253 results
Search Results
2. Becoming Afflicted, Becoming Virtuous: Darkest Dungeon and the Human Response to Stress.
- Author
-
Cartlidge, James
- Subjects
PRISONS ,VIDEO games ,ROLEPLAYING games ,HUMAN beings ,SUFFERING - Abstract
The developers of Red Hook Studios' 2016 gothic horror "Darkest Dungeon" said that they wanted to "capture the human response to stress." This paper analyzes how the game does this with its "stress," "affliction," and "virtue" mechanics. With reference to research literature on stress, I show how these mechanics, which could easily have been cheap gimmicks, approach the topic of stress with admirable detail, offering a complex reflection on the various aspects, positive and negative, of several possible human responses to stress. They show how different responses include similar symptoms, how stress impacts the people around the stressed person, and make the case that stress can break people, but also fuel heroism. It is a fantastic example of how video game mechanics can be used to educate people about complex subjects without explicitly saying this is what they are doing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Aquatic Exercise for Health Promotion: A 31-Year Bibliometric Analysis.
- Author
-
Zhou, Wen-Sheng, Ren, Fei-Fei, Yang, Yong, and Chien, Kuei-Yu
- Subjects
PUBLISHING ,COMPUTER software ,BIOCHEMISTRY ,AQUATIC exercises ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,SPORTS sciences ,JOINT diseases ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PHYSICAL fitness ,MENTAL health ,CITATION analysis ,REHABILITATION ,HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL research ,EVALUATION - Abstract
The present study aimed to review the research literature on aquatic exercise for health promotion using bibliometric methods and CiteSpace software. The number of studies related to this topic are constantly expanding, with the USA, Brazil, and Australia the centers of this research. Most published papers fall within Sports Science, but the disciplines of Physiology, Psychology, and Rehabilitation were also found to be dominant domains for this literature. The seven most prolific authors were from Brazil or Spain. The most frequently cited references focused on sub-topics of physiology, biochemistry, physical fitness, psychological health, cardiovascular disease, and joint disease. New research trends have shifted to the promotion of cardiovascular health in clinical populations (stroke, overweight, hypertension, endothelium dysfunctional, obese, inflammation, antioxidant, heart failure). Overall, this review found that research hot spots and trends in this realm have focused on improving cardiovascular health with aquatic exercise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Young people and young adults’ experiences with child abuse and maltreatment: Meaning making, conceptualizations, and dealing with violence.
- Author
-
Aadnanes, Margrete and Gulbrandsen, Liv Mette
- Subjects
INVECTIVE ,QUALITY of life ,MENTAL health ,CHILD abuse & psychology ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,ETHNIC groups ,EXPERIENCE ,PARENT-child relationships ,PARENTING ,SOCIAL services ,YOUNG adult psychology ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Exploring children and young people’s own understanding of experiences with abuse and maltreatment is an important part of taking their right to participation seriously. By applying a narrative theoretical framework, this paper explores and analyzes young people’s and young adults’ stories of being the target of violence and abuse as children, and their meaning making and definition of such experiences, then and now. The overall findings show the participants’ varied and nuanced perceptions of what constitutes violence were much dependent on contextual, relational, and temporal aspects. Furthermore, many participants reported psychological and emotional abuse and neglect to be the most hurtful of their experiences of maltreatment. Finally, the analysis sheds light on how responses to abuse and maltreatment change and depend on the children and young people’s definition of their situation through time and context. The paper contributes with qualitative knowledge to the social work research and practice field, on how abuse and maltreatment unfold in and affect children and young people’s lives seen from their own points of view. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A Critical Race Theory of Psychology as Praxis: Proposing and Utilizing Principles of PsyCrit.
- Author
-
Crossing, Adrianna E., Gumudavelly, Divya, Watkins, Nia, Logue, Caroline, and Anderson, Riana Elyse
- Subjects
ETHNOPSYCHOLOGY ,CRITICAL race theory ,PRAXIS (Process) ,FATHERS ,BLACK people ,BLACK men ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Historically, psychological science has contributed to maintaining the hegemony of white normativity and a fallacious belief in objective science that speaks to one singular truth about race. Due to a widespread unfamiliarity with critical theories and research methods in the field, novel approaches to psychological scientific inquiry are warranted to support scholars in pursuing racially-just empirical inquiries with socially-just implications. This manuscript aims to (1) introduce an evolution from critical race theory in psychology to a set of principles to guide research praxis: PsyCrit and (2) demonstrate its utility through use in an exemplar qualitative study. Qualitative coding analysis of semi-structured interviews with four Black mothers and one Black father (n = 5) participating in the Engaging, Managing, and Bonding through Race intervention was conducted to model the use of PsyCrit in practice and deepen our understanding of parent factors in Black families. This manuscript unpacks four aspects of the exemplar study utilizing four of the seven tenets of PsyCrit. The depth of analysis provided by the framework suggests that these principles may serve in guiding psychological researchers toward more nuanced investigations, especially as they relate to issues of race or racism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The social dimensions of gambling among street youth in Mumbai: Is it really an addiction?
- Author
-
Saldanha, Kennedy and Madangopal, Dakshayani
- Subjects
GAMBLING & psychology ,HOMELESSNESS ,MENTAL health ,QUALITY of life ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,FOCUS groups ,GAMBLING ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,LEISURE ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SOCIAL skills ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,ETHNOLOGY research ,COMORBIDITY ,JUDGMENT sampling ,SOCIAL support ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This mixed-methods, exploratory study investigates the gambling activities of street youth in Mumbai, India. Data from surveys and brief interviews of 70 youth aged 12–24, two focus groups, and ethnographic observations offer descriptive snapshots of the gambling behavior of participants. The article includes details about games played, popular venues, initiation patterns, time spent gambling, and interactions with the police. Street youth gamble for social benefits, such as group membership and fun; it is also a leisure activity enabling time to go by quickly. Individual benefits include intermittent rewards and a high after winning or being referred to as a gambler. The inability to save, the lack of recreation options, living in groups, and the environment of the streets structure and sustain gambling. This study discusses the group and social dimension of gambling among street youth, and how this dimension makes their participation different from adolescent gambling in general and General Addictions Theory. It contributes to the literature by emphasizing that for street youth the social/group aspects of gambling predominate the psychological. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implications for practice, highlighting the need to develop recreational, income-saving, and educational awareness programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. "Too much too soon, let me out of here!" Psychiatric and obstetric implications of a child's pregnancy.
- Author
-
Ghosh, Sunanda, Bruxner, George, and Kothari, Alka
- Subjects
ABORTION ,PREGNANCY ,TEENAGE pregnancy ,CHILDREN ,PSYCHIATRISTS ,ABORTION laws ,ABORTION & psychology ,MENTAL health laws ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,CAPACITY (Law) ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHIATRY ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: Psychiatrists may become involved in circumstances where a child is seeking termination of pregnancy. Potential roles include capacity advice and advocacy, but ethical and legal uncertainties abound. This paper uses illustrative cases, in an Australian jurisdiction, to exemplify the issues.Conclusion: Termination of pregnancy at the youthful extreme raises unique challenges for all involved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. WHAT WILL I DO...? TEENAGE GIRLS AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF MOTHERHOOD.
- Author
-
Prendergast, Shirley and Prout, Alan
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,MOTHERHOOD ,TEENAGE girls ,SOCIAL norms ,MENTAL depression ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The ideas explored in this paper were initially brought to our notice whilst analysing data derived from interviews with 15 year olds on motherhood and mental health. The aim of the paper is to explore and describe the relationship between powerful social norms about motherhood and the ideas and knowledge which the 15 year olds in our study revealed to us, ideas which often contradict the normative view. Our own data will be used to show some of the ways in which 15 year olds appear to negotiate for themselves, and attempt to resolve, the contradictions between normative and self-experienced knowledge about motherhood. In doing this we will be especially concerned to describe some of the solutions the girls develop. We have data on the same themes for boys, collected in the same way. For reasons of space we were unable to look at this in detail but want to write it up more fully at a later date. Our analysis will stress the active role that children play in the construction of their own views and futures rather than a more straightforwardly deterministic model which would see children as products of a social culture. We intend to relate this data to recent research on motherhood and depression and to some reflections on how normative conceptions come to be reproduced and socially maintained, focusing on the. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS AND PERCEIVED HEALTH STATUS.
- Author
-
Tessler, Richard and Mechanic, David
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,HEALTH ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,MENTAL health ,ANXIETY ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper examines the association between psychological distress and persons' perceptions of their physical well-being. Associations between psychological distress and ratings of health status within four diverse data sets are examined, controlling for physical health status as well as for sociodemographic variables. The results indicate that, despite variation in the characteristics of the populations under study, the mode of data collection employed, and the specific questions used to measure psychological distress, distress remains a statistically significant correlate of perceived health status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Exploring Mortality Salience and Pandemic Impact in the Context of COVID-19.
- Author
-
Paul, Disha and Vasudevan, Moosath Harishankar
- Subjects
DEATH & psychology ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,PRESS ,MASS media ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MENTAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,COGNITIVE testing ,DEATH ,THEMATIC analysis ,CONSCIOUSNESS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
Mortality salience refers to a state of conscious awareness of death and the inevitable conclusion of life, associated with psychological terror. The COVID-19 pandemic generated increased awareness of illness and death, and effectuated changes in death cognitions and people's experiences around psychological or sociocognitive domains of media and life goals. To understand these changes, this study administered the Multidimensional Mortality Awareness Measure (Levasseur et al., 2015) to 103 emerging adults in India, post which 6 participants proceeded for a semi-structured interview exploring pandemic experiences, news consumption and goal prioritization, to examine specific areas in relation to death cognition. The thematic analysis demonstrates psychological effects, and discusses developments in health and death-related psychological processes. Focus on career goals and health maintenance, cautious news consumption and disadvantageous impacts on mental health are seen, significant in navigating healthcare measures for emerging adults, as we move forward into this 'new normal'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Mental health screening in immigration detention: A fresh look at Australian government data.
- Author
-
Young, Peter and Gordon, Michael S.
- Subjects
MENTAL health screening ,DETENTION of persons ,POLITICAL refugees ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PSYCHOLOGY ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Objectives: The poor mental health of asylum seekers and refugees in immigration detention has consistently been reported in peer-reviewed literature internationally; however, data on the mental health of asylum seekers and refugees detained in Australian immigration has been very limited.Methods: We re-analysed mental health screening data obtained by the Human Rights Commission.Results: Longer time in detention was associated with higher self-reported depression scores, with female individuals being more vulnerable to time in detention than those of male gender. Approximately one-half of the refugee group who agreed to complete the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire had post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms. On clinician-rated measures, one-third of the children, adolescents and adults suffered with clinical symptoms requiring tertiary outpatient assessment.Conclusions: This paper consolidates the findings of the 2014 Australian Human Rights Commission report and it provides an argument for public reporting of refugee data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Fifteen years of detaining children who seek asylum in Australia - evidence and consequences.
- Author
-
Mares, Sarah
- Subjects
POLITICAL refugees ,DETENTION of persons ,CHILD psychology ,IMMIGRANT children ,MENTAL health ,HEALTH ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: To review and summarise the evidence about and consequences of Australia's policy of mandatory indefinite detention of children and families who arrive by boat to seek asylum.Methods: This paper will summarise the accumulated scientific evidence about the health and mental health impacts of immigration detention on children and compare methodologies and discuss the political reception of the 2004 and 2014 Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) Inquiries into Immigration Detention of children.Results: The conclusions of the 2004 and 2014 Inquiries into Immigration Detention of Children are consistent with Australian and international research which demonstrates that immigration detention has harmful health, mental health and developmental consequences for children and negative impacts on parenting.Conclusion: The evidence that prolonged immigration detention causes psychological and developmental harm to children and families and is in breach of Australia's human rights obligations is consistent. This is now partially acknowledged by the Government. Attempts to limit public scrutiny through reduced access and potential punishment of medical witnesses arguably indicates the potency of their testimony. These harmful and unethical policies should be opposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. REFRAINING FROM INTRUSIVE THOUGHTS IS STRATEGY DEPENDENT: A COMMENT ON SUGIURA, ET AL. AND A PRELIMINARY INFORMAL TEST OF DETACHED MINDFULNESS, ACCEPTANCE, AND OTHER STRATEGIES.
- Author
-
WELLS, ADRIAN and ROUSSIS, PANAGIOTIS
- Subjects
MINDFULNESS ,ACCEPTANCE & commitment therapy ,METACOGNITION ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The control of cognition is fundamental to psychological well being. One dimension recently explored by Sugiura, Sugiura and Tanno (2013) is the perceived ability to refrain from catastrophic thinking--a construct that could be a marker of several factors. The current paper recommends deeper consideration in terms of metacognitive theory and exemplifies this by testing the effect of a strategy that focuses on abstaining from processes (detached mindfulness) vs. transforming content (acceptance, brief exposure). Fifty-six participants (M age = 21.5 yr., range = 18-42) were randomly assigned to detached mindfulness, acceptance, exposure, or a control group before watching a stressful film that induced intrusive images. Afterwards, they engaged in their respective strategies for 5 min. and the frequency of intrusive images was rated. Detached mindfulness was the only manipulation that was associated with a statistically significant lower frequency of intrusions than the control condition. It is argued that assessment of perceived skills to refrain from thinking should be conceptualized within a metacognitive framework that distinguish process- and content-oriented strategies and address the question: When is a strategy a true refrain? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. A Community Mental Health and Well-Being University Level Course: Design and Implementation.
- Author
-
Pozzulo, Joanna, Vettese, Alexia, and Stone, Anna
- Abstract
Background: Community mental health is growing discipline in psychology that recognizes the importance of creating a community that fosters wellness. Although universities provide many individuals a sense of community, little research has examined how community mental health interventions can be implemented into a classroom setting.Purpose: This paper provides a proof of concept of a university course that was created to give students the opportunity to interact with their campus community while receiving course credit over two semesters.Approach: In the first semester, the course provided students with content and theory as it relates to community mental health, well-being, and health promotion. The second semester implemented experiential learning, where students applied knowledge and skills to a placement related to mental health and well-being within their university.Conclusions: This university course can provide benefits to the university (e.g., cost-efficiency), the students (e.g., networking), and the community (e.g., accessible mental health services). This research presents a course framework that other post-secondary institutions can build upon and implement into their own programs.Implications: Future research should focus on implementing experiential learning courses that provide opportunities in the mental health field for undergraduate psychology students to facilitate post-graduate student success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Depression literacy and help-seeking in Australian police.
- Author
-
Reavley, Nicola J., Milner, Allison J., Martin, Angela, Too, Lay San, Papas, Alicia, Witt, Katrina, Keegel, Tessa, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness treatment , *CONFIDENCE , *MENTAL depression , *EMPLOYMENT , *HEALTH attitudes , *HELP-seeking behavior , *INTENTION , *LITERACY , *RESEARCH methodology , *CASE studies , *MENTAL health , *GENERAL practitioners , *POLICE psychology , *PROFESSIONAL ethics , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SOCIAL stigma , *SURVEYS , *WORK environment , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *AFFINITY groups , *SOCIAL boundaries , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *HEALTH literacy , *LEADERS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: To assess depression literacy, help-seeking and help-offering to others in members of the police force in the state of Victoria, Australia. Methods: All staff in police stations involved in a cluster randomised controlled trial of an integrated workplace mental health intervention were invited to participate. Survey questions covered sociodemographic and employment information, recognition of depression in a vignette, stigma, treatment beliefs, willingness to assist co-workers with mental health problems, help-giving and help-seeking behaviours, and intentions to seek help. Using the baseline dataset associated with the trial, the paper presents a descriptive analysis of mental health literacy and helping behaviours, comparing police station leaders and lower ranks. Results: Respondents were 806 staff, comprising 618 lower-ranked staff and 188 leaders. Almost 84% of respondents were able to correctly label the problem described in the vignette. Among those who had helped someone with a mental health problem, both lower ranks and leaders most commonly reported ‘talking to the person’ although leaders were more likely to facilitate professional help. Leaders’ willingness to assist the person and confidence in doing so was very high, and over 80% of leaders appropriately rated police psychologists, general practitioners, psychologists, talking to a peer and contacting welfare as helpful. However, among both leaders and lower ranks with mental health problems, the proportion of those unlikely to seek professional help was greater than those who were likely to seek it. Conclusion: Knowledge about evidence-based interventions for depression was lower in this police sample than surveys in the general population, pointing to the need for education and training to improve mental health literacy. Such education should also aim to overcome barriers to professional help-seeking. Interventions that aim to improve mental health literacy and help-seeking behaviour appear to be suitable targets for better protecting police member mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. How to tackle a giant: creating a genuine evaluation of the Better Access Program.
- Author
-
Rosenberg, Sebastian and Hickie, Ian
- Subjects
MENTAL health laws ,LAW reform ,MENTAL health service laws ,GOVERNMENT programs - Abstract
Objective: This paper proposes a framework for a systematic evaluation of the Better Access Program, the largest single component of mental health reform announced under the Council of Australian Governments National Action Plan on Mental Health 2006-11. Method: The article explores the genesis of the Program and considers extant data sets and information available with which to establish the impact of the Program on consumers and service providers. Results: There are useful data available in Australia from which to derive pre- and post-implementation analysis about the impact of the Better Access Program. There is doubt as to whether these data form part of the Federal Government's current approach to evaluation of the Program. Conclusions: Anything less than a genuine and comprehensive evaluation will leave Australia unable to assess the real impact of the Better Access Program. The merit of further expenditure in the vital area of primary mental health care will be in doubt as a consequence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Insider-Outsider reflections from a Native Hawaiian researcher and the use of community-based participatory approaches.
- Author
-
Spencer, Michael S.
- Subjects
HAWAIIANS ,PACIFIC Islander Americans ,AUTOETHNOGRAPHY ,ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis ,COMMUNITY-based participatory research ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MENTAL health ,ETHNOPSYCHOLOGY ,MEDICAL care research ,PSYCHOLOGY of Research personnel - Abstract
Objectives: There is an increasing interest in conducting research within indigenous communities among indigenous and non-indigenous researchers alike. This paper offers the critical reflections of one Native Hawaiian researcher and the process of engaging in research as both an insider-outsider.Conclusions: Community-based, participatory research (CBPR) offers one model for outsiders to work effectively with indigenous communities, but CBPR also offers valuable principles for insiders who desire to work with their own communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Conversations between anthropology and psychiatry: drawing out the best from interdisciplinarity in global mental health.
- Author
-
Rosso Buckton, Amanda
- Subjects
ANTHROPOLOGISTS ,PSYCHIATRISTS ,SOCIAL scientists ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,PSYCHIATRIC research ,PSYCHOLOGY ,ETHNOLOGY ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHIATRY ,WORLD health - Abstract
Objectives: Conversations between anthropologists and psychiatrists have led to new theoretical trajectories, research agendas and clinical practices as social scientists and medical practitioners forged new understandings about the interaction of culture, personhood and illness. However, the demands of global mental health, coupled with health service provision requirements, mean that mental health interventions set up with the best intentions can fail to take into account the knowledge and expertise that social sciences can contribute to a programme's success. In this paper, I reflect on conversations between an anthropologist and mental health professionals in direct reference to data analysis of an AusAID mental health capacity-building programme undertaken in the Pacific region.Conclusions: Social and cultural perspectives embedded within programmes can provide richer, more contextualised interventions. In drawing on the combined expertise of anthropology and psychiatry, new taken-for-granted reference points embedding cultural approaches form the basis for delivery of global mental health programmes. These perspectives include: Locating mental health programmes within development critiques. Situating the subjects of development within contextualised settings, acknowledging and respecting local knowledge, understandings and practices. A focus on interdisciplinarity as the basis for future practice in global mental health projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Social and emotional wellbeing, natural helpers, critical health literacy and translational research: connecting the dots for positive health outcomes.
- Author
-
Drew, Neil
- Subjects
WELL-being ,TRANSLATIONAL research ,HEALTH literacy ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,INDIGENOUS youth ,ETHNOPSYCHOLOGY ,HEALTH attitudes ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDICAL research ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY ,INFORMATION literacy ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
Objective: The tripartite framework for principled practice was developed as part of the Wundargoodie Aboriginal Youth and Community Wellbeing Programme. The programme engages natural helpers to enhance critical health literacy. This paper examines the importance of translational research to enhancing critical health literacy for this group of de facto health workers using the work of the Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet as an example. Translational research provides workforce support for those who are time poor and overburdened. Connecting these concepts and natural helpers will make a positive difference to Aboriginal health outcomes.Conclusions: There is a need for the development of translational research products that enhance the critical health literacy of natural helpers. The tripartite framework for principled practice supports reflective and accountable practice in the intercultural space to build trust and confidence between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people to enhance the opportunity for authentic knowledge production and transfer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Reflections on Aboriginal perinatal mental health, mothers, babies, families and community: A South Australian trainee's experience.
- Author
-
Laddipeerla, Aparna, Alexander, Jacob, and Lattanzio, Adriana
- Subjects
MOTHERS ,PERINATAL care ,PSYCHIATRISTS ,ABORIGINAL Australian women ,MOTHER-child relationship ,PSYCHOLOGY ,TRAINING ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Objective: This paper explores novel training opportunities that the Expanded Setting Training Program (ESTP) provides for advanced psychiatry trainees. It is a reflection of a trainee's learning experiences during a year-long posting in Aboriginal Perinatal Mental Health, working alongside the Aboriginal Family Birthing Program, coupled with reflection and supervision.Conclusions: ESTP provided a fertile area to hone an advanced trainee's skills in the niche areas of Aboriginal mental health, perinatal mental health, culture and psychiatry. In addition, it provided skills in the area of leadership, health advocacy and the establishment and maintenance of successful programs in disadvantaged, culturally and linguistically diverse communities. The ESTP Aboriginal Mental Health rotation provides a unique experience for training, and the learning opportunities are limited only by the creativity of the trainee and supervisor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Can music preference indicate mental health status in young people?
- Author
-
Baker, Felicity and Bor, William
- Subjects
MUSIC & youth ,MUSIC psychology ,DELINQUENT behavior ,MUSIC & teenagers ,RAP music ,HEAVY metal music ,EMO music ,MENTAL health ,TEENAGERS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: In the aftermath of the double suicide of two teenage girls in 2007, the media linked the themes of 'emo' music and the girls' mental state. But it is not just emo music that has been the subject of scrutiny by the media. Rap music, country, and heavy metal have also been blamed for antisocial behaviours including violence, theft, promiscuity and drug use. It remains an important research and clinical question as to whether music contributes to the acting out of behaviours described in the music lyrics or whether the preferred music represents the already existing behavioural tendencies in the subject. This paper surveys and discusses the relevant literature on music preference and adolescent music listening behaviours, and their links with adolescent mental health. Conclusion: Studies have found a relationship between various genres of music and antisocial behaviours, vulnerability to suicide, and drug use. However, studies reject that music is a causal factor and suggest that music preference is more indicative of emotional vulnerability. A limited number of studies have found correlations between music preference and mental health status. More research is needed to determine whether music preferences of those with diagnosed mental health issues differ substantially from the general adolescent population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Risk Factor Research and Prevention for Anxiety Disorders.
- Author
-
Schmidt, Norman B. and Zvolensky, Michael J.
- Subjects
ANXIETY disorders ,ANXIETY ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,RESEARCH ,NEUROSES ,MENTAL health ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In relation to treatment-related research in the United States, there is relatively little systematic effort focused on the combination of risk and prevention for anxiety pathology. This article broadly discusses risk factor research and prevention program development for anxiety psychopathology. The authors also specifically discuss papers in this special issue that are focused on these topics. Risk factor research should be used by clinical researchers to inform prevention programs, and reciprocally, prevention knowledge should be effectively utilized to drive new, clinically focused risk factor research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Measuring the soul: psychological technologies and the production of physical health in Progressive Era America.
- Author
-
Gagen, Elizabeth A.
- Subjects
- *
CHILD psychology , *PHYSICAL education , *SOUL , *PSYCHOLOGY , *MENTAL health , *ETHICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *CHILD development , *PHILOSOPHY - Abstract
This paper is concerned with the establishment of child psychology at the end of the 19th century and with its applied uses in the field of physical education. During this period psychology evolved from a philosophical field content with generalised statements about the human soul to a scientific field concerned with measuring and individuating the psyche, This paper focuses on how while psychology quickly laid claim to establishing the contours of normative menial health it was simultaneously deployed in the service of identifying and bolstering normative physical health. As interiority was systematically brought within the realm of science, the traditional metonymic connection between physicality and morality materialised into a new relationship between the self and its numerical existence. This relationship is explored here through an examination of physical-health testing in New York schools during the Progressive Era. My aim is to draw out the manifold ways in which psychological technologies were absorbed into spatial practice, supporting the claim of this theme issue that the proliferation of psychology can be traced through multiple governing practices and into specific geographies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Hurly-burly of psychiatric ethics.
- Author
-
Hughes, Julian C. and Fulford, K. W. M. Bill
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHIATRIC ethics , *MEDICAL ethics , *ETHICS , *PSYCHIATRY , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This is the introductory paper to the special issue on ethics in psychiatry. We introduce the other papers that follow and set them in a context. Inevitably, they represent only a thin slice of the work going on in psychiatric ethics. But they serve to show two unique features of this discipline. First, it has a tendency to dig deep and to make connections with other philosophical concepts. So, for example, in a number of ways the papers that follow touch on the nature of personhood. We examine this notion. Second, psychiatric ethics, because of its content and its embededness in the real world, tends to hit upon diverse and sometimes conflicting values. We introduce the idea of values-based medicine, which provides both a theoretical framework and a practical approach to the common dilemmas of psychiatric practice. The need to think deeply, but also clearly and coherently, combined with the need to engage with the hurly-burly of the world of patients, users and carers, suggests the reasons why psychiatric ethics offers a paradigm for practical ethics generally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Profiles of Decent Work and Precarious Work: Exploring Macro-Level Predictors and Mental Health Outcomes.
- Author
-
Blustein, David L., Allan, Blake A., Davila, Alekzander, Smith, Camille M., Gordon, Michael, Wu, XiYue, Milo, Lauren, and Whitson, Nathan
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,GOVERNMENT policy ,STRUCTURAL models ,PRECARITY ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Using a person-centered approach, this study explored the interrelationship between decent work and precarious work via a latent profile analysis (LPA). This investigation sought to replicate the latent profiles from Blustein and colleagues (2020) and extend the results by examining the role of individual lifetime experiences of macro-level factors (economic constraints and marginalization) as predictors and selected mental health indices (depression and anxiety) as outcomes of profile membership. Using a sample of 422 working adults in the U.S., the findings of the LPA yielded four profiles (indecent-precarious, low healthcare-low rights, highly decent, and vulnerability dominant), replicating four out of the five of the profiles identified in Blustein et al. Informed by psychology of working theory (PWT) and precarity theory, we assessed a structural model of the aforementioned predictors and outcomes in relation to profile membership. Consistent with theoretical expectations, economic constraints and marginalization positively predicted profiles that reflected greater instability and precarity. In addition, the profiles that reflected greater instability and precarity predicted both depression and anxiety. Implications for theory, counseling practice, public policy, and new directions in research are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Brain Changes Linked to Cognitive Symptomatology in Homeless Youth.
- Author
-
Bounds, Dawn, Woo, Mary A, Nyamathi, Adeline, Kehoe, Priscilla, Roy, Bhaswati, Yadav, Kartik, Cabrera-Mino, Cristina, and Kumar, Rajesh
- Subjects
COGNITION disorder risk factors ,BRAIN anatomy ,MENTAL depression risk factors ,PILOT projects ,RESEARCH ,GRAY matter (Nerve tissue) ,PREFRONTAL cortex ,EXECUTIVE function ,LIMBIC system ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,CASE-control method ,RISK assessment ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,INSULAR cortex ,CONFLICT management ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,T-test (Statistics) ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,DECISION making ,MENTAL depression ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,HOMELESS persons ,STATISTICAL correlation ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,COGNITIVE testing ,DATA analysis software ,ADULTS - Abstract
Youth impacted by homelessness experience diminished cognition due to a variety of reasons including mental health symptoms, alcohol and substance use, and adverse childhood experiences. However, the status of specific brain regions which could impact important cognitive functions in homeless youth remains unclear. In this pilot comparative and correlational study, a series of demographic, psychological, cognitive assessments, and brain magnetic resonance imaging were performed in 10 male youth experiencing homelessness and 9 age-matched healthy male controls (age range: 18–25 years). Participants experiencing homelessness had significantly decreased regional brain gray matter tissue in comparison to the controls. Moreover, there were strong inverse correlations between the brain regions classically associated with executive decision-making (prefrontal cortices), depression (insular lobes), and conflict resolution (anterior cingulate), and the level of the symptoms detected by their questionnaires. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Mental Health Benefits and Detriments of Caregiving Demands: A Nonlinear Association in the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging.
- Author
-
Bierman, Alex, Lee, Yeonjung, and Penning, Margaret J.
- Subjects
CAREGIVER attitudes ,MENTAL health ,SATISFACTION ,PSYCHOLOGY ,FAMILIES ,REGRESSION analysis ,MENTAL depression ,CONCEPTUAL models ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MARITAL status ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objectives: This study examines whether the association between caregiving demands and mental health is non-linear and also, whether this non-linear association is contingent on the marital status of the caregiver. Methods: We analyze the data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging, applying OLS regression and quadratic interaction terms. Results: A lower level of demands is salubriously associated with symptoms of depression and life satisfaction, but this association becomes deleterious at higher levels of demands. Moreover, a connection to a marital partner extends the benefits of caregiving demands and stems the adverse consequences. Discussion: This research shows that acts of caregiving may not themselves be detrimental. Instead, the degree and way in which caregiving relates to mental health may vary by both the extent of the demands of the caregiving role and familial relationships in which caregivers are embedded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Questioning Contemporary Universalist Approaches to Human Flourishing.
- Author
-
Fowers, Blaine J., Novak, Lukas F., Kiknadze, Nona C., and Calder, Alex J.
- Subjects
WELL-being ,HAPPINESS ,RESEARCH evaluation ,MATHEMATICAL models ,PSYCHOLOGY ,CULTURAL pluralism ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,THEORY - Abstract
This article takes stock of the growing interest in flourishing measurement. The focus is on three challenges in this domain: the degree of coherent theorizing, the overreliance on psychometric validation, and the questionable universality of the measures. A rigorous process identified the eight most widely documented flourishing measures. All eight measures struggled with the three challenges. First, all measures were constructed on intuitive grounds, whether those bases were existing literatures, personal conceptualizations, or the intuition of an opposition of mental illness and flourishing. Second, all measures were assessed almost exclusively with psychometric studies, with little evidence of theoretical or cultural validity. Finally, all eight measures implicitly or explicitly assume cultural universality without providing theoretical argument or empirical evidence for that assumption. This stock-taking resulted in two main conclusions. First, there are areas of both consensus (e.g., that flourishing is a measurable, multidimensional construct) and dissensus (e.g., the components of flourishing) that can provide bases for future theory and research. Second, systematic theoretical argument is necessary to better understand what flourishing is, how it can be validly measured, and the degree to which it can be considered a universal human experience. It is time to address these theoretical and cultural questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Individual response profiles in the behavioral assessment of personality.
- Author
-
Asendorpf, Jens B.
- Subjects
BEHAVIORAL assessment ,PERSONALITY assessment ,PERSONALITY tests ,PERSONALITY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL techniques ,MENTAL health ,CONSCIOUSNESS ,PSYCHODIAGNOSTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
A long-standing problem in the behavioral assessment of personality is the individual specifically of response. Often, different persons externalize the same trait in different responses. One solution to this problem is to aggregate many different responses. The paper compares the power of responses aggregation for predicting self- and other-ratings of personality of personality with two alternative of response selection; the nomothetic strategy of selecting the response with the highest overall predictive power, and the more idiographic strategy of selecting, for each individual, the most extreme response. Seventy subjects were videotaped in a sequence of social situations inducing shyness to various degrees. Five different nonverbal measures of shyness all correlated significantly with the subjects self- or other-rated shyness, and showed low correlations across subjects and a substantial cross-situational consistency of response profiles. Response aggregation and both strategies of response selection were found to be equality powerful in predicting the subjects self- and other-rating of shyness from the five behavioural responses. Therefore, these findings somewhat dampen the hope more respect for the individual case may improve anesthetic assessment procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Psychotherapy outcome research in child psychiatric disorders.
- Author
-
Pearsall, Donald F. and Pearsall, D F
- Subjects
CHILD psychiatry ,CHILD psychology ,CHILD psychopathology ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,CHILD mental health services ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PSYCHIATRY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,MENTAL illness treatment ,MENTAL illness ,COGNITIVE therapy ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Psychiatry is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Are there injury-prone children? A critical review of the literature.
- Author
-
Wazana, Ashley and Wazana, A
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S injuries ,CHILDREN'S accidents ,CHILD psychiatry ,CHILD psychology ,CHILD psychopathology ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PSYCHIATRY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,TRAFFIC accidents -- Psychological aspects ,TRAFFIC safety ,ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,ATTRIBUTION (Social psychology) ,BEHAVIOR ,LONGITUDINAL method ,TRAFFIC accidents ,WOUNDS & injuries ,CASE-control method - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Psychiatry is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Severe conduct disorder--some key issues.
- Author
-
Werry, John Scott and Werry, J S
- Subjects
PERSONALITY disorders ,ANTISOCIAL personality disorders ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,HUMAN services ,PUBLIC health ,GENETIC counseling ,PSYCHIATRIC social work ,HUMAN behavior ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHIATRY ,JUVENILE delinquency & psychology ,COMBINED modality therapy ,BEHAVIOR disorders in children ,JUVENILE delinquency ,PERSONALITY development ,COMORBIDITY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL factors ,DIAGNOSIS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Psychiatry is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Role Occupancy and Minority Mental Health.
- Author
-
Jackson, Pamela Braboy
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,RACE ,ETHNICITY ,PSYCHOLOGY ,ETHNIC groups ,SOCIAL role ,PUERTO Ricans ,MEXICANS - Abstract
Most studies of the mental health consequences of role occupancy do not consider racial/ethnic variation. Using a national sample of adults (19 = 13,017), this paper examines the relationship between three' role characteristics (role accumulation, role status, and role combinations) and mental health for Blacks, Mexicans, and Puerto Ricans and explores the extent to which these patterns differ from those for non-Hispanic Whites. Blacks and Puerto Ricans do not benefit from role accumulation whereas Mexicans and Whites who report a high number of roles report better psychological health than those who report few roles. All ethnic groups benefit from the spousal role but there is no consistent effect of either employment or parenthood. Membership in organizational groups benefits non-Hispanic Whites only, whereas familial roles (especially having a sibling) are related to improved mental health among all ethnic groups, except Puerto Ricans. In terms of role combinations, the psychological benefits of occupying all three adult social roles is more evident among non-Hispanic Whites and Mexican Americans compared to Blacks and Puerto Ricans. These findings are discussed in the context of their implications for sociological research which assumes that social psychological processes operate in the same manner across racial/ethnic groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A New Perspective on the Relationships Among Race, Social Class, and Psychological Distress.
- Author
-
Kessler, Ronald C. and Neighbors, Harold W.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL classes - Abstract
Over the past decade, a body of research has developed which purports to show that the well-established relationship between race and psychological distress is duc entirely to social class. In our paper we demonstrate that this view is incorrect: Most prior research has assumed that the effects of race and social class are additive; our analysis shows that they are actually interactive. The form of interaction is such that thc true effect of race is suppressed and tire true effect of social class is magnified in a model that fails to take the interaction into consideration. An analysis of eight different epidemiologic surveys documents this result and shows that race differences in psychological distress are particularly pronounced among people with low incomes. On the basis of this result we call for renewed interest in the effect of race on mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The 22-Item Scale Used In Field Studies of Mental Illness: A Question of Method, a Question of Substance, and a Question of Theory.
- Author
-
Seller, Lauren H.
- Subjects
MENTAL illness ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,LIFE change events ,MENTAL health ,FIELD research ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The 22-item scale developed through the Midtown Manhattan Study is considered from methodological, substantive, and theoretical perspectives. This paper concludes that the instrument is, at best, a very incomplete measure of mental illness. A review of previous literature suggests a more reasonable interpretation is that it measures psychological stress and physical malaise, although even for these purposes it is a less than ideal measure. Use of the instrument examining the relationship between stressful life experiences and mental illness is further discouraged due to a conceptual confounding of the independent and dependent variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. De-medicalising public mental health with the Power Threat Meaning Framework.
- Author
-
Harper, D J
- Abstract
Aims: To propose that the language and concepts in public mental health are often medicalised and to suggest that the power threat meaning framework (PTMF), can be a useful resource for those wishing to take a de-medicalising approach. Method: Examples of medicalisation from the literature and from practice are discussed and key constructs in the PTMF are explained, drawing from the report which presented its research base. Results: Examples of medicalisation in public mental health include: the uncritical use of psychiatric diagnostic categories; the 'illness like any other' approach in anti-stigma campaigns; and the implicit privileging of biology in the biopsychosocial model. The negative operations of power in society are seen as posing threats to human needs and people make sense of such situations in varied ways, though there are some commonalities. This gives rise to culturally available and bodily enabled threat responses which serve a variety of functions. From a medicalised perspective, these responses to threat are characteristically seen as 'symptoms' of underlying disorders. The PTMF is both a conceptual framework and a practical tool that can be used by individuals, groups and communities. Conclusion: Consistent with social epidemiological research, prevention efforts should focus on preventing adversity rather than 'disorders' but the added value of the PTMF is that varied problems can be understood in an integrated manner as responses to a variety of threats whose functions could be met in different ways. Its message that mental distress is often a response to adversity is comprehensible to the public and can be communicated in an accessible way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Mental health system development in Asia: Does Australia have a role?
- Author
-
Arandjelovic, Katarina, Eyre, Harris A., Forbes, Malcolm P., Bauer, Renee, Aggarwal, Shilpa, Singh, Ajeet B., Baune, Bernhard T., Everall, Ian, Berk, Michael, and Ng, Chee
- Subjects
- *
POLICY sciences , *HEALTH services accessibility , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *MEDICAL ethics , *FOREIGN medical personnel , *MENTAL health services , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL stigma , *TRANSCULTURAL medical care , *ATTITUDES toward mental illness , *HEALTH & social status , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Socioeconomic trends herald what many describe as the Asian Century, whereby Asian economic, political and cultural influence is in global ascendency. Broadening relevant ties between Australia and Asia is evident and logical and may include strengthening alliances in mental health systems. Aim: We argue the importance of strengthening Asian mental health systems and some of the roles Australian mental health workers could have in promoting strengthening the Asian mental health system. Methods: This paper is a narrative review which sources data from reputable search databases. Results: A well-articulated Australian strategy to support strengthening the mental health system in Asia is lacking. While there are active initiatives operating in this space, these remain fragmented and underdeveloped. Coordinated, collaborative and culturally respectful efforts to enhance health education, research, policy, leadership and development assistance are key opportunities. Conclusion: Psychiatrists and other mental health professionals have a unique opportunity to contribute to improved mental health outcomes in Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Bringing Books Back: Enhancing the Understanding of Psychotherapy in Psychology Students Through Book Club Participation.
- Author
-
Khokhlova, Olga and Bhatia, Aditi
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY students ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,BOOK clubs (Discussion groups) ,UNDERGRADUATES ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Background: The experiential and reflective nature of psychotherapeutic training is not always captured in undergraduate psychology teaching, therefore, there is a need for educational strategies that provide opportunities for deeper understanding of the therapeutic process. Objective: This article evaluates one such strategy—A Book Club, to support the understanding of psychotherapeutic practice and mental health in Psychology undergraduate students at a private university in Dubai, UAE. Method: Psychotherapy-related books were assigned as prior reading each month, which were then discussed in the group meetings facilitated by clinically experienced Psychology lecturers. Fifteen semi-structured interviews were carried out with students and analyzed using thematic analysis. Results: Four primary themes were generated—(1) Diversity in perspectives, (2) Autonomous learning environment, (3) Reality orientation, and (4) Sparking self-insight. The results highlight that Book Clubs are useful in fostering deeper conceptualizations of the therapeutic relationship, visualizing future careers in psychotherapy, and promoting self-awareness among students. Conclusion: Discussions centred around books can provide students with discourse opportunities that enhance students' interpersonal skills and improve student engagement. Teaching Implication: Book clubs can be a useful platform for teachers to help students connect the knowledge that they have previously acquired in the classroom with real-life experiences of psychotherapists described in books. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Educators Are Not Alright: Mental Health During COVID-19.
- Author
-
Hirshberg, Matthew J., Davidson, Richard J., and Goldberg, Simon B.
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,JOB stress ,MENTAL health ,POOR families ,LABOR demand ,SCHOOL employees - Abstract
Educator mental health sits at the intersection of multiple pressing educational issues. We are among the first to provide estimates of school system employee (SSE) stress, anxiety, and depression during the COVID-19 pandemic. Most participants reported clinically meaningful anxiety and depressive symptoms (77.96% and 53.65%, respectively). Being in the lowest strata of family income was associated with higher stress, a greater likelihood of clinically significant depressive symptoms, and reduced intentions to continue in the same job, portending the current staffing shortages affecting schools. Supporting SSE mental health should become a policy priority. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. "My Voice Was Discounted the Whole Way Through": A Gendered Analysis of Women's Experiences of Involuntary Mental Health Treatment.
- Author
-
Tseris, Emma Jane, Bright Hart, Eva, and Franks, Scarlett
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL practice ,HUMAN research subjects ,FEMINISM ,RESEARCH methodology ,PATIENT decision making ,SOCIAL change ,PSYCHOLOGY ,INTERVIEWING ,VIOLENCE ,INVOLUNTARY treatment ,EXPERIENCE ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,RESEARCH ethics ,GENDER ,SEX distribution ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,SOCIAL isolation ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,THEORY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,POVERTY ,MENTAL health services ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
Although it is well established that women experience significant gendered oppressions when accessing mental health services, research exploring the impacts of involuntary mental health services is frequently conducted without attending specifically to gender. This article reports on a qualitative study that explored women's experiences of compulsory mental health treatment in Australia. In-depth interviews revealed substantial gendered harms experienced by women within involuntary mental health treatment settings. Themes identified were: involuntary treatment replicates the dynamics and tactics of gendered violence; treatment involves profound deprivation and losses, with potential implications across the lifecourse; mental health services disrupt and undermine mothering; and recovery is found outside of coercive mental health systems. The study reveals the heightened harms experienced by women within involuntary mental health contexts, as well as women's strategic resistances to psychiatric oppression. It demonstrates the relevance of a conceptual lens that is attuned to gender, in order to develop a deeper understanding of women's experiences of intersecting oppressions within involuntary mental health settings. Implications include the need for alliance-building across feminist and critical mental health movements, and the need for a much more robust engagement by the social work profession in challenging the widespread acceptance of involuntary mental health treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Incorporating Mental Health Into Lifestyle Medicine.
- Author
-
Abascal, Liana, Vela, Alyssa, Sugden, Steve, Kohlenberg, Samuel, Hirschberg, April, Young, Allison, Lane, Karen, and Merlo, Gia
- Subjects
PSYCHIATRY ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,NUTRITION ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PHYSICAL activity ,SLEEP ,HEALTH behavior ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,BEHAVIOR modification - Abstract
The evidence-based interconnection between mental health with lifestyle medicine practice is discussed. The extent to which physical health, and mental and behavioral health overlap are significant, and their interaction is seen in many ways. These bidirectional influences form a continuous thread through all lifestyle medicine pillars. The intersection of mental health and lifestyle should be considered and applied to provide optimal evidence-based lifestyle medicine for all patient populations who will benefit from the specific attention to diet, physical activity, relationships, stress, sleep, and substance use. Lifestyle medicine can be utilized to directly address and treat a range of mental health symptoms and disorders, and physical illnesses. In addition, behavior change skills and addressing the psychological factors contributing to barriers are crucial to helping patients reach their lifestyle medicine goals. Approaches to practice that attend to, and address, mental and behavioral health are relevant to and necessary for all types of providers who work within the lifestyle medicine framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Belief in Human Sinfulness, Belief in Experiencing Divine Forgiveness, and Psychiatric Symptoms.
- Author
-
Uecker, Jeremy, Ellison, Christopher, Flannelly, Kevin, and Burdette, Amy
- Subjects
MENTAL health & religion ,SIN ,FORGIVENESS of sin ,FAITH ,RELIGIOUSNESS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Many mental health and religious professionals have long argued that belief in human sinfulness is associated with poor mental health. Others argue that the deleterious mental health effects of belief in sinfulness may be buffered by a concomitant belief in divine forgiveness, which may itself have positive mental health benefits. We test these ideas using data from a national survey of US adults ( N = 1629). Our results indicate a positive association between belief in human sinfulness and all eight classes of psychiatric symptoms we examine, and a negative relationship between belief in being divinely forgiven and six of the classes of psychiatric symptoms. Moreover, there are significant interaction effects between believing humans to be sinful and belief in being forgiven for seven of the eight outcomes such that the net effects of believing in sin on mental health are attenuated for those who believe they have experienced God's forgiveness in their lives. Among those who report feeling forgiven by God 'many times,' belief in human sinfulness is only associated with four of the psychiatric outcomes, and these associations are modest in size. Our findings provide partial support for the idea that belief in sinfulness is bad for mental health, but also show that religious beliefs are best understood in relation to other beliefs. Believing in human sinfulness is not necessarily harmful if it is accompanied by belief in having experienced divine forgiveness. This study contributes to a growing body of research explicating the relationships among religious beliefs and mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Multidimensional Determinants of Well-Being Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults During the Early Stage of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Taiwan.
- Author
-
Chen, Jia-Jen, Liu, Li-Fan, Lin, Chung-I, and Lin, Heng-Chun
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,OLDER people ,PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being ,WELL-being ,SOCIAL status ,LAUGHTER - Abstract
Objectives: Due to the insufficient and inadequate policies on the psychological well-being of the aged population, we aimed to examine the multidimensional determinants of well-being during the early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: Data were collected from face-to-face interviews with1,232 participants aged 50 and older living in Southern Taiwan. We used multivariate logistic regression to examine the associations between demographics, the physical health, mental health, social ties domains, and well-being. Results: We found that (i) in physical health, no dental problems and exercise were related to better well-being; (ii) in mental health, stress and depression decreased well-being, but laughing every day, and a positive attitude toward aging had adverse effects; and (iii) in social ties, subjective social status, family support, and place attachment to the community were positively associated with well-being. Discussion: Our findings highlight the multidimensional needs at the individual and community levels for the Chinese population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Skin Shade Stratification and the Psychological Cost of Unemployment: Is there a Gradient for Black Females?
- Author
-
Diette, Timothy, Goldsmith, Arthur, Hamilton, Darrick, and Darity, William
- Subjects
SOCIAL stratification ,RACE discrimination in employment ,UNEMPLOYMENT & psychology ,PSYCHOLOGY of Black women ,BLACK women ,DEPRESSION in women ,HUMAN skin color ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MENTAL health - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to formally evaluate whether the deleterious impact of unemployment on mental health increases as skin shade darkens for black women in the U.S. Using data drawn from the National Survey of American Life, we find strong evidence of a gradient on depression between skin shade and unemployment for black women. These findings are consistent with the premises of the emerging field of stratification economics. Moreover, the findings are robust to various definitions of skin shade. Unemployed black women with darker complexions are significantly more likely to suffer their first onset of depression than unemployed black females with lighter skin shade. While in some cases, lighter skinned black women appeared not to suffer adverse effects of unemployment compared to their employed counterparts, persons with dark complexions did not enjoy the same degree of protection from poor mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Dialog with ERIC.
- Subjects
ERIC (Information retrieval system) ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems in education ,INFORMATION resources ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,HEALTH ,PSYCHOLOGY ,DISABILITY studies ,MENTAL health ,SPEECHES, addresses, etc. - Abstract
The article talks about the ERIC information system. It asks for people to consider entering their reports, speeches or papers and their teaching unit or curriculum guide into the ERIC system. It states that the addition of the materials in the system does not prevent the owner to publish them elsewhere. It presents questions which serves as guidelines to consider in determining if the material is a good candidate for ERIC. The topics include education of the handicapped, psychology, mental health, emerging trends in the field, and users' interests.
- Published
- 1978
46. Risk Factors for Potential Mental Illness Among Brazilians in Quarantine Due To COVID-19.
- Author
-
Filgueiras, Alberto and Stults-Kolehmainen, Matthew
- Subjects
MENTAL illness ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH behavior ,OLDER people ,QUARANTINE - Abstract
Background: During quarantine, both physical and mental health are a concern. To the same extent that physicians are a scarce resource during this crisis, psychiatrists and psychologists are also limited in number. To help practitioners and public managers decide where to invest their resources, the present research investigated the relationships of stress, depression and state anxiety levels with sociodemographic and behavioural variables. Methods: Data were collected in Brazil between March, 18 and 22, 2020 in 1,468 volunteers during quarantine. Participants with a history of or current mental health illnesses were excluded leaving 1,460 individuals in the final sample. The online assessment included instruments for psychological stress, depression and state anxiety. A sociodemographic and behavioural questionnaire with 15 items was used to assess other factors. Multiple linear regression was performed for each psychological outcome to determine a hierarchy of significant predictors. Findings: Stress, depression and state anxiety levels were all predicted by gender (women higher than men), quality of nutrition, attendance in tele-psychotherapy, exercise frequency, presence of elderly persons in quarantine with the person, obligation to work outside the home, level of education (more educated, lesser risk for mental illness) and age (younger age, greater risk). Having a perceived risk factor for COVID-19 predicted depression and state anxiety, but not stress. Finally, the presence of children in quarantine with the participant was a protective factor for depression. Interpretation: Even though this research is limited by its cross-sectional design, it is possible to infer that mental health varies by demographic attributes, obligations and health behaviours. Those who report higher distress must work outside the home during quarantine, live with an elderly person and carry a risk factor for COVID-19, among other factors. Identifying those who are most vulnerable would help to prioritize those who may need the greatest psychological aid and assist public health practitioners in developing support strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Effectiveness of an Adventure-based Cognitive Behavioral Program for Hong Kong University Students.
- Author
-
Pan, Jia-Yan and Zhuang, Xiaoyu
- Subjects
COMPETENCY assessment (Law) ,STATISTICAL power analysis ,LECTURE method in teaching ,CAMPING ,STATISTICS ,ADVENTURE therapy ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,STATISTICAL reliability ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,SOCIAL workers ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,ABILITY ,TRAINING ,PHYSICAL activity ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,THEORY ,HEALTH care teams ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DATA analysis ,DATA analysis software ,COGNITIVE therapy ,ADULT education workshops ,WARMUP ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
Objectives: This pilot study developed an adventure-based cognitive behavioral intervention (aCBI) program and tests its effectiveness in improving the mental health of Chinese university students in Hong Kong. Method: A total of 217 undergraduate students participated in an aCBI program in the form of an interdisciplinary general education course in a university in Hong Kong. A battery of standardized online questionnaires was administered to the students before joining and upon completion of the course, and at a 3-month follow-up test. Results: The participants showed a significant reduction of psychological distress, perceived stress, depressive symptoms, and negative thoughts and emotions and a significant increase of positive thoughts upon immediate completion of the program. The positive effects maintained at the 3-month follow-up test. Conclusion: The integration of cognitive behavioral intervention and adventure training in a class setting might be an effective and feasible approach for the mental health counseling of university students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Discovering Grace at the Table? Prayers at Mealtime, Marital Status, and Life Satisfaction in Later Life.
- Author
-
Jung, Jong Hyun and Ellison, Christopher G.
- Subjects
WELL-being ,SATISFACTION ,MENTAL health ,PRAYER ,MARITAL status ,RELIGION ,LONGITUDINAL method ,OLD age ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This study examines the effects of prayers at mealtime on change in life satisfaction among older U.S. adults. In addition, it assesses the ways that marital status conditions these psychological effects of prayers at mealtime. Using two waves of longitudinal data from the Religion, Aging, and Health Survey (2001–2004), a representative sampling of adults aged 65 and older, the analyses reveal that the frequency of prayers at mealtime is associated with an increase in life satisfaction over time. Further, the positive effects of prayers at mealtime on change in life satisfaction are greater for nonmarried older adults than their married counterparts. The findings in the study reinforce claims of the beneficial effects of religion on mental well-being in later life. Moreover, they elaborate on the resource substitution thesis by showing that religion provides greater psychological benefits for older adults who do not have alternative resources for well-being—a marital partner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Multidimensional Determinants of Well-Being Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults During the Early Stage of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Taiwan.
- Author
-
Jia-Jen Chen, Li-Fan Liu, Chung-I Lin, and Heng-Chun Lin
- Subjects
WELL-being ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PLACE attachment (Psychology) ,OLDER people ,SOCIAL status ,LAUGHTER - Abstract
Objectives: Due to the insufficient and inadequate policies on the psychological well-being of the aged population, we aimed to examine the multidimensional determinants of well-being during the early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: Data were collected from face-to-face interviews with1,232 participants aged 50 and older living in Southern Taiwan. We used multivariate logistic regression to examine the associations between demographics, the physical health, mental health, social ties domains, and well-being. Results: We found that (i) in physical health, no dental problems and exercise were related to better well-being; (ii) in mental health, stress and depression decreased well-being, but laughing every day, and a positive attitude toward aging had adverse effects; and (iii) in social ties, subjective social status, family support, and place attachment to the community were positively associated with well-being. Discussion: Our findings highlight the multidimensional needs at the individual and community levels for the Chinese population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A Survey Study of Spiritual Change and Related Factors Among the Surviving Loved Ones of Homicide Victims.
- Author
-
Johnson, Shannon
- Subjects
HOMICIDE ,RESEARCH ,SPIRITUALITY ,RESEARCH evaluation ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHRISTIANITY ,RESEARCH methodology ,GROUNDED theory ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MENTAL health ,VICTIM psychology ,THEORY ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software ,BEREAVEMENT - Abstract
A survey study was conducted as the second phase of a sequential mixed-methods study of spiritual change after the homicide of a loved one. The purpose of the study was to test the Theory of Post-Homicide Spiritual Change (Theory of PHSC), which emerged in Phase 1 of the larger study. The formulation of survey research questions and hypotheses was guided by the emerging theory. Data were collected online using Qualtrics. Respondents (N = 112) completed a demographic and background questionnaire that was devised for the study based on a review of important factors in homicidal bereavement. They also responded to established measures, including a modified version of the Posttraumatic Growth Inventory, the Integration of Stressful Life Experiences Scale (ISLES), and the Perceived Justice Scale. The ISLES was comprised of two subscales—Comprehensibility and Footing in the World. Significant findings revealed that posttraumatic growth (PTG) was higher among those for whom 3 or more years had passed since the murder, as compared with those for whom fewer than 3 years had passed. The age of the victim was positively correlated with integration of loss. Christian respondents reported higher levels of integration of loss and PTG, as compared with non-Christian respondents. Integration of loss was a mediator of the relationship between perceived justice and integration of loss, while footing in the world was a mediator of the relationship between comprehensibility and PTG. Contrary to hypotheses, integration of loss did not differ by time since murder. This finding is interpreted in terms of the limitations of the study sample and in terms of future research directions in this area. The results of this study yield important insight into spiritual change and related factors that can be used to guide service provision with the homicide survivor population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.