The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies.
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Public health practice vs research: implications for preparedness and disaster research review by State Health Department IRBs.Participatory action research methodology in disaster research: results from the World Trade Center evacuation study.Research risk for persons with psychiatric disorders: a decisional framework to meet the ethical challenge.Applying experience sampling methods to partner violence research: safety and feasibility in a 90-day study of community women.The burden of research on trauma for respondents: a prospective and comparative study on respondents evaluations and predictorsPosttraumatic stress disorder symptoms among family decision makers and the potential relevance of study attrition.Supporting Rural Australian Communities after Disaster: the Warrumbungle Bushfire Support Coordination Service.Impact of violence research on participants over time: Helpful, harmful, or neither?Is Participating in Psychological Research a Benefit, Burden, or Both for Medically Ill Youth and Their Caregivers?.Interview and recollection-based research with child disaster survivors: Participation-related changes in emotion and perceptions of participationMales' Reactions to Participating in Research on Dating Violence Victimization and Childhood AbuseReactions to Dating Violence Research: Do Difficulties with Distress Tolerance Increase Negative Reactions?Participant reactions to a pretreatment research assessment during a treatment outcome study for PTSDEthical issues in trauma-related research: a review.Holding harm: narrative methods in mental health research on refugee trauma.Reactions to participating in dating violence research: are our questions distressing participants?How do IRB members make decisions? A review and research agenda.Doing more good than harm? The effects of participation in sex research on young people in the Netherlands.Investigating the effects of trauma-related research on well-being.Ethical issues in research on sensitive topics: participants' experiences of distress and benefit.Trauma and sex surveys meet minimal risk standards: implications for institutional review boards.Research Reactions Following Participation in Intimate Partner Violence Research: An Examination With Men in Substance Use Treatment.Do Some Students Need Special Protection From Research on Sex and Trauma? New Evidence for Young Adult Resilience in "Sensitive Topics" Research.Readiness to reconcile and post-traumatic distress in German survivors of wartime rapes in 1945.Trauma and post-traumatic stress symptoms in former German child soldiers of World War II.Reactions to a survey among those who were and were not sexually assaulted while serving in the military.What are we missing? Risk behaviors among Arab-American adolescents and emerging adults.The appraisal of quantitative and qualitative trauma-focused research procedures among pregnant participants.Service and science in times of crisis: developing, planning, and implementing a clinical research program for children traumatically bereaved after 9/11.Different Diagnosis, Shared Vulnerabilities: The Value of Cross Disorder Validation of Capacity to Consent.[Trauma and posttraumatic stress symptoms in patients in German primary care settings].Children's Perception of Research Participation: Examining Trauma Exposure and Distress.A mixed methods study of participant reaction to domestic violence research in Jordan."What has it been like for you to talk with me today?": the impact of participating in interview research on rape survivors.Training interviewers for research on sexual violence: a qualitative study of rape survivors' recommendations for interview practice.Distress, need for help, and positive feelings derived from participation in sex research: findings of a population study in The Netherlands.Trauma victim: yes or no? Why it may be difficult to answer questions regarding violence, sexual abuse, and other traumatic events.Variables differentiating singly and multiply victimized youth: results from the National Survey of Adolescents and implications for secondary prevention.Ethical research in refugee communities and the use of community participatory methods.Perceptions of trauma research with a sample of at-risk youth.
P2860
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P2860
The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies.
description
2004 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2004年の論文
@ja
2004年学术文章
@wuu
2004年学术文章
@zh-cn
2004年学术文章
@zh-hans
2004年学术文章
@zh-my
2004年学术文章
@zh-sg
2004年學術文章
@yue
2004年學術文章
@zh
2004年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies.
@ast
The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies.
@en
type
label
The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies.
@ast
The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies.
@en
prefLabel
The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies.
@ast
The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies.
@en
P1476
The risks and benefits of participating in trauma-focused research studies
@en
P2093
Danny G Kaloupek
Elana Newman
P304
P356
10.1023/B:JOTS.0000048951.02568.3A
P577
2004-10-01T00:00:00Z
P6179
1012139612