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A crisis sparks innovation - The Covid-19 pandemic s a catalyst for evolution in the legal world?: An interview with Stephan Ebner and Hendrik SchneiderEbner, Stephan, Schneider, Hendrik 21 April 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Anti-corruption compliance in times of the Covid-19 pandemic: Criminal law risks and incentives for compliance-management-systems in the healthcare sectorSchönborn, Elias 21 April 2021 (has links)
In addition to a global endurance test for the health system, the Corona pandemic
triggered a tremendous social and economic crisis. Health professionals as well as
politicians and business managers have to make decisions with considerable consequences
under great time pressure. In this context, numerous international organizations
- including Transparency International, GRECO and IACA - point out
that the Corona crisis can be a breeding ground not only for conflicts of interest,
but also for corruption. Even though quick decisions have to be made at present, it is clear that the strict prohibitions on corruption must be fully observed also in
times of the Corona crisis. In order to avoid violations from the outset, existing compliance
systems should continuously be updated and adapted to the current situation.
This article begins with a description of possible forms of corruption in the
health care sector that are particularly relevant in the current times of crisis. Finally,
the article offers ideas for updates on the company's internal healthcare compliance
system with regard to anti-corruption.
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U.S. compliance for german SMEs 2021Ebner, Stephan, Leone, Susanne 21 April 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Medical tourism in a pandemicEl-Khouri, Christian 21 April 2021 (has links)
Medical tourism, as many other industries, has suffered a big hit during the Covid
pandemic. Being impacted both on the tourism and the healthcare side of the industry,
it faces multiple challenges to recover. Looking at another period in time
when the medical tourism industry was this heavily impacted and comparing technological
advances during the respective periods, this article elaborates on how to
better use digital technologies to rebuild and strengthen international patient care
infrastructures.
Before delving into the topic at hand I make the usual disclaimer: Due to the sensitive
nature of the industry, there is not a lot of hard data available on medical
tourism. Many hospitals do not record foreign patients differently than local patients,
due to the specific set of laws that apply to them. Only a few medical tourism
destinations collect hard data and survey medical tourists on their experience.
Thus, any quantative analysis of the impact the Covid pandemic had and will have
on medical tourism is strongly limited.
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The elephant in the virtual law classroomPerez, Tiffany A. 21 April 2021 (has links)
Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, law schools had to pivot to virtual legal education
quickly. In the wake of the pandemic, scholars have eagerly written about the dos
and don’ts of the virtual law classroom. Although some articles have represented
the law students’ perspective and some have represented the law professor’s
perspective, none have done both in an attempt to create empathy and bridge the
gap between what students’ desire, and what law professors are currently
providing, and what good virtual legal education requires. As such, based on several
interviews with law professors and students, this Article begins by describing one
online Contracts class first from the professor’s point of view and then from the
student’s point of view. The professor and students’ different perceptions of the
same class are then analogized to John Godfrey Saxe’s poem The Blind Men and
the Elephant. Then, using the Kübler-Ross Grief Cycle as a vehicle to build
empathy and understanding, this article attempts to demonstrate the similarities
that exists between students and professors’ feelings about online virtual
education, namely that both professors and students alike are avidly grieving a
common loss: in-person, Socratic law school days of old. As such, they are both
experiencing denial and anger about their situations. In keeping with one of the key
strategies recommended by the Mayo Clinic for overcoming denial in grief, this
article “journals” their realities and provides both the student and professor perspective in the hopes that, by doing so, it will rid the misconceptions and bridge
the way for a new type of virtual legal education to be created—one that meets
(and/or exceeds) both professors’ and students’ expectations.
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Studying in times of CoronaSchräder, Luise K. 21 April 2021 (has links)
In March 2020 the Covid-19 pandemic changed life circumstances drastically for
everyone. Exactly one year ago the university had to shift from campus to the internet.
This led to huge alterations in how professors lecture and how student university
life takes place. After this year, it is time to evaluate the changes and put
them into perspective. This means recognizing the benefits of technology to legal
education instead of seeing the current situation as a replacement that disappears
as soon as a return back to campus is possible.
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(Book Review) The Small Firm RoadmapMcCormack, Paul 21 April 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Trauma-informed mindful embodied (TIME) yoga for childhood trauma survivors: self-regulation during a global pandemicSilveira, Kristen 29 April 2022 (has links)
Survivors of complex childhood trauma (CCT) tend to develop distinctive mental health challenges later on in adulthood, which may be exacerbated by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. CCT survivors often struggle with self-regulation, making it difficult to tolerate the distress associated with “gold-standard” trauma-processing therapies for survivors of single-incident and adult-onset trauma. Yoga can enhance self-regulation, through physical movements, breathing techniques, meditative focus, and ethical guidelines of behaviour. This dissertation encompasses the creation of a new approach for teaching yoga to trauma survivors, called TIME yoga. This approach is based on a neuropsychological understanding of the bio-psycho-social alterations that CCT survivors undergo. Chapter 1 details the methods employed in this series of dissertation studies. A randomized controlled trial (RCT) was conducted with 26 adult survivors of CCT. Mental health, emotional functioning, resilience, and cognitive functioning were assessed via subjective and objective measures at two time points (i.e., pre- and post- participation in the online yoga program or waitlist). Chapter 2 is a retrospective and cross-sectional study describing survivors’ pre-intervention psychological and cognitive functioning during the pandemic, and evaluating the impact of trauma at particular developmental stages. Regression analyses revealed particular implications of adolescent and young-childhood trauma. Chapter 3 presents a manual of TIME yoga and feasibility data from the initial RCT, supporting both feasibility and safety of the program. Chapter 4 underscores yoga-related improvements in depressive symptoms, interoceptive awareness, and executive functioning. Using both repeated-measures ANOVAs and clinically meaningful indicators of change, this study illustrates how TIME yoga effectively improved survivors’ self-regulation during the global health crisis. Future directions for program development and evaluation are discussed. / Graduate / 2023-04-11
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The Impact of COVID-19 on the Opioid EpidemicStewart, Hailey 01 May 2022 (has links)
The COVID-19 pandemic adversely affected the lives of most Americans. People with Substance Use Disorder (SUD) were particularly vulnerable to the negative effects brought on by the pandemic. This study explored the increase in deaths due to opioid overdose during the pandemic exacerbated by factors such as increased stress, decrease in treatment options due to social distancing requirements and facility closures, social isolation, and an increase in spare time. Access to treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD) was interrupted by the measures meant to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Through a systematic review of current literature, it was demonstrated that existing patients were able to maintain access to care, while few new patients were able to initiate treatment. Telehealth proved to be a vital means of assuring PWUD were able to access life-saving treatment amid a pandemic. Further research is needed to determine whether SUD treatment measures during the COVID-19 pandemic warrants changing the policies long term.
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Skolkuratorers uppfattning om psykisk ohälsa bland högstadieelever under covid-19-pandemin / School counsellors perception of mental illness among secondary school students during the covid-19-pandemicNiklasson, Linn, Jonsson, Maja January 2022 (has links)
Syftet med den kvalitativa studien var att undersöka om skolkuratorers uppfattning omhögstadieelevers psykiska ohälsa har förändrats under covid-19-pandemin, samt omskolkuratorernas arbetssätt har förändrats. De forskningsfrågor som berördes handlar om hurskolkuratorerna upplevde att högstadieelevernas psykiska hälsa såg ut under covid-19-pandemin, om deras psykiska hälsa har påverkats av distansundervisning samt hurskolkuratorerna har arbetat med elevernas psykiska hälsa under covid-19-pandemin. För attbesvara forskningsfrågorna har intervjuer med skolkuratorer på högstadieskolor genomförts.Det insamlande materialet har sedan analyserats med hjälp av kvalitativ innehållsanalys.Teorierna som har använts för att analysera resultatet var systemteori och KASAM. Resultateti studien visade att skolkuratorer upplevde att högstadieelevers psykiska hälsa påverkadesnegativt av covid-19-pandemin. Framför allt framkom att skolkuratorernas uppfattning var atthögstadieelevernas vardag förändrades i samband med covid-19-pandemin, vilket har bidragittill att de inte upplevde en känsla av sammanhang, vilket har lett till att deras måendepåverkades negativt. Med hjälp av systemteori uppmärksammades vikten av en bra elevhälsaså eleverna kunde få hjälp med sin psykiska ohälsa i skolan och därmed må bättre i övrigasystem som de ingår i. Om eleverna enligt skolkuratorerna mådde bra i skolan bidrog det äventill att de fick förutsättningar till att må bra på sin fritid. Studiens slutsats var att skolkuratorernaupplevde att högstadieelevernas psykiska hälsa påverkades negativt av covid-19-pandeminsamt att de har fått anpassat sitt arbetssätt utefter distansundervisning, restriktioner ochelevernas psykiska hälsa. / The purpose of this qualitative study was to investigate whether school counsellors’ perceptionsof secondary school students’ mental health illness have changed during the covid-19-pandemic, and whether the school counsellors’ working methods have changed. Furthermorehow the counsellors have worked with the students mental health during the pandemic. Schoolcounsellors have been interviewed to provide relevant answers to these questions which havebeen analyzed using KASAM, general systems theory and qualitative content analysis. Theresult of the study shows that the counsellors perceived that the covid-19 pandemic has not onlyhad an adverse effect on secondary school students’ mental health but also changed theirlifestyle, which have contributed to a lesser sense of belonging in society at large among thestudents. By using general systems theory the importance of a working student care team thathelps students’ during mental illness is highlighted since that improves their health in othersystems too. If the students have good mental health in school, their mental health is consideredto be better in their spare time too. The conclusion of the study was that the school counsellorsfelt that secondary school students mental health was affected negatively of the covid-19-pandemic and that they had to adapt thier way of work in form om distance learing, restrictionsand the students mental health.
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