153 results match your criteria: "Fielding Graduate University.[Affiliation]"

Objective: To investigate the effectiveness of community-based mental health interventions by professionally trained, lay counsellors in low- and middle-income countries.

Methods: We searched PubMed®, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, PROSPERO and EBSCO databases and professional section publications of the United States National Center for PTSD for randomized controlled trials of mental health interventions by professionally trained, lay counsellors in low- and middle-income countries published between 2000 and 2019. Studies of interventions by professional mental health workers, medical professionals or community health workers were excluded because there are shortages of these personnel in the study countries.

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Importance: There are conflicting accounts about the risk for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) following traumatic brain injury (TBI), possibly owing to variations between studies in acute TBI severity or when ADHD was assessed postinjury. Analysis of these variations may aid in identifying the risk.

Objective: To conduct a meta-analysis of studies assessing ADHD diagnoses in children between ages 4 and 18 years following concussions and mild, moderate, or severe TBI.

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Individual variation in diurnal cortisol in patients with knee osteoarthritis: Clinical correlates.

Int J Psychophysiol

September 2021

Department of Anesthesiology, Harvard Medical School, Brigham & Women's Hospital, 850 Boylston St, Suite 302, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA.

Background: The cortisol awakening response (CAR) is a core biomarker of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis regulation. To date, however, studies of HPA-axis function among patients with chronic pain are scarce and show equivocal results. The objectives of this study were to investigate the association between CAR and pain-related outcomes and to investigate potential sex differences in patients with knee osteoarthritis (KOA).

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Background: Sleep disturbances constitute a common complication in pediatric cancer patients and survivors and are frequently severe enough to warrant treatment. Suboptimal sleep has been associated with decreased emotional well-being and cognitive functioning and increased behavioral problems. Standardized guidelines for non-pharmacological sleep interventions for adults with cancer exist, but no standard of care intervention or standard guidelines are available to guide such intervention in pediatric cancer patients and survivors.

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Cannabinoids for fibromyalgia pain: a critical review of recent studies (2015-2019).

J Cannabis Res

May 2020

School of Psychology, Fielding Graduate University, 2020 De La Vina St, Santa Barbara, CA, 93105, USA.

Introduction: Fibromyalgia is a chronic health condition characterized by widespread, severe musculoskeletal pain that affects an estimated 5-7% of the global population. Due to the highly comorbid nature of fibromyalgia, patients with the disorder often respond poorly to traditional pain treatments. Recent studies suggest that patient response may be more favorable to alternative analgesics, such as cannabis.

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Objective: Developmental family-centered care is evolving as an essential intensive care practice component for newborns and families. Research supports developmental care and the resulting positive outcomes for infants and families.

Study Design: An interprofessional and parent committee utilized a systematic review and consensus process to evaluate the evidence for intensive care practice.

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Background: Prolonged exposure therapy (PE) is an evidence-based treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that is underutilized in the military health system. Standard workshop training in PE may not be sufficient to alter provider behavior, but post-workshop consultation requires significant resources. Therefore, it is important to determine the incremental utility of post-workshop consultation.

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Sociocultural learning in emergency medicine: a holistic examination of competence.

Diagnosis (Berl)

August 2020

Institute for Social Innovation, Fielding Graduate University, 2020 De la Vina Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93105-3814, USA.

Objectives In the medical community of practice, the resident is situated in systems of professional and cultural activities. How diagnostic competence manifests in their sociocultural context is examined through situativity and systems theories. A holistic model is proposed that could examine diagnostic competence across micro (individual), meso (activity), and macro (cultural) systems.

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Although there are effective treatments that promote recovery and improve quality of life for serious mental illness in nonincarcerated populations, more research is needed to understand the recovery process for individuals with a history of incarceration. A qualitative, grounded theory study was conducted with 17 men and women who have serious mental illness (SMI) and a history of incarceration. Findings revealed barriers and facilitators to the recovery process in the areas of identity, treatment, relationships, community, and institutions.

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Objective: HIV self-testing (HIVST) kits are a viable alternative to testing in clinical settings, but research on the effective ways of promoting uptake of HIVST kits has been lacking. The present study examines crowdsourcing contests as community engagement to promote uptake of HIVST kits among African Americans in the southern region of the US.

Methods: This mixed-methods study design evaluated two contests through qualitative assessment of contest entries.

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Circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders and the COVID-19 pandemic.

J Clin Sleep Med

August 2020

Alliance Behavioral Health, LLC, Huntsville, Alabama.

Bryson WJ. . 2020;16(8):1423.

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Background: HIV testing programs in the United States aim to reach ethnic minority populations who experience high incidence of HIV, yet 40% of African Americans have never been tested for HIV. The objective of this study is to identify community-based strategies to increase testing among African Americans in both urban and rural areas.

Methods: This study conducted focus group discussions (FGDs) informed by community-based participatory research principles to examine African American's concerns and ideas around HIV testing and HIV self-testing.

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Supporting women leaving prison through peer health mentoring: a participatory health research study.

CMAJ Open

February 2021

School of Population and Public Health (McLeod, Korchinski, Young, Milkovich, Hemingway, Buxton, Janssen, Elwood Martin) and Collaborating Centre for Prison Health and Education (McLeod, Korchinski, Young, Milkovich, Hemingway, Condello, Fels Buxton, Granger-Brown Ramsden, Elwood Martin), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; First Nations Health Authority (DeGroot), BC; Justice Studies (Condello), Nicola Valley Institute of Technology, Burnaby, BC; Arts Education (Fels), Simon Fraser University; BC Centre for Disease Control (Buxton); Child and Family Research Institute (Janssen), Vancouver, BC; Fielding Graduate University (Granger-Brown), Santa Barbara, Calif.; Department of Academic Family Medicine (Ramsden), University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Sask.; Counselling Psychology Program (Buchanan), Education and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education, and Centre for Group Counselling and Trauma (Buchanan), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC

Background: During the transition between prison and community, people are at greatly increased risk for adverse health outcomes. This study describes a peer health mentoring program that supports women in the first 3 days after their release from a provincial correctional facility in British Columbia.

Methods: We used a participatory health research framework to develop multimethod processes to describe the Unlocking the Gates Peer Health Mentoring Program.

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Infants admitted to neonatal intensive care units (NICU) require carefully designed risk-adjusted management encompassing a broad spectrum of neonatal subgroups. Key components of an optimal neuroprotective healing NICU environment are presented to support consistent quality of care delivery across NICU settings and levels of care. This article presents a perspective on the role of neonatal therapists-occupational therapists, physical therapists, and speech-language pathologists-in the provision of elemental risk-adjusted neuroprotective care services.

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Disability activists emerged as an important influence over the first decade of the new millennium in postcommunist Central and Eastern Europe, a particularly critical time for progress in human rights and services for people with mental disabilities in that part of the world. An entrenched custodial institutional infrastructure existed for children and adults with mental disabilities in communist Central and Eastern Europe between the 1940s and the fall of communism in 1989. Activists who emerged in the subsequent postcommunist era faced multiple challenges and important new opportunities in their efforts to address human rights and quality of life for citizens with mental disabilities.

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This study reports child and family outcomes from a community-based, quasi-experimental pilot trial of that is a parent-mediated, naturalistic, developmental behavioral intervention for children with or at-risk for autism spectrum disorder developed through a research-community partnership. Community early interventionists delivered either ( = 10) or Usual Care ( = 9) to families based on Part C assigned provider. Twenty-five families participated, with children averaging 22.

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Background: Previous research has demonstrated the association between child maltreatment and household composition, with increased maltreatment risk generally present in single mother households. However, existing research does not fully examine the complexity and configuration of single mother households. In particular, less is known about important variants of single parent family structures, such as grandparents residing in the home, and the extent to which household compositions change across time.

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A concerning trend has emerged in the diagnosis and treatment of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that has a negative impact on care. Quite often, a clinician's diagnosis of ASD using DSM-5 criteria is no longer sufficient for individuals with ASD to access services. Insurance companies, school districts, and developmental disability agencies commonly require an Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS) to be eligible for services.

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The importance of warming up prior to sport competition has been highlighted in the scientific literature, with increasing attention paid to the benefits of mental warmups. The purpose of this research was to explore the possibility that a mental warmup may also benefit exercisers. Two studies were conducted in which the effects of a mental warmup on the psychological readiness and psychological stress of exercisers were examined.

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Pediatric Massage Therapy Research: A Narrative Review.

Children (Basel)

June 2019

University of Miami/Miller School of Medicine, Fielding Graduate University, 2889 McFarlane Rd, Miami, FL 33133, USA.

This narrative review on pediatric massage literature from the last decade suggests that massage therapy has positive effects on several pediatric conditions. These include preterm infant growth, psychological problems including aggression, gastrointestinal problems including constipation and diarrhea, painful conditions including burns and sickle cell, muscle tone disorders including cerebral palsy and Down syndrome, and chronic illnesses including diabetes, asthma cancer, and HIV. Potential underlying mechanisms for the massage therapy effects include increased vagal activity and decreased stress hormones.

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Potentially morally injurious experiences (PMIEs) are events that may violate deeply held values or belief systems. Combat engagement places service members at a heightened risk for PMIE exposure. Exposure to PMIEs may elicit internal conflict between moral beliefs and experiences and, if unresolved, conflict may manifest as feelings of guilt, shame, and spiritual or existential crisis.

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Background And Objectives: Major depression disorder (MDD) and social anxiety disorder (SAD) are characterized by the use of perseverative cognition (PC) as a dysfunctional coping strategy. We sought to investigate the dysfunctional physiological and psychological consequences of PC and how the valence of social interactions moderates such consequences in these psychopathological conditions.

Design/methods: The study combined 24-hour heart rate variability (HRV) and ecological momentary assessments in 48 individuals with MDD, SAD, and sex-matched controls.

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It's about Time: Effects of Physical Exertion on Duration Estimates.

J Funct Morphol Kinesiol

January 2019

Armed Forces Services Corporation, 2800 Shirlington Road # 350, Arlington, VA 22206, USA.

Background: Task duration is a fundamental aspect of exercise, but little is known about how completed bouts of physical activity are perceived. Consequently, the purpose of the five experiments conducted for this investigation was to examine the effects of engaging in physical tasks on retrospective duration estimates with college student participants.

Methods: Across the five experiments, participants were 113 college students (82 women, 31 men).

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Objective: Much of the extant literature on women with serious mental illness (SMI) has focused on the risks associated with motherhood, including violence, custody loss, poverty, and homelessness. The present study was conducted to characterize women's broader experiences surrounding the parenting role.

Method: Twenty women with SMI, both those with and without children, were interviewed.

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