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There is limited knowledge on the possible pathways of victimization among rural dwellers during adolescence in developing contexts, such as rural China, where victimization may compound developmental disadvantages of rural adolescents. Guided by the lifestyle/routine activity theory, the goal of this study thus was to examine how far delinquent lifestyles (delinquent involvement and delinquent peer association); nondeviant routine activities (unstructured socializing with peers, structured activities, and solitary activities); and social guardianship within family, school, and neighborhood contribute to juvenile victimization in a rural setting. The outcomes of interest covered direct victimization (violent, property, and sexual) and indirect victimization (witnessing community violence). The study included 2,839 adolescents (51.2% male; mean age = 13.88 ± 0.90 years) from 30 middle schools in rural China. The delinquent peer influence as a risk factor of direct and indirect victimization appeared to be more profound than delinquent involvement. Solitary activities consistently put rural adolescents at greater risk of direct and indirect victimization, and their role was stronger than that of rural adolescents' delinquent involvement. No victimization outcomes were predicted by unstructured socializing with peers and structured activities. Attachment to family caregivers and neighborhood cohesion were the strongest social guardianship predictors across all forms of victimization. These results suggest that alongside social guardianship and delinquent lifestyles, rural isolation should be addressed in managing juvenile victimization. The insignificant role of unstructured socializing with peers may raise the need to clarify its conceptual relevance to rural settings. The implications for improving the underdeveloped preventive measures against victimization of rural adolescent populations in developing societies are described.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886260520958637 | DOI Listing |
Dementia (London)
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School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol, UK.
The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) has implications for the use of law with people living with dementia. This systematic review identifies how decisions to deprive people living with dementia of their liberty, using domestic mental capacity and mental health laws, are understood and made by professionals, and are experienced by people living with dementia and their carers. Database searches of Scopus, IBSS, CINAHL, PubMed, HMIC, and Social Policy and Practice were conducted to identify relevant academic and grey literature, with final searches in July 2024.
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School of Criminology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
Unintentional water-related deaths are an ongoing global problem, despite being named by the United Nations as one of the leading preventable causes of death. To address the need for enhanced analysis of drowning risk factors, including demographic and situational conditions that may influence death outcomes, this research involved a three-phase multimodal risk assessment by utilizing unintentional water-related death records (n = 5105) from all Canadian provinces and territories from Jan 2006 to Dec 2016, census boundaries, hydrological shape files, and spectrum management data on all cellular towers. These were all accidental fatalities, where decedent demographics, situational case factors, and environmental conditions are known, including whether a rescue attempt occurred.
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August 2025
Loyola Behavioral Lab, Universidad Loyola Andalucia, Cordoba, Andalucía, Spain.
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The Federal State Budget Educational Institution of Higher Education "The Irkutsk State Medical University" of Minzdrav of Russia, 664003, Irkutsk, Russia.
The article presents results of studying archival sources and periodicals that reveal history of development of medical social care to the blind in the Irkutsk Governorate-General. The blindness was especially common among residents of the northern districts of Eastern Siberia. The glaucoma, traumatic and inflammatory affections of the cornea were the causes of development of blindness in conditions of absence of specialized medical care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommunity Ment Health J
July 2025
Community Psychiatry Service, Department of Psychiatry, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Community treatment orders (CTOs) are legal procedures that authorise compulsory community mental health care for people with severe mental disorders. Since their introduction in Switzerland in 2013, the Swiss Canton of Vaud (846'300 inhabitants) has been engaged in the monitoring of CTOs. This study describes the use of this measure in the Canton of Vaud over the 10 years since its introduction and examines the profile of people undergoing CTOs during this period, the form that these measures took and the factors associated with their duration and outcome.
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