Guest guest Posted April 28, 2004 Report Share Posted April 28, 2004 Ebanks, M.E., Fisher, W.W., (2003). Altering the timing of academic prompts to treat destructive behavior maintained by escape. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 36(3), 355-359. Following a functional analysis showing that destructive behavior was reinforced by escape, we altered the aversiveness of task demands by interspersing easy and difficult tasks and by presenting a corrective prompt as an antecedent event the next time a previously failed item was presented: this procedure was compared with one in which the corrective prompt was provided as an immediate consequence. Results of a reversal design showed that the antecedent prompt acted as an establishing operation and reduced destructive behavior to zero. <http://www.autismbehaviorconsult.com/> Everyone Can <http://www.autismbehaviorconsut.com/> Learn e Quinby Behavior Consultant 6165 Mountain Laurel Court <http://maps./py/maps.py?Pyt=Tmap & addr=6165+Mountain+Laurel+Cou rt & csz=Pipersville%2C+PA+18947 & country=us> Pipersville, PA 18947 e@... www.autismbehaviorconsult.com <http://www.autismbehaviorconsult.com/> tel: fax: 215-766-3832 215-766-3832 <http://www.plaxo.com/signature> Signature powered by Plaxo <http://www.plaxo.com/signature> Want a signature like this? <https://www.plaxo.com/add_me?u=8589960430 & v0=50595 & k0=1679972177> Add me to your address book... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 1, 2005 Report Share Posted May 1, 2005 DAta is quoted from a study-not a trial but an observational study. Not even from anyone in Milwaukee. One needs to remember the Salt Institute which is devoted to selling salt-not to saving lives is a freq funder of these sorts of analyses. So see who funded the study. CE Grim, MD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 1, 2005 Report Share Posted May 1, 2005 In a message dated 5/1/05 10:55:21 PM, dave@... writes: But as a longtime writer and editor, I am embarrassed and mortified by recent trends toward "dumbing down," for just these reasons. Dave All one has to do is to watch the local "health news" TV segment each evening. The crap they talk about is unbelieveable. No wonder the public is so health knowledge deficient. CE Grim, MD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 1, 2005 Report Share Posted May 1, 2005 , I think you were struck true. I too, am similarly stricken because I write stuff like this for a living. This is good journalism because it at least presents one critical argument that sicker people use reduced salt diets, and would naturally have higher mortality rates. It is not good scientific jourmalism in that it does not present other critical thought about the study. What variables were correlated with mortality? Just low salt diets? How low? How were the participants screened and defined prior to starting? What were these parameters? This goes to reliability and validity; and if you have to go read the original study to find out, the article is too condensed, or " dumbed down " because of these omissions. Many people have neither the time or ability to evaluate professional academic research. It is also not good general journalism--whatever reason this writer/editor used to justify this omission--because with so little information about research method, the " other side of the argument " should have been presented high up, in at least the so-called " nut graph, " or summary of what is to follow. It is not, which is thought in journalism to likely give speedy readers the impression that this finding does change the entire medical attitude toward dietary sodium, because critical thought does not occur until later. The posited " speedy reader " might well only read the first few paragraphs, or if she/he got to them at all, think them unimportant. So, if they use this most common journalistic reason for leaving out important facts, they are defeating their own ethical code by putting criticism at the bottom. Finally, the article is by a writer from " Heath Day Reporter, " a publication about which readers know nothing, nor if the article is published in full. So, yes, I'd agree it is not a responsible hospital publishing move. Diet is too important a subject to be tossed off like a tabloid. I was just invited to apply for a job of communications director for our local hospital, and this would be one of the things I could not countenance--incomplete medical reporting--much less be well enough to take the job if offered. As a PA patient, I am still struggling to undo years of incorrect diagnosis and treatment of my hypertension. But as a longtime writer and editor, I am embarrassed and mortified by recent trends toward " dumbing down, " for just these reasons. Dave On May 1, 2005, at 3:01 PM, Malotky wrote: > An article on the homepage of my local hospital (Dr. Grim's > neighboring community) claims low salt diets are dangerous... > http://www.waukeshamemorial.org/cgi-bin/healthDay.pl? > article & articleID=525391 Not conclusive, of course... strikes me as a > little irresponsible for a hospital to publish such statements on > their web site. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 2, 2005 Report Share Posted May 2, 2005 Yes, my main concern was also with the speedy readers, of which I am one... the only reason I read the whole article was because I couldn't believe what I was reading at the beginning. But, had I not been so personally connected to the subject, I probably would've just skimmed a few paragraphs and moved on. M. Re: research article , I think you were struck true. I too, am similarly stricken because I write stuff like this for a living.This is good journalism because it at least presents one critical argument that sicker people use reduced salt diets, and would naturally have higher mortality rates. It is not good scientific jourmalism in that it does not present other critical thought about the study. What variables were correlated with mortality? Just low salt diets? How low? How were the participants screened and defined prior to starting? What were these parameters? This goes to reliability and validity; and if you have to go read the original study to find out, the article is too condensed, or "dumbed down" because of these omissions. Many people have neither the time or ability to evaluate professional academic research.It is also not good general journalism--whatever reason this writer/editor used to justify this omission--because with so little information about research method, the "other side of the argument" should have been presented high up, in at least the so-called "nut graph," or summary of what is to follow. It is not, which is thought in journalism to likely give speedy readers the impression that this finding does change the entire medical attitude toward dietary sodium, because critical thought does not occur until later. The posited "speedy reader" might well only read the first few paragraphs, or if she/he got to them at all, think them unimportant. So, if they use this most common journalistic reason for leaving out important facts, they are defeating their own ethical code by putting criticism at the bottom.Finally, the article is by a writer from "Heath Day Reporter," a publication about which readers know nothing, nor if the article is published in full.So, yes, I'd agree it is not a responsible hospital publishing move. Diet is too important a subject to be tossed off like a tabloid. I was just invited to apply for a job of communications director for our local hospital, and this would be one of the things I could not countenance--incomplete medical reporting--much less be well enough to take the job if offered. As a PA patient, I am still struggling to undo years of incorrect diagnosis and treatment of my hypertension.But as a longtime writer and editor, I am embarrassed and mortified by recent trends toward "dumbing down," for just these reasons.DaveOn May 1, 2005, at 3:01 PM, Malotky wrote: An article on the homepage of my local hospital (Dr. Grim's neighboring community) claims low salt diets are dangerous... http://www.waukeshamemorial.org/cgi-bin/healthDay.pl?article & articleID=525391 Not conclusive, of course... strikes me as a little irresponsible for a hospital to publish such statements on their web site. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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