139 results match your criteria: "VIVE-The Danish Center for Social Science Research[Affiliation]"
J Health Serv Res Policy
December 2024
Professor, Department of Political Science and Public Management, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
Objectives: The purpose of this study is to investigate how organizational factors influence the ethical and economic problems of overtreatment of cancer patients.
Methods: The study applies a sequential mixed-method approach. First, our logistic regression model assesses how patient characteristics and hospital department variables influence the use of late cancer treatment (LCT), primarily chemotherapy, in stage IV non-small cell lung cancer cases using Danish registry data.
Objectives This is the protocol for a Campbell systematic review. The objectives are as follows: The first objective is to find and describe machine and statistical learning (ML) methods designed for moderator meta-analysis. The second objective is to find and describe applications of such ML methods in moderator meta-analyses of health, medical, and social science interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis is the protocol for a Campbell systematic review. The objectives are as follows: What are the effects of proactive resilience programmes offered to employees in high-risk occupations on resilience and psychological adaptation?
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Qual Stud Health Well-being
December 2024
FaCe, Family Focused Healthcare Research Center, Department of Clinical Research, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
Acta Anaesthesiol Scand
November 2024
VIVE - Health, VIVE-The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Purpose: The increasing use of advanced medical technologies to detect adverse events, for instance, artificial intelligence-assisted technologies, has shown promise in improving various aspects within health care but may also come with substantial expenses. Therefore, understanding the potential economic benefits can guide decision-making processes regarding implementation. We aimed to estimate the potential cost savings associated with reducing length of stay and avoiding readmissions within the framework of an artificial intelligence-assisted vital signs monitoring system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Abuse Negl
September 2024
VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Herluf Trolles Gade 11, DK-1052 Copenhagen K, Denmark. Electronic address:
Background: Previous research has shown that young people in the child protection system experience different levels of participation in decision-making on important issues. Nonetheless, researchers agree that children's participation in decision-making is likely to affect critical factors in their lives, such as educational and employment performance.
Objectives: This study aimed to examine (1) to what extent the level of participation in decision-making is related to this group of young people's subsequent education and employment, and (2) how the relation varies between different dimensions of the measure of participation.
Soc Sci Med
October 2024
VIVE - the Danish Center for Social Science Research, 1052, Copenhagen, Denmark.
This paper provides the first rigorous account of the diverse characteristics of transgender individuals at the population level, using data from Danish population registers. We observe three transgender subpopulations within the same national setting: all who changed thier legal sex (T-Legal, n = 1,995), all who have been assigned trans-related diagnostic codes (T-ICD, n = 1,594), and those who self-identified as transgender in a representative survey (T-Survey, n = 197, weighted n = 44,958). Results show significant differences in the subpopulations' backgrounds, family, education and labour market characteristics, and healthcare use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Public Health
December 2024
National Institute of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Persons with intellectual disabilities (ID) face pronounced health disparities. The aim of this study was to describe premature mortality by causes of death and avoidable mortality among persons with ID compared to the general Danish population. This study is based on a Danish nationwide cohort of adults (aged 18-74 years) with ID (n = 57 663) and an age- and sex-matched reference cohort (n = 607 097) which was established by linkage between several registers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Anthropol
August 2024
SUND, VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Copenhagen, Denmark.
The introduction of personalized medicine marks a shift in pregnancy-related screening, from fetal to maternal health risks putting the pregnant woman's future orientations center stage. Drawing on fieldwork from pregnancy outpatient clinics and 11 interviews with pregnant women diagnosed with gestational diabetes and offered genetic testing, we use their experiences of time to explore how futurity is reshaped by notions of early detection and at-riskness. We offer the concept of "future prism" to capture how multiple situations of orienting toward the future shape and circumscribe one's experience of the future - an orientation that makes genetic testing almost impossible to refuse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Child Adolesc Trauma
June 2024
VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Herluf Trolles gade 11, 1052 , Copenhagen, Denmark.
Purpose: Most children who enter out-of-home care (OHC) have been subjected to prolonged maltreatment. Maltreatment potentially contributes to a cumulative deficit in neurocognitive maturation and development that is likely to proceed with the child's placement into OHC and persist throughout adulthood. From the theoretical perspective of how maltreatment may affect the developing brain, this study examines the IQ and executive function of children placed in OHC on standardized, norm-referenced measures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcon Hum Biol
August 2024
VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Herluf Trolles Gade 11, Copenhagen K 1052, Denmark.
Background: Excess body weight has been recognised as an important factor in influencing labour market outcomes. Several hypotheses explain the causal effect of excess body weight on employment outcomes, including productivity, labour supply, and discrimination. In this review, we provide a systematic synthesis of the evidence on the causal impact of excess body weight on labour market outcomes worldwide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Public Health
April 2024
American University, School of Public Affairs, USA.
Background: The Copenhagen School Health Record Register (CSHRR) includes health information from school examinations and is now updated with information on measles, mumps and rubella vaccines for the cohorts born from 1977 to 1994.
Aim: The aim of this study is to provide a comprehensive description and validation the newly digitised vaccine information in the CSHRR.
Methods: We describe the data collection and the newly digitalised information in the CSHRR.
BMC Public Health
April 2024
Unit of Medical Psychology, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Øster Farimagsgade 5, Copenhagen, 1353, Denmark.
Background: Despite young children's widespread use of mobile devices, little research exists on this use and its association with children's language development. The aim of this study was to examine the associations between mobile device screen time and language comprehension and expressive language skills. An additional aim was to examine whether three factors related to the domestic learning environment modify the associations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcute Med
April 2024
MD, PhD, Department of Emergency Medicine, Hospital of South West Jutland, Esbjerg, Denmark Department of Regional Health Research, University of Southern Denmark, Esbjerg, Denmark Department of Emergency Medicine, Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark.
Background: This study explored changes in short-term mortality during a national reconfiguration of emergency care starting in 2007.
Methods: Unplanned hospital contacts at emergency departments across Denmark from 2007 to 2016. The reconfiguration was a natural experiment, resulting in individual timelines for each hospital.
This is the protocol for a Campbell systematic review. The objectives are as follows. The aim of the present review is to synthesize evidence on the effectiveness of interventions for at-risk families aimed at preventing the out-of-home placement of children or increasing the likelihood that children are reunited with their birth families following temporary care arrangements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGerodontology
December 2024
Department of Odontology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Background And Objectives: The aim of the study was to examine oral care utilisation among older Danes and to describe the extent to which oral care use is associated with the co-existence of challenges relating to general health and care dependency.
Materials And Methods: The study used registry data covering the entire population of older adults (≥65 years) in seven municipalities in Denmark (N = 178 787 individuals). Oral care services utilisation was computed from administrative data on oral care contacts up to and including 2019, including both private oral care and a municipal oral care programme (MOCP).
RMD Open
February 2024
The Parker Institute, Copenhagen University Hospital, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
This is the protocol for a Campbell systematic review. The objectives are as follows. The main objective of this review is to answer the following research question: What are the effects of the FRIENDS preventive programme on anxiety symptoms in children and adolescents? Further, the review will attempt to answer if the effects differ between participant age groups, participant socio-economic status, type of prevention (universal, selective or indicated), type of provider (lay or mental health provider), country of implementation (Australia or other countries) and implementation issues in relation to the booster sessions and parent sessions (implemented, partly implemented or not at all).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Unsafe and unhealthy working conditions lead to injuries and financial losses across the globe, resulting in a need for research into effective work environment interventions.
Objectives: The objective of this evidence and gap map (EGM) is to provide an overview of existing systematic reviews and primary studies examining the effects of occupational health and safety regulatory interventions.
Search Methods: Relevant studies are identified through searches in published and unpublished literature performed up to January 2023.
PLOS Glob Public Health
November 2023
VIVE-The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Copenhagen K., Denmark.
Since the 1970s, most western countries have experienced an increase in jobs characterized by temporary employment working arrangements. Research links temporary employment to negative health outcomes. Yet, no study has analysed the effects on the mental health of workers in involuntary temporary employment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSociol Health Illn
February 2024
NOVA, Centre for Welfare and Labour Research, OsloMet - Oslo Metropolitan University, Oslo, Norway.
Western welfare states are facing great challenges as they strive to optimise their health and social systems in response to the realities of an ageing population. Many countries put a stake on reablement services-short-term rehabilitative interventions aiming to help older people regain functional capacity. To ensure a person-centred approach and outcome measures, service providers are recommended to follow a protocol designed for the dual purpose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Prim Care
September 2023
Department of Public Health, The Section of General Practice and the Research Unit for General Practice, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Objective: To evaluate the feasibility and fidelity of implementing and assessing the SOFIA coordinated care program aimed at lowering mortality and increasing quality of life in patients with severe mental illness by improving somatic health care in general practice.
Design: A cluster-randomised, non-blinded controlled pilot trial.
Setting: General Practice in Denmark.
PLoS One
September 2023
VIVE Health, VIVE-The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Copenhagen, Denmark.
KIDSCREEN-10 is a generic instrument for measuring global health-related quality of life among 8-18-year-old children and adolescents. This study examines the criterion-related construct validity and psychometric properties of the Danish language version of the KIDSCREEN-10 using Rasch models. A further aim was to construct Danish norms based on the resulting person parameter estimates from the Rasch models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSociol Health Illn
March 2024
VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Copenhagen, Denmark.
The sociology of diagnosis has shown that diagnosis not only serves to label the underlying cause of disease but also to provide access to services and resources. Elaborating on this double-affordance of diagnosis, this article examines how precision medicine reconfigures diagnosis as a label and as a process in regulatory and clinical settings. Reporting from an ethnographic case study of the introduction of immunotherapy for lung cancer, the paper unfolds the uncertainties involved in dissecting diagnosis into layers and examines the efforts and negotiations it takes to enable these layers to work both as clinical entities and regulative entities with the purpose of delineating access to treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Ageing
June 2023
VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Recent studies report significant increases in retirement ages over the past two to three decades in most countries in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development-increases that research has attributed mainly to changes in the legislative frameworks for retirement in these countries. Using unique data from the Danish Longitudinal Study of Ageing, this study investigates whether and, if so to what extent, changes to the workforce in terms of gender, education, employment status (employed or self-employed) and health contribute to explaining differences in retirement ages between the cohorts born in 1935 and 1950. The retirement window of these cohorts stretches from the early 1990s to the late 2010s-a period characterized by substantial changes to workforce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF