Sozialwesen (SW)
Refine
Year
Publication Type
- Article (133)
- Lecture (54)
- Part of a Book (28)
- Book (9)
- Conference Proceeding (1)
Language
- English (225) (remove)
Keywords
- Humans (15)
- Child (13)
- Female (12)
- Male (12)
- Adolescent (10)
- Adult (10)
- Middle Aged (8)
- Surveys and Questionnaires (7)
- Cross-Sectional Studies (6)
- Neoplasms/psychology (6)
- Parents/psychology (6)
- Social Support (5)
- Germany (4)
- Parent-Child Relations (4)
- Young Adult (4)
- Adaptation (3)
- Aged (3)
- Child of Impaired Parents/psychology (3)
- Preschool (3)
- Psychological (3)
- Quality of Life (3)
- Survivors/psychology (3)
- Adult Children/psychology (2)
- Child Health Services (2)
- Europe (2)
- Gender Identity (2)
- Health Services Needs and Demand (2)
- Neoplasms/epidemiology/psychology (2)
- Parenting/psychology (2)
- Psychology (2)
- Registries (2)
- Reproducibility of Results (2)
- ADHD (1)
- Affective Symptoms/psychology (1)
- Age Factors (1)
- Analysis of Variance (1)
- Anxiety Disorders/psychology (1)
- Anxiety/epidemiology/etiology/pathology/psychology (1)
- Anxiety/epidemiology/psychology (1)
- Attitudes towards inclusion (1)
- Autismus, Roboter, Mensch-Technik-Interaktion, autismusspezifische Verhaltenstherapie (1)
- Body Image/psychology (1)
- Bulgaria; code of the street; Roma; urban criminology, youth violence (1)
- Cancer Survivors/psychology (1)
- Child Behavior Disorders/etiology (1)
- Climate Change (1)
- Comprehension (1)
- Counseling (1)
- Cross-Cultural Comparison (1)
- Depression/epidemiology/etiology/pathology/psychology (1)
- Depressive Disorder/psychology (1)
- Electronic Health Records (1)
- Family Relations (1)
- Family Relations/psychology (1)
- Family/psychology (1)
- Follow-Up Studies (1)
- Gender Dysphoria/psychology/therapy (1)
- Germany/epidemiology (1)
- Health Status (1)
- Homosexuality (1)
- Hormones (1)
- Infant (1)
- Job coaching (1)
- Language (1)
- Mental Disorders/epidemiology/etiology (1)
- Mental Disorders/etiology (1)
- Mental Disorders/psychology (1)
- Mental Health Services (1)
- Multilingualism (1)
- Needs Assessment (1)
- Neoplasms (1)
- Neoplasms/complications/epidemiology/pathology/psychology (1)
- Newborn (1)
- Palliative Care (1)
- Parenting (1)
- Parents (1)
- Patient Reported Outcome Measures (1)
- Patient Satisfaction (1)
- Persons with disabilities (1)
- Pilot Projects (1)
- Prevalence (1)
- Preventive Health Services/organization {\&} administration (1)
- Prognosis (1)
- Program Development (1)
- Psychiatric Status Rating Scales (1)
- Psychological/classification/physiology (1)
- Psychometrics (1)
- Psychometrics/statistics {\&} numerical data (1)
- Psychosexual Development (1)
- Qualitative Research (1)
- Refugees/psychology (1)
- Risk Factors (1)
- Self Report (1)
- Sexual Maturation (1)
- Social Adjustment (1)
- Social Management (1)
- Social Work (1)
- Socioeconomic Factors (1)
- Statistics as Topic (1)
- Stress (1)
- Transgender Persons/psychology (1)
- Transsexualism (1)
- Transsexualism/psychology/therapy (1)
- after-school programme (1)
- ambiguity (1)
- autism spectrum disorder (1)
- children with special needs (1)
- classroom management strategies (1)
- day care facilities (1)
- doing relationship (1)
- doing social work (1)
- ethnographic research (1)
- homework (1)
- human robot interaction (1)
- human-machine communication (1)
- inclusive education (1)
- parents (1)
- primary school (1)
- robotic learning assistant (1)
- social robot (1)
- social work theories (1)
Male juveniles in segregated poor neighbourhoods are at increased risk of violence. The code of the street approach is commonly used to understand the context informing street violence in such marginalized spaces, but the concept is mainly used in Western countries, especially in African American communities in the US. This study investigates whether the code of the street is also applicable to the largest Roma neighbourhood in Europe, located in Bulgaria, through guided interviews with male juveniles. The results show that some elements of the code work are applicable in this space, but clear differences also emerge. These findings affect the generalizability of the approach and the understanding of street violence.
OBJECTIVE To compare the emotional and behavioral problems of children of patients suffering from cancer or a mental disorder and their association with parental quality of life. METHODS A total of 223 children from 136 families and their 160 parents were investigated from multiple perspectives in a cross-sectional study. The consistency of different adjustment reports between family members was examined. Through mixed models, the differences between parental HRQoL and the children's symptomatology were studied with regard to the type of parental illness. The prediction of children's adjustment through parental HRQoL was further examined. Additionally, gender and age of the children were considered. RESULTS Half of the children exhibited psychosocial problems. Gender and age differences were independent of the type of parental disease. In families with parental cancer, the reports of children's adjustment were more consistent between family members than in families where a parental mental disorder was present. We found differences in HRQoL between families with mentally ill parents and those with parental cancer patients. Specifically, the healthy partners of mentally ill parents showed worse HRQoL compared with healthy partners of cancer patients. Healthy parents' reduced HRQoL was associated with worse adjustment in their children, regardless of the type of parental illness, but this result was not found for ill parents. CONCLUSION Family members confronted with parental cancer or mental disorders are more burdened compared with those from the normal population, independently of the type of disease. Our results indicate that the type of a parental disease has no direct effect on children's adjustment. However, there are disease-specific effects on parental HRQoL, which are associated with children's adjustment.