Spelling suggestions: "subject:"johannesburg."" "subject:"tohannesburg.""
151 |
A survey to determine attitudes and perceptions of complementary and alternative medicine users in Johannesburg health shopsSnyman, Werner 02 June 2014 (has links)
M.Tech. (Homoeopathy) / Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) describes a group of natural healthcare interventions that may be employed in conjunction with (Complementary) or instead of (Alternative) conventional medical treatments (Barnes and Bloom, 2008).The prevalence of CAM use in industrialised countries has shown a significant increase in recent decades, amongst consumers and professionals alike, and is being utilised by up to 50% of adults in developed communities (Astin et al., 1998). The general public are starting to take their health and well-being into their own hands by investing in CAM products and consulting with various CAM practitioners. This study is designed to gain valuable insight into the subjective experience of typical CAM users in Johannesburg. Such information may raise awareness within the current CAM climate and may be of value in formulating future marketing and educational strategies for the various CAM professions. Several global surveys have been done to determine patterns and prevalence of CAM use. In South Africa, such studies have been conducted in Cape Town (Du Plessis and Pellow, 2013) and in Durban (Singh et al., 2004). The Allied Health Professions Council of South Africa (AHPCSA) is the regulatory body of CAM in South Africa. It currently regulates and registers 11 CAM professions, namely Homoeopathy, Chiropractic, Ayurveda, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Unani-Tibb, Osteopathy, Naturopathy, Phytotherapy, Therapeutic Aromatherapy, Therapeutic Massage and Therapeutic Reflexology. Most CAM products are freely available in various retail outlets. The aim of this study is to determine the attitudes and perceptions of Complementary and Alternative Medicine users in Johannesburg health shops. This will be evaluated by means of a questionnaire survey.
|
152 |
The relationship between mindfulness and burnout amongst employees in a South African corporate organisationAbdool Karrim Ismail, Husain 18 August 2014 (has links)
M.A. (Clinical Psychology) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
|
153 |
Childhood pedestrian mortality in Johannesburg, South Africa : magnitude, determinants and neighbourhood characteristicsBulbulia, Abdulsamed 11 1900 (has links)
Child pedestrian injury and mortality is an issue of significant public health concern in the city of Johannesburg, Gauteng, in South Africa. Since there is a paucity of studies in the last decade or more on fatal childhood traffic and non-traffic injuries in Johannesburg, this study aspires to address the disproportion in this domain of research, and provide more recent, and comprehensive empirical evidence over a ten-year period. The overarching aim of this study was to describe and examine the magnitude, circumstances, and neighbourhood characteristics of fatal pedestrian injuries among children (0-14 years) in Johannesburg for the period from 2001 to 2010. More specifically, the objectives of the study were: firstly, to provide a comprehensive epidemiological description of the magnitude, trends and occurrence of pedestrian mortality among children; secondly, to describe and examine the epidemiology of child pedestrian mortality in relation to children as motor vehicle passengers; thirdly, to describe and examine child pedestrian mortality in relation to non-traffic injuries, in particular, burns and drowning; and fourthly, to assess the influence of neighbourhood characteristics on child pedestrian mortality. The study conceptualised pedestrian road safety within an ecological systems framework. The study used quantitative descriptive, and multivariate logistic regression methods of analysis to examine child pedestrian mortality data. The study drew on data from the National Injury Mortality Surveillance System (NIMSS) and the Census 2001. The main findings indicated that black, male children aged 5 to 9 years (11.02/100 000) are the most vulnerable, and that mortality occurred predominantly during the afternoons and early evenings (12h00-16h00 and 16h00-21h00), over weekends, during school holidays, and to a lesser extent, during non-holiday months. In addition, neighbourhood characteristics that reflected concentrations of disadvantage, single female-headed households and residentially stable areas were associated with child pedestrian mortality. The study findings highlight the
need for critical action in terms of investment in child pedestrian safety research, and appropriate prevention initiatives guided by stringent evidenced-based studies, and the design of safe pedestrian, vehicular and urban environments. / Psychology / D. Phil. (Psychology)
|
154 |
Training and skills development for senior municipal officials in the Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality25 March 2015 (has links)
M.A. (Public Management and Governance) / Local government in South Africa faces many challenges. It is argued that these challenges could be addressed through training and skills development among senior municipal officials. This study set out to investigate the training and skills development challenges for senior municipal officials in the Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality. The study further argued that training and skills development have the potential to direct thinking, activity and resources for the Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality to achieve its strategic outcomes, especially the pressing issue of service delivery. This study found that despite a large financial budget being allocated to training and skills development in the Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality, the budget is not adequately spent. The reason behind this, amongst others, rests on insufficient information regarding training opportunities, the relevant units not completing their training application requirements on time and the lack of capacity to inculcate a culture of lifelong learning. It has been found that the Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality lacks the relevant planning and skills development initiatives for training and developing its senior managers. Investing in training and skills development would result in a cadre of senior managers who possess the relevant competencies to turn the Municipality into a world class African space. Finally, this study would prove beneficial to both policy-makers and the Department of Human Resource Development in the Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality in that it could improve the skills development deficit.
|
155 |
'n Mikro-ekonomiese ondersoek na die aard en omvang van die informele sektor in Johannesburg26 March 2014 (has links)
D.Com.(Economics) / One of the current most topical aspects of economic activity in South Africa is the growth of the informal sector. In addition, with deregulation becoming a hallmark of government economic policy, local authorities have become increasingly aware of the growth of the informal sector. The aim of this study is to investigate the nature and extent of informal sector activities in the Johannesburg municipal area by means of a questionnaire method of research. After a study of the numerous definitions concerning the informal sector, it was decided that for the purpose of this thesis, the informal sector be defined as: Those businesses that do not conform to a diversity of legal requirements, while the market and price mechanisms determine the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. In Johannesburg, it was observed that the formal sector's inability to create sufficient employment opportunities for all its citizens led to increasing numbers of people becoming involved in the informal sector. As far as the nature of the informal sector is concerned, the survey carried out during August 1991 revealed that diverse types of economic activities are being carried out. The main activities of the informal sector in Johannesburg were found to be: (i) production (such as "furniture makers" and "knitters"); (ii) accommodation (such as sub-letting of land/property or premises); (iii) building construction (such as building contractors and plasterers); (rv) repair services (such as motor repairs, panel beaters and home appliance repairs); (v) retail distribution (such as food vendors and hawkers of fresh produce); (vi) transport (such as the transport of goods and passengers); and (vii) personal services (such as hairdressers and photographers). The most important activity was found to be retail distribution. Disproportionately more male than female entrepreneurs were involved in this sector. Most entrepreneurs were between the ages of 31 and 40 years. These entrepreneurs work long hours and frequently have to provide their services for seven days a week. Most of the undertakings were operated solely by the informal sector entrepreneur, and employees were only employed in exceptional cases. Informal sector entrepreneurs experienced great problems in obtaining finance and licences. Other problems included access to water and electricity. A unique method was developed in order to determine the extent of informal sector activities in Johannesburg. In applying this method it was found that 15,20 percent of the total number of unemployed households in Johannesburg participated in informal sector activities. Having taken account of the findings of the survey conducted in August 1991, the informal sector has an important role to play in the future, especially as an avenue for the employment of those who cannot be accommodated in the formal sector. The greatest challenge facing the Johannesburg City Council is to introduce development measures such as financial assistance, the provision of infrastructure, establishing a development fund, deregulation and training programmes in order to stimulate the expansion of informal sector activities without detrimentally affecting the formal sector activities. Africa is the growth of the informal sector. In addition, with deregulation becoming a hallmark of government economic policy, local authorities have become increasingly aware of the growth of the informal sector. The aim of this study is to investigate the nature and extent of informal sector activities in the Johannesburg municipal area by means of a questionnaire method of research. After a study of the numerous definitions concerning the informal sector, it was decided that for the purpose of this thesis, the informal sector be defined as: Those businesses that do not conform to a diversity of legal requirements, while the market and price mechanisms determine the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. In Johannesburg, it was observed that the formal sector's inability to create sufficient employment opportunities for all its citizens led to increasing numbers of people becoming involved in the informal sector. As far as the nature of the informal sector is concerned, the survey carried out during August 1991 revealed that diverse types of economic activities are being carried out. The main activities of the informal sector in Johannesburg were found to be: (i) production (such as "furniture makers" and "knitters"); (ii) accommodation (such as sub-letting of land/property or premises); (iii) building construction (such as building contractors and plasterers); (iv) repair services (such as motor repairs, panel beaters and home appliance repairs); (v) retail distribution (such as food vendors and hawkers of fresh produce); (vi) transport (such as the transport of goods and passengers); and (vii) personal services (such as hairdressers and photographers). The most important activity was found to be retail distribution. Disproportionately more male than female entrepreneurs were involved in this sector. Most entrepreneurs were between the ages of 31 and 40 years. These entrepreneurs work long hours and frequently have to provide their services for seven days a week. Most of the undertakings were operated solely by the informal sector entrepreneur, and employees were only employed in exceptional cases. Informal sector entrepreneurs experienced great problems in obtaining finance and licences. Other problems included access to water and electricity. A unique method was developed in order to determine the extent of informal sector activities in Johannesburg. In applying this method it was found that 15,20 percent of the total number of unemployed households in Johannesburg participated in informal sector activities. Having taken account of the findings of the survey conducted in August 1991, the informal sector has an important role to play in the future, especially as an avenue for the employment of those who cannot be accommodated in the formal sector. The greatest challenge facing the Johannesburg City Council is to introduce development measures such as financial assistance, the provision of infrastructure, establishing a development fund, deregulation and training programmes in order to stimulate the expansion of informal sector activities without detrimentally affecting the formal sector activities.
|
156 |
Sinbelewenis van die dwelmmiddelafhanklike pasiënt09 February 2015 (has links)
M.Cur. / The lack of experiencing a purpose in life, leads to high levels of internal frustration in an individual, which reinforces their desire to satisfy these needs. This desire is motivated by the need of an individual to function within a healthy lifestyle functioning. Should this healthy lifestyle functioning be lacking, some individuals may regard drugs as more obtainable and this intense experience of frustration cause the individual to become dependent on drugs. The drug dependent patient's experience of unfulfilled needs, reinforces his distrust in future expectancies. He tries to withdraw from life actions and its associated responsibilities. Withdrawal from these associated life actions in a given situation, causes the drug dependent person to subjectively experience an unfulfilled personal life. The inability to accept responsibility, also includes the inability to satisfy needs, effective interpersonal interaction patterns, effectively accomplishing projects and conducting thought processes productively. The drug dependent patient therefore cannot accept any responsibility in order to find a purpose in his personal life. As a result of the absence of an overall satisfactory life style, feelings of self actualization and satisfaction cannot be experienced by the patient. He therefore lacks the ability to internalize creative, esthetic and attitude values which are related to experiencing a purpose in life. Idealization of intrapsychic needs restrains the drug dependent patient in his isolated existence from experiencing a purpose, though the forming of unique interpersonal relationships.
|
157 |
Urban living 101: a platform for [re]introduction into Johannesburg inner cityBelamant, Michelle 20 February 2014 (has links)
Thesis (M.Arch. (Prof.))--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, School of Architecture and Planning, 2012. / Over 800 000 people access and commute
through Johannesburg Inner City every single
day. (JDA, 2009) Out of this, a certain group of
people enter the city with every intention to fi nd
permanent residency and work within the city.
They mostly come from afar, rural or semi-rural
areas and often from neighbouring countries.
Unfortunately, with the continuously changing
urban environment, it can be an incredibly
difficult process to adapt to alone. As such, this
can be the best time and the worst time of their
lives, fi lled with mixed emotions of excitement,
disappointment, fear and anticipation. This is
the time where one may manage to truly live
life, or end up surviving it. The sudden change
in lifestyle, security, social and economic
conditions, entertainment and habitat can
create situations where the very best will fail
in their quest to improve their lives and fall into
degenerate lives of crime and despair from
which very few will emerge stronger.
As I see it, architecture is the
science of building, in terms of not
only visually inspiring structures
but more importantly, structures
that can improve the lives of people
whilst preserving the environment
and assisting in the building of a
stronger economy and moral fi bre.
I believe that architecture is at the
root of civilization itself.
However, due to a multitude of varying levels
of control implemented into the urban realm
of Johannesburg’s Inner City, in order to
ensure this change, it appears that parts of
the physical environment are being distorted
to accept a selected group of city inhabitants,
leaving the marginalised group to fend for
themselves. In saying this, there thus appears
to be a new form of segregation occurring
within the city. As such, the social and physical
environments are beginning to lose a certain
key characteristic of what a city should be –
spirit and integration between all of its parts.
This thesis therefore investigates a
design that strives to create a bridge
between Johannesburg’s Inner
City and the formal environments
where new city-dwellers can fi nd
respite and are assisted to achieve
their goals without succumbing to
the pitfalls that would otherwise
await them. The design will ensure
that the transition between these
new-comers’ old and new lifestyles
and surroundings is as painless as
possible allowing them to reach their
full potential quickly and hopefully
removing the risk that they may
become a burden to themselves and
society.
This thesis will focus on the construct of a 21st
century interpretation of Godin’s familistère, not
necessarily in its structural make up but rather
in its funding, management and programmatic
structure to fulfi l its mission in a sustainable
manner as well as the new idea of connecting
these factors into the ‘bigger picture’. (Benevolo,
1971) This thesis will address the fundamentals
of target group, services provided, training,
temporary living accommodation, optimal
time of stay, work ethics, funding and most
importantly, the spatial framework required for
such integration to occur. The results of this
thesis will culminate in a full-scale detailed
design of such a construct and propose how
it could be achieved spatially for the direct
benefi t of those individuals, as well as the
indirect effect it could have on the physical
make-up of Johannesburg’s Inner City.
|
158 |
Feed.u.cation: propagating urban spaces through an educational food facilityPappas, Anastasia January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (M.Arch. (Professional))--University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, 2016 / Globalisation is a considerable catalyst for the state of the world
today, and so it is evident through industrialisation, modernism and
capitalism that the power and spatiality of food has shifted. Food
has always brought people together as it is an universal language
that is understood by everyone. However food no longer exists as
this valued product of necessity but has now become a product
of consumerism. Large corporations control our food industry
which has lead to an economic food crisis where our basic needs
have become too expensive. This is a consequence of increased
population, demands, immoral farming methods and greed. Not
only is it affecting our economies but our natural resources. Food
production systems need to change along with our attitude
towards the environment. In an age of technology, branding and
mass production, people have become disconnected from nature,
regarding the food we eat and where it comes from.
In South Africa, this has resulted in increased food insecurity, obesity,
malnutrition and health risks. The necessity of honest, healthy and
nutritious clean-living has been lost. So how can we overcome
this pressure before we collapse as a society and as a planet? The
quality of food affects our daily productivity, well-being and psyche,
our primal need. How can architecture instigate a change for the
free food philosophy? How can it challenge profit margins in the food
system through urban contexts by re-establishing our connection
with nature?
Investigating the journey through the history of farming, politics
and food, I will observe the gradual change in the food industry
from the farmer to corporation to consumer, exposing the cultural
power plays, which can be reconsidered through architecture. This
thesis proposes an holistic approach towards propagating parks
and public spaces through food education in an urban context. It
concentrates on re-igniting the relationship between man and nature
through small-scale agriculture using small-scale architecture:
‘agritechture’. Establishing its roots in Joubert Park, Park Station
Precinct, Johannesburg, the strategy unfolds biophilia characteristics
observing the intricacy of Persian architecture and soil structures
stimulated by modular systems, grid proportions and layering. The
prairie ecosystem becomes a precedent study for heterotopian
architecture rooting itself as homogeneity. Creating catalytic nodes
of urban renewal, it unifies communities while defending its territory,
similar to the original African settlement, ‘the Kraal’. / MT2017
|
159 |
Knowledge and practices of doctors and nurses about management of health care waste at Johannesburg Hospital in the Gauteng Province, South AfricaRamokate, Tuduetso 29 August 2008 (has links)
ABSTRACT
Introduction: The Gauteng Province in South Africa is home to four large
hospitals which generate enormous amounts of waste. However, no formal study
has been done to asses the magnitude of this problem. Health care waste falls
under a cluster of waste which is regarded as hazardous due to its composition
and therefore ability to transmit disease. It has become an important type of waste
mainly because of its ability to transmit HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis B and C among other
infectious diseases. This study attempted to address the knowledge and practices
of doctors and nurses, which are just some of the factors which influence health
care waste management.
Aims: The main aim of this study was to evaluate the current knowledge and
practices of doctors and nurses regarding the management of health care waste.
Methods: This was a descriptive cross sectional study. A self administered
questionnaire was used to collect the data. A total sample of 128 doctors and
nurses was drawn from the Johannesburg Hospital, an academic hospital in the
Gauteng Province.
Results: Although there was overall lack of awareness about the existence of the
international, national, provincial and local documents (Act, Regulation, Manual,
Code of Practice and Policies) regulating heath care waste management, the
majority of the respondents (84%) knew about the existence of the Johannesburg
Hospital’s policy on waste management. Generally, knowledge of nursing staff
was significantly higher than that of doctors. Although some good practices such
as use of gloves were reported, there is generally a lack of knowledge about key
documents regulating health care waste, particularly among the doctors.
Conclusion: This study was the first of its kind to be done at the Hospital. As the
Hospital policy is more accepted and accessible to the health professionals than
the other documents investigated in this study, it should be updated regularly to
incorporate new changes. The Hospital should not only make that policy document
more easily accessible and visible but also strive to reach doctors with training in health care waste management. Continuous monitoring and evaluation is also
necessary to ensure that policies and procedures are followed.
|
160 |
"We are used to it" : explorations of childhood perceptions of danger and safety in living in the Johannesburg inner city.Kent, Lauren 05 September 2014 (has links)
This thesis is an exploration of the daily realities of childhood in the Johannesburg inner city,
investigating how the children understand and negotiate the possible dangers and probable safeties of
the inner city. Growing up in the inner city is an image few think is possible. However, throughout
my research I will argue for a conceptualisation of childhood that speaks to the urban public spaces
in the Johannesburg inner city and an inner city that speaks to the a new childhood in South Africa. I
have used danger and safety negotiation as the bridge between studies of the Johannesburg inner city
and studies of a South African childhood, and as a bridge in the gap between theories on childhood
and theories on the city. I investigate the ways that the children negotiate the everyday dangers in the
city and develop practices of safety, and how these practices and avoidance techniques speak to the
reality of living in the inner city. The very nature of the congested inner city offers a freedom that
many suburban childhoods lack, and that the children experience an independent mobility within an
infamously dangerous space speaks to the changes within the inner city often hidden behind the
skewed opinion of many of the Johannesburg inner city. I make a claim that the inner city offers
more freedom of mobility that is expected. This mobility is a relatively simple and well practiced
form of creating visibility within the pedestrian congestion of the city. These practises of visibility, I
argue, is heavily reliant on the layout of the inner city and the ways in which children understand the
dangers that face them. As such, their safety practices are a complex network of sharing cautionary
stories and avoidance techniques. For most children, this environment is also the only space that they
know and therefore, what to outsiders might seem a dangerous, chaotic and confusing space is to the
children just their everyday experience. These are the stories about which I write.
|
Page generated in 0.0432 seconds