Issue Addressed: Individuals engage in volunteer activities due to a range of intrinsic, extrinsic, and altruistic factors; and this can have a positive impact on their subjective wellbeing. Within a school context, mentoring programs can connect adult volunteers with students, to provide social and/or academic support; however, evaluation data related to these programs is limited and often focused on student perspectives. This paper explores EdConnect volunteers' perspective on volunteering in primary and secondary schools in Western Australia and Victoria.
Methods: A mixed methods evaluation framework utilised surveys (n = 380) and telephone interviews (n = 22) with Edconnect Mentor and/or Learning Support volunteers.
Results: Most survey respondents reported that volunteering enhanced their sense of community, mental wellbeing, physical health, had helped them to develop new skills. Recurrent themes related to (a) Structural impacts of motivations; and (b) Motivations and inter-and intrapersonal impacts of volunteering were identified. Various factors impacted the volunteer experience, including volunteer roles and responsibilities, volunteer qualities, school support and training opportunities. Key motivating factors for volunteering were a desire to give back to society, helping students and staff, and contributing to student social, emotional, and academic outcomes.
Conclusion: Volunteers identified a range of academic, social, emotional, and behavioural gains for the students they supported; as well as range of personal benefits for themselves. Despite the positive impact that a school-based mentoring program can have for key stakeholders, challenges to program implementation do exist and require careful management. SO WHAT?: School-based mentoring programs are an efficacious way to strengthen partnerships between schools and their local community, with positive benefits for the school, the students, and the adult volunteers. They also contribute to the notion of a 'school as a community hub'.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hpja.956 | DOI Listing |
JBI Evid Synth
March 2025
Health Quality Programs, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Objectives: The objective of this review is to identify, appraise, and synthesize available evidence on the experiences of informal caregivers providing HIV and/or AIDS care and the experiences of care received by people living with HIV and/or AIDS (PLHIV) in sub-Saharan Africa.
Introduction: PLHIV share the burden of the disease with their informal caregivers throughout their lives. Experiences of HIV- and/or AIDS-related caregiving and care receiving have a significant impact on the treatment and physiological health outcomes of both care receivers and caregivers.
Surg Infect (Larchmt)
March 2025
Department of Surgery, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas, USA.
Percutaneous drains are a commonly used method of source control for intra-abdominal infections. Increased time to source control has been shown to predict worse outcomes in patients with intra-abdominal infections, but it is unclear whether this relationship is valid when the source control method is percutaneous drainage. We hypothesized that increased time from diagnostic imaging to drain placement would be associated with higher complication rates in a population of patients requiring percutaneous drainage for intra-abdominal, retroperitoneal, or pelvic infectious processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
March 2025
Shanghai Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology, School of Pharmacy, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai, 200237, P. R. China.
Agrochemicals play a pivotal role in the management of pests and diseases and the way agrochemicals are utilized exerts significant impacts on the environment. Ensuring rational application and improving utilization rates of agrochemicals are major demands in developing green delivery systems. Herein, a model of nucleic acid-peptide coacervate (NPC) for agrochemical delivery is presented, which is formed by mixing negatively charged single-stranded DNAs with positively charged poly-L-lysine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Immunol
March 2025
Institut D'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer, Barcelona, Spain.
T-regulatory-type-1 (TR1) cells are a subset of interleukin-10-producing but Foxp3 Treg cells that arise in response to chronic antigenic stimulation. We have shown that systemic delivery of autoimmune disease-relevant peptide-major histocompatibility complex class II (pMHCII)-coated nanoparticles (pMHCII-NP) triggers the formation of large pools of disease-suppressing Foxp3 TR1 cells from cognate T-follicular helper (TFH) cell precursors. Here we show that, upon treatment withdrawal, these Foxp3 TR1 cells spontaneously differentiate into a novel immunoregulatory Foxp3 TR1 subset that inherits epigenetic and transcriptional hallmarks of their precursors, including clonotypic T-cell receptors, and is distinct from other Foxp3 Treg subsets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Immunol
March 2025
Biotech Research and Innovation Center (BRIC), University of Copenhagen (UCPH), Copenhagen, Denmark.
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