Relative Status (relative + status)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Experimentally manipulated high in-group status can buffer personal self-esteem against discrimination

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 5 2005
Michael J. Platow
We present an experiment in which the relative status of an in-group and the discriminatory nature of a decision maker's intergroup behaviour (in-group-favouring/out-group-favouring/even-handed) were independently manipulated to observe their effects on self-esteem. Adopting a Social Identity Theory framework, and following from previous empirical work, we predicted that discrimination against one's in-group would lead to lower self-esteem among members of a low-status group but not among members of a high-status group. This prediction was confirmed. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Nursing-Sensitive Outcome Implementation and Reliability Testing in a Tertiary Care Setting

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING TERMINOLOGIES AND CLASSIFICATION, Issue 2003
Julia G. Behrenbeck
PURPOSE To describe the NOC outcomes most relevant for specialty nursing practice and in selected field sites representing the continuum of care; to assess the adequacy of measures (reliability, validity, sensitivity, specificity, practicality); and to describe the linkages among nursing diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes in clinical decision making. METHODS Data were collected on 434 patients during the 12-month data collection period at a tertiary care center: cardiac surgery intensive care (n= 76), cardiac transplant unit (n= 153), and medical unit (n= 205). Medical diagnoses of patients on the two cardiac units were related to cardiac disease. Medical diagnoses of patients on the medical unit were extremely varied (ranging from e.g., gout to pneumonia). Data were collected on 65 separate outcome labels for a total of 633 ratings. FINDINGS In the cardiac transplant ICU, data were collected on 42 outcomes: 30 had an average interrater reliability of ,85%, and 16 had an absolute agreement interrater reliability of ,85%. In the cardiac surgery ICU, data were collected on 30 outcomes: 25 had an average interrater reliabilty of ,85%, 6 had an absolute agreement interrater of ,85%. In the medical unit, data were collected on 45 outcomes: 41 had an average interrater reliability of ,85%, 14 had an absolute agreement interrater reliability of ,85%. Four outcomes have been implemented into the documentation system for all patients: Tissue Integrity: Skin and Mucous Membranes, Mobility Level, Knowledge: Disease Process, and Coping. CONCLUSIONS Overall, nursing staff were very positive about having the opportunity to participate in nursing research. Staff were able to think about the relative status of their patient and how nursing care contributes to the patient's recovery. They appreciated the opportunity to discuss this with a colleague during the interrater exercise. Increased familiarity with NOC allows staff members to determine which outcomes comprise core nursing-sensitive outcomes for their clinical setting. [source]


Negotiating conflict within the constraints of social hierarchies in Korean American discourse

JOURNAL OF SOCIOLINGUISTICS, Issue 3 2003
M. Agnes Kang
This paper provides an interactional account of conflict negotiation strategies in Korean American discourse. With specific attention to the sociolinguistic phenomenon of codeswitching among Korean Americans, I argue that speaking Korean at particular moments evokes ideologies of social hierarchy that serve to mitigate potential conflicts. The Korean social ideology of relative status has a major influence on how bilingual Korean Americans interact with one another, regardless of whether they are using Korean or English. The use of codeswitching, among other mitigating strategies in discourse, serves to instantiate these hierarchical relationships and introduces particular social norms that guide the observable actions used in navigating meaning and social relations. The data analyzed here show how the evocation of Korean social ideologies may serve as an identifiable characteristic of Korean American discourse. [source]


Fibrinolytic risk factor clustering and insulin resistance in healthy male relatives of men with intermittent claudication,

BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY (NOW INCLUDES EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY), Issue 3 2006
D. J. Parry
Background: Raised fibrinolytic factors predict cardiovascular risk in healthy subjects. The aim of this study was to measure fibrinolytic factors and insulin resistance in healthy male first-degree relatives of men with intermittent claudication younger than 65 years. Methods: The study compared 165 healthy first-degree relatives with 165 age-, sex- and race-matched control subjects free from a personal or family history of premature cardiovascular disease. Primary outcome measures were plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and D-dimer levels. Insulin resistance was estimated by Homeostasis Model Assessment. Clinical and biochemical risk factors were measured and subjects genotyped for the PAI-1 4G/5G polymorphism. Results: First-degree relatives had significantly higher mean PAI-1 (10·23 versus 7·85 ng/ml; P = 0·024), tPA (9·98 versus 8·29 ng/ml; P < 0·001) and D-dimer levels (56·6 versus 46·1 ng/ml; P = 0·004). They also had significantly higher insulin resistance (1·85 versus 1·53; P < 0·001) and clustered multiple atherogenic risk factors. On multivariate analysis the association between both tPA and D-dimer levels and relative status was independent of other variables. Conclusion: Raised levels of PAI-1, tPA, D-dimer and estimated insulin resistance were present in the healthy male first-degree relatives of men with intermittent claudication. These data support the hypothesis of fibrinolytic risk factor clustering in this high-risk population. Copyright © 2006 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]