Sunday, June 16, 2013

Critical Psychology Review - 6/16/2013

Dancing with your demons - Nation on Sunday

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Dancing with your demons
Nation on Sunday
The author's contribution to action psychotherapies is an excellent critical introduction to dramatic and action therapies. Through historical analysis, theoretical discussion, and scrutiny of clinical practice, he demonstrates how creativity ...

Pathological Altruism - People's Cube (satire) (blog)

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Pathological Altruism
People's Cube (satire) (blog)
That is to say, it is largely the domain of pop psychology. "It is reasonable to wonder if the lack of ... Altruistic intentions played a critical role in the development and unfolding of the housing bubble in the United States. The same is true of the ...

Inside Business: Dog trainer uses psychology background to modify canine ... - CapitalGazette.com

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Inside Business: Dog trainer uses psychology background to modify canine ...
CapitalGazette.com
Education: B.A. in psychology from St. John's University. What I'm reading: "The Healing .....Cottman said understanding how different dogs — with different personalities — will react to various training techniques is critical to his job. While an ...

What Part Do Sleep Spindles Play In Emotional Memory: Ambien Study - RedOrbit

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RedOrbit

What Part Do Sleep Spindles Play In Emotional Memory: Ambien Study
RedOrbit
Sara C. Mednick, assistant professor of psychology at UC Riverside, along with UC San Diegopsychologists Erik. J. Kaestner and John T. Wixted, was able to determine how sleep spindles are important for emotional ... Previous research published by ... 

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Love or country? Immigration law means hard choices for gay couples - CNN International

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Love or country? Immigration law means hard choices for gay couples
CNN International
There are nearly 30,000 such couples in America who now find themselves in the crosshairs of two critical national debates: the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, and immigration reform. Even if Servetas were to marry Amaral in the District of ...

Annual Review of Critical Psychology 10 | CRISE 

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Acabou de ser publicado o novo número (10) da Revista de Psicologia Crítica: “Critical Psychology in a Changing World: Building Bridges and Expanding the Dialogue”. Conta com 49 artigos do mundo todo (Alemanha,...
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Initiative Critical Psychology: Think brain scans can reveal our ... 

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The grip of neuroscience on the academic and popular imagination is extraordinary. In recent decades, brain scientists have burst out of the laboratory into the public forum. They are everywhere, analysing and explaining ...

The Hidden Roots of Critical Psychology ... - downloaditemsr0

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The Hidden Roots of Critical Psychology: Understanding the - download ebook. Hi Guys! Sorry to be so slow in answering your questions, but here goes. If you have any questions about books feel free to ask. As usual, I will ...

Evolutionary Psychology Critical Publication (Q&A) - Modern ...

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Summarizes my critiques of evolutionary psychology and addresses critical comments.

Corrections, Psychology & Social Connection: Creating No More ... 

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Examples include the death of an offender, a re-offense in the community, or a perceived or real threat to a staff member. These types of incidents may cause critical incident stress for officers. RCMP psychologists Teal Maedel ...

'Journal of Social and Political Psychology': A New Forum for Critical ... 

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As you know, there aren't that many journals that are willing to publish critical work in psychology, so one is always intrigued by, and grateful for, any new initiatives. The recently announced Journal of Social and Political...

What The Military Is Doing To Address Its Sexual Assault Crisis

What The Military Is Doing To Address Its Sexual Assault Crisis

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey addresses Congress (Credit: AP)
Sexual assault in the military has come under heavy scrutiny in recent months after a series of scandals and a Pentagon report that estimated 26,000 cases of unwanted sexual contact in 2012, up from 19,000 in the previous year. Of the many issues that have been reported, a narrative has emerged of high and increasing rates of assault, a fear of reportingdifficulty in accessing resources, a sometimes re-traumatizing reporting and judicial process, and a misuse of powerby some commanders.
The Senate Armed Services Committee held a hearing on the crisis last week, and various pieces of legislation are being debated in both houses of Congress. As that’s occurring, the Department of Defense and the various branches of the military are also attempting to end the problem in their ranks. Here’s what each of them are — or in some cases aren’t — doing so far:

The Department of Defense

1. Re-training and re-screening of prevention and response personnel.
After officers in charge of sexual assault prevention for a Ft. Hood, TX base and the entire Air Force were accused of sexual assault, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel ordered the re-training, re-credentialing, and re-screening of all sexual assault prevention and response personnel. Currently, the qualifications for personnel varies across military branches, but the House recently approved a proposal that would codify and standardize selection criteria across the military. According to DoD spokeswoman Cynthia O. Smith, the DoD is in the process of standardizing selection, training, and certification standards for special victim investigators.
2. Limiting commanders’ power to overturn jury rulings.
In response to another scandal, where an Air Force colonel overturned a sexual assault conviction by blaming the victim, Hagel asked Congress to limit military commanders’ power as “convening authorities” to overturn court-martial verdicts, after a review conducted by the Pentagon in April. Commanders would still be able to change sentences, but would have to explain their reasons in writing. The Senate Armed Services Committee on Wednesdayaccepted an amendment from Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) that would enact these changes.
3. Pushing back against restricting chain of command authority.
At the Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on sexual assault in the military, commanders pushed back universally against the idea of stripping decision-making power from the chain of command structure. While many advocates support the change, and Pentagon data shows that more than 25 percent of victims were assaulted by someone in their chain of command, Hagel and top commanders argued that the chain of command must be preserved to maintain order and discipline. Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Carl Levin (D-MI)sided with commanders on Wednesday by rejecting a proposal from Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) that would have handed cases of felony sex crimes over to independent military prosecutors outside the chain of command. Gillibrand plans to re-introduce her bill on the Senate floor.
4. Revising policies and expanding resources through the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office
The Department of Defense’s Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office revised its Sexual Assault Program policy in March 2013, according to Smith, focusing on standardizing procedures and increasing training of commanders. The Office further established new standards for medical care providers and is in the process of expanding resources such as the 24-hour Safe Help Line and adding more sexual assault Resource Coordinators and Victim Advocates across branches. The Office will be charged with the DoD’s further attempts at reform in the coming months; its latest strategic plan lists prevention strategies, encouraging reporting, improved response, increased accountability, and stakeholder education as its main priorities.

The Army

5. Creating screenings and incentives for counselors and advocates.
After a two-day Sexual Harassment/Assault Prevention and Response conference, Army Secretary John McHugh issued a directive that will require behavioral health screenings for Sexual Assault Response Coordinators and Victim Advocates. The directive also triggers the creation a plan to incentive these positions through career rewards, and restricts the ability to hire these personnel to a small set of senior officers.
6. Training medical officers in evidence collection.
The Army has been developing a Sexual Assault Medical Forensics Examiners program in its South Korea base, with the goal of creating “an Army best practice model program.” Medical personnel are trained in the program to use standard evidence collection kits, and will become part of the sexual assault response process along with Response Coordinators and Victim Advocates.

The Air Force

7. Appointing a female general to head the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office.
After the head of the Air Force’s Sexual Assault and Prevention (SAPR) program was arrested for sexual assault, a 2-star female general was appointed to the position. Maj. Gen. Margaret Woodward plans to reorganize the office to directly report to the Air Force’s chief of staff and is seeking ideas on resolving the sexual assault crisis from outside the military. The Department of Defense’s overarching SAPR office is run by two men.
8. Creating Special Victims’ Counsels to advocate for victims.
On Monday, the Air Force opened its first dedicated facility to sexual assault response, housing newly trained lawyers from the Special Victims’ Counsel (SVC) program created earlier this year. In an attempt to tackle a problem that 85 percent of victims do not report, SVCs willadvocate solely on behalf of the victim through the entire reporting and prosecuting process. They are also charged with supporting victims in housing changes and other procedural support. Victim advocates have existed in the civilian world for many years and in the Army as Victim Advocates.

The Navy

9. Issuing a fleet-wide sexual assault awareness stand-down.
Last Wednesday, in accordance with orders from Joint Chiefs Chairman Martin Dempseydirected to all branches of the military, the Navy announced that it would be holding a three-week long Sexual Assault Awareness Stand-down in June. All personnel will be required to undergo training on basic sexual assault prevention and response principles and training from sexual assault Response Coordinators and Victim Advocates. The Navy intends for the stand-down to “refocus [its] attention” on sexual assault prevention, but it is unclear how the program will differ from previous training required of all officers. During the stand-down, the Navy will also conduct re-training of all personnel involved in sexual assault prevention. Other branches of the military are required to create plans for stand-downs by July 1.
10. Piloting “night patrol” and education programs.
The Navy is currently rolling out a pilot program in a San Diego base of 20,000 military personnel and 6,000 civilians, where a team of officers patrols the barracks charged with preventing assault. The program is based on an earlier pilot instituted in a Great Lakes base since 2011, which also included programs of targeted awareness and victim support. The program isdescribed as using bystander intervention strategies, but the concept of nighttime patrols could also overemphasize stranger rape over acquaintance rape. A Navy spokesman told ThinkProgress that since the combined programs’ establishment in the Great Lakes base in 2011, there has been a 62 percent reduction in reports of sexual assault. The next locations planned for the program’s expansion are bases in Yokosuka, Japan and Naples, Italy.

The Marines

Notably publicly absent in recent months are any specific programs from the Marine Corps, despite the Pentagon survey’s estimation that women in the Marine Corps, in 2012, faced a higher rate of sexual assault of 10.1 percent as opposed to the 6.1 percent average across the military.
Kumar Ramanathan is an intern at ThinkProgress.

The impact of the September 11 terrorist attack on suicide rates in New York City

The impact of the September 11 terrorist attack on suicide rates in New York City

Publication Abstract
Larkin, G.L., M. Tracy, and Sandro Galea. 2007. "The impact of the September 11 terrorist attack on suicide rates in New York City." Annals of Emergency Medicine, 50(3): S13-S14.
Background The literature on the impact of disasters on the rates of suicide is mixed. According to Durkheim, suicide rates should fall in the wake of external threats or crises. (Durkheim E, 1897) No studies to date have examined the impact of September 11 terrorist attacks on completed suicide in the five boroughs comprising New York City.
Study Objective
To examine the impact of 9/11 on suicide rates in New York City. Methods
An observational study using daily counts of suicides (ICD-9 Codes: E950-959) and death from undetermined injury (E960-E969) was conducted using data from the medical examiner’s office in New York City from all five boroughs: Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, Bronx, and Staten Island from 1994 to 2004. Confirmed suicides were analyzed with and without undetermined deaths added in order to confirm robustness of trends. Daily counts of suicide were aggregated into weekly counts from Tuesday to Monday, in order to include the week starting Tuesday, September 11, 2001. Results
Compared to 440/(661) suicides/(suicides + undetermined deaths) for the year 2001, the mean annual number of NYC suicides/(suicides plus undetermined deaths) for the years 1994-2004, 492.2/(662.8), is not significantly different (p >0.25 for both). Similarly, the mean number of suicides/(suicides plus undetermined deaths) for the month of September in the years 1994-2004, 39/(54.4), matches closely September 2001 suicides of 33/(54), respectively (p>0.25 for both). The annual fraction of suicides constituted by the month of September was 7.5% in 2001 and 7.9% on average for the years 1994-2004 (p>0..25). For the year 2001, NYC suicides plus undetermined injury deaths/month averaged 55.1 (SD=7.6), ranging from 38 to 67. The week from 9/11 to 9/17 saw 11 suicides which was not significantly different than the average of 12.6 (SD: 2.6) suicides per week both before and after 9/11 (Ptrend >0.20). Conclusion
Compared to the years, months, and weeks before and after 9/11 in the 5 boroughs of NYC, neither suicide frequencies nor suicide trajectories were significantly altered after the events of 11 September, 2001.

Psychiatrists protest against disgraced academic’s lecture at research centre

Psychiatrists protest against disgraced academic’s lecture at research centre

Posted by Xeno on June 11, 2013
Britain’s premier institute for the study of mental illness has become embroiled in a damaging row over its decision to invite a disgraced US academic to give the inaugural lecture for a new research centre.
The decision by the Institute of Psychiatry at Kings College, in central London, Europe’s largest psychiatric research organisation, to invite Professor Charles Nemeroff, an expert in the treatment of depression, has split the psychiatric profession and been attacked by members of the institute itself. Professor Nemeroff, a leading authority on the biological causes of mental illness, is one of the highest profile doctors to have been exposed for concealing large payments from pharmaceutical companies.
He was forced to resign his post at Emory University, Atlanta, in 2008 after an investigation revealed that he had failed to report more than $1.2m of payments from GlaxoSmithKline, despite having signed an undertaking to limit payments to $10,000 a year.
He received the payments whilst undertaking a study on behalf of the National Institutes of Health into drugs made by GSK.
In 2009, Professor Nemeroff was appointed chair of psychiatry at the University of Miami and was subsequently awarded a research grant of $400,000 a year for the next five years by the National Institutes of Health. In 2012 it emerged that US Senator Charles Grassley, whose 2008 investigation triggered Professor Nemeroff’s downfall, had written to the National Institutes of Health to ask why they had given him a grant when he was still under federal investigation.
Now a group of UK psychiatrists have written to the Institute of Psychiatry protesting against its decision to invite Professor Nemeroff to give the “inaugural annual lecture for the new Centre for Affective Disorders”, which is due to take place at the institute next Monday.
The group representing the radical Critical Psychiatry Network claims the Nemeroff case is frequently cited as “one of the starkest examples of the financial corruption of medicine” through its “overly cosy relationship with the pharmaceutical industry”.
“Many medical institutions have recognised this relationship is unhealthy and is bringing the profession into disrepute. We find it surprising therefore that the Institute of Psychiatry has seen fit to invite Nemeroff to deliver this important lecture,” they wrote….