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Institute
Die Akzente im Stadtmarketing haben sich in den letzten Jahren in vielen Städten verschoben: Stand früher die Ausrichtung auf externe Stakeholder wie Touristen, Unternehmen oder potenzielle Arbeitskräfte im Zentrum, so richtet sich die Aufmerksamkeit heute in zunehmendem Maße auf interne Stakeholder, insbesondere auf die Bürgerinnen und Bürger. Diese werden nicht nur auf ihre Rolle als Kunden reduziert, sondern sie werden als Mitgestalter in Beteiligungsprozesse integriert. Der Beitrag beschreibt die Entwicklung einer Dachmarke in einem beteiligungsorientierten Stadtmarketing-Prozess unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Methode Design Thinking.
Background
Lay family caregivers of patients receiving palliative care often confront stressful situations in the care of their loved ones. This is particularly true for families in the home-based palliative care settings, where the family caregivers are responsible for a substantial amount of the patient’s care. Yet, to our knowledge, no study to date has examined the family caregivers’ exposure to critical events and distress with home-based palliative care has been reported from Germany. Therefore, we attempt to assess family caregiver exposure to the dying patient’s critical health events and relate that to the caregiver’s own psychological distress to examine associations with general health within a home-based palliative care situation in Germany.
Methods
A cross-sectional study was conducted among 106 family caregivers with home-based palliative care in the Federal State of North Rhine Westphalia, Germany. We administered the Stressful Caregiving Adult Reactions to Experiences of Dying (SCARED) Scale. Descriptive statistics and linear regression models relating general health (SF-36) were used to analyze the data.
Results
The frequency of the caregiver’s exposure, or witness of, critical health events of the patient ranged from 95.2% “pain/discomfort” to 20.8% “family caregiver thought patient was dead”. The highest distress scores assessing fear and helpfulness were associated with “family caregiver felt patient had enough’” and “family caregiver thought patient was dead”. Linear regression analyses revealed significant inverse associations between SCARED critical health event exposure frequency (beta = .408, p = .025) and total score (beta = .377, p = .007) with general health in family caregivers.
Conclusions
Family caregivers with home-based palliative care in Germany frequently experience exposure to a large number of critical health events in caring for their family members who are terminally ill. These exposures are associated with the family caregiver’s degree of fear and helplessness and are associated with their worse general health. Thus the SCARED Scale, which is brief and easy to administer, appears able to identify these potentially upsetting critical health events among family caregivers of palliative care patients receiving care at home. Because it identified commonly encountered critical events in these patients and related them to adverse general health of family caregivers, the SCARED may add to clinically useful screens to identify family caregivers who may be struggling.
Cashflow
(2019)
Land cover change is a dynamic phenomenon driven by synergetic biophysical and socioeconomic effects. It involves massive transitions from natural to less natural habitats and thereby threatens ecosystems and the services they provide. To retain intact ecosystems and reduce land cover change to a minimum of natural transition processes, a dense network of protected areas has been established across Europe. However, even protected areas and in particular the zones around protected areas have been shown to undergo land cover changes. The aim of our study was to compare land cover changes in protected areas, non-protected areas, and 1 km buffer zones around protected areas and analyse their relationship to climatic and socioeconomic factors across Europe between 2000 and 2012 based on earth observation data. We investigated land cover flows describing major change processes: urbanisation, afforestation, deforestation, intensification of agriculture, extensification of agriculture, and formation of water bodies. Based on boosted regression trees, we modelled correlations between land cover flows and climatic and socioeconomic factors. The results show that land cover changes were most frequent in 1 km buffer zones around protected areas (3.0% of all buffer areas affected). Overall, land cover changes within protected areas were less frequent than outside, although they still amounted to 18,800 km2 (1.5% of all protected areas) from 2000 to 2012. In some parts of Europe, urbanisation and intensification of agriculture still accounted for up to 25% of land cover changes within protected areas. Modelling revealed meaningful relationships between land cover changes and a combination of influencing factors. Demographic factors (accessibility to cities and population density) were most important for coarse-scale patterns of land cover changes, whereas fine-scale patterns were most related to longitude (representing the general east/west economic gradient) and latitude (representing the north/south climatic gradient).
Commitment für die Lehre
(2019)
Die technischen Entwicklungen im Zuge der Digitalisierung haben die heutige Arbeitswelt grundlegend verändert und zu einer Entgrenzung von Raum und Zeit geführt. Bereits viele Organisationen bieten ihren Mitgliedern die Chance, den Arbeitsort und die Arbeitszeit flexibler zu gestalten. Daraus folgt, dass Organisationsmitglieder seltener mit ihren Kollegen an ein und demselben Ort zusammenarbeiten. Es stellt sich die Frage, ob die neuen flexiblen Arbeitsmodelle und die damit verbundenen digitalen Kommunikationsformen das affektive Commitment – also die emotionale Bindung des Mitarbeiters an die Organisation – beeinflussen.
Der vorliegende Beitrag bezieht sich auf eine Masterarbeit, die diesen Einfluss im Rahmen einer quantitativen Online-Befragung untersuchte. Durch die Umfrage, an der 245 Arbeitnehmer verschiedener Branchen und Regionen teilnahmen, stellte sich heraus, dass sowohl orts- als auch zeitflexibles Arbeiten mit positiven Folgen für die emotionale Organisationsbindung verknüpft sind. Personen, die ihren Arbeitsort und ihre Arbeitszeit relativ flexibel gestalten, sind zudem nicht bedeutend schwächer an ihr Arbeitsteam gebunden. Für die Verwendung digitaler Kommunikationsmedien sind darüber hinaus zunächst keine negativen Auswirkungen auf das Commitment gegenüber der Organisation und dem Team zu verzeichnen. Wird der persönliche Kontakt allerdings durch die häufige Nutzung unpersönlicher Kommunikationsmedien vernachlässigt, dann sind durchaus negative Folgen für das Commitment erkennbar.