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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pain is both a sensory and an emotional experience. In a multidisciplinary pain management clinic for a geriatric population, pain and mood have been assessed prior to the initiation of management in 49 of 100 referred patients. Patients have been assessed clinically, for psychological disability using the profile of mood states (POMS) and a visual analogue scale for mood, for pain using the McGill pain questionnaire (
short form)
, word descriptor scale and visual analogue scale and for activities of daily living (ADL) using the Disability and Impairment Interview Schedule and the Rapid Disability Rating Scale -2. All testing has followed initial screening to exclude dementia. For the group assessed by psychometric measures, median age was 75 years (range 56 to 91); 41 were female. Major pathologies were degenerative musculoskeletal disease (15), post-herpetic neuralgia (9), and psychiatric conditions (7). Intra-test item correlations were found to be significant for the McGill questionnaire and the POMS. Inter-test correlations were observed for pain measures (McGill present pain intensity with VAS pain, r = 0.67; with word descriptor, 0.64; p less than 0.001), for ADL measures (r = 0.53, p less than 0.001) and for measures of mood (VAS mood with POMS (
depression
), r = 0.45; p less than 0.001; with POMS (anxiety), r = 0.35; p less than 0.01. There was no significant correlation between measures of mood and pain on the McGill scale. The data to this time support the view that standard psychometric tools can be used reliably to evaluate pain, mood and activity in this population. Furthermore, it appears that mood and pain may be measured separately.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Can psychometric tools be used to analyse pain in a geriatric population? 264 22
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship of late-life
depression
to memory complaint and objective performance in a recognition memory task. Fifty-seven individuals between the ages of 58 and 88 were evaluated for
depression
using the Beck
Depression
Inventory (
short form)
. They were then shown two stimulus lists, each consisting of high-imagery and low-imagery words. Recognition for these words was subsequently tested. Error rates and nonparametric signal detection measures were analyzed as indices of performance. Respondents gave global self-assessments of memory and, during the recognition task, also made self-ratings of performance. Depressed individuals showed more conservative response biases than nondepressed respondents, reflected in a higher false-negative error rate but a lower false-positive rate. Neither overall memory sensitivity as assessed by signal detection analysis nor self-ratings of performance were related to
depression
, though global memory self-ratings were. Elderly depressed individuals thus presented a pattern of greater memory complaint and unwillingness to venture responses in spite of showing small or no information-processing deficits.
...
PMID:Signal detection analysis of recognition memory in depressed elderly. 407 14
The aim of this study was to determine, in a population of medical inpatients, the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of two self-rating
depression
scales, and of the physicians' judgment, compared to a structured interview derived from the Composite Interview Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) designed to assess the diagnosis of major depressive episodes. The setting of the study was a general internal medicine inpatient ward of a French university hospital. Patients between 15 and 75 were asked to fill, within the first week of their hospitalization, two self-rating
depression
scales: the Beck
Depression
Inventory - short form (BDI-
short form)
, a 13-item scale with established reliability and validity; and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-
Depression
Scale (CES-D), a 20-item scale designed for epidemiological use in the general population, recently translated in French. Patients were then interviewed by a psychologist, blind to the results of the self-rating scales, using a slightly simplified version of the
depression
section of the CIDI. The ward physicians' recognition of
depression
was assessed six months later by a careful chart review, conducted by an investigator blind to the results of
depression
scales and structured interview. One hundred consecutive patients were studied: 63% were women, mean age was 53.6 +/- 16.5 years. According to the results of the CIDI, the prevalence of current major depression was 29.7%, and the lifetime prevalence of major depression was 59.8%. The correlation between BDI-short form and CES-D was +0.81. BDI-short form proved to have a slightly better acceptability than the CES-D.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Screening for depression in patients with medical hospitalization. Comparison of two self-evaluation scales and clinical assessment with a structured questionnaire]. 808 34
Depression
in the elderly may have many presentations. Skill is required in differentiating clinical depressive conditions from mild reactive states and senile dysphoria. Screening tests are available that may assist the doctor in the diagnosis of
depression
. One of these, the Geriatric
Depression
Scale (
short form)
, is easily completed by patients (Table 3). Exclusion of organic causes of
depression
and sub-typing of the
depression
are the first steps. Correct matching of type of treatment--medication, electroconvulsive therapy, cognitive-behavioural therapy or other forms of therapy--to the type of
depression
usually leads to a good outcome. Extra caution is required in prescribing medications to older people because of altered pharmacokinetics and the frequent co-occurrence of physical disorders. For example, the use of tricyclic antidepressants is precluded by the presence of cardiac conduction abnormalities, urinary outflow problems, narrow angle glaucoma or postural hypotension and the subsequent risk of falls and fractures.
Depression
in the elderly carries a much greater risk of endogenous and psychotic sub-types and of suicide. The proportion of the population who are elderly is increasing.
Depression
in older persons is very common, may be difficult to diagnose, is treatable and has a prognosis similar to that of middle aged or younger patients. Doctors should think
depression
in older patients and bear in mind possible atypical presentations. When the correct diagnosis, usually possible by taking a careful history, is followed by correct treatment, the outcome can be very rewarding for patient and doctor.
...
PMID:Think of depression--atypical presentations in the elderly. 837 8
This study investigated the mediational hypothesis of hopelessness in predicting suicidal ideation in a group of 196 patients with advanced terminal cancer. Each patient underwent a semistructured interview to assess hopelessness and suicidal ideation, and also completed the Beck
Depression
Inventory (
short form)
. Hopelessness was correlated more highly with suicidal ideation than was the level of
depression
. In multiple linear-regression analyses, hopelessness contributed uniquely to the prediction of suicidal ideation when the level of
depression
was controlled. For health care providers attending to the needs of dying patients, hopelessness appears to be an important clinical marker of suicidal ideation in this vulnerable patient population.
...
PMID:Depression, Hopelessness, and suicidal ideation in the terminally ill. 969 6
Research in unipolar depression suggests that neuroticism is associated with poor long-term outcome and greater chronicity. The objective of this study was to determine whether baseline neuroticism scores predict response to treatment with fluoxetine in depressed outpatients. Seventy-six depressed outpatients participating in a clinical trial of fluoxetine (fixed/flexible dosing) completed the NEO-FFI (five factor inventory
short form)
at baseline. Clinical response was defined as a 50% or greater decrease in the 17-item Hamilton
Depression
Rating Scale (HAM-D-17) total score (final visit--baseline). Logistic regression evaluated NEO-FFI factor scores as predictors of treatment outcome within an intent-to-treat model. Scores on the neuroticism scale were not found to significantly predict treatment response as measured by the HAM-D-17. Strengths of this study include a standardized treatment protocol and use of structured interview instruments, while limitations include a modest sample size, lack of continuation data, state/trait effects, and lack of generalizability to other antidepressant treatments.
...
PMID:NEO-FFI factor scores as predictors of clinical response to fluoxetine in depressed outpatients. 1185 46
Most instruments focussing on hypochondriasis symptoms do not have for goal to assess beliefs specifically. Instead, these instruments are used to measure specific behaviors. To assess underlying beliefs with these kinds of instruments, you have to extract false beliefs by deduction. In cognitive therapy, it is important to target erroneous beliefs in order to change them. On the other hand, existing instruments are not really suitable to target erroneous health beliefs. Even if some questionnaires are built to assess beliefs directly, it seems that they only measure the conviction of having an illness and do not assess the general health beliefs present in excessive health worriers. However, many researchers argue that this other kind of beliefs are the ones responsible in maintaining hypochondriasis symptoms. Presently, researchers assume that erroneous beliefs can maintain worries about illness among people with hypochondriasis symptoms like false beliefs about worry maintain worries in people with General Anxiety Disorder (GAD). Even if the importance of false beliefs in the maintenance of pathological worries is now recognized, most instruments on hypochondriasis symptoms do not have for goal to assess erroneous beliefs concerning worry about health. For instance, although the questionnaire Why do people worry? (WW) shows good psychometric properties and measures beliefs related to general worries, this questionnaire is not specific enough to correctly evaluate beliefs associated to health worry. A new questionnaire has to emerge in order to assess false beliefs associated to worry about health. This manuscript presents the development and the validation of a new questionnaire: the General Health Beliefs Questionnaire (GHBQ) that assesses general health beliefs, and also presents the development and the validation of a new questionnaire assessing beliefs associated to worry about health: the Why do people Worry about Health? (WW-H) . In this study, the GHBQ's and the WW-H's psychometric qualities and the factorial structure were assessed. More precisely, this study examined the factorial structure, the temporal stability, the convergent, divergent and criteria validities of the GHBQ and the WW-H. Four hundred and twenty nine French-speaking university students (non-clinical participants) completed a battery of questionnaires at the beginning of a class. The questionnaires were: The General Health Beliefs Questionnaire (GHBQ), the Why do people Worry about Health (WW-H), the Illness Worry Scale (IWS), the Beck
Depression
Inventory-short form (BDI-
short form)
and the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI). A second administration took place three weeks later with the same sample to test the temporal stability of the GHBQ and the WW-H. The principal component analysis with orthogonal rotation (varimax) supports a five components solution for the GHBQ: 1) magical thinking, 2) health, 3) consequences, 4) responsibility, and 5) vulnerability. The principal component analysis with oblique rotation (direct oblimin) (d=0) found a two components solution for the WW-H: 1) utility and 2) magical thinking associated to worries about health. The internal consistency of the GHBQ and the WW-H is excellent (a=.80 and a=.90, respectively). A correlation of 0.49 was found between the GHBQ and the WW-H. The correlation between the GHBQ and the IWS who evaluates the tendency to worry (r=.50) and between the WW-H and the IWS (r=.49) showed that the convergent validity of these questionnaires is adequate. On a three weeks interval, the GHBQ (r=.70) and the WW-H (r=.71) showed a satisfying temporal stability. The means of the high worriers (80 superior percentile at the IWS) (M=38.8, ET=8.93) and the means of the moderate worriers (between the 40 and the 60 percentile at the IWS) (M=32.8, ET=8.00) on the GHBQ have been compared. A significant difference has been found between the two groups [F(1,181)=23,129, p<0,001]. Also, the means of the high worriers (M=27.3, ET=8.59) and the means of the moderate worriers (M=23.8, ET=8.56) on the WW-H haveave been compared. An ANOVA has found a significant difference between these two groups [F(1,180)=7,396, p=0,007]. These results show that general health beliefs and false beliefs associated to worry about health are more often present in high worriers than in moderate worriers. The GHBQ and the WW-H allow psychologists, physicians and psychiatrists to do a quicker and more exhaustive evaluation of general health beliefs and false beliefs associated to worry about health, in less costs. These questionnaires will improve the chances of success of the hypochondriasis' treatment by helping clinicians to detect and correct false beliefs more easily.
...
PMID:[Study of psychometric properties of two new questionnaires assessing beliefs in hypochondriasis in a non-clinical population]. 1223 39
Most studies examining the relation between
depression
and bone mineral density (BMD) have been limited to psychiatric patients or to community-dwelling, older women. We conducted a cross-sectional and prospective cohort study to determine whether depressive symptoms are associated with low BMD in community-dwelling, older men. We recruited 515 men 50 years of age or older from population-based listings of age-eligible men. Participants completed the Geriatric
Depression
Scale (
short form)
and were considered depressed if they scored 6 or more out of 15 possible points. BMD was measured in the spine and hip using dual energy x-ray absorptiometry in all participants, and again an average of 3.6 years later in a random subset of 100 participants. The prevalence of depressive symptoms (GDS = 6) was 3.1% (16 of 515). We found no difference in mean BMD or mean percent change in BMD per year of the hip and lumbar spine in men who had 6 or more depressive symptoms compared with men who reported 5 or fewer symptoms of
depression
. These findings suggest that depressive symptoms are not associated with BMD in community-dwelling, older men.
...
PMID:Depressive symptoms and bone mineral density in older men. 1515 49
Intrathecal (IT) opioid therapy is a treatment alternative for patients with severe chronic non-malignant pain. Several uncontrolled retrospective and prospective outcome studies have suggested a benefit in chronic non-malignant pain patients, but uncertainties about patient selection in these studies weaken the results. This study evaluated long-term outcome of IT opioid therapy in chronic non-malignant pain prospectively, and included two comparative groups to improve understanding of selection criteria and relative severity of intrathecal pump recipients (PRs). The study subjects included 38 PRs while the comparative groups included 31 intrathecal candidates who either had an unsuccessful trial, or declined the IT therapy, and another group of 41 newly referred patients. The following data were analyzed at study entry, and at 6 monthly intervals for a 3-year period: Symptom Check List 90 (SLC-90), SF-36 Health survey, Beck
Depression
Inventory, McGill Pain Questionnaire (
short form)
, Oswestry Disability Index, Pain Drawings and Pain rating on visual analogue scale. Data analysis suggests the study group of PRs had improvements in pain, mood, and function from baseline to 36 months. These same parameters improved among new referrals (less severe patients receiving conservative pain management) while non-recipients significantly worsened. Although PRs improved, they were still worse off at 36 months than new referrals were at baseline. The study showed that when patients with extremely severe pain problems are selected as pump candidates, they will likely improve with the therapy, but their overall severity of pain and symptoms still remains high.
...
PMID:Intrathecal opioid treatment for chronic non-malignant pain: a 3-year prospective study. 1515 84
Chronic pain and
depression
are coexisting entities with high simultaneous prevalence. Both are linked with early adversities. Early maladaptive schemas (EMS) can be seen as a reflection of these adversities. EMSs extensively indicate underlying psychic patterns and provide a good opportunity to detect covert processes and psychic shapes (latent factors), which create the basis of how people rate their schemas. The purpose of this study was to explore these latent, higher order schema factors (SF) and to find out how they are associated with pain intensity or
depression
in chronic pain patients and a control sample. The study subjects consisted of 271 first-visit pain patients and 331 control participants. Sociodemographic and pain data were gathered by questionnaire; 18 EMSs were measured with the Young Schema Questionnaire (
short form)
and depressiveness was measured with the Beck
Depression
Inventory, Version II. Exploratory factor and regression analyses were used. The chronic pain patient group showed two SFs. The first SF showed a shameful, defective, socially isolated, failure, emotionally inhibited, deprived, submissive and resigned pattern. The second SF showed a demanding, approval seeking, self-sacrificing and punitive pattern. SF1 predicted more than half of the depressiveness in the pain patient sample. A three-factor structure was found in the control sample, and SFs 1 and 3 together predicted almost one-third of depressiveness. The pain patient and the control groups had a different, higher order factor structure. We assume that SF1 in the pain patients reflected a rather serious, undefined early psychic trauma and was also associated with their depressiveness.
...
PMID:Early maladaptive schema factors, chronic pain and depressiveness: a study with 271 chronic pain patients and 331 control participants. 2121 Apr 95
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