WordNet
- refraining from making judgments especially ones based on personal opinions or standards; "sympathetic and nonjudgmental"
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English Journal
- Mental health and clinical correlates in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer young adults.
- Grant JE, Odlaug BL, Derbyshire K, Schreiber LR, Lust K, Christenson G.Author information a Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience , University of Chicago , Chicago , Illinois.AbstractAbstract Objective: This study examined the prevalence of mental health disorders and their clinical correlates in a university sample of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ) students. Participants: College students at a large public university. Methods: An anonymous, voluntary survey was distributed via random e-mail generation to university students during April and May of 2011. LGBQ students were compared with their heterosexual counterparts on psychological and physical status as well as academic performance. Results: LGBQ students reported worse depressive symptoms, higher levels of perceived stress, considered themselves less attractive, and were more likely to be overweight. LGBQ students were significantly more likely to report histories of affective, substance use, and certain anxiety disorders as well as compulsive sexual behavior and compulsive buying. Conclusions: The higher rates of many psychiatric conditions among LGBQ students underscore the need for universities to provide LGBQ students a nonjudgmental environment to discuss sexual orientation and health issues.
- Journal of American college health : J of ACH.J Am Coll Health.2014 Jan;62(1):75-8. doi: 10.1080/07448481.2013.844697.
- Abstract Objective: This study examined the prevalence of mental health disorders and their clinical correlates in a university sample of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ) students. Participants: College students at a large public university. Methods: An anonymous, voluntary survey was distri
- PMID 24313699
- Perspectives on trauma-informed care from mothers with a history of childhood maltreatment: A qualitative study.
- Muzik M1, Ads M1, Bonham C2, Lisa Rosenblum K1, Broderick A1, Kirk R1.Author information 1Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, USA.2Department of Psychiatry, University of New Mexico, USA.AbstractWomen who experienced abuse or neglect as children are more likely to have health problems during pregnancy and postpartum, but can be reluctant to seek help due to a lack of trauma-informed services. As part of a larger mixed method study, this component aimed to obtain qualitative data from trauma-exposed new mothers about their health care preferences during the perinatal period with the ultimate goal to design personalized, supportive interventions. Fifty-two trauma-exposed mothers completed a semi-structured interview at seven months postpartum about health care preferences including ideas for programs that promote wellness, thoughts about the influences of being a new mother and possible names for a program serving trauma-exposed mothers. Interviews were transcribed and coded using N-Vivo. Participants described ambivalence about seeking help but also a sincere desire for healing, coupled with hope for the future. This tension was apparent in the discussions highlighting the importance of access to experienced, nonjudgmental, and knowledgeable health and social care staff and volunteers, the wish for both formal, integrated physical and mental health services, and for informal opportunities to meet other trauma-exposed mothers in a non-stigmatizing, child-friendly setting. Finally, positive relationship-building, respect, and safety were identified as key elements of services critical to counteract trauma-related shame and mistrust in others. Services for trauma-exposed mothers should acknowledge the normal ambivalence surrounding seeking help, but promote hope-affirming practices in a family-centered, safe, non-clinical setting that involves children, builds social support, and provides peer interaction. Program names should reflect optimism and healing rather than trauma.
- Child abuse & neglect.Child Abuse Negl.2013 Dec;37(12):1215-24. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2013.07.014. Epub 2013 Aug 23.
- Women who experienced abuse or neglect as children are more likely to have health problems during pregnancy and postpartum, but can be reluctant to seek help due to a lack of trauma-informed services. As part of a larger mixed method study, this component aimed to obtain qualitative data from trauma
- PMID 23978576
- Talk or Text to Tell? How Young Adults in Canada and South Africa Prefer to Receive STI Results, Counseling, and Treatment Updates in a Wireless World.
- Labacher L, Mitchell C.Author information a Department of Integrated Studies in Education , McGill University , Montreal , Quebec , Canada.AbstractYoung adults often lack access to confidential, long-lasting, and nonjudgmental interactions with sexual health professionals at brick-and-mortar clinics. To ensure that patients return for their STI test results, post-result counseling, and STI-related information, computer-mediated health intervention programming allows them to receive sexual health information through onsite computers, the Internet, and mobile phone calls and text messages. To determine whether young adults (age: M = 21 years) prefer to communicate with health professionals about the status of their sexual health through computer-mediated communication devices, 303 second-year university students (183 from an urban North American university and 120 from a periurban university in South Africa) completed a paper-based survey indicating how they prefer to communicate with doctors and nurses: talking face to face, mobile phone call, text message, Internet chat programs, Facebook, Twitter, or e-mail. Nearly all students, and female students in South Africa in particular, prefer to receive their STI test results, post-results counseling, and STI-related information by talking face to face with doctors and nurses rather than communicating through computers or mobile phones. Results are clarified in relation to gender, availability of various technologies, and prevalence of HIV in Canada and in South Africa.
- Journal of health communication.J Health Commun.2013 Dec;18(12):1465-76. doi: 10.1080/10810730.2013.798379. Epub 2013 Sep 9.
- Young adults often lack access to confidential, long-lasting, and nonjudgmental interactions with sexual health professionals at brick-and-mortar clinics. To ensure that patients return for their STI test results, post-result counseling, and STI-related information, computer-mediated health interven
- PMID 24015829
Japanese Journal
- 特別講演 Nonjudgmental Rorschach-Based Psychotherapy : "あるがまま"を支えるRorschach-Based Psychotherapy (国際ロールシャッハおよび投映法学会第20回日本大会記念特別号)
- 中村 紀子
- 包括システムによる日本ロールシャッハ学会誌 : 包括システムによる日本ロールシャッハ学会機関誌 (特別号), 45-60, 2013-08
- NAID 40019790451
- Consciousness and Unconsciousness in Clinical and Educational Psychology Through the Lens of Mindfulness
- Sugiura Yoshinori
- 教育心理学年報 49, 238-248, 2010-03-30
- … Mindfulness is a mode of attention characterized by receptive and nonjudgmental awareness of the experience of the present moment. …
- NAID 110007618616
- 子どもの性同一性障害--小児期・思春期・青年期のGIDに関する研究動向 (特集 教育学の射程)
- 佐々木 掌子
- 哲学 123, 159-184[含 英語文要旨], 2010-03
- … Approaches to therapy can be placed into 4 categories: 1) therapy for aiming at changing cross-gender identity, 2) therapy that exhibits a nonjudgmental attitude to cross-gender identity, 3) therapy that affrmatively accepts cross-gender identity, 4) physical interventions for sex reassignment. …
- NAID 40017219798
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