Torill Lindstrøm - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Torill Lindstrøm

Research paper thumbnail of Animal-Assisted Therapy in the Treatment of Substance Use Disorders: A Systematic Mixed Methods Review

Human-animal interaction bulletin

There is a need for evidence-based interventions that can contribute to more positive treatment o... more There is a need for evidence-based interventions that can contribute to more positive treatment outcomes for substance use disorders. Animal-assisted therapy is a supplementary intervention in which certified animals are used in a structured and goal directed manner in the treatment of various health problems. This review aims to systematically investigate and evaluate the available literature and thus hopefully contribute to future research. The electronic searches were performed in the databases PsycInfo, Medline, and Web of Science. Searches of reference lists were also performed. As the research on this particular field is scarce, the inclusion criteria had to allow for a relatively great variation in methods, interventions, and populations. Still, only ten studies were included, of which three were quantitative, six were qualitative, and one was a mixed methods study. All of the included articles examined the effect of AAT in the treatment of substance use disorders. The popula...

Research paper thumbnail of Psychology from the Bronze Age

Research paper thumbnail of Kvinner har ulike opplevelser av mestring ni år etter brystkreftkirurgi

Research paper thumbnail of Women's Experiences of Social Support After Having Received Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Awaiting Surgery

Background: Social support is associated with a better adjustment to breast cancer, whereas inade... more Background: Social support is associated with a better adjustment to breast cancer, whereas inadequate social support increases psychological distress. However, the period between diagnosis and surgery is particularly stressful, and few studies have addressed the significance of social support in this period. Objective: The purpose of this study was to describe women's individual experiences of social support after having received a breast cancer diagnosis and awaiting surgery. Methods: A qualitative descriptive design was used. Individual semistructured interviews were conducted the day before surgery with 21 women aged 41 to 73 years with newly diagnosed breast cancer at a Norwegian university hospital. Results: Methods of qualitative meaning condensation analysis revealed 5 themes: available support, information and advice, care, having confidants, and balancing distance and closeness. Knowing that both family and healthcare professionals were available and caring gave a sense of security. Social support gave strength, although too much could be experienced as difficult and frightening. The women needed a balance between distance from and closeness to their social network. Both professional information and someone professional with whom to talk personally were essential. Conclusions: Social support is an important resource for women with breast cancer but can be a double-edged sword as the network's offered support can sometimes be a burden. Implications for Practice: Healthcare professionals could call each patient, encourage the patients to call if they want, and, if preferred, offer face-to-face consultations for women with breast cancer awaiting surgery. This contact should be a supportive, informative, and confidential available resource.

Research paper thumbnail of Coping with chronic pain

International Journal of Nursing Studies, Mar 1, 2005

Many models of pain give coping an important role in understanding adaptation to chronic pain. Am... more Many models of pain give coping an important role in understanding adaptation to chronic pain. Among these, Lazarus and Folkman's cognitive-phenomenological model of stress and coping provides a theoretical framework to conceptualise stress phenomena and coping strategies related to chronic pain. Chronic pain often necessitates new coping skills. An understanding of the concept of coping and how the patients cope is therefore crucial for the success of rehabilitation. The current study examined how coping, as measured by the Ways of Coping Checklist, was related to medical variables, depression measured by the Short Zung depression rating scale, and Rosenberg's self-esteem scale. The study sample consisted of 88 people who were recruited for a multidisciplinary pain management programme. Data were collected as part of a routine pre-treatment evaluation. Results indicated that the most predominant stressors were related to familylife and social activities. We also recognised on the one hand, appraising pain as a challenge was predictive of problem-focused coping, while on the other hand, appraising pain as a threat, experiencing depression, and reduced self-esteem were predictive of emotion-focused coping. Clinical implications of these results in nursing are discussed.

Research paper thumbnail of A Small Rock Holding Back the Waves

Research paper thumbnail of Sykepleieforskning : kvantitativ tilnærming - en diskusjon og oversikt

Research paper thumbnail of Do Good Fences Make Good Neighbors? Pilot Osterøy Field Project (PILOST) and Redefining boundaries in Southwestern Norway

Research paper thumbnail of Catching the ephemeral – aesthetics of artful artefacts

Research paper thumbnail of Facial Expressions ( and non-Expressions ) in Roman Faces

Faces depicted in art are major sources of information about people from pre-photographic times. ... more Faces depicted in art are major sources of information about people from pre-photographic times. They tell us something about how people looked and looked upon themselves and others. Depicted faces give us information about how people wanted to be seen, their self-representation; but also give information about their views of “the other” (people from different genders, classes, occupations, ethnic groups, etc.) shown in the ways in which they were depicted. Depicted faces in archaeological material are sometimes portraits, or, as in more “primitive” art, at least attempts towards representing facial likeness. Depiction of faces also often followed traditional conventions and could be ideologically influenced.

Research paper thumbnail of Health-related Quality of Life and Pain Beliefs Among People Suffering From Chronic Pain yyy

hronic pain, when not effectively treated and relieved, may have a armful effect on all aspects o... more hronic pain, when not effectively treated and relieved, may have a armful effect on all aspects of health-related quality of life (HRQL). urthermore, pain beliefs are considered an important mediating psyhological factor in chronic pain. The present study focused on HRQL s measured by the Medical Outcomes Survey-Short Form (SF-36) and ddressed possible relationships between pain beliefs as measured by he Pain Beliefs and Perceptions Inventory (PBAPI). The possible imact of background variables such as age, gender, social support, pain ntensity, pain duration, and analgesics on HRQL were controlled for n the analyses. The study sample consisted of 81 people who were ecruited from a multidisciplinary pain management program. Data ere collected as the first part of a routine pretreatment evaluation. he chronic-pain patients reported lower scores on all dimensions of RQL compared to normal controls and other patient groups. No sigificant association was found between pain beliefs and th...

Research paper thumbnail of The Support I Need": Women's Experiences of Social Support After Having Received Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Awaiting Surgery

Social support is associated with a better adjustment to breast cancer, whereas inadequate social... more Social support is associated with a better adjustment to breast cancer, whereas inadequate social support increases psychological distress. However, the period between diagnosis and surgery is particularly stressful, and few studies have addressed the significance of social support in this period. The purpose of this study was to describe women's individual experiences of social support after having received a breast cancer diagnosis and awaiting surgery. A qualitative descriptive design was used. Individual semistructured interviews were conducted the day before surgery with 21 women aged 41 to 73 years with newly diagnosed breast cancer at a Norwegian university hospital. Methods of qualitative meaning condensation analysis revealed 5 themes: available support, information and advice, care, having confidants, and balancing distance and closeness. Knowing that both family and healthcare professionals were available and caring gave a sense of security. Social support gave strength, although too much could be experienced as difficult and frightening. The women needed a balance between distance from and closeness to their social network. Both professional information and someone professional with whom to talk personally were essential. Social support is an important resource for women with breast cancer but can be a double-edged sword as the network's offered support can sometimes be a burden. Healthcare professionals could call each patient, encourage the patients to call if they want, and, if preferred, offer face-to-face consultations for women with breast cancer awaiting surgery. This contact should be a supportive, informative, and confidential available resource.

Research paper thumbnail of Emotions in the Dionysiac Fresco in Villa of the Mysteries Outside Pompeii

Emotions are ephemeral phenomena and hard to identify in archaeological materials and contexts. Y... more Emotions are ephemeral phenomena and hard to identify in archaeological materials and contexts. Yet, graves, battlefields, and objects may offer compelling evidence of emotions; and, through millennia, people have depicted human faces in paintings, pottery, sculptures, embroideries, metal works, and more. Some faces display emotional expressions. But how can we systematically record and identify them? The Facial Action Coding System (FACS), an instrument for registering facial expressions (Ekman and Friesen, The facial action coding system. Consulting Psychologists Press, Palo Alto, 1978), was developed within psychology, but is used within numerous fields. “The Dionysiac Fresco” in “Villa of the Mysteries” in Pompeii, Italy, painted in the first century BCE, is one of the most famous paintings from European antiquity. It shows 29 persons (human and supernatural) engaged in various activities. The interpretations are numerous and varied. Several interpretations claim that strong emo...

Research paper thumbnail of Tephroarchaeology

TephroArchaeology in the North Pacific

Research paper thumbnail of The Many Paradoxes Of Control

Psychology and Psychotherapy Research Study

Research paper thumbnail of “Cancer changed my life”

Nordisk sygeplejeforskning

Research paper thumbnail of “I Have Both Lost and Gained.” Norwegian Survivors’ Experiences of Coping 9 Years After Primary Breast Cancer Surgery

Research paper thumbnail of Agency. A response to Sørensen and Ribeiro

Archaeological Dialogues

While agreeing to openness to other world views, the underlying premise of ‘otherness’ in ‘the ot... more While agreeing to openness to other world views, the underlying premise of ‘otherness’ in ‘the other’ is questioned. It is argued that individual, intercultural and intra-cultural differences run criss-cross throughout the anthroposphere. The often convoluted language in symmetrical, Latourian and New Materialist directions in archaeology is criticized. One questions what their significant new contributions to archaeological research are. The importance of refined differentiations regarding agency and effects, and the living and the non-living, is maintained. Latour's claim of a universal dichotomization in Western thinking (both academic and common) is interrogated, and empirical proofs demanded. The concepts of ‘dichotomy’ and ‘binary thinking’ are discussed. The assumed political and ethical sequelae and implications of adherence to one or another theoretical position and research methodology are questioned. Ecological awareness can be acquired from various positions. In gene...

Research paper thumbnail of Agency ‘in itself’. A discussion of inanimate, animal and human agency

Archaeological Dialogues, 2015

'Agency', the concept, its connections to ontology and its uses within archaeological theory, are... more 'Agency', the concept, its connections to ontology and its uses within archaeological theory, are discussed and criticized. In recent archaeological theory, the term 'agency' has been attributed to things, plants, animals and humans. In this paper it is argued that the term 'agency' is logically meaningless if applied to everything that moves or has effects on its surroundings, and that we need a new, more precise terminology that discriminates between 'agency', 'effect', 'actant' and 'effectant'. That people, of all cultures, perceive and experience things/objects as having agency is explained as being due to projections of human characteristics, human psycho-neurological functioning, and the fact that all individuals and cultures are deeply involved with and dependent on things/objects. Connected to this, questions regarding different ontologies, animism, ethics and sciences are discussed. The paper presents a critique of symmetrical archaeology and materiality studies. Broader paradigmatic perspectives, more theoretical and methodological inclusiveness, and more interand trans-disciplinary endeavours are suggested to increase archaeology's 'agency'.

Research paper thumbnail of “I just have to move on”: Women's coping experiences and reflections following their first year after primary breast cancer surgery

European Journal of Oncology Nursing, 2015

The purpose of this qualitative follow-up study was to describe women&amp... more The purpose of this qualitative follow-up study was to describe women's individual coping experiences and reflections following their first year after primary breast cancer surgery. Using a qualitative descriptive design, we collected data through individual interviews with ten women at a Norwegian university hospital between August 2007 and April 2008. We employed Kvale's method of qualitative meaning condensation analysis. Themes identified were: existential concerns and finding meaning, ways of thinking and feeling about the disease, taking action, and returning to normal life. Most women experienced an increased appreciation of life and greater confidence in themselves, were more caring and compassionate towards others, and focused more on their life priorities. Their family and close relationships became more important. They accepted their situation and made the best of it. Positive thinking, physical activity, self-care, nature, hobbies and work helped. Generally, they were optimistic despite a fear of cancer recurrence and uncertainty about their future. The women wanted to return to a "normal" and healthy life by distancing themselves from both the cancer environment and information about cancer. Uncertainty and anxiety about a potential future cancer relapse was a major undercurrent one year following surgery. Our findings emphasize the richness in these women's coping strategies, their different coping profiles and different needs, as well as some general adaptive strategies, which all fluctuated over time. Not all managed to cope equally well. Through awareness of these women's individual experiences and coping strategies, healthcare professionals can enhance these women's coping endeavours.

Research paper thumbnail of Animal-Assisted Therapy in the Treatment of Substance Use Disorders: A Systematic Mixed Methods Review

Human-animal interaction bulletin

There is a need for evidence-based interventions that can contribute to more positive treatment o... more There is a need for evidence-based interventions that can contribute to more positive treatment outcomes for substance use disorders. Animal-assisted therapy is a supplementary intervention in which certified animals are used in a structured and goal directed manner in the treatment of various health problems. This review aims to systematically investigate and evaluate the available literature and thus hopefully contribute to future research. The electronic searches were performed in the databases PsycInfo, Medline, and Web of Science. Searches of reference lists were also performed. As the research on this particular field is scarce, the inclusion criteria had to allow for a relatively great variation in methods, interventions, and populations. Still, only ten studies were included, of which three were quantitative, six were qualitative, and one was a mixed methods study. All of the included articles examined the effect of AAT in the treatment of substance use disorders. The popula...

Research paper thumbnail of Psychology from the Bronze Age

Research paper thumbnail of Kvinner har ulike opplevelser av mestring ni år etter brystkreftkirurgi

Research paper thumbnail of Women's Experiences of Social Support After Having Received Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Awaiting Surgery

Background: Social support is associated with a better adjustment to breast cancer, whereas inade... more Background: Social support is associated with a better adjustment to breast cancer, whereas inadequate social support increases psychological distress. However, the period between diagnosis and surgery is particularly stressful, and few studies have addressed the significance of social support in this period. Objective: The purpose of this study was to describe women's individual experiences of social support after having received a breast cancer diagnosis and awaiting surgery. Methods: A qualitative descriptive design was used. Individual semistructured interviews were conducted the day before surgery with 21 women aged 41 to 73 years with newly diagnosed breast cancer at a Norwegian university hospital. Results: Methods of qualitative meaning condensation analysis revealed 5 themes: available support, information and advice, care, having confidants, and balancing distance and closeness. Knowing that both family and healthcare professionals were available and caring gave a sense of security. Social support gave strength, although too much could be experienced as difficult and frightening. The women needed a balance between distance from and closeness to their social network. Both professional information and someone professional with whom to talk personally were essential. Conclusions: Social support is an important resource for women with breast cancer but can be a double-edged sword as the network's offered support can sometimes be a burden. Implications for Practice: Healthcare professionals could call each patient, encourage the patients to call if they want, and, if preferred, offer face-to-face consultations for women with breast cancer awaiting surgery. This contact should be a supportive, informative, and confidential available resource.

Research paper thumbnail of Coping with chronic pain

International Journal of Nursing Studies, Mar 1, 2005

Many models of pain give coping an important role in understanding adaptation to chronic pain. Am... more Many models of pain give coping an important role in understanding adaptation to chronic pain. Among these, Lazarus and Folkman's cognitive-phenomenological model of stress and coping provides a theoretical framework to conceptualise stress phenomena and coping strategies related to chronic pain. Chronic pain often necessitates new coping skills. An understanding of the concept of coping and how the patients cope is therefore crucial for the success of rehabilitation. The current study examined how coping, as measured by the Ways of Coping Checklist, was related to medical variables, depression measured by the Short Zung depression rating scale, and Rosenberg's self-esteem scale. The study sample consisted of 88 people who were recruited for a multidisciplinary pain management programme. Data were collected as part of a routine pre-treatment evaluation. Results indicated that the most predominant stressors were related to familylife and social activities. We also recognised on the one hand, appraising pain as a challenge was predictive of problem-focused coping, while on the other hand, appraising pain as a threat, experiencing depression, and reduced self-esteem were predictive of emotion-focused coping. Clinical implications of these results in nursing are discussed.

Research paper thumbnail of A Small Rock Holding Back the Waves

Research paper thumbnail of Sykepleieforskning : kvantitativ tilnærming - en diskusjon og oversikt

Research paper thumbnail of Do Good Fences Make Good Neighbors? Pilot Osterøy Field Project (PILOST) and Redefining boundaries in Southwestern Norway

Research paper thumbnail of Catching the ephemeral – aesthetics of artful artefacts

Research paper thumbnail of Facial Expressions ( and non-Expressions ) in Roman Faces

Faces depicted in art are major sources of information about people from pre-photographic times. ... more Faces depicted in art are major sources of information about people from pre-photographic times. They tell us something about how people looked and looked upon themselves and others. Depicted faces give us information about how people wanted to be seen, their self-representation; but also give information about their views of “the other” (people from different genders, classes, occupations, ethnic groups, etc.) shown in the ways in which they were depicted. Depicted faces in archaeological material are sometimes portraits, or, as in more “primitive” art, at least attempts towards representing facial likeness. Depiction of faces also often followed traditional conventions and could be ideologically influenced.

Research paper thumbnail of Health-related Quality of Life and Pain Beliefs Among People Suffering From Chronic Pain yyy

hronic pain, when not effectively treated and relieved, may have a armful effect on all aspects o... more hronic pain, when not effectively treated and relieved, may have a armful effect on all aspects of health-related quality of life (HRQL). urthermore, pain beliefs are considered an important mediating psyhological factor in chronic pain. The present study focused on HRQL s measured by the Medical Outcomes Survey-Short Form (SF-36) and ddressed possible relationships between pain beliefs as measured by he Pain Beliefs and Perceptions Inventory (PBAPI). The possible imact of background variables such as age, gender, social support, pain ntensity, pain duration, and analgesics on HRQL were controlled for n the analyses. The study sample consisted of 81 people who were ecruited from a multidisciplinary pain management program. Data ere collected as the first part of a routine pretreatment evaluation. he chronic-pain patients reported lower scores on all dimensions of RQL compared to normal controls and other patient groups. No sigificant association was found between pain beliefs and th...

Research paper thumbnail of The Support I Need": Women's Experiences of Social Support After Having Received Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Awaiting Surgery

Social support is associated with a better adjustment to breast cancer, whereas inadequate social... more Social support is associated with a better adjustment to breast cancer, whereas inadequate social support increases psychological distress. However, the period between diagnosis and surgery is particularly stressful, and few studies have addressed the significance of social support in this period. The purpose of this study was to describe women's individual experiences of social support after having received a breast cancer diagnosis and awaiting surgery. A qualitative descriptive design was used. Individual semistructured interviews were conducted the day before surgery with 21 women aged 41 to 73 years with newly diagnosed breast cancer at a Norwegian university hospital. Methods of qualitative meaning condensation analysis revealed 5 themes: available support, information and advice, care, having confidants, and balancing distance and closeness. Knowing that both family and healthcare professionals were available and caring gave a sense of security. Social support gave strength, although too much could be experienced as difficult and frightening. The women needed a balance between distance from and closeness to their social network. Both professional information and someone professional with whom to talk personally were essential. Social support is an important resource for women with breast cancer but can be a double-edged sword as the network's offered support can sometimes be a burden. Healthcare professionals could call each patient, encourage the patients to call if they want, and, if preferred, offer face-to-face consultations for women with breast cancer awaiting surgery. This contact should be a supportive, informative, and confidential available resource.

Research paper thumbnail of Emotions in the Dionysiac Fresco in Villa of the Mysteries Outside Pompeii

Emotions are ephemeral phenomena and hard to identify in archaeological materials and contexts. Y... more Emotions are ephemeral phenomena and hard to identify in archaeological materials and contexts. Yet, graves, battlefields, and objects may offer compelling evidence of emotions; and, through millennia, people have depicted human faces in paintings, pottery, sculptures, embroideries, metal works, and more. Some faces display emotional expressions. But how can we systematically record and identify them? The Facial Action Coding System (FACS), an instrument for registering facial expressions (Ekman and Friesen, The facial action coding system. Consulting Psychologists Press, Palo Alto, 1978), was developed within psychology, but is used within numerous fields. “The Dionysiac Fresco” in “Villa of the Mysteries” in Pompeii, Italy, painted in the first century BCE, is one of the most famous paintings from European antiquity. It shows 29 persons (human and supernatural) engaged in various activities. The interpretations are numerous and varied. Several interpretations claim that strong emo...

Research paper thumbnail of Tephroarchaeology

TephroArchaeology in the North Pacific

Research paper thumbnail of The Many Paradoxes Of Control

Psychology and Psychotherapy Research Study

Research paper thumbnail of “Cancer changed my life”

Nordisk sygeplejeforskning

Research paper thumbnail of “I Have Both Lost and Gained.” Norwegian Survivors’ Experiences of Coping 9 Years After Primary Breast Cancer Surgery

Research paper thumbnail of Agency. A response to Sørensen and Ribeiro

Archaeological Dialogues

While agreeing to openness to other world views, the underlying premise of ‘otherness’ in ‘the ot... more While agreeing to openness to other world views, the underlying premise of ‘otherness’ in ‘the other’ is questioned. It is argued that individual, intercultural and intra-cultural differences run criss-cross throughout the anthroposphere. The often convoluted language in symmetrical, Latourian and New Materialist directions in archaeology is criticized. One questions what their significant new contributions to archaeological research are. The importance of refined differentiations regarding agency and effects, and the living and the non-living, is maintained. Latour's claim of a universal dichotomization in Western thinking (both academic and common) is interrogated, and empirical proofs demanded. The concepts of ‘dichotomy’ and ‘binary thinking’ are discussed. The assumed political and ethical sequelae and implications of adherence to one or another theoretical position and research methodology are questioned. Ecological awareness can be acquired from various positions. In gene...

Research paper thumbnail of Agency ‘in itself’. A discussion of inanimate, animal and human agency

Archaeological Dialogues, 2015

'Agency', the concept, its connections to ontology and its uses within archaeological theory, are... more 'Agency', the concept, its connections to ontology and its uses within archaeological theory, are discussed and criticized. In recent archaeological theory, the term 'agency' has been attributed to things, plants, animals and humans. In this paper it is argued that the term 'agency' is logically meaningless if applied to everything that moves or has effects on its surroundings, and that we need a new, more precise terminology that discriminates between 'agency', 'effect', 'actant' and 'effectant'. That people, of all cultures, perceive and experience things/objects as having agency is explained as being due to projections of human characteristics, human psycho-neurological functioning, and the fact that all individuals and cultures are deeply involved with and dependent on things/objects. Connected to this, questions regarding different ontologies, animism, ethics and sciences are discussed. The paper presents a critique of symmetrical archaeology and materiality studies. Broader paradigmatic perspectives, more theoretical and methodological inclusiveness, and more interand trans-disciplinary endeavours are suggested to increase archaeology's 'agency'.

Research paper thumbnail of “I just have to move on”: Women's coping experiences and reflections following their first year after primary breast cancer surgery

European Journal of Oncology Nursing, 2015

The purpose of this qualitative follow-up study was to describe women&amp... more The purpose of this qualitative follow-up study was to describe women's individual coping experiences and reflections following their first year after primary breast cancer surgery. Using a qualitative descriptive design, we collected data through individual interviews with ten women at a Norwegian university hospital between August 2007 and April 2008. We employed Kvale's method of qualitative meaning condensation analysis. Themes identified were: existential concerns and finding meaning, ways of thinking and feeling about the disease, taking action, and returning to normal life. Most women experienced an increased appreciation of life and greater confidence in themselves, were more caring and compassionate towards others, and focused more on their life priorities. Their family and close relationships became more important. They accepted their situation and made the best of it. Positive thinking, physical activity, self-care, nature, hobbies and work helped. Generally, they were optimistic despite a fear of cancer recurrence and uncertainty about their future. The women wanted to return to a "normal" and healthy life by distancing themselves from both the cancer environment and information about cancer. Uncertainty and anxiety about a potential future cancer relapse was a major undercurrent one year following surgery. Our findings emphasize the richness in these women's coping strategies, their different coping profiles and different needs, as well as some general adaptive strategies, which all fluctuated over time. Not all managed to cope equally well. Through awareness of these women's individual experiences and coping strategies, healthcare professionals can enhance these women's coping endeavours.