Archive for June 2023
Greater Engagement in Valued Activities is Associated with Less Barriers to Quitting Smoking Among Smokers with Mobility Impairments
The spirit of time and the spirit of depth: Psychodynamic approaches in public mental health services in Israel
Migration aspirations and the perceptions of the political, economic and social environment in Africa
A prospective study of the relative contribution of adolescent peer support quantity and quality to depressive symptoms
Children accommodated in secure children’s homes
Determinants of cigarette smoking and smoking frequency among women of reproductive age in Nigeria: evidence from a nationwide cross-sectional survey
Lesbian and heterosexual Spanish and Swedish couples: Division of labor and life‐satisfaction
Filling the gap in service provision. Partners as family carers to people with Parkinson’s disease: A Scandinavian perspective
Effectiveness of a year-long individual cognitive stimulation program in Portuguese older adults with cognitive impairment
Re-Examining the Reliability and Validity of the SWPBIS Tiered Fidelity Inventory
When life gives you lemons, make anti-poverty strategies
Evaluating Covariate Effects on ESM Measurement Model Changes with Latent Markov Factor Analysis: A Three-Step Approach
Estimating the number of people living with dementia at different stages of the condition in India: A Delphi process
The association between the interaction of migration background and physical activity with loneliness in middle‐aged and older adults living in Germany
Globalization and the health and well-being of migrant domestic workers in Malaysia
Self-management for sickle cell disease among patients and parents: A qualitative study
Cognitive and behavioral profiles in children with autism spectrum disorder with and without Attention‐Deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Strategizing early interventions to improve hemodialysis acceptance among chronic kidney disease patients
It’s not the rotten apples! Why family scholars should adopt a structural perspective on racism
Hidden Disparities in Utilization of Depression Treatments
Patient adherence to tuberculosis treatment in the Indian subcontinent: systematic review and meta-synthesis of qualitative research
Equivocal findings in forensic evaluations.
Reflexivity and positionality in research
The Short Guide to Town and Country Planning 2e
Women’s migration to cities
Teachers as Policy Advocates Strategies for Collaboration and Change
The new normal: changed patterns of dwelling demand and supply
Strès ak Pwoblèm Pap Janm Fini: Deciphering migration-related stress from the perspectives of Haitian immigrants in Florida
Activities and social contact as antecedents to sleep onset time in U.S. adolescents
The past and future of uncertainty in advanced illness: a systematic scoping review of underlying cognitive processes
Is a “real” artwork better than a reproduction? A meta-analysis of the genuineness effect.
Associations of adult roles and minority stressors with trajectories of alcohol dependence symptoms throughout adulthood among sexual minority women.
How (not) to be held accountable in research: The case of the Dutch integrity code
In Defense of the Netherlands Code of Conduct for Research Integrity: Response to Radder
Using substances to cope with social anxiety: Associations with use and consequences in daily life.
Inclusive, engaged, and accountable institutional review boards
Harm reduction and recovery services support (HRRSS) to mitigate the opioid overdose epidemic in a rural community
Ingenious librarians
Throughout an unusually sunny Fall in 1970, hundreds of students and faculty at Syracuse University sat one at a time before a printing computer terminal (similar to an electric typewriter) connected to an IBM 360 mainframe located across campus in New York state. Almost none of them had ever used a computer before, let alone a computer-based information retrieval system. Their hands trembled as they touched the keyboard; several later reported that they had been afraid of breaking the entire system as they typed.