Lisbeth Hybholt
Mental Health Services
13 Papers
15 Citations
Lisbeth Hybholt is an academic researcher from Mental Health Services. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & CINAHL. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications. Previous affiliations of Lisbeth Hybholt include Region Zealand.
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Papers
Service user's actual involvement in mental health research practices: A scoping review.
TL;DR: The study reveals that collaborative research in mental health requires changes to traditional research practices to create and support genuine collaborative partnerships and thereby avoid tokenism and power inequalities.
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Nurses’ use of social media during the COVID-19 pandemic—A scoping review
Stinne Glasdam,Helena Sandberg,Sigrid Stjernswärd,Frode F. Jacobsen,Anette Grønning,Lisbeth Hybholt +5 more
TL;DR: How nurses use social media in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic is explored, providing snapshots of nurses’ uses of social media from various regions in the world, but revealed a need for studies from further countries and continents.
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Arksey and O′Malleyʼs consultation exercise in scoping reviews: A critical review
Niels Buus,Lene Nygaard,Lene Lauge Berring,Lisbeth Hybholt,Stine Lundstrøm Kamionka,Camilla Blach Rossen,Rikke Søndergaard,Anette Juel +7 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that a consultation exercise should only be included when it genuinely invites participation and reports on the effect of alternative voices, and an aspirational move from ‘consultation’ to ‘participation” is encouraged.
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Scoping Review of Peer-Led Support for People Bereaved by Suicide
Agnes Higgins,Lisbeth Hybholt,Olivia A. Meuser,Jessica Eustace Cook,Carmel Downes,Jean Morrissey +5 more
TL;DR: A systematic review of peer-led support for people bereaved by suicide was conducted by as discussed by the authors , which identified 10 studies conducted between 1994 and 2020 in five countries, including face-to-face groups, telephone and online groups/forums and evaluated using a variety of methodologies.
Older Adults' Conduct of Everyday Life After Bereavement by Suicide: A Qualitative Study.
Lisbeth Hybholt,Lene Lauge Berring,Lene Lauge Berring,Annette Erlangsen,Annette Erlangsen,Elene Fleischer,Jørn Toftegaard,Elin Kristensen,Vibeke Toftegaard,Jenny Havn,Niels Buus +10 more
TL;DR: Investigating how older adults bereaved by suicide conducted their everyday life during the first 5 years after the loss of a loved one found it necessary to grapple with their understanding of themselves and other people in social communities when they pursued their concerns adjusting to their broken notions of late-life living.