8 results on '"Torstensson Levander M"'
Search Results
2. The life course of women who have experienced abuse - a life chart study in general psychiatric care
- Author
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Örmon, K., primary, Torstensson-Levander, M., additional, Bahtsevani, C., additional, and Sunnqvist, C., additional
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- 2014
- Full Text
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3. Disclosure of abuse among female patients within general psychiatric care - a cross sectional study.
- Author
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Örmon, K., Sunnqvist, C., Bahtsevani, C., and Torstensson Levander, M.
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WOMEN patients ,CARE of people ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,PATIENT abuse ,HISTORY of medicine ,PHYSICAL abuse ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: Experiences of abuse are common among women in general psychiatric care. Even so, there are to our knowledge no previous national or international studies exploring disclosure in a general psychiatric setting of female patient's experiences of abuse to staff or to formal and informal networks. This study aimed to explore women's disclosure of experiencing physical, emotional and/or sexual abuse during their most recent contact with staff at a general psychiatric clinic. The study also aimed to determine whether the women have previously disclosed abuse to anyone. Methods: A consecutive sampling of eligible female patients at a general psychiatric clinic in an urban area of southern Sweden answered the NorVold Abuse Questionnaire, NorAQ, a self-administrated questionnaire. NorAQ has previously been used and further developed to compare the prevalence of abuse in women present in gynecological outpatient settings in the five Nordic countries. Seventy-seven women with experiences of abuse participated in the research. Descriptive statistics were used to analyse the data. Results: Most respondents did not disclose their experiences of abuse to staff at the general psychiatric clinic. Women with experiences of physical abuse (n = 40), emotional abuse (n = 37) and sexual abuse (n = 37) chose not to disclose their experiences. Respondents disclosed abuse more often to others than to staff. Conclusions: Our findings indicated the importance of including routine questions concerning abuse experiences as a natural part of female patients' medical history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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4. Pathways to child and adolescent psychiatric clinics: a multilevel study of the significance of ethnicity and neighbourhood social characteristics on source of referral
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Rydelius Per-Anders, Levander Sten, Adler Hans, Svensson Robert, Ivert Anna-Karin, and Torstensson Levander Marie
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Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background In the Swedish society, as in many other societies, many children and adolescents with mental health problems do not receive the help they need. As the Swedish society becomes increasingly multicultural, and as ethnic and economic residential segregation become more pronounced, this study utilises ethnicity and neighbourhood context to examine referral pathways to child and adolescent psychiatric (CAP) clinics. Methods The analysis examines four different sources of referrals: family referrals, social/legal agency referrals, school referrals and health/mental health referrals. The referrals of 2054 children aged 11-19 from the Stockholm Child-Psychiatric Database were studied using multilevel logistic regression analyses. Results Results indicate that ethnicity played an important role in how children and adolescents were referred to CAP-clinics. Family referrals were more common among children and adolescents with a Swedish background than among those with an immigrant background. Referrals by social/legal agencies were more common among children and adolescents with African and Asian backgrounds. Children with Asian or South American backgrounds were more likely to have been referred by schools or by the health/mental health care sector. A significant neighbourhood effect was found in relation to family referrals. Children and adolescents from neighbourhoods with low levels of socioeconomic deprivation were more likely to be referred to CAP-clinics by their families in comparison to children from other neighbourhoods. Such differences were not found in relation in relation to the other sources of referral. Conclusions This article reports findings that can be an important first step toward increasing knowledge on reasons behind differential referral rates and uptake of psychiatric care in an ethnically diverse Swedish sample. These findings have implications for the design and evaluation of community mental health outreach programs and should be considered when developing measures and strategies intended to reach and help children with mental health problems. This might involve providing information about the availability and accessibility of health care for children and adolescents with mental health problems to families in certain neighbourhoods and with different ethnic backgrounds.
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- 2011
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5. An examination of the interaction between morality and self-control in offending: A study of differences between girls and boys.
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Ivert AK, Andersson F, Svensson R, Pauwels LJR, and Torstensson Levander M
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- Adolescent, Attitude, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Health, Prevalence, Sex Factors, Crime statistics & numerical data, Criminals psychology, Morals, Self-Control
- Abstract
Background: There is a well-documented gender difference in offending, with evidence that boys, on average, are more involved in crime than girls. Opinions differ, however, on whether the causes of crime apply to girls and boys similarly., Aims: Our aim is to explore crime propensity in boys and girls. Our research questions were (1) are there differences between boys and girls in moral values and self-control; (2) are these attributes similarly correlated with offending among girls and boys; and (3) is any interaction effect between morality and self-control identical for girls and boys., Methods: Data were drawn from the Malmö Individual and Neighbourhood Development Study, which includes 481 girls and boys aged 16-17. An 8-item self-control scale was derived from Grasmick's self-control instrument; we created a 16-item morality scale. Analysis of variance was used to test for differences in scale scores., Results: There were significant gender differences in moral values but not self-control. Moral values and self-control were significantly correlated with offending among both girls and boys. In the multiple regression analysis, the three-way interaction term used to test the interaction between gender, self-control and moral values was non-significant, indicating that the magnitude of the self-control-moral value interaction is not affected by gender., Conclusions: Our findings indicate that effects of morality and self-control are general and apply to girls and boys similarly, so more research is needed to explain gender differences in crime prevalence. © 2018 The Authors Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd., (© 2018 The Authors Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2018
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6. The duality of suffering and trust: abused women's experiences of general psychiatric care--an interview study.
- Author
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Örmon K, Torstensson-Levander M, Sunnqvist C, and Bahtsevani C
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Middle Aged, Nursing Process, Sweden, Young Adult, Battered Women psychology, Nurse-Patient Relations, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Truth Disclosure
- Abstract
Aims and Objectives: To elucidate how women subjected to physical, emotional and/or sexual abuse experience the care provided at a general psychiatric clinic after the disclosure of abuse., Background: Violence against women is a major global public health issue, which has an impact on women's lives and mental health as well as generating frequent hospital admission., Design: Qualitative design with an inductive approach., Methods: Interviews with nine women who were recipients of general psychiatric care and had disclosed experiences of abuse to a member of staff were conducted. Qualitative inductive content analysis was used., Results: The overall theme emerging from the narratives, 'dependency as a reality containing a duality of suffering and trust,' links the categories together. Each subcategory is presented in relation to the categories 'being belittled,' 'being misinterpreted' and 'being cared for.' Experiences of care as caring and noncaring were found in the narratives. Caring could include situations experienced as the women being acknowledged and listened to, situations where staff approached and supported the women in a sensitive way. Experiences of noncaring were when the abuse was disregarded, and when the women were not believed in, were left with burdens of guilt and were offended. A noncaring environment focused primarily on the diagnosis, and the experienced abuse was seen as secondary., Conclusions: Abused women are subjected to psychiatric environments where staff are divided into groups of those who believed in and supported the abused women and those who regarded experiences of abuse as a secondary issue and focused on the mental disorder., Relevance to Clinical Practice: This study provides knowledge of how abused women experience the care provided at a general psychiatric clinic after the disclosure of abuse., (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2014
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7. Adolescents' utilisation of psychiatric care, neighbourhoods and neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation: a multilevel analysis.
- Author
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Ivert AK, Torstensson Levander M, and Merlo J
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- Adolescent, Databases, Factual, Female, Humans, Male, Multilevel Analysis, Poverty Areas, Residence Characteristics, Social Adjustment, Social Environment, Socioeconomic Factors, Sweden, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Hospitals, Psychiatric statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders psychology, Mental Health statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Mental health problems among adolescents have become a major public health issue, and it is therefore important to increase knowledge on the contextual determinants of adolescent mental health. One such determinant is the socioeconomic structure of the neighbourhood. The present study has two central objectives, (i) to examine if neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation is associated to individual variations in utilisation of psychiatric care in a Swedish context, and (ii) to investigate if neighbourhood boundaries are a valid construct for identifying contexts that influence individual variations in psychiatric care utilization. Data were obtained from the Longitudinal Multilevel Analysis in Scania (LOMAS) database. The study population consists of all boys and girls aged 13-18 years (N=18,417), who were living in the city of Malmö, Sweden, in 2005. Multilevel logistic regression analysis was applied to estimate the probability of psychiatric care utilisation. The results from the study indicate that the neighbourhood of residence had little influence on psychiatric care utilisation. Although we initially found a variation between neighbourhoods, this general contextual effect was very small (i.e. 1.6%). The initial conclusive association between the neighbourhood level of disadvantage and psychiatric care utilisation (specific contextual effect) disappeared following adjustment for individual and family level variables. Our results suggest the neighbourhoods in Malmö (at least measured in terms of SAMS-areas), do not provide accurate information for discriminating adolescents utilisation of psychiatric care. The SAMS-areas appears to be an inappropriate construct of the social environment that influences adolescent utilisation of psychiatric care. Therefore, public health interventions should be directed to the whole city rather than to specific neighbourhoods. However, since geographical, social or cultural contexts may be important for our understanding of adolescent mental health further research is needed to identify such contexts.
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- 2013
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8. Mentally disordered criminal offenders: legal and criminological perspectives.
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Dahlin MK, Gumpert CH, Torstensson-Levander M, Svensson L, and Radovic S
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- Adolescent, Adult, Causality, Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders legislation & jurisprudence, Crime statistics & numerical data, Dangerous Behavior, Female, Humans, Individuality, Male, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders psychology, Middle Aged, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis, Psychotic Disorders epidemiology, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenia epidemiology, Schizophrenic Psychology, Sweden, Violence legislation & jurisprudence, Violence prevention & control, Violence psychology, Young Adult, Crime legislation & jurisprudence, Insanity Defense, Mental Competency legislation & jurisprudence, Mental Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Legal research in Sweden has traditionally focused on a systematization of the legal rules and their practical application, while the task of studying the effects of the application of the laws has been handed over to other branches of the social sciences. In contrast, new legal theories focusing on proactive and therapeutic dimensions in law have gained increasing attention in the international arena. These approaches may be better suited for evaluating legislation governing compulsory psychiatric care. Theoretical discussions and studies of causal mechanisms underlying criminal behaviour, as well as the implementation and value of instruments for predicting behaviour, are relevant to contemporary criminological research. Criminal behaviour varies across different groups of perpetrators, and the causes can be sought in the interplay between the individual and social factors. Multi-disciplinary efforts, integrating research from forensic psychiatry, psychology, sociology, and criminology, would be beneficial in leading to a better understanding of the causes underlying criminal behaviour.
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- 2009
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