381 results on '"Berry, Jack"'
Search Results
352. Forgiveness Working: Forgiveness, Health, and Productivity in the Workplace.
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Toussaint, Loren, Worthington, Everett L., Van Tongeren, Daryl R., Hook, Joshua, Berry, Jack W., Shivy, Victoria A., Miller, Andrea J., Davis, Don E., and Worthington, Everett L Jr
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MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGY , *JOB satisfaction , *FORGIVENESS , *HUMAN behavior , *PREVENTION of psychological stress , *WORK environment & psychology , *ADAPTABILITY (Personality) , *HEALTH promotion , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *LABOR productivity , *CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Purpose: Associations between forgiveness and health promotion in the workplace were examined as mediating effects of workplace interpersonal stress.Design: Cross-sectional.Setting: Multiple Washington, DC, office-based and Midwestern manufacturing workplaces.Participants: Study 1: 108 employees (40 males and 68 females); mean age was 32.4 years. Study 2: 154 employees (14 males and 140 females); mean age was 43.9 years.Measures: Questionnaires measured forgiveness, unproductivity, absenteeism, stress, and health problems.Analysis: Bivariate and multiple correlation/regression and structural equation models were used. Indirect effects were estimated with bootstrapping methods.Results: In study 1, forgiveness of a specific workplace offense was inversely associated with unproductivity ( r = -.35, P < .001) and mental ( r = -.32, P = .001) and physical ( r = -.19, P = .044) health problems. In study 2, trait forgiveness was inversely associated with unproductivity (β = -.20, P = .016) and mental (β = -.31, P < .001) and physical health problems (β = -.28, P = .001), and workplace interpersonal stress partially mediated these associations (indirect effects = -.03, -.04, -.05, respectively).Conclusion: The association of forgiveness and occupational outcomes is robust. Forgiveness may be associated with outcomes by (at least partially) reducing stress related to workplace offenses. Forgiveness may be an effective means of coping following being emotionally hurt on the job that may promote good health, well-being, and productivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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353. Telephone-Based Problem-Solving Intervention for Family Caregivers of Stroke Survivors: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Pfeiffer, Klaus, Beische, Denis, Hautzinger, Martin, Berry, Jack W., Wengert, Julia, Hoffrichter, Ruth, Becker, Clemens, van Schayck, Rudolf, and Elliott, Timothy R.
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CAREGIVERS , *STROKE patients , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MENTAL depression , *TELEPHONE interviewing - Abstract
Objective: Intervention trials for stroke caregivers after the early poststroke period are lacking. To address this gap, we examined the effectiveness of a problem-solving intervention (PSI) for stroke caregivers who provided care for at least 6 months and who experienced significant strain in their role. Method: One hundred twenty-two family caregivers (age = 66.2 years, 77.9% female) were randomly allocated to a PSI or control group. The PSI was composed of 2 home visits and 18 telephone calls delivered over a 3-month intensive intervention and a 9-month maintenance period. PSI and control groups received monthly information letters in addition to usual care. Primary caregiver outcomes were depressive symptoms (measure: Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale) and sense of competence (measure: Sense of Competence Questionnaire). Results: In covariance analyses, caregivers of the PSI group showed significantly lower levels of depressive symptoms after 3 months (p < .01, d = -.4 8 ) and after 12 months (p < .05, d = -.3 7 ), but no better sense of competence compared with the control group. Latent growth curve analyses revealed positive significant (p < .05) linear and quadratic effects of PSI on both primary outcomes. No effects, however, were found on caregiver social-problem-solving abilities. Conclusions: Although beneficial effects were observed among caregivers in the PSI group, the lack of effects on problem-solving abilities implies other characteristics of the intervention might account for these benefits. The relative intensity and therapeutic contact during the first 3 months of the intervention may be particularly helpful to caregivers of stroke survivors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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354. Family Satisfaction Predicts Life Satisfaction Trajectories Over the First 5 Years After Traumatic Brain Injury.
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Johnson, Caitlin L., Resch, J. Aaron, Elliott, Timothy R., Villarreal, Victor, Oi-Man Kwok, Underhill, Andrea T., and Berry, Jack W.
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DISABILITIES , *MARITAL status , *FAMILIES , *QUALITY of life , *BRAIN injuries , *PATIENTS , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) - Abstract
Objectives: Examined the influence of functional impairment, stable marital status, and family satisfaction on life satisfaction trajectories for 609 individuals (435 men, 174 women) over the first 5 years after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Measures: Participants completed the Family Satisfaction Scale (FSS), Functional Independence Measure (FIM), and the Life Satisfaction Index (LSI) at years 1, 2, 4, and 5 after sustaining a TBI. Results: Trajectory modeling revealed that higher family satisfaction was associated with increases in life satisfaction for individuals with less functional impairment. Stable marital status was not significantly associated with life satisfaction trajectories. Implications: Family satisfaction appears to have pronounced beneficial effects on life satisfaction for persons with less functional impairment after TBI regardless of marital status. In contrast, a stable marriage appears to have no apparent benefits to self-reported life satisfaction over the first 5 years post-TBI. Theoretical and clinical implications of these results are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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355. Trajectories of Life Satisfaction in the First 5 Years Following Traumatic Brain Injury.
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Resch, J. Aaron, Villarreal, Victor, Johnson, Caitlin L., Elliott, Timothy R., Oi-Man Kwok, Berry, Jack W., and Underhill, Andrea T.
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PATIENT satisfaction , *BRAIN injuries , *FUNCTIONAL independence measure , *MEDICAL rehabilitation , *MULTILEVEL models - Abstract
Objectives: The trajectories of life satisfaction for 609 individuals who sustained a traumatic brain injury (TBI) were studied. Hierarchical linear modeling analysis examined individual level growth trends over the first 5 years following TBI using gender, functional independence, age, and time to estimate life satisfaction trajectories. Measures: Participants completed the Functional Independence Measure and the Life Satisfaction Inventory at years 1, 2, 4, and 5 after sustaining TBI. Results: Participants who reported higher functional independence at year 1 also had higher life satisfaction at year 1. Participants with lower functional independence across the 5-year period had life satisfaction trajectories that decreased at significantly greater rates than the individuals with more functional independence. The life satisfaction trajectory declined for the sample, but participants reporting lower cognitive and motor functional independence had significantly greater declines in life satisfaction trajectories. Age and gender were not significant factors in predicting life satisfaction trajectories following TBI. Implications: Individuals with greater cognitive and motor impairments following TBI are likely to experience significant declines in life satisfaction within 5 years of living with TBI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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356. The Religious Commitment Inventory—10: Development, Refinement, and Validation of a Brief Scale for Research and Counseling.
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Worthington Jr., Everett L., Wade, Nathaniel G., Hight, Terry L., McCullough, Michael E., Berry, James T., Ripley, Jennifer S., Berry, Jack W., Schmitt, Michelle M., Bursley, Kevin H., and O'Connor, Lynn
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CHURCH attendance , *COUNSELING , *COLLEGE students - Abstract
The authors report the development of the Religious Commitment Inventory—10 (RCI-10), used in 6 studies. Sample sizes were 155, 132, and 150 college students; 240 Christian church-attending married adults; 468 undergraduates including (among others) Buddhists (n = 52), Muslims (n = 12), Hindus (n = 10), and nonreligious (n = 117); and 217 clients and 52 counselors in a secular or 1 of 6 religious counseling agencies. Scores on the RCI-10 had strong estimated internal consistency, 3-week and 5-month test-retest reliability, construct validity, and discriminant validity. Exploratory (Study 1) and confirmatory (Studies 4 and 6) factor analyses identified 2 highly correlated factors, suggesting a 1-factor structure as most parsimonious. Religious commitment predicted response to an imagined robbery (Study 2), marriage (Study 4), and counseling (Study 6). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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357. Decoding the molecular crosstalk between grafted stem cells and the stroke-injured brain.
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Azevedo-Pereira RL, Manley NC, Dong C, Zhang Y, Lee AG, Zatulovskaia Y, Gupta V, Vu J, Han S, Berry JE, Bliss TM, and Steinberg GK
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- 2023
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358. The leadership and followership challenges of doctors in training during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Boardman N, Munro-Berry J, and McKimm J
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- Career Mobility, Cooperative Behavior, Humans, Patient Care Team organization & administration, SARS-CoV-2, Social Skills, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Education, Medical methods, Education, Medical trends, Leadership, Medical Staff, Hospital education, Medical Staff, Hospital psychology, Medical Staff, Hospital standards, Teaching trends
- Abstract
Research carried out in 2016 by the authors investigated the challenges that doctors in training experience around leadership and followership in the NHS. The study explored contemporary healthcare leadership culture and the role of followership from the perspective of early career doctors. It found that the leadership and followership challenges for these doctors in training were associated with issues of social and professional identity, communication, the medical hierarchy, and relationships with senior colleagues (support and trust). These challenges were exacerbated by the busy and turbulent clinical environment in which they worked. To cope with various clinical situations and forms of leadership, doctors in training engage in a range of different followership behaviours and strategies. The study raised implications for medical education and training and suggested that followership should be included as part of formal training in communication and team working skills. The importance of both leadership and followership in the delivery of safe and effective patient care has been brought sharply into focus by the COVID-19 pandemic. This article revisits these challenges in light of the pandemic and its impact on the experiences of doctors in training.
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- 2021
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359. Contextual fear memory retrieval by correlated ensembles of ventral CA1 neurons.
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Jimenez JC, Berry JE, Lim SC, Ong SK, Kheirbek MA, and Hen R
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- Algorithms, Amygdala metabolism, Animals, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, CA1 Region, Hippocampal metabolism, Fear physiology, Memory physiology
- Abstract
Ventral hippocampal CA1 (vCA1) projections to the amygdala are necessary for contextual fear memory. Here we used in vivo Ca
2+ imaging in mice to assess the temporal dynamics by which ensembles of vCA1 neurons mediate encoding and retrieval of contextual fear memories. We found that a subset of vCA1 neurons were responsive to the aversive shock during context conditioning, their activity was necessary for memory encoding, and these shock-responsive neurons were enriched in the vCA1 projection to the amygdala. During memory retrieval, a population of vCA1 neurons became correlated with shock-encoding neurons, and the magnitude of synchronized activity within this population was proportional to memory strength. The emergence of these correlated networks was disrupted by inhibiting vCA1 shock responses during memory encoding. Thus, our findings suggest that networks of cells that become correlated with shock-responsive neurons in vCA1 are essential components of contextual fear memory ensembles.- Published
- 2020
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360. A Genetic Screen To Assess Dopamine Receptor (DopR1) Dependent Sleep Regulation in Drosophila.
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Jiang Y, Pitmon E, Berry J, Wolf FW, McKenzie Z, and Lebestky TJ
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- Animals, Animals, Genetically Modified, Behavior, Animal, Brain metabolism, Dopamine metabolism, Dopaminergic Neurons metabolism, Gene Knockout Techniques, Genetic Testing, Genotype, Male, Mushroom Bodies metabolism, Mutation, Drosophila physiology, Receptors, Dopamine genetics, Sleep genetics
- Abstract
Sleep is an essential behavioral state of rest that is regulated by homeostatic drives to ensure a balance of sleep and activity, as well as independent arousal mechanisms in the central brain. Dopamine has been identified as a critical regulator of both sleep behavior and arousal. Here, we present results of a genetic screen that selectively restored the Dopamine Receptor (DopR/DopR1/dumb) to specific neuroanatomical regions of the adult Drosophila brain to assess requirements for DopR in sleep behavior. We have identified subsets of the mushroom body that utilizes DopR in daytime sleep regulation. These data are supported by multiple examples of spatially restricted genetic rescue data in discrete circuits of the mushroom body, as well as immunohistochemistry that corroborates the localization of DopR protein within mushroom body circuits. Independent loss of function data using an inducible RNAi construct in the same specific circuits also supports a requirement for DopR in daytime sleep. Additional circuit activation of discrete DopR
+ mushroom body neurons also suggests roles for these subpopulations in sleep behavior. These conclusions support a new separable function for DopR in daytime sleep regulation within the mushroom body. This daytime regulation is independent of the known role of DopR in nighttime sleep, which is regulated within the Fan-Shaped Body (FSB). This study provides new neuroanatomical loci for exploration of dopaminergic sleep functions in Drosophila, and expands our understanding of sleep regulation during the day vs. night., (Copyright © 2016 Jiang et al.)- Published
- 2016
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361. Does participation mediate the prospective relationships of impairment, injury severity, and pain to quality of life following burn injury?
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Elliott TR, Berry JW, Nguyen HM, Williamson ML, Kalpinski RJ, Underhill AT, and Fine PR
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Burns pathology, Burns physiopathology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Young Adult, Burns psychology, Health Status, Pain psychology, Personal Satisfaction, Quality of Life psychology, Severity of Illness Index, Social Participation psychology, Survivors psychology
- Abstract
We examined the prospective impact of injury severity, functional impairment, and pain on participation in the community and subsequently on life satisfaction and self-rated health of 260 burn survivors 5 years post-discharge. Predictor variables include injury severity and total body surface area burned (assessed during acute care), functional independence (assessed at 12 months post-discharge), pain (assessed at the 24th month), and participation (assessed at the 48th month). Participation predicted life satisfaction and self-rated health. Functional independence and injury severity had significant indirect influences on adjustment via their influence on participation. Pain predicted both outcome variables. Clinical and research implications are discussed., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2016
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362. Forgiveness-reconciliation and communication-conflict-resolution interventions versus retested controls in early married couples.
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Worthington EL Jr, Berry JW, Hook JN, Davis DE, Scherer M, Griffin BJ, Wade NG, Yarhouse M, Ripley JS, Miller AJ, Sharp CB, Canter DE, and Campana KL
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- Adult, Decision Making, Female, Humans, Male, Communication, Empathy, Forgiveness, Marriage psychology, Negotiating, Spouses psychology
- Abstract
The first 6 months of marriage are optimal for marriage enrichment interventions. The Hope-Focused Approach to couple enrichment was presented as two 9-hr interventions--(a) Handling Our Problems Effectively (HOPE), which emphasized communication and conflict resolution, and (b) Forgiveness and Reconciliation through Experiencing Empathy (FREE). HOPE and FREE were compared with repeated assessment controls. Couples were randomly assigned and were assessed at pretreatment (t1); 1 month posttreatment (t2) and at 3- (t3), 6- (t4), and 12-month (t5) follow-ups using self-reports. In addition to self-report measures, couples were assessed at t1, t2, and t5 using salivary cortisol, and behavioral coding of decision making. Of 179 couples who began the study, 145 cases were analyzed. Both FREE and HOPE produced lasting positive changes on self-reports. For cortisol reactivity, HOPE and FREE reduced reactivity at t2, but only HOPE at t5. For coded behaviors, control couples deteriorated; FREE and HOPE did not change. Enrichment training was effective regardless of the focus of the training., (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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363. Resilience in the initial year of caregiving for a family member with a traumatic spinal cord injury.
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Elliott TR, Berry JW, Richards JS, and Shewchuk RM
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- Activities of Daily Living, Adult, Aged, Chronic Disease, Family Conflict, Female, Health Status, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self Report, Severity of Illness Index, Time Factors, Adaptation, Psychological, Anxiety etiology, Caregivers psychology, Depression etiology, Negativism, Resilience, Psychological, Social Support, Spinal Cord Injuries nursing
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Objective: Individuals who assume caregiving duties for a family member disabled in a traumatic injury often exhibit considerable distress, yet few studies have examined characteristics of those who may be resilient in the initial year of caregiving. Reasoning from the influential Pearlin model of caregiving (Pearlin & Aneshensel, 1994) and the resilience process model (Bonanno, 2005), we expected a significant minority of caregivers would be chronically distressed and another group would be resilient throughout the inaugural year of caregiving for a person with a traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI), and these groups would differ significantly in primary and secondary stress and in personal resources and mediators., Method: Twenty men and 108 women who identified as caregivers for a family member who incurred a traumatic SCI consented to complete measures during the inpatient rehabilitation and at 1 month, 6 months, and 12 months postdischarge., Results: Latent growth mixture modeling of depression symptoms over time revealed 3 groups of caregivers: chronic (24%), recovery (24%) and resilient (48%). The chronic group reported more anxiety, negative affect, and ill health than the other 2 groups throughout the year. The resilient group was best characterized by their enduring levels of positive affect and supportive social networks., Conclusions: A large percentage of individuals are resilient in the initial year of caregiving, and those who have problems adapting exhibit significant distress soon following the traumatic event. Early detection of and psychological interventions for individuals who have difficulty adjusting are indicated, as their distress is unlikely to abate untreated over the year.
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- 2014
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364. Predicting quality of life 5 years after medical discharge for traumatic spinal cord injury.
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Erosa NA, Berry JW, Elliott TR, Underhill AT, and Fine PR
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- Activities of Daily Living psychology, Adult, Family psychology, Female, Health Status, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Pain psychology, Personal Satisfaction, Time Factors, Quality of Life psychology, Spinal Cord Injuries psychology
- Abstract
Objectives: This study tested an a priori contextual model of the mediating effects of participation on the predictive relationships of functional impairment, family satisfaction, and pain to quality of life (QoL) following traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI)., Design: A longitudinal design was used to study 144 persons following discharge for traumatic SCI. Predictor variables included functional impairment and family satisfaction (at 12 months post-discharge) and the presence of pain (at 24 months), and mediating variables were two indicators of participation (assessed 48 months post-discharge). Life satisfaction and self-rated health status at 60 months post-discharge were the outcome variables., Methods: A path model tested hypothesized prospective effects of functional impairment, family satisfaction and pain on participation and the subsequent effects of participation on the QoL variables., Results: Greater functional impairment and pain were predictive of less participation, and participation significantly predicted both indicators of QoL. The two participation variables mediated the relationship of functional impairment and pain to life satisfaction over time. Family satisfaction had an indirect effect on QoL through its association with social integration., Conclusions: Participation appears to mediate the prospective influence of functional impairment, family satisfaction, and pain on QoL in the years following SCI. These findings provide insight into factors that can predict QoL post-SCI and support the use of contextual models to understand the temporal influence of disability and psychological variables on participation and subsequent QoL., Statement of Contribution: What is already known on this subject? Life satisfaction and self-rated health status are important aspects of quality of life following traumatic spinal cord injury. Functional impairment has been inconsistently predictive of these variables over time. Prospective research to date has not examined the mediating effects of participation in predicting quality of life. What does this study add? The results indicate that greater functional impairment and pain are prospectively predictive of lower participation. Greater participation, in turn, is prospectively predictive of greater quality of life. Participation appears to mediate the prospective influence of functional impairment, family satisfaction, and pain to quality of life., (© 2013 The British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2014
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365. Trajectories of life satisfaction five years after medical discharge for traumatically acquired disability.
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Hernandez CL, Elliott TR, Berry JW, Underhill AT, Fine PR, and Lai MH
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Disabled Persons statistics & numerical data, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Marriage psychology, Middle Aged, Recovery of Function physiology, Young Adult, Attitude to Health, Disabled Persons psychology, Disabled Persons rehabilitation, Family psychology, Personal Satisfaction, Quality of Life psychology
- Abstract
Objectives: We studied the predictive impact of family satisfaction, marital status, and functional impairment on the trajectories of life satisfaction over the first 5 years following medical treatment for traumatic spinal cord injury, burns, or interarticular fractures (total N = 662). It was anticipated that fewer functional impairments, being married, and greater family satisfaction would predict higher life satisfaction trajectories., Method: The Functional Independence Measure, the Family Satisfaction Scale, and the Life Satisfaction Index were administered 12, 24, 48, and 60 months postdischarge., Results: Trajectory modeling revealed that greater functional impairment significantly predicted lower life satisfaction, regardless of injury type. However, this association diminished when marital status and family satisfaction were entered into the models. Greater family satisfaction and being married predicted greater life satisfaction across time. Moreover, there was no evidence for increases in life satisfaction trajectories over time: Trajectories were stable across time for all injury groups., Conclusions: Results suggest that being married and greater family satisfaction promote life satisfaction among those who traumatically acquire disability, and these beneficial effects may be more salient than the degree of functional impairment imposed by the condition., ((c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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366. Does problem-solving training for family caregivers benefit their care recipients with severe disabilities? A latent growth model of the Project CLUES randomized clinical trial.
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Berry JW, Elliott TR, Grant JS, Edwards G, and Fine PR
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Caregivers psychology, Cost of Illness, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Depressive Disorder rehabilitation, Disability Evaluation, Disabled Persons psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Status Schedule, Middle Aged, Quality of Life psychology, Statistics as Topic, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Young Adult, Caregivers education, Disabled Persons rehabilitation, Problem Solving
- Abstract
Objective: To examine whether an individualized problem-solving intervention provided to family caregivers of persons with severe disabilities provides benefits to both caregivers and their care recipients., Design: Family caregivers were randomly assigned to an education-only control group or a problem-solving training (PST) intervention group. Participants received monthly contacts for 1 year., Participants: Family caregivers (129 women, 18 men) and their care recipients (81 women, 66 men) consented to participate., Main Outcome Measures: Caregivers completed the Social Problem-Solving Inventory-Revised, the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression scale, the Satisfaction with Life scale, and a measure of health complaints at baseline and in 3 additional assessments throughout the year. Care recipient depression was assessed with a short form of the Hamilton Depression Scale., Results: Latent growth modeling was used to analyze data from the dyads. Caregivers who received PST reported a significant decrease in depression over time, and they also displayed gains in constructive problem-solving abilities and decreases in dysfunctional problem-solving abilities. Care recipients displayed significant decreases in depression over time, and these decreases were significantly associated with decreases in caregiver depression in response to training., Conclusions: PST significantly improved the problem-solving skills of community-residing caregivers and also lessened their depressive symptoms. Care recipients in the PST group also had reductions in depression over time, and it appears that decreases in caregiver depression may account for this effect., (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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367. Massage Therapy Produces Short-term Improvements in Balance, Neurological, and Cardiovascular Measures in Older Persons.
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Sefton JM, Yarar C, and Berry JW
- Abstract
Background: Falls are the primary cause of accidental death in older persons, producing increased morbidity, decreased independence, and billions in medical costs annually. Massage therapy (MT) may produce adaptations that decrease risk of falling. If MT can improve stability in older persons, it may provide a new intervention for this issue., Purpose: Determine the acute effects of a 60-minute MT treatment on static and functional balance, neurological measures, heart rate, and blood pressure in healthy, older individuals., Setting: Laboratory, Research Design: A 2 by 4 (treatment by time) mixed factorial experimental design for the cardiovascular and postural control variables; independent variables were treatment with two levels (control, MT) and time with four levels (pretreatment baseline, immediate post-treatment, 20-minute post-treatment, 60-minute post-treatment). Neurological measures utilized a 2 by 2 mixed design, with testing conducted pre- and 60-minutes post-treatment., Participants: Thirty-five healthy, older volunteers (19 male and 16 female; ages 62.9 ± 4.6)., Intervention: A 60-minute full-body therapeutic massage. The control group rested quietly in the treatment room., Main Outcome Measures: Static (double-legged) and functional (single-legged) postural control with eyes-open and eyes-closed; Hoffmann-reflex measures; heart rate, and systolic and diastolic blood pressure., Results: MT significantly decreased rectangular displacement area in both the eyes-open and eyes-closed, double-legged stance conditions (p < 0.05); displacement velocity in both eyes-open conditions (p < .05); and systolic and diastolic blood pressure (p < .05), while increasing heart rate (p < .05). MT also significantly lowered H(max)/M(max) ratios compared to controls (p = .002). Decreased H(max)/M(max) measures were correlated to improved stability., Conclusions: A single, 60-minute, full-body massage therapy treatment was shown to have a stabilizing effect on measures of static and dynamic balance and physiological factors related to stability in older adults. MT should be investigated as a potential intervention to decrease falls in older individuals.
- Published
- 2012
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368. Six weeks of massage therapy produces changes in balance, neurological and cardiovascular measures in older persons.
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Sefton JM, Yarar C, and Berry JW
- Abstract
Objectives: Falls in older adults represent a primary cause of decreased mobility and independence, increased morbidity, and accidental death. Research and clinical reports indicate that therapeutic massage (TM) may positively influence suggested causative factors. The second in a two-part study, this project assessed the effects of six weeks of TM treatment on balance, nervous system, and cardiovascular measures in older adults., Design: A randomized controlled trial assessed the effects of six weekly 60-minute sessions of TM on balance, cardiovascular, and nervous system measures. Thirty-five volunteers (19 male and 16 female; ages 62.9 ± 4.6) were randomly assigned to relaxation control or TM groups. A 2 × 4 [treatment condition X time (week 1 and 6)] mixed factorial experimental design was utilized for cardiovascular/balance variables assessed at pretreatment baseline, immediate post-treatment, and 20- and 60-minutes post-treatment; nervous system measures were assessed only at pretreatment and at 60-minute follow-up (2 × 2 mixed design). Long-term benefits were assessed by comparing the TM and control groups on pretreatment baseline measures at week six and a follow-up assessment at week seven (2 × 3 mixed design)., Setting: Laboratory, Intervention: Six weekly 60-minute, full-body TM., Outcome Measures: Postural control/cardiovascular measures were assessed weeks one, six, and seven; pretreatment and immediate, 20- and 60-minutes post-treatment. Motoneuron pool excitability was assessed pretreatment and 60 minutes post-treatment., Results: The TM group showed significant differences relative to controls in cardiovascular and displacement area/velocity after the week six session, with decreasing blood pressure and increasing stability over time from immediate post-TM to 60 minutes post-TM. The TM group revealed lower H-max/M-max ratios 60-minutes post-treatment. Long-term differences between the groups were detected at week seven in displacement area/velocity and systolic blood pressure., Conclusions: Results suggest six weeks of TM resulted in immediate and long-term improvements in postural stability and blood pressure, compared to a controlled condition.
- Published
- 2012
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369. Physiological and clinical changes after therapeutic massage of the neck and shoulders.
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Sefton JM, Yarar C, Carpenter DM, and Berry JW
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- Adult, Cross-Over Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Musculoskeletal Diseases diagnostic imaging, Musculoskeletal Diseases physiopathology, Neck Muscles diagnostic imaging, Range of Motion, Articular, Shoulder diagnostic imaging, Ultrasonography, Young Adult, Massage methods, Musculoskeletal Diseases therapy, Neck Muscles physiology, Shoulder physiology
- Abstract
Little is known regarding the physiological and clinical effects of therapeutic massage (TM) even though it is often prescribed for musculoskeletal complaints such as chronic neck pain. This study investigated the influence of a standardized clinical neck/shoulder TM intervention on physiological measures assessing α-motoneurone pool excitability, muscle activity; and the clinical measure of range of motion (ROM) compared to a light touch and control intervention. Flexor carpi radialis (FCR) α-motoneurone pool excitability (Hoffmann reflex), electromyography (EMG) signal amplitude of the upper trapezius during maximal muscle activity, and cervical ROM were used to assess possible physiological changes and clinical effects of TM. Sixteen healthy adults participated in three, 20 min interventions: control (C), light touch (LT) and therapeutic massage (TM). Analysis of Covariance indicated a decrease in FCR α-motoneurone pool excitability after TM, compared to both the LT (p = 0.0003) or C (p = 0.0007) interventions. EMG signal amplitude decreased after TM by 13% (p < 0.0001), when compared to the control, and 12% (p < 0.0001) as compared to LT intervention. The TM intervention produced increases in cervical ROM in all directions assessed: flexion (p < 0.0001), lateral flexion (p < 0.0001), extension (p < 0.0001), and rotation (p < 0.0001). TM of the neck/shoulders reduced the α-motoneurone pool excitability of the flexor carpi radialis after TM, but not after the LT or C interventions. Moreover, decreases in the normalized EMG amplitude during MVIC of the upper trapezius muscle; and increases in cervical ROM in all directions assessed occurred after TM, but not after the LT or C interventions., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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370. Six weeks of balance training improves sensorimotor function in individuals with chronic ankle instability.
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Sefton JM, Yarar C, Hicks-Little CA, Berry JW, and Cordova ML
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- Adult, Chronic Disease, Electromyography, Female, H-Reflex physiology, Humans, Joint Instability physiopathology, Male, Motor Neurons physiology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Ankle Joint physiopathology, Joint Instability therapy, Physical Therapy Modalities, Postural Balance physiology, Proprioception physiology
- Abstract
Study Design: Prospective cohort study., Objective: To assess the effect of 6 weeks of balance training on sensorimotor measures previously found to be deficient in participants with chronic ankle instability (CAI)., Background: CAI is the tendency toward repeated ankle sprains and recurring symptoms, occurring in 40% to 70% of individuals who have previously sustained a lateral ankle sprain. Recent studies have found deficits in sensorimotor measures in individuals with CAI. As balance training is a common component of ankle rehabilitation, understanding its effect on the sensorimotorsystem in individuals with CAI may enable us to optimize protocols to better utilize this rehabilitation method., Methods: Twelve participants with CAI and 9 healthy volunteers participated. Independent variables were group (CAI, control) and time (pretraining, posttraining). Participants with CAI who completed a 6-week balance training program and healthy controls who did not get any training were pretested and posttested at the beginning and at the end of 6 weeks., Results: The individuals in the CAI group who performed balance training demonstrated better performance than control participants on baseline adjusted posttraining measures of dynamic balance in the anterior medial (P = .021), medial (P = .048), and posterior medial directions (P = .030); motoneuron pool excitability Hmax/Mmax ratio (P = .044) and single-limb presynaptic inhibition (P = .012); and joint position sense inversion variable error (P = .017). It may be of note that no systematic differences were detected for static balance or plantar flexion joint position sense tasks., Conclusions: After 6 weeks of balance training, individuals with CAI demonstrated enhanced dynamic balance, inversion joint position sense, and changes in motoneuron pool excitability compared to healthy controls who did not train., Level of Evidence: Therapy, level 2b.
- Published
- 2011
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371. On the form and function of forgiving: modeling the time-forgiveness relationship and testing the valuable relationships hypothesis.
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McCullough ME, Luna LR, Berry JW, Tabak BA, and Bono G
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- Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Motivation, Nonlinear Dynamics, Personality, Psychological Tests, Time Factors, Young Adult, Interpersonal Relations, Models, Psychological
- Abstract
In two studies, the authors sought to identify the mathematical function underlying the temporal course of forgiveness. A logarithmic model outperformed linear, exponential, power, hyperbolic, and exponential-power models. The logarithmic function implies a psychological process yielding diminishing returns, corresponds to the Weber-Fechner law, and is functionally similar to the power law underlying the psychophysical function (Stevens, 1971) and the forgetting function (Wixted & Ebbesen, 1997). By 3 months after their transgressions, the typical participant's forgiveness had increased by two log-odds units. Individual differences in rates of change were correlated with robust predictors of forgiveness. Consistent with evolutionary theorizing (McCullough, 2008), Study 2 revealed that forgiveness was uniquely associated with participants' perceptions that their relationships with their offenders retained value.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
372. Verbal and physical abuse experienced by family caregivers of adults with severe disabilities.
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Erosa NA, Elliott TR, Berry JW, and Grant JS
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine reports of verbal and physical abuse from family caregivers of adults with severe physical, neurological and developmental disabilities, and examine possible associations of abuse with family caregiver adjustment. DESIGN: Cross-sectional. PARTICIPANTS: 147 community-residing caregivers (129 women, 18 men) of adults with disabilities (66 men, 81 women). MEASURES: Caregiver burden, life satisfaction, depression, health complaints, supervision provided to a family member with a disability, and care-recipient agitation and functional impairment. A brief measure of verbal and physical abuse experienced over the previous year was administered to the caregiver. RESULTS: 51% of the sample reported some form of abuse in the twelve months prior to assessment. Caregivers who reported some form of abuse reported significantly greater distress and burden than caregivers who did not report any abuse. CONCLUSIONS: Caregivers who experience verbal and physical abuse may be at risk for increased emotional difficulties and have a greater sense of caregiver burden than caregivers who do not experience abuse. These data indicate that clinicians should attend to incidents of verbal and physical abuse that may occur between caregiver - care-recipient dyads. Further research is required to determine the conditions under which such abuse is likely to occur.
- Published
- 2010
373. Configural approaches to temperament assessment: implications for predicting risk of unintentional injury in children.
- Author
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Berry JW and Schwebel DC
- Subjects
- Accidents classification, Alabama epidemiology, Child, Child Behavior classification, Cluster Analysis, Extraversion, Psychological, Female, Humans, Introversion, Psychological, Iowa epidemiology, Male, Prevalence, Risk Assessment methods, Risk Factors, Wounds and Injuries classification, Accident Proneness, Accidents statistics & numerical data, Child Behavior psychology, Temperament classification, Wounds and Injuries epidemiology
- Abstract
This study used two configural approaches to understand how temperament factors (surgency/extraversion, negative affect, and effortful control) might predict child injury risk. In the first approach, clustering procedures were applied to trait dimensions to identify discrete personality prototypes. In the second approach, two- and three-way trait interactions were considered dimensionally in regression models predicting injury outcomes. Injury risk was assessed through four measures: lifetime prevalence of injuries requiring professional medical attention, scores on the Injury Behavior Checklist, and frequency and severity of injuries reported in a 2-week injury diary. In the prototype analysis, three temperament clusters were obtained, which resembled resilient, overcontrolled, and undercontrolled types found in previous research. Undercontrolled children had greater risk of injury than children in the other groups. In the dimensional interaction analyses, an interaction between surgency/extraversion and negative affect tended to predict injury, especially when children lacked capacity for effortful control.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
374. Problem-solving training for family caregivers of women with disabilities: a randomized clinical trial.
- Author
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Elliott TR, Berry JW, and Grant JS
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Caregivers psychology, Female, Home Nursing education, Home Nursing psychology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Psychometrics, Caregivers education, Disabled Persons, Problem Solving
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the effectiveness of an individualized problem-solving intervention provided to family caregivers of women living with severe disabilities., Design: Family caregivers were randomly assigned to an education-only control group or a problem-solving training (PST) intervention group. Participants received monthly contacts for 1year., Participants: Family caregivers (64 women, 17 men) and their care recipients (81 women with various disabilities) consented to participate., Main Outcome Measures: Caregivers completed the Social Problem-Solving Inventory - Revised, the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression scale, the Satisfaction with Life scale, and a measure of health complaints at baseline and in three additional assessments throughout the year., Results: Multilevel modeling was used to conduct intent-to-treat analyses of change trajectories for each outcome variable. Caregivers who received PST reported a significant linear decrease in depression over time; no effects were observed for caregiver health or life satisfaction. Caregivers who received PST also displayed an increase in constructive problem-solving styles over the year., Conclusions: PST may benefit community-residing family caregivers of women with disabilities, and it may be effectively provided in home-based sessions that include face-to-face visits and telephone sessions.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
375. Efficient assessment of social problem-solving abilities in medical and rehabilitation settings: a Rasch analysis of the Social Problem-Solving Inventory-Revised.
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Dreer LE, Berry J, Rivera P, Snow M, Elliott TR, Miller D, and Little TD
- Subjects
- Aged, Caregivers psychology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diabetes Mellitus psychology, Diabetes Mellitus rehabilitation, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Rehabilitation Centers, Reproducibility of Results, Social Adjustment, Vision, Low psychology, Vision, Low rehabilitation, Disabled Persons psychology, Problem Solving, Psychological Tests, Psychometrics methods, Self-Assessment
- Abstract
The Social Problem Solving Inventory-Revised Scale (SPSI-R) has been shown to be a reliable and valid self-report measure of social problem-solving abilities. In busy medical and rehabilitation settings, a brief and efficient screening version with psychometric properties similar to the SPSI-R would have numerous benefits including decreased patient and caregiver assessment burden and administration/scoring time. Thus, the aim of the current study was to identify items from the SPSI-R that would provide for a more efficient assessment of global social problem-solving abilities. This study consisted of three independent samples: 121 persons in low-vision rehabilitation (M age=71 years old, SD=15.53), 301 persons living with diabetes mellitus (M age=58, and SD=14.85), and 131 family caregivers of persons with severe disabilities (M age=56 years old, SD=12.15). All persons completed a version of the SPSI-R, Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), and the Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS). Using Rasch scaling of the SPSI-R short-form, we identified a subset of 10 items that reflected the five-component model of social problem solving. The 10 items were separately validated on the sample of persons living with diabetes mellitus and the sample of family caregivers of persons with severe disabilities. Results indicate that the efficient 10-item version, analyzed separately for all three samples, demonstrated good reliability and validity characteristics similar to the established SPSI-R short form. The 10-item version of the SPSI-R represents a brief, effective way in which clinicians and researchers in busy health care settings can quickly assess global problem-solving abilities and identify those persons at-risk for complicated adjustment. Implications for the assessment of social problem-solving abilities are discussed.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
376. Brief problem-solving training for family caregivers of persons with recent-onset spinal cord injuries: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Elliott TR and Berry JW
- Subjects
- Adult, Caregivers psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, United States, Caregivers education, Problem Solving, Spinal Cord Injuries nursing
- Abstract
Our objective was to examine the effectiveness of a brief individualized problem-solving intervention for family with caregivers of persons with recent-onset spinal cord injury (SCI). Family caregivers were randomly assigned to a usual care control group (N=30) or an intervention group (N=30) in which participants were to receive three face-to-face problem-solving training sessions (PST), educational materials, and telephone contacts as requested over the first year of caregiving. The participants included 60 caregivers (49 women, 11 men). The Social Problem-Solving Inventory-Revised, the Inventory to Diagnose Depression, and the SF-36 were administered at baseline, 6 months and 12 months. Caregivers in the intervention group reported a significant decrease in dysfunctional problem-solving styles scores over time; there were no observable effects for PST on caregiver depression. There was also some indication that the intervention had beneficial effects on caregiver social and physical functioning. An intervention for new caregivers featuring brief PST, education, and contact may be associated with lower dysfunctional problem-solving styles over time and may promote certain aspects of caregiver quality of life. We also discuss limitations and implications of the present study.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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377. Analyzing Longitudinal Data with Multilevel Models: An Example with Individuals Living with Lower Extremity Intra-articular Fractures.
- Author
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Kwok OM, Underhill AT, Berry JW, Luo W, Elliott TR, and Yoon M
- Abstract
The use and quality of longitudinal research designs has increased over the past two decades, and new approaches for analyzing longitudinal data, including multi-level modeling (MLM) and latent growth modeling (LGM), have been developed. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the use of MLM and its advantages in analyzing longitudinal data. Data from a sample of individuals with intra-articular fractures of the lower extremity from the University of Alabama at Birmingham's Injury Control Research Center is analyzed using both SAS PROC MIXED and SPSS MIXED. We start our presentation with a discussion of data preparation for MLM analyses. We then provide example analyses of different growth models, including a simple linear growth model and a model with a time-invariant covariate, with interpretation for all the parameters in the models. More complicated growth models with different between- and within-individual covariance structures and nonlinear models are discussed. Finally, information related to MLM analysis such as online resources is provided at the end of the paper.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
378. Problem-solving training for family caregivers of persons with traumatic brain injuries: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Rivera PA, Elliott TR, Berry JW, and Grant JS
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Middle Aged, Brain Injuries nursing, Caregivers education, Caregivers psychology, Problem Solving
- Abstract
Objective: To test the hypothesis that a problem-solving training program would lower depression, health complaints, and burden, and increase well-being reported by community-residing family caregivers of persons with traumatic brain injuries (TBIs)., Design: Randomized controlled trial., Setting: General community., Participants: Of the 180 people who expressed interest in the study, 113 did not meet eligibility criteria. A consenting sample of family caregivers were randomized into a problem-solving training group (4 men, 29 women; average age, 51.3y) or an education-only control group (34 women; average age, 50.8y). Care recipients included 26 men and 7 women in the intervention group (average age, 36.5y) and 24 men and 10 women in the control group (average age, 37.2y)., Intervention: Problem-solving training based on the D'Zurilla and Nezu social problem-solving model was provided to caregivers in the intervention group in 4 in-home sessions and 8 telephone follow-up calls over the course of their year-long participation. Control group participants received written educational materials and telephone calls at set intervals throughout their 12 months of participation., Main Outcome Measures: Caregiver depression, health complaints, well-being, and social problem-solving abilities., Results: Hierarchical linear models revealed caregivers receiving problem-solving training reported significant decreases in depression, health complaints, and in dysfunctional problem-solving styles over time. No effects were observed on caregiver well-being, burden, or constructive problem-solving styles., Conclusions: Problem-solving training provided in the home appears to be effective in alleviating distress and in decreasing dysfunctional problem-solving styles among family caregivers of persons with TBI. Methodologic limitations and the implications for interventions and future research are discussed.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
379. Using all alleles in the multiallelic versions of the SDT and combined SDT/TDT.
- Author
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Czika W and Berry JJ
- Subjects
- Alleles, Chromosome Mapping, Genetic Markers, Linkage Disequilibrium, Models, Genetic, Statistics, Nonparametric
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
380. Guilt, fear, submission, and empathy in depression.
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O'Connor LE, Berry JW, Weiss J, and Gilbert P
- Subjects
- Adult, Altruism, Biological Evolution, Female, Humans, Male, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Depression psychology, Empathy, Fear, Guilt, Motivation
- Abstract
Background: This study compares self-focused motivations (fear of negative evaluation, social comparison, and fear of envy) and other-focused motivations (empathy and interpersonal guilt) in submissive behavior and depression., Methods: The Beck Depression Inventory, Submissive Behavior Scale, Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale, Social Comparison Scale, Interpersonal Guilt Questionnaire, and Interpersonal Reactivity Inventory were administered to 50 patients hospitalized for depression and 52 students., Results: Depressed patients were significantly higher in survivor guilt, omnipotent responsibility guilt, submissive behavior, fear of negative evaluation, fear of envy, and empathic distress, and lower in social comparison., Limitations: This research was limited in that it was a correlational study., Conclusions: This study suggests that altruistic concern about others may be an important factor in depression and submissive behavior. Evolutionary implications of these findings are discussed.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
381. [The German short version of the interpersonal guilt questionnaire--Validation in a population-based sample and clinical application].
- Author
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Albani C, Blaser G, Körner A, Geyer M, Volkart R, O'Connor L, Berry J, and Brähler E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Anxiety psychology, Female, Germany, Humans, Language, Male, Middle Aged, Guilt, Interpersonal Relations, Mental Disorders psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires standards, Survival psychology
- Abstract
The present study describes the development of the German short version "Fragebogen zu interpersonellen Schuldgefühlen" (FIS) of the "Interpersonal Guilt Questionnaire" (IGQ) developed by O'Connor et al. The questionnaire was used in a representative sample of 652 eastern and 1283 western Germans. Woman show higher scores on the subscales "Seperation Guilt" and "Omnipotent Responsibility Guilt" than man. Eastern Germans mark higher scores on the subscale "Omnipotent Responsibility Guilt" than western Germans. Correlations between interpersonal guilt and social anxiety and differences between a non-clinical and a clinical sample show that maladaptive aspects of guilt feelings can be assessed by the "Interpersonal Guilt Questionnaire".
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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