Spelling suggestions: "subject:"counseling intervention"" "subject:"ounseling intervention""
1 |
"Skill-Builders": Enhancing Middle School Students' Self-efficacy and Adaptive Learning Strategies in MathematicsFalco, Lia Denise January 2008 (has links)
This dissertation presents findings from a study investigating of the effects of a middle-school intervention, using the "Skill-Builders" curriculum, on participating students' attitudes, self-efficacy, achievement, self-regulated learning, and classroom learning behaviors in mathematics. The main research questions were 1) will a nine week school-counselor-led intervention using the "Skill-Builders" curriculum have a significant effect on the outcome variables of interest, and 2) will the effects be different for females than for males. A repeated measures ANOVA was used to test for differences between conditions and between sexes on all outcome measures. Results from the study demonstrated statistically significant post-intervention differences between students in the experimental and control conditions on their attitudes toward math learning, self-efficacy, achievement, and self-regulated learning behaviors, and the gains made by students in the experimental condition were maintained at follow-up. Students in the control condition showed no changes or declined on measures of attitudes, achievement, self-efficacy, and self-regulated learning behaviors at post-test and follow-up. Results also indicated a significant interaction for sex and condition, which suggests that the intervention had different effects for the participating females than the males. Implications of the findings, within the theoretical framework of the study and within the context of school counseling outcome research, are discussed.
|
2 |
Integrated Management of Physician-Delivered Alcohol Care for Tuberculosis Patients: Design and ImplementationGreenfield, Shelly F., Shields, Alan, Connery, Hilary S., Livchits, Viktoriya, Yanov, Sergey A., Lastimoso, Charmaine S., Strelis, Aivar K., Mishustin, Sergey P., Fitzmaurice, Garrett, Mathew, Trini A., Shin, Sonya 01 February 2010 (has links)
Background: While the integration of alcohol screening, treatment, and referral in primary care and other medical settings in the U.S. and worldwide has been recognized as a key health care priority, it is not routinely done. In spite of the high co-occurrence and excess mortality associated with alcohol use disorders (AUDs) among individuals with tuberculosis (TB), there are no studies evaluating effectiveness of integrating alcohol care into routine treatment for this disorder. Methods: We designed and implemented a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to determine the effectiveness of integrating pharmacotherapy and behavioral treatments for AUDs into routine medical care for TB in the Tomsk Oblast Tuberculosis Service (TOTBS) in Tomsk, Russia. Eligible patients are diagnosed with alcohol abuse or dependence, are newly diagnosed with TB, and initiating treatment in the TOTBS with Directly Observed Therapy-Short Course (DOTS) for TB. Utilizing a factorial design, the Integrated Management of Physician-delivered Alcohol Care for Tuberculosis Patients (IMPACT) study randomizes eligible patients who sign informed consent into 1 of 4 study arms: (1) Oral Naltrexone + Brief Behavioral Compliance Enhancement Therapy (BBCET) + treatment as usual (TAU), (2) Brief Counseling Intervention (BCI) + TAU, (3) Naltrexone + BBCET + BCI + TAU, or (4) TAU alone. Results: Utilizing an iterative, collaborative approach, a multi-disciplinary U.S. and Russian team has implemented a model of alcohol management that is culturally appropriate to the patient and TB physician community in Russia. Implementation to date has achieved the integration of routine alcohol screening into TB care in Tomsk; an ethnographic assessment of knowledge, attitudes, and practices of AUD management among TB physicians in Tomsk; translation and cultural adaptation of the BCI to Russia and the TB setting; and training and certification of TB physicians to deliver oral naltrexone and brief counseling interventions for alcohol abuse and dependence as part of routine TB care. The study is successfully enrolling eligible subjects in the RCT to evaluate the relationship of integrating effective pharmacotherapy and brief behavioral intervention on TB and alcohol outcomes, as well as reduction in HIV risk behaviors. Conclusions: The IMPACT study utilizes an innovative approach to adapt 2 effective therapies for treatment of alcohol use disorders to the TB clinical services setting in the Tomsk Oblast, Siberia, Russia, and to train TB physicians to deliver state of the art alcohol pharmacotherapy and behavioral treatments as an integrated part of routine TB care. The proposed treatment strategy could be applied elsewhere in Russia and in other settings where TB control is jeopardized by AUDs. If demonstrated to be effective, this model of integrating alcohol interventions into routine TB care has the potential for expanded applicability to other chronic co-occurring infectious and other medical conditions seen in medical care settings.
|
3 |
Implementing a Sustainable Program Evaluation Component at a Large University Counseling CenterJanuary 2012 (has links)
abstract: This action research dissertation study was undertaken to establish the foundation of a comprehensive evaluation component for the Turn-It-Around (TIA) workshop intervention program at Arizona State University (ASU), and was delivered in the form of a program development consultation. The study's intent was to enhance the ASU Counseling Service's departmental capacity to evaluate one of its important clinical services. The outcomes of this study included multiple assessments of TIA's evaluability and the fidelity of its implementation to its program design. The study products include a well-articulated program theory comprised of program goals, learning objectives, a detailed description of program activities, a logic model, and theoretical construct checklist documents articulating the behavioral science theory underlying the TIA intervention. In addition, instruments tailored to the Turn-It-Around intervention that are suitable for assessing program outcomes were developed and are implementation ready. TIA's clinical stakeholders were interviewed following the generation and delivery of the products and instruments mentioned above to determine whether they found the study's processes and products to be worthwhile and useful. In general, the clinicians reported that they were very satisfied with the benefits and outcomes of the program development consultation. As an action research dissertation, this study generated useful and usable collateral materials in the form of reports, documents, and models. These products are now at the disposal of TIA's institutional stakeholders for use in day-to-day business activities such as training new facilitators and liaisons, and giving presentations that describe the usefulness of TIA as an intervention. Beyond the documents generated to form a program evaluation infrastructure for Turn-It-Around, the processes involved in crafting the documents served to engage relevant stakeholders in a cycle of action research that enriched and solidified their understandings of TIA and furnished them with insight into their counterparts' thinking about the intervention and its potential to benefit the college students they are responsible for helping. Consistent with the intent of action research, the processes involved in accomplishing the objectives of this study surfaced new topics and questions that will be useful in subsequent cycles of program improvement.   / Dissertation/Thesis / Ed.D. Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2012
|
4 |
Couple Play As A Predictor Of Couple Bonding, Physical Health And Emotional HealthVanderbleek, Linda 01 January 2005 (has links)
Traditional couple counseling research focused on why people end relationships, with research only recently addressing what factors contribute to relationship satisfaction and stability. Yet, throughout this research, minimal attention has been paid to the role of play in couple counseling. The research available on play in couple counseling had varied definitions of couple play and was not based on current couple counseling theory. The research and anecdotal data on couple play proposed a strong relationship between couple play and the factors that predict successful, long-term couple relationships, individual physical health and emotional health. This study applied current couple counseling theory and research to define couple play and the relationship between couple play and couple bonding, physical health and emotional health. The hypotheses of the study were couple play would predict couple bonding; couple play would predict individual physical health; and couple play would predict individual emotional health. The results from a sample of 30 couples demonstrated couple play predicted measures of couple bonding, including relationship satisfaction, communication, conflict resolution, and the couple's view of the relationship. Couple play demonstrated no relationship to individual physical or emotional health. Since couple play was predictive of successful, long-term couple relationship measures, the implications were discussed for using couple play in assessment and intervention in couple counseling and future research.
|
5 |
Impact of a family centered approach on uptake of HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy for exposed and infected children in Solwezi, ZambiaMwanda, Kalasa January 2010 (has links)
<p>Aim: To establish whether a family centered approach to HIV care in which HIV positive adults are counseled on the importance of having their children tested results in the adults bringing their children under the age of five years for testing and or accessing HIV care, and to explore challenges faced by caregivers in bringing children for testing and care.</p>
|
6 |
Impact of a family centered approach on uptake of HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy for exposed and infected children in Solwezi, ZambiaMwanda, Kalasa January 2010 (has links)
<p>Aim: To establish whether a family centered approach to HIV care in which HIV positive adults are counseled on the importance of having their children tested results in the adults bringing their children under the age of five years for testing and or accessing HIV care, and to explore challenges faced by caregivers in bringing children for testing and care.</p>
|
7 |
Impact of a family centered approach on uptake of HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy for exposed and infected children in Solwezi, ZambiaMwanda, Kalasa January 2010 (has links)
Magister Public Health - MPH / Aim: To establish whether a family centered approach to HIV care in which HIV positive adults are counseled on the importance of having their children tested results in the adults bringing their children under the age of five years for testing and or accessing HIV care, and to explore challenges faced by caregivers in bringing children for testing and care. / South Africa
|
8 |
Adapting a Psychosocial Intervention to reduce HIV risk among likely adolescent participants in HIV biomedical trialsDietrich, Janan Janine 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2015 / ENGLISH ABSTRACT : In 2010, young people aged 15–24 years accounted for 42% of new HIV infections globally. In 2009,
about five million (10%) of the total South African population was estimated to be aged 15–19 years.
Current South African national sero-prevalence data estimate the prevalence of HIV to be 5.6% and
0.7% among adolescent girls and boys aged 15–19 years, respectively. HIV infections are mainly
transmitted via sexual transmission. Adolescent sexuality is multi-faceted and influenced at multiple
levels. In preparing to enroll adolescents in future biomedical HIV prevention trials, particularly
prophylactic HIV vaccine trials, it is critical to provide counseling services appropriate to their needs.
At the time of writing, there was no developed psychosocial intervention in South Africa for use among
adolescent vaccine trial participants.
Thus, the aim of the present study is to adapt and pilot-test a psychosocial intervention, namely,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) risk reduction counseling intervention of Project
Respect, an intervention tasked at being developmentally and contextually appropriate among potential
adolescent participants in HIV biomedical trials in the future. To achieve this overall aim, I
qualitatively explored adolescent sexuality and risk factors for HIV among a diverse sample of
participants aged 16–18 from Soweto. Thereafter, I developed a composite HIV risk scale in order to
measure the variance in HIV risk among the sample of adolescents studied.
The study followed a two-phased, mixed method research design and was informed by
ecological systems theory and integrative model of behavioral prediction. The aim of Phase 1, split into
phases 1a and b, was to conduct focus group discussions (FGDs) and to undertake a cross-sectional
survey, respectively, to determine psychological (for example, self-esteem and depression), behavioral
(specifically, sexual behavior) and social (specifically, social support, parent-adolescent
communication) contexts that placed adolescents at risk for HIV infection. Phase 1a was qualitative, with data collected via nine FGDs: three involved parents of adolescents, four involved adolescents
aged 16–18 years and two counselors. Nine key themes related to adolescent sexuality and risks for
HIV acquisition were identified, namely: (1) dating during adolescence; (2) adolescent girls dating
older men; (3) condom use amongst adolescents; (4) teenage pregnancies; (5) views about
homosexuality; (6) parent-adolescent communication about sexual health; (7) the role of the media; (8)
discipline and perceived government influence; and (9) group sex events. Phase 1b was quantitative
and the data were collected via a cross-sectional survey to investigate the variance of risk for HIV. For
Phase 1b, the sample consisted of 506 adolescents with a mean age of 17 years (interquartile range
[IQR]: 16–18). More than half the participants were female (59%, n = 298). I used a three-step
hierarchical multiple regression model to investigate the variance in risk for HIV. In step 3, the only
significant predictors were “ever threatened to have sex” and “ever forced to have sex”, the
combination of which explained 14% (R2 = 0.14; F (12, 236) = 3.14, p = 0.00). Depression and parentadolescent
communication were added to steps 2 and 3, respectively, with both variables insignificant
in these models.
In Phase 2, I adapted and pilot tested the CDC risk reduction counseling intervention. The
intervention was intended to be developmentally and contextually appropriate among adolescents from
Soweto aged 16–18 years, viewed as potential participants in future HIV biomedical trials. Participants
in Phase 2 were aged 16–18 years; the sample was mainly female (52%, n = 11) and most (91%, n =
19) were secondary school learners in grades 8 to 12. Participants provided feedback about their
experiences of the adapted counseling intervention through in-depth interviews. I identified three main
themes in this regard, namely: benefits of HIV testing services, reasons for seeking counseling and HIV
testing services, and participants’ evaluation of the study visits and counseling sessions. The adapted
CDC risk reduction counseling intervention was found to be acceptable with favorable outcomes for
those adolescents who participated in the piloting phase.
This study adds to the literature on risks for HIV among adolescents in Soweto, South Africa,
by considering multiple levels of influence. Reaching a more complete understanding of ecological
factors contributing to sexual risk behaviors among adolescents in the pilot-study enabled the
development of a tailored counseling intervention. The findings showed the adapted CDC risk
reduction counseling intervention to be feasible and acceptable among adolescents likely to be
participants and eligible to participate in future HIV biomedical prevention trials. Thus, this study
provides a much needed risk reduction counseling intervention that can be used among adolescents, an
age group likely to participate in future HIV vaccine prevention research. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING : In 2010 het jongmense tussen die ouderdomme van 15 en 24 jaar 42% van nuwe MIV-infeksies
wêreldwyd uitgemaak. In 2009 was omtrent 5 miljoen mense (10%) van die Suid-Afrikaanse bevolking
tussen 15 en 19 jaar oud. Volgens data oor die huidige Suid-Afrikaanse nasionale sero-voorkoms, word
die voorkoms van MIV onderskeidelik op 5.6% en 0.7% onder tienermeisies en -seuns tussen die
ouderdomme van 15 tot 19 jaar beraam. MIV-infeksies word hoofsaaklik deur seks oorgedra.
Adolessente seksualiteit het baie fasette en word op verskeie vlakke beïnvloed. Ter voorbereiding van
die werwing van adolessente vir toekomstige biomediese proewe, veral proewe oor profilaktiese MIVentstowwe,
is dit van kritiese belang dat beradingsdienste verskaf word wat geskik is vir hul behoeftes.
Op die tydstip wat hierdie tesis geskryf is, het daar nog geen psigososiale intervensie in Suid-Afrika
bestaan vir gebruik onder adolessente deelnemers aan entstofproewe nie.
Daarom is die doel van hierdie studie om ʼn psigososiale intervensie ‒ die Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) se Projek Respek, ʼn beradingsintervensie vir die vermindering van
risiko ‒ aan te pas en met ʼn loodsprojek te toets. Hierdie intervensie is geskik vir die ontwikkelings- en
kontekstuele vlak van adolessente deelnemers aan toekomstige MIV- biomediese proewe. Ten einde
hierdie oorkoepelende doelwit te bereik, het ek adolessente seksualiteit en die risikofaktore vir MIV
onder ʼn diverse steekproef deelnemers tussen die ouderdomme van 16 en 18 jaar van Soweto
kwalitatief ondersoek. Daarna het ek ʼn saamgestelde MIV-risikoskaal ontwikkel om die variansie van
MIV-risiko onder die groep adolessente te meet.
Die studie se navorsingsontwerp het uit twee fases en gemengde metodes bestaan, en is
gebaseer op ekologiesestelsel-teorie en die integrerende gedragsvoorspellingsmodel. Die doel van fase
1, wat in fases 1a en 1b verdeel is, was om onderskeidelik fokusgroepbesprekings te hou en om ʼn
deursnitopname te doen om die sielkundige kontekste (byvoorbeeld elemente van selfbeeld en depressie), gedragskontekste (spesifiek seksuele gedrag) en sosiale kontekste (spesifiek sosiale
ondersteuning en ouer-adolessent-kommunikasie) te bepaal waarin adolessente die risiko loop om
MIV-infeksie op te doen. Fase 1a was kwalitatief en data is deur middel van nege
fokusgroepbesprekings ingesamel: drie met die ouers van adolessente, vier met adolessente tussen 16
en 18 jaar oud en twee met beraders. Nege sleuteltemas is geïdentifiseer wat verband hou met
adolessente seksualiteit en risiko’s om MIV op te doen: (1) verhoudings tydens adolessensie, (2)
tienermeisies wat verhoudings met ouer mans het, (3) die gebruik van kondome onder adolessente, (4)
tienerswangerskappe, (5) sienings oor homoseksualiteit, (6) ouer-adolessent-kommunikasie oor
seksuele gesondheid, (7) die rol van die media, (8) dissipline en die ervaarde regeringsinvloed en
(9) groepseksgeleenthede. Fase 1b was kwantitatief en data is deur middel van ’n deursnitopname
ingesamel om die variansie van risiko vir MIV te ondersoek. Vir Fase 1b het die steekproef bestaan uit
506 adolessente met ’n gemiddelde ouderdom van 17 jaar (interkwartielwydte [IKW]: 16–18). Meer as
die helfte van die deelnemers was vroulik (59%, n = 298). Ek het ’n hiërargiese meervoudige
regressiemodel met drie stappe gebruik om die variansie van risiko vir MIV te ondersoek. Die enigste
beduidende voorspellers in stap 3 was “ooit gedreig om seks te hê” en “ooit geforseer om seks te hê”.
Die kombinasie hiervan het 14% (R2 = 0.14; F (12, 236) = 3.14, p = 0.00) verklaar. Depressie en oueradolessent-
kommunikasie is onderskeidelik in stappe 2 en 3 bygevoeg, en albei veranderlikes was
onbeduidend in hierdie modelle.
In Fase 2 het ek die CDC se intervensie vir die verlaging van risiko aangepas en met ’n
loodsprojek getoets. Die intervensie was bedoel om geskik te wees vir die ontwikkelings- en
kontekstuele vlakke van 16- tot 18-jarige adolessente van Soweto wat beskou is as potensiële
deelnemers aan toekomstige MIV- biomediese proewe. Deelnemers in Fase 2 was 16 tot 18 jaar oud,
die steekproef was hoofsaaklik vroulik (52%, n = 11) en die meeste van die deelnemers (91%, n = 19)
was in grade 8 tot 12 op hoërskool. Deelnemers het tydens indringende onderhoude terugvoering oor hulle ervarings van die aangepaste beradingsintervensie verskaf. Ek het drie hooftemas in hierdie
verband geïdentifiseer, wat die volgende insluit: voordele van MIV-toetsingsdienste, redes waarom
berading en MIV-toetsingsdienste verlang word, en die deelnemers se evaluering van die studiebesoeke
en beradingsessies. Daar is bevind dat die aangepaste beradingsintervensie van die CDC aanvaarbaar
was en gunstige uitkomste gelewer het vir die adolessente wat aan die loodsfase deelgeneem het.
Hierdie studie dra by tot die literatuur oor MIV-risiko’s vir adolessente in Soweto, Suid-Afrika,
deur meervoudige invloedsvlakke te oorweeg. Die feit dat ’n meer volledige begrip tydens die
loodsondersoek verkry is van die interaksie van die ekologiese faktore wat tot seksuele risikogedrag
onder adolessente bydra, het die ontwikkeling van ʼn doelgemaakte intervensie deur berading moontlik
gemaak. Die bevindings het getoon dat die aangepaste beradingsintervensie van die CDC
lewensvatbaar en aanvaarbaar is vir gebruik onder adolessente wat waarskynlik geskikte deelnemers
aan toekomstige biomediese proewe oor MIV-voorkoming kan wees. Hierdie studie verskaf dus ʼn
noodsaaklike beradingsintervensie om die MIV-risiko onder adolessente ‒ ʼn ouderdomsgroep wat
waarskynlik aan toekomstige biomediese navorsing oor MIV-voorkoming sal deelneem ‒ te verminder.
|
Page generated in 0.1363 seconds