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The healing power of faith in mood and anxiety disorders : pastoral study / Marika MitchellMitchell, Marika January 2006 (has links)
The central theoretical argument of the study is that faith can heal or help
counselees to cope with mood and anxiety disorders.
In the meta-theoretical perspective a literature study of recent research on
mood and anxiety disorders and the therapeutic approaches to each within the
disciplines of psychiatry, psychology, and medicine was done. It was found that
there are a number of different causes and treatments for depression and anxiety
with different disciplines emphasising different perspectives. An empirical study
consisting of qualitative structured interviews and observations of a selected
group of counselees struggling with depression and anxiety was also carried out.
It was established that faith had played a significant role in the healing of the
counselee's depression and anxiety or in their ability to deal with their illnesses.
The goal with the basis-theoretical perspectives was to explore what the Bible
has to teach about 'depression", faith and healing and to research the revelation
historical stance on this. Expositional studies of a selected core of biblical
references pertaining to depression were undertaken and key biblical figures who
suffered from “depression" were studied. It was concluded that although the Bible
does not speak of depression and anxiety per se, it describes people who might
have been suffering from it. Valuable insights that can be used in helping
counselees to deal and/or cope with their depression and anxiety were gained by
studying these biblical characters and passages (2 Corinthians 1:3-11,
Philippians 4:4-13 and Lamentations).
In the practice-theoretical perspective an integrative model which can be used
by pastoral counsellors for dealing with depression in a faith-based context and
for equipping depression sufferers to constructively deal with their depression
and anxiety was developed. This was accomplished by utilising the basis- and
meta-theoretical perspectives in a hermeneutical interaction to formulate a
holistic faith-based model. / Thesis (Ph.D. (Pastoral))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2006
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Stress : mécanismes d'adaptation, conséquences psychopathologiques et somatiques, approches thérapeutiques. / Stress : adaptative mechanisms, somatic and psychopathological consequences, therapeutic approachesChapelle, Frédéric 18 December 2013 (has links)
L’individu est en interaction permanente avec son environnement et tente de s’y adapter sans cesse. En cas d’échec de cette relation transactionnelle (Lazarus), l’individu développe un stress qui peut s’exprimer de différentes façons.Le stress a été largement étudié en population générale, mais il existe peu de données sur les liens entre stress et psychopathologie.Nous nous sommes attachés à intégrer l’ensemble des informations qui pourraient rendre compte du stress au travers de la création d’un questionnaire intégrant à la fois les stresseurs (d’ordre personnel, professionnel et environnemental), les manifestations de stress et les cognitions inadaptées. Ce nouveau questionnaire a bénéficié d’une validité de face, d’une étude de ses validités convergente et divergente, ainsi qu’une étude de ses propriétés psychométriques.Les résultats en population générale (n=2298) montrent de façon nette une expression de stress différente selon le sexe et qu’il existerait des facteurs protecteurs (vie en couple et présence d’enfants).Ce questionnaire a été étudié sur des populations d’hommes et de femmes suivies en ambulatoire, présentant un trouble anxieux (trouble obsessionnel et compulsif, trouble panique avec agoraphobie, trouble anxiété généralisée, trouble anxiété sociale) et comparé aux populations générales.Chacune des populations présente des spécificités d’expression du stress et en particulier la population masculine souffrant d’anxiété généralisée.Les données retrouvées amènent à une réflexion sur les stratégies de coping utilisées par les patients anxieux pour rendre compte de ces différences existant à la fois entre les troubles anxieux mais aussi entre sexes. / Individuals are constantly interacting with and adapting to their environment. When the transactional model (Lazarus) is not met, stress manifests itself in a variety of different forms. While stress has been widely studied in the normal population, little is known about the relationship between stress and psychopathology. The current work attempts to evaluate stress using detailed measures of stress manifestations, daily stressors (personal, work-related, and environmental), and stress-related cognitions. The resulting questionnaire was analysed in terms of face validity followed by a larger study examining its convergent and divergent validity as well as different psychometric properties. The results from the general population (n=2298) show that males and females have significantly different experiences of stress; results also suggest that significant relationships (couple, family) can serve as protective factors. The questionnaire was then used to assess the stress experience in four ambulatory consultation samples of individuals diagnosed with anxiety disorders (obsessive-compulsive disorder, panic disorder with agoraphobia, generalised anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder) and compared with results from the participants in the general population. Stress manifestations differed according to psychological disorder; of note was significant and meaningful differences demonstrated by the male participants suffering from generalised anxiety disorder. The data provide insight into the different types of coping strategies that seem to be used by patients suffering from anxiety disorders.
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The healing power of faith in mood and anxiety disorders : pastoral study / Marika MitchellMitchell, Marika January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D. (Pastoral))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2006.
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Causes of comorbidity among internalizing disorders of childhood and adolescence the roles of neuroticisim, genes and environment /Cronk, Nikole J., January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2006. / The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file (which also appears in the research.pdf); a non-technical general description, or public abstract, appears in the public.pdf file. Title from title screen of research.pdf file viewed on (February 26, 2007) Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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The Hidden Cost of Hiding Feelings: Emotion Suppression and Inauthenticity in Social AnxietyGehring Reimer, Susanna January 2008 (has links)
Social anxiety is associated with an unusually high level of negative affect, yet little is known about the strategies used by socially anxious individuals to manage and regulate their emotions. The present research examined differences in trait and state levels of expressive emotion suppression in high- and low- socially anxious participants, and explored possible causes and consequences of such suppression across two studies. Using self-reports of trait-like characteristics, Study 1 examined a theoretical model positing that individuals high in social anxiety would report greater emotion suppression than those low in social anxiety; and that authenticity, in turn, would predict diminished well-being. Study 2 used self-report measures administered following a brief social interaction in the laboratory to examine group differences in state-like emotion suppression and the effects of such differences on situational authenticity. Additionally, Study 2 investigated the contributions of state negative affect and acceptance of mood to help explain possible increases in emotion suppression in socially anxious participants. The results of Study 1 supported the hypothesis that diminished well-being in individuals with social anxiety is partially accounted for by low authenticity, which, in turn, is partially accounted for by high emotion suppression. Study 2 revealed that socially anxious participants suppressed their emotions more, and felt less authentic than, controls during the social interaction. However, state negative affect and acceptance of mood did not significantly mediate the relationship between group status and state-like emotion suppression. Implications of the present findings are discussed in terms of contemporary cognitive-behavioural theory and treatment, with indications for future directions for research.
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The Hidden Cost of Hiding Feelings: Emotion Suppression and Inauthenticity in Social AnxietyGehring Reimer, Susanna January 2008 (has links)
Social anxiety is associated with an unusually high level of negative affect, yet little is known about the strategies used by socially anxious individuals to manage and regulate their emotions. The present research examined differences in trait and state levels of expressive emotion suppression in high- and low- socially anxious participants, and explored possible causes and consequences of such suppression across two studies. Using self-reports of trait-like characteristics, Study 1 examined a theoretical model positing that individuals high in social anxiety would report greater emotion suppression than those low in social anxiety; and that authenticity, in turn, would predict diminished well-being. Study 2 used self-report measures administered following a brief social interaction in the laboratory to examine group differences in state-like emotion suppression and the effects of such differences on situational authenticity. Additionally, Study 2 investigated the contributions of state negative affect and acceptance of mood to help explain possible increases in emotion suppression in socially anxious participants. The results of Study 1 supported the hypothesis that diminished well-being in individuals with social anxiety is partially accounted for by low authenticity, which, in turn, is partially accounted for by high emotion suppression. Study 2 revealed that socially anxious participants suppressed their emotions more, and felt less authentic than, controls during the social interaction. However, state negative affect and acceptance of mood did not significantly mediate the relationship between group status and state-like emotion suppression. Implications of the present findings are discussed in terms of contemporary cognitive-behavioural theory and treatment, with indications for future directions for research.
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Den skapande bildens betydelse för hälsan hos personer med depressions- och ångestsyndromThunell, Boel January 2012 (has links)
The main objective of this study has been to explore how art therapists experience the visual art´s that can be used in the promotion of health among people with depression - and anxiety disorders. The concept of SOC- sense of coherence has been a central term and a link between imaging and SOC were identified in the study. The underlying method in the study was a qualitative form, where semi-structured interviews were used. Through a strategic- sample five female art therapist were contacted, who all came to participate in the study. The study is essentially based on hermeneutical method and the analysis of interview material has been analyst by using thematic analysis. The results indicate that the therapists experiences shows that visual art can be a support for people with depression- and anxiety disorders. The SOC- concept made its mark in the result and it came to show that the visual art´s may be a support for people with depression- and anxiety disorders. Visual art can help people with depression- and anxiety disorders to get more understanding and tools to manage their state according to the therapists.
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Investigating normal and pathological variation in memory-based inhibition : an examination of worry, thought suppression, and stimuli characteristicsBrown, Matthew Adam 21 March 2011 (has links)
This work was conducted in an effort to better understand the role that activational mechanisms in memory play in the etiology and maintenance of anxiety disorders. The affect of word stimuli characteristics, such as affective valence and semantic association with worry, on the association between inhibition and trait worry was investigated under different types of induced thought. Previous research has demonstrated that worry is associated with negative affect, and that worry may be semantically organized in memory. Based on these findings, it was hypothesized that words would be differentially inhibited in association with trait worry when worry was induced compared to neutral thought. Stimuli characteristics including the positive or negative affective valence of words, and their semantic association with common domains of worry were expected to moderate the relationship between inhibition and trait worry. In order to investigate these hypotheses, 86 undergraduate students from the University of Texas at Austin completed a series of memory tasks designed to measure inhibition for either negative or positive words, both associated and unassociated with worry. They underwent either idiopathic worry or neutral thought induction prior to completing each memory task, and completed questionnaires assessing trait worry and thought suppression. The findings provide partial support for the hypotheses. Higher levels of trait worry were associated with less inhibition of negative words, but more inhibition of positive words semantically associated with worry. Contrary to predictions, differential induction of worry did not affect the relationship between inhibition and trait worry. The research and clinical implications of these findings are discussed. / text
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The significance of subthreshold symptoms of anxiety in the aetiology of bruxism.Basson, Reneda A. January 2007 (has links)
<p>Bruxism is an oral parafunctional habit involving clenching and grinding of the teeth that occurs mainly unconsciously, diurnally and nocturnally. It is considered an important contributory factor in the aetiology of myofascial pain (MFP) and temporomandibular disorders (TMD). The aetiology of bruxism is considered to be multifactorial, involving physiological and psychological factors. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between the subthreshold symptoms (subtle, prodromal, atypical and subclinical symptoms of which the severity precludes diagnosis as a disorder) of anxiety and bruxism in a sample of subjects using a spectrum model.</p>
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Mental health service use by Canadian older adults with anxiety: correlates of service use, social support, and treatment outcomesLippens, Tiffany 16 March 2011 (has links)
Despite growing evidence that anxiety can be a significant problem in late-life, information regarding the use of mental health services by older adults for anxiety is lacking. The current research project consists of three studies focusing on this issue. The first study examines the rates of mental health service use among older adults with anxiety disorders and high levels of anxiety symptoms, as well as individual characteristics associated with this use. The second study examines various aspects of social support as correlates of anxiety disorders in older adults, and the role of social support as an enabling resource for mental health service use. Finally, the third study examines three important outcomes of service use among older adults: treatment satisfaction, perceived treatment effectiveness, and dropout. The data for these studies came from the Canadian Community Health Survey: Mental Health and Well-Being (CCHS 1.2), a national population-based survey that includes 12,792 respondents aged 55+ years. This research found that older adults with significant anxiety were less likely to use services than those with mood disorders, and that indicators of need for services were the strongest predictors of use. Lower levels of functional social support were related to the presence of anxiety disorders among older adults, and lower levels of perceived emotional/informational support and positive social interactions predicted greater use of services for adults throughout the lifespan. Finally, older adults were generally satisfied with services, perceived them as helpful, and were likely to remain in treatment. Analyses indicated that individual characteristics likely play only a small role in these outcomes. In general, this project provides new and important information that can inform policy, clinical work, and future research regarding late-life anxiety.
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