CESSDA Data Catalogue OAI-PMH Repository
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The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA) Wave 6, 2020-2023
TILDA collects information on all aspects of health, economic and social circumstances from adults aged 50 years and over resident in Ireland. Waves of data collection take place every two years. TILDA provides a comprehensive and accurate picture of the characteristics, needs and contributions of older persons in Ireland to inform and support improvements in policy and practice; advancements in technology and innovation; tailored education and training through an enhanced ageing research infrastructure; harmonisation with leading international research to ensure adoption of best policy and practice and comparability of results. TILDA is necessary to act as the foundation on which we can plan appropriate health, medical, social and economic policies for our older adults. Wave 6 dataset: v6.1 The version 6.1 PMF is the first release of Wave 6 data for the public archive. This contains data from 4,095 respondents who completed a sixth interview during the Wave 6 fieldwork. Data from any respondents who were new at Wave 6, respondents who had passed away between the waves and data from returning respondents who required a proxy interview have been removed (n=225) to protect anonymity. Explicit consent was introduced in this wave for the first time, and those who did not consent to sharing their non-identifiable information with institutions within the EU are also excluded (n=12). The dataset includes data from the home interview, the self-completion questionnaire and certain other variables derived from this data. More information on these derived variables can be found in the ‘Wave 6 Derived Variable Codebook’
Labour Force Survey (LFS), 2004
The Labour Force Survey (LFS) is a large-scale, nationwide survey of households in Ireland conducted by the Central Statistics Office. It is designed to produce quarterly labour force estimates that include the official measure of employment and unemployment in the state (ILO basis). This survey replaced the Quarterly National Household Survey (QNHS) from Q3 2017. The QNHS began in September 1997, replacing the annual April Labour Force Survey (LFS). Each quarter the LFS produces data among others on: Numbers unemployed Persons in employment Labour force participation rates Inactive population (not in the labour force) Sectoral breakdown (Nace Rev. 2) of those in employment Breakdown of headline data by age, sex and region Persons in employment classified by occupation Seasonally adjusted headline series Data on family compositio
Labour Force Survey (LFS), 2017
The Labour Force Survey (LFS) is a large-scale, nationwide survey of households in Ireland conducted by the Central Statistics Office. It is designed to produce quarterly labour force estimates that include the official measure of employment and unemployment in the state (ILO basis). This survey replaced the Quarterly National Household Survey (QNHS) from Q3 2017. The QNHS began in September 1997, replacing the annual April Labour Force Survey (LFS). Each quarter the LFS produces data among others on: Numbers unemployed Persons in employment Labour force participation rates Inactive population (not in the labour force) Sectoral breakdown (Nace Rev. 2) of those in employment Breakdown of headline data by age, sex and region Persons in employment classified by occupation Seasonally adjusted headline series Data on family compositio
INSIGHT '07: a national survey of consumer satisfaction, 2007
Insight '07 is an independent study of consumer satisfaction with the health and social care services. It was commissioned by the Health Service Executive (HSE) and carried out by the School of Public Health Physiotheraphy and Population Science in University College Dublin. This is the first time a study of this scale has been undertaken among a nationally representative sample of people who have used the HSE’s hospitals and community services. Key variable areas: Knowledge and attitudes about Health Services in the Republic of Ireland; General Health Status; Utilisation of Services; Experience of services in hospital, community and general practice. It involved detailed face-to-face interviews with 3,517 people across the country who were asked about their experience of the public health and social care services
Children’s Sport Participation and Physical Activity Study (CSPPA), 2017-2018
The Children’s Sport Participation and Physical Activity Study (CSPPA17-18) is a follow up to CSPPA 09-10, and was funded by Sport Ireland, Healthy Ireland and Sport Northern Ireland. Similar to its predecessor, CSPPA17-18 was a multi-centre study, undertaken by the University of Limerick (lead University), Dublin City University, and University College Cork, with the addition of Ulster University for the first time. This study provided an updated national database for Sport Ireland, Healthy Ireland, Sport Northern Ireland and any other interested public policy agencies or organisations, interested in physical activity, Physical Education and sport participation levels of children and youth in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. Provided quality surveillance data on the current physical activity levels of Irish and Northern Irish children and youth, primary and post primary, respectively. Comprehensively assess the participation levels of Irish and Northern Irish children and youth in sport, physical activity and Physical Education, using both subjective and objective measurement protocols. Determine factors that enhance or inhibit participation levels of Irish and Northern Irish children and youth in sport, physical activity and Physical Education. Demonstrate the health benefits of participation in regular physical activity for children and youth. Provide a comparison, where possible, between CSPPA09-10 and CSPPA17-18 study findings
Eurostudent VII: Ireland 2019
Ireland is one of 30 countries which participated in the Eurostudent VII survey, and this dataset continues the initiative of previous Eurostudent reports extensively analysing the characteristics of students studying in Ireland by examining the demographic profile of the student population, the courses they are undertaking, their income and expenditure, their accomodation and employment, the route they took into higher education and the extent to which they study abroad as part of their programme
The Empty Office: Quantitative Survey
Introduction: Teleworking is one of the most significant legacies of the pandemic. Great attention is now being paid to its effects on workers’ health. One of the arguments that emerged on this issue is that ‘working away from the office’ affects the time we spend with significant others. This calls into question all those processes that make relatives and colleagues important to our health, such as forms of mentoring and social support, but also conflicts, work interruptions or control over workers’ activities. So far, no study has evaluated the impact that teleworking has on these processes using data on personal networks. The Empty Office is the first study to use social network analysis to measure the impact that telework has on social relations and, in turn, workers’ health and well-being. Methods and analysis: The project draws on a total sample of 4400 participants from Switzerland, the Netherlands, Spain, and Germany (n=1100 per country). The choice of these countries is due to their specificity and diversity in socioeconomic features, which make them particularly interesting for studying teleworking from a comparative point of view. The research is conceived as a sequential mixed-method design. First, quantitative data collection will administer an online questionnaire to gather information on telework modalities, health and well-being markers, and data on personal networks collected by a name generator. A qualitative module, administered one year later, will consist of in-depth interviews with a subsample (n=32) of teleworkers selected for delving narratively into the mechanisms identified with the quantitative analyses. Ethics and dissemination: This study has obtained 2 years of funding from the Swiss Network for International Study and was approved by the Ethics Committee of the University of Geneva (CUREG- 20230920- 292- 2). All participants will be asked to provide informed consent to participate in this study. The results will be shared with international organisations and disseminated in scientific journals and conferences
Exposure of Applied Sciences Bachelor Students to Stressors, Relationship with their Mental Health, and exploration of potential protective factors - T0.5-Nursing
L'objectif de cette étude HEalStud était d'identifier les ressources susceptibles de protéger la santé mentale des étudiant·e·s des établissements de la Haute Ecole Spécialisée de Suisse Occidentale (HES-SO). Quatre collectes de données ont été effectuées. La première (T0) a eu lieu en en février 2020, soit juste avant la première vague de COVID-19 et les mesures sanitaires qui l'ont suivie. La seconde (T1) a eu lieu en février 2021, soit avant la 3ème vague de la pandémie. La troisième (T2) a eu lieu en mars 2022, durant la levée des mesures sanitaires. Une collecte supplémentaire (T0.5) a eu lieu auprès des étudiant·e·s du domaine Santé en septembre 2020, accompagnée de focus groups visant à comprendre le vécu des étudiant·e·s ayant été mobilisé·e·s sur le terrain durant la pandémie. Les étudiant·e·s de tous les domaines d'études de la HES-SO en 1ère et 2ème année Bachelor en 2020 ont été invité·e·s à répondre. Il ont rempli des questionnaires portant sur leurs caractéristiques démographiques, leur niveau de stress perçu, leur résilience, leur niveau d'auto-efficacité, leur capacité de pleine conscience, leur soutien social perçu, leur degré d'épanouissement, leur niveau de croissance post-traumatique et leur exposition à la COVID-19.The objective of this study HEalStud was to identify the resources likely to protect the mental health of students in the institutions of the University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland (HES-SO). Four data collections were carried out. The first (T0) took place in February 2020, i.e. just before the first wave of COVID-19 and the sanitary measures that followed it. The second (T1) took place in February 2021, i.e. before the 3rd wave of the pandemic. The third (T2) took place in March 2022, during the lifting of the sanitary measures. An additional survey (T0.5) was conducted among students in the Health field in September 2020, accompanied by focus groups aimed at understanding the experiences of students who had been mobilized in the field during the pandemic. Students from all fields of study at the HES-SO in their 1st and 2nd year Bachelor's degrees in 2020 were invited to respond. They completed questionnaires concerning their demographic characteristics, their level of perceived stress, their resilience, their level of self-efficacy, their capacity for mindfulness, their perceived social support, their degree of flourishing, their level of post-traumatic growth and their exposure to COVID-19
z-proso: Adolescent and Young Adult Surveys (Age 11 to 24; Waves K4-K9)
The Zurich Project on the Social Development from Childhood to Adulthood (z-proso) is a prospective-longitudinal study that was launched in 2004 in response to the need for a better evidence base to support optimal child social development and prevent crime and violence. Since then, the study has explored the life course of a cohort of 1,675 children in the target population from age 7 (n = 1,360) to age 24 (n = 1,160), with primary data collection waves at ages 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 17, 20, and 24 (see Ribeaud et al. 2022, https://doi.org/10.1007/s40865-022-00195-x, for the sampling procedure). The study has been built on multi-method, multi-informant design that combines child/youth/young adult, teacher, and parent surveys. The large and ethnically diverse sample, the dense sequence of assessments with multiple-informant data, the high retention rate, and the combination of measurement domains make z-proso an important resource for innovative research nationally and internationally. z-proso project website: https://www.jacobscenter.uzh.ch/en/research/zproso.htm
Cause Commune à Chavannes-près-Renens: données hectométriques
Cause Commune à Chavannes-près-Renens is a longitudinal survey conducted from 2019 to 2023 in the municipality of Chavannes-près-Renens in Switzerland. The aim of the collaborative research program Cause Commune is to enhance social quality and health in the municipality neighborhoods through a participatory intergenerational governance of the action of the municipality services and a program of activities in the public and community spaces. Topically, the survey questions cover nine broad areas: (1) socio-demographics, (2) satisfaction with the living environment, (3) neighborhood life, (4) life in the municipality, (5) social relationships, (6) social participation, (7) health and well-being, (8) material conditions, and (9) aspects of the Cause Commune project. The archived data set includes all three bi-annual waves of the longitudinal survey.Dans le cadre de Cause Commune à Chavannes-près-Renens, une enquête longitudinale auprès de la population adulte de plus de 18 ans a été menée de 2019 à 2023 dans cette commune. L’objectif du programme de recherche-action collaborative Cause Commune est d’améliorer la qualité sociale et possiblement la santé dans les quartiers de la commune grâce à une gouvernance participative et intergénérationnelle de l’action des services communaux, ainsi qu’à un programme d’activités dans les espaces publics et communautaires. Les questions de l’enquête couvrent neuf grands domaines : (1) les caractéristiques sociodémographiques, (2) la satisfaction vis-à-vis de l’environnement de vie, (3) la vie de quartier, (4) la vie dans la commune, (5) les relations sociales, (6) la participation sociale, (7) la santé et le bien-être, (8) les conditions matérielles et (9) l’évaluation du projet Cause Commune par la population. Le jeu de données archivé comprend les trois vagues biannuelles de l’enquête longitudinale