Archive for April 2024
Management of Chronic Pain Associated With Temporomandibular Disorders: Hope on the Horizon
Making the Band: Constructing Competitiveness in Faculty Hiring Decisions
A systematic review and meta-analysis of transdiagnostic cognitive behavioural therapies for emotional disorders
Chronic Low Back Pain Improves More With Cognitive Functional Therapy Than With Core Exercises
How negative self-views may interfere with building positive relationships: An experimental analogue of identity dysfunction in borderline personality disorder
Bizarro: The Surreal Saga of America’s Secret War on Synthetic Drugs and the Florida Kingpins It Captured
The Index of Parental Activities, Context and Experiences (I-PACE): Psychometric Properties of a New Brief Early Parenting Questionnaire
Exploring the Interplay Between Equity Groups, Mental Health and Perceived Employability Amongst Students at a Public Australian University
Diagnosis and Management in Patients With Pain in the Setting of Obesity
Cooperative Agreements for the Garrett Lee Smith State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention and Early Intervention Program (Due by June 3)
Migraine Trainer® App
What’s the Magnitude of the Housing Crisis? It Depends on Your Definition of ‘Affordable’
To understand the risks posed by AI, follow the money
We ought to heed Collingridge’s warning that technology evolves in uncertain ways. However, there is one class of AI risk that is generally knowable in advance. These are risks stemming from misalignment between a company’s economic incentives to profit from its proprietary AI model in a particular way and society’s interests in how the AI model should be monetised and deployed.
April 2024: Neural Responses to Intranasal Oxytocin in Youths With Severe Irritability
Importance of Social Workers Phillipines
Social Disconnectedness in Individuals with Cardiovascular Disease: Associations with Health Literacy and Treatment Burden
Experts’ views on translating NHS support to stop smoking in pregnancy into a comprehensive digital intervention
Testing a syndemics perspective on the effects of multiple adversities on depression and anxiety symptoms in a representative population sample
Hawkins named to new vice dean role at UNC School of Social Work
Robert L. Hawkins, Ph.D., associate dean for academic and faculty affairs at the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at nearby North Carolina State University, has been named to the new position of vice dean at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Social Work
Shaping tomorrow’s support: baseline clinical characteristics predict later social functioning and quality of life in schizophrenia spectrum disorder
Parental Education-related Gaps in Externalising Behaviour at age 3–4 Years: Evidence from a Harmonised Framework from the United Kingdom, the United States, and the Netherlands
From classrooms to controllers: how school closures shaped children’s video gaming habits
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of Faith Healers and Psychiatric Illnesses: A Systematic Review of the Literature in the Arab World
Knowledge for the unknown? A history of the future in Swedish higher education and research policy, 1970–2020
Present and future outlook of Türkiye’s welfare system
Türkiye has overhauled its welfare model and significantly increased social protection investments in the past two decades, with Erdoğan’s policies greatly improving the conditions of many in society. Above: A man takes a ride in a ferry crossing the Bosporus in Istanbul, Türkiye
Social network enhanced behavioral interventions for diabetes and obesity: A 3 arm randomized trial with 2 years follow-up in Jordan
Cash Transfers Improve Economic Conditions and Reduce Maternal Stress in Rural Côte d’Ivoire
2023 Disasters in numbers
Sharing the Work: Using Diversity Advocates to Develop Inclusive Excellence
Child Sexual Abuse in Pakistan: A Phenomenological Study on Parental Understanding and Prevention Strategies for Child Protection
Palliative and end of life care profiles: April 2024 update
Two key brain systems are central to psychosis
Inside the brains of people with psychosis, two key systems are malfunctioning: a “filter” that directs attention toward important external events and internal thoughts, and a “predictor” composed of pathways that anticipate rewards.
Impact of COVID-19 on people living with HIV and HIV care: A qualitative study in the Volta Region of Ghana
England: Apprenticeship funding
Investing in resources: An interaction model of personal resources, commitment, and work achievement
Urbanization, self-harm, and suicidal ideation in left-behind children and adolescents in China: a systematic review and meta-analysis
How conservative policy is changing college enrolment trends
A large majority of American college and university students are so strongly in favour of abortion, gun control and the freedom to study ‘divisive topics’ such as critical race theory that they are either considering leaving their colleges or not applying to those in so-called ‘Red States’ like Florida, where (Republican) Governor Ron DeSantis has been waging a culture war against these issues.
Young Mothers and Dating Violence: An Examination of Depressive Symptomatology and Interpersonal Competency
Prevalence of Psychiatric Disorders During Pregnancy at 2nd Trimester Ultrasound: a Feasibility Study in the General Population (GROUP)
Alcohol and Pregnancy: Communication Materials for Healthcare Professionals and Patients
Academic psychiatry: mental health research and training opportunities webinar
It’s not you (well, it is a bit you), it’s me: Self- versus social image in warm-glow giving
Sociocultural Contexts Affecting Trauma Recovery and Posttraumatic Growth for Women Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence
CfP: Community Engagement and Population Health (Deadline to submit an inquiry: April 26)
HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2025 Final Rule
Migration Stigma: Understanding Prejudice, Discrimination, and Exclusion
In her hands: women’s fight against AIDS in the United States
Examining Financial Fraud Against Older Adults
What Martin Luther King Jr. Knew About Crime and Mental Illness
Mental illness isn’t a crime, and jail isn’t the answer for those experiencing it. We must meet the needs of people in crisis with treatment and support. In order to do so, we need more funding.