Rates of suicide, alcohol and drug fatalities (collectively known as “deaths of despair”) have increased by 9%, 45% and 81% respectively in England and Wales over the last decade. Given that mortality rates for most other causes are stable or decreasing, this increase is deeply concerning. In total, in 2022 these three causes accounted for 18,947 fatalities in England and Wales, almost one in 30 of the deaths recorded that year. The figures are even starker for younger people, with “deaths of despair” making up more than 40% of fatalities in the 25 to 29 age group.
Archive for November 2024
Visualization of AI Accuracy: A Novel Assignment for the Teaching of Critical Thinking and Science Writing
Using Generative AI to Promote Psychological, Feedback, and Artificial Intelligence Literacies in Undergraduate Psychology
Progressive Functional Analysis and Function-Based Intervention Via Telehealth: A Replication and Extension
Using Instructions and Acoustic Feedback to Improve Staff Delivery of Behavior-Specific Praise in a Clinical Setting
Expression of Concern: Behavioral Activation and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in the Treatment of Anxiety and Depression in Cancer Survivors: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Modeling Growth in Reading With Curriculum-Based Measurement Versus Computer-Adaptive Tests
Evaluating the Reliability of Name Writing Rubric Scoring
States Should Spur Use of “Direct Pay” Tax Credits to Advance Clean Energy in Low-Income Communities
At risk or resilient? Examining the effects of having a migration background on mental and social wellbeing outcomes amongst adolescents
ABCs unravelled: The time and timing in calls for behavioural change
PEN America Index of Educational Gag Orders
So-called ‘deaths of despair’ are rising in the UK. Labour must act on this silent epidemic
The Right to Oblivion: Privacy and the Good Life
CfP: Perspectives on Politics: Political Science and the University (Deadline 8/1/25)
A Fleeting Utopia: The Rise and Fall of the “Women’s Hotel” in American Cities
Doing Radical Things Right: Ethical Good Practice for Basic Income Experiments
Listen for a moment. It’s time to cancel student debt. All of it.
Increasing Transparency on the Use of Artificial Intelligence and Automated Tools in Mixed Methods Studies
Expectation, emotion and the built environment: experiences of occupying hospital spaces as a loved one nears the end of life
Drivers of Income Inequality in Ireland and Northern Ireland
BASW reacts to UK Budget
BASW made a submission to the Treasury ahead of the budget on what we wanted the Chancellor to announce, which included more spending on social care, tackling poverty, and giving local authorities the long-term funding needed to deliver local services.
“Suffering in silence”: How social workers in child welfare practice experience and manage burnout
Health and Social Care Committee launches inquiry into cost of inaction on adult social care reform
Black Male Veterans’ Mental Health: Exploring Their Lived Experiences
Community Diversity and Social Media Use in Local Governments
The Nexus of Resistance and Neoliberalism in Social Work and Social Welfare: A Scoping Review
Opioid exposure in gestation, postnatal adversity, and preschool-age cognitive functioning
A ‘radically realistic’ vision for adult social care
Explaining socioeconomic inequality in food consumption patterns among households with women of childbearing age in South Africa
Outsourcing our future to for-profit AI
The recent AI Nobel Prize win and California’s vetoed AI safety bill highlight the growing trend of placing our future in the hands of private corporations, with little public accountability.