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Treatment Of The Elderly, Sterotypes And Prejudice Body Language Of The Elderly

I have written about my mother being treated horribly in the nursing home where she was recovering from ankle surgery and treatment of the elderly is often effected by peoples stereotyped prejudices and judgments about the elderly.

I found the following study quite interesting as it mentions research on forcible restraint of the elderly in nursing homes.


"To become old is to become institutionalized and imprisoned": comparing regulatory frameworks for the use of restraints in long-term care facilities.


Link to this page
"To become old is to become institutionalized and imprisoned": comparing regulatory frameworks for the use of restraints in long-term care facilities.

"One of the essential functions of human-rights legislation is to protect human beings from the therapeutic good intentions of others. ... To give these human beings [patients] the benefit of informed consent, the rule of law, and such autonomy as they can exercise without harm to others is the proof that we actually believe in human rights." (2) (Michael Ignatieff This page is currently protected from editing until (UTC) or until disputes have been resolved. )

Introduction

Our commitment to human rights is tested when we enact laws and create policies that affect the elderly. As Kazin writes: "We are often sentimental about the old in the abstract but contemptuous con·temp·tu·ous
adj.
Manifesting or feeling contempt; scornful.


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con·temptu·ous·ly adv. of them in practice." (3) She continues that "many of us simply expect that to become old is to become institutionalized in·sti·tu·tion·al·ize
tr.v. in·sti·tu·tion·al·ized, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·ing, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·es
1.
a. To make into, treat as, or give the character of an institution to.

b. and imprisoned im·pris·on
tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons
To put in or as if in prison; confine.


security penitentiary, near San Francisco; “escapeproof.” [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 218]

Altmark, the

German prison ship in World War II. [Br. Hist. that is experienced by the elderly is restraint; (5) indeed, some elderly persons regard the imposition of restraints as a routine part of care as they grow older. (6)



Restraint is a technique used to control and restrict a person's freedom of movement, and as such it is vulnerable to being misused and/or abused. Regulation can serve as a framework to ensure that the human rights of the elderly are enabled and respected, serves to minimize the potential abuse and misuse of restraints, and may reduce the potential harm to the person who is restrained. Accordingly, in this paper I examine how we, as a society, should regulate the use of restraints to ensure that they are not a routine part of the lives of the elderly. (7) I compare and contrast two regulatory frameworks for the use of restraints in long-term care facilities long-term care facility
n.
See skilled nursing facility. and conclude by suggesting a new regulatory framework.

The Incidence of the Use of Restraints

International research suggests that nine percent of residents of long-term care facilities are restrained in countries such as Iceland, Denmark and Japan, 13.5-17 percent in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , 15-17 in France, Italy and Sweden, 15-26 percent in Australia and 40 percent in Spain. (8) The most common justification for restraint use is that it is necessary to restrain an elderly person to prevent serious self-harm or serious harm to others. But these rationales do not completely explain the high levels of restraint use. Research from the US suggests that restraints are used by health providers for a number of other reasons including: adhering to policies; the health provider's sense of security and comfort; and fear of legal liability. (9) Other, more clinical rationales are said to include: behavioral control; confusion; poor judgment; and controlling agitated ag·i·tate
v. ag·i·tat·ed, ag·i·tat·ing, ag·i·tates

v.tr.
1. To cause to move with violence or sudden force.

2. behavior or wandering. (10)

Certainty, Autonomy, Effectiveness and Abuse--Issues Pointing to the Need for A Regulatory Framework

In most jurisdictions in Canada, and in many international jurisdictions, the use of restraints in health facilities generally is not regulated. (11) It is left to the common-law, professional bodies, and individual institutions to create standards for restraint use.

There are four key arguments that suggest that to continue not to regulate restraints in long-term care facilities does not accord sufficient priority to the rights and needs of the elderly and to the interests of health care providers and society as a whole.

First, lack of regulation creates uncertain law and therefore uncertainty in practice. Under the common-law it is not clear when, why, how and in what circumstances restraints may be legitimately used. It is also not clear what impact the Charter (12) could have on this area. Regulation may create a degree of certainty as to the legality of restraint use and set out in detail the circumstances in which it may be used. It also may create standards for the application and monitoring of restraint use.

Second, an individual's right to autonomy needs to be accorded greater protection, which may be achieved through legislation specific to the issues in this area. When health providers argue that they need to restrain an elderly person to protect him/her from self-harm, such as the possibility of falling, they are acting out of a desire to protect that person. This protective instinct may be legitimate in some cases, perhaps if the person is not competent, but may be overly paternalistic pa·ter·nal·ism
n.
A policy or practice of treating or governing people in a fatherly manner, especially by providing for their needs without giving them rights or responsibilities. in other circumstances. Competent individuals are free to choose paths that may lead to self-harm. Risks are a part of life and to deny the elderly the chance to take risks can be to deny their autonomy. If autonomy is to be limited for protection of self or others then it must be limited within a clearly articulated regulatory framework, otherwise it may violate the Charter or human rights law.

Third, regulation may reduce the levels of restraint use by limiting opportunities for health providers to misuse restraints. Often health providers will use restraint because an elderly person is agitated, wandering, or unsteady and they fear that the person will fall. They consider that restraints are an effective tool to reduce that risk. (13) However, recent research suggests that fall rates are the same whether restraints are used or not and that the severity of the outcome of the fall may be increased when restraints are used. (14) Similarly, agitation may increase, rather than decrease. (15) Restraints may therefore not actually achieve the ends that health providers hope they will. Regulation may create clearer evidence based criteria for restraint use that may reduce the opportunities to misuse restraints.

Similarly, restraints are not necessarily safe interventions--restraint use carries with it its own risks, particularly for the elderly. If physical restraints Physical restraint refers to the practice of rendering people helpless or keeping them in captivity by means such as handcuffs, shackles, straitjackets, ropes, straps, or other forms of physical restraint. are not applied properly, and the person who is restrained is not monitored regularly and effectively, injuries, even death, can ensue en·sue
intr.v. en·sued, en·su·ing, en·sues
1. To follow as a consequence or result. See Synonyms at follow.

2. To take place subsequently. . (16) In addition, immobility immobility

standing still and disinclined to move, as in an animal suddenly blinded; responds to other stimuli unless immobility is part of a dummy syndrome when all stimuli are ignored. caused by restraint use can contribute to the development of pressure sores pressure sore
n.
See bedsore. , as well as the development or worsening wors·en
tr. & intr.v. wors·ened, wors·en·ing, wors·ens
To make or become worse.

Noun 1. worsening - process of changing to an inferior state
decline in quality, deterioration, declension of other conditions. (17) Chemical restraints also have side effects Side effects

Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm. . These include symptoms such as dizziness dizziness: see vertigo. , sedation Sedation Definition

Sedation is the act of calming by administration of a sedative. A sedative is a medication that commonly induces the nervous system to calm.
Purpose

The process of sedation has two primary intentions. , and increased agitation, which may contribute to an increased risk that the person will fall, may reduce the person's capacity (18) or cause ill health. (19) Regulation can set standards for safe and appropriate restraint use, especially for those with multiple health conditions who are more vulnerable to adverse effects caused by restraint, like the elderly.

Fourth, regulation may reduce or prevent abuse of the power to restrain by health providers. In an institutional environment where there may be a profound power imbalance between the elderly person and staff or when the elderly person lacks capacity, misuse or abuse of such a powerful tool is not unheard of Not heard of; of which there are no tidings.
Unknown to fame; obscure.
- Glanvill.

See also: Unheard Unheard . In the face of the potential for abuse, regulation is necessary to protect those who are most vulnerable.

Those jurisdictions that do not currently have regulations limiting and monitoring restraint use should enact law that specifically addresses this issue. However, the regulation of restraint use in health facilities is complicated by the fact that restraints are used in a variety of environments, by a variety of health providers, some of whom are trained professionals and some of whom are not, on a variety of people with differing needs, who are from a variety of cultural, religious, ethical, social and ethnic backgrounds and who all have different personal histories. In the next section I examine models of regulation for restraint use that have been implemented or suggested in two jurisdictions to see whether lessons can be learned and direction taken from these models.

Regulatory and Legislative Frameworks for Restraint Use in Long-term Care Facilities

There are two main types of regulatory frameworks evident in legislation that address the use of restraints in health facilities: facility-focussed regulatory frameworks (British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography
); and patient-focussed regulatory frameworks (proposed in New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland. ). Each of these frameworks indicates different terminal values in health systems. (20) Facility-focussed frameworks focus on institutional compliance with procedural norms that aim to achieve safe, consistent systems within institutions, in accordance with the quality improvement and safety model that to a certain extent dominates health system management discourse at this time. Patient-focussed frameworks aim to maximize observance of and respect for the human rights of individuals in health care systems, in accordance with a more patients rights centred approach, which postulates the patient at the centre of the model of care.

Facility-Focussed Regulatory Frameworks--British Columbia

In British Columbia, the regulatory framework for restraint use is set out in s. 25 of the Health Care (Consent) and Care Facility (Admission) Act. (21) This states that operators of care facilities (22) must not use physical, chemical or other means of restraint to restrict the freedom of movement of an adult who lives in that facility unless: all alternatives have been exhausted; the restraint is as minimal as possible; the patient/substitute decision-maker and a physician approve a plan devised by another health care provider agreeing that it is in the patient's best interest or for the protection of others; and the need for restraint is periodically reassessed. Restraint may be used in an emergency without consent if it is necessary to preserve the person's life or to prevent serious physical harm to others as long as he/she is restrained no longer than necessary, and is monitored and reassessed at regular intervals. The operator must record restraint use in the patient's clinical record.

The Adult Care Regulations (23) also provide a regulatory framework for the use of restraints in long-term care facilities. Restraints must not be used for punishment or discipline or for the convenience of staff, but may be used if all alternatives to the use of restraint have been exhausted, the restraint is as minimal as possible, the restraint is approved by the resident or his/her substitute decision-maker, restraint is documented in the care plan, staff are trained, and there are written policies and procedures Policies and Procedures are a set of documents that describe an organization's policies for operation and the procedures necessary to fulfill the policies. They are often initiated because of some external requirement, such as environmental compliance or other governmental acceptable to the Medical Health Officer.

Patient-Focussed Regulatory Frameworks--New Zealand

The New Zealand Law Commission reviewed the current legislative framework in New Zealand for the use of coercive co·er·cive
adj.
Characterized by or inclined to coercion.


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co·ercive·ly adv. physical force on disadvantaged groups in the health and disability sector in its report Protections Some Disadvantaged People May Need. (24) It accepts that on occasion coercive powers to apply physical force need to be available to health or welfare officials but concludes that his power is not currently available in New Zealand law. Accordingly, it recommends the introduction of a new section into the Protection of Persons and their Property Act (25) to give the Family Court the power to hear applications for the use of physical restraints and to authorise restraint use. (26) The Commission also suggests that the Family Court periodically review restraint orders. The Commission recommends that the powers of District Inspectors of Mental Health (27) monitor the rights of compulsory psychiatric patients be expanded to include monitoring of the rights of persons in respect of whom coercive orders have been made wherever they may live.

New Zealand already has a national standard to inform the development of institutional policies as to when and how physical restraints should be used. (28) Facilities are audited to determine whether they have institutional policies that comply with general and specific national standards, including the restraint standard, and may not be licensed if they do not comply. (29)

Evaluating the Frameworks from British Columbia and New Zealand

In this section I evaluate the regulatory frameworks having regard to three criteria: autonomy, adherence and monitoring systems.

i. Autonomy

The proposed New Zealand system focuses on the rights and needs of individuals rather than facility compliance. Assuming that the Family Court has the time and expertise to evaluate the appropriateness of restraint for each individual, an independent assessment can be made of whether restraint unduly compromises the rights of incompetent individuals or is necessary to protect the individual or to protect others from serious, imminent and reasonably certain harm. This system would appear to limit the opportunities for restraint to be abused or misused. However, there seem to be two serious difficulties: New Zealand's proposed mechanism promises to be reasonably resource intensive, at least initially; and it does not appear to address issues relating to relating to relate prep → concernant

relating to relate prep → bezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc competent patients and when it is clinically and legally appropriate for restraints to be used for this group. Resource issues are not necessarily fatal objections to such a scheme. As a society we offer costly protections to other groups subject to coercive mechanisms, such as the mentally ill and prisoners, and we should do no less for the elderly. The New Zealand system also has the potential to clog family court processes. It may create the risk that restraint approval by the courts becomes a pro forma As a matter of form or for the sake of form. Used to describe accounting, financial, and other statements or conclusions based upon assumed or anticipated facts.

The phrase pro forma process.

In contrast, although the system in British Columbia focuses on institutional compliance with statutory requirements and thus is facility focussed, the legislation itself is patient-focussed. Patients or surrogate surrogate n. 1) a person acting on behalf of another or a substitute, including a woman who gives birth to a baby of a mother who is unable to carry the child. 2) a judge in some states (notably New York) responsible only for probates, estates, and adoptions. decision makers (if the patient is not competent) must give consent to restraints being used unless the emergency provisions apply. The legislation also sets out criteria within which restraints may be used, limiting the opportunities for misuse or abuse and thus prioritizing the autonomy of the patient.

ii. Adherence

One of the greatest challenges faced by regulators, particularly in the health sector, is creating regulation that is likely to be adhered to by the public, or in this case health providers. As Eastman and Peay note:
People use law; law does not use people. Law is
not an actor, only an instrument of human actors
whose interest is not in how the law thinks people
act, but how they do act; people are not passive
participants of the law--they use it, abuse
it and stretch it in order to stay creatively within
it and/or to frustrate its objectives. People interact
with law. (30)



The British Columbia framework encourages adherence by the operators of long-term care facilities, because it is not procedurally cumbersome. Facilities need not make applications for each individual to the court for permission to restrain, they must merely comply with the set of specific criteria set out in the legislation in order for restraint use to be lawful.

In contrast, one of the problems with the Law Commission's proposed framework for New Zealand is that it requires long-term care facilities to be pro-active and make an application to the courts seeking authorization to use restraints on an individual. Alternatively, health providers must encourage the family (presuming pre·sum·ing
adj.
Having or showing excessive and arrogant self-confidence; presumptuous.


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pre·suming·ly adv. there is one) to apply to the courts for such an order. However, inaction in·ac·tion
n.
Lack or absence of action.


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inaction
Noun

lack of action; inertia

Noun 1. is a powerful force. Provider/facility/family costs associated with making applications to the family court in adherence to law are an issue that may also discourage adherence, for example, the costs of legal representation, expert evidence etc. Similarly, health providers and/or facilities in New Zealand may try to avoid legal mechanisms (whether because of fear, ignorance, dislike of red-tape or a reluctance to enter the legal system and to attract further institutional monitoring). Providers and facilities may therefore choose to rely on common law doctrines or, as the proposed New Zealand system does not address the use of chemical restraints, it creates the risk that health care providers will use chemical restraints as an alternative to physical restraints. In contrast, the framework from British Columbia addresses emergency restraint use, thus removing the common-law from the equation, and it also covers all forms of restraint use.

iii. Monitoring

Monitoring how services are provided is a crucial step in ensuring that individuals receive treatment or health care that is safe. When the services in question are those that can cause serious harm and perhaps more importantly can be abused it is important that such monitoring is independent of the health providers who provide the service. Yet ultimately the framework in British Columbia seems to rely upon self-policing by institutions. Although the Medical Health Officer must approve an institution's restraint policy, it is not clear that this policy is regularly reviewed after approval is given. No independent agency enters facilities to review restraint use. Therefore, the capacity of this framework to police restraint application on individuals is non-existent, and abuse or misuse is not likely to be identified and stopped.

In contrast, the monitoring system currently in place, through national standards, and that proposed by the New Zealand Law Commission, will enable monitoring at both ends of the spectrum. Institutional compliance is audited independently as part of a certification process to ensure that standards are met and facilities take responsibility for guiding staff. The welfare of the individual who is being restrained is also monitored by an independent agency to ascertain the person's safety, the effectiveness of the intervention and to ensure that the person's rights are being impinged upon to the least possible extent. If the rules are obeyed and monitoring is effective, the incidence of abusive, inappropriate or unsafe restraint use could decrease under this model.

Hybrid Framework

Both of the regulatory responses described above have both positive and negative features. If policy makers wish to privilege individual autonomy to its greatest extent, and minimize the incidence of misuse and abuse of restraints, I suggest a hybrid framework drawing from the strengths of both frameworks. Briefly, in this hybrid model blanket authorization for restraint use is set out in legislation but is subject to stringent conditions. Health providers who use restraints on their patients are required to keep excellent records, setting out when, why and how restraints were used and what strategies were used to make restraint an option of last resort. Health providers/facilities must report each incidence of restraint use to a monitoring agency. That agency will actively monitor an individual's experiences with restraint, as well as whether the facility has formulated a policy to ensure that restraint is used and applied in a manner that maximizes the resident's safety. The monitoring agency should be independent and have the power to make random inspections. The hybrid model is both facility and patient focussed and may contribute to autonomy, minimizing restraint use and reducing the likelihood that restraints are used in an abusive or inappropriate manner.

Conclusion

Regardless of the model chosen, what is certain is that a robust regulatory and monitoring framework surrounding the use of restraints in long-term facilities, and indeed in all healthcare facilities, is important to safeguard the autonomy of the elderly and to minimise abuse and misuse.

It is also important to acknowledge that regulation is only part of the answer. Barham and Barnes note:
[The law] can define the circumstances in which
action to limit the autonomy of citizens can be
legitimated, and the procedural rights available
to citizens to challenge such limitations, but it
cannot require action to enable the practice of
citizenship. (31)



If, as a society, we wish to free the elderly, as much as possible, from the use of restraints there are at least two remaining problems that the law cannot address: resource issues; and the perceptions and attitudes of health providers, families and the general public.

Moving to an institutional environment where restraint use is at a minimum requires an investment in the care of the elderly. Alternative mechanisms used to reduce the need for restraint use, such as special beds and diversion therapy, are not without cost and these costs may be significant in an area that has traditionally attracted little support and funding from government. It also may be significant for private facilities that must return a profit to investors in the facility.

But perhaps the most significant issue in the restraint conundrum conundrum A problem with no satisfactory solution; a dilemma is the attitudes, perceptions and beliefs of providers, patients, families and the public. Ageism ageism Geriatrics A bias or belief that may be held by a health care provider that depression, forgetfulness, and other disorders are a normal part of aging and that older individuals will not benefit from treatment of mental disorders. Cf elderly. and the protective mantra mantra (măn`trə, mŭn–), in Hinduism and Buddhism, mystic words used in ritual and meditation. A mantra is believed to be the sound form of reality, having the power to bring into being the reality it represents. that accompanies it must be addressed through a shift in societal perceptions accomplished by education and increasing awareness of the rights of the elderly. As Michael Ignatieff states:
... human rights alone are not enough. ... we
need extra resources, especially humour, compassion,
and self-control. These virtues must in
turn draw on a deep sense of human indivisibility,
a recognition of us in them and them in us,
that rights doctrines express but in themselves
have no power to instil in the human heart. (32)



Effective regulation is but a first step to allow the elderly to be free from the expectation that to become old is to be institutionalized, imprisoned, and stereotyped as incapable and in need of protection. (33)

(1.) C. Kazin, "'Nowhere to Go and Choose to Stay': Using the Tort of False Imprisonment false imprisonment, complete restraint upon a person's liberty of movement without legal justification. Actual physical contact is not necessary; a show of authority or a threat of force is sufficient. The person falsely imprisoned may sue the offender for damages. to Redress Involuntary Confinement of the Elderly in Nursing Homes and Hospitals" (1998/1999) 137 U. Pa. L. Rev. 903 at 903.

(2.) Michael Ignatieff, The Rights Revolution (House of Anansi PressHouse of Anansi Press is a Canadian publishing company, founded in 1967 by writers Dennis Lee and Dave Godfrey. The company specializes in finding and developing new Canadian writers of literary fiction, poetry, and non-fiction.
..... Click the link for more information.: Toronto 2000) at 39.

(3.) Kazin, supra A relational DBMS from Cincom Systems, Inc., Cincinnati, OH (www.cincom.com) that runs on IBM mainframes and VAXs. It includes a query language and a program that automates the database design process. note 1.

(4.) Ibid at 904.

(5.) When I use the terms "restrained" or "restraint" in this paper I mean physical restraints, including a health provider holding a resident, the use of equipment and furniture, and environmental factors, including contained environments, seclusion seclusion Forensic psychiatry A strategy for managing disturbed and violent Pts in psychiatric units, which consists of supervised confinement of a Pt to a room–ie, involuntary isolation, to protect others from harm , or strategies to reduce the levels of social contacts or stimulation. I also include chemicals that are used to control a person's behaviour or limit their freedom of movement.

(6.) These are the results from a small qualitative assessment of elderly persons who were physically restrained in an acute hospital after surgery. See, R. Gallinagh, et al. "Perceptions of Older People Who Have Experienced Restraint" (2001) 10:13 Brit brit also britt
n.
1. The young of herring and similar fish.

2. Minute marine organisms, such as crustaceans of the genus Calanus, that are a major source of food for right whales. . J. Nurs. 852.

(7.) I focus on the elderly as restraints are often used on the elderly, a group that may suffer greater harms from restraint use because of their age.

(8.) G. Ljunggren et al., "Comparisons of Restraint Use in Nursing Homes in Eight Countries" (1997) 26 Suppl. Age & Aging 43.

(9.) K.S. Dunn, "The Effect of Physical Restraints on Fall Rates in Older Adults who are Institutionalized" (2001) 27:10 J. Geron. Nurs. 41 at 42; and Julie Braun & Elizabeth Capezuti, "The Legal and Medical Aspects of Physical Restraints and Bed Siderails and Their Relationship to Falls and Fall-related Injuries in Nursing Homes" (2000) 4:1 DePaul J. Health Care L. 1 at 7-8.

(10.) Ibid.

(11.) British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec have regulatory schemes.

(12.) Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (also known as The Charter of Rights and Freedoms or simply The Charter) is a bill of rights entrenched in the Constitution of Canada. It forms the first part of the Constitution Act, 1982. , Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act Canada Act, also called the Constitutional Act of 1982, which made Canada a fully sovereign state. The British Parliament approved it on Mar. 25, 1982, and Queen Elizabeth II proclaimed it on Apr. 17, 1982. 1982 (U.K.) 1982, c.11.

(13.) Dunn, supra note 9 and Braun & Capezuti, supra note 9.

(14.) Dunn, supra note 9; M. Arbesman & C. Wright, "Mechanical Restraints mechanical restraint Physical restaint A device used on a person to restrict free movement–eg, seatbelt, straitjacket–camisole, vest, or physical confinement Indications Unsteadiness, wandering, disruptive behavior, often 2º to psychiatric , Rehabilitation rehabilitation: see physical therapy. Therapies and Staffing Adequacy for Risk Factors For Falls in Elderly Hospitalized Patients" (1999) 24:3 Rehabilitation Nursing 122; L. Evans, et al. "A Clinical Trial to Reduce Restraints in Nursing Homes" (1997) 45 J. Am. Geriatric Soc. 675; L. Bradley, C. Siddique & B. Dufton "Reducing the Use of Physical Restraints in Long-term Care Facilities" (1995) 21:9 Geron. Nurs. 21; R. Lofgren, et al. "Mechanical Restraints on the Medical Wards: Are Protective Devices Safe?" (1989) 79:6 J. Pub. Health 735; M. Tinetti, E. Liu & S. Ginter, "Mechanical Restraint Use and Fall-related Injuries Among Residents of Skilled Nursing Facilities skilled nursing facility
n. Abbr. SNF
An establishment that houses chronically ill, usually elderly patients, and provides long-term nursing care, rehabilitation, and other services. " (1992) 116:5 Annals of Internal Medicine Annals of Internal Medicine (Ann Intern Med) is an academic medical journal published by the American College of Physicians (ACP). It publishes research articles and reviews in the area of internal medicine. Its current editor is Harold C. Sox. 369.

(15.) Gallinagh et al., supra note 6. Similarly, benzodiazepines Benzodiazepines Definition

Benzodiazepines are medicines that help relieve nervousness, tension, and other symptoms by slowing the central nervous system.
Purpose

Benzodiazepines are a type of antianxiety drugs. , hypnotics and anti-psychotic medications, all commonly used to chemically restrain the elderly have as side effects the possibility of increased agitation.

(16.) The physical risks of restraint use for the elderly include: occurrence and worsening of pressure sores; infections; incontinence; fecal impaction fecal impaction
n.
An immovable collection of compressed or hardened feces in the colon or rectum.


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Fecal impaction
Obstruction of the rectum by a large mass of feces (stool). ; functional impairment from lack of movement; cardiac stress; nutritional impairment; bone resorption Bone resorption is the process by which osteoclasts break down bone and release the minerals, resulting in a transfer of calcium from bone fluid to the blood.

The osteoclasts are multi-nucleated cells that contain numerous mitochondria and lysosomes. due to demineralization demineralization /de·min·er·al·iza·tion/ (de-min?er-al-i-za´shun) excessive elimination of mineral or organic salts from tissues of the body.
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de·min·er·al·i·za·tion
n. ; electrolyte electrolyte (ĭlĕk`trəlīt'), electrical conductor in which current is carried by ions rather than by free electrons (as in a metal). losses; injuries that result in increased morbidity and mortality Morbidity and Mortality can refer to:
Morbidity & Mortality, a term used in medicine
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a medical publication
See also

Morbidity, a medical term
Mortality, a medical term
; and, on rare occasions, accidental strangulation strangulation /stran·gu·la·tion/ (strang?gu-la´shun)
1. choke (2).

2. arrest of circulation in a part due to compression. See hemostasis (2).

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stran·gu·la·tion
n. . See discussion in V. Dawkins, "Restraints and the Elderly with Mental Illness: Ethical Issues and Moral Reasoning Moral reasoning is a study in psychology that overlaps with moral philosophy. It is also called Moral development. Prominent contributors to theory include Lawrence Kohlberg and Elliot Turiel. " (1998) 36:10 J. Psychosocial psychosocial /psy·cho·so·cial/ (si?ko-so´shul) pertaining to or involving both psychic and social aspects.
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psy·cho·so·cial
adj.
Involving aspects of both social and psychological behavior. Nursing 22; Dunn, supra note 9 at 42. See also, H. Archibald Kaiser, "Restraint and Seclusion in Canadian Mental Health Facilities: Assessing the Prospects of Improved Access to Justice" (2001) 19 Windsor Y.B. Access Just. 391 at 395-96; S. Miles & P. Irvine, "Deaths Caused by Physical Restraints" (1992) 32 The Gerontologist ger·on·tol·o·gy
n.
The scientific study of the biological, psychological, and sociological phenomena associated with old age and aging.


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ge·ron 762.

(17.) Ibid.

(18.) Medications used for restraints may have a sedating effect and may increase confusion, therefore reducing the person's mental capacity.

(19.) Psychotropic medications List of medications which are used to treat psychiatric conditions on the market in the United States. A

Abilify - antipsychotic used to treat schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and agitation

are commonly used as chemical restraints. These are drugs that affect brain activities associated with mental processes and behaviour. There are four broad categories of psychotropic medications: anti-psychotic drugs, anti-depressant drugs, anti-anxiety drugs (including benzodiazepines) and hypnotics, all of which have serious side effects. The side effects are also more common in the elderly and may be more severe. Benzodiazepines may cause more daytime drowsiness drows·i·ness
n.
A state of impaired awareness associated with a desire or inclination to sleep. Also called hypnesthesia.


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drowsiness Medtalk Semiconsciousness; grogginess, sleepiness ; therefore falls and related accidents may be more common. Confusion, anxiety, depression, amnesia amnesia (ămnē`zhə), [Gr.,=forgetfulness], condition characterized by loss of memory for long or short intervals of time. It may be caused by injury, shock, senility, severe illness, or mental disease. , and, more rarely, delusions Delusions Definition

A delusion is an unshakable belief in something untrue. These irrational beliefs defy normal reasoning, and remain firm even when overwhelming proof is presented to dispute them. , disorientation disorientation /dis·or·i·en·ta·tion/ (-or?e-en-ta´shun) the loss of proper bearings, or a state of mental confusion as to time, place, or identity. , agitation, aggression, and hallucinations Hallucinations Definition

Hallucinations are false or distorted sensory experiences that appear to be real perceptions. These sensory impressions are generated by the mind rather than by any external stimuli, and may be seen, heard, felt, and even may increase. Addiction is also a serious risk. Hypnotic hypnotic /hyp·not·ic/ (hip-not´ik)
1. inducing sleep.

2. an agent that induces sleep.

3. pertaining to or of the nature of hypnosis or hypnotism. medications have similar side effects to benzodiazepines. The side effects of anti-depressants include, excessive sedation, blurred near vision, confusion, disorientation, and orthostatic hypotension Orthostatic Hypotension Definition

Orthostatic hypotension is an abnormal decrease in blood pressure when a person stands up. This may lead to fainting. (which can cause a predisposition predisposition /pre·dis·po·si·tion/ (-dis-po-zish´un) a latent susceptibility to disease that may be activated under certain conditions.
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pre·dis·po·si·tion
n.
1. to fall). Anti-psychotics may have a sedating effect, may increase confusion and/or agitation, and may cause rigidity rigidity /ri·gid·i·ty/ (ri-jid´i-te) inflexibility or stiffness.
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clasp-knife rigidity , tremors, and a change in gait. The manufacturers recommend that elderly persons prescribed anti-psychotics be regularly monitored.

(20.) Nuala Kenny, What Good is Healthcare? Reflections on the Canadian Experience (Ottawa: CHA n. 1. Tea; - the Chinese (Mandarin) name, used generally in early works of travel, and now for a kind of rolled tea used in Central Asia.
A pot with hot water . . . made with the powder of a certain herb called chaa, which is much esteemed.
- Tr. J. Press, 2002).

(21.) The Health Care (Consent) and Care Facility (Admission) Act--Supplement, R.S.B.C. 1996 C. 181. Section 25 is not yet in force.

(22.) Ibid. This is defined in s. 2 to include community care facilities, private hospitals, hospitals and facilities designated by regulation as care facilities.

(23.) Adult Care Regulations B.C. Reg. 536/80 sections 10.9, 10.10 and 10.11.

(24.) New Zealand, Law Commission, Protections Some Disadvantaged People May Need: Report 80 (Law Commission: Wellington, 2002), online at: The Law Commission (date accessed: 20 January 2003) [Law Commission].

(25.) Protection of Personal and Property Rights Act 1988 (N.Z.), 1988/4. This is New Zealand's adult guardianship legislation.

(26.) Law Commission, supra note 24 at 19. Court orders allowing restraint use must be expressed precisely, the purpose must be set out in the order and the order must not be capable of being construed to justify a greater degree of restraint than in necessary to achieve the purpose of the order. The Family Court may impose conditions on its order. For example, that restraint may be used only as long as necessary for the care of the patient or the protection of others. Also coercive powers must be exercised so as not to compromise the dignity, privacy or self-respect of the person concerned.

(27.) District Inspectors of Mental Health are appointed pursuant to section 94 of the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992 (N.Z.), 1992:46 [MH(CAT)]. They monitor the conditions of, and respond to complaints from, patients who are subject to compulsory treatment orders.

(28.) New Zealand Standard 8141:2001 Restraint Minimization and Safe Practice (Wellington: Standards New Zealand, 2001) [Restraint Minimization Standard]. The standard incorporates the following components: cultural recognition, particularly of cultural safety and recognizing the philosophy of Te Whare Tapa tapa: see bark cloth. Wha (the four cornerstones of Maori health); assessment, to be undertaken by suitably skilled persons in partnership with the resident and his/her family and includes the individuals personal and cultural needs, triggers and precursors and other factors and to be regularly reviewed; risk and quality management systems to develop institutional policies and improve communication with staff; compliance with legal and professional standards, including human rights, natural justice, and the Health and Disability Commissioner (Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers Rights) Regulations 1996 (N.Z.), 1996/78; respect for dignity and privacy; consumer support and communication during and after the restraint, including debriefing de·brief·ing
n.
1. The act or process of debriefing or of being debriefed.

2. The information imparted during the process of being debriefed.

Noun 1. ; staff training and competency assurance; an institutional approval process for various types of restraint, where residents, family, internal and external health providers, cultural advisors and specialist input when required, will consider education, competency and evaluation requirements for staff, indications for use, policies and procedures, monitoring and observation requirements, documentation, evaluation and review frequency and maintenance frequency (for equipment); monitoring during restraint use including the provision of food and nourishment nour·ish·ment
n.
Something that nourishes; food. , personal hygiene personal hygiene person n → Körperhygiene f and toileting, clothing, medications, exercise and activity and cultural safety; evaluation and review to ascertain whether an individual plan was followed, it was the least restrictive intervention, de-escalation techniques were tried, what impact the restraint had on the individual, family and staff and that adequate support was provided; quality review of restraint use at six-month intervals; and specific requirements for the use of seclusion under MH(CAT), ibid.

(29.) Section 9 of the Health and Disability Services (Safety) Act 2001 (N.Z.), 2001/93 requires that all health care services (hospital care, residential disability care and rest home care) must (among other requirements) meet all relevant service standards. The Health and Disability Services (Safety) Hospital Care, Residential Disability Care and Rest Home Care Standards Notice 2002 (N.Z.), 2002/24 approved the Restraint Minimization Standard, ibid. Existing facilities have two years to comply with the standard from 1 October 2002. External auditors The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. will audit each facility for compliance at approximately two yearly intervals. If they do not comply with the standards they may lose their license.

(30.) Nigel Eastman & Jill Peay, "Law Without Enforcement: Theory and Practice" in Nigel Eastman & Jill Peay, eds., Law Without Enforcement: Integrating Mental Health and Justice (Oxford & Portland, Ore.: Hart publishing, 1999) 1 at 25.

(31.) Peter Barham & Marian Barnes, "The Citizen as a Mental Patient" in Law Without Enforcement, ibid., 133 at 144.

(32.) Ignatieff, supra note 2 at 39.

(33.) Kazin, supra note 1.

Fiona McDonald is a doctoral candidate at Dalhousie UniversityDalhousie University (dălhou`zē), at Halifax, N.S., Canada; nonsectarian; coeducational; founded 1818 by the 9th earl of Dalhousie. Except for a few years between 1838 and 1845, Dalhousie did not function as a university until 1863.
..... Click the link for more information., Halifax, Nova Scotia For other uses, see Halifax.
Halifax, Nova Scotia may refer to any of the following:
Halifax Regional Municipality, capital of Nova Scotia, Canada

The research was supported by the Canadian Institutes for Health Research and the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research. The author thanks Elaine Gibson, Jocelyn Downie and an anonymous reviewer for their comments on this article. Thanks too, to Archie Kaiser and Elaine Gibson for their comments on the paper on which this article is based. All errors and omissionserrors and omissions n. short-hand for malpractice insurance which gives physicians, attorneys, architects, accountants and other professionals coverage for claims by patients and clients for alleged professional errors and omissions which amount to negligence.
..... Click the link for more information. remain the responsibility of the author.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Health Law Institute
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.





Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Aging, Stereotypes And First Impressions

The ability to interpret thin slices evolved as a way for our ancestors to protect themselves in an eat-or-be-eaten world, whereas modern-day threats to survival often come in the form of paperwork (dwindling stock portfolios) or intricate social rituals (impending divorce). The degree to which thin slices of experience help us navigate modern encounters—from hitchhikers to blind dates—is up for debate.
Ekman says that people excel at reading facial expressions quickly, but only when a countenance is genuine. Most people cannot tell if someone is feigning an emotion, he says, "Unless their eyes have been trained to spot very subtle expressions that leak through." Consider anger: When we are boiling mad, our lips narrow—an expression we can't make on demand when we're pretending. And the accuracy of a snap judgment always depends on what exactly we're sizing up. Ekman doesn't think we can use a thin slice of behavior to judge, say, if someone is smart enough to be our study partner or generous enough to lend us a bus token. "But we can pretty easily distinguish one emotion from another, particularly if it's on the face for a second or more." Spending more time with a genuine person, he says, won't yield a more accurate sense of that person's emotional state.
We can take thin slices of information to form a first impression of emotions and whether those emotions are true. In Second stage impressions we are taught how to judge others, holding our thin slices up to the light of social stereotypes. Here are attitudes effect are judgments. Research conducted by Brian Nosek, professor of psychology at the University of Virginia studies these stereotypes.
Quoted from Psychology Today, “
Nosek and colleagues administer a quick online test that reveals the beliefs people either can't or won't report. Called the Implicit Association Test, it asks participants to pair concepts, such as "young" with "good," or "elderly" with "good." If, in some part of his mind, "old" is more closely related to "bad" than to "good," the test taker will respond more quickly to the first pairing of words than to the second. In versions of these tests, small differences in response times are used to determine if someone is biased toward youth over the elderly, African-Americans over Caucasians or for President Bush over President Kennedy. "When I took the test," says Nosek, "I showed a bias toward whites. I was shocked. We call it unconsciousness-raising, in contrast to the consciousness-raising of the 1960s



Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

How Will Businesses Respond To Aging?

How will the increasing number of elder aged people affect the way we do business and affect our compassion and caring? In Atlanta there is a PR feast concerning the Fox Theater and the musician Joe, who played the famous organ in the Fox Theater. The community rose up to protest what they thought was Foxes breaking of a contract they had with Joe to stay in his apartment in the Theater for the rest of his life. A contract that was made when he helped save the famous historical Theater from being demolished in the late seventies. Below I put the response from the Fox Theater. In a future post labeled Aging I will discuss our stereotypes of the elderly.. Here is the response from the Fox Theater.

What Fox is sending to protesters:

The Board of Atlanta Landmarks, Joe included, have all known each other for over 30 years and all worked together to save this building. They are good people that are truly heartbroken that it has come to this.

All of this is part of a conversation that has been going on with Joe for the past few years. With increasing frequency over the last two years, Joe’s friends have called on the Fox staff to go check on Joe when he has been unresponsive or hard to reach. This entire conversation evolved out of our concern for Joe as he has required more and more assistance from our staff, and most recently, from the EMT that was here during a performance.

Joe’s attorney had the new occupancy agreement in hand for over a week before Monday’s meeting. Based on Joe’s comments on Monday, we are not even sure that he has seen it for himself.

Under the previous lease, there was a requirement for Joe to provide security for the building, which is no longer a requirement. In addition, the previous lease never contemplated the issues related to aging and assisted living. That is why a new occupancy agreement was written.

The building is a theatre, first and foremost. It is a commercial facility and it is not designed for 24/7 elder care. The new lease addresses this. At this time, Joe and his attorney tell us that he does not want or need our assistance, and that he does not want or need access to the building - that he is totally capable of taking care of himself. Removing access to the building was not a Fox initiative.

Please allow us to be clear - that the Board of Atlanta Landmarks has NEVER used the word "evict" and they did NOT vote to evict. It is their desire to have Joe remain in the apartment for as long as he is able. Last Friday the Board presented Joe's attorney with a new occupancy agreement, and they have not responded to it. This occupancy agreement continues to allow him to live at the Fox rent free, and the Fox will continue to pay the majority of his utilities as we have for the last 31 years.

It appears that Joe has been misinformed by his advisors. To be clear - Joe is welcome to live here at the Fox as long as he is able.

Thank you so much for your email, and your concern.

The Fox Theatre

Body Language Mistakes Managers Make And Why Should You Quote Research On Body Language

Yesterday, I did an interview with Forbes Magazine about body language mistakes. The Journalist mentioned that other body language experts were quoting the same research over and over on space differences and I hadn't done that. I asked if they were quoting Edward Hall research that gives the space delineations of 0 to 14 inches for intimate space and so on. She said yes. I said, well there is a general tendency to stay in certain zones of space, but there were so many caveats based on culture, gender, age and exposure to technology. I didn't share with her that Anthropologist Edward Hall's original research was done in the fifties and even then the research stated that there were difference's based on culture. You need to know the research on body language and how it works in everyday life.

Today, someone asked me if I thought there was a trend to quote research to support your thoughts. There is always a need to support your observations with solid research. Here is how and why I continue to study the current research in nonverbal communication and I analyze how or if it applies to everyday life. Every night at dinner when I was in fifth grade all the way through High School and college my father was first attending grad school then a college professor in accounting. Whenever I would make a point or share a fact at the dinner table my father would say, "Where did you hear that?", "What is your source?","Why do you think that is true" or just play devil's advocate so I would learn to cite my source and know how the information was created. If it was based on research I knew how many subjects were in the research study. If it was quoted in Time magazine I knew the political leanings of that publication. It prepared me for my masters then my Doctoral coursework, where every statement you make in a paper or in the class has to be supported by research and you need to know every detail of the research study you are quoting.
As far as Deception Detection Research goes, there was very little research in academic research. Paul Eckman, was quoted quite a bit. Now there is so much information. Quite a bit of the research is done in academic settings where there is little real cost if you lie. When you lie in real life there needs to be stress or clear punishment, say loss or threat to a job or relationship for normal stress cues to show and college students who are used as subjects for most studies are not always the most accurate representation of population. I have several blog entries on deception if you search for deception or lying on my blog and a few long articles on my website where I quote some of the strongest findings.



Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Making The Most Of Your Media Interview


Patti Wood, professional speaker, author and speech coach, states that interviews are really fun but they are extremely time-consuming. Patti shares with Realty Success Magazine 5 tips that will help you get your "ducks in a row" before you begin this process so you don't waste energy. Check them out at the link!


Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Fighting The Gossip



What is the significance of Blake Lively's stance with Penn Badgley according to OK Weekly Magazine's body language expert, Patti Wood. What is the latest gossip? Find out at the link!

http://www.scribd.com/doc/34273552/OK-BlakePenn

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Red Carpet Vs. Real Life


Cosmopolitan's body language expert, Patti Wood, exposes which Red Carpet celebs are putting on a show when they pose for pictures and which are genuine. Can you guess the real from the fake? The answers are at the link!

http://www.scribd.com/doc/34851930/Cosmopolitan-RedCarpetVsRealLife

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Body Language and Eye Contact, What kind does your eye contact say?

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

High-Testosterone People Feel Rewarded By Others' Anger

High-Testosterone People Feel Rewarded By Others' Anger, New Study Finds
ScienceDaily (May 12, 2007) — Most people don't appreciate an angry look, but a new University of Michigan psychology study found that some people find angry expressions so rewarding that they will readily learn ways to encourage them.


•"It's kind of striking that an angry facial expression is consciously valued as a very negative signal by almost everyone, yet at a non-conscious level can be like a tasty morsel that some people will vigorously work for," said Oliver Schultheiss, co-author of the study and a U-M associate professor of psychology.

The findings may explain why some people like to tease each other so much, he added. "Perhaps teasers are reinforced by that fleeting 'annoyed look' on someone else's face and therefore will continue to heckle that person to get that look again and again," he said. "As long as it does not stay there for long, it's not perceived as a threat, but as a reward."

The researchers took saliva samples from participants to measure testosterone, a hormone that has been associated with dominance motivation.

Participants then worked on a "learning task" in which one complex sequence of keypresses was followed by an angry face on the screen, another sequence was followed by a neutral face, and a third sequence was followed by no face.

Participants who were high in testosterone relative to other members of their sex learned the sequence that was followed by an angry face better than the other sequences, while participants low in testosterone did not show this learning advantage for sequences that were reinforced by an angry face.

Notably, this effect emerged more strongly in response to faces that were presented subliminally, that is, too fast to allow conscious identification. Perhaps just as noteworthy, participants were not aware of the patterns in the sequences of keypresses as they learned them.

While high-testosterone participants showed better learning in response to anger faces, they were unaware of the fact that they learned anything in the first place and unaware of what kind of faces had reinforced their learning.

Michelle Wirth, the lead author of the study and now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, added: "Better learning of a task associated with anger faces indicates that the anger faces were rewarding, as in a rat that learns to press a lever in order to receive a tasty treat. In that sense, anger faces seemed to be rewarding for high-testosterone people, but aversive for low-testosterone people."
She said the findings contribute to a body of research suggesting that perceived emotional facial expressions are important signals to help guide human behavior, even if people are not aware that they do so.

"The human brain may have built-in mechanisms to detect and respond to emotions perceived in others," she said. "However, what an emotional facial expression, such as anger, 'means' to a given individual—whether it is something to pursue or avoid, for example—can vary."

U-M psychology researchers Michelle Wirth and Schultheiss, the authors of the study, published their findings in the journal Physiology and Behavior.




Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Do Angry Men Get More Attention? Anger And First Impressions

Do Angry Men Get Noticed?
Science Daily (June 7, 2006) — By comparing how quickly human facial expressions of different types are detected in a crowd of neutral faces, researchers have demonstrated that male angry faces are a priority for visual processing -- particularly for male observers. The findings are reported by Mark Williams of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Jason Mattingley of the University of Melbourne, Australia, and appear in the June 6th issue of Current Biology.

In evolutionary terms, it makes sense that our attention is attracted by threat in the environment. It has long been hypothesized that facial expressions that signal potential threat, such as anger, may capture attention and therefore "stand out" in a crowd. In fact, there are specific brain regions that are dedicated to processing threatening facial expressions. Given the many differences between males and females, with males being larger and more physically aggressive than females, one might also suspect differences in the way in which threat is detected from individuals of different genders.

In the new work, Williams and Mattingley show that angry male faces are found more rapidly than angry female faces by both men and women. In addition, men find angry faces of both genders faster than women, whereas women find socially relevant expressions (for example, happy or sad) more rapidly. The work suggests that although males are biased toward detecting threatening faces, and females are more attuned to socially relevant expressions, both sexes prioritize the detection of angry male faces; in short, angry men get noticed. The advantage for detecting angry male faces is consistent with the notion that human perceptual processes have been shaped by evolutionary pressures arising from the social environment.

Reference: Mark A. Williams of Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts and University of Melbourne in Parkville,Victoria, Australia; Jason B. Mattingley of Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Williams et al.: "Correspondence: Do angry men get noticed?" Publishing in Current Biology 16, R402-404, June 6, 2006. www.current-biology.com


Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

If You Have Internet Access In Your Home You Are More Likely To Be In A Relationship

Internet Access at Home Increases the Likelihood That Adults Will Be in Relationships, Study Finds
Science Daily (Aug. 19, 2010) — Adults who have Internet access at home are much more likely to be in romantic relationships than adults without Internet access, according to research to be presented at the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association.

"Although prior research on the social impacts of Internet use has been rather ambiguous about the social cost of time spent online, our research suggests that Internet access has an important role to play in helping Americans find mates," said Michael J. Rosenfeld, an associate professor of sociology at Stanford University and the lead author of the study, "Meeting Online: The Rise of the Internet as a Social Intermediary."

According to the study, 82.2 percent of participants who had Internet access at home also had a spouse or romantic partner, compared to a 62.8-percent partnership rate for adults who did not have Internet access. The paper uses data from Wave I of the How Couples Meet and Stay Together (HCMST) survey, a nationally representative survey of 4,002 adults, of whom 3,009 had a spouse or romantic partner.

In addition to finding that people are more likely to be in romantic relationships if they have Internet access in their homes, Rosenfeld and study co-author Reuben J. Thomas, an assistant professor of sociology at the City University of New York, found that the Internet is the one social arena that is unambiguously gaining importance over time as a place where couples meet.

"With the meteoric rise of the Internet as a way couples have met in the past few years, and the concomitant recent decline in the central role of friends, it is possible that in the next several years the Internet could eclipse friends as the most influential way Americans meet their romantic partners, displacing friends out of the top position for the first time since the early 1940s," Rosenfeld said.

The study also found that the Internet is especially important for finding potential partners in groups where the supply is small or difficult to identify such as in the gay, lesbian, and middle-aged heterosexual communities.

Among couples who met within two years of the HCMST Wave I survey in the winter of 2009, 61 percent of same-sex couples and 21.5 percent of heterosexual couples met online.

"Couples who meet online are much more likely to be same-sex couples, and somewhat more likely to be from different religious backgrounds," Rosenfeld said. "The Internet is not simply a new and more efficient way to keep in touch with our existing networks; rather the Internet is a new kind of social intermediary that may reshape the kinds of partners and relationships we have."




Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

People Who Lie On Online Dating Services Likely Are People-Pleasers Who Want To Present Themselves In The Most Favorable Light To Get Someone To Like

Online Daters Behave Similarly to Those Who Meet Face-to-Face, Researcher Says
ScienceDaily (Mar. 8, 2010) — People who lie on online dating services likely are people-pleasers who want to present themselves in the most favorable light to get someone to like them -- just as they would in face-to-face dating, according to a University of Kansas researcher.


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•Social Psychology
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•Communications
•Spintronics Research
Reference
•Interpersonal relationship
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•Conflict resolution
Jeffrey Hall, assistant professor of communication studies, surveyed more than 5,000 participants in a national Internet matchmaking service to determine what kinds of people are most likely to lie during the online dating process. He asked them how likely they were to lie about topics such as assets, relationship goals, personal interests, personal attributes, past relationships, age and weight.

"What people lie about depends on what kind of people they are," Hall said. "For example, if you're an extrovert, you might downplay the number of past relationships you've had because chances are you've had more relationships than an introvert."

Those most likely to lie during online dating experiences are "high self-monitors" -- people who have an acute sense of what people like and control their behavior to achieve social ends. Their actions are not necessarily manipulative, Hall said, but rather reflect a desire to be liked and to fit in.

Hall's research was published in the February issue of the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships.

In the study, men admitted to lying more overall, but women were most likely to lie about their weight. Because online daters hope to meet face-to-face eventually, the amount of lying is quite small, Hall said.

"Online daters shouldn't be concerned that most people are presenting a false impression of themselves," Hall said. "What influences face-to-face dating influences the online world




Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Communication In Hospitals. What happens When There Is Hand Off From One Shift To The Next?

Communication Often Fumbled During Patient Hand-Offs in Hospital Science Daily (Mar. 13, 2010) — As shifts change in a hospital, outgoing physicians must "hand off" important information to their replacements in a brief meeting. But a new study of this hand-off process finds that the most important information is not fully conveyed in a majority of cases, even as physicians rate their communication as successful. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See Also: Health & Medicine •Today's Healthcare •Smoking •Staying Healthy •Medical Imaging •Disability •Diseases and Conditions Reference •Pediatrics •Bone scan •List of medical topics •Palliative care The research, published by University of Chicago researchers in the March issue of Pediatrics, highlights the importance of educating doctors about successful communication skills during hand-offs. 

The results also emphasize the risk inherent in increased hand-offs necessitated by restrictions on medical resident work hours, even as further work limits are being discussed. "When resident hours are shortened, you have more hand-offs," said Vineet Arora, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Chicago Medical Center. "You could have concerns about either a tired physician who knows the patient or a well-rested physician that may not know the patient. The trade-off is between fatigue and familiarity." Conducted through a unique collaboration between physicians and psychologists at the University of Chicago, the study observed hand-off communication between pediatric interns -- first-year residents -- at Comer Children's Hospital at the University of Chicago. Interns at the end of an overnight shift would spend a total of 10-15 minutes sharing information about hospitalized patients with the resident relieving them in a designated hand-off room.

 Both the outgoing and incoming interns were then asked by researchers about what they thought was the most important information conveyed during the hand-off about each patient. Surprisingly, what the outgoing intern identified as the most important information was not successfully communicated to the incoming intern 60 percent of the time. The rationale for certain medical decisions -- such as why a patient is on a particular drug or why the primary care physician should be contacted -- was also not understood by the receiving intern in a majority of cases. But despite these miscommunications, interns on both sides of the hand-off consistently rated the quality of their communication as very high. Boaz Keysar, Ph.D., a professor of psychology at the University of Chicago and co-author of the paper, said that this disconnect between perceived and actual success of communication is common in other settings. "You would imagine the kind of miscommunication we discover elsewhere actually might be reduced when the stakes are high in a clinical setting because it matters so much," Keysar said. "But the opposite is true, which I think is counter-intuitive and important to know." The results were even more striking given the optimal hand-off conditions for interns at Comer Children's Hospital. In each hand-off, a conversation takes place in a designated room under supervision by more experienced physicians. In previous research, Arora found that many hospitals and programs have much less organized hand-off procedures -- if they occur at all. In illustrating the communication breakdowns that plague even best-case hand-off conditions, Arora and Keysar hope to inform medical centers and schools of the need for better education about hand-offs. The study found that "anticipatory guidance" -- offering to-do items or if-then advice -- was a more effective way of communicating information between interns than passing on knowledge items in bulk. Currently, Arora and colleagues are working on a simulation exercise for fourth-year medical students to train more effective hand-off communication skills. 

 Such training, they hope, will be more effective than relying upon computer programs and electronic medical records to facilitate hand-off communication. A verbal exchange of information remains important so that young doctors can make quick, informed decisions about patients, Arora said. "IT solutions cannot substitute for a successful communication act," Arora said. "We aren't at the point where computers are going to do that for us. Technology solutions can help so that you have the information that you need when you need it, but to look at that information and be able to make a judgment about what to do, is what the hand-off conversation is for." But while researchers look for the best way to improve those conversations, Arora and Keysar hope that medical policymakers are aware of the risks inherent in the current hand-off model. As the Accreditation Council for General Medical Education ponders further restrictions upon the number of hours residents and interns can work, the consequences of those reduced hours must be acknowledged, they said. "We tend to be very myopic in the way we think about this problem," Keysar said. "Reducing hours is good, but there's a cost that is not obvious at all, and this study really spells that cost out. It's very difficult for us to gauge how well we are understood, and this should be taken into account in the trade-off between a number of work hours and fatigue." Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also, check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Talking On The Cell Phone While Driving Can Make People Dislike You. First Impressions

Does talking on the cell phone while driving effect your impression?
New research shows that divers talking to people on the cell phone talked more than they listened. And used simpler words. This is so interesting. It makes me wonder if this is one of the behaviors that is pushing us to more narcissistic behavior. We are becoming more "ME" focused.
Read one of the quotes then an article on the original research below.

"Conversation analyses revealed some interesting patterns, according to the researchers. When driving tasks got more complicated, drivers appeared to modulate the complexity of their speech, as measured by syllables-per-word. Drivers also talked more when using cell phones, perhaps, the authors speculated, because they were trying to control the conversation to avoid using the mental resources required to really listen to the other person.

Meanwhile, passengers took an active role in supporting the driver, often talking about surrounding traffic. That shared situational awareness could be helpful to the
Drivers Distracted More By Cell Phones Than By Passengers
Science Daily (Dec. 1, 2008) — Drivers make more mistakes when talking on a cell phone than when talking to passengers, new research shows.


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Mind & Brain
•Perception
•Intelligence
•Schizophrenia
•Brain Injury
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Reference
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•Hearing impairment
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•Jet lag
This finding addresses the common question about whether driver distraction comes from cell-phone use specifically or conversation generally.

Even when drivers used a hands-free cell phone, driving performance was significantly compromised. "Cell phone and passenger conversation differ in their impact on a driver's performance; these differences are apparent at the operational, tactical, and strategic levels of performance," the researchers wrote.

The study, led by Frank Drews, PhD, of the University of Utah, analyzed the driving performance of 41 mostly young adult drivers paired with 41 friends who served as conversation partners. Both sexes were equally represented.

In each of three experimental conditions (conversation with hands-free cell phone, conversation in the car, or no conversation), one person in each pair was randomly selected to be the "driver" and the other the conversation partner.

Drivers used a sophisticated simulator that presented a 24-mile multi lane highway with on- and off-ramps, overpasses and two-lane traffic in each direction. Participants drove under an irregular-flow condition that mimics real highway conditions -- with other vehicles, in compliance with traffic laws, changing lanes and speeds. This context required "drivers" to pay attention to surrounding traffic.

In the cell-phone conversation condition, drivers' conversation partners were at another location. In the in-car conversation condition, partners sat next to their (simulated) drivers. In both cases, conversation partners were told to tell one another a previously undisclosed "close call" story about a time their lives were threatened.

All drivers were instructed to leave the simulated highway once they arrived at a rest area about eight miles from the starting point. Partners were told the driver had this task. The driving sequences took about 10 minutes to finish.

Drivers talking by cell phone drove significantly worse than drivers talking to passengers. The cell-phone users were more likely to drift in their lane, kept a greater distance between their car and the car in front, and were four times more likely to miss pulling off the highway at the rest area. Passenger conversation barely affected all three measures.

The authors said the problems could have stemmed from inattention "blindness," or insufficient processing of information from the driving environment. Cell-phone users may also have found it harder to hold in working memory the intent to exit at the rest area.

Conversation analyses revealed some interesting patterns, according to the researchers. When driving tasks got more complicated, drivers appeared to modulate the complexity of their speech, as measured by syllables-per-word. Drivers also talked more when using cell phones, perhaps, the authors speculated, because they were trying to control the conversation to avoid using the mental resources required to really listen to the other person.

Meanwhile, passengers took an active role in supporting the driver, often talking about surrounding traffic. That shared situational awareness could be helpful to the




Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Is Talking On Your Cell Phone Bad For Your Relationship?

This research article simply states a distracted listener is more likely to make mistakes that could harm a relationship.

Talking On Your Cell Phone While Driving May Be Hazardous To Your Close Relationships
Science Daily (June 15, 2010) — Warnings about the dangers of distracted driving while using a cell phone are prevalent these days, but cell phone use while driving may also put family relationships in jeopardy, says University of Minnesota professor Paul Rosenblatt.


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See Also:
Mind & Brain
•Social Psychology
•Relationships
•Perception
Matter & Energy
•Transportation Science
•Technology
•Virtual Environment
Reference
•Mobile phone radiation and health
•Anger management
•Mobile phone
•Hearing impairment
The same factors that make using a cell phone while driving more hazardous -- longer reaction times and impaired attention -- can also make family communication in that situation more risky, says Rosenblatt in an article in the current issue of Family Science Review. The article, authored by Rosenblatt and graduate student Xiaohui Li, provides a speculative theoretical analysis on the topic. Rosenblatt is a family social science professor in the university's College of Education and Human Development.

"If we assume that the relationship risks involved in talking on a cell phone while driving are similar to the driving risks -- both tasks involve divided attention and distraction -- we can develop ideas about how a family relationship may be impaired," Rosenblatt says in the article.

For example, studies have indicated that cell phone use while driving leads to slower reaction times on the road. This could translate to the driver's cell phone conversation as well.

"A delay in the conversation could be a problem if the person (spouse or partner) on the other end of the conversation interprets the delayed reaction as an indicator of ambivalence, of not having a ready answer or of hiding something. This all leads to upsetting the partner," Rosenblatt says.

And, what if the driver misses important details of the conversation? This could lead to misunderstandings and more hard feelings, he says.

"In general, cell phone usage while driving might lead to missed relationship stop lights, slow reactions to dangerous relationship circumstances, loss of control of one's part of the interaction, and interaction mistakes that could lead to conflict, hurt feelings, misunderstandings, and possibly even serious damage to the relationship," Rosenblatt says in the article.

The partner who is not driving might be worried about the driver's safety and may cut a conversation short so the driver can concentrate, but the driver might interpret that in a negative way.

In addition to the relationship problems created by talking on cell phone while driving, a number of problems arise that both people have when one of them is driving while talking on a cell phone.

The lack of visual cues including gestures, facial expressions and posture creates challenges. Poor cell phone reception and the noise from the automobile and the road can all contribute to misunderstandings, he says.

In the article, Rosenblatt explores five hypothetical examples of possible relationship problems that could arise when a driver is talking with a family member via cell phone. The examples he explores include the partner asking the driver to run an errand; a family member calls with good news; a family member calls with bad news; arguments over the phone and apologies over the phone. Each of the scenarios can be wrought with frustration and misunderstanding.

Most relationships can manage the added difficulties related to cell phone use.

"However, for couples in which things have been so difficult that they both are considering ending the relationship, problems arising from a difficult phone conversation, may push their relationship to the tipping point," Rosenblatt says.



Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

How Accurate Are First Impressions Made From Viewing People In Photos?

How accurate are personality assessments made of people in photographs?

I quote this research to my audiences so they know how much information is communicated in an instant.

First Impressions Count When Making Personality Judgments, New Research Shows
Science Daily (Nov. 4, 2009) — First impressions do matter when it comes to communicating personality through appearance, according to new research by psychologists Laura Naumann of Sonoma State University and Sam Gosling of The University of Texas at Austin.

•Despite the crucial role of physical appearance in creating first impressions, until now little research has examined the accuracy of personality impressions based on appearance alone. These findings will be published in the December 2009 issue of Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, co-written with Simine Vazire (Washington University in St. Louis) and Peter J. Rentfrow (University of Cambridge).

"In an age dominated by social media where personal photographs are ubiquitous, it becomes important to understand the ways personality is communicated via our appearance," says Naumann. "The appearance one portrays in his or her photographs has important implications for their professional and social life."

In the study, observers viewed full-body photographs of 123 people they had never met before. The targets were viewed either in a controlled pose with a neutral facial expression or in a naturally expressed pose. The accuracy of the judgments was gauged by comparing them to the aggregate of self-ratings and that of three informants who knew the targets well, a criterion now widely regarded as the gold standard in personality research.

Even when viewing the targets in the controlled pose, the observers could accurately judge some major personality traits, including extraversion and self-esteem. But most traits were hard to detect under these conditions. When observers saw naturally expressive behavior (such as a smiling expression or energetic stance), their judgments were accurate for nine of the 10 personality traits. The 10 traits were extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, emotional stability, openness, likability, self-esteem, loneliness, religiosity and political orientation.

"We have long known that people jump to conclusions about others on the basis of very little information," says Gosling, "but what's striking about these findings is how many of the impressions have a kernel of truth to them, even on the basis of something as simple a single photograph."

Gosling cautioned that observers still make plenty of mistakes, but noted that this latest work is important because it sheds new light on the sources of accuracy and inaccuracy of judgments.

With this kind of knowledge, individuals can choose to alter their appearance in specific ways, either to make identity claims or shape others impressions of them, Naumann says.

"If you want potential employers or romantic suitors to see you as a warm and friendly individual, you should post pictures where you smile or are standing in a relaxed pose," suggests Naumann.

For example, whether you smile and how you stand (tense vs. relaxed, energetic vs. tired) are important cues to judge a variety of traits. Extraverts smile more, stand in energetic and less tense ways, and look healthy, neat and stylish. People who are more open to experience are less likely to have a healthy, neat appearance, but are more likely to have a distinctive style of dress.

The researchers also found males who have a neat and healthy appearance are often seen as more conscientious. However, defining personality in women was more difficult because they were more strongly influenced by cultural demands to look presentable.

Digital high-resolution images demonstrating the standardized and spontaneous full-body photographs are available upon request.


Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Can Opposites Attract?


Patti Wood, author of "Success Signals," looks at the body language of Courteney Cox and David Arquette for OK Weekly Magazine. Patti says that even though they are totally opposite their body language is living proof that opposites attract and can develop into a wonderful relationship!
http://www.scribd.com/doc/34274000/OK-CourteneyDavid

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

What's Going On With Brad?


It seems as if Brad is always in the background or lagging behind when he is seen with Angelina. Patti Wood, body language expert, weighs in on this situation for Life & Style Weekly. See what Patti says at the link!

http://www.scribd.com/doc/34852052/Life-Style-a

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Publicity Or Passion?


Patti Wood, body language expert, reveals what she sees behind the exterior of George Clooney and Sarah Larson for OK Weekly Magazine. Is it just publicity or is there passion behind their body language? Details at the link!

http://www.scribd.com/doc/34274003/OK-GeorgeSarah


Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Boost Your People Smarts, Good Housekeeping


Patti Wood, body language expert, says "Don't just listen to what others tell you - learn how to read their body language to find out what they are "really" saying." Patti discusses some clues that will help you become more "people smart" in Good Housekeeping's Quick & Simple.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/34852033/GHQuick-Simple-Boost-Your-People-Smarts


Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Is This Duo Totally In Tune?


Patti Wood, body language expert, weighs in on this photo of the duo, Gavin Rossdale and Gwen Stefani for OK Weekly Magazine. This couple has always appeared to be in love. What is their body language revealing? Check the link below!

http://www.scribd.com/doc/34274005/OK-GwenGavin

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://PattiWood.net. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Teaching College Students To Shake Hands

I just got this feedback from a professor at Purdue. He used the tools he learned in my workshop last week with his students.

Dear Patti,
Thank you very much for all the coaching you provided last week! I enjoyed the program so much. I learned a lot of new things, but I also re-discovered some forgotten attributes of my presentation skills and … of myself . I already applied many of the learned skills to my first lecture yesterday to sophomore students. Boy did they work! I used the hand-shake attention-getter and it fit perfectly with this class. This is the first class students take in electrical engineering, so the analogy to hand-shaking with a new person is obvious. This was also the first time I introduced a class with zero power point slides. Open gestures and taking more space added the right amount of confidence as well.

Research presentations are my next frontier…

Associate Professor
Purdue University


Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

What's Behind Their Smile?


Patti Wood, body language expert, examines these dazzling celebrity smiles for Star Magazine and reveals the startling personality secrets behind their smiles. The link below has all the details!

http://www.scribd.com/doc/34852089/Star-Behind-the-Smile


Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Public Speaking and Body Language

Body Language when you're speaking can seem difficult. My most frequently asked question is, "What do I do with my hands when I am giving a speech?" First and foremost, let your hands show. Specifically you want to make sure the palms of your hands show. We are wired to look at the palms of the hands to see if you are armed and dangerous. So make sure your hands are open and so look safe. Because there is a tendency for some people to hide their hands when they lie, you also want to make sure you show the palms of your hands when you are speaking to look honest. A simple trick if you're stressed is to put your right hand in your pocket and hold on to a nickle. It anchors you and magically your left hand will gesture. I have given that trick to my coaching clients and they are amazed how effective it is. For more tips, go to my official website link http://www.pattiwood.net/
Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

A Cold Shoulder - What It Reveals!


Body language expert, Patti Wood, checks out the cues that Kate Beckinsale is sending out as she stands beside Len Wiseman for OK Weekly Magazine. Check out why Patti says there might be "dark times" ahead for this couple because of Kate's stance. Find out what it reveals!

http://www.scribd.com/doc/34274006/OK-LenKate

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

What Do Different Handholds Reveal?




Patti Wood, body language expert, examines the way Tom and Katie are holding hands for Life & Style Weekly. Are you wondering what is behind the way they are holding hands? Check the link for all the details!
http://www.scribd.com/doc/34273544/LifeStyle-TomKatie

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

A Solo Act


Patti Wood, body language expert, uncovers what is going on between Madonna and Guy Ritchie for OK Weekly. It seems that Madonna is fighting for her independence from Guy. What brings Patti to that conclusion.....what are the clues? Check the link!

http://www.scribd.com/doc/34274008/OK-MadonnaGuy

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

How Dads Show They Love Their Daughters


Patti Wood, body language expert, reads the body language of children and their dads in First For Women Magazine. She reveals what's behind an upturned hand, turned-in feet, a raised chin and palms pointing upward. Who's really wrapped around whose finger? Find out at the link!



Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.

Losing Their Steam?

What are the cues that Patti Wood, body language expert, picked up on for OK Weekly that led her to say, "Rebecca Gayheart and Eric Dane do not look like a happy couple." Details at the link below!
http://www.scribd.com/doc/34274012/OK-RebeccaEric

Patti Wood, MA, Certified Speaking Professional - The Body Language Expert. For more body language insights go to her website at http://pattiwood.net/. Also check out the body language quiz on her YouTube Channel at http://youtube.com/user/bodylanguageexpert.