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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study examines the relationships between exposure to violence and
depression
, hopelessness, and purpose in life among black adolescents living in or around public housing developments. Black adolescents (N = 225, males = 44%) ages 11 to 19 years in a southern city were administered an anonymous questionnaire.
Depression
was correlated with the exposure to violence (r = .28),
family conflict
(r = .29), and corporal punishment (r = .32) scales, perceived probability of being alive at age 25 years (r = -.14), socioeconomic status of head of household (r = .14), anticipated socioeconomic status as an adult (r = .21), and number of sexual partners (r = .22). Based on multiple regression analysis, corporal punishment,
family conflict
, educational level of head of household, and perceived probability of being alive at age 25 years explained 18% (p < or = .0001) of the variation in
depression
.
Family conflict
, corporal punishment, and unemployed head of household explained 11% of the variation in the hopelessness scale. Unemployed head of household, the corporal punishment scale, and number of sexual partners explained 9.7% of the variation in purpose in life. Even when accounting for other social factors, exposure to violence in the home was associated with psychological distress in this sample of adolescents.
...
PMID:Exposure to violence and victimization and depression, hopelessness, and purpose in life among adolescents living in and around public housing. 759 57
Behavioral family systems therapy (BFST) was compared with ego-oriented individual therapy (EOIT) in a controlled, random-assignment investigation involving 22 young adolescents with anorexia nervosa. Each adolescent and her parents received approximately 16 months of outpatient therapy along with a common medical and dietary regimen. BFST emphasized parental control over eating and weight gain, coupled with cognitive restructuring and problem-solving communication training. EOIT emphasized building ego strength, adolescent autonomy, and insight into the emotional blocks to eating. BFST produced greater change on body-mass index than did EOIT, but both treatments produced comparable improvements on eating attitudes, body shape dissatisfaction, interoceptive awareness,
depression
/internalizing psychopathology, and eating-related
family conflict
. The implications of these results for the clinician who treats adolescents with anorexia nervosa are discussed.
...
PMID:Family therapy versus individual therapy for adolescent females with anorexia nervosa. 803 62
New procedures for segmented organ transplantation of the lung and liver have again brought to public attention the issue of live organ donation. To provide a context for understanding the dilemmas faced by potential donors, the body of literature over the last 40 years regarding living-related organ donation with kidneys was reviewed. Results indicated that while psychological side effects have been reported including
depression
and
family conflict
these risks are generally under-emphasized. Risk factors for negative psychological consequences include high age, lack of social support, and organ rejection in the recipient. Instantaneous decision-making in favor of donation is generally described. However, researchers have neglected to consider social desirability factors when assessing donor motives. Furthermore, lack of awareness has been shown concerning the coercive processes involved in moral decision-making. Health professionals should be aware that merely raising the issue of live organ donation may instigate powerful psychological processes beyond the potential donor's voluntary control and leave little room for refusal without psychological cost. Implications for treatment are discussed with these circumstances in mind.
...
PMID:Living-related organ donation: the donor's dilemma. 833 9
A study of 46 women with histories of childhood sexual abuse and a control group of 93 women without such histories showed an association between childhood sexual abuse and the women's symptoms of anxiety and
depression
, as well as their perceptions of their families of origin. Results also suggested that
family conflict
, control, and cohesiveness moderated the relationship between the childhood abuse and current symptoms of
depression
.
...
PMID:Childhood family environment and sexual abuse as predictors of anxiety and depression in adult women. 842 4
No prospective data have documented the physical and psychosocial functioning of patients before and after BMT. In this study 67 allogeneic transplant patients completed standardized self-report measures pre-transplant. Survivors were re-assessed at 90 days (n = 34) and 1 year (n = 31) post-transplant. Telephone interviews established 4-year work history and performance status. Physical function was most impaired at 90 days post-transplant, with a return to pre-transplant levels of functioning by 1 year in most areas. By 2 years post-transplant, 68% of patients had returned to full-time work. Only 9% of 4-year survivors failed to return to full-time occupations. Mean levels of anxiety and
depression
did not change over the first year. Pre-transplant, 27% of patients reported
depression
and 41% reported elevated anxiety. Greater emotional distress at 1 year was predicted by pre-transplant
family conflict
, non-married status and development of less severe chronic GVHD. Impaired physical recovery at 1 year was predicted by more severe chronic GVHD, pre-transplant physical impairment and
family conflict
. The large majority of long-term survivors returned to full-time employment with normal physical and psychosocial functioning, although recovery took longer than 1 year for approximately 40%. Family relationships were important determinants of physical and emotional recovery.
...
PMID:Recovery after allogeneic marrow transplantation: prospective study of predictors of long-term physical and psychosocial functioning. 848 79
This article examines the intervening pathways linking parental divorce with adolescent
depression
, using both cross-sectional and prospective data from a study of high school students in the Boston metropolitan area. Overall, findings reveal that parental divorce is linked with adolescent
depression
in two ways: (1) it is a source of numerous secondary problems and stresses that are causally related to
depression
, and (2) it alters youths' reactivity to these stresses, in some cases enhancing, but in other cases mitigating, their depressive effects. Analyses demonstrated the central role of economic hardship in linking family status with
depression
, with the strength of this indirect pathway partly attributable to the greater vulnerability of youths in single-parent families to financial stresses. In contrast,
family conflict
did not account for the distress of youths in single-parent families, largely because of their immunity to the effects of such conflict. Finally, prospective data failed to support the hypothesis that differences between youths in single-parent and intact families predate the divorce.
...
PMID:Pathways linking parental divorce with adolescent depression. 869 Aug 75
Previous research demonstrated that the combination of a negative life event (NLE) and less constructive perceived problem solving alternatives (PPSAs) was associated with more
depression
in unselected adolescents. This study investigated these variables and their association with suicidal ideation in 80 adolescent psychiatric patients. Depressed patients reported more negative effects from NLEs, particularly
family conflict
and academic failure, and were more likely to consider self-destructive PPSAs than their less depressed counterparts. The impacts of NLEs and negative PPSAs were independently associated with both
depression
and suicidal ideation for this population, in contrast to non-patients.
...
PMID:The association among negative life events, perceived problem solving alternatives, depression, and suicidal ideation in adolescent psychiatric patients. 889 52
Since health-risk behaviors are often encountered in clusters among adolescents, it was hypothesized that adolescents with poor school attendance would be associated with more health-risk behaviors (e.g., substance use, violence) than those who attend school regularly. This study assessed the relationship between poor school attendance and health-risk behaviors, and described health-risk behaviors and self-esteem among adolescents seeking employment. In this cross-sectional study, school attendance (poor vs. regular attendance) was related to health-risk behaviors by asking 122 subjects seen at a New York City Working Papers Clinic to complete both a 72-item questionnaire about their health-risk behaviors and the 58-item Coopersmith Self-Esteem School Form Inventory. Chi-square and Fisher's Exact Tests were performed. The poor and regular attenders of school differed significantly in only 5 out of 44 items pertaining to health-risk behaviors. Self-esteem measures for the two groups did not differ from one another or from national norms. In this sample,
depression
"in general" (global) and "at home," but not "at school," were associated significantly with suicidal thoughts/attempts and serious past life events (e.g.
family conflict
, sexual abuse). There were no significant associations between
depression
or self-esteem and illicit substance or alcohol use. We found few associations between poor school attendance and health-risk behaviors in this sample of employment-seeking adolescents. The poor and regular attenders of school were similar in most aspects of their health-risk behaviors and self-esteem.
...
PMID:School attendance, health-risk behaviors, and self-esteem in adolescents applying for working papers. 898 20
Sociodemographics, clinical characteristics, and life stressors of community-dwelling suicidal risk and nonsuicidal risk elders referred to a community aging and mental health provider were compared in this study. Information was collected through case manager surveys and agency records on 683 older adults referred to the Elder Services Program of Spokane Mental Health in 1994 and the first 6 months of 1995. This sample included 109 individuals who were clinically judged to be at suicide risk by case managers at the time of initial assessment. Comparisons between suicidal risk and nonsuicidal risk elders indicated that suicidal elders were younger, more likely to be separated or divorced, and more likely to report a previous history of suicidal behavior. Results of a logistic regression analysis indicated that living alone,
depression
or anxiety disorder, and higher levels of emotional disturbance predicted suicide risk status. In addition, medical problems,
family conflict
, and relationship loss predicted suicide risk status in this particular sample. Individuals at suicide risk were also more likely to have a family physician than others. Implications of findings for identification and treatment of suicidal elders are discussed.
...
PMID:A comparison of suicidal and nonsuicidal elders referred to a community mental health center program. 926 Mar 1
While first-wave Vietnamese immigrants adapted well to life in the United States, subsequent immigrants have had greater adjustment difficulties, including more evidence of psychological distress. This study aimed to analyze psychosocial adaptation differences among three generations of recent Vietnamese immigrants, as well as to examine predictors of mental distress in the sample as a whole. A community sample of 184 recent Vietnamese immigrants, categorized as either elderly, middle-aged, or young adults, was assessed for levels of psychological distress, including
depression
, anxiety, and PTSD, as well as
family conflict
, dissatisfaction with life in the U.S., acculturation and biculturalism, social support, coping, and premigratory stressors. Young Vietnamese adults were most acculturated, most bicultural, and reported themselves as healthiest and least depressed. They were most often working, least often on welfare, and had the highest family income. However, they also reported most dissatisfaction with their current lives in the U.S. and most
family conflict
. Regression analysis explaining approximately one-quarter of the variance in mental distress implicated current dissatisfaction with and lack of adjustment of life in the United States, as well as greater acculturation and increased
family conflict
. Although young adults scored significantly higher than other generations on most of the risk factors for psychological distress, they appeared to be buffered against poorer mental health outcomes by factors of generation and perceived positive overall well-being. In terms of testing a predictive model of psychological distress, this study found current adjustment factors significantly more important in determining mental health outcomes than premigratory stressors such as war-related traumas.
...
PMID:Generational differences in psychosocial adaptation and predictors of psychological distress in a population of recent Vietnamese immigrants. 1020 90
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