Archive for October 2023
“A change in the narrative, a change in consensus”: the role of Deep End networks in supporting primary care practitioners serving areas of blanket socioeconomic deprivation
A Systematic Literature Review on the Application of Telepsychiatry in Correctional Facilities/Prisons: Necessity and Modern Challenges
The Handbook of LGBTQIA-Inclusive Hospice and Palliative Care
Silicon Valley Imperialism: Techno Fantasies and Frictions in Postsocialist Times
Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on hospice and palliative care in nursing homes—A qualitative study from a multiperspective view
Advancing Workplace Exposure Surveillance in Canada
Do couples who use fertility treatments divorce more? Evidence from the US National Survey of Family Growth
Seeing in the Dark: A View into Dissociation and Healing
NIRS-aided differential diagnosis among patients with major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia
Self-neglect: Exploring the social work response
Understanding Digital Treatments: Why All Mental Health Apps Are Not Created Equal
Building Opportunity III: Affirmatively furthering fair housing in the Low Income Housing Tax Credit program
Navigating stigma, survival, and sex in contexts of social inequity among young transgender women and sexually diverse men in Kingston, Jamaica
One Bureau under God
On October 10, 1963, the Department of Justice signed a memo granting the FBI permission to conduct technical, wall-to-wall surveillance on Martin Luther King, Jr. The eloquence and reach of King following the March on Washington had so alarmed the Kennedy administration and the bureau that six weeks later they felt drastic steps had to be taken.