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Juarez Martinsen posted an update 3 weeks, 1 day ago
We showed that the subtests using Radial Frequency Patterns as stimuli were redundant and could be combined in one subtest. We conclude that L-POST can be shortened to 26 items (7-14 min) and an adaptive item selection procedure could prove particularly useful for screening purposes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
There is limited understanding of the prevalence of psychological distress and associated stressors and supports among displaced adults in low- and middle-income first asylum countries.
This article reports the findings of a cross-sectional study. We recruited 245 Congolese adults (18-80 years) residing in Nairobi, Kenya using snowball sampling. Data were collected using an interviewer-administered questionnaire consisting of sociodemographic characteristics, the Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ-20), and a locally developed stressors and supports survey. We used multivariable logistic regression to examine associations among sociodemographic, stressor, and support variables and the likelihood of experiencing psychological distress.
More than half of the participants (52.8%) reported symptoms indicative of psychological distress. Factors associated with increased psychological distress included perceiving to have a useful role in one’s family or community, AOR = 1.85; 95% CI [1.1.17, 3.11],
= .012, ffugee status is an important structural determinant of mental health, which should be considered in MHPSS practice and policy. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).Social scientists have become increasingly interested in using intensive longitudinal methods to study social phenomena that change over time. Many of these phenomena are expected to exhibit cycling fluctuations (e.g., sleep, mood, sexual desire). However, researchers typically employ analytical methods which are unable to model such patterns. We present spectral and cross-spectral analysis as means to address this limitation. Spectral analysis provides a means to interrogate time series from a different, frequency domain perspective, and to understand how the time series may be decomposed into their constituent periodic components. Cross-spectral extends this to dyadic data and allows for synchrony and time offsets to be identified. The techniques are commonly used in the physical and engineering sciences, and we discuss how to apply these popular analytical techniques to the social sciences while also demonstrating how to undertake estimations of significance and effect size. In this tutorial we begin by introducing spectral and cross-spectral analysis, before demonstrating its application to simulated univariate and bivariate individual- and group-level data. We employ cross-power spectral density techniques to understand synchrony between the individual time series in a dyadic time series, and circular statistics and polar plots to understand phase offsets between constituent periodic components. Finally, we present a means to undertake nonparameteric bootstrapping in order to estimate the significance, and derive a proxy for effect size. A Jupyter Notebook (Python 3.6) is provided as supplementary material to aid researchers who intend to apply these techniques. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).This systematic case study investigated the nature of corrective emotional experiences (CEEs) that occurred over the course of psychotherapy in a single case and how those in-session CEEs were related to changes in the client’s life. Client’s e-mails on her experience of therapy sessions and postsession changes sent to the therapist, as well as outcome and postsession measures, were analyzed. The client was a Japanese woman who sought help for a variety of psychological symptoms including depression, anxiety, and emotional dysregulation. A long-term therapy of 67 sessions was conducted by a Japanese male psychotherapist who followed an integrative affect-focused approach. The quantitative analysis showed that the client achieved clinically significant change in depression, anxiety, self-compassion, interpersonal functioning, and self-esteem over the course of therapy. A grounded-theory analysis of client e-mails to the therapist showed that she experienced a deep connection with the therapist, gained a sense of relief through experiencing her disavowed feelings, and developed a positive sense of self in the course of her sessions. click here The client felt she had gained strength, had deepened her understanding of her feelings and behaviors, and that she was beginning to develop new relationships with others. The understanding of the theory of CEEs through this case, cultural issues, and the limitations and future directions of this study are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).Despite a growing literature on racial microaggressions, little is known about the racial microaggression experiences of people of color in therapy, nor the effectiveness of strategies used by therapists to repair the harm of therapy racial microaggressions and cultural ruptures. This study used a mixed methodology to examine the occurrence of racial microaggressions in therapy and their potential impact on the participants’ relationship with their therapist. Participants included 128 self-identified people of color who have had at least 1 counseling session and were recruited from across the United States. Results suggested that experiencing racial microaggressions negatively impacted the client-therapist relationship and that clients of color had more positive therapeutic alliances when their therapists engaged in active cultural repair strategies. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).Atypical antipsychotics are commonly prescribed for the treatment of severe mental illnesses during pregnancy. Evidence regarding the impact of physiologic changes during pregnancy on the concentration of atypical antipsychotics is limited, specifically in the case of lurasidone. Data to guide dosing in pregnancy that maximizes efficacy and minimizes adverse effects are lacking. This case report presents perinatal changes in the concentration of lurasidone and the implications for Bipolar Disorder (BD) illness course in a primiparous woman. Monitoring of lurasidone serum concentrations and recurrence of BD symptoms after the second trimester of pregnancy until the third postpartum month was completed. Lurasidone serum concentrations ranged from 0 to 4.7 ng/mL during pregnancy and increased to 10-12 ng/mL postpartum. The subject presented with worsening anxiety and depressive symptoms during the second trimester of pregnancy which resulted in a 40 mg daily dose increase during the second half of her pregnancy.