Archive for July 2019
Fraying Families: Demographic Divergence in the Parental Safety Net
Pediatric palliative care in the medical neighborhood for children with medical complexity.
The ability to evaluate arguments in scientific texts: Measurement, cognitive processes, nomological network, and relevance for academic success at the university
Gender bias, other specified and unspecified feeding and eating disorders, and college students: a vignette study
Sophonisba Breckinridge: Championing Women’s Activism in Modern America
Romantic attachment, dyadic coping, and parental adjustment across the transition to parenthood
Food rioters and the American Revolution – Barbara Clark Smith
On more than thirty occasions between 1776 and 1779, American men and women gathered in crowds to confront hoarding merchants, intimidate “unreasonable” storekeepers, and seize scarce commodities ranging from sugar to tea to bread. A good-sized minority of the crowds we know about consisted largely of women; a few others may have included men and women alike. Each crowd voiced specific local grievances, but it is clear that their participants sometimes knew of actions elsewhere and viewed each episode as part of a wider drama.
Commissioning Framework For all commissioners of support services for victims and survivors of child sexual abuse in England
Workplace violence in Bangladesh’s garment industry
Neighborhood social and economic change and diabetes incidence: The HeartHealthyHoods study
Unmet Need for Personal Care Assistance among Rural and Urban Older Adults
Remembering Social Work Pioneer: Nancy A. Humphreys
Pain Management for People with Serious Illness in the Context of the Opioid Use Disorder Epidemic: Proceedings of a Workshop
The United States is facing an opioid use disorder epidemic with opioid overdoses killing 47,000 people in the U.S. in 2017. The past three decades have witnessed a significant increase in the prescribing of opioids for pain, based on the belief that patients were being undertreated for their pain, coupled with a widespread misunderstanding of the addictive properties of opioids. This increase in prescribing of opioids also saw a parallel increase in addiction and overdose. In an effort to address this ongoing epidemic of opioid misuse, policy and regulatory changes have been enacted that have served to limit the availability of prescription opioids for pain management.