Search results for "helplessness"

showing 10 items of 29 documents

Living alone, receiving help, helplessness, and inactivity are strongly related to risk of undernutrition among older home-dwelling people

2012

Solveig T Tomstad1, Ulrika Söderhamn2, Geir Arild Espnes3, Olle Söderhamn21Department of Social Work and Health Science, Faculty of Sciences and Technology Management, NTNU, Trondheim, Norway and Centre for Caring Research – Southern Norway, Faculty of Health and Sport Sciences, University of Agder, Grimstad, Norway; 2Centre for Caring Research – Southern Norway, Faculty of Health and Sport Sciences, University of Agder, Grimstad, Norway; 3Research Centre for Health Promotion and Resources HiST-NTNU, Department of Social Work and Health Science, Faculty of Social Sciences and Technology Management, NTNU, Trondheim, NorwayBackground: Being at risk of und…

GerontologySense of CoherenceHome dwellingLearned helplessnessInternational Journal of General MedicinehjemmeboendeNorgeVDP::Medical disciplines: 700::Health sciences: 800::Nutrition: 811tverrsnittforebyggingkartleggingmattverrsnittstudieself-caremedicineeldreegenomsorgsevneernæringsstatusOriginal Researchdrikkemåltidpasientsikkerhetegenomsorglivskvalitetbusiness.industryscreeningrisikohealthGeneral Medicineopplevelse av sammenhengunderernæringmedicine.diseasePeer reviewhelseMalnutritionnutritionernæringskartleggingSelf carebusinessSense of coherenceernæring
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Self-care ability among home-dwelling older people in rural areas in southern Norway

2011

Results: A total of 780 persons were found to have higher self-care ability and 240 to have lower self-care ability using the Self-care Ability Scale for the Elderly. Self-care ability was found to be closely related to health-related issues, self-care agency, sense of coherence, nutritional state and mental health, former profession, and type of dwelling. Predictors for high self-care ability were to have higher self-care agency, not receiving family help, having low risk for undernutrition, not perceiving helplessness, being able to prepare food, being active and having lower age. Conclusions: When self-care ability is reduced in older people, caregivers have to be aware about how this ca…

Gerontologybusiness.industryRural healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthLearned helplessnessmedicine.diseaseMental healthMalnutritionScale (social sciences)Agency (sociology)medicineRural areabusinessIndependent livingScandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences
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Serotonin modulates a depression-like state in Drosophila responsive to lithium treatment

2016

Major depressive disorder (MDD) affects millions of patients; however, the pathophysiology is poorly understood. Rodent models have been developed using chronic mild stress or unavoidable punishment (learned helplessness) to induce features of depression, like general inactivity and anhedonia. Here we report a three-day vibration-stress protocol for Drosophila that reduces voluntary behavioural activity. As in many MDD patients, lithium-chloride treatment can suppress this depression-like state in flies. The behavioural changes correlate with reduced serotonin (5-HT) release at the mushroom body (MB) and can be relieved by feeding the antidepressant 5-hydroxy-L-tryptophan or sucrose, which …

Male0301 basic medicineSerotoninSucroseLithium (medication)ScienceGeneral Physics and AstronomyLearned helplessnessWalkingLithiumMotor ActivityVibrationArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology5-Hydroxytryptophan03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineStress PhysiologicalCyclic AMPAnimalsMedicineReceptorMultidisciplinaryDepressionbusiness.industryQfungiBrainAnhedoniaGeneral Chemistrymedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistryAntidepressive Agents3. Good healthDrosophila melanogaster030104 developmental biologyReceptors SerotoninMushroom bodiesAntidepressantMajor depressive disorderFemaleSerotoninmedicine.symptombusinessNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgerySignal Transductionmedicine.drugNature Communications
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Achievement strategies at school: types and correlates

2002

In this study we made an effort to identify the kinds of strategies adolescents deploy in achievement context in an unselected sample of Swedish adolescents. The participants were 880 14-15-year-old comprehensive school students (399 boys and 481 girls) from a middle-sized town in central Sweden. Six groups of adolescents were identified according to the strategies they deployed. Four of them, i.e. optimistic, defensive pessimistic, self-handicapping and learned helplessness strategies, were similar to those described previously in the literature. The results showed that membership in the functional strategy groups, such as in mastery-oriented and defensive pessimist groups, was associated …

MaleAdolescentSocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPsychology AdolescenteducationDysfunctional familyContext (language use)Learned helplessnessAcademic achievementDevelopmental psychologyComprehensive schoolAdaptation PsychologicalDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCluster AnalysisHumansPersonalityStudentsmedia_commonSwedenSocial environmentAchievementPsychiatry and Mental healthMultivariate AnalysisPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthWell-beingFemalePsychologyJournal of Adolescence
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Emotional and cognitive adjustment in abused children

1994

Research on the impact of maltreatment on children has increased in the last years, as there is a need to design appropriate treatment strategies. Social, cognitive, and emotional areas may be affected in these children. This research is aimed to study the psychological functioning of child victims, particularly in their emotional and cognitive adjustment. Nineteen children (10.3 years old) with case histories of at least 2 years of physical and emotional parental abuse and a group of 26 nonmaltreated children (9.4 years old) matched in socio-economic characteristics and coming from the same community area were compared in depressive symptomatology and attributional style by using the stand…

MaleChild abuseAdolescentPersonality Inventorymedia_common.quotation_subjectVictimologyLearned helplessnessDevelopmental psychologyLife Change EventsHelplessness LearnedAdaptation PsychologicalDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansAffective SymptomsChild AbuseChildPsychological abuseInternal-External Controlmedia_commonDepressionSelf-esteemSelf ConceptSadnessPsychiatry and Mental healthPhysical abusePediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemaleCognition DisordersPsychologyClinical psychologyCognitive styleChild Abuse & Neglect
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The role of attachment dimensions and perceived social support in predicting adjustment to cancer.

2009

Objective: Several studies carried out over the last years show that patients' adjustment is very important to the past experiences of people with cancer. In our study of 96 subjects with cancer, we examined whether patient's working model of attachment anxiety/avoidance and perceptions of social support predicts adjustment to cancer. Methods: All participants filled in a demographic questionnaire, the Relationship Scale Questionnaire (RSQ), the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS), and the Mental Adjustment to Cancer (MAC). Results: Anxious attachment predicted psychological adjustment: patients with high levels of anxious attachment showed high levels of helplessness…

MalePoison controlExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyLearned helplessnessSuicide preventionSocial supportNeoplasmsInjury preventionAdaptation PsychologicalcancerHumansPsychological testingObject AttachmentPsychological Testspsychological adjustmentSocial perceptionSocial SupportMiddle AgedObject AttachmentPsychiatry and Mental healthOncologySocial PerceptionRegression Analysisanxious attachmentFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyPsycho-oncology
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A translational paradigm to dtudy the rffects of uncontrollable stress in humans

2020

Theories on the aetiology of depression in humans are intimately linked to animal research on stressor controllability effects. However, explicit translations of established animal designs are lacking. In two consecutive studies, we developed a translational paradigm to study stressor controllability effects in humans. In the first study, we compared three groups of participants, one exposed to escapable stress, one yoked inescapable stress group, and a control group not exposed to stress. Although group differences indicated successful stress induction, the manipulation failed to differentiate groups according to controllability. In the second study, we employed an improved paradigm and co…

MalePsychological interventionLearned helplessnessTranslational Research Biomedicallcsh:ChemistryCognition0302 clinical medicineHelplessness LearnedEscape ReactionSurveys and QuestionnairesStress (linguistics)111 000 Intention & Actionlcsh:QH301-705.5Spectroscopymedia_commonlearned helplessness05 social sciencesGeneral MedicineComputer Science ApplicationsControllabilityMemory Short-TermFemalePsychological resiliencePsychologyCognitive psychologyAdultAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectEscape responseTranslational researchuncontrollable stress050105 experimental psychologyCatalysisArticleInorganic ChemistryYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMolecular BiologyresilienceAction intention and motor controlOrganic ChemistryStressorlcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999translational researchresilience ; control ; translational research ; learned helplessness ; uncontrollable stresscontrolStress Psychological030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Don’t Stress, It’s Under Control: Neural Correlates of Stressor Controllability in Humans

2021

AbstractAnimal research has repeatedly shown that experience of control over an aversive event can protect against the negative consequences of later uncontrollable stress. Neurobiologically, this effect is assumed to correspond to persistent changes in the pathway linking the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and the dorsal raphe nucleus. However, it remains unclear to what extent these findings translate to humans. During functional magnetic resonance imaging, we subjected participants to controllable and uncontrollable aversive but non-painful electric stimuli, as well as to a control condition without aversive stimulation. In each trial, a symbol signalled whether participants coul…

Neural correlates of consciousnessmedicine.diagnostic_testmedia_common.quotation_subjectStressorVentromedial prefrontal cortexContext (language use)Learned helplessnessmedicine.anatomical_structuremedicinePsychological resilienceFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychologyNeuroscienceInsulamedia_common
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Media coverage about organisations in critical situations – Analysing the impact on employees.

2013

Purpose– This research aims to investigate how critical media coverage of an organisation affects its employees. The authors expect the effects to be similar to the way media coverage about an individual would affect this person, termed “reciprocal effects”.Design/methodology/approach– Drawing on a framework for the analysis of reciprocal effects of mass media by Kepplinger and qualitative interviews among employees of 14 different organisations undergoing a crisis, the authors develop an employee-model of reciprocal effects for the context of organisational crises.Findings– This qualitative research shows that employees are affected by media coverage on a critical issue about their employe…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)business.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectShameMedia coverageLearned helplessnessInterpersonal communicationPublic relationsIndustrial relationsSociologybusinessSocial psychologyReciprocalmedia_commonQualitative researchMass media
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Entering a World with No Future: A phenomenological study describing the embodied experience of time when living with severe incurable disease

2012

This article presents findings from a phenomenological study exploring experience of time by patients living close to death. The empirical data consist of 26 open-ended interviews from 23 patients living with severe incurable disease receiving palliative care in Norway. Three aspects of experience of time were revealed as prominent: (i) Entering a world with no future; living close to death alters perception of and relationship to time. (ii) Listening to the rhythm of my body, not looking at the clock; embodied with severe illness, it is the body not the clock that structures and controls the activities of the day. (iii). Receiving time, taking time; being offered - not asked for - help is …

Phenomenology (philosophy)Harmony (color)RhythmPsychotherapistPalliative careEmbodied cognitionPerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthActive listeningLearned helplessnessPsychologymedia_commonScandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences
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