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Dive into the research topics where Helene Jackson is active.

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Featured researches published by Helene Jackson.


Professional Psychology: Research and Practice | 2002

Traumatic brain injury: A hidden consequence for battered women

Helene Jackson; Elizabeth Philp; Ronald L. Nuttall; Leonard Diller

The inability of substantial numbers of battered women to terminate or extricate themselves from violent relationships is of grave concern to clinical practitioners. Despite professional intervention, many victims of domestic violence return to the batterer and to repetitive battering, demonstrating that, for these women, traditional psychosocial interventions are ineffective. In a sample of 53 battered women, 92% reported having received blows to the head in the course of their battering; 40% reported loss of consciousness. Correlations between frequency of being hit in the head and severity of cognitive symptoms were significant, strongly suggesting that battered women should be routinely screened for traumatic brain injury and postconcussive syndrome. Development of treatment strategies to address the potentially damaging sequelae of head trauma in this population is essential. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)


Child Abuse & Neglect | 1994

Personal history of childhood abuse among clinicians

Ronald L. Nuttall; Helene Jackson

We conducted a survey to determine the prevalence, characteristics, and effects of a history of childhood sexual and physical abuse among professionals responsible for evaluating child sexual abuse allegations. A gender-stratified random sample of 1,635 United States clinicians was drawn from the most current national directories of clinical social work, pediatrics, psychiatry, and psychology. We received 656 completed questionnaires, yielding a 42% response rate. Thirteen percent of the men and 20% of the women reported a personal history of childhood sexual abuse; 7.3% of the men and 6.9% of the women reported a history of physical abuse as children. The modal age at which both genders were sexually abused was 8 years. The modal age at the time of physical abuse was 10 years for both sexes. Of those sexually abused, 50% of both genders were sexually abused for only 1 year. Of those physically abused, more than 50% of both genders were physically abused for 3 or more years. Older females were more likely to report a history of sexual abuse than were their younger cohorts. In this population, physical abuse was overwhelmingly perpetrated by parents. However, the modal perpetrators of sexual abuse (for both females and males) were male acquaintances or male strangers. Fathers and stepfathers were unlikely to be perpetrators of sexual abuse (3% for males and 12% for females) in this sample. For both genders, particularly males, sexually abused respondents were less likely to be married than their nonabused cohorts. Both men and women who had been sexually abused were more likely to be in nonmarital relationships than were those who had not been sexually abused. Women who had been sexually abused were less likely to have raised children than were women who had not been sexually abused. Respondents who had been sexually abused and/or physically abused were more likely to believe allegations of sexual abuse contained in 16 vignettes alleging sexual abuse.


Tradition | 2001

Risk for Preadolescent Suicidal Behavior: An Ecological Model

Helene Jackson; Ronald L. Nuttall

The relationship between preadolescent suicidality (ideation, threats, attempts) and subsequent adolescent suicidal behavior is well documented. We tested a six domain, ecological suicide risk model in a sample of 69 preadolescent outpatients (ages 5 to 12 years). We correlated items from each domain with “Suicidality” as measured by the Pfeffer Spectrum of Suicide Potential Scale. Three domains (Child Risk Factors, Childhood Traumas, Family Stressors) had a total of 19 items that were significantly correlated with Suicidality (alpha < .05 level); one item in the fourth dimension, Social Supports, was included (alpha = .06). We show that children who demonstrate anxiety/depression, aggressive and antisocial behavior in a climate of parental hostility are at risk for suicidal behavior.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 1993

Clinician responses to sexual abuse allegations

Helene Jackson; Ronald L. Nuttall


Journal of Teaching in Social Work | 2003

What We Bring to Practice: Teaching Students About Professional Use of Self

Mimi V. Chapman; Susan Oppenheim; Tazuko Shibusawa; Helene Jackson


Social Work Research | 1994

Effects of Gender, Age, and History of Abuse on Social Workers' Judgments of Sexual Abuse Allegations.

Helene Jackson; Ronald L. Nuttall


Archive | 1997

Childhood abuse : effects on clinicians' personal and professional lives

Helene Jackson; Ronald L. Nuttall


Professional Psychology: Research and Practice | 2001

A relationship between childhood sexual abuse and professional sexual misconduct.

Helene Jackson; Ronald L. Nuttall


Archive | 2004

Battered women and traumatic brain injury.

Helene Jackson; Elizabeth Philip; Ronald L. Nuttall; Leonard Diller


Journal of Teaching in Social Work | 2004

What We Bring to Practice

Mimi V. Chapman; Susan Oppenheim; Tazuko Shibusawa; Helene Jackson

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Mimi V. Chapman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Donileen R. Loseke

University of South Florida

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