836 resultados para Psychic trauma
Resumo:
Intergenerational transmission of trauma describes the impact that traumatic events experienced by one generation have for the subsequent generation. In Northern Ireland, violent conflict raged between 1969 and 1998, when a peace process begun. This study explored to what extent (if any) parents’ experiences of the conflict influenced how children perceived life in this society. Parents completed a questionnaire, and their children drew 2 pictures, depicting Northern Ireland now and before they were born. Children’s behaviors and awareness of the conflict were influenced by their parents’ experiences and narratives, their age, gender, and school. Parental narrative about the violence was influenced by individual learning history, the child’s age and gender, and present circumstances. A behavior analytic approach is offered.
Resumo:
This study aimed to explore the reliability of self-reported trauma histories in a population with a diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Previous studies in other populations suggest high reliability of trauma histories over time and it was postulated that a similar high reliability would be demonstrated in this population. Thirty-nine patients with a confirmed diagnosis (DSM-IV criteria) were followed-up and re-administered the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire after 18 months. Cohen's kappa scores and intraclass correlations suggest reasonable test-retest reliability over the 18-month time period of the study for all types of childhood abuse, namely emotional, physical, sexual, and physical abuse and emotional neglect. Intraclass correlations ranged from r = .50 to (sexual abuse) to r = .96 (physical abuse). Cohen's kappas ranged from .44 (sexual abuse) to .76 (physical abuse). Retrospective reports of childhood trauma can be seen as reliable and are in keeping with results found with other mental health populations.
Resumo:
Previous research has shown that lay believers in psychic abilities are more prone to intuitive thinking, less inclined to rational thinking, and have an external locus of control, compared to non-believers. Psychic practitioners, however, may have different characteristics. Psychic practitioners (N=31; mean age = 42.7 years, s.d.=13.1), lay believers (N=33; mean age = 33.0 years, s.d.=10.3), and non-believers (N=31; mean age = 34.4 years, s.d.=15.4) completed questionnaires measuring thinking styles, locus of control, and psychic belief. Comparisons of lay believers with non-believers confirmed previous observations; believers had a higher propensity for intuitive thinking, lower propensity for rational thinking, and more external locus of control. In contrast, practitioners were equivalent to non-believers in rational thinking and had the highest internal locus of control. This highlights the importance of considering level of involvement with psychic practice in understanding the thinking styles of believers. Results suggested that practitioners may have rationalised their beliefs and constructed a coherent model of psychic phenomena that satisfies a propensity for rational thinking within a community of belief.
Resumo:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Affective instability (AI), childhood trauma, and mental illness are linked, but evidence in affective disorders is limited, despite both AI and childhood trauma being associated with poorer outcomes. Aims were to compare AI levels in bipolar disorder I (BPI) and II (BPII), and major depressive disorder recurrent (MDDR), and to examine the association of AI and childhood trauma within each diagnostic group. METHODS: AI, measured using the Affective Lability Scale (ALS), was compared between people with DSM-IV BPI (n=923), BPII (n=363) and MDDR (n=207) accounting for confounders and current mood. Regression modelling was used to examine the association between AI and childhood traumas in each diagnostic group. RESULTS: ALS scores in descending order were BPII, BPI, MDDR, and differences between groups were significant (p<0.05). Within the BPI group any childhood abuse (p=0.021), childhood physical abuse (p=0.003) and the death of a close friend in childhood (p=0.002) were significantly associated with higher ALS score but no association was found between childhood trauma and AI in BPII and MDDR. LIMITATIONS: The ALS is a self-report scale and is subject to retrospective recall bias. CONCLUSIONS: AI is an important dimension in bipolar disorder independent of current mood state. There is a strong link between childhood traumatic events and AI levels in BPI and this may be one way in which exposure and disorder are linked. Clinical interventions targeting AI in people who have suffered significant childhood trauma could potentially change the clinical course of bipolar disorder.
Resumo:
Pretende-se realizar uma revisão sobre as estruturas neuroanatómicas e os processos de neurotransmissão e de modulação neuronal envolvidos na memória. A memória é vista como um processo activo, baseado na reunião de variados aspectos dos padrões de activação neuronal, num processo dependente da experiência. Descreve-se a importância das regiões límbicas e sua inter-relação no processamento da memória, desde a codificação até à consolidação que implica uma reestruturação neuronal. Procede-se à caracterização dos tipos de memória (implícita e explícita) e suas características,a relação com as diferentes fases do desenvolvimento, tocando alguns aspectos mais descritivos de diferentes componentes da memória. Numa perspectiva contextual são também focadas as áreas da amnésia infantil, a lembrança, o esquecimento e o trauma. O esquecimento é parte essencial da memória explícita. Vários estudos apontam para um efeito de curva em U invertida, em relação com o impacto emocional. Eventos com intensidade moderada a elevada parecem ser etiquetados como importantes (envolvimento de estruturas do sistema límbico como a amígdala e o córtex orbito-frontal) e são mais facilmente recordadas no futuro. Se os eventos são muitos intensos o processamento no hipocampo da codificação memoria explícita e subsequentemente a recordação são inibidos,há também um bloqueio da consolidação cortical da experiência, porém mantém-se a memória implícita, que pode levar a vivência de imagens intrusivas não elaboradas. No que concerne ao trauma, levanta-se a questão da precisão da memória e do seu impacto, tanto ao nível das implicações neurofisiológicas como das consequências psicopatológicas. As alterações ao nível das neurotransmissões induzidas pelo stress vão condicionar alterações na mielinização, sinaptogénese e neurogénese, que podem levar a alterações a longo prazo em várias regiões do cérebro entre as quais a amígdala. Nestas condições, o processo explícito e a aprendizagem podem ser cronicamente impedidas, para além do risco importante para o desenvolvimento de psicopatologia, nomeadamente: Perturbação da Personalidade, Perturbações de Humor (depressão); Perturbações de Ansiedade; Perturbações Dissociativas e maior risco de Psicose.
Resumo:
Apresentação na qual é efectuada uma caracterização epidemiológica do Trauma comparando a distribuição bimodal vs trimodal assim como a causa e local de morte. De seguida são definidos cuidados emergentes a nível pré-hospitalar e as competências indispensáveis à práxis por parte do Enfermeiro. Por último reflectimos de que forma a abordagem e o assegurar do continuum de cuidados desde o pré-hospitalar à UCI (com passagem no SU) contribuem para a melhoria dos cuidados ao doente politraumatizado.