123 results match your criteria: "Institute of Policy Studies.[Affiliation]"

Policy choice and riverine water quality in developing countries: An integrated hydro-economic modelling approach.

J Environ Manage

December 2018

Discipline of Agricultural and Resource Economics, UWA School of Agriculture and Environment, University of Western Australia, Australia.

Industrialization and urbanization, as a result of rapid economic development, have led to the deterioration of water quality in many rivers in developing countries. The Kelani River in Sri Lanka provides drinking water to Colombo and a range of market and non-market ecosystem services; but these services are threatened by deteriorating water quality. We apply a hydro-economic model that accounts for spatial patterns of water quality and abatement cost variability between firms in the catchment.

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Background: The progress to achieve the fourth Millennium Development Goal in reducing mortality rate in children younger than 5 years since 1990 has been remarkable. However, work remains to be done in the Sustainable Development Goal era. Estimates of under-5 mortality rates at the national level can hide disparities within countries.

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Background: Despite decades of evidence gathering and calls for action, few countries have systematically attenuated health inequities (HI) through action on the social determinants of health (SDH). This is at least partly because doing so presents a significant political and policy challenge. This paper explores this challenge through a review of the empirical literature, asking: what factors have enabled and constrained the inclusion of the social determinants of health inequities (SDHI) in government policy agendas?

Methods: A narrative review method was adopted involving three steps: first, drawing upon political science theories on agenda-setting, an integrated theoretical framework was developed to guide the review; second, a systematic search of scholarly databases for relevant literature; and third, qualitative analysis of the data and thematic synthesis of the results.

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Industrial pollution and the management of river water quality: a model of Kelani River, Sri Lanka.

Environ Monit Assess

August 2017

Agricultural and Resource Economics Discipline, UWA School of Agriculture and Environment, University of Western Australia, Perth, WA 6009, Western Australia, Australia.

Water quality of the Kelani River has become a critical issue in Sri Lanka due to the high cost of maintaining drinking water standards and the market and non-market costs of deteriorating river ecosystem services. By integrating a catchment model with a river model of water quality, we developed a method to estimate the effect of pollution sources on ambient water quality. Using integrated model simulations, we estimate (1) the relative contribution from point (industrial and domestic) and non-point sources (river catchment) to river water quality and (2) pollutant transfer coefficients for zones along the lower section of the river.

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The Experience of Counseling Among a Singaporean Elderly Population: A Qualitative Account of What Clients Report as Beneficial.

J Cross Cult Gerontol

September 2016

Institute of Policy Studies, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, 1C Cluny Road, House 5, Singapore, 259599, Singapore.

Adjustments that accompany ageing pose a challenge to the mental health of the elderly. Psychologically based counseling has been documented in Western societies as an appropriate intervention for elderly persons with depressive episodes. There is however very little research documenting how Asian elderly populations experience and benefit from counseling.

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Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Survey (WHS) involving 6,902 university students in 37 countries evaluating 40 figures from world history. Multidimensional scaling and factor analysis techniques found only limited forms of universality in evaluations across Western, Catholic/Orthodox, Muslim, and Asian country clusters. The highest consensus across cultures involved scientific innovators, with Einstein having the most positive evaluation overall.

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Aim: On observing present Japanese society, we can find deep gaps between the present system and its probable future. One of the gaps may be due to the misconception that future societal make up is not definite. The aim of the current study was to investigate a future societal structure and to develop methods of adding a timed dimension policy to the societal structure.

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Severe staff and skill shortages within the health systems of developed countries have contributed to increased migration by health professionals. New Zealand stands out among countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in terms of the high level of movements in and out of the country of skilled professionals, including nurses. In New Zealand, much attention has been given to increasing the number of Māori and Pacific nurses as one mechanism for improving Māori and Pacific health.

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Objective: Using New Zealand as a case study, to determine whether ethnicity is appropriate for communicating sun exposure health promotion messages.

Design: This study reviews recent literature on minimising skin cancer risk and achieving sufficient serum vitamin D levels. It draws on a variety of scientific literature, reports and media statements to determine appropriate sun exposure messages for minimising skin cancer risk and achieving sufficient vitamin D status among the New Zealand population, which is diverse with regards to both ethnicity and skin colour.

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Introduction: Internationally there is a growing demand for health services. Skilled health workers, including doctors, have a high degree of international mobility and New Zealand (NZ) stands out internationally in terms of the significant flows of doctors in and out of the country. Through changes in training of doctors in NZ and migration flows, there have been major shifts in the composition of the medical workforce in NZ since the mid-1980s.

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Objective: To estimate the direct financial costs to the Sri Lanka Ministry of Health of treating patients after self-poisoning, particularly from pesticides, in a single district.

Methods: Data on staff, drug, laboratory and other inputs for each patient admitted for self-poisoning were prospectively collected over a one-month period from one general hospital (2005) and five peripheral hospitals (2006) in the Anuradhapura district. Data on transfers to secondary- and tertiary-level facilities were obtained for a 6-month period from 30 peripheral hospitals.

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Objective: This study examines the development of new tools for analysing links between ethnicity and health outcomes. In a New Zealand context, it focuses on (1) how ethnicity is increasingly articulated as a social construct, (2) how individuals belonging to more than one ethnic group have been recorded and reported in research, and (3) health research and policy implications of the growing proportion of New Zealanders who claim multi-ethnic affiliations.

Design: New Zealand provides a microcosm in which to consider ethnicity, indigeneity, migration and intermarriage, and their interacting effects on society, culture, identity and health outcomes.

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Mitigation of three types of stress on cognitive performance.

Aviat Space Environ Med

May 2007

Potomac Institute of Policy Studies, Arlington, VA, USA.

The development of reliable and valid generalizations about realworld behavior, based on laboratory and simulation experiments, continues to be a major challenge in the applied behavioral sciences, particularly cognitive psychology. This challenge, and the tradeoff between reliability and generalizability, is discussed in light of the principal goal of applied science, which is successful generalization, in contrast to basic science, which is the generation of successful theory. Cognitive psychology has been successful in providing useful guidance for the design of performance enhancing techniques to mitigate the effects of stress that can be found in military operations and other applied settings.

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Introduction: Aging in Asia--perennial concerns on support and caring for the old.

J Cross Cult Gerontol

December 2005

Institute of Policy Studies, 29, Heng Mui Keng Terrace #06-06, Singapore 119620, Singapore.

This introductory article provides background to an understanding of "Aging in Asia," focusing on the demographics of population aging in Asia. It discusses the differences in the magnitude of the aged population in different parts of Asia and highlights the perennial concerns of care and support facing the aged and their families as Asian societies grapple with the graying population. Globalization is one important factor presenting new challenges as well as opportunities to aging Asia.

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Data from the Moving to Opportunity Program, a randomized mobility experiment in which a subset of low-income minority families living in public housing in high-poverty neighborhoods were given vouchers to move to low-poverty neighborhoods, were used to evaluate 1 policy approach for improving children's educational outcomes. Four hundred twenty-five New York City children were seen 2 1/2 and 5 years following relocation (mean age=14.64 years, SD=3.

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Reform and counter reform: how sustainable is New Zealand's latest health system restructuring?

J Health Serv Res Policy

July 2002

Health Services Research Centre, Institute of Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.

New Zealand's health care sector has undergone almost continual restructuring since the early 1980s. In the latest set of reforms, 21 district health boards (DHBs) have been established with responsibility for promoting health, purchasing services for their populations and delivering publicly owned health services. Boards will be governed by a mix of elected and appointed members, will be responsible for arranging the delivery of primary and community health services, and will own and run public hospitals and related facilities.

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The role of outputs and outcomes in purchaser accountability: reflecting on New Zealand experiences.

Health Policy

October 1998

Health Services Research Centre, Institute of Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.

Recent reforms in a number of countries' health systems have led to the separation of funder, purchaser and provider roles and the strengthening of funders' and purchasers' positions relative to providers. One of the aims of such reforms is to improve accountability. This paper reports on experiences in New Zealand where, in addition to improving the accountability of providers, purchaser accountability has also been a key policy issue.

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Features of disability support service provision in New Zealand are examined. Factors influencing the restructuring of the disability support services are identified in the context of international comparisons. Reference is made to the debate on the health/welfare interface, policy trends that have favoured a shift from institutional to community care and the need to contain escalating public health service expenditure.

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Core services and priority-setting: the New Zealand experience.

Health Policy

November 1994

Institute of Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.

Like people in other countries, New Zealanders have been struggling with the issue of how to decide which health services should be delivered and to whom. The government has established a Core Services Committee to advise on core services, that is, those health care and disability support services to be made available on affordable terms and without unreasonable waiting time. Such a core has a similar role to a standard package of benefits within a managed competition framework.

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A reflection on the New Zealand health care reforms.

Health Policy

November 1994

Institute of Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.

What route should be taken in reforming health services? Is there a single best route? These issues are addressed in this final paper in this series on the New Zealand health care reforms. It is suggested that there are probably more ways of getting things right and that these ways are potentially relevant in many countries. The paper also looks at the specific messages that emerge from the New Zealand reforms not only for New Zealand but also for policy-makers in other countries either in the process of reform or contemplating reform.

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New Zealand health care: a background.

Health Policy

November 1994

Institute of Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.

New Zealand, its people and health care services are described, followed by a discussion of (i) the role of government and non-government agencies in the funding, provision and purchasing of health care and (ii) persistent problems in the health care system. The authors argue that recent New Zealand health care reforms represent a significant deviation from past policies. However, to have any prospect of being judged as successful, the reforms must address difficulties in the funding, purchasing and provision of health care that are not new but have been features of New Zealand health care over many years.

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In certain countries of east and south-east Asia, traditional Chinese medicine continues to be used by many people. However, the pattern of use favours the advance of the drug-retailing side of this sector rather than medical care, and there is consequently some concern about the professional status of practitioners in the long term.

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