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2. Innovative approaches for vaccine trials as a key component of pandemic preparedness – a white paper
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Bethe, Ullrich, Pana, Zoi D., Drosten, Christian, Goossens, Herman, König, Franz, Marchant, Arnaud, Molenberghs, Geert, Posch, Martin, Van Damme, Pierre, and Cornely, Oliver A.
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- 2024
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3. Integrating NIST and ISO Cybersecurity Audit and Risk Assessment Frameworks into Cameroonian Law
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Bernard Ngalim
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This paper reviews cybersecurity laws and regulations in Cameroon, focusing on cybersecurity and information security audits and risk assessments. The importance of cybersecurity risk assessment and the implementation of security controls to cure deficiencies noted during risk assessments or audits is a critical step in developing cybersecurity resilience. Cameroon's cybersecurity legal framework provides for audits but does not explicitly enumerate controls. Consequently, integrating relevant controls from the NIST frameworks and ISO Standards can improve the cybersecurity posture in Cameroon while waiting for a comprehensive revision of the legal framework. NIST and ISO are internationally recognized as best practices in information security systems and cybersecurity risk management. This paper highlights the lack of specific international law provisions addressing cybersecurity audits and risk assessments. Overall, the paper highlights the importance of continuous risk assessment and monitoring, implementation of security controls, and compliance with organizational policies, relevant laws and regulations to ensure the adequate protection of information systems. Finally, the paper underscores the importance of improving Cameroon's cybersecurity regulations by integrating provisions from NIST and ISO.
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- 2024
4. The MOOC Post-Mortem: Bibliometric and Systematic Analyses of Research on Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), 2009 to 2022
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Jon Billsberry and Irit Alony
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Massive open online courses (MOOCs) are online-based teaching programs designed to accommodate thousands of students without charging any fees. They began appearing in 2009 and 2010, became popular for a while, but are in decline now. This paper contains bibliometric and systematic reviews of research on MOOCs to see what can be learned from the innovation. The primary goals of these reviews are (1) to bibliometrically chart the research conducted on MOOCs and highlight significant milestones, (2) to reveal themes in MOOC research and discover key lessons, and (3) to surface any management education-specific lessons. The results show an increasing interest in scholarly work on MOOCs that demonstrates an enduring interest in reducing drop-out rates, although remedies have not yet been found. Studies demonstrate the importance of increasing opportunities for engagement and interaction. Few studies have explored MOOCs related to business and management. As universities have sought to monetize MOOCs, they have become less massive and less open as key components like credit and certification have been placed behind pay walls. The paper concludes with a critical discussion of MOOC research that suggests that they were a fad whose time has come and gone.
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- 2024
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5. Middle Leaders Pursuing Teacher Safety against Learner Victimization: A Policy Document Analysis
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Edwin Darrell de Klerk and June Monica Palmer
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Various scholars have confirmed that teacher safety against learner victimization is a growing concern worldwide, and this problem is exacerbated by a lack of understanding and readiness to implement policies to address this matter. In this regard, policy implementation by middle leaders (MLs) in creating safe school environments has attracted much less interest as a possible way of addressing issues of teacher safety and the prevention of learner victimization. MLs are regarded as individuals who have the potential to lead, plan, inspire and persuade, and in so doing, they are in an ideal position to translate policy into practice. As such, this paper provides a qualitative policy document analysis of The National School Safety Framework (NSSF) premised on the theory that every individual in the school experiences safety in dissimilar ways and has unique safety needs. The NSSF is endorsed by the Department of Basic Education to guide in addressing issues of violence and safety in South African schools. Underpinned by the rational choice theory and utilizing policy document analysis, texts in the NSSF were analysed and interpreted to propose transformative policy strategies that can assist MLs in managing teachers' safety at schools more effectively. The findings suggest that administrative duties and a lack of time make it difficult for MLs to create a safe and supportive learning environment in schools. Another finding was that there is no clear plan outlined in the NSSF to guide MLs to pursue teacher safety against learner victimization in schools. To assist MLs, this paper proposes transformative policy strategies that can assist them in promoting teacher safety and preventing learner victimization in schools. The paper recommends that more explicit interpretation and implementation strategies be communicated with schools to assist them in fighting the war against violence in schools.
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- 2024
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6. How Do They Define Design Failure? An Investigation of Design Failure in Instructional Design Practice from the Practitioners' Perspective
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Ahmed Lachheb and Elizabeth Boling
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In this paper, we report findings from a larger study that investigated design failure, as a phenomenon, in instructional design (ID) practice from the perspective of ID practitioners. Following an interpretive phenomenological study design, we interviewed 17 ID practitioners working in diverse settings, seeking their stories of design failure. Throughout the interviews and the analysis of the practitioners' stories of design failures, we found that ID practitioners define design failure in different ways that are mostly not captured in design literature, that is: design failure as "failure during use of design," design failure as "failure during process of design," design failure as "an opportunity for reflection on design actions," design failure as "an outcome or an event that needs to be avoided/prevented during the process of design," and design failure as "an outcome or an event that could not be avoided/prevented during the process of design." These findings and our discussions of them emphasize the generative role design failure plays in ID practice, the richness and the complexity of this phenomenon, and point to implications for IDT scholarship and ID education. In an upcoming paper, we report what ID practitioners attribute design failure to and what is the essence of design failure in ID practice.
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- 2024
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7. The Contribution of Safe Parks to School Safety: Lessons from the Thari-Programme
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Roelf Reyneke
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Unsafe and violent schools are a widespread problem in South Africa. This paper argues that Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) contribute to this phenomenon. While various individual and community-level interventions to address ACEs have been reported on, the contribution of safe parks towards preventing school violence has not yet been explored. To support schools in dealing with violence, the Adopt-a-School Foundation introduced a pilot project at eight schools in Botshabelo in the Free State Province. The programme included psychosocial support services, establishing safe parks, and ensuring community involvement. The goal was to improve school communities by creating environments that are empowering, academically effective, gender sensitive and free from violence. Although there are safe parks in communities around South Africa, they are an uncommon sight at schools. This paper reports on the quantitative study conducted on safe parks' contribution to making schools safer and less violent. Results show that safe park activities improve community well-being, including reduced gangsterism, enhanced learner safety, and decreased disciplinary problems. It is recommended that safe parks continue to provide psychosocial services to children at schools and that their programmes be expanded to include more services.
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- 2024
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8. A holistic qualitative exploration on the perception of scams, scam techniques and effectiveness of anti-scam campaigns in Malaysia
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Wilson, Sharon, Hassan, Nor Azlili, Khor, Kheng Kia, Sinnappan, Santhidran, Abu Bakar, Afi Roshezry, and Tan, Soon Aun
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- 2024
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9. Young Voices United: co-designing a place-based youth-led sexual and violence abuse prevention approach for one Australian community
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Rundle-Thiele, Sharyn, Willmott, Taylor Jade, McKillop, Nadine, Saleme Ruiz, Pamela, and Kitunen, Anna
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- 2024
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10. Management of delirium in acute stroke patients: a position paper by the Austrian Stroke Society on prevention, diagnosis, and treatment.
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Kneihsl, Markus, Berger, Natalie, Sumerauer, Stefan, Asenbaum-Nan, Susanne, Höger, Franz Stefan, Gattringer, Thomas, Enzinger, Christian, Aigner, Martin, Ferrari, Julia, and Lang, Wilfried
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STROKE patients ,DELIRIUM ,STROKE units ,DIAGNOSIS ,THERAPEUTICS ,STROKE - Abstract
Delirium is a common complication in acute stroke patients, occurring in 15–35% of all stroke unit admissions and is associated with prolonged hospital stay and a poor post-stroke prognosis. Managing delirium in acute stroke patients necessitates an intensive and multiprofessional therapeutic approach, placing a significant burden on healthcare staff. However, dedicated practical recommendations for delirium management developed for the population of acute stroke patients are lacking. For this purpose, the Austrian Stroke Society, in cooperation with the Austrian Society of Neurology, the Austrian Society of Neurorehabilitation, and the Austrian Society of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, and Psychosomatics has formulated an evidence-based position paper addressing the management of delirium in acute stroke patients. The paper outlines practical recommendations on the three pillars of care in stroke patients with delirium: (a) Key aspects of delirium prevention including stroke-specific delirium risk factors and delirium prediction scores are described. Moreover, a non-pharmacological delirium prevention bundle is presented. (b) The paper provides recommendations on timing and frequency of delirium screening to ensure early diagnosis of delirium in acute stroke patients. Moreover, it reports on the use of different delirium screening tools in stroke populations. (c) An overview of non-pharmacological and pharmacological treatment strategies in patients with delirium and acute stroke is presented and summarized as key recommendation statements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. The Development of UNESCO's Programmes for Preventing Violent Extremism: Educational Norms, Institutional Politics and Declining Legitimacy
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Eleni Christodoulou
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Since 2015, UNESCO has developed a variety of programmes for preventing violent extremism through education (PVE-E), under the framework of Global Citizenship Education and Target 4.7 of Agenda 2030. There have been formal board decisions to promote PVE-E, regional and international conferences and three key publications: a Teacher's Guide (2016), a Guide for Policy-makers (2017), and a Youth-Led Guide (2017 and 2018). Through a discourse analysis of these key documents and a critical engagement with the institutional politics of UNESCO, the paper delineates the discursive constructs of PVE-E that are mobilised and sheds light on the under-researched politics of production that affect the nature of these texts. Taking a comparative perspective, the paper shows how PVE-E is represented within and between these different texts, exposes the normative values and ideological assumptions underpinning these representations and argues that we are ultimately witnessing a declining legitimacy of UNESCO's normative power.
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- 2024
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12. Coping Power -- Rural: Iterative Adaptation of an Evidence-Based Preventive Intervention for Rural Upper Elementary and Middle Schools
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Amanda J. Nguyen, Jacqueline Hersh, Lydia Beahm, Lora Henderson Smith, Courtney Newman, Katelyn Birchfield, Kurt Michael, and Catherine P. Bradshaw
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Background: Educators in rural schools are uniquely situated to address youth mental health disparities, yet often face challenges in delivering mental health supports. This paper describes the process of adapting the evidence-based Coping Power program, a small group prevention program for youth with aggressive behavior problems, to be a two-tiered (Tier 1 and Tier 2), transdiagnostic intervention to improve fit and feasibility for rural upper-elementary and middle schools. Method: Identified challenges with the Coping Power program for rural areas included program length, substantial staffing and resource requirements, lack of universal programming, low caregiver engagement, and co-occurring problems. Initial adaptations included a classroom and small group format implemented by school staff, teacher consultations integrated into coaching and co-facilitation, and a technology-supported caregiver component. Implementer feedback forms, coaching notes, and individual interviews informed the iterative development and feasibility testing process. Results: Between 2019-2023, thirteen schools across six rural districts implemented the program. Student curriculum revisions included order and relative emphasis of content, classroom and small group overlap, necessary simplification of concepts, improved contextualization to the rural setting, and the addition of student workbooks. Supports for implementers included fully developed lesson plans and slides, a comprehensive implementation manual, video lesson overviews, action-focused training, and a 3-session coaching model to support implementer preparation and sustain motivation. Teacher and caregiver infographic text "nudges" were improved to promote generalization of concepts across settings. Discussion: By partnering with school-based implementers, the adapted program holds promise to be more feasible and appealing for rural schools than the original model. This fully developed program is now ready for larger-scale testing in rural schools. [This paper was published in "School Mental Health."]
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- 2024
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13. Exploring the Role of ChatGPT in Higher Education: Opportunities, Challenges and Ethical Considerations
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Ali Zeb, Rafid Ullah, and Rehmat Karim
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Purpose: This paper aims to examine the opportunities and challenges of using ChatGPT in higher education. Furthermore, it is also discuss the potential risks and plunders of these tools. Design/methodology/approach: The paper discuss the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in academia and explores the opportunities and challenges of using ChatGPT in higher education. It also highlights the difficulties of detecting and preventing academic dishonesty and suggests strategies that universities can adopt to ensure ethical and useful use of these tools. Findings: The paper concludes that while the use of AI tools, ChatGPT in higher education presents both opportunities and challenges. The universities can effectively address these concerns by taking a proactive and ethical approach to the use of these tools. This paper further suggests that universities should develop policies and procedures, provide training and support, to detect and prevent cheating intentions. Originality/value: The paper provides insights into the opportunities and challenges of using ChatGPT in higher education, as well as strategies for addressing concerns related to academic dishonesty. The paper further adds importance to the discussion on the ethical and responsible use of AI tools in higher education.
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- 2024
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14. Chatting and Cheating: Ensuring Academic Integrity in the Era of ChatGPT
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Debby R. E. Cotton, Peter A. Cotton, and J. Reuben Shipway
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The use of artificial intelligence in academia is a hot topic in the education field. ChatGPT is an AI tool that offers a range of benefits, including increased student engagement, collaboration, and accessibility. However, is also raises concerns regarding academic honesty and plagiarism. This paper examines the opportunities and challenges of using ChatGPT in higher education, and discusses the potential risks and rewards of these tools. The paper also considers the difficulties of detecting and preventing academic dishonesty, and suggests strategies that universities can adopt to ensure ethical and responsible use of these tools. These strategies include developing policies and procedures, providing training and support, and using various methods to detect and prevent cheating. The paper concludes that while the use of AI in higher education presents both opportunities and challenges, universities can effectively address these concerns by taking a proactive and ethical approach to the use of these tools.
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- 2024
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15. Performance Evaluation of Urban Emergency Governance: Conceptual Connotations and Empirical Research Based on the Crisis Life Cycle Theory
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Min Wang and Jiaxing Wang
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Although scholars have discussed in depth about the evaluation content and the construction of evaluation index system of emergency management and crisis management, a unified and standardized interpretation of system construction concepts and empirical research on the performance evaluation of urban emergency management is still lacking. In view of this, this paper is based on the theory of the crisis life cycle, with the four phases of urban emergency management and the content of the task as a clue, constructed a performance evaluation index system containing 12 primary indicators and 44 secondary indicators, and centered on the emergency management work situation of S city. The study reveals that emergency management underperforms in S city, with a score of 5.948, qualifying as the "defined level". The "prevention and preparedness stage" receives poor evaluation, indicating a significant bias for crisis response instead of prevention. The report suggests the improvement of emergency material stockpile planning, the formation of grassroots emergency response teams, the emergency management publicity, and special emergency drill plans, etc., with a view to providing reference for city managers to comprehensively review and evaluate the emergency management system, and to promote the construction of a more systematic, complete and scientific urban emergency management system.
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- 2024
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16. Changing the Culture of Sexual Violence at UK Universities: A Website Analysis of Definitions, Report/Support and Prevent Mechanisms
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Nicola Roberts, Lauren Doyle, and Mark Roberts
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The incidence and nature of sexual violence at UK universities has been aligned with a 'rape culture', where sexual violence is taken-for-granted. Calls to change such a culture permeate literature from government, charities, regulatory bodies, and academia. This paper pulls out of the literature the strategies called to change rape culture. Focusing on three overarching strategies: "naming" sexual violence, "reporting" sexual violence, and "preventing" sexual violence. We carried out a website analysis of all UK universities that focused on gathering data along these three themes to ascertain the extent to which their websites supported changing the culture of sexual violence at their university. Many universities' websites had an online reporting tool and defined sexual violence, but many universities' websites did not have information about bystander initiatives (the prevention strategy we focused on). The research raises implications for universities to enhance their website pages for in-person bystander initiatives and to standardise definitions of sexual violence used in online reporting tools. Consequently, more research is needed into what definitions of sexual violence are used, the type of language used and the efficacy of online reporting tools.
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- 2024
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17. 'Key Skills' Building in Schools as a Possible Approach to Reducing and Preventing Challenging Behaviour
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Heather Armstrong, Claire McDowell, Gerard Leavey, and Louise D. Denne
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Background: Building 'key skills' may help prevent the development of challenging behaviour in children with an intellectual disability. The aim of this paper was to extend the current limited evidence in this area. Method: We undertook two studies with children with an intellectual disability in school settings: (1) a cross-sectional replication study exploring the relationship between 'key skills' and challenging behaviour. (2) a longitudinal study follow-up exploring change in 'key skill' levels and challenging behaviour. Results: The replication study recruited 74 participants, those scoring lowest in 'key skill' had a 94% chance of having challenging behaviour; those with the highest scores had a 6% chance. The follow-up study recruited 39 participants, we found a significant increase in children's 'key skill' level (p < 0.001) and a decrease in their challenging behaviour (p = 0.046). Conclusion: Building 'key skills' in children with an intellectual disability may help reduce or prevent challenging behaviour.
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- 2024
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18. Categorising potential non-disasters
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Podloski, Brady and Kelman, Ilan
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- 2024
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19. Meningococcal meningitis in Spain in the Horizon 2030: A position paper.
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Moraga-Llop, Fernando, Andradas, Elena, Blesa-Baviera, Luis Carlos, Cantón, Rafael, González del Castillo, Juan, Martinón-Torres, Federico, Moya, Elena, Trilla, Antoni, Vazquez, Julio, Villena, Rodolfo Javier, Ruiz-Galiana, Julián, De Lucas Ramos, Pilar, García-Botella, Alejandra, García-Lledó, Alberto, Hernández-Sampelayo, Teresa, Gómez-Pavón, Javier, Martín-Delgado, Mari Cruz, Martín Sánchez, Francisco Javier, Martínez-Sellés, Manuel, and Molero García, José María
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MENINGOCOCCAL infections ,NEISSERIA meningitidis ,MENINGITIS ,VACCINES ,EPIDEMICS ,ANTI-infective agents ,CHEMOPREVENTION - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Española de Quimioterapia is the property of Sociedad Espanola de Quimioterapia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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20. Implementation and Evaluation of a Multi-Level, Place-Based Tobacco Prevention and Control Program at a Minority-Serving Institution in Texas
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Brad Love, Rosemary Coffman, Charulata Ghosh, Jennifer Cofer, Alex N. Hurst, Katherine Oestman, Mayra Aquino, Lauren Kriss, Mansi Shah, Gerold Dermid, Margaret Raber, Ernest Hawk, Michael T. Walsh, and Ruth Rechis
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Multi-level, place-based interventions have proven effective at promoting a range of health behaviors, including tobacco control and discouraging the uptake of tobacco products. This paper describes the implementation and impact of a 3-year, multi-level tobacco prevention and control program at a community-college minority-serving institution (MSI) on the Texas Gulf Coast within the context of a broader multi-sector, cross-functional health coalition. The intervention studied included a tobacco-free policy, a large-scale communication campaign highlighting parts of the intervention and prevention and cessation resources. The intervention was bolstered by the support of a community-led Steering Committee and tobacco control experts. Results from the first 3 years of implementation show that tobacco-free policies were largely supported by community members, awareness of the policy increased over time, and tobacco prevention and cessation resources were successfully embedded into campus norms. This multi-component approach shows how a community college was able to effectively reach students and staff on their campus to increase awareness of both the campus tobacco-free policy and the availability of tobacco prevention and cessation resources. Additionally, it also offers lessons for future tobacco prevention and control work in higher education.
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- 2024
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21. Telehealth-Delivered Depression Prevention: Short-Term Outcomes from a School-Based Randomized Controlled Trial
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Jami F. Young, Jason D. Jones, Karen T. G. Schwartz, Amy So, Gillian C. Dysart, Rebecca M. Kanine, Jane E. Gillham, Robert Gallop, and Molly Davis
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Objective: To examine short-term (i.e., post-intervention) outcomes from a randomized controlled trial comparing a school-based telehealth-delivered depression prevention program, Interpersonal Psychotherapy-Adolescent Skills Training (IPT-AST), to services as usual (SAU). We expected IPT-AST would be acceptable and feasible and that IPT-AST adolescents would experience greater reductions in depression symptoms, anxiety symptoms, and impairment compared to SAU. Methods: Adolescents (N=242; M[subscript age]=14.80 years, SD=0.70; 65% female; 21% Black; 13% Hispanic/Latinx) with elevated scores on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies--Depression Scale (CES-D; Radloff, 1977) at screening provided data at baseline, 2-month (midpoint of IPT-AST), and 3-month (post-intervention) assessments. They reported depression symptoms on the CES-D, anxiety symptoms on the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders (Birmaher et al., 1997) and impairment on the Columbia Impairment Scale (Bird et al., 1993). Baseline depression diagnosis was examined as a moderator. Results: Hierarchical linear models showed that adolescents reported significant reductions in depression symptoms and impairment across conditions. IPT-AST adolescents reported significantly greater reductions in anxiety symptoms than SAU adolescents, d=0.39, 95% CI [0.05, 0.72], p=0.003. Depression diagnosis moderated outcomes (ds=0.33-0.34, ps[less than or equal to]0.05), such that IPT-AST adolescents without a diagnosis at baseline showed greater improvements in depression and anxiety symptoms than SAU adolescents. Adolescents in SAU with a depression diagnosis at baseline showed greater improvements in impairment compared to IPT-AST. Attendance and satisfaction data demonstrated the feasibility and acceptability of telehealth-delivered IPT-AST. Conclusions: Results support telehealth-delivered IPT-AST as a promising intervention for improving short-term outcomes among adolescents with depression symptoms but without a depression diagnosis. [This paper will be published in the "Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology."]
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- 2024
22. Helping Teachers Understand and Mitigate Trauma in Their Classrooms
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Lynn S. Burdick and Catherine Corr
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Nine-year old Eliza is a student at Meadows Elementary School where she receives special education services for her diagnosis of Emotional Disturbance. Her teachers are working together to try to bring Eliza back into the classroom after weeks of time spent in the office with no contact with her peers. Mr. Jimenez and Ms. Landon are collaborating to incorporate trauma-informed practices into their classrooms in an attempt to address the absence of secure attachments and feelings of safety in Eliza's life, as well as her inability to control her emotional responses. Creating a trauma-informed classroom benefits everyone but especially students with disabilities who have experienced trauma. In this paper we discuss the need for trauma-informed practices and strategies for making classroom environments more trauma-informed.
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- 2024
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23. Embedding Social Emotional Learning from the Bottom up in Multi-Tiered Services and Supports Frameworks
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Jessie D. Guest, Robbie A. Ross, Tasha M. Childs, Kate E. Ascetta, Rachelle Curcio, Aidyn Iachini, and Lauren Griffiths
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Student mental health needs continue to rise across the United States and many students and families rely on schools to provide services to meet these needs. Yet, an overwhelming number of available frameworks and approaches to school mental health (SMH) and overlapping terminology surrounding SMH supports like trauma-informed (TI) approaches, social and emotional learning (SEL), and others can lead to confusion and potentially less effective implementation of services and supports for students. In this paper, we aim to mitigate this confusion and offer a solution that integrates several of these approaches into a single complementary model with a special emphasis on the role of SEL. We first present an overview of commonly used SMH frameworks. Next, we present the Trauma-Informed Multi-Tiered Systems of Support Model (TI-SEL MTSS)--an adaptation of the TITI-SEL MTSS--to include and emphasize the specific role of SEL as a critical foundational layer within a multi-tiered system of support. The proposed adapted model maintains the key structure of a MTSS while highlighting the importance of embedding SEL pedagogy in daily teaching practices and all aspects of school life. A case study is used to illustrate how the proposed model adaptations can be used in practice and in tandem with TI and SMH services without being conflated as the same service as SEL. Practical implications for implementation are discussed.
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- 2024
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24. Witnessing Bullying at Work: Employee Silence in Higher Education Institutions
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Angela Mazzone, Anastasios Karakolidis, Vasiliki Pitsia, Yseult Freeney, and James O'Higgins Norman
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Workplace bullying is a widespread phenomenon within Higher Education Institutions (HEIs). Employee tendency to remain silent is one of the most common reactions to workplace bullying. Yet, employee silence in the context of workplace bullying is poorly studied. Building on the Conservation of Resources Theory (COR) and the Learned Helplessness Theory (LHT), this study investigated employee reluctance to take action when witnessing workplace bullying (employee silence). The sample comprised 560 employees working in 20 HEIs in Ireland. Respondents filled out a survey measuring employee silence, victimisation, and team psychological safety. Results showed a negative association between team psychological safety and employee silence, indicating a reluctance to report bullying among respondents with low levels of team psychological safety. In line with the COR and the LHT, a positive association was found between victimisation and employee silence. The paper concludes with a discussion of possible actions for bullying prevention in HEIs.
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- 2024
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25. Strategies to Prevent or Reduce Inequalities in Specific Avoidable Causes of Death for Adults with Intellectual Disability: A Systematic Review
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Pauline Heslop and Emily Lauer
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Background: We now have sufficient evidence demonstrating inequalities in specific avoidable causes of death for adults with intellectual disability compared to their peers without intellectual disability. Apart from COVID-19, the largest differentials that disadvantage people with intellectual disability are in relation to pneumonia, aspiration pneumonia, epilepsy, cerebrovascular disease, ischaemic heart disease, deep vein thrombosis, diabetes and sepsis. The aim of this systematic review is to report on strategies at the individual, population or policy levels aimed at preventing these conditions that are applicable to adults with intellectual disability and that have been based on or recommended by research. Methods: Systematic review of PUBMED, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsychInfo, Social Care Online, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS), Web of Science, Scopus, Overton, the Cochrane Library and Google Scholar databases was carried out. Searches were completed on 30 June 2023. Quantitative, qualitative and mixed-methods research; systematic, scoping or evidence-based reviews; and audit and reports of mortality reviews were included. Publications included in the review were about preventing the eight potentially avoidable causes of death. Findings: Ninety-four papers were included in the review (9 in relation to pneumonia; 11 for aspiration pneumonia; 18 for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy; 7 for cerebrovascular disease; 8 for ischaemic heart disease; 4 for deep vein thrombosis; 31 for diabetes; 6 for sepsis). The eight most frequently occurring potentially avoidable causes of death in people with intellectual disability are very different medical conditions, but they shared striking similarities in how they could be prevented. The literature overwhelmingly implicated the need to make lifestyle changes to address obesity, lack of exercise and poor nutrition, and to have regular medical reviews. In addition, 'whole-population' approaches are required that look beyond the individual to the social determinants of health. Conclusions: We found little peer-reviewed evidence specifically about preventing these conditions in people with intellectual disability. However, most of the literature about preventative strategies pertaining to the general population was applicable to people with intellectual disability, albeit that some 'reasonable adjustments' would be required.
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- 2024
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26. Mastering timely deliveries using dynamic capabilities: perspectives from logistics service providers and shippers
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Özcan, Seda, Oflaç, Bengü Sevil, Tokcaer, Sinem, and Özpeynirci, Özgür
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- 2024
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27. Intersectional collaboration and the development of prevention infrastructures: a qualitative study
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de Bekker, Ankie, Reckman, Päivi, Kemper, Peter, and Lemmens, Lidwien
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- 2024
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28. Evaluation of a dementia prevention program to improve health and social care and promote human rights among older adults
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Kaneko, Keisuke, Sasamori, Fumihito, Okuhara, Masao, Maruo, Suchinda Jarupat, Ashida, Kazuki, Tabuchi, Hisaaki, Akasaki, Hisaki, Kobayashi, Kazuki, Aoyagi, Yuya, Watanabe, Noriaki, Nishino, Tomoyuki, and Terasawa, Koji
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- 2024
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29. Pattern of Multimorbidity in Middle-Aged and Older-Aged People with Mild Intellectual Disability in Australia
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Grace Rutherford, Rafat Hussain, and Kathleen Tait
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Background: Non-communicable diseases (NCDs), also known as chronic diseases, now constitute a major proportion of ill-health across most adult and older populations including in people with intellectual disability. The current paper is a comparative analysis of prevalence of NCDs across mid-aged and older-aged people with mild intellectual disability. Method: Comparative data comes from two cross-sectional surveys using similar methodology and timeframes. The analysis sample comprises mid-aged group (30-50 years, N = 291) and older-aged group (=60 years, N = 391). Results: People with mild intellectual disability start developing NCDs in early to mid-adulthood and increases with age. The mean number of NCDs in mid-aged group was 0.86 (SD, 0.84) compared to 3.82 in older group (SD, 2.67). Conclusion: There needs to be early identification and management of NCDs using relevant health promotion and preventative measures at optimal intervention points. The training of healthcare professionals needs improvement.
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- 2024
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30. Integrating the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) into a Culturally Responsive Evaluation (CRE) Approach to Conduct Mixed-Method Evaluations of Diabetes Prevention and Management Programs Reaching Underresourced Populations and Communities
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Sara R. Jacobs, LaShawn Glasgow, Peter Amico, Kimberly D. Farris, Gia Rutledge, and Bryce D. Smith
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Diabetes is a significant population health threat. Evidence-based interventions, such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Diabetes Prevention Program and diabetes self-management education and support programs, can help prevent, delay, or manage the disease. However, participation is suboptimal, especially among populations who are at an increased risk of developing diabetes. Evaluations of programs reaching populations who are medically underserved or people with lower incomes can help elucidate how best to tailor evidence-based interventions, but it is also important for evaluations to account for cultural and contextual factors. Culturally responsive evaluation (CRE) is a framework for centering an evaluation in the culture of the programs being evaluated. We integrated CRE with implementation and outcome constructs from the Adapted Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) to ensure that the evaluation produced useful evidence for putting evidence-based diabetes interventions to use in real-world settings, reaching populations who are at an increased risk of developing diabetes. The paper provides an overview of how we integrated CRE and CFIR approaches to conduct mixed-methods evaluations of evidence-based diabetes interventions.
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- 2024
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31. Revisiting the Percentage of K-12 Students in Need of Preventive Interventions in Schools in a 'Peri-COVID' Era: Implications for the Implementation of Tiered Programming
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Mark D. Weist, Andy Garbacz, Brandon Schultz, Catherine P. Bradshaw, and Kathleen Lynne Lane
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As the public health framework has been implemented in schools through multi-tiered systems of support, as in Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS), a prominent interpretation has been that 80% of students will benefit from universal or Tier 1 schoolwide behavior support, around 15% will require added selective or Tier 2 targeted support, and 5% will require the more intensive selective or Tier 3 intervention. The PBIS framework also emphasizes the use of tiered logic, with strengthened efforts at the universal and selective levels when student behavioral or mental health needs exceed expected levels. The prediction that 5% of students will require indicated support was based mostly on students at risk for discipline encounters (i.e., office discipline referral data) and, more recently, systematic screening data, but this percentage remains an interpretation of the public health framework. Further, epidemiologic data over the past decade show that rates of childhood mental health disorders have risen and are even higher now as schools struggle to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic - much higher than 15% and 5% for selective and indicated levels. Thus, we believe it is time to revisit projections of the number of students in need of Tier 2 and Tier 3 support. In this position paper, we review the evidence for escalating youth mental health needs and discuss the implications for the tiered prevention framework in schools. We describe strategies to expand the availability of preventive intervention supports beyond Tier 1 efforts and conclude with recommendations for practice, policy, and research in this peri-COVID recovery era.
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- 2024
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32. Practical guide on left atrial appendage closure for the non-implanting physician: an international consensus paper.
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Potpara, Tatjana, Grygier, Marek, Häusler, Karl Georg, Nielsen-Kudsk, Jens Erik, Berti, Sergio, Genovesi, Simonetta, Marijon, Eloi, Boveda, Serge, Tzikas, Apostolos, Boriani, Giuseppe, Boersma, Lucas V A, Tondo, Claudio, Potter, Tom De, Lip, Gregory Y H, Schnabel, Renate B, Bauersachs, Rupert, Senzolo, Marco, Basile, Carlo, Bianchi, Stefano, and Osmancik, Pavel
- Abstract
A significant proportion of patients who suffer from atrial fibrillation (AF) and are in need of thromboembolic protection are not treated with oral anticoagulation or discontinue this treatment shortly after its initiation. This undertreatment has not improved sufficiently despite the availability of direct oral anticoagulants which are associated with less major bleeding than vitamin K antagonists. Multiple reasons account for this, including bleeding events or ischaemic strokes whilst on anticoagulation, a serious risk of bleeding events, poor treatment compliance despite best educational attempts, or aversion to drug therapy. An alternative interventional therapy, which is not associated with long-term bleeding and is as effective as vitamin K anticoagulation, was introduced over 20 years ago. Because of significant improvements in procedural safety over the years, left atrial appendage closure, predominantly achieved using a catheter-based, device implantation approach, is increasingly favoured for the prevention of thromboembolic events in patients who cannot achieve effective anticoagulation. This management strategy is well known to the interventional cardiologist/electrophysiologist but is not more widely appreciated within cardiology or internal medicine. This article introduces the devices and briefly explains the implantation technique. The indications and device follow-up are more comprehensively described. Almost all physicians who care for adult patients will have many with AF. This practical guide, written within guideline/guidance boundaries, is aimed at those non-implanting physicians who may need to refer patients for consideration of this new therapy, which is becoming increasingly popular. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Bystander Intervention in Bullying and Sexual Harassment Training: Mixed-Method Evaluation of NAB IT!
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Amanda B. Nickerson, Margaret E. Manges, Julianna Casella, Yingqi Huang, Jennifer A. Livingston, Lyndsay N. Jenkins, Gina M. Bellavia, and Thomas H. Feeley
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The goal of the current pilot study was to examine the effects of bystander intervention training on a sample of 27 high school students who were selected by their peers as opinion leaders. Measures of bystander intervention knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors were included in the within-subjects design. Sixteen of the students also participated in focus groups to provide feedback about their experiences with the training. Results showed that participating students reported increases in knowledge about bullying and sexual harassment, confidence in intervening, acceptance of responsibility, knowing what to do, and acting to intervene (including direct intervention, providing support, and reporting to an adult) from pre-to posttest. Themes from focus groups indicated that students found the training relevant and helpful, particularly for focusing on both bullying and sexual harassment and for providing opportunities to learn and practice multiple intervention strategies. Barriers to intervening based on the type of violence (e.g., physical vs. relational or verbal) and relationship with the people involved were also themes. Directions for future research and implications for practice, such as focusing on dissemination to the larger student body and implementing bystander intervention training within the context of a positive school climate that emphasizes social and emotional competencies, are discussed. [This paper will be published in "Journal of Prevention and Health Promotion."]
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- 2024
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34. Role of School Administrators in Preventing School Violence in the State of Illinois
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Stephen C. Scarfe
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This paper examined the perceptions of school administrators in the state of Illinois concerning their roles in preventing school violence. Targeted school violence has increasingly been a concern in the United States. It is a type of violence that transcends everyday altercations in the school context, and rises to the level of deliberate, usually planned efforts to bring violence to the school setting. The study focused on the administrators' perceptions of their roles in a new era of threat assessments to learn ways in which administrators can potentially, effectively address and mitigate the risk of targeted violence in educational settings. Additionally, the study sought to address gaps in existing literature by responding to calls for further research on leveraging the unique position of school leaders in violence prevention efforts and identifying evidence-based practices for enhancing school safety. The data revealed that administrators are implementing comprehensive strategies such as threat assessments and mental health screenings, and they believe these measures are effective in reducing incidents of school violence. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2024
35. Academic Integrity and AI. Education Week. Spotlight
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Editorial Projects in Education (EPE)
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Addressing academic integrity in the age of AI is essential to ensure honesty and student success. This Spotlight will help you learn about how educators nationwide are approaching AI in teaching and learning; review data investigating how many students are actually using AI to cheat; examine strategies teachers are using to fight AI cheating; discover how teachers can structure lessons in AI literacy; and more. Articles in this Spotlight include: (1) Where Does AI Belong in Education? Teachers and Administrators Have Some Strong Opinions (Kevin Bushweller); (2) The Best Science Fiction to Teach about AI, from Teachers (Alyson Klein); (3) New Data Reveal How Many Students Are Using AI to Cheat (Arianna Prothero); (4) Teachers Turn to Pen and Paper amid AI Cheating Fears, Survey Finds (Alyson Klein); (5) Don't Make This Mistake When It Comes to Teaching AI Literacy (Alyson Klein); (6) High-Achieving Students More Likely To Try AI, ACT Survey Finds (Alyson Klein); and (7) No, AI Detection Won't Solve Cheating (Kip Glazer). [This Spotlight was sponsored by Turnitin.]
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- 2024
36. Non-Binary Youth and Binary Sexual Consent Education: Unintelligibility, Disruption and Possibility
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Jessica Wright and Ellis Greenberg
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This paper theorises the ways in which non-binary gender is rendered invisible through binary Yes/No sexual consent education. Judith Butler's framework of gender intelligibility is drawn upon to consider the absenting of non-binary youth from consent education. We suggest that the undoing of the hegemonic colonial gender binary also be a project of consent education. Consent education is often taught through a highly gendered lens underscored by the 'miscommunication hypothesis,' which posits normative binary gender roles as the underlying cause of sexual violence and fails to account for how non-binary youth experience and navigate consent. Furthermore, we examine how binary Yes/No consent education negates non-binary gender by rejecting the grey area of consent. The dismissal of grey area experiences is problematic for non-binary youth as ambiguity around consent may be more prevalent amongst non-binary people due to increased experiences of trauma and the common experience of gender dysphoria. Despite this invisiblisation, non-binary people have formulated their own modes for navigating sexual pleasure and consent. We call for more research into how non-binary youth are invisibilised by binary consent education as well as how these youth are challenging normative consent and reimagining sexual cultures that centre interdependence, mutual pleasure, and care.
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- 2024
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37. Empathy as a Virtue: A Confucian Interpretation and a Tool to Address Anti-Asian Hate Crime
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Charlene Tan and Priya Goel La Londe
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This paper extends the dominant understandings of empathy -- as a trait, state, communication or relationship -- by conceptualising it as a virtue and as a tool to address anti-Asian hate crime. Drawing upon the writings of the Confucian philosopher Xunzi, this article interprets empathy as a personal quality that attests to one's moral excellence. It is argued that Xunzi's concept of empathy revolves around the ethical attributes of "zhong" (authenticity) and "ren" (humaneness). This article amplifies Xunzi's formulation of empathy by applying it to anti-Asian hate crime in the U.S. The authors propose that Xunzian empathy is a powerful tool to address racism and violence towards Asians through two related and mutually reinforcing approaches: undoing fixation by identifying and eliminating racial/ethnic prejudice and discrimination; and habituating humane conduct by internalising and exhibiting "li" (normative behaviour) towards fellow human beings. These two approaches and a Confucian construal of empathy as a virtue can be enacted in schools through the strategies of role-taking, empathetic pedagogy, and Global Citizenship Education curriculum.
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- 2024
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38. Essential Elements of Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation: Inside the Black Box of Preschool Expulsion Prevention
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Davis Schoch, Annie, Tidus, Kaela M., Catherine, Evandra, Perry, Deborah F., Duran, Frances, and Rabinovitz, Lauren
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Exclusionary discipline practices differentially harm young children of color. As early childhood education systems seek to close these gaps to ensure all young children have access to high quality early learning experiences, the field requires more evidence-based approaches that can be scaled and replicated. Infant and early childhood mental health consultation (IECMHC) has been associated with lower rates of preschool expulsion; but the field lacks clear guidance on the essential elements of high quality IECMHC. Without such guidance, researchers cannot build a credible evidence base for the causal link between IECMHC and exclusionary discipline. An interdisciplinary research team, with support from the national Center for Excellence in IECMHC, led a consensus-building process to identify the essential activities of IECMHC as implemented across settings. The three-stage Delphi Process resulted in a list of five essential elements and 26 activities that define IECMHC and make concrete its emphasis on relationships and equity. This greater clarity around the activities of IECMHC can help inform future research and evaluation, as well as workforce and professional development. [This paper was published in "Early Childhood Research Quarterly" v66 p24-33 2024.]
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- 2024
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39. Applying Theory and Research toward Reducing Suicidality among Graduate Students and Postdoctoral Scholars
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Elizabeth A. Jach and Anthony P. Rinaldi
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Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to highlight suicide risk factors experienced by graduate students and postdoctoral scholars, and then outline suicide prevention strategies for these populations. Design/methodology/approach: Through analysis of literature and application of theory, the authors use the diathesis-stress model and Joiner's (2005) interpersonal theory of suicidality to outline suicide prevention strategies specific to graduate students and postdoctoral scholars. Findings: The authors' review of the literature and application of theory suggest that both individuals and groups can engage in suicide prevention strategies, specifically pertaining to reducing stressors unique to graduate students and postdoctoral scholars, as well as addressing feelings of thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness that can lead to the development of suicidality within these populations. Practical implications: Engaging in suicide prevention strategies can save lives and address the mental health conditions exhibited among graduate student and postdoctoral scholars. Originality/value: The authors offer a synthesis of good practices addressing suicide risk factors and prevention with attention to the stress-diathesis model and Joiner's (2005) interpersonal theory of suicidality toward reducing suicidality among graduate students and postdoctoral scholars.
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- 2024
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40. 'It's All about Context': Building School Capacity to Implement a Whole-School Approach to Bullying
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Natasha Pearce, Helen Monks, Narelle Alderman, Lydia Hearn, Sharyn Burns, Kevin Runions, Jacinta Francis, and Donna Cross
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Student bullying behaviours are a significant social issue in schools worldwide. Whilst school staff have access to quality bullying prevention interventions, schools can face significant challenges implementing the whole-school approach required to address the complexity of these behaviours. This study aimed to understand how schools' capacity to implement whole-school bullying prevention interventions could be strengthened to promote sustainability and improve student outcomes. Qualitative methods were used to observe schools over time to gain insight into their implementation capacity to improve student social and emotional wellbeing and prevent and ameliorate harm from bullying. A four-year longitudinal, multi-site case study intensively followed eight schools' implementation of "Friendly Schools," an Australian evidenced-based whole-school bullying prevention intervention. Regular in-depth interviews with school leaders and implementation teams over four years led to the refinement of a staged-implementation process and capacity building tools and revealed four common drivers of implementation quality: (1) strong, committed leadership; (2) organisational structures, processes and resources; (3) staff competencies and commitment; and (4) translating evidence into local school policy and practice. This paper considers the strengths of qualitative data in understanding how and why bullying prevention interventions work as well as actions schools can take to enhance their implementation and sustainability of complex social interventions.
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- 2024
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41. Preventing Image-Based Sexual Coercion, Harassment and Abuse among Teenagers: Girls Deconstruct Sexting-Related Harm Prevention Messages
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Nicola Gavey, April Wech, Pearl Hindley, Brandee Thorburn, Grace Single, Octavia Calder-Dawe, and Paulette Benton-Greig
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This paper explores teenage girls' responses to general advice, and formal prevention messages, designed to reduce sexting-related risk and prevent harm. We conducted workshops with seven groups of girls (28 in total), aged 16-17 years, in a New Zealand city. Each group participated in a series of three workshop sessions. Drawing on a Freirean 'problem-posing' approach, we designed the workshops as spaces in which girls were invited to observe and critically discuss norms related to sharing nudes as well as harm prevention messages. Girls noticed the problematic gender and sexual politics that shape abstinence-based models that target girls (implicitly) to not send nudes, but which leave boys who distribute or otherwise misuse them out of the picture. Participants navigated a careful path between attending to risk and protection on the one hand, and endorsing their right to freedom of expression on the other. We argue for a subtle, but significant, shift away from a focus on sexting safety to a focus on the prevention of image-based sexual coercion, harassment and abuse. This reframing would help to direct prevention efforts to the gendered drivers and dynamics of harm perpetration, and the ways in which they are problematically socially ignored or condoned.
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- 2024
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42. Sexual Health and Safety of Adolescents with Intellectual Disability: Challenges and Concerns among Special Educators in India
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Vaishnavi Jeyachandran, S. P. Divya Ranjelin, and Aneesh Kumar
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Sexual health education among adolescents with intellectual disabilities is an area of concern among parents and educators. Special educators play a vital role in teaching sexual health and safety to their students with disabilities. The present study explores special educators' concerns in teaching sexual health among adolescents with intellectual disabilities. The participants included 35 special educators working with adolescents with intellectual disabilities in India. Summative content analysis of the data collected using a semi-structured interview schedule highlights the neglect of the issues related to sexual health among adolescents with disabilities. Special educators reported the challenges in providing sexual health education. Teachers lacked skills in imparting sexual health education. Developmentally and culturally appropriate sexual health education can help adolescents with a disability learn healthy life skills. The paper emphasizes the need for professional support and training among special educators on sexual health education.
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- 2024
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43. Community-Based Prevention of Substance Use in Adolescents: Outcomes before and during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Santiago, Chile
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Nicolás Libuy, Carlos Ibáñez, Ana María Araneda, Paula Donoso, Lorena Contreras, Viviana Guajardo, and Adrian P. Mundt
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A primary community prevention approach in Iceland was associated with strong reductions of substance use in adolescents. Two years into the implementation of this prevention model in Chile, the aim of this study was to assess changes in the prevalence of adolescent alcohol and cannabis use and to discuss the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the substance use outcomes. In 2018, six municipalities in Greater Santiago, Chile, implemented the Icelandic prevention model, including structured assessments of prevalence and risk factors of substance use in tenth grade high school students every 2 years. The survey allows municipalities and schools to work on prevention with prevalence data from their own community. The survey was modified from an on-site paper format in 2018 to an on-line digital format in a shortened version in 2020. Comparisons between the cross-sectional surveys in the years 2018 and 2020 were performed with multilevel logistic regressions. Totally, 7538 participants were surveyed in 2018 and 5528 in 2020, nested in 125 schools from the six municipalities. Lifetime alcohol use decreased from 79.8% in 2018 to 70.0% in 2020 (X[superscript 2] = 139.3, p < 0.01), past-month alcohol use decreased from 45.5 to 33.4% (X[superscript 2] = 171.2, p < 0.01), and lifetime cannabis use decrease from 27.9 to 18.8% (X[superscript 2] = 127.4, p < 0.01). Several risk factors improved between 2018 and 2020: staying out of home after 10 p.m. (X[superscript 2] = 105.6, p < 0.01), alcohol use in friends (X[superscript 2] = 31.8, p < 0.01), drunkenness in friends (X[superscript 2] = 251.4, p < 0.01), and cannabis use in friends (X[superscript 2] = 217.7, p < 0.01). However, other factors deteriorated in 2020: perceived parenting (X[superscript 2] = 63.8, p < 0.01), depression and anxiety symptoms (X[superscript 2] = 23.5, p < 0.01), and low parental rejection of alcohol use (X[superscript 2] = 24.9, p < 0.01). The interaction between alcohol use in friends and year was significant for lifetime alcohol use ([beta] = 0.29, p < 0.01) and past-month alcohol use ([beta]= 0.24, p < 0.01), and the interaction between depression and anxiety symptoms and year was significant for lifetime alcohol use ([beta] = 0.34, p < 0.01), past-month alcohol use ([beta] = 0.33, p < 0.01), and lifetime cannabis use ([beta] = 0.26, p = 0.016). The decrease of substance use prevalence in adolescents was attributable at least in part to a reduction of alcohol use in friends. This could be related to social distancing policies, curfews, and homeschooling during the pandemic in Chile that implied less physical interactions between adolescents. The increase of depression and anxiety symptoms may also be related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The factors rather attributable to the prevention intervention did not show substantial changes (i.e., sports activities, parenting, and extracurricular activities).
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- 2024
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44. Getting Ahead of School Shootings: A Call for Action, Advocacy and Research
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Lauren W. Collins, Timothy J. Landrum, and Chris A. Sweigart
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Despite the fact that schools remain incredibly safe spaces for children and youth to spend time, the occurrence of mass school shootings, although rare, is a pressing issue for our society. In this paper we discuss the importance of action, advocacy, and research related to mass school shootings. Specifically, we discuss research-based actions for preventing and responding to mass school shootings, including multi-tiered systems of support, positive behavior interventions and supports, threat assessment, and trauma-informed care. In regard to advocacy, we focus on the need to discontinue ineffective and, in some cases, harmful practices such as zero-tolerance policies. We conclude with an examination of the needed research in this area, with special attention on the use of active shooter drills and firearm legislation.
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- 2024
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45. School Policing, Climate, and Safety: The Challenges for Local Policy Makers in Urban Districts
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Heather M. Reynolds and Ron Avi Astor
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Currently, there is a national level debate on security-based school safety policies and practices, particularly in relation to the presence of police in schools. Decisions about school safety are discussed at the district level by administrators and board of education members who may not be aware of the importance of utilizing local data to ensure these decisions are data driven and beneficial to all the stakeholders they represent in diverse, urban districts. Research on security, policing, and social-emotional and school climate-based strategies are discussed, as is research on district-level decision-makers (boards of education and administrators) and decision making. This paper provides local school stakeholders, policy makers, and school safety researchers with a framework for collaborative work to ensure that evidence-based violence prevention programming and local data drive district-level decision making about school safety.
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- 2024
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46. A Bibliometric Analysis of Scientific Publications on Eating Disorder Prevention in the Past Three Decades.
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Liao, Zhenxin, Scaltritti, Martina, Xu, Zhihan, Dinh, Thu Ngoc Xuan, Chen, Jiahe, and Ghaderi, Ata
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Background: Eating disorders (EDs) present a growing concern due to their widespread occurrence and chronic course, the low access to evidence-based treatment, and the significant burden they place on the patients and society. This picture justifies intensive focus on the prevention of EDs. The current study provides the first bibliometric analysis of research on the prevention of EDs, focusing on trends and contributions, to prompt further prevention research. Methods: We conducted a bibliometric analysis of publications on the prevention of EDs using the Web of Science database, from 1993 to 2023. Focusing on universal and selective prevention strategies, our study involved a rigorous selection process, narrowing down from 10,546 to 383 relevant papers through manual screening. The analysis utilized the "bibliometrix" R package (version 4.2.2) and Python (version 3.9.6) for data processing, with VOSviewer employed for mapping collaboration networks. Results: Our analysis revealed a consistent annual growth rate of 10.85% in ED prevention research publications, with significant contributions from the "International Journal of Eating Disorders" and some notable authors. The United States emerged as the dominant contributor. The analysis also highlighted key trends, including a surge in publications between 2010 and 2017, and the role of major institutions in advancing research in this field. Discussion: The increasing rate of publications on the prevention of EDs is encouraging. However, the actual number of studies on the prevention of EDs are limited, and the majority of this work is performed by a few research groups. Given the high concentration of publications within a few countries and research groups, increased funding, facilitation of prevention research on a wider scale, and engagement of more researchers and further collaboration are called for. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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47. Ultraviolet Spectroscopy vs Congo Red Card Test—A Step Forward toward Early Prediction of Preeclampsia: A Case– Control Study.
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Gupta, Neena, Gupta, Garima, Jahan, Uruj, and Bisht, Sonali
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- *
PREECLAMPSIA , *ULTRAVIOLET spectroscopy , *CONGO red (Staining dye) , *CASE-control method - Abstract
Aim: Comparative evaluation of ultraviolet–visible (UV–Vis) spectroscopy and Congo red card-based test in the diagnosis of preeclampsia. Materials and methods: In this case–control study, UV–Vis spectroscopy and Congo red card test were done using mid-stream clean catch urine samples collected from 98 cases and 98 controls. The results obtained were used to calculate the specificity and sensitivity of each test. Results: Out of 98 cases, 76 showed increased absorbance in UV–Vis spectroscopy while 69 showed Congo red positivity. Thus, the ultraviolet (UV)-absorbance method was found to be more sensitive (77.53) and specific (80.61) compared to the Congo red paper-based test (sensitivity, 70.40; specificity, 64.28) in the detection of the misfolded proteins present in the urine samples of the preeclamptic patients. Conclusion: The UV–Vis absorption spectroscopy is a renowned yet innovative technique in the diagnosis of preeclampsia. It is more sensitive and specific to the existing Congo red paper-based test. Clinical significance: Several studies show that urine of preeclampsia patients shows the presence of misfolded proteins which are present about 2 weeks before the onset of symptoms, that is, clinical diagnosis. This creates scope for early detection and diagnosis of preeclampsia. In this study, we establish the role of spectroscopy as a novel test in diagnosing misfolded proteins in preeclamptic patients and compare its diagnostic performance to the highly acclaimed Congo red card test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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48. International Newborn Screening: Where Are We in Saudi Arabia?
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Alhusseini, Noara, Almuhanna, Yara, Alabduljabbar, Lama, Alamri, Soaad, Altayeb, Maryam, Askar, Ghadi, Alsaadoun, Noor, Ateq, Khadijah, and AlEissa, Mariam M.
- Subjects
MEDICAL screening ,NEWBORN screening ,COMPARATIVE method ,PUBLIC health officers ,PREVENTIVE medicine - Abstract
Newborn screening (NBS) programs are believed to play an important role in the decrease of infant mortality rates in many countries. This is achieved through offering early detection and treatment of many genetic as well as metabolic disorders prior to the onset of symptoms. Our paper examines NBS across seven diverse nations: Saudi Arabia, the United States, Japan, Singapore, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom. This paper discusses the diseases screened for by each country, latest additions, as well as future recommendations, when applicable. Employing a comparative approach, we conducted a comprehensive review of the most recent published literature on NBS programs in each country and subsequently examined their latest implemented NBS guidelines as outlined on their respective official government health sector websites. We then reviewed the economic feasibility of each of these programs and factors that affect implementation and overall benefit. While all six countries employ well-developed programs, variations are observed. Those variations are mainly attributed to disparities in access, resource scarcity, financial availability, as well as ethical and cultural considerations. From a local perspective, we recommend conducting further population-based studies to assess the epidemiological data in relation to the disease burden on the country's economy. Moreover, we recommend updating national and international guidelines to contain a more comprehensive approach on policies, operation, and sustainability to deliver a service through the lens of value-based healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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49. Paper up or paper down? Clarifying instrument reprocessing standards.
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Hill, Amanda
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DENTAL equipment , *INFECTION control , *PERSONAL protective equipment , *EYE protection , *QUALITY control , *MEDICAL equipment reuse , *STERILIZATION (Disinfection) , *EQUIPMENT maintenance & repair , *MEDICAL equipment contamination , *GLOVES , *MEDICAL equipment safety measures , *PREVENTION - Abstract
The article discusses some evidence-based standard operating procedures (SOP) on the proper sterilization of dental instruments to prevent infection. Topics mentioned include the importance of heat sterilization of critical and semi-critical items used in dental practice, proper way of packaging instruments after sterilization, and some solutions to address the paper up/paper down debate in autoclave.
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- 2024
50. Bibliometric Framing of Research Trends Regarding Public Sector Auditing to Fight Corruption and Prevent Fraud.
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Branet, Diana-Sabina and Hategan, Camelia-Daniela
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FRAUD ,PUBLIC sector ,INTERNAL auditing ,CORRUPTION ,BIBLIOMETRICS - Abstract
Combating corruption is an important objective of the United Nations Sustainable Development Group, with the aim of helping public institutions to act in the interest of citizens. To ensure this objective is met, the spending of public money is controlled by the supreme audit institutions of each country. The objective of this paper is to identify trends in and approaches to the field of auditing in the public sector to combat corruption and prevent fraud. To achieve the proposed objective, a bibliometric analysis of papers published in the journals indexed in Web of Science Clarivate Analytics for the period 2003–2022 was carried out; selection criteria was based on instances of the keywords "public audit fraud", "supreme institution", and "fraud" appearing in a sample of 528 articles. The results showed that there was a research interest in this field, with the trend being more pronounced since 2017. The main topics addressed were those related to the performance audit and the fight against corruption, and the most relevant studies were conducted on samples from Nordic European countries. Thus, it is confirmed that the external audit in public sector is an important factor in combating the phenomenon of corruption in the public sector, both by detecting fraud and by offering recommendations aimed at making the activity of this sector more efficient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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