61 results match your criteria: "The Netherlands Institute for Social Research[Affiliation]"
PLoS One
November 2024
Department of Sociology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
This study examines differences in benefit receipt using an intersectional approach. Intersectionality theory emphasizes the importance of the interplay of multiple social dimensions. Taking this as a starting point, the paper investigates how different combinations of three demographic variables plus education buffer or amplify benefit receipt and thereby create relatively advantaged and disadvantaged groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealthcare (Basel)
October 2024
Department of Health and Caring Sciences, Linnaeus University, SE-39182 Kalmar, Sweden.
Background/objectives: This cross-national study focuses on adolescents who provide care and support to family members or significant others. Current evidence regarding their mental health and solutions to strengthen it is limited and mostly available in a few countries. The aim of this study is to evaluate the results of a primary prevention intervention for improving the mental health and well-being of adolescent young carers (AYCs) aged 15-17 years in six European countries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSSM Popul Health
March 2024
Utrecht University, Department of Sociology/ICS, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Introduction: Diverging death risks are associated with a wide range of social factors, including not only education and income but also other economic and non-economic resources. The aim of this study was to assess the association of mortality risks with four types of resources: economic, social, cultural and person capital.
Methods: We used data of 2,952 participants from the Disparities in the Netherlands survey and annual mortality data from Statistics Netherlands for the period 2014 to 2021.
Healthcare (Basel)
January 2024
Faculty of Health and Education, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester M15 6BX, UK.
A child's disability, long-term illness, or mental ill-health is known to affect siblings' health, social life, school engagement, and quality of life. This article addresses a research gap by its focus on young sibling carers and the impact of providing care to a sibling. A cross-national survey study was conducted in 2018-2019 (Italy, the Netherlands, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, the UK) to examine the incidence of adolescent sibling carers, the extent of care they provide, and their self-reported health, well-being, and school situation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2024
Department of Interdisciplinary Social Science, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
The academic and public debate on social inequality has recently been fuelled by large disparities in income and wealth, profound changes in the labour market, and other emerging cleavages in post-industrial societies. This article contributes to the discussion by arguing that class divisions are theoretically based on four types of capital: people's economic means, their social capital, their cultural resources, and the combination of their health and attractiveness ('person capital'). From this premise, the social structure of the Netherlands is examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Health Econ
November 2024
Faculty of Social Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, 1081 HV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Faced with an unprecedented demand for long-term care, European health care systems are moving towards mixed care models, where the welfare state and informal caregivers share care responsibilities. While informal care is often viewed as a means of alleviating pressure on public care, it comes with significant economic costs for caregivers, their employers, and society at large. This study uses nationally representative data to estimate the total direct (informal care time and out-of-pocket costs) and indirect (productivity) economic costs of informal care in the Netherlands in 2019.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
November 2023
Department of Work and Organizational Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
This study examines the paradoxical effects of a perceived inclusive environment for ethnic minorities. We argue that while perceptions of an inclusive environment may be associated with more positive intergroup attitudes and affect among minority groups, they may instill a sense of threat among the majority group, resulting in negative intergroup sentiments and attitudes towards minorities. We analyzed data from two waves of a nationally representative survey conducted in the Netherlands ( = 11,897) comprising minority and majority groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealthcare (Basel)
November 2023
School of Education and Social Work, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QQ, UK.
Prior studies emphasize the value of friends' support for children/adolescents who have a disability or suffer from mental ill-health or a long-term illness. However, few studies have explored how a caring role affects those young friend carers themselves. This paper addresses a gap in the research by focusing on this hitherto neglected group of young carers to explore the impact of providing care to friends.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEduc Psychol Meas
August 2023
Tilburg University, The Netherlands.
When cognitive and educational tests are administered under time limits, tests may become speeded and this may affect the reliability and validity of the resulting test scores. Prior research has shown that time limits may create or enlarge gender gaps in cognitive and academic testing. On average, women complete fewer items than men when a test is administered with a strict time limit, whereas gender gaps are frequently reduced when time limits are relaxed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQual Life Res
November 2023
Health Economics Division, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Purpose: Identify aspects of quality of life (QoL) important to Australian informal carers and explore how well the Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit for Carers, Care-related Quality of Life instrument and Carer Experience Scale capture these aspects in the Australian context.
Methods: Online questionnaires were completed by Australian informal carers. Socio-demographics, open-ended questions: positive/negative aspects of caring and QoL aspects missing from the instruments, and ranking of the instrument domains was used to explore the content of the instruments.
J Ethn Migr Stud
September 2022
The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, The Hague, the Netherlands.
With increasing ethnic diversity in Western European cities, more and more inhabitants without a migration background find themselves a local minority in majority-minority neighbourhoods, where less than half of the inhabitants have no migration background. We investigate whether this affects how they define national identity. We compare Dutch inhabitants without a migration background in majority-minority neighbourhoods in Amsterdam and Rotterdam to a representative sample of the overall Dutch population without a migration background and investigate how people describe what they see as truly Dutch.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
March 2023
Department of Health and Caring Sciences, Linnaeus University, 39182 Kalmar, Sweden.
Young carers provide a substantial amount of care to family members and support to friends, yet their situation has not been actively addressed in research and policy in many European countries or indeed globally. Awareness of their situation by professionals and among children and young carers themselves remains low overall. Thus, young carers remain a largely hidden group within society.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
February 2023
Careum School of Health, Kalaidos University of Applied Sciences, Gloriastrasse 18a, 8006 Zurich, Switzerland.
Pharmacoeconomics
September 2023
Erasmus School of Health Policy and Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Burgemeester Oudlaan 50, PO Box 1738, 3000 DR, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Background: Productivity costs can form a large and influential component of total costs in an economic evaluation taking a societal perspective. In calculating productivity costs, estimating productivity losses is a central element. Compensation mechanisms and multiplier effects may influence these losses but remain understudied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSSM Popul Health
March 2023
University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Department of Health Sciences, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Background: The persistence of health inequalities may be driven by differences in education and income, but also by other economic and non-economic factors. Our aim was to explore how the association between single-dimensional health and socioeconomic status (SES) changes when including health-related person capital, economic capital, social capital, cultural capital and attractiveness and personality capital.
Methods: We used a capital-based approach to understand health inequalities.
F1000Res
September 2022
Department of Epidemiology and Data Science, Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Traditionally, research integrity studies have focused on research misbehaviors and their explanations. Over time, attention has shifted towards preventing questionable research practices and promoting responsible ones. However, data on the prevalence of responsible research practices, especially open methods, open codes and open data and their underlying associative factors, remains scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
August 2022
School of Education and Social Work, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RG, UK.
Young carers are children and adolescents who provide care to other family members or friends, taking over responsibilities that are usually associated with adulthood. There is emerging but still scarce knowledge worldwide about the phenomenon of young carers and the impact of a caring role on their health, social and personal development spheres. This paper provides an overview of the main results from the ME-WE project, which is the first European research and innovation project dedicated to adolescent young carers (AYCs) (15-17 years).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Ageing
December 2022
The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, The Hague, The Netherlands.
Informal care, meaning taking health-related care of people in their own social network, is a topic that gets more and more attention in social science research because the pressure on people to provide informal care is rising due to ageing societies and policy changes. The developed by Broese van Groenou and de Boer (Eur J Ageing 13(3):271-279, 2016) provides a theoretical foundation to understand under what conditions a person provides informal care. We test this theoretical model by applying it to intrapersonal changes in informal care provision during the first COVID-19 lockdown in the Netherlands in Spring 2020.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
June 2022
Programme Participation, Talent Development, and Equality of Opportunity, SCP, The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, Bezuidenhoutseweg 30, 2594 AV The Hague, The Netherlands.
This study investigates whether there are differences in quality of life-i.e., psychosomatic complaints and life satisfaction-between schoolchildren with and without a chronically ill or disabled parent at home.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Health Econ Manag
March 2023
The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, The Hague, The Netherlands.
Exploiting a rich data set on the Dutch market for home help services, we find that larger providers obtain a higher price than do small providers. However, compared to other studies on market power in care markets this price difference is considered small to moderate. Our identification strategy relies on the exogenous variation in market shares in January'07, the very first month after home help was decentralized to municipalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2022
Department of Epidemiology and Data Science, Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Prevalence of research misconduct, questionable research practices (QRPs) and their associations with a range of explanatory factors has not been studied sufficiently among academic researchers. The National Survey on Research Integrity targeted all disciplinary fields and academic ranks in the Netherlands. It included questions about engagement in fabrication, falsification and 11 QRPs over the previous three years, and 12 explanatory factor scales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Pediatr
February 2022
Department of Interdisciplinary Social Science, Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Many adolescents worldwide (indirectly) grow up with a chronic disease, which may impact their functioning and wellbeing. The objective of this study is to assess whether adolescents with a (family member with a) chronic disease differ from their healthy counterparts in terms of psychosocial functioning. Data from the Dutch 2013 HBSC-survey were used, including 7168 adolescents (Mean = 13.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Int Migr Integr
March 2021
The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, Bezuidenhoutseweg 30, 2594 AV, Den Haag, the Netherlands.
Unlabelled: In many European countries, refugees spend their first period after arrival in the receiving country in reception centers. Though this reception period has been heavily criticized, especially in relation to mental health, few scholars examined its impact on refugee integration. Since host country language learning is the main focus for most recent arrivals, this study re-examines the impact of the (renewed) reception period on both refugee mental health and host country language proficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Soc Care Community
November 2021
The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, The Hague, The Netherlands.
This study investigates determinants for offering help to family members, neighbours and friends, based on the Informal Care Model. We do so in pooled representative data for the Netherlands collected in 2014 and 2016 (persons >17 years, n = 13,165). One-third provides informal care to a person with health problems or impairments: partners (4%, n = 671), parents or children (16%, n = 2,381), distant relatives (6%, n = 858), friends or neighbours (6%, n = 839).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Patient Rep Outcomes
November 2020
Nivel - Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research, P.O. Box 1568, 3500 BN, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Objectives: Personal budgets for social and health care have been introduced in many European countries over recent decades. The assumption is that people with a personal budget are able to purchase care that matches their needs more closely and therefore experience greater independence and improved well-being. The question is whether this assumption is true.
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