Archive for December 2019
Investing in refugees, investing in Australia
Reflections on Interactionist Institutional Orders
Risk factors of acute malnutrition among children aged 6–59 months enrolled in a community-based programme in Kurigram, Bangladesh: a mixed-method matched case-control study
2019 Annual trends and outlook report: Gender equality in rural Africa: From commitments to outcomes
Perceived Discrimination and Depressive Symptoms: Is the Cognitive Triad a Moderator or Mediator?
Helping Poor Smokers Quit
Risk of Developing Parkinson Disease in Bipolar Disorder: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Opioid Crisis Video 1: “An Uncanny Convergence: The Opioid-Methamphetamine Syndemic”
Policy and practice briefings: Migrants, refugees and asylum seekers
Neighborhood perceptions and allostatic load: Evidence from Midlife in the United States study
Ageing, age-related diseases and oxidative stress: What to do next?
Washington’s privatization of liquor: Effects on household alcohol purchases from Initiative 1183
Skilling Up: The Scope of Modern Apprenticeship
COveRs to impRove AesthetiC ouTcome after Surgery for Chronic subdural haemAtoma by buRr hole trepanation (CORRECT-SCAR): protocol of a Swiss single-blinded, randomised controlled trial
The last 10 years: any changes in perceptions of the seriousness of alcohol, cannabis, and substance use in Canada?
Does migrant background predict to what extent colorectal cancer patients want to be informed about their life expectancy? – a cross-sectional analysis
Career mobility of maternal care providers in Mali: a mixed method study on midwives and obstetric nurses
Health promoter, advocate, legitimiser — the many roles of WHO guidelines: a qualitative study
One opioid user saving another: the first study of an opioid overdose-reversal and naloxone distribution program addressing hard-to-reach drug scenes in Denmark
Drug utilization and cost associated with inflammatory bowel disease management in Saudi Arabia
Being Friends with or Rejected by Classmates: Aggression Toward Same- and Cross-Ethnic Peers
The Long History of Debt Cancellation
Moral thinking about debt has fluctuated throughout U.S. history. Today’s calls for cancellation suggest it may be poised for transformation once again. Above: An American man being released from debtors’ prison.