27 research outputs found

    Adopting Minds — a mentalization-based therapy for families in a post-adoption support service: preliminary evaluation and service user experience

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    Children placed for adoption often face unique challenges and are at higher risk of mental health problems compared to the general population. Yet despite some important clinical developments, there is still a lack of evidence related to effective therapeutic interventions for this population. This study reports on the preliminary evaluation of a mentalization-based family therapy service, Adopting Minds, offered as part of a post-adoption support service. Thirty-six families who had adopted 42 children were referred to the service between September 2015 and December 2016. Demographic information was collected and assessments undertaken on the families at baseline and at the end of therapy, using a range of validated measures. Five families who had completed therapy were also interviewed about their experience of the approach. For those families on which data were available, positive outcomes in mental health and parental self-efficacy were identified, and adoptive parents reported high levels of satisfaction with the mentalization-based family therapy service. Analysis of the interviews revealed that the families found it a containing space that was supportive and non-judgemental. They felt able to express their fears and worries to a therapist who was friendly and knowledgeable and reported that the service helped them to deal with and link struggles they were facing to their own as well as their child's past experiences. However, some adoptive families felt that this short-term, six-session service alone was not enough to address all the difficulties that had brought the family to seek help, and would have preferred a longer-term intervention or therapy in combination with other types of support

    Monitoring the occurrence of microplastic ingestion in otariids along the peruvian and chilean coasts

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    Repeated reports of microplastic pollution in the marine pinniped diet have emerged in the last years. However, only few studies address the drivers of microplastics presence and the potential implications for monitoring microplastic pollution in the ocean. This study monitored their in the scats (N = 205) of four pinniped species/subspecies at five different locations in the southern Pacific Ocean (Peru and Chile). Samples from all rookeries contained microplastics, and overall, 68% of the examined scats contained fragments/fibers, mostly blue colored. We confirmed that 81.5% of the fragments/fibers were anthropogenic in origin , but only 30% were polymers. Scats from Juan Fernandez Archipelago presented higher microplastic concentrations than continental rookeries. Also, the common diet in each location may influence the levels found in the samples. This study presents a useful non-invasive technique to track plastic pollution in top predator diets as bioindicators for future surveillance/management plans applied to different location.Rufford Foundation: N 18815-1. Dirección de Investigación y Doctorados, Universidad Andres Bello. Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica (CONICYT), CONICYT FONDECYT: 11150548, 116504, 111609059. Instituto Antártico Chileno Grant: INACh RT_12_17. Conicyt PCI: REDI 170292, REDI 170403. Ministerio de Economia, Fomento y Turismo through Iniciativa Científica Milenio (Núcleo Milenio INVASAL). Direccion de Investigación Universidad de Variarais: DIUV 38/2013. Morris Animal Foundation fellowship: N D16ZO-413. Saint Louis Zoo. Chicago Zoological Society. Kansas City Zoo. Woodland Park Zoo

    Anales Seminario Internacional Desarrollo Territorial y Extractivismo : luchas y alternativas en la región andina

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    En el contexto de exploración y explotación hidrocarburífera en ciertas zonas de la Amazonía peruana, las organizaciones indígenas están ensayando estrategias que replantean el modelo de gobernanza de sus territorios, a partir de mecanismos de negociación y coordinación con las empresas y el Estado y/o la búsqueda de reconocimiento de sus derechos territoriales como caminos para alcanzar la autodeterminación. Ejemplos de ello, más allá de su nivel de éxito, son los casos del Acta de Dorissa en el río Corrientes y la propuesta de Zonificación Ecológica y Económica (ZEE) en la provincia de Datem del Marañón. Ambos casos están vinculados a la explotación petrolera en el Lote 1AB, uno de los lotes más antiguos de la Amazonía peruana, que abarca tanto la cuenca del Corrientes y el Tigre, en la provincia de Loreto, como la cuenca del Pastaza, en Datem del Marañón
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