Disability, Ethics, and Health Care in the COVID-19 Pandemic September 1, 2020 Maya Sabatello, Teresa Blankmeyer Burke, Katherine E. McDonald, and Paul S. Appelbaum This article considers key ethical, legal, and medical dilemmas arising for people with disabilities in the COVID-19 pandemic.
Inside the Adverse Childhood Experience Score: Strengths, Limitations, and Misapplications April 24, 2020 Robert Anda, Laura Porter, and David Brown The authors, including the co-author of the original Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study, emphasize that the ACE questionnaire was designed to research—not screen—the relationship between childhood adversities and health and social outcomes.
The Effect of Minority Status and Social Context on the Development of Depression and Anxiety September 30, 2019 Margarita Alegria, Patrick Shrout, et al Puerto Rican teens growing up as minorities in the South Bronx are more likely to experience anxiety and depression than their peers growing up as a majority in Puerto Rico, even under similar conditions of poverty.