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Anne Marie Iaccopucci; Marcel Horowitz; Dorina Espinoza; Roshan Nayak – Journal of Extension, 2024
4-H academics responded to the COVID pandemic by rapidly adapting CDC and other resources for virtual delivery. A statewide epidemiology project was taught to 48 youth with the goal of minimizing fears and confusion, increasing prevention measures, leveraging current topics for education, and bolstering the social-emotional health of youth…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Health Needs, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Julia G. Halilova; Samuel Fynes-Clinton; Donna Rose Addis; R. Shayna Rosenbaum – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
Research suggests that discounting of delayed rewards (i.e., tendency to choose smaller immediate rewards over large later rewards) is a promising target of intervention to encourage compliance with public health measures (PHM), such as vaccination compliance. The effects of delay discounting, however, may differ across the types of PHMs, given…
Descriptors: Participation, COVID-19, Pandemics, Health Behavior
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Aleksandra Karosas; Lichuan Ye – Journal of American College Health, 2024
Contact tracing is essential to help monitor and control the spread of the highly contagious COVID-19 virus. Many universities across the United States have developed and implemented contact tracing programs during the COVID-19 pandemic. In this viewpoint article, we characterized and reflected on the unique challenges of contact tracing in…
Descriptors: Barriers, Disease Control, Public Health, COVID-19
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Moola, Fiona; Buliung, Ronald; Vance, Colm; Consunji-Araneta, Raquel; Naganathan, Methuna – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2022
Background: Due to the risk of cross-contamination and the enforcement of strict infection control guidelines, patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) and their families have engaged in social and physical distancing for the past decade and a half. Family members, such as parents, are considered to be a critical component of patients' lives. Objective:…
Descriptors: Diseases, Disease Control, Genetic Disorders, Risk
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Carragher, Daniel J.; Towler, Alice; Mileva, Viktoria R.; White, David; Hancock, Peter J. B. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
To slow the spread of COVID-19, many people now wear face masks in public. Face masks impair our ability to identify faces, which can cause problems for professional staff who identify offenders or members of the public. Here, we investigate whether performance on a masked face matching task can be improved by training participants to compare…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Disease Control, Hygiene
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Grenville, Emily; Dwyer, Dominic M. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
The coronavirus pandemic has resulted in increased use of face masks worldwide. Here, we examined the effect of wearing a face mask on the ability to recognise facial expressions of emotion. In a within-subjects design, 100 UK-based undergraduate students were shown facial expressions of anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, and neutral…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Disease Control, Undergraduate Students, Psychological Patterns
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Stajduhar, Andreja; Ganel, Tzvi; Avidan, Galia; Rosenbaum, R. Shayna; Freud, Erez – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
Face perception is considered a remarkable visual ability in humans that is subject to a prolonged developmental trajectory. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, mask-wearing has become mandatory for adults and children alike. Recent research shows that mask-wearing hinders face recognition abilities in adults, but it is unknown if the same holds…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Human Body, Recognition (Psychology), COVID-19
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White, Allie; Maloney, Erin; Boehm, Michele; Bleakley, Amy; Langbaum, Jessica – Health Education Research, 2022
Wearing a face mask is effective in minimizing the spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) among unvaccinated individuals and preventing severe illness among the vaccinated. Country, state and local guidelines promote, and at times mandate, mask-wearing despite it being publicly perceived as an individual's choice. Guided by the Health…
Descriptors: Adults, Hygiene, Disease Control, Health Behavior
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Moreno Martínez, Pedro Luis – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2022
The growing multidisciplinary historiographic interest in the study of the misnamed "Spanish flu", which caused 50 to 100 million deaths in the world and between 260,000 and 270,000 in Spain, has not spread to the History of Education. The main objective of this article is to provide an initial approach to the analysis of certain aspects…
Descriptors: Pandemics, Communicable Diseases, Information Dissemination, Foreign Countries
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Mullen, Carol A. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2022
This essay reflects the spirit of our times, at least in North America. Reentering a generative world in lockdown is juxtaposed with the gains and losses in our communities. "For All Eternity," my poem, is about the generative cycle of rebirth and death and the forces that move us from decay to regeneration. As the coronavirus pandemic…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Disease Control, Poetry
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Cocke, Teri E.; Geest, Emily A.; Shufran, Andrine A. – Science Activities: Projects and Curriculum Ideas in STEM Classrooms, 2022
Mosquitoes (Culicidae) are disease vectors, which are responsible for an estimated one million deaths per year. Female mosquitoes, which need blood for survival and reproduction, collect blood with a disease present from a host, and will transmit that disease from one host to another as it feeds on additional food sources. This continuous feeding…
Descriptors: Entomology, Diseases, Disease Control, Class Activities
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Carlaw, Brooke N.; Huebert, Andrew M.; McNeely-White, Katherine L.; Rhodes, Matthew G.; Cleary, Anne M. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
Previous research has shown that even when famous people's identities cannot be discerned from faces that have been filtered with monochromatic noise, these unidentifiable famous faces still tend to receive higher familiarity ratings than similarly filtered non-famous faces. Experiment 1 investigated whether a similar face recognition without…
Descriptors: Hygiene, Disease Control, Health Behavior, Occupational Safety and Health
David Paul Hodge – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Since the COVID-19 pandemic began in the United States in early 2020, individuals have been motivated to protect themselves against the risk of the virus by the wearing of masks, social-distancing, and receiving vaccinations. This study utilizes Rogers' (1975) Protection Motivation Theory (PMT) to test motivations of collegiate student-athletes to…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Athletes, Motivation, COVID-19
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Nelson, M. I. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2023
In the past, my mathematics students have frequently complained at any suggestion that they should communicate ideas through the medium of a written report. This article discusses student responses when they were asked to write a short report for the mayor of a (hypothetical) small town in response to the mayor's plan to eliminate a contagious…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, COVID-19, Pandemics, Disease Control
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Munoz-Rubke, Felipe; Almuna, Felipe; Duemler, Jaclyn; Velásquez, Eloísa – International Journal of Science Education, Part B: Communication and Public Engagement, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic revealed that many countries have failed to provide the general population with the cognitive tools to thoroughly understand and cope with a global health crisis. While scientists and leaders worldwide have struggled to discover ways to contain the spread of the virus, this difficult task has become overwhelming due to the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Mathematics Instruction, Statistics Education
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