Search results for "Addiction"

showing 10 items of 415 documents

Psychic retreats or psychic pits?: Unbearable states of mind and technological addiction.

2010

New technologies are highly interactive. They promote imaginative involvement and allow the experience of different self-states, such as those involving withdrawal or “psychic retreat”. According to Steiner, psychic retreats are areas of the mind populated by imagination and ideas which are poorly aligned with reality. Psychic retreats are not necessarily pathological in themselves—for instance, they can be used positively for counteracting anxiety or enhancing creativeness. However, with technological addiction there is a misuse of psychic retreat: here the total absorption with computer applications serves to hide painful or unbearable states of mind, and to protect the patient from overw…

PsychicClinical PsychologyPsychotherapistAddictionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSettore M-PSI/07 - Psicologia DinamicaAddiction states of mindPsychologymedia_commonPsychoanalytic Psychology
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Smartphone Addiction Inventory (SPAI): Psychometric properties and confirmatory factor analysis

2016

The Smartphone Addiction Inventory (SPAI) was developed to assess smartphone addiction in Taiwanese university students. The purpose of the current research is to evaluate the factor structure and psychometric properties of the SPAI in Italian university students. A total of 485 university students (29.3% boys) completed the SPAI and the Young's Internet Addiction Test (IAT).The proposed four-factor model of the SPAI-I was tested by computing CFA, and the results of the goodness of fit indices indicated an ambiguous solution. An exploratory-confirmatory cross validation strategy was applied for a better trimming of SPAI-I factorial structure. Results suggested a five-factor solution that ex…

Psychology (all)media_common.quotation_subjectBehavioural addiction050109 social psychologyCravingTest validityValidity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGoodness of fitArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Settore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia Clinicamedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral Psychologymedia_commonAddiction05 social sciencesFactor analysiReliabilityConfirmatory factor analysisExploratory factor analysisSmartphone addictionTest (assessment)Human-Computer InteractionConvergent validitymedicine.symptomPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychology
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Controlling the uncontrollable. Self-regulation and the dynamics of addiction

2017

The multidisciplinary research on addictions generally promotes the assumption that addictive behavior is caused and maintained by the external psychoactive substance, which accordingly is consider...

Psychotherapistmedia_common.quotation_subjectPsychoactive substance050108 psychoanalysisDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinesubstance dependenceMultidisciplinary approachmental disordersmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesincorporationta611media_commonSubstance dependenceAddiction05 social sciencesmedicine.diseaseegosyntonic and egodystonic behaviorPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical Psychologytransitional phenomenarepetition and bindingAddictive behaviorPsychologyidealization and ambivalence030217 neurology & neurosurgeryThe Scandinavian Psychoanalytic Review
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Light smoking and dependence symptoms in high-school students.

2005

Summary In high-school students, prevalence of smoking is high but few studies analyzed smoking in the student population according to nicotine content of smoked cigarettes and gender. We analyzed the responses to a questionnaire, including the modified Fagerstrom Tolerance Questionnaire (FTQ), administered to 555 students (382 males, 173 females) of a professional high school in Palermo, Italy, to assess the prevalence in both genders of: (1) smoking “light” and high nicotine (HN) cigarettes; (2) signs of nicotine dependence and (3) respiratory symptoms. Nicotine content of habitually smoked cigarettes was considered as “light” if ⩽0.8 mg; as high if >0.8 mg. Forty-four percent of students…

Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineMaleFagerstrom tolerance questionnairemedicine.medical_specialtyNicotineAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationNicotine contentAddictionAdolescentsSmoking historyNicotineSex FactorsCigarette smokingSurveys and QuestionnairesmedicineHumansNicotine dependencePsychiatrymedia_commonPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesStudent populationbusiness.industryAddictionSmokingAge FactorsTobacco Use Disordermedicine.diseaseRespiration DisordersGanglionic StimulantsSchool environmentFemaleSmoking CessationbusinessDemographymedicine.drugRespiratory medicine
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Barriers and incentives for Italian paediatricians to become smoking cessation promoters: a GARD-Italy Demonstration Project

2020

Background: Paediatricians rarely devote any time to screening and treatment for parental tobacco use. The present project is part of a Global Alliance against Chronic Respiratory Diseases (GARD)-Italy Demonstration Project, aimed to increase the skills of primary care physicians and paediatricians as "promoter of smoking cessation". The aims of this study were: (I) to identify latent classes of barriers and incentives for smoking cessation counseling among paediatricians using latent class analysis (LCA); (II) to investigate risk factors for inclusion into the identified classes. Methods: In 2018, 1,500 Italian paediatricians were invited to complete an online survey on passive smoke expos…

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicinebarriers; incentives; latent class analysis (LCA); paediatricians; smoking cessationmedicine.medical_specialtyincentivesmedicine.medical_treatmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectbarriersOriginal Article of GARD SectionLatent class analysis (LCA);Settore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E SpecialisticaLatent class analysis (LCA)medicinepaediatricians;Multinomial logistic regressionmedia_commonbusiness.industryAddictionpaediatricianLatent class modelWork experienceincentivePassive Smoke Exposuresmoking cessationFamily medicineRespondentbarrierSmoking cessationbusinessInclusion (education)paediatricians
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Tabaquismo en sanitarios. Identificación de factores asociados

1998

The objective of this study was to determine the epidemiology of smoking among health care givers in our setting and to describe their characteristics. We gave an anonymous questionnaire to 566 health care workers in the Valencian Community (248 physicians, 212 nurses and 106 aides). The results were as follows. Physicians: 46.4% were smokers, 25.4% were non smokers and 28.2% were ex-smokers. Most (69.3%) smoked 11 to 20 cigarettes/day. Low scores on Fagerstrom's test were recorded for 93%, and 57.3% have tried to quit smoking more than 5 times. The likelihood of being and ex-smoker increased with age (r = 0.158; p = 0.012) and with the number of attempts to quit (r = 0.170; p = 0.021). Nur…

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyPhysical addictionbusiness.industryAddictionmedia_common.quotation_subjectQuit smokingNicotine AddictionValencian communityrespiratory tract diseasesHealth personnelEpidemiologyHealth carebehavior and behavior mechanismsmedicinebusinessmedia_commonDemographyArchivos de Bronconeumología
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Acetaldehyde, motivation and stress: Behavioral evidence of an addictive ménage à trois

2017

Acetaldehyde contributes to alcohol’s psychoactive effects through its own rewarding properties. Recent studies shed light on the behavioral correlates of acetaldehyde administration and the possible interactions with key neurotransmitters for motivation, reward and stress-related response, such as dopamine and endocannabinoids. This mini review critically examines acetaldehyde psychoactive properties, focusing on behavioral investigations able to unveil acetaldehyde motivational effects and their pharmacological modulation in vivo. Similarly to alcohol, rats spontaneously drink acetaldehyde, whose presence is detected in the brain following chronic self-administration paradigm. Acetaldehyd…

Punishment (psychology)Stremedia_common.quotation_subjectMini ReviewDopamineCognitive NeuroscienceAlcohol abuseAcetaldehydeOperant behavior03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundstressBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineDopamineNeuroplasticitymedicineendocannabinoidsmedia_commonEndocannabinoidAcetaldehyde; Dopamine; Endocannabinoids; Operant behavior; Stress; Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology; Cognitive Neuroscience; Behavioral NeuroscienceAddictionAcetaldehydeExtinction (psychology)medicine.diseaseEndocannabinoid system030227 psychiatryNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologychemistryPsychologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drugNeuroscience
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From Emotional (Dys)Regulation to Internet Addiction: A Mediation Model of Problematic Social Media Use among Italian Young Adults

2021

Internet addiction (IA) has mostly been investigated with the fear of missing out and difficulties in emotional regulation. The present study examined the link between IA and variables related to problematic social media use (i.e., fear of missing out, social media addiction), together with emotional (dys)regulation and personality traits, providing new insights and an integrated assessment of IA. In total, 397 participants, aged 18–35 years (M = 22.00; SD = 3.83), were administered a set of questionnaires pertaining to IA, problematic social media use, emotional (dys)regulation, and personality traits. Pearson’s correlations showed significant associations between IA and the investigated v…

RemotiondisorderGeneral MedicineArticleinternet addiction; fear of missing out; social media addiction; mediation; behavioral addiction; personality traits; risk factors; emotion; disorderinternet addictionPsicologiafear of missing outpersonality traitsBehavioral addiction; Disorder; Emotion; Fear of missing out; Internet addiction; Mediation; Personality traits; Risk factors; Social media addictionrisk factorsMedicinemediationsocial media addictionbehavioral addictionJournal of Clinical Medicine
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The neurobiological bases for the pharmacotherapy of nicotine addiction.

2007

Nicotine, the major psychoactive agent present in tobacco, acts as a potent addictive drug both in humans and laboratory animals, whose locomotor activity is also stimulated. A large body of evidence indicates that the locomotor activation and the reinforcing effects of nicotine may be related to its stimulatory effects on the mesolimbic dopaminergic function. Thus, it is now well established that nicotine can increase in vivo DA outflow in the nucleus accumbens and the corpus striatum. The stimulatory effect of nicotine on DA release most probably results from its ability to excite the neuronal firing rate and to increase the bursting activity of DA neurons in the substantia nigra pars com…

RAT STRIATAL SYNAPTOSOMESNicotineINDUCED BEHAVIORAL SENSITIZATIONmedia_common.quotation_subjectSubstantia nigraStriatumNicotinic AntagonistsBiologyNucleus accumbensPharmacologyReceptors NicotinicNicotineDrug DiscoverySUSTAINED-RELEASE BUPROPIONmedicineLOCOMOTOR STIMULANT ACTIONAnimalsHumansNicotinic Agonistsmedia_commonPharmacologyMIDBRAIN DOPAMINE NEURONSPars compactaAddictionNIGRA PARS COMPACTAFACILITATES SMOKING CESSATIONTobacco Use DisorderSUBUNIT MESSENGER-RNAAntidepressive AgentsVentral tegmental areaVENTRAL TEGMENTAL AREANicotinic agonistmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemmedicine.drugSEROTONIN(2C) RECEPTORS BLOCKSCurrent pharmaceutical design
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Evolution of patients’ socio-behavioral characteristics in the context of DAA: Results from the French ANRS CO13 HEPAVIH cohort of HIV-HCV co-infecte…

2018

International audience; BACKGROUND:Direct-acting antivirals (DAA) have dramatically increased HCV cure rates with minimal toxicity in HIV-HCV co-infected patients. This study aimed to compare the socio-behavioral characteristics of patients initiating pegylated-interferon (PEG-IFN)-based HCV treatment with those of patients initiating DAA-based treatment.METHODS:ANRS CO13 HEPAVIH is a national multicenter prospective cohort started in 2005, which enrolled 1,859 HIV-HCV co-infected patients followed up in French hospital outpatient units. Both clinical/biological and socio-behavioral data were collected during follow-up. We selected patients with socio-behavioral data available before HCV tr…

RNA virusesMaleHealth BehaviorSocial Scienceslcsh:MedicineHIV InfectionsHepacivirusGeographical locationsChronic Liver Disease0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsPrevalencePsychologyAlcohol consumptionProspective Studies030212 general & internal medicineYoung adultProspective cohort studylcsh:SciencePathology and laboratory medicinemedia_commonChronic hepatitisDrug injectionClinical Trials as TopicMultidisciplinarybiologyPharmaceuticsCoinfectionHepatitis C virusLiver Diseasesvirus diseasesMedical microbiologyMiddle AgedPrognosisHepatitis CAddicts3. Good healthEuropeBehavioral PharmacologyDrug usersVirusesCohortFemale030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyDrug therapyFrancePathogensResearch ArticleAdultDrugmedicine.medical_specialtySubstance-Related Disordersmedia_common.quotation_subjectLiver fibrosisAddictionContext (language use)Gastroenterology and HepatologyMicrobiologyAntiviral AgentsYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesPharmacotherapyRecreational Drug UseInternal medicinemedicineHumansEuropean UnionNutritionAgedCannabisMedicine and health sciencesPharmacologyBiology and life sciencesFlavivirusesbusiness.industrylcsh:ROrganismsViral pathogensHIVbiology.organism_classificationHepatitis virusesdigestive system diseasesMicrobial pathogensDiet[SDV.SPEE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologielcsh:Q[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologieCannabisPeople and placesbusiness
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