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Article Digests for Psychology & Social Work article-digests at lists.clinicians-exchange.org
Fri Oct 27 12:54:23 PDT 2023


NYU Information for Practice Daily Digest (Unofficial)

 

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/news/cleveland-state-spotlight-alumnas-inspiring-journey-in-social-work/) Cleveland State Spotlight: Alumna’s Inspiring Journey In Social Work
Oct 27th 2023, 15:06

Laura Vacheresse has served her community and the world as a social worker. 
The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/news/cleveland-state-spotlight-alumnas-inspiring-journey-in-social-work/) Cleveland State Spotlight: Alumna’s Inspiring Journey In Social Work was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/s41347-023-00338-x/) Introduction to Evidence-Based Digital Interventions and Informatics Approaches to Service Delivery for Behavioral Health Populations
Oct 27th 2023, 13:36

Abstract
Technology use is ubiquitous in the digital age, and to ensure quality care, patients, more research, and evaluation are needed of digital interventions and informatics approaches for behavioral health disorders—particularly those that have population-level impact. Clinicians, teams, organizations, and countries have to prioritize and implement systems to organize clinical care and set the stage for evidence-based interventions. Much of this is through electronic health records (EHRs), patient portals, artificial intelligence (AI), and data analytic approaches for workflow (e.g., clinical decision support). The Special Edition is geared to help clinicians/faculty, trainees, and healthcare leaders improve clinical care, by showcasing new systems, technologies, research, and evidence- and consensus-based best practices. One overarching goal is to apply the most recent health technology and evidence to promote behavioral health and to predict, assess, triage, and treat behavioral health disorders. Another goal is to describe how to shift from in-person/video care visits to longitudinal, in time care with patient and clinician decision support facilitated by artificial intelligence and other technologies. The issue focuses on effectiveness and implementation science approaches for patients across populations and settings. Evaluation of intended and unintended consequences of new technologies could facilitate or impede workflow and outcomes.
(https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41347-023-00338-x?error=cookies_not_supported&code=86f8f941-bb8c-499b-b6c7-1ee29ea8a560) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/grey-literature/the-midcareer-opportunity-meeting-the-challenges-of-an-ageing-workforce/) The midcareer opportunity: meeting the challenges of an ageing workforce
Oct 27th 2023, 12:44

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/grey-literature/the-midcareer-opportunity-meeting-the-challenges-of-an-ageing-workforce/) The midcareer opportunity: meeting the challenges of an ageing workforce was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/open-access-journal-articles/coherent-lives-making-sense-of-adoptees-experiences-in-education-through-narrative-identity/) Coherent lives: Making sense of adoptees’ experiences in education through narrative identity
Oct 27th 2023, 12:23

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/open-access-journal-articles/coherent-lives-making-sense-of-adoptees-experiences-in-education-through-narrative-identity/) Coherent lives: Making sense of adoptees’ experiences in education through narrative identity was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/meta-analyses-systematic-reviews/a-systematic-review-of-the-prevalence-of-lifetime-experience-with-conversion-practices-among-sexual-and-gender-minority-populations/) A systematic review of the prevalence of lifetime experience with ‘conversion’ practices among sexual and gender minority populations
Oct 27th 2023, 12:22

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/meta-analyses-systematic-reviews/a-systematic-review-of-the-prevalence-of-lifetime-experience-with-conversion-practices-among-sexual-and-gender-minority-populations/) A systematic review of the prevalence of lifetime experience with ‘conversion’ practices among sexual and gender minority populations was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/s10935-023-00750-2/) Factors Affecting Attitudes Towards Cancer, Cancer Prevention, and Early Diagnosis Behaviors Among Cancer Patient Relatives
Oct 27th 2023, 12:18

Abstract
Attitudes towards cancer may affect the cancer prevention behaviors of cancer patients’ relatives and their participation in cancer screening. Knowing the factors affecting attitudes will shed light on the education programs to be planned to encourage individuals to gain a positive attitude towards cancer and positive health behaviors in cancer prevention. Determining the behaviors towards cancer prevention and cancer screening, identifying reasons that prevent participation in cancer screening, determining the factors associated with the attitudes of cancer patients’ relatives towards cancer, determining the factors affecting their attitudes towards cancer of cancer patients’ relatives, can increase the awareness of healthcare professionals and patient relatives on the subject. The aim of the present study was to determine cancer prevention and early diagnosis behavior and the factors affecting the attitudes of towards cancer of cancer patient relatives. The descriptive and analytical study was completed with 321 relatives of cancer patients. The data were collected by the face-to-face interview method. The interview was conducted in a quiet place, alone with the participant, using a clear and simple language, allowing people to speak freely, and avoiding criticism and evaluation. About half of the participants smoked (49.5%), many did not do regular physical activity (67.3%) or protect themselves from the sun (77.3%), and only 10.9% had regular screening tests. The reasons for not having a screening test were ignorance, disregard, lack of complaints, and fear. Acording to binary logistic regression analysis, the determinants included factors of negative attitudes toward cancer with the age of the patient (Exp(β): 1.024), low education level (Exp(β): 2.572), being the child (Exp(β): 8.484) or sibling (Exp(β): 8.801) of the patient, not being protected from the sun (Exp(β): 2.063), and not doing physical activity (Exp(β): 1.744). Even for those having positive health behaviors, such as not smoking (Exp(β): 2.008) and using sun protection (Exp(β): 2.280), the attitudes towards cancer were negative for the Impossible to Recover sub-dimension. Cancer prevention behaviors and regular participation in cancer screening of cancer patients’ relatives were very low. It was determined that low education level, increasing age of the patient, and the degree of relation to the patient negatively affected attitudes towards cancer, and that there was a need for education. We believe that the results of the present study will contribute to evidence-based practice for cancer prevention and early diagnosis.
(https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10935-023-00750-2?error=cookies_not_supported&code=4badcfdb-63d8-4104-8a3e-87b715949022) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/03069885-2022-2070126/) A tale of two widows: investigating meaning-making and identity development through writing in the face of grief
Oct 27th 2023, 12:11

Volume 51, Issue 3, June 2023. 
(https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03069885.2022.2070126?af=R) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/7323813/) Disentangling human–AI divide: complementarity in the age of artificial intelligence
Oct 27th 2023, 11:23

health intelligencemental healthpublic health
(https://academic.oup.com/jpubhealth/advance-article/doi/10.1093/pubmed/fdad201/7323813?rss=1) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/10783903231171590/) Implementing the NCTSN Trauma-Informed Organizational Assessment (TIOA) for Improving Trauma-Informed Care in Inpatient Child Psychiatry
Oct 27th 2023, 11:20

Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association, Ahead of Print. BACKGROUND:Children and adolescents receiving inpatient psychiatric services have disproportionately high levels of exposure to trauma and adversity. The National Child Traumatic Stress Network Trauma-Informed Organizational Assessment (TIOA) is a comprehensive tool intended to guide implementation of trauma-informed care, but it has not yet been applied in inpatient settings.AIMS:The purpose of this quality improvement project was to describe trauma-informed care in inpatient child/adolescent psychiatry with the TIOA, examine relatedness among trauma-informed care domains, and explore barriers or facilitators to applying trauma-informed care.METHODS:This quality improvement project used mixed methods. We conducted a web-based survey in Summer 2022 with staff members (clinical and administrative) at two inpatient child/adolescent psychiatric units in California to assess trauma-informed care practices with the TIOA (87 items). Qualitative follow-up interviews were offered to interested participants. A correlation matrix and cluster analyses were used to examine relationships among TIOA domains; qualitative data were analyzed thematically.RESULTS:There were 69 survey respondents and seven qualitative interviews. TIOA domain scores ranged from a low of 2.3 to a high of 3.2, indicating that practices were occurring only “rarely” to “sometimes.” There were two major themes identified from qualitive interviews: (a) barriers to trauma-informed care in an inpatient context that can be resource-constrained or coercive; and (b) discovering strategies to provide trauma-informed care despite structural barriers.CONCLUSION:Organizational interventions targeting any domains of trauma-informed care are needed in inpatient settings given limited uptake of trauma-informed care.
(https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/10783903231171590?ai=2b4&mi=ehikzz&af=R) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/7329807/) Time to treat the climate and nature crisis as one indivisible global health emergency†
Oct 27th 2023, 11:20

(https://oup2-idp.sams-sigma.com/authorize?auth_token=eyJhbGciOiJSU0EtT0FFUC0yNTYiLCJlbmMiOiJBMTI4R0NNIn0.clB3esoZPeWqc8CpyAbqryg--q0Ue0fJCti6ih1EJmQdRtzoYyU02rQmrYrhb1rGryyhf-iV_1imXnLibDQGvRQFWhBMAnaUnMtb3kvrbmrQ7puGJcFi-G9_9Q-vMbW9lLuvdai4K1ZqXMeyGpSEZMjBRqJdDztKglWAkgoUqxuBDRWHCUcCKRcsObUPy7ZVaDt6LYxgL8WSm-Sq7_JhiIjEjI4bpi-crLQ4iThyLqrWJ8svOxb8bft213RMEkfcwVMwgeCBlvd8PqYgJfYXY-N6PPy4g6ckZI8bFYTwkLEY7IwU_GgoEtUGGM1X5xpTDhNuAHTIT1_9_9bfUditLA.MI41sf6MBG-MAqtv.s_iP6_dJpuWugrrPyW1PxDgHiSR_WhOXxcuppQHKkHKHkUFTAj-cMan9O4jLmqpKIvxFAS2LFg9q24e2fSNQ2rCjIPSGV_x9CXrxX5xQ4D5vjf1F_HGE_9izf88xx9nsdu67U8EcMf0OEG3j0NHDAoPdx4I4GCMHqsqd9VgO5PHlYLcuVTc-eJkrd6WT81mJdFW3ATD0C1nqxST68OeJULmk01g.osEuLgFEIIGJnoOJNX_Odw&ip_address=128.122.120.19&prompt=none&referrer_url=https://ifp.nyu.edu/&response_type=code&scope=openid+profile+email+license_lite+profile_extended+offline_access&redirect_uri=https://academic.oup.com/HTTPHandlers/Sigma/LoginHandler.ashx&client_id=ACADEMIC&state=2104c612-e2b1-4c87-b5c2-9ab37f8633c3redirecturl=httpszazjzjacademiczwoupzwcomzjheapolzjadvancezyarticlezjdoizj10zw1093zjheapolzjczzad086zj7329807zsrsszr1) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/0160449x231201252/) Is US Labor Law Reform Enough? A Conversation About the “Clean Slate for Worker Power”
Oct 27th 2023, 11:20

Labor Studies Journal, Ahead of Print. In this roundtable, labor studies scholars examine the viability of the Clean Slate for Worker Power project. Engaging themes such as labor law, immigrant workers, and organizing strategies, the contributors debate the limits of U.S. labor law, the tendency of scholars to silo our work and our research without engaging an intersectional approach, and the practical realities that impact the U.S.’ low rates of unionization.
(https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0160449X231201252?ai=2b4&mi=ehikzz&af=R) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/7328888/) ‘I Did Not Choose to Be in Your Country’: Social-Racial Hierarchies in Peru and Venezuelan Migrant Women’s Responses
Oct 27th 2023, 11:19

Abstract
Drawing on 72 interviews with Venezuelan migrant women across five Peruvian cities between 2018 and 2020, this article discusses the prevailing intersectional discriminations they have experienced. I also explore their resistance to social marginalizations that position them along a social-racial hierarchy based on xenophobia, sexism, and racialization. My research has found that their responses to these treatments are to reposition themselves as politically and morally equal, if not superior, to host country nationals. I close the article with questions about what these dynamics portend for future inquiries on south–south migrations.
(https://oup2-idp.sams-sigma.com/authorize?auth_token=eyJhbGciOiJSU0EtT0FFUC0yNTYiLCJlbmMiOiJBMTI4R0NNIn0.YL8lW099EjFMu218wPp6oXkVozh7pywB0p4-N1SkStzc3faiNp9ByvnXSz8qDWYX31iyx8zFlPrJkkKeCOHE0X_TPS5E48OirNGoMzsb0zZZ6uhzZkwes_1_IQGNi4D_ttlWRehxSyyFGq0GUnx_rxWr3CADyga0DPLxjJxZIPoMa2Dzn377Br0DZVI9_oIlLPq-WYXlGoanRwRjBE7Sc3C-qrzr1gSwUG3dJbzf-YpsZUPz8Ev_6vrUbLtjUR8Z-ZNvBD8aby6bAemFVleprkyZo6a9iyeWn1yi9jyzWXsWnfPAEISo_BtL7JQqL3t2Z65l1bQaF9P8AeoUQuGVaQ.AKkcxTuDVVaByX84.l_7PSc6ZcnEbj1Z_WHbzkRhBpyBFiGYgabjk4YmsCABQ1zKUqNIWHzTStVj21AFKTWgFwjNxcb8oE6hWO_aFjH-pzKRVFvR4rjTKnGzvcmsEKVxmmE9G3XFnYIqbFk2PKP0bQLKsF7iVJXeOv1T5cjH4aEI1EAH-3j7Z0qq6AzrB0ZURiFT7v5a3E-7uQ0oBHrZrY4z-2VmpiapL6s9Ik9hkWQ.K3o7Q9F6GJ786RaczOet2A&ip_address=128.122.120.19&prompt=none&referrer_url=https://ifp.nyu.edu/&response_type=code&scope=openid+profile+email+license_lite+profile_extended+offline_access&redirect_uri=https://academic.oup.com/HTTPHandlers/Sigma/LoginHandler.ashx&client_id=ACADEMIC&state=dd9e3f94-fc99-466a-9a42-1b564b8d3d3eredirecturl=httpszazjzjacademiczwoupzwcomzjjrszjadvancezyarticlezjdoizj10zw1093zjjrszjfead079zj7328888zsrsszr1) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/15570851231207866/) A Sense of Danger: Gender-Based Violence and the Quest for a Sensory Criminology
Oct 27th 2023, 11:18

Feminist Criminology, Ahead of Print. This article responds to recent calls for a ‘sensory criminology’ by offering a multi-sensorial analysis of gender-based violence (GBV). We examine both the often-discussed external senses as well as the more marginalized internal senses and explore how emotion, the broader criminological ‘atmosphere’ of GBV and the shift in atmosphere during the Covid-19 pandemic are implicated in women’s experiences of street-based sexual harassment and sexual assault. By analysing over 140 stories of GBV during the Covid-19 lockdowns, we evidence the scope and value of a fully multi-sensory criminology.
(https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/15570851231207866?ai=2b4&mi=ehikzz&af=R) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/7319986/) Valuing Aging Services and the People Who Work in Them
Oct 27th 2023, 11:17

Aging services remain a particular focus of gerontological research, or more specifically, the type, quality, and effectiveness of programs that people rely on as they get older. These programs can range from volunteer help in the home to hospice care. Although there are noticeable exceptions, for most older people in the U.S. aging services are fragmented and vary in quality, availability, and accessibility. Nonetheless, they are also greatly valued by those older people and the unpaid care partners and caregivers who use them.
(https://oup2-idp.sams-sigma.com/authorize?auth_token=eyJhbGciOiJSU0EtT0FFUC0yNTYiLCJlbmMiOiJBMTI4R0NNIn0.X7WdaYX6vEXwpE21NPPggL4HXh3Oz-Wy8b4a_pa3D9OAF17I82eY5liB7aFdU8sJxU1qaymyJM_eNwFO-DCv-WTzzZy23O-6zdDQxKA5_hqslRSUTlJL4SNrWoKq9YDp2RLzFqRNGPpSt7KExEEayCWZKlUR64TW34DD9M5nfQiuUeKGL-fh6BK2QcAm1s_SdwpKRGsO4PkihUQHvwwQSW9_8TIuw4A0pr34jG4KOAZJpt_TNWE1I0xS4xyp3sfPBgUYPzmkLJyuIDyPmPvBExkRiOVNxj4MtU5NciOYzRFeE-_K4mzoZymeC2Vn-p_lye1N9GFKFzQ1Ub9W1gJgCw.C7UgKv51am9880JK.xzNnDJ0USM2aBi_g24I1-U8pnydlhk6jL3rdLVUSLqQklE_y3qk6WqAYD1xjRG3DQVETxJ42WCPiWRa3lUfsEg0pSdfz_DCF6FtfprxF4P8SRcHFtZ-4AIoPGD4PtGTrIuCldQeARd1cxVIo4ToqxG1zENNUhKkx3mYj5iqbLcWzGOZL-KbuphIgxdNVY0USkABJFZyfffBOXcqiDUBtUIRp8cw.zayALbYl65sAuEq_XGYkiA&ip_address=128.122.120.19&prompt=none&referrer_url=https://ifp.nyu.edu/&response_type=code&scope=openid+profile+email+license_lite+profile_extended+offline_access&redirect_uri=https://academic.oup.com/HTTPHandlers/Sigma/LoginHandler.ashx&client_id=ACADEMIC&state=11fae8dd-dddb-4b22-bfe8-957c775712d2redirecturl=httpszazjzjacademiczwoupzwcomzjgerontologistzjarticlezj63zj9zj1409zj7319986zsrsszr1) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/00981389-2023-2238008-2/) Quality of life of services users in psychotropic drug treatment and rehabilitation services: a qualitative study from service user and provider perspectives
Oct 27th 2023, 11:17

Volume 62, Issue 10, July-December 2023, Page 321-344. 
(https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00981389.2023.2238008?af=R) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/14647001231202134/) Parables of resilience: Promising pessimism, Octavia Butler’s ‘purpose’, and the making of worlds
Oct 27th 2023, 11:17

Feminist Theory, Ahead of Print. Resilience is the trailblazing saviour of contemporary social and political life. Politicians, scientists, self-help experts, public school administrators, military officials, and psychologists increasingly tout resilience-building as the only rational solution to a twenty-first-century world of unprecedented uncertainty. The underlying (pessimistic) promise of resilience is that people, and by extension global systems, can not only survive but flourish through crisis. In order to underscore the material, ideological and political danger that this logic poses, I examine NASA/SpaceX’s plans for interplanetary colonisation – a project explicitly intended to promote a resilient human species – as promising pessimism’s devastating finale. Despite this dire trajectory, I conclude by considering the cost for left feminist thinkers and activists of reducing the concept of resilience to a neoliberal technology of power. To this end, I contend that Octavia Butler’s prophetic diptych Parable of the Sower (1993) and Parable of the Talents (1998) counters the colonising project of promising pessimism and recovers a liberatory account of resilience: one which refuses to exchange utopian surety for acquiescence to power, but which recuperates the present as a practice ground for transformation. Ultimately, this article insists that to engage in political struggle over how to govern ourselves and our world, in a shared context of escalating crises, requires sustained critical investment in the ethical and political implications of valorising certain kinds of resilient life.
(https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/14647001231202134?ai=2b4&mi=ehikzz&af=R) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/10596011231208232/) How Organizational Cynicism Can Promote Customer-Directed Deviance Via Employee Resource Depletion And How Experiencing Supervisory Support May Help Overcome This Effect
Oct 27th 2023, 11:17

Group &Organization Management, Ahead of Print. While research suggests that organizational cynicism prompts employees to engage in organizationally directed deviant behaviors, questions remain regarding whether, how and when organizational cynicism can also prompt employees to engage in deviance toward customers, who are third parties outside the organization-employee exchange relationship. Drawing on conservation of resources theory, we develop and test a model that addresses these questions. We theorize that organizational cynicism is an adverse and stressful experience that drains employees’ psychological resources over time, which in turn leads to customer-directed deviance. We further propose that perceptions of supervisor support help employees cope functionally with their lack of resources and reduce customer-directed deviant behavior. We tested our predictions in a two-week daily experience sampling study of call-center representatives and found that organizational cynicism indirectly predicts customer-directed deviant behavior via resource depletion when PSS is lower than when it is higher. Two post hoc studies (including a three-wave panel survey conducted over 6 months and a three-wave, time-separated survey conducted over one month) addressed the methodological limitations of this investigation and ruled out alternative explanations for our results. Implications for organizational cynicism and customer service literature are discussed.
(https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/10596011231208232?ai=2b4&mi=ehikzz&af=R) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/15240657-2023-2243789/) “Lovesick Women”: A Historical Overview of Gendered Conceptualizations of Erotomania, and Their Influence on Responses to Stalking
Oct 27th 2023, 11:17

Volume 24, Issue 3, July-September 2023, Page 176-188. 
(https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15240657.2023.2243789?ai=ys&mi=754lm4&af=R) Read the full article ›
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(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/7086012/) The Impact of Wages on Care Home Quality in England
Oct 27th 2023, 11:16

Abstract
Background and Objectives
In many countries, a large proportion of long-term care staff are paid at, or near, minimum wage, leading to concerns of negative effects on care outcomes. This study analyzed the effect of staff wages on care home quality ratings in England.
Research Design and Methods
A national staffing database of long-term care providers was matched with local-area information on needs and supply to construct a 3-year panel (2016–2018) of English care home observations. Using multiple imputation methods to address missing data provided a data set of 12,055 observations of 5,556 care facilities (both residential and nursing homes). We analyzed the effect of the facility-level average hourly wage of care staff on national regulator quality ratings. A measure of the impact of exogenous changes in the national minimum wage on care facilities was used as an instrument for wage.
Results
We find that wages positively affect care home quality ratings. Other things equal, a 10% increase in the average hourly wage of direct care workers would lead to a 7.1% increase in the likelihood that a care home will have a high-quality rating. The wage effect on quality was significant when controlling for staff skill mix, measured as the share of registered nurses in nursing home staff.
Discussion and Implications
This study provides important evidence of the positive impact that staff pay can have on the quality of long-term care. Our finding has important implications for appropriate levels of pay and the funding of long-term care.
(https://oup2-idp.sams-sigma.com/authorize?auth_token=eyJhbGciOiJSU0EtT0FFUC0yNTYiLCJlbmMiOiJBMTI4R0NNIn0.H1QHp0_GmI8k1ZPw_DiI1Sw6nppWBxaGyicK-HjFZiv6ig1qwr9FxkpCoIfTGAokuBedFKqZfovmVRrseb_fcYFBwgZv5VuubWz2xDjnNk5glOLFLLsGSvJoGVYLsc12k9j1HTgX8KFZ53nyTaswP4Xc4kv_qxdeAofOFsIioUUh2PbufULcwAHpVn7eZbFtZIP0lGzzb5EZhFo0YmFSf6w0_I6BM-H5XkFFP3oHACOEK8_9NQrtWxb73d4oxS_EAUMhQw6wNLKI4uDwcHfTgyy0xPfCmugZnGCHX1G1g34B4gN8iSO0jTcoZgOY3oygIZqdlWRwWRtV7MkFN4PwyA.EgRN0JAQE55Q6JML.ppWkUxJtnpqTCmx6Y6EnSx9EqBvOp7P8lhOGxDd_ABZ0z-e2Oc1eSZY4ho3IhkKtQGOZaIcM5s1E1iI5WK-xOtFxAfPJtPlgunefnb5SusRvA2qMAreT3zDxOHlGJjTFsPsPx2mGJ-kuF6JsoxkuGcIcjABTA_jqVfQnUSrAWrErYVHiieLGvpI4TfK3pt3c0y5ARNx3RMJUxglrp4T6r_9zgcM.6tM0yjTp42a294T7xUfpzQ&ip_address=128.122.120.19&prompt=none&referrer_url=https://ifp.nyu.edu/&response_type=code&scope=openid+profile+email+license_lite+profile_extended+offline_access&redirect_uri=https://academic.oup.com/HTTPHandlers/Sigma/LoginHandler.ashx&client_id=ACADEMIC&state=0215583b-99a4-4096-9368-b6788680469eredirecturl=httpszazjzjacademiczwoupzwcomzjgerontologistzjarticlezj63zj9zj1428zj7086012zsrsszr1) Read the full article ›
The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/7086012/) The Impact of Wages on Care Home Quality in England was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/10596011231203758/) How Does Workplace Gossip Benefit Gossip Actors? The Impact of Workplace Gossip on Power and Voluntary Turnover
Oct 27th 2023, 11:16

Group &Organization Management, Ahead of Print. Although workplace gossip is ubiquitous, more scholarship is needed to determine how employees may use gossip to attain valuable social resources at work—namely, their experience of power. Drawing from the gossip literature and research on power in the workplace, we identify proximal (i.e., increased power accrual) and distal (i.e., diminished voluntary turnover) positive outcomes for employees enacting negative and positive gossip about the organization at work. Using a sample of 338 nurses, we found that positive workplace gossip about the organization increases expert power. Our analysis further revealed that positive workplace gossip about the organization had a negative indirect effect on the voluntary turnover of gossip actors via their expert power. Our findings contribute to the organizational literature on the benefits of gossip to actors and serve to further enrich the emerging literature which has considered the relationship between power and turnover. An important implication of our research is that organizations need to recognize the dynamics of organization-directed gossip and its potential to serve as a source of social power for employees and a retention driver for those who accrue power in expertise.
(https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/10596011231203758?ai=2b4&mi=ehikzz&af=R) Read the full article ›
The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/10596011231203758/) How Does Workplace Gossip Benefit Gossip Actors? The Impact of Workplace Gossip on Power and Voluntary Turnover was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/14649365-2022-2073466/) ‘Fowl’ play: reverse place-branding of Toxteth, liverpool through the celebrity discourse of Robbie Fowler
Oct 27th 2023, 11:16

Volume 24, Issue 9, November – December 2023, Page 1538-1556. 
(https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14649365.2022.2073466?ai=2il&mi=3icuj5&af=R) Read the full article ›
The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/14649365-2022-2073466/) ‘Fowl’ play: reverse place-branding of Toxteth, liverpool through the celebrity discourse of Robbie Fowler was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/guidelines-plus/how-to-drink-less-alcohol/) How to drink less alcohol
Oct 27th 2023, 10:48

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/guidelines-plus/how-to-drink-less-alcohol/) How to drink less alcohol was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/s1697260023000480/) The influence of electroconvulsive therapy on reconsolidation of autobiographical memories: A retrospective quasi-experimental study in patients with depression
Oct 27th 2023, 10:41

Publication date: October–December 2023
Source: International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology, Volume 23, Issue 4
Author(s): Leonardo Wiedemann, Samuel Trumm, Malek Bajbouj, Simone Grimm, Sabine Aust
(https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1697260023000480?dgcid=rss_sd_all) Read the full article ›
The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/journal-article-abstracts/s1697260023000480/) The influence of electroconvulsive therapy on reconsolidation of autobiographical memories: A retrospective quasi-experimental study in patients with depression was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/podcasts/american-sociological-review-the-stigma-of-diseases-unequal-burden-uneven-decline/) American Sociological Review – The Stigma of Diseases: Unequal Burden, Uneven Decline
Oct 27th 2023, 10:16

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/podcasts/american-sociological-review-the-stigma-of-diseases-unequal-burden-uneven-decline/) American Sociological Review – The Stigma of Diseases: Unequal Burden, Uneven Decline was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/video/the-ethical-implications-of-generative-artificial-intelligence-for-psychologists/) The Ethical Implications of Generative Artificial Intelligence for Psychologists
Oct 27th 2023, 10:07

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/video/the-ethical-implications-of-generative-artificial-intelligence-for-psychologists/) The Ethical Implications of Generative Artificial Intelligence for Psychologists was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/news/military-contractors-are-targeting-dc-commuters/) Military Contractors Are Targeting DC Commuters
Oct 27th 2023, 09:52

Weapons and tech contractors are skirting Washington Metro advertising rules to hawk war machinery directly to policymakers…. Outfront Media’s pitch to advertisers for the DC market area highlights its large audience of “political leaders, government employees, and corporate contractors.” To help reach them all, they offer a “Rail Station Domination” deal in thirteen Metro stations to allow one advertiser to occupy much of the available space, an opportunity, it says, to “transform commuters’ daily ride into a total ‘brand experience.’”
The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/news/military-contractors-are-targeting-dc-commuters/) Military Contractors Are Targeting DC Commuters was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/calls-consultations/request-for-information-rfi-environmental-justice-research-gaps-opportunities-and-capacity-building-due-by-dec-15/) Request for Information (RFI): Environmental Justice Research Gaps, Opportunities and Capacity Building (Due by Dec 15)
Oct 27th 2023, 09:52

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/calls-consultations/request-for-information-rfi-environmental-justice-research-gaps-opportunities-and-capacity-building-due-by-dec-15/) Request for Information (RFI): Environmental Justice Research Gaps, Opportunities and Capacity Building (Due by Dec 15) was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/open-access-journal-articles/the-influence-of-school-climate-on-teachers-job-satisfaction-the-mediating-role-of-teachers-self-efficacy/) The influence of school climate on teachers’ job satisfaction: The mediating role of teachers’ self-efficacy
Oct 27th 2023, 09:36

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/open-access-journal-articles/the-influence-of-school-climate-on-teachers-job-satisfaction-the-mediating-role-of-teachers-self-efficacy/) The influence of school climate on teachers’ job satisfaction: The mediating role of teachers’ self-efficacy was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/grey-literature/the-affordable-housing-crisis-grows-while-efforts-to-increase-supply-fall-short/) The Affordable Housing Crisis Grows While Efforts to Increase Supply Fall Short
Oct 27th 2023, 09:17

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/grey-literature/the-affordable-housing-crisis-grows-while-efforts-to-increase-supply-fall-short/) The Affordable Housing Crisis Grows While Efforts to Increase Supply Fall Short was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

(https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/clinical-trials/a-trauma-informed-sleep-intervention-for-children-in-foster-care/) A Trauma-Informed Sleep Intervention for Children in Foster Care
Oct 27th 2023, 09:13

The post (https://ifp.nyu.edu/2023/clinical-trials/a-trauma-informed-sleep-intervention-for-children-in-foster-care/) A Trauma-Informed Sleep Intervention for Children in Foster Care was curated by (https://ifp.nyu.edu) information for practice.

Forwarded by:
Michael Reeder LCPC
Baltimore, MD

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