Results 361 to 370 of about 2,307,620 (393)
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The Assessment of Psychological Distress
Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, 1992ABSTRACT. This paper describes the assessment of psychological distress symptoms in the hospitalized physically ill elderly using a screening instrument known as the Comprehensive Psychopathological Rating Scale (CPRS) (Åsberg et al. 1978). The methodological properties of this scale and a subscale known as the Montgomery Åsberg Depression Scale ...
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Psychological Distress and Enrollment in Medicaid [PDF]
Adults with poor mental health may want and need insurance to obtain care, but symptoms may impede enrollment into public health insurance. This study compares Medicaid enrollment responses to eligibility expansions by mental health status using a sample of non-elderly adults in both the 2000-2011 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey and the National ...
Gilbert Gonzales+3 more
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Psychological Distress in the Era of Psychological Safety
Journal of General Internal MedicineThere has been a growing disconnect between learners and educators within medical education. As the landscape of medical education has been altered post-pandemic and cultural shifts favor "safe spaces," we sought to explore the tension that exists between a sense of safety and the discomfort inherent within the learning process.
Alissa Zeglin+4 more
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Workplace bullying, psychological distress, resilience, mindfulness, and emotional exhaustion
Service Industries Journal, 2020The present study proposes and tests a moderated mediation model investigating the direct and mediated effect of workplace bullying on employee emotional exhaustion via psychological distress and resilience with mindfulness as a moderating variable ...
Elham Anasori+2 more
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Social Class and Psychological Distress
American Sociological Review, 1980Although a negative relationship between socioeconomic position and psychological distress has consistently been documented in community surveys, we know very little about the determinants of this relationship. The dominant interpretation argues that distress is caused by exposure to stressful life experiences, that lower status people are highly ...
Paul D. Cleary, Ronald C. Kessler
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Psychological Resources and Distress
2001In hard times, some workers find a reason to believe in themselves and their futures. Others find despair. What is the difference between those who say, “the whole plant closing thing toughened me up,” and those who claim that “everybody blames us”? This chapter provides more pieces of the puzzle.
V. Lee Hamilton+2 more
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Recall mammography and psychological distress
European Journal of Cancer, 2013The aims of this study were (a) to identify psychological distress before and after being diagnosed with or without cancer in women recalled for further investigation because previous screening mammography indicated possible malignancy and (b) to document the willingness to attend and recommend mammography.
Per Skaane+4 more
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Social Consistency and Psychological Distress
Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 1988Various hypotheses have been proposed regarding the stressful nature of a lack of consistency among different dimensions of social status. Three of these, termed respectively the status inconsistency, goal-striving stress, and lifestyle incongruity models, are evaluated with data collected in a southern black community. Of these three models, lifestyle
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Psychological Distress Around Menopause
Psychosomatics, 2001The authors sought to identify a subgroup of women who are likely to experience psychological distress in the period around menopause. A sample of 189 women (mean age=49.49) was selected from the general population and rated for menopausal status, menopausal symptoms, depression, anxiety, perceived control, body image, and sex role. Menopausal symptoms
Galit Bennamitay+6 more
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Psychological Distress and Hypertension Control
Journal of Human Stress, 1980Ninety-nine hypertensive patients who had been on antihypertensive therapies for at least six months because of diastolic blood pressure of 105 mg Hg or more were interviewed immediately after seeing their physicians. A four-item scale was used to separate those exhibiting the highest amount of psychological distress (18 patients) from the remainder of
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