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Introducing CBT for low mood and depression

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Introducing CBT for low mood and depression
Depression is among the most common mental health problems faced by students. In this series of podcasts, we look at what depression is and how it can impact student life, and offer some ideas and techniques to help you through it. Drawing on cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), an evidence-based approach for the treatment of depression, they provide a framework for thinking about ways in which depression and low mood can keep you stuck, and some practical tools you can try out either on your own or with the help of a counsellor.

Importantly, these podcasts are not intended to be used as a replacement for counselling or therapy for those who may need it. Rather, the hope is that will give you some ideas which might be part of a process of understanding more about yourself and, ultimately, feeling better.

Useful Links and Resources

Students against Depression: https://www.studentsagainstdepression.org/ - lots of self-help materials including a Safety Plan template (see the Self Help page)

Dr Kristen Neff’s website: https://self-compassion.org/guided-self-compassion-meditations-mp3-2/ - lots of resources including guided exercises on self compassion.

University Counselling Service Self-Help Resources: https://www.ox.ac.uk/students/welfare/counselling/self-help (see the Mental Health section in particular for more useful links)

Points of Contact

Emergency Services: Call 999 or go to Accident & Emergency (A&E) if you are at immediate risk e.g. if you are having suicidal thoughts and believe you might act on them imminently. The nearest A&E in Oxford is at the John Radcliffe Hospital: Headley Way, Headington, Oxford, OX3 9DU. See weblink for Emergency Department of Psychiatry: https://www.oxfordhealth.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/AM-075.15-Eme...

Your GP: Your GP is a point of contact for mental as well as physical health and can make referrals to specialist services where appropriate. See your college website if you’re not sure which surgery you’re connected to.

111: Call 111 if you need medical help quickly but there is not an immediate risk, or if you are unable to contact your GP surgery (e.g. due to its being out-of-hours). As well as physical health advice, this is a source of round the clock, non-emergency advice on accessing mental health support.

Safe Haven: A late night safe space for people experiencing mental health crisis (run in partnership with Mind). Open 6pm – 10pm Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday. You can self-refer on the night from 5pm by calling 01865 903037 or email: oxonsafehaven@oxfordhealth.nhs.uk

College Support

Your College Welfare Team: Every college has its own setup but this may include a Wellbeing Adviser, Welfare Officer or Dean, Chaplain, Nurse and others. Check your college website if you’re not sure who to contact.

Your College Lodge: The porters can also help you access support within college. If you need urgent support outside of normal working hours, they will be able to alert an on-call Junior Dean who can help you access appropriate support.

Helplines and Online Support

Samaritans: 116 123. Emotional support helpline, free to access, operates 24/7.

NightLine: 01865 270 270. Run by and for students, open 8pm – 2am, also offers instant messaging chat.

No Panic: 0300 7729844 OR 0330 606 1174 for the Youth Helpline (13-20 year-olds). Operates 10am to 10pm, provides support for people struggling with anxiety.

CALM (Campaign Against Living Miserably): 0800 58 58 58. Operates 5pm – midnight. “For people in the UK who are down or have hit a wall for any reason, who need to talk or find information and support.” Also offers webchat.

The Mix: 0808 808 4994. Support service aimed specifically at under 25s. Helpline is open 3pm – midnight, and there are also webchat and text support services available.

Togetherall: A safe, professionally moderated online peer support community. Register with your university email address to gain free access.

The Helplines Partnership: There are lots of other helplines and online supports out there. This site helps you find organisations you can contact quickly by phone, email or online, for a range of different forms of support.

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Ivriot - עבריות

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Ivriot - עבריות
בהסכית החדש של המרכז ללימודי יהדות מדברות המורה אסתר, והתלמידה אליסיה על השפה העברית, אנחנו לומדות אחת מהשנייה מילים חדשות ואיך באמת מדברים בישראל. A new podcast from the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies. We speak in Hebrew and about Hebrew, where do words came from into Hebrew, how we say and why we say. Idioms, expressions and slang. Esther And Alicia talk about Where Yiddish meets Acadian and five millennia of human language mix to create modern Hebrew. Hosts: Esther Yadgar, Alicia Vergara.


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Lakshmi Chockalingam

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Dârini Vedarattiname

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Francesca Pesola

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From Montréal to Madurai: How cities can drive systemic change

Series
Future of Business
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In this episode with Dârini Vedarattiname, we explore the different ways cities, such as Amsterdam and Cochin or our home cities Montréal and Madurai, can impact our society and our economic development.
Where do you come from and how much does that impact the opportunities you get? What determines a city’s place in the world? Join us to listen to a truly global citizen talk about a deeply global topic.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Future of Business
People
Dârini Vedarattiname
Lakshmi Chockalingam
Keywords
future of cities
Future of work
smart cities
sustainable cities
power clusters
International Development
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 29/06/2022
Duration: 00:23:50

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June 2022 with Dr Francesca Pesola

Series
Let's talk e-cigarettes
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Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Nicola Lindson discuss emerging evidence in e-cigarette research and interview Dr Francesca Pesola.
In the June episode Jamie Hartmann-Boyce talks with Francesca Pesola from the Wolfson Institute of Population Health Queen Mary University of London. Dr Francesca Pesola talks to Associate Professor Jamie Hartmann-Boyce about the results from the trial comparing e-cigarettes to nicotine patches for smoking cessation in pregnant women. Professor Tim Coleman discussed this study in the May 2021 podcast and the results have now been published in Nature Medicine, Hajek et al 2022 (DOI: 10.1038/s41591-022-01808-0).
Dr Pesola outlines the need to identify smoking cessation aids to help women quit during pregnancy. Dr Pesola discusses the results of their randomised control trial of 1,140 participants comparing refillable e-cigarettes with nicotine patches. In this trial pregnant women who smoke were randomized to e-cigarettes or nicotine patches. Dr Pesola reports that the unadjusted analysis of the primary outcome of validated quit rates at the end of pregnancy were not found to be significantly different between the e-cigarette and nicotine patch arms. However, Dr Pesola explains that some people in the study used non-allocated products, for example people in the nicotine patch group were also found to be using e-cigarettes. This meant that if they then quit there was uncertainty as to whether the quitting behaviour was due to the nicotine patches or to the e-cigarettes. The study team had anticipated this behaviour and pre-specified that they would exclude people who were abstinent and who had used non-allocated products. Dr Pesola reports that after doing this e-cigarettes were found to be more effective than patches. The safety profile was similar for both study products, however, low birthweight (

Episode Information

Series
Let's talk e-cigarettes
People
Jamie Hartmann-Boyce
Nicola Lindson
Francesca Pesola
Keywords
ecigarettes
E-cigarettes
nicotine
smoking
vaping
cancer
Department: Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine
Date Added: 29/06/2022
Duration: 00:18:38

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Tzen Sam

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Nora Baker

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TORCH Post-Show Conversations: When We Dead Awaken

Series
TORCH Post-Show Conversations
Embed
Listen in as Billy Barrett, Tzen Sam and Kirsten Shepherd-Barr discuss a recent production of Ibsen's 'When We Dead Awaken'
A TORCH Post-show Conversation podcast about The Coronet Theatre & The Norwegian Ibsen Company's production of When We Dead Awaken.

This conversation was recorded between Billy Barrett, Tzen Sam and Kirsten Shepherd-Barr in March 2022 on location in London. It explores their responses to the play, and the ways it connects with their knowledge exchange collaboration 'My Name is Laura Kieler'.

TORCH Post-show Conversations is a series of informal, 'on location' conversations between Oxford researchers in response to a current theatre production. Designed to capture 'on the night' responses to performance, the Conversations give listeners a chance to eavesdrop on the intersections between research and theatre practice, and give researchers the opportunity to respond in real time to the best of theatre. Variation in sound quality comes from recording in public spaces or in transit. A full transcript will be available in due course, in the meantime please contact TORCH if you have any questions about this conversation. 

Episode Information

Series
TORCH Post-Show Conversations
People
Kirsten Shepherd-Barr
Tzen Sam
Billy Barrett
Keywords
theatre
ibsen
Breach Theatre
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 28/06/2022
Duration: 00:28:26

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