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Introduction: Forensic healthcare workers in mental health settings face significant challenges when working with sex offenders. Balancing staff wellbeing with effective offender rehabilitation remains critical.
Aim: This study examined how attitudes, perceptions and workplace factors influence the wellbeing of frontline forensic healthcare workers caring for sex offenders.
Method: A cross-sectional design, adhering to the STROBE checklist, was used. Ninety-one participants from UK privatised mental health settings completed an online survey. Wellbeing was assessed using measures of compassion satisfaction, burnout and secondary traumatic stress, with predictors including attitudes, perceptions and workplace factors.
Results: Positive attitudes, such as understanding offender intent, were associated with improved wellbeing, while excessive trust reduced compassion satisfaction. Perceptions like risk awareness acted as psychological buffers. Workplace factors, including environmental safety and quality supervision, enhanced wellbeing, whereas co-worker support unexpectedly reduced compassion satisfaction.
Discussion: The findings highlight the importance of rational attitudes in enhancing wellbeing. While punitive perceptions offered emotional buffering, fostering balanced approaches is essential for improving therapeutic environments.
Limitations And Implications: The study focused on privatised UK settings, limiting generalisability to NHS contexts. Future research should explore broader populations.
Recommendations: Employers should enhance environmental safety, supervision and training to foster rational attitudes and address peer dynamics.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpm.70018 | DOI Listing |
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12418155 | PMC |
Front Nutr
August 2025
Thaer-Institute-Div. Urban Plant Ecophysiology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Background: Changes in consumer food choices have been associated with transformation in the food environment. Despite the direct impact of consumers' food choices on their diet and health outcomes, there is a lack of comprehensive evidence regarding how various factors within the food environment impact these choices.
Methods: This study uses the Theory of Planned Behavior to examine how socio-psychological factors in the food environment influence consumers' healthy food choices.
Exp Clin Transplant
August 2025
>From King Abdullah Medical City, Makkah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Objectives: Patients who reach the terminal phase of renal disease are candidates for kidney transplant. However, the pretransplant process is substantial and requires time-intensive evaluations. We aimed to investigate the factors that affect the timeline for evaluation of kidney transplants and to identify the challenges and recommendations for improvement of the evaluation process in Saudi Arabia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Obstet Gynaecol
December 2025
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Princess Margaret Hospital, Hong Kong.
Background: Antenatal perineal massage (APM) is an established technique for preventing severe perineal trauma, but it is uncommonly practised in Hong Kong. This study aimed to investigate pregnant women's knowledge, attitudes and interest in APM, and to identify factors that influence their interest in the technique.
Methods: A prospective cross-sectional study was conducted over 7 months at Princess Margaret Hospital.
Nat Commun
September 2025
Columbia University, Department of Psychology, New York, NY, USA.
Racial stereotypes have been shown to bias the identification of innocuous objects, making objects like wallets or tools more likely to be identified as weapons when encountered in the presence of Black individuals. One mechanism that may contribute to these biased identifications is a transient perceptual distortion driven by racial stereotypes. Here we provide neuroimaging evidence that a bias in visual representation due to automatically activated racial stereotypes may be a mechanism underlying this phenomenon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sci Med Sport
August 2025
School of Behavioural and Health Sciences, Australian Catholic University, Australia; Healthy Brain and Mind Research Centre (HBMRC), Australian Catholic University, Australia. Electronic address:
Objectives: Sport-related concussions are a global health concern. Athletes consistently underreport sport-related concussions, and knowledge and attitudes about sport-related concussions vary between levels of sport competition and according to a range of factors. It is unclear how concussion knowledge and attitudes relate to reporting behaviours amongst community sport athletes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF