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1.
J Exp Psychol Appl ; 2024 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38661645

ABSTRACT

This study examined how incidental emotions influence decisions to arrest or release sex trafficking survivors. Community members (N = 984) completed an autobiographical memory task invoking disgust, sympathy, or no emotion and read case facts from United States v. Bell (2014) varying whether the survivor had a prior history of sex work and whether she came from a vulnerable or nonvulnerable background. Participants in the vulnerable condition believed that the survivor was less able to resist the trafficker's proposal. Furthermore, women but not men made to feel disgust believed that she should have resisted. Regarding arresting the survivor for prostitution versus releasing her for services, invoking either incidental disgust or sympathy, but especially disgust, triggered feelings of disgust, which in turn predicted an arrest decision. Finally, our data supported a moderated mediation model in which the belief that the survivor should have been able to resist the trafficker predicted a greater probability of an arrest judgment. Furthermore, participants in the vulnerable condition believed that the survivor had less ability to resist, and they disfavored her arrest. However, this was only true when we invoked no emotion. When we invoked disgust, vulnerability ceased to have this moderation effect. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

2.
AJOG Glob Rep ; 3(1): 100155, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36589486

ABSTRACT

The human monkeypox virus is a zoonotic orthopoxvirus initially discovered in Africa that causes a disease similar to smallpox with less severe symptoms. Since May 2022, the virus is being transmitted from human to human at an increasing rate outside of Africa. Although monkeypox infection was endemic in Africa, it had sporadic surges in recent years. This has led the World Health Organization to declare its highest alert level on July 25, 2022. In Switzerland only, 456 individuals have been diagnosed with monkeypox infection from May 19, 2022, to August 29, 2022. To date, >99% of patients with monkeypox infection are men, in particular those who have sex with other men. Clinical cases of women with monkeypox infection are still very rare but will more likely be seen. With this case, we have highlighted the fact that this zoonosis is also starting to spread among women. We have presented the case of a female patient living in Switzerland who presented to our gynecologic emergency department for painful vulvar lesions after an episode of upper respiratory tract infection. The monkeypox infection was confirmed with a real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis at the University Hospital of Geneva, a center of reference for monkeypox in Switzerland. Shortly after, the patient developed generalized and typical lesions on the whole body.

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