88 research outputs found

    Étude descriptive des interventions individuelles et spontanées auprès des enfants et des adolescents exposés à la violence conjugale

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    Cet article présente les résultats d’une recherche sur les pratiques d’intervention auprès des enfants exposés à la violence conjugale. Les données ont été recueillies dans 146 établissements et organismes (CLSC, centres jeunesse, maisons d’hébergement) oeuvrant dans le domaine de la violence. La plupart des interventions sont basées sur l’aide individuelle; elles se distinguent selon trois types : les pratiques féministes formelles, les pratiques féministes ponctuelles et les pratiques éclectiques/systémiques. Des interventions spontanées ont également été relevées dans desmaisons d’hébergement. Le portrait des pratiques d’intervention tracé soulève des questions sur la difficulté pour les intervenants d’évaluer les résultats de leur action, sur le peu de rayonnement des interventions auprès des adolescents et sur la place faite aux parents.Research suggested that exposure to woman battering negatively affects the behaviour and emotional well-being of children. The growing awareness of these effects have led to a variety of services for children. But the nature of these services is not well known. This article reports the results of a survey aimed at describing the goals, processes and results of child counselling delivered on a one-to-one basis in community services, child welfare agencies and women’s shelters. Informal programs for children in women’s shelters are also described

    Efficacy of cognitive-behavioural therapy interventions on reducing burden for caregivers of older adults with a neurocognitive disorder : A systematic review and metaanalysis

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    Background: By 2025, 34 million people worldwide will be living with Alzheimer's disease or another form of dementia (i.e., neurocognitive disorders). Symptoms of cognitive disorders include memory deficits and executive deficits; these and other symptoms have functional repercussions on daily activities such as doing chores, taking medication and preparing meals. People with neurocognitive disorders often rely on a caregiver to alleviate the impact of their symptoms, but this help has consequences for the caregiver. Indeed, caregivers report subjective burden, depressive symptoms, stress, anxiety and a lower quality of life than noncaregivers. Multiple cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) trials have been conducted to reduce these symptoms for caregivers, and two meta-analyses have suggested that this method could be beneficial in reducing depressive symptoms. However, no meta-analysis has been conducted to evaluate the efficacy of this type of intervention on reducing subjective burden. Method: Eligibility criteria for the individual studies were determined using the PICOS strategy recommended by the PRISMA Statement. Articles were selected from PsycNet, MEDLINE, AgeLine and ProQuest Dissertation and Theses for the period from 2000 to 2017. Article selection, data extraction and bias analysis for individual studies was completed by two independent authors who used a consensus procedure when discrepancies occurred. The statistics Q, df, p value, I-square and Tau-squared were computed. Standardized effect sizes (Hedges’s g) were also computed for all studies. Result: A total of 20 articles were included in the systematic review. Statistics suggested there was no significant heterogeneity, and a fixed-effect model was used. Ten studies (N = 200 caregivers) evaluated the efficacy of CBT in reducing subjective burden, and the meta-analysis suggested a significant reduction in subjective burden following CBT. Additionally, 17 studies (N = 437 caregivers) evaluated the efficacy of CBT in reducing depressive symptoms, and the meta-analysis revealed a significant reduction for these caregivers following CBT. Conclusion: CBT for caregivers of individuals with a neurocognitive disorder was beneficial in reducing subjective burden and depressive symptoms but had no impact on stress, anxiety or quality of life

    Recent Advances in Modeling Stellar Interiors

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    Advances in stellar interior modeling are being driven by new data from large-scale surveys and high-precision photometric and spectroscopic observations. Here we focus on single stars in normal evolutionary phases; we will not discuss the many advances in modeling star formation, interacting binaries, supernovae, or neutron stars. We review briefly: 1) updates to input physics of stellar models; 2) progress in two and three-dimensional evolution and hydrodynamic models; 3) insights from oscillation data used to infer stellar interior structure and validate model predictions (asteroseismology). We close by highlighting a few outstanding problems, e.g., the driving mechanisms for hybrid gamma Dor/delta Sct star pulsations, the cause of giant eruptions seen in luminous blue variables such as eta Car and P Cyg, and the solar abundance problem.Comment: Proceedings for invited talk at conference High Energy Density Laboratory Astrophysics 2010, Caltech, March 2010, submitted for special issue of Astrophysics and Space Science; 7 pages; 5 figure

    Long-distance migratory shorebirds travel faster towards their breeding grounds, but fly faster post-breeding

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    Long-distance migrants are assumed to be more time-limited during the pre-breeding season compared to the post-breeding season. Although breeding-related time constraints may be absent post-breeding, additional factors such as predation risk could lead to time constraints that were previously underestimated. By using an automated radio telemetry system, we compared pre- and post-breeding movements of long-distance migrant shorebirds on a continent-wide scale. From 2014 to 2016, we deployed radio transmitters on 1,937 individuals of 4 shorebird species at 13 sites distributed across North America. Following theoretical predictions, all species migrated faster during the pre-breeding season, compared to the post-breeding season. These differences in migration speed between seasons were attributable primarily to longer stopover durations in the post-breeding season. In contrast, and counter to our expectations, all species had higher airspeeds during the post-breeding season, even after accounting for seasonal differences in wind. Arriving at the breeding grounds in good body condition is beneficial for survival and reproductive success and this energetic constraint might explain why airspeeds are not maximised in the pre-breeding season. We show that the higher airspeeds in the post-breeding season precede a wave of avian predators, which could suggest that migrant shorebirds show predation-minimizing behaviour during the post-breeding season. Our results reaffirm the important role of time constraints during northward migration and suggest that both energy and predation-risk constrain migratory behaviour during the post-breeding season

    Observation of Cosmic Ray Anisotropy with Nine Years of IceCube Data

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    Design of an Efficient, High-Throughput Photomultiplier Tube Testing Facility for the IceCube Upgrade

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    Multi-messenger searches via IceCube’s high-energy neutrinos and gravitational-wave detections of LIGO/Virgo

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    We summarize initial results for high-energy neutrino counterpart searches coinciding with gravitational-wave events in LIGO/Virgo\u27s GWTC-2 catalog using IceCube\u27s neutrino triggers. We did not find any statistically significant high-energy neutrino counterpart and derived upper limits on the time-integrated neutrino emission on Earth as well as the isotropic equivalent energy emitted in high-energy neutrinos for each event

    Searching for time-dependent high-energy neutrino emission from X-ray binaries with IceCube

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    A time-independent search for neutrinos from galaxy clusters with IceCube

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    Completing Aganta Kairos: Capturing Metaphysical Time on the Seventh Continent

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