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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We present the case of a 55-year-old heterosexual man who had a generalized alopecia and mood changes associated with the antiretroviral protease inhibitor; indinavir within 6 months of use. This was reversed within 3 months of change of therapy to the protease inhibitor, nelfinavir with demonstrable changes in his Hospital Anxiety and
Depression
(HAD) scale scores.
Int J
STD
AIDS 2000 Jul
PMID:Indinavir use: associated reversible hair loss and mood disturbance. 1091 91
Goals of this study were to examine the frequency of
depression
and related constructs of suicidal ideation and hopelessness in a sample of homeless older adolescents and their associations with behaviors that may increase the risk of
sexually transmitted disease
(
STD
). Diagnostic interviews and blood/urine samples were obtained from 523 homeless adolescents (mean age=17.8). Overall, 12.2 per cent had a current DSM-IV diagnosis of major depression and 6.5 per cent had dysthymia, with higher rates for female and older participants.
Depression
appeared to precede rather than follow homelessness and was associated with biologically verified
STDs
(in older participants), infrequent condom use, a non-heterosexual orientation (in older participants), and lifetime homosexual experience. Unlike
depression
, suicidal ideation and hopelessness were associated with higher rates of intravenous drug use but lower rates of multiple sex partners and, in young homeless women, less sexual coercion.
Depression
is frequent in homeless older adolescents and has a complex association with
STD
-related behaviors.
...
PMID:Depression, suicidal ideation and STD-related risk in homeless older adolescents. 1154 25
Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is one of many causes of electrocardiographic ST segment elevation (STE) in ED chest pain (CP) patients; at times, the electrocardiographic diagnosis may be difficult. Coexistent ST segment
depression
has been reported to assist in the differentiation of non-infarction causes of STE from AMI-related ST segment elevation. The objective was to determine the effect of AMI diagnosis on the presence of
STD
among ED CP patients with electrocardiographic STE. Adult CP patients with electrocardiographic STE in at least 2 anatomically distributed leads were reviewed for the presence or absence of ST segment
depression
in at least 1 lead and separated into 2 groups, both with and without ST segment
depression
. A comparison of the 2 groups was performed in 2 approaches: all STE patients and then only with STE patients who lacked confounding electrocardiographic pattern (bundle branch block [BBB], left ventricular hypertrophy [LVH], or right ventricular paced rhythm [VPR]). All patients in the study underwent prolonged observation in the ED (at least 8 hours) with 3 serial troponin T determinations and 3 electrocardiograms (ECG). AMI was diagnosed by abnormal serum troponin T values (>0.1 mg/dL); electrocardiographic STE diagnoses of non-AMI causes were determined by medical record review. There were 171 CP patients with STE were entered in the study with 112 (65.5%) individuals show ST segment
depression
. When considering all study patients, ST segment
depression
was present at statistically equal rates in AMI and non-AMI situations (P = NS). The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for the electrocardiographic diagnosis of AMI were 63%, 34%, 30%, and 67%, respectively. Patients with confounding patterns (LVH 46, BBB 19, and VPR 6) were removed from the analysis group, leaving 100 patients for analysis; 38 of these patients had ST segment
depression
. When considering this group of study patients, ST segment
depression
was present significantly more often in AMI patients (P <.0001). The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for the electrocardiographic diagnosis of AMI were 69%, 93%, 93%, and 71%, respectively. Clinical diagnoses were as follows: 56 AMI, 50 USAP, and 65 noncoronary syndrome. When all CP patients with electrocardiographic STE are considered, the presence of ST segment
depression
is not helpful in distinguishing AMI from non-AMI. If one considers only patterns which lack electrocardiographic ST segment
depression
caused by altered intraventricular conduction, the presence of ST segment
depression
strongly suggests the diagnosis of AMI. In these cases, reciprocal ST segment
depression
is of considerable value in establishing the electrocardiographic diagnosis of STE AMI.
...
PMID:Reciprocal ST segment depression: impact on the electrocardiographic diagnosis of ST segment elevation acute myocardial infarction. 1178 11
Adolescent women are at high risk of sexually transmitted diseases/human immunodeficiency virus (
STDs
/HIV) because of physiologic susceptibility and risky sexual behavior. The latter may be related to the "personal factors" of self-efficacy, sexual knowledge, self-esteem, and ability to communicate/negotiate. In the current study, near-peers attempted to have an impact on these factors by using the female condom as a negotiating tool for safer sex in a group of 100 urban adolescent women recruited from an adolescent health center waiting room. This pilot study consisted of a questionnaire, a workshop on how to use the female condom and negotiate its use, and follow-up interviews at 1 and 4 months. Demographics of the study sample define a multiethnic (40% black, 33% Hispanic) group in late adolescence (average age 18 years) completing high school. At baseline, 18% evidenced
depression
, 62% had moderate-to-low self-esteem, 91% had an internal locus of control. At baseline, male condom use in the prior 6 months was 28% always, 51% inconsistently, 21% never. When baseline and follow-up scores were compared, there was a statistically significant increase in sexual knowledge and self-efficacy, together with the suggestion of improved negotiating skills. At 1 month, 50% (20/40) had tried the female condom, and 17 of these women planned to use it in the future. Total percentage of protected sex acts increased significantly during the follow-up period through increased use of both the male and female condoms. The data suggest that adolescent women will accept the female condom and can be empowered to protect themselves from
STDs
/HIV through its application or through the using of it as a negotiating tool.
...
PMID:The female condom, a tool for empowering sexually active urban adolescent women. 1179 7
Little has been written about the formation of state medicine in early-twentieth-century Canada, particularly during the
Depression
era. Indeed, many historians and policy analysts have assumed that this was a time of stagnation and retrenchment in state health provision. To foster a more nuanced analysis of the formation of the Canadian medical state during the
Depression
decade, this article focuses on British Columbia and the public health initiatives brought in by the provincial Liberal government of T. D. Pattullo. In B.C., an energetic cadre of policymakers and bureaucrats sought to reform existing services by using professionally educated personnel, centralized administrative hierarchies, community education, and the surveillance of target health populations. Funding from the provincial government and the Rockefeller Foundation permitted considerable expansion in a range of public health sectors that included vital statistics, rural health centers, tuberculosis and
venereal disease
treatment schemes, and laboratory services. This article tells the story of this important period by bringing together details of the professional and personal lives of key individuals--the majority of whom were men--and exploring the new provincial health programs that were developed in B.C. during the interwar years.
...
PMID:Competent professionals and modern methods: state medicine in British Columbia during the 1930s. 1187 44
The aim of the study was to assess adherence with antiretroviral medication in a sample of HIV patients in Hong Kong and identify predictors of adherence. The study used a cross-sectional correlational design. Adherence behaviour was assessed with the use of self-reports. Other scales assessed knowledge with HIV medication, coping, health locus of control, anxiety,
depression
and fatigue. A blood sample was also obtained to assess CD4+ counts and viral load. Sociodemographic characteristics and medical information were obtained from the medical records. A high adherence rate was found in this sample of 136 predominantly Chinese patients. There were only 13.7% of the patients being classified as non-adherent. Predictors of adherence included high self-efficacy in terms of being certain that the medication schedule will be followed all or most of the time as directed, low tension-anxiety scores, and low intensity of nausea and vomiting (R2=0.304). An expanded regression model revealed additional factors influencing adherence, including coping variables, pain and numbness in the hands and feet, age, disease stage, internal locus of control, fatigue, family support and taking medication twice daily. This model explained 49% of the variance in adherence. The results suggest that adherence is a multidimensional concept. Every effort should be made to assess in individuals those variables found to affect adherence and alter them whenever possible. Continuous support of patients and individualized medication programmes that will help patients adjust their treatment to their lifestyle are recommended.
Int J
STD
AIDS 2002 May
PMID:Factors associated with adherence to antiretroviral medication in HIV-infected patients. 1197 33
The development of the concept of population quality is found in the history of population policy in prewar Japan. Between 1916 and 1926 the Japanese government was concerned with high death rate and low birth rate. The condition was attributed to the poor health condition of the population, and a committee was organized to investigate public health problems. The committee studied the following: 1) infants and children, 2) tuberculosis, 3)
venereal disease
, 4) leprosy, 5) psychoses, 6) food, clothing, and housing conditions, 7) rural area hygiene, and 8) vital statistics. The resulting population policy was illustrated by infant/toddler welfare and social welfare works. Between 1927 and 1930 the possibility of overpopulation was discussed in the background of
depression
. The government organized a committee of investigation pertaining to population and food problems in 1927. The interrelation of high birth rate and high death rate was noted in the report, and it was proposed that the country should maintain natural population increase by adopting a policy of low birth/death rates. The proposal favored the reasonable practice of birth control from the standpoints of public health and eugenics. Thus, the population quality concept was originated in the eugenic aspects of population policy when the nation was faced with the problem of population control in a quantitative sense.
...
PMID:[Essay on the history of population policy in Japan--around the concept of population quality]. 1215 2
This paper reviews the developing pattern of HIV infection in Thailand with an introduction on basic principles of HIV transmission; a description of the emergence of HIV as a public health threat; a review of the social characteristics of HIV carriers in the context of the sexual culture in Thailand; and ends with a discussion of the dilemmas a developing country faces in dealing with HIV. Thailand is an example of a society where few people have many sex partners, a situation with a faster transmission of HIV than a case where most people have few partners. While Asia has lagged behind other regions in the spread of AIDS, in Thailand HIV has spread rapidly since 1988. Thailand has an illegal but tolerated commercial sex industry, with outlets very diverse in terms of
STD
control. This industry caters to tourists from other Asian countries, and is maintained by a strong male dominant culture, incomes averaging 25 times higher than other occupations pay,
depression
in outlying areas encouraging remittance of money back to families, and even status for sex workers in the marriage market. There is an entrenched subculture of intravenous drug injectors who also make up a nucleus of HIV carriers with high prevalence, 43% as of 1988. Some strategies open to the government to control spread of HIV include legalization and control of the sex industry, needle/syringe exchange and health care for drug injectors, social welfare for opium growers in the hills, and political solutions for the conflicts affecting drug traffic in Burma.
...
PMID:The social context of the emergence of HIV in Thailand. 1228 37
The injectable contraceptive depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) dissolves slowly and is released over 3 months to suppress ovulation. It is more than 99% effective at preventing pregnancy. More than 30 million women in 90 countries have used DMPA and none have died from using it. A World Health Organization [WHO] study showed that DMPA did not significantly increase the risk of breast cancer or other cancers. One study points to a small reduction in bone density with DMPA use, but the reduction did not become larger with long-term use and may even be reversible. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) thoroughly reviewed these studies and the experiences of DMPA users. This review resulted in the FDA's approving DMPA as a contraceptive in October, 1992. Almost all DMPA users experience menstrual changes with irregular bleeding and spotting occurring during the 1st few months. After 12 months, at least 50% of DMPA users experience amenorrhea, which some women consider a benefit. Other possible but rare side effects are weight gain, headache, breast tenderness, loss of libido,
depression
, nervousness, and fatigue. It takes longer for past DMPA users to conceive after stopping DMPA use than users of other contraceptive methods, but by 18 months more than 90% of past DMPA users who wanted to become pregnant conceived. DMPA does not protect users from sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) or HIV/AIDS. They need to use latex condoms to prevent
STD
/HIV transmission. DMPA users must return to their health care provider every 3 months for another injection. DMPA is a viable contraceptive for women wanting a safe, reliable, long-term, reversible contraceptive. Any woman wanting to use DMPA should discuss it with her provider.
...
PMID:Facts about injectable contraception. 1228 37
The physiology of lactation rarely receives adequate scientific attention. Physiologically and biologically, hormonal changes associated with lactation affect sexual function. Moreover, one must consider the direct contraceptive effect of lactation as well as its impact upon other contraceptive methods. Controversy remains over the role of breastfeeding in HIV and other
STD
transmission. Breastfeeding is more complicated than the readily recognized process during which an infant ingests milk. Lactation and breastfeeding also have psychological implications and effects. For example, society's perception of the role of the female breast and its acceptance of breastfeeding may affect a woman's decision whether to breastfeed as well as the psychosexual relationship which she enjoys with her partner. The sensual aspect of breastfeeding may also cause a breastfeeding mother to feel guilt; an association has been noted between weaning and maternal
depression
. The author reviews the psychological and physiological effects of breastfeeding upon sexual health, and the interactions of
STDs
, their treatments, and breastfeeding practices. Further research in these areas is warranted.
...
PMID:The implications of breastfeeding on a sexual health practice. 1229 Mar 2
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