9,716 results on '"despair"'
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2. Escaping the Binary: Gender Ideology and Edna’s Death in Kate Chopin’s <italic>The Awakening</italic>.
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Larios, Joe
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SOCIAL institutions , *SOCIAL status , *AMERICAN women authors , *LITERARY realism , *BINARY gender system , *DESPAIR , *ABORTION laws - Abstract
The article discusses the interpretation of Edna's death in Kate Chopin's "The Awakening" as a rejection of binary choices presented to her in society. Edna's suicide is seen as a paradoxical act that is both despairing and heroic, stemming from her frustration with limited options. The text explores Edna's struggle with societal expectations, her desire for autonomy, and her ultimate decision to escape through self-destruction. The analysis delves into the complexity of Edna's character, her refusal to conform to societal norms, and the significance of her final act as a challenge to the social order. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2025
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3. A 30‐year retrospective cohort outcome study of periodontal treatment of stages III and IV patients in a private practice.
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Fardal, Øystein, Skau, Irene, and Grytten, Jostein
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PERIODONTITIS treatment , *RISK assessment , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *SEVERITY of illness index , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *AGE distribution , *DESPAIR , *MEDICAL practice , *DISEASE progression , *TOOTH loss , *PERIODONTITIS , *DIABETES , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Aim: Tooth loss studies show that periodontal treatment is effective. However, it is not known whether these results can be projected into a lifetime of treatment. The aim of the study was to study all patients with stages III/IV of periodontitis over 30 years in a private practice. Materials and Methods: All patients referred between 1986 and 1990 were monitored for 30 years for tooth loss and prognostic factors. All dropouts were accounted for. Results: In all, 386 patients were followed, of whom 283 patients dropped out, leaving 103 patients (67 females and 36 males, average age 40.1 years) monitored over 30 years. Tooth loss was stable until 16 years, when the population was divided into groups of low (n = 65), moderate (n = 18) and high (n = 20) tooth loss, losing 1.05 (SD 1.27), 4.83 (SD 0.96) and 11.90 (SD 4.25) teeth, respectively. The strongest prognostic factors were first‐degree relatives with periodontitis, periodontal treatment before the age of 35 years, diabetes and patients with teeth with initial hopeless prognosis. Conclusion: The majority of patients with stages III and IV periodontitis could be successfully treated with conventional periodontal treatment over a period of 30 years. The findings suggest that retrospective studies with shorter observation times cannot automatically be projected onto the outcome of a lifetime of periodontal treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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4. Formación de la sensibilidad ética y el criterio moral de la mano de Kierkegaard.
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Ugarte-Abollado, Cristina
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MORAL judgment , *PHILOSOPHERS , *MORAL education , *SELF , *NARRATION , *DESPAIR , *HAPPINESS - Abstract
This article aims to present a way to foster moral growth through Søren Kierkegaard's work The Sickness Unto Death as a tool capable of developing moral sensitivity and judgment. After discussing the need for this topic in the education of today's youth, the thought of Martha Nussbaum will be introduced as the foundation for my proposal, justifying the ethical potential inherent in narrative. This potential is abundantly reflected in Kierkegaard's work. From his unique existential style, the Danish philosopher addresses the authenticity of the self and of one's own existence to achieve the true constitution of oneself. The various forms of despair that the author explores are analyzed, with excerpts from the work highlighting his mastery and subtlety in reflecting the complexity and dynamism inherent in human interiority. This provides the reader with the opportunity to reflect on their ethical and existential state from a Kierkegaardian perspective, recognizing in it the universal aspects of the human condition that great authors throughout history have conveyed through their works. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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5. Network dynamics of self‐compassion, anxiety, and depression during eating disorder therapy.
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Kopland, Maren C. G., Vrabel, KariAnne, Landt, Margarita Slof‐Op 't, Hoffart, Asle, Johnson, Sverre Urnes, and Giltay, Erik J.
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TREATMENT of eating disorders , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *BULIMIA , *PSYCHOMOTOR disorders , *CHILD abuse , *SELF-compassion , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EATING disorders , *ANOREXIA nervosa , *SOCIAL networks , *DESPAIR , *ANXIETY disorders , *MENTAL depression , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Background: Recovery processes during residential treatment for eating disorders, especially in patients with a history of maltreatment, are insufficiently understood. This study aimed to explore the temporal relationships among comorbid factors, including depression, anxiety, and self‐compassion, with the influence of childhood maltreatment. Method: Using Dynamic Time Warp (DTW), weekly scores from the Symptom Checklist‐5, Eating Disorder Examination, and Self‐Compassion Scale were analysed over 12 weeks. The study generated undirected and directed networks to identify influential symptoms in a transdiagnostic sample, comparing patients with and without childhood maltreatment. Results: The study included 124 patients with eating disorders (ED) (97% women), mean age of 30.9 years (SD = 9.7, range 18–61 years). Diagnoses included anorexia nervosa (26%), bulimia nervosa (38%), and other specified feeding and eating disorders (36%). The directed DTW network showed that hopelessness, worrying, and restlessness had the highest out‐strength, predicting changes in self‐compassion and ED behaviour. In maltreatment cases, hopelessness and low acceptance predicted changes, while worry, restlessness, and nervousness were predictive in non‐maltreatment cases. Conclusion: Temporal network analyses suggest that a change in hopelessness, worrying, and restlessness drives symptom improvement in ED behaviour and the development of self‐compassion during residential treatment. These processes vary between patients with and without a history of childhood maltreatment separately, indicating the need for further analyses. Key points: Temporal network analysis can contribute to further advances in personalised medicine.Our study indicates that patients with eating disorders (ED) and a history of childhood maltreatment differ from patients without a history of childhood maltreatment in network dynamics, indicating different therapy processes.We find that a change in hopelessness and acceptance of disliked personality traits preceded and predicted change in ED behaviour and the ability to feel self‐compassionate in patients with ED and a history of childhood maltreatment.These findings point to a need to study patients with a history of maltreatment separately to further advance the field of personalised medicine in ED treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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6. Utilizing Dialectical Behavioral Therapy in a Partial Hospital and Intensive Outpatient Program: Outcomes on Patient’s Mindfulness, Clinical Ratings, and PTSD.
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Lothes, John and Hall, Marla
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BEHAVIOR therapy , *MENTAL depression , *MINDFULNESS , *DESPAIR , *SYMPTOMS - Abstract
AbstractObjectiveMethodResultsConclusionFew studies have examined Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) being utilized in either a Partial Hospital (PH) program or Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) setting.This study examined clinically relevant outcomes with a heterogeneous sample of patients (
N = 87) attending either a DBT PH program (n = 42) or IOP (n = 45). This current study assessed intake/discharge data to examine change scores in symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, hopelessness, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Mindfulness changes were also assessed.Findings showed symptom reduction on all clinical scales and mindfulness increased on all sub-scales for patients in both programs.Clinicians may want to consider the benefits that DBT-PH programs or IOPs may have for patients seeking a more intense alternative or as a supplement to those going through a standardized PTSD regiment. Findings suggest that DBT in PH programs and IOP settings can help with various symptom reductions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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7. Comments on authoritarianism: YouTube-mediated feelings of young citizens in Turkey.
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Mutlu, Mehmet
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YOUNG adults , *AUTHORITARIANISM , *DESPAIR , *ANOMY , *SADNESS - Abstract
AbstractThis study is about how young citizens perceive the authoritarian regime in Turkey. It argues that feelings are overlooked in the debate on authoritarianism and then proposes the concept of ‘perceived regime’ to provide a framework for the intended discussion. To understand the dominant feelings of young people, this study analyses YouTube comments posted under the documentaries of 140Journos, a well-known independent new media content producer. Accordingly, this study defines a feeling structure called ‘collective misery’. Feelings of sadness, despair, hopelessness, anger, resentment and envy are the fundamental building blocks of this structure, and anxiety is the beam. Furthermore, this study posits that the primary manifestation of the authoritarian regime in Turkey is a pervasive and profound ‘anomie-like’ social formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Effect of a Logotherapy-Based Empowerment Program for Achieving Self-Reliance Among Persons Living Houseless.
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Hyun, Myungsun, Kim, Soyoung, and Park, Eunyoung
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PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SELF-efficacy , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *CLINICAL trials , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *FISHER exact test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *MANN Whitney U Test , *CONTROL groups , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *HOMELESS persons , *DESPAIR , *SOCIAL skills , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis software , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
The lives of houseless individuals are characterized by powerlessness, meaninglessness, hopelessness, and despair, yet they have a desire to escape homelessness. While the economic aspect is essential for escaping homelessness, psychological resources are crucial, as they form the basis of the strength needed to achieve independence. The study aimed to examine the effectiveness of a logotherapy-based empowerment program developed to strengthen the capabilities of persons living houseless and ultimately develop competencies that serve as a foundation for self-reliance. The study was performed in a homeless support center for men living houseless in South Korea using a repeated-measures design with a control group. The experimental group received an eight-session empowerment program over 8 weeks. The participants were assessed at three intervals: pretest, posttest immediately after the program, and follow-up test 4 weeks after the posttest. The follow-up tests were completed by 22 and 16 participants in the experimental and control groups, respectively. We found that the empowerment program significantly enhanced the meaning of life, hope, and empowerment of houseless individuals. Community mental health nurses, who are in a position to interact with persons living houseless, must empower them to escape homelessness and achieve self-reliance, an important goal for this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Collaging together-apart: building trust and hope in social innovation and design pedagogies.
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Romano, Nike
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SOCIAL innovation , *TEACHING methods , *TRUST , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *DESPAIR - Abstract
This article explores how relationships of care, trust and hope might be fostered in a social innovation design course at a South African university of technology. Rather than shy away from the challenges of our uncertain world, the paper proposes feminist pedagogical strategies that seek to nurture students' capacity for trust and hope, rather than overwhelm and despair, through carefully curated collaborative-collage-making processes. By interweaving Bracha Ettinger's theory of matrixial trans-subjectivity and Karen Barad's agential realism, the generative role that arts-based practices offer social innovation design pedagogies is made explicit. The paper will show how collaborative artworking activated a co-affective encounter in which students and myself, rather than drowning in overwhelm, discovered new educational imaginaries and Hope-full renewals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Psychological interventions for family members of people with psychological disorders with emotional dysregulation: Introduction to special section.
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Guillén, Verónica
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FAMILIES & psychology , *FAMILY psychotherapy , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *EMOTION regulation , *SERIAL publications , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *PSYCHOEDUCATION , *FAMILIES , *EATING disorders , *BORDERLINE personality disorder , *PERSONALITY , *DESPAIR , *PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers , *PSYCHOSES - Abstract
Clinicians working with people suffering from psychological disorders involving emotional dysregulation often focus on treating the patient. To some extent, this is logical given the urgency and severity of the patient's problems. However, caregivers of these patients experience high levels of burden, depression, and other types of distress. Therefore, not caring for family members means first, neglecting these people who are also suffering, and secondly missing the opportunity to help patients from other perspectives focused on the context around them that can be very helpful. Currently, there is growing interest in studying interventions to help relatives of people with severe mental disorders. This special section presents some studies that analyze several variables that may influence the course of treatment, such as the influence of personality traits of parents of people with eating disorders and affective disorders or the family alliance for therapeutic change, and the level of hopelessness in family members of people with borderline personality disorders. Second, empirically supported interventions are presented for psychological disorders involving emotional dysregulation, for example, in relatives of people with borderline personality disorder and eating disorders. It is essential to make progress in the psychological care of people with psychological disorders and we think a good way to do this is to integrate into our clinical practice the possibility of offering skills training and psychoeducation to family members. So far, good results have been obtained, and we believe it is essential to disseminate these interventions among clinicians and researchers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Hopelessness for family members of individuals with borderline personality disorder.
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Joyce, Mary, Kells, Mary, Boylan, Emily, Corcoran, Paul, Power, Bláthín, Wall, Stephanie, and Flynn, Daniel
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TREATMENT of borderline personality disorder , *PARENTS , *RESEARCH funding , *CLINICAL trials , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *DESPAIR , *EXTENDED families , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *PATIENT aftercare - Abstract
Family members and loved ones of individuals with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) can experience high levels of distress. Types of distress reported by family members include burden, grief, depression, guilt, and powerlessness. Hopelessness is a construct that has received little attention despite its potential relevance for this group. This study sought to examine, and assess potential change in, hopelessness among individuals attending a 12‐week Family Connections (FC) program. Participants were 75 family members, 29 men and 46 women. Most participants were parents (n = 43; 57%). Data were collected at four time‐points and outcomes included hopelessness, burden, and grief. The majority of participants (82%) reported scores within the 'minimal' or 'mild' ranges of hopelessness before the FC program. A greater proportion of participants in the 60–70 year age group reported scores in the 'moderate/severe' category when compared with younger age groups. The mean hopelessness score for all participants before FC was 4.61 which is considered mild. There was no significant difference in hopelessness scores after program completion. Although mean scores increased at both 3‐month and 12‐month follow‐ups, they continued to remain in the 'mild' category. Hopelessness scores in the current study are similar to those reported in previous studies, although no significant change was found after FC completion. Concepts of personal vs. situational hopelessness should be considered, as well as the relevance of assessing personal hopelessness for this participant group. Further research is needed to determine the relationship between family member hopelessness and index client wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Perceived responsiveness in suicidal ideation: An experience sampling study in psychiatric patients.
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Sels, Laura, Homan, Stephanie A., Reis, Harry T., Horn, Andrea B., Revol, Jordan, Scholz, Urte, Kowatsch, Tobias, and Kleim, Birgit
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PEOPLE with mental illness , *SUICIDE , *AT-risk people , *DESPAIR , *SUICIDAL ideation - Abstract
Introduction: Perceived responsiveness, or the extent to which one feels understood, validated and cared for by close others, plays a crucial role in people's well‐being. Can this interpersonal process also protect people at risk? We assessed whether fluctuations in suicidal ideation were associated with fluctuations in the degree of perceived responsiveness that psychiatric patients (admitted in the context of suicide or indicating suicidal ideation) experienced in daily interactions immediately after discharge. Methods: Fifty‐seven patients reported on suicidal ideation (5 times a day) and perceived responsiveness (daily) for four consecutive weeks. The effects of established risk factors—thwarted belongingness, perceived burdensomeness, and hopelessness—were assessed as well. Results: The more patients felt that close others had been responsive to them, the less suicidal ideation they reported. At low levels of thwarted belongingness, perceived burdensomeness, or hopelessness, perceived responsiveness seemed to play a protective role, negatively co‐occurring with suicidal ideation. When thwarted belongingness, perceived burdensomeness, and hopelessness were high, perceived responsiveness did not have an effect. Conclusion: Perceived responsiveness could be a protective factor for suicidal ideation for people at risk only when they are experiencing low levels of negative perceptions. When experiencing highly negative perceptions, however, perceived responsiveness seems to matter less. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Experience of psychosocial rehabilitation; perspectives of depressed adolescents.
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Kodzo, Lalit Dzifa, Danso, Nana Ama Asi, Budu, Jemima Twumwaa, Akriti, Kafle Baral, Hussain, Abid, and Zhang, Ruixing
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DEPRESSION in adolescence , *CROSS-sectional method , *SUPPORT groups , *QUALITATIVE research , *SUICIDAL ideation , *REHABILITATION of people with mental illness , *INTERVIEWING , *STATISTICAL sampling , *JUDGMENT sampling , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *DESPAIR , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *MENTAL depression , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *SOCIAL isolation - Abstract
Given the multifaceted character of depression and its related symptoms, an adolescent living with it is at increased risk for a wide range of adverse events. This research aimed to understand and characterize the psychosocial rehabilitation experiences of depressed teenage participants in the Greater Accra Region of Ghana. A cross-sectional semi-structured interview design influenced by an interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) technique was adopted. We employed a nonprobability, purposeful sampling approach to recruit twenty-one adolescents (6 males, 15 females) diagnosed with depression from the community after one month of discharge from admission and undergoing psychosocial rehabilitation. Using separate interviews, we gathered and analyzed data using interpretive phenomenological analysis to produce themes and sub-themes. These were presented with the participants' direct quotations. We discovered that the perspectives of adolescents' psychosocial rehabilitation experience include hopelessness and suicide ideation, coping difficulties, undesirable attitudes from support networks, challenges related to school, and isolation. Participants suggested appropriate therapeutic environments, encouraging support systems, and the media's role in preventing and treating depression among young people as rehabilitation approaches that could assist adolescents to remain lucid for longer intervals. These results shed light on the tragic realities faced by depressed adolescents. There is an urgent need to put well-defined structures in place to aid their rehabilitation and develop coping strategies for a better life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. How kindness took a hold: A sociology of emotions, attachment and everyday enchantment.
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Brownlie, Julie
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CONTOURS (Cartography) , *MAGIC , *DESPAIR , *KINDNESS , *BASIC needs - Abstract
How are we to understand the contemporary preoccupation—at least in many English‐speaking societies—with 'random acts of kindness' and the idea of kindness more generally? Should this be seen as a challenge to the logic of capitalism or reinforcing of it, an example of commodification of emotion within our everyday lives? By introducing and mapping the contours of an emergent 'kindness industry', placing emotion (and enchantment) at the heart of how attachment to the idea of kindness is theorised, and marshalling existing empirical research on contemporary framings of everyday kindness, I argue that there is a need for a critical sociological engagement with the 'pro‐social' that does justice to its profound ambivalence. In the case of contemporary kindness this involves understanding both the regulatory nature of the enchantment sold by a kindness industry and the problem‐solving potential of the enchantment of kindness in the everyday, where it both helps address contemporary feelings of hopelessness and shame and facilitates the possibility of making life materially liveable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Sexual and mental health of Singaporean gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men in times of COVID-19: a qualitative study.
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Seah, Xin Yi, Tan, Rayner Kay Jin, Yong, Xu Ming, and Asano, Miho
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COMPETENCY assessment (Law) , *SEXUALLY transmitted disease risk factors , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PSYCHOLOGY of gay people , *HEALTH services accessibility , *RISK assessment , *SEXUAL orientation , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *GOVERNMENT policy , *RISK-taking behavior , *HEALTH attitudes , *HUMAN sexuality , *INTERVIEWING , *CULTURE , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *EMOTIONS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *UNCERTAINTY , *MEN who have sex with men , *THEMATIC analysis , *SEX customs , *EXPERIENCE , *FINANCIAL stress , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *SOCIAL networks , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *DESPAIR , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *SAFE sex , *BISEXUAL people , *SEXUAL minorities , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PRACTICAL politics , *DATA analysis software , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SEXUAL health , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SOCIAL stigma , *SOCIAL isolation , *WELL-being - Abstract
Objectives: COVID-19 had significant influences on everyone's lives. This study aimed to explore impacts of COVID-19 on mental and sexual health and access to health services among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM) in Singapore. Methods: This qualitative study recruited 16 self-identified GBMSM via purposive sampling and semi-structured individual interviews were conducted. Three themes and seven sub-themes were derived from analysis done using the framework method. Results: Participants shared how COVID-19 led to negative emotions and experiences at an intrapersonal level and interpersonal level (with families or partners), which were also worsened by prevailing stigma that GBMSM already face in Singapore and within their social networks. Sexual behaviours associated with HIV and other sexually transmitted infections risk and substance use were seen to be maladaptive coping methods of social isolation due to COVID-19. These dynamics were all exacerbated by the closure of "non-essential" services, which included many important services for mental and sexual health that were relevant to the GBMSM community. Conclusions: Changes in policies and community efforts should be explored to improve these areas, enhancing the psychosocial and sexual well-being of GBMSM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. The effect of HIV on patients' lives: a phenomenological qualitative study.
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Alzahrani, Naif S. and Almarwani, Abdulaziz Mofdy
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FEAR , *STATISTICAL sampling , *INTERVIEWING , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons , *EXPERIENCE , *QUALITY of life , *DESPAIR , *RESEARCH methodology , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *DATA analysis software , *WELL-being - Abstract
Introduction: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection poses a significant threat to the immune system, compromising the body's ability to combat diseases and infections. The Ministry of Health in Saudi Arabia reported an HIV incidence rate of 3 cases per 10,000 individuals. This study aimed to gain insight into the lived experience of Saudi patients living with HIV. Methods: Employing a qualitative phenomenological approach, this study conducted in-depth interviews with 16 HIV patients (10 men, 6 women) between January 2023 and May 2023. Results: Thematic data analysis highlighted three overarching themes and four subthemes. "Fear of the Future" encompassed subthemes including the fear of infecting a family member, fear of marriage, fear of employment recruitment, and fear of scandals. "Hopelessness" reflected the profound emotional state experienced by patients. "Overcoming Adversity" captured the resilience and strength demonstrated by individuals facing the challenges of living with HIV. Conclusion: Saudi patients diagnosed with HIV encounter numerous obstacles in their daily lives. The fear of the future, including concerns such as infecting family members, marriage prospects, employment opportunities, and potential social repercussions, significantly impacts their overall well-being. By understanding the lived experience of HIV patients in Saudi Arabia, healthcare providers and policymakers can better support and enhance the quality of life for this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Career development and the COVID-19 outbreak: protective functions of career-related teacher support.
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Wong, Lawrence P. W., Chen, Gaowei, and Yuen, Mantak
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SELF-efficacy , *PSYCHOLOGY of high school students , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TEACHERS , *DESPAIR , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SOCIAL support , *FACTOR analysis , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
It is well established that COVID-19 pandemic is associated with arousal of feelings of hopelessness and negativity in adolescents regarding future career development outcomes. However, the current literature has yet to clarify the roles teacher social support play in facilitating students' positive career development during the pandemic. This study investigated the effects of career-related teacher support (CRTS) on ameliorating students' feelings of hopelessness and increasing their career self-efficacy among 402 senior secondary students (Grades 10-12) in Hong Kong, China. Results from mediated moderation analyses showed that academic ability was only weakly related to career self-efficacy. Hopelessness was not a significant moderator concerning the link between academic ability and career self-efficacy when CRTS functioned as the mediator. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. A Theological Framework for Understanding Hope in the Clinic.
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Thornton, Andrea
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TERMINAL care , *PALLIATIVE treatment , *DESPAIR , *OPTIMISM , *HOPE - Abstract
Appeals to the miraculous are common in healthcare, and arguments about end-of-life decision-making can quickly become theological. Assessments of hope have been recommended within the biopsychosocialspiritual model of medicine, but these assessments fail to account for the theological dimension of hope. Examples of failed assessments include recent efforts in palliative care and classic works, such as On Death and Dying by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross. To adequately address the patient's and family members' hopes without patronizing or harming the patient, assessments must be done by a person trained in theology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Evidential Incognizance.
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Rippon, Simon
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EXPERT evidence , *AUTHORITARIANISM , *DESPAIR , *THEORY of knowledge , *DEMOCRACY - Abstract
In this article, I explore an epistemic vice I call "evidential incognizance." It is a vice of failing generally to recognize evidence, or recognize the full force of evidence, in a domain of knowledge. It frequently manifests as a kind of unbridled skepticism or hopelessness about knowing in the domain, including (but not limited to) skepticism about expert testimony. It is epistemically vicious primarily because it leads people to overlook valuable epistemic opportunities, and thus tends to obstruct knowledge and justified belief. I believe it is of interest particularly because it tends to arise as a reaction to a certain kind of information environment and is often induced intentionally by populist candidates and authoritarian regimes. I discuss the nature of evidential incognizance, its relation to and differences from other epistemic shortcomings, its political significance, why it may have been previously overlooked in the literature, and the potential for overcoming it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Friend influence and susceptibility to influence on emotions towards math: The role of adolescent temperament.
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Kiuru, Noona, DeLay, Dawn, Tervahartiala, Katja, Polet, Juho, and Hirvonen, Riikka
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SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *MATHEMATICS , *TEMPERAMENT , *RESEARCH funding , *AFFINITY groups , *ANGER , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *EMOTIONS , *ANXIETY , *CHI-squared test , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *FINNS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *HAPPINESS , *DESPAIR , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SHAME , *FRIENDSHIP , *HOPE - Abstract
Background and Aims: Peer relationships during adolescence play an important role in shaping academic outcomes. The present study examined friend influences on emotions towards math, as well as the role of temperament in these influences. Sample: The sample consisted of 350 Finnish students (mean age 13.29 years; 64% girls) who were involved in stable friendship dyads from fall to spring of Grade 7. Methods: In this two‐wave study, information on adolescents' temperament (i.e., negative emotionality, extraversion, effortful control) and on seven emotions towards math (i.e., enjoyment, hope, pride, anger, anxiety, shame, hopelessness, and boredom) was collected during grade 7. The data were analysed using longitudinal actor‐partner interdependence models. Results: The results showed that friends resembled each other in all the investigated math‐related emotions. Furthermore, over and above these initial similarities, friends mutually influenced each other's math‐related enjoyment and anger towards math. Students characterized by higher negative emotionality also influenced their friends with lower levels of negative emotionality towards an increase in math‐related anger and a lack of effortful control made adolescents more susceptible to friend influence over math‐related shame and anxiety. Conclusion: Our findings demonstrate that friends influence each other over time in math‐related enjoyment and frustration. Furthermore, high negative emotionality may make adolescents more influential over their friends' math‐related anger and a lack of effortful control may make adolescents more susceptible to friend influence over math‐related shame and anxiety. Thus, the current findings have implications for how peer relations may impact individual outcomes in mathematics, for better or worse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Three decades of psychology in South Africa: legacies of hope and fault lines of the future.
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Bowman, Brett, Malherbe, Nick, and Suffla, Shahnaaz
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PRAXIS (Process) , *GEOGRAPHIC boundaries , *SEVENTEENTH century , *SOCIAL justice , *COLONIZATION , *DESPAIR - Abstract
Three decades have passed since South Africa's formal transition from apartheid to liberal democracy. This milestone signified a triumph of hope over despair for a country that had struggled under a suffocating system of racist, dehumanising oppression since its colonisation in the seventeenth century. Reflecting this zeitgeist, divisions, and complicities that had characterised the study, practice, and organisation of psychology within South Africa's racist structures were disassembled. The discipline committed to social justice, inclusive science, liberatory praxis, and global well-being. From a 30-year vantage point that many imagined would represent a clearer picture of a maturing and free rather than an emerging and new South African democracy, this article assesses the discipline's progress in achieving the socio-political, economic, health and psychological imperatives it set for itself in 1994. Through grounding this analysis in the 10 contributions that constitute this Special Issue, the article pits the promises of struggle and hope against the yields of democracy and its imagined freedoms. It argues that despite the unmistakable continuities of despair that define South African life and the discipline's response thereto, there are several discernible legacies of hope that psychology has recuperated in its journey thus far, and that these may offer fault lines for a hopeful future. These moments of hope are most powerful when the discipline seeks solidarity rather than solipsism, transcends rather than polices its epistemic and political boundaries, and embraces ordinariness through disavowing the exceptionalism that forecloses its connectedness to several overriding movements that prioritise planetary justice for all. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Remembering Socrates Litsios: Reflections on the changing agenda of global health.
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Neelakantan, Vivek
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COMMUNITY health services , *SMALLPOX , *HOLISTIC medicine , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DIGNITY , *PRIMARY health care , *MALARIA , *WORLD health , *INSECTICIDES , *MEMORY , *DESPAIR , *TECHNOLOGY , *PRACTICAL politics , *HOPE , *POVERTY - Published
- 2024
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23. Suicide While Locked Up in Texas: Risk Factors for Death by Suicide in Custody.
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Marks, Rocky B., Moreira, Nicole, O'Connell, Katherine L., Hearne, Alera, and Law, Keyne C.
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- *
SUICIDE risk factors , *RISK assessment , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *CRIME , *AFRICAN Americans , *VIOLENCE , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *HISPANIC Americans , *SEX distribution , *CAUSES of death , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *ODDS ratio , *RACE , *DESPAIR ,MORTALITY risk factors - Abstract
In the United States, suicide is a leading cause of death in prisons and jails, with incarcerated individuals being nine times more likely to die by suicide than the general population. Identifying vulnerabilities at each stage of custody (prebooking, jail, prison) and factors that increase suicide risk can improve prevention efforts. A hierarchical binary logistic regression was conducted on data from the Texas Justice Initiative's Deaths in Custody Report. Variables included race/ethnicity, sex, age at death, days in custody, classification of crime as violent or nonviolent, and custody type of prebooking, jail, or prison. Among main effects, when compared to suicide rates in prison, jail suicide deaths were over three and a half times more likely (OR = 3.61), and the period of prebooking emerged as a period of staggering risk of suicide death, with suicides being over 5,000% more likely than at other stages of custody (OR = 50.86). When interactions were entered, Latinx individuals were at a particularly increased risk of suicide death (OR = 10.46), likelihood of suicide death decreased with each year of age (OR =.89), nonviolent offenders were just under three and a half times more likely to die by suicide when compared to violent offenders (OR = 3.45), and each stage of custody was shown to affect the relationship between age-related rates of suicide in different ways. Results call for further investigation into suicide among understudied populations in corrections, such as Latinx individuals, juveniles in the prison system, and nonviolent offenders, to identify the groups at the highest risk of premature death in correctional systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. The influence of psychotherapy on individuals who have attempted suicide: A systematic review and meta‐analysis.
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Xu, Xinqing, Song, Jingjing, and Jia, Liping
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PREVENTION of mental depression , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *STATISTICAL models , *SUICIDAL ideation , *COMPUTER software , *RESEARCH funding , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *META-analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SUICIDAL behavior , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDLINE , *ODDS ratio , *MEDICAL databases , *DESPAIR , *SUICIDE , *COMBINED modality therapy , *QUALITY of life , *ONLINE information services , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PUBLICATION bias , *EVALUATION ,ANXIETY prevention - Abstract
Introduction: Suicide is a serious global public health issue, and a history of attempted suicide is the most critical indicator of suicide risk. There are limited studies on the effectiveness of psychotherapy in individuals who have attempted suicide, and other outcome measures related to suicide risk in suicide attempts have not been explored. Aim/Question: This study aimed to systematically review and perform a meta‐analysis of the effectiveness of psychotherapy on individuals who have attempted suicide. Methods: This study conducted a comprehensive literature search of five major databases (PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane, Web of Science, and Ovid). The protocol for this study is registered with PROSPERO (CRD42023464401) and follows the PRISMA guidelines. Results: This meta‐analysis included a total of 34 trials from 32 literature sources. The study involved a total of 6600 participants. The results showed that psychotherapy had a positive effect on reducing the suicidal tendencies of individuals who have attempted suicide and effectively reduced the number of repeated suicide attempts as well as the levels of suicidal ideation, depression, anxiety and hopelessness. Implications for Practice: This study concludes that psychotherapy is effective in reducing the suicidal tendencies of individuals who have attempted suicide. Psychological therapy for individuals who have attempted suicide are crucial in preventing future suicidal behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Lifestyles of Palestinians during the COVID-19 pandemic: A cross-sectional study.
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Natour, Nihal and Al-Tell, Mariam
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COMPETENCY assessment (Law) ,MORTALITY risk factors ,LIFESTYLES ,CROSS-sectional method ,FEAR ,WORRY ,T-test (Statistics) ,BODY mass index ,SADNESS ,FOOD consumption ,SATISFACTION ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SKIN care ,EMOTIONS ,POPULATION geography ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ANXIETY ,STAY-at-home orders ,PALESTINIANS ,METROPOLITAN areas ,DESPAIR ,FOOD habits ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,DATA analysis software ,SLEEP quality ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Background: Although the COVID-19 epidemic was linked to movement limitations and a sense of risk among the general public, changes in lifestyle and mental health were not examined among Palestinians. The study aimed to investigate changes in a group of Palestinians' lifestyles and mental health. Methodology: A translated questionnaire about demographics, mental health difficulties, and lifestyle choices was created using Google Forms and distributed over social media and academic platforms. SPSS 21 was used to analyze the data. Results: The participants' mean age was 25 9 years, 67% were women, and 47% were city dwellers. About 82% had a bachelor's degree. Infection with COVID-19 was present in 13% of study group, COVID-19 infection caused the death of a relative in 13% of study group, and commitment to limits was present in 14% of study group. Negative emotions like despair, hopelessness, and worry were extremely common. Despite eating a few fruits and vegetables and drinking a lot of soft beverages, study participants were generally active. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic is associated with a negative impact on lifestyle and mental well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. On Continuity and Exceptionality in Our Present Crisis: A Conversation with Silvia Federici.
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Gallo-Cruz, Selina and Morton, Chelsea Renea
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WAR ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SCHOLARLY method ,HISTORIANS ,VIOLENCE against women ,DESPAIR ,ECOFEMINISM ,GENOCIDE - Abstract
On 2 May of 2024, we spoke via Zoom call with sociologist and critical historian of violence against women, Silvia Federici, author of Caliban and the Witch, among many other critical works on our present global crises – from the genocidal war against Palestine to women in welfare in the United States. The conversation took us from the depths of her despair about the ongoing wars against the world's most vulnerable peoples to the resilient hopes sowed by women in commons in Nigeria and Argentina. Silvia shared her reflections on the human experiences that have shaped her scholarship, the continuities of capitalist discipline observed in her early advocacy, and how she makes sense of today's compounding global crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Gender differences in sleep latency between low and high hopelessness individuals.
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Li, Lishi, Zhong, Yiming, Liang, Shuyan, and Quan, Peng
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SLEEP latency ,HAMILTON Depression Inventory ,SLEEP quality ,GENDER differences (Psychology) ,DESPAIR - Abstract
In depressive symptoms and sleep disorders, the relationship between gender, sleep latency, and feelings of hopelessness is critical for implementing mental health interventions. The current study enrolled 637 Chinese outpatients with depression, ranging in age from 9 to 87 years, 212 males and 425 females. There are specialized psychiatrists who screen outpatients using the ICD-10 diagnostic criteria for depressive episodes. Sleep latency factor in the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and hopelessness factor in the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD-24) were used to assess sleep latency and hopelessness, respectively. The results indicated that hopelessness positively correlated with sleep latency, and females generally experienced longer sleep latency than males. Further, regression analyses revealed a significant interaction between gender and hopelessness on sleep latency. The sleep latency of those with lower levels of hopelessness is shorter than those with higher levels of hopelessness, regardless of gender. Females consistently had longer sleep latency than males, regardless of the level of hopelessness. And among those with low hopelessness, male had significantly lower sleep latency than females. However, as the level of hopelessness increased, the sleep latency of males increased substantially, almost equaling that of females, while females increased only slightly. Future studies should incorporate longitudinal designs and diverse populations to further validate and expand these findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Burning from the Inside: Narrating Trauma of Self-Immolation in Tibetan Exile Cinema.
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K.S., Gokul and Gupta, Sonika
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- *
EPISODIC memory , *PUBLIC demonstrations , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *SUICIDE , *NOBEL Peace Prize , *COLLECTIVE memory , *DESPAIR - Abstract
The article delves into the traumatic impact of self-immolation protests within the Tibetan community, examining specific cases and responses both within and outside Tibet. It explores the emotional and political aspects of self-immolation as a form of resistance, highlighting the individual and collective trauma experienced. The filmmakers behind the documentaries aim to challenge prevailing narratives, focusing on human stories and the long-term effects of these protests on the Tibetan struggle for self-determination. The document also delves into themes of conflict, violence, and terrorism, discussing the religious, political, and cultural implications of self-immolation as a mode of protest in Tibet, as well as the changing language of protest and online debates among Tibetans in exile. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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29. P1 evoked by facial expression images is enhanced in Parkinson's disease patients with depressive symptoms.
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Sun, Yujia, Mo, Yixiang, Peng, Chunkai, Li, Qingqing, Wang, Zhuyong, Xue, Sha, and Zhang, Shizhong
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PARKINSON'S disease diagnosis ,PUBLIC hospitals ,OCCIPITAL bone ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,SOMATOFORM disorders ,DISABILITIES ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,EMOTIONS ,SYMPTOM burden ,ANXIETY ,CASE-control method ,ANALYSIS of variance ,STATISTICS ,DESPAIR ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL screening ,FACIAL expression ,MENTAL depression ,BIOMARKERS ,NONPARAMETRIC statistics ,SLEEP disorders - Abstract
Introduction: Depressive symptoms are most common non-motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease (PD), which is often overlooked due to absence of rapid and objective diagnostic biomarkers. Electroencephalography (EEG)-based event-related potentials (ERPs) is commonly used to assess emotional processes. The aim of this study was to investigate changes in ERPs in PD patients exhibiting depressive symptoms and to provide a reliable biomarker for assisting in the diagnosis of PD with depressive symptoms. Methods: We conducted a case–control study involving 30 PD patients with (dPD group) or without depressive symptoms (nPD group) and 13 age matched healthy controls (HC). We recorded EEG of the patients during the emotional picture stimulation task and analyzed the difference in the early ERPs potentials (P1, N170, early posterior negativity) and their correlation with the severity of symptoms in PD patients. Results: Our results found that P1 amplitude in the occipital region of the dPD group in response to emotional faces was significantly higher than that of nPD and HC group, and it was positively correlated with severity of depressive symptoms in PD patients. Conclusion: Our study shows that facial expression-induced enhancement of P1 amplitude can be utilized as a rapid and objective indicator to screen for depressive symptoms in PD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Perfect: feeling judged on social media: a roundtable discussion.
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Gill, Rosalind
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- *
YOUNG adults , *SOCIAL media , *INFLUENCER marketing , *DIGITAL forensics , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *DESPAIR , *GAZE - Abstract
The article "Perfect: feeling judged on social media: a roundtable discussion" by Rosalind Gill explores the experiences of young women on social media, focusing on the pressures of perfection and judgment they face. The research highlights the anxieties young women feel about being watched and judged, leading to intense feelings of anxiety and fear of making mistakes. The study also delves into the labor young women invest in maintaining their social media presence, as well as the emotional distress and mental health struggles they navigate in a visually dominated culture. The author aims to challenge stigmas around mental health and promote discussions on the structural and cultural factors influencing young people's well-being. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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31. Resilience and hopelessness mediate the relationship between benevolent childhood experiences and life satisfaction: evidence from a cross-cultural study.
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Sever, Melih, Tatlıcıoğlu, Oktay, Almeida, Telma Catarina, Abdul Azeez, E. P., Caridade, Sónia, and Cunha, Olga
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PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,LIFE satisfaction ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,CROSS-cultural studies ,DESPAIR - Abstract
Background: A growing body of literature focuses on the role of benevolent childhood experiences (BCEs) in predicting adulthood well-being, in addition to adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). However, cross-cultural differences are generally ignored in this endeavor. Hence, this study aimed to explore the role of BCEs in predicting life satisfaction, resilience, and hopelessness. We also examined the potential of resilience and the role of hopelessness in mediating the relationship between BCE and life satisfaction. Methods: A total of 850 university students from Turkey (n = 371), Portugal (n = 248), and India (n = 231), aged 17 to 58 years (M = 22.12, SD = 4.41), participated in the study. Participants completed an online protocol consisting of measures to assess BCEs, life satisfaction, resilience, and hopelessness. Results: BCEs, hopelessness, and life satisfaction have significantly differed among the samples based on the country of residence. BCEs were positively correlated to resilience and life satisfaction and negatively to hopelessness. In the sequential mediation model, after controlling for country and sex, resilience and hopelessness sequentially mediated the relationship between BCEs and life satisfaction. BCEs were associated with life satisfaction, resilience, and hopelessness across countries and sexes. The model explains 42.8% of the variability. Conclusion: Despite differences between countries, BCEs are important predictors of adult well-being in all three countries and should be monitored along with ACE. Further, resilience seems to have an important role in lowering the negative consequences of lower BCEs and feelings of hopelessness, pointing to the need to strengthen psychological resilience among adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Newton in the poetry of Friedrich Schiller.
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Sieling, Villads Wjac
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- *
NATURAL theology , *POETRY (Literary form) , *POETS , *SPHERES , *DESPAIR - Abstract
This article attempts to explain the peculiar role of Isaac Newton in the poetry of Friedrich Schiller. I show that Newtonian ideas appear from the earliest poems in Anthologie auf das Jahr 1782 wherein gravity is used mainly as a metaphor for love. Newton is made a culprit, in Schiller's cosmological poems, for the destruction of the spheres and for the poet's despair in the ‘empty’, Newtonian universe. I chart the changing role of Newton in the later poetry of Schiller, where it is mainly his Opticks that interests the poet, who at this point has a thoroughly negative idea of the scientist, probably inspired by Goethe. Newton's famous experiment with the prism is figured as being the opposite of the poetry with which Schiller sought to unify (rather than refract) nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. The Relationship Between Metacognitive Beliefs and Suicidal Ideation Among Chinese Male Prisoners: A Network Analysis.
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Zeng, Xiaoqing and Wang, Mengye
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STATISTICAL correlation , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *SUICIDAL ideation , *SELF-efficacy , *RESEARCH funding , *OPTIMISM , *WORRY , *IMPRISONMENT , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PSYCHOLOGY of men , *PRISON psychology , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CONFIDENCE , *SURVEYS , *RESEARCH , *SLEEP , *DESPAIR , *DATA analysis software , *COGNITION , *SELF-perception , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Background: The relationship between metacognitive beliefs and suicidal ideation is complex, yet there is limited research exploring 'the fine‐grained and comorbid pathways between the two variables', particularly in prisoners. Methods: Data were collected from prisoners who completed demographic surveys and psychological scales between February and March 2024. Demographic information included age, educational background and duration of imprisonment. The Metacognitions Questionnaire‐30 (MCQ‐30) and Self‐Rating Idea of Suicide Scale (SIOSS) were administered. Using R 4.2.3 software, a network model of metacognitive beliefs and suicidal ideation was constructed, with expected influence (EI) and bridge expected influence (BEI) calculated to compare the roles of specific symptoms within the network. Results: The network model revealed 21 significant edges between metacognitive beliefs and the suicidal ideation community. The most vital edges across communities included 'Negative beliefs about worry' and 'Despair', 'Cognitive confidence' and 'Despair', 'Cognitive self‐consciousness' and 'Optimism', and 'Cognitive confidence' and 'Sleep' (with edge weights of 0.30, 0.16, −0.16 and 0.11, respectively). 'Despair' demonstrated the highest EI value, exerting the strongest impact on the network. The highest BEI values were found for 'Negative beliefs about worry' and 'Despair'. Conclusion: Network analyses underscore the intricate interplay between metacognitive beliefs and suicidal ideation among prisoners at the symptom level. These findings highlight specific areas for therapeutic focus, potentially leading to more effective mental health support for incarcerated individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Impact of Indirect Trauma and Disaster Media Exposure on Psychological States and Temporal Processes: The Case of 2023 Turkey Earthquakes.
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Oz, Irem Tugce and Cona, Giorgia
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- *
MENTAL depression risk factors , *POST-traumatic stress disorder , *RISK assessment , *SATISFACTION , *SEVERITY of illness index , *ANXIETY , *DELAY discounting (Psychology) , *TURKS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *BEREAVEMENT , *DESPAIR , *NATURAL disasters , *MEDIA exposure , *TIME , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *EVALUATION , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Turkey experienced two devastating earthquakes, which resulted in more than 50,000 deaths and millions of injured and homeless individuals. The negative influence of direct exposure to trauma has been proven, but the impact of indirect exposure remains unclear. In this study, we focused on indirect types of trauma exposure: the loss of someone in the earthquake and the exposure to disaster media. We aimed to explore the influence of these dimensions on psychological states, including earthquake trauma severity, post‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, depression, anxiety, hopelessness and life satisfaction and temporal‐psychological measures, such as intertemporal decision‐making tendencies and time perspectives. The sample (N = 215) consisted of Turkish individuals who experienced the earthquakes through two types of indirect exposure: having lost someone and being exposed to disaster media. Findings showed that having a loss in the earthquake was related to high levels of trauma, anxiety, hopelessness and a past‐negative time perspective. Repetitive exposure to disaster media was linked to higher levels of trauma, PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety, stress and a past‐negative time perspective. Importantly, the amount of traumatization in case of losing someone was modulated by the frequency of disaster‐media exposure. Even indirect exposure to the disaster substantially disturbs many processes, and the media magnifies such disturbances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. A Comparative Study of Nonsuicidal Self‐Injury, Hopelessness and Meaning in Life Before and After COVID‐19 in Adolescents.
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Sanz‐Sendra, X., Mora‐Ascó, J., Gallego‐Hernández de Tejada, B., Marco, J. H., and Pérez Rodríguez, S.
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- *
SELF-injurious behavior , *STATISTICAL correlation , *BECK Hopelessness Scale , *DATA analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *ADOLESCENT health , *MENTAL health , *PARAMETERS (Statistics) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *SELF-mutilation , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *MATHEMATICAL statistics , *DESPAIR , *QUALITY of life , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Introduction: Recent research shows that there has been a decrease in meaning in life and an increase in hopelessness and nonsuicidal self‐injury in adolescents after the pandemic. The present study aims to address three objectives: (1) to compare the frequency, types and functions of nonsuicidal self‐injury before and after the pandemic, (2) to explore the relationship between meaning in life, hopelessness and nonsuicidal self‐injury and (3) to study differences in nonsuicidal self‐injury, meaning in life and hopelessness levels before and following the pandemic. Methods: This research was conducted in a community sample of N = 3800 Spanish participants, including n = 1733 from the pre‐pandemic period and n = 2067 from the post‐pandemic period. Ages ranged between 11 and 19, and the average age was 14.87 (SD = 1.58). The sample had an equal distribution by gender, with 50.5% females (n = 1919) and 49.5% males (n = 1881). Standardized tests such as ISAS‐II, BHS and PIL‐10 were used, as well as descriptive statistics, Spearman correlations and non‐parametric ANCOVAs of Quade controlling for age and gender to compare pre‐ and post‐pandemic variables. Results: The results revealed a significant increase in the number of functions of nonsuicidal self‐injury, in the methods employed and in the levels of hopelessness, along with a notable decrease in meaning in life after the pandemic. However, the estimated prevalence of pre‐ and post‐pandemic nonsuicidal self‐injury remained similar. The estimated lifetime prevalence of NSSI was 24.9% (n = 432) before the pandemic and 19.4% (n = 401) after the pandemic. A positive correlation between nonsuicidal self‐injury and hopelessness and a negative correlation with meaning in life were observed. Conclusions: These findings indicate that the pandemic influenced the mental health of young Spaniards and suggest it may be useful to incorporate meaning‐centred interventions in protocols to address nonsuicidal self‐injury and hopelessness in adolescent populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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36. Artificial intelligence and the future of our sociolinguistic work.
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Kelly‐Holmes, Helen
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NATURAL language processing , *LANGUAGE models , *SOCIAL media , *ATTITUDES toward language , *LINGUISTICS , *DESPAIR , *SPEECH perception - Abstract
The article discusses the potential impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on sociolinguistic research. AI tools can assist in analyzing social media data, identifying dialects, and automating data collection. However, challenges such as biases in AI models and ethical considerations need to be addressed. The merging of human and machine interactions raises questions about language authenticity and societal impacts. The article also highlights the need to reflect on algorithmic identities and the challenges of finding multilingual data in increasingly privatized online spaces. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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37. البث والشكوى في شعر امرئ القيس دراسة نفسية تحليلية.
- Author
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شمس الاسلام احمد
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GRIEF , *SADNESS , *EMOTIONS , *POETRY (Literary form) , *ANXIETY , *DESPAIR - Abstract
This research aims to study the motives for grief and complaining according to Imru’ alQays’ poetry and their trends in his poetry, and to clarify the prominent meanings and contents revealed by the poet’s poetry of complaint, the psychological reflections of this poetry and its most important emotions and feelings. To achieve the research objectives, the study is divided into two parts: The first section includes theoretical material; it defines the concept of grief and complaining, then clarifies the motives for grief and complaining in the poetry of Imru’ al-Qays. The second section talks about their trends in his poetry and analyzes poetic texts to reveal the poet’s suffering and how he revealed its depth in himself and his conscience. It also explains the psychological repercussions of this poetry. The research concludes that Imru' al-Qais's complaint was generally the result of either psychological suffering or severe physical illness. The subject of complaint in his poetry had psychological repercussions that appeared, for example, in the dominance of feelings of sadness and anxiety, a feeling of weakness and brokenness, despair, and living in memories of the past. That's why this poetry was an honest mirror that reflected the poet’s suffering in various stages in his life and called him to sadness, complaint and revelation in these poems. They preserved an important aspect of his life and expressed sincere human feelings that made him go beyond individual subjectivity to express human conscience in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
38. Performances of Hope and Despair: A Case Study of Organ Donation Between a Palestinian and Israeli Jew Amidst War.
- Author
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Oreg, Ayelet and Ben Shlomo, Shirley
- Subjects
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ORGAN donors , *QUALITATIVE research , *CULTURAL competence , *ORGAN donation , *ISRAELIS , *WAR , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *BEREAVEMENT , *THEMATIC analysis , *DESPAIR , *PALESTINIANS , *RELIGION , *GRIEF , *CASE studies , *HOPE , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
We explore the phenomenon of organ donation between rivals in time of war when a significant gift such as organ donation is given not just to a "stranger" but to a stranger who may be considered an enemy. This is a case study of a unique organ donation event that occurred in Israel during Operation Guardian of the Walls in May 2021. It involved a Palestinian boy killed by a Jewish policeman and a Jewish man killed by Palestinian youths. Both victims, lacking organ donor cards, had their organs donated by their families with the awareness that recipients could come from the "opposing" group. We ask: (1) How do families from rival groups construct meaning in their decision to donate organs? (2) How do they construct meaning in their experience of loss? The findings reveal that bereaved families imbue their actions with political and religious significance, framing the organ donations as a "universal gift" guided by religious commandments to save lives. While these acts initially transcend cultural and national boundaries, a lack of recognition and gratitude afterward can lead to disillusionment, reinforcing "us" versus "them" boundaries. This study underscores the intricate dynamics in organ donations during political conflict and the pivotal role of religious authorities in shaping perceptions and meaning. Moreover, it highlights the potential for organ donations to foster reconciliation and coexistence amidst conflict, provided mutual recognition in cases where compassion and understanding of loss are prioritized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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39. AFFECT AND IDEOLOGY.
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Secor, Anna J. and Anderson, Ben
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- *
DESPAIR , *OPTIMISM , *IDEOLOGICAL conflict , *GREAT Resignation, 2021- , *RESIGNATION of employees , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *INTUITION - Abstract
The article from New Formations explores the relationship between affect and ideology in the context of the current impasse marked by economic crises, environmental collapse, and political shifts. The authors refrain from providing fixed definitions of affect and ideology, allowing them to surface contextually in the collected articles. The papers in the special issue delve into various aspects of affect and ideology, examining topics such as futility in environmentalism, the concept of "net zero" in settler futurity, and the interplay between confidence and conservatism. The authors aim to map the affective present and explore the potential for new understandings of cultural theory by engaging with affect and ideology in a nuanced and dynamic manner. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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40. Nature‐friendly hands: The relationship between nursing students' climate change anxiety, intolerance of uncertainty, and anxiety about the future.
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Gülırmak Güler, Kübra and Albayrak Günday, Eda
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- *
RISK assessment , *STATISTICAL correlation , *FEAR , *CLIMATE change , *INTERVIEWING , *UNCERTAINTY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *ANXIETY , *NURSING education , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EMOTIONS , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH , *DESPAIR , *DATA analysis software , *NURSING students , *NATURAL disasters , *COGNITION , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Aim/objective: This study examined the relationship between climate change anxiety, intolerance of uncertainty, and future anxiety levels of nursing students. Background: The effects of climate change, an important global problem, on people's emotional and intellectual states are becoming increasingly important. It is important to understand to what extent prospective health professionals, such as nursing students, are affected by such environmental concerns and the possible impact of this level on their professional behaviors to develop an environmentally focused approach to health services. Design: This study was conducted using a descriptive and correlational design. Methods: Students enrolled in the Nursing Undergraduate Program of a university in Turkey in the 2023–2024 academic year participated in the study. The participants were administered a personal information form, climate change anxiety scale, intolerance of uncertainty scale, and future anxiety scale in university students. The data were evaluated using advanced statistical analyses, and relationships were examined. Results: As a result of these analyses, it was determined that there was a significant relationship between future anxiety and climate change anxiety in university students (R = 0.234, p =.000). In addition, there was a substantial relationship between climate change anxiety and intolerance of uncertainty (R = 0.562, p =.000). Conclusions: These findings indicate significant and linear relationships between nursing students' emotional and cognitive states associated with environmental factors such as climate change, uncertainty, and future anxiety. Developing support and interventions in nursing education is crucial to help students cope with these issues and function more effectively in their future professional lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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41. Pathways between grief, depression, hopelessness, reasons for living, and suicidal ideation in bereaved individuals.
- Author
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Fisher, Joscelyn E., Zhou, Jing, Blumhorst, Alexandra L., Ogle, Christin M., Sumberg, Luke, and Cozza, Stephen J.
- Subjects
- *
SUICIDAL ideation , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *BEREAVEMENT , *COMPLICATED grief , *GRIEF , *DESPAIR - Abstract
Associations between comorbid depression and grief with suicidal ideation (SI) have been inconsistent. To identify at-risk individuals, it is important to determine the role of symptom severity by examining both continuous and clinical-threshold grief and depression, in addition to other factors (i.e., hopelessness, reasons for living—RFL) associated with SI. Participants (n = 216) bereaved by combat, accident, or suicide completed an online survey. Associations between depression, grief, SI, RFL, and hopelessness were examined by multivariable logistic regressions and structural equation modeling (SEM). Across the sample, hopelessness and RFL were associated with SI while continuous measures of grief and depression were not. In contrast, clinical-threshold grief, clinical-threshold depression, hopelessness, and RFL each were associated with SI. In addition, of the grief characteristics, yearning was the most robust correlate of SI, and Survival/Coping Beliefs (SCB) was the RFL most associated with SI. SEM indicated that direct paths between grief and SI, hopelessness and SI, and RFL and SI were significant, but not between depression and SI. Instead, depression had a strong direct effect on hopelessness, and hopelessness had a direct effect on SI. Results are consistent with previously-identified associations between SI and clinical levels of depression and grief. More nuanced findings suggest hopelessness, yearning, and SCB as additional targets for reducing risk for SI in bereaved individuals regardless of whether they meet clinical thresholds for grief or depression. • Clinical-threshold depression and clinical-threshold grief are potential targets for suicidal ideation. • Hopelessness and reasons for living (RFL) likely effective targets in community samples. • Of grief symptoms, yearning was the most robust correlate of suicidal ideation. • Survival/Coping Beliefs (SCB) was the RFL most associated with suicidal ideation. • Support should focus on reducing yearning and hopelessness and encouraging SCB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. "Bitter Memory" Meets "Dark Retrospect": Charlotte Smith, Satan, and the Politics of Nostalgia in The Emigrants.
- Author
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Little, Diana
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *DESPAIR , *PARADISE , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *REPUBLICANS , *NOSTALGIA - Abstract
Charlotte Smith's The Emigrants (1793), a blank verse critique of Revolutionary France during the Terror, probes the unstable connections between sentiment, nostalgia, and political will, especially in the context of gendered political engagement. To do so, Smith aligns herself with Milton's Satan. She uses this most subversive of Paradise Lost's characters as a model for articulating her own republican ideals and nostalgic sentiment, which both undermines and feeds her political engagement in the French Emigration Crisis. Comparing passages from The Emigrants and Paradise Lost, I argue that Smith expresses a nostalgia imbued with satanic despair to glean the political use-value of memory. Can politics – especially of a marginalized person – ever be nostalgic, or must it focus on future reform? I argue that Smith's satanic nostalgia protests the limited forms of political engagement for women in the period, the demands of charity on women, and their social disenfranchisement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Early Adolescent Predictors of Young Adults' Distress and Adaptive Coping During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings From a Longitudinal Cohort Study.
- Author
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Steinhoff, Annekatrin, Johnson-Ferguson, Lydia, Bechtiger, Laura, Murray, Aja, Hepp, Urs, Ribeaud, Denis, Eisner, Manuel, and Shanahan, Lilly
- Subjects
- *
COMPETENCY assessment (Law) , *RISK assessment , *LIFE change events , *LIFESTYLES , *ADOLESCENT development , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *RESEARCH funding , *PARENT-child relationships , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *INTERNALIZING behavior , *FAMILIES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *STAY-at-home orders , *DESPAIR , *SOCIAL support , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SOCIALIZATION , *WELL-being , *ADOLESCENCE , *ADULTS - Abstract
We examined early adolescent predictors of later distress and adaptive coping in early adulthood, using data from a prospective longitudinal cohort study (n = 786). In early adolescence (age 13), we assessed indicators of mental health (internalizing symptoms), stressor exposure (cumulative stressful life events), and family socialization (supportive parent–child interactions). In early adulthood (age 22), during the first COVID-19-related Swiss national lockdown, we assessed cumulative pandemic-related stressors, distress (poor well-being, hopelessness, and perceived disruptions to life) and adaptive coping. Early adolescent internalizing symptoms predicted lower well-being, more hopelessness, and perceived lifestyle disruptions in early adulthood, during the pandemic. Cumulative stressful life events during early adolescence moderated the association between cumulative pandemic-related stressors and perceived lifestyle disruptions. Supportive parent–child interactions fostered subsequent engagement in adaptive coping, which, in turn, predicted less hopelessness and better well-being. Findings reveal that early adolescent development is linked with distress and adaptive coping in later periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Visualisation of female characters in Huturu Hwemavanga (Vernom from the Scars), Chakwesha (The Boss) and Nguva Yakaoma (Hard Times).
- Author
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Maganga, Allan T. and Tembo, Charles
- Subjects
BIBLICAL commentaries ,INDUSTRIAL management ,DESPAIR ,NEOCOLONIALISM ,POLITICAL philosophy - Abstract
This paper is a comparative exegesis of Zimbabwean novelists' visualisation of female characters. It avers that in addressing business management issues through literature, selected Shona novelists' projection of female characters fosters hopelessness and despair into the unsuspecting readership since works of art is never neutral but rather ideological. Utilising Chakwesha (The Boss), Huturu Hwemavanga (Vernom from the Scars) and Nguva Yakaoma (Hard Times) as the prisms for the study, this paper holds that in business management and administration issues; women are cast as tricksters, opportunists, fraudsters and responsible for businessmen's downfall in their pursuit of business triumphalism. In all the selected primary sources for this paper, women are the perpetrators, whereas their male counterparts are the victims. Furthermore, the paper argues that this illumination fosters pessimism instead of a life-affirming and life-guaranteeing consciousness in the audience through the manner these Shona novelists pit male and female characters against each other. Since literature helps shape people's attitudes and identity, novelists have to elucidate on the predatory nature of the capitalistic economic system, which undergirds a neo-colonial system, which in turn impacts on respective female characters' morality that these novelists tend to magnify. Appreciation of these selected African literary works is guided by Africana Womanism against the backdrop that it places cultural and historical circumstances in the explication of issues related to the condition of African women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A HORA DA ESTRELA: CRÍTICA SOCIAL.
- Author
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de Albuquerque Cerqueira, Ariany, Silva Tenório, Levi Daniel, and de Melo Neto, Moisés Monteiro
- Subjects
ABANDONMENT (Psychology) ,YOUNG women ,SOCIAL marginality ,DESPAIR ,LONELINESS - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Foco (Interdisciplinary Studies Journal) is the property of Revista Foco 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
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. William James’s Assessment of Nihilism as a Psychological Phenomenon
- Author
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Jon Stewart
- Subjects
nihilism ,psychology of religion ,depression ,meaninglessness ,despair ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion - Abstract
The present article examines the contribution to the problem of nihilism found in the American philosopher and psychologist William James, specifically in his essay “Is Life Worth Living?” from 1896 and the chapter “The Sick Soul” from his The Varieties of Religious Experience from 1902. At the age of 27, James suffered a period of intense depression that lasted from the fall of 1869 until the spring of 1870. This experience shaped his views on nihilism. The present article argues that James’s proposed solution to the problem of nihilism, although formulated rather differently, is in essence the same as that of Jean Paul and the Danish thinker Poul Martin Møller. James’s originality can be found in his treatment of the issue as a psychological problem.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Courage to Be and Types of Anxiety in the Theological Metaphysics of Paul Tillich
- Author
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Marius CUCU and Oana LENȚA
- Subjects
the courage to be ,anxiety ,theism ,non-being ,grace ,neurosis ,despair ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 ,Language and Literature - Abstract
The metaphysical theology proposed by Paul Tillich offers the perspective of a constant connection between the human existential journey and the problem of Non-Being. Centered on the idea of Being, both metaphysics and theology seem to place the issue of Nothingness, of Emptiness, in the background. In reality, the dialectic between Being and Non-Being constitutes the central dynamic for the entire evolution of existence and, likewise, of human thought. Confrontation with Non-Being becomes one of the most important sources of reflection and fundamental ontic experiences. From Non-Being arises anxiety, manifesting in multiple forms that appear equally devastating to our consciousness. A natural question would be: how did those in the past overcome anxiety, and how can we do so today? Paul Tillich believes we are mistaken. Anxiety cannot truly be overcome; instead, it can and must be assimilated—otherwise, convulsive despair could overwhelm the consciousness.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. "While this everywhere crying".
- Author
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STEPHENSON, WEN
- Subjects
- *
ZEN Buddhism , *SOCIAL movements , *SOCIAL justice , *CLIMATE change , *CRYING , *POETS , *DESPAIR - Abstract
This article features a conversation with poet Jane Hirshfield, discussing her recent work and her growing concern for ecological issues. The author shares their interest in Zen Buddhism and their personal visit to Hirshfield. They delve into the themes of despair and grief in Hirshfield's poetry, particularly in relation to climate change. The article also explores the darkness and life-affirming aspects of her work, highlighting her ability to find profundity in everyday life. Additionally, Hirshfield discusses her politics and views on social justice movements, emphasizing the importance of non-separation and cultivating abundance. She has been involved in activism, including founding Poets for Science and participating in the March for Science. Hirshfield acknowledges the significance of despair but encourages resilience and appreciation for the impermanence and beauty of the world. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
49. The entangled becoming in humanities doctoral education
- Author
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Nuriler, Hatice and Bengtsen, Søren S.E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. On Ice.
- Author
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Mullen, Laura
- Subjects
NATURE & nurture ,WEIGHT gain ,DESPAIR ,HUMAN embryos ,HOME remodeling ,BREATH holding ,GRATITUDE - Abstract
The article "On Ice" from After Dinner Conversation follows the protagonist, Cecelia, as she navigates the complexities of her past relationship with Jacob and the decision regarding their frozen embryos. Cecelia grapples with unresolved feelings towards Jacob, the implications of preserving or destroying the embryos, and the unexpected turn of events following a fire at the fertility clinic. Through introspection and interactions with others, Cecelia confronts her emotions and makes decisions that ultimately lead to personal growth and closure. The narrative delves into themes of loss, hope, and the intricacies of relationships, prompting readers to reflect on individual rights, communication, and the impact of past experiences on present choices. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2025
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