3,248 research outputs found
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Coping styles associated with post-traumatic stress and depression symptoms following childbirth in croatian women
Childbirth is a normative event in a woman's life and is considered as a positive event. However, one in three women perceive childbirth as a physical threat to themselves or their new-born and 3% of women develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following childbirth. Poor coping strategies have been associated with PTSD following childbirth. However, previous studies mainly utilised unidimensional measures of coping strategies, therefore, it remains to be investigated which specific dimensions of coping are more predictive of PTSD after childbirth. The aims of this study were to explore whether women in Croatia report PTSD symptoms following childbirth, and how different coping styles were related to PTSD and depression symptoms. Women (N = 160) who gave birth in the last two years, completed an online questionnaire measuring PTSD symptoms (Impact of Event Scale – IES), postnatal depression symptoms (Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale – EPDS) and coping styles (Brief Cope). In this sample, 1.9% reported severe PTSD symptoms following childbirth and 21.9% reported depression symptoms. Many women (66.7%) with PTSD symptoms reported depression symptoms. On the other hand, 28.6% of women with depression symptoms also reported PTSD symptoms, showing that there is a higher co-morbidity of PTSD and depression than vice versa. Avoidant coping styles, specifically, denial and self-blame were positively correlated with both PTSD and depression symptoms. Moreover, of avoidant coping styles, behavioural disengagement was positively correlated with PTSD symptoms only, while self-distraction was positively correlated with depression symptoms only. Also, lower levels of planning and higher levels of emotional support were related to higher levels of depression. However, after controlling for postnatal psychopathology symptoms, coping styles were not significant predictors of PTSD symptoms, but self-blame was a significant predictor of depression symptoms. Psychopathological symptoms following childbirth are reported by Croatian women and are related to coping styles. The avoidant coping style, self-blame, is particularly associated with depression symptoms. Future studies should explore predictors of postpartum PTSD in Croatian women in more representative samples during pregnancy and with the follow-up after childbirth. Also, screening for postnatal psychopathological symptoms should be performed both for depression and PTSD symptoms
Interception and Offshore Processing of Asylum Seekers: The International Law Dimensions
For decades the international community has conducted a delicate and politically charged balancing act trying to reconcile the inexorable increase in refugees-and the need to find permanent homes for them with the fundamental right of all countries to have secure frontiers. While the notion of non-refoulement remains fundamental to the treatment of asylum seekers, their rights vis A vis the states in which they seek asylum are significantly circumscribed by their alien status. States have a right to control entry to their territories. In the development of asylum law and policy, the central difficulty for states, and indeed the international community, is how to construct an appropriate balance between the urgent humanitarian demands to protect those who are genuinely in need of asylum, and the exclusion of those who do not qualify for humanitarian protection
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Personal growth in UK and Croatian women following childbirth: A preliminary study
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine growth in UK and Croatian women following childbirth and to identify correlates of personal growth after birth, specifically focusing on sociodemographic, obstetric and coping variables. Background: Childbirth is a significant and challenging life event for many women with the potential for both positive and negative psychological changes. Research is increasingly exploring growth in different cultures. No studies have explored growth in Croatian women following childbirth. Methods: UK (N = 193) and Croatian (N = 160) women who had given birth within the last two years completed online questionnaires measuring growth, depression, posttraumatic stress symptoms and coping strategies. Results: Approximately 44% and 35% of UK and Croatian women, respectively, reported a moderate level of growth after childbirth. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses showed that younger women in both countries reported more growth. In the UK sample, coping strategies were related to higher growth. In the Croatian sample, higher posttraumatic stress symptoms and the avoidant coping strategy of denial were associated with higher levels of growth. Conclusion: This study suggests that many women report positive changes as a result of their birth experience. Further research is needed to explore how cultural elements are manifested in the experience of growth
Inspiring Music for All: next steps in innovation, improvement and integration
The report, funded by the Paul Hamlyn Foundation, provides an overview of schools-based music education in England. It represents the outcomes of research undertaken in January and February 2014 which included detailed literature reviews, personal interviews with thirty-five specialists involved in leading various organisations responsible for different aspects of music education, focus group discussions and an on-line survey of the music education workforce that generated 515 responses. The findings suggest that the place and status of music in schools vary widely across the country. The best music in schools is significantly more inclusive, more musically diverse and better quality that it was a decade ago. However, the quality and reach of schools-based music education is still unacceptably variable and inconsistent at both primary and secondary levels. Detailed findings and recommendations are included in the report
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Can self-affirmation exacerbate adverse reactions to stress under certain conditions?
OBJECTIVE: Self-affirmation has repeatedly been shown to reduce adverse psychological and physiological responses to stress. However, it is plausible that self-affirmation could exacerbate negative reactions to stress under certain conditions. The current research explored whether self-affirmation would increase negative psychological responses to a stressor occurring in a central life domain characterised by low levels of control.
DESIGN: Female participants (Study 1 N = 132; Study 2 N = 141) completed baseline measures of anxiety and mood. They were then randomly allocated to complete a self-affirmation or control task, before reading a narrative documenting a stressful birth and imagining themselves in the place of the woman giving birth. After completing this task, participants again reported their levels of anxiety and positive mood.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Anxiety and positive mood assessed at follow-up.
RESULTS: Study 1 demonstrated that self-affirmed women experienced increased anxiety and less positive mood at follow-up, compared both to baseline and to women in the control condition. Study 2 revealed that the effect of self-affirmation on outcomes was moderated by fear of childbirth.
CONCLUSION: These results provide preliminary evidence that self-affirmation may worsen negative responses to stressors under certain conditions and for certain individuals
Appearance-based localization for mobile robots using digital zoom and visual compass
This paper describes a localization system for mobile robots moving in dynamic indoor environments, which uses probabilistic integration of visual appearance and odometry information. The approach is based on a novel image matching algorithm for appearance-based place recognition that integrates digital zooming, to extend the area of application, and a visual compass. Ambiguous information used for recognizing places is resolved with multiple hypothesis tracking and a selection procedure inspired by Markov localization. This enables the system to deal with perceptual aliasing or absence of reliable sensor data. It has been implemented on a robot operating in an office scenario and the robustness of the approach demonstrated experimentally
ROSAT and ASCA observations of the Crab-Like Supernova Remnant N157B in the Large Magellanic Cloud
We report the results of ROSAT and ASCA X-ray observations of the supernova
remnant N157B (or 30 Dor B, SNR 0539-69.1) in the Large Magellanic Cloud. For
comparison, we also briefly describe the results on SNR 0540-69.3, the only
confirmed Crab-like remnant in the Cloud. The X-ray emission from N157B can be
decomposed into a bright comet-shaped feature, superimposed on a diffuse
emission region of a dimension pc. The flat and nearly featureless
spectrum of the remnant is distinctly different from those of young shell-like
remnants, suggesting a predominantly Crab-like nature of N157B. Characterized
by a power law with an energy slope , the spectrum of N157B above
keV is, however, considerably steeper than that of SNR 0540-69.3,
which has a slope of . At lower energies, the spectrum of N157B
presents marginal evidence for emission lines, which if real most likely arise
in hot gas of the diffuse emission region. The hot gas has a characteristic
thermal temperature of 0.4-0.7 keV. No significant periodic signal is detected
from N157B in the period range of s. The pulsed
fraction is (99% confidence) in the keV range. We discuss
the nature of the individual X-ray components. In particular, we suggest that
the synchrotron radiation of relativistic particles from a fast-moving () pulsar explains the size, morphology, spectrum, and energetics
of the comet-shaped X-ray feature. We infer the age of the remnant as yrs. The lack of radio polarization of the remnant may be due to
Faraday dispersion by foreground \ion{H}{2} gas.Comment: To be published in The Astrophysical Journal, 21 pages, plus 11
images in the PS, GIF, or jpeg format. Postscript files of images are
available at http://www.astro.nwu.edu/astro/wqd/paper/n157b
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