Background? Caregivers' emotional and cognitive reactions to challenging behaviours have been identified as potential determinants of their reinforcing responses towards such behaviours. However, few studies have explored factors affecting caregivers' emotional and cognitive responses to challenging behaviours. Methods? Sixty students inexperienced in work with people with challenging behaviours and 60 experienced staff watched one of two carefully matched, acted videotapes depicting self-injury maintained by attention or escape-from-task demands. The participants were also told whether the self-injury depicted typically led to mild or severe consequences for the person filmed. The subjects completed measures of their negative emotional rea...
Emotion-related motivations for self-injurious behavior were examined in a sample of 115 women, 26 o...
Countertransference and self-injury: a cognitive behavioural cycleAim. This paper discusses the emot...
Caregivers differ in their emotional response when facing difficult situations during the caregiving...
Contemporary behavioural models of the maintenance of challenging behaviour stress the importance of...
Researchers have suggested that mediators find challenging behaviors aversive. An ecologically valid...
Current behavioural models incorporate challenging behaviour and staff actions into a 'dynamic behav...
Reasons why people might behave in ways that are challenging for others include dementia and learnin...
Patterns of caregiver responses to client adaptive behavior were compared between adults with intell...
Objective: To use Weiner's attributional model of helping behaviour to investigate the relationship ...
Background: This study examines the relationship between the topography of challenging behaviour, su...
The behavior of staff who care for people with mental retardation has been identified as a significa...
Objective: The Emotional Cascade Model posits that nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) functions to distr...
Objectives. The aim of the study was to explore an amended version of Weiner's (e.g. Weiner, 1980) h...
Background and objectives: Theoretical models of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) propose that indivi...
Bacground Previous studies have attempted to apply Weiner's attributional model of helping behaviour...
Emotion-related motivations for self-injurious behavior were examined in a sample of 115 women, 26 o...
Countertransference and self-injury: a cognitive behavioural cycleAim. This paper discusses the emot...
Caregivers differ in their emotional response when facing difficult situations during the caregiving...
Contemporary behavioural models of the maintenance of challenging behaviour stress the importance of...
Researchers have suggested that mediators find challenging behaviors aversive. An ecologically valid...
Current behavioural models incorporate challenging behaviour and staff actions into a 'dynamic behav...
Reasons why people might behave in ways that are challenging for others include dementia and learnin...
Patterns of caregiver responses to client adaptive behavior were compared between adults with intell...
Objective: To use Weiner's attributional model of helping behaviour to investigate the relationship ...
Background: This study examines the relationship between the topography of challenging behaviour, su...
The behavior of staff who care for people with mental retardation has been identified as a significa...
Objective: The Emotional Cascade Model posits that nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) functions to distr...
Objectives. The aim of the study was to explore an amended version of Weiner's (e.g. Weiner, 1980) h...
Background and objectives: Theoretical models of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) propose that indivi...
Bacground Previous studies have attempted to apply Weiner's attributional model of helping behaviour...
Emotion-related motivations for self-injurious behavior were examined in a sample of 115 women, 26 o...
Countertransference and self-injury: a cognitive behavioural cycleAim. This paper discusses the emot...
Caregivers differ in their emotional response when facing difficult situations during the caregiving...