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Dive into the research topics where Tea Vukušić Rukavina is active.

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Featured researches published by Tea Vukušić Rukavina.


BMC Psychiatry | 2012

Psychiatric disorders and aggression in the printed media: is there a link? a central European perspective

Alexander Nawka; Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Lucie Nawková; N. Jovanovic; Ognjen Brborović; J. Raboch

BackgroundA content analysis was used to describe the association between psychiatric disorders and aggression in the printed media in the Czech Republic and Slovakia.MethodsArticles were chosen from the most widely read daily newspapers and magazines in both countries during five one-week periods in 2007. A coding manual was developed and a content analysis was performed. Aggressive behavior was assessed by two separate categories - the role of the mentally ill person in the violent act (perpetrator/victim) and the type of aggressive act (homicide, suicide).ResultsA total of 375 articles were analyzed. Main findings: 1) The proportion of articles depicting psychiatric disorders together with either self- or other-directed aggressive behavior is 31.2%; 2) Homicide was most frequently mentioned in the context of psychotic disorders and schizophrenia, while affective disorders were most frequently associated with both completed suicides and homicides; 3) Eating disorders and anxiety disorders were seldom associated with any kind of aggressive behavior, including self-harm; 4) The vast majority of articles presented mentally ill people as perpetrators, and these articles were more often coded as stigmatizing. 5) Articles with aggressive behavior mentioned on the cover are roughly as frequent as those with aggressive behavior in the later sections of the media (36.7% vs. 30.7%).ConclusionsThe results are similar to the findings in countries with longer histories of consistent advocacy for improved depiction of mental illness in the media. However, we have shown that persons with mental illness are still over-portrayed as perpetrators of violent crimes, especially homicides.


Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 2012

Development of the PICMIN (picture of mental illness in newspapers): instrument to assess mental illness stigma in print media

Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Alexander Nawka; Ognjen Brborović; Nikolina Jovanović; Martina Rojnic Kuzman; Lucie Nawková; Bibiána Bednárová; Svetlana Zuchova; Marie Hrodková; Zuzana Lattova

PurposeThe aim of this paper is to report on the development and applicability of a standardised and objective measure of stigma of mental illness in print media. Picture of mental illness in newspapers (PICMIN) instrument consists of eleven descriptive and five analytical categories. It is intended to allow comparison among countries and different studies over time.MethodsThe research team conducted a three-phase study to develop the instrument based on the principles of content analysis and test its inter-coder reliability (ICR). In the first phase, keyword search and ICR assessment was performed on articles from Croatia (75), Czech Republic (203), and Slovakia (172). The second phase consisted of instrument revision and training, along with ICR reassessment on 40 articles from USA and UK. In the third, main phase articles from Croatia (238), Czech Republic (226), and Slovakia (158) were analysed with the final version of the PICMIN instrument.ResultsAcross three countries, ICR was found acceptable to assess mental illness representations related to stigma in print media. Print media representations of the mental illness in Croatia, Czech Republic, and Slovakia significantly differed in the type of media distribution, whether headline of the article was positioned on the media cover, in the use of a sensationalistic style of writing, in the association of aggressive behaviour with persons with mental illness and in the distribution of the global impression of the headline.ConclusionsPICMIN instrument allows comparison among countries and different studies over time.


Acta informatica medica : AIM : journal of the Society for Medical Informatics of Bosnia & Herzegovina : časopis Društva za medicinsku informatiku BiH | 2013

The Connection between Alexithymia and Somatic Morbidity in a Population of Combat Veterans with Chronic PTSD.

Zorana Kušević; Marta Čivljak; Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Goran Babić; Mladen Lončar; Bjanka Vuksan Ćusa; Rudolf Gregurek

Purpose To investigate the connection between alexithymia and somatic illness, or, somatization, in veterans suffering from chronic combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSD. Methods Croatian combat veterans (N=127) were studied at the Department of Psychology, Zagreb Clinical Hospital Center. The diagnosis of PTSD was confirmed and verified according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). A version of the Mississippi Scale for Combat Related PTSD (M-PTSD) standardized for the Croatian population was used to assess the severity of PTSD. In addition to the clinical interview, the existence of alexithymia was confirmed by the score on the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TA S-20). Results A statistically significant association was found between the total number of diagnosed physical illnesses and the scores on three subscales of an alexithymia questionnaire, the TA S-20, with a 1% risk (p<0.01, 0.487; 0.450; 0.335). Regression analysis confirmed the most statistically significant predictive value of the first item of the TA S-20, which refers to difficulty in identifying feelings (=0.408, p=0.019). The total score on the M-PTSD scale correlated significantly to the subscales for alexithymia. There was a statistically significant negative correlation of the total score on the M-PTSD scale with social support. Conclusion The total scores obtained in this study, particularly those related to alexithymia, indicate the importance of this construct in the etiopathogenesis of somatic morbidity in the study population and confirm that as in other countries the TA S-20 is a useful instrument in Croatia for the assessment of this phenomenon.


Health Policy | 2009

Evaluation of Croatian model of polycentric health planning and decision making.

Selma Šogorić; Aleksandar Džakula; Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Sonja Grozić-Živolić; Danijela Lazarić-Zec; Ankica Džono-Boban; Ognjen Brborović; Slobodan Lang; Silvije Vuletić

OBJECTIVE To determine the progress in the development and implementation of health policies on a county level resulting from the learning-by-doing training provided through the County Public Health Capacity Building Program started in 2001 in Croatia. METHODS Modular training using management tools, public health theory and practice, and SMDPs Healthy Plan-it tool, followed by the self-evaluation of the progress made by county teams in health needs assessment and health policy development, implementation, and assurance. Fifteen county teams consisting of politicians, executive officers, public health professionals, and community members. RESULTS Twelve of 15 county teams completed the program. The teams made progress in the evaluated areas, although to a different extent, which did not depend on the amount of time they had or the governance experience. The differences in improvement depended on the differences in the strength of political, executive, and professional components of the teams. Teams with a strong political and/or executive component, but weak public health professional and community components made major improvements in policy development and/or assurance function, but performed less well in the health needs assessment and constituency building. The reversed was also true. CONCLUSION Learning-by-doing training program improved public health practices on a county level in Croatia.


European Psychiatry | 2013

2442 – How media influence stigma towards psychiatric disorders

Alexander Nawka; Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Lucie Nawková; N. Jovanovic; Ognjen Brborović

Media are considered to be the publics primary source of information regarding mental illness. Evidence suggests that media representations of people with psychiatric disorders are frequently negative and contribute to their stigmatization. On the other hand, media can play an important role in reducing this stigmatisation by providing adequate information about this topic. An example of an use of a standardised and objective measurement of the stigma of mental illness in print media using clearly operationalized definitions will be shawn. The Picture of Mental Illness in newspapers (PICMIN) instrument is based on the principles of content analysis and used in an analysis of the coverage on mental health/illness issues in Czech, Croatian, and Slovak print media. Some of the most interesting findings based on the analysis include; a similarly high level of stigmatizing articles across countries, clearly exceeding the ones with destigmatizing statements; overrepresentation of schizophrenia and eating disorders and underrepresentation of anxiety disorders and dementia when comparing the correlation of their actual rate in the populations; the proportion of articles depicting mental disorders together with aggressive deeds being as high as onethird of all articles; homicide being most frequently mentioned in the context of psychotic disorders, while affective disorders being most frequently associated with completed suicides, etc. As the influences of the media and the stigma of psychiatric disorders are heterogeneous, activities that should tighten the mental health together with media professionals should be initiated in an ultimate effort to improve media coverage of mental illness issues.


Journal of Health Communication | 2012

The Picture of Mental Health/Illness in the Printed Media in Three Central European Countries

Lucie Nawková; Alexander Nawka; Tereza Adámková; Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Petra Holcnerová; Martina Rojnic Kuzman; N. Jovanovic; Ognjen Brborović; Bibiána Bednárová; Svetlana Žuchová; Michal Miovský; J. Raboch


Collegium Antropologicum | 2009

Psychological distress within cardiovascular risks behaviors, conditions and diseases conceptual framework.

Ognjen Brborović; Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Gordana Pavleković; Aleksandar Džakula; Selma Šogorić; Silvije Vuletić


Collegium Antropologicum | 2012

Characteristics of people with the perceived stress in Croatia : the CroHort Study

Hana Fazlić; Ognjen Brborović; Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Kristina Fišter; Milan Milošević; Jadranka Mustajbegović


Collegium Antropologicum | 2012

Prevalence and five-year cumulative incidence of psychological distress: the CroHort study.

Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Ognjen Brborović; Hana Fazlić; Aleksandar Džakula; Bjanka Vuksan Ćusa


Collegium Antropologicum | 2012

Predictors of the Desire/Decision to Quit Smoking in a Cohort of Croatian Adult Smokers Followed for Five Years: The CroHort Study

Marta Čivljak; Milan Milošević; Ivan Ćelić; Tea Vukušić Rukavina; Ognjen Brborović; Stipe Oreskovic

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Martina Rojnic Kuzman

University Hospital Centre Zagreb

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N. Jovanovic

Queen Mary University of London

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