7 results match your criteria: "Lyndon State College[Affiliation]"

Post-traumatic Stress and Trauma-Related Subjective Distress: Comparisons Among Hispanics, African-Americans, and Whites with Severe Mental Illness.

Community Ment Health J

October 2017

Department of Psychology and Human Services, Lyndon State College, 1001 College Rd., Lyndonville, VT, 05851, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • - The study tested whether Hispanic clients in community mental health reported more post-traumatic stress symptoms compared to African-American or white clients, considering factors like gender and existing psychiatric symptoms.
  • - Results indicated that self-identifying as Hispanic was linked to higher levels of post-traumatic stress symptoms, with sexual abuse being a significant contributing factor.
  • - The study's limitations include a relatively small sample size of 132 participants, which may affect the generalizability of the findings.
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Pharmaceuticals and other micropollutants have been detected in drinking water, groundwater, surface water, and soil around the world. Even in locations where wastewater treatment is required, they can be found in drinking water wells, municipal water supplies, and agricultural soils. It is clear conventional wastewater treatment technologies are not meeting the challenge of the mounting pressures on global freshwater supplies.

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Research on the impact of sudden or unexpected losses in people with severe mental illness is scarce. The purpose of our study was to examine the relationship between subjective distress from sudden losses in people with severe mental illness and posttraumatic stress symptoms while controlling for gender, psychiatric symptoms, and negative appraisals. As part of routine care, treatment personnel collected data from 371 community mental health clients diagnosed with a severe mental illness.

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(Black-legged Tick) has expanded its range in recent decades. To establish baseline data on the abundance of the Black-legged Tick and (causative agent of Lyme disease) at the edge of a putative range expansion we collected 1398 ticks from five locations along the Connecticut River in Vermont. Collection locations were approximately evenly distributed between the villages of Ascutney and Guildhall.

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The role of cognitive appraisal in adaptation to traumatic stress in adults with serious mental illness: a critical review.

Trauma Violence Abuse

July 2011

Department of Psychology and Human Services, Lyndon State College, Lyndonville, VT 05867, USA.

A compelling body of literature suggests that negative appraisal may be associated with adverse reactions to traumatic stress. However, very few studies have examined how appraisal influences posttraumatic adaptation in people with serious mental illness (SMI) despite evidence of disproportionately high prevalence rates of trauma exposure and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in this population. The purpose of this article is to provide a critical analysis of the theoretical and empirical literature on cognitive appraisal and psychological adaptation to traumatic stress with a specific focus on individuals diagnosed with SMI.

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