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http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/prev.2024.111.3.315 | DOI Listing |
Wiad Lek
September 2024
VASYL STEFANYK PRECARPATHIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY, IVANO-FRANKIVSK, UKRAINE.
Objective: Aim: The paper aims to examine superconscious processes as mental images of a higher order in the context of telezombification.
Patients And Methods: Materials and Methods: The authors used interpretive research paradigm, psychoanalysis, basic principles of hermeneutics, phenomenological approach along with general scientific methods, such as induction, deduction, generalization, etc.
Conclusion: Conclusions: With the beginning of the russian full-scale attack on Ukraine, russian atrocities in Bucha, Mariupol and other cities and villages of the country, many Ukrainian citizens asked about what has happened to the russian society, the state authorities, who set the goal of destroying Ukraine as a state and all its inhabitants as a nation.
An attempt is made to encircle time and the times psychoanalytically. They are understood as the result of the interplay of different psychic systems: Timelessness of the Ucs system (psychic reality), actual time in the Pcpt-Cs (perceptual reality), and vectorial-linear time in the Cs/Pcs systems (reality principle). Time shows itself in the moment of presence, but it can only show itself if there is a temporal antecedent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNutr Health
May 2024
Allergy Unit, Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital AOU delle Marche, Ancona, Italy.
Health professionals, including dietitians, should adapt their clinical daily practice to evidence-based practice (EBP), but this does not happen often in daily practice. The aim of this study was to investigate the current status and barriers to evidence-based practice among dietitians. This was a mixed-method, cross-sectional, national study (questionnaire and focus group) performed on working and registered dietitians, both self-employed and employed by public hospitals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealthcare (Basel)
March 2024
Department of Biomedical, Metabolic, and Neural Science, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, 41124 Modena, Italy.
Background: Being subjected to or witnessing coercive measures in mental health services can have a negative impact on service users, carers and professionals, as they most often are experienced as dehumanising and traumatic. Coercion should be avoided, but when it does happen, it is important to understand how the experience can be processed so that its consequences are managed.
Method: A systematic review and meta-ethnography was used to synthesise findings from qualitative studies that examined service users', staff's and relatives' experiences of recovery from being exposed to coercive measures in mental health care settings.
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