October 2012
Wish to get to know the MBA and the Masters of the International area of LUISS Business School more in detail?
We understand that signing up for an MBA or a Master is an important decision, and we want to give you the opportunity to gather all the information you need to enable you to reach your decision.
This is why we would like to invite you to:
meet the staff, students and alumini, the international activities and career office managers, as well as the Master coordinators.
sit with them, clear your doubts and discuss your ideas.
And if you have already made up your decision, you can come and discuss the recruitment steps and experience a simulation of the selection test.
Come and meet us at the next MBA & Master Open Evening Event, that will take place at LUISS Business School (Viale Pola, 12 – Rome) , Sala delle Colonne, Thursday the 18th of October. The event is open-doors: you may come at any time, from 6 to 9 pm.
If you are not able to come to the event, we would love to virtually host you!
Just connect with us in live chat on www.mba.luiss.it We will be online from 6 to 9 pm (GMT +1) and ready to answer your questions!!!
Uunder the 7th EU Research Framework Programme (http://www.ancien-longtermcare.eu/). It runs for a 46 month period and involves 20 partners from EU member states. The project principally concerns the future of long-term care (LTC) for the elderly in Europe. The project members compiled EU-wide data from 22 countries and published country reports describing the existing LTC systems. According to our baseline projection, in the next years the number of disabled elderly will increase by almost 60 % in Germany and may double in The Netherlands, while Spain and Poland could even experience a 125 % increase. These growing numbers of elderly in need of LTC will translate in increased demand for long term care. Furthermore, ANCIEN projections of the future LTC capacity, both in terms of the formal care workforce and the numbers of available informal caregivers, indicate a growing gap between supply and demand. ANCIEN analysis will enable policymakers of member states to assess the potential care gap in their countries in order to plan the future organization and financing of their national LTC systems. In addition, the analysis of the factors that determine the performance of national LTC systems can be used to assist policymakers in adapting their national LTC systems.
ANCIEN project reports are available here: www.ancien-longtermcare.eu/node/27
The event program will include, among the others, the following presentations:
Long-term Care needs: demography and epidemiology
Govert Bijwaart, Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (Belgium)
Long-term Care use and supply: determinants and projections
Joanna Geerts, Federal Planning Bureau (Belgium)
Technologies for Long-Term Care
Angelo Rossi Mori, Institute for Biomedical Technologies, Centro Nazionale delle Ricerche (Italy)
Quality of Long-Term Care in European Countries
Roberto Dandi, LUISS Business School (Italy)
Evaluating Long-term Care system performance in Europe
Esther Mot, Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis (The Netherlands)
Policy implications and recommendations
Peter Willemé, Federal Planning Bureau (Belgium)
Esther Mot, Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis (The Netherlands)
Uunder the 7th EU Research Framework Programme (http://www.ancien-longtermcare.eu/). It runs for a 46 month period and involves 20 partners from EU member states. The project principally concerns the future of long-term care (LTC) for the elderly in Europe. The project members compiled EU-wide data from 22 countries and published country reports describing the existing LTC systems. According to our baseline projection, in the next years the number of disabled elderly will increase by almost 60 % in Germany and may double in The Netherlands, while Spain and Poland could even experience a 125 % increase. These growing numbers of elderly in need of LTC will translate in increased demand for long term care. Furthermore, ANCIEN projections of the future LTC capacity, both in terms of the formal care workforce and the numbers of available informal caregivers, indicate a growing gap between supply and demand. ANCIEN analysis will enable policymakers of member states to assess the potential care gap in their countries in order to plan the future organization and financing of their national LTC systems. In addition, the analysis of the factors that determine the performance of national LTC systems can be used to assist policymakers in adapting their national LTC systems.
ANCIEN project reports are available here: www.ancien-longtermcare.eu/node/27
The event program will include, among the others, the following presentations:
Long-term Care needs: demography and epidemiology
Govert Bijwaart, Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (Belgium)
Long-term Care use and supply: determinants and projections
Joanna Geerts, Federal Planning Bureau (Belgium)
Technologies for Long-Term Care
Angelo Rossi Mori, Institute for Biomedical Technologies, Centro Nazionale delle Ricerche (Italy)
Quality of Long-Term Care in European Countries
Roberto Dandi, LUISS Business School (Italy)
Evaluating Long-term Care system performance in Europe
Esther Mot, Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis (The Netherlands)
Policy implications and recommendations
Peter Willemé, Federal Planning Bureau (Belgium)
Esther Mot, Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis (The Netherlands)