Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 326
Filter
1.
Higher Education (00181560) ; 85(6):1357-1379, 2023.
Article in English | Academic Search Complete | ID: covidwho-20239863

ABSTRACT

Higher education organizations in countries where English is not the native tongue must function in a multilingual mode, using English as their primary language for scientific exchange and academic publication and relying on the native language for instruction and administration. When operating in a multilingual mode of communication and identity expression, a higher education organization runs the risk of becoming a "tower of Babel";however, by operating solely in single-language mode, it may become an "ivory tower." Investigating Israeli higher education organizations and focusing specifically on their mission statements, we analyzed the built-in tension of this multilingual self-identification through how they introduce themselves in the lingua franca of global academe, namely English, and in the local language, Hebrew. In our analysis, we found: (a) differences between the English- and Hebrew-language mission statements in length, style, and context;(b) differences in thematic emphases and thus in the narration of organizational identity;and (c) that such thematic differences patterned according to the three categories of state-mandated higher education organizations and, to some degree, time. We conclude that multilingualism serves both as an arena for the negotiation of organizational identity and as a state of being for higher education organizations in non-English-speaking countries. [ FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of Higher Education (00181560) is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full . (Copyright applies to all s.)

2.
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships ; 40(6):1770-1791, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20236624

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic created a range of stressors, among them difficulties related to work conditions, financial changes, lack of childcare, and confinement or isolation due to social distancing. Among families and married individuals, these stressors were often expressed in additional daily hassles, with an influence on mental health. This study examined two moderated mediation models based on Bodenmann's systemic-transactional stress model. Specifically, the models tested the hypothesis that intra-dyadic stress mediates the association between extra-dyadic stress and mental health, while two measures of family functioning, cohesion and flexibility, moderate the relationship between extra and intra-dyadic stress. Participants were 480 Palestinian adults in Israel who completed self-report questionnaires. All were in opposite-sex marriages and identified as either cisgender women or cisgender men. The results showed partial mediation patterns supporting both models, indicating that family cohesion and flexibility weakened the mediating effect of intra-dyadic stress on the relationship between extra-dyadic stress and mental health. These findings increase our understanding of the variables that affected mental health during the pandemic, and suggest that when faced with extra-dyadic stress, married individuals with good family environments are less likely to experience high levels of intra-dyadic stress, which is in turn associated with preserved mental health. Limitations and implications for planning interventions for couples and families during the pandemic are discussed.

3.
Perfusion ; 38(1 Supplement):127-128, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20235731

ABSTRACT

Objectives: The growing implementation of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for patients with COVID19 has led to increased involvement of nurses in treating ECMO-supported patients (ECMO-SP). In June 2021, the Israeli Ministry of Health;s Nursing Administration published the first director;s circular in the world to detail the nursing scope of practice in caring for ECMO-SP. This study aimed to examine how often nurses perform various activities while caring for adult ECMO-SP. Method(s): A cross-sectional study. A convenience sample consisted of 76 registered ICU nurses (mean age 41.3+/-8.7 years;71% female). A 20-item Nursing Activities in the Care of ECMO-SP instrument was developed based on the Israeli Ministry of Health;s procedure on Nursing Practice in the Care of ECMO-SP and a literature review. The instrument examined how often nurses perform various activities on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (Never) to 5 (Always). Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses (EFA and CFA), as well as descriptive statistics and Pierson;s correlations were performed. Result(s): When examined in EFA and CFA, the instrument yielded acceptable fit indices. The instrument contains four subscales with the following mean +/- SD scores: Factor 1. Nursing care of ECMO-SP not related to the ECMO device (7 items, a=0.90), M+/-SD=4.66+/-0.61;Factor 2. Activities on the ECMO device during emergencies (5 items, a=0.82), M+/-SD=2.1+/-0.91;Factor 3. ECMO device calibrating and monitoring (4 items, a=0.72), M+/-SD=3.26+/-1.0;and Factor 4. Medication and blood administration through the ECMO device (4 items, a=0.73), M+/-SD=1.52+/-0.60. Of the 20 nursing activities, 10 (50%) were reported as "never" or "rarely" performed. Nine out of 20 items (45%) were reported as "very often" or "always" performed. Conclusion(s): Ten out of 20 (50%) activities while caring for ECMO-SP listed in the scope of practice as permissible for nurses to perform were reported as not performed at all or performed rarely. Policymakers need to act so that the activities listed in the nursing scope of practice are carried out by nurses in practice.

4.
Journal of Constructivist Psychology ; 36(3):317-336, 2023.
Article in English | Academic Search Complete | ID: covidwho-20235037

ABSTRACT

This study is embedded within a distinct pro-migration incentivized 'Law of Return' migration policy in Israel, as it considers the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on migrant women, their agency, and proculturation. It features stories of migrant women during the COVID-19 pandemic, exploring their agency within the Individual-Socio-Ecological frame of reference of I-positions in the dialogical self theory. This qualitative study on English-speaking women in Israel (N = 39) is empirically grounded in lived experiences of meaning making, mothering, family dynamics, work, and access to healthcare under conditions of lockdown. The analysis of participants' stories resulted in identifying six overarching themes relevant to migrant women: familial roles, mental labor, voicing resistance, mindfulness, intergenerational solidarity, and transnationalism. This study provides a construct clarification of agency, introducing three levels of agency: inward, social, and societal. In particular older migrant women may appeared to be losing agency during the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel, if the focus was solely on decision making and taking action. However, this study suggests that inward I-positions, in particular as related to mental labor, seemed to flourish during the COVID-19 pandemic, when many participants could engage in a more limited way on social and societal levels. [ FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of Journal of Constructivist Psychology is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full . (Copyright applies to all s.)

5.
Drug Safety ; 46(6):517-532, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20232808

ABSTRACT

Bahri et al discuss the International Society of Pharmacovigilance's (ISoP) Special Interest Group on Medicinal Product Risk Communication (CommSIG). ISoP dedicated a range of activities to communication about the risks and safe use of medicines in the decade before creating the CommSIG, including a pre-conference training course in Tianjin in 2014. Establishing the CommSIG also built on a forward-looking attitude to changes in medicine, communication technology, patient expectations, and societies overall. It was also recognized that the multidisciplinary approach to communication would support reaching out to patient groups, healthcare, medicine information and media professionals, and experts from the communication, social, healthcare and data sciences. The nine founding members of the CommSIG published its background and aspirations in ISoP's official journal, Drug Safety.

6.
Minerva ; : 1-25, 2023 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20235679

ABSTRACT

This paper examines the trust relations involved in Israel's COVID-19 vaccination campaign, focusing on vaccine hesitancy and the concept of 'trust'. The first section offers a conceptual analysis of 'trust'. Instead of analyzing trust in the vaccination campaign as a whole, a few objects of trust are identified and examined. In section two, the Israeli vaccination campaign is presented, and the focus is placed on vaccine hesitancy. In section three, different trust relations are examined: public trust in the Israeli government and health institutions, interpersonal trust in healthcare professionals and experts, trust in the pharmaceutical companies that make the COVID-19 vaccine, the US FDA, and trust in the new vaccine and the new technology. Through this complexity of trust relations, I argue that it is impossible to completely separate the trust that the vaccine is safe and effective from social aspects of mistrust. Additionally, practices of silencing and censoring the concerns of vaccine hesitaters - both experts and among the public, are pointed out. I contend that these cases further minimize vaccine hesitaters' trust in vaccine-related entities. In contrast, in section four, I suggest the 'trust-based approach': since vaccine hesitancy is not solely the result of knowledge deficiency but also a lack of trust relations, any campaign that addresses vaccine hesitancy should also focus on trust. The advantages of this approach are spelled out. For governments, a discussion based on trust is, ultimately, the best democratic way to encourage hesitaters to take the plunge and get vaccinated.

7.
Behav Sci (Basel) ; 13(5)2023 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-20242456

ABSTRACT

The aim of the current study was to examine the emotional resilience, satisfaction with life, social support, and anxiety during the vaccination process of the Israeli population after the end of the third lockdown, according to religiosity degree. We hypothesized that a higher degree of religiosity (ultra-Orthodox and religious participants) would be associated with higher levels of resilience and with lower levels of anxiety than in secular individuals. In addition, it was hypothesized that satisfaction with life, social support, anxiety, and religiosity will predict resilience and anxiety. Nine hundred and ninety-three native Jewish Hebrew-speaking respondents representing ultra-Orthodox, religious, observant, and secular Jews participated in this study. Ultra-Orthodox participants showed higher resilience and satisfaction with life than other groups, and lower levels of anxiety. Satisfaction with life and social support predicted higher resilience. It is suggested that religious faith as well as satisfaction with life may provide a source of strength and resilience in stressful life events.

8.
Health Information Exchange: Navigating and Managing a Network of Health Information Systems ; : 647-664, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2322802

ABSTRACT

The national health information exchange (HIE) network in Israel is perhaps the world's best kept HIE secret. Few Israelis even know the network exists, yet this HIE network has broad adoption across Israel's health system, and it has facilitated many landmark studies on HIE in the biomedical literature. This case study highlights the development, implementation, and evolution of Israel's national HIE network. What began as a vision within one health maintenance organization (HMO) about 20 years ago now connects most hospitals in the country as well as many ambulatory care facilities. At its center is a focus on using a de-centralized, federated network to deliver comprehensive, virtual medical records to clinicians on demand within their electronic medical record system for use in supporting patient care. The network evolved to support COVID-19 and other national priorities. Moving forward, the Israeli national HIE network will play a critical role in supporting the nation's digital health strategy, and will focus on advanced functionalities, including common clinical terminologies and advanced analytics. © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

9.
Journal of Homeland Security Education ; 16:1-9, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2325543

ABSTRACT

Democracy has increasingly come under pressure as democratic norms are being eroded. This article explores why democratic processes are at risk in Europe and the United States and what might replace them. It reflects the thinking of the Study Group on Democracy convened under the auspices of the International Association for Intelligence Education in 2022. Its deliberations identified a set of underlying key drivers, documented how they manifested, and speculated on what new forms of governance might replace democratic rule. Recent trends cited include the corruption of norms, the disruptive influence of social media, the growing diversity of society, the shift from community-based problem-solving to reliance on identity politics, the emergence of existential threats, and the need for strong leadership. The group concludes that prospects for sustaining democratic institutions can best be understood by viewing future trends along two perspectives: the complexity of society and modes of decision-making.

10.
American Quarterly ; 74(2):213-220, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2316869

ABSTRACT

The battles over masking only amplified preexisting culture and race wars in which entrenched libertarianism and neoliberal individualism evaded the economic and existential precarity caused by degraded social welfare and state health care. Counterterrorism projects such as Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) introduced by Barack Obama have relied on recruitment of community members, social service providers, and educators for self-surveillance and self-regulation of political expression and community organizing: a liberal counterterrorism approach for "reformist reform.” 5 Nabeel Abraham and Will Youmans provide important analyses of the "Containment System” in response to the War on Terror, based on "entrepreneurial opportunism” (Rodríguez) by Arab and Muslim American educators, professionals, and community leaders (including in the nonprofit industrial complex), some of whom collaborated with federal and state agencies.6 Academic Containment Reckoning with these critiques from critical Arab American or Southwest Asian and North African (SWANA) studies requires grappling with the long history of anti-Arab/Muslim state policies of surveillance, policing, and mass incarceration that preceded 2001. The Zionist lobby and anti-Palestinian organizations such as the Anti-Defamation League have increasingly deployed the language of tolerance and civility to tar critics of Israel with charges of anti-Semitism.7 These liberal strategies, illustrating Rodríguez's argument, can be more damaging than frontal attacks on the Palestine justice movement because the language of racism is harder to challenge

11.
Open Public Health Journal ; 16(1) (no pagination), 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2316128

ABSTRACT

Aim: This study aimed to examine the utilization of health resources during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel through the analysis of Meuhedet Health Services' real-world database. Background(s): The history of COVID-19 in Israel comprises three waves: from February to May 2020, from May to November 2020, and from November 2020 to April 2021. Restrictions imposed on the Israeli population included travel limitations and even lockdowns. Meuhedet Health Services, the third largest health management organization in Israel, manages all its medical data through computerized electronic files and has collected various types of health services data from 2018 to 2020. This paper compared the consumption of Meuhedet Health Services over two consecutive years of the pandemic using a real-world database. Method(s): Electronic medical records from primary care physicians, laboratory tests, hospitalization medical histories, treatments in hospitals and institutes, visits to and treatments by community physicians, and prescriptions and medical equipment consumption were collected from 2018 to 2020. This research used aggregated, non-personalized, and decoded data from a cohort of insured individuals, and the research was approved by all the relevant institutional Helsinki Committees. The data analysis compared the corresponding data in a chosen month of the year with the data in the same month of the previous year. The differences were then scaled by the data corresponding to the month of the previous year, and the result was multiplied by 100 and plotted. To analyze drug consumption, we used the fixed price of every drug in a year multiplied by the difference in consumption of the drug in question between the month of the current year and the same month of the previous year, multiplied by 100. Result(s): A significant decrease was noted in hospitalization days, general hospital outpatient clinic visits, general hospital emergency room visits, and total numbers of visits to community physicians during the first lockdown in the first wave of the pandemic in comparison to 2019. At the end of the lockdown, however, a compensatory increase was noted in all services. In terms of drug consumption, the data showed no differences in the effects of the different waves. Our findings revealed that the first wave of COVID-19 was a shock, with a significant reduction in the consumption of health services, but this decrease attenuated with the second wave due to immediate management interventions and safety rules implemented in hospitals and clinics. Conclusion(s): People shun medical services during a fast-spreading epidemic that causes significant mortality. Since new variants of COVID-19 could be part of our lives for the next few years, we should learn how to continue living with the pandemic and develop alternative medical services to maintain healthy states. Digitization, remote services, telemedicine, and home care, including home hospitalization, should be part of the health services to cope with pandemic situations.Copyright © 2023 Klang et al.

12.
Critical Care Conference: 42nd International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine Brussels Belgium ; 27(Supplement 1), 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2314457

ABSTRACT

Introduction: This study included pregnant patients with severe COVID to test the hypothesis that the impact of delivery on maternal outcome depends upon illness severity at the time of delivery;we hypothesized that patients not yet requiring IPPV would improve following delivery (due to improvement in respiratory mechanics), while patients already on IPPV, or close to requiring ventilation, would deteriorate (due to maternal cardiovascular intolerance to autotransfusion). Method(s): This multicenter, prospective/retrospective cohort study evaluated Israeli ICU admissions of pregnant women with COVID-19 pneumonitis from 1-Feb-2020 to 31-Jan-2022. We assessed maternal, neonatal outcomes and longitudinal maternal clinical data. The primary outcome was maternal outcome (no-IPPV, IPPV, ECMO, death). The primary longitudinal outcome was SOFA score, the secondary longitudinal outcome was the novel PORCH score (PEEP, Oxygenation, Respiratory-support, Chest-X-ray, Haemodynamic-support). Patients were classified into: no-delivery, postpartum admission, deliverycritical and delivery-not-critical groups. Result(s): 84 patients in 13 ICUs were analysed;there were 34 nodelivery, 4 postpartum, 32 delivery-critical, 14 delivery-not-critical patients. Delivery-critical and postpartum had worse outcomes with, 26/32(81%) and 4/4(100%) requiring IPPV;12/32(38%) and 3/4(75%) requiring ECMO;1/32(3%) and 2/4(50%) dying. Deliverynot- critical and no-delivery had far better outcomes with, respectively, 6/34(18%) and 2/14(14%) requiring mechanical ventilation;no patients required ECMO or died. SpO2, S/F ratio, P/F ratio in Deliverycritical deteriorated on the day of delivery, continued to deteriorate, and took longer to recover;delivery-not-critical improved rapidly following delivery. The day of delivery was a highly significant covariate for PORCH (p < 0.0001), not SOFA (p = 0.09). Conclusion(s): Interventional delivery should be considered for maternal indications before patients deteriorate and require IPPV.

13.
Israel Studies Review ; 38(1):127-147, 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2312715

ABSTRACT

Social solidarity is the conscious and voluntary affinity between human beings that instills in them a sense of guaranteed mutual assistance. Israeli society has long been characterized as having a high level of national solidarity, especially in times of crisis. The COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 put this notion to the test. The lack of agreement about fundamental norms of civil society in general and the nature of Israeli democracy in particular questioned the interdependence of its communities. This study examines the pandemic's effect on the sense of social solidarity in Israel. Using a quantitative approach and a representative sample of the adult population, the results show that the pandemic did affect the sense of solidarity. Moreover, taking into account long-standing religious and ideological cleavages in Israel, the pandemic exacerbated existing divisions among different groups. © Association for Israel Studies

15.
Sustainability ; 15(6), 2023.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2307362

ABSTRACT

The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic entailed a sudden shift to remote learning. Teachers had to adjust instantly to a new reality and acquire new tools for emergency remote teaching. The present research studied the perceptions and stances of teachers following this change. It focused on aspects of personal experience and teachers' perceptions of the students and the educational relations, and it also examined gender differences. An online questionnaire built to this end addressed different aspects of the switch to emergency remote teaching. The findings reveal a variety of stances and perceptions about the change. The research participants thought that the students faced a need to increase their self-learning. However, they did not sense a significant change in their self-perception and the quality of educational relations. Yet, significant differences emerged between the teachers based on gender. Male teachers reported more difficulty making the switch than their female colleagues. The research shed light on the link between remote teaching and Social-Emotional Learning (SEL). On a practical level, it calls for integrating social-emotional learning components in teacher training frameworks and promoting remote teaching professional skills.

16.
Nationalities Papers-the Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity ; : 1-17, 2023.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2307322

ABSTRACT

This article explores the national identity argument in unsettled times by using the COVID-19 pandemic as a test case. It uses a longitudinal survey among Jewish Israelis to examine whether the pandemic influenced levels of national identity and solidarity and whether it altered their relationship. The findings indicate a clear reduction in levels of solidarity, national attachment, and national chauvinism over time. They also show that the positive connection between national attachment and solidarity grew stronger, while the connection between national chauvinism and solidarity became weaker and insignificant. These findings provide complex evidence for the national identity argument.

17.
Urban History ; 50(2):356-363, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2292768
18.
Education Sciences ; 13(4):418, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2291671

ABSTRACT

Once the major threat of the COVID-19 pandemic diminished, schools reopened, and teachers once again had to cope with unprecedented challenges. The impact of these challenges on the emotional well-being of Arab teachers, who have a unique set of challenges within the Israeli school educational system, has received little attention in the recent literature. In this cross-sectional study, we examined 300 Arab teachers' well-being in Israel in May 2021, three months after schools were reopened. All study hypotheses were confirmed. Findings indicate the need to promote a sense of well-being among Arab teachers in stressful conditions and to design solutions specifically tailored to support them in accordance with their cultural and social characteristics. Israel's Ministry of Education should encourage school administrators to seek ways to provide a supportive environment for Arab teachers in school environments in order to improve their performance and retention, and maintain their well-being.

19.
Health & Social Care in the Community ; 2023, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2291009

ABSTRACT

Between December 2020 and February 2021, Israel administered two doses of COVID-19 vaccine to >50% of its adult population. Nonetheless, due to declining immunity and the spread of the COVID-19 delta variant, the government offered a third COVID-19 vaccine dose in July 2021. Although the vaccine was shown to provide effective protection against severe illness, the compliance rate among the Arab minority remained low. The present study sought to identify the factors predicting willingness to uptake the COVID-19 vaccine in the Arab community. An online survey of 2486 participants was conducted in November 2021 to assess vaccination-related behaviours, such as perceived benefits, barriers, incentives (e.g., the green pass), subjective norms, and pandemic fatigue. Positive correlations were found among reasons for obtaining a green pass, trust in formal authorities, perceived effectiveness of the third COVID-19 vaccine dose, subjective norms, and attitudes toward the booster dose. Pandemic fatigue was positively correlated with vaccination barriers. Trust in authorities, perceived booster dose effectiveness, subjective norms, and attitudes were negatively related to pandemic fatigue and barriers to vaccination. Demographic variables such as age, education level, and income level were positively related to odds of getting the booster. Participants who reported being religious exhibited a lower rate of booster dose compliance than secular participants. The study findings show that the reasons for acquiring a green pass were positively correlated with the perceived effectiveness of the booster dose, demonstrating that individuals understood the vaccine benefits. Further, having a green pass was negatively related to barriers. Incentives such as the green pass play a major role in encouraging the population to take the COVID-19 vaccine. In addition, public campaigns to explain the health benefits and refute erroneous myths support higher vaccination rates.

20.
Revista de Globalización, Competitividad y Gobernabilidad ; 16(2):70-84, 2022.
Article in Spanish | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2290897

ABSTRACT

En este artículo se realiza una aplicación time-varying para medir el desempeño bursátil de los mercados desarrollados en tiempos del Covid-19. Para lo anterior, se utiliza el "Alfa de Jensen", estimado a partir del modelo de Fama & French (2015) con residuos heterocedásticos. Los resultados indican que, durante la crisis, los mercados accionarios desarrollados con mejor desempeño son: Dinamarca, Israel y Holanda, mientras que los de peor desempeño son: Singapur, Bélgica y Alemania. El buen desempeño se asocia a políticas fiscales eficientes y bien focalizadas, representando así los mercados con desempeño superior, alternativas que crean valor a inversionistas globales.Alternate :In this article, a time-varying application is made to measure the stock market performance of developed markets during the Covid-19 crisis. For the above, the Jensen's Alpha" is used, estimated from the model of Fama & French (2015) with heteroscedastic residuals. The results indicate that, during the crisis, the developed stock markets with the best performance are: Denmark, Israel and the Netherlands, while the worst performers are: Singapore, Belgium and Germany. Good performance is associated with efficient and well-focused fiscal policies and therefore stock markets with superior performance are alternatives that create value to global investors.Alternate :Neste artigo, é feita uma aplicação variante no tempo do modelo de cinco fatores Fama & French para medir o desempenho dos desenvolvidos mercados de ações durante a crise do Covid-19. Para o exposto, utiliza-se o "Alpha de Jensen", estimado a partir do modelo de Fama & French (2015) com resíduos heterocedásticos. Os resultados indicam que, durante a crise, os mercados de ações com melhor comportamento são: Dinamarca, Israel e Holanda, enquanto os piores são: Cingapura, Bélgica e Alemanha. O bom desempenho está associado a políticas fiscais eficientes e bem direcionadas, representam assim, os mercados com desempenho superior, alternativas que geram valor para os investidores globais.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL