51 results match your criteria: "UPF-Barcelona School of Management[Affiliation]"

Precarious employment (PE) is a major determinant of population health and contributor to health and social inequities. The purpose of this article is to synthesize and critically appraise available evidence on labor market initiatives addressing PE identified through a systematic review. Of the 21 initiatives reviewed, grouped into four categories-labor market policies, legislation, and reforms; union strategies; apprenticeships and other youth programs; social protection programs-10 showed consistently positive outcomes and 11 a combination of negative, mixed, or inconclusive outcomes.

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Article Synopsis
  • The paper investigates the obesity transition related to socioeconomic status (SES), gender, and age in cities of Colombia and Mexico using data from the SALURBAL study.
  • A system dynamics model simulates BMI categories from national health surveys collected between 2010-2016, projecting trends in obesity from 2010 to 2050.
  • Results indicate that while lower SES adults in both countries face increasing obesity rates, the patterns differ by gender, especially with Mexican women showing a faster rise in obesity rates among higher SES groups.
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Social Determinants of Breast Cancer Screening: A Multilevel Analysis of Proximal and Distal Factors Related to the Practice of Mammography.

Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev

December 2024

Centro de Investigaciones en Nutrición Humana (CenINH), Escuela de Nutrición, Facultad de Ciencias Médicas, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba (UNC), Córdoba, Argentina.

Background: Mammography is crucial for early breast cancer detection. In Latin America, Argentina faces a significant breast cancer burden, with varying mammography rates. The social factors influencing mammography practices remain unclear.

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Objectives: To (i) ascertain stakeholders' perceptions of the contextual factors and resources necessary to successfully implement the AMORE platform, a tool that provides accessibility assessments for health care services, considering factors such travel time and traffic conditions, and (ii) identify potential barriers to and facilitators for enhancing spatial accessibility to health care services within the Colombian urban context.

Methods: In this qualitative study, semi-structured interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of seven key stakeholders. The sample was drawn from individuals involved in development of policies in Colombia, service providers, and users, among others, who had expertise in the field.

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The adoption of circular economy (CE) strategies by companies-such as reduction, substitution, reuse, and others-is more necessary than ever to face recent challenges that have caused a rise in the price of raw materials, among other effects. However, incorporating CE strategies into the production process is not trivial because it can imply significant organizational transformation. To understand this transformation, this work analyses how the adoption of CE strategies impacts company performance and, consequently, the subsequent transformation of the company in adapting to this strategy.

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Panel stacking is a threat to consensus statement validity.

J Clin Epidemiol

September 2024

Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA; Department of Biomedical Data Science, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA; Department of Medicine (Stanford Prevention Research Center), Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA; Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA; Department of Statistics, Stanford University School of Humanities and Sciences, Stanford, CA, USA. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Consensus statements are important in medicine and public health, but not all use solid evidence to support their claims.
  • Some statements rely on expert panels, which can be biased if many members share the same opinions or interests, especially without a thorough review of evidence.
  • A recent case about COVID-19 showed that many panel members had strong connections to groups pushing for strict COVID measures without revealing these biases, highlighting the need for clear conflicts of interest to ensure trustworthiness.
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What is the impact of job precariousness on depression? Risk assessment and attributable fraction in Spain.

Public Health

June 2024

Research Group on Health Inequalities, Environment - Employment Conditions Network (GREDS-EMCONET), JHU-UPF Public Policy Center, Departament de Ciències Polítiques i Socials, Universitat Pompeu Fabra (UPF), 08005 Barcelona, Spain; UPF Barcelona School of Management (UPF-BSM), 08008 Barcelona, Spain; Ecological Humanities Research Group (GHECO), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid, Spain.

Objectives: The prevalence of depression related to precarious employment (PE) has become a significant public health concern, given the declining trend of the standard employment relationship. Research has focused on the mental health detrimental effects of employment conditions, whereas there is scarce evidence concerning the burden of depression that could be prevented by targeting precariousness. This paper estimates the impact of PE on the risk of depression and the attributable fraction within the active and working salaried population in Spain.

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Whilst radio, podcasts, and music streaming are considered unique audio formats that offer brands different opportunities, limited research has explored this notion. This current study analyses how the brain responds to these formats and suggests that they offer different branding opportunities. Participants' engagement, attitude, attention, memory, and physiological arousal were measured while each audio format was consumed.

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Assessing the environmental impacts of three different types of accommodations in Portugal and Spain by using an LCA approach.

Sci Total Environ

June 2024

Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Cantabria, Av. de Los Castros s/n, 39005 Santander, Spain. Electronic address:

The tourism industry, affected by COVID-19, must reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This study evaluated the environmental impact of three hotels in coastal and mountainous regions of Spain and Portugal using Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). Data was gathered via surveys in the Greentour tool.

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Understanding Health Inequalities Research Capacities: Insights and Recommendations From Comparing Two High Income Settings.

Int J Soc Determinants Health Health Serv

April 2024

Research Group on Health Inequalities, Environment, and Employment Conditions (GREDS-EMCONET), Department of Political and Social Sciences, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain.

Generating evidence on health inequalities (HI) is necessary to raise awareness of these issues, describe and monitor their evolution, analyze their causes, and inform interventions aiming to improve health equity. Yet not all cities and countries have the capacity to produce this type of research. Recent research provides new contextual and causal insights into this research production process, and in-depth understanding on why and how this type of research is produced in certain settings.

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Background: Multiple sclerosis patients would benefit from machine learning algorithms that integrates clinical, imaging and multimodal biomarkers to define the risk of disease activity.

Methods: We have analysed a prospective multi-centric cohort of 322 MS patients and 98 healthy controls from four MS centres, collecting disability scales at baseline and 2 years later. Imaging data included brain MRI and optical coherence tomography, and omics included genotyping, cytomics and phosphoproteomic data from peripheral blood mononuclear cells.

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One of the most critical factors in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is communication between patients and caregivers. A relevant part of the way of speaking is what is known as prosody, or the variations a speaker makes when talking. To our knowledge, no research has analyzed the relevance of communication for caregivers when speaking with AD patients or what they consider the most effective strategies to communicate with them.

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The tourism sector after COVID-19 has raised different concerns that have lead to a development towards a more sustainable model of tourism. After the health crisis, the increase in environmental awareness of tourists has become evident. In this context, the great paradigm of 'small-scale' tourism has been developed as opposed to traditional tourism.

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Uncovering the semantics of concepts using GPT-4.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

December 2023

Department of Economics and Business, Universitat Pompeu Fabra (UPF), Barcelona School of Economics (BSE), UPF-Barcelona School of Management, Barcelona 08005, Spain.

The ability of recent Large Language Models (LLMs) such as GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 to generate human-like texts suggests that social scientists could use these LLMs to construct measures of semantic similarity that match human judgment. In this article, we provide an empirical test of this intuition.

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Unpacking the modeling process for energy policy making.

Risk Anal

June 2024

Centre for the Study of the Sciences and the Humanities, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.

This article explores how the modeling of energy systems may lead to an undue closure of alternatives by generating an excess of certainty around some of the possible policy options. We retrospectively exemplify the problem with the case of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) global modeling in the 1980s. We discuss different methodologies for quality assessment that may help mitigate this issue, which include Numeral Unit Spread Assessment Pedigree (NUSAP), diagnostic diagrams, and sensitivity auditing (SAUD).

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Social media feedback and extreme opinion expression.

PLoS One

November 2023

Department of Economics and Business, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain.

On popular social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, or Tiktok, the quantitative feedback received by content producers is asymmetric: counts of positive reactions such as 'likes,' or 'retweets,' are easily observed but similar counts of negative reactions are not directly available. We study how this design feature of social media platforms affects the expression of extreme opinions. Using simulations of a learning model, we compare two feedback environments that differ in terms of the availability of negative reaction counts.

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Tourism has grown steadily in recent decades, becoming a strategic sector for the economy in many countries. However, the environmental impacts associated with tourism have also experienced an upward trend. In this sense, innovation is needed in the tourism sector, to move towards new models and strategies that integrate environmental sustainability with the social aspects of the sector.

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Background: Social media sites are becoming an increasingly important source of information about mental health disorders. Among them, eating disorders are complex psychological problems that involve unhealthy eating habits. In particular, there is evidence showing that signs and symptoms of anorexia nervosa can be traced in social media platforms.

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What did COVID-19 really teach us about science, evidence and society?

J Eval Clin Pract

December 2023

Departments of Medicine, of Epidemiology and Population Health, of Biomedical Data Science, and of Statistics, and Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford (METRICS), Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates whether competition influences moral behavior, a topic that has produced mixed results in previous research due to varying experimental designs.
  • Researchers collected data from over 18,000 participants across 45 different experimental setups, finding that competition has a small negative impact on moral behavior.
  • The results highlight significant differences in effect sizes across studies, suggesting that relying on just one experimental design may not provide a clear understanding of the relationship between competition and morality.
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What can mathematical modelling contribute to a sociology of quantification?

Humanit Soc Sci Commun

May 2023

School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.

Sociology of quantification has spent relatively less energies investigating mathematical modelling than it has on other forms of quantification such as statistics, metrics, or algorithms based on artificial intelligence. Here we investigate whether concepts and approaches from mathematical modelling can provide sociology of quantification with nuanced tools to ensure the methodological soundness, normative adequacy and fairness of numbers. We suggest that methodological adequacy can be upheld by techniques in the field of sensitivity analysis, while normative adequacy and fairness are targeted by the different dimensions of sensitivity auditing.

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Why and how has the United Kingdom become a high producer of health inequalities research over the past 50 years? A realist explanatory case study.

Health Res Policy Syst

March 2023

Department of Political and Social Sciences, Research Group on Health Inequalities, Environment, Employment Conditions Knowledge Network (GREDS-EMCONET), Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Mercè Rodoreda 24 Building, Campus Ciutadella UPF, Ramon Trias Fargas, 25-27, 08003, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.

Background: Evidence on health inequalities has been growing over the past few decades, yet the capacity to produce research on health inequalities varies between countries worldwide and needs to be strengthened. More in-depth understanding of the sociohistorical, political and institutional processes that enable this type of research and related research capacity to be generated in different contexts is needed. A recent bibliometric analysis of the health inequalities research field found inequalities in the global production of this type of research.

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Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are responsible for 90% of all business and 50% of employment globally, mostly female jobs. Therefore, measuring SMEs' performance under the digital transformation (DT) through methods that encompass sustainability represents an essential tool for reducing poverty and gender inequality (United Nations Sustainable Development Goals). We aimed to describe and analyze the state-of-art performance evaluations of digital transformation in SMEs, mainly focusing on performance measurement.

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Performance effects of green production capability and technology in manufacturing firms.

J Environ Manage

March 2023

AMADE, Polytechnic School, Universitat de Girona, Girona, Spain; Faculty of Engineering, Instituto Tecnológico Metropolitano, Medellín, Colombia. Electronic address:

The proclamation of the sustainable development goals is driving companies to implement protective measures that favour the environment, thereby occupying a strategic place in the creation of green product innovation (GPI). This new management paradigm could be impacting capabilities, techniques, technologies, efficient energy use and green-oriented production policies and systems. Therefore, one of the challenges is to configure green production capabilities (GPC) coordinated with the technology dimension (TECH) because the design of ecological products and their manufacture requires the backup of capabilities and the possible support of green technology.

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The present work looks at what we call "the multiverse of quantification", where visible and invisible numbers permeate all aspects and venues of life. We review the contributions of different authors who focus on the roles of quantification in society, with the aim of capturing different and sometimes separate voices. Several scholars, including economists, jurists, philosophers, sociologists, communication and data scientists, express concerns or identify critical areas of our relationship with new technologies of 'numericization'.

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