178 results on '"Parker, Caroline"'
Search Results
152. Facilitating simultaneous engineering in the automotive industry via high speed networks, control passing and face-to-face video: Results from the car project
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Parker, Caroline, primary and Joyner, Sue, additional
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- 1995
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153. What is new in rapid tranquillisation?
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Parker, Caroline and Khwaja, Masum G
- Abstract
Giving medicines to quickly calm the severely agitated patient, in order to reduce the risk of imminent and serious violence to self or others, is referred to as rapid tranquillisation (RT). Despite national guidelines on the management of violence, several Royal College of Psychiatrists guidelines, consensus statements, best practice guidelines, and numerous reviews of the evidence, there is no current consensus as to the first line pharmacological agent in RT. Over the last few years there have been a number of new medicines for RT, new formulations, and new evidence. The discontinuation of droperidol injection led to more widespread use of haloperidol. The maximum dose of haloperidol has decreased, baseline ECGs are now recommended, and it is no longer licensed for IV administration. These developments have led to changes in RT practice. In order to safely use the new medicines and new formulations it is imperative that all staff involved in prescribing and administration should be familiar with the practical use of these medicines. This includes methods of preparation and administration, specific side effects and monitoring requirements, as well as their own responsibilities in regard to these medicines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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154. Editorial: Innovative Professional Development for STEM Workforce Development.
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Parker, Caroline E.
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EDUCATIONAL technology ,CLASSROOM activities - Abstract
The article discusses three papers published within the issue, which focused on the Innovative Technology for Students and Teachers (ITEST) program and classroom and out-of-school science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).
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- 2011
155. The Innovative Technology Experiences for Students and Teachers (ITEST) Program: Teachers Developing the Next Generation of STEM Talent.
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PARKER, CAROLINE E., MALYN-SMITH, JOYCE, REYNOLDS-ALPERT, SUZANNE, and BREDIN, SIOBHAN
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STEM education ,TEACHER development ,PROFESSIONAL education ,NONFORMAL education ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,BEST practices - Abstract
The National Science Foundation Innovative Technology Experiences for Students and Teachers (ITEST) program is designed to discover and disseminate best practices for developing the next generation of STEM talent. Now in its eighth year, ITEST engages students, teachers, and other educators in compelling, authentic, technology-based STEM activities and learning environments. The six articles in this special issue describe specific ITEST teacher development projects, provide portraits of these projects, and address important themes that cross ITEST professional development and STEM professional development more generally: building links between informal and formal education; using technology in innovative ways; integrating STEM content into professional development; reaching and engaging underrepresented populations; developing innovative professional development; and tightening the research/practice cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
156. User-centred design does make a difference. The case of decision support systems in crop production.
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Parker, Caroline and Sinclair, Murray
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CROP science , *USER interfaces - Abstract
This paper lends weight to the argument that user-centred design is important in design and development of software systems by describing the case of decision support systems for crop production. Decision support systems (DSS) are increasingly being seen as useful mechanisms for the transfer of scientific knowledge and 'best practice'; particularly in the field of agriculture. Although many systems have been developed, few can be termed 'successful' (i.e. have a significant uptake by intended users, and used by them). This paper provides evidence to support the importance of a user-centred approach by showing that each issue considered to be relevant to the failure of DSS in crop production can be addressed by the appropriate inclusion of users in the design and development process. Positive evidence in the shape of successful systems that have employed UCD is also presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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157. Caroline Nelson Parker Survey
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Parker, Caroline Nelson, Parker, Caroline Nelson, Parker, Caroline Nelson, and Parker, Caroline Nelson
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4 continuous tone images, Responses to survey mailed by the University of Michigan Alumnae Council to women who had attended the University in the period 1870-1924. The survey included information on activities, memories of faculty and college life, descriptions of influence of University on their lives, occupations, public services, etc., (dlps) 8730.2039.001, (voicesdb) 2043, https://www.lib.umich.edu/about-us/policies/copyright-policy
158. "DOWNTOWN" HAS FLED TO THE SUBURBS.
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Breckenfeld, Gurney and Parker, Caroline
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- 1972
159. Measuring cognition of students with disabilities using technology-enabled assessments
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Sue Bechard, Jan Sheinker, Rosemary Abell, Karen Barton, Kelly Burling, Christopher Camacho, Rene Cameto, Geneva Haertel, Eric Hansen, Christopher Johnstone, Neal Kingston, Boo Murray, Parker, Caroline E., Doris Redfield, and Bill Tucker
160. Our friends the birds,
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Parker, Caroline H., primary
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- 1897
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161. Breaking Down Silos, Joining Forces.
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Rinaldi, Claudia and Parker, Caroline E.
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ENGLISH language education ,LEARNING disabilities ,COMPUTER software - Abstract
The article evaluates the English Learner Tool Kit developed by the U.S. Department of Education Office of English Language Acquisition, and the RTI-Based Specific Learning Disabilities Identification Toolkit developed by the U.S. National Center for Learning Disabilities (NCLD).
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- 2016
162. CROSSING BORDERS: The Saint Makers: A Living Tradition in American Folk Art.
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Parker, Caroline
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The article reviews the exhibition "The Saint Makers: A Living tradition in American Folk Art" held at the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum of Florida Intenational University in Miami, Florida from September 24 through December 4, 2005.
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- 2006
163. The Apartment Dweller's Return.
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Rothfeld, Michael and Parker, Caroline
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- 1972
164. Bridging the gap : user centred design and support methods for decision support systems in crop production
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Parker, Caroline
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- 620.82, Ergonomics
- Abstract
This thesis suggests that there is a problem with technology transfer in crop production. The nature of the problem and the mechanisms available to the agricultural research sector for solving it are examined. As a consequence it is argued that Decision Support Systems (DSS) technology is an extremely useful mechanism for encapsulating and delivering scientific knowledge to the industry. The thesis then poses the question of why this technology is not currently being taken up by farmers and farm consultants, hypothesising that the current lack of user involvement in design is a major contributing factor. The hypothesis is supported by a survey of DSS development and use in agriculture and it is concluded that a user-centred design (UCD) approach is important to the successful adoption of these systems by the industry. The thesis then asks what methods the agricultural DSS developers should employ to ensure a user-centred design approach. It is suggested that it is not sufficient merely to point DSS producers in the direction of user centred design but to furnish them with adequate methods and tools to achieve this goal, bearing in mind their specific requirements and limitations and the nature of the decision support task. A review of currently available methods reveals that none of the standard methods meets this requirement and that a new approach is therefore needed. An approach supported by work from management science is introduced. This approach identifies the user's questions to the system as a means of defining its function and features. Its use in the context of workshops is developed into a user centred design method to meet all of the requirements for the designer stakeholders. The question approach is also used as the basis of ä method for identifying DSS interface requirements and collating design solutions. Both methods are presented as mechanisms for improving the acceptance of DSS in the sector. The document concludes by discussing the contribution made by the thesis to its originating disciplines and looks forward to the future of DSS technology in crop production.
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- 1999
165. LETTER OF THE WEEK.
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Parker, Caroline, Baroudi, Sharron, and Morrison, Jane
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LETTERS to the editor ,INFORMATION services ,AWARDS ,CHILD care services ,CHILD care - Abstract
Several letters to the editor are presented in response to articles in previous issues including one from a mother who wants the pressure of a stressful education system not to be applied to her child, another on a letter by Roger Bell regarding the Children's Information Services, and on the Council for Awards in Children's Care and Education's Diploma in Home-based Childcare.
- Published
- 2008
166. Substance use policy and practice in the COVID-19 pandemic: Learning from early pandemic responses through internationally comparative field data.
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Aronowitz, Shoshana V., Carroll, Jennifer J., Hansen, Helena, Jauffret-Roustide, Marie, Parker, Caroline Mary, Suhail-Sindhu, Selena, Albizu-Garcia, Carmen, Alegria, Margarita, Arrendondo, Jaimie, Baldacchino, Alexander, Bluthenthal, Ricky, Bourgois, Philippe, Burraway, Joshua, Chen, Jia-shin, Ekhtiari, Hamed, Elkhoy, Hussien, Farhoudian, Ali, Friedman, Joseph, Jordan, Ayana, and Kato, Lindsey
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HEALTH policy , *FIELD research , *WELL-being , *AFFINITY groups , *DRUG addiction , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *RESEARCH methodology , *CONVALESCENCE , *DRUG overdose , *PUBLIC health , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL care , *QUALITATIVE research , *ETHNOLOGY research , *HARM reduction , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *COMMUNITY-based social services , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *INTERNATIONAL agencies , *PUBLIC welfare , *COVID-19 pandemic , *DRUG abusers , *DELPHI method , *SOCIAL case work , *CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has created an unprecedented natural experiment in drug policy, treatment delivery, and harm reduction strategies by exposing wide variation in public health infrastructures and social safety nets around the world. Using qualitative data including ethnographic methods, questionnaires, and semi-structured interviews with people who use drugs (PWUD) and Delphi-method with experts from field sites spanning 13 different countries, this paper compares national responses to substance use during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Field data was collected by the Substance Use x COVID-19 (SU x COVID) Data Collaborative, an international network of social scientists, public health scientists, and community health practitioners convened to identify and contextualise health service delivery models and social protections that influence the health and wellbeing of PWUD during COVID-19. Findings suggest that countries with stronger social welfare systems pre-COVID introduced durable interventions targeting structural drivers of health. Countries with fragmented social service infrastructures implemented temporary initiatives for PWUD led by non-governmental organisations. The paper summarises the most successful early pandemic responses seen across countries and ends by calling for greater systemic investments in social protections for PWUD, diversion away from criminal-legal systems toward health interventions, and integrated harm reduction, treatment and recovery supports for PWUD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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167. Passing the baton: Community-based ethnography to design a randomized clinical trial on the effectiveness of oral pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV prevention among Black men who have sex with men.
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Garcia, Jonathan, Colson, Paul W., Parker, Caroline, and Hirsch, Jennifer S.
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HIV prevention , *MEN who have sex with men , *DRUG efficacy , *ETHNOLOGY , *PATIENT compliance , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Although HIV interventions and clinical trials increasingly report the use of mixed methods, studies have not reported on the process through which ethnographic or qualitative findings are incorporated into RCT designs. We conducted a community-based ethnography on social and structural factors that may affect the acceptance of and adherence to oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among Black men who have sex with men (BMSM). We then devised the treatment arm of an adherence clinical trial drawing on findings from the community-based ethnography. This article describes how ethnographic findings informed the RCT and identifies distilled themes and findings that could be included as part of an RCT. The enhanced intervention includes in-person support groups, online support groups, peer navigation, and text message reminders. By describing key process-related facilitators and barriers to conducting meaningful mixed methods research, we provide important insights for the practice of designing clinical trials for ‘real-world’ community settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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168. A secreted sirtuin from Campylobacter jejuni contributes to neutrophil activation and intestinal inflammation during infection.
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Callahan SM, Hancock TJ, Doster RS, Parker CB, Wakim ME, Gaddy JA, and Johnson JG
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- Mice, Humans, Animals, Histones, Neutrophil Activation, Inflammation, Campylobacter jejuni physiology, Campylobacter Infections microbiology, Campylobacter Infections pathology
- Abstract
Histone modifications control numerous processes in eukaryotes, including inflammation. Some bacterial pathogens alter the activity or expression of host-derived factors, including sirtuins, to modify histones and induce responses that promote infection. In this study, we identified a deacetylase encoded by Campylobacter jejuni which has sirtuin activities and contributes to activation of human neutrophils by the pathogen. This sirtuin is secreted from the bacterium into neutrophils, where it associates with and deacetylates host histones to promote neutrophil activation and extracellular trap production. Using the murine model of campylobacteriosis, we found that a mutant of this bacterial sirtuin efficiently colonized the gastrointestinal tract but was unable to induce cytokine production, gastrointestinal inflammation, and tissue pathology. In conclusion, these results suggest that secreted bacterial sirtuins represent a previously unreported class of bacterial effector and that bacterial-mediated modification of host histones is responsible for the inflammation and pathology that occurs during campylobacteriosis.
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- 2023
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169. Involuntary Civil Commitment for Substance Use Disorders in Puerto Rico: Neglected Rights Violations and Implications for Legal Reform.
- Author
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Parker CM, Miranda-Miller OE, and Albizu-García C
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- Adult, United States, Humans, Puerto Rico, Human Rights, Mental Health, Civil Rights, Involuntary Commitment, Substance-Related Disorders
- Abstract
Laws facilitating the involuntary civil commitment (ICC) of people with substance use disorders vary considerably internationally and across the United States. Puerto Rico, a colonial territory of the United States since 1898, currently harbors the most punitive ICC legislation in the country. It is the only place in the United States where self-sufficient adults who pose no grave danger to themselves or others can be involuntarily committed to restrictive residential facilities for over a year at a time without ever being assessed by a health care professional. The involuntary commitment of otherwise-able citizens-many of whom have never been diagnosed with a substance use disorder-continues to be ignored nationally and internationally. In this paper, we specify how Puerto Rican ICC law and procedures systematically violate rights and liberties that are supposed to be guaranteed by Puerto Rico's Mental Health Act, the US Federal Supreme Court, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. To ensure that Puerto Rico's ICC procedures conform to prevailing local, national, and international standards, we propose a series of legislative reforms. Finally, we highlight the importance of addressing the preponderance of poorly constructed ICC laws both within the United States and internationally., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (Copyright © 2022 Parker, Miranda-Miller, Albizu-García.)
- Published
- 2022
170. Vocal Function Differences Before and After Sorority Recruitment.
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Sandage MJ, Hamby HA, Barnett LA, Harris ML, Parker CR, and Allison LH
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- Female, Humans, Phonation, Stroboscopy, Voice Quality, Voice Training, Voice Disorders diagnosis, Voice Disorders etiology
- Abstract
Purpose: Participation in sorority recruitment often results in acute vocal impairment. The purpose of this investigation was to characterize the extent to which voice function and laryngeal appearance may be altered by participation in this social phenomenon., Methods: Using a within-participant repeated measures design, nine women participating as sorority recruiters completed the study protocol. The following data were collected at two time points, immediately before and after the completion of two weeks of sorority recruitment: stroboscopic laryngeal imaging, vocal acoustic measures, and perceptual measures of vocal effort and voice quality., Results: Perceived phonatory effort and overall severity of voice quality were significantly impaired following sorority recruitment. All participants had evidence of mucosal changes in the form of one or more the following: observed edema, erythema, increased vascularity, glottic margin changes. No significant differences in acoustic measures were identified., Conclusions: Increased perceived vocal effort, increased overall severity ratings of voice quality, and deleterious vocal fold tissue changes observed support the hypothesis that the acute vocal loading that is characteristic of the sorority recruitment process contributes to a decline in voice function in the short term. Acoustic measures taken either lacked the sensitivity for the perceived decline in voice function or the participants, who were otherwise healthy, managed to adapt the acoustic signal to the tissue changes observed. The extent to which these acute changes may be mitigated with vocal hygiene and voice training is an area for future study., (Copyright © 2020 The Voice Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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171. College-Based Transition Services' Impact on Self-Determination for Youth With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities.
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Schillaci RS, Parker CE, Grigal M, and Paiewonsky M
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- Adolescent, Child, Developmental Disabilities therapy, Humans, Students, Universities, Persons with Disabilities, Intellectual Disability therapy
- Abstract
Most youth in transition services with labels of intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) have poorer employment outcomes than their peers with other or without disabilities. One alternative approach to address this challenge provides youth with IDD access to transition services in the context of a college or university campus. College-based transition services (CBTS) provide students with IDD access to college courses, internships, and employment during their final 2 to 3 years of secondary education. A quasi-experimental design evaluation of one college-based transition services model, Think College Transition, found that, after controlling for student baseline scores, the college-based transition services had a significant effect on students' scores of self-determination at post-test. Implications for further refining the model are discussed., (©AAIDD.)
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- 2021
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172. From Treatment to Containment to Enterprise: An Ethno-history of Therapeutic Communities in Puerto Rico, 1961-1993.
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Parker CM
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- Adult, Humans, Puerto Rico ethnology, Residential Treatment organization & administration, Substance-Related Disorders ethnology, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Therapeutic Community
- Abstract
Unpaid work is now a central therapy in Puerto Rican therapeutic communities, where substance users reside and seek to rehabilitate each other, often for years at a time. Once a leading treatment for addiction in mainland United States, therapeutic communities were scaled back in the 1970s after they lost federal endorsement. They continue to flourish in Puerto Rico for reasons that have less to do with their curative powers than with their malleability as multi-purpose social enterprises and their historical co-option by state, market and family actors who have deployed them for a variety of purposes. Their endurance from the 1960s to the neoliberal present obliges us to recognize their capacities as what Mizruchi calls abeyance mechanisms whereby 'surplus' populations, otherwise excluded from labor and home, are absorbed into substitute livelihoods. Having initially emerged as a low-cost treatment, in a context of mass unemployment and prison-overcrowding they now thrive as institutions of containment and informal enterprise.
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- 2020
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173. Public Libraries: A Community-Level Resource to Advance Population Health.
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Philbin MM, Parker CM, Flaherty MG, and Hirsch JS
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- Humans, Public Health, Public Policy, United States, Health Promotion organization & administration, Libraries organization & administration, Population Health statistics & numerical data
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Policy makers and public health practitioners rarely consider public libraries to be part of the health system, even though they possess several characteristics that suggest unrealized potential to advance population health. This scoping review uses an adapted social determinants framework to categorize current health-related work conducted by public libraries in the United States and to discuss libraries' potential as 'meso-level' community resources to improve population health. Our discussion of libraries contributes to scholarship on place-based health disparities, by emphasizing the potential impact of institutions that are modifiable through social policy-e.g., parks, community centers, schools-and which have a conceptually clear or empirically documented relationship to health.
- Published
- 2019
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174. Gendered Social Institutions and Preventive Healthcare Seeking for Black Men Who Have Sex with Men: The Promise of Biomedical HIV Prevention.
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Philbin MM, Parker CM, Parker RG, Wilson PA, Garcia J, and Hirsch JS
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- Adult, HIV Infections prevention & control, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Humans, Male, New York City, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Sexual and Gender Minorities statistics & numerical data, Social Stigma, Black or African American psychology, Homosexuality, Male ethnology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care ethnology, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Research on gender and health, including research conducted among Black men who have sex with men (BMSM), has primarily focused on how gender norms and roles shape healthcare engagement. Here we advance that work by demonstrating how a broader theorization of gender, particularly one that moves beyond gender norms and performance to incorporate structures such as the healthcare system and the labor market, can facilitate an understanding of how gender affects preventive healthcare seeking among BMSM, particularly the uptake of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a promising approach to alleviate HIV disparities. This article is based on a year-long ethnographic study conducted in New York City with BMSM (n = 31; three interviews each) and community stakeholders (n = 17). Two primary findings emerged: (1) the labor market systematically excluded the men in our sample, which limited their ability to access employer-sponsored healthcare. Such discrimination may promote overt demonstrations of masculinity that increase their HIV vulnerability and decrease healthcare seeking, and (2) healthcare systems are not structured to promote preventive healthcare for men, particularly BMSM. In fact, they constrained men's access to primary providers and were usually tailored to women. Applying a structural, gendered lens to men's health-in addition to the more frequently researched individual or interpersonal levels-provides insight into factors that affect healthcare seeking and HIV prevention for BMSM. These findings have implications for the design of policies and institutional reforms that could enhance the impact of PrEP among BMSM. Findings are also relevant to the management of chronic disease among men more broadly.
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- 2018
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175. The Urgent Need for Research and Interventions to Address Family-Based Stigma and Discrimination Against Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Youth.
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Parker CM, Hirsch JS, Philbin MM, and Parker RG
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Family Relations psychology, Research, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, Social Stigma
- Abstract
Purpose: This scoping study sought to provide an overview of existing interventions, programs and policies that address family-based stigma and discrimination against LGBTQ youth., Methods: A keyword search in three online databases identified relevant scientific publications. Because it located a relatively small number of peer-reviewed publications, additional grey literature references were included, identified through consultation with specialists and through anonymous peer-review. Research, policies and interventions were categorized using an adapted ecological framework., Results: There is very little peer-reviewed research on interventions to reduce family stigma and discrimination against LGBTQ youth. Most on-going work to improve family environments for LGBTQ youth appears to be currently conducted by city governments and non-governmental organizations. Very few interventions or programs provide any outcome data. Theoretical frameworks and approaches vary widely., Conclusions: Given the widely recognized importance of a supportive family environment for a healthy transition to adulthood for LGBTQ youth, there is an urgent need for scientific research on policies and interventions to address stigma and discrimination and create supportive environments within families. Tackling family-based stigma and discrimination will require interventions and policies at each level of the ecological framework, including individual- and interpersonal-level interventions as well as community-level programs and structural-level policymaking., (Copyright © 2018 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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176. The Impact of Urban US Policing Practices on Black Men Who Have Sex with Men's HIV Vulnerability: Ethnographic Findings and a Conceptual Model for Future Research.
- Author
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Parker CM, Parker RG, Philbin MM, and Hirsch JS
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Cities statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, New York City, Risk-Taking, Young Adult, Black or African American psychology, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Police psychology, Racism psychology, Sexual Behavior psychology, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology
- Abstract
This paper advances research on racism and health by presenting a conceptual model that delineates pathways linking policing practices to HIV vulnerability among Black men who have sex with men in the urban USA. Pathways include perceived discrimination based on race, sexuality and gender performance, mental health, and condom-carrying behaviors. The model, intended to stimulate future empirical work, is based on a review of the literature and on ethnographic data collected in 2014 in New York City. This paper contributes to a growing body of work that examines policing practices as drivers of racial health disparities extending far beyond violence-related deaths.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
177. Social risk, stigma and space: key concepts for understanding HIV vulnerability among black men who have sex with men in New York City.
- Author
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Parker CM, Garcia J, Philbin MM, Wilson PA, Parker RG, and Hirsch JS
- Subjects
- Condoms statistics & numerical data, HIV Infections ethnology, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, New York City ethnology, Risk-Taking, Sexual Behavior ethnology, Sexual Partners, Social Discrimination, Black or African American psychology, HIV Infections prevention & control, Homosexuality, Male ethnology, Social Stigma
- Abstract
Black men who have sex with men in the USA face disproportionate incidence rates of HIV. This paper presents findings from an ethnographic study conducted in New York City that explored the structural and socio-cultural factors shaping men's sexual relationships with the goal of furthering understandings of their HIV-related vulnerability. Methods included participant observation and in-depth interviews with 31 Black men who have sex with men (three times each) and 17 key informants. We found that HIV vulnerability is perceived as produced through structural inequalities including economic insecurity, housing instability, and stigma and discrimination. The theoretical concepts of social risk, intersectional stigma, and the social production of space are offered as lenses through which to analyse how structural inequalities shape HIV vulnerability. We found that social risk shaped HIV vulnerability by influencing men's decisions in four domains: 1) where to find sexual partners, 2) where to engage in sexual relationships, 3) what kinds of relationships to seek, and 4) whether to carry and to use condoms. Advancing conceptualisations of social risk, we show that intersectional stigma and the social production of space are key processes through which social risk generates HIV vulnerability among Black men who have sex with men.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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178. Psychosocial Implications of Homophobia and HIV Stigma in Social Support Networks: Insights for High-Impact HIV Prevention Among Black Men Who Have Sex With Men.
- Author
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Garcia J, Parker C, Parker RG, Wilson PA, Philbin M, and Hirsch JS
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Black or African American psychology, HIV Infections ethnology, HIV Infections psychology, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, New York City, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis, Young Adult, HIV Infections prevention & control, Homophobia psychology, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Social Stigma, Social Support
- Abstract
Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) bear an increasingly disproportionate burden of HIV in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends high-impact combination prevention for populations at high risk for HIV infection, such as BMSM. However, few scholars have considered the types of behavioral interventions that combined with biomedical prevention could prove effective for mitigating the epidemic among BMSM. Between June 2013 and May 2014, we conducted three in-depth interviews each with 31 BMSM, interviews with 17 community stakeholders, and participant observation in New York City to understand the sociocultural and structural factors that may affect the acceptance of and adherence to oral preexposure prophylaxis among BMSM and to inform an adherence clinical trial. BMSM and community leaders frequently described condomless sex as a consequence of psychosocial factors and economic circumstances stemming from internalized homophobia resulting from rejection by families and religious groups. BMSM revealed that internalized homophobia and HIV stigma resulted in perceived lack of self- and community efficacy in accepting and adhering to preexposure prophylaxis. Our results indicate that addressing internalized homophobia and fostering emotional social support in peer networks are key elements to improve the effectiveness of combination prevention among BMSM., (© 2015 Society for Public Health Education.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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