Publications by authors named "Andreas Bergholz"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how voice-based technologies like smartphones and landlines were used to conduct ethnographic research during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany.
  • These technologies facilitated data collection and helped establish connections with participants by aligning with their daily communication habits.
  • The researchers argue that such technologies not only allowed them to engage with participants while respecting health guidelines but also highlighted the importance of sound in their interactions.
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The social sciences have long shown that health is not born of pure biology, empirically (re)centred the social and material causes of disease, and affirmed the subjective experiences of disease. Disputed both in popular and academic discourses, social health has variously attempted to stress the social aspects of health. Existing conceptions remain analytically limited as they are predominantly used as descriptors for populational health.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the high rates of ischemic heart disease in Brandenburg, focusing on how access to cardiology care facilities may contribute to health inequalities in the region.
  • Researchers mapped distances from communities to various cardiology care types and analyzed these distances in relation to local care needs, using socioeconomic indicators and elderly population data.
  • Findings indicate that while many residents can easily reach general practitioners, a significant portion lives far from specialized cardiology services, highlighting the need for improved, region-specific healthcare strategies.
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Introduction: Despite the growing numbers of physicians in outpatient care, continuing discussion about the planning of physician requirements suggests remaining problems in this field, which could be due to focussing on the ratio of physician to population rather than on morbidity-based evaluations. Against this background, this paper tries to depict the latent need in outpatient care, illustrates supply and demand and further tests the hypothesis that there is a relative inequality in distribution due to physicians preferring to locate in socially privileged areas in the German state of Brandenburg.

Methods: We aggregated all data available on a small scale with potential impact on demand and examined it via principal component analysis.

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The Covid-19 pandemic, officially declared in March 2020 by the WHO, poses major challenges to public, private, and occupational life. CoronaCare is an ethnographic research project that investigates the everyday life of people during the Covid-19 pandemic in Germany with a particular focus on social health. The aim of the project was to develop recommendations for pandemic preparedness planning focusing on expanding social health care.

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There is growing recognition of the importance of the residential environment for early detection of cancer. However, few studies have investigated area socioeconomic deprivation, social capital, and rurality in combination. Therefore, we aimed to estimate mutually adjusted associations of these characteristics with tumour size at diagnosis in Germany.

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Introduction: Evidence on the association of socioeconomic deprivation with occurrence of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is available from international studies and urban settings in western Germany. This study aimed to assess this association based on small geographical areas in a rural setting in eastern Germany.

Methods: This study used routine data of all patients with AMI who were treated in the Hospital Brandenburg in the city of Brandenburg, Germany, between May 2019 and May 2020.

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Introduction: German government regulations such as physical distancing and limited group numbers, designed to curb the spread of COVID-19, have had far-reaching consequences for the very foundations of social life. They have, to name only a few, transformed greetings and goodbyes, blurred private and public worlds, and complicated basic communication with mandatory mask wearing. The ethnographic study CoronaCare investigates how these sociopolitical measures affect social health, a form of health which unfolds through and across social relations.

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