10 research outputs found

    Jurors\u27 perceptions of child witnesses with disabilities

    Full text link
    Research has shown that children with disabilities are much more likely to be abused than their non-disabled peers. Moreover, it has been suggested that 50% of child victims of abuse possess a learning and/or emotional disability (NIH, 1999). Although legal professionals rely heavily on the victim to aid in the investigative and judicial process, studies have shown that jurors find children less credible witnesses than adults (Goodman & Bottoms, 1993). It has also been suggested that prosecutors are less likely to prosecute a case that involves a child with a disability (Perry & Wrightsman, 1991). The purpose of the present study was to assess jurors\u27 perceptions of a child witness with a learning disability, a child witness with emotional disturbance or a child witness with mental retardation compared to a child witness without a disability. It was hypothesized that a child witness with a learning disability, emotional disturbance or mental retardation would be perceived as less credible than a child without a disability. Results indicated that there was no significant difference found in witness credibility across groups. The implications of these findings could include: providing a catalyst for further research in the area of child witnesses with disabilities, helping child witnesses with disabilities prepare for court, and making the results available to prosecutors who have been reluctant to prosecute a case involving a child with a disability

    Beyond Financial Aid: How Colleges Can Strengthen the Financial Stability of Low-income Students and Improve Student Outcomes

    Get PDF
    Completing education beyond high school is essential to Americans' well-being and economic success. But rising costs and inadequate financial resources hinder too many students from earning postsecondary credentials. This guidebook identifies six key strategies for improving services for low-income students. The report showcases promising approaches that colleges and universities are already employing, and offers these ideas as guides for all institutions. It also features an institutional self-assessment designed to help postsecondary institutions determine their effectiveness in serving low-income students and take steps toward improving their practices

    Smoking relapse and weight gain prevention program for postmenopausal weight-concerned women: A pilot study

    No full text
    OBJECTIVE: Postmenopausal women have substantial concerns about weight gain when quitting smoking, which may contribute smoking relapse. There is a need for smoking cessation and weight gain prevention programs effective in this population. METHODS: Two formats of a smoking cessation/weight gain prevention follow-up intervention in postmenopausal weight concerned women were compared: a minimally-tailored group format and a highly tailored, multidisciplinary individual format. Effects on sustained abstinence and postcessation weight gain were assessed. Postmenopausal smokers received 6 sessions of behavioral counseling over a 2-week period, 8 weeks of the nicotine transdermal patch, and subsequent random assignment to receive follow-up relapse prevention sessions at 1, 3, 8, and 16 weeks postcessation in either group or individual format. RESULTS: The sample (N = 98), was 67% Caucasian; 33% African-American. Age: m=52.3(7.8) years, follicle stimulating hormone: m=42.6(25.7), body mass index (BMI): m=27.4(6.2), daily smoking rate: m=20.3(11.5), for m=29.4(10.7) years, Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND): m=6.4(2.1), and carbon monoxide: m=23.8(13.0) ppm. Abstinence rates in the group condition were significantly higher at 8 weeks posttreatment. Group format significantly predicted abstinence rates at 8 and 16 weeks posttreatment, even while controlling for age, race, BMI, CPD, years smoking, FTND, and weight concern. Weight concern predicted postcessation weight gain at 8 and 16 weeks posttreatment. CONCLUSIONS: Results indicate that smoking cessation programs for postmenopausal women may best be delivered in a group format and that postcessation weight concerns be dealt with prior to a quit date

    Circulating T-Cell Subsets, Monocytes, and Natural Killer Cells in Peripartum Cardiomyopathy: Results From the Multicenter IPAC Study

    No full text
    •Immune cell subsets were examined in healthy postpartum and peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) women.•In the early postpartum, PPCM women had lower NK and higher CD3+CD4–CD8–CD38+ T cell levels.•Levels largely normalized by 6 months postpartum. The aim of this work was to evaluate the hypothesis that the distribution of circulating immune cell subsets, or their activation state, is significantly different between peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) and healthy postpartum (HP) women. PPCM is a major cause of maternal morbidity and mortality, and an immune-mediated etiology has been hypothesized. Cellular immunity, altered in pregnancy and the peripartum period, has been proposed to play a role in PPCM pathogenesis. The Investigation of Pregnancy-Associated Cardiomyopathy (IPAC) study enrolled 100 women presenting with a left ventricular ejection fraction of <0.45 within 2 months of delivery. Peripheral T-cell subsets, natural killer (NK) cells, and cellular activation markers were assessed by flow cytometry in PPCM women early (<6 wk), 2 months, and 6 months postpartum and compared with those of HP women and women with non–pregnancy-associated recent-onset cardiomyopathy (ROCM). Entry NK cell levels (CD3–CD56+CD16+; reported as % of CD3– cells) were significantly (P < .0003) reduced in PPCM (6.6 ± 4.9% of CD3– cells) compared to HP (11.9 ± 5%). Of T-cell subtypes, CD3+CD4–CD8–CD38+ cells differed significantly (P < .004) between PPCM (24.5 ± 12.5% of CD3+CD4–CD8– cells) and HP (12.5 ± 6.4%). PPCM patients demonstrated a rapid recovery of NK and CD3+CD4–CD8–CD38+ cell levels. However, black women had a delayed recovery of NK cells. A similar reduction of NK cells was observed in women with ROCM. Compared with HP control women, early postpartum PPCM women show significantly reduced NK cells, and higher CD3+CD4–CD8–CD38+ cells, which both normalize over time postpartum. The mechanistic role of NK cells and “double negative” (CD4–CD8–) T regulatory cells in PPCM requires further investigation
    corecore