21 results on '"Kidd, Sean"'
Search Results
2. Antecedents and Consequences of Violence in Homeless Shelters: Perspectives and Experiences of Service Users and Shelter Staff.
- Author
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Kerman, Nick, Kidd, Sean A., Voronov, Joseph, de Pass, Timothy, Marshall, Carrie Anne, and Stergiopoulos, Vicky
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HOMELESS shelters , *QUALITY of service , *HOMELESS persons , *VIOLENCE , *INTERPERSONAL conflict - Abstract
Violence is a critical issue in homeless shelters that affects service users and staff, yet there is limited evidence on how shelter-based violence occurs. The objective of this qualitative study was to investigate the antecedents and consequences of shelter-based violence from the perspectives of service users and staff. Purposive sampling was used to recruit individuals experiencing homelessness and shelter staff in a large metropolitan city in Ontario, Canada. Data from in-depth interviews with 56 individuals experiencing homelessness and 30 shelter staff were analyzed. Findings showed that shelter-based violence toward service users and staff was perceived to manifest in response to three interacting factors: (a) burden of homelessness and shelter living, (b) individual histories and marginalization, and (c) interpersonal conflict. These antecedents had a hierarchical structure in that each subsequent factor exacerbated the risk of previous ones and culminated with the most proximal factor for violence. There were three primary outcomes of shelter-based violence reported by service users and staff: (a) health and environmental harms, (b), procedural enforcement, and (c) avoidant behaviors. Avoidance was often a subsequent impact following health harms, as was procedural enforcement to a lesser extent. Overall, the study findings demonstrate that shelter-based violence is a complex and dynamic problem that is perceived to be the result of interacting structural, environmental, programmatic, interpersonal, and individual factors, with similar consequences for service users and staff. Implications for preventing violence through shelter design and service delivery are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Mental Health and Wellness of Service Providers Working with People Experiencing Homelessness in Canada: A National Survey from the Second Wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Kerman, Nick, Ecker, John, Gaetz, Stephen, Tiderington, Emmy, and A. Kidd, Sean
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MENTAL health services ,HOMELESS persons ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MENTAL illness ,WORK experience (Employment) ,HARM reduction - 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
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Second National Canadian Homeless Youth Survey: Mental Health and Addiction Findings: La Deuxième Enquête Nationale Auprès des Jeunes Sans Abri : Résultats en Matière De Santé Mentale et de Toxicomanie.
- Author
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Kidd, Sean A., Gaetz, Stephen, O'Grady, Bill, Schwan, Kaitlin, Zhao, Haoyu, Lopes, Katrini, and Wang, Wei
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HOMELESS youth , *MENTAL health of youth , *EMOTIONAL trauma in adolescence , *ADDICTIONS , *YOUTH , *HOMELESSNESS , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys - Abstract
Objective: Youth experiencing homelessness represent a major social problem in Canada and, as demonstrated in the first national survey of this population conducted in 2015, are experiencing significant mental health challenges. The present study examines the findings of a second national survey completed in 2019. These findings afford the opportunity to examine the reliability of the findings of the first study with another large, representative sample and to attempt to articulate the unique characteristics of youth experiencing the greatest distress among this at-risk population. Methods: This study analyzed the mental-health-related data from the 2019 Without a Home–National Youth Homelessness Survey that was administered through convenience sampling at 98 agencies serving homeless youth in 49 communities across Canada. The survey was cross-sectional and self-administered, assessing a range of demographic information, pre- and post-homelessness variables, and mental health indicators. Multinomial logistic regression and linear regression were implemented to evaluate associations with distress level. Results: Survey data were obtained from 1,375 youth accessing Canadian homeless services in 9 provinces. Thirty-five percent reported at least 1 suicide attempt, and 33.1% reported a drug overdose requiring hospitalization. The findings of this survey replicated most of the key findings from the 2015 survey. The current findings emphasized, for this high-risk population, the heightened adversity faced by young women, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Two-Spirit (LGBTQ2S), and Indigenous subpopulations, as well as the centrality of violence exposure in determining risk and distress. Sexual violence, in particular, emerged as a key factor in the identification of youth experiencing the greatest distress with risk buffered by contact with family. Conclusions: These findings can inform prevention and intervention policies and services and reinforce the importance of attending to violence exposure and trauma as central to the mental health trajectories of youth who have experienced homelessness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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5. Methodological reflections on research with street youth.
- Author
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Karabanow, Jeff, Kidd, Sean, Frederick, Tyler, McLuckie, Alan, and Quick, Jacqueline
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HOMELESS persons , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH funding , *RESEARCH ethics , *SOCIAL work research , *CONTENT mining , *PARTICIPANT-researcher relationships , *EVALUATION , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Summary This paper examines both the epistemological and practical limitations and challenges of data collection by reflecting on the experiences of a team of both junior and senior researchers engaged in such a longitudinal study. Findings This paper argues that longitudinal research with street youth challenges the boundaries and limits of the formal constructs of research and ethics that typically guide qualitative research by grappling with field issues such as navigating reciprocity, risk and authenticity within relationships with a vulnerable group. Application This paper calls for an explicit acknowledgement of the challenges researching populations such as street youth over time in our research ethics guidelines and encourages researchers to engage in dialogue leading to more reflective, transparent and accountable framing of how we collect data in the field with vulnerable youth populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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6. Thirty-Day and 5-Year Readmissions following First Psychiatric Hospitalization: A System-Level Study of Ontario’s Psychiatric Care: Réhospitalisation dans les 30 jours et les 5 ans par suite d’une premiére hospitalisation psychiatrique : une étude au niveau du systéme des soins psychiatriques de l’Ontario
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Chen, Sheng, Collins, April, and Kidd, Sean A.
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PATIENT readmissions ,CARE of people ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,PSYCHIATRIC hospital admission & discharge ,INPATIENT care ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,SCHIZOPHRENIA - Abstract
Objective: Analyses of representative, system-level data to examine trends in short- and longer-term readmission rates for psychiatric illnesses are largely absent. The objective of this article is to examine key trends and variables with implications for inpatient care as indicated by 30-day readmission and outpatient care as reflected by readmission within 5 years.Methods: Using OMHRS data from 2005 to 2015, patients who had their first inpatient admission were followed for 5 years to examine their subsequent 30-day and overall admission rates stratified by discharge time and diagnosis.Results: The study cohort consisted of 42,280 patients. The 30-day and 5-year readmission rates for the entire cohort were 7.2% and 35.1%, respectively. Using a time course analysis of readmission for discharges in different years, both 30-day readmission and 5-year readmission rates decreased in a linear manner from 2005 to 2010, primarily because of readmission patterns for patients diagnosed with mood disorders and schizophrenia/other psychotic disorders. It was also evident that both demographic considerations such as age and gender and variables reflective of social determinants such as education level and employment were predictive of rehospitalization risk.Conclusions: The trends of decreasing readmission rates may be reflective of improvements in the quality of hospital and community-based outpatient care. Such system-level indicators warrant tracking and may inform more effective tertiary prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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7. Physical health, community participation and schizophrenia.
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Patel, Pooja, Frederick, Tyler, and Kidd, Sean A.
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GROUNDED theory ,HEALTH status indicators ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MENTAL health services ,PSYCHOSES ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,PATIENT participation ,QUALITATIVE research ,QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
Our objective is to identify links between physical health and community participation among individuals with schizophrenia or a psychosis mental illness. Semi-structured qualitative and quantitative interviews and community tours were conducted over 10 months (N = 30). Interviews were transcribed and analyzed using a grounded theory coding strategy. Physical health played an important role in community participation both as a cause and consequence. Key processes included mobility issues impeding physical community involvement; a multi-directional relationship between social relationships, community involvement, and physical health; identity as a mechanism linking physical health problems and community engagement; and the potential for community-based mental health programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. Patient Characteristics, Length of Stay, and Functional Improvement for Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders: A Population Study of Inpatient Care in Ontario 2005 to 2015: Caractéristiques des patients, durée de séjour, et amélioration fonctionnelle pour les troubles du spectre de la schizophrénie: une étude dans la population des soins des patients hospitalisés en Ontario de 2005 à 2015
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Chen, Sheng, Collins, April, Anderson, Kelly, McKenzie, Kwame, and Kidd, Sean
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SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment ,INPATIENT care ,PEOPLE with schizophrenia ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,MEDICAL care ,HOSPITALS ,HOSPITAL statistics ,PSYCHIATRIC hospital statistics ,DATABASES ,HOSPITAL patients ,LIFE change events ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CROSS-sectional 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
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
9. The 2015 National Canadian Homeless Youth Survey: Mental Health and Addiction Findings.
- Author
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Kidd, Sean A., Gaetz, Stephen, O’Grady, Bill, and O'Grady, Bill
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HOMELESS youth , *HOMELESS persons , *MENTAL health of youth , *HOMELESSNESS , *STREET youth , *PSYCHOLOGY , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Objective: This study was designed to provide a representative description of the mental health of youth accessing homelessness services in Canada. It is the most extensive survey in this area to date and is intended to inform the development of mental health and addiction service and policy for this marginalized population.Methods: This study reports mental health-related data from the 2015 "Leaving Home" national youth homelessness survey, which was administered through 57 agencies serving homeless youth in 42 communities across the country. This self-reported, point-in-time survey assessed a broad range of demographic information, pre-homelessness and homelessness variables, and mental health indicators.Results: Survey data were obtained from 1103 youth accessing Canadian homelessness services in the Nunavut territory and all Canadian provinces except for Prince Edward Island. Forty-two per cent of participants reported 1 or more suicide attempts, 85.4% fell in a high range of psychological distress, and key indicators of risk included an earlier age of the first episode of homelessness, female gender, and identifying as a sexual and/or gender minority (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and 2 spirit [LGBTQ2S]).Conclusions: This study provides clear and compelling evidence of a need for mental health support for these youth, particularly LGBTQ2S youth and female youth. The mental health concerns observed here, however, must be considered in the light of the tremendous adversity in all social determinants faced by these youth, with population-level interventions best leveraged in prevention and rapid response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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10. On the Creative Edge.
- Author
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Seko, Yukari, Kidd, Sean A., Wiljer, David, and McKenzie, Kwame J.
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COGNITION , *INTERNET , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *RESEARCH funding , *SELF-injurious behavior , *SOCIAL networks , *SUICIDAL ideation , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors - Abstract
The last decade has witnessed an exponential growth in user-generated online content featuring Non-Suicidal Self-Injury (NSSI), including photography, digital video, poems, blogging, and drawings. Although the increasing visibility of NSSI content has evoked public concern over potential health risks, little research has investigated why people are drawn to create and publish such content. This article reports the findings from a qualitative analysis of online interviews with 17 individuals who produce NSSI content. A thematic analysis of participants’ narratives identified two prominent motives: self-oriented motivation (to express self and creativity, to reflect on NSSI experience, to mitigate self-destructive urges) and social motivation (to support similar others, to seek out peers, to raise social awareness). Participants also reported a double-edged impact of NSSI content both as a trigger and a deterrent to NSSI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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11. Pathways to First-Episode Care for Psychosis in African-, Caribbean-, and European-Origin Groups in Ontario.
- Author
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Anderson, Kelly K., Flora, Nina, Ferrari, Manuela, Tuck, Andrew, Archie, Suzanne, Kidd, Sean, Tang, Taryn, Kirmayer, Laurence J., and McKenzie, Kwame
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MENTAL health services ,PSYCHOSES ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment ,CARIBBEAN people ,BLACK people ,ETHNICITY ,ETHNIC groups ,HEALTH ,PATIENTS ,MENTAL health - 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
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Mental Health Reform at a Systems Level: Widening the Lens on Recovery-Oriented Care.
- Author
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Kidd, Sean A., McKenzie, Kwame J., and Virdee, Gursharan
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MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness treatment , *INPATIENT care , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
This paper is an initial attempt to collate the literature on psychiatric inpatient recovery- based care and, more broadly, to situate the inpatient care sector within a mental health reform dialogue that, to date, has focused almost exclusively on outpatient and community practices. We make the argument that until an evidence base is developed for recovery- oriented practices on hospital wards, the effort to advance recovery-oriented systems will stagnate. Our scoping review was conducted in line with the 2009 Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (commonly referred to as PRISMA) guidelines. Among the 27 papers selected for review, most were descriptive or uncontrolled outcome studies. Studies addressing strategies for improving care quality provide some modest evidence for reflective dialogue with former inpatient clients, role play and mentorship, and pairing general training in recovery oriented care with training in specific interventions, such as Illness Management and Recovery. Relative to some other fields of medicine, evidence surrounding the question of recovery-oriented care on psychiatric wards and how it may be implemented is underdeveloped. Attention to mental health reform in hospitals is critical to the emergence of recovery-oriented systems of care and the realization of the mandate set forward in the Mental Health Strategy for Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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13. From Social Experience to Illness Experience: Reviewing the Psychological Mechanisms Linking Psychosis With Social Context.
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Kidd, Sean A.
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PSYCHOSES , *PATIENTS , *MEDLINE , *SEARCH engines , *SOCIAL perception , *SYMPTOMS ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This review was undertaken to describe the psychological processes that are associated with the social experiences and behaviours of people with psychosis. A systematic search was conducted using MEDLINE and PsyclNFO search engines. In each of the major topic domains, the search was comprised of review articles published from 2004 to present, and individual article searches for papers published from 2010 to present. The key psychological mechanisms in this context are social cognition, self-concept, emotion, and communication. While diverse in content, there were several cross-cutting themes in these literatures. These include evidence of the presence of social processing difficulties in high-risk and psychosis populations that have both state and trait characteristics, are related to, but not fully accounted for by, neurocognltion and symptomatology, and have significant implications for social functioning. There are numerous established and promising treatments linked to our understanding of social cognition. Limitations cutting across these literatures include a substantial reliance on cross-sectional studies that use control groups comprised of people who have not experienced significant psychological or social adversity. There Is also limited inquiry into how psychological mechanisms may differ owing to sex, ethnicity, and race. Despite these issues, this line of inquiry is very promising as part of the larger movement toward an integrative model of psychosis that is able to account for the complex interactions of social, biological, and psychological risks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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14. Sex Trade Involvement in São Paulo, Brazil and Toronto, Canada: Narratives of Social Exclusion and Fragmented Identities.
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Kidd, Sean A. and Liborio, Renata Maria Coimbra
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SEX work , *SOCIAL marginality , *SEX trafficking of minors , *QUALITATIVE research , *NARRATIVES , *POVERTY , *DRUG abuse - Abstract
An extensive international literature has been developed regarding the risk trajectories of sex trade-involved children and youth. This literature has not, however, substantially incorporated the narratives of youths regarding their experiences. In this article, the contemporary literature on child and youth sex trade-involvement is reviewed and the findings of a qualitative analysis of the narratives of 14 youth from Sao Paulo, Brazil and 58 youth from Toronto, Canada are presented. Substantial similarities were found between the groups of narratives with respect to abusive and unstable home experiences, pathways into the sex trade, social exclusion, and the impacts of the sex trade on physical and mental health. Key areas of divergence included the roles of poverty and drug use in entering the sex trade. The implications of shared experiences of social exclusion and fragmented identity across differing sociocultural contexts for policy and intervention are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2011
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15. Home Is Where You Draw Strength and Rest: The Meanings of Home for Houseless Young People.
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Kidd, Sean A. and Evans, Josh D.
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QUALITATIVE research , *HOMELESS youth , *STREET youth , *RESEARCH methodology , *NARRATIVES , *HOME (The concept) , *HOMELESSNESS , *CONCEPTS , *DEFINITIONS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This qualitative study examined the meanings ascribed to the construct “home” by 208 youths defined by mainstream society as “homeless”. Youth narratives on the topic of home ranged across a continuum with home as state at one end (i.e., home is a state of mind, comprised of one’s friends) and home as place at the other (i.e., home as a physical dwelling). Youths employing the former meanings had typically been on the street for longer periods and identified with counterculture-type ideologies. For youths who defined home as place, home was constructed in direct opposition to street experiences. For both of these groups, control emerged as a central theme in their narratives. The implications of these findings for engaging youth and goal setting regarding exiting the streets are described. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2011
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16. Relationships Between Humor, Subversion, and Genuine Connection Among Persons With Severe Mental Illness.
- Author
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Kidd, Sean A., Miller, Rebecca, Boyd, Geoffrey M., and Cardeña, Ivette
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MENTAL illness , *WIT & humor , *GROUNDED theory , *SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment , *QUALITY of life , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
Although humor has been linked to resilience among many populations, little is known regarding the role of humor in the coping of individuals with severe mental illness (SMI). In this study, a series of interviews focused on humor was completed by 15 individuals with SMI, with narratives analyzed using grounded theory methods. The marginalized and stigmatized social position occupied by persons with SMI was found to affect both the use and meanings of humor. Humor was described as being the subject of clinical scrutiny. Humor was also emphasized as a means of subverting power differentials revolving around the identity of SMI with, for many, the primary goal being the development of "real" and genuine connections with service providers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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17. "A Lot of Us Look at Life Differently": Homeless Youths and Art on the Outside.
- Author
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Kidd, Sean A.
- Subjects
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HOMELESS youth , *DRAWING , *POETRY (Literary form) , *ART , *LITERATURE , *EXPRESSIVE behavior - Abstract
This article presents a qualitative analysis of the artistic expression of homeless youths, accompanied by examples of drawings and poetry gathered from youths in New York City and Toronto. The impacts of various forms of marginalization and the meanings youths give their work are examined. These meanings include art as being transformative, selfexploratory, communicative, and a redirection of emotional energy into an artistic medium and expressive process. Parallels are drawn between the art and the marginalization of homeless youths and forms and expressions subsumed under the L'Art Brut and Outsider Art movements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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18. Using qualitative research to inform mental health policy.
- Author
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Davidson, Larry, Ridgway, Priscilla, Kidd, Sean, Topor, Alain, and Borg, Marit
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QUALITATIVE research ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHIATRY ,HEALTH policy ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PUBLIC health ,MENTAL illness ,MENTAL health services ,MENTAL illness treatment ,MENTAL health service laws ,CONVALESCENCE ,MEDICAL research ,POLICY sciences ,ECONOMICS - 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
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. FACTORS PRECIPITATING SUICIDALITY AMONG HOMELESS YOUTH: A Quantitative Follow-Up.
- Author
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Kidd, Sean A.
- Subjects
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HOMELESS youth , *SUICIDAL behavior , *DRUG abuse , *DOMESTIC violence , *HEALTH , *YOUTH , *BEHAVIOR , *REGRESSION analysis , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *SURVEYS - Abstract
Homeless youth are a population at a high risk for suicidal behavior. A previous exploratory study emphasized the importance of feeling trapped or helpless, which appeared to mediate the impact of other risk variables. Confirmatory work was needed to test this inductively derived model. Two hundred eight homeless youths completed surveys on the streets and in agencies in New York City and Toronto. Structural equation modeling was used to test a theoretical model developed from exploratory work, and regression analyses were used to examine the influence of home and street contextual variables. The centrality of the trapped experience in a model incorporating drug use and dependence, abusive family history, loneliness, low self-esteem, and suicidality was confirmed. Other findings included a marked reduction in reported suicidal behavior following participants' leaving home, with family violence, being thrown out of the home, neglect, poor physical health, and having suicidal friends showing strong relationships with suicidality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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20. "THE WALLS WERE CLOSING IN, AND WE WERE TRAPPED".
- Author
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Kidd, Sean A.
- Subjects
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YOUTH , *SUICIDE , *HOMELESS children , *STREET youth - Abstract
Semistructured interviews focusing on suicide were conducted with 80 street youth in agencies and on the streets of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Participants described their understandings of the phenomenon of suicide among street youth and the meanings suicide held for them. Qualitative analysis of the interviews revealed themes of worthlessness, loneliness, hopelessness, and most centrally the feeling of being "trapped" as forming the construct of suicide held by the participants. These idioms of distress were situation within the context of a street life that included social stigma and drug abuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. EVALUATING CHILD AND YOUTH HOMELESSNESS.
- Author
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Kidd, Sean A. and Scrimenti, Kathryn
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HOMELESSNESS , *HOMELESS children , *HOMELESS youth , *HOMELESS families - Abstract
Following a review of approaches taken to generate accurate estimates of the scale of child and youth homelessness in America, this article documents the methods and results of a multipronged count of homeless children and youth in New Haven, Connecticut. The survey used in this count accessed demographics and service needs, and was administered on the streets and in a wide range of service provision settings. A total of 170 homeless families were located, comprised primarily of young, single, African American women and their children. These families need 323 children, suggesting an annual prevalence of 1,688 in this community. This work addresses the paucity of information on homeless children and youth located in small to midsized cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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