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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A diathesis-stress model has been proposed (Schotte & Clum, 1982, 1987), in which deficits in interpersonal problem-solving skills are said to predispose individuals under chronic stress to
depression
,
hopelessness
, and suicide ideation. The present study examined the stability of interpersonal problem-solving skills in a short-term, longitudinal study of hospitalized suicide ideators (N = 36). The Ss displayed marked changes in depressive symptoms, state anxiety,
hopelessness
, and suicide intent over time, and these improvements were associated with improvements in interpersonal problem-solving skills. It is concluded that interpersonal problem-solving deficits may be a concomitant, rather than a cause, of
depression
,
hopelessness
, and suicide intent.
...
PMID:Problem-solving deficits in suicidal patients: trait vulnerability or state phenomenon? 225 2
Previous investigators have suggested that numerous symptoms used to diagnose
depression
, such as sleep or appetite disturbance, are non-specific in medically ill patients, and alternative diagnostic criteria should be developed. In the study this hypothesis was tested in Parkinson's disease (PD) by comparing patients with PD who reported a depressive mood with patients having PD but without a depressive mood. Depressed patients showed a significantly higher frequency of both autonomic and affective symptoms of
depression
. Depressed patients with PD reported a significantly higher frequency of worrying, brooding, loss of interest,
hopelessness
, suicidal tendencies, social withdrawal, self-depreciation, ideas of reference, anxiety symptoms, loss of appetite, initial and middle insomnia, and loss of libido when compared with non-depressed patients. No significant between-group differences, however, were observed in the frequency of anergia, motor retardation, and early morning awakening.
...
PMID:Specificity of affective and autonomic symptoms of depression in Parkinson's disease. 226 68
Determined whether six commonly used inventories which are associated with suicide (
Hopelessness
Scale, Zung Self-Rating
Depression
Scale, Scale for Suicide Ideation, Reasons for Living Inventory, Suicide Probability Scale, and the Suicide Ideation Questionnaire) overlap; all six were given to 308 undergraduates. A principal components factor analysis yielded four factors with Eigenvalues greater than 1.00. These four factors were labeled Suicidal/Negative Ideas, Reasons for Living, Self-Doubt, and Suicide Desire. Each scale or subscale had a factor loading of .4 or greater on one factor. Only the Survival and Coping Beliefs subscale of the Reasons for Living Inventory and the Suicide Ideation Questionnaire loaded on two factors. Thus, each of these six instruments accounts for unique variance in suicidality. A suicide screening battery that includes all six inventories would take approximately 20 min for college students to complete, and would be valuable in identifying different aspects of suicidality.
...
PMID:A factor analysis of six commonly used instruments associated with suicide using college students. 228 Mar 43
This paper reports the first British study to assess the construct validity of Beck's
Hopelessness
Scale (HS) and the Beck
Depression
Inventory (BDI). On the basis of interviews with 50 economically active parasuicide patients, it was confirmed that
hopelessness
accounts for the relationship between
depression
and suicidal intent. Moreover, it was shown that social desirability neither confounds the relationship between
hopelessness
and suicidal intent, nor has any predictive power in explaining variation in suicidal intent. On the other hand, the interval ('elapsed time') between the commencement of the parasuicidal act and of the research interview was significantly and positively correlated with suicidal intent, and elapsed time was a significant predictor of the total score on Beck's Suicidal Intent Scale. Two explanations for this finding are proposed: the first is based on the possibility that elapsed time is an indirect or proxy measure of medical seriousness; the second derives from the likely impact of prolonged hospital stay on the patient's interpretation or understanding of his/her behaviour. Researchers are advised to take into account the moderating effect of elapsed time when designing studies which examine psychological processes in parasuicide.
...
PMID:Suicidal intent, hopelessness and depression in a parasuicide population: the influence of social desirability and elapsed time. 228 72
In a controlled trial, 20 patients at high risk of repeated suicide attempts were randomly allocated to either cognitive-behavioural problem solving or a 'treatment-as-usual' control condition. The group practising problem solving improved significantly more than controls on ratings of
depression
,
hopelessness
, suicidal ideation and target problems at the end of treatment and at follow-up of up to one year, and there was evidence of an effect on the rates of repetition over the six months after treatment.
...
PMID:Cognitive-behavioural problem solving in the treatment of patients who repeatedly attempt suicide. A controlled trial. 228 97
The effects of changes in
depression
-relevant cognition were examined in relation to subsequent change in depressive symptoms for outpatients with major depressive disorder randomly assigned to cognitive therapy (CT; n = 32) versus those assigned to pharmacotherapy only (NoCT; n = 32).
Depression
severity scores were obtained at the beginning, middle, and end of the 12-week treatment period, as were scores on 4 measures of cognition: Attributional Styles Questionnaire (ASQ), Automatic Thoughts Questionnaire (ATQ), Dysfunctional Attitudes Scale (DAS), and the
Hopelessness
Scale (HS). Change from pretreatment to midtreatment on the ASQ, DAS, and HS predicted change in
depression
from midtreatment to posttreatment in the CT group, but not in the NoCT group. It is concluded that cognitive phenomena play mediational roles in cognitive therapy. However, data do not support their status as sufficient mediators.
...
PMID:How does cognitive therapy work? Cognitive change and symptom change in cognitive therapy and pharmacotherapy for depression. 229 37
The aim of this research was to study the effect of suspected infertility on psychological functioning, comparing men who suspect that they are infertile (N = 107) with men who have no such suspicion (N = 30). Infertile men had lower self-esteem, higher anxiety and showed more somatic symptoms than fertile men. The effects of moderating variables on the psychological functioning of the subfertile men were analysed. The findings were that causality of infertility, feelings of
hopelessness
and global attribution were related to sexual inadequacy.
Depression
was uniquely related to stress of infertility and global attribution. Global attribution, though predictive of psychological consequences, was not affected by the objective variables of infertility.
...
PMID:Psychological aspects of male infertility. 233 55
An integrative path model is presented that details the relationships among several demographic variables, life stress,
depression
,
hopelessness
, social support, and suicidal ideation. The sample consisted of 737 university students, 287 males and 450 females. Negative life stress was found to be a significant predictor of both
depression
and
hopelessness
, which, in turn, mediated the relationship between life stress and suicidal ideation. Contrary to previous findings,
depression
proved to be a better predictor of suicidal ideation than
hopelessness
. Findings also illustrated the importance of including social support measures in the model, as significant relationships were discovered between social support and both life stress and suicidal ideation. The model accounted for a total of 34% of the variance in suicidal ideation. Individual findings are interpreted; the ways in which they reflect on previous research, and future efforts, are discussed.
...
PMID:An integrative model of suicidal ideation. 233 79
This study reports on the relationship between stressful life events and
depression
in an inpatient sample of 100 children, age 7 to 12 years. Thirteen children were diagnosed as depressed on the basis of structured interviews. These subjects reported having more negative life events (both unit and weighted) as measured by the life Events Checklist (LEC) than did the remaining sample. They also had lower self-concepts, greater
hopelessness
, and higher scores on the withdrawal and
depression
subscales of the Personality Inventory for Children than the nondepressed inpatient group. The significance of these findings is discussed.
...
PMID:Life events and major depression in a sample of inpatient children. 234 Jul 21
A model of a recovery process from
depression
that is compatible with the
hopelessness
theory of depressive onset is proposed. This model predicts that depressives who have an enhancing attributional style for positive events (i.e., make global, stable attributions for such events) will be more likely to regain hopefulness and, thereby, recover from
depression
, when positive events occur. This prediction was tested by following a group of depressed college students longitudinally for 6 weeks. Although neither positive events alone nor attributional style alone predicted reduction in
hopelessness
, depressives who both showed the enhancing attributional style for positive events and experienced more positive events showed dramatic reductions in
hopelessness
which were accompanied by remission of depressive symptoms. Thus, attributional style for positive events may be a factor that enables some depressives to recover when positive events occur in their lives.
...
PMID:Positive life events, attributional style, and hopefulness: testing a model of recovery from depression. 234 9
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