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Credit: Tobi Goldfus

Q: This has been a tough year for my young clients. How do I help them stay centered and connected to therapy, even as most of what they do—and we do—is now online?

A: When I first started doing teletherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic, I worried my young clients would find our virtual interactions awkward, but that was a reflection of my discomfort, not theirs. Having spent a good deal of their life online, they were relaxed during video sessions and delighted to share their safe place, usually their bedroom, with me. They’d point to pictures on the wall or put meaningful objects in front of the webcam for me to see, as if this show-and-tell were the most natural thing in the world. Sharing their space in this way sparked a kind of implicit trust almost immediately.

With Amy, a senior in high school, whose prom had been canceled at the start of the pandemic, I laughed as she grabbed a stuffed animal from her bed and said how Pooh Bear was now more important to her than ever. Her humor was infectious, a sweet release in an anxious time. Our young clients can teach us a lot about adapting and connecting online, but they still need our real-life wisdom about connecting with their core inner selves, especially as they face life’s challenges, whether they unfold virtually or in person.

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What’s Normal?

It's natural to worry during stressful times. But some people feel tense and anxious day after day, even with little to worry about. When this lasts for 6 months or longer, it may be generalized anxiety disorder. Many people don't know they have it. So they may miss out on treatments that lead to a better, happier life.

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Credit: Minesh Khatri, MD

Terrorism is a crime from which the families of the victims may never recover. A recent study examines the grieving process in depth.

In a recent study, Pål Kristensen, PhD at the Centre for Crisis Psychology at the University of Bergen in Norway and colleagues examined the parents and siblings of the victims of the 2011 terrorism attacks in Norway as they went through the grieving process.1 They found nearly 80% of the study participants had a high level of grief and experienced a slow recovery, if any recovery at all.

“The terror attack in 2011 was a huge national tragedy that affected all of us deeply. Still,

we needed to learn about the long-term mental health effects and how we could help those who were affected the most—the bereaved,” Kristensen said to the press.2

In the aforementioned attack, a far-right Norwegian-born terrorist used a car bomb explosion to kill 8 people in Oslo, then shot and killed 69 people on Utøya Island. Researchers reached out to the family members of these victims; of the 208 contacted, nearly 60% responded.

According to the study, families of terrorist victims are at high risk of developing Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD). PGD is an ailment marked by an intense longing for the deceased, so consistent and severe that it negatively affects daily life.

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Credit: Leah Kuntz

Friday, 26 February 2021 10:49

6 Sleep Myths: Experts Weigh In

Ten sleep specialists assessed widely accepted beliefs and here's what they found.

Visit Psychiatric Times to find out more.

Credit: Chris Aiken, MD

Monday, 19 October 2020 11:29

Family Wellbeing Study

Consideration could also be given by the Australian Government to funding and developing further specialist mental health centres of excellence within all major defence service regions, providing local capability and knowledge as well as the opportunity to form partnerships and build the evidence base through high quality research and service evaluation. Such centres would see consultant psychiatrists working within specialist multi-disciplinary teams which include mental health nurses, allied health practitioners and peer workers, and could potentially offer services to current and former serving personnel, and their families.

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My name is Rebecca Pollard from the School of Justice, Queensland University of Technology (QUT) and I’m doing a PhD into Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) Perpetrated by Australian Defence Force (ADF) Personnel. 

Rebecca Pollard <This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.;

Saturday, 13 July 2019 11:48

Research Papers and more

 

For those interested in Research into Australian Military Families.

Just click on link to find more

afom shop

 

 

 

http://einarbthorsteinsson.blogspot.com/2019/07/the-partners-of-veterans-distress-scale.html

Sunday, 07 July 2019 11:34

Research on Moral Injury

Sunday, 10 February 2019 00:12

The War Within

depression

 

 

RESEARCH PROJECT

The War Within: Making sense of suicide through narratives with former serving Australian Defence Force members

 

 

PARTICIPANTS WANTED

For further information please see information and recruitment flyer and or contact Nikki Jamieson on 0419907069 or email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

 

RESEARCH PROJECT : The War Within: Making sense of suicide through narratives with former serving Australian Defence Force members

Are you a former Australian Defence Force (ADF) member?

Have you experienced feelings of self-condemnation, guilt, shame, or suicide?

My name is Nikki Jamieson and I lost my son to suicide whilst he served in the ADF. I am now researching the concept of “moral injury” (MI) and how it might relate to the former ADF service for my doctoral thesis with the University of New England (UNE) and would like to invite you to participate in this study. My interest and prime motivation is to build on international evidence and develop support/training for the future.

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September 08, 2020

The impact of deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan on partners and wives of military personnel

Deployment has well documented psychological consequences for military personnel. To fully understand the human cost of war, the psychosocial impact of separation and homecoming of military personnel on their families must also be considered. Recent arduous… Read more...
September 08, 2020

The Duration of Deployment and Sensitization to Stress

This article addresses conceptual and theoretical issues concerning how the duration of deployment to a combat theater of operations may impact the mental health of deployed troops. A core principle of occupational medicine, critical to this aim, is to… Read more...
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May 20, 2020

Important Research:Intimate Partner Violence Perpetrated by Australian Defence Force Personnel: an exploratory study.

My name is Rebecca Pollard from the School of Justice, Queensland University of Technology (QUT) and I’m doing a PhD into Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) Perpetrated by Australian Defence Force (ADF) Personnel. Rebecca Pollard <rebecca.deane@qut.edu.au>; Read more...
Jul 01, 2016

Partners of Veterans with PTSD

Jennifer L. Price, PhD & Susan P. Stevens, PsyD Introduction A number of studies have… Read more...
Feb 21, 2016

Effects Of Repeated Deployment

The mental and physical health consequences of service in Afghanistan (Operation Enduring… Read more...
Feb 21, 2016

The Triangle Of Care

The essence of this document is to clearly identify the six key elements required to… Read more...
Feb 21, 2016

Rwanda

This report presents the findings of the Rwanda Deployment Health Study, a Department of… Read more...
Feb 20, 2016

Who Cares For The Carer?

The Dunt Review 1 into mental health services in the Australian Defence Force (ADF)… Read more...
Feb 15, 2016

Stress, PTSD and Dementia

Stress, PTSD and Dementia Article Read more...
Jan 06, 2016

Suicide Research

Volume 10 - Suicide Research Read more...
Jan 04, 2016

Dunt Review Into Suicide

While there is evidence that military and similar institutionally-based ‘gatekeeper… Read more...