Listing 1 - 10 of 27 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Quatrième de couverture : "Qu'ils soient malades dans l'école ou malades de l'école, les enseignants et les élèves en souffrance sont trop souvent ignorés. Quand ils ne le sont pas, ils sont généralement "externalisés" pour être pris en charge par une médecine individuelle et spécialisée... Nicole Catheline et son équipe proposent ici une autre voie. C'est la voie de la prévention et de l'accompagnement bienveillant dès l'apparition des premiers signes préoccupants. C'est, surtout, la voie de la collaboration et du partenariat au service des acteurs de l'institution scolaire. Pas question de se renvoyer les responsabilités, en une partie de ping-pong infernale, entre partenaires rivaux. Pas question, non plus, de "découper la personne en tranches" en ignorant que les dimensions affectives et cognitives, personnelles et professionnelles, sont étroitement liées et en interaction permanente. Pas question, enfin, de jouer aux "apprentis sorciers" en s'improvisant psychologue ou pédagogue sans en avoir la formation et les compétences. Forts d'une expérience de trente années, les auteurs de ce livre nous proposent une méthodologie rigoureuse pour un vrai travail partenariat entre professionnels de santé et professionnels de l'éducation. Ils nous présentent des exemples particulièrement convaincants de dispositifs structurés de collaboration. Ils nous montrent comment la souffrance au travail ou le décrochage scolaire peuvent être pris en charge par des équipes ou des binômes pluridisciplinaires afin d'éviter une externalisation systématique et une médicalisation excessive. Ce livre s'adresse aussi bien aux enseignants et cadres éducatifs, qu'aux infirmiers, éducateurs spécialisés, psychologues et médecins. Tous y trouveront des analyses et des outils grâce auxquels ils pourront mieux prendre soin ensemble de toutes les personnes qui fréquentent l'Ecole."
Psychology, Child --- Psychology, Clinical --- Psychological Distress
Choose an application
"Deftly combining crisis science, evolutionary psychology, neuroscience, and behavioral psychology, Crisis Integration With Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Theory and Practice provides mental health clinicians with an easy to learn, simple to remember, and immediately actionable approach to helping patients deal with crises and evolve through them. This volume examines findings from the scientific study of crisis, offering readers a translational and functional definition of crisis and tying the acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) model to the literature. Engaging clinical dialogues, grounded in real-world practice, demonstrate the three core processes of ACT at work in clinical practice: 1 Mindfulness and its effectiveness in both acute and chronic crises; 2 Self-compassion and how kindness to oneself during intense torment can be crucial to acceptance; and 3 Engagement with life and the importance of controlling one's own behavior amid crisis-provoking events. Although crises come in a great variety of forms, this illuminating guide posits that the core processes underpinning the generation and maintenance of a crisis response are basically the same and introduces a model that transforms moments of crisis into opportunities for learning and growth for both patients and clinicians"--
Crisis Intervention --- Psychological Distress --- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy --- Mindfulness
Choose an application
Distress (Psychology) --- Emotions. --- Feelings --- Human emotions --- Passions --- Psychology --- Affect (Psychology) --- Affective neuroscience --- Apathy --- Pathognomy --- Anguish --- Psychological distress --- Emotions
Choose an application
How else does the ramified phenomenon of greed (corruption, nepotism, extreme self-aggrandizement, megalomanic tendencies etc) become nefarious to both the physical and mental worlds of a people either individually or collectively? It brings about a retrogressing, catabatic state in their evolution in both regards, eating back into the socio-economic and political set up of a given society as well as unquestionably impairing the mindset of its people. Reign of the Quisling-Rodents tells of the gradual bane of a society to perdition which is not so much due to its dehumanizing physical quality
Poetry. --- Corruption --- Deprivation (Psychology) --- Distress (Psychology) --- Resistance (Philosophy) --- Poems --- Poetry --- Verses (Poetry) --- Literature --- Anguish --- Psychological distress --- Emotions --- Loss (Psychology) --- Psychology --- Corrupt practices --- Ethics --- Philosophy
Choose an application
This open access book maps a crucial but neglected chapter in the history of psychiatry: how was melancholia transformed in the nineteenth century from traditional melancholy madness into a modern biomedical mood disorder, paving the way for the emergence of clinical depression as a psychiatric illness in the twentieth century? At a time when the prevalence of mood disorders and antidepressant consumption are at an all-time high, the need for a comprehensive historical understanding of how modern depressive illness came into being has never been more urgent. This book addresses a significant gap in existing scholarly literature on melancholia, depression, and mood disorders by offering a contextualised and critical perspective on the history of melancholia in the first decades of psychiatry, from the 1830s until the turn of the twentieth century.
History of human medicine --- Psychiatry --- World history --- History of the United Kingdom and Ireland --- History of Eastern Europe --- psychiatrie --- geneeskunde --- geschiedenis --- sociale geschiedenis --- Europese geschiedenis --- Social history. --- Medicine—History. --- Psychiatry. --- Great Britain—History. --- Medicine and psychology --- Mental health --- Psychology, Pathological --- Descriptive sociology --- Social conditions --- Social history --- History --- Sociology --- Social History --- History of Medicine --- History of Britain and Ireland --- Mood disorders --- Psychiatric illness --- Physiology --- Psychology --- Statistical and diagnostic practices --- Asylum records --- Insanity --- Madness --- Mental pain --- Suicidal tendencies --- Psychological distress --- Open Access --- Social & cultural history --- History of medicine --- European history --- Depression, Mental --- Melancholy
Choose an application
The spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), which is caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has evolved as a global pandemic and the disease has affected nearly every country and region. This pandemic has posed further threats to people due to the emergence of the number of novel SARS-CoV-2 strains with unknown original hosts. Since the start of the pandemic, COVID-19 has overwhelmed health systems worldwide, from crippling health resources to causing paradigms shifts in health care delivery. The various strategies taken to control viral transmission including testing process, quarantine and isolation have had dire psychological and financial implications on individuals and institutions. Furthermore, many countries have implemented lockdowns and other restrictions to curb the virus’s spread resulted in disrupted formal education, unplanned fiscal costs on emergency reliefs, and decreased productivity. This Special Issue provides an avenue for authors from various disciplines to better understand the risk factors associated with the spread and severity of COVID-19 infections. It also provides information about the influence of COVID-19 and its countermeasures on local economies, the environment, and mental health. This Special Issue contains 11 research articles and one review.
Medicine --- Epidemiology & medical statistics --- coronavirus disease --- artificial neural networks --- SARS-CoV-2 --- ventilator --- index development index --- developing country --- Covid-19 --- population density --- Covid-19 mortality --- economic recovery --- population reduction --- China --- Saudi Arabia --- Henry Kissinger --- economic burden --- influenza-like illness --- healthcare-seeking behaviors --- air pollution --- coronavirus disease 2019 --- Greece --- GreenYourAir --- fine particulate matter --- COVID-19 --- dentistry --- pandemic --- dentist --- protective equipment --- economy resilience --- economy resistance --- economy restoration --- photochemical smog --- respiratory disorders --- prevalence --- occupational health --- infection --- trade protectionism --- economy --- energy --- input-output model --- public health crisis --- ESG --- stock price volatility --- avoid risk --- psychological distress --- depression symptoms --- anxiety symptoms --- financial variables --- COVID-19 pandemic --- district-level analysis --- risk factors --- Nepal
Choose an application
The spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), which is caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has evolved as a global pandemic and the disease has affected nearly every country and region. This pandemic has posed further threats to people due to the emergence of the number of novel SARS-CoV-2 strains with unknown original hosts. Since the start of the pandemic, COVID-19 has overwhelmed health systems worldwide, from crippling health resources to causing paradigms shifts in health care delivery. The various strategies taken to control viral transmission including testing process, quarantine and isolation have had dire psychological and financial implications on individuals and institutions. Furthermore, many countries have implemented lockdowns and other restrictions to curb the virus’s spread resulted in disrupted formal education, unplanned fiscal costs on emergency reliefs, and decreased productivity. This Special Issue provides an avenue for authors from various disciplines to better understand the risk factors associated with the spread and severity of COVID-19 infections. It also provides information about the influence of COVID-19 and its countermeasures on local economies, the environment, and mental health. This Special Issue contains 11 research articles and one review.
Medicine --- Epidemiology & medical statistics --- coronavirus disease --- artificial neural networks --- SARS-CoV-2 --- ventilator --- index development index --- developing country --- Covid-19 --- population density --- Covid-19 mortality --- economic recovery --- population reduction --- China --- Saudi Arabia --- Henry Kissinger --- economic burden --- influenza-like illness --- healthcare-seeking behaviors --- air pollution --- coronavirus disease 2019 --- Greece --- GreenYourAir --- fine particulate matter --- COVID-19 --- dentistry --- pandemic --- dentist --- protective equipment --- economy resilience --- economy resistance --- economy restoration --- photochemical smog --- respiratory disorders --- prevalence --- occupational health --- infection --- trade protectionism --- economy --- energy --- input-output model --- public health crisis --- ESG --- stock price volatility --- avoid risk --- psychological distress --- depression symptoms --- anxiety symptoms --- financial variables --- COVID-19 pandemic --- district-level analysis --- risk factors --- Nepal
Choose an application
The spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), which is caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has evolved as a global pandemic and the disease has affected nearly every country and region. This pandemic has posed further threats to people due to the emergence of the number of novel SARS-CoV-2 strains with unknown original hosts. Since the start of the pandemic, COVID-19 has overwhelmed health systems worldwide, from crippling health resources to causing paradigms shifts in health care delivery. The various strategies taken to control viral transmission including testing process, quarantine and isolation have had dire psychological and financial implications on individuals and institutions. Furthermore, many countries have implemented lockdowns and other restrictions to curb the virus’s spread resulted in disrupted formal education, unplanned fiscal costs on emergency reliefs, and decreased productivity. This Special Issue provides an avenue for authors from various disciplines to better understand the risk factors associated with the spread and severity of COVID-19 infections. It also provides information about the influence of COVID-19 and its countermeasures on local economies, the environment, and mental health. This Special Issue contains 11 research articles and one review.
coronavirus disease --- artificial neural networks --- SARS-CoV-2 --- ventilator --- index development index --- developing country --- Covid-19 --- population density --- Covid-19 mortality --- economic recovery --- population reduction --- China --- Saudi Arabia --- Henry Kissinger --- economic burden --- influenza-like illness --- healthcare-seeking behaviors --- air pollution --- coronavirus disease 2019 --- Greece --- GreenYourAir --- fine particulate matter --- COVID-19 --- dentistry --- pandemic --- dentist --- protective equipment --- economy resilience --- economy resistance --- economy restoration --- photochemical smog --- respiratory disorders --- prevalence --- occupational health --- infection --- trade protectionism --- economy --- energy --- input-output model --- public health crisis --- ESG --- stock price volatility --- avoid risk --- psychological distress --- depression symptoms --- anxiety symptoms --- financial variables --- COVID-19 pandemic --- district-level analysis --- risk factors --- Nepal
Choose an application
Toward the Psychology of Malefaction This is a book about human wickedness. I would like to identify two obstacles in the path that this book seeks to traverse. One obstacle is an inappropriate scientism; the other is an inappropriate moralism. There is a kind of scientism that prevents us from seeing that human beings are responsible for what happens on the planet. It is a view that, in the name of science, downplays the role of human beings as agents in what takes place. This view is often expressed in a paradigm that regards human conduct as the "dependent variable," while anything that impinges on the human being is considered the "independent variable." The paradigm further takes the relationship between the dependent and independent variable to be the result of natural law. It charac teristically ignores the possibility that individual or collective deci sion or policy, generated by human beings and not by natural law, is and can be regulatory of conduct.
#psyc:gift 1997 --- Anomy --- Deviant behavior --- Distress (psychology) --- Psychopaths --- Social change --- Social psychology --- Social values --- Psychological aspects --- Anomy. --- Deviant behavior. --- Distress (psychology). --- Psychopaths. --- Social psychology. --- Social values. --- Psychological aspects. --- Distress (Psychology) --- Mass psychology --- Psychology, Social --- Change, Social --- Cultural change --- Cultural transformation --- Societal change --- Socio-cultural change --- Antisocial personality disorders --- Psychopathic persons --- Sociopaths --- Anguish --- Psychological distress --- Deviancy --- Social deviance --- Anomie --- Patients --- Values --- Human ecology --- Psychology --- Social groups --- Sociology --- Social history --- Social evolution --- Mentally ill --- Emotions --- Human behavior --- Conformity --- Social adjustment --- Durkheimian school of sociology --- Government, Resistance to --- State, The --- Psychology. --- Social sciences. --- Psychiatry. --- Psychology, general. --- Social Sciences, general. --- Medicine and psychology --- Mental health --- Psychology, Pathological --- Behavioral sciences --- Human sciences --- Sciences, Social --- Social science --- Social studies --- Civilization --- Mental philosophy --- Mind --- Science, Mental --- Human biology --- Philosophy --- Soul
Choose an application
This timely analysis sets out the full impacts of policy reform, austerity and marketisation on our country's mental health services. Rooted in the experiences of service users and providers, it provides valuable perspectives on our evolving practical and organisational responses to mental distress.
Mental health services. --- Mental health policy. --- Distress (Psychology) --- Detresse. --- Services de sante mentale --- Sante mentale --- Mental health services --- Mental health policy --- Anguish --- Psychological distress --- Emotions --- Mental health and state --- Mental health --- State and mental health --- Medical policy --- Behavioral health care --- Mental health care --- Psychiatric care --- Psychiatric services --- Medical care --- Politique gouvernementale --- Government policy --- Great Britain. --- National Health Service (Great Britain) --- NHS --- NHS Executive --- Anglia --- Angliyah --- Briṭanyah --- England and Wales --- Förenade kungariket --- Grã-Bretanha --- Grande-Bretagne --- Grossbritannien --- Igirisu --- Iso-Britannia --- Marea Britanie --- Nagy-Britannia --- Prydain Fawr --- Royaume-Uni --- Saharātchaʻānāčhak --- Storbritannien --- United Kingdom --- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland --- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland --- Velikobritanii͡ --- Wielka Brytania --- Yhdistynyt kuningaskunta --- Northern Ireland --- Scotland --- Wales
Listing 1 - 10 of 27 | << page >> |
Sort by
|