
Archive for April 2025
Visual simulation and subjective probability estimation: When seeing is believing.
Beyond Bricks and Mortar Building Homes, Communities, and Neighbourhoods

Innovative Nutrition Policies and Programs to Reduce Low-Income Children’s Sodium Intake in the United States: Implication for Social Work
The gender convergence effect in older age: A meta-analytic review comparing modern attitudes toward younger, middle-aged, and older women and men.
The fundamental importance of social insurance for health equity
Teacher–student relationships and student outcomes: A systematic second-order meta-analytic review.
Assessing the feasibility and acceptability of a faith-based home activity toolbox designed for African American families affected by dementia
The Effects of Monthly Unconditional Cash Support Among Latina Families
An accelerated emergence of the self during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic: a hermeneutic phenomenological analysis
Working with Parents in Therapy: A Mentalization-Based Approach

Agents of Change? Women Candidates and Support for Campaign Finance Reform
Racism and cannabis-related problems among Black adults who smoke cigarettes: The role of negative emotions in responses to experiencing racism.
A treasure trove of education reports and studies is under threat

The Hechinger Report | C Forte
ERIC stands for Education Resources Information Center and it is a curated online public library of 2.1 million educational documents that is funded and managed by the U.S. Education Department. The collection dates back to the 1960s and used to be circulated to libraries through microfiche. Today it’s an open access website where anyone can search, read online or download material. Neither a library card nor login credentials are needed. It is used by an estimated 14 million people a year. (I am one of them.) If you’re familiar with MedLine or PubMed for health care studies, this is the equivalent for the field of education.
How Nonprofits Can Create Ethical AI Policies
Human Rights 101 | Episode 14: What is International Justice and How Does it Work?
When the body speaks: A case discussion of bodily manifestations of introjection and identification with the aggressor
Self- and informant-reported cognitive concerns associated with primary brain tumour: systematic review
Bridging the Divide: Exploring Equity Gaps in Undergraduate Research Participation Among Black and African American and Hispanic and Latinx Students
Which Families Benefited from the Expanded Child Tax Credit? The Effects of Income, Race, and Education
State-by-State Estimates of Medicaid Expansion Coverage Losses under a Federal Work Requirement

UConn workshop aims to give Latinas the tools, confidence to make political change

UCONN SSW | P Morenus
Living Like a Candidate: Connecticut Latina Campaign School takes place Saturday, April 26 at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
24-Hour Movement Behavior and Health-Related Physical Fitness in College Students: A Compositional Data Analysis
Mediating Role of Delay Discounting in the Link Between Depressive Symptoms and Diabetes Onset: Findings from a Prospective Survey of a Community Sample
Machine Learning of Smoking Relapse: the Role of Racial Differences and E-Cigarette Vaping Characteristics on Former Smokers
Violence Toward Social Workers in Spain and its Association with Burnout, Job Satisfaction and Anxiety
Calls for urgent action to protect prison staff and prisoners from psychological harm
Exploring mediation through creativity: ethnography, theatre and cinema with Maghrebi unaccompanied migrant youth in Barcelona
Hebrew validation of the postpartum bonding questionnaire: a study of mothers and fathers
Does livestock-crop diversification improve food and nutrition security? Evidence from Eastern Ethiopia
Dual Effects of Self-Compassion on Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms and Posttraumatic Growth: The Roles of Trauma-Related Shame and Guilt
Parent Club: How schools can work with parents to support attendance
Exploring the association between adolescent psychotic-like experiences and components of social performance using a multi-level virtual reality paradigm
Sex differences in schizophrenia spectrum disorders: insights from the DiAPAson study using a data-driven approach
Do parents show interpersonally oriented socialization practices for adolescents’ negative emotions? Through the lens of Chinese families.
Musculoskeletal disorders and other occupational health outcomes among sanitation workers in Nepal: A community based cross-sectional survey exploring the risk factors, knowledge, and practices
Afghanistan’s crystal meth boom is rooted in this plant

c&en | L Billing
Ephedra—known as oman in some areas of the country and bandak in others—has grown wild and abundantly across Afghanistan’s mountainous central highlands for centuries. Today, the plant is behind the dramatic growth in the methamphetamine industry in Afghanistan. Above: A pharmacist in Jalālābād, in eastern Afghanistan, holds the dried branches of the ephedra plant.
NIHR Doctoral Award – 3-year funding opportunity
Beautiful Resilience: 20 Years of Lotus House
Three ways American cities can become more flood-resilient and beautiful
The unregulated link in a toxic supply chain

Grist | IP Aguirre
Homes on the street behind Cardinal Health’s east El Paso warehouse overlook the facility’s loading dock. A Grist data analysis found that residents in parts of the neighborhood are likely being exposed to dangerously high levels of ethylene oxide.