Search results for "Mental disorder"

showing 10 items of 1586 documents

Comparing the characteristics of homeless adults in Poland and the United States.

2014

This study compared the characteristics of probability samples of homeless adults in Poland (N = 200 from two cities) and the United States (N = 219 from one city), using measures with established reliability and validity in homeless populations. The same measures were used across nations and a systemic translation procedure assured comparability of measurement. The two samples were similar on some measures: In both nations, most homeless adults were male, many reported having dependent children and experiencing out-of-home placements when they themselves were children, and high levels of physical health problems were observed. Significant national differences were also found: Those in Pola…

AdultCross-Cultural ComparisonMalemedicine.medical_specialtyHealth (social science)Time FactorsAdolescentSubstance-Related DisordersPoison controlSuicide preventionOccupational safety and healthLife Change EventsSocial supportYoung AdultAge DistributionRisk-TakingInjury preventionmedicineHumansSex DistributionPsychiatryApplied PsychologyAgedUnsafe Sexbusiness.industryMood DisordersPublic healthMental DisordersPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSocial SupportMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMental healthUnited StatesSubstance abuseIll-Housed PersonsSchizophreniaFemalePolandbusinessAmerican journal of community psychology
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Reliability and validity of the German version of the European Addiction Severity Index (EuropASI).

2001

This study provides data on the psychometric characteristics of the German version of the European Addiction Severity Index (EuropASI). The ASI is a frequently used clinical and research instrument that measures problem severity among people with substance dependence.The German ASI was used in a sample of 112 consecutively admitted male psychiatric inpatients seeking treatment for severe alcohol problems. The conceptual structure of the German ASI subscales was investigated by analyzing the intercorrelations of the severity ratings and composite scores. Internal consistency, interrater reliability and concurrent validity in terms of correlations with other assessment instruments were evalua…

AdultCross-Cultural ComparisonMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPsychometricsPsychometricsConcurrent validityMedicine (miscellaneous)Poison controlTest validityPersonality AssessmentGermanGermanymental disordersmedicineHumansPsychiatryGeneral PsychologySubstance dependenceReproducibility of ResultsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseCross-cultural studieslanguage.human_languageEuropeInter-rater reliabilityAlcoholismlanguageFemalePsychologyJournal of studies on alcohol
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Strategic responses to intimate partner violence against women in Spain: a national study in primary care

2012

Background Research on women99s responses to intimate partner violence (IPV) has largely been limited to women who have been exposed to severe physical violence with scarce generalisation. This study aimed to analyse how Spanish abused women from different backgrounds and with different IPV characteristics respond to violence. Method Women experiencing IPV before the previous year (1469) were selected from a large cross-sectional national survey of adult women recruited during 2006–7 among female patients seeking medical care for whatever reason in primary healthcare services. The outcome variables were women9s responses to IPV and the predictor variables were personal and social resources …

AdultDomestic ViolenceEpidemiologyDistancingeducationPsychological interventionPoison controlSuicide preventionbehavioral disciplines and activitiesOccupational safety and healthPregnancySurveys and QuestionnairesInjury preventionmental disordersHumansMedicineDones Salut i higienePsychological abuseFamily CharacteristicsPrimary Health Carebusiness.industryBattered WomenPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthsocial sciencesMiddle AgedPatient Acceptance of Health CareSelf ConceptCross-Sectional StudiesLogistic ModelsMental HealthSexual PartnersSocioeconomic FactorsSpainWomen's HealthDomestic violenceDones Delictes contraFemaleHealth Services ResearchbusinessClinical psychology
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Emotional eating and food intake after sadness and joy

2013

Do people with a high score on a scale for eating in response to negative emotions also show high food intake in response to positive emotions?. We studied these effects in 60 female students that were preselected on the basis of extreme high or low scores on an emotional eating questionnaire. Using a between subject design we experimentally tested the difference in food intake following a mood induction designed to induce joy or sadness (the joy vs. sad mood condition). The high and low emotional eaters did not differ in their food intake, but emotional eating significantly moderated the relationship between mood condition and food intake. Whereas low emotional eaters ate similar amounts a…

AdultEmotional eatingFood intakemedia_common.quotation_subjectEmotionsHappinessSodium Chloridebehavioral disciplines and activitiesVirtual realityDevelopmental psychologyExperimental Psychopathology and TreatmentEatingYoung AdultMood (Psychology)Dietary SucroseFood intakeSurveys and Questionnairesmental disordersDynamics of genderHumansStudentsTrastorns de la conducta alimentàriaGeneral Psychologymedia_commonAnalysis of VarianceNutrition and DieteticsRealitat virtualdigestive oral and skin physiologyDEBQFeeding BehaviorEmotional eatingHumor (Psicologia)ModerationSadnessMoodSpainMood inductionMood inductionEating disordersHappinessFemaleAnalysis of variancePsychologyAppetite
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Borderline intellectual functioning: an increased risk of severe psychiatric problems and inability to work

2019

Background The use of facilities such as disability pension, psychiatric care, health care and services for people with intellectual disabilities and borderline intellectual functioning (BIF) were compared with the general population and two other study groups comprising people with mild intellectual disabilities (MIDs) and learning problems (LPs). Methods The population-based sample (N = 416,973), 'Finland-in-Miniature', was gathered in 1962 and followed until 1998. For the purpose of the present study, three groups were formed: BIF (n = 416), MID (n = 312) and LP (n = 284). The use of services was examined with the help of national registers. Results As compared with the general populatio…

AdultEmploymentMale030506 rehabilitationmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentPopulationComorbiditySeverity of Illness IndexYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesBorderline intellectual functioningArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Intellectual DisabilityHealth caremedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive scienceseducationPsychiatryFinlandeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryMental Disordersfungi05 social sciencesRehabilitationDisability pensionWork lifeMental healthPsychiatry and Mental healthIncreased riskNeurologyWork (electrical)FemaleNeurology (clinical)0305 other medical sciencebusinessPsychology050104 developmental & child psychologyJournal of Intellectual Disability Research
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Functional outcome in bipolar disorder: the role of clinical and cognitive factors.

2007

Introduction:  Few studies have examined the clinical, neuropsychological and pharmacological factors involved in the functional outcome of bipolar disorder despite the gap between clinical and functional recovery. Methods:  A sample of 77 euthymic bipolar patients were included in the study. Using an a priori definition of low versus good functional outcome, based on the psychosocial items of the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF, DSM-IV), and taking also into account their occupational adaptation, the patients were divided into two groups: good or low occupational functioning. Patients with high (n = 46) and low (n = 31) functioning were compared on several clinical, neuropsychologica…

AdultEmploymentMalemedicine.medical_specialtyBipolar DisorderGlobal Assessment of FunctioningNeuropsychological TestsSeverity of Illness IndexAdaptation PsychologicalmedicineHumansPsychologyBipolar disorderEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performancePsychiatryBiological PsychiatryDemographyNeuropsychologyCognitionmedicine.diseaseExecutive functionsAntidepressive AgentsDiagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental DisordersPsychiatry and Mental healthFemaleVerbal memoryPsychologyCognition DisordersPsychosocialSocial AdjustmentClinical psychologyAntipsychotic AgentsBipolar disorders
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Decreased benzodiazepine receptor binding in panic disorder measured by IOMAZENIL-SPECT. A preliminary report.

1994

Single photon emission tomography (SPECT) imaging of the central benzodiazepine receptor (BZr) became possible with the newly developed ligand 123I-IOMAZENIL. The BZr binding was investigated in ten patients with panic disorder (PP) compared to ten epileptic patients (EP). Panic patients had lower IOMAZENIL uptake rates in the frontal, occipital and temporal cortex than EP indicating the involvement of the BZr complex in panic disorder.

AdultFlumazenilMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classbehavioral disciplines and activitiesCerebral VentriclesInternal medicinemental disordersmedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Biological PsychiatryBenzodiazepine receptor bindingTemporal cortexPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesTomography Emission-Computed Single-PhotonIomazenilBenzodiazepinePanic disorderPanicGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseReceptors GABA-AFrontal LobePsychiatry and Mental healthEndocrinologyFlumazenilAnesthesiaPanic DisorderFemaleOccipital Lobemedicine.symptomPsychologyAnxiety disordermedicine.drugEuropean archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience
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Is comfort food actually comforting for emotional eaters? A (moderated) mediation analysis

2019

Item does not contain fulltext An important but unreplicated earlier finding on comfort eating was that the association between food intake and immediate mood improvement appeared to be mediated by the palatability of the food, and that this effect was more pronounced for high than for low emotional eaters [26]. This has not yet been formally tested using mediation and moderated mediation analysis. We conducted these analyses using data from two experiments on non-obese female students (n = 29 and n = 74). Mood and eating satisfaction in Study 1, and mood, tastiness and emotional eating in Study 2 were all self-reported. In Study 1, using a sad mood induction procedure, emotional eaters ate…

AdultFood mood emotional eatingMediation (statistics)Adolescentmoodmedia_common.quotation_subjectEmotionsWASSExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyPersonal Satisfactionbehavioral disciplines and activitiesExperimental Psychopathology and TreatmentEatingYoung AdultBehavioral NeuroscienceModerated mediationAdaptation Psychologicalmental disordersTrier social stress testHumansConsumption and Healthy Lifestylesmedia_commonemotional eatingdigestive oral and skin physiologyCognitionFeeding BehaviorEmotional eatingFood moodSadnessAffectMoodFoodHappinessConsumptie en Gezonde LeefstijlFemaleTastinessPsychologyEating satisfactionStress PsychologicalClinical psychology
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Association analysis of SCN9A gene variants with borderline personality disorder

2008

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a serious psychiatric disorder affecting about 1-2% of the general population. Key features of BPD are emotional instability, strong impulsivity, repeated self-injurious behavior (SIB) and dissociation. In the etiology of BPD and its predominant symptoms, genetic factors have been suggested. The voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 is expressed in sensory neurons and in the hippocampus, a key region of the limbic system probably dysfunctional in BPD and dissociative disorders. The alpha-subunit of Nav1.7 is encoded by the SCN9A gene on chromosome 2 and variations of SCN9A can lead to complete inability to sense pain. The aim of the present study was t…

AdultGenetic MarkersMaleOncologyCandidate genemedicine.medical_specialtyPopulationSingle-nucleotide polymorphismImpulsivityPolymorphism Single Nucleotidebehavioral disciplines and activitiesBorderline Personality DisorderInternal medicinemental disordersmedicineHumansDissociative disordersSex DistributioneducationBorderline personality disorderBiological PsychiatryGenetic associationPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesGeneticseducation.field_of_studymedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthHaplotypesCase-Control StudiesFemaleSCN9A Genemedicine.symptomPsychologyJournal of Psychiatric Research
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Restless legs syndrome: Epidemiological and clinicogenetic study in a South Tyrolean population isolate.

2006

Genetic contributions to restless legs syndrome (RLS) have been consistently recognized from population and family studies. To determine the clinical and genetic features of RLS in a population isolate and explore linkage to three previously described susceptibility loci on chromosomes 12q, 14q, and 9p, respectively, an isolated population in the South Tyrolean Alps was identified and 530 adults participated in the study. Using a two-step strategy, 47 patients with idiopathic RLS were ascertained. The prevalence in the population was 8.9%. Twenty-eight patients (59.6%) had at least one affected first-degree relative and were classified as hereditary cases. In a single extended pedigree, lin…

AdultGenetic MarkersMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPopulationFamily studiesLocus heterogeneityGermanyRestless Legs SyndromeSurveys and Questionnairesmental disordersEpidemiologymedicineHumansRestless legs syndromeeducationLinkage (software)Geneticseducation.field_of_studyPolymorphism Geneticbusiness.industryChromosome MappingReproducibility of Resultsmedicine.diseaseSurgeryPedigreeNeurologyItalyHomogeneousSusceptibility locusFemaleNeurology (clinical)business
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