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Featured researches published by Jocelyn Bisson.


International Journal of Nursing Studies | 1999

Longitudinal effects of an early family intervention programme on the adaptation of parents of children with a disability

Diane Pelchat; Jocelyn Bisson; Nicole Ricard; Michel Perreault; Jean-Marie Bouchard

This study assesses the longitudinal effects of an original early intervention programme on the adaptation of parents of children with a disability (Down syndrome and cleft lip/palate, i.e. DS and CLP). Variations in the effects of the programme according to the time of measurement, the type of disability and parents gender are also examined. Globally, the results show a better adaptation among parents who participated in the intervention programme compared to those who did not participated in the programme. These parents had lower levels of parental stress, they had more positive perceptions and attitudes concerning their childs disability and their parental situation, they were more confident in their own resources and the help they could receive from others, they had lower levels of emotional distress, anxiety and depression and they perceived more emotional support from their spouse. In general, these gains were maintained throughout the year when the children were between six and 18 months of age, they were relatively similar for parents of children with DS and parents of children with CLP, as well as for mothers and fathers.


Substance Use & Misuse | 1996

When Anthropology Meets Epidemiology: Using Social Representations to Predict Drinking Patterns

Andrée Demers; Natalie Kishchuk; Chantal Bourgault; Jocelyn Bisson

Based on a sample of 2,015 adult drinkers from the Montreal metropolitan area (Quebec, Canada), this study investigates the relationship between eight social representations of drinking (i.e., compensatory, convivial, relaxing, disinhibitory, harmful, sexually enhancing, conventional, socially enabling) and drinking measures (QF Index, drinking frequency, and maximum number of drinks on one occasion) according to age and sex. The representations explain up to 34% of the variance in drinking measures. Representations differed in the strength of their relation to drinking measures and in population prevalence. Strength of relation to drinking and prevalence rates were relatively independent. Representations were generally more strongly endorsed by men than women, although they were related in the same way to drinking behaviors. Representations were also more strongly endorsed by younger than by older respondents, and they related differently to drinking in each age group. The implications of these results for prevention are discussed.


Epidemiologia e psichiatria sociale | 2010

Development and validation of the RQC: a daily contact log for ACT and ICM teams.

Alain Lesage; Daniel Gélinas; Jocelyn Bisson; Eric Dion; Nicole Ricard

AIM Instruments to measure the process--the daily activities of home care workers--have received little attention and may impede research in refining the active ingredients, the clientele best served and continuous quality improvement. We developed a decade ago in Quebec, Canada, a new daily contact log (relevé quotidien des contacts or RQC) that has now reached in practice 1 million entries. METHODS Three features distinguish the RQC development, namely, practical ergonomics, a clear logic, and response categories easy to understand and retain. The instrument is filled following any 10-minute or more contact with or about the client, and covers the location, time and actors of the episode of care, and the nature of the intervention (crisis, representing, accompanying, discussing) in 10 areas (i.e. medication, daily living activities, housing, relationships, substance abuse, legal, etc.). Inter-rater agreement for each RQC response category and rater agreement with a criterion measure (coded vignettes) were evaluated. RESULTS Kappa coefficients and intra-class correlation coefficients yielded results ranging from at least moderate to generally substantial agreement for all 77 response categories. CONCLUSIONS The new RQC may support international studies of the implementation and application of various forms of intensive home care, refining its indications, and serves as a clinical and managerial tool to ensure quality of the interventions.


Child Care Health and Development | 1999

ADAPTATION OF PARENTS IN RELATION TO THEIR 6-MONTH-OLD INFANT'S TYPE OF DISABILITY

Diane Pelchat; Nicole Ricard; Jean-Marie Bouchard; Michel Perreault; Saucier Jf; Berthiaume M; Jocelyn Bisson


Addiction | 1999

The validity of the CAGE scale to screen for heavy drinking and drinking problems in a general population survey

Jocelyn Bisson; Louise Nadeau; Andrée Demers


Infant and Child Development | 2003

The effects of early relational antecedents and other factors on the parental sensitivity of mothers and fathers

Diane Pelchat; Jocelyn Bisson; Caroline Bois; Jean-François Saucier


International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research | 2006

Factorial validation of a French short-form of the Working Alliance Inventory

Marc Corbière; Jocelyn Bisson; Sylvie Lauzon; Nicole Ricard


Handicap | 2003

Facteurs de la sensibilité parentale des pères et des mères d'un enfant ayant une déficience

Diane Pelchat; Hélène Lefebvre; Jocelyn Bisson


Santé mentale au Québec | 1997

Médication neuroleptique et risque de dyskinésie tardive : une enquête auprès de psychiatres et d’omnipraticiens du Québec

David Cohen; Jocelyn Bisson


Archive | 2005

Dveloppement et validation du Relev quotidien des contacts

Daniel Gélinas; Jocelyn Bisson; D. Ricard; D. Alain Lesage; Mark Formosa M Phil

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Diane Pelchat

Université de Montréal

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Nicole Ricard

Université de Montréal

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Andrée Demers

Université de Montréal

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Jean-Marie Bouchard

Université du Québec à Montréal

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Alain Lesage

Université de Montréal

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Berthiaume M

Université du Québec à Montréal

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Caroline Bois

Université de Montréal

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