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Query: UMLS:C0011551 (depersonalization)
1,117 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The author reports the use of behavior therapy in the treatment of two cases of severe intractable depersonalization. Outcome criteria included full psychiatric assessment, patients' self-ratings, and psychometric test scores. Treatment by flooding was highly effective in one case, and associated obsessive symptoms and anticipatory anxiety were substantially decreased in the other. Behavioral techniques may prove especially helpful in cases in which anticipatory anxiety, phobic avoidance, and obsessive perseveration are exacerbating features.
Am J Psychiatry 1978 Dec
PMID:Severe depersonalization treated by behavior therapy. 71 75

A prolonged period of depersonalization resolved in this 16-year-old boy with only supportive therapy. Reasons for the depersonalization and withholding of other treatment are discussed. Observations are shared of the very intriguing phenomenon of derealization and allied conditions, psychiatric syndromes which are appearing with increasing frequency among so-called "normal adolescents" who indulge in drugs or other experiences which alter the state of consciousness, and among adolescents who survive disasters or harrowing experiences.
South Med J 1978 Dec
PMID:Depersonalization in a 16-year-old boy. 72 44

Depersonalization occurs in many psychiatric states but its origins are unknown. It is suggested that feelings of unreality may be unusually common in adolescents. Certain speculations are offered concerning the genesis of a sense of unreality. The neurophysiological mechanisms governing the perception of 'familiar' or 'strange' are seen to be the key to this experience. They involve the matching of events in the outer world against inner organizations of previous experience. These mechanisms are likely to be disturbed through epilepsy or other disorders of the temporal lobe, in which abnormal perceptions of strangeness and familiarity are frequently found. It is suggested that the matching process extends to include social situations, and that where an individual's identity is undeveloped or fragmented a sense of strangeness may result. The concept of identity is briefly discussed in order to distinguish it from 'self' and 'ego', and to intimate its possible fragmentation in adolescence. Finally, some reference is made to management and, in particular, to the use of the peer group.
Br J Med Psychol 1978 Dec
PMID:On depersonalization in adolescence: a consideration from the viewpoints on habituation and 'identity'. 75 65

This paper examines several clinical concerns about the shorter half-life benzodiazepine hypnotics from an epidemiologic perspective. It draws on data from (1) 1979 and 1990 comprehensive probability-based U.S. national household surveys of the medical use of psychotherapeutic medications; (2) a 1990 four-city community-based volunteer call-in survey of the beneficial and adverse effects of hypnotics; and (3) an analogous random-digit dialing telephone survey in the general population. The issues addressed are abuse liability, rebound, depersonalization/derealization, paranoid feelings, accidents/injuries, and the unexamined consequences of the target illness in assessments of benefit-risk. In populations representative of everyday outpatient practice, we found that (1) the abuse liability of benzodiazepine hypnotics with shorter and longer elimination half-lives was generally low and comparable; (2) prevalence rates for rebound were low and not differential for flurazepam, temazepam, triazolam, and OTC sleeping pills; (3) reports of a single or an occasional experience involving depersonalization/derealization or paranoid feelings were fairly frequent in normals, in insomnia patients prior to treatment, and in persons with untreated insomnia; (4) treatment-emergent rates of occurrence for these same symptoms were low and not drug-specific; (5) past-year prevalence rates for serious accidents/injuries were much higher for chronic untreated insomnia than for normal controls and most groups treated with psychotherapeutic medications. A high proportion of past-year users of hypnotics were satisfied with their medication and would take it again.
J Clin Psychiatry 1992 Dec
PMID:New epidemiologic findings about insomnia and its treatment. 148 78

To identify and evaluate recent working conditions and job content of hospital nurses in Japan, as well as the prevalence of the burnout phenomenon and the occupational risk factors responsible for it, a questionnaire survey was carried out. The subjects consisted of 898 nurses and 255 municipal service workers as the control group. Working conditions and workload burdens were more severe among nurses than among the municipal workers. The burnout phenomenon among the nurses was characterized by emotional exhaustion as well as depersonalization. Moreover, the rate ratio and multivariate analyses indicated that a great variety of occupational factors, not only interpersonal relationships, but the general working conditions and specific physical or mental workloads influenced the burnout phenomenon as well. Therefore, in examining measures dealing with the burnout phenomenon among nurses, it is considered important to evaluate the occupational factors systematically and comprehensively.
J Hum Ergol (Tokyo) 1991 Dec
PMID:Burnout phenomenon and its occupational risk factors among Japanese hospital nurses. 184 59

The dimensionality of Maslach's (1982) 3 aspects of job burnout--emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal accomplishment--was examined among a sample of supervisors and managers in the human services. A series of confirmatory factor analyses supported the 3-factor model, with the first 2 aspects highly correlated. The 3 aspects were found to be differentially related to other variables reflecting aspects of strain, stress coping, and self-efficacy in predictable and meaningful ways. Implications for better understanding the burnout process are discussed.
J Appl Psychol 1990 Dec
PMID:On the meaning of Maslach's three dimensions of burnout. 198 Oct 64

This study assessed burnout within a large Health Maintenance Organization. Primary care physicians and one psychiatric clinic staff were studied. The Maslach Burnout Inventory was used to develop frequency data in the areas of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal achievement. Among the primary care physicians, moderate emotional exhaustion, and depersonalization were found. Personal achievement was high. Among the psychiatric staff, high emotional exhaustion and depersonalization were found. Again, personal achievement was high. The entire professional group, with the one exception, was significantly higher in emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal achievement than Maslach's normative sample. Psychiatrists and social workers had significantly higher scores on depersonalization than the primary care physicians or psychologists. High burnout in a Health Maintenance Organization setting suggests that managed health care providers may be more prone to burnout than fee-for-service practitioners. Several suggestions were made for such organizations to help alleviate burnout in their staffs.
Psychol Rep 1989 Dec
PMID:Burnout among primary care physicians and mental health professionals in a managed health care setting. 260 36

Burnout is a syndrome of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment that can occur among individuals who do "people work" of some kind. Health care providers, including dentists, are at high risk for burnout because their occupation often requires intense interaction with fearful, demanding patients on a daily basis. The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of burnout among Texas dentists using a standardized measurement device, the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI). Dentists attending the 1989 Texas Dental Association Annual Session were surveyed using the MBI. The respondents' results were analyzed and compared to each other as well as to the norms of medicine and to society (human service workers nationwide). Among the Texas sample, male dentists scored significantly higher for emotional exhaustion and depersonalization than did female dentists. When compared to the norms of medical workers, Texas dentists scored higher burnout in the depersonalization subscale, but lower burnout for personal accomplishment. The Texas sample again scored lower for burnout in the personal accomplishment subscale when compared to societal norms. At no time did the Texas sample fall into the high range of experienced burnout as defined by the survey instrument. Texas dentists did not appear "burned out" as a group and actually demonstrated an increased sense of personal accomplishment in their profession.
Tex Dent J 1989 Dec
PMID:Are Texas dentists burned out? 263 47

Burnout is a job-related condition involving feelings of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment. The Maslach Burnout Inventory (Maslach & Jackson, 1981a) is the instrument most widely used to measure job-related stress in human service professions, such as occupational therapy. This study explored the application of the Maslach Burnout Inventory for use with occupational therapists. The subjects were 99 registered occupational therapists residing in the southeastern United States. Mean scores lower than the aggregate occupational norms provided by the test's authors on the Emotional Exhaustion and Depersonalization subscales supported the need to develop specific norms for occupational therapists. Results of this study indicate that use of the aggregate norms would underestimate the level of experienced burnout. Correlational analyses delineated significant relationships between age and Emotional Exhaustion and Depersonalization, education and Emotional Exhaustion and Depersonalization, years of work as an occupational therapist and Depersonalization and Personal Accomplishment, years in the present position and Personal Accomplishment (intensity only), hours of direct patient contact and Emotional Exhaustion (intensity only), and hours of direct patient contact and Depersonalization (frequency only). These correlates of burnout furnish clues for understanding the development of work-related stress in occupational therapists.
Am J Occup Ther 1988 Dec
PMID:Burnout in occupational therapists. 322 4

Primary depersonalization disorder is believed to be resistant to treatment. However, we report the successful treatment of a case with desipramine and suggest that, because there is a link between depersonalization and anxiety disorders, tricyclic antidepressants may prove effective for depersonalization.
Can J Psychiatry 1987 Dec
PMID:Desipramine: a possible treatment for depersonalization disorder. 343 87


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