Climate anxiety linked to lack of access to green space
Survey shows being around nature has a positive effect on mental health.
Climate anxiety linked to lack of access to green space Read More »
Survey shows being around nature has a positive effect on mental health.
Climate anxiety linked to lack of access to green space Read More »
Travel agencies in Vietnam are being told not to organise tours of the capital’s renowned “Train Street” due to safety fears.
Vietnam’s famous ‘Train Street’ bans tour groups over safety fears Read More »
Source: Google News – Health More than two in five patients with long COVID suffer from moderate to severe sleep disturbances, according to an analysis published in Journal of General Internal Medicine. The analysis also identified risk factors for moderate to severe sleep disturbances, including race, hospitalization for COVID-19, greater anxiety severity, and fatigue. After
Sleep Disturbances Prevalent in Long COVID, Analysis Finds Read More »
Psychological safety is defined as a shared belief that individuals within a team or group are able to take risks without fear of being embarrassed or punished.1,2 Psychological safety consists of an environment in which people feel respected and comfortable to speak up and express their ideas, opinions, and concerns, which is essential for effective communication and collaboration and encourages creativity and innovation.
[Correspondence] Shared decision making with psychological safety Read More »
Our understanding of OCD is enhanced by focusing on its distinctive characteristics, while also considering larger worldly influences.
Coping with OCD as a Teen: A View from the Inside Read More »
Compassion makes us more resilient and less anxious or depressed, and it increases self-worth and happiness, research tells us.
Rick Hanson: Compassion is a kind of superpower. Here’s what research says it can do. Read More »
The Nashville, Tennessee, shooting has faded from the news, but it is ever present in the minds of our students.
Letters: Fear of school shootings is always present in the minds of students Read More »
Therapeutic effects of electrical cranial stimulation (CES) in patients suffering from anxiety remained unclear. This meta-analysis aimed at investigating acceptability and therapeutic efficacy of CES against anxiety, depression, and insomnia for patients who experienced symptoms of anxiety. … … Our study supported the use of CES for symptoms of anxiety, depression, and insomnia in those
Journal of Humanistic Psychology, Ahead of Print. The present study examined the role of attachment anxiety, attachment avoidance, and grit on life satisfaction and romantic relationship satisfaction. We recruited participants (n = 378, mean age = 28.3) using convenience and snowball sampling (i.e., via Facebook and email). The sample consisted of 86 males, 284 females, 2 transgender individuals, and 6 individuals who did not indicate their gender. Participants completed online surveys. Results partially supported our hypotheses that greater attachment anxiety and attachment avoidance resulted in lower life satisfaction scores, but individuals with high grit had lower life satisfaction scores than those with low grit. Additionally, results supported the hypotheses that greater attachment anxiety and attachment avoidance resulted in lower romantic relationship satisfaction scores. However, we posit that grit may work differently in influencing life satisfaction compared with romantic relationship satisfaction, particularly among our younger sample. Implications of findings and directions for future research were also explored.
Journal of Humanistic Psychology, Ahead of Print. Cognitive-behavioral interventions for anxiety and obsessive–compulsive disorder have received a great deal of attention for their growing evidence base. These therapies focus on symptom elimination by way of cognitive and behavioral change and, though undoubtedly helpful, miss important symbolic aspects of the client’s experience of these disorders that have the potential for meaning and the resolution of traumatic history. Jungian psychotherapy, like other depth-oriented and humanistically oriented approaches, is concerned both with meaning in the client’s life and the process by which the client becomes more themselves by integrating fragmented, wounded, and hidden aspects of the psyche—a process known as individuation. This article integrates Jungian concepts with trauma theory to generate an integrative framework for psychotherapy with individuals with anxiety and obsessive–compulsive disorder. The case of “Stefan,” which provides a description of trauma-informed psychotherapy incorporating eye movement desensitization and reprocessing within a Jungian framework, is then presented to illustrate key elements of this theoretical integration.
Integrative Jungian Psychotherapy for Anxiety and OCD Read More »