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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8677584PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.1095980DOI Listing

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Violence against nurses and other healthcare workers is a significant and escalating concern, impeding the provision of safe and effective healthcare services. A majority of nurses experience some kind of violence, including physical and nonphysical assaults during their careers. The consequences of workplace violence extend beyond individual trauma, leading to increased burnout, turnover, and significant financial costs for healthcare systems.

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Street fight videos on the internet may provide information about little known aspects of human physical aggression, but their reliability is unclear. Analyses of 100 dyadic fight videos addressing ethological, game theoretic and sex-differentiated questions derived from research on other animals found that prefight verbalizations or gestural signals of nonaggressive or aggressive intent loosely predicted who would strike first and who would win. The head is the preferred strike target.

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Article Synopsis
  • Street violence negatively impacts cardiovascular health (CVH), but its effects had not been thoroughly studied prior to this research.
  • The study involved 648 participants over the age of 40 in a rural Ecuadorian village and examined the relationship between fear of crime and CVH using American Heart Association guidelines.
  • Results indicated that higher fear of crime significantly correlated with worsening CVH status, suggesting a need for interventions to improve health outcomes in communities affected by violence.
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