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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.
21

Reminder messages combined with health education to improve antiretroviral treatment compliance / Stephani Botha

Botha, Stephani January 2014 (has links)
The background and problem statement focuses on antiretroviral therapy (ART) and the use of mobile technology to improve compliance within a primary health care (PHC) context in South Africa. South Africa is one of the countries, globally, with the highest HIV incidence and prevalence and ART enrolled patients visiting PHC facilities. Compliance to ART plays an integral part in effective HIV/AIDS management. HIV/AIDS management entails a complex process of patient education and pharmacological control to improve ART compliance in South Africa. Studies were done in South Africa on reminder messages as most studies focused on chronic conditions in general. A literature review explored what is known about ART and mobile technology to improve compliance. Literature confirmed that compliance through reminder messages were done worldwide and in Sub-Saharan countries. Previous research indicated that the compliance rate of the patients increased through reminder messages. Yet there is a gap in the literature regarding reminder messages combined with health education on ART compliance. The aim of the study was to determine the impact of reminder messages combined with health education on ART compliance among patients receiving ART at a PHC facility Methodology: The study followed a quantitative, experimental, intervention, randomised multi-group, pre- and post measurement design (Creswell, 2012:1, Welman et al., 2012:80). The research design is experimental because the researcher applied an intervention (reminder messages) to two experimental groups. Random sampling was applied and participants were grouped into three groups: Group A, (control group), Group B, (reminder messages only) and Group C (reminder messages combined with health education). A preand post-measurement design is followed as each participant’s pill count and return date were measured before and after the reminder messages with/without health education were given. The sample size was 202 eligible patients receiving Regime 1 and 2 ART’s (Lamuvidine, Tenofovir, Efavirenz, Nevirapine, Alluvia® and Zidovudine) at a PHC facility in the North West, South Africa (N=202). The sample size was determined with guidance of statistical services to ensure that results obtained from the study would be reliable and significant. Data collection was done in three phases. Phase one (1) consisted of collecting the biographical data and a pre-measurement of pill count and return dates for participants in Groups A, B and C. Phase two (2) consisted of sending bi-weekly messages (Group B) via WinSMS and with health education (Group C) for three (3) months. Phase three (3) consisted of post-measurement of participants’ pill count and return date for Groups A,B and C. Data collection stretched over six months (October 2013-March 2014), namely three months pre-measurement, then activation of intervention combined with another three months post-measurement. Descriptive and inferential statistical analysis was conducted through SPSS (SPSS Inc., 2013). Descriptive statistics indicated that more female patients visited the PHC facility for ART on a more regular basis. It was concluded that the experimental group proved a slight increase in compliance with regards to return date after the SMS intervention. No difference was noted in compliance to pill counts. It can also be concluded that pill counts is a complex monitoring procedure with room for error from the patients’ aspect. / MCur, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
22

Dějiny spásy v symbolice byzantské liturgie sv. Jana Zlatoústého / The history of salvation in the symbology of the Byzantic liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom

FOGL, Jaroslav January 2007 (has links)
The thesis deals with the questions, how the Christians in the Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom remind themselves the history of salvation and how they make the history of salvation present (i. e. anamnesis of the history of salvation) trough the symbols followed by the word. In the first part the author deals with the Christians symbolic acts in the liturgy as the symbolic acts express their relation to God. In the next part he pays attention to the process of the celebration of the liturgy of Saint John Chrisostom. These themes that describe symbolic acts of celebration are followed by the chapter that deals with the spiritual aspects of the liturgy. For a better orientation in the next text he closes the introductory part with the theological conception of the selected authors of the liturgical commentaries. In the main part of the thesis the author focuses on the history of the liturgy and on the liturgical commentaries of the selected authors of the Orthodox Christianity, who influenced the development of the Byzantine liturgy. Further, he focuses on the analysis of the present text of the liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom, where he searches for the ways the anamnesis of the history of salvation is reached. In the final part of the work he presents the results of the analysis and concludes that the Jesus life is really reminded and made present in the particular parts of the Byzantine liturgy.

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