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- Unique Identifier
- 2005-02830-009
- Title
- Maternal use of physical punishment in response to child misbehavior: Implications for child abuse prevention.
- Publication Year
- 2005
- Language
- English
- Author
- Ateah, Christine A.; Durrant, Joan E.
- Correspondence Address
- Christine A. Ateah, Faculty of Nursing, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada, R3T 2N2
- Affiliation
- Ateah, Christine A.: Faculty of Nursing, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
Durrant, Joan E.: Department of Family Social Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
- Source
- Child Abuse & Neglect. 29(2), Feb 2005, 169-185.
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science, Netherlands, http://elsevier.com
- ISSN/ISBN
- 0145-2134
- Format Availability
- Electronic; Print
- Format Covered
- Print
- Publication Type
- Journal; Peer Reviewed Journal
- Document Type
- Original Journal Article
- Abstract
- Objective: The objective was to examine the roles of cognition and affect in maternal use of physical punishment. Method: Through a review of the literature, distal and proximal predictors (cognitive and affective) of physical punishment use were identified. One hundred and ten mothers of 3-year-old children were interviewed regarding two disciplinary situations that occurred during the previous 2-week period that elicited their strongest reactions: one which resulted in the use of physical punishment (if this occurred) and one which did not. The individual and combined contributions of the predictors of physical punishment use were analyzed through logistic regression. Results: The predictors of physical punishment following individual analyses were: maternal attitude toward physical punishment, maternal perception of the seriousness and intent of the child misbehavior, and maternal anger in response to the child misbehavior. Through multivariate analysis 54% of the variance in physical punishment use was explained. Conclusions: Both cognitive and affective factors affect the decision to use physical punishment with children. These findings can be useful in establishing parenting educational programming that is directed at decreasing the rates of physical punishment and subsequently child physical abuse. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved)
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.chiabu.2004.10.010
- Keywords
- physical punishment; child misbehavior; child abuse prevention; mothers; cognition; affect; discipline
- Descriptors
- *Child Discipline; *Cognition; *Emotional States; *Mothers; *Punishment; Behavior Problems; Child Abuse; Prevention
- Classification Code
- 2956 Childrearing & Child Care
- Population
- Human; Female
- Age Group
- Adulthood (18 yrs & older)
- Location
- Canada
- Methodology
- 0400 Empirical Study; 1800 Quantitative Study
- Tests & Measures
- Attitudes Toward Spanking/Slapping My Child Questionnaire; Parent Knowledge of Child Development Norms; Parental Discipline Interview
- Release Date
- 20050502
- References (sample only):
-
- Ateah, C. A., Durrant, J. E., & Mirwaldt, J. (2004). Physical punishment and physical abuse of children: Strategies for prevention. In C. A. Ateah & J. Mirwaldt (Eds.), Within our reach: Preventing abuse across the lifespan (pp. 11-28). Halifax, NS: Fernwood Publishing and RESOLVE (Research and Education for Solutions to Violence and Abuse).
- Bower-Russa, M. E., Knutson, J. F., & Winebarger, A. (2001). Disciplinary history, adult disciplinary attitudes, and risk for abusive parenting. Journal of Community Psychology, 29, 219-240.
- Unique Identifier
- 2004-20907-000
- Title
- Treatment planning for person-centered care: The road to mental health and addiction recovery.
- Publication Year
- 2005
- Language
- English
- Author
- Adams, Neal; Grieder, Diane
- Source
- Elsevier Academic Press. (2005). xxi, 291 pp.
- Publisher
- Elsevier Academic Press, San Diego, CA, US, http://www.academicpress.com
- ISSN/ISBN
- 0-12-044155-1
- Format Covered
- Print
- Publication Type
- Book; Authored Book
- Abstract
- Providers should consider this book one of the most important instructional tools in the field of mental health and addictive disorders. An recovery management plan (RMP) is a person-centered plan. In an RMP, all goals are written in both clinical terms as well as layperson language so that both the consumer and provider can relate to aspects of the RMP from their own perspective. Using the individual's own words, the RMP helps to identify the skills, knowledge, and action steps/interventions necessary to meet the goals. It also provides an opportunity for the individual to identify activities in the community that they want to pursue or organizations in the community can assist them in accomplishing their goals. The individual and the provider then decide how the provider can best assist them in accomplishing their goal. Oftentimes the RMP is actually completed by the individual, who is then given a copy to take home. This process is all about helping the individual make decisions rather than the provider being the decision-making authority. It is about the individuals taking on more responsibility in their own recovery processes. The real goal of person-centered planning is for the provider and individual, in partnership, to create a road map for reaching the individual's goals-and at the same time documenting medical necessity and supporting billing. This book will assist providers in understanding their role in the journey of developing and facilitating an individual's road map through person-centered planning.
- Keywords
- person-centered treatment; treatment planning; addiction services; addiction recovery; recovery management plan; mental health services; therapy approaches
- Index Terms
- *Client Centered Therapy; *Drug Rehabilitation; *Mental Health Services; *Psychotherapeutic Techniques; *Treatment Planning; Addiction; Risk Assessment
- Classification Code
- 3300 Health & Mental Health Treatment & Prevention
- Population
- Human
- Methodology
- 0400 Empirical Study
- Tests & Measures
- Mental Status Assessment Form; Adult Diagnostic Assessment; Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test; Consumer Oriented Survey; Experience of Care and Health Outcomes Survey
- Intended Audience
- Psychology: Professional & Research
- Table of Contents
-
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue
- Foreword
- Preface
- Section I: Planning the trip
- Introduction: Planning the trip
- Person-centered care
- The value of individual planning
- Section II: Getting started
- Assessment
- Understanding needs: The narrative summary
- Section III: On the road
- Setting goals
- Focusing on change: Specifying the objective
- Interventions
- Section IV: Journey's end: The destination
- Epilogue
- Appendices: Learning by example
- Aaron Howard
- Sally Hamilton
- Sam HewlettCarmen Suarez
- Release Date
- 20050404
- References (sample only):
-
- Ali, O. S. (2004). ATTC-NE Course. Developing Culturally Competent Recovery Plans-Person-centered Planning Within Recovery Oriented Systems of Care. 2004.
- Berwick, D. M. (2002). A User's Manual for the lOM's 'Quality Chasm' Report. Health Affairs, 2002;21(3):80-90.
- CARF 2004 to 2005 Behavioral Health Standards Manual, p. 80.
- CARF Behavioral Health Standards Manual, 2003 to 2004. www.carf.org.
- Carroll, A. Personal communication. Modesto, CA: Stanislaus County Behavioral Health and Recovery Services.
- Changing the Face of Menial Illness in Virginia. The Alliance for Increased Mental Health Awareness, p. 5. http://www.zialogic.org/CCISC.htm.
- Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America. (2001). Crossing the Quality Chasm. Washington DC: Institute of Medicine, 2001.
- Daniels, A., et al. (2002). Current issues in continuing education for contemporary behavioral health practice, Administration and Policy in Mental Health, 2002;29(4-5):359-376.
- Unique Identifier
- 2005-01932-002
- Title
- Transforming local and global discourses: Reassessing the PTSD movement in Bosnia and Croatia.
- Publication Year
- 2005
- Language
- English
- Author
- Stubbs, Paul
- Affiliation
- Stubbs, Paul: Institute of Economics, Zagreb, Croatia
- Source
- Ingleby, David (Ed). (2005). Forced migration and mental health: Rethinking the care of refugees and displaced persons., International and cultural psychology series. (pp. 53-66). Springer Publishing Co. x, 218 pp.
- Publisher
- Springer Publishing Co, New York, NY, US, http://www.springerpub.com
- ISSN/ISBN
- 0-387-22692-3
- Format Covered
- Print
- Publication Type
- Book; Edited Book
- Document Type
- Original Chapter
- Abstract
- The wars of the Yugoslav succession, beginning in 1991 and culminating in the still unresolved Kosovo crisis, have seen large-scale killings and forced population movement as explicit major war aims, often euphemistically referred to as 'ethnic cleansing'. In this chapter, the dreadful realities of the wars and their wider socio-political contexts are less directly the focus than the ways in which these realities were reproduced and connected in specific, more or less coherent, discourses. These discourses were embedded in particular movements, which constructed ways of addressing and understanding the consequences of the conflicts on particular affected populations, and, most importantly, thereby delineated particular kinds of responses to ameliorate these consequences. Above all, the paper attempts to unravel the ways in which forms of psychosocial assistance, primarily defined in terms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), came to attain an important position within emergency responses to refugees and displaced persons in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina. The text builds on arguments which, together with Baljit Soroya, and based on research undertaken in Croatia from October 1993,1 have advanced elsewhere regarding the problematic aspects of the dominant psychosocial discourse, particularly in Croatia. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved)
- Keywords
- posttraumatic stress disorder; population movement; major war; ethnic cleansing; socio-political contexts; psychosocial assistance; emergency responses; refugees; displaced persons
- Index Terms
- *Assistance (Social Behavior); *Genocide; *International Relations; *Posttraumatic Stress Disorder; *Psychosocial Factors; Crises; Human Migration; Mental Health Services; Refugees; Social Issues; War
- Classification Code
- 3300 Health & Mental Health Treatment & Prevention; 2900 Social Processes & Social Issues
- Population
- Human
- Location
- Bosnia-Herzegovina; Croatia
- Intended Audience
- Psychology: Professional & Research
- Release Date
- 20050314
- References (sample only):
-
- Agger, I. (1994) The Blue Room; Trauma and testimony among refugee women - a psychosocial exploration. London: Zed Books.
- Agger, I. (1995) A longing for Sarajevo: understanding the trauma of humanitarian aid workers. In: Appadurai, A. (1996) Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press.
- Unique Identifier
- 2005-99006-128
- Title
- Exposure to domestic violence as children: A review of the literature across American ethnic minority groups.
- Publication Year
- 2005
- Language
- English
- Author
- Soo Hoo, Melissa C.
- Affiliation
- Soo Hoo, Melissa C.: Azusa Pacific U., US
- Source
- Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B: The Sciences and Engineering. 65(9-B), 2005, 4876.
- Publisher
- Univ Microfilms International
- ISSN/ISBN
- 0419-4217
- UMI Order Number
- AAI3148822
- Format Availability
- Print
- Format Covered
- Print
- Publication Type
- Dissertation Abstract
- Abstract
- This study explores the impact of exposure to domestic violence on child and adult development in Caucasians and ethnic minorities living in America. An extensive review of the literature is presented and discussed. Results indicate that those exposed have a wide range of emotional, behavioral, cognitive, and interpersonal responses that vary in number, severity, and persistence with the frequency of exposure. Cultural beliefs were found to play a significant role in victim help-seeking and coping with violence which moderates the individual's exposure. Implications for future research and clinical practice are provided. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved)
- Keywords
- domestic violence; American ethnic minority groups; child development; adult development
- Index Terms
- *Adult Development; *Childhood Development; *Family Violence; *Minority Groups; *Racial and Ethnic Groups
- Classification Code
- 2800 Developmental Psychology
- Population
- Human
- Location
- US
- Methodology
- 0800 Literature Review
- Release Date
- 20050705
- Unique Identifier
- 2005-01327-001
- Title
- What Every Clinician Should Know About Assessing Trauma.
- Publication Year
- 2005
- Language
- English
- Author
- Schmidt, James P.
- Source
- PsycCRITIQUES. 50 (10), 2005, No Pagination Specified.
- Publisher
- American Psychological Assn, US, http://www.apa.org
- ISSN/ISBN
- 1554-0138
- Format Availability
- Electronic
- Format Covered
- Electronic
- Publication Type
- Electronic Collection
- Document Type
- Review
- Abstract
- Reviews Psychological Assessment of Adult Posttraumatic States: Phenomenology, Diagnosis, and Measurement (2nd ed.) by John Briere (see record 2004-14153-000), one of the leading authorities, if not the leading authority, on the assessment and diagnosis of posttraumatic states. The book includes two sections. The first section addresses the phenomenology of posttraumatic states. In the second part of the book, the author shifts his focus from describing the phenomenology of traumatic stress responses to the specific task of assessing such disorders. The reviewer contends that this book is important for the practicing clinician since it covers a key area of psychological practice in which there has been little coverage. Briere's book deserves to be read, not only by psychologists who practice within the area of posttraumatic states but also by all clinicians. Failure to recognize and diagnose components of posttraumatic states can lead to major clinical errors, and, as this volume makes abundantly clear, such omissions are easily made if the clinician fails to systematically explore such issues. Fortunately, in addition to sounding the alarm for such risks, Briere provides a readily accessible guide and tools to eliminate it. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved)
- DOI
- 10.1037/040714
- Keywords
- psychological assessment; adult posttraumatic states; phenomenology; diagnosis; measurement; trauma; traumatic stress responses
- Index Terms
- *Emotional Trauma; *Phenomenology; *Posttraumatic Stress Disorder; *Psychodiagnosis; *Psychological Assessment; Stress Reactions
- Classification Code
- 3215 Neuroses & Anxiety Disorders
- Population
- Human
- Age Group
- Adulthood (18 yrs & older)
- Reviewed Item
- Authors: John Briere. Title: Psychological Assessment of Adult Posttraumatic States: Phenomenology, Diagnosis, and Measurement (2nd ed.). Other Info: Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, 2004. 281 pp. ISBN 1-5914-7144-3. $34.95, paperback. Year: 2004
- Release Date
- 20050307
- References:
-
- American Psychiatric Association. (1994). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.
- Wilson, J. P., & Keane, T. M. (Eds.). (1997). Assessing psychological trauma and PTSD. New York: Guilford Press.
- Unique Identifier
- 2005-01638-000
- Title
- Popular psychology: An encyclopedia.
- Publication Year
- 2005
- Language
- English
- Author
- Cordón, Luis A.
- Affiliation
- Cordón, Luis A.: Eastern Connecticut State University, Willimantic, CT, US
- Source
- Greenwood Press/Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. (2005). xix, 274 pp.
- Publisher
- Greenwood Press/Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc, Westport, CT, US, http://www.greenwood.com
- ISSN/ISBN
- 0-313-32457-3
- Format Covered
- Print
- Publication Type
- Encyclopedia
- Book Type
- Reference Book
- Abstract
- The purpose of this book is to try to counteract the tide of misinformation about the field of psychology with a concise guide to some things that the well-informed student of psychology and the interested general public ought to know. The Encyclopedia requires no specialized knowledge or training. I have written all entries assuming the reader is reasonably intelligent, but relatively uninformed about psychology, or indeed about science. The organization of this book is a simple encyclopedia-style alphabetical listing, with further readings listed at the ends of entries to provide more helpful information resources, and a bibliography of useful general works at the end of the volume. Cross-references within the text of an entry to other entries in the book are highlighted in small capital letters upon their first mention. A "Guide to Related Topics" provides a separate listing of categories of related topics to help readers quickly find multiple entries with similar themes. Concluding the volumes is a detailed subject index that provides access to information within entries. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved)
- Keywords
- popular psychology
- Index Terms
- *Popular Culture; *Psychology
- Classification Code
- 2100 General Psychology
- Intended Audience
- Psychology: Professional & Research
- Table of Contents
-
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- List of Entries
- Guide to Related Topics
- Popular Psychology: An Encyclopedia
- Annotated Bibliography
- Index
- Release Date
- 20050222

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