642 resultados para emotional wellbeing


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A morte é, porventura, o grande tabu da sociedade ocidental contemporânea, fenómeno com clara ressonância na forma como os sobreviventes vivenciam o luto por perda de figura significativa. Numa sociedade que se mantém à margem da morte, as emoções decorrentes do luto são escamoteadas e reprimidas, com sérios riscos para a saúde mental dos enlutados. Essa conspiração do silêncio desagua também nos contextos educativos, onde os valores da juventude, do bem-estar, do prazer e da felicidade, quase não deixam espaço para o sofrimento e a morte. Deste modo, este estudo pretende ser uma contribuição para a compreensão dos efeitos do processo de luto em alunos adolescentes, nomeadamente ao nível do seu desempenho escolar, e, concomitantemente, para a análise do tipo de apoio que a comunidade educativa proporciona a esses alunos, com enfoque no papel dos professores (em geral) e dos diretores de turma (em particular). Pretende ainda apresentar estratégias interventivas, a implementar nas escolas, potenciadoras de uma educação para a vida, mesmo em circunstâncias de morte, e para a gestão do luto, que se revelem promotoras de um lidar pedagógico inclusivo. Sendo o luto um processo que afeta o indivíduo em todas as dimensões que o definem, um paradigma educacional que encontre na complexidade a sua matriz identitária, foi assumido neste estudo como o único capaz de resgatar a importância da gestão equilibrada dos afetos no processo de ensinoaprendizagem. À luz deste paradigma que assume um princípio de totalidade, partindo da totalidade, ou seja, que promove o desenvolvimento do ser humano na sua multidimensionalidade, assumimos também que a missão suprema e última da educação é a construção do sujeito ético. E é nos marcos de uma educação integral, humanista e ética, de responsabilidade pelo Outro, que ganha contornos a figura do professor cuidador, como sendo alguém atento às necessidades emocionais dos seus alunos. Do ponto de vista metodológico, esta investigação desenvolveu-se de acordo com uma abordagem de natureza predominantemente qualitativa, interpretativa e complexa e o estudo realizado centrou-se em três fases, tendo a recolha de dados decorrido entre setembro de 2009 e setembro de 2012: (i) Estudo exploratório, dirigido aos Diretores das 61 escolas secundárias do Distrito do Porto, com base num questionário adaptado, com o objetivo de sustentar a importância e pertinência do estudo principal e recolher indicadores para o orientar; (ii) Estudo de Caso Coletivo, envolvendo três alunas adolescentes em luto por perda de pai. Na primeira parte, e com vista à caracterização do contexto, a escola frequentada pelas três alunas, procedeuse à análise documental, concretamente do Projeto Educativo, mas também ao inquérito por entrevista a vários agentes da comunidade educativa: o Diretor, a Psicóloga, a Coordenadora dos Diretores de Turma do ensino secundário e seis Diretores de Turma. Na segunda parte, procedeu-se a uma abordagem holística e aprofundada da complexidade inerente a cada caso, procurando dar “voz” à forma única como cada uma das alunas vivenciou, significou e enfrentou a sua experiência de luto, tendo-se recorrido ao inquérito por entrevista. De forma a cruzar perspetivas de vários informantes, e identificar significados transversais, complementares ou alternativos, foram também entrevistadas as Encarregadas de Educação e os Diretores de Turma das alunas; (iii) Caraterização das conceções de professores sobre a temática em análise e validação de propostas de intervenção a implementar nas escolas, mobilizando-se, assim, dimensões emergentes das Fases I e II da investigação, mas também do quadro teórico que sustentou o estudo. Para a recolha de dados, foi construído um questionário que se aplicou aos professores do 2º e 3º ciclos do ensino básico e ensino secundário do Agrupamento onde se centrou o estudo de caso desenvolvido na Fase II. Procurando uma leitura global dos resultados obtidos e corroborando o que é amplamente defendido na literatura da especialidade, o estudo demonstra o impacto negativo que o luto tem no desempenho escolar e revela que o padrão afetivo da ambiência escolar não é favorável à expressão emocional de alunos enlutados, prevalecendo uma atitude de evitação por parte dos colegas e professores, o que sugere a necessidade de serem trilhados novos caminhos, por um lado, ao nível da formação de professores e, por outro lado, através da implementação em contexto escolar de uma intervenção pedagógica que eduque para a vida, mas sem descurar os fenómenos de perda afetiva significativa e respetivas vivências de luto. Deste estudo sai também reforçada a responsabilidade acrescida dos Diretores de Turma na constituição de um ethos de suporte envolvendo alunos em luto, cabendo-lhes um importante papel na articulação entre os vários agentes da comunidade educativa. Em suma: para além da necessidade de repensar o perfil de competências dos professores, mais consentâneo com o paradigma de escola acolhedora, deste estudo ressalta também a premência de validar na prática propostas de intervenção articuladas, consistentes e, sobretudo, éticas.

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Background The Well London programme used community engagement, complemented by changes to the physical and social neighbourhood environment, to improve physical activity levels, healthy eating and mental wellbeing in the most deprived communities in London. The effectiveness of Well London is being evaluated in a pair-matched cluster randomised trial (CRT). The baseline survey data are reported here. Methods The CRT involved 20 matched pairs of intervention and control communities (defined as UK census lower super output areas; ranked in the 11% most deprived LSOAs in London by Index of Multiple Deprivation) across 20 London boroughs. The primary trial outcomes, sociodemographic information and environmental neighbourhood characteristics were assessed in three quantitative components within the Well London CRT at baseline: a cross-sectional, interviewer-administered adult household survey; a self-completed, school-based adolescent questionnaire; a fieldworker completed neighbourhood environmental audit. Baseline data collection occurred in 2008. Physical activity, healthy eating and mental wellbeing were assessed using standardised, validated questionnaire tools. Multiple imputation was used to account for missing data in the outcomes and other variables in the adult and adolescent surveys. Results There were 4107 adults and 1214 adolescent respondents in the baseline surveys. The intervention and control areas were broadly comparable with respect to the primary outcomes and key sociodemographic characteristics. The environmental characteristics of the intervention and control neighbourhoods were broadly similar. There was greater between cluster variation in the primary outcomes in the adult population compared to the adolescent population. Levels of healthy eating, smoking and self-reported anxiety/depression were similar in the Well London population and the national Health Survey for England. Levels of physical activity were higher in the Well London population but this is likely to be due to the different measurement tools used in the two surveys. Conclusions Randomisation of social interventions such as Well London is acceptable and feasible and in this study the intervention and control arms are well balanced with respect to the primary outcomes and key sociodemographic characteristics. The matched design has improved the statistical efficiency of the study amongst adults but less so amongst adolescents. Follow-up data collection will be completed 2012.

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Positive psychology has tended to be defined in terms of a concern with ‘positive’ psychological qualities and states. However, critics of the field have highlighted various problems inherent in classifying phenomena as either ‘positive’ or ‘negative.’ For instance, ostensibly positive qualities (e.g., optimism) can sometimes be detrimental to wellbeing, whereas apparently negative processes (like anxiety) may at times be conducive to it. As such, over recent years, a more nuanced ‘second wave’ of positive psychology has been germinating, which explores the philosophical and conceptual complexities of the very idea of the ‘positive.’ The current paper introduces this emergent second wave by examining the ways in which the field is developing a more subtle understanding of the ‘dialectical’ nature of flourishing (i.e., involving a complex and dynamic interplay of positive and negative experiences). The paper does so by problematizing the notions of positive and negative through seven case studies, including five salient dichotomies (such as optimism versus pessimism) and two complex processes (posttraumatic growth and love). These case studies serve to highlight the type of critical, dialectical thinking that characterises this second wave, thereby outlining the contours of the evolving field.

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The position of an item influences its evaluation, with research consistently finding that items occupying central locations are preferred and have a higher subjective value. The current study investigated whether this centre-stage effect (CSE) is a result of bottom-up gaze allocation to the central item, and whether it is affected by item valence. Participants (n=50) were presented with three images of artistic paintings in a row and asked to choose the image they preferred. Eye movements were recorded for a subset of participants (n=22). On each trial the three artworks were either similar but different, or were identical and with positive valence, or were identical and with negative valence. The results showed a centre-stage effect, with artworks in the centre of the row preferred, but only when they were identical and of positive valence. Significantly greater gaze allocation to the central and left artwork was not mirrored by equivalent increases in preference choices. Regression analyses showed that when the artworks were positive and identical the participants’ last fixation predicted preference for the central art-work, whereas the fixation duration predicted preference if the images were different. Overall the result showed that item valence, rather than level of gaze allocation, influences the CSE, which is incompatible with the bottom-up gaze explanation. We propose that the centre stage heuristic, which specifies that the best items are in the middle, is able to explain these findings and the centre-stage effect.

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Two experiments investigated self-reported emotional reactions to photographs of people with attractive, unattractive or structurally disfigured faces. In Experiment 1 participants viewing disfigured faces reported raised levels of sorrow and curiosity but not raised levels of negative emotions. In Experiment 2 there was more negative emotion and less positive emotion reported under conditions of relatively high anonymity, compared to low anonymity, specific to disfigured faces, suggesting that self-reports are influenced by social desirability. Trait empathy was associated with sorrow and negative emotions when viewing disfigured faces. Disgust sensitivity was associated with negative emotions and inversely associated with positive emotions.

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A tennis coach works in a social environment, employed in a service based economy with the outcome of client-customer interactions significantly impacting on the consumer experience. Research conducted outside of sport has shown that positive affective displays during interactions, which in a tennis situation may include providing support through displays of warmth, empathy, positivity and compassion as the client attempts to master a new technique, have shown positive associations with customer satisfaction. Hochschild (1983) coined the term ‘emotional labour’ to describe the process of, and demands resulting from adjusting one’s demeanour, language and tone during social encounters in a planned and strategic manner in order to facilitate a positive outcome. Hochschild proposed that individuals in jobs which require a high degree of face-to-face interaction with the public are particularly at risk of experiencing potentially deleterious effects that result from dealing with emotional labour demands on a daily basis. It would appear that tennis coaches work in environments that make them susceptible to experiencing emotional labour and as such the intention of this article is to first introduce the concept and then to provide suggestions for how a coach may cope with these demands.

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Positive psychology, an emergent branch of scholarship concerned with wellbeing and flourishing, initially defined itself by a focus on “positive” emotions and qualities. However, critics soon pointed out that this binary logic—classifying phenomena as either positive or negative, and valorising the former while disparaging the latter—could be problematic. For example, apparently positive qualities can be harmful to wellbeing in certain circumstances, while ostensibly dysphoric emotional states may on occasion promote flourishing. Responding to these criticisms, over recent years a more nuanced “second wave” of positive psychology has been developing, in which wellbeing is recognized as involving a dialectical balance of light and dark aspects of life. This article introduces this emergent second wave, arguing that it is characterized by four dialectical principles. First, the principle of appraisal states that it is difficult to categorically identify phenomena as either positive or negative, since such appraisals are fundamentally contextually dependent. Second, the principle of co-valence holds that many states and qualities at the heart of flourishing, such as love, are actually a complex blend of light and dark elements. Third, the principle of complementarity posits that not only are such phenomena co-valenced, but that their dichotomous elements are in fact co-creating, two intertwined sides of the same coin. Finally, the principle of evolution allows us to understand second-wave positive psychology as itself being an example of a dialectical process. This article is published as part of a collection entitled “On balance: lifestyle, mental health and wellbeing”.

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Tese de doutoramento, Psicologia (Psicologia Clínica), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Psicologia, 2014

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This paper draws on findings from a four‐year longitudinal research project, commissioned by the Department for Education and Skills (DfES), which investigated Variations in Teachers’ Work, Lives and Effectiveness (VITAE). Drawing on data gathered from 300 teachers working in 100 primary and secondary schools in England, the research identified associations between commitment and effectiveness (perceived and in terms of pupil attainment) and found that there were more, and less, effective teachers in each of six professional life phases. It found that teachers in each of these phases experienced a number of different scenarios that challenged their abilities to sustain their commitment (i.e. remain resilient). This paper discusses how these impact, positively and negatively, on teachers’ capacities for sustaining their initial commitment and associations between identity, well‐being and effectiveness. It finds that teacher identities are neither intrinsically stable nor intrinsically fragmented, but that they can be more, or less, stable and more or less fragmented at different times and in different ways according to the influence of the interaction of a number of personal, professional and situated factors. The extent to which teachers are able to and are supported in managing the scenarios they experience will determine their sense of effectiveness.

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Contractual agreements have become an accepted part of participation processes for athletes in a variety of sport contexts. Closer readings of these contracts,however, pose several questions regarding organizational intentions and motivations,the conceptualization of athletes as “workers,” and representation parity. In this article, we draw on four types of athlete contractual documents from both select international “amateur” and “professional” sport settings. Our key considerations include athletes’ ownership over their image and identities; medical and health disclosures; lifestyle, behavioral and body choices, and restrictions beyond sport; adherence to organizational philosophy and commitments; and social media and publicity constraints. Our exegesis here encourages sport researchers to deliberate whose “wellbeing” matters most when signing that seductive dotted line.

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Objective This study explores men with advanced prostate cancers’ own practices for promoting and maintaining emotional well-being using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Design Five men with advanced prostate cancer participated in face-to-face, semi-structured, in-depth interviews. Results Within rich narratives of lost and regained well-being, two super-ordinate themes emerged – ‘living with an imminent and uncertain death’ and ‘holding on to life.’ Well-being was threatened by reduced sense of the future, isolation and uncertainty. Yet, the men pursued well-being by managing their emotions, striving for the future whilst enjoying life in the present, taking care of their families and renegotiating purpose. Running through participant’s accounts was a preference for taking action and problem-solving. Sense of purpose, social connectedness and life-engagement were revealed as concepts central to improving well-being, indicating areas which practitioners could explore with men to help them re-establish personal goals and life-purpose. Conclusions The findings also add weight to the evidence base for the potential value of psychological interventions such as cognitive behaviour therapy and mindfulness in men with prostate cancer.

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Background - Allotments in the UK are popular and waiting lists long. There is, however, little evidence on the health benefits of allotment gardening. The aims of this study were to determine the impacts of a session of allotment gardening on self-esteem and mood and to compare the mental well-being of allotment gardeners with non-gardeners. Methods - Self-esteem, mood and general health were measured in 136 allotment gardeners pre- and post- an allotment session, and 133 non-gardener controls. Allotment gardeners also detailed the time spent on their allotment in the current session and previous 7 days, and their length of tenure. Results - Paired t-tests revealed a significant improvement in self-esteem (P < 0.05) and mood (P < 0.001) as a result of one allotment session. Linear regression revealed that neither the time spent on the allotment in the current session, the previous 7 days or the length of tenure affected the impacts on self-esteem and mood (P > 0.05). One-way ANCOVA revealed that allotment gardeners had a significantly better self-esteem, total mood disturbance and general health (P < 0.001), experiencing less depression and fatigue and more vigour (P < 0.0083). Conclusions - Allotment gardening can play a key role in promoting mental well-being and could be used as a preventive health measure