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'Zoombombing' research shows legitimate meeting attendees cause most attacks

Most zoombombing incidents are inside jobs according to a new study featuring researchers at Binghamton University, State University of New York.

New-york
United-states
Italy
Binghamton
Bulgaria
Chile
Turkey
Chen-ling
Utkucan-balci
Jeremy-blackburn
Google
Boston-university-assistant-professor-gianluca-stringhini

The Lancet: World failing to address health needs of 630 million women and children affected by armed conflict

 E-Mail New estimates reveal extent of the health burden of armed conflict affecting at least 630 million women and children worldwide in 2017, and contributing to more than 10 million deaths among children under 5 years of age over 20 years. Changing nature of war is a growing threat to humanitarian access and the provision of essential health services for women and children, but responses in countries like Syria, Pakistan, and Colombia may provide context-specific innovative ways forward. Armed conflicts are becoming increasingly complex and protracted and a growing threat to humanitarian access and the delivery of essential health services, affecting at least 630 million women and children over 8% of the world s population in 2017, according to a new four-paper Series exposing the far-reaching effects of modern warfare on women s and children s health, published today in

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Colombia
Pakistan
India
Norway
Afghanistan
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United-kingdom
Uppsala
Uppsala-lan
Sweden
Lebanon

Rescuers at risk: emergency personnel face trauma and post traumatic stress symptoms

A new study in Frontiers in Psychiatry has for the first time, demonstrated differences in the prevalence of post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) in different groups of rescue workers and emergency personnel, including firefighters, police officers and psychiatric nurses. The researchers showed that the varying experiences and circumstances these workers encounter, such as handling aggressive people, working with families or dealing with deaths and suicide, are tied to varying levels of PTSS and suicidal thoughts, with emergency department staff and psychiatric nurses showing the highest levels of PTSS and suicidal thoughts out of the emergency professions studied. The findings highlight the urgent need for bespoke training and counselling services across the rescue and emergency industries, which would help staff to cope with the trauma they experience, improving their quality of life and mental wellbeing in such high-risk professions. The study was led by Dr Leila Soravia and Dr

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Switzerland
Leila-soravia
University-of-bern-hospital-psychiatry
Medicine-health
Health-care-systems-services
Health-professionals
Trauma-injury
Coping-phobias
Death-dying
Counseling

Effects of head trauma from intimate partner violence largely unrecognized

 E-Mail While there is an abundant amount of research about traumatic brain injuries in athletes and those serving in the military, the same data is scarce when it comes to concussions and head and neck injuries sustained due to intimate partner violence. Carrie Esopenko, assistant professor in the Department of Rehabilitation and Movement Sciences in the Rutgers School of Health Professions says that the World Health Organization estimates that one in three women will experience intimate partner violence (IPV) in her lifetime, and studies suggest that anywhere between 30% to 90% of women who experience physical abuse at the hands of an intimate partner experience head trauma. Yet not enough data is being collected to understand how this head trauma affects cognitive and psychological functioning as well as the underlying neural effects.

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Movement-sciences
Rutgers-school-of-health-professions
World-health-organization
Partner-violence-working-group
Department-of-rehabilitation
Rutgers-school
Health-professions
Intimate-partner-violence-working-group
Enhancing-neuroimaging-genetics
Brain-imaging
Medicine-health

Study finds NRA stakeholders conflicted in wake of shootings

 E-Mail A recent study finds that, in the wake of a mass shooting, National Rifle Association (NRA) employees, donors and volunteers had extremely mixed emotions about the organization - reporting higher levels of both positive and negative feelings about the NRA, as compared to people with no NRA affiliation. We wanted to see what effect in-group affiliation and political identity had on how people responded to the NRA s actions after a mass shooting, says Yang Cheng, co-author of the study and an assistant professor of communication at North Carolina State University. The political findings were predictable - Republicans thought more favorably of the NRA than Democrats did. But the in-group affiliation was a lot more complex than we anticipated.

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United-states
Hongmei-shen
Yang-cheng
International-journal-of-business-communication
Marjory-stoneman-douglas-high-school-in-parkland
San-diego-state-university
Carolina-state-university
National-rifle-association
North-carolina-state
Marjory-stoneman-douglas-high-school
Social-identities

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