Facultad de Educación y Psicología
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/10171/38987
En el curso 2013/2014 se constituyó la nueva Facultad de Educación y Psicología. Los materiales anteriores a esa fecha, puede localizarlos en: Facultad de Filosofía y Letras - Departamento de Educación.
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6 results
Results
- Palliative care stay room – designing, testing and evaluating a gamified social intervention to enhance palliative care awareness.(Springer Nature, 2023-04-20) Rivas-Borrell, S. (Sonia); Benitez, E. (Edgar); Olza-Moreno, I. (Inés); Centeno, C. (Carlos); Sandgren, A. (Anna); Reigada, C. (Carla); Hermida-Romero, S. (Santiago); Carvajal, A. (Ana); Gómez-Baceiredo, B. (Beatriz); Ripoll, G. (Guillem)The message of palliative care can be promoted using creative thinking and gamification. It can be an innovative strategy to promote changes in behaviour, promote thinking, and work on skills such as empathy. The aim of this article is to design, test and evaluate a gamified social intervention to enhance palliative care awareness among younguniversity students from non-health background.
- Combining interdisciplinarity and creative design - A powerful strategy to increase palliative care awareness within a university community(Elsevier, 2022) Naya-Villaverde, C. (Carlos); Gómez, B. (Beatriz); Acilu, A. (Aitor); Centeno, C. (Carlos); Sandgren, A. (Anna); Reigada, C. (Carla); Rivas, S. (Sonia); Hermida-Romero, S. (Santiago); Carvajal, A. (Ana); Tabera-Roldán, A. (Andrés)Society’s understanding of palliative care has room for improvement. Although the World Health Organisation highlighted palliative care as a human right, many people still lack access to this crucial form of treatment. The paucity of understanding and social discussion surrounding palliative care has, moreover, negatively impacted its development and implementation. This study therefore aims to construct a strategy that will empower a specific community to solve their own palliative care-related misunderstandings. Using Participatory Action Research and Design Thinking methodologies and adopting the strategy of Public Engagement in Responsible Research and Innovation, a design group worked for three months through five virtual focus groups. Moving through the phases of empathizing, defining, ideation, prototyping, and testing, the design group generated 33 ideas to address palliative care-related problems. Ideas related to self- learning, the use of technology, and the exchange of personal experiences are highlighted as innovative ways to promote palliative care. The design group adopted a variety of strategies, used disruptive tools, and created and tested rapid prototypes to discover novel solutions. This method of working, centred on interdisciplinarity and creativity, presents an efficient way to involve the members of a community in solving their own problems.
- Internal developmental assets and substance use among Hispanic adolescents. A cross-sectional study(Wiley, 2021) Belintxon, M. (Maider); Balaguer-Estaña, A.J. (Álvaro J.); Osorio, A. (Alfonso); Vidaurreta, M. (Marta); Calatrava, M. (María)Aims: To determine the associations between internal assets (planning and decision- making, interpersonal competence and commitment to learning) and substance use (tobacco, alcohol, binge drinking, marijuana use and other drugs).Design: A cross-sectional study was conducted in four countries (Chile, Mexico, Spain and Peru).Methods: Adolescents aged 12–18 self-completed a multi-purpose questionnaire be-tween 2016 and 2019. Multiple logistic regressions and structural equation models were performed to analyse the association between internal assets (planning and decision- making, interpersonal competence, and commitment to learning) and sub-stance use.Results: The results indicate that planning and decision- making and commitment to learning are conducive to the prevention of substance use. On the contrary, interper-sonal competence was not associated with substance use.Conclusion: The present study shows that planning and decision- making and com-mitment to learning can be relevant factors in explaining substance use during ado-lescence. Internal assets can be an important aspect to include in health promotion interventions with children, youth and families to prevent substance use. These find-ings may be useful for researchers, schools, paediatric nurse practitioners, and health professionals in general to design health programs focused on children and adoles-cents. Furthermore, the Developmental Assets framework has been proved as a suit-able frame of reference for paediatric nurse practitioners to assess and develop child and adolescent positive development and design health promotion interventions to prevent substance use.
- The role of emotional intelligence and self-care in the stress perception during COVID-19 outbreak: An intercultural moderated mediation analysis(Elsevier, 2021) Martinez, M. (Martín); Sarrionandia, A. (Ainize); Luis-Garcia, E.O. (Elkin Oswaldo); Bermejo-Martins, E. (Elena); Fernández-Berrocal, P. (Pablo)Background: The relationship between emotional intelligence (EI) and stress has been widely studied, as well as the beneficial role of self-care to maintain health and wellbeing. However, the joint contribution of EI and self- care in predicting stress has not been examined during COVID-19 lockdown. This study aimed to examine the mediating role of self-care in the relationship between EI and stress and the potential moderator role of gender. Methods: A sample of 1082 participants from four Hispanic countries completed measures related to socio- demographic, trait emotional intelligence (Trait Meta-Mood Scale), self-care activities (Self-care Activities Screening Scale) and stress (Perceived Stress Scale). Results: Mediation analyses revealed that self-care increased the explained variance of the prediction of stress by EI dimensions after controlling gender and age. However, gender only moderated the relationship between selfcare and stress in the mediation model corresponding to emotional attention. Conclusions: Data supported a general model for the interaction of EI and self-care as contributing factors of stress. Further research is needed to replicate it in more culturally distant samples and to fully explore the po- tential role of gender differences. Future intervention programs should include a balanced combination of EI and self-care to increase their benefits on people’s health
- Validity and reliability of the Self-care Activities Screening Scale (SASS-14) during COVID-19 lockdown(2021) Sarrionandia, A. (Ainize); Luis-Garcia, E.O. (Elkin Oswaldo); Yair-Oliveros, E. (Edwin); Bermejo-Martins, E. (Elena); Martínez-Villar, M. (Martín); Vidaurreta, M. (Marta); Fernández-Berrocal, P. (Pablo)In a context where there is no treatment for the current COVID-19 virus, the combination of self-care behaviours together with confinement, are strategies to decrease the risk of contagion and remain healthy. However, there are no self-care measures to screen self-care activities in general population and which, could be briefly in a lockdown situation. This research aims to build and validate a psychometric tool to screen self-care activities in general population. Firstly, an exploratory factor analysis was performed in a sample of 226 participants to discover the underlying factorial structure and to reduce the number of items in the original tool into a significant pool of items related to self-care. Later a confirmatory factor analyses were performed in a new sample of 261 participants to test for the fit and goodness of factor solutions. Internal validity, reliability, and convergent validity between its score with perceived stress and psychological well-being measures were examined on this sample. The exploratory analyses suggested a four-factor solution, corresponding to health consciousness, nutrition and physical activity, sleep, and intra-personal and inter-personal coping skills (14 items). Then, the four-factor structure was confirmed as the best model fit for self-care activities. The tool demonstrated good reliability, predictive validity of individuals¿ perception of coping with COVID-19 lockdown, and convergent validity with well-being and perceived stress.
- Connections between family assets and positive youth development: the association between parental monitoring and affection with leisure-time activities and substance use(2020) Riper, M. (Marcia) van; Irala, J. (Jokin) de; Belintxon, M. (Maider); Osorio, A. (Alfonso); Vidaurreta, M. (Marta); Reparaz-Abaitua, C. (Charo)This study aimed to determine the associations between parental monitoring and affection and three adolescent lifestyle aspects: constructive leisure, non-constructive leisure and substance use. A cross-sectional study was conducted in four countries (Chile, Mexico, Spain and Peru). Adolescents aged 12¿15 self-completed a multi-purpose questionnaire. Multiple logistic regressions were performed to analyse the association between the parental monitoring and affection variables and the outcomes in terms of the children¿s lifestyles. The results indicate that parental monitoring is conducive to more constructive leisure and less non-constructive leisure and seems to be conducive to the prevention of substance use. Furthermore, parental affection is conducive to constructive leisure and the prevention of substance use. The discussion focuses on the fact that the family can be a protective resource associated with positive adolescent development.