312 research outputs found

    Oral History Interview: Mrs. Ethel Porter and Mrs. Joan Porter-Green

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    This interview is one of series conducted concerning the Oral History of Appalachia. Joan Porter-Green and Ethel Green discuss their childhood in Charleston, WV, including their experiences in education (primary, secondary, and college) and their experiences in dealing with racism.https://mds.marshall.edu/oral_history/1514/thumbnail.jp

    Deaths of Despair: A Scoping Review on the Social Determinants of Drug Overdose, Alcohol-Related Liver Disease and Suicide

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    Death of despair; Health inequalities; Public healthMuerte de desesperación; Desigualdades en salud; Salud públicaMort de desesperació; Desigualtats en salut; Salut públicaBackground: There is a lack of consensus on the social determinants of Deaths of Despair (DoD), i.e., an increase in mortality attributed to drug overdose, alcohol-related liver disease, and suicide in the United States (USA) during recent years. The objective of this study was to review the scientific literature on DoD with the purpose of identifying relevant social determinants and inequalities related to these mortality trends. Methods: Scoping review focusing on the period 2015–2022 based on PubMed search. Articles were selected according to the following inclusion criteria: published between 1 January 2000 and 31 October 2021; including empirical data; analyzed DoD including the three causes defined by Case and Deaton; analyzed at least one social determinant; written in English; and studied DoD in the USA context only. Studies were excluded if they only analyzed adolescent populations. We synthesized our findings in a narrative report specifically addressing DoD by economic conditions, occupational hazards, educational level, geographical setting, and race/ethnicity. Results: Seventeen studies were included. Overall, findings identify a progressive increase in deaths attributable to suicide, drug overdose, and alcohol-related liver disease in the USA in the last two decades. The literature concerning DoD and social determinants is relatively scarce and some determinants have been barely studied. However different, however, large inequalities have been identified in the manner in which the causes of death embedded in the concept of DoD affect different subpopulations, particularly African American, and Hispanic populations, but blue collar-whites are also significantly impacted. Low socioeconomic position and education levels and working in jobs with high insecurity, unemployment, and living in rural areas were identified as the most relevant social determinants of DoD. Conclusions: There is a need for further research on the structural and intermediate social determinants of DoD and social mechanisms. Intersectional and systemic approaches are needed to better understand and tackle DoD and related inequalities

    The common good balance sheet, an adequate tool to capture non-financials?

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    In relation to organizational performance measurement, there is a growing concern about the creation of value for people, society and the environment. The traditional corporate reporting does not adequately satisfy the information needs of stakeholders for assessing an organization's past and future potential performance. Practitioners and scholars have developed new non-financial reporting frameworks from a social and environmental perspective, giving birth to the field of Integrated Reporting (IR). The Economy for the Common Good (ECG) model and its tools to facilitate sustainability management and reporting can provide a framework to do it. The present study depicts the theoretical foundations from the business administration field research on which the ECG model relies. Moreover, this paper is the first one that empirically validates such measurement scales by applying of Exploratory Factor Analysis on a sample of 206 European firms. Results show that two out of five dimensions are appropriately defined, along with some guidelines to refine the model. Consequently, it allows knowledge to advance as it assesses the measurement scales' statistical validity and reliability. However, as this is the first quantitative-driven research on the ECG model, the authors' future research will confirm the present results by means of Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA)

    A critical realist evaluation of a music therapy intervention in palliative care

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    BACKGROUND: Music therapy is increasingly used as an adjunct therapy to support symptom management in palliative care. However, studies to date have paid little attention to the processes that lead to changes in patient outcomes. To fill this gap, we examined the processes and experiences involved in the introduction of music therapy as an adjunct complementary therapy to palliative care in a hospice setting in the United Kingdom (UK). METHODS: Using a realistic evaluation approach, we conducted a qualitative study using a variety of approaches. These consisted of open text answers from patients (n = 16) on how music therapy helped meet their needs within one hospice in Northern Ireland, UK. We also conducted three focus groups with a range of palliative care practitioners (seven physicians, seven nursing staff, two social workers and three allied health professionals) to help understand their perspectives on music therapy's impact on their work setting, and what influences its successful implementation. This was supplemented with an interview with the music therapist delivering the intervention. RESULTS: Music therapy contains multiple mechanisms that can provide physical, psychological, emotional, expressive, existential and social support. There is also evidence that the hospice context, animated by a holistic approach to healthcare, is an important facilitator of the effects of music therapy. Examination of patients' responses helped identify specific benefits for different types of patients. CONCLUSIONS: There is a synergy between the therapeutic aims of music therapy and those of palliative care, which appealed to a significant proportion of participants, who perceived it as effective

    Bridging Alone: Religious Conservatism, Marital Homogamy, and Voluntary Association Membership

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    This study characterizes social insularity of religiously conservative American married couples by examining patterns of voluntary associationmembership. Constructing a dataset of 3938 marital dyads from the second wave of the National Survey of Families and Households, the author investigates whether conservative religious homogamy encourages membership in religious voluntary groups and discourages membership in secular voluntary groups. Results indicate that couples’ shared affiliation with conservative denominations, paired with beliefs in biblical authority and inerrancy, increases the likelihood of religious group membership for husbands and wives and reduces the likelihood of secular group membership for wives, but not for husbands. The social insularity of conservative religious groups appears to be reinforced by homogamy—particularly by wives who share faith with husbands

    T84-intestinal epithelial exosomes bear MHC class II/peptide complexes potentiating antigen presentation by dendritic cells: Function of intestinal epithelial exosomes

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    International audienceBackground and aims: Intestinal epithelial cells release antigen presenting vesicles (exosomes) bearing MHC class II/peptide complexes stimulating specific immune responses in vivo. To further characterize the role of human epithelial exosomes in antigen presentation, their capacity to load antigenic peptides, to bind immune target cells and to induce T cell activation was analyzed in vitro. Methods: The capacity of exosomes derived from the HLA-DR4 expressing, intestinal epithelial cell line T84, to load the HLA-DR4-specific peptide 3H-HSA 64-76 and to activate a HLA-DR4-restricted T cell hybridoma, was tested in the presence or absence of human monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs). Interaction of FITC-labeled exosomes with T cells and DCs was analyzed by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. Results: T84-derived exosomes, enriched in CD9, CD81, CD82 and A33 antigen, were capable of binding specifically HSA 64-76 peptide on HLA-DR4 molecules and of interacting preferentially with DCs. HSA-loaded exosomes were unable to activate the T cell hybridoma directly, but induced a productive T cell activation through DCs. When HSA peptide was bound to exosomal HLA-DR4 molecules instead of in a soluble form, the threshold of peptide presentation by DCs was markedly decreased (x10-3). Conclusions: Exosomes released by intestinal epithelial cells bear exogenous peptides complexed to MHC class II molecules and interact preferentially with DCs, strongly potentiating peptide presentation to T cells. Epithelial exosomes constitute a powerful link between luminal antigens and local immune cells by mediating the transfer of tiny amounts of luminal antigenic information and facilitating immune surveillance at mucosal surfaces

    The Future of Women\u27s Studies

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    from the UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON, SEATTLE Because the degree which our students receive reads, B.A. General Studies, students have asked for some means to show on their transcript the women-oriented courses they have taken in their Women Studies concentration. Thus, beginning in summer 1975, many of the courses that would have been listed under General and Interdisciplinary Studies (GIS) will now be listed under Women 290 or Women 490. These new numbers are for special topics in Women Studies and augment our three (only) permanently numbered courses: Women 200 (Introduction to Women Studies), Women 310 (Women and the Law) and Women 499 (Special Problems—Independent Study). In addition, there are new and upper division courses being developed by faculty in various departments, and some of these will be given permanent status in those departments. Thus, majors in women studies will have not only an increase in women-numbered courses to choose from, but they also will be able to select a wider range of women-focused courses offered in traditional departments. Students who want to develop a specific disciplinary approach to the study of women will have an opportunity to do so beginning autumn 1975. ...from the UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI... ...from the UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT... ...from PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY... ...from the SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY... ...from STEPHENS COLLEGE..

    Community health workers improve contact tracing among immigrants with tuberculosis in Barcelona

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    Background: The important increase in immigration during recent years has changed the epidemiology and control strategies for tuberculosis (TB) in many places. This study evaluates the effectiveness of intervention with community health workers (CHW) to improve contact tracing among immigrants. Methods: The study included all TB cases detected by the Barcelona TB Program from 2000 to 2005 and compared a period without CHW intervention (2000-2002) to a period with CHW intervention (2003-2005). The influence on contact tracing of sex, age, hospital of diagnosis, district of residence, birthplace, HIV, homeless and CHW intervention was analysed by logistic regression. Odds ratio (OR) and 95 % confidence intervals (CI) were calculated. Results: 960 foreign born TB cases were detected, 388 in the intervention period. Contact tracing was performed on 65,7 % of 201 smear-positive cases during the pre-intervention period compared to 81.6 % of 152 smear-positive TB cases during the intervention period (p < 0.001). Risk factors associated with incomplete contact tracing of smear-positive index cases included being diagnosed in two hospitals without contact tracing TB unit (OR = 3.5; CI:1.4-8.9) and (OR = 4.6; CI:1.6-13.5) respectively, birth place in India-Pakistan (OR = 4.4; CI:1.9-10.3) or North Africa (OR = 4.3; CI:1.8-10.5), having an unknown residence (OR = 5.4; CI:1.6-18.0), being HIV-infected (OR = 6.1; CI:2.5-14.8

    Micro-behaviors and structural properties of knowledge networks: toward a 'one size fits one'cluster policy

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    The economic returns of cluster policies have been recently called into question. Based on a “one size fits all” approach consisting in boosting R&D collaborations and reinforcing network density, cluster policies are suspected to have failed in reaching their objectives. The paper proposes to go back to the micro foundations of clusters in order to disentangle the links between the long run performance of clusters and their structural properties. We use a simple agent-based model to shed light on how individual motives to build knowledge relationships can give rise to emerging structures with different properties, which imply different innovation and renewal capacities. The simulation results are discussed in a micro-macro perspective, and motivate suggestions to reorient cluster policy guidelines towards more targeted public-funded incentives for R&D collaboration
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