Archive for November 2024
Lessons learned from the Health Resources and Services Administration health workforce well-being grantees.
Can Professors Afford the American Dream?
Iowa’s Big Tax Cut for the Rich Already Straining State Services
Sexual Trauma, Polygenic Scores, and Mental Health Diagnoses and Outcomes
Whiteout How Racial Capitalism Changed the Color of Opioids in America
Health sciences training for disability inclusion: the need to engage with emotion
Postmortem evidence of decreased brain pH in major depressive disorder: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Carceral Recovery: Prisons, Drug Markets, and the New Pharmaceutical Self
‘Once you’ve opened that can of worms’: qualitative study to understand why liaison psychiatry staff are not asking about domestic abuse following self-harm
Intimate Subjects: Touch and Tangibility in Britain’s Cerebral Age
Teens and their parents talk about the future – World Children’s Day 2024 | UNICEF
Setting the Table: Nutritional standards and practical guidance for early learning and childcare providers in Scotland
Disadvantaged Black Boys Less Likely to Be Identified for Special Education by Black Teachers
Intimate Partner Violence Prevention
Poverty, Neglect, and Child Protection Reform: An Invited Editorial
Integrating constructivism in the critical dialogue method of clinical ethics
Yukon-based clinical social worker temporarily stripped of registration for pushing conspiracy theories
Dr. Lea Caragata, the director of UBC’s School of Social Work, told CBC she felt “shock and horror” upon learning details of Debbra Greig’s views.
Who are the hybrid workers?
Assisted dying: what are the ‘slippery slope’ fears in England and Wales?
One of the arguments that has come to the fore in the debate surrounding whether assisted dying should be legalised in England and Wales is the “slippery slope” theory – that even if the legislation contains watertight qualifying criteria and safeguards, the law will inevitably be expanded in time and the restrictions loosened.
The implementation of an integrated workplace health promotion program in Dutch organizations ‐ A mixed methods process evaluation
Identifying job demands and resources typologies and exploring their differences on employee health behaviors.
Second Investment Dialogue for Australia’s Children held in Adelaide
The dialogue brings the Government and 24 philanthropic partners together to agree to work collaboratively to empower vulnerable communities, the families that live in them and their children by addressing entrenched, intergenerational disadvantage.
The National Aged Care Advocacy Program presenting issues: report 4
The (in)congruence effects of organizational green compensation and employee green conscientiousness on pro-environmental behavior: evidence from China
Summer EBT Technology Grants (Due by Jan 15)
‘I can feel sad about it and I can worry, but inside I know everything happens for a reason’: personal experiences in the aftermath of the March 15 Christchurch mosque attacks
Anime watching: is a new kind of addiction? Evaluation of psychopathologies and psychosocial factors associated with problematic anime watching among adolescents
An anti-racism framework: voices of First Nations peoples
How are interpretive methods feminist and queer? Four discursive methods for studying marginality
A scoping review of the development and validation procedures of 59 supervision measures published between 1984 and 2023
Parent–child emotion dynamics in families presenting for behavioral parent training: Is there a link with child behavior, parenting, and treatment outcome?
Democrats would rather have fascism than Bernie Sanders’ populism
Improving community engagement in addiction science
Getting Racism Out of Our Work (GROW): Design, deployment, and early outcomes for a program to increase psychology supervisor’s multicultural competence.
CfP | Gender in the Economy: Women in the Digital World (Closes Dec 9)
Guardrails Needed for Social Science Research
An integrative conceptual review of multiperspective frameworks in personality research and a roadmap for extended applications in organizational psychology.
Ethical and diversity considerations of mandatory reporting: Implications for training.
Psychonauts: Drugs and the Making of the Modern Mind
Restorative Justice Responses to Sexual Violence: Perspectives and Experiences of Participating Persons Responsible and Persons Harmed
The integrated behavioral model of mental health help seeking (IBM-HS): A health services utilization theory of planned behavior for accessing care.
Development and efficacy of an ethical decision-making tool for training clinical psychologists.
Dorothy Allison was an authentic voice for the poor, capturing the beauty, humor and pain of working-class life in America
In Bastard out of Carolina, Bone resents the rich rather than admiring them. In a conversation with one of her aunts, she says she “hates” them. Interestingly, her aunt provides the poor person’s counterpoint to hate.
“Could be they’re looking at you sitting up here eating blackberries … could be they’re jealous of you for what you got, afraid of what you would do if they stepped in the yard.”
Federal Deaths in Custody and During Arrest, 2022 – Statistical Tables
Touchstones of Equivalence and the Houdini Transformation
Can Preschoolers Learn Novel Causal Rules in Pretense?
Onto the Next Generation: Exploring the Impact of Mother’s Experiences of Child Abuse and Commercial Sex Industry Involvement on Child Custody Outcomes
Fayetteville Police Positive About Partnership With Social Workers
School of Social Work professors Mark Plassmeyer and Kim Stauss.