Krista Mathias

 KristaL. Mathias

Krista L. Mathias

  • Courses5
  • Reviews26
Jan 4, 2020
N/A
Textbook used: No
Would take again: Yes
For Credit: Yes

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Mandatory



Difficulty
Clarity
Helpfulness

Average

Prof. Krista is amazing, but she takes forever to return assignments. She takes almost two months to get a poster returned. Assignments weren't so clear. Sometimes, rubrics would be missing the amount of marks assigned to each component. Class had a participation mark, but she has no clear criteria.

Biography

University of Saskatchewan - Arts Sciences

Lecturer, Health Studies Program, Department of Psychology at University of Saskatchewan
Research
Krista-Lee
Mathias
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
I am currently a lecturer for the Health Studies program within the Department of Psychology at the University of Saskatchewan and am a Fellow of interRAI. I am a member of the interRAI Network of Mental Health (iNMH) and I serve on the forensic subcommittee of iNMH. I hold a PhD from the University of Waterloo in Health Studies and Gerontology and a BA (Hons) in Criminal Justice from Nipissing University. My PhD research focused on a gender-based analysis assessing the influences that predict three outcomes among forensic mental health patients in Ontario including: restriction to room (seclusion/confined to room) in forensic mental health hospitals, unaccompanied leaves from forensic mental health hospitals, and freedom of movement (FoM) among forensic inpatients. My research interests in are criminal justice, mental health and gender-based analysis.


Experience

  • Nipissing University

    Criminal Justice Program Placement Assistant - School of Criminal Justice

    Krista worked at Nipissing University as a Criminal Justice Program Placement Assistant - School of Criminal Justice

  • Institute of Applied Social Research (IASR)

    Senior Research Assistant

    Krista worked at Institute of Applied Social Research (IASR) as a Senior Research Assistant

  • ideas for Health, University of Waterloo

    Research Associate

    Krista worked at ideas for Health, University of Waterloo as a Research Associate

  • Centre for Forensic Behavioural Science and Justice Studies at University of Saskatchewan

    Postdoctoral Fellow

    Krista worked at Centre for Forensic Behavioural Science and Justice Studies at University of Saskatchewan as a Postdoctoral Fellow

  • University of Saskatchewan

    Lecturer, Health Studies Program, Department of Psychology

    Krista worked at University of Saskatchewan as a Lecturer, Health Studies Program, Department of Psychology

Education

  • Nipissing University

    Bachelor of Arts (B.A.)

    Criminal Justice

  • Nipissing University

    Criminal Justice Program Placement Assistant - School of Criminal Justice



  • University of Waterloo

    Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

    Health Studies and Gerontology
    Began my MSc at the Univeristy of Waterloo in 2007, then fast-tracked into the PhD program in the School of Public Health and Health Systems, Univeristy of Waterloo. Completed my Ph.D. in 2014.

Publications

  • A Care Planning Strategy for Traumatic Life Events in Community Mental Health and Inpatient Psychiatry Based on the InterRAI Assessment Instruments

    Community Mental Health Journal

    Clinical triggers from the Traumatic Life Events Clinical Assessment Protocol (CAP) identify individuals who might benefit from formal services or additional supports targeted towards trauma treatment. The Traumatic Life Events CAP identifies two groups who have experienced one or more potentially traumatic life events: (1) those who are in immediate danger due to current abuse/criminal victimization; (2) those who have experienced one or more traumatic events that evoked an intense sense of horror or fear. Descriptive analysis was conducted across psychiatric hospital and community-based mental health service settings to compare the two triggered groups to those without traumatic experiences (the not-triggered group). The Traumatic Life Events CAP identified subpopulations with unrecognized and untreated traumaticstress- related symptoms, which are of great concern for those in community-based mental health services who are in immediate danger due to current abuse.

HLST 110

1.6(17)

HLST 210

1.7(3)

PSY 260

2.3(3)

HLTHST 110

1(1)