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Ricardo Eiraldi; Gwendolyn M. Lawson; Ami Patel; Barry L. McCurdy; Courtney Benjamin Wolk; Muniya S. Khanna; Abbas F. Jawad – Contemporary School Psychology, 2024
Schools face an unprecedent demand for mental health services. Student mental health problems can be addressed via a continuum of mental health evidence-based practices (EBPs) integrated within school-wide Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS). However, integrating mental health interventions with PBIS can be challenging. The…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Intervention, School Health Services, Mental Health Programs
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Eiraldi, Ricardo; Comly, Rachel; Goldstein, Jessica; Khanna, Muniya S.; McCurdy, Barry L.; Rutherford, Laura E.; Henson, Kathryn; Bevenour, Patrick; Francisco, Jennifer; Jawad, Abbas F. – School Mental Health, 2023
Children in rural settings are less likely to receive mental health services than their urban and suburban counterparts and even less likely to receive evidence-based care. Rural schools could address the need for mental health interventions by using evidence-based practices within a tiered system of supports such as positive behavioral…
Descriptors: Mental Health Workers, Mental Health Programs, School Health Services, Rural Schools
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Jocelyn C. Anderson; Michelle D. S. Boakye; Zoe Feinstein; Summer Miller-Walfish; Kelley A. Jones; Carla D. Chugani; Alexandra Schmulevich; Reesha Jackson; Elizabeth Miller – Journal of American College Health, 2024
Objective: Examine associations between care seeking reasons in college health and counseling centers and sexual violence (SV). Participants: College students (n = 2,084 baseline, n = 1,170 one-year follow up) participating in a cluster randomized controlled trial of an SV reduction intervention on 28 campuses. Methods: Computer-based survey data…
Descriptors: College Students, Help Seeking, Violence, Sexual Abuse
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Jenny L. Olson; David E. Conroy; Scherezade K. Mama; Kathryn H. Schmitz – Health Education & Behavior, 2024
Healthy lifestyle behaviors can improve health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in cancer survivors; but the combination of behaviors most important for HRQOL is not known. This study investigated the patterns of lifestyle behaviors among cancer survivors and differences in HRQOL between behavioral classes. Cancer survivors (n = 2,463) were invited…
Descriptors: Health Behavior, Life Style, Quality of Life, Cancer
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Marian Reiff; Alaina Spiegel; Elizabeth Williams; Brinda Ramesh; Soumya Madabhushi; Batsirai Bvunzawabaya – Journal of College Student Mental Health, 2024
While gatekeeper trainings have demonstrated their effectiveness in appraisals of preparedness, efficacy, and intention to intervene, evidence has been lacking regarding gatekeeper behaviors in real life. The I CARE training aims to increase intervention in real-world situations involving suicidality through informational and experiential…
Descriptors: Intervention, Suicide, Experiential Learning, Skill Development
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Gellis, Zvi D.; Gregory, Christin; LaMarra, Denise; Radway, Janice; Cao, Hannah; Connors, Sophia; Delgado, Jennifer; Sloan, Kelli; Trovati, Joslyn – Journal of Social Work Education, 2023
Nationally, social work students face limited access to clinical education that examines the intersection of older adults, chronic disease, and mental health. This is critical due to a rapidly aging population and a shortage of geriatrics trained social workers. Scant data exists on the effectiveness of clinical simulations to prepare social work…
Descriptors: Social Work, Caseworkers, Older Adults, Chronic Illness
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Chisholm, Alexandria; Hartman-Caverly, Sarah – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2022
Personal technology use can significantly impact wellness. The transition to widespread remote learning, working, and socializing during the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated society's reliance on technology. This article presents a case study of how the authors applied their privacy scholarship to offer a responsive learning experience for students…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Wellness, Influence of Technology
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Dial, Lauren A.; DeNardo, Faith A.; Fevrier, Bradley; Morgan, Amy L.; Du, Chen; Tucker, Robin M.; Hsiao, Pao Ying; Ludy, Mary-Jon – Journal of American College Health, 2023
Objective: This study explored how COVID-related mental health and well-being varied between undergraduate and graduate students. Relationships with physical health behaviors were also examined. Participants: Undergraduate (n = 897) and graduate (n = 314) students were recruited from three US universities between mid-April and late-May 2020.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Well Being, Mental Health
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Platt, Lisa F.; Scheitle, Christopher P.; McCown, Claire M. – Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 2022
Using data from the Center for Collegiate Mental Health (CCMH), the present study examines the role family relationships have in explaining mental health outcomes for transgender and gender nonconforming (TG/GNC) college students who present to university counseling centers. A structural equation model indicates that TG and GNC collegiate clients…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Family Relationship, College Students, School Counseling
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Elizabeth B. Dowdell; Raina V. Lamade; Austin F. Lee; Ann Schuler; Robert A. Prentky – Journal of School Nursing, 2024
Adolescent behavior now occurs offline and online. Frequently studied and treated independently, the relationship between offline problem behaviors and online risk taking is not well understood. This study asked whether there are any problematic behaviors predictive of online risk taking by high school students. Using a 2009 dataset of 2,077 high…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, High School Students, Behavior Problems, Mental Health
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Rivers, Alannah Shelby; Winston-Lindeboom, Payne; Ruan-Iu, Linda; Atte, Tita; Tien, Allen; Diamond, Guy – School Psychology, 2023
Externalizing problems are common in children ages 6-14, can have lifelong consequences, and may pose a particular risk when combined with other risk factors and symptoms (like depression and anxiety). Schools are uniquely positioned to assess and address these types of behavioral health concerns, but many school-based assessments do not focus on…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Student Behavior, Child Behavior, Mental Health
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Bertuccio, Rebecca Felicia; Frank,, Jennifer L.; Hall, Cristin Marie – School Psychology Review, 2022
Adolescent suicide is a critical problem in the United States. Identification and reporting of warning signs is a suicide prevention practice that is particularly important in schools, where adolescents spend the majority of their time. Though it is necessary to consider both risk factors and warning signs when evaluating an individual's suicide…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Suicide, At Risk Persons, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
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Umucu, Emre; Moser, Erin; Bezyak, Jill – Journal of College Student Development, 2020
Hope is a defining characteristic of well-being, and research points to the positive contribution of hope to life adjustment (Snyder, Lehman, Kluck, & Monssan, 2006). Harris developed an initial version of an individual-differences measure of hope, the Trait Hope Scale (THS). Snyder, Harris, and colleagues (1991) further developed the THS by…
Descriptors: Veterans Education, College Students, Nontraditional Students, Psychological Patterns
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Liang, Christopher T. H.; Gutekunst, Malaïka H. C.; Liu, Lian; Rosenberger, Teresa; Kohler, Brooke A. – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
Teaching youth how to self-regulate is a focus of a trauma-informed school approach. Peace Spaces, including Peace Corners and Peace Rooms, are a trauma-informed intervention used to teach self-regulation skills to students. The current study used a Consensual Qualitative Research design to identify and describe the thoughts, concerns, and…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Urban Schools, Intervention, Trauma Informed Approach
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Krach, Shelley Kathleen; Paskiewicz, Tracy L.; Monk, Malaya M. – Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 2020
In 2017, the National Association of School Psychologists described tele-assessment as the least researched area of telehealth. This became problematic in 2020 when COVID-19 curtailed the administration of face-to-face assessments. Publishers began to offer computer-adapted tele-assessment methods for tests that had only previously been…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Computer Mediated Communication, Teleconferencing
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