Wednesday, November 01, 2023

 

Canine cuddles can comfort equally across all genders


New UBC Okanagan study investigates if canine intervention therapy is gender inclusive

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA OKANAGAN CAMPUS

BARK Session 

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A FIRST OF ITS KIND STUDY FROM THE OKANAGAN SCHOOL OF EDUCATION HAS DETERMINED THAT CANINE THERAPY CAN HELP STUDENTS FEEL BETTER AND MORE OPTIMISTIC REGARDLESS OF THEIR GENDER.

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CREDIT: UBCO: FREYA GREEN




While there are a number of studies demonstrating that dog therapy programs can improve a person’s social and emotional wellbeing, many typically have a disproportionate number of female participants.

Recent research led by Dr. John-Tyler Binfet, an Associate Professor in UBC Okanagan’s School of Education and Director of Building Academic Retention through K9s (BARK), evaluated if there are gender differences in wellbeing by setting up separate dog therapy sessions for those who identified as female, male and gender diverse participants.

Dr. Binfet has conducted numerous studies on the benefits of canine therapy, but to his knowledge, this is the first gender-specific study about canine therapy.

“Previous research has explored if it works and how it works, but not who it works for,” says Dr. Binfet. “This was one of the first studies that examined whether canine-assisted interventions work equally well for varied genders.”

For the study, students self-selected their gender cohort and were assigned to a session on a first-come first-serve basis. Prior to the sessions, they provided reports of wellbeing; specifically measuring their self-perceptions of campus and social connectedness, happiness, optimism, stress, homesickness and loneliness.

A total of 163 students—49 per cent women, 33 per cent men, and 17 per cent non-binary and other genders—participated in 20-minute sessions. In groups of three to four, the students engaged with a therapy dog and handler, and following the session they filled out a survey. The results showed, as expected, that there was a significant increase in wellbeing and a decrease in homesickness, stress and loneliness. The results also demonstrated that canines have a comparable positive wellness effect across diverse gender identities.

“In light of previous studies that note participants were predominantly women, our sampling of men, genderfluid and two-spirit participants furthers our understanding that the efficacy of these interventions does not appear to be gender dependent,” says Dr. Binfet. “The vast majority of responses showed that the dogs helped the students feel and experience something positive regardless of their gender.”

The findings could influence post-secondary mental health and wellness programs as educators continue to seek low-cost and low-barrier inclusive options for students.

The research, published in CABI Human-Animal Interactionswas supported by the BARK program.  

 

Gilleaudeau conducting geochemical analysis of carboniferous carbonates & implications for ocean oxygenation


Grant and Award Announcement

GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY




Geoffrey Gilleaudeau, Assistant Professor, Atmospheric, Oceanic and Earth Sciences (AOES), received funding for the project: "Geochemical Analysis of Carboniferous Carbonates and Implications for Ocean Oxygenation."  

He and his collaborators aim to generate a new composite carbon record through the lower Mississippian in the Williston Basin. They also aim to generate a new record that tests the hypothesis that carbon excursion was related to an expansion of global ocean anoxia, or absence of oxygen. 

"This project will produce the first complete composition carbon isotope record through the Lower Carboniferous of the Williston Basin, as well as produce a uranium isotope paleo-redox record that tests the influence of ocean anoxia on the initiation of the Late Paleozoic Ice Age," Gilleaudeau said.

Gilleaudeau received $1,100 from the Society for Sedimentary Geology for this research. Funding began in Sept. 2023 and will end in late Dec. 2024. 

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About George Mason University

George Mason University is Virginia's largest public research university. Located near Washington, D.C., Mason enrolls 38,000 students from 130 countries and all 50 states. Mason has grown rapidly over the last half-century and is recognized for its innovation and entrepreneurship, remarkable diversity and commitment to accessibility. Learn more at http://www.gmu.edu.

 TODAY IS THE DAY OF THE DEAD 

Just in time for Halloween: Researchers document the power of 'ghostly encounters' on organizations


Peer-Reviewed Publication

BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY

Organizational Ghosts photo illustration 

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ORGANIZATIONAL GHOSTS CAN HAVE A MAJOR INFLUENCE ON HOW COMPANIES OPERATE.

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CREDIT: NATE EDWARDS/BYU PHOTO




Brigham Young University researcher Jeff Bednar is now a part-time ghost hunter. And while the business professor doesn’t have night vision cameras or ultrasensitive recording equipment, he’s found a bunch of ghosts — including several on his own campus.

The ghosts Bednar and University of Illinois colleague Jacob Brown are hunting sound similar to the ghosts you’ve heard of — they linger long after they’ve left this life and hover over their previous haunts — but they’re not necessarily the kind of ghosts that show up around Halloween.

They’re called organizational ghosts: admired former leaders that become embodied prototypes of the organization’s values and identity who continue to have outsized influence long after they’ve departed. Think Walt Disney, Coco Chanel or Steve Jobs. And it turns out these organizational ghosts tend to visit their old stomping grounds pretty regularly.

“Organizational ghosts can manifest themselves in a number of different ways,” said Bednar, an associate professor at BYU's Marriott School of Business. “It could be in the form of someone asking themself if a former leader would be proud of what they’re doing, or they might imagine how a former leader would approach a certain task before attempting it themselves.”

These ghosts transcend their physical presence, becoming immortalized within the organization and living on through associative learning, perpetuated practices and collective memory. The research, published recently in the Academy of Management Journal, found that organizational ghosts can serve to safeguard organizations from risky decisions, legitimize the actions of current leaders or devalue new leaders or other organizations. 

Bednar himself regularly experienced “ghostly encounters” with an organizational ghost when he interned at Walmart headquarters in 2005. He noticed that the buildings he worked in had pictures and quotes of Walmart founder Sam Walton, who passed away in 1992, all over the walls, and employees constantly referenced Sam and told stories about him. Bednar was intrigued by the impact that Walton still had on the company over 10 years after his death.

“People in meetings were always talking about how they should try to do things the way Sam would have,” Bednar said. “It fascinated me, the impact and influence a leader could have on an organization even after they’re gone.”

Bednar and Brown’s research discovered that it isn’t just the founder of an organization who can become an organizational ghost. Any leader who makes a profound enough impact on showcasing and embodying the values of an organization can leave a lasting legacy that transcends their tenure.

At BYU, past leaders such as President Spencer W. Kimball have become profoundly influential organizational ghosts. In 1975, President Kimball delivered a seminal address about the future of BYU referred to as the “Second Century Address.” That address and the words of President Kimball continue to guide the university and its leaders in significant ways.

Hall of Fame football coach LaVell Edwards, who led BYU to a national championship in 1984 and is oft cited as a mentor by current coach Kalani Sitake, is another example of an organizational ghost at BYU.

Once the memory of these individuals is embedded in the minds and hearts of those who are a part of an organization, they often become preserved in physical artifacts and practices too, such as a newly planted tree, a parking space, an office or a room named after the organizational ghost. Or, in the case of LaVell Edwards, a football stadium. As a result, they can be “activated” in the minds of an organization's members when members imagine how they might approach a certain decision or recall the actions of a ghost and use that to influence their own actions.

But “ghost hunting” isn’t just for researchers like Bednar and Brown; everyone should be aware of the ghosts in their lives and the ways they continue to influence them.

"Which ghosts are most influential in your life? And how do they impact the way you think, feel, and behave?" Bednar said. “For me, one of the most important leadership lessons from this study was the importance of being aware of the historical dynamics that are always operating in the background in organizations. New leaders need to be especially conscious of those that have gone before them as they are making decisions that affect others in organizations.”

 

Royal Canadian Institute for Science recognizes the unsung heroes of science communication


Grant and Award Announcement

RCISCIENCE

Royal Canadian Institute for Science / RCIScience logo 

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FOR 174 YEARS, RCISCIENCE HAS BEEN CONNECTING PEOPLE IN CANADA WITH SCIENCE TO FOSTER DIALOGUE, DISCOVERY AND COMMUNITY AND BUILD AN ENGAGING SCIENCE CULTURE FOR EVERYONE, VALUING SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE AND INTEGRITY FOR A STRONGER CANADA.  THE INSTITUTE WAS FOUNDED IN 1849 BY SIR SANDFORD FLEMING, THE FATHER OF STANDARD TIME.

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CREDIT: RCISCIENCE




The Royal Canadian Institute for Science (RCIScience) awards the 2023 Sandford Fleming Medal for Excellence in Science Communication to independent science writer Terry Collins and the William Edmond Logan Award to the team behind CBC Radio's national weekly science program, Quirks & Quarks.

A knowledge translator for over 27 years, Terry Collins' reporting has been picked up by journalists in Canada and worldwide, awakening public interest in and deepening understanding of diverse sciences, fostering political will and mobilizing resources for change. 

Nominator Dr. Peter A. Singer, former Special Advisor to the Director-General of the World Health Organization, remarks that Terry “has been the common denominator in an extremely long series of successful efforts to raise the general public's scientific interest and knowledge.”

He has interpreted and explained the essence and importance of research findings from scores of scientific institutions, including ten UN bodies. His work has benefited critical global causes and advanced many scientific careers. Most notably, Terry's behind-the-scenes efforts made an impactful contribution to the UN's historic Global Biodiversity Framework agreement in 2022.

Mineralogist and astrobiologist Robert Hazen of the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington DC, a frequent collaborator, calls Terry “a genius at communicating science to the broadest possible audience. His polished and compelling treatments of sometimes difficult scientific topics are distinguished by their eloquent prose, their accessibility, and, perhaps most importantly, their creative framing. And the results are absolutely spectacular.”

Says Mr. Collins: “Many thousands of people at colleges, universities, scientific organizations and elsewhere put complex ideas into everyday language, helping the public to understand and engage, encouraging scientific literacy and curiosity. This prestigious award is dedicated to all of them.”

Quirks & Quarks is one of Canada's most beloved science news programs. Since it first aired in October 1975, Quirks & Quarks is consistently rated among the most popular CBC programs, attracting almost a million listeners globally each week. Three of its four hosts have previously been awarded the Fleming Medal, but it is the production team behind the scenes who receive this year's William Edmond Logan Award, led by showrunner Jim Lebans. 

From particle physics to dinosaurs to black holes, the Quirks & Quarks four-person production team brings all manner of science stories, from the serious to the quirky, to the Canadian public. The average listener may not be aware of just how much work goes into making the show happen every week. From initial pitch to polished product, over 150 hours of work go into producing each episode! No quick or easy feat.

It is the team's keen sense of what makes a good science story, combined with their deep intuition for what works (and what doesn't work) on radio, that heralds Quirks & Quarks as the gold standard for audio science communication and a bucket list interview for so many researchers worldwide.

“It's really a treat for us to be able to approach scientists and bring their work to our audience. Fortunately, the show's reputation means people are usually happy and even excited to be on,” said Senior Producer Jim Lebans.

Carrie Boyce, Executive Director of RCIScience, remarks, “I'm absolutely thrilled that RCIScience is recognizing just a few of the unsung heroes of science communication who work so diligently behind the scenes to make science engaging and accessible for everyone in Canada.”

public ceremony to celebrate Mr. Collins’ and the Quirks & Quarks team’s contributions to science communication in Canada will be held at the Centre for Social Innovation (Annex), 720 Bathurst St, Toronto, on Wednesday, November 29th, at 7 PM.

Of particular interest to scientists, aspiring science writers and public information officers, the award winners will participate in a roundtable discussion and Q&A on the behind-the-scenes newsmaking process, from identifying the news hook to airing a story nationwide.

For 174 years, RCIScience has been connecting people in Canada with science to foster dialogue, discovery and community and build an engaging science culture for everyone, valuing scientific knowledge and integrity for a stronger Canada. 

Since 1982, the charity has awarded the Sandford Fleming Medal and Citation annually to a Canadian who has made outstanding contributions to the public understanding of science – to advance our vision.

Previous recipients include David Suzuki, Ursula Franklin, Chris Hadfield, Molly Shoichet, Bob MacDonald, Timothy Caulfield, Ivan Semeniuk, and André Picard. 

The William Edmond Logan Award was created in 2015 as a companion to the Fleming Medal to recognize organizations rather than individuals.

Past winners include Celestica, Sanofi Pasteur Canada, IBM Canada, the Science Communication Program at Laurentian University and Toronto Metropolitan University's SciXchange.

Together, the Fleming Medal and Logan Award are two of a very small number of awards celebrating outstanding science communication efforts in Canada. 

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About RCIScience: www.rciscience.ca

SCI-FI-TEK x 2

Department of Energy announces $11.4 million for research on quantum information science for fusion energy sciences


The Fusion Energy Sciences (FES) program supports fundamental research to expand the understanding of matter at very high temperatures and densities and to build the scientific foundation needed to develop a fusion energy source.

Grant and Award Announcement

DOE/US DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY




WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $11.4 million for six projects in quantum information science (QIS) with relevance to fusion and plasma science.

The Fusion Energy Sciences (FES) program supports fundamental research to expand the understanding of matter at very high temperatures and densities and to build the scientific foundation needed to develop a fusion energy source. The QIS portfolio within FES supports research opportunities outlined in the 2018 Fusion Energy Sciences Roundtable on Quantum Information Science report. It includes science and technology thrusts where QIS might have a transformative impact on FES mission areas, including fusion and discovery plasma science. It also includes exploring fundamental science supported by FES to advance the field of Quantum Information Science beyond FES’ applications.

“These awards will not only advance our priority research opportunities but will position FES to take advantage of QIS sensing techniques and future quantum computing hardware,” said Jean Paul Allain, Associate Director of Science for FES. “The convergence of quantum science, fusion energy, and plasma science is an exciting and revolutionary emergent area of discovery and broader impact.”

Projects funded in this announcement will advance quantum algorithms relevant to fusion and plasma physics on existing and near‐term quantum computers, develop novel high-sensitivity measurement techniques for plasmas, and explore the use of high energy density physics methods for novel QIS materials discovery and synthesis.

The projects were selected by competitive peer review under the DOE Funding Opportunity Announcement for Quantum Information Science Research for Fusion Energy Sciences. They will last up to three years, with total funding of $11.4 million: $3.8 million in FY23 and $7.6 million in outyear funding contingent on congressional appropriations.

The list of projects and more information can be found on the FES program page.

 

RIT scientists receive grant to expand work on a sign language lexicon for chemistry


A team of four scientists is working to make chemistry more accessible for deaf and hard-of-hearing students


Grant and Award Announcement

ROCHESTER INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY




A team of scientists at Rochester Institute of Technology will expand its work after receiving a large grant from the National Science Foundation to make chemistry more accessible for students who rely on American Sign Language interpreters in class.

Christina Goudreau Collison, professor in the School of Chemistry and Materials Science; Jennifer Swartzenberg, senior lecturer in the National Technical Institute for the Deaf’s Department of Science and Mathematics; Lea Michel, professor in the School of Chemistry and Materials Science; and Pepsi Holmquist, visiting assistant professor in NTID’s Department of Science and Mathematics, have been awarded nearly $380,000 for their proposal to transform chemistry for deaf and hard-of-hearing students via the design, implementation, and evaluation of a descriptive sign language lexicon.

The work started years ago when Swartzenberg was learning ASL. When she visited classrooms, she noticed that interpreters had to do a lot of fingerspelling to communicate technical terms. Upon further investigation, Swartzenberg realized that deaf students’ grades were lower than the hearing students’, indicating a language barrier. Swartzenberg had taken Goudreau Collison’s classes in the past and was familiar with how she used body movements to help explain terms. The pair decided to work together to find a solution.

A group was formed and the initial work began. A team worked to identify organic chemistry terms, and a process evolved where deaf students created signs in collaboration with Goudreau Collison and Swartzenberg to ensure they had scientific clarity. Once they agreed on the signs, other ASL users reviewed them, and videos were created that taught the chemistry-specific signs.

Now, years after the initial implementation, there is evidence supporting the effectiveness of their efforts. Tracking one specific exam in her class, Goudreau Collison found that prior to the group’s work, deaf students were scoring below the class average. After creating and teaching the new chemistry signs, working with interpreters, and creating peer-led workshops, interpreter-dependent students were now performing above exam average.

The strategic methodology of establishing the new signs with input from students, scientists, and interpreters has proven beneficial for all and made the initial project successful.

“The signs need to be descriptive and help to understand the concept in addition to just telling what the word is,” said Goudreau Collison. “That’s where the collaboration comes in, because you really need the content and the understanding of the meaning behind the word, as well as the understanding of how a sign is going to work best for all students.”

With the NSF grant, the scientists will continue the work in completing a comprehensive set of STEM signs for concepts and terms in general chemistry and biochemistry.

“This project is something that is incredibly complicated,” said Holmquist, who is deaf. “Going into the nuance and details of general chemistry and biochemistry, it can be very challenging to come up with an iconic sign that’s going to include all of the overlapping ideas that show up in our vocabulary with minimal loss in translation between English and sign language.”

To illustrate the complexity of this project and how difficult it may be to choose a suitable sign for a concept, Holmquist explained that the sign for electron is also a sign that she uses for monomer. In science, these two things have very different meanings. For students using sign language in science classes, whether the professor is referring to an electron or a monomer is crucial for the student to fully understand the lesson.

 “We’re trying to look at areas where language overlaps and take that into consideration,” added Holmquist. “The goal is to minimize confusion. Sometimes you can’t use just one sign for one concept and be done with it. You need to have a selection of two or three signs for that concept.”

Goudreau Collison and Swartzenberg led the initial research team (named the Sign Language Incorporation in Chemistry Education [SLICE]), and recruited Michel and Holmquist to expand the project. The SLICE team was recognized in June 2022 with the Royal Society of Chemistry’s Inclusion and Diversity Prize.

The work doesn’t stop when terms are identified and signs are chosen. The team plans to disseminate the new lexicon to deaf and hard-of-hearing students as well as to interpreters and chemistry faculty. In the future, the researchers plan to have workshops for faculty, staff, and interpreters to show the signs and their usefulness.

“I think it’s the key to learning for everybody,” said Goudreau Collison. “Sign language has universal design opportunities that can be leveraged for accessibility for many more learners of chemistry, for example, English as a Second language (ESL) students and other neurodiverse learners. I think it’s going to help a lot of people in many ways.”

Furthermore, giving deaf and hard-of-hearing students accessibility to science, in general, opens more doors for students to get involved in STEM programs and careers. Professors involved in the study have already seen an increase in deaf students in their research labs.

“This project is so exciting for me,” said Holmquist. “I know it’s going to make a huge difference and give deaf people options that they didn’t even know they have. I didn’t think it was possible for me to go to graduate school, so it’s really nice that now I’m in a privileged position right now to empower other people. We are able to inspire the next generation.”

Largest brain autopsy study of female intimate partner violence decedents reveals brain injury pathology unlike that seen among male contact sports athletes



Peer-Reviewed Publication

THE MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL / MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL OF MEDICINE




The largest brain autopsy study of women who had experienced intimate partner violence reveals substantial vascular and white matter damage in the brain, but no evidence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), the neurodegenerative disease recognized among male contact sports athletes who sustain repeated head trauma.

The international collaboration, led by a team from the Brain Injury Research Center of Mount Sinai in collaboration with the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, appears in the most recent issue of Acta Neuropathologica.

Importantly, the study also revealed substantial medical comorbidity, including cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease, suggesting a need to consider a broad scope of pathology that underlies intimate partner violence-related brain injury, as well as the medical and psychiatric comorbidities that contribute to brain health during life.

Despite how common intimate partner violence is—it affects one in three women at some point in their lives—remarkably little is known about the neuropathology of partner violence. The long-term consequences of traumatic brain injury include the risk of neurodegenerative disease, and in the popular press and even in scientific discussions, there is an assumption that repeated head injuries sustained in the context of intimate partner violence are comparable to those sustained by male contact sports athletes.

“Because our team has been conducting research and clinical care with survivors of partner violence for years, we strongly suspected that the neuropathology of brain injury may be far more complex than assumed,” said Kristen Dams-O’Connor, PhD, Director of the Brain Injury Research Center of Mount Sinai and lead author of the paper. “Through our unique collaboration with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner here in New York and international colleagues, we were able to shed light on this group that has been nearly absent from the medical literature.”

The collaboration between the Brain Injury Research Center and the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner dates from 2019, when the two entities solidified an unprecedented academic collaboration with the shared goal of identifying decedents with a history of traumatic brain injury for inclusion in the Late Effects of TBI (LETBI) brain donor program.

The clinical research team invited families of the decedents to participate in an interview so the team could learn more about the deceased’s health, brain trauma history, and any symptoms of clinical decline the relatives may have observed during life. The postmortem protocol of the LETBI study includes ex vivo imaging, in which the whole brain specimen is scanned at high resolution. This allows researchers to identify lesions that are invisible to the human eye and that would be missed in a standard brain autopsy, permitting an examination of unparalleled comprehensiveness.

For the prospective case series, 14 brains were obtained over two years from women with documented intimate partner violence (ages 20s-late 70s; median, 30s) and complex histories, including prior traumatic brain injury; nonfatal strangulation; cerebrovascular, neurological, and/or psychiatric conditions; and epilepsy. At autopsy, all had old and/or recent traumatic brain injury stigmata (physical marks seen in the brain that are characteristic of the condition). Substantial vascular and white matter pathology was seen in some. Evidence of cerebrovascular disease from lacunes (small cystic cavities in the brain that usually result from an ischemic infarction and much more rarely from a small, deep cerebral hemorrhage) and/or from chronic infarcts (localized areas of dead tissue resulting from failure of blood supply). Alzheimer’s disease neuropathologic change was present only in the oldest case in the series (in the 70-79 age range), and no CTE neuropathologic change was identified in any.

Findings from the initial prospective case series prompted similar exploration of an expanded case series of 70 archival intimate partner violence cases (ages late teen to late 80s; median 30s) accrued from multiple international institutions. In this archival series, the research team again found evidence of vascular and white matter pathologies. Only limited neurodegenerative proteinopathies were encountered in the oldest subjects, with none meeting the consensus criteria for CTE neuropathologic change.

“We were astounded by the burden of health comorbidity carried by the women in this series. Approximately half had epilepsy, and chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, substance use, and HIV were common,” said Dr. Dams-O’Connor. “The findings clearly indicate that we should be casting a much wider net when it comes to characterizing the neuropathology of partner violence-related brain injury and post-traumatic neurodegeneration.”

“The consequences for intimate partner violence are enormous both on an individual and societal level, and it’s more common than most people realize,” she added. “Our research suggests that it is a frequently unmeasured and under-recognized contributor to the brain health decline experienced by many survivors.”

Rebecca Folkerth, MD, Neuropathologist at the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Clinical Professor of Forensic Medicine at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, and senior author of the paper, emphasizes that “without close collaboration between forensic centers, where violent deaths are analyzed for medico-legal purposes, and clinical research collaborators such as those at the Brain Injury Research Center of Mount Sinai, advances in the field of intimate partner violence will remain highly constrained. The only way toward understanding the associated brain injuries at a cellular level is through coordinated, intensive examination directly in the brains of affected individuals. We are so grateful for this initial opportunity, and hope to expand it while using and sharing what we have learned.”

The researchers advise anyone who encounters someone with a history of intimate partner violence to be aware that the individual may have neurological injury that affects their brain health and function. The work of researchers and clinicians at Mount Sinai’s Brain Injury Research Center has consistently demonstrated that people living with brain injury may not able to benefit from standard interventions that are not tailored to address their deficits. They may require difference accommodations, more reminders, and more support to benefit from available assistance.

“If someone with a brain injury misses an appointment, it may not be because they’re ungrateful for the help or they don’t care about the service being offered. If they lose their temper, it may be a manifestation of neurobehavioral dysregulation attributable to the traumatic brain injury. If they remain in a violent relationship, it may be that they don’t have the cognitive and executive function skills, or resources, required to orchestrate a safe and successful path to safety,” explained Dr. Dams-O’Connor. “This is not something the survivor should be blamed for.”  

The results of this case series represent an unprecedented advancement in the understanding of partner violence-related brain injury, and the investigators believe there is a message of hope in their findings. Vascular contributors to cognitive impairment and decline may be treatable in some cases. Given the high burden of vascular brain injury, together with the extensive disease comorbidity observed in this cohort, it is possible that some symptoms experienced by people living with partner violence-related brain injury may be treatable, or even preventable. Domestic violence often goes unreported, and survivors may struggle to access even basic health care. Systematic screening for intimate partner violence can connect survivors to available resources—and possibly could have even saved the lives of the young women in this study.

About the Mount Sinai Health System
Mount Sinai Health System is one of the largest academic medical systems in the New York metro area, with more than 43,000 employees working across eight hospitals, more than 400 outpatient practices, more than 300 labs, a school of nursing, and a leading school of medicine and graduate education. Mount Sinai advances health for all people, everywhere, by taking on the most complex health care challenges of our time—discovering and applying new scientific learning and knowledge; developing safer, more effective treatments; educating the next generation of medical leaders and innovators; and supporting local communities by delivering high-quality care to all who need it.

Through the integration of its hospitals, labs, and schools, Mount Sinai offers comprehensive health care solutions from birth through geriatrics, leveraging innovative approaches such as artificial intelligence and informatics while keeping patients’ medical and emotional needs at the center of all treatment. The Health System includes approximately 7,400 primary and specialty care physicians; 13 joint-venture outpatient surgery centers throughout the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester, Long Island, and Florida; and more than 30 affiliated community health centers. Hospitals within the System are consistently ranked by Newsweek’s® “The World’s Best Smart Hospitals” and by U.S. News & World Report's® “Best Hospitals” and “Best Children’s Hospitals.” The Mount Sinai Hospital is on the U.S. News & World Report® “Best Hospitals” Honor Roll for 2023-2024.

 

Hospital care for children has shifted from general hospitals to children’s hospitals over last 20 years


Children’s hospital care is now concentrated in fewer locations, and this has important implications for hospital planning and readiness, according to a new study led Michael Steiner, MD, MPH, of UNC Health.


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA HEALTH CARE

Michael Steiner, MD, MPH 

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MICHAEL STEINER, MD, MPH

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CREDIT: UNC SCHOOL OF MEDICINE




CHAPEL HILL, NC – Historically, most children in the United States who needed to be hospitalized were treated at general hospitals that treat both children and adults. But the number of hospitals providing inpatient care for children has decreased over the last decade, and many of them struggled to keep up with the demand for children’s care during a viral infection surge in the fall of 2022.

Now children are much more likely to be treated at children’s hospitals that are concentrated into fewer locations, according to a new study led by UNC School of Medicine researchers.

“The inpatient care of children has shifted dramatically over the past 20 years,” said Michael Steiner, MD, MPH, lead author of the study, which was published October 30 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

“Children are much less likely now to be hospitalized at their local hospitals that care for both children and adults, and much more likely to be hospitalized in higher volume children’s specialty centers. Additionally, other than neonates after birth, fewer older children are having inpatient admissions. These changes have important implications for hospital planning and readiness, systems to provide high-quality child-specific transport, and capacity needs at children’s hospitals,” said Steiner, who is pediatrician-in-chief at UNC Children’s Hospital, Vice Chair of Clinical Affairs in the Department of Pediatrics, and Michael F. Durfee Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics at the UNC School of Medicine.

Steiner and his study co-authors reached these conclusions after analyzing data of pediatric inpatient discharges from nearly 4,000 hospitals in 48 states across the country between 2000 and 2019. More than 14 million discharges were included in their analysis. Birth hospitalization discharges were not included.

They found that annual inpatient discharges decreased from 2000 to 2019 by 26.5%. But during the same period, discharges from children’s hospitals increased from 58.9% of total discharges in 2000 to 81.8% in 2019.

In addition, they found an increase in the number of children who were transferred from one hospital to another prior to their discharge. In 2000, 6.1% of pediatric patients experienced an interfacility transfer. In 2019, that increased to 18.8%, and 88% of these children were transferred to a children’s hospital.

Study co-authors from UNC’s Department of Pediatrics are Ashley G. Sutton, MD; John R. Stephens, MD; and Lindsay Chase, MD. Co-authors from outside UNC are Matt Hall, PhD, of the Children’s Hospital Association; JoAnna K. Leyenaar, MD, PhD, MPH, of the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth; and Corrie E. McDaniel, DO, of the University of Washington School of Medicine.