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Six Items on Trauma and Violence posted since June 2015
One problem with trauma and violence is that they are not always regarded as suitable subjects for epidemiological investigation. The work of Susan Baker and colleagues at Johns Hopkins has made the costs and prevention of accidents a more accepted subject of epidemiological research. The time has come, as Gary Slutkin puts it, to “treat violence like a contagious disease.”
Good reading.
Article Title |
No of Hits |
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Exposure to violence predicts poor educational outcomes in young children in South Africa and Malawi http://www.childsurvival.net/?content=com_articles&artid=5439 |
139 |
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How Childhood Trauma Affects Health across a Lifetime http://www.childsurvival.net/?content=com_articles&artid=5346 |
135 |
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An epidemiological study of the burden of trauma in Makurdi, Nigeria http://www.childsurvival.net/?content=com_articles&artid=4490 |
121 |
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Let us treat Violence like a contagious disease http://www.childsurvival.net/?content=com_articles&artid=5345 |
125 |
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Epidemiologic approaches to injury and violence http://www.childsurvival.net/?content=com_articles&artid=4512 |
113 |
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Does childhood trauma influence offspring´s birth characteristics? http://www.childsurvival.net/?content=com_articles&artid=5994 |
22 |
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