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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder in South Africa

Atwoli, Lukoye January 2015 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references / Objective: The main aim of this thesis is to analyze data from the South African Stress and Health (SASH) study and , for the first time, generate information on the epidemiology of traumatic event s (TEs) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and on the association of TEs with other psychopathological and physical health outcomes. Methods: A literature review was done to provide information current knowledge in the field. Cross - tabulations, Chi - squared tests and logistic regression analyses were then conducted SASH data to determine the prevalence of the different types of trauma and PTSD and the associations between the sociodemographic variables and TEs and PTSD on the one hand, and TEs and PTSD, other psychopathology and chronic physical conditions on the other . Results: The most common traumatic events were the unexpected death of a loved one and witnessing trauma. Lifetime prevalence of PTSD was 2.3%, and the conditional prevalence of PTSD after trauma exposure was 3.5%. PTSD conditional risk and burden were both highest for witnessing trauma. Witnessing trauma was commonest among males and those with low - average education. There was statistically significant association between witnessing and PTSD, mood, and anxiety disorders. Exposure to any TE significantly increased the odds of all the physical conditions, and the odds of having a physical condition were directly related to the number of lifetime traumatic events. Sexual violence and unexpected death of a loved one significantly increased the odds of all the e physical conditions assessed, while war events were only associated with respiratory conditions. Apart from war events, accidents and witnessing trauma were associated with the fewest physical conditions. Conclusions: Consistent with the literature, trauma and PTSD in South Africa are not distributed according to the socio - demographic factors or trauma types observed in other countries. Witnessing trauma is common in South Africa and increases the risk of mood and anxiety disorders. Finally, TE exposure is associated with chronic physical conditions in a dose - response manner. Trauma interventions must therefore focus also on those not directly affected, and routine evaluation for chronic physical conditions is recommended for survivors of all trauma.
52

Exploring recovery in women diagnosed with personality disorder in a secure setting

Jenkinson, Julia January 2011 (has links)
Section A consists of a literature review which explores the concept of recovery and its relevance for women who have been detained in a secure setting and diagnosed with a personality disorder. Section B presents the findings of a study to explore the concept of recovery in women diagnosed with personality disorder in a secure unit. Six semi- structured interviews, conducted with women diagnosed with personality disorder and experience of being detained in secure accommodation, were analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Analysis of the transcripts revealed five master themes: recovering; centrality of relationships; assuming responsibility for own care; evolving an identity; understanding of the mental health experience. The study concludes that, as far as is consistent with a secure setting, women should be given maximum opportunity to participate in decisions about their own care. Staff should be creative in providing opportunities for the women to engage in meaningful activities that promote a positive identity. Education with respect to personal recovery and the presentation and aetiology of personality disorder may support more caring and hopeful relationships between staff and service users, within which recovery can be facilitated. Section C involves a critical appraisal of the study.
53

An exploration into service users' and staff experiences of a medium secure setting

Taylor, Vikki January 2016 (has links)
Despite a growing literature base related to both compassionate care and work-related stress in healthcare settings, there is a lack of empirical studies investigating the relationship between these concepts, particularly in medium secure settings. This mixed methods study explored the relationship between compassion (The Compassion Scale) and work-related stress (The HSE Management Standards Toolkit) from the self-report of 51 members of staff in a medium secure setting, including semi-structured interviews with 12 participants. On the quantitative measures, the relationship between self-reported compassion and work-related stress on the quantitative measures was found to be statistically non-significant. However, elements of compassion were found to significantly predict subscales of work-related stress such that high levels of elements of compassion were found to predict higher levels of subscales of work-related stress. Participants constructed several meanings of compassion and its role in the care of the patients they worked with. Several consequences of occupational demands were cited including an increase in work-related stress and less time to build therapeutic relationships or to develop compassion towards patients. The findings of this study can be used to inform the development of staff interventions. Increased consistency of staff groups, increased debriefing opportunities and a review of paperwork responsibilities within staff teams have also been recommended.
54

Recovery approaches with women with a diagnosis of personality disorder in secure care

Millar, Hayleigh January 2011 (has links)
A literature review in Section A reviews the conceptual and empirical literature with regard to the usefulness and challenges inherent in applying recovery approaches in secure services, with a particular focus on women with a diagnosis of personality disorder. Section B. Background: Some studies have suggested that recovery approaches could be facilitated in secure mental health services despite a number of inherent tensions. However, none have explored if this applies to women with a diagnosis of personality disorder in secure care. A group whose needs have historically been overlooked, and can present with complex care-seeking behaviours. Aims. To explore how staff working with these women understand and apply recovery approaches in secure units. Method. Eleven multidisciplinary staff members working in a medium-secure unit in the UK participated in in-depth interviews. The data was analysed using grounded theory. Results. A preliminary model was generated, which comprised of five categories: secure base, balancing tensions, therapeutic relationship, initiating recovery, and nurturing recovery. These appeared to interact and influence each other throughout the recovery process. Conclusions. Staff are required to continually balance a number of tensions and as such they need a secure base from which to explore the service-users’ unique recovery process through the medium of collaborative therapeutic relationships. Staff sharing a recovery ethos that is embedded in the culture of a conducive environment, and is supported by supervision and teamwork, fosters the actualisation of recovery principles of empowerment, identity formation, and hope. Section C provides a critical appraisal of the study as well as a personal reflection on what was learnt through the process of the conducting the study.
55

Psychiatry's 'golden age' : making sense of mental health care in Uganda, 1894-1972

Pringle, Yolana January 2013 (has links)
This thesis investigates the emergence of an internationally renowned psychiatric community in Uganda. Starting at the beginning of colonial rule in 1894, it traces the changing nature of mental health care both within and beyond the state, examining the conditions that allowed psychiatry to develop as a significant intellectual tradition in the years following Independence in 1962. This ‘golden age’ of psychiatry saw Uganda establish itself as a leader of mental health care in Africa, an aspect of history that is all the more marked for its contrast with the almost complete collapse of mental health care after the expulsion of the Asian population by Idi Amin in 1972. Using a wide range of new source material, including interviews with psychiatrists, traditional healers, and community elders, this thesis pushes the history of psychiatry in Africa beyond the examination of government policy and colonial hegemony. It brings together the history of psychiatry with the histories of missionary medicine, medical education, and international health by asking what types of people, institutions, and organisations were involved in the provision of mental health care; how important the growth of Makerere Medical School was for intellectual and institutional psychiatry; and how ‘African’ mental health care had become by the end of the period. It presents a history of mental health care in a country that has tended to be overshadowed by Kenya in the historiography, yet whose engagement with medical missionaries and efforts to advance medical training meant that the trajectory of psychiatry came to be quite different. Focusing in particular on the significance of western-trained Ugandan medical practitioners for mental health care, the thesis not only analyses African psychiatrists as historical actors in their own right, but represents the first attempt to examine the development of psychiatric education in Africa.
56

Transnational trauma : trauma and psychiatry in the world and Taiwan, 1945-1995

Wu, Harry Yi-Jui January 2012 (has links)
This study considers the history of trauma, both as a psychiatric concept and as a diagnosis, and its social and cultural representation from a transnational perspective after WWII. The intellectual evolution of trauma was determined by various medical, social and cultural variables, institutions, and people who wielded influence in the postwar world order as well as diverse local contexts. This thesis focuses on the globalisation and localisation of such concept and diagnosis shaped by international and local mental health experts at the World Health Organization and the National Taiwan University Hospital. Through the efforts of these experts, trauma not only became one of the most globally diffused psychiatric diagnoses, but also a hyperbole appropriated by Taiwanese psychiatrists to account for extreme forms of social suffering. Studies have criticised the universality and the Anglo-American-centred approach to the history of traumatic psychiatry. Scholars have also begun to explore transnational histories of psychiatry by systematically comparing or tracing the diffusion routes of psychiatric topics. Their methods of enquiry and problems solved, however, differ. My research analyses a disparate collection of evidence at the level of international organisations and from local aspects, allowing not only a critical reconsideration of trauma in the trend of global medicine, but also its reception, contestation and appropriation in the non-Western contexts. Guided by the works of medical historians, literary critics and cultural anthropologists, this project combines archival research with oral history interviews to challenge the existing historical accounts of trauma, and provide evidence of the limited capacity of globalised psychiatric norms and their reception and appropriation beyond the imagination of world citizenship. It argues that such scientific artefacts were not only produced through mutual reference between Eastern and Western experiences, but also measures of instrumental rationality employed by postwar internationalists to engineer their modernity in the Global South.

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