1,018 research outputs found

    When Big Brother Becomes ā€œBig Fatherā€: Examining the Continued Use of Parens Patriae in State Juvenile Delinquency Proceedings

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    The U.S. Constitution grants American citizens numerous Due Process rights; but, historically, the Supreme Court declined to extend these Due Process rights to children. Initially, common-law courts treated child offenders over the age of seven in the same manner as adult criminals. At the start of the 20th century, though, juvenile reformers assisted in creating unique juvenile courts that used the parens patriae doctrine and viewed children as delinquent youths in need of judicial parental guidance rather than punishment. Later, starting in 1967, the Supreme Court released multiple opinions extending certain constitutional Due Process rights to children in juvenile delinquency proceedings. While most states have implemented these constitutional rights into statutory and procedural law, the state of Michigan still struggles to clearly delineate how its justice system views and handles child offenders. Although Michiganā€™s Juvenile Code originated from a parens patriae standpoint, current Michigan juvenile court practices are inconsistent at best and completely contrary at worst. The conflict between viewing a child as a criminal and as a delinquent youth is evident in the striking differences between Michiganā€™s Juvenile Code and Michigan courtsā€™ opinions. This Comment examines Michiganā€™s Juvenile Code and evaluates the Michigan courtsā€™ lack of consistency in applying the Juvenile Code and in protecting childrenā€™s constitutional rights. This Comment will also highlight some pending changes to Michiganā€™s Juvenile Code and will provide recommendations for changes that would improve Michigan childrenā€™s access to their Due Process protections

    Removing Barriers--Not Children: How West Virginia Can Prevent Further Harm to Children

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    West Virginia has one of the highest rates of children in foster careā€”and thus removed from their familiesā€”in the United States. Recent scientific and social science research has shown that removing children from their parentsā€™ home is a traumatic event in and of itself, causing further harm to children already experiencing abuse and neglect. Federal legislation in the past ten years requires that states make reasonable efforts to address issues of abuse and neglect prior to removing children from their homes. West Virginia, for many reasons, is not doing so. West Virginiaā€™s state child welfare agency, Department of Health and Human Resources (WVDHHR) is unable to sufficiently staff their offices across the state, leading to crises and an inability to timely investigate referrals to Child Protective Services. The state as a whole lacks access to a number of critical resources that are necessary to preventing removal. The opioid crisis has exacerbated pre-existing poverty and substance abuse problems and caused further need for services in the state. Yet the West Virginia government had a self-proclaimed surplus of 1.308billionattheendof2022.ThisarticleseekstoproposeseveralprogramsandservicesthatWestVirginiacouldbefundingthroughthatsurplusandthroughvariousfederalgrants,includingIVāˆ’Emonies,thatwouldreducethenumberofchildrenremovedfromtheirhomesbyprovidingassistancetoparentsbeforethesituationrisestothelevelofimminentdanger.ThisarticlealsosuggestswaysthatWestVirginiacanmitigatethetraumatochildrenbymakinggreatereffortstoplacethemwithrelativesandfictivekinintheirowncommunities.andthusremovedfromtheirfamiliesā€”intheUnitedStates.Recentscientificandsocialscienceresearchhasshownthatremovingchildrenfromtheirparentsā€™homeisatraumaticeventinandofitself,causingfurtherharmtochildrenalreadyexperiencingabuseandneglect.Federallegislationinthepasttenyearsrequiresthatstatesmakereasonableeffortstoaddressissuesofabuseandneglectpriortoremovingchildrenfromtheirhomes.WestVirginia,formanyreasons,isnotdoingso.WestVirginiaā€™sstatechildwelfareagency,DepartmentofHealthandHumanResources(WVDHHR)isunabletosufficientlystafftheirofficesacrossthestate,leadingtocrisesandaninabilitytotimelyinvestigatereferralstoChildProtectiveServices.Thestateasawholelacksaccesstoanumberofcriticalresourcesthatarenecessarytopreventingremoval.Theopioidcrisishasexacerbatedpreāˆ’existingpovertyandsubstanceabuseproblemsandcausedfurtherneedforservicesinthestate.YettheWestVirginiagovernmenthadaselfāˆ’proclaimedsurplusof1.308 billion at the end of 2022. This article seeks to propose several programs and services that West Virginia could be funding through that surplus and through various federal grants, including IV-E monies, that would reduce the number of children removed from their homes by providing assistance to parents before the situation rises to the level of imminent danger. This article also suggests ways that West Virginia can mitigate the trauma to children by making greater efforts to place them with relatives and fictive kin in their own communities. and thus removed from their familiesā€”in the United States. Recent scientific and social science research has shown that removing children from their parentsā€™ home is a traumatic event in and of itself, causing further harm to children already experiencing abuse and neglect. Federal legislation in the past ten years requires that states make reasonable efforts to address issues of abuse and neglect prior to removing children from their homes. West Virginia, for many reasons, is not doing so. West Virginiaā€™s state child welfare agency, Department of Health and Human Resources (WVDHHR) is unable to sufficiently staff their offices across the state, leading to crises and an inability to timely investigate referrals to Child Protective Services. The state as a whole lacks access to a number of critical resources that are necessary to preventing removal. The opioid crisis has exacerbated pre-existing poverty and substance abuse problems and caused further need for services in the state. Yet the West Virginia government had a self-proclaimed surplus of 1.308 billion at the end of 2022. This article seeks to propose several programs and services that West Virginia could be funding through that surplus and through various federal grants, including IV-E monies, that would reduce the number of children removed from their homes by providing assistance to parents before the situation rises to the level of imminent danger. This article also suggests ways that West Virginia can mitigate the trauma to children by making greater efforts to place them with relatives and fictive kin in their own communities

    Cochlear Implant Surgery

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    Susceptibility locus on chromosome 1q23-25 for a schizophrenia subtype resembling deficit schizophrenia identified by latent class analysis

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    Context: Identifying susceptibility genes for schizophrenia may be complicated by phenotypic heterogeneity, with some evidence suggesting that phenotypic heterogeneity reflects genetic heterogeneity. Objective: To evaluate the heritability and conduct genetic linkage analyses of empirically derived, clinically homogeneous schizophrenia subtypes. Design: Latent class and linkage analysis. Setting: Taiwanese field research centers. Participants: The latent class analysis included 1236 Han Chinese individuals with DSM-IV schizophrenia. These individuals were members of a large affected-sibling-pair sample of schizophrenia (606 ascertained families), original linkage analyses of which detected a maximum logarithm of odds (LOD) of 1.8 (z = 2.88) on chromosome 10q22.3. Main Outcome Measures: Multipoint exponential LOD scores by latent class assignment and parametric heterogeneity LOD scores. Results: Latent class analyses identified 4 classes, with 2 demonstrating familial aggregation. The first (LC2) described a group with severe negative symptoms, disorganization, and pronounced functional impairment, resembling "deficit schizophrenia." The second (LC3) described a group with minimal functional impairment, mild or absent negative symptoms, and low disorganization. Using the negative/deficit subtype, we detected genome-wide significant linkage to 1q23-25 (LOD = 3.78, empiric genome-wide P = .01). This region was not detected using the DSM-IV schizophrenia diagnosis, but has been strongly implicated in schizophrenia pathogenesis by previous linkage and association studies.Variants in the 1q region may specifically increase risk for a negative/deficit schizophrenia subtype. Alternatively, these results may reflect increased familiality/heritability of the negative class, the presence of multiple 1q schizophrenia risk genes, or a pleiotropic 1q risk locus or loci, with stronger genotype-phenotype correlation with negative/deficit symptoms. Using the second familial latent class, we identified nominally significant linkage to the original 10q peak region. Conclusion: Genetic analyses of heritable, homogeneous phenotypes may improve the power of linkage and association studies of schizophrenia and thus have relevance to the design and analysis of genome-wide association studies

    Electron Diffraction of Water in No Man's Land

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    A generally accepted understanding of the anomalous properties of water will only emerge if it becomes possible to systematically characterize water in the deeply supercooled regime, from where the anomalies appear to emanate. This has largely remained elusive because water crystallizes rapidly between 160 K and 232 K. Here, we present an experimental approach to rapidly prepare deeply supercooled water at a well-defined temperature and probe it with electron diffraction before crystallization occurs. We show that as water is cooled from room temperature to cryogenic temperature, its structure evolves smoothly, approaching that of amorphous ice just below 200 K. Our experiments narrow down the range of possible explanations of the origin for the water anomalies and open up new avenues for studying supercooled water

    Dextran Penetration Through Nonkeratinized and Keratinized Epithelia in Monkeys

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142019/1/jper0424.pd

    Towards a Better Understanding of Rural Homelessness: An Examination of Housing Crisis in a Small, Rural Minnesota Community

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    This report compiles the work done during the Rural Housing Policy course at the University of Minnesota Morris by the students and their instructor, Professor Greg Thorson. the class reviewed the literature on urban and rural homelessness, interviewed local providers of social service programs, developed a survey to be administered at regional homeless shelters, wrote the Institutional Review Board (IRB) proposal to authorize the administration of the survey, administered the survey, and analyzed the results.https://digitalcommons.morris.umn.edu/cst/1009/thumbnail.jp

    Genetic variation in South Indian castes: evidence from Y-chromosome, mitochondrial, and autosomal polymorphisms

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    Background: Major population movements, social structure, and caste endogamy have influenced the genetic structure of Indian populations. An understanding of these influences is increasingly important as gene mapping and case-control studies are initiated in South Indian populations. Results: We report new data on 155 individuals from four Tamil caste populations of South India and perform comparative analyses with caste populations from the neighboring state of Andhra Pradesh. Genetic differentiation among Tamil castes is low (R = 0.96% for 45 autosomal short tandem repeat (STR) markers), reflecting a largely common origin. Nonetheless, caste- and continent-specific patterns are evident. For 32 lineage-defining Y-chromosome SNPs, Tamil castes show higher affinity to Europeans than to eastern Asians, and genetic distance estimates to the Europeans are ordered by caste rank. For 32 lineage-defining mitochondrial SNPs and hypervariable sequence (HVS) 1, Tamil castes have higher affinity to eastern Asians than to Europeans. For 45 autosomal STRs, upper and middle rank castes show higher affinity to Europeans than do lower rank castes from either Tamil Nadu or Andhra Pradesh. Local between-caste variation (Tamil Nadu R = 0.96%, Andhra Pradesh R = 0.77%) exceeds the estimate of variation between these geographically separated groups (R = 0.12%). Low, but statistically significant, correlations between caste rank distance and genetic distance are demonstrated for Tamil castes using Y-chromosome, mtDNA, and autosomal data. Conclusion: Genetic data from Y-chromosome, mtDNA, and autosomal STRs are in accord with historical accounts of northwest to southeast population movements in India. The influence of ancient and historical population movements and caste social structure can be detected and replicated in South Indian caste populations from two different geographic regions
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