18 research outputs found

    'Write when it hurts. Then write till it doesn't': athlete voice and the lived realities of one female professional athlete

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    Digital media has played a central role in promoting women’s sport, where female athletes are increasingly using online platforms to control their own representations and challenge male dominated sporting institutions. Alternatively, some commentators claim that female athletes’ use of digital media contributes to patriarchal practices in sport, where through self-promotion and image building they do little to advance representations of women’s sport. This paper interrogates these ideas, adopting a postfeminist sensibility and collaborative research approach to examine the online self-representations of a female athlete and blogger. The athlete in question is Meghan MacLaren, a professional golfer on the Ladies’ European Tour who documents her life as a professional athlete through her online blog. Primarily, the authors present a critical analysis of MacLaren’s blog posts over a period of three years, from MacLaren turning professional to the present day. This initial analysis prompted a series of questions around MacLaren’s blogging and self-representations, which the authors then posed directly to her, and Meghan was invited to respond in her own voice. Using a collaborative approach with MacLaren as co-author, this paper seeks to draw attention to the diverging realities of a female professional athlete fulfilling dichotomous identities as a simultaneously trusting and doubting golf performer on the course and a self-appointed athlete activist online, all the while operating in, and influenced by the patriarchal and capitalist cultural environment of golf

    Countering Extremists on Social Media:Challenges for Strategic Communication and Content Moderation

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    Extremist exploitation of social media platforms is an important regulatory question for civil society, government, and the private sector. Extremists exploit social media for a range of reasons-from spreading hateful narratives and propaganda to financing, recruitment, and sharing operational information. Policy responses to this question fit under two headings, strategic communication and content moderation. At the center of both of these policy responses is a calculation about how best to limit audience exposure to extremist narratives and maintain the marginality of extremist views, while being conscious of rights to free expression and the appropriateness of restrictions on speech. This special issue on "Countering Extremists on Social Media: Challenges for Strategic Communication and Content Moderation" focuses on one form of strategic communication, countering violent extremism. In this editorial we discuss the background and effectiveness of this approach, and introduce five articles which develop multiple strands of research into responses and solutions to extremist exploitation of social media. We conclude by suggesting an agenda for future research on how multistakeholder initiatives to challenge extremist exploitation of social media are conceived, designed, and implemented, and the challenges these initiatives need to surmount

    Two Years of Experience in the Implantation of Heartmate III.

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    Left ventricular assist devices as long-term mechanical circulatory support are increasingly used as an option for medically refractory advanced heart failure. Heartmate III is one of the alternative devices for circulatory support in those patients. Analyze a two years Heartmate III implantation Program. From November 2015 to August 2017, Heartmate III was implanted in 16 patients with chronic end-stage heart failure, in 81% (n = 13) as a bridge to transplant and 19% (n = 3) as destination therapy. We did a review off demographic, clinical and surgical data, and we analyzed the overall survival using the Kaplan-Meier method, excluding patients who were transplanted. Heartmate III was implanted in 16 male patients (100%) with age 55.8 ± 11.1 years (limits 38-74 years) and body surface area 2.0 ± 0.19 m2. The baseline hemodynamic data revealed a cardiac index 2.1 ± 0.4 l / min / m2 and a left ventricular ejection fraction of 20.7 ± 7.3%. Ischemic cardiomyopathy was the most common etiology in this chronic heart failure population (n = 9; 56%). Seven patients (44%) were classified INTERMACS 4; five (31%) in profile 2; three (19%) in profile 3 and one (6%) in profile 1. The implantation of the devices was performed under Cardiopulmonary Bypass (78.6 ± 25.7 min), and 25% of the patients (n = 4) had right ventricular dysfunction, requiring postoperative temporary right ventricle support. As complications, 6 patients (38%) manifested bleeding requiring surgery and 2 (12%) reported gastrointestinal bleeding, 4 (25%) developed driveline infection, 3 of them were treated (18%) with conservative therapy and in 1 patient (6%) with driveline transposition. During the total follow-up time (19 months), three patients (18%) were transplanted; two deaths occured due to pulmonary embolism and ischemic stroke respectively; verified by the Kaplan Meier method, an overall survival rate of 92.9 ± 6.9%, stable from 6 months after implantation. The 6 months survival rate of 92.9% proves the efficacy of this therapy for our patients and all of them were INTERMACS profils lower than 4. Despite the small number of patients enrolled and the follow-up duration limiting our study, we demonstrated the first experience of our center in the treatment of high-risk population. In conclusion, we show that the Heartmate III was consistent in low INTERMACS profile patients
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