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1.
National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance ; 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20243957

ABSTRACT

Education officials have long hoped that the statewide academic assessments most students take each year could be used not only for accountability but also to guide instruction. Congress established the Innovative Assessment Demonstration Authority (IADA) program in 2015 to help address this goal, offering up to seven states temporary flexibility from federal testing requirements so that they may more easily make progress toward replacing their current assessments with more innovative ones. The key incentive to participate in IADA is that students trying out the innovative assessment are not required to also take the state's current assessment. However, states approved for IADA must still show that their innovative assessments meet most requirements for federal accountability, and they are expected to implement the new assessments statewide within 5 years. This report describes the progress of the first five assessment systems approved under IADA in order to help policymakers consider expanding the program to more states. The report is primarily based on an analysis of states' IADA applications and performance reports to the U.S. Department of Education through the 2020-2021 school year and is part of a broader evaluation of IADA required by Congress. [For the Appendix, see ED627873. For the Study Highlights, see ED627880.]

2.
Psychology & Sexuality ; 14(2):432-444, 2023.
Article in English | CINAHL | ID: covidwho-20235026

ABSTRACT

Transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals experience high levels of minority stress, as well as a high prevalence of suicidality and self-harm. The current study investigates if emotion regulation mediates the relationships of minority stressors with self-harm and suicidality. TGD adult primary care patients (N = 115) completed a survey including measures of minority stressors, emotion dysregulation, self-harm, and suicidality. Emotion regulation mediated the relationship between victimisation and suicidality. Emotion regulation did not mediate the relationship between victimisation and self-harm. TGD individuals' suicide risk may be increased when they experience victimisation through increased emotion dysregulation.

3.
Applied Clinical Trials ; 30(7/8):28-29, 2021.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20232399

ABSTRACT

Tryon Medical Partners, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, is a fairly new practice, which broke off from a nearby hospital system approximately three years ago. Overall, the patient does enjoy the experience and when integrated with primary care and their own PCPs, I think clinical trial retention rates are higher because of the attention from their provider." Grayson also sees that the patients are excited to participate when asked, and spread the word to friends and family. Because of the practice population, and history of underrepresentation, Grayson believes that the clinical research information and understanding for them is enlightening.

4.
National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance ; 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20231545

ABSTRACT

Education officials have long hoped that the statewide academic assessments most students take each year could be used not only for accountability but also to guide instruction. Congress established the Innovative Assessment Demonstration Authority (IADA) program in 2015 to help address this goal, offering up to seven states flexibility from federal requirements so that they may more easily make progress toward replacing their current assessments with more innovative ones. The report describes the early progress of the first five IADA systems to help policymakers consider expanding the program to more states. The report is primarily based on analyses of states' IADA applications and annual performance reports through the 2020-2021 school year and is part of a broader evaluation of IADA required by Congress. This Study Highlights describes the key findings from the report. [For the full report, see ED627872. For the Appendix, see ED627873.]

5.
American Quarterly ; 74(2):239-244, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2326727

ABSTRACT

I framed my response to your presidential address as a letter in hopes that this intimate form will find you and others in the vein of the words you cite from Audre Lorde, "the personal as political.” Writing to you in this way allows me to aspire after the intimacy denied by the virtual 2021 ASA conference, to imagine what it would have been like to be in a shared space, feeling the urgency of your call for "Love and Resistance in a time of COVID.” This letter, then, might be read as a yearning for social and intellectual associations that have been made dangerous, not least by the COVID-19 pandemic, but also by the increased policing of our work as scholars and teachers in a nation and within institutions organized around the violences of settler colonialism and white supremacist politics hostile to the flourishing of minoritized life and knowledges. Let me begin by thanking you for the story of your experience growing up as a mixed-race Cambodian American adoptee in Valdosta, Georgia. Your evocative descriptions helped ground me in time and place, from the significance of Valdosta as a site of "refuge” during the American Civil War to its transformation over the course of Reconstruction and Jim Crow to the 1980s, when it became the scene of the "most formative” years of your childhood. The reflections you shared on the loneliness you experienced, and the painful "lesson of indifference” instructed by your father, who believed it best to keep the racist crimes committed against your family "to oneself simply because ‘no one cared' and doing otherwise would lead to undeniable trouble and unreconciled hurt,” were deeply affecting and illuminating. Your story finds resonance with the work of Leslie Bow, Lee Isaac Chung, and Monique Truong, who elucidate histories of Asian racial formation and sociality in the US South.1 As a recent transplant to Tallahassee, a north Floridian city that often feels like a part of south Georgia, these texts and your words have helped me negotiate the conflicting feelings and palimpsestic temporal geographies of a place I am still trying to make into home

6.
Journal of Asian American Studies ; 25(3):v-xiii, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2319755

ABSTRACT

In moments of crisis that test the stability of US nationalism—the civil war, the expansion of American empire, World Wars I & II, the civil rights era, the post-industrial era, 9/11, COVID—a pattern of violence against Asian Americans seems to make an appearance. Nearly a third of the nurses who have died of coronavirus in the United States are Filipino, even though Filipino nurses make up just 4% of the nursing population nationwide.2 Over 1.2 million Asian Americans labor in food-related industries nationwide—at farms, food processing factories, grocery stores, and restaurants—and are placed at higher risk of infection and mortality.3 In the spring of 2021, in the span of two months, lone white gunmen murdered Asian Americans in Atlanta, Indianapolis, and San Jose (all of the victims were essential service workers). In presenting the data, Wong and Liu invite us to consider how anti-Black tropes and invocations of a persistent "Black-Asian conflict" diverted attention away from the role of white supremacy in fomenting an anti-Asian climate. The new White House immediately promised to "Build Back Better" with a sweeping plan to restore domestic stability and the nation's reputation abroad;implied was the beating back of Trumpian revanchism.

7.
English Journal ; 112(5):92-94, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2319561

ABSTRACT

Stephens uses Shakespeare to address societal problems. Teaching William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet's relevance to struggling readers is challenging. Like Kelly Gallagher's argument that struggling writers do not do enough writing, she thinks struggling readers suffer from similar failures: teachers do not do enough reading with students. Like Gallagher, she believes it is best to focus on what teachers can control. So, when she was required to teach Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet to her ninth graders last year, she paused to reflect on undertaking this task with struggling readers while making the text accessible and meaningful. Here she describes her attempt to meet this task.

8.
Asian American Policy Review ; 33:110-114, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2317571

ABSTRACT

2022 was a year marked with significant anniversaries of hate against the AAPI community both historic and recent, from the 40th anniversary of the hate-driven murder of Chinese American immigrant Vincent Chin to the one-year anniversary of recent mass shootings in Atlanta and Indianapolis. These commemorations, moreover, came amidst a series of hate crimes targeting Sikh men in Richmond Hill, Queens, and a years-long spike in violence against Asian Americans - particularly Asian American women - ignited by the COVID-19 pandemic. One anniversary in 2022, however, is both important on its own right as a marker in the history of targeted violence and useful for contextualizing recent trends of hate in the US: the 10-year remembrance of the shooting at a gurdwara, a Sikh house of worship, in Oak Creek WI.

9.
Theatre Journal ; 74(1):ix-xiii, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2317214

ABSTRACT

Discourse concerning the Atlanta Spa Shootings, which happened around the time that this issue first started to come together in March of 2021, has renewed the urgency of thinking about performance and feminism together.1 Given that this issue's publication roughly coincides with the first anniversary of those murders, the violent events in Atlanta have loomed in the background of the editorial process. [...]although the essays in this issue address quite distinct forms of performance and paratheatrical phenomena from state surveillance to fan groups to online participatory audiences, all of the essays use feminist methodologies either explicitly or implicitly. [...]this editorial highlights some of their convergences to think through how the interventions of each author might speak to a feminist knowledge project that is critical in this historical moment. Fans watch events transpire in Wanda's magically created world, which is itself surveyed in the narrative by an extra-governmental agency (elaborated in the comic books if not so much in the television miniseries itself);these source materials give Wanda and Vision their names and provide many backstories for the roster of secondary characters. Barnette suggests that the series also provided a platform to see the ethical conundrums of real-life individuals whose positions of power grant their words authority;witness former president Donald Trump inciting the attack on the Capitol.

10.
Topics in Antiviral Medicine ; 31(2):385, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2315187

ABSTRACT

Background: Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, it was evident that many SARS-CoV-2 infections occurred at mass gathering events. In many LMICs and LICs, places of worship serve as a venue for mass gatherings, and therefore a potential source of large-scale transmission events. Mass gatherings at places of worship also serve as an opportunity to distribute Ag-RDTs to a significant proportion of the community at regular intervals, disrupting transmission within the event and potentially impacting community spread of SARS-CoV-2. Method(s): We used an agent-based community assessment model, Propelling Action for Testing and Treatment, to estimate how various strategies of asymptomatic Ag-RDT self-testing of a fixed percentage of persons attending large religious gatherings (10%, 20%, 40%, 100%), in addition to the general underlying level of ongoing symptomatic testing in the population, would impact community transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in 3 contexts (Brazil, Georgia, Zambia). These testing strategies were analyzed with bi-weekly and weekly asymptomatic self-testing in a population with varying levels of vaccine efficacy (low/high), vaccine coverage (10%, 50%, 80%), and reproductive numbers (0.9, 1.2, 1.5, and 2.0) to simulate varying stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. We then performed an economical evaluation of the results from the model to understand the impact and cost-effectiveness of each self-testing strategy at places of worship. Result(s): In each of the epidemic conditions modeled, testing of symptomatic persons at weekly and biweekly frequencies can avert 2%-16% of Brazilian community infections and 31%-45% of infections occurring in places of worship in Brazil. The same is true in Georgia (1%-6% of total infections and 28%-45% place of worship-related infections) and Zambia (2%-21% of total infections and 29%-45% of place of worship related infections) despite differences in the proportion of populations regularly attending places of worship in the 3 countries. Asymptomatic self-testing in 100% of places of worship in a country result in the greatest percent of infections averted and consistently lands on the cost-effectiveness frontier yet requires a budget 520- 1550x greater than that of symptomatic testing alone. Conclusion(s): Testing of symptomatic persons attending regular religious gatherings have a significant impact on the spread of SARS-CoV-2 in places of worship and can significantly reduce community spread in contexts where population level attendance at religious gatherings is high. Cost-effectiveness analysis from Brazil, Georgia and Zambia modelling results with infections averted within places of worship and total community infections averted assuming a total cost per self-test of $2.50 USD.

11.
American Quarterly ; 74(3):700-705, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2313653

ABSTRACT

In the past two years, as the whole world has been deeply mired in the COVID-19 pandemic, we may have observed neoliberal capitalism's crisis of care: exposed and exacerbated by the global pandemic, made explicit alongside examples such as the collapsing of health systems, the shortage of care labor and overwork of nurses, the serious outbreaks in aged care facilities, the increased burden of domestic labor and care work due to school closures, and the worldwide rise of domestic abuse. Feminist calls for economic independence for (mostly middle-class) women to work for equal pay as men certainly do not resolve the care problem but, instead, further obscure colonial divisions of labor under which the racialized labor mostly from formerly colonized nations is made to fill up the gap.2 I consider the discursive formations of love as a point of departure to review how the global pandemic bears on our everyday practices of intimacy. The historical effects of racialized displacement can be seen as consisting of three sets of often-dissociated social relations during the pandemic crisis: archetypical angel-heroines in white (nurses), angels in the house (housewife and mother), and fallen angels (prostitutes).3 During the pandemic, many of us constantly experience fears about the health systems being overwhelmed, even while we express growing appreciation for the essential care provided by health workers. The virus eventually spread to the teahouses of Taipei's Wanhua neighborhood—also known as an adult entertainment red-light district in Taipei. Since Wanhua was reported as the center of a major cluster, the workers in the sexual venues, in particular, became a singularized target of public criticism.

12.
Topics in Antiviral Medicine ; 31(2):383, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2313640

ABSTRACT

Background: Despite widespread vaccination and increasing population immunity from previous infections, community transmission of COVID-19 continues, and testing may continue to be an important component of our response particularly with the proliferation of new variants of concern. Strategic deployment of SARS-CoV-2 antigen-detection rapid diagnostic (AgRDT) self-tests to settings with increased transmission potential can reduce the viral burden within the specific settings, such as in K-12 schools, and may have spillover benefits for broader community transmission. Method(s): Using a previously developed agent-based simulation model, parameterized to three distinct country archetypes (Brazil, Georgia, Zambia), we analyzed 11 different self-testing strategies within the school-going population at three testing frequencies under 24 different epidemic conditions (Rt, vaccination coverage/effectiveness), comprising a total of 696 scenarios per country. Strategies included symptomatic testing, and in addition, asymptomatic testing at 5, 20, 40 or 100% of schools, or asymptomatic contact testing. These were all targeted to either only teachers or teachers and students. Then, with the cost to offer a COVID-19 self-test in schools at USD 2.50, we performed an economic analysis with all scenarios to identify the most costeffective strategies by country. Result(s): Routine asymptomatic testing of teachers and students at 100% of schools reduced the greatest number of infections across contexts, but at the greatest cost. However, with respect to both the reduction in infections and total cost, symptomatic testing of all teachers and students appears to be the most efficient strategy. Symptomatic testing can prevent up to 69.3%, 64.5%, and 75.5% of school infections in Brazil, Georgia, and Zambia, across all epidemic conditions. Additionally, it can prevent up to 77,200, 80,900, 107,800 symptomatic days per 100,000 teachers and students in each country, respectively, over the course of a 90-day epidemic wave. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for strategies that consistently appeared on the costeffectiveness frontier across countries and epidemic conditions are shown in Figure 1 for an Rt of 1.2. Conclusion(s): If financial resources are limited, symptomatic testing of teachers and students has the potential to be cost-effective while reducing a substantial number of infections and the amount of time lost from the classroom, making it a feasible strategy for implementation in a variety of settings.

13.
Journal of Asian American Studies ; 25(3):411-430, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2312791

ABSTRACT

In this formulation, the US-ROK Alliance—what the State Department deems the "linchpin of peace, security, and prosperity" in the region—stands not as a form of military occupation or imperial clientelism, but one of righteous defense from regional bogeyman such as the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).3 The endemic violence of US militarism—from sexual exploitation in military "camptowns" to the extralegal status of US servicemen—is rendered a mere footnote to a program of liberal internationalism which claims to preside over what the US military euphemistically terms a "Free and Open Indo-Pacific. "4 Blinken's easy distinction between the singular act of the Atlanta shootings and the routinized violence of US imperialism speaks to the contradictions at the heart of the Biden administration's aspiration to restore both racial liberalism and global US power.5 Since the campaign trail, platitudes about restoring global US leadership have made up the core of the Biden administration's foreign policy platform. [...]Biden pitched his presidency as a means to reinstate the era of racial liberalism in order to "restore the soul of the nation" from the crude racism of the Trump era.7 Asian /Americans have been cast to perform the work of legitimation under the intersecting projects of racial liberalism and US hegemony—from the symbolic inclusion of Asian /Americans into the US national body to the incorporation of allied Asian states into a US-led orbit of militarized peace.8 On the one hand, Asian /Americans have become a performative symbol of a reascendant racial liberalism. What does it mean, then, in a region still shaped by Cold War imperialism, to proclaim that "America is back," as Kamala Harris did on her first trip to Asia as Vice President in August 2021?13 Even more, how do we make sense of the declaration of a "new" Cold War, emerging as it does from the unfinished business of an "old" Cold War that never ended?

14.
European Urban & Regional Studies ; : 1, 2023.
Article in English | Academic Search Complete | ID: covidwho-2292515

ABSTRACT

The capacity of the state to develop and implement policy at the complex nexus of energy infrastructure, social inequality and housing is indicative of the political priorities of governing structures and, by extension, the nature of statecraft more generally. We compare and contrast the energy poverty amelioration policies of two former Yugoslav and two post-Soviet states located outside the European Union, but seeking to join its regulatory sphere – Serbia, Montenegro, Ukraine and Georgia – against the background of deep and persistent patterns of domestic energy hardship. We are particularly interested in uncovering the time horizons, socio-technical systems and target constituencies of different policy measures, as well as energy sector–specific responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. We find that most states in the region have done little to address some of the more substantive challenges around improving housing quality, energy efficiency and gender inequality. However, energy poverty is present in the policy lexicon of all case study countries, and Ukraine, in particular, has advanced a number of more sophisticated approaches and programmes. [ FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of European Urban & Regional Studies is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full . (Copyright applies to all s.)

15.
Emerging Infectious Diseases ; 29(3), 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2292371

ABSTRACT

The author highlights many challenges ahead that limit achieving the World Health Organization (WHO) End TB strategy without substantial additional investments and development of new tools to combat TB (the WHO End TB strategy targets a 90% reduction in TB cases and 95% reduction in TB-related deaths by 2035). [...]perhaps the book ends prematurely, because after it was written, new treatments were developed for highly drug-resistant TB that shifted to all oral regimens (WHO recommendation);a ≈90% favorable outcome was recently reported for the BPaL regimen used to treat highly drug-resistant TB (2). Emory University School of Medicine and Rollins School of Public Health, Atlanta, Georgia, USA World Health Organization.

16.
Transboundary and Emerging Diseases ; 2023, 2023.
Article in German | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2306484

ABSTRACT

The pandemic spread of African swine fever (ASF) has caused serious effects on the global pig industry. Virus genome sequencing and genomic epidemiology analysis play an important role in tracking the outbreaks of the disease and tracing the transmission of the virus. Here we obtained the full-length genome sequence of African swine fever virus (ASFV) in the first outbreak of ASF in China on August 3rd, 2018 and compared it with other published genotype II ASFV genomes including 9 genomes collected in China from September 2018 to October 2020. Phylogenetic analysis on genomic sequences revealed that genotype II ASFV has evolved into different genetic clusters with temporal and spatial correlation since being introduced into Europe and then Asia. There was a strong support for the monophyletic grouping of all the ASFV genome sequences from China and other Asian countries, which shared a common ancestor with those from the Central or Eastern Europe. An evolutionary rate of 1.312 × 10−5 nucleotide substitutions per site per year was estimated for genotype II ASFV genomes. Eight single nucleotide variations which located in MGF110-1L, MGF110-7L, MGF360-10L, MGF505-5R, MGF505-9R, K145R, NP419L, and I267L were identified as anchor mutations that defined genetic clusters of genotype II ASFV in Europe and Asia. This study expanded our knowledge of the molecular epidemiology of ASFV and provided valuable information for effective control of the disease.

17.
Community Practitioner ; 96(2):20-25, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2303321

ABSTRACT

During the pandemic, many school nurses brilliantly flexed their service to ensure they continued to support students. Here, Scott discusses the practices that have continued.

18.
2022 Computing in Cardiology, CinC 2022 ; 2022-September, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2300591

ABSTRACT

We developed an end-to-end automatic algorithm for the detection of signs of COVID-19 virus infection in ECGs. We analyzed 12-lead ECGs from patients infected by COVID-19 (C-group) and from a control group (NC-group). The C-group (896 cases) included patients (age range [19-96] years) hospitalized at Ospedale San Matteo in Pavia (Italy) during the first 2020 pandemic outbreak. Infection was confirmed by nasal swab testing. The NC-group (also 896 cases) was built by collecting ECG in sinus rhythm from 3 datasets: Georgia ECG (USA), PTB-XL (Germany) and CPSC 2018 (China). Control ECGs were matched by gender, age and heart rate. An additional control group, only used for testing, was extracted from the Ningbo (China) database. A 4-layers convolutional neural network (CNN), with increasing filter size plus a final fully connected (FC) layer, was designed to classify C vs NC-group. The CNN was trained and k-fold cross validated (k=7) on 1536 ECGs (1316 for testing-220 for validation). Every fold model was used to classify the remaining, separate common test set of 256 ECGs. The accuracy was 0.86 ± 0.01 on validation, 0.86 ± 0.01 on the test set. The FPR on the NC-group was 0.14 ± 0.03 on validation, 0.13 ± 0.02 on test and 0.10 ± 0.01 on the Ningbo test set (p > 0.05,ns) showing that no bias was induced by the selection of datasets. © 2022 Creative Commons.

19.
International Review of Administrative Sciences ; 89(2):555-576, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2299786

ABSTRACT

This article aims to explore the impact of digital communication tools application by citizens and the perceived usefulness of social media on the relationship between citizens and local authorities. The data were gathered in April–September 2020 through a survey (CAWI) among citizens of Poznan, Poland (n=502), and Kutaisi, Georgia (n=504), and were analyzed with structural equation modeling. The findings show that the intensity of digital communication tools usage for participation in the city branding and the perceived usefulness of social media contribute to the lasting relationships between citizens and local authorities in both countries. The novelty of this research concerns comparing two countries with different levels of development. Georgia is a developing economy in Europe and is in the process of modernizing the local governance across the cities. Poland, however, is a mature economy with a post-transformation heritage, where its cities benefit from considerable experience in building and developing citizen participation policies. Furthermore, the research was conducted amid the COVID-19 pandemic and evidenced the growing popularity of digital tools adoption by citizens in city matters. This study contributes to understanding the impact of digital tools on the relationship between citizens and local authorities in terms of city brand management. Citizens' participation in the city branding process via various digital communication tools increased citizen commitment towards long-lasting collaboration with local authorities. Moreover, citizens' perception of social media usefulness positively influences their desire to engage in the city branding process online, supporting the trust-building and collaboration between citizens and local authorities. Points for practitioners The intensiveness of digital tools usage – governments should identify the tools already trusted and popular among their audience and employ those tools to a greater extent to maximize the chances of feedback, high citizen participation, and commitment. Citizens' perception of social media – such characteristics as ease of use, transparency, ease of communication with the municipality, and safety encourage citizens to get involved in the city brand management process. Consequently, local authorities should consider the features mentioned above and develop the online tools quality.

20.
The Judges' Journal ; 62(2):26-30, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2295824

ABSTRACT

ABA Commission Report After a series of meetings of key figures in Georgia's legal community in 1988, in February 1989, the Supreme Court of Georgia created the Chief Justice's Commission on Professionalism (CJCPGA), the first entity of this kind in the world created by a high court to address legal professionalism. The framework for CJCPGA appears to draw on the work of the American Bar Association's (ABA) 1986 report entitled In the Spirit of Public Service: A Blueprint for the Rekindling of Lawyer Professionalism (ABA Report). On December 31, 1999, Judge Hugh Lawson of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Georgia signed a Consent Order and Final Judgment that settled an action seeking sanctions against E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Company for alleged litigation misconduct in earlier product liability cases. According to the Consent Order, the monies were to be devoted "to fostering and teaching professionalism and ethics in the practice of law."

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