Archive for May 2024
Minimizing Questionable Research Practices – The Role of Norms, Counter Norms, and Micro-Organizational Ethics Discussion
Comparison of Racial and Ethnic Mortality Disparities among Post-9/11 Veterans with and without Traumatic Brain Injury to the Total U.S. Adult Population
Promoting Age Inclusivity in Higher Education: Campus Practices and Perceptions by Students, Faculty, and Staff
Procedural Fairness in Physician–Patient Communication: A Predictor of Health Outcomes in a Cohort of Adults with Overweight or Obesity
CfP: Continuity & Resilience Review: Call for Submissions
Listening to Black Pregnant and Postpartum People: Using Technology to Enhance Equity in Screening and Treatment of Perinatal Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders
How 2-Tone brought new ideas about race and culture to young people beyond the inner cities
Institution level awarding gap metrics for identifying educational inequity: useful tools or reductive distractions?
I Was Once a Student Protester. The Old Hyperbole Is Now Reality.
Judging from the new encampments springing up around the country, the harsh countermeasures of the last couple of weeks are counterproductive. But more than that, they are dangerous. Overreactions like this can lead to social breakdown — on both sides of the barricade.
Institutionalization for good governance to reach sustainable health development: a framework analysis
The challenge of change: understanding the role of habits in university students’ self-regulated learning
Talking to a Loved One With Suicidal Thoughts
Dr. Stacey Freedenthal is an Associate Professor of Social Work at the University of Denver. A licensed clinical social worker, Freedenthal…. provides training and consultation to social workers and other professionals who treat clients at risk for suicide.
Police Harassment and Psychiatric, Sexual, and Substance Use Risk Among Black Sexual Minority Men and Black Transgender Women in the HIV Prevention Trials 061 Cohort
Variances in Smoking Expectancies Predict Moment-to-Moment Smoking Behaviors in Everyday Life
To Transparency and Beyond: Snapshots of States Using Cost Growth Targets to Improve Health Care Affordability
Inside Thatcher’s Monetarism Experiment: The Promise, the Failure, the Legacy
Does Industry Experience Influence Transferable Skills Instruction? Implications for Faculty Development and Culture Theory
Links between mental health problems and future thinking from the perspective of adolescents with experience of depression and anxiety: a qualitative study
Stores Accepting SNAP Online
Mental Health in America: Battling Stigma
Research Ethics Committee and Integrity Board Members’ Collaborative Decision Making in Cases in a Training Setting
More Than 6 in 10 Hispanic Children’s Households Experienced Material Hardship in 2020
Extravagances of Neoliberalism: A conversation with Melinda Cooper
Extravagance is only admissible when it comes to certain kinds of spending. It’s spending that will not promote wage inflation or empower labor or the poor.
Gallia County (Ohio) receives $21.9 million in grants through Appalachian Community Grant Program
The impact of maternal mood and economic stress during Covid-19 pandemic on infant behaviour: Findings from the cross-sectional UK Covid-19 New Mum Study
2024 Robert J. Lampman Memorial Lecture | Susan Dynarski – Insights on Inequality in Education
Indigenous data sovereignty—A new take on an old theme
A new kind of data revolution is unfolding around the world, one that is unlikely to be on the radar of tech giants and the power brokers of Silicon Valley. Indigenous Data Sovereignty (IDSov) is a rallying cry for Indigenous communities seeking to regain control over their information while pushing back against data colonialism and its myriad harms.
BMI Growth Profiles Among Black Children from Immigrant and US-Born Families
Diaspora, Climate-Induced Migration and Skills Mobility: A focus on Africa
Caregiver Experience with Bicultural, Bilingual Family Navigators to Support Early Childhood Development
Birthweight trends and their explanatory factors in Hungary between 1999 and 2018: an analysis of the Hungarian Tauffer registry
The impact of social support on benefit finding among patients with advanced lung cancer and their caregivers: based on actor-partner interdependence mediation model
The Lassies are No Feart
Safe sex negotiation and HIV risk reduction among women: A cross-sectional analysis of Burkina Faso 2021 Demographic and Health Survey
Millions of British children born since 2010 have only known poverty. My £3bn plan would give them hope
They are austerity’s children, born after 2010, perhaps now at secondary school – and they account for 3.4 million of Britain’s 4.3 million children in poverty. Most have never known what it is like to be free of poverty. And yet in almost every single year of the past decade, even as their need has been mounting, the government’s support for children has been spiralling downwards, each year more difficult than the year before as, with almost surgical precision, the government has made the already poor even poorer and propelled the number of poor children up by 100,000 a year.
Understanding parent perspectives on engagement with online youth-focused mental health programs
Associations Between Opioid Agonist Treatment and Withdrawal Symptoms: Exploratory Analyses from the OPTIMA Study
Cancer mortality patterns in selected Northern and Southern African countries
Mental health status among children and adolescents in one-child and multichild families: a meta-analysis of comparative studies
Assessing negative reinforcement through simultaneous observing and committed concurrent progressive‐ratio procedures: Preliminary investigations
What makes a NIHR Doctoral Fellowship application excellent?
Associations between the number of siblings, parent–child relationship and positive youth development of adolescents in mainland China: A cross‐sectional study
Social Support and Social Stress Among Suicidal Inpatients at Military Treatment Facilities: A Multidimensional Investigation
“I’ll take them another day”: A qualitative study exploring the socio-behavioral complexities of childhood vaccination in urban poor settlements
Participatory policy analysis in health policy and systems research: reflections from a study in Nepal
Four Things You Should Know About Arthritis
Implementation of Point of Care Sexually Transmitted Infections Testing in a Community Clinic Setting
If You Care About Human Freedom, You Should Reject the Capitalist Work Ethic
What makes Paul Lafargue’s case for leisure distinctive is that he unapologetically endorses hedonistic idleness.
The Housing Movement Failed Gaza – and Revealed Its Own Double Standards
Op-ed: A home is a home, no matter where. As a Palestinian American housing activist, I’m stunned by the pro-housing movement’s silence. Above: At least 370,000 housing units in Gaza have been damaged since Oct. 7, 2023, according to the U.N. Another 79,000 have been destroyed completely, such as those pictured here in the city of Gaza.