137 research outputs found
Intimate partner violence among African American and African Caribbean women: prevalence, risk factors, and the influence of cultural attitudes.
BackgroundWomen of African descent are disproportionately affected by intimate partner abuse; yet, limited data exist on whether the prevalence varies for women of African descent in the United States and those in the US territories.ObjectiveIn this multisite study, we estimated lifetime and 2-year prevalence of physical, sexual, and psychological intimate partner abuse (IPA) among 1,545 women of African descent in the United States and US Virgin Islands (USVI). We also examined how cultural tolerance of physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence (IPV) influences abuse.DesignBetween 2009 and 2011, we recruited African American and African Caribbean women aged 18-55 from health clinics in Baltimore, MD, and St. Thomas and St. Croix, USVI, into a comparative case-control study. Screened and enrolled women completed an audio computer-assisted self-interview. Screening-based prevalence of IPA and IPV were stratified by study site and associations between tolerance of IPV and abuse experiences were examined by multivariate logistic regression analysis.ResultsMost of the 1,545 screened women were young, of low-income, and in a current intimate relationship. Lifetime prevalence of IPA was 45% in St. Thomas, 38% in St. Croix, and 37% in Baltimore. Lifetime prevalence of IPV was 38% in St. Thomas, 28% in St. Croix, and 30% in Baltimore. Past 2-year prevalence of IPV was 32% in St. Thomas, 22% in St. Croix, and 26% in Baltimore. Risk and protective factors for IPV varied by site. Community and personal acceptance of IPV were independently associated with lifetime IPA in Baltimore and St. Thomas.ConclusionsVariance across sites for risk and protective factors emphasizes cultural considerations in sub-populations of women of African descent when addressing IPA and IPV in given settings. Individual-based interventions should be coupled with community/societal interventions to shape attitudes about use of violence in relationships and to promote healthy relationships
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Nurse Faculty Scholars program leadership training
Background
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Nurse Faculty Scholars program was created to address the nursing shortage via development of the next generation of national leaders in academic nursing.
Purpose
The leadership training combined development at the scholar's home institution with in-person didactic and interactive sessions with notable leaders in nursing and other disciplines.
Methods
A curriculum matrix, organized by six domains, was evaluated quantitatively and qualitatively.
Discussion
What set this program apart is that it immersed junior faculty in concerted leadership development with regard to all aspects of the faculty role so that teaching interactively, making use of the latest in information technology, giving testimony before a policy-making group, participating in strategic planning, and figuring out how to reduce the budget without jeopardizing quality were all envisioned as part of the faculty role.
Conclusion
The domains covered by this program could easily be used as the framework to plan other leadership-development programs for the next generation of academic leader
Eff ectiveness of an integrated intimate partner violence and HIV prevention intervention in Rakai, Uganda: analysis of an intervention in an existing cluster randomised cohort
Background Intimate partner violence (IPV) is associated with HIV infection. We aimed to assess whether provision
of a combination of IPV prevention and HIV services would reduce IPV and HIV incidence in individuals enrolled in
the Rakai Community Cohort Study (RCCS), Rakai, Uganda.
Methods We used pre-existing clusters of communities randomised as part of a previous family planning trial in this
cohort. Four intervention group clusters from the previous trial were provided standard of care HIV services plus a
community-level mobilisation intervention to change attitudes, social norms, and behaviours related to IPV, and a
screening and brief intervention to promote safe HIV disclosure and risk reduction in women seeking HIV
counselling and testing services (the Safe Homes and Respect for Everyone [SHARE] Project). Seven control group
clusters (including two intervention groups from the original trial) received only standard of care HIV services.
Investigators for the RCCS did a baseline survey between February, 2005, and June, 2006, and two follow-up surveys
between August, 2006, and April, 2008, and June, 2008, and December, 2009. Our primary endpoints were selfreported
experience and perpetration of past year IPV (emotional, physical, and sexual) and laboratory-based diagnosis
of HIV incidence in the study population. We used Poisson multivariable regression to estimate adjusted prevalence
risk ratios (aPRR) of IPV, and adjusted incidence rate ratios (aIRR) of HIV acquisition. This study was registered with
ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02050763.
Findings Between Feb 15, 2005, and June 30, 2006, we enrolled 11 448 individuals aged 15–49 years. 5337 individuals
(in four intervention clusters) were allocated into the SHARE plus HIV services group and 6111 individuals (in seven
control clusters) were allocated into the HIV services only group. Compared with control groups, individuals in the
SHARE intervention groups had fewer self-reports of past-year physical IPV (346 [16%] of 2127 responders in control
groups vs 217 [12%] of 1812 responders in intervention groups; aPRR 0·79, 95% CI 0·67–0·92) and sexual IPV
(261 [13%] of 2038 vs 167 [10%] of 1737; 0·80, 0·67–0·97). Incidence of emotional IPV did not diff er (409 [20%] of
2039 vs 311 [18%] of 1737; 0·91, 0·79–1·04). SHARE had no eff ect on male-reported IPV perpetration. At follow-up 2
(after about 35 months) the intervention was associated with a reduction in HIV incidence (1·15 cases per 100 personyears
in control vs 0·87 cases per 100 person-years in intervention group; aIRR 0·67, 95% CI 0·46–0·97, p=0·0362).
Interpretation SHARE could reduce some forms of IPV towards women and overall HIV incidence, possibly through
a reduction in forced sex and increased disclosure of HIV results. Findings from this study should inform future
work toward HIV prevention, treatment, and care, and SHARE’s ecological approach could be adopted, at least partly,
as a standard of care for other HIV programmes in sub-Saharan Africa.
Funding Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, US National Institutes of Health, WHO, President’s Emergency Plan for
AIDS Relief, Fogarty International Center
The health of women and girls determines the health and well-being of our modern world: A White Paper From the International Council on Women's Health Issues
The International Council on Women's Health Issues (ICOWHI) is an international nonprofit association dedicated to the goal of promoting health, health care, and well-being of women and girls throughout the world through participation, empowerment, advocacy, education, and research. We are a multidisciplinary network of women's health providers, planners, and advocates from all over the globe. We constitute an international professional and lay network of those committed to improving women and girl's health and quality of life. This document provides a description of our organization mission, vision, and commitment to improving the health and well-being of women and girls globally
Burmese pythons in Florida: A synthesis of biology, impacts, and management tools
Burmese pythons (Python molurus bivittatus) are native to southeastern Asia, however, there is an established invasive population inhabiting much of southern Florida throughout the Greater Everglades Ecosystem. Pythons have severely impacted native species and ecosystems in Florida and represent one of the most intractable invasive-species management issues across the globe. The difficulty stems from a unique combination of inaccessible habitat and the cryptic and resilient nature of pythons that thrive in the subtropical environment of southern Florida, rendering them extremely challenging to detect. Here we provide a comprehensive review and synthesis of the science relevant to managing invasive Burmese pythons. We describe existing control tools and review challenges to productive research, identifying key knowledge gaps that would improve future research and decision making for python control. (119 pp
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Genome-wide association study of Tourette Syndrome
Tourette Syndrome (TS) is a developmental disorder that has one of the highest familial recurrence rates among neuropsychiatric diseases with complex inheritance. However, the identification of definitive TS susceptibility genes remains elusive. Here, we report the first genome-wide association study (GWAS) of TS in 1285 cases and 4964 ancestry-matched controls of European ancestry, including two European-derived population isolates, Ashkenazi Jews from North America and Israel, and French Canadians from Quebec, Canada. In a primary meta-analysis of GWAS data from these European ancestry samples, no markers achieved a genome-wide threshold of significance (p<5 × 10−8); the top signal was found in rs7868992 on chromosome 9q32 within COL27A1 (p=1.85 × 10−6). A secondary analysis including an additional 211 cases and 285 controls from two closely-related Latin-American population isolates from the Central Valley of Costa Rica and Antioquia, Colombia also identified rs7868992 as the top signal (p=3.6 × 10−7 for the combined sample of 1496 cases and 5249 controls following imputation with 1000 Genomes data). This study lays the groundwork for the eventual identification of common TS susceptibility variants in larger cohorts and helps to provide a more complete understanding of the full genetic architecture of this disorder
Assessing dangerousness : Violence by batterers and child abusers
New Yorkxi, 165 p.; 23 cm
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