P
Peter Tavel
Researcher at Palacký University, Olomouc
Publications - 89
Citations - 767
Peter Tavel is an academic researcher from Palacký University, Olomouc. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Religiosity. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 68 publications receiving 462 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter Tavel include Prague College.
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Provision of Psychotherapy during the COVID-19 Pandemic among Czech, German and Slovak Psychotherapists.
Elke Humer,Christoph Pieh,Martin Kuška,Antonia Barke,Bettina K. Doering,Katharina Gossmann,Radek Trnka,Radek Trnka,Zdenek Meier,Natália Kaščáková,Peter Tavel,Thomas Probst +11 more
TL;DR: Results imply that the supply of mental health care could be maintained during COVID-19 and that changes in the provision of psychotherapy vary among countries and gender.
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Factors associated with educational aspirations among adolescents: cues to counteract socioeconomic differences?
TL;DR: Characteristics of the school environment, the family and the individual adolescent are all associated with the level of educational aspiration, but in a different way for different educational tracks.
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For the benefit of others: generativity and meaning in life in the elderly in four cultures.
TL;DR: A moderated mediation model is tested and it is confirmed that generative concern is partly associated with meaning in life because it leads to generative goals, which provide individuals withmeaning in life.
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The Spiritual Well-Being Scale: Psychometric Evaluation of the Shortened Version in Czech Adolescents
Klara Malinakova,Jaroslava Kopcakova,Peter Kolarcik,Andrea Madarasova Geckova,Iva Poláčková Šolcová,Iva Poláčková Šolcová,Vít Hušek,Lucie Kluzova Kracmarova,Eva Dubovská,Michal Kalman,Zuzana Puzova,Jitse P. van Dijk,Peter Tavel +12 more
TL;DR: The new seven-item version of the Spiritual Well-Being Scale supports a two-factorial model of the SWBS with satisfactory internal consistency and is suitable for measuring spiritual well-being in a secularising environment.
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When Reminiscence is Harmful: The Relationship Between Self-Negative Reminiscence Functions, Need Satisfaction, and Depressive Symptoms Among Elderly People from Cameroon, the Czech Republic, and Germany
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the link between self-negative reminiscence functions and depression in three cultural contexts: Cameroon, Czech Republic, and Germany, and found that self negative reminiscing is associated with an impairment of need satisfaction which in turn relates to enhanced depressive symptoms.