keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38604655/the-big-heroine-genre-motherhood-and-the-maternal-body-in-postsocialist-chinese-television
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chelsea Wenzhu Xu
This article explores the feminist social critique in the 'big heroine' drama, a newly emerged genre of television that focuses on empowering yet dramatic stories of urban women in contemporary China. The article theorises the genre as a site of ongoing contestations to inform and critique women's maternal reality in neoliberal, pronatalist China. The big heroine genre is situated in the postsocialist structure of feeling defined by alienation and precarity, responding to China's need to stabilise the emerging population crisis and labour shortage...
April 10, 2024: Medical Humanities
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38602976/covid-19-vaccine-apartheid-and-the-failure-of-global-cooperation
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephen Brown, Morgane Rosier
The equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines is one of the most important tests of global cooperation that the world has faced in recent decades. Collectively, global leaders failed that crucible abysmally, creating a 'vaccine apartheid' that divided the world according to income into countries with widespread access and those without. Why, given that leaders were fully aware of the risks and injustice of vaccine inequity, did governments of wealthy countries hoard doses, impede the expansion of vaccine manufacturing and otherwise prevent equitable access to vaccines? We argue that their decisions to act selfishly are best explained by governments' accountability to domestic constituencies, their lack of leadership and commitment to multilateralism and their adoption of short-term perspectives, as well as their unwillingness to curb the influence of profit-oriented global pharmaceutical companies and, to a certain extent, of an additional private actor, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation...
August 2023: British Journal of Politics & International Relations
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38601262/exploring-stigma-experience-and-coping-strategies-among-women-living-with-hiv-aids-in-china-a-phenomenological-study
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhongfang Yang, Hongli Yang, Beibei Gong, Lin Zhang, Yanfen Fu, Yan Hu
PURPOSE: As of the end of 2022, over 20 million women worldwide, aged 15 and above, are living with HIV. Stigma remains a formidable barrier for women living with HIV/AIDS, hindering their access to healthcare and exacerbating health disparities. Indeed, some women living with HIV/AIDS can successfully confront and overcome stigma. There remains a paucity of qualitative research exploring the stigma coping strategies of women living with HIV/AIDS in China. This study was aimed to gain the deeper understanding of stigma experienced by women living with HIV/AIDS and coping strategies...
2024: Psychology Research and Behavior Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600774/person-people-planet-eco-systematic-analysis-of-older-adults-experiences-of-engagement-with-nature-and-discourse-about-nature
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lia Levin, Mali Nevo
This study combined ecological, environmental, nature-based, and epistemic interpretations of older adulthood to gain a previously unresearched look at how older adults feel that their relations with nature are treated by others. Sixty older adults were interviewed in-depth, and data was analyzed using the Eco-Appreciation framework and Thematic Content Analysis. The results indicate the concurrence of processes of withdrawal of older adults from spaces of nature and discourse about nature. These processes obstruct older adults' wellbeing; entail the infliction of existential epistemic injustices and "eco-ageism" toward them; and emphasize the crucial role social work can play in responding thereto...
April 10, 2024: Journal of Gerontological Social Work
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600409/addressing-health-equity-in-the-context-of-carbon-capture-utilization-and-sequestration-technologies
#25
REVIEW
David Rojas-Rueda, Kelly McAuliffe, Emily Morales-Zamora
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To describe the role of health equity in the context of carbon capture, utilization, and sequestration (CCUS) technologies. RECENT FINDINGS: CCUS technologies have the potential to both improve and worsen health equity. They could help reduce greenhouse gas emissions, a major contributor to climate change, but they could also have negative health impacts like air and noise pollution. More research is needed to fully understand the health equity implications of CCUS technologies...
April 11, 2024: Current Environmental Health Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38598015/unpacking-neighborhood-socioeconomic-status-in-children-s-health-research-from-an-environmental-justice-perspective-a-scoping-review
#26
REVIEW
Ananya Bhaktaram, Amii M Kress, Zone Li, Emily A Knapp
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Clearly defining and measuring neighborhood socioeconomic status (nSES) is a key first step in achieving environmental justice, as the disproportionate distribution of environmental hazards and access to resources is heavily influenced by socioeconomic factors. This scoping review explores the definition of neighborhoods, measurement of neighborhood socioeconomic status (nSES), and studies that evaluated the association between nSES and child health in accordance with PRISMA guidelines...
April 10, 2024: Current Environmental Health Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593736/forest-climate-and-policy-literature-lacks-acknowledgement-of-environmental-justice-diversity-equity-and-inclusion
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caroline E Vickery, John E Quinn
Forests boast essential resources and potential to mitigate climate change, meriting the development of conservation policies on all governmental scales. Ecosystem services provided by forests, including biodiversity, air quality, and food and fuel production, make forests valuable assets for climate-vulnerable communities that often lack the means to cope with ecosystem service degradation resulting from climate change. Historically, these vulnerable communities are previously marginalized and socio-economically limited, and climate change augments already-existing injustices...
April 8, 2024: Journal of Environmental Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38591241/the-uptake-and-measurement-of-alternative-approaches-to-domestic-violence-intervention-programs-a-scoping-review
#28
REVIEW
Julia K Campbell, Sydney Nicolla, Deborah M Weissman, Kathryn E Moracco
This scoping review explores the breadth and depth to which Domestic Violence Intervention Programs (DVIPs) in the United States and globally: (a) incorporate components that address the relationship between intimate partner violence (IPV) and social injustice, racism, economic inequality, and adverse childhood experiences (ACEs); (b) use restorative (RJ)/transformative justice (TJ) practices, individualized case management, partnerships with social justice actors, and strengths-based parenting training in current programming; and (c) measure effectiveness...
April 9, 2024: Trauma, Violence & Abuse
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38587713/antipsychotic-discontinuation-through-the-lens-of-epistemic-injustice
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Helene Speyer, Lene Falgaard Eplov, David Roe
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 8, 2024: Community Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38584314/a-scoping-review-of-the-role-of-policy-in-mitigating-childhood-obesity-in-underserved-populations-using-the-re-aim-framework
#30
REVIEW
Bonnie Gance-Cleveland, Marilyn Frenn, Nancy Browne, Cindy Smith Greenberg, Julia A Snethen, Eric A Hodges, Alissa V Fial, Leigh Small, Sharon Y Irving
BACKGROUND: Childhood obesity is an escalating crisis in the United States. Health policy may impact this epidemic which disproportionally affects underserved populations. AIM: The aim was to use the reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance (RE-AIM) framework to assess health policy impact on preventing or treating school-aged children (5 > 18 years) with obesity in underserved populations. METHODS: A scoping review of 842 articles was conducted...
April 7, 2024: Worldviews on Evidence-based Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38580533/diversity-epistemic-injustice-and-medicalization
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christophe Gauld, Lucie Jurek, Pierre Fourneret
This Viewpoint explores challenges within the neurodiversity framework, with a particular focus on autism, and discusses three critical aspects: the risk of epistemic injustice, the balance between over and undermedicalization, and the terminological complexities associated with the "neuro-" prefix. It underscores the importance of a balanced approach that avoids overmedicalization while providing essential support, addresses concerns about the indiscriminate use of "neurodiverse", questions the terminology on neurodiversity, and suggests considering a broader term like "biopsychosocial diversity"...
March 19, 2024: Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38575663/research-on-the-coordinated-development-between-land-urbanization-and-population-urbanization-in-shaanxi-province-china
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhao Hangli, Ai Xinnan
The coordinated development of land urbanization and population urbanization is crucial for the advancement of new urbanization. The study applied the entropy weight method and coupling coordination degree model, taking Shaanxi-a province in China characterized by a moderate pace of economic development and volume, along with distinct geographic and demographic features within its region-as the subject. It assessed the coordination conditions of these two types of urbanization from both macro and micro scales during the years 2010-2022...
April 4, 2024: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38572202/collective-action-against-corruption-in-western-and-non-western-countries-cross-cultural-implications-of-the-axiological-identitary-collective-action-model
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dmitry Grigoryev, Albina Gallyamova, Lucian Gideon Conway, Alivia Zubrod, José Manuel Sabucedo, Marcos Dono, Anastasia Batkhina, Klaus Boehnke
People sometimes protest government corruption, yet our current understanding of why they do so is culturally constrained. Can we separate pancultural factors influencing people's willingness to protest government corruption from factors culturally specific to each socioecological context? Surprisingly little cross-cultural data exist on this important question. To fill this gap, we performed a cross-cultural test of the Axiological-Identitary Collective Action Model (AICAM) regarding the intention to protest against corruption...
2024: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38558780/moral-submissiveness-social-origin-as-a-vulnerability-for-well-being-on-a-warming-planet
#34
REVIEW
Vanessa Weihgold
In recent years, the emotional experience of climate change has been studied extensively from fields like psychology, theology, sociology, and philosophy. It is crucial to analyze these results for possible vulnerability with regard to well-being. While climate justice research raises awareness of the current (social) situation of the participants in relation to the experience of climate change, the research on climate emotions seems to overlook the participant's former social situation - their family of origin...
2024: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38554069/the-selective-deployment-of-ai-in-healthcare-an-ethical-algorithm-for-algorithms
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Vandersluis, Julian Savulescu
Machine-learning algorithms have the potential to revolutionise diagnostic and prognostic tasks in health care, yet algorithmic performance levels can be materially worse for subgroups that have been underrepresented in algorithmic training data. Given this epistemic deficit, the inclusion of underrepresented groups in algorithmic processes can result in harm. Yet delaying the deployment of algorithmic systems until more equitable results can be achieved would avoidably and foreseeably lead to a significant number of unnecessary deaths in well-represented populations...
March 30, 2024: Bioethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38537165/slavery-and-its-afterlives-in-us-psychiatry
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Èlodie Edwards-Grossi, Christopher D E Willoughby
Antecedents of racist treatments of Black patients by the psychiatric profession in the United States affect the way they view treatment today. Specifically, in this essay, we explore the enduring consequences of racial science on various treatment practices. We examined a range of primary sources on the history of racial theories about the mind, medical and psychiatric publications, and hospitals. We contextualize this analysis by examining the secondary literature in the history and sociology of psychiatry...
March 2024: American Journal of Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533798/association-of-environmental-injustice-and-cardiovascular-diseases-and-risk-factors-in-the-united-states
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sumanth Khadke, Ashish Kumar, Sadeer Al-Kindi, Sanjay Rajagopalan, Yixin Kong, Khurram Nasir, Javaria Ahmad, Gary Adamkiewicz, Scott Delaney, Anju Nohria, Sourbha S Dani, Sarju Ganatra
BACKGROUND: While the impacts of social and environmental exposure on cardiovascular risks are often reported individually, the combined effect is poorly understood. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using the 2022 Environmental Justice Index, socio-environmental justice index and environmental burden module ranks of census tracts were divided into quartiles (quartile 1, the least vulnerable census tracts; quartile 4, the most vulnerable census tracts). Age-adjusted rate ratios (RRs) of coronary artery disease, strokes, and various health measures reported in the Prevention Population-Level Analysis and Community Estimates data were compared between quartiles using multivariable Poisson regression...
March 27, 2024: Journal of the American Heart Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38532988/editorial-addressing-epistemic-injustice-in-mental-health
#38
EDITORIAL
Karen Newbigging, Anthony Salla, Ulla-Karin Schön, Colin King
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2024: Frontiers in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38532966/critical-perspective-on-infodemic-and-infodemic-management-in-previous-ebola-outbreaks-in-uganda
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sunday Jimmy Obol, Okechi Nzedibe
This research investigates the complex dynamics of Uganda's recent Ebola outbreaks, emphasizing the interplay between disease spread, misinformation, and existing societal vulnerabilities. Highlighting poverty as a core element, it delves into how socioeconomic factors exacerbate health crises. The study scrutinizes the role of political economy, medical pluralism, health systems, and informal networks in spreading misinformation, further complicating response efforts. Through a comprehensive analysis, this study aims to shed light on the multifaceted challenges faced in combating epidemics in resource-limited settings...
2024: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38519336/examining-injustices-transfusion-medicine-and-race
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sumedha Arya, Alyson Mahar, Jeannie Callum, Richard L Haspel
Race and ethnicity are sociopolitical and not biological constructs, and assertions that these population descriptors have scientific meaning has caused significant harm. A critical assessment of the transfusion medicine literature is an important aspect of promoting race-conscious as opposed to race-based medicine. Utilizing current definitions and health equity frameworks, this review will provide a critical appraisal of transfusion medicine studies at the intersection of race and healthcare disparities, with a focus on larger methodological challenges facing the transfusion medicine community...
February 18, 2024: Transfusion Medicine Reviews
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