Advanced search in Research products
Research products
arrow_drop_down
Searching FieldsTerms
Any field
arrow_drop_down
includes
arrow_drop_down
Include:
The following results are related to COVID-19. Are you interested to view more results? Visit OpenAIRE - Explore.
4,012 Research products, page 1 of 402

  • COVID-19
  • Publications
  • 2017-2021
  • Book
  • COVID-19

10
arrow_drop_down
Relevance
arrow_drop_down
  • Publication . Other literature type . Thesis . Book . 2021
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Brackstone, Ken; Boateng, Laud Ampomah; Atengble, Kirchuffs; Head, Michael; Akinocho, Herve; Osei, Kingsley; Nuamah, Kwabena;
    Publisher: figshare
    Country: United Kingdom

    Report 3, published 19 July 2021. Fully open-access.We conducted a nationally representative online survey in Ghana (N = 1295) throughout June 2021.In our analyses, we operationalised vaccine hesitancy as respondents who answered ‘no’ and ‘I don’t know’ to the question: “When a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available to you, would you like to get vaccinated?” Some top-level findings to share - willingness to vaccinate dropped from 82% in March, to 71% in June 2021 - Therefore, to phrase another way, there was an observed and significant increase in hesitancy, from 18% to 29% across this time period. - 32% of respondents reported that they had recently seen or heard stories about the indecision surrounding the Oxford Astrazeneca vaccine rollout in Europe and North America. Of this 32% subgroup, 62.0% of them indicated that these stories made them feel worried about accepting the COVID-19 vaccine in the future. - our main predictors of hesitancy continue to include: i) education (more educated people were more likely to be hesitant; one hypothesis is perhaps more likely to have greater access to the internet and thus availability of misinformation via social media); ii) females more hesitant than males; and iii) political allegiance (voting for the opposition parties was greater predictor of hesitancy). We hope that this information can be helpful with informing the health promotion efforts from the GHS, Ministry of Health and other stakeholders. For the previous report from this series of Ghana surveys (covering surveys in August 2020 and March 2021), see https://www.researchgate.net/publication/351327020_Examining_drivers_of_COVID-19_vaccine_hesitancy_in_Ghana

  • Publication . Book . 2021
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Babcock, Rebecca; Putric, Tiana; Dyllan Goldstein; Phillips, Jennie;
    Publisher: figshare

    This module aims to explore Digital Contact Tracing (D-CT) developed and implemented in South Africa for the COVID-19 response. Focus is on their D-CT app, COVID Alert SA, and understanding user-uptake. The case study begins with a brief overview of the country’s overall response to COVID-19 and the impact of the virus on the country. Following, we explain South Africa’s app by describing, how it emerged, how it is designed and functions, how users engage with the app across the whole user-engagement process, and what user-uptake looks like in the country. The next section describes the main factors that emerged in our research for this country that suggest influencing user-uptake within the country’s context including communications & misinformation, accessibility & inclusion, public trust, and response infrastructure. This section ends with a brief conclusion

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Henrique Caixeta Brigolini; Renata Veloso Santos Policarpo; Fernando Hadad Zaidan; Rafael Pinheiro Amantea;
    Publisher: Brazilian Journals Editora

    O objetivo deste estudo foi aplicar a metodologia de análise e solução de problemas em uma empresa de educação que atende crianças como suporte na solução de problemas durante a pandemia do novo coronavírus. Para isso, um estudo de caso foi realizado aplicando as etapas de identificação, observação, análise do problema, plano de ação, ação, verificação, padronização e conclusão, que perfazem um ciclo da metodologia. Esse ciclo foi aplicado sete vezes ao longo deste estudo de modo a mitigar os problemas que foram surgindo. Foi escolhida uma escola particular que atende crianças com idade inferior a 10 anos e superior a 2 anos situada na região metropolitana de Belo Horizonte. Em conclusão, o estudo auxiliou na melhora da relação entre a escola e família durante o período pandêmico, na implantação e no fornecimento das atividades de aperfeiçoamento pedagógico e das aulas on-line acessíveis aos alunos, na precificação das mensalidades, no sistema de avaliação, na organização dos planos de aulas de acordo com a exigência da Secretaria de Educação, no processo de matrícula e nas adequações para o possível retorno das aulas presenciais.

  • Publication . Conference object . Book . 2021
    Restricted Portuguese
    Authors: 
    Sofia Alexandra Cruz; Diana Urbano; António Coelho; João Pedro Pêgo;
    Country: Portugal

    This report describes a preliminary study that took place during the second semester of the school year 2019–2020, where suddenly classes had to be held online due to COVID 19 pandemic. Kahoot! a gamified application was used in some of the problem-solving classes of an undergraduate physics course of the integrated masters of the Electrical and Computers Engineering program. The quizzes applied covered rigid body dynamics and thermodynamics, both contents included in the syllabus of the course. The study was planned prior to the pandemic and the necessary adjustments of teaching online altered the goals. A simple analysis of the data obtained with the Kahoot! quizzes is performed and the results are discussed in the context of the positive and negative effects of “going online”.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Živković, Igor; Kerremans, Aart; Denis, Alain; Strid, Sofia; Callerstig, Anne-Charlotte; Axelsson, Tobias; Altınay, Ayşe Gül; Türker, Nazli; Ghidoni, Elena; Fenosa, Laia Tarragona; +5 more
    Publisher: Resistiré Consortium
    Country: Turkey
  • Authors: 
    Adilson Tadeu Basquerote;
    Publisher: Atena Editora
  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Konle-Seidl, Regina; Picarella, Francesca;
    Publisher: Luxembourg : Policy Department for Economic, Scientific and Quality of Life Policies European Parliament, 2021

    El objetivo es proporcionar a los miembros de la Comisión de Empleo y Asuntos Sociales (EMPL) un análisis del impacto de la crisis del COVID-19 en los jóvenes, proporcionando información actualizada sobre su situación económica y social, con un enfoque sobre el empleo. ESP

  • Open Access French
    Authors: 
    Gürsel, Seyfettin;
    Publisher: Institut français d’études anatoliennes

    La pandémie de COVID-19 a frappé la Turquie à partir du mois de mars. Le gouvernement turc a suivi peu ou prou la même stratégie adoptée par la plupart des gouvernements européens. D’une part, des mesures de confinement ont été introduites à partir du mois d’avril et d’autre part, diverses mesures de soutien telles qu’ajournement d’impôts, transferts de revenus aux ménages pauvres, garanties publiques au crédit bancaire, subventions salariales aux travailleurs en chômage partiel ont été lancées pour amortir les effets du choc sur les revenus et l’emploi. En mai, Le gouvernement turc a même interdit aux employeurs de licencier leurs employés tout en leur accordant le droit de les mettre en congé sans solde. Ces diverses mesures ont pu certainement limiter la contraction du PIB au deuxième semestre mais une contraction tout de même sévère a provoqué la perte de 2 millions d’emplois. Le taux de chômage déjà élevé à la veille de la pandémie (14,8 %) a fait un bond appréciable (à 16,5 %) mais en fait le niveau atteint par le chômage officiel a été largement sous-estimé dans la mesure où le nombre de chômeurs n’a augmenté que de 155 000 ; cela sans compter plus d’un million de travailleurs, officiellement en emploi mais sans travail.

  • Authors: 
    Robert C.M. Beyer; Sebastian Franco-Bedoya; Virgilio Galdo;
    Publisher: World Bank, Washington, DC
  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Vázquez Atochero, Alfonso; Cambero Rivero, Santiago;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    El COVID-19 está generando cambios en distintos ámbitos de la sociedad (político, económico, cultural,...), y por ende, en las diferentes facetas de nuestra cotidianidad (familiar, laboral, académico,...). De ahí, que este momento resulte estratégico para reflexionar desde múltiples perspectivas del conocimiento científico sobre tales cambios provocados por la crisis sanitaria de esta pandemia. Estas transformaciones están siendo progresivas, puesto que transitamos desde una coyuntura de circunstancias extraordinarias e imprevistas hacia la “nueva normalidad” que informa el Gobierno de España, aunque algunos preferimos una próxima realidad. Una próxima realidad a construir entre todos y todas que pueda modificar aquellos aspectos excluyentes y divergentes que hasta ahora formaban parte de los escenarios sociales donde realizamos nuestro día a día. En ese proceso de transición iniciado hace dos meses, motivado por la aparición de este nuevo Coronavirus, se contemplan diversos contextos en los entornos locales y global, que podría definirse como la era PosCOVOD-19. Un nuevo tiempo que podría suponer una rehumanización que mejorase nuestra forma de entender la propia vida compartida con otras especies animales, fauna y flora, en aras dignificar las condiciones de miles de millones de habitantes en el planeta Tierra. Una nueva oportunidad de cambios sociales desde una renovada escala de valores y actitudes que nos beneficie como personas en este periodo histórico que inauguramos. Reinventarse sería la acción individual más relevante, que represente la innovación en las formas de vida y cultura más significativas para el ser humano. Quizás sean palabras de un optimismo vital excesivo a tenor de los últimos acontecimientos de la historia de la humanidad, pero se trataría inteligentemente de prevenirnos de posibles catástrofes naturales, muchas de las cuales la mano humana es responsable de las mismas pérdidas materiales y vidas humanas. Por tanto, está en nuestras cabezas la opción de frenar tantos desastres con consecuencias fatales, más letales que el mismo COVID-19.

Advanced search in Research products
Research products
arrow_drop_down
Searching FieldsTerms
Any field
arrow_drop_down
includes
arrow_drop_down
Include:
The following results are related to COVID-19. Are you interested to view more results? Visit OpenAIRE - Explore.
4,012 Research products, page 1 of 402
  • Publication . Other literature type . Thesis . Book . 2021
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Brackstone, Ken; Boateng, Laud Ampomah; Atengble, Kirchuffs; Head, Michael; Akinocho, Herve; Osei, Kingsley; Nuamah, Kwabena;
    Publisher: figshare
    Country: United Kingdom

    Report 3, published 19 July 2021. Fully open-access.We conducted a nationally representative online survey in Ghana (N = 1295) throughout June 2021.In our analyses, we operationalised vaccine hesitancy as respondents who answered ‘no’ and ‘I don’t know’ to the question: “When a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available to you, would you like to get vaccinated?” Some top-level findings to share - willingness to vaccinate dropped from 82% in March, to 71% in June 2021 - Therefore, to phrase another way, there was an observed and significant increase in hesitancy, from 18% to 29% across this time period. - 32% of respondents reported that they had recently seen or heard stories about the indecision surrounding the Oxford Astrazeneca vaccine rollout in Europe and North America. Of this 32% subgroup, 62.0% of them indicated that these stories made them feel worried about accepting the COVID-19 vaccine in the future. - our main predictors of hesitancy continue to include: i) education (more educated people were more likely to be hesitant; one hypothesis is perhaps more likely to have greater access to the internet and thus availability of misinformation via social media); ii) females more hesitant than males; and iii) political allegiance (voting for the opposition parties was greater predictor of hesitancy). We hope that this information can be helpful with informing the health promotion efforts from the GHS, Ministry of Health and other stakeholders. For the previous report from this series of Ghana surveys (covering surveys in August 2020 and March 2021), see https://www.researchgate.net/publication/351327020_Examining_drivers_of_COVID-19_vaccine_hesitancy_in_Ghana

  • Publication . Book . 2021
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Babcock, Rebecca; Putric, Tiana; Dyllan Goldstein; Phillips, Jennie;
    Publisher: figshare

    This module aims to explore Digital Contact Tracing (D-CT) developed and implemented in South Africa for the COVID-19 response. Focus is on their D-CT app, COVID Alert SA, and understanding user-uptake. The case study begins with a brief overview of the country’s overall response to COVID-19 and the impact of the virus on the country. Following, we explain South Africa’s app by describing, how it emerged, how it is designed and functions, how users engage with the app across the whole user-engagement process, and what user-uptake looks like in the country. The next section describes the main factors that emerged in our research for this country that suggest influencing user-uptake within the country’s context including communications & misinformation, accessibility & inclusion, public trust, and response infrastructure. This section ends with a brief conclusion

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Henrique Caixeta Brigolini; Renata Veloso Santos Policarpo; Fernando Hadad Zaidan; Rafael Pinheiro Amantea;
    Publisher: Brazilian Journals Editora

    O objetivo deste estudo foi aplicar a metodologia de análise e solução de problemas em uma empresa de educação que atende crianças como suporte na solução de problemas durante a pandemia do novo coronavírus. Para isso, um estudo de caso foi realizado aplicando as etapas de identificação, observação, análise do problema, plano de ação, ação, verificação, padronização e conclusão, que perfazem um ciclo da metodologia. Esse ciclo foi aplicado sete vezes ao longo deste estudo de modo a mitigar os problemas que foram surgindo. Foi escolhida uma escola particular que atende crianças com idade inferior a 10 anos e superior a 2 anos situada na região metropolitana de Belo Horizonte. Em conclusão, o estudo auxiliou na melhora da relação entre a escola e família durante o período pandêmico, na implantação e no fornecimento das atividades de aperfeiçoamento pedagógico e das aulas on-line acessíveis aos alunos, na precificação das mensalidades, no sistema de avaliação, na organização dos planos de aulas de acordo com a exigência da Secretaria de Educação, no processo de matrícula e nas adequações para o possível retorno das aulas presenciais.

  • Publication . Conference object . Book . 2021
    Restricted Portuguese
    Authors: 
    Sofia Alexandra Cruz; Diana Urbano; António Coelho; João Pedro Pêgo;
    Country: Portugal

    This report describes a preliminary study that took place during the second semester of the school year 2019–2020, where suddenly classes had to be held online due to COVID 19 pandemic. Kahoot! a gamified application was used in some of the problem-solving classes of an undergraduate physics course of the integrated masters of the Electrical and Computers Engineering program. The quizzes applied covered rigid body dynamics and thermodynamics, both contents included in the syllabus of the course. The study was planned prior to the pandemic and the necessary adjustments of teaching online altered the goals. A simple analysis of the data obtained with the Kahoot! quizzes is performed and the results are discussed in the context of the positive and negative effects of “going online”.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Živković, Igor; Kerremans, Aart; Denis, Alain; Strid, Sofia; Callerstig, Anne-Charlotte; Axelsson, Tobias; Altınay, Ayşe Gül; Türker, Nazli; Ghidoni, Elena; Fenosa, Laia Tarragona; +5 more
    Publisher: Resistiré Consortium
    Country: Turkey
  • Authors: 
    Adilson Tadeu Basquerote;
    Publisher: Atena Editora
  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Konle-Seidl, Regina; Picarella, Francesca;
    Publisher: Luxembourg : Policy Department for Economic, Scientific and Quality of Life Policies European Parliament, 2021

    El objetivo es proporcionar a los miembros de la Comisión de Empleo y Asuntos Sociales (EMPL) un análisis del impacto de la crisis del COVID-19 en los jóvenes, proporcionando información actualizada sobre su situación económica y social, con un enfoque sobre el empleo. ESP

  • Open Access French
    Authors: 
    Gürsel, Seyfettin;
    Publisher: Institut français d’études anatoliennes

    La pandémie de COVID-19 a frappé la Turquie à partir du mois de mars. Le gouvernement turc a suivi peu ou prou la même stratégie adoptée par la plupart des gouvernements européens. D’une part, des mesures de confinement ont été introduites à partir du mois d’avril et d’autre part, diverses mesures de soutien telles qu’ajournement d’impôts, transferts de revenus aux ménages pauvres, garanties publiques au crédit bancaire, subventions salariales aux travailleurs en chômage partiel ont été lancées pour amortir les effets du choc sur les revenus et l’emploi. En mai, Le gouvernement turc a même interdit aux employeurs de licencier leurs employés tout en leur accordant le droit de les mettre en congé sans solde. Ces diverses mesures ont pu certainement limiter la contraction du PIB au deuxième semestre mais une contraction tout de même sévère a provoqué la perte de 2 millions d’emplois. Le taux de chômage déjà élevé à la veille de la pandémie (14,8 %) a fait un bond appréciable (à 16,5 %) mais en fait le niveau atteint par le chômage officiel a été largement sous-estimé dans la mesure où le nombre de chômeurs n’a augmenté que de 155 000 ; cela sans compter plus d’un million de travailleurs, officiellement en emploi mais sans travail.

  • Authors: 
    Robert C.M. Beyer; Sebastian Franco-Bedoya; Virgilio Galdo;
    Publisher: World Bank, Washington, DC
  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Vázquez Atochero, Alfonso; Cambero Rivero, Santiago;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    El COVID-19 está generando cambios en distintos ámbitos de la sociedad (político, económico, cultural,...), y por ende, en las diferentes facetas de nuestra cotidianidad (familiar, laboral, académico,...). De ahí, que este momento resulte estratégico para reflexionar desde múltiples perspectivas del conocimiento científico sobre tales cambios provocados por la crisis sanitaria de esta pandemia. Estas transformaciones están siendo progresivas, puesto que transitamos desde una coyuntura de circunstancias extraordinarias e imprevistas hacia la “nueva normalidad” que informa el Gobierno de España, aunque algunos preferimos una próxima realidad. Una próxima realidad a construir entre todos y todas que pueda modificar aquellos aspectos excluyentes y divergentes que hasta ahora formaban parte de los escenarios sociales donde realizamos nuestro día a día. En ese proceso de transición iniciado hace dos meses, motivado por la aparición de este nuevo Coronavirus, se contemplan diversos contextos en los entornos locales y global, que podría definirse como la era PosCOVOD-19. Un nuevo tiempo que podría suponer una rehumanización que mejorase nuestra forma de entender la propia vida compartida con otras especies animales, fauna y flora, en aras dignificar las condiciones de miles de millones de habitantes en el planeta Tierra. Una nueva oportunidad de cambios sociales desde una renovada escala de valores y actitudes que nos beneficie como personas en este periodo histórico que inauguramos. Reinventarse sería la acción individual más relevante, que represente la innovación en las formas de vida y cultura más significativas para el ser humano. Quizás sean palabras de un optimismo vital excesivo a tenor de los últimos acontecimientos de la historia de la humanidad, pero se trataría inteligentemente de prevenirnos de posibles catástrofes naturales, muchas de las cuales la mano humana es responsable de las mismas pérdidas materiales y vidas humanas. Por tanto, está en nuestras cabezas la opción de frenar tantos desastres con consecuencias fatales, más letales que el mismo COVID-19.