8 results on '"Rachel Schumann"'
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2. Unbreaking Bail?: Post-Antic Trends in Bail Outcomes
- Author
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Rachel Schumann and Carolyn Yule
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Law - Abstract
Addressing criticism that bail blurs the line between prevention and punishment, the Supreme Court of Canada unanimously agreed “it is time to ensure that bail provisions are applied consistently and fairly” (R v Antic 2017 SCC 27, [2017] 1 SCR 509). Rather than reform bail, this decision simply reaffirmed the existing legal mandate: using the ladder principle, accused must be released with the fewest conditions necessary to prevent them from absconding, reoffending/interfering with the administration of justice, and/or bringing the criminal justice system into disrepute. We analyze 480 bail hearings in Ontario, Canada, that occurred pre- and post- the R v Antic decision. Our results reveal that justices are more attentive to the ladder principle post-Antic, such that more accused are released on their own recognizance than in the past. While post-Antic trends show a reduction in the use of certain behaviour-modifying conditions, bail supervision programs are used more frequently. We discuss the implications of these findings in light of Canada’s “broken bail system.”
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A Comparative Study of Two Photoscreening Devices With Manual Vision Screening Involving Preschool Children
- Author
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John D Baker, David C. Musch, Rachel Schumann, and Chris Andrews
- Subjects
Male ,Screening test ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Gold standard (test) ,Amblyopia ,Refractive Errors ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Test (assessment) ,Ophthalmology ,Vision Screening ,McNemar's test ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Humans ,Optometry ,Medicine ,Female ,Strabismus ,business - Abstract
Purpose: To compare referral results from two photoscreening devices that are in wide use relative to a manual screening test protocol in preschool children. Methods: Children aged 3 to 5 years who attended preschools in two counties within the State of Michigan (N = 1,085) took part in the State's vision screening program, which included the Lea Symbols and Stereo Butterfly tests, during a 3-month period. All who failed this screening or were unable to be tested, and 20% of those who passed, were then invited to undergo testing with the Plusoptix Vision Screener Model S-12C (Plusoptix, Inc) and Welch Allyn SPOT Vision Screener Model VS-100 (Hill-Rom, Inc) photoscreening devices. Screening was conducted by State-trained technicians. With the State's test results considered the gold standard for screening, sensitivity and specificity of the two photo-screening devices were calculated. McNemar's test and logistic regression were used to evaluate the findings. Results: A total of 1,085 children took part in the State's screening program. Their mean ± standard deviation age was 48.8 ± 7.2 months, with a 51:49 female-to-male ratio, and a similar percentage were Black (34.1%) or White (33.3%). The sensitivity of the SPOT and Plusoptix screening was 61.0% and 65.2%, respectively. The specificity of the SPOT and Plusoptix screening was 92.9% and 82.4%, respectively. For 84 children who were unable to be tested by the State's screening, the SPOT and Plusoptix devices completed the screening on the majority (86.9% and 73.8%, respectively). Conclusions: The photoscreening devices yielded numerous false-negative results and fewer false-positive results. Their ability to screen many children who could not be screened by manual testing indicates a useful application. [ J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus . 2022;59(1):46–52.]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Negotiating Release? Analysing Decision Making in Bail Court
- Author
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Carolyn Yule and Rachel Schumann
- Subjects
Negotiation ,Political science ,Law ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Justice (ethics) ,Workgroup ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
The vast majority of accused in Canada are released on bail with conditions pending the resolution of their case. As members of the court-room workgroup, the defence, the Crown, and the Justice of the Peace (JP) are tasked with negotiating a set of release conditions in a timely fashion; yet little work has attempted to understand how exchanges between these court-room participants shape the number and type of bail conditions imposed and how closely their in-court actions align with their legally mandated roles. Data collected from court-room observations of 257 bail cases in southwestern Ontario show that the distinct occupational roles of the defence, the Crown, and JPs are blurred within bail proceedings, contributing to a culture of numerous conditions and restrictive releases.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Sureties as Civilian Jailers: Understanding the Role of the Court in the Lives of Accused Released on Surety Bail in Ontario
- Author
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Rachel Schumann
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Surety ,Remand (detention) ,Blame ,Scholarship ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Law ,050501 criminology ,Christian ministry ,Sociology ,Suspect ,0505 law ,media_common - Abstract
Changes to Ontario's bail system (2017) are intended to keep accused out of custody and in the community as they await trial. For the Ministry of the Attorney General, living in the community while on bail is a vast improvement to remand because there is minimal state involvement in the lives of accused, resulting in fewer personal and administrative disruptions. Yet, most accused in the province require a surety to be released. Justices of the peace, Crowns, and even defense counsel expect sureties to act like civilian jailers, which questions the level of state intervention at this stage in the legal process. Previous scholarship on bail attributes the overuse of surety releases to a culture of risk aversion whereby the courts offload responsibility and blame for the accused's actions onto the surety. By exploring how court officials describe and determine who an appropriate surety is and the types of powers afforded to them, this paper argues that although sureties are legally obligated to supervise the accused, the court is still heavily involved in defining what this role looks like and how it should unfold outside the courtroom. The qualitative findings provide important insight into how criminally suspect individuals are governed in the province more generally.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Testability Study of the Titmus V3 Test in Pre-school Children
- Author
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David C. Musch, Rachel Schumann, Bruce A. Furr, and Chris Andrews
- Subjects
Male ,Visual acuity ,Younger age ,genetic structures ,Visual Acuity ,Amblyopia ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Vision Screening ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Strabismus ,Testability ,business.industry ,Standard methods ,Refractive Errors ,eye diseases ,Test (assessment) ,Ophthalmology ,Child, Preschool ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optometry ,Female ,Pre school ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Binocular vision - Abstract
Significance Vision screening can identify people who have vision problems requiring a comprehensive examination. When children are screened, the most prevalent serious problem is amblyopia secondary to uncorrected ametropia. Screening also identifies strabismus, which can lead to loss of binocularity. Early diagnosis permits treatment with restoration of balanced vision and binocularity. Purpose The study evaluated the testability of the Titmus V3 Vision Screener as a method to screen vision and strabismus in pre-school children. Methods Pre-school children between 36 and 66 months of age underwent vision screening in six Michigan counties. The State of Michigan screening consists of the LEA Symbols test for visual acuity and the stereo butterfly for near-strabismus testing. The proposed Titmus V3 screening tests were the LEA Symbols slide for vision and near-strabismus test slide. Primary and secondary objectives of this study were to evaluate the percentage of pre-school children who completed the Titmus V3 screening tests for vision and near strabismus and factors associated with an inability to complete the tests, contrasting the pass/fail results between the state and Titmus V3 results. Results Two-hundred sixty-three children were tested. The percentages of children unable to score on the Titmus V3 instrument versus the state's LEA Symbols test were 16.0% and 5.3%, respectively. The percentage of children unable to score on the Titmus V3 near-strabismus test slide was 6.9 versus 3.4% on the State of Michigan stereo butterfly test. Younger age at testing was the most important factor associated with the inability to complete testing. Conclusions Because of testability limitations and higher failure rates relative to the State of Michigan testing methods, the Titmus V3 screening device is not a feasible alternative to the standard methods used by the State of Michigan for vision and near-strabismus screening among the pre-school subjects we tested.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A community-based effort to increase the rate of follow-up eye examinations of school-age children who fail vision screening: a randomized clinical trial
- Author
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Rachel Schumann, Chris Andrews, John D. Baker, and David C. Musch
- Subjects
Male ,Parents ,Indiana ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vision Disorders ,Eye care ,Odds ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Vision Screening ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Community based ,Protocol (science) ,Schools ,School age child ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ophthalmology ,Eye examination ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose To determine whether enhanced follow-up after failed vision screening, involving more communication with parents/guardians than occurs in a standard protocol, would result in a higher rate of post-screening examination by an eye care provider. Methods In a study conducted from January through December 2017, 162 children in first- and third-grade who failed a vision screening in their Wayne County, Michigan, schools were randomly assigned to receive an enhanced or the standard follow-up protocol. Results The average age of the children was 7.9 ± 1.1years; 84 (52%) were males. In the enhanced follow-up group, 52 of 80 (65%) had a documented eye examination within 16 weeks of their screening; the rate in those receiving standard follow-up was 48% (39/82). The intergroup difference in follow-up was 17.4% (95% CI, 2.4%-32.5%). The enhanced follow-up group's odds of obtaining a documented eye examination was twice that of the standard follow-up group (OR = 2.05; 95% CI, 1.09-3.85; P = 0.026). Conclusions In this study cohort, methods to enhance communication proved effective in increasing the likelihood that children who failed vision screenings would receive an examination by an eye care provider.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Sureties as Civilian Jailers: Understanding the Role of the Court in the Lives of Accused Released on Surety Bail in Ontario
- Author
-
Rachel, Schumann
- Abstract
Changes to Ontario's bail system (2017) are intended to keep accused out of custody and in the community as they await trial. For the Ministry of the Attorney General, living in the community while on bail is a vast improvement to remand because there is minimal state involvement in the lives of accused, resulting in fewer personal and administrative disruptions. Yet, most accused in the province require a surety to be released. Justices of the peace, Crowns, and even defense counsel expect sureties to act like civilian jailers, which questions the level of state intervention at this stage in the legal process. Previous scholarship on bail attributes the overuse of surety releases to a culture of risk aversion whereby the courts offload responsibility and blame for the accused's actions onto the surety. By exploring how court officials describe and determine who an appropriate surety is and the types of powers afforded to them, this paper argues that although sureties are legally obligated to supervise the accused, the court is still heavily involved in defining what this role looks like and how it should unfold outside the courtroom. The qualitative findings provide important insight into how criminally suspect individuals are governed in the province more generally.
- Published
- 2018
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