557 results
Search Results
2. (Self-) Reflection / Reflexivity in Sensitive, Qualitative Research: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Karcher, Katharina, McCuaig, Joanne, and King-Hill, Sophie
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REFLEXIVITY , *RESEARCH personnel , *QUALITATIVE research , *SCIENCE databases , *RESEARCH questions - Abstract
This scoping review offers insight into researcher well-being when working with sensitive and traumatic topics in a qualitative research context. The study identified existing empirical research concerning researcher well-being and mental health. The databases included SSCI, ASSIA < IBISS, Scopus, Social Policy and Practice, PsycInfo, Social Science Database/Social Science Premium Collection (Proquest), and Open Grey. An international search was conducted, with no time constraints on publication dates to gather as wide a selection as possible. 55 papers met the criteria. We found that the terminology used within the papers was not consistent which necessitated grouping the (self-) reflection/reflexive practices researchers used and categorizing them under the umbrella term SRR practices. The research questions were: 1. Which disciplines or fields are conducting SRR practices on sensitive topics? 2. What SRR practices do researchers employ in the context of sensitive research? 3. What were the self-reported outcomes from using SRR practices as a tool of researchers working on sensitive research? A key finding of the scoping review is that many researchers who work on sensitive topics feel unprepared and receive little or no training or support for SRR practices. This poses particular challenges for early career researchers. We also identified that qualitative researchers have developed a range of SRR practices to manage the emotional impact of their sensitive research work. Many authors of the scoped papers stress the importance of peer-support as well as formal and informal debriefing meetings. Another key SRR practice discussed by many researchers is reflexive journaling. Our scoping review suggests that if it is combined with other activities, self-reflexive journaling can be an excellent way to acknowledge and assess the emotional impact of sensitive research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Emerging ethical challenges in researching vulnerable groups during the COVID-19.
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Pelek, Deniz, Bortun, Vladimir, and Østergaard-Nielsen, Eva
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SOCIAL sciences , *MENTAL health , *AT-risk people , *CLIMATE change , *SEX distribution , *BIOETHICS , *ETHICS , *HUMAN rights , *COVID-19 pandemic , *RESEARCH ethics , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
This paper discusses the lasting impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on research ethics in social sciences by focusing on the concept of vulnerability. We unpack the current conceptualisations of vulnerability and their limitations and argue for the need to reconceptualise vulnerability as multidimensional, consisting of both universal and contextual dimensions, as well as their dynamic interplay. Multidimensional vulnerability is inspired by and relevant to social science research during the pandemic but can also be useful in other contexts such as climate change or conflict. The paper puts forwards several considerations about how this revised concept of vulnerability may be useful when evaluating ethical dimensions of social science research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Unveiling the Strong Black Woman Schema—Evolution and Impact: A Systematic Review.
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Parks, Ashley K. and Hayman, Laura L.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *HEALTH self-care , *WOMEN , *HEALTH status indicators , *SELF-efficacy , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *CINAHL database , *EMOTIONS , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDLINE , *PSYCHOLOGY of Black people , *NURSING practice , *QUALITY assurance , *ONLINE information services , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems - Abstract
The Strong Black Woman (SBW) schema is described as a statue of unrelenting strength, resilience, and self-sufficiency, serving as a shield of protection and cultural adaptation to suppress and control manifestations of racial and gender oppression. Stemming from superwoman syndrome, a conceptual model exploring the multifactorial roles women hold and their impact, the SBW extends beyond gender roles to the sociopolitical context of the Black woman's lived experience. Endorsement of the SBW posits risk for health disparities including stress, anxiety, depression, and obesity. This review was conducted to explore the SBW schema and experiences of Black women who endorse it, to delineate how Black women describe themselves in relation to the SBW persona, and to inform further inquiry, nursing practice, and clinical approaches to improving health outcomes of this population. A systematic review of qualitative studies was conducted with a literature search from CINAHL, APA PsycINFO, MEDLINE, PubMed, and SocINDEX databases yielding seven relevant papers for this analysis. Studies using the superwoman schema and the SBW schema with participants who identified as Black women were included in the review. Consistent with the SBW phenomenon, many participants described examples and consequences of being an SBW. While most women identified with SBW, not all endorsed the persona entirely, challenging its ideal and reinforcing positive self-care. Themes include (a) Strength by nature, not choice, (b) Suppressed emotion, (c) Success over everything, and (d) Prioritizing others over self. Additional emerging themes are also included. Black women increasingly recognize the negative impacts of the SBW schema, pinpointing how their internal feelings manifest in their external world. The conceptual framework itself is an anomaly, incongruently impacting both the mental and physical health of Black women, further contributing to the long-term health and sociopolitical disparities that Black women experience. Simply acknowledging and understanding these experiences by healthcare practitioners are not enough to prevent or eliminate the risks involved with the endorsement of the SBW schema but rather intentionally addressing these as a contributing social determinant of health that predisposes them to long-term chronic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Bias in assessment of co-occurring mental disorder in individuals with intellectual disabilities: Theoretical perspectives and implications for clinical practice.
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Kildahl, Arvid Nikolai, Oddli, Hanne Weie, and Helverschou, Sissel Berge
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PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Influence from bias is unavoidable in clinical decision-making, and mental health assessment seems particularly vulnerable. Individuals with intellectual disabilities have increased risk of developing co-occurring mental disorder. Due to the inherent difficulties associated with intellectual disabilities, assessment of mental health in this population often relies on a different set of strategies, and it is unclear how these may affect risk of bias. In this theoretical paper, we apply recent conceptualisations of bias in clinical decision-making to the specific challenges and strategies in mental health assessment in intellectual disabilities. We suggest that clinical decision-making in these assessments is particularly vulnerable to bias, including sources of bias present in mental health assessment in the general population, as well as potential sources of bias which may be specific to assessments in this population. It follows that to manage potential bias, triangulating information from multi-informant, multi-method, interdisciplinary assessment strategies is likely to be necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. StigmaBeat: Collaborating With Rural Young People to Co-Design Films Aimed at Reducing Mental Health Stigma.
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Hine, Rochelle, Gladstone, Brenda, Reupert, Andrea, O'Dea, Lotti, Cuff, Rose, Yates, Scott, Silvén Hagström, Anneli, McGaw, Violette, and Foster, Kim
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AUDIOVISUAL materials , *MEDICAL care research , *VIDEO production & direction , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *MENTAL health , *HUMAN services programs , *RESEARCH funding , *RURAL health , *MENTAL illness , *CHILDREN of parents with disabilities , *STRATEGIC planning , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *EXPERIENCE , *SOCIAL context , *CREATIVE ability , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *RURAL population , *MOTION pictures , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SOCIAL stigma , *PATIENT participation , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Little is known about the experience and impact of intersectional stigma experienced by rural young people (15–25 years) who have a parent with mental health challenges. The StigmaBeat project employed a co-design approach to create short films to identify and challenge mental health stigma from the perspective of young people who have experienced this phenomenon. The aim of this paper is to describe the co-design methodological approach used in StigmaBeat, as an example of a novel participatory project. We describe one way that co-design can be employed by researchers in collaboration with marginalised young people to produce films aimed at reducing mental health stigma in the community. Through describing the processes undertaken in this project, the opportunities, challenges, and tensions of combining community development methods with research methods will be explored. Co-design with young people is a dynamic and engaging method of collaborative research practice capable of harnessing lived experience expertise to intervene in social issues and redesign or redevelop health services and policies. The participatory approach involved trusting and implementing the suggestions of young people in designing and developing the films and involved creating the physical and social environment to enable this, including embedding creativity, a critical element to the project's methodological success. Intensive time and resource investment are needed to engage a population that is often marginalised in relation to stigma discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Evaluating Workforce Mental Health and Well-Being: A Review of Assessments.
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Imboden, Mary T., Wolfe, Emily, Evers, Kerry, Ferrão, Arline, Mochari-Greenberger, Heidi, Johnson, Sara, Kirsten, Wolf, and Seaverson, Erin L. D.
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MENTAL health , *LABOR supply , *EMPLOYEE well-being , *PSYCHOLOGICAL safety , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene - Abstract
The disruption, trauma, and stressors brought by COVID-19 have increased recognition and normalization of workforce mental health needs. Objective: Given the importance of mental health and well-being assessments to employers' efforts to optimize employee health and well-being, this paper reviews mental health assessments that have utility in the workplace. Data Source: A review of publicly available mental health and well-being assessments was conducted with a primary focus on burnout, general mental health and well-being, loneliness, psychological safety, resilience, and stress. Inclusion Criteria: Assessments had to be validated for adult populations; available in English as a stand-alone tool; have utility in an employer setting; and not have a primary purpose of diagnosing a mental health condition. Data Extraction: All assessments were reviewed by a minimum of two expert reviewers to document number of questions, subscales, fee structure, international use, translations available, scoring/reporting, respondent (ie, employee or organization), and the target of the assessment (ie, mental health domain and organizational or individual level assessments. Data Synthesis & Results: Sixty-six assessments across the six focus areas met inclusion criteria, enabling employers to select assessments that meet their self-identified measurement needs. Conclusion: This review provides employers with resources that can help them understand their workforce's mental health and well-being status across multiple domains, which can serve as a needs assessment, facilitate strategic planning of mental health and well-being initiatives, and optimize evaluation efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. What do young women want? Using a qualitative survey to explore the potential for feminist-informed mental health peer support.
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Moulding, Nicole, Jarldorn, Michele, and Deuter, Kate
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SOCIAL support , *STRATEGIC planning , *FOCUS groups , *FEMINISM , *MENTAL health , *PEER counseling , *VIOLENCE , *NONBINARY people , *QUALITATIVE research , *EXPERIENCE , *GENDER , *SURVEYS , *LGBTQ+ people , *RESEARCH funding , *THEMATIC analysis , *WOMEN'S health , *GENDER inequality , *GAY people , *ADULTS - Abstract
Intersecting gender and other social inequalities are pertinent to women's mental health across the life course. Gendered violence and other forms of gender inequality in particular play a key role in the higher burden of psychological distress carried by young women. However, the context of gendered violence is often minimised or overlooked entirely when young women seek help or advice around mental health concerns. This is especially the case for young women under the age of 30 years. This paper reports on a research study exploring how young women in Australia understand their mental health, and the scope for new approaches to support that better address their needs. A qualitative survey undertaken with 52 Australian young women was used to explore the nature of their mental health experiences, sought to learn about the strategies they used when experiencing poor mental health and the scope for mental health peer support as an alternative approach to intervention. Responses from a diverse group of young women demonstrated that they understood the role that gendered violence and gender inequality played in their mental health. Findings point to the risk of slippage between young women's understandings of their lived experience and those of traditional service providers, demonstrating the risks associated with minimising or ignoring of the gendered nature of young women's mental health problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The Stirling County Study: a case study of interdisciplinarity and its effects on the history of psychiatric epidemiology.
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Delille, Emmanuel
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PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *YOUNG adults , *SOCIAL skills , *MENTAL illness , *LABOR market , *GREAT Depression, 1929-1939 - Abstract
Epidemiology of mental disorders emerged in the post-1945 era at the intersections of different areas of knowledge. Given its ambitions, the Stirling County Study provides an instructive case study. It is also a good example of how the epidemiology applied methodological skills from social sciences. This paper aims, first, to reconstruct one of the first episodes in the development of psychiatric epidemiology. Its second purpose is to provide a detailed description of interdisciplinarity at work, and to examine its effects. After explaining some of the major features of the Stirling County Study, I emphasize the links between some of the first results, particularly regarding young people as a population at risk, and the job market after the Great Depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Mental Health Changes in Healthcare Workers During COVID-19 Pandemic: A Systematic Review of Longitudinal Studies.
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Umbetkulova, Saltanat, Kanderzhanova, Akbota, Foster, Faye, Stolyarova, Valentina, and Cobb-Zygadlo, Deanne
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This study provides an overview of research findings on long-term effects on healthcare workers mental health and factors associated with positive or negative changes. Medline and PubMed databases were searched for observational longitudinal studies and 18 papers were included in the review (PROSPERO: CRD42021260307). 12 articles indicated negative changes over time and six studies revealed a positive trend in a variety of mental health outcomes (anxiety, depression, insomnia, and others). Female sex, younger age, nursing occupation, frontline work, longer working hours and concerns about contracting COVID-19 were identified to be associated with negative changes. Conversely, a supportive environment, access to psychological resources, provision of sufficient personal protective equipment and availability of COVID-19 tests were linked to positive changes. Therefore, our findings can assist governmental and institutional authorities with effective interventions to improve psychological care for healthcare workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Appraising Psychological Adaptation During Covid-19 in South Africa: A Descriptive Study Illustrating the Need for Multi-Model Monitoring of Mental Health.
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Van Wijk, Charles H.
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COVID-19 pandemic , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *MENTAL health , *GENERALIZED anxiety disorder - Abstract
The devastation of the Covid-19 pandemic on society raised the question of how best to gauge society's psychological adaptation to continually evolving global disruptor events, such as Covid-19. This paper aims to illustrate the use of different approaches to monitor society's psychological response to Covid-19, in order to argue for a more comprehensive, multi-model, approach. The results from different approaches are presented in two studies employing measures of mental disorders and mental distress, respectively, using South African samples for demonstration. The first study presents findings from repeat administration of measures of common mental disorders (major depressive and generalized anxiety disorders) across three consecutive years, while the second study presents findings from mood response profiles (measured with the Brunel Mood Scale) collected across five time points during the Covid-19 pandemic. Both studies showed that the Covid-19 pandemic was temporally associated with adverse mental health outcomes across the mental health continuum, and that mental health profiles were associated with both time since onset of Covid-19 and subsequent wave occurrence. Elevated prevalence of common mental disorders, as well as fluctuating patterns of mood response profiles, are discussed against the context of Covid-19. The paper concludes that a multi-modal approach, for instance measuring specific mental disorders as well as more general mental distress, is crucial to comprehensively understand society's psychological adaptation to major disruptor events, and guide health sector responses. The paper serves as a reminder to continue to observe mental health more inclusively to appropriately respond to the psychological needs of communities. Plain Language Summary: Measuring mental health across Covid-19 waves The impact of Covid-19 on mental health raised the question of how can we best measure how society adapts, psychologically, to major events that disrupt life. This article looked at two specific ways to measure and monitor society's psychological response to Covid-19. The first study looked at the prevalence of mental disorders, and the second looked at levels of mental distress. Both studies used South African samples to demonstrate this. The first study presented data from a repeat administration of scales that identify depressive and anxiety disorders, completed across three consecutive years. The second study presented findings from mood response profiles (measured with the Brunel Mood Scale) collected across five time points during the Covid-19 pandemic. The results showed that the pandemic was associated with adverse mental health outcomes—across the mental health continuum—and that mental health profiles were associated with both time since the start of Covid-19 and fluctuated with the subsequent waves across the pandemic time-line. This article demonstrated the importance of using a multi-modal approach to fully understand society's psychological response to major life disruptions. It also acted as reminder to monitor mental health continuously to be able to respond to the psychological needs of communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Resilience After Trauma in Kosovo and Southeastern Europe: A Scoping Review.
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Kelmendi, Kaltrina and Hamby, Sherry
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PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *ONLINE information services , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *WELL-being , *SOCIAL support , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *SOCIAL change , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *HISTORICAL trauma , *MENTAL health , *VICTIM psychology , *RESEARCH funding , *LITERATURE reviews , *MEDLINE , *DIGNITY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *CULTURAL values , *POSTTRAUMATIC growth - Abstract
Most people who experience trauma want to thrive and often find paths to well-being and healthy functioning. This scoping review explores the existing evidence on adversity and resilience in southeastern European countries, focusing on Kosovo. There is a lack of research on trauma and resilience in cultures outside the US and Western Europe. The paper provides a brief cultural and historical overview of this region and the collectivist cultures found there. We draw from a range of interdisciplinary literatures to identify key strengths that have the potential to improve health outcomes for trauma victims in this region. Overall, 42 papers from PsycInfo and PubMed were identified, using keywords such as "resilience" or "health" and "Kosovo," "Balkans," and "Southeastern Europe." Findings from this scoping review show that different cultural values, norms, and societal ecologies impact resilience within these societies. Some strengths, such as social support and sense of purpose, echoed similar research in the US and Western Europe. There was also evidence that factors such as dignity, family solidarity, social activism, and nationwide meaning-making are strengths associated with resilience for these collectivist societies of southeastern Europe. We also consider the implications of the results for other post-conflict societies. Finally, findings from this review call for culturally sensitive strength-based perspectives in promoting health and well-being after the high dosages of trauma common in this region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Trauma Aware and Anti-Oppressive Arts-Health and Community Arts Practice: Guiding Principles for Facilitating Healing, Health and Wellbeing.
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Sunderland, Naomi, Stevens, Fiona, Knudsen, Kate, Cooper, Rae, and Wobcke, Marianne
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TREATMENT of emotional trauma , *WELL-being , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *CINAHL database , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *COMMUNITY health services , *MENTAL health , *ART therapy , *MENTAL healing , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
There is a growing call for arts-health and community arts professionals to work in 'trauma informed ways' to prevent re-traumatisation and promote healing. This paper reports on a scoping review of existing literature that deal with trauma aware and informed practice and its applications in arts-health and community arts. Trauma informed practice does not seek to target or treat trauma but, rather, seeks to provide a safer and more informed space for people who experience post-traumatic stress conditions and symptoms to engage in facilitated arts activities. We particularly examine the extent to which existing literature acknowledges the presence of oppression-related collective trauma – such as racial trauma – and offers appropriate creative, anti-oppressive and trauma aware practice approaches. A total of 19 articles were included following librarian input and team checking. Included articles were written in English, published in peer reviewed academic journals, included a creative arts component, and adopted an intentional trauma informed or aware approach to practice. An additional three sources were included as part of descriptive synthesis to foreground leading First Nations resources for practice. Although no specific guidelines for trauma aware practice in arts-health or community arts were found, findings are consolidated at the end of the paper to offer interim principles, values and activities for trauma aware and informed practice in arts-health and community arts. Findings can also inform general trauma related research and therapy by highlighting the growing role of arts and creativity in responding to diverse experiences of trauma and its effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Women have leadership advantages – on why that matters and how it may help us.
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Adams, Sophia JL
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LEADERSHIP in women , *DIVERSITY in the workplace , *MENTAL health , *LEADERSHIP , *LABOR supply - Abstract
Objective: Diversity in the workforce is a recognised component of highly functioning teams but remains aspirational in the Australian mental health context. There continue to be significant obstacles to true workforce diversity. The objective of this paper is to outline some of the skills and advantages women in established leadership roles have by dint of their lived workforce experience and how these skills may inform leadership approaches and capacity building potential for the benefit of the system. Conclusions: Leaders must synthesise, capacity build, maintain a systems and future focus and hold a vision to harness the skills of others. This paper outlines why women may have some unique capabilities as a consequence of a gender socialised world and describes approaches that contribute to cohesive, diverse and engaged teams. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Paper and Voice MAYSI-2: Format Comparability and Concordance With the Voice DISC-IV.
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Maureen A. Hayes
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ADOLESCENT health , *MENTAL health , *STRESS management for teenagers , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
The authors examine the comparability of paper and voice formats of the Massachusetts Youth Screening Instrument-Second Version (MAYSI-2) as well as each format’s concordance with the Voice Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children (DISC) among adjudicated youth. Comparability is assessed among 248 youths admitted to a South Carolina Assessment Center. Mean scores and alpha coefficients are calculated, and area under the curve and positive and negative predictive values are used to compare concordance to the DISC. Paper and voice formats are significantly correlated, have similar alpha coefficients, and have comparable concordance with the DISC, suggesting that the MAYSI-2 paper and voice formats are comparable instruments. The voice format may be preferable to the paper format for screening justice youth for mental health problems because it may reduce incomplete data and increase reporting of stigmatized behaviors and because of its ability to automatically generate scored reports and aggregate data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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16. 'Through no fault of their own': Social work students' use of language to construct 'service user' identities.
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Skoura-Kirk, Eleni
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SOCIAL workers , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *LANGUAGE & languages , *GROUP identity , *SIMULATION methods in education , *INTERVIEWING , *MENTAL health , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *STUDENTS , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *DECISION making , *POLITICAL participation , *EMOTIONS , *MEDICAL research , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
The way social workers discursively construct 'service user' identities in everyday interactions (interviews, conversations and text) can affect quality of relationships and practice outcomes. Even though research has focused on the construction of 'service user' identities by professionals and service users, little has been done to explore such discursive formulations by pre-qualifying social work students. This is especially relevant, given the strengthening of the 'expert by experience' identity in social work education. This paper seeks to make visible mechanisms of student identity constructions as to 'who a service user is', and implications for practice through the examination of student written work pre- and post- a module focussing on lived experience. A critical discursive psychology approach was followed, recognising the interplay between localised professional encounters and wider contexts of power relations. The findings show a shift in the 'service user' identities employed by the students mainly based on individualistic discourses and deserving/undeserving themes (substance misuse the result of vulnerability, rather than selfishness, domestic abuse narratives denoting resilience rather than victimhood). The effect to practice showed shifts between the reflective, expert, person-centred and critical/radical practitioner, mainly stressing the need for professional growth at an individual level, with less emphasis on addressing social inequality. The paper argues that predominantly individualistic discourses can perpetuate de-politicised or oppressive categorisations of 'service users' and calls for further critical engagement with the discursive micro-practises enacted and developed in the social work classroom, if we are to unveil and challenge narrow, or stigmatising categorisations early on. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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17. Cannabis Unveiled: An Exploration of Marijuana's History, Active Compounds, Effects, Benefits, and Risks on Human Health.
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Hasan, Khaled M
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CANNABIS (Genus) , *HEALTH status indicators , *MENTAL health , *MEDICAL marijuana , *PAIN management - Abstract
Marijuana, also known as cannabis, is a psychoactive drug that comes from the Cannabis plant. Marijuana can be smoked, vaporized, or consumed through edibles in a variety of ways. Perception changes, changes in mood, and problems with coordination are all possible side effects. Marijuana is used for both recreational and medical purposes to treat a variety of health conditions. The literature review on the effects of marijuana on the human body has increased in recent years as more states legalize its use. It is important to investigate the benefits and harmful effects of marijuana on individuals due to the widespread use of cannabis-derived substances like marijuana for medical, recreational, and combined purposes. The paper will review different aspects of marijuana in 4 main domains. A thorough discussion of marijuana's definition, history, mechanism of action, pharmacokinetics, and effects on human cells will be given in the first domain. The second domain will concentrate on marijuana's negative effects, while the third domain will look at marijuana's possible positive impacts, such as its usage in controlling multiple sclerosis, treating obesity, lowering social anxiety, and managing pain. The fourth domain will concentrate on marijuana's effects on anxiety, educational attainment, and social consequences. Additionally, this paper also will provide a highlight of the history of marijuana use and governmental legislation, both of which play a significant role in determining how the public views marijuana. In conclusion, this paper provides a comprehensive review of marijuana's effects, which may be of interest to a large readership. This review adds to the continuing discussion about the use of marijuana by analyzing the data that is currently available about the possible advantages and disadvantages of marijuana usage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. "I'm Really Glad that You're Doing this Research". Qualitative Research Involving Doctors With Lived Experience of Mental Health or Substance Use Challenges in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand.
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Bradfield, Owen M., Spittal, Matthew J., and Bismark, Marie M.
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *MENTAL health , *QUALITATIVE research , *PHYSICIANS , *RESEARCH protocols - Abstract
Background: Doctors with a history of mental health or substance use challenges face barriers accessing treatment and are difficult to recruit for research. This makes understanding their experiences challenging, yet essential. Overcoming barriers to research participation among unwell doctors is critical to advancing their overall health and wellbeing. Methods: A qualitative interview study of 21 allegedly impaired doctors in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand who were subject to regulatory processes relating to their health. Based in an interpretative phenomenological paradigm, this paper examines participants' motivations for participation in this study and their reactions to participating. It highlights wider implications for sensitive research involving doctors and marginalised groups. Results: Participants were strongly motivated to participate in our research for their own benefit (desire to be heard, catharsis, and empowerment) and to benefit others (to change the system, and to avoid other doctors experiencing what they experienced). Careful planning and communication of unique legal risks fostered a trusting researcher-participant relationship. To assist other researchers undertaking sensitive qualitative research with vulnerable participants, we describe our research protocol, challenges, and successes in detail. Conclusions: Despite ethical concerns about research risk, researchers can and should pursue qualitative research into the experiences of under-represented groups, including allegedly impaired doctors. Without involving them in research that examines issues directly impacting on them, we may be inadvertently perpetuating the barriers and stigma that also hinder them from accessing treatment and support. This also deprives us of knowledge that can be used to improve doctors' health. This paper has broader relevance for anyone doing research with doctors, people in vulnerable positions, people disempowered by institutional or social systems, people who are stigmatised or shamed, and people who have experienced trauma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. A Descriptive Look at the Mental Health Literacy of Student-Athletes.
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Beasley, Lauren and Hoffman, Steven
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HEALTH literacy , *MENTAL health services , *MENTAL health , *COLLEGE athletes , *ATHLETES' health - Abstract
Mental health literacy (MHL) is a significant component in understanding mental health disparities in vulnerable populations. Due to the unique structure and pressures of American college sport, attention to student-athletes' MHL is critical, especially now that the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is requiring member institutions to offer mental health services to their athletes. Utilizing online surveys of both athletes (N = 205) and non-athlete students (N = 205), this paper offers a descriptive look at the MHL of student-athletes. We found that both athletes and non-athlete students had above average levels of MHL, but high rates of mental health stigma. With a foundation in contact theory, the paper provides recommendations on how to utilize student-athletes' mental health knowledge to decrease mental health stigma and increase MHL campus wide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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20. Trends in mental health inequalities for people with disability, Australia 2003 to 2020.
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Bishop, Glenda M, Kavanagh, Anne Marie, Disney, George, and Aitken, Zoe
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STROKE , *CROSS-sectional method , *AGE distribution , *MENTAL health , *SEX distribution , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HEALTH equity , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *BRAIN injuries , *DATA analysis software , *LONGITUDINAL method , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities - Abstract
Objective: Cross-sectional studies have demonstrated that people with disability have substantial inequalities in mental health compared to people without disability. However, it is not known if these inequalities have changed over time. This study compared the mental health of people with and without disability annually from 2003 to 2020 to investigate time trends in disability-related mental health inequalities. Methods: We use annual data (2003–2020) of the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey. Mental health was measured using the five-item Mental Health Inventory. For each wave, we calculated population-weighted age-standardised estimates of mean Mental Health Inventory scores for people with and without disability and calculated the mean difference in Mental Health Inventory score to determine inequalities. Analyses were stratified by age, sex and disability group (sensory or speech, physical, intellectual or learning, psychological, brain injury or stroke, other). Results: From 2003 to 2020, people with disability had worse mental health than people without disability, with average Mental Health Inventory scores 9.8 to 12.1 points lower than for people without disability. For both people with and without disability, Mental Health Inventory scores decreased, indicating worsening mental health, reaching the lowest point for both groups in 2020. For some subpopulations, including young females and people with intellectual disability, brain injury or stroke, mental health inequalities worsened. Conclusion: This paper confirms that people with disability experience worse mental health than people without disability. We add to previous findings by demonstrating that disability-related inequalities in mental health have been sustained for a long period and are worsening in some subpopulations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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21. Adventure Therapy for Adolescents with Complex Trauma: A Scoping Review and Analysis.
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Pringle, Graham, Boddy, Jennifer, Slattery, Maddy, and Harris, Paul
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LITERATURE reviews , *TEENAGERS , *HUMAN rights , *ADVENTURE therapy , *STRESS management , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Background: Childhood adversity is linked with mental health concerns, including complex trauma (CT), whereas positive experiences may be restorative. Treatment for CT with adolescents commonly uses therapies administered indoors. Yet outdoor adventure, being rich in positive experiences, may also be appropriate. Purpose: This article examines how adventure practices may be healing for adolescents with CT. Methodology/Approach: A scoping review of literature since 2014 on adventure therapy (AT) for 12- to 18-year-olds with CT was undertaken. Refining searches from six databases identified six texts which met inclusion criteria. A seventh paper was added manually. Findings/Conclusions: CT-informed adventure tended toward a tri-phasic approach: safety, processing, and integration. Adventure benefits included improvements in attachment, skills, schemas, and stress management. An ecological approach was identified, through the analysis, as were some well-intended but harmful practices that a human rights-based practice framework may help avoid. Implications: Adopting an ecological and human rights-based approach as frames for AT research and practice may yield new insights and enhance program effectiveness for youth with CT. This should apply to adventure generally and specifically to AT; however, more research is needed given the paucity of available texts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. Riding the tides: Directions in mental health rehabilitation in NSW.
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McDonald, Andrew, Still, Megan, Sommer, Joanne, and Coniglio, Francesca
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INTEGRATED health care delivery , *MENTAL health , *REHABILITATION , *DISABILITY insurance , *COMMUNITY mental health services , *HEALTH care reform - Abstract
Objective: This paper outlines the evolution of mental health rehabilitation in NSW, where allocation of health resources has repeatedly contradicted the policy intention to reorient services from inpatient to community-based services, leaving community rehabilitation the poor and disconnected cousin of inpatient services. The expanding role of community-managed organisations (CMOs) in psychosocial rehabilitation, the introduction of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS), and emerging service models have helped foster a maturing housing and social care environment, but present reality and the integration of health and social care services remains at a distance from best evidence practice. Conclusion: The challenge of the next decade of mental health reform is to embrace and consolidate greater service diversity and complexity. Understanding what factors influenced present reality is important in providing guardrails for the future, enabling the current wave of renewal and reinvestment in NSW to build on the strengths of past developments and steer a course around their weaknesses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. The psychiatric work villages in Israel: a micro working community.
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Keidar, Efrat
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LONELINESS , *THERAPEUTIC communities , *MENTAL illness , *VILLAGES , *CULTURAL activities , *INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
This paper examines the psychiatric work villages in Israel, which have so far had little historiographic attention. In the 1950s and 1960s, four work villages were established for people with psychiatric disabilities. They were intended to create a long-term rehabilitative alternative to the common hospitalization practice. These villages were organized around employment in various branches of farming and also offered recreational and cultural activities to alleviate the patients' loneliness and to create a community life. The villages echoed central values of the new country: labour, manufacturing, cooperativity, and cultural and community life. I will discuss the similarities between the psychiatric work villages and earlier, mostly Western, psychiatric therapeutic models, such as moral treatment and the therapeutic community model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. Raising the Bar: A Qualitative Study of a Co-Produced Model for Promoting research Partnerships in Mental Health.
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River, Jo, Bellingham, Brett, Isobel, Sophie, Gill, Katherine, Boydell, Katherine, Conlon, Liam, Goodhew, Mark, Cutler, Natalie, and Kemp, Holly
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QUALITATIVE research , *BUSINESS partnerships , *CONSUMER activism , *PARTICIPANT observation , *MENTAL health facilities ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Internationally, lead agencies and consumer movements emphasise the need for high-level research participation in mental health. However, evidence suggests that people with lived experience tend to be recruited as subjects rather than as active agents in research, or are consulted in tokenistic ways. Although participatory research has the potential to rectify epistemic disparities, few studies have grappled with how to move from exclusion and tokenism to high-level research participation. This paper describes a qualitative co-evaluation of a co-produced model of research partnership, Raising the Bar, which involved deliberate establishment and facilitation of six participatory research teams, comprising 28 lived experience and 'conventional' mental health researchers. Findings indicate that the theoretical elements of the model set the bar high from the outset, supporting research teams to address inconsistencies in knowledge about participation. It also provided researchers with the competencies and resources to undertake participatory research in egalitarian team structures, and to negotiate new forms of non-traditional research outputs - thereby challenging whom research might be for and how it might be made accessible. Finally, the model shifted collective meanings about research, lending credibility to participatory practices, which came to be seen as essential for meeting the needs of affected communities. Nonetheless, systemic barriers to participatory research remain, and need to be recognised and acted upon to promote a culture that supports high-level research participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. ' They would rather not have known and me kept my mouth shut': The role of neutralisation in responding to the disclosure of childhood sexual abuse.
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Cunnington, Claire and Clark, Tom
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CHILD sexual abuse & psychology , *DISCLOSURE , *RESEARCH methodology , *CONVALESCENCE , *INTERVIEWING , *FAMILY attitudes , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGY of adult child abuse victims , *THEMATIC analysis , *SOCIAL attitudes , *SOCIAL responsibility - Abstract
There is a well-established literature examining how perpetrators of child sexual abuse (CSA) neutralise the norms and beliefs that ordinarily prohibit such behaviours. However, there has been substantially less focus on how such techniques of neutralisation might also be applied by people and groups who were not directly involved in the abuse, who we might expect to be more supportive. Drawing on a thematic analysis of an open-ended survey (n=140) and semi-structured interviews (n=21) with adults who experienced childhood sexual abuse this paper examines societal responses to disclosure. Identifying three key techniques of neutralisation, it explores how families, professionals and institutions use wider discourses that deny the victim/survivor, deny or minimise harm and silence by appealing to loyalty. The results demonstrate how significant others can constrain, rather than support, the process of disclosure and recovering from CSA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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26. The Key Characteristics and Role of Peer Support in the Aftermath of Victimization: A Scoping Review.
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de Ven, Pien van, Leferink, Sonja, and Pemberton, Antony
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AFFINITY groups , *SUICIDE , *WELL-being , *MEDICAL databases , *SOCIAL support , *TRAFFIC accidents , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MENTAL health , *VICTIM psychology , *LITERATURE reviews , *VETERANS , *THEMATIC analysis , *EMPIRICAL research , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Topic: Currently, research into the key elements and role of peer support in the aftermath of victimization is limited. This study reviews the types of evidence available, clarifying key concepts in the literature, examining how research is conducted and identifying key characteristics or factors related to peer support in the aftermath of a victimization experience. Method: A scoping review was performed for peer-reviewed papers using predefined search terms. Studies addressing peer support among victims and survivors of crime, traffic accidents, calamities, suicide, and veterans were included. Selection was based on title and abstract and resulted in 16 papers eligible for review. An inductive thematic analysis was used to synthesize data and findings. Findings: Empirical studies into the key elements and role of peer support in the aftermath of victimization are limited in availability and scattered in terms of approach to research (e.g., methodology, type of respondents, type of peer support) and focus (such as focus on effects on mental health and well-being, on key elements or an evaluation of a support program). Studies mainly have an explorative and interpretative character. Key elements, operationalizations, positive outcomes and negative outcomes of peer support are discussed. Conclusion and discussion: The currently available knowledge on peer support in the aftermath of victimization lacks four points: cross-cultural studies, lived experiences as empirical findings, a variety of victimization events and longitudinal studies. Moreover, it is argued that future research should be improved by adopting a contextual and narrative approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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27. "He/his/she/her/father/mother/son/daughter": A critical reflection of reproductions of cis-normativity and cis-dominance in preparing qualitative data for analysis.
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Liegghio, Maria, Sloos, Renée, Fantin, Skyler, and Ciordas, Hannah
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MOTHERS , *SOCIAL support , *FATHERS , *SOCIAL justice , *GENDER-nonconforming people , *PREJUDICES , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL isolation , *HEALTH equity , *MENTAL health services - Abstract
In this research note, we present a critical moment we had as a research team in our work preparing qualitative data for its analysis in which an unanticipated social justice issue was triggered. The moment was related to determining the best ways to anonymize the information—in particular, how to replace what were perceived as "male" and "female" gendered names, family relationships, and roles with the labels of "she/her/mother/daughter" or "he/his/father/son". The paper begins with a review of the main "do's and don'ts" of data preparation, followed by our reflections of the social justice issue. Through our differently positioned reflections, we complicate the task of data preparation by revealing the ways in which cis-dominance is upheld by cis-normativity, cis-genderism, and heteronormativity. We end with recommendations for practices that uphold the values and goals of social justice by resisting cis-dominance and challenging the erasures of peoples with fluid genders and identities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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28. Your Move: An Open Access Dataset of Over 1500 Board Gamer's Demographics, Preferences and Motivations.
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Cross, Liam, Piovesan, Andrea, Sousa, Micael, Wright, Peter, and Atherton, Gray
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BOARD games , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *MIDDLE-aged persons , *NEURODIVERSITY , *MENTAL health , *MIDDLE-aged women - Abstract
Intro: This paper reports the demographics of a large sample of board gamers and their in-game motivations and preferences. Methods: We report the specific preferences of 1603 board gamers (i.e. preferred platform, mechanics, style, theme, player count and game length) and player demographics, i.e. age, gender, education level as well as neurodivergence in this population. Participants were sampled via board game groups and game distributor mailing lists. Results: Findings confirmed previous assumptions that board gamers are primarily middle-aged, university/college-educated, white males. We show that most gamers identify as mid-core/core with a preference for shorter, competitive Euro games. They tend to prefer in-person play with 3-4 players. However, a sizeable portion of the sample did not fit this description, showing a more complex picture. Discussion: Results describe the population's demographics and detailed description of gamers preferred, mechanics, themes, components, preferences and motivations. An anonymised version of this data set is provided alongside this work for game designers and academics to explore further and cross-reference relationships between demographics and preferences/motivations. Considering that a quarter of the sample were neurodivergent (i.e. reported at least one mental health or neurodevelopmental condition) the dataset could also help clinicians who use board games as interventional tools. We hope this dataset (https://osf.io/tu8yq) will be helpful to board game designers, clinicians, educators, teachers, therapists and researchers interested in utilising board games to make informed choices about which games they use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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29. Reliability and Validity of a Novel Measure of Nonviolent Communication Behaviors.
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Cheung, Cherry T.Y., Cheng, Clement Man-Him, Lam, Stanley Kam Ki, Ling, Henry Wai-Hang, Lau, Kim Ling, Hung, Suet Lin, and Fung, Hong Wang
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- *
HUMAN research subjects , *EMPATHY , *STATISTICAL reliability , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *FACTOR analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *STATISTICAL sampling , *EMOTIONS , *DATA analysis software ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: Nonviolent communication (NVC) has been increasingly recognized as a potentially beneficial approach that could promote empathy, resolve conflicts, and improve psychosocial well-being. No validated measure is available to assess or quantify NVC-specific characteristics or behaviors. This paper describes the development and pilot psychometric evaluation of a self-report measure for assessing behaviors characteristic of NVC (e.g., awareness of feelings, honest self-expression). Method: We analyzed data in an online convenience sample of young adults (N = 205). Results: The 7-item Nonviolent Communication Behaviors Scale (NVCBS) was found to have satisfactory internal consistency (α = 0.789 to 0.810), good test-retest reliability (ICC = 0.781) and a single-factor structure. The NVCBS was also positively correlated with empathy while negatively correlated with negative beliefs about emotions, demonstrating its construct validity. Discussion: The study provides a reliable and valid measure of NVC behaviors which can facilitate future studies on NVC. Directions for future research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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30. The use of implementation science to close the research-to-treatment gap for cognitive impairment in psychosis.
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Zbukvic, Isabel, Bryce, Shayden, Moullin, Joanna, and Allott, Kelly
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MEDICAL quality control , *PSYCHOSES , *COGNITION , *CLINICAL medicine research , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH care teams , *QUALITY of life , *QUALITY assurance , *MEDICAL research - Abstract
For people living with psychosis, cognitive impairment is common and can have significant impacts for functional recovery, impacting engagement with treatment and quality of life more broadly. There is now strong evidence for the effectiveness of cognition-focused treatments, such as cognitive remediation to improve clinical and functional outcomes for people with psychosis. However, engagement with treatment has been a long-standing issue in mental health care, including for people with psychosis, who often experience difficulties with motivation. While research on clinical effectiveness of cognition-focused treatment is growing, to date there has been little research focused on the implementation of such treatments and it is not clear how best to support uptake and engagement across diverse mental health settings. Implementation science is the study of methods and strategies to promote the adoption, application, and maintenance of evidence-based practices in routine care. To integrate cognition-focused treatments into routine practice, and improve engagement with treatment and the quality and effectiveness of care for people with psychosis, researchers need to embrace implementation science and research. This paper provides a succinct overview of the field of implementation science, current evidence for implementation of cognition-focused treatments for psychosis and practical guidance for using implementation science in clinical research. The future of psychosis research includes multidisciplinary teams of clinical researchers and implementation scientists, working together with providers and consumers to build the evidence that can improve the implementation of cognition-focused treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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31. Factors associated with mental health symptoms among UK autistic children and young people and their parents during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Palmer, Melanie, Chandler, Susie, Carter Leno, Virginia, Mgaieth, Farah, Yorke, Isabel, Hollocks, Matthew, Pickles, Andrew, Slonims, Vicky, Scott, Stephen, Charman, Tony, and Simonoff, Emily
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness risk factors , *PARENTS of children with disabilities , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder , *AUTISM , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *HOUSING , *COVID-19 pandemic , *LONGITUDINAL method , *DISEASE complications , *CHILDREN , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
The current study explored the role of pre-existing and pandemic-time child, family or environmental factors in the presentation of mental health symptoms of autistic youth and their parents during the pandemic. Participants were parents/carers of autistic children (Autism Spectrum Treatment and Resilience Cohort, N = 67, M age = 9 years) and adolescents (QUEST cohort, N = 112, M age = 17 years). Parents completed an online survey that asked about child and parental mental health, infection experience, and changes to education arrangements, family life, housing and finances during the pandemic. Pre-existing measures of mental health, autism and adaptive functioning were also utilised. More engagement and enjoyment in education provision and going outside was associated with better child and parental mental health. In multivariate multiple linear regression models, more pre-existing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder symptoms were associated with more behavioural/attention deficit hyperactivity disorder symptoms during the pandemic in the pre-adolescent cohort, and with greater emotional symptoms in the adolescent cohort. More pre-existing parental mental health problems were associated with more parental mental health symptoms during the pandemic in both cohorts. Knowledge of pre-existing mental health and pandemic-related stressors may help care planning. Encouraging engagement and enjoyment in education and promoting physical exercise are key intervention targets. Ensuring access to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder medication and support is important, especially if this is managed jointly across school and home. What is already known about the topic: The COVID-19 pandemic and the associated restrictions impacted all of society. There is emerging evidence showing a range of impacts on autistic children and young people and their families. Further research that looks at how individuals coped during the pandemic while considering how they were doing before the pandemic is needed. What this paper adds: This article explores whether how well autistic youth were doing before the pandemic influenced how they coped during the pandemic. It also looked at how well their parents were doing during the pandemic and whether any pre-pandemic factors influenced how they coped. Samples of both primary-school-aged autistic children and autistic teenagers and their parents were surveyed to answer these questions. More engagement and enjoyment in education provision during the pandemic and getting outside more were linked with better child and parental mental health during the pandemic. More attention deficit hyperactivity disorder before the pandemic was linked with more attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and behavioural problems during the pandemic in primary-school-aged autistic children, and more emotional problems during the pandemic in autistic teenagers. Parents with more mental health problems during the pandemic had more mental health problems before the pandemic. Implications for practice, research or policy: Encouraging engagement and enjoyment in education and promoting physical exercise are key intervention targets. Ensuring access to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder medication and support is important, especially if this is managed jointly across school and home. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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32. Real-World Skills in a Virtual World: An Innovative Activity for Teaching Developmental Psychopathology.
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Koch, Mary Kate and Mendle, Jane
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ACTIVE learning , *CAREER development , *VIRTUAL reality , *INNOVATIONS in business , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *CLINICAL psychology - Abstract
Background: Incorporating professional development into undergraduate psychology coursework is an ongoing area of improvement for educators. Objective: We present a novel activity encouraging students to explore various professional skills and roles for which their psychology major prepares them through application to real-world issues. Method: Students participated in one of two virtual mental health summits and formed working groups to present from different perspectives (e.g., public health, epidemiology, etc.). Students collectively voted on resolutions at the end of each summit (e.g., budgetary recommendations for a county health department). Results: We examined student perceptions of confidence in their professional skills and content knowledge before and after summits. Students indicated that they wanted more applied assignments like the mental health summit in other psychology classes and preferred the activity to exams or papers in a virtual course. Teaching Implications: The mental health summit represented a real-world application activity that students indicated wanting in their courses. Recommendations for how to adapt the presented activity for non-clinical psychology courses are discussed. Conclusion: The mental health summit activity supported the real-world application that students desire. Future iterations of the activity can build on the model we describe to support greater skill improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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33. Patients languishing in emergency departments: A descriptive analysis of mental health-related emergency department presentations in Australia between 2016-17 and 2020-21.
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Brazel, Matthew, Allison, Stephen, Bastiampillai, Tarun, Kisely, Stephen R, and Looi, Jeffrey CL
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HOSPITAL emergency services , *MALIGNANT hyperthermia , *MENTAL health policy , *PUBLIC hospitals , *HEALTH care reform , *FIRST responders - Abstract
Objective: In the context of concerns regarding hospital access block, this paper provides a descriptive longitudinal analysis of mental health–related ED episodes in Australian public hospitals between 2016-17 and 2020-21. Method: We descriptively analysed Australian Institute of Health and Welfare data for mental health–related ED presentations, outcomes and 5-year trends for Australian public hospitals. Results: There were more than 300,000 Australian mental health–related ED presentations in 2020-21. Presentations increased by an average annual rate of 2.8% between 2016-17 and 2020-21, commonly involving first responder (police, paramedic) attendance. From 2016-17 to 2020-21, the average annual rate of mental health–related ED presentations receiving a triage category of resuscitation increased by 13.7%, emergency by 9.4% and urgent by 4.7%. 90% of MH-related ED presentations were completed within 14 h, which was longer than the 90th percentile for all ED presentations (up to 8 h). Conclusions: Current mental health policies have not stemmed the rising tide of ED presentations. Mental health–related ED presentations are increasing in number and severity, likely due to health systemic and societal factors. Psychiatry patients stay longer in EDs than other patients. Healthcare reforms should be targeted to provide the best outcome based on principles of equity of access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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34. The new normal: a review of the impact of COVID-19 on gastroenterology fellowship training.
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Makhani, Salima, Morales, Jaclyn, and Whitson, Matthew J.
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COVID-19 , *MEDICAL education , *COVID-19 pandemic , *GASTROENTEROLOGY , *EDUCATIONAL quality - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on medical education and gastroenterology fellowship training. As a result of the pandemic, a trainee's physical safety, mental health and wellness, clinical and procedural training, and educational opportunities were all potentially altered. Changes necessitated at the start of the pandemic were different than those needed further along in the pandemic course. Fellowship programs were required to modify policies and adapt to changes rapidly to advocate for their trainees and ensure quality education. Much of COVID-19's initial impact on education – decreased endoscopic procedures and the loss of educational conferences – has largely returned to pre-pandemic form. However, other changes made during the pandemic have persisted and likely will continue in the future. This includes a virtual interview format for fellowship matches, a virtual option for many national conferences, and an expansion of simulation training. This article reviews the impact that COVID-19 had on medical education with a specific focus on gastroenterology fellowship. The paper highlights the initial impact of COVID-19, the lingering effects, and discusses the areas needed for further research to best understand the total impact COVID-19 had on our trainees' education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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35. Framework and Overview of a State-Wide College Mental Health Program in Kerala, India.
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Jaisoorya T. S., Joseph, Shiju, Kalarani K. S., Menon, Maya, Smita G. S., Shini V. S., Jose, Sheril Elizabeth, Mahesh M. M., Shibu K, Sujisha T. G., Jayaprakashan K. P., Kiran P. S., Anil Kumar T. V., Vigneshwari V., and Titus, Usha
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health services , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH programs , *MIDDLE-income countries , *LIBRARY media specialists , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *TRAINING of counselors , *STUDENT health services - Abstract
Background: Mental health issues are common among college students, and structured services have been proven to enhance outcomes. Despite increased enrolment for higher education in India, college mental health services remain sparse. JEEVANI is the first structured state-wide college mental health service in India. This paper describes its framework and provides an overview of its functioning during the initial five months. Methods: In 2019–2020, the Directorate of Collegiate Education, Government of Kerala, implemented the program in 66 colleges catering to approximately 60,000 students. Qualified counsellors were trained to identify issues and provide interventions and early referrals, using a stepped-care approach. They conducted awareness programs to promote mental health and reduce stigma. Results: The services were accessed by 2,315 students during the assessment period (October 2019 to February 2020). The beneficiaries were predominantly females (54.1%). Over a third (38.8%) belonged to the lower socio-economic strata, and 2.5% had significant vulnerabilities. Although no syndromal diagnoses were made, anxiety and depression were the most common presentations. The counsellors provided 3,758 individual sessions and facilitated support for students who reported academic difficulties or interpersonal issues. Severe mental illness was detected in 54 students, and referrals for specialist mental health input were initiated in 68. Conclusion: Describing the framework, sharing the technical material, and providing an overview of its functioning from a resource-constrained setting in India may encourage higher education institutions in low- and middle-income countries to consider similar projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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36. Using an Emergency Plan to Combat Teacher Burnout Following a Natural Hazard.
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Cannon, Sarah R., Davis, Cassandra R., and Long, Rex
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EMERGENCY management , *HURRICANE Matthew, 2016 , *HAZARDS , *TEACHER retention , *TEACHER turnover , *NATURAL disasters , *TEACHER burnout , *PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *HURRICANE Harvey, 2017 - Abstract
A relevant, well-crafted emergency plan can help schools most optimally return to normal following a disaster. During this time, educators find themselves facing unintended responsibilities like operating on the front lines of providing social-emotional support for their students. Researchers conducted 115 interviews with educators impacted by Hurricanes Harvey and Matthew in Texas and North Carolina to assess their mental health and their school's role in returning to normal. Findings suggest that emergency plans often did not take into account the social-emotional factors of recovery. This paper seeks to provide insight into the experiences of educators following a disaster and propose elements to consider in revising school emergency plans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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37. "I'm Really Glad that You're Doing this Research". Qualitative Research Involving Doctors With Lived Experience of Mental Health or Substance Use Challenges in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand.
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Bradfield, Owen M., Spittal, Matthew J., and Bismark, Marie M.
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *MENTAL health , *QUALITATIVE research , *PHYSICIANS , *RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Background: Doctors with a history of mental health or substance use challenges face barriers accessing treatment and are difficult to recruit for research. This makes understanding their experiences challenging, yet essential. Overcoming barriers to research participation among unwell doctors is critical to advancing their overall health and wellbeing. Methods: A qualitative interview study of 21 allegedly impaired doctors in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand who were subject to regulatory processes relating to their health. Based in an interpretative phenomenological paradigm, this paper examines participants' motivations for participation in this study and their reactions to participating. It highlights wider implications for sensitive research involving doctors and marginalised groups. Results: Participants were strongly motivated to participate in our research for their own benefit (desire to be heard, catharsis, and empowerment) and to benefit others (to change the system, and to avoid other doctors experiencing what they experienced). Careful planning and communication of unique legal risks fostered a trusting researcher-participant relationship. To assist other researchers undertaking sensitive qualitative research with vulnerable participants, we describe our research protocol, challenges, and successes in detail. Conclusions: Despite ethical concerns about research risk, researchers can and should pursue qualitative research into the experiences of underrepresented groups, including allegedly impaired doctors. Without involving them in research that examines issues directly impacting on them, we may be inadvertently perpetuating the barriers and stigma that also hinder them from accessing treatment and support. This also deprives us of knowledge that can be used to improve doctors' health. This paper has broader relevance for anyone doing research with doctors, people in vulnerable positions, people disempowered by institutional or social systems, people who are stigmatised or shamed, and people who have experienced trauma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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38. The paper trail to mental health.
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Ellard, John
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PSYCHIATRY , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL health services , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,EDITORIALS - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this article was to examine the concept of mental health and the policies that have been advanced to improve the wellbeing of the population. Conclusions: In the last century there have been many changes in the phenomena of psychiatric disorder, the management of those disorders and the outcomes. All of the changes have largely been due to the efforts of those working pragmatically at the coalface. There is little to suggest that the plans and programs advanced in the last half century have achieved more than enhancing the status of those who advance them. Conclusion: It is difficult to define mental health and equally difficult to develop a comprehensive program that will benefit the whole field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Hierarchy and inequality in research: Navigating the challenges of research in Ghana.
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Mfoafo-M'Carthy, Magnus and Grischow, Jeff
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PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis , *CAREGIVER attitudes , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL stigma , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH ethics , *EXPERIENCE , *SELF-efficacy , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *MEDICAL research , *CULTURAL awareness , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
This paper provides insights from experiences in data gathering and recruitment from two research projects on disability/mental health in Ghana. The focus of the study explores stigma amongst individuals diagnosed with mental illness and their caregivers. The study investigates the positioning of the researcher in a superior light by participants which often wrests power from those who should be considered the true experts of their own circumstances. Inequality in the interview process thus carried the risk of impacting the quality of the data, as some participants did not consider themselves as 'experts' of their condition. The paper explores strategies for addressing these challenges of hierarchy and inequality in the research process in the Global South. Based on the study, we report on our experiences as follows: (1) ensuring that participants are empowered to engage with researchers; and (2) training local researchers to engage in culturally sensitive research processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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40. ‘A certain magic’ – autistic adults’ experiences of interacting with other autistic people and its relation to Quality of Life: A systematic review and thematic meta-synthesis.
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Watts, Georgina, Crompton, Catherine, Grainger, Catherine, Long, Joseph, Botha, Monique, Somerville, Mark, and Cage, Eilidh
- Abstract
There is an increasing focus on research exploring autistic communication and community. In this review, we systematically collate and analyse how autistic adults describe their experiences of other autistic people and the relationship this has with their Quality of Life (QoL). Fifty two qualitative papers were analysed using thematic meta-synthesis. Results found many experiences of other autistic people were positive and were associated with improved QoL across a range of domains. The heterogeneity of the autistic experiences described indicates a need for further research to explore which factors predict a positive impact on QoL. Analysis also highlighted a paucity of data on autistic people with co-occurring intellectual disability in relation to this phenomenon. Implications for research and practice are discussed.Research has suggested that autistic people enjoy spending time with other autistic people and find them easier to talk to. We wanted to find out what autistic people say about spending time with other autistic people and whether this makes their life better. We found 52 papers which described this and reviewed what they found. We found that many autistic people had positive experiences of spending time with other autistic people and these experiences had positive impact on their lives in a range of different ways. The papers did not tell us whether this also happens for autistic people with a learning disability. More research is needed to find out more about why spending time with other autistic people helps some autistic people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Trauma-informed Care and its Significance in Responding to Child Sexual Abuse in India.
- Author
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Augustus, Prathibha and Pandey, Smita
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- *
CHILD sexual abuse , *TRAUMA-informed care , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *HUMAN services , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Child sexual abuse is a detrimental experience that could cause deleterious mental-health outcomes in the survivor. Decades of research have revealed the complex nature of child sexual abuse in terms of its characteristics, dynamics, causes, and consequences. Efficacious psychological interventions for managing child sexual abuse-related outcomes in children exist. However, it is now well recognized that interventions alone are not enough for recovery from sexual or any other type of trauma; it requires an entire human service system that is well-informed about trauma and its effects. Given the lack of awareness about the consequences of child sexual abuse and the stigmatization that exists in the Indian context, which significantly contributes toward the evolution and severity of trauma outcomes in victimized children, this paper is an attempt to discuss the relevance of adopting a trauma-informed approach while responding to child sexual abuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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42. "It's Kind of Our Everyday Life. It Sort of Becomes Natural": Everyday Violence and Violent Practices Among Young People.
- Author
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Skott, Sara
- Subjects
- *
SAFETY , *FOCUS groups , *AGE distribution , *VIOLENCE , *INTERVIEWING , *MENTAL health , *VICTIM psychology , *SEX distribution , *SEXUAL harassment , *PHOTOGRAPHY , *SOUND recordings , *SOCIAL classes , *SEX crimes , *THEMATIC analysis , *CYBERBULLYING , *PUBLIC opinion , *ADULTS , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Although violence among youth remains an important, global issue, little research has been conducted regarding how young people themselves define violence and what practices in relation to violence that are evident in their everyday lives. Using an intersectional gender perspective, specifically exploring the intersection of gender, age, and class, this paper therefore aims to explore how young people define violence, as well as to explore what practices in relation to violence that are evident in young people's everyday lives. By using a photovoice methodology, 11 focus groups of young boys and girls (17–19 years old) living in two municipalities in northern Sweden were interviewed and asked to take photographs representing themes that were discussed. Overall, three main themes in the young peoples' stories were identified: Violence as ubiquitous, Easy prey and dangerous predators, and The way forward. The findings demonstrated that violence is pervasive, all-encompassing and normalized in young people's everyday lives, and that this violence is moderated by intersecting power orders of gender, age, and class. Any future theoretical frameworks or prevention strategies should therefore aim to include an intersectional perspective as well as including the voices of the youths themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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43. Trends in Post-Secondary Student Stress: A Pan-Canadian Study.
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Linden, Brooke, Stuart, Heather, and Ecclestone, Amy
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- *
MENTAL health of students , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *SCHOOL year - Abstract
Objective: Previous research has evaluated the sources of post-secondary student stress, but has failed to explore whether stressors fluctuate over time. The purpose of this research was to use the Post-Secondary Student Stressors Index to examine whether stressors changed significantly and meaningfully over the course of an academic year. Due to the timing of data collection, results also provide context around students' experiences of stress during the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: Cross-sectional data was collected at 3 time points via online surveys over the course of the 2020–2021 academic year from >10,000 students. Participants attended 15 post-secondary institutions across Canada, representing 9 provinces and 1 territory. Validated instruments were used to assess levels of stress, distress and the severity of student-specific stressors. Kruskal–Wallis ranked tests and multiple pairwise comparison analyses were conducted to assess whether the mean severity of stressors changed over time. Standard effect sizes were calculated using Cohen's d. Results: Mean levels of stress and psychological distress were high at the start of the study and remained high across time points. A similarly high level of stress was observed on average for student-specific stressors. While significant differences in mean severity were observed over time for some stressors, standardized effect sizes were negligible, suggesting little meaningful change and consistent levels of chronic stress over the course of the academic year. Conclusions: This is the first paper to examine trends in student-specific stress using a nationwide sample of Canadian post-secondary students during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Patterns observed in student-specific stressors reflected changes likely to be indicative of the pandemic, including the most severe stress associated with academics, finances and concerns for the future. Implications for future research are discussed, in particular, the importance of examining stressors related to COVID-19 and their impact on student mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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44. A qualitative fallacy: Life trapped in interpretations and stories.
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Bøe, Tore Dag, Bertelsen, Bård, Larsen, Inger Beate, and Topor, Alain
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- *
PROFESSIONAL practice , *PSYCHIATRY , *EVALUATION , *CONVALESCENCE , *MENTAL health , *NARRATIVES , *LANGUAGE & languages , *UNCERTAINTY , *QUALITATIVE research , *CONTENT mining , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *WRITTEN communication , *STORYTELLING , *READING , *MENTAL illness , *CONSCIOUSNESS - Abstract
This paper points out some problematic aspects of qualitative research based on interviews and uses examples from mental health. The narrative approach is explored while inquiring if the reality of life here is forced into the formula of a chronological story. The hermeneutic approach, in general, is also examined, and we ask if the reality of life in this scenario becomes caught up in a web of interpretations. Inspired by ideas from Bakhtin and phenomenology, we argue for interview-based research that stays with unresolvedness and constantly question the web of interpretations and narratives that determine our experiences. This also chimes with certain dialogical practices in mental health in which tolerance of uncertainty is the guiding principle. Concludingly, we suggest that interview-based research could be a practice of 'un-resolving' in which researchers, together with the participants, look for cracks, contradictions, and complexities to prevent the qualitative fallacies of well-organized meanings and well-composed stories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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45. Regional evolution of psychosocial services in Australia before and after the implementation of the National Disability Insurance Scheme.
- Author
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Salvador-Carulla, Luis, Furst, Mary Anne, Gillespie, James, Rosenberg, Sebastian, Aryani, Amir, Anthes, Lauren, Ferdousi, Shahana, and Salinas-Perez, Jose A.
- Subjects
- *
NONPROFIT organizations , *SOCIAL support , *HEALTH services accessibility , *DISABILITY insurance , *HUMAN services programs , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *PRIMARY health care , *HEALTH care reform , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Objectives: This paper compares the evolution of the psychosocial sector in two Australian regions pre and post introduction of the National Disability Insurance Scheme – a major reform to the financing, planning and provision of disability services in Australia, intended to create greater competition and efficiency in the market, and more choice for service users. Methods: We used a standardised service classification instrument based on a health ecosystems approach to assess service availability and diversity of psychosocial services provided by non-government organisations in two Primary Health Network regions. Results: We identified very different evolutionary pathways in the two regions. Service availability increased in Western Sydney but decreased in the Australian Capital Territory. The diversity of services available did not increase in either Primary Health Network 4 years after the reform. Many services were experiencing ongoing funding uncertainty. Conclusion: Assumptions of increased efficiency through organisational scaling up, and a greater diversity in range of service availability were not borne out. Implications: This study shows the urgent need for evaluation of the effects of the NDIS on the provision of psychosocial care in Australia. Four years after the implementation of the NDIS at vast expense key objectives not been met for consumers or for the system as a whole, and an environment of uncertainty has been created for providers. It demonstrates the importance of standardised service mapping to monitor the effects of major reforms on mental health care as well as the need for a focus at the local level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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46. First Nations Peoples in the forensic mental health system in New South Wales: Characteristics and rates of criminal charges post-release.
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Dean, Kimberlie, Lyons, Georgia, Johnson, Anina, and McEntyre, Elizabeth
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INDIGENOUS Australians , *STATISTICS , *PRISON psychology , *MENTAL health , *CRIME , *RESEARCH funding , *FORENSIC medicine , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *CRIMINAL justice system , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models - Abstract
Background: It is well established that First Nations Peoples in Australia are overrepresented within the criminal justice system. However, First Nations Peoples appear to be comparatively underrepresented in the forensic mental health system, and little is known about their outcomes once released from secure care. Objective: To compare the characteristics and rates of repeat criminal justice contact for a criminal charge of First Nations and non-First Nations forensic patients in New South Wales. Methods: Data on the sample were extracted from the New South Wales Mental Health Review Tribunal paper and electronic files matched to the Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research Reoffending Database. Characteristics of First Nations and non-First Nations patients were compared using univariate logistic regression analysis. Univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazard regression was used to determine predictors of post-release criminal charges. Results: Key differences in the sociodemographic, clinical and forensic characteristics of First Nations compared with non-First Nations forensic patients were identified. The time to first criminal justice contact following release was significantly shorter for First Nations forensic patients (p < 0.01). Conclusion: The findings of this study confirm that First Nations forensic patients have distinct and complex needs that are apparent at entry to the forensic mental health system and that their poorer criminal justice contact rates following release from secure care indicate that these needs are not being adequately met either during treatment or once in the community. Responses to these study findings must consider the complex and continuing impact of colonisation on First Nations Peoples, as well as the need for solutions to be culturally safe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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47. Characterizing the Development of Research Landscapes in Substance Use and HIV/AIDS During 1990 to 2021.
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Nguyen, Tham Thi, Nguyen, Hien Thu, Do, Huyen Phuc, Ho, Cyrus SH, and Ho, Roger CM
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- *
HIV infections , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *MENTAL health , *MEDICAL care , *QUALITY of life , *RESEARCH funding , *ELECTRONIC publications , *HIV , *AIDS , *MEDICAL research - Abstract
Mitigating the impacts of Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (HIV/AIDS) and substance use requires comprehensive and systematic thinking in designing interventions and developing policies. This study describes the growth of research publications from 1991 to 2021 in the Web of Science database and points out current research landscapes in the fields of HIV/AIDS and substance use. Latent Dirichlet Allocation was used for classifying 21 359 papers into corresponding topics. The most common topics were HIV transmission, HIV infection, quality of life and mental health of substance users, and the biomedical effect of substance use. Emerging research landscapes include vulnerabilities of people who inject drugs to HIV transmission and related health problems. This study found a lack of research on health services, interdisciplinary and inter-sectoral in combination with clinical evaluation and treatment services. Future investment and implementation of HIV/AIDS and substance use programs should focus on research of health services and clinical evaluation, especially context-specific interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Home-based Vestibular Rehabilitation: A Feasible and Effective Therapy for Persistent Postural Perceptual Dizziness (A Pilot Study).
- Author
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Teh, Carren Sui-Lin, Abdullah, Nurul Ain, Kamaruddin, Noor Rafidah, Mohd Judi, Kamariah Binti, Fadzilah, Ismail, Zainun, Zuraida, and Prepageran, Narayanan
- Subjects
- *
PILOT projects , *HOME rehabilitation , *DIZZINESS , *MENTAL health , *VESTIBULAR apparatus diseases , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *QUALITY of life , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling - Abstract
Introduction: Persistent postural-perceptual dizziness (PPPD) is a chronic functional vestibular disorder where there is persistent dizziness or unsteadiness occurring on most days for more than 3 months duration. Treatment recommendations for PPPD include vestibular rehabilitation therapy (VRT) with or without medications and/or cognitive behavioral therapy. Objectives: This paper is a pilot study designed to compare the effects of Bal Ex as a home-based VRT on the quality of life (EQ-5D), dizziness handicap (DHI) and mental health (DASS-21) against hospital-based VRT. Design: This was an assessor-blinded, randomized controlled pilot study where PPPD patients were randomly selected to undergo Bal Ex, the home-based VRT (intervention group) or hospital-based (control group) VRT. The participants were reviewed at 4 weeks and 12 weeks after the start of therapy to assess the primary endpoints using the subjective improvement in symptoms as reported by patients, changes in DHI scores, DASS-21 scores and EQ5D VAS scores. Results: Thirty PPPD patients successfully completed the study with 15 in each study group. Within 4 weeks, there were significant improvements in the total DHI scores as well as anxiety levels. By the end of 12 weeks, there were significant improvements in the DHI, DASS-21 and EQ5D. The degree of improvement between Bal Ex and the control was comparable. Conclusion: VRT is an effective modality in significantly improving quality of life, dizziness handicap, depression, and anxiety levels within 3 months in PPPD. Preliminary results show Bal Ex is as effective as hospital-based VRT and should be considered as a treatment option for PPPD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Beyond burnout I: Doctors health services and unmet need.
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Lele, Kiran, Mclean, Loyola M, and Peisah, Carmelle
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- *
MENTAL health services , *PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *PHYSICIANS , *HEALTH programs , *SUICIDE statistics , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Objectives: Doctors' mental health has received renewed attention given the epidemic of burnout, high suicide rates and the recent pressures of the COVID-19 pandemic. Internationally, various service designs and primary prevention initiatives have been trialled to address these needs. Systemic barriers such as stigma as well as individual characteristics of doctors have historically prevented access to mental health services. This paper outlines the Australian service context from which a new publicly funded doctors' mental health programme emerged. Methods: A narrative review of current services and a description of the challenges is outlined. Results: A picture of urgency and unmet needs emerged with particular challenges, such as the need for privacy. Conclusions: Doctors' mental health is an urgent priority with direct impacts on patient safety and care. The complex context and the unmet need suggest the focus must go far beyond burnout and has prompted the establishment of a new service model designed to complement existing services in the Australian context, to be described in a sister paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Gender, Power, and Health: Measuring and Assessing Sexual Relationship Power Equity Among Young Sub-Saharan African Women and Men, a Systematic Review.
- Author
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Closson, Kalysha, Ndungu, Jane, Beksinska, Mags, Ogilvie, Gina, Dietrich, Janan J, Gadermann, Anne, Gibbs, Andrew, Nduna, Mzikazi, Smit, Jenni, Gray, Glenda, and Kaida, Angela
- Subjects
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SUB-Saharan Africans , *INTIMATE partner violence , *ONLINE information services , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *HUMAN sexuality , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MENTAL health , *MEN , *WOMEN , *SEX customs , *MEDLINE , *SEXUAL health , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *GENDER inequality - Abstract
Gender inequity, including low sexual relationship power (SRP), is an important determinant of intimate partner violence (IPV) and negative sexual, reproductive, and mental health. Different versions of the Sexual Relationship Power Scale (SRPS) are commonly used within youth studies to examine how gender inequities, including controlling behaviors, in heterosexual relationships impact the lives of young people in sub-Saharan Africa. This review aims to (1) describe definitions and measures of SRP within sub-Saharan African youth studies and (2) review and summarize associations between SRP equity, IPV, and sexual, reproductive, and mental health. After searching Pubmed, Ovid Med, Psych info, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and relevant research forums, 304 papers were identified, of which 29 papers based on 15 distinct studies (published 2004–2019) met our criteria for being youth-specific, conducted in sub-Saharan Africa, and including a quantitative measure of SRP. Details of each SRPS are described, including any adaptations and psychometric properties, as well as associations with IPV, sexual, reproductive, and mental health behaviors and outcomes. Results indicate that there are variations to the SRPS, and a paucity of evidence has detailed the psychometric properties of such measures within sub-Saharan African youth studies. Measures of SRP equity are associated with experiences (among women) and perpetration of (among men) IPV as numerous pathways to HIV risk; however, the evidence remains mixed. In order to address overlapping epidemics of violence against women and HIV, efforts are needed to ensure that measures, including the SRPS, are valid and reliable among highly affected populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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