70 research outputs found

    Changing staff attitudes and empathy for working with people with psychosis

    Get PDF
    Seventy-seven mental health professionals completed a 3-day cognitive behavioural training course for managing hallucinations and delusions in schizophrenia. A questionnaire measuring attitudes and empathy towards working with people who have these symptoms was administered before and after the course. Significant increases in feelings of adequacy, legitimacy, employment related self-esteem, and expectations of work satisfaction were observed after the course and participants displayed high levels of motivation for working with this clinical population at both time points. In addition, the participants showed significant increases in perceived empathy for the experience of hallucinations and delusions. This was a predicted outcome as the course included exercises designed to enhance therapists’ understanding of the subjective experience of psychotic symptoms. Empathy is recognized in the wider psychotherapy outcome literature as a therapeutically important variable that influences the formation of a therapeutic alliance but it is a relatively unexamined construct in CBT for psychosis. Further investigations in this area will potentially enhance psychological treatment delivery and subsequent outcomes for people who experience hallucinations and delusions. Furthermore, explication of such ‘‘non-specific’’ therapeutic factors may help to explain some of the transient but beneficial effects of unstructured ‘‘control’’ therapies observed in recent CBT for psychosis outcome trials

    Suits Against Gas-Emitting Landfills in West Virginia: Identifying and Overcoming the Barriers

    Get PDF
    The U.S. in the past two decades has experienced an increase in class actions stemming from landfill odors, with many of these lawsuits utilizing the common law doctrines of nuisance, trespass, and negligence. Landfill odors impact nearby residents, making it unenjoyable for them to be outside on their lawns, and even in their homes. West Virginia’s sole appellate court, despite the state having 17 operational landfills and disposing of nearly 1.5 million tons of trash, has seen no such suit. This Note identifies whether West Virginia decisional law is prohibitive of this type of suit; it finds no clear legal barriers precluding such suits and outlines a potential litigation strategy. This Note will also briefly address non-legal explanations for the lack of litigation. Finally, this Note will conclude by finding that there are no steadfast legal barriers that can completely preclude such suits

    Notes on a Grammar of the Language of Ongtong Java

    No full text
    • 

    corecore