62 research outputs found

    Child Sexual Assault: Children\u27s Memory and the Law

    Get PDF

    Child Sexual Assault: Children\u27s Memory and the Law

    Get PDF

    Benefit finding in renal transplantation and its association with psychological and clinical correlates:A prospective study

    Get PDF
    OBJECTIVES: The identification of positive psychological changes, including benefit finding (BF), in chronic illness has gained substantial interest. However, less is known about BF in the context of a positive medical intervention. End-stage renal disease (ESRD) can be regarded as a burdensome condition, but transplantation is expected to restore physical and psychological functioning to a large extent after a period of illness. The aim of this study was to examine (1) changes in BF from pre- to 12 months post-transplantation, (2) the concurrent association of disease-related characteristics and optimism to BF, and (3) the potential causal relations between BF and distress. METHODS: In this longitudinal study, 319 patients completed questionnaires before, 3 months, 6 months, and/or 12 months post-transplantation. Multilevel models were used for the analyses. Measures included the Illness Cognitions Questionnaire to measure BF, the Life Orientation Test to measure optimism, and the General Health Questionnaire to measure distress. RESULTS: Benefit finding increased from pre- to post-transplantation. Fewer symptoms and comorbidities, and more optimism, were related to more BF over all time-points. The direction of the relation between BF and distress changed over time. Before transplantation, distress predicted an increase in BF, whereas post-transplantation, distress predicted a decrease in BF. The causal relation between BF and distress post-transplantation appeared to be reciprocal. CONCLUSIONS: A positive medical intervention such as renal transplantation might facilitate the development of BF. This study indicates the need for longitudinal research on the relation between BF and psychological health in the face of positive events. Statement of contribution What is already known on this subject? Benefit finding refers to the identification of positive psychological changes following a negative life event. Individuals can experience benefit finding following chronic illness. The positive event of kidney transplantation is associated with improvements in patients' physical and psychological functioning. What does this study add? Benefit finding increases from pre- to post-kidney transplantation. Fewer symptoms and comorbidities, and higher optimism are related to more benefit finding. Before transplantation, distress predicts an increase in benefit finding. After transplantation, there appears to be a reciprocal relation between distress and benefit finding such that distress predicts a decrease in benefit finding and benefit finding predicts a decrease in distress

    Undoing gender through performing the other

    Get PDF
    Following the perspective of gender as a socially constructed performance, consumer research has given light to how individuals take on, negotiate, and express a variety of gender roles. Yet the focus of research has remained on gender roles themselves, largely overlooking the underlying process of gender performativity and consumers’ engagement with it in the context of their everyday lives. Set within a performance methodology and the context of crossplay in live action role-playing games, this paper explores how individuals undo gender on a subjective level, thus becoming conscious and reflexive of gender performativity. The study suggests that individuals become active in undoing gender through engaging in direct, bodily performance of the gender other. Such performance does not challenge or ridicule norms, but pushes individuals to actively figure out for themselves how gender is performed. As a result, individuals become aware of gender performativity and become capable of actively recombining everyday performance

    Social support and adjustment to cancer: Reconciling descriptive, correlational, and intervention research.

    No full text

    Perceptions of Danger in Achievement and Affiliation Situations: An Extension of the Pollak and Gilligan vs. Benton et al. Debate

    No full text
    In a recent article, Pollak and Gilligan (1982) claimed to have shown that men perceive danger in situations involving affiliation and intimacy, whereas women perceive danger in situations involving competitive achievement. This conclusion was based on stories written in response to Thematic Apperception Test pictures depicting situations of affiliation and achievement. Pollak and Gilligan\u27s methods and findings subsequently received sharp criticism (Benton et al., 1983). Our study addresses these criticisms and Pollak and Gilligan\u27s critical evaluation of Benton et al.\u27s research. Although we found arguments from both sides to have merit, our results generally upheld the substance of Pollak and Gilligan\u27s original assertion. In addition, we found that analyses comparing the frequency of violent imagery appearing in achievement-oriented stories with that in affiliation-oriented stories, a procedure advocated by both sides of the argument, actually concealed differences in violent imagery created by experimentally manipulated affiliation and achievement conditions. Although our results do corroborate what Benton et al. called common and perhaps repressive stereotypes regarding men and women (p. 1167), we advocate their use in publicizing the social conditions that make such stereotypes credible

    Agentic and communal traits and health: adolescents with and without diabetes.

    No full text
    <p>The authors examined whether agentic and communal traits are associated with relationship and health outcomes among adolescents with and without diabetes. They interviewed 263 teens (average age 12; 132 Type 1 diabetes; 131 healthy) on an annual basis for 5 years. The authors measured agency, communion, unmitigated agency, and unmitigated communion as well as parent and peer relationship quality, psychological distress, and diabetes health. In concurrent and lagged multilevel models, unmitigated communion and unmitigated agency were associated with poor relationship outcomes and greater psychological distress for those with and without diabetes. In lagged analyses, unmitigated communion predicted deterioration in diabetes health. Communion and agency were associated with positive relationship and health outcomes, with the former being stronger than the latter. These results underscore the need to focus on unmitigated agency and unmitigated communion when studying the implications of personality for health during adolescence.</p
    • …
    corecore