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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects during childhood, adolescence, and adulthood of having a parent with a drinking problem has interested researchers in several countries. The greatest number of reports related to this subject have appeared in the U.S. literature and in the literature from countries of Eastern Europe. This review encompasses the findings of researchers in these countries as well as workers in Western Europe, Latin America, and Japan. This review does not include biological, physiological, or neurological data. The epidemiologic evidence from several countries shows significant points of agreement. Problem drinking by a parent markedly increases health risks to children and adolescents. Such risks include diminished intellectual capacity and development, increased neuroticism, and a wide range of psychological and behavioral disorders. Parents who drink excessively are also likely to have children who experience long-term adverse consequences. These include heavy and problem-causing psychoactive
substance use
, criminality, suicide,
depression
, personality disorders, and psychological and behavioral disturbances. Parents who drink heavily are also especially likely to produce children who subsequently abstain from alcohol or drink only lightly.
...
PMID:The effects on children and adolescents of parents' excessive drinking: an international review. 250 72
This study explored suicidal behavior in 291 adolescents who were using runaway shelters in St. Louis. Thirty percent of the runaways reported having attempted suicide in the past. The suicide attempters had significantly more behavioral and mental health problems, and reported having more family members and more friends with problems, than nonattempters. A logistic regression showed that youths'
substance use
, behavior problems, family instability, and sex all helped to explain their suicide attempts. Most of the attempters made their first attempt by their midteens. One-quarter made their latest attempt shortly before entering the shelter, and one-fifth stated that they would still consider suicide. The great majority of attempts were not preplanned, but one-third followed troubles or arguments at home and feelings of confusion and
depression
. Remarkably, half of the teenage suicide attempters never received any professional help following their attempt.
...
PMID:Suicide attempts in runaway youths. 274 58
We assessed psychiatric states in 223 men at first entry to New York, NY, municipal men's shelters, overall and differentiated by prior experience of homelessness. Instruments included a diagnostic interview (Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R: Psychotic Disorders), the Short Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test, and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies of
Depression
Scale. The use of a "first timer" sample, and of a clinical diagnostic interview, had not, to our knowledge, been previously attempted in studies of psychiatric problems in the homeless. The majority of men had a history of mental disorder or of heavy
substance use
. On diagnostic interview, 17% of the men had a definite or probable history of psychosis, and another 8% had a possible history of psychosis. A confident diagnosis of schizophrenia was made in 8%. A history of alcohol or other drug abuse was evident in 58%. Cocaine was already (in 1985) the drug of choice; 27% of the study sample had used it more than 50 times. One third of the men were in extreme distress, much of it apparently acute and associated with the transition to the shelter, and 7% reported suicidal thoughts at the time of the interview. The newly homeless, compared with those who had been homeless for much of the 5 years prior to shelter entry, were younger and had fewer psychiatric problems.
...
PMID:Psychiatric problems in homeless men. Lifetime psychosis, substance use, and current distress in new arrivals at New York City shelters. 277 50
The prevalence and patterns of smokeless tobacco use and its correlates were assessed in the National Institute on Drug Abuse National Household Survey of residents 12 years of age and older. Overall, 11% of the general population have "ever tried" chewing tobacco, snuff, or other smokeless tobacco. Of these, 5% were former users and 3% used smokeless tobacco almost daily in the past year. Rates of its use differed significantly by sex, age group, race, region, and metropolitan area size. Although females were far less likely to try it, those who did were as likely as males to be daily users. Smokeless tobacco users were also more likely to use alcohol, cigarettes, and marijuana. In general, those who used smokeless tobacco almost daily were more likely to report poor health and hospitalization for illness or injury in the past year, even when other
substance use
was controlled. Smokeless tobacco users also were more likely to report symptoms of
depression
. Finally, some substituted smokeless tobacco for cigarettes, but youths (12-17 yr old) were more likely than older tobacco users to use both forms of tobacco regularly.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of smokeless tobacco use: a national study. 278 48
One hundred adolescent substance users were interviewed in a youth drop-in counseling center. The results indicated that 16% of the sample suffered from a nontransitory type of
depression
with a duration of at least one year with a superimposed major depressive disorder. The group with such double-
depression
was found to include significantly more alcohol dependent individuals as well as amphetamine abusers. The study gives further support to the DSM-III notion that
depression
is associated with
substance use
in adolescents.
...
PMID:Double depression in adolescent substance users. 315 24
Self-report instruments assessing
substance use
, eating behaviors, social adjustment, and
depression
were distributed to all 329 first- and second-year medical students at a private northeastern university. Two-hundred students (61 percent) completed the questionnaires. Thirty-five students (17.5 percent) were found to be at risk for substance (alcohol and psychoactive drugs) abuse, of whom 13 were found to be at high risk. Thirty-three students (16.5 percent) were found to be at risk for an eating disorder, of whom only one was at high risk. Risk for eating disorders was greater for the female students, but risk for substance abuse was not related to gender. Psychosocial impairment and
depression
were associated with risk for either eating disorders or substance abuse.
...
PMID:Substance use, eating behaviors, and social impairment of medical students. 347 73
A review of the literature on the comprehensive description of depressive patients revealed prominent concern with syndromic subtypes, course of illness, and personality factors, followed by severity, concomitant physical disorders, psychosocial stressors, and adaptive functioning. The descriptive value of multiaxial approaches for
depression
was illustrated through the application of an extended DSM-III formulation to all 3455 depressive (bipolar depression, major depression, dysthymic disorder, and atypical
depression
) and 7837 nondepressive patients of all ages and sexes presenting for evaluation and care at the Psychiatric Institute of the University of Pittsburgh during a period of 53 months. Twenty-six percent of the depressive patients received an additional diagnosis in axis I, the most frequent of which were
substance use
disorder, anxiety disorder, and condition not attributable to a mental disorder. In axis II, depressive patients presented a differentially higher frequency of dependent personality disorder and the "anxious/fearful" cluster of personality disorders. In axis III, 47% of the depressive vs. 40% of the nondepressive patients had a positive diagnosis of physical illness, with a significantly higher frequency among depressive patients attained by acquired hypothyroidism, migraine, essential hypertension, unspecified abdominal hernia, and unspecified arthropathies. Specific stressors differentially more frequent among depressive patients were those of conjugal, parenting, and occupational types and those reflecting the impact of physical illness. Overall stressor severity was at severe, extreme, or catastrophic levels for 42% of the depressive and 31% of the nondepressive patients. The highest level of adaptive functioning in the past year was good, very good, or superior for 44% of the depressive and 29% of the nondepressive patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Multiaxial characterization of depressive patients. 358 10
The relation of
substance use
status to depressed mood during careers of 173 opioid users was estimated using the Zung Self-Rating
Depression
Scale. The data suggested a progression in severity of
depression
from those abstinent or using occasionally, who were least depressed, through intermediate
substance use
states, to those dependent on illicit opioids, who were most depressed. One hundred five subjects completed the Scale in two interviews separated by a mean of 4.5 years. Change in
substance use
status from not dependent at first interview to dependent at second interview was associated with increased
depression
.
...
PMID:Depression in opioid users varies with substance use status. 368 97
A theoretical model of adolescent behavior is examined separately for males and females (N = 722). The model hypothesizes that
depression
and self-derogation may lead to a lack of purpose in life, which, in turn, may lead to suicide ideation and
substance use
. Confirmatory factor analyses and structural equation procedures were used to examine the model, using Bentler's (1984) EQS computer program, which is available from BMDP. For both the men and women, the model adequately accounted for the data although there were some important differences between the sexes. In response to psychic discomfort (i.e.,
Depression
and Self-derogation), men are more apt to turn to drugs and alcohol, whereas women consider suicide. Conversely, the situation changes in response to feelings of meaninglessness or a lack of purpose in life. Here, the females appear to turn to
substance use
, whereas the males react with thoughts of suicide.
...
PMID:Depression, self-derogation, substance use, and suicide ideation: lack of purpose in life as a mediational factor. 395 15
A combined survey and interview study was conducted to validate a categorical Dieting and Bingeing Severity Scale (DBSS), and to estimate the prevalence of eating disorders in young women. We hypothesized that assignment to the DBSS categories would be confirmed by clinical interviews such that interview-diagnosed eating disorders would be found with increasing frequency and severity at the upper end of the DBSS. Freshmen college women (n = 1367) completed a survey instrument addressing the frequency and severity of dieting, binge-eating, and other behaviors and attitudes related to weight control. Random stratified sampling procedures were used to select a subset of women (n = 306) from each DBSS category for structured clinical interviews for DSM-III-R (SCID). Survey respondents were assigned to one of six mutually exclusive DBSS categories: non-dieters (9% of sample), casual dieters (26%), moderate dieters (23%), intense dieters (21%), dieters at-risk (19%), and probable bulimia nervosa (2%). The DBSS effectively rank-ordered subjects according to the risk of having interview-diagnosed eating disorders. Women in the three most severe DBSS categories were significantly more likely to have current subthreshold and threshold level eating disorders, in particular bulimia nervosa and eating disorder not otherwise specified (EDNOS). The estimated prevalence of current bulimia nervosa was approximately 2% by both survey and interview methods. The prevalence of current EDNOS was 13%, more than six times greater than the prevalence of bulimia nervosa. The DBSS was found to be a reliable and valid measure of dieting and bingeing severity. The survey instrument may be useful in measuring the extent of, and changes in, pathological dieting in community-based samples of young women, and in studying comorbidity of dieting and bingeing severity with other psychiatric conditions including
depression
and
substance use
. The DBSS may also be useful in identifying risk factors associated with the onset of eating disorders.
...
PMID:The severity of dieting and bingeing behaviors in college women: interview validation of survey data. 747 97
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