2,630 research outputs found
Why Punish the Children? A Reappraisal of the Children of Incarcerated Mothers in America
The incarceration rate for female offenders has skyrocketed in recent years. This has spurred unwelcomed growth of the invisible class of infants, children, and teenagers who find themselves without a mother at home. While new legions of children are growing up separated from their mothers, government agencies appear more powerless than ever to attend to the needs of their children, their mothers, and their caregivers. Now more than ever, we must renew our concern and define our commitment to these children
Principles and Recommendations for Gender-Responsive Approaches for Criminal Justice Reform
This report documents the need for a new vision for the criminal justice system, one that recognizes the behavioral and social differences between female and male offenders that have specific implications for gender-responsive policy and practice
Young adults seeking medical care: do race and ethnicity matter?
"Health care disparities among different racial and ethnic subgroups in the United States are of national concern. Health insurance is a key factor in the access to medical care services, and young adults in the United States aged 20-29 years are more likely than adults aged 30 years and over to lack health insurance coverage (1-4). A previous report has examined the differences in health insurance and access to health care by gender among young adults aged 20-29 years. This report focuses on the differences in health insurance and access to health care among Hispanic, non-Hispanic white, and non-Hispanic black young adults aged 20-29 years." - p. 1Barbara Bloom and Robin A. Cohen.Also available via the World Wide Web as an Acrobat .pdf file (515 KB, 8 p.).Includes bibliographical references
A pilot evaluation of appetite-awareness training in the treatment of childhood overweight and obesity
Objective: The aim of this study was to conduct a preliminary evaluation of Children’s Appetite Awareness Training (CAAT), a treatment for childhood obesity which encourages overweight children to eat in response to internal appetite cues. Method: Overweight children (ages 6 – 12 years old) were randomized to either the CAAT treatment group (N=23), to receive one-hour treatment sessions over six weeks, or a wait-list group (N=24). Weight and height of children and parents in both groups were assessed at pre- and post-treatment (or equivalent time for wait-list control) and at a six-month follow-up for those in the CAAT group. Results: The intervention had a significant, short-term effect on the BMI of children who participated. Although at six-month follow-up, children’s BMI has not increased significantly, the difference between pre-treatment and follow-up BMI was no longer significant. Discussion: These results are encouraging for the use of CAAT with overweight children. Long-term effectiveness could be enhanced through increasing the duration of the program, adding booster sessions and increased involvement of parents
The Incarceration of Women in California
This articles addresses why the California prison system needs broad reform aimed toward providing female offenders the support structure necessary to maximize their opportunities for success
Morphological evidence for enhanced kisspeptin and neurokinin B signaling in the infundibular nucleus of the aging man.
Peptidergic neurons synthesizing kisspeptin (KP) and neurokinin B (NKB) in the hypothalamic infundibular nucleus have been implicated in negative sex steroid feedback to GnRH neurons. In laboratory rodents, testosterone decreases KP and NKB expression in this region. In the present study, we addressed the hypothesis that the weakening of this inhibitory testosterone feedback in elderly men coincides with enhanced KP and NKB signaling in the infundibular nucleus. This central hypothesis was tested in a series of immunohistochemical studies on hypothalamic sections of male human individuals that were divided into arbitrary "young" (21-49 yr, n = 11) and "aged" (50-67 yr, n = 9) groups. Quantitative immunohistochemical experiments established that the regional densities of NKB-immunoreactive (IR) perikarya and fibers, and the incidence of afferent contacts they formed onto GnRH neurons, exceeded several times those of the KP-IR elements. Robust aging-dependent enhancements were identified in the regional densities of KP-IR perikarya and fibers and the incidence of afferent contacts they established onto GnRH neurons. The abundance of NKB-IR perikarya, fibers, and axonal appositions to GnRH neurons also increased with age, albeit to lower extents. In dual-immunofluorescent studies, the incidence of KP-IR NKB perikarya increased from 36% in young to 68% in aged men. Collectively, these immunohistochemical data suggest an aging-related robust enhancement in central KP signaling and a moderate enhancement in central NKB signaling. These changes are compatible with a reduced testosterone negative feedback to KP and NKB neurons. The heavier KP and NKB inputs to GnRH neurons in aged, compared with young, men may play a role in the enhanced central stimulation of the reproductive axis. It requires clarification to what extent the enhanced KP and NKB signaling upstream from GnRH neurons is an adaptive response to hypogonadism or, alternatively, a consequence of a decline in the androgen sensitivity of KP and NKB neurons
A global health action agenda for the Biden administration
Joe Biden will assume the US presidency at a time of unprecedented global health crises, with the COVID-19 pandemic and major setbacks in reducing poverty, hunger, and disease. The COVID-19 pandemic offers rare opportunities for the US President-elect to spearhead long-overdue structural changes and revitalise global health leadership. Building trust among global partners will be challenging, given the USA\u27s withdrawal from, and disruption of, international cooperation under the presidency of Donald Trump. The USA will have to lead in a different, more collaborative way. Here, we offer a Global Action Agenda for the Biden Administration
Evidence for an FU Orionis-like Outburst from a Classical T Tauri Star
We present pre- and post-outburst observations of the new FU Orionis-like
young stellar object PTF 10qpf (also known as LkHa 188-G4 and HBC 722). Prior
to this outburst, LkHa 188-G4 was classified as a classical T Tauri star on the
basis of its optical emission-line spectrum superposed on a K8-type
photosphere, and its photometric variability. The mid-infrared spectral index
of LkHa 188-G4 indicates a Class II-type object. LkHa 188-G4 exhibited a steady
rise by ~1 mag over ~11 months starting in Aug. 2009, before a subsequent more
abrupt rise of > 3 mag on a time scale of ~2 months. Observations taken during
the eruption exhibit the defining characteristics of FU Orionis variables: (i)
an increase in brightness by > 4 mag, (ii) a bright optical/near-infrared
reflection nebula appeared, (iii) optical spectra are consistent with a G
supergiant and dominated by absorption lines, the only exception being Halpha
which is characterized by a P Cygni profile, (iv) near-infrared spectra
resemble those of late K--M giants/supergiants with enhanced absorption seen in
the molecular bands of CO and H_2O, and (v) outflow signatures in H and He are
seen in the form of blueshifted absorption profiles. LkHa 188-G4 is the first
member of the FU Orionis-like class with a well-sampled optical to mid-infrared
spectral energy distribution in the pre-outburst phase. The association of the
PTF 10qpf outburst with the previously identified classical T Tauri star LkHa
188-G4 (HBC 722) provides strong evidence that FU Orionis-like eruptions
represent periods of enhanced disk accretion and outflow, likely triggered by
instabilities in the disk. The early identification of PTF 10qpf as an FU
Orionis-like variable will enable detailed photometric and spectroscopic
observations during its post-outburst evolution for comparison with other known
outbursting objects.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, ApJ accepte
A picture of eight turtles: the child’s understanding of cardinality and numerosity
An essential part of understanding number words (e.g., eight) is understanding that all number words refer to the dimension of experience we call numerosity. Knowledge of this general principle may be separable from knowledge of individual number word meanings. That is, children may learn the meanings of at least a few individual number words before realizing that all number words refer to numerosity. Alternatively, knowledge of this general principle may form relatively early and proceed to guide and constrain the acquisition of individual number word meanings. The current article describes two experiments in which 116 children (2½- to 4-year-olds) were given a Word Extension task as well as a standard Give-N task. Results show that only children who understood the cardinality principle of counting successfully extended number words from one set to another based on numerosity—with evidence that a developing understanding of this concept emerges as children approach the cardinality principle induction. These findings support the view that children do not use a broad understanding of number words to initially connect number words to numerosity but rather make this connection around the time that they figure out the cardinality principle of counting
New Mandates and Imperatives in the Revised ACA Code of Ethics
The first major revision of the ACA Code of Ethics in a decade occurred in late 2005, with the updated edition containing important new mandates and imperatives. This article provides interviews with members of the Ethics Revision Task Force that flesh out seminal changes in the revised ACA Code of Ethics in the areas of confidentiality, romantic and sexual interactions, dual relationships, end-of-life care for terminally ill clients, cultural sensitivity, diagnosis, interventions, practice termination, technology, and deceased clients
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