Hannah Wepf
Kalaidos University of Applied Sciences
9 Papers
21 Citations
Hannah Wepf is an academic researcher from Kalaidos University of Applied Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Health care. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications. Previous affiliations of Hannah Wepf include University of Zurich.
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Papers
Counting young carers in Switzerland – a study of prevalence
Agnes Leu,Agnes Leu,Marianne Frech,Hannah Wepf,Joe Sempik,Stephen Joseph,Laura Alexandra Helbling,Urs Moser,Saul Becker,Corinna Jung,Corinna Jung +10 more
TL;DR: An online survey of children in school grades 4–9 (mostly aged 10–15) was conducted in Switzerland in order to determine the prevalence of young carers using a 2‐stage stratified sampling approach.
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Character Strengths Are Related to Students' Achievement, Flow Experiences, and Enjoyment in Teacher-Centered Learning, Individual, and Group Work Beyond Cognitive Ability.
TL;DR: Trait activation theory is used to investigate the relationships of students’ character strengths with achievement, flow experiences, and enjoyment in different learning situations, suggesting that different character strengths play a role in different school situations and that their contribution to explaining variance in educational outcomes is incremental to the contribution of cognitive ability.
Pathways to Mental Well-Being in Young Carers: The Role of Benefit Finding, Coping, Helplessness, and Caring Tasks.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined pathways through which benefit finding may influence mental well-being and found that benefit finding was associated with better mental health directly and indirectly via better coping and lower helplessness.
Well-Being and Perceived Stress of Adolescent Young Carers: A Cross-Sectional Comparative Study
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the impact of a caring role on adolescents' mental health and to gain knowledge about adolescent young carers' specific needs, and found that more recognition for the caring role predicted better well-being and perceived stress outcomes.
Experts' perspectives on SwissDRG: Second class care for vulnerable patient groups?
TL;DR: It is concluded that ATC measures do not produce the expected effect the legislators had hoped for and more health data is needed to identify situations where vulnerable patient groups are more susceptible to inadequate health care access in Switzerland.
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