Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been shown to be linked to health risk behaviours (HRBs). This study aims to identify risk factors for ACEs and to examine the associations between ACEs and ...single and multiple HRBs in a sample of university students in Germany.
An online-based cross-sectional study was conducted among public university students (N = 1466). The widely applied ACE questionnaire was used and extended to operationalise 13 categories of childhood adversity. First, variables for each type of ACE and HRB were dichotomised (single ACEs and single HRBs), and then used for cumulative scores (multiple ACEs and multiple HRBs). Frequencies were assessed, and (multinomial) logistic regression analyses were performed.
Prevalence rates of ACEs ranged from 3.9 to 34.0%, depending on the type of childhood adversity. Sociodemographic risk and protective factors for single/multiple ACEs varied strongly depending on the outcome. In particular, a high family socioeconomic status seemed to be a consistent protective factor for most ACEs. After adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics, both single and multiple HRBs were associated with single events of ACEs. Moreover, dose-response relationships between multiple ACEs and various single and multiple HRBs were found.
The study provides strong evidence that ACEs are associated with HRBs. The number of ACEs may play a role in single or multiple HRBs. Reducing the number of ACEs could thus decrease HRBs, which account for many of the leading causes of morbidity and death. The findings highlight the importance of trauma-informed health interventions designed to prevent the occurrence of ACEs, and build capacity among children and adults.
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DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK
Although the increasing dissemination and use of health-related information on the Internet has the potential to empower citizens and patients, several studies have detected disparities in the use of ...online health information. This is due to several factors. So far, only a few studies have examined the impact of socio-economic status (SES) on health information seeking on the Internet. This study was designed to identify sociodemographic and health-(care-)related differences between users and non-users of health information gleaned from the Internet with the aim of detecting hard-to-reach target groups.
This study analyzed data from the NRW Health Survey LZG.NRW 2011 (n = 2,000; conducted in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, via telephone interviews). Logistic regression analysis was used to examine the determinants of online health information seeking behavior.
68% of Internet users refer to the Internet for health-related purposes. Of the independent variables tested, SES proved to exert the strongest influence on searching the Internet for health information. The final multivariate regression model shows that people from the middle (OR: 2.2, 95% CI: 1.6-3.2) and upper (OR: 4.0, 95% CI: 2.7-6.2) social classes are more likely to seek health information on the Internet than those from the lower class. Also, women are more likely to look for health information on the Internet than men (OR: 1.5, 95% CI: 1.1-2.1). Individuals with a migration background are less likely to conduct health searches on the Internet (OR: 0.6, 95% CI: 0.4-0.8). Married people or individuals in a stable relationship search the Internet more often for health information than do singles (OR: 1.9, 95% CI: 1.2-2.9). Also, heavy use of health-care services compared to non-use is associated with a higher likelihood of using the Internet for health-related matters (OR: 1.7, 95% CI: 1.2-2.5).
In order to achieve equity in health, health-related Internet use by the socially deprived should be promoted through measures to increase their level of e-health literacy. Furthermore, longitudinal studies are needed in order to gain reliable data/results on determinants of health-related Internet use.
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DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK
Zusammenfassung
Hintergrund
Menschen mit Fluchtgeschichte sind mit einer Vielzahl von rechtlichen, strukturellen, administrativen, kulturellen und sprachlichen Barrieren im Zugang zur ...Gesundheitsversorgung konfrontiert. Derzeit liegen jedoch wenig Daten zu gesundheitlichen Bedarfen und Bedürfnissen von Geflüchteten vor. Insbesondere ihre subjektiven Erfahrungen im Zugang zur Gesundheitsversorgung sind bisher wenig berücksichtigt worden.
Ziel der Arbeit
In diesem Beitrag sollen die subjektiven Erfahrungen von Menschen mit Fluchtgeschichte beim Zugang zur Gesundheitsversorgung und bei deren Nutzung beschrieben werden. Strategien bei der Bewältigung von Herausforderungen werden dargestellt.
Methoden
Die Rekrutierung der InterviewpartnerInnen erfolgte anhand von quantitativen Querschnittsdaten, die im Rahmen einer Studie zur Gesundheit von Geflüchteten (FlüGe-Gesundheitsstudie) erhoben wurden. Personen, die einer erneuten Kontaktaufnahme zugestimmt hatten, wurden telefonisch kontaktiert. Es wurde eine im Hinblick auf Alter, Geschlecht, Nationalität, Gesundheitszustand und Inanspruchnahmeverhalten heterogene Teilstichprobe (
n
= 18) mittels dolmetschergestützter problemzentrierter Interviews nachbefragt. Die Datenauswertung erfolgte in einem deduktiv-induktiven Prozess.
Ergebnisse und Diskussion
Die wenig migrationssensible Gesundheitsversorgung von Menschen mit Fluchtgeschichte ist geprägt durch Sprachbarrieren, Orientierungslosigkeit, Ablehnungserfahrungen, Fehlbehandlungen und strukturelle Barrieren. Fremdheitserfahrungen in und mit dem Gesundheitssystem können dazu führen, dass die Versorgung nicht (mehr) oder nur verzögert in Anspruch genommen wird. Gleichzeitig werden individuelle Strategien von Geflüchteten und VersorgerInnen angewendet, um den genannten Herausforderungen zu begegnen.
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EMUNI, FIS, FZAB, GEOZS, GIS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, MFDPS, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, SBMB, SBNM, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK, VKSCE, ZAGLJ
The study aims to investigate the significance of legal status for well-being and access to and use of needs-based health care by asylum seekers and refugees in Germany.
Using a mixed-method-design, ...we first conducted a cross-sectional study to explore access to health care and unmet needs of refugees and asylum seekers and legal status. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics. For the qualitative study a heterogeneous sample was recruited from the quantitative data. Interviews were analysed using a deductive-inductive approach.
Quantitative results showed that health care utilisation was associated with an unsecure legal status but not with unmet care needs. The in-depth qualitative study revealed that the legal status determines experiences of structural violence that can negatively affect well-being and associated access to health care.
An insecure legal status can affect access to health care for refugees and asylum seekers. In order to improve health, changes in living conditions and the removal of access barriers are necessary.
Artisanal small-scale gold mining (ASGM) is the world's largest anthropogenic source of mercury emission. Gold miners are highly exposed to metallic mercury and suffer occupational mercury ...intoxication. The global disease burden as a result of this exposure is largely unknown because the informal character of ASGM restricts the availability of reliable data.
To estimate the prevalence of occupational mercury intoxication and the disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) attributable to chronic metallic mercury vapor intoxication (CMMVI) among ASGM gold miners globally and in selected countries.
Estimates of the number of artisanal small-scale gold (ASG) miners were extracted from reviews supplemented by a literature search. Prevalence of moderate CMMVI among miners was determined by compiling a dataset of available studies that assessed frequency of intoxication in gold miners using a standardized diagnostic tool and biomonitoring data on mercury in urine. Severe cases of CMMVI were not included because it was assumed that these persons can no longer be employed as miners. Cases in workers' families and communities were not considered. Years lived with disability as a result of CMMVI among ASG miners were quantified by multiplying the number of prevalent cases of CMMVI by the appropriate disability weight. No deaths are expected to result from CMMVI and therefore years of life lost were not calculated. Disease burden was calculated by multiplying the prevalence rate with the number of miners for each country and the disability weight. Sensitivity analyses were performed using different assumptions on the number of miners and the intoxication prevalence rate.
Globally, 14-19 million workers are employed as ASG miners. Based on human biomonitoring data, between 25% and 33% of these miners—3.3-6.5 million miners globally—suffer from moderate CMMVI. The resulting global burden of disease is estimated to range from 1.22 (uncertainty interval UI 0.87-1.61) to 2.39 (UI 1.69-3.14) million DALYs.
This study presents the first global and country-based estimates of disease burden caused by mercury intoxication in ASGM. Data availability and quality limit the results, and the total disease burden is likely undercounted. Despite these limitations, the data clearly indicate that mercury intoxication in ASG miners is a major, largely neglected global health problem.
Die Grenzen zwischen Erziehungswissenschaft, Politik und Gesellschaft verlaufen fließend und werden immer wieder neu hergestellt. Diesem Thema widmet sich der vorliegende Band mit Beiträgen der ...Jahrestagung der Sektion Interkulturelle und International Vergleichende Erziehungswissenschaft (SIIVE) 2021 in der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Erziehungswissenschaft (DGfE). Es werden theoretische und empirische Perspektiven auf Grenzbearbeitungen eröffnet, Bestandsaufnahmen von Grenzbearbeitungen vorgenommen, methodisch-methodologische Herausforderungen in den Mittelpunkt gerückt und Grenzen bearbeitet. (DIPF/Verlag)
Objectives:
The study estimated the environmental burden of disease (EBD) attributable to a long-term exposure of the population to nitrogen dioxide (NO
2
) and fine particulate matter (PM
2.5
) ...emissions from hard coal- and lignite-fired power plants in Germany for the year 2015.
Methods:
The contribution of coal-fired power plants to the total air pollutant concentration was modelled using a chemical transport model and then combined with population data to assess the corresponding population exposure. We calculated years of life lost (YLL), years of life with disability, or disability-adjusted life years for different health outcomes with a strong evidence for an association with the exposure.
Results:
The burden of disease from PM
2.5
emissions from lignite is 1.2 times higher than that from hard coal emissions (7,866 YLL compared to 6,412 YLL). NO
2
emissions from lignite, cause a burden of disease 2.3 times higher than hard coal NO
2
-emission (13,537 YLL compared to 5,906 YLL). The EBD for both pollutants is dominated by diseases of the cardiovascular system.
Conclusion:
Abandoning energy generation by coal-fired power plants would lower the burden of disease in Germany.
Strengthening individual health literacy and knowledge about health challenges are important preventive approaches in public health to improve health equality. Health care organizations have come ...into focus in this regard. They need to raise their organizational health literacy (OHL) to help users to access and navigate information and services.
In Germany, public health departments (PHDs) are responsible for public and environmental health at the population level. This study breaks new ground as it is the first to investigate the OHL of these health care organizations. The study attempts to answer what barriers keep them from raising their OHL and how can these be overcome?
In this explorative study, 10 guideline-oriented interviews with experts from PHDs were conducted in two states in Germany. Qualitative content analysis was used to extract the results from the experts´ statements.
Eleven barriers to raising OHL were identified. Obstacles were found in leadership and organizational culture, design and implementation of information, and in human resources. False expectations due to negative preconceptions about public service were identified as a new barrier that had not been elucidated in prior literature. The same applies to lack of cooperation on cross-sectoral topics as well as lack of accessibility. Clear communication of tasks and clear jurisdictional authority are some of the recommendations for lowering these barriers. Other examples include identifying and using synergies and involvement of target groups.
Overcoming these obstacles could improve the OHL of German PHDs. This, in turn, could improve the health of the general population and thus contribute significantly to overall public health. Extrapolating to the whole of Germany and other countries could further strengthen research on OHL.
Plain Language Summary: Public health departments (PHDs) must be able to help their users access, understand, and use health information and services. This competence is called organizational health literacy (OHL). Ten experts from German PHDs were interviewed about barriers to raising OHL. This article reports the barriers identified and recommendations for lowering them, as well as three previously unknown obstacles.
The discourse on climate justice has developed from the theoretical approaches and discussions on environmental justice. A central tenet of the concept of environmental and climate justice is that ...environmental and climate issues cannot be seen in isolation from issues of social justice.
A conceptual model was developed on the relationship between climate change impacts, social dimensions, adaptive capacities, biological sensitivity, and health equity in order to systematically analyse climate justice. Based on an exploratory literature review and the evaluation of the individual contributions of the status report on climate change and health, the evidence in Germany on social inequalities in exposure to climate change impacts and vulnerability to their direct and indirect health effects was summarised.
This paper provides an overview of the international debate and examples of evidence on climate justice in Germany. Climate justice in the sense of avoidable, unjust social inequalities in exposure, vulnerability, and the effects of climate mitigation and adaptation measures on health inequalities is still insufficiently addressed in Germany.
A consistent integration of equity issues into climate policy is necessary. With reference to the international literature, options for action and research needs are identified.
Greenspaces can provide an important resource for human mental health. A growing body of literature investigates the interaction and the influence of diverse greenspace exposures. In order to gain a ...comprehensive understanding of the complex connection between greenspace and mental health, a variety of perspectives and methodological combinations are needed. The aim of this review is to assess the current methodologies researching greenspace and mental health.
A scoping review was conducted. Four electronic databases (Pubmed, Embase, PsycInfo, Web of Science) were searched for relevant studies. A wide range of greenspace and mental health keywords were included to provide a comprehensive representation of the body of research. Relevant information on publication characteristics, types of greenspaces, mental health outcomes, and measurements of greenspace exposure and mental health was extracted and assessed.
338 studies were included. The included studies encompassed a multitude of methods, as well as outcomes for both greenspace and mental health. 28 combinations were found between seven categories each for greenspace and mental health assessment. Some pairings such as geoinformation systems for greenspace assessment and questionnaires investigating mental health were used much more frequently than others, implying possible research gaps. Furthermore, we identified problems and inconsistences in reporting of greenspace types and mental health outcomes.
The identified methodological variety is a potential for researching the complex connections between greenspace and mental health. Commonly used combinations can provide important insights. However, future research needs to emphasize other perspectives in order to understand how to create living environments with mental health benefits. For this purpose, interdisciplinary research is necessary.