively on egg production as well as the actions taken to address those constraints.
Two separate questionnaires were also used to collect data from both the beneficiaries and the extension officers. Out of twenty villages a list of 231 beneficiaries of starter up packs was identified. Krecjcie and Morgan (1970) sample estimation required 144 randomly selected beneficiaries of starter up packs to participate in the study which reflected 0.6 margin of error.
The two questionnaires with open ended and closed ended questions were piloted at Fetakgomo District in four villages with thirty one beneficiaries and ten extension officers. Reliability was found to be 0.81 skills, 0.80 for support from extension officers and 0.61 for government expectations.
The Statistical Package for the Social Sciences was used for the entering data collected. Descriptive statistics were used to analyse data. The findings revealed that the majority of the beneficiaries fall within the prescribed selection criteria. Almost all except one village were given the starter up packs namely 18 layers, four bags of laying mash, cage, nipples, feeding trays and a cage as outlined in the policy. Training was considered by both the beneficiaries and the extension officers as inadequate for effective and efficient running of the home based egg production projects. The results revealed that the majority of beneficiaries did not meet government expectations. An acknowledgement was made that during the implementation of projects mistakes were committed by both beneficiaries and extension officers.
Analysis of variance was also used to determine the relationship between the level of education and the extent to which government expectations were met. There was no significant relationship between skills such as technical, management, financial, administration and the extent to which government expectations were met. However there was a significant relation between marketing skills and levels of education. The majority of beneficiaries had a low level of education.
Pearson correlation coefficient was used to determine whether there is a relationship between skills and support from the extension officers and the extent to which government expectation were met. Skills such as technical and marketing as well as the support from the extension officers attributed much to variations with regard to the extent to which government expectation were met.
Constraints were also encountered which impacted negatively on egg production. Extension officers identified the following constraints such as survey not done prior to distribution, insufficient human resources, training, insufficient monitoring, inadequate transport, inability of beneficiaries to purchase feed, inadequate starter packs and failure to establish cooperatives.
Beneficiaries identified constraints such as feed, training, diseases and unavailability of veterinarian, mortality of layers on arrival, theft and predation, inadequate starter packs, layers not of the same age and cages that are too small.
Out the constraints mentioned only three namely insufficient transport, inadequate starter up packs `and one aspect on feed i.e. soft shelled eggs were addressed.
Although the majority of beneficiaries considered home based egg production projects inadequate in providing access to adequate food, slightly over half of them favoured them as future household projects. / Kellog Foundation
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Marketing strategies of home-based custom clothiers who were members of the Professional Association of Custom Clothiers, Oregon ChapterFrisbie, ZoeDel E. 27 April 2000 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the marketing strategies of custom clothing home-based
business owners by identifying selected demographic characteristics, general business information,
marketing strategies, and current and potential future marketing support from members who were custom
clothier home-based business owners affiliated with the Professional Association of Custom Clothiers in
the Oregon Chapter. The PACC is an organization developed to assist custom clothier home-based
businesses and commercial businesses that are in fields associated with the sewing industry.
There is limited research developed exploring areas focused on the marketing of custom clothier
home-based businesses. The custom clothier home-based business owner acts as the research and
development manager, production manager, and accountant as well as the marketer of the business
Therefore, as concluded in previous studies the examination of the marketing strategies used by custom
clothiers and any marketing support offered by professional organizations that assist home-based
businesses, required further investigation.
A self-administered mail survey questionnaire was mailed to all members of the PACC
organization in order to collect data for this study. Only members who owned a custom clothier home-based
business were asked to participate. The data from 45 of the returned questionnaires were identified as
useable and analyzed using a Statistical Analysis System (SAS) version 7.
Percents and frequencies were used to analyze the demographic characteristics, marketing
strategies, and current and potential future marketing support from the PACC organization. Eighty percent
of the respondents had been members of the PACC organization for three years or more. The greatest
percentage of the respondents (13.33%) had owned their custom clothier business for 12 years. The
majority of the respondents contribute fifty percent or less of the total household income. The respondents
in the survey confirmed that word-of-mouth communication was the most effective method of promotion
for the custom clothier home-based business owner. Networking was the most beneficial item of marketing
support the respondents derive from membership in the PACC organization. A Likert Scale with the
endpoints of "Very Beneficial and Not Very Beneficial" identified that the respondents also perceive
product/service development at meetings as a very beneficial source of marketing support from the PACC
organization. Future ideas for possible potential marketing support for the PACC organization included: 1)
using the PACC referral service, 2) more publicity for the PACC organization, and 3) more exposure at the
national level.
Fisher's Exact Test was used to analyze data. Four separate two-by-two tables were developed to
compare the respondents as two groups of 1) those respondents who had marketing experience and/or
education to 2) those respondents who did not have marketing experience and/or education. Therefore, the
column factor in the columns of the two-by-two tables was marketing experience and/or education and was
indicated by the respondents on the questionnaire with a "yes" or "no" response. The row factors in each of
the four separate two-by-two tables were: 1) geographic range of the clientele. 2) number of competitors in
the local area. 3) requests for new fabrics, embellishments, or interfacings, and 4) satisfaction with the level of profits from the business.
This investigation revealed that the proportion of the respondents who had marketing experience
and/or education were inclined to have clientele outside the designated local area of a 50-mile radius within
the location of the home-based business. The two-by-two table that compared the column factor of
marketing experience and/or education and the row factor of satisfaction with the level of profits from the
business revealed no significant differences between the two groups of respondents. Satisfaction of the
business was not associated with either having marketing experience and/or education or not having
marketing experience and/or education.
Research investigating the marketing strategies of custom clothier home-based business owner is
an important topic. The marketing of the custom clothier home-based business is often a complex process
and is difficult to master and implement. / Graduation date: 2000
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The household economy : examining the mediating roles of income diversification and home production on economic and subjective well-being of women in MalawiChande-Binauli, Lucy S. 03 November 1995 (has links)
An integrated framework of Family Resource Management and Household
Economic theory was utilized to develop a model of relationships between
human capital, family characteristics and resources, number of income
sources, hours spent in home production, total income and subjective well-being.
This study utilized a sample of 129 women systematically selected
from Machinga and Zomba Districts in Malawi.
Results of Path analysis showed that place of residence, primary
education and secondary education or above had positive direct relationships
to number of income sources. Variables which had significant negative
relationships with hours spent in home production were place of residence
and age. Access to farm technologies had a positive relationship. The
positive predictors of total income were: primary education, secondary
education or above, number of income sources, place of residence, land
holding size and access to farm technologies. Home production time and
health status were negatively related to total income. Total income and hours
spent in home production were significant and positively related to a well-being
score, derived from four measures of well-being. Health status was
negatively related to this score.
Five variables: place of residence, age, primary education, secondary
education or above and access to farm technologies had indirect effects on
total income through number of income sources and home production. All
independent variables entered had indirect effects on the well-being score
through total income and hours spent in home production. Number of income
sources only mediated the effects on the well-being score jointly with total
income. On the whole, both intervening variables did a fair job of mediating
the effects of independent variables on total income and subjective well-being
(well-being score).
Finally, household size, health status and subjective well-being
significantly affected overall satisfaction with life. This study has implications
for policy, education/training and research in order to enhance women's well-being. / Graduation date: 1996
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Home-based work, human capital accumulation and women's labor force participationChutubtim, Piyaluk 30 October 2006 (has links)
This dissertation examines the effect of changes in the stock of human capital on
the labor force participation decision of women aged 25-54. Without the option of homebased
work, some women choose to leave the labor market and stay at home temporarily
for family reasons. Working women realize that time out of the labor force could impose
penalties on their work careers. This is because during the break, they do not accumulate
any new human capital while the existing job skills continuously depreciate.
Nowadays, home-based work becomes possible for many jobs because rapid
development in personal computers and advances in information and communications
technology have reduced employersâ cost of offering home-based work arrangements.
Working women can resolve the time conflict between demand for paid work and family
responsibility by working from home. In a previous study, the home-based work
decision depends on the fixed cost of working and potential home production. Women
who are disabled, have small children, or live in rural areas are likely to work from home
because they have high fixed costs of working and high potential home production. However, none of the existing studies applies the human capital theory of labor supply to
the home-based work decision.
Using data on the female labor force from the Integrated Public Use Microdata
Series (IPUMS) of housing units from the 2000 U.S. Census, I estimate a nested logit
model to examine the effects of expected costs of non-participation, in terms of forgone
earnings, forgone human capital accumulation and human capital depreciation, on
womenâÂÂs labor force participation decision. I find that, other things being equal, women
aged 25 to 44 who have potentially high human capital accumulation and high human
capital depreciation are likely to stay in the labor force. In the case that the value of their
home time is so high that they choose to stay at home, they prefer to work for pay at
home than to be out of the labor force.
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A matter of respect : the mother-home visitor relationship in the Healthy Families America ProgramMullins, Sarah. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Marshall University, 2001. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains iv, 52 p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 51-52).
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The scope and extent of home-based business income relative to employment earnings in financing basic household expenditures : a study in the sub-economic housing area of Kleinvlei in the Cape Metropole /Pick, Bernard. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Entrepreneurship))--Peninsula Technikon, 2002. / Word processed copy. Summary in English. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 53-55). Also available online.
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