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1.
Am J Lifestyle Med ; 17(2): 213-215, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36896035

ABSTRACT

Surgeons have been under great pressure during the COVID pandemic. Their careers are filled with fast paced decisions, life and death situations, and long hours at work. The COVID pandemic created more tasks and even new responsibilities at times, but when the operating rooms were closed down, there was less work. The COVID experience invited the opportunity to rethink mentoring in the surgery department at the Massachusetts General Hospital. The leadership experimented with a new style of mentoring which involved a team approach. In addition, they tried something else that was new: adding a lifestyle medicine expert and wellness coach to the mentoring team. The program was tested on 13 early stage surgeons who found the experience to be beneficial, and they commented that they wished they had it even earlier in their careers. Including a non-surgeon who was a lifestyle medicine physician and wellness coach added an element of whole person health that was acceptable to the surgeons and even embraced as the majority of them elected to follow up with one on one coaching after the mentoring meeting. This team mentoring program with senior surgeons and a lifestyle medicine expert is one that can be explored by other departments and other hospitals given its success at the department of surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital.

2.
Psychiatr Rehabil J ; 45(2): 192-199, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34694844

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Our objective is to provide preliminary evidence of the English translation of the Integrative Hope Scale (IHS). Hope is a critical concept for recovery. Synthesizing from other hope models, Schrank and colleagues developed the IHS. Although translated into five languages, no known studies assess the IHS's English translation within a clinical sample. Additionally, no known studies investigate the IHS's relationships with mental health measures in a mixed-diagnostic clinical sample. METHOD: To address these gaps in the literature, we used confirmatory factor analyses, alpha, and omega reliability coefficients, and correlational analyses to assess the IHS within a suburban, mixed-diagnostic intensive outpatient community mental health sample (n = 125) in the midwestern United States. RESULTS: While poorest fit was found within the one-factor model, the four-factor oblique, higher-order, and bifactor models showed improved fit. Reliability for the total score was good, with subscales ranging from acceptable to good. Significant relationships were found for the IHS in expected directions with measures of hope and depression at a large effect size and anxiety and stress at a moderate effect size. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: This study provides preliminary evidence that the IHS may have the potential to serve as a central measure of hope. Given hope's role within recovery and given its relationships with mental health measures shown in this mixed-diagnostic clinical sample, the IHS should continue to be investigated by researchers, clinicians, and clients, especially in recovery-focused programs. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Language , Public Health , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Humans , Psychometrics , Reproducibility of Results
3.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 59(1): 125-132, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34928651

ABSTRACT

Standard dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), with its 12-month format, has a documented record of efficacy. While emerging evidence is supportive of DBT adaptations in community mental health settings and brief, intensive formats, many of these studies are limited by sample size of its DBT group, by omission of program completion rates and specific data from program noncompleters, and by focusing solely on symptom-focused measures-which inadvertently omits observing gains associated with well-being. We used a nonexperimental design to assess client outcomes on pathology-focused and positive-psychology measures in a brief DBT intensive-outpatient Community Mental Health Center in the midwestern United States for program graduates and program dropouts who completed at least two surveys (n = 77). This is the shortest average program length (M = 19.01 days) known for a DBT program. Scores on measures of depression (d = 0.41), anxiety (d = 0.5), stress (d = 0.5), and difficulties in emotion regulation (d = 0.51) all decreased from entrance to exit. Scores on measures of mindfulness (d = 0.43), Snyder's hope (d = 0.51), and integrative hope (d = 0.41) increased from entrance to exit. These results provide evidence that pathology decreases and measures associated with well-being increase in this brief, intensive-outpatient community health DBT program. This study provides support for future investigations of brief, intensive community health programs. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Borderline Personality Disorder , Dialectical Behavior Therapy , Mindfulness , Anxiety/therapy , Behavior Therapy , Borderline Personality Disorder/therapy , Humans , Outpatients , Public Health , Treatment Outcome
4.
J Am Coll Health ; 69(2): 208-214, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31513476

ABSTRACT

Objective: This pilot study assessed the feasibility and acceptability of The Mindfulness App with college students and the utility of daily text-message reminders for increasing adherence.Participants: Students from a mid-sized Midwestern University (N = 59) during the spring and fall of 2016.Methods: Using a pretest-posttest design, a group of students used The Mindfulness App for 5 weeks. All students were sent text-message reminders to submit daily practice time and completed a series of online measures.Results: Participants consistently used the application as intended, and reported positive attitudes toward the text-message reminders and the quality of the application.Conclusions:The Mindfulness App is a feasible, well-accepted tool for delivering mindfulness interventions to college students.


Subject(s)
Mindfulness , Mobile Applications , Humans , Pilot Projects , Students , Universities
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