Calling, Recalling, and Restoring the Signal Function of Emotions

2005 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 223-227
Author(s):  
Michael H. Davison

Among the huge accumulation of psychological books offered in libraries and book stores, a relative few volumes stand out in an otherwise deluge of self-help exhortations, and discuss the psychotherapeutic process itself. Of that small portion, most consist of self-congratulatory case histories from professional therapists. Few volumes come from patients. The author, a long-term psychotherapy patient, briefly summarizes lessons gained in one of the most difficult processes a human can endure. The essay criticizes the current emphasis on psychotropic medication and equates anesthetizing unpleasant emotions, particulary depression, to shooting the messenger. Unpleasant emotions, like physiological pain, act as the body’s signals that something needs attention. Drugging them into insensitivity in the belief that they stem from unbalanced chemistry cures nothing. The argument offers an admittedly more difficult alternative that preserves the natural signal functions of depression, anxiety, and fear.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Richards ◽  
Rebecca A Jones ◽  
Fiona Whittle ◽  
Carly A Hughes ◽  
Andrew J Hill ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND The long-term impact and cost-effectiveness of weight management programmes depends on post-treatment weight maintenance. There is growing evidence that interventions based on third-wave cognitive behavioural therapy (3wCBT), specifically acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), could improve long-term weight management however these interventions are typically delivered face-to-face by psychologists, which limits the scalability of this type of intervention. OBJECTIVE To use an evidence-, theory- and person-based approach to develop an ACT-based intervention for weight-loss maintenance that uses digital technology and non-specialist guidance to minimise resources needed for delivery at scale. METHODS Intervention development was guided by the Medical Research Council framework for the development of complex interventions in healthcare, Intervention Mapping Protocol, and the person-based approach for enhancing the acceptability and feasibility of interventions. Two phases of work were conducted: phase one consisted of collating and analysing existing and new primary evidence, and phase two consisted of theoretical modelling and intervention development. Phase one included a synthesis of existing evidence on weight-loss maintenance from previous research, a systematic review and network meta-analysis of 3wCBT interventions for weight management, a qualitative interview study of experiences of weight-loss maintenance, and the modelling of a justifiable cost for a weight-loss maintenance programme. Phase two included iterative development of guiding principles, a logic model and the intervention design and content. Target user and stakeholder panels were established to inform each phase of development and user-testing of successive iterations of the prototype intervention were conducted. RESULTS This process resulted in a guided self-help ACT-based intervention called SWiM (Supporting Weight Management). SWiM is a 4-month programme, consisting of weekly web-based sessions for 13 consecutive weeks, followed by a 4-week break for participants to reflect and practice their new skills, and a final session at week 17. Each session consists of psychoeducational content, reflective exercises, and behavioural experiments. SWiM includes specific sessions on key determinants of weight-loss maintenance, including developing skills to manage high-risk situations for lapses, creating new helpful habits, breaking old unhelpful habits, and learning to manage interpersonal relationships and their impact on weight-management. A trained, non-specialist coach provides guidance for participants through the programme with four scheduled 30-minute telephone calls and three further optional calls. CONCLUSIONS This comprehensive approach facilitated the development of an intervention that is based on scientific theory and evidence of how to support people with weight-loss maintenance, and is grounded in the experiences of the target users and the context in which it is intended to be delivered. The intervention will be refined based on findings of a planned pilot randomised controlled trial.


Author(s):  
Alison Hope Alkon ◽  
Yahya Josh Cadji ◽  
Frances Moore

How can gentrification spur collaborations between new food justice organizations and long-standing residents? This chapter explores this question through an analysis of the partnership and eventual merging of Phat Beets Produce and the Self-Help Hunger Program in North Oakland, California. In 2014, Phat Beets saw a local realtor point to its community garden and farmers’ market in an advertisement video designed to draw new residents to their gentrifying neighborhood. This drove them to resist the upscaling of their food justice work and deepen their alliances with long-term community-based organizations. This collaboration has transformed both organizations and created a strong alliance, but it is not enough to resist the structural forces that drive gentrification.


2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giulia Serra ◽  
Lavinia De Chiara ◽  
Giovanni Manfredi ◽  
Alexia E. Koukopoulos ◽  
Gabriele Sani ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 27 (suppl 2) ◽  
pp. 39-39
Author(s):  
A Denihan ◽  
I Bruce ◽  
D Coalkey ◽  
B A Lawlor

1974 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 126-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian M. Rogerson

Jobs and their location provide the key to an understanding of the contemporary thrust of South Africa's ‘separate development’ policy. Within the country's present space economy, dominated by the four metropolitan complexes of the Southern Transvaal, Cape Town, Durban, and Port Elizabeth, this policy seeks to mould a new geography of employment opportunity for the blacks of South Arica. In this process, public policy-makers are attempting to decentralise some economic activities, particularly in the manufacturing sector, away from the nation's metropolitan hubs, and concomitantly to promote new work centres in, or on the borders of, the designated ‘Bantu Homelands’. The current emphasis in the Republic is upon the generation of industrial employment for Africans at selected sites in these Homelands. This short note explores the immediate problems and long-term prospects of this policy with reference to the Bophutatswana growth point of Babelegi.


2005 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 84-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joe Bouch ◽  
John James Marshall

Patient risk factors for suicide are well known to psychiatrists, yet the availability of clinically useful, routine and systematic methods for risk recognition are limited. This article outlines the structured professional judgement approach to suicide risk assessment and management. This method combines psychiatric assessment and formulation with the evidence base for suicide risk factors. Structured professional judgement is contrasted with actuarial and clinical judgement approaches. A categorisation of risk factors is presented, with four groups described – static, stable, dynamic and future. Case histories illustrate long-term high risk contrasted with sudden and unpredictable onset of suicidality.


1996 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margot Prior

AbstractMany different reasons may account for the well documented relationship between attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and learning difficulties. Longitudinal Australian data support the earlier occurrence of behaviour problems than reading problems, especially for boys. Language, motivation, and biological mechanisms, and combinations of these factors, may contribute to this association. Current emphasis must be placed on early intervention for behaviour problems, assessment of LDs which are suspected by the Grade 2 or 7-year-old level, and a long-term perspective on the management of both conditions.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document