Ditemukan 18659 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
Sarafino, Edward P.
New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1990
616.89 SAR h
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Sarafino, Edward P.
New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1994
616.89 SAR h
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Niven, Neil
New York: Churchill Livingstone , 1994
613.019 NIV h
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
London: Sage Publications, 1999
616.001 9 QUA
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Radley, Alan, 1946-
London: Sage, 1994
610.019 RAD m
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Taylor, Shelley E.
New York: McGraw-Hill, 1995
616 TAY h
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Sarafino, Edward P.
"Sarafino draws from the research and theory of many disciplines in order to show psychologists how psychology and health affect each other. The new edition has been updated to include new research and data. New discussions are included on health care systems. Significant new information is also presented on prevention and intervention, especially for teens? risky behaviors. In addition, international examples are included to broaden the psychologist?s view of health issues around the world and highlight what works in the field."
Hoboken N.J.: John Wiley & Son, 2012
616.001 9 SAR h
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Sheridan, Charles L.
New York: Wiley, 1992
610.1 SHE h
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
"Despite widespread speculation that syndrome co-occurrence undermines treatment outcomes, this hypothesis has not been fully examined within clinical care settings. To address this gap, the authors investigated the relation between syndrome co-occurrence and outcome among 325 clinically referred youths. For every syndrome, higher initial severity was predictive of greater treatment gains and higher posttreatment symptom levels; contrary to speculation in the literature, co-occurrence effects were rare and modest in size, accounting for 0.6% of outcome variance on average. The results suggest that co-occurrence, though common in youth clinical care, is not an obstacle to treatment success in most cases. In addition to its substantive findings, the study illustrates how a dimensional approach can be used to shed new light on co-occurrence in clinical care.
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JCCP 74 (1-3) 2006
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library
"The authors conducted a large-scale study of terrorism in Israel via telephone surveys in September 2003 with 905 adult Jewish and Palestinian citizens of Israel (PCIs). Structural equation path modeling indicated that exposure to terrorism was significantly related to greater loss and gain of psychosocial resources and to greater posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depressive symptoms. Psychosocial resource loss and gain associated with terrorism were, in turn, significantly related to both greater PTSD and depressive symptoms. PCIs had significantly higher levels of PTSD and depressive symptoms than Jews. Further, PTSD symptoms in particular were related to greater authoritarian beliefs and ethnocentrism, suggesting how PTSD may lead to a self-protective style of defensive coping."
JCCP 74 (1-3) 2006
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library