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      Conceptualising brainwashing: corporate communication in a concussion crisis

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          Image repair discourse and crisis communication

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            Concepts and forms of greenwashing: a systematic review

            Background The aggravation of environmental problems has led companies to seek the development and commercialization of green products. Some companies mislead their stakeholders through a phenomenon called greenwashing. Results This paper aims to explore the phenomenon of greenwashing through a systematic literature review in search of its main concepts and typologies in the past 10 years. This research has followed the proceedings of a systematic review of the literature, based on the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA). We identified a major classification of greenwashing: firm-level executional, firm-level claim, product-level executional, and product-level claim. Conclusion It was possible to highlight and catalog the types of the phenomenon. A structure based on such type has been observed in the literature.
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              Age of First Exposure to Tackle Football and Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy

              Objective: To examine the effect of age of first exposure to tackle football on CTE pathological severity and age of neurobehavioral symptom onset in tackle football players with neuropathologically-confirmed CTE. Methods: The sample included 246 tackle football players who donated their brains for neuropathological examination. 211 were diagnosed with CTE (126/211 were without comorbid neurodegenerative diseases) and 35 were without CTE. Informant interviews ascertained age of first exposure and age of cognitive and behavioral/mood symptom onset. Results: Analyses accounted for decade and duration of play. Age of exposure was not associated with CTE pathological severity, or Alzheimer’s disease or Lewy body pathology. In the 211 participants with CTE, every one year younger participants began to play tackle football predicted earlier reported cognitive symptom onset by 2.44 years ( p <0.0001) and behavioral/mood symptoms by 2.50 years ( p <0.0001). Age of exposure before 12 predicted earlier cognitive ( p <0.0001) and behavioral/mood ( p <0.0001) symptom onset by 13.39 and 13.28 years, respectively. In participants with dementia, younger age of exposure corresponded to earlier functional impairment onset. Similar effects were observed in the 126 CTE only participants. Effect sizes were comparable in participants without CTE. Interpretation: In this sample of deceased tackle football players, younger age of exposure to tackle football was not associated with CTE pathological severity, but predicted earlier neurobehavioral symptom onset. Youth exposure to tackle football may reduce resiliency to late life neuropathology. These findings may not generalize to the broader tackle football population and informant-report may have affected the accuracy of the estimated effects.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics
                International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics
                Informa UK Limited
                1940-6940
                1940-6959
                February 08 2024
                : 1-15
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, London, UK
                [2 ]Department in Sport and Event Management, Bournemouth University Centre for Event and Sport Research, Poole, UK
                [3 ]Head of Brain Health, Professional Footballers Association, England, UK
                Article
                10.1080/19406940.2024.2312813
                e0760595-d41d-495e-9fc8-f247b3af8ac1
                © 2024
                History

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