The article deals with the issues of legal regulation of forensic and forensic psychiatric examinations in Ukraine. Issues related to forensic examinations in the field of healthcare are urgent and particularly difficult to implement and enforce novadays in Ukraine, given the significant gaps and controversies in legal regulation. The rights of patients and medical professionals may be violated in course of the named examinations provision. Current national legislation in the field of forensic examination is riddled with numerous lacunae and conflicts, partly given in the study, filled with Letters of the MoH of Ukraine instead of regulatory decisions, and thus, acute legal uncertainty creates difficulties in legal implementation and execution, which negatively affects the protection of human rights and violates the rule of law standards. In view of the spectral transformation processes in Ukraine, we consider it expedient that the newly created Commission on Legal Reform, approved by Presidential Decree No. 584/2019 as of 07.08.2019, put on the agenda the issue of reforming forensic examination, which can play a significant role in the administration of justice in the light of best international statutory practice.
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BMC Psychol
January 2025
Faculty of Education, Northeast Normal University, Changchun, 130022, China.
Background: The positive association of parental phubbing with internalizing and externalizing problems among adolescents has gained academic traction. However, current researches on the negative impacts of parental phubbing have focused primarily on adolescents, with a noticeable lack of studies concerning preschool children, and there is also a deficiency in investigations from the perspective of the Risky Family Model. These gaps limit our understanding of how parental phubbing affects problem behaviors among preschool children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Intern Med
January 2025
Brown University, 222 Richmond St., Providence, RI, 02903, USA.
On April 22, 2024, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced new staffing mandates for long-term care (LTC) facilities in an effort to improve care quality in nursing homes (NHs). The guidelines require a minimum of 3.48 h of daily care per resident, including 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGene
January 2025
Department of Biotechnology, Pondicherry Central University, Pondicherry 605014, India.
The PWWP domain is a conserved motif unique to eukaryotes, playing a critical role in various cellular processes. Proteins containing the PWWP domain are typically found in chromatin, where they bind to DNA and histones in nucleosomes, facilitating chromatin-associated functions. Among these proteins, PWWP-domain containing proteins 2A and 2B (PWWP2A and PWWP2B), identified during the H2A interactome analysis, are DNA methyltransferase-related proteins, that are structurally disordered, except for their PWWP domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Policy
December 2024
Health Policy and Management Department, Faculty of Health Sciences, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Institute of Public Health, Skawinska 8 Str., Krakow 31-066, Poland. Electronic address:
Background: The migration of healthcare professionals is common phenomenon and shows upwards trends. Poland, which used to be a source country with marginal immigration, has in the past few years received more immigrants due to the simplified access to the labour market for professionals from outside the European Union. We aimed to analyse the immigration of healthcare workforce to Poland with an emphasis on legislative changes regarding the right to practice of medical personnel from outside the EU (mainly from Ukraine).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
December 2024
Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative, Geneva, Switzerland
Introduction: The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) is committed to maximising the scientific value of the individual participant data (IPD) it has collected during its 20 years of activity and the IPD it will collect in the future, while safeguarding research participants' privacy and their right to know how their data will be processed.
Objective: The objective of this article is to share what DNDi has learnt while working on its commitment to data sharing. It also aims to advance the debate about best practice in the research community to avoid 'IPD sharing paralysis', with a focus on multistakeholder projects involving patients and researchers based in countries with various levels of data privacy regulations and measures.
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