Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Hacer Harlak is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Hacer Harlak.


Archives of Suicide Research | 2016

Suicidal behavior and psychological distress in university students: a 12-nation study

Mehmet Eskin; Jian-Min Sun; Jamila Abuidhail; Kouichi Yoshimasu; Omar Kujan; Mohsen Janghorbani; Chris Flood; Mauro Giovanni Carta; Ulrich S. Tran; Anwar Mechri; Motasem Hamdan; Senel Poyrazli; Khouala Aidoudi; Seifollah Bakhshi; Hacer Harlak; Maria Francesca Moro; Hani Nawafleh; Louise Phillips; Amira Shaheen; Shahama Taifour; Kanami Tsuno; Martin Voracek

This study investigated the prevalence of suicidal behavior and psychological distress in university students across 12 nations. A total of 5,572 university students from 12 countries were surveyed about suicide ideation, suicide attempts, and psychological distress by means of a self-administered questionnaire. Almost 29% of the samples reported having contemplated suicide and 7% reported attempting suicide. Of the total sample, 51.1% scored above the General Health Questionnaire-12 ≥ 3 cut-off points, 41.6% above the GHQ-12 ≥ 4 cut-off points, and 33.8% scored above the GHQ-12 ≥ 5 cut-off points. While odds of suicide ideation were elevated in Austria and the UK, reduced ORs were detected for China, Italy, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Turkey. Similarly, while odds of suicide attempt were high in Jordan, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, and to some extent in Turkey, reduced ORs were observed for Austria, China, Italy, Japan and the United States. Elevated ORs for psychological distress were seen in Japan, Jordan, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Turkey but reduced ORs were noted in Austria, China, Iran, Italy, and the United States. Psychological distress was strongly associated with reports of suicide ideation and attempts. Suicide ideation, suicide attempt, and psychological distress are common in university students but their rates vary depending on the sociocultural context. Due attention should be devoted to the mental health needs of young adults enrolled in higher educational institutions and more cross-cultural research is warranted to better understand the etiology of the observed intersocietal variations in suicidal behavior and psychological distress.


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2016

Cross - national comparisons of attitudes towards suicide and suicidal persons in university students from 12 countries

Mehmet Eskin; Omar Kujan; Martin Voracek; Amira Shaheen; Mauro Giovanni Carta; Jian-Min Sun; Chris Flood; Senel Poyrazli; Mohsen Janghorbani; Kouichi Yoshimasu; Anwar Mechri; Yousef Khader; Khouala Aidoudi; Seifollah Bakhshi; Hacer Harlak; Muna Ahmead; Maria Francesca Moro; Hani Nawafleh; Louise Phillips; Abdulwahab Abuderman; Ulrich S. Tran; Kanami Tsuno

This paper reports the results of a comparative investigation of attitudes to suicide and suicidal persons in 5,572 university students from 12 countries. Participants filled out two scales measuring attitudes towards suicide and suicidal persons, a measure of psychological distress together with the questions about suicidal behavior. Results showed that the highest suicide acceptance scores were observed in Austrian, UK, Japanese and Saudi Arabian samples and the lowest scores were noted in Tunisian, Turkish, Iranian and Palestinian samples. While the highest social acceptance scores for a suicidal friend were noted in Turkish, US, Italian and Tunisian samples, the lowest scores were seen in Japanese, Saudi Arabian, Palestinian and Jordanian samples. Compared to participants with a suicidal past, those who were never suicidal displayed more internal barriers against suicidal behavior. Men were more accepting of suicide than women but women were more willing to help an imagined suicidal peer. Participants with accepting attitudes towards suicide but rejecting attitudes towards suicidal persons reported more suicidal behavior and psychological distress, and were more often from high suicide rate countries and samples than their counterparts. They are considered to be caught in a fatal trap in which most predominant feelings of suicidality such as hopelessness or helplessness are likely to occur. We conclude that in some societies such as Japan and Saudi Arabia it might be difficult for suicidal individuals to activate and make use of social support systems.


Anatolia | 2016

Hasan Zafer Dogan – understanding tourism from a wider perspective

Hacer Harlak

Shortly after I completed my psychology degree, I became aware of the psychology of tourism. I met Hasan Zafer Dogan and got to know his work, and began to be interested in the social psychological...


Health Promotion International | 2018

Validity and reliability of the Turkish version of the European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire

Filiz Abacıgil; Hacer Harlak; Pınar Okyay; Didem Evci Kiraz; Selen Gürsoy Turan; Gülnur Saruhan; Kağan Karakaya; Hakan Tüzün; Emine Baran Deniz; Omer Tontus; Erdal Beşer

Health literacy is a public health priority which refers to individuals knowledge, motivation and competence to access, understand, appraise and apply health information to prevent disease and promote health in daily life. This study aimed to adapt European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47) into Turkish and to investigate its psychometric properties. The questionnaire was translated into Turkish by using both group translation and expert opinion methods. Forward translation-back translation method was used for language validity and the final Turkish version (HLS-TR) was formed. HLS-EU-Q47 and Health Awareness Scale (HAS) were administered to 505 respondents. The scale reliability was examined using Crohnbachs alpha coefficient and the construct validity was assessed by principal axis factoring procedure. The convergent validity was obtained by Pearson correlation coefficients between HLS-TR and HAS scores and discriminant validity was examined comparing the scores of participants who were stratified according to ages, educational status, gender, general health status and social status. Cronbachs alpha coefficient for the whole scale was 0.95. Principal axis factoring extracted nine factors which eigenvalues were >1 and explained 50.01% of total variance. Factor matrix displayed that all items gave greater load in factor 1, showing that health literacy measured with one factor. Positive and significant correlation was found between HLS-TR and HAS. Significant relations were found between HLS-TR scores and selected determinants of health. This study revealed that the HLS-TR was a valid and reliable measuring instrument with appropriate psychometric characteristics.


Education and Health | 2008

Communication Skills Training: Effects on Attitudes toward Communication Skills and Empathic Tendency

Hacer Harlak; Ayfer Gemalmaz; Fs Gurel; Çiğdem Dereboy; K Ertekin


Complementary Therapies in Medicine | 2009

Factors related to regular use of complementary/alternative medicine in Turkey☆

Arzu Araz; Hacer Harlak; Gülgün Meşe


Turkish journal of psychiatry | 2008

Prevalence of and factors related to depression in high school students

Mehmet Eskin; Kamil Ertekin; Hacer Harlak; Çiğdem Dereboy


Turkish journal of psychiatry | 2005

Teaching Empathy in Medical Education

Çiğdem Dereboy; Hacer Harlak; Gürel S; Gemalmaz A; Mehmet Eskin


Education and Health | 2008

Validation of a Turkish Translation of the Communication Skills Attitude Scale with Turkish Medical Students

Hacer Harlak; Ciethdem Dereboy; Ayfer Gemalmaz


Annals of Tourism Research | 1994

Perception of tourists by service personnel

Hacer Harlak

Collaboration


Dive into the Hacer Harlak's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mehmet Eskin

Adnan Menderes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erdal Beşer

Adnan Menderes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Filiz Abacıgil

Adnan Menderes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gülnur Saruhan

Adnan Menderes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hakan Tüzün

Turkish Ministry of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kağan Karakaya

Turkish Ministry of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pınar Okyay

Adnan Menderes University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kanami Tsuno

Wakayama Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kouichi Yoshimasu

Wakayama Medical University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge