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Showing 1 to 15 of 56 results Save | Export
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Lake, James – International Journal for Transformative Research, 2022
Mental health professionals can help patients understand exceptional and paranormal experiences, integrate them into day-to-day life, and cope with confusion and anxiety that sometimes accompany them. However, a broader clinical perspective and specialized training in clinical parapsychology is needed. In the first part of the paper I argue that…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Health Personnel, Mental Health Workers, Patients
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Bye, Amanda; Aston, Megan – Journal of Intellectual Disabilities, 2016
Children with intellectual disabilities spend more time in the health-care system than mainstream children. Parents have to learn how to navigate the system by coordinating appointments, understanding the referral process, knowing what services are available, and advocating for those services. This places an incredible amount of responsibility on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Intellectual Disability, Daughters
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Marks-Tarlow, Terry – American Journal of Play, 2017
The author employs neurobiology to help explore deception in nature and self-deception in human beings. She examines activities that may appear playful but that lack such hallmark qualities of play as equality, mutual pleasure, and voluntarism and that can, therefore, prove psychologically destructive. She warns that the kind of playful…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Deception, Play, Parent Child Relationship
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Walsh, Julie – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2014
In this paper I consider some of the affinities between the teacher-student dynamic in academic supervision, and the therapist-patient dynamic in the therapeutic relation. Drawing on my own experiences, I identify several difficulties that pertain to these two settings. First, in the context of the classroom, I consider how the requirement to…
Descriptors: Reflection, Teacher Student Relationship, Interpersonal Relationship, Patients
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Roxborough, Heather M.; Hewitt, Paul L.; Kaldas, Janet; Flett, Gordon L.; Caelian, Carmen M.; Sherry, Simon; Sherry, Dayna L. – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 2012
The role of interpersonal components of perfectionism in suicide outcomes among youth was assessed and the Perfectionism Social Disconnection Model (PSDM) was tested by determining whether the links between socially prescribed perfectionism (SPP) and perfectionistic self-presentation (PSP) and suicide outcomes are mediated by experiences of social…
Descriptors: Suicide, Personality Traits, Role, Interpersonal Competence
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Gabel, Stewart – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2013
Demoralization is a feeling state of dejection, hopelessness, and a sense of personal "incompetence" that may be tied to a loss of or threat to one's own goals or values. It has an existential dimension when beliefs and values about oneself are disconfirmed. Numerous sources describe high rates of dissatisfaction and burnout in…
Descriptors: Professional Continuing Education, Health Personnel, Psychological Patterns, Burnout
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Ghahramanlou-Holloway, Marjan; Cox, Daniel W.; Greene, Farrah N. – Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 2012
To date, no empirically based inpatient intervention for individuals who have attempted suicide exists. We present an overview of a novel psychotherapeutic approach, Post-Admission Cognitive Therapy (PACT), currently under development and empirical testing for inpatients who have been admitted for a recent suicide attempt. PACT is adapted from an…
Descriptors: Intervention, Suicide, Cognitive Restructuring, Coping
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Haedt-Matt, Alissa A.; Keel, Pamela K. – Psychological Bulletin, 2011
The affect regulation model of binge eating, which posits that patients binge eat to reduce negative affect (NA), has received support from cross-sectional and laboratory-based studies. Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) involves momentary ratings and repeated assessments over time and is ideally suited to identify temporal antecedents and…
Descriptors: Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Eating Disorders, Patients, Effect Size
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Gage, L. Ashley – Health & Social Work, 2012
The life span of patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) continues to extend due to advances in treatments and care. The rate of pregnancy for female patients with CF has also continued to rise. The purpose of this study was to systematically review the available literature on female patients with CF and their knowledge of sexual and reproductive…
Descriptors: Females, Quality of Life, Diseases, Pregnancy
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Callahan, Brandy L.; Ueda, Keita; Sakata, Daisuke; Plamondon, Andre; Murai, Toshiya – Brain and Cognition, 2011
It is well-known that patients having sustained frontal-lobe traumatic brain injury (TBI) are severely impaired on tests of emotion recognition. Indeed, these patients have significant difficulty recognizing facial expressions of emotion, and such deficits are often associated with decreased social functioning and poor quality of life. As of yet,…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Injuries, Quality of Life, Patients
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Gadea, Marien; Espert, Raul; Salvador, Alicia; Marti-Bonmati, Luis – Brain and Cognition, 2011
Dichotic Listening (DL) is a valuable tool to study emotional brain lateralization. Regarding the perception of sadness and anger through affective prosody, the main finding has been a left ear advantage (LEA) for the sad but contradictory data for the anger prosody. Regarding an induced mood in the laboratory, its consequences upon DL were a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Patients, School Districts
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Stewart, John – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2011
British child guidance was a form of psychiatric, preventive medicine for children and young people and centred, at least in principle, on specialist clinics led by psychiatrists. From small beginnings in the aftermath of the First World War, child guidance expanded steadily, in terms of both numbers of patients and numbers of clinics, and came to…
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Preventive Medicine, Parent Child Relationship, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Angner, Erik; Miller, Michael J.; Ray, Midge N.; Saag, Kenneth G.; Allison, Jeroan J. – Social Indicators Research, 2010
The relationship between health literacy and happiness was explored using a cross-sectional survey of community-dwelling older primary-care patients. Health literacy status was estimated with the following previously validated question: "How confident are you in filling out medical forms by yourself?" Happiness was measured using an adapted…
Descriptors: Poverty, Patients, Psychological Patterns, Health Education
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Ai, A. L.; Ladd, K. L.; Peterson, C.; Cook, C. A.; Shearer, M.; Koenig, H. G. – Gerontologist, 2010
Purpose: Despite the growing evidence for effects of religious factors on cardiac health in general populations, findings are not always consistent in sicker and older populations. We previously demonstrated that short-term negative outcomes (depression and anxiety) among older adults following open heart surgery are partially alleviated when…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Mental Health, Surgery, Coping
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Nyklicek, Ivan; Denollet, Johan – Psychological Assessment, 2009
Psychological mindedness (PM) refers to a person's interest and ability to be in touch with and reflect on his or her psychological states and processes. In this multipart study, the authors present the Balanced Index of Psychological Mindedness (BIPM). The psychometric properties and clinical relevance of this 14-item self-report scale were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Psychological Patterns, Measures (Individuals), Mental Health
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