| Title | Venue | Year | Impact | Source |
4501 | The National Health Cluster in Yemen: assessing the coordination of health response during humanitarian crises Yemen has been facing political, economic and social challenges since 1990. The fragility of Yemen’s situation has led to a widespread conflict in 2015, resulting in the world’s largest humanitarian crisis. Amid the humanitarian catastrophe and the collapsing health system, a platform for coordinating humanitarian health response, called the National Health Cluster, has expanded its operations across the country. The study aims to evaluate the performance of the National Health Cluster in Yemen between 2015 and 2019. A qualitative research design was employed, and ten semi-structured interviews with key Health Cluster stakeholders were conducted. The study applied the Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance in Humanitarian Action (ALNAP) guide to evaluating humanitarian action using the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) criteria. Six evaluation criteria were selected: relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, effects, connectedness and participation. Inputs from interviews were manually transcribed and then analysed using NVivo 12 software. The study results indicate that the Health Cluster in Yemen has contributed to saving lives and strengthening the local health capacities in diseases surveillance. In addition, its positive effect was evident in improving the humanitarian health response coordination. Nevertheless, engaging health stakeholders, especially national organisations, was suboptimal. Exit strategies were lacking, while services to address mental health, non-communicable diseases, senior citizens and people with disabilities were not prioritised in the Health Cluster strategic plans and partners’ response. To ameliorate Health Cluster performance, revising its objectives and establishing a cluster-specific rapid response funding mechanism are pivotal. Furthermore, preparing the national health system for recovery and actively engaging all stakeholders in the Health Cluster’ response and strategic decisions would maximise its positive impact on Yemen’s health system and population. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4502 | Kinderzahnmedizin und die Coronakrise Die COVID-19-Pandemie hat das Leben Aller nachhaltig verändert. Für die Kinderzahnmedizin stellen sich elementare Herausforderungen während der Quarantäne ebenso wie in der darauffolgenden Wiederaufnahme der geregelten Arbeit. Viele neue Aspekte müssen diesen Umständen angepasst werden. In diesem Beitrag wird versucht die vielen Aspekte darzustellen, welche in der Kinderzahnmedizin durch das COVID-19-Virus betroffen sind. Ebenso werden praktische Lösungen für diese hieraus resultierenden Probleme angesprochen. Neu für die Zahnmedizin, wird in diesem Beitrag das Konzept der Vollraum-Desinfektion geschildert. | N/A | 2020 | | CORD-19 |
4503 | 27. Jahrestagung der DGKiZ 15. Kongress der EAPD: Virtueller erfolgreicher Kongress mit Möglichkeiten der Interaktion überstieg die Erwartungen | N/A | 2020 | | CORD-19 |
4504 | There is no glory in prevention | N/A | 2020 | | CORD-19 |
4505 | DGKiZ-News | N/A | 2020 | | CORD-19 |
4506 | Neues aus der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Zahnerhaltung | N/A | 2020 | | CORD-19 |
4507 | DGKiZ-News: Neues aus der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Kinderzahnheilkunde | N/A | 2020 | | CORD-19 |
4508 | The psychology of vacationers' hotel brand choice in a post-pandemic world The present study investigated patrons’ intricate psychological process for hotel brand choice and preference. This research uncovered hotel selection attributes in shaping brand loyalty through customer experience, brand trust, brand attachment, age, and gender in the post-pandemic world. This paper categorized hotel selection attributes into that vacationers appreciate in the domestic tourism context. The findings indicated the significant effect of hotel selection attributes on customer experience, which in turn affect brand preference. Also, the moderating effect of age was identified in the relationship between hotel selection attributes and customer experience. This research is among the first to revisit hotel selection attributes for domestic tourism amid the pandemic and the way to cultivate the loyalty toward a hotel brand. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4509 | Readiness and Perception of Pacific Students to Mobile Phones for Higher Education The emergence and advancement of Information Communication Technologies have transformed facilitation and content delivery in higher education worldwide, the Pacific region being no exception. The extensive use of mobile phones in the Pacific, especially with the student-aged populace, is gradually creating a niche for mobile learning in the education landscape. However, there is a growing concern on the effectiveness of this innovative intervention keeping in mind the digital intelligence of Pacific students. This paper explores the readiness and perception of the Pacific students using mobile devices for learning. An online questionnaire was used to collect data for this exploratory research. While the results revealed the student’s willingness and positive perception to leverage on mobile phones for learning in higher education, their readiness for the mobile-driven education is rather dependent on various factors which are explored in detail. The paper concludes with recommendations for the higher education institutes and education ministries in the Pacific region. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4510 | Effects of Macroprudential Policies on Bank Lending and Credit Risks I analyse the effects of two macroprudential policy measures implemented in Switzerland: the activation of the countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) and a cap on the loan-to-value (LTV) ratios. I use a difference-in-differences method to estimate the effects of these measures on risk indicators, such as their LTV and loan-to-income (LTI) ratios and mortgage growth rates. I find that both the CCyB and the LTV cap led to a reduction in high LTV mortgages. The banks affected by the CCyB also reduced their mortgage growth rates. I do not find any evidence that these measures had unintended consequences on LTI risks, other measures of mortgage lending standards, or non-mortgage credit growth. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10693-022-00378-z. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4511 | Sweat Equity: Student Scholarships in Aotearoa New Zealand's Universities This paper responds to calls from past and present students to increase the value of postgraduate scholarships in Aotearoa New Zealand. Here we provide context for understanding the scholarship landscape in Aotearoa, including how scholarships are understood in relation to dominant neoliberal framings of higher education and persistent inequities within the sector. We present data which provides insight into the current inequities in Summer, Masters and PhD scholarship values. The average value of PhD scholarships has remained stagnant between 2011 and 2019 resulting in the average being $11,238 less than the Living Wage in 2019. We show that the average length of time full-time PhD students take to complete their doctorates exceeds the three-year tenure of scholarships. We argue the status-quo of low scholarships, supplemented by postgraduate ‘sweat’, excludes people from participating in postgraduate education, preventing them and their communities from realising the public benefits that such an education can produce. We suggest that these inadequacies could be addressed through (1) raising Summer, Masters and PhD scholarships to the living wage; (2) extending tenure of PhD scholarships; and (3) reinstating the postgraduate student allowance. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40841-022-00244-5. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4512 | 2021 ASE presidential address energizing surgical education: the pivotal role of the ASE | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4513 | Making masks: The women behind Ghana's nose covering mandate during the COVID-19 outbreak In 2020, Ghanaians adopted face masks, or “nose masks,” in public places to combat the spread of a novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2. Seamstresses and tailors quickly pivoted to manufacture nose masks by April, given the longstanding cottage sewing industry. While the country saw an influx of disposable face masks by the end of the year, cloth mask makers made a significant impact on public health at the start of the pandemic. This article considers how people were able to quickly popularize nose masks in 2020, noting the key role women seamstresses played alongside public leaders, the Ghana Standards Authority, and the police who used punitive punishments and coercive tactics to encourage sustained use as the pandemic continued. It marks one of the first studies on the history and cultural use of nose masks in an African country, comparing their use and adoption to other national mask responses, including those in the United States, Japan, and the Czech Republic. | J Mater Cult | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4514 | Recent Study on Schottky Tunnel Field Effect Transistor for Biosensing Applications In this review, we discussed highly sensitive biosensor devices which is having a more attractive, wide scope and development in the sensing field. Biosensor devices can detect the charged and neutral charged biomolecules such as protein, nucleic acids, antibody agents and viruses. Due to these highly sensitive biosensor devices, we mainly focused on schottky tunnel field-effect transistors (STFET), these transistors have unique properties such as enhanced transconductance and gate controllability, low leakage current etc. In addition, we studied the performances and challenges of STFET by dielectric modulation doping concentration, dielectric modulation, and heterostructure devices. Further, we have reviewed the comparison of STFET and conventional devices. This article reviews mainly on the study of high sensitivity analysis of STFET and modified Schottky-TFET structures for the use of biosensing applications. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4515 | E-Leadership and Distance Education in Greece during Covid-19 Pandemic The paper attempts to investigate how contributive primary school principals’ e-leadership proved to the work and preparation of teachers for the implementation of the Distance Education during the covid-19 pandemic. By employing quantitative modes of enquiry and specifically a significant number of questionnaires, we concluded that the teachers’ level of education doesn't affect their opinion towards the degree of the school principals’ contribution to their work and preparation or the implementation of distance education, contrary to their educational experience. Moreover, the majority of teachers who participated in the research consider the presence and involvement of the electronic leader as important. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4516 | From Bondi to Fairfield: NSW COVID-19 press conferences, health messaging and social inequality The use of media sources increases exponentially during a health crisis or disaster. Similarly, digital health information and misinformation can spread quickly through social media. From the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the press conference has been one of the federal, state, and territory governments’ key outlets for providing updates, containing misinformation, reassuring constituents, and articulating public health measures. This article focuses on NSW press conferences relating to the major Delta outbreak in Australia. The article looks at the press conferences as they pertain to the NSW government's controversial targeting of the lower socioeconomic and ethnically diverse south-west ‘hotspot’ or ‘LGA of concern’, Fairfield, which turned the LGA into an area of intense policing. We argue strategic manoeuvring in the press conferences, through the individualisation of responsibility and blame shifting, formed part of the NSW government's attempts to minimise political fallout. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4517 | A case of completed course multifocal osteonecrosis (MFON) during pregnancy due to primary antiphospholipid syndrome Osteonecrosis of both shoulders and hips is a rare presentation of primary antiphospholipid syndrome. A female patient aged 23 years old with no systemic diseases has her only complaint which was pain and limitations in both hips followed by both shoulders. Careful detailed history and clinical examination is essential for reaching optimum diagnosis thus good management. MRI for hip and shoulder joints is essential for the diagnosis of osteonecrosis. Exclusion of all causes of secondary osteonecrosis by history, clinical examination, and laboratory studies should be done before diagnosing the rare causes of osteonecrosis or the primary type. Pregnancy is an exacerbation factor for primary osteonecrosis. We recommend that the female patient with primary osteonecrosis should receive prophylactic antithrombotic during pregnancy. In conclusion, exclusion of all secondary causes of osteonecrosis is mandatory to reach an accurate diagnosis. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4518 | Contamination Through Splatter, Droplets and Aerosols | Dent Abstr | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4519 | Adopting New Ways of Doing Dental Business | Dent Abstr | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4520 | Role of community pharmacies in the prevention of communicable diseases | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4521 | Managing Unvaccinated Staff | Dent Abstr | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4522 | Fashion consumption during COVID-19: Comparative analysis of changing acquisition practices across nine countries and implications for sustainability The COVID-19 pandemic caused and still causes unprecedented disruptions in daily lives of billions of people globally. It affects practices and routines across all household consumption domains, including clothing consumption. Drawing on Social Practice Theory, this article explores and compares changes in clothing acquisition practices during COVID-19 across nine countries: the USA, the UK, Finland, Germany, Switzerland, Iran, Czech Republic, India, and Hong Kong SAR. Data was obtained through a standardized survey containing rated and open-ended questions, which were analyzed through descriptive quantitative analysis and inductive qualitative content analysis of open-ended questions. The results of this cross-country research indicate that all forms of fashion consumption, including more sustainable practices, have decreased during the pandemic. The most visible impacts have occurred in the material arrangements associated with fashion acquisition practices (e.g., closed physical shops, shipping disruptions, cancelled events, remote work, etc.). However, changes that result from these disruptions may be shorter-lived that changes that happened as a result of changing meanings associated with fashion consumption and its more sustainable forms and new competencies and skills acquired during the pandemic that could ensure more lasting practicing of more sustainable forms of fashion consumption. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4523 | Research in brief | Lancet Infect Dis | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4524 | Articles to Appear in Future Issues | J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4525 | Evaluation of airborne transmission risk in university towns based on IEQ surveys This study aims to evaluate airborne transmission risk in university towns during the COVID-19 pandemic based on surveys of indoor environmental quality (IEQ). Both on-site measurements and questionnaire surveys were carried out in public buildings in university towns in Changsha, China. Air temperature, relative humidity, and CO2 concentration in one library, ten classrooms, eight canteens, seven restaurants, and sixteen malls were measured. 2220 valid questionnaires concerning occupants’ sensation on thermal environment, air movement, and indoor air quality were collected. A 3-level evaluation method of airborne transmission risk that is dependent on building type and indoor CO2 concentration was developed. Excessive CO2 concentration is found in library (1045 ppm), classrooms (1151 ppm), restaurants (1242 ppm), and malls (1057 ppm). The percentage time of “high risk” accounts for 18-100% in these buildings. The results reveal a serious problem: numerous public buildings in China and probably other resource limited countries are not basically prepared and equipped to cope with airborne transmission. This fact should be taken into account when developing guidelines and formulating mitigation measures. Real-time monitoring and displaying IEQ and thus the transmission risk level should be an important way to be widely implemented in public buildings. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4526 | Sociability, Social Isolation and Social Interaction During the First Months of COVID-19 Pandemic: a Qualitative Analysis of Brazilian, Finnish and American Adults The social distancing imposed by the pandemic transformed how people interact with others, and little is known about how it has impacted new ways of sociability and if culture influences this process. This is a qualitative study exploring changes in the configurations of social interactions and the resources for sociability that adults in Brazil, the USA, and Finland have developed during the initial stage of quarantine. A total of 95 participants (ages between 20 and 60) experiencing social isolation either living alone or with their partners (without children) completed online questionnaires about their interactive experiences. The questionnaire was composed of multiple choices, addressing the frequency, types, and length of social interactions before and during the pandemic, and open questions focusing on the participants’ experiences on online interactions during the pandemic. Frequencies were analyzed through a paired-sample t-test, and open-ended responses were thematically analyzed. Results revealed, first, that social isolation did not represent a significant change in the composition of the participants’ social network, but family bonds became the main connection during the period, and other sources of social interaction were kept due to the possibility of interaction through virtual means. Although the frequency of social interactions reduced, their significance increased. Second, virtual environments reframed social interactions, influencing individual’s bodily perceptions such as differences in attentional demands, communication processes, and awareness of their own image, and the interaction itself. Third, cultural values seemed to influence the way participants signified their interactive experiences. This study suggests that although virtual environments changed the ways interactions happen, virtual encounters were essential for maintaining participants’ social networks. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s43076-022-00172-9. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4527 | Germany, the Eurozone crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic: Failing forward or moving on? This article explores continuity and change in Germany’s policy towards economic and monetary integration, comparing its approach to the Eurozone crisis with its response to the economic challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic. As the largest EU member state with significant macroeconomic relevance for the whole of the Eurozone, Germany presents a critical case during both episodes. The article adopts an historical institutionalist approach to exploring policy evolution, identifying the key interests and ideas that have driven German policy. The analysis is based on the ‘failing forward’ argument, applied to German domestic politics. German policy has evolved through an incremental layering process that both facilitated and constrained the architecture of the Eurozone. The Franco-German proposal for a reconstruction fund in May 2020 seemed to conflict with a long-standing German opposition to mutualising debt. The article argues that it in fact represented a further stage in the process (layering and conversion) rather than a critical juncture or paradigm change in policy. However, the resultant Recovery and Resilience Facility may prove to be another incomplete policy response due to the deepening consequences of the pandemic and the interventions of Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4528 | Association of Emotional State and Cancer Prevention Behaviors during COVID-19 | Ann Epidemiol | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
4529 | Lesson Learned: Flexibility. Adapting Trial Recruitment and Onboarding during COVID-19 | Ann Epidemiol | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
4530 | Job satisfaction, academic motivation and organizational citizenship behavior among lecturers during the COVID-19 pandemic: a cross-national comparative study in Japan and Malaysia Job satisfaction and its antecedents and outcomes are important areas of focus in the social sciences research, and higher education is no exception. The importance of this issue has grown during the COVID-19 pandemic. For this reason, using a cross-national study conducted in Malaysia and Japan, we collected data on lecturers’ job satisfaction and two of its outcomes, namely, academic motivation and individual-level organizational citizenship behavior (OCBI) to test our evidence-based theoretical model, which explains the relationships between these variables. We also added age, gender, and tenure as covariates to our model. Our partial least squares structural equation modeling estimation results at the aggregate and country levels showed that the effect of job satisfaction on OCBI was mainly transmitted through academic motivation. We also observed that Malaysian and Japanese lecturers did not show a statistical difference in terms of the relationships described between the variables in our model. Additionally, the relationship between academic motivation and OCBI was nonlinear based on the data from the Malaysian sample, and we explained this phenomenon from both theoretical and practical/policy perspectives. Moreover, our results showed that age plays an important role in the model when it is estimated using data from the Malaysian higher education system. We discussed our findings in detail in terms of theoretical and practical implications. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12564-022-09757-6. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4531 | Development and Application of an Integrated Approach to Reduce Costs in Steel Production Planning Steel manufacturing is critical for industrial development and contributes greatly to the world’s energy consumption. A worldwide oversupply of steel has led to increased competition in the market, requiring developing countries to function on the same level as developed countries. Since energy use contributes between 20 and 40% of steel production costs, a reduction in energy consumption will result in decreased production costs, and increased competitiveness. This study therefore focuses on the development and application of an integrated approach to reduce energy costs in steel production planning. This is a new solution, as a review of existing research indicated that there is a lack of an integrated steel production planning model and application thereof on marginally profitable facilities. The key novelty lies in the integration aspect of the solution — both in terms of integrating different initiatives and different sections of such a facility. The proposed approach provides an opportunity to adapt outdated production planning methods without the use of capital, and simultaneously address resistance from personnel at these marginally profitable facilities in developing countries. The new cost model focuses on the identification, evaluation, comparison, prioritisation, implementation, and integration of steel production planning initiatives. The integration determines the effect that individual initiatives have on each other, and dynamically prioritises solutions by combining theoretically quantified benefits with practical constraints. Two initiatives were implemented on a South African facility, with an estimated cost benefit of US$0.83 million per annum (approximately R13.3 million per annum). | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4532 | COVID-19 and the second exams fiasco across the UK: four nations trying to avoid immediate policy failure In 2021, the UK and devolved governments tried to avoid the school exams fiasco of 2020. Their immediate marker of success was to prevent a similar U-turn on their COVID-19 school exams replacement policies. They still cancelled the traditional exam format, and sought teacher assessments to determine their grades, but this time without using an algorithm to standardise the results. The outcomes produced some concerns about inequity, since the unequal exam results are similar to those experienced in 2020. However, we did not witness the same sense of acute political crisis. We explain these developments by explaining this year’s ‘windows of opportunity’ overseen by four separate governments, in which the definition of the problem, feasibility of each solution, and motive of policymakers to select one, connects strongly to the previous U-turn. A policy solution that had been rejected during the first window became a lifeline during the second and a likely choice during the third. This action solved an immediate crisis despite exacerbating the problem that ministers had previously sought to avoid (‘grade inflation’). It produced another year of stark education inequity, but also ensured that inequity went from part of an acute political crisis to its usual status as a chronic low-attention policy problem. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4533 | Self-care, Household Cleaning and Disinfection During COVID-19 Pandemic: A Study from Metropolitan Cities of India Hygiene has been noticed as one of the most effective procedures against COVID-19 cross-transmission, especially hand hygiene and covering the face with the mask. Therefore, this study tried to peek into the people movements and seeks to understand how people are handling their daily use items like fruits and vegetables, how people are managing unavoidable grooming services, how people are disinfecting themselves after coming from outside, and what all hygienic practices they are following during this pandemic. Furthermore, this study attempts to explore ways through which people are disinfecting their houses. At last, the study seeks to explore the knowledge/information people have about Coronavirus. The study collected primary data through a self-administered questionnaire. A quota sampling technique was used to collect the data. Bivariate analysis was carried out to reach the study findings. Based on the findings, it is the need of the hour to disseminate the information on the use of unhealthy disinfectants as they lack the knowledge about the safe use of various types of cleaners and disinfectants. It is also reiterated that there is an urgency to promote further information on risk factors of Coronavirus among people and compulsion to promote healthy hand hygiene and sanitation practices. There is a need to promote information through mass media and other modes of awareness, such as artwork and announcements. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4534 | The challenges and opportunities of online learning and teaching at engineering and theoretical colleges during the pandemic Education has been one of the major areas disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aims to assess the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on users’ (students and faculty members) learning in higher education, examining how engineering students and faculty perceived the abrupt transition in comparison to other colleges. The current research aims to investigate the outcomes of enforcing eLearning to facilitate teaching and learning processes in higher education after this unprecedented pandemic and identify the most significant challenges and opportunities the users face. This study uses a quantitative approach; it included 1713 respondents, 227 full-time faculty members, and 1486 students at the University of Sharjah. The survey analysis indicated general agreement that the most significant advantage of online learning implementation was its flexibility in place and time, with 77.2% of users providing positive feedback. Moreover, the accessibility and effectiveness of the assessment and communication methods used showed a positive trend in the hypotheses, 80.3% of the users. The sudden implementation of eLearning during the COVID-19 pandemic had discouraging implications for users' mental health and socialization, where 55.6% of the sample agreed that they had been affected negatively. 75% of the users prefer a flexible model blending face-to-face and e-learning techniques rather than solely depending on either of them. Therefore, A Hybrid-Flexible (HyFlex) is recommended for the university to apply based on the nature of the courses. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4535 | Economic Contributions of Forestry Service Providers in Mississippi, USA We used three comprehensive datasets to assess economic activities at as granular a level as possible for Support Activities for Forestry industry in Mississippi in 2019. The labor market company Emsi® provided the most current employment estimates by 6-digit North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) codes along with a geographic listing of businesses by NAICS codes that contained employment, earnings, and sales data. Esri® further categorized the 6-digit codes into 8-digits, thus providing a more detailed view of this sub-sector’s businesses. However, since business listings do not comprehensively tabulate all businesses of each classification within a region, we developed a weighting method to estimate output, jobs, and earnings for the following industries using Emsi® data- Foresters Consulting, Government – Forestry Services, and Forest Restoration. A statewide input–output model, along with sub-regional models, were estimated using the IMPLAN® software to identify economic contributions to the state and regional economies. Total annual sales across Mississippi were $84.5 million; sales were greatest in the Central subregion, with the South, North close behind. Consulting Foresters was the largest industry by sales, jobs, and earnings. Total economic contributions were 1,140 jobs and $59.79 million in value added on total sales of $121.99 million. South Mississippi received the greatest regional contributions from Foresters Consulting, while Central Mississippi received the greatest benefits from Government – Forestry Services and Forest Restoration. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4536 | One Year on: Michael Sandel's Tyranny of Merit: What's Become of the Common Good? (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2020) | Res Publica | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4537 | Telerrehabilitación en tiempos de COVID: una encuesta de satisfacción a cuidadores y pacientes con daño cerebral Objetivo Determinar el grado de satisfacción de los cuidadores y de los pacientes con ictus que han recibido fisioterapia en formato de telerrehabilitación (TR) durante la primera oleada de la pandemia de SARS-CoV-2. Material y métodos Se elaboró un estudio descriptivo mediante un cuestionario. El cuestionario incluía preguntas sobre la experiencia general, los problemas encontrados, los resultados subjetivos obtenidos y las sugerencias para futuras ediciones. Resultados Se seleccionaron 26 sujetos: 16 pacientes (9 hombres y 7 mujeres) con diagnóstico de ictus y 10 cuidadores (3 hombres y 7 mujeres). El 87,6% de los pacientes y el 90% de los cuidadores consideraron que el sistema de conexión era fácil de usar, aunque el 30% dijeron que elegirían otro sistema de conexión en el futuro. Además, el 87,6% de los pacientes estaban de acuerdo o muy de acuerdo en repetir el tratamiento de TR. Conclusión Los pacientes con ictus y los cuidadores que participan en el programa TR han mostrado un grado de satisfacción aceptable con su participación. Aim To determine the satisfaction degree of caregivers and stroke patients who received physiotherapy in telerehabilitation (TR) format during the first wave of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Material and methods A descriptive study was developed using a questionnaire. The questionnaire included questions on general experience, problems encountered, subjective results obtained and suggestions for future editions. Results Twenty-six subjects were selected: 16 patients (9 men and 7 women) with a diagnosis of stroke and 10 caregivers (3 men and 7 women). 87.6% of the patients and 90% of the caregivers found the connection system easy to use, although 30% said they would choose another connection system in the future. In addition, 87.6% of patients agreed or strongly agreed to repeat the TR treatment. Conclusion Stroke patients and caregivers participating in the TR program showed an acceptable satisfaction degree with their participation. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4538 | Adjustment Processes Within Economic Evolution-Schumpeterian Approach This research is inspired by Schumpeter’s theory of economic development and aims at analysing the outcomes of innovative and non-innovative changes implemented within economic evolution. A multiplicity of outcomes of economic processes leads to complexity of the structure of economic evolution. In order to examine innovative processes, the role of the circular flow, i.e. a form of the economy, which for Schumpeter was both the starting and ending points in the analysis of economic development, should be taken into account. In this context, we determine a simple model of economic evolution in line with Schumpeter’s theory, using Hurwicz’s concept of the adjustment process. This allows us to examine an impact of accessed information on diversification of economic processes. It should be added that in the model presented, non-innovative changes also play important roles, which is coherent with Schumpeter’s theory. As a result, we prove, under some initial conditions coming from the mainstream of the Schumpeter’s thought, that the economy under study can evolve in the direction of equilibrium and take a form of circular flow. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4539 | 148. Menstruation in the time of covid-19 or how confinement has affected adolescent girls | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4540 | 205 Sars-cov-2 reinfection in pregnancy-A case report | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4541 | 198 COVID-19 In Pregnancy-One year after world health organization (WHO) Declared a global pandemic | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4542 | 124 A cross-country comparison of the impact of covid-19 on socioeconomical, psychological and relational well-being of pregnant and non-pregnant women in latvia and portugal | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4543 | 116 COVID-19: What do pregnant women know now? A cross sectional study | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4544 | 413. Psychological well-being and worries among pregnant women during the first phase of the covid-19 pandemic compared to a historical group: A hospital-based cross-sectional study | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4545 | 140 Outcomes of pregnancy and childbirth in Women with sars-COV-2 cap | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4546 | 288. Assessment of sars-cov-2 vertical transmission: analysis of the 31 placentas from the PREG-COV study | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4547 | 162 Comparative study of previous pregnant women of COVID-19 care at the intensive care unit in a west hospital in the Western Amazon, In the years 2020/2021 | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4548 | 191 Giving birth with COVID-19 | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4549 | 419. Hybrid prenatal care during covid-19-a chance to preserve patient safety | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4550 | 663 Pulmonary thromboembolism during the puerperium of a woman with covid-19 infection-a case report | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |