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Shaolin Wu Fo Dao – die Synthese japanischer und chinesischer Kampfkunst-Lehre auf der Grundlage zen-buddhistischer Theorie und Praxis ist eine neu geschaffene Disziplin. In dieser Fusion verbinden sich wesentliche Elemente aus Budo und Shaolin (-Wudao), deren traditionellen Körper-Geist-Übungen von Kampftechnik (Bu/Wu) und Meditation (Zen/Chan) als originäre Weg- und Heilslehre (Do/Dao) seit jeher der Persönlichkeits- und spirituellen Entwicklung des Ausübenden dienten.
Hier nun, in der Überwindung alter Grenzen zwischen japanischer und chinesischer Kampfkunstsysteme („hart“ und „weich“), wurde hier nun erstmaligen ein zusammengewachsenes Kampfkunstsystem kreiert, um die beidseits positiven Wirkungen auf den Menschen zu bündeln und – und das ist das Besondere – sie in den Dienst buddhistischer (Butsu, jap.: Buddha / chin. Fo) Psychologie und Psychotherapie zu stellen.
Die Verbindung von Budo mit Shaolin als eigenständiges praktisches Lehrkonzept, allein schon eine „revolutionäre Innovation“, erfährt durch ihren Einsatz als spezielle Methode einer Heilkunst zusätzlich Pioniercharakter in der Behandlung von Leid. Gemeint sind sowohl Ansätze aus der Budopädagogik und speziellen Budotherapie zur Heilung, Linderung oder Prävention von physischen, psychosomatischen und psychischen Krisen, Störungen, Krankheiten, Behinderungen und Leiden, als auch im Sinne des philosophischen und wissenschaftlichen Buddhismus, „das Leid in der Welt zu mindern“, zum Wohle des Menschen, für sein Glück und Frieden zu arbeiten.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) is a human rights framework in the context of multi-level governance child protection policies central to social work education and practice (United Nations, 1989). In line with this statement, children’s rights-based education introduces undergraduate social work students to the principles of the CRC, namely participation, protection, harm prevention and provision, to facilitate knowledge acquisition by building core competencies for critical practice (IFSW, 2002). It equips social workers with analytical and advocacy skills that foster critical thinking and creativity in the juxtaposition between child protection, autonomy and self-determination.
This chapter provides insights for social work education to locate and analyse the underlying casualties of social problems using a problem and resource framework, the w-questions (Geiser, 2015). The framework is used to develop theory driven social work interventions as illustrated against the backdrop the anonymised case study, Amira, an accompanied child asylum seeker in Austria (Fritsche, Glawischnig, & Wolfsegg, 2019). Correspondingly, CRC is addressed along a continuum between human needs fulfilment and human right entitlements (Obrecht, 2009; IFSW, 2002; Ife, 2012). The concept of need is understood as tension in our concrete biological and psychological bio-values and states (Obrecht, 2009, p. 27). The assertion is that when children lack support or are obstructed from achieving their equal right to education due to social, cultural or economic barriers, this exacerbates social marginalisation because it deprives them of membership in the school social system. Social marginalisation thwarts the fulfilment of needs and weakens social cohesion by causing alienation and anomie (Mayrhofer, 2015). The tentative conclusion is that knowledge and practice models that link human needs and children’s rights equip social workers with the expertise to reduce children’s vulnerability whilst strengthening their protection, autonomy and self-determination.
This chapter is about school suspension through a social work lens. Young people like Martin require the collective to belong, to be a member of a group, to realise their social needs. This is the basic requirement of human mental and social stability. Suspension stands in opposition because it legitimises social exclusion and disregards the linkage between the individual and collective (Bunge 2003). This chapter advocates for a whole systems approach to tackle social problems and develop sustainable interventions that facilitate young peoples’ needs realisation at school.
Objectives: The MetabQoL 1.0 is the first disease-specific health related quality of life (HrQoL) questionnaire for patients with intoxication-type inherited metabolic disorders. Our aim was to assess the validity and reliability of the MetabQoL 1.0, and to investigate neuropsychiatric burden in our patient population. Methods: Data from 29 patients followed at a single center, aged between 8 and 18 years with the diagnosis of methylmalonic acidemia (MMA), propionic acidemia (PA) or isovaleric acidemia (IVA), and their parents were included. The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQoL) was used to evaluate the validity and reliability of MetabQoL 1.0.
Results: The MetabQoL 1.0 was shown to be valid and reliable (Cronbach's alpha: 0.64–0.9). Fourteen out of the 22 patients (63.6%) formally evaluated had neurological findings. Of note, 17 out of 20 patients (85%) had a psychiatric disorder when evaluated formally by a child and adolescent psychiatrist. The median mental scores of the MetabQoL 1.0 proxy report were significantly higher than those of the self report (p = 0.023). Patients with neonatal-onset disease had higher MetabQoL 1.0 proxy physical (p = 0.008), mental (p = 0.042), total scores (p = 0.022); and self report social (p = 0.007) and total scores (p = 0.043) than those with later onset disease.
Conclusions: This study continues to prove that the MetabQoL 1.0 is an effective tool to measure what matters in intoxication-type inherited metabolic disorders. Our results highlight the importance of clinical assessment complemented by patient reported outcomes which further expands the evaluation toolbox of inherited metabolic diseases.
Wohnbedarf im Alter
(2015)