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Ivana Juzová; Helena Vadurová; Nikol Vicherková – British Journal of Special Education, 2024
The study focused on comparing the prevalence and type of psychosomatic symptoms in Czech students aged 14 to 19 years (N = 459) without and with specific learning disabilities (SpLDs), as well as their tendencies towards selected coping strategies. No statistically significant differences were found in the prevalence and type of psychosomatic…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Students with Disabilities, Learning Disabilities, Psychosomatic Disorders
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Taylor, Candice – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2021
Workplace bullying is a known issue in society, and is most prevalent in education. Nevertheless, teacher-on-teacher bullying is a taboo topic of discussion. Bullying is repeated acts or verbal comments made to the victim as a way of controlling and demonstrating power over the individual. These acts could cause a multitude of psychological or…
Descriptors: Bullying, Work Environment, Peer Relationship, Teaching Conditions
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Gustems-Carnicer, Josep; Calderon, Caterina; Calderon-Garrido, Diego; Martin-Piño, Carolina – International Journal of Educational Psychology, 2020
Academic performance among university students is a fundamental factor in the analysis of quality of higher education. Despite the large volume of research on academic performance, there are no conclusive results regarding the influence of some variables on it. While some studies find differences attributable to gender, age, or psychological…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Coping, Stress Variables, Preservice Teachers
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Payne, Helen; Roberts, Amanda; Jarvis, Joy – Journal of Transformative Education, 2020
This article describes how adults learn to self-manage chronic bodily symptoms, a complex and costly health problem. It proposes a theory of learning for an innovative, research-informed intervention, The BodyMind Approach® (TBMA) aimed at developing confidence, competence, skills, and knowledge and understanding for self-management for people…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Self Management, Patients, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
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Sprague, Caryll M.; Kia-Keating, Maryam; Felix, Erika; Afifi, Tamara; Reyes, Gilbert; Afifi, Walid – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2015
Background: Natural disasters can have a significant impact on youth and family mental health and well-being. However, the relationship between family protective factors and youth adjustment in the aftermath of disaster remains unclear. Objective: In order to address the present gaps in the field, this study investigated perceived disaster-related…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Family Role, Natural Disasters, Coping
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Martin, Paddy – Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 2012
This paper will look at work carried out with asylum-seeking families and children within a hospital paediatric setting, exploring theories that can help us to understand how highly traumatic experiences, emotionally and cognitively unprocessed, may become expressed bodily. The case examples will show how these shattered and dislocated patients…
Descriptors: Psychosomatic Disorders, Cultural Context, Grief, Coping
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Weiss, Bahr; Tram, Jane M.; Weisz, John R.; Rescorla, Leslie; Achenbach, Thomas M. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2009
Individuals react in a variety of ways when experiencing environmental challenges exceeding their capacity to cope adaptively. Some researchers have suggested that Asian populations tend to react to excessive stress with somatic symptoms, whereas Western populations tend to respond more with affective or depressive symptoms. Other researchers,…
Descriptors: Help Seeking, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Referral, Researchers
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Hamama, Liat; Ronen, Tammie; Rahav, Giora – Health & Social Work, 2008
The study focuses on healthy children's responses to a sibling's cancer and its aftermath, with particular scrutiny directed toward these healthy siblings' stress factors, duress responses, and coping resources. The authors investigated role overload as these siblings' stress factor, anxiety and psychosomatic symptoms as their duress responses,…
Descriptors: Siblings, Jews, Self Efficacy, Psychosomatic Disorders
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Miers, Anne C.; Rieffe, Carolien; Terwogt, Mark Meerum; Cowan, Richard; Linden, Wolfgang – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2007
Attempts to explain the experience of somatic complaints among children and adolescents suggest that they may in part result from the influence of particular strategies for coping with anger on the longevity of negative emotions. To explore these relationships British (n = 393) and Dutch (n = 99) children completed a modified version of the…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Coping, Adolescents, Children
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Kim, Hun Soo; Kim, Hyun Sil – Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 2008
This study examined the rate of suicide attempts and relevant variables and identified risk factors for suicide attempts among Korean adolescents. A cross-sectional study was performed using an anonymous, self-report questionnaire. A total of 2,100 Korean adolescents, including 1,321 student adolescents and 779 delinquent adolescents, were…
Descriptors: Delinquency, Life Satisfaction, Psychosomatic Disorders, Suicide
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Ogden, Jenni A.; Von Sturmer, Guy – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1984
Examined the emotional strategies people use and their psychological consequences. Adults (N=270 and 329) were classified into emotional strategy groups. Suppressed emotives had a significantly higher score on the Complaint Questionnaire than emotive and nonemotive groups, suggesting neurotic tendencies. (JAC)
Descriptors: Adults, Affective Behavior, Coping, Emotional Adjustment
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Gayton, William F.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1978
Examined relationship between repression-sensitization (R-S) and visits to prison infirmary for males during a one-year period. Main effect for R-S dimension was significant for total number of visits, number of medically justified visits, and number of medically unjustified visits. Sensitizers had significantly more visits than repressors.…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Coping, Health Behavior, Health Facilities
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Wolfe, Jessica; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1994
Participants responded to a series of psychological, exposure and health questionnaires. Results suggest that effects of traumatic exposure on perceived health are partially mediated by increases in PTSD after exposure, supporting studies on the effects of stress on health. (BF)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Coping, Females, Perception
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Rosman, Bernice L.; Baker, Lester – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 1988
Responds to the critical evaluation of Coyne and Anderson in the previous article, of "Psychosomatic Families: Anorexia Nervosa in Context" (Minuchin, Rosman, and Baker). Asserts that indeed certain very specifically defined diabetic patients' physiological disturbance serves a function in their families, an assertion strongly supported by…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Diabetes, Family Characteristics
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Etherington, Kim – British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 2005
This paper is based on a study of how childhood trauma can be experienced in the body and the resources individuals have chosen to deal with that. Ten individuals (including myself) wrote stories showing how they had made sense of those experiences and found ways to heal. In this paper, I tell the story of that research, contextualising myself as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Abuse, Psychosomatic Disorders, Psychophysiology
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