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Navigating Health Anxiety: The Impact of Information

Navigating Health Anxiety: The Impact of Information

Health anxiety, defined as an excessive fear of having or developing a serious medical condition, appears in many forms and intensities, and people often turn to the internet, social media, and symptom-checking apps as their main health information sources. Although easily accessible details can support and inform patients, the same abundance of information can intensify and prolong their worries. This article describes how and why information frequently heightens health anxiety, provides illustrative examples and data-supported trends, and outlines practical approaches for both individuals and clinicians.What is health anxiety and cyberchondria?Health anxiety can span from brief, manageable concern to ongoing, overwhelming…
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Bangladesh: garment CSR cases improving workplace safety and career upskilling

How CSR is Improving Garment Workplaces in Bangladesh

The 2013 Rana Plaza collapse that killed more than 1,100 people and injured thousands was a watershed moment for Bangladesh’s ready-made garment (RMG) sector. The disaster exposed systemic safety failures and triggered a wave of corporate social responsibility (CSR) interventions, multi-stakeholder agreements, and development programs aimed at making factories safer and creating clearer career pathways for workers. This article reviews the main CSR cases and initiatives, shows concrete workplace safety and upskilling outcomes, and draws lessons for sustaining progress.Key CSR mechanisms introduced after Rana PlazaThe Accord on Fire and Building Safety — an independent, legally binding agreement led by global…
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Máster en Neuromarketing y Comportamiento del Consumidor

Unraveling Brain Curiosities: The Mystery of Forgotten Names

Forgetting a person’s name at an awkward moment is nearly universal. Proper names feel different from other words: they slip away while common nouns and facts remain accessible. Understanding why this happens requires looking at how names are stored and retrieved in the brain, how attention and emotion affect encoding, and how age, stress, and language experience change retrieval dynamics.What makes proper names specialProper names function as identifiers that carry minimal semantic cues. In contrast with a term like “dog,” which naturally evokes qualities, behaviors, and situational associations, a name such as “Sarah” offers almost no built‑in hints about its…
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Primer plano de un profesional médico sosteniendo un catéter con precisión en un entorno estéril.

Value-Based Care: Maximizing Quality, Decreasing Interventions

Value-based care redirects health systems from counting how many services are provided to concentrating on the outcomes that genuinely matter to patients, built on a straightforward idea: compensation should reward value rather than volume, a shift that influences clinical choices, payment structures, evaluation methods, and patient involvement while helping curb unnecessary procedures and enhance quality, equity, and affordability.The meaning behind value-driven careValue-based care seeks to optimize health outcomes for every dollar invested by:Measuring outcomes: emphasizing clinical results, functional abilities, patient-reported measures (PROMs), and overall experience instead of tallying visits or procedures.Aligning payment: implementing incentives that promote prevention, coordinated care, and…
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