637 results match your criteria: "Silver School of Social Work.[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Social anxiety disorder (SAD) in Black youth involves distress and avoidance in social settings, leading to serious interpersonal and academic difficulties.
  • While evidence-based assessment tools for SAD seem culturally relevant, more research is needed on their effectiveness specifically for Black adolescents.
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) shows potential as a treatment, but there's a call for incorporating cultural considerations and more research into adapted interventions, alongside strategies to improve access to mental health services.
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Trans young adults of color experience systemic harm that contributes to negative health outcomes and hinders their ability to live freely. The present study used a grounded theory qualitative methodology rooted in a critical-ideological paradigm to understand the intersections of racial and gender oppression. Trans young adults of color from across the United States ( = 15; ages 20-29; majority racial identities: Asian, Black, and multiracial; majority gender identities: nonbinary and transmasculine) participated in a semistructured interview.

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Background And Hypothesis: Problematic internet use (PIU) is prevalent among adolescents. Past research suggested cross-sectional associations between PIU and psychotic experiences, but little information is available on the longitudinal association. We hypothesized that PIU in adolescence may be longitudinally associated with psychotic experiences, adjusting for confounders.

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R. Spitzer and the depathologization of homosexuality: some considerations on the 50th anniversary.

World Psychiatry

June 2024

Center for Bioethics, School of Global Public Health, and Silver School of Social Work, New York University, New York, NY, USA.

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Background: This paper describes the protocols for a randomized controlled trial using a parallel-group trial design that includes an intervention designed to address social isolation and loneliness among people experiencing homelessness known as Miracle Friends and an intervention that combines Miracles Friends with an economic poverty-reduction intervention known as Miracle Money. Miracle Friends pairs an unhoused person with a volunteer "phone buddy." Miracle Money provides guaranteed basic income of $750 per month for 1 year to Miracle Friends participants.

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Assertive community treatment as an alternative to incarceration for American pretrial detainees.

Int J Law Psychiatry

June 2024

Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center, New York State Office of Mental Health, United States of America; New York University Grossman, School of Medicine, United States of America. Electronic address:

In the United States and elsewhere around the world, people with serious mental illness (SMI) are overrepresented in the criminal justice system. Clinical interventions to divert such individuals out of correctional settings, including Assertive Community Treatment (ACT), have been shown to reduce rates of criminal justice recidivism when modified to allow for the use of court sanctions to encourage treatment adherence. However, these interventions are noted to be underutilized as alternative to incarceration (ATI) programs.

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We used results from an optimization randomized controlled trial which tested five behavioral intervention components to support HIV antiretroviral adherence/HIV viral suppression, grounded in the multiphase optimization strategy and using a fractional factorial design to identify intervention components with cost-effectiveness sufficiently favorable for scalability. Results were incorporated into a validated HIV computer simulation to simulate longer-term effects of combinations of components on health and costs. We simulated the 32 corresponding long-term trajectories for viral load suppression, health related quality of life (HRQoL), and costs.

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Introduction: The Shared Trauma Professional Post Traumatic Growth Inventory (STPPG) was developed by Tosone et al. (2014) to help understand shared trauma (ST) in social workers. ST occurs when the healthcare professional and client both experience the same collective traumatic event.

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Women employed by sex work (WESW) experience significant gaps in accessing necessary healthcare services, leading to unmet health needs. Yet, there is a dearth of literature on the barriers to medical care access among WESW in Uganda. We used data from the Kyaterekera baseline to examine the correlates of access to medical care among WESW, defined as the ability of individuals to obtain the necessary healthcare services they require in a timely, affordable, and equitable manner.

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This is a mixed methods international survey of therapists ( = 89) belonging to Therapy First, an organization supporting the use of exploratory therapy, rather than gender affirmative therapy, with gender-questioning clients. The method used was an electronic questionnaire, producing a 33% response rate from members. Responses were analyzed using thematic analysis.

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Recent labor market transformations brought on by digital and technological advances, together with the rise of the service economy since the 1980s, have subjected more workers to precarious conditions, such as irregular work hours and low or unpredictable wages, threatening their economic well-being and health. This study advances our understanding of the critical role employment plays in our health by examining how employment patterns throughout our working lives, based on work schedules, may shape our health at age 50, paying particular attention to the moderating role of social position. The National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-1979 (NLSY79), which has collected 30+ years of longitudinal information, was used to examine how employment patterns starting at ages 22 (n ≈ 7,336) might be associated with sleep hours and quality, physical and mental functions, and the likelihood of reporting poor health and depressive symptoms at age 50.

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Experiences of delay-causing obstacles and mental health at the time of abortion seeking.

Contracept X

March 2024

Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health (ANSIRH), Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.

Objectives: The delays and challenges people encounter when seeking abortion are well-documented, but their psychological implications are understudied. Aiming to fill this gap, we explored the associations between experiences of delay-causing obstacles to abortion care and adverse mental health symptoms among individuals seeking abortion care.

Study Design: In 2019, we surveyed 784 people (of 1092 approached) ages 15-45 accessing abortion care in four clinics in abortion-supportive states: California, Illinois, and New Mexico.

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In the US, there is a growing number of older Latinx communities. Qualitative approaches such as narrative inquiry may be fruitful endeavors to elucidate their lived experiences. However, older Latinx communities, including sexual minorities, are disproportionately exposed to social, health, and historical challenges that may result in exposure to potentially traumatic events (e.

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Does social empathy moderate fear-induced minority blaming during the COVID-19 pandemic?

Soc Sci Med

April 2024

Department of Sociology, Korea University, 145 Anam-ro, Anam-dong, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul, South Korea. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated how minority groups in South Korea were blamed for COVID-19 during the pandemic, highlighting increased discrimination and fear.
  • The research identified characteristics of those who were blamed, measuring both individual and interpersonal fear, and examining social empathy's role in this blame phenomenon.
  • Findings revealed that individual fear heightened blame across all minority groups, while interpersonal fear primarily influenced blame towards ethnic and religious minorities, with social empathy having mixed effects based on the type of minority.
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Introduction: Alternative Nicotine Delivery Systems (ANDS) such as e-cigarettes (EC) and oral nicotine pouches (ONP) may facilitate the substitution of smoking for those unwilling to quit. This pilot study assesses the harm-reduction potential of EC and ONP among smokers with low socioeconomic status (SES).

Aims And Methods: Adults who smoked daily in the past 6 months, had a household income < 250% federal poverty level and had no intention of quitting smoking in the next 30 days were randomized 2:2:1 to 8 weeks of 5% nicotine EC; 4 mg ONP or assessment-only control (CC).

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This article canvasses extant literature about values, evidence, and standards for inpatient psychiatry units' design. It then analyzes apparent trade-offs between quality of care and access to care using empirical and ethical lenses. From this analysis, the authors conclude that standards for the built environment of inpatient psychiatric care should align with patient-centeredness, even if a downstream consequence of implementing new patient-centered designs is a reduction in beds, although this secondary outcome is unlikely.

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Importance: Studies suggest a higher risk of schizophrenia diagnoses in Black vs White Americans, yet a systematic investigation of disparities that include other ethnoracial groups and multiple outcomes on the psychosis continuum is lacking.

Objective: To identify ethnoracial risk variation in the US across 3 psychosis continuum outcomes (ie, schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders, clinical high risk for psychosis [CHR-P], and psychotic symptoms [PSs] and psychotic experiences [PEs]).

Data Sources: PubMed, PsycINFO and Embase were searched up to December 2022.

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Inequalities in emerging adult college students' sleep quality during the COVID-19 pandemic.

J Am Coll Health

February 2024

Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, California, USA.

Objective: To examine inequalities in sleep quality during the COVID-19 pandemic by gender, sexual orientation, race/ethnicity, and socioeconomic position (SEP), and test associations between discrimination and sleep quality in a national longitudinal cohort of emerging adult college students.

Participants: Participants were enrolled in college full-time and were aged 18-22 at baseline.

Methods: Participants completed online surveys in spring 2020 ( = 707) and summer 2021 ( = 313).

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This Department of Social Work Services (the Department) is one of the largest hospital social work departments in the country, with almost 600 staff, in the largest of eight hospitals and one medical school of a major health system. The Department's senior directors (three current and one former) share its innovative and effective collective leadership model that was initially developed in response to a confluence of unprecedented complex events stemming from the Covid-19 pandemic. The experiences of these co-leaders, an evaluation of the model, future internal considerations as its applicability to other health care settings will be discussed.

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Social work practice in perinatal palliative care: an overview.

Soc Work Health Care

April 2024

Silver School of Social Work, New York University, New York, New York, USA.

Social workers in Perinatal Palliative Care (PPC) play an essential role in caring for birthing people carrying a baby with a life-limiting condition and their families. Perinatal palliative care is consistent with social work values concerning fostering quality of life and promoting social justice and access to care. Social workers play a multidimensional role in providing a holistic approach to caring for the birthing person, baby, and family.

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Implementation Feasibility and Hidden Costs of Statewide Scaling of Evidence-Based Therapies for Children and Adolescents.

Psychiatr Serv

May 2024

Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York University (NYU) Grossman School of Medicine, New York City (Hoagwood, Richards-Rachlin, Horwitz, Narcisse); Department of Psychology, St. John's University, New York City (Richards-Rachlin); McSilver Institute for Poverty Policy and Research, NYU Silver School of Social Work, New York City (Baier, Vilgorin, Diedrich, Cleek).

Objective: State mental health systems are retraining their workforces to deliver services supported by research. Knowledge about evidence-based therapies (EBTs) for child and adolescent disorders is robust, but the feasibility of their statewide scaling has not been examined. The authors reviewed implementation feasibility for 12 commonly used EBTs, defining feasibility for statewide scaling as an EBT having at least one study documenting acceptability, facilitators and barriers, or fidelity; at least one study with a racially and ethnically diverse sample; an entity for training, certification, or licensing; and fiscal data reflecting the costs of implementation.

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Beyond gender: The biological impacts of inequality through the lens of intersectionality.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

January 2024

The Center for Health and Aging Innovation, Silver School of Social Work, New York University, New York, NY 10003.

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