Kate Nanson

ORCID: 0000-0002-1739-9121
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research
  • COVID-19 and Mental Health
  • Vaccine Coverage and Hesitancy
  • HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
  • Long-Term Effects of COVID-19
  • Mental Health via Writing
  • Aging and Gerontology Research
  • COVID-19 and healthcare impacts
  • Digital Mental Health Interventions
  • Mental Health Treatment and Access
  • Psychedelics and Drug Studies
  • Healthcare Systems and Public Health
  • Optimism, Hope, and Well-being
  • Migration, Health and Trauma
  • Health Literacy and Information Accessibility
  • Health and Well-being Studies
  • Forensic Toxicology and Drug Analysis
  • Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes

Thompson Rivers University
2023-2024

<sec> <title>BACKGROUND</title> Dementia is a significant global health concern. However, public awareness and education about dementia-related stigma remain limited, especially on social media. Examining media critical because it impacts how the perceives people living with dementia. By understanding media, we can develop educational strategies to target false stereotypes, beliefs, misinformation improve quality of life </sec> <title>OBJECTIVE</title> This study examines X platform...

10.2196/preprints.72775 preprint EN cc-by 2025-02-17

Abstract Emerging evidence on substituting cannabis for more harmful drugs has led to becoming a novel harm‐reduction strategy combating the current drug poisoning crisis. However, authorization of medical as part approach and recovery significant implementation barriers rooted in longstanding stigma towards cannabis. Through multi‐discipline collaboration Canadian clinicians academic researchers, we highlighted opportunities address these elicit improved delivery therapy within existing...

10.1111/inm.13231 article EN cc-by International Journal of Mental Health Nursing 2023-09-28

Abstract Background and Objectives During the rollout of coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines, older adults in high-income countries were often prioritized for inoculation efforts to reduce COVID-19-related mortality. However, this prioritization may have contributed intergenerational tensions ageism, particularly with limited supply COVID-19 vaccines. This study examines Twitter discourse understand vaccine-related ageism during pandemic inform future vaccination policies practices ageism....

10.1093/geront/gnad061 article EN cc-by The Gerontologist 2023-06-02

Understanding advocacy strategies is essential to improving dementia awareness, reducing stigma, supporting cognitive health promotion, and influencing policy support people living with dementia. However, there a dearth of evidence-based research on used awareness.

10.2196/63464 article EN cc-by JMIR Infodemiology 2024-06-21
Coming Soon ...