I am currently looking for participants to complete my online questionnaire focussing on how talking about stressful or traumatic events may affect health and well-being.
Research studies have shown that talking about past or recent stressful or traumatic events can have a variety of positive effects on health and well-being. My research project looks at how talking about different types of stressful or traumatic events may affect health and which factors might influence this relationship.
The findings of this research will contribute to greater understandings of how people who experience different types of upsetting or traumatic events cope with these events. In particular whether people talk about their experiences, how they feel about this, and how this may affect their health.
Therefore, I am currently looking for participants to complete a short online questionnaire. To participate in this survey you must have experienced or witnessed a very distressing or traumatic event at some point in your life (e.g. accidents, natural disasters, abuse, rape, military combat, illness, death of a close person, witness of traumatic events, distressing life changes, etc.)
This research is completely anonymous and confidential and handled in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998. It has been approved by the School of Psychology ethical review process, at the University of Sussex.
You can participate in this study by following the link and filling in a simple online questionnaire, which should take no longer than 15-20 minutes.
http://www.dsm5.org/Documents/Diagnostic Criteria for Personality Disorder (Comparison of DSM-IV DSM-5 old DSM-5 new.pdf
I am currently a postgraduate student at the University of Sussex and this survey is part of my Masters project. This project is supervised by Dr Susan Ayers from the University of Sussex.
If you have any questions regarding the survey or if you want more information, please feel free to contact me at any time.
Your help would be highly appreciated.
Miriam Thiel (MSc Psychology Student, University of Sussex)
&
Dr Susan Ayers
Research studies have shown that talking about past or recent stressful or traumatic events can have a variety of positive effects on health and well-being. My research project looks at how talking about different types of stressful or traumatic events may affect health and which factors might influence this relationship.
The findings of this research will contribute to greater understandings of how people who experience different types of upsetting or traumatic events cope with these events. In particular whether people talk about their experiences, how they feel about this, and how this may affect their health.
Therefore, I am currently looking for participants to complete a short online questionnaire. To participate in this survey you must have experienced or witnessed a very distressing or traumatic event at some point in your life (e.g. accidents, natural disasters, abuse, rape, military combat, illness, death of a close person, witness of traumatic events, distressing life changes, etc.)
This research is completely anonymous and confidential and handled in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998. It has been approved by the School of Psychology ethical review process, at the University of Sussex.
You can participate in this study by following the link and filling in a simple online questionnaire, which should take no longer than 15-20 minutes.
http://www.dsm5.org/Documents/Diagnostic Criteria for Personality Disorder (Comparison of DSM-IV DSM-5 old DSM-5 new.pdf
I am currently a postgraduate student at the University of Sussex and this survey is part of my Masters project. This project is supervised by Dr Susan Ayers from the University of Sussex.
If you have any questions regarding the survey or if you want more information, please feel free to contact me at any time.
Your help would be highly appreciated.
Miriam Thiel (MSc Psychology Student, University of Sussex)
&
Dr Susan Ayers