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Multiprofessional Clinician Perspectives on Communicating about Brain Death in Children.

Communicating about death by neurologic criteria (DNC), or brain death, presents complex challenges for multiprofessional providers in pediatrics. The heterogeneity of state-level and institutional brain death policies drives variability in clinical practice patterns, complicating clear and consistent messaging about this nuanced domain. Interprofessional and provider-family communication in brain death cases has been identified as a critical target for interventions, but little is known about multiprofessional clinicians' experiences in communicating about pediatric brain death.

Journal of pain and symptom management

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Improving child mental health and learning outcomes and reducing stigma and discrimination in conflict setting: findings from a cluster randomized controlled trial of a classroom-based psychosocial intervention in rural primary schools in Afghanistan.

Conflict and crises have long-lasting and dramatic consequences on the mental health of children. We aimed to investigate the effectiveness of a psychosocial intervention on child mental health in Afghanistan.

Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines

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Is memory in older adulthood influenced by changes in air pollution over the previous decade?: Examining concurrent trajectories in ambient PM2.5 and NO2 using sequence analysis.

The temporal pattern of air pollution exposure may affect cognitive aging. We characterized 10-year trajectories of particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) exposure at the United States census tract level using sequence and cluster analysis and evaluated their association with memory among 6750 National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS) participants aged 65 or older. For each year between 2000 and 2010, we trichotomized PM2.5 and NO2 concentrations in each census tract using the national 2010 25th and 75th percentiles of PM2.5 (7.9 and 10.8 µg/m3) and NO2 (4.8 and 10.8 ppb), creating nine mutually exclusive air pollution categories for each census tract each year (e.g., high PM2.5 and high NO2, high PM2.5 and medium NO2, etc.). We quantified the dissimilarity between each census tract's 10-year PM2.5 and NO2 trajectory and all other trajectories in NHATS using sequence analysis, and combined similar air pollution trajectories using hierarchical clustering. We assigned a 10-year air pollution trajectory cluster to each participant based on their residential census tract location in 2011. Episodic memory score in 2011 was the mean of immediate and delayed word recall scores. We estimated the association of air pollution trajectory with this episodic memory score using linear models adjusted for age, gender, education level, race/ethnicity, neighborhood socioeconomic status, census region, and urbanicity. We clustered 1080 unique air pollution trajectories from 2000 to 2010 into nine distinct groups. In general, participants belonging to clusters with higher pollutant concentrations in 2000 had lower memory scores in 2011, even when pollutant concentrations in the cluster later declined. For example, those exposed to high PM2.5 and high NO2 concentrations in 2000, with decreasing NO2 concentration (and consistently high PM2.5) starting in 2006, had an adjusted mean memory score that was 0.20 units lower (95% confidence interval: -0.35, -0.046) than those in clusters with consistently low concentrations of both pollutants. This application of sequence analysis offers a new approach for characterizing temporal patterns of PM2.5 and NO2 exposure, simultaneously incorporating pollutant type, timing, duration, and concentration.

Environmental epidemiology (Philadelphia, Pa.)

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Development and testing of an evidence-informed structured survey tool for planning tailored technical assistance.

Technical assistance (TA) provides training to improve program development or implementation. This study developed an evidence-informed TA survey tool for planning tailored TA. The survey captures the recipients' preferred TA delivery methods by activity categories and TA duration and identifies barriers and facilitators to TA engagement. Two phases were carried out: 1) outlining the survey components and assessing face and content validity, and 2) testing the survey with state tobacco control staff and analyzing the survey responses using descriptive statistics. Twenty-seven tobacco control managers and staff representing 14 U.S. state tobacco control programs participated in testing the survey. The final survey included 21 questions. Virtual meetings were the preferred TA delivery method for three TA activities: 1) professional development, 2) coaching and mentoring, and 3) collaborative work. The preferred duration was 1.4-3.0 h/month. Respondents wanted pragmatic information with actionable steps (92 %) and examples of similar challenges other programs address (89 %) in the TA sessions. Respondents pointed to low organizational capacity (76 %) and competing priorities (76 %) as barriers to TA engagement. The TA survey allows TA providers to identify TA recipients' preferences regarding TA activities and delivery methods, the TA duration, and potential barriers preventing recipients from participating in TA sessions.

Evaluation and program planning

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The Population Neuroscience-Dementia Syndemics Framework to better understand global sex and gender-based risk in low- and middle-income countries.

Globally, the burden of dementia profoundly affects low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), with a greater burden and risk for late-life women than men. Structural and social determinants of health, crucial constructs conferring risk and protection from later-life dementia, are relatively understudied, yet essential in LMICs. Typical neuroscience studies have historically been small, with highly selected samples that do not generalize well to target populations in LMICs. To better understand gender and sex differences in dementia risk in LMICs, this Perspective lays out a guiding framework for a global dementia research plan-the Population Neuroscience-Dementia Syndemics Framework. Population neuroscience considers the brain in a multilevel context, from a lifecourse perspective, using tools to enhance internal and external validity, while syndemics suggest that diseases and social conditions may cluster and interact in populations with syndemic risk factors-sociocultural, political, economic, and environmental factors that promote stress pathways and disease.

Nature aging

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Development of Let's Get REAL: A Family Intervention for Pediatric Stem Cell Transplant and Cellular Therapy Decisions.

Youth feel uninformed in stem cell transplant and cellular therapy (SCTCT) decisions and those as young as 8 years of age want to be included in discussions. Decision support interventions for youth are few, and interventions targeting the youth-family interaction warrant attention.

Psycho-oncology

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Advancing global pediatric cancer survivorship care: barriers, facilitators, and implementation strategies.

As more children with cancer experience improved treatment outcomes across the world, challenges arise with ongoing care needs due to a higher risk of mortality and chronic health conditions compared to the general population. Addressing global pediatric cancer survivorship care, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), is of growing importance. The current study used the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) and the Expert Recommendations for Implementing Change (ERIC) to examine the barriers, facilitators, and strategies for implementing childhood cancer survivorship care in LMICs.

Journal of cancer survivorship : research and practice

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PrEParing for Long-acting Technologies: A Multistate Analysis of PrEP Persistence and HIV and STI Lab Coverage Among Oral PrEP Initiators in St. Louis, Missouri (2014-2021).

Engagement in pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) care and routine screening for HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is critical to realizing the full benefits of this HIV prevention strategy.

Open forum infectious diseases

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In Search of Pharmaceutical Policy Innovation in the US.

JAMA health forum

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