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34,037 result(s) for "Worry."
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Worried
\"Early readers will learn to recognize and comprehend the feeling of worry through relatable situations and examples. Utilizing full-page, engaging photographs alongside simple text and relevant sight words, this book is a helpful guide that aids young readers in navigating their emotions while also providing an opportunity to practice their reading skills. Includes a page for caregivers and teachers that suggests guiding questions to help aid in reading comprehension.\"-- Provided by publisher.
She Has an A.I. Lover. Her Son Has Questions
What happens when your parent falls in love with an A.I. chatbot?
Ruby finds a Worry
A young girl's sense of adventure and exploration vanishes when she discovers a Worry that grows and grows until she learns how to get rid of it.
Yo-Yo Ma doesn't worry, he's hopefully optimistic
National arts reporter Geoff Edgers interviewed musician Yo-Yo Ma on Instagram live on April 16.
The relationship between climate change and mental health: a systematic review of the association between eco-anxiety, psychological distress, and symptoms of major affective disorders
Background and objectives The adverse impacts of climate change on mental health is a burgeoning area, although findings are inconsistent. The emerging concept of eco-anxiety represents distress in relation to climate change and may be related to mental health. The aim of this study was to explore the relationship between eco-anxiety with validated mental health outcomes, specifically psychological distress and symptoms of major affective disorders. Design Systematic review. Methods EBSCO, ProQuest, and Web of Science databases were searched to February 2024 for studies of adult samples quantifying eco-anxiety (exposure, i.e. fear, worry or anxiety in relation to climate change) and symptoms of psychological distress and major affective disorders (outcomes), as assessed by validated measures. Results Full text review of 83 studies was performed, and k  = 35 studies were included in the review ( N  = 45 667, 61% female, M age 31.2 years). Consistently, eco-anxiety showed small to large positive correlations with mental health outcomes of psychological distress, depression symptoms, anxiety symptoms, and stress symptoms. However, results regarding post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms and pathological worry were mixed. Stronger associations were observed where eco-anxiety was operationalised as ‘anxiety’ rather than ‘worry’. Conclusions Findings underscore that eco-anxiety is related to psychological burden. Greater consideration of eco-anxiety in assessment and treatment is needed in clinical practice and further policy development is warranted at the intersection of climate and health to address the mental health challenges posed by climate change.
Justin Case : shells, smells, and the horrible flip-flops of doom
\"Justin is going to start fourth grade-but first, he has to survive the summer. He \"gets\" to go to camp every day on a bus. He \"gets\" to experience all sorts of new things: Bugs. Mess hall food. Flip-flops (they hurt the space between his toes and they're hard to walk in). And (gulp!) swimming. Justin's little sister, Elizabeth, seems to deal with camp just fine. So do his friends. Justin is trying very hard not to be a worried kid anymore, especially when it comes to making friends at camp, including a new kid who is kind of ... rough. After all, Justin is going to be in fourth grade. It's time to be brave. Right?\"--Jacket.
Worrying : a literary and cultural history
\"Worrying: A Literary and Cultural History is a unique approach to the inner life and its ordinary pains. It charts the emergence of our contemporary conception of worry, which originated with the Victorians and became established after the First World War as a feature of modernity. It was, for some writers between the Wars, the 'disease of the age.'Worrying considers the kind of worry-fearful, non-pathological, and hidden questioning about uncertain futures-which is every day. It offers a 'short' history of worry as it came into language in the early twentieth century and a 'long' history: an account of worry as the natural bedfellow of a world in which we try to live by reason and believe we have the right to choose. It finds in the worrier a peculiar contemporary sufferer, whose world is not only exceptionally familiar but deeply strange. This book suggests that when we take worry into account, we realize just how little we know of others.Offering an intimately personal account of an all too common human experience, and of a word that slips in and out of ordinary conversation so that it has become invisible in its familiarity, Worrying is a book about the sadness of everyday and how the modern world has shaped it\"-- Provided by publisher.
P054 WHAT ARE THEY WORRIED ABOUT?: FINDINGS FROM THE IBD DISTRESS SCALE
Abstract Introduction It is intuitive to expect youth with IBD will have higher rates of depression and anxiety than their otherwise healthy peers, and most research bears this notion. However, existing literature of emotional distress has not consistently addressed the differentiation between general depression and anxiety and normative emotional experiences of IBD. Assessment measures often used for youth with IBD align with the DSM criteria; based on symptoms, without considering etiology or context (e.g., chronic disease). The IBD Distress Scale (IDS) was designed to identify distress/worry in response to extraordinary circumstances of having IBD. Methods The IDS is a 27-item measure of distress related to IBD symptoms, treatment, and disease burden. The youth self-report was completed by 108 patients ages 12–19, and 101 parents. The IDS measure was administered with general measures of depression (Patient Health Questionnaire, PHQ8) and anxiety (General Anxiety Disorder, GAD7) to youth with IBD attending their routine gastroenterology appointment. Item responses were classified as “not a problem,” “moderate problem,” or “serious problem.” For some analyses, “not a problem” and “moderate problem” were collapsed. Correlations and frequencies were conducted to compare youth and parent responses. Results Results identified top “serious problems” rated by youth and parents, separately. The highest rated problem for youth was worries about not being able to eat what others are eating, with 18% reporting this as a serious problem. The second most highly rated “serious problem” by youth was fear of not having bathroom access (15%). For parents, the highest rated “serious problem” was fear of surgery (24%). Parents also rated worrying about next flare, and feeling there’s no way to avoid a flare, as “serious problems,” both with 16% frequency. Pearson correlations for the top problems identified as “serious” by youth and parents revealed significant agreement for socially-oriented worries; e.g., anxiety about patient not being able to eat what others are eating (r=.33). Conclusion The CCF states IBD treatment goals are five-fold: achieve remission; control inflammation; maintain remission; prevent and manage complications; maximize quality of life. Based on research with other diseases, integrating the IDS into current IBD treatment protocols is a logical step for identifying target areas for treatment. Thematically, results revealed youth and parents worry about future-oriented (e.g., worrying about next flare) and socially-oriented issues (e.g., possibility of not having access to a bathroom). The identified themes enlighten current treatment and provide guidance for improved interventions. Future directions should include development and implementation of appropriate interventions specific to the identified serious problems for IBD distress.