Teenage X

Teenage X




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Teenage X
Objective Analysis. Effective Solutions.
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All Authors Acosta, Joie D. Akers, Aletha Y. Bangen, Katherine J. Banspach, Stephen W. Baruch, Ben Beckett, Megan K. Bell, Robert M. Benitez, Andreana Bergman, Peter Berry, Sandra H. Bogart, Laura M. Bowman, Richard Bozick, Robert Brener, Nancy Breslow, Lester Brooks, Bridget N. Brown, Arleen F. Brown, Jane D. Brown, Ryan Andrew Buddin, Richard Burstein, Gale R. Cabral, Patricia Chandra, Anita Chinman, Matthew Chung, Paul J. Cohen, Deborah A. Coller, Karen M. Collins, Rebecca L. Cordasco, Kristina M. Corona, Rosalie Cuccaro, Paula D'Amico, Elizabeth J. Dancel, Theresa M. Darling, Jill Davies, Susan L. Dittus, Patricia Donnerstein, Edward Downs, Julie S. Dudovitz, Rebecca N. Eastman, Karen L. Ebener, Patricia A. Edelen, Maria Orlando Eisen, Marvin Elie, Migel Ellickson, Phyllis L. Elliott, Marc N. Ewing, Brett Farris, Coreen Fielding, Jonathan E. Fischhoff, Baruch Forbes, Erika E. Franzoi, Lynn L. Glick, Peter Glymour, M. Maria Golinelli, Daniela Goutam, Prodyumna Green, Harold D. Gross, Alden L. Haas, Ann C. Haggstrom, Gus Herbeck, Diane M. Herman, Patricia M. Hiatt, Liisa Hoeppner, Marie B. Holliday, Stephanie Brooks Holloway, Ian Howard, Stefanie Hunter, Sarah B. Imamura, Mari Jaycox, Lisa H. Kammash, Umaiyeh Kanouse, David E. Karam, Rita T. Kase, Courtney Ann Kataoka, Sheryl H. Keith, Jamie Kennedy, David P. Khandwala, Shefali B. Kilburn, M. Rebecca Kilpatrick, Shelly Dean Klein, David J. Malone, Patrick S. Martino, Steven C. McCaffrey, Daniel F. Miles, Jeremy N. V. Miu, Angela Ober, Allison J. Petersen, Laura Rana, Yashodhara Ratner, Jessica A Ryan, Gery W. Schuster, Mark A. Shaw, Rebecca Slaughter, Mary Ellen Tortolero, Susan R. Tucker, Joan S. Vestal, Katherine D. Wallander, Jan Warsofsky, Avra L. Wenzel, Suzanne L. Show All

Research conducted by

RAND Health Care



David P. Kennedy
Senior Behavioral / Social Scientist




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Drawing upon decades of experience, RAND provides research services, systematic analysis, and innovative thinking to a global clientele that includes government agencies, foundations, and private-sector firms.
The Pardee RAND Graduate School ( PardeeRAND.edu ) is home to the only Ph.D. and M.Phil. programs offered at an independent public policy research organization—the RAND Corporation.
Ph.D. Student, Pardee RAND Graduate School, and Assistant Policy Researcher, RAND
Assistant Policy Researcher, RAND; Ph.D. Student, Pardee RAND Graduate School
Children and teens who engage in sexual behavior are at greater risk for emotional problems, pregnancy, dating violence, and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). RAND studies have examined such topics as prevention and intervention strategies, virginity pledges, the influence of the media on adolescent sexual behavior, and the link between romantic teen relationships and later adult marriages.
This study estimated the cost of adding Getting To Outcomes implementation support to a teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted infection prevention evidence-based program called Making Proud Choices in 32 Boys and Girls Clubs in Alabama and Georgia.
This weekly recap focuses on what can be done about ISIS detainees, a program that helps reduce homelessness, Modi's reelection in India, and more.
Teenagers who don't get enough sleep may be at an increased risk of engaging in unsafe sexual behaviors, such as not using condoms or having sex under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
Dance4Life, an international NGO working with young people on health and promotion of safe sexual choices, asked RAND Europe to conduct a process evaluation of the NGO's new implementation and social franchising pilots.
Homeless young adults were less likely to complete an alcohol and other drug and risky sex prevention program if they had slept outside or received the program in an urban setting.
Incomplete brain development pushes adolescents to engage in risky behaviors and may affect the extent to which sexual media content is sought and acted on.
Conduct disorder is associated with risky sexual behavior among youth, but the specific behavior most strongly associated with conduct disorder is different for female and males.
Social factors such as generational status, parental monitoring, and peer norms affected the timing of initial sexual activity differently in Latinas and Latinos in the Healthy Passages study.
This report analyzes the costs to implement the Children's Aid Society's Carrera Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Program in-school model for one year for 880 students at one school district in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Many organizations do not use programs backed by research or do not implement them well even when they do. A new web-based tool can help community leaders better plan and run their pregnancy prevention programs and achieve more positive outcomes.
This guide is designed to help organizations assess the need for and select a teen pregnancy prevention program, identify specific goals and outcomes, create a detailed plan, identify and use evaluation measures, and apply data for program improvement.
In typical community-based settings, manuals and training common to structured evidence-based practices may be sufficient to yield low levels of performance and moderate levels of fidelity, but systematic implementation support is needed to achieve high levels of performance and fidelity.
Boys & Girls Club sites that used the Getting to Outcomes implementation support tool had greater capacity to run the Making Proud Choices program, but youth sexual health outcomes were no better at sites that used the tool versus those that did not.
Explores the role of social relationships in the transmission and prevention of HIV among marginalized populations.
Interventions targeting homeless youth should reflect multiple levels of risk behavior and evaluation in order to address the diversity of risk profiles.
Transformation of primary care to new patient-centered models requires major changes in healthcare organizations, including interprofessional expectations and organizational policies.
This is one of the first qualitative event-based studies to understand the various mechanisms through which multiple factors influence condom use decision making among homeless youth.
Most successful schools demonstrate better retention and academic achievement. As a result, being admitted to or attending a successful school can reduce very risky health behaviors among low-income adolescents.
In this paper, the authors examine module theme in relationship to depressive symptoms reported during and post-treatment among clients receiving concurrent substance abuse treatment in either a residential or outpatient setting.
In a diverse group of early adolescents, this study explores the co-occurrence of a broad range of health risk behaviors: alcohol, cigarette, and marijuana use; physical inactivity; sedentary computing/gaming; and the consumption of low-nutrient energy-dense food.
David Kennedy is a senior social and behavioral scientist at the RAND Corporation. He was trained as a medical anthropologist and has conducted research on the intersection of culture, social networks, and health.
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From the New Mutants and Generation X to the New X-Men and Generation Hope, join CBR as we rank the strongest mutants from the junior X-Men teams!
At the end of the day, the X-Men are teachers. Since they spend most of their time fighting supervillains and taking trips to the other side of the universe, it's easy to forget that most of the X-Men are faculty members at Xavier's Institute for Higher Learning, which is currently known as the Xavier Institute for Mutant Education and Outreach. Regardless of its name, the Xavier's school has taught several generations of mutants how to survive in a world that hates and fears them. Even though the school has somewhat dubious educational credentials and has shut down more than once, its doors never stay closed for too long. While Charles Xavier hasn't played an active role in running the school for a few years, the X-Men have kept their alma mater operating as the bright beacon for Xavier's dream of peace between mutants and humans. Of course, most of Xavier's students have had to face off against the countless dangers of the Marvel Universe alongside some of their classmates in teams of "junior" X-Men.
Now, CBR is counting down the X-Men's most powerful young members, whether they grew into full-fledged X-Men or didn't make it to graduation. While most of the X-Men were technically Xavier's students at some point, we'll be sticking to teenage characters who were primarily served on X-Men training squad like the New Mutants, Generation X, New X-Men, and we won't be including younger versions of older characters. To figure out which of these young mutants are the strongest, we'll be considering their overall power and their most noteworthy accomplishments.
While Megan Gwynn's most obvious mutant power might just be a pair of wings, Pixie has some magical abilities that give her unlimited potential. Since she was created by Nunzio DeFilippis, Christina Weir and Michael Ryan in 2004's New X-Men #5, Pixie has gone from being a background character to a full member of the X-Men.
In addition to serving as one of X-Men's chief teleporters, Pixie has a Souldagger than can injure all kinds of mystical foes. This mutant-fairy hybrid has even been mentioned as someone who could theoretically replace Doctor Strange as Marvel's Sorcerer Supreme in the future.
After debuting as a homeless mutant in Nunzio DeFilippis, Christina Weir, Carlo Barberi and Khary Randolph's New X-Men #8, Surge became one of the leaders of the next generation of X-Men. Although she has electrical mutant powers that also gave her limited super-speed, Noriko Ashida needs gauntlets to help her control her electric abilities.
In her most impressive moment, Surge single-handedly took down Nimrod, an ultra-powerful mutant-hunting Sentinel from the future. While it took a full zap of her powers to do that, Surge still accomplished something on her own that entire teams of X-Men haven't been able to do.
From Kitty Pryde to Jubilee, the X-Men have occasionally run around with someone who could be the team's collective kid sister. Starting in Joss Whedon and John Cassaday's Astonishing X-Men run, Armor filled that role in 2004. By drawing on the power of her ancestors, Hisako Ichiki has the mutant ability to form an impenetrable psionic exoskeleton around her body.
While most of her appearances have been alongside the main X-Men team, Armor also served as a member of the New X-Men, one of the X-Men's training squads, for a short time and remains a student at the Xavier Institute.
Whether she's called Boom-Boom, Time-Bomb, Meltdown, Boomer or just Tabby, Tabitha Smith livens up any group that she's a part of. Since she exploded on the scene in 1985's Secret Wars II #5, by Jim Shooter and Al Milgrom, this mostly reformed thief helped found X-Force and the absurdist super-team Nextwave. She's also been a member of the New Mutants, X-Factor and the X-Men.
While she might not always seem serious, Boom-Boom packs some serious firepower. Her plasma "time bombs" explode with enough devastating concussive force to blow up mutant hunters like Nimrod and Predator X.
Given their similar personalities and power sets, Jubilee and Boom-Boom look alike on paper, but they're drastically different characters. Since Jubilation Lee debuted in Chris Claremont and Marc Silvestri's Uncanny X-Men #244, she's grown from a chili-fry-loving mallrat into a responsible, seasoned leader through her tenures with the X-Men and Generation X.
When she's not a vampire, Jubilee has the power to create small bursts of energy that she calls "fireworks." Jubilee has the potential power to detonate matter on a sub-atomic level, and she's already defeated legitimately tough X-villains like Sauron, Donald Piece and Emplate without much help.
With a body made out of granite, Rockslide might be the X-Men's most durable member. Although he was initially something of a bully, Santo Vaccarro has grown up a little since he debuted in Nunzio DeFilippis, Christina Weir and Carlo Barberi's New Mutants #8. Thanks to his distinctive appearance, Rockslide was one of the most recognizable members of the New X-Men and Young X-Men.
With the ability to lift about 75 tons, Rockslide was able to knock the Hulk off his feet. With some help, he can also reconstitute his body from rock whenever it's destroyed or otherwise split apart.
Life in the X-Men is usually pretty tough for telepathic mutants, and Hellion is no exception to that rule. Since he was created by Nunzio DeFilippis, Christina Weir and Keron Grant in 2003's New Mutants #2, the feisty Julian Keller lost his forearms to Nimrod, turned into a living bomb and even contracted the M-Pox virus.
With telekinetic mutant powers that let him move matter on a molecular level, Hellion has a pair of metal hands as telekinetic prosthetics. While Nimrod got the best of him, Hellion was still strong enough to permanently deactivate the Omega Sentinel with his powers.
The worlds of the X-Men and Asgard don’t overlap much, but Danielle M
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