Encyclopedia of Behavioral Medicine 2020
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-39903-0_1716
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Psychosocial Factors and Traumatic Events

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Psychosocial factors might include parental psychiatric symptoms, suggesting that parental trauma-related mental health symptoms could be considered as the exposure or the mechanism, depending on the context. Factors might also include parental psychological factors, interpersonal parent-child relationships, or social factors within the household-level (which include demographic factors) that would influence child-rearing behaviors [25]. Comparators will be defined the measurement of the absence of the factor(s) or varying levels of continuously-measured factor(s) of interest in at least some sub-group of participants in the study sample.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Psychosocial factors might include parental psychiatric symptoms, suggesting that parental trauma-related mental health symptoms could be considered as the exposure or the mechanism, depending on the context. Factors might also include parental psychological factors, interpersonal parent-child relationships, or social factors within the household-level (which include demographic factors) that would influence child-rearing behaviors [25]. Comparators will be defined the measurement of the absence of the factor(s) or varying levels of continuously-measured factor(s) of interest in at least some sub-group of participants in the study sample.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Factors might also include parental psychological factors (such as satisfaction, self-efficacy, self-esteem, and locus of control), interpersonal parent-child relationships (parental and family communication patterns and styles, family functioning and cohesion, emotional availability, parent-child attachment, decision-making, trauma communication, and abuse or neglect), or social factors within the household-level (which include demographic factors such as socioeconomic status, religion, age, gender, personal roles, and physical attributes) that would influence child-rearing behaviors, based on the Suzuki framework of psychosocial factors and traumatic events. 58 Comparators will be defined the measurement of the absence of the factor(s) or varying levels of continuously-measured factor(s) of interest in at least some sub-group of participants in the study sample.…”
Section: Study Design and Document Typementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Psychosocial factors might include parental psychiatric symptoms, suggesting that parental trauma-related mental health symptoms could be considered as the exposure or the mechanism, depending on the context. Factors might also include parental psychological factors, interpersonal parent-child relationships, or social factors within the household-level (which include demographic factors) that would influence child-rearing behaviors (25). Comparators will be defined the measurement of the absence of the factor(s) or varying levels of continuously-measured factor(s)…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Psychosocial factors, as defined in the Encyclopedia of Behavioural Medicine, are "influences that affect a person psychologically or socially. These are multidimensional constructs encompassing several domains such as mood status (anxiety, depression, distress, and positive affect), cognitive behavioral responses (satisfaction, self-efficacy, self-esteem, and locus of control), and social factors (socioeconomic status, education, employment, religion, ethnicity, family, physical attributes, locality, relationships with others, changes in personal roles, and status)," (Suzuki & Takei, 2013). World Health Organization (1981) has also positioned the definition of mental health in its report on the Social Dimensions of mental health which states that "Mental Health is the capacity of the individual, the group and the environment to interact with one another in ways that promote subjective well being, the optimal development and use of mental abilities (cognitive, affective and relational), the achievement of individual and collective goals consistent with justice and the attainment and preservation of conditions of fundamental equality".…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%