Publications by authors named "Hawes D"

This meta-analytic review examined irritability across childhood and adolescence as it relates to symptoms of common mental health disorders in these periods. Of key interest was whether the relationship between irritability and symptom severity varies according to symptom domain. This was tested at the level of broad symptom dimensions (internalizing versus externalizing problems) as well as discrete diagnostic domains (e.

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Background: Early identification and intervention for mental health (MH) problems in childhood offers lifelong benefits. Many children with MH problems do not receive appropriate help. To address this need, an online universal MH screening tool, the Growing Minds Check-In for parents/caregivers (GMCI-P), was developed to provide feedback to parents on their children's MH, identify children at risk of MH problems, and link parents to evidence-based online programs/information, with the goal of facilitating parent help-seeking, and ultimately reducing the prevalence of child MH problems.

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Time-out is an empirically supported component of parenting interventions for child conduct problems; however, it is receiving increasing criticism among parents and some practitioners. This study aimed to investigate practitioners' use and acceptability of time-out for child conduct problems; examine whether perceived effectiveness and knowledge of evidence-based parameters of time-out implementation influence use and acceptability of time-out; and explore practitioners' perceptions about alternatives to time-out. One hundred and ten Australian and New Zealand practitioners who have worked with children and families completed an online survey investigating their use and acceptability of time-out for children with conduct problems.

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  • Ductal carcinoma in-situ (DCIS) is a non-invasive breast cancer type that makes up about 25% of breast cancer cases, but it often leads to unnecessary aggressive treatment despite many cases never progressing to invasive cancer.
  • A study analyzed 197 breast tissue samples to explore molecular changes in DCIS, using techniques like mRNA expression and DNA analysis to compare progressing versus non-progressing cases.
  • The research found significant molecular differences among DCIS subtypes and between DCIS and invasive breast cancer, highlighting the complexity of DCIS and the need for more tailored approaches to assess risk and treatment.
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  • Discipline is vital for parenting, and while time-out is a common strategy with solid evidence, it faces criticism regarding its effects on emotional development, especially for children with past adversities.
  • This study involved 474 Australian primary caregivers of children aged 6-8 and examined how time-out's implementation relates to parent-child attachment and child mental health, factoring in experiences of adversity.
  • Results indicated that when used appropriately, time-out can improve mental health and attachment, especially for children facing adversity, suggesting that misinformation about time-out should be addressed to promote child well-being effectively.
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Vascular graft vasospasm is a lethal risk when using grafts for revascularization and reconstructive surgery. Revascularization is a treatment modality for ischemic diseases including Moyamoya disease that requires bypass surgery. Cerebrovascular graft transplantation carries a 5-10% risk of vasospasm, which can lead to devastating neurological sequelae.

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Neuropsychiatric conditions pose substantial challenges for therapeutic development due to their complex and poorly understood underlying mechanisms. High-throughput, unbiased phenotypic assays present a promising path for advancing therapeutic discovery, especially within disease-relevant neural tissues. Here, we introduce NeuroPainting, a novel adaptation of the Cell Painting assay, optimized for high-dimensional morphological phenotyping of neural cell types, including neurons, neuronal progenitor cells, and astrocytes derived from human stem cells.

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The Face-to-Face Still-Face (FF-SF) procedure has been a popular paradigm to understand infant behavior. The current study examines the validity of mothers' behavior during the Still-Face phase of the FF-SF, especially the quality of her neutral face and its impact on infant arousal (N = 358 ethnically-diverse mother-infant dyads, Mean infant age = 223 days, SD = 27 days). Results showed that more than half of the mothers in the sample breached one or more Still-Face phase instructions; however, mothers' breaches of the Still-Face instructions were unrelated to infant arousal (Skin Conductance Responses) during the FF-SF.

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Background: Parenting interventions are effective for improving child conduct problems (CPs), but online self-directed interventions are required to improve reach and impact. Mothers are the main users of such programmes; fathers show low participation rates despite evidence of increased efficacy when they participate.

Methods: This randomised controlled trial examined the efficacy of Family Man, a brief, self-directed online parenting intervention for fathers and mothers of children with CPs.

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  • Pathological tau isoforms, particularly hyperphosphorylated tau at serine 396, and tau oligomers were found in the retinas of patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD), indicating a potential link between tauopathy and retinal changes.
  • The study analyzed retinal cross-sections from 25 patients with MCI or AD and 16 cognitively normal controls, revealing a significant reduction in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and increased signs of cell distress in MCI and AD patients compared to controls.
  • Findings showed that higher amounts of pS396-tau in RGCs were strongly correlated with decreased RGC integrity and related to severity in cognitive decline, suggesting that retinal
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Three distinct MN1::BEND2 fusion-positive tumors in pediatric patients. (A) Clinical course for each patient was variable in part due to differences in initial diagnosis. Each patient responded favorably to gross total resection and is stable at last follow-up.

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  • * Researchers analyzed retinal samples from AD patients (both mild cognitive impairment and dementia) and matched controls, finding significant increases in various tau isoforms, particularly in advanced AD cases.
  • * Strong correlations were identified between specific retinal tau isoforms and brain pathology, indicating that changes in the retina could reflect the severity of cognitive decline and neurodegeneration in AD patients.
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Childhood represents a critical window for the emergence and treatment of mental health disorders, yet many are not being identified, or are identified too late to receive adequate intervention. This systematic review (Prospero registration: CRD42022299560) aimed to determine the effectiveness and acceptability of parent reported universal mental health screening (UMHS) to improve the early identification of children at-risk of mental health difficulties, and to identify barriers and enablers that may influence parental engagement. Six databases were searched in February 2022 for peer-reviewed, primary research.

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Integration of molecular data with histologic, radiologic, and clinical features is imperative for accurate diagnosis of pediatric central nervous system (CNS) tumors. Whole transcriptome RNA sequencing (RNAseq), a genome-wide and non-targeted approach, allows for the detection of novel or rare oncogenic fusion events that contribute to the tumorigenesis of a substantial portion of pediatric low- and high-grade glial and glioneuronal tumors. We present two cases of pediatric glioneuronal tumors occurring in the occipital region with a CLIP2::MET fusion detected by RNAseq.

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Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), including child maltreatment and interparental aggression, are known to have far-reaching consequences for mental health across the lifespan. Emerging evidence, such as that reported by Nobakht et al. (Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2023), indicates that child conduct problems (e.

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  • - This study investigates the presence of various pathological tau proteins in the retinas of individuals with early and advanced Alzheimer's disease (AD) and their connection to the severity of the disease.
  • - Researchers analyzed retinal and brain samples from 75 donors with conditions ranging from normal cognition to mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD, using advanced histopathology and digital profiling methods.
  • - The results showed significant increases in multiple tau isoforms in the retinas of AD and MCI patients compared to normal controls, suggesting a correlation between retinal changes and cognitive decline.
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  • Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS) is a serious genetic disorder that leads to severe disabilities and increased mortality due to heightened type I interferon activity.
  • Janus Kinase (JAK) inhibitors, like baricitinib, have been effective in managing AGS by blocking the harmful effects of interferon, even when treatment starts at a very young age.
  • A post-mortem analysis of a patient on baricitinib for over 4 years revealed significant brain damage, indicating the need for better treatment solutions that can reach the central nervous system more effectively.
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Background: Low-grade fibromyxoid tumors are uncommon in children. Their differentiation from high-grade fibromyxoid tumors, as seen in adults, is imperative to diagnosis. Awareness of the entity and its subsequent behavior may guide management and predict outcomes.

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Evidence suggests that associations between antisocial behaviour, callous-unemotional (CU) traits and cognitive empathy (e.g. perspective taking) vary depending on more fine-grained dimensions of these constructs.

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With considerable debate concerning the impact of culture on the expression of callous-unemotional (CU) traits, it is unclear whether the core features of CU traits generalize to youth across cultures. This study aimed to examine whether cultural differences are reflected in the core features of CU traits and the associations among these features. Network analysis was employed to identify the core features and to examine the network structure of CU traits operationalized by the Inventory of Callous Unemotional traits (ICU) in four community youth samples from different nations (Australia, N = 190; the UK, N = 437; the USA, N = 330; China, N = 503).

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The economic analysis of Goulter et al. (2023) identifies the long-term financial costs arising from conduct problems in the kindergarten period, including those associated with later criminal activity, lost offender productivity, victim costs and government and medical services. These costs are substantial and provide policymakers with a compelling argument for investing in early intervention and prevention of conduct problems.

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This study evaluated the interrater reliability, convergent and divergent validity, incremental validity, and clinical prognostic utility of the Clinical Assessment of Prosocial Emotions (CAPE; Frick, 2013) for assessing limited prosocial emotions (LPE). Participants were 232 young children ( = 3.94 years, = 1.

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Background: The effective treatment of child conduct problems is understood to rely on a range of therapist competencies, yet these have rarely been an explicit focus of research. In this practitioner review, we examine core competencies for the delivery of evidence-based parenting interventions for conduct problems in early-to-middle childhood. These are examined in light of research into the common elements shared by these interventions, literature regarding common challenges in these interventions, and conceptualisations of such competencies in other fields of mental health.

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Unlabelled: Patients with H3K27M-mutant diffuse midline glioma (DMG) have no proven effective therapies. ONC201 has recently demonstrated efficacy in these patients, but the mechanism behind this finding remains unknown. We assessed clinical outcomes, tumor sequencing, and tissue/cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) correlate samples from patients treated in two completed multisite clinical studies.

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Understanding the developmental psychopathology of child conduct problems (CP) has been advanced by differentiating subtypes based on levels of internalizing problems (INT) and/or callous-unemotional (CU) traits (i.e., low empathy/guilt, poor motivation, shallow/deficient affect).

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