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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Since emotional distress is linked to poor prognosis in coronary patients, there is urgent need for research into interventions that may enhance emotional well-being in these patients. Cardiac rehabilitation aims to return the individual to optimal emotional function, but the psychological effect of this therapy still needs to be demonstrated. Hence, we examined the role of cardiac rehabilitation in enhancing emotional health. We examined 170 male patients with coronary heart disease, of whom 85 had participated in the outpatient rehabilitation programme of the University Hospital of Antwerp and 85 had received standard medical care only in two other hospitals. Rehabilitation and control patients were matched by medical category and tendency to experience distress. The Global Mood Scale, the
Health Complaints
Scale, and the Heart Patients Psychological Questionnaire were used to assess changes in emotional well-being over a 3-month period. These changes were significantly different as a function of cardiac rehabilitation (P<0.0001). Rehabilitation patients, but not control patients, reported a significant improvement in negative affect, positive affect, well-being , health and disability (P<0.001). At follow-up, differences in
depression
, tranquillizer use (P<0.05), and activity profile (P<0.01) confirmed that rehabilitation patients displayed more healthy behaviour than control patients. Patients not only improved more, but also deteriorated less as a function of rehabilitation. This therapy also had a positive effect on patients suffering minimal distress, which is at variance with previous research. These findings suggest that comprehensive rehabilitation may be an effective therapy for enhancing emotional well-being in patients with coronary heart disease.
...
PMID:Enhancing emotional well-being by comprehensive rehabilitation in patients with coronary heart disease. 866 60
A variety of measures are currently used to assess psychosocial outcome (quality of life) in cardiac rehabilitation programmes. However, there is no consensus on the most appropriate instruments to use. Instruments that are not sufficiently responsive to change in cardiac populations are unsuitable as audit tools as they underrepresent the benefits of programme attendance. To identify the most responsive instruments in cardiac rehabilitation populations a systematic overview of studies for the 10-year period 1986-1995 was conducted. The following databases were searched: Medline, Psychlit, Cinahl and Sociofile and 32 relevant studies were identified. The effect size statistic (a comparison of the magnitude of change to the variability in baseline scores) was used to determine those instruments most responsive to change. The following instruments were identified as being responsive in more than one study: Beck
Depression
Inventory, Global Mood Scale,
Health Complaints
Checklist, Heart Patients Psychological Questionnaire and Speilberger State Anxiety Inventory. There is little consensus on psychosocial evaluation instrument use in the cardiac rehabilitation literature. A number of measures show significant potential for routine outcome assessment. Formal assessment of these instruments is recommended to inform final recommendations about instrument selection for audit and evaluation purposes in cardiac rehabilitation.
...
PMID:Psychosocial outcome assessments for use in cardiac rehabilitation service evaluation: a 10-year systematic review. 1036 38
With an ageing population and a decline in cardiac mortality rates, the number of patients with cardiac disease is increasing, which in turn poses a major challenge for secondary prevention. For this end, appropriate, sensitive, and validated instruments to assess health complaints and quality of life are required. The objectives of the current study were: (1) to cross-validate the
Health Complaints
Scale (HCS) in a Danish sample of patients with a first myocardial infarction (MI); and (2) to investigate whether perceived health, as measured by the HCS is related to cardiac disease severity. The HCS was originally developed in Belgian patients with coronary artery disease. One-hundred-and-twelve consecutive patients with a first myocardial infarction were assessed by means of a questionnaire four to six weeks post infarction. Clinical measures were sampled from medical records. The factor structure of the HCS and the internal consistency of the Somatic Complaints (alpha = 0.91) and Cognitive Complaints subscales (alpha = 0.94) were confirmed. The construct validity of the scale was confirmed against measures of psychopathology and personality. Patients scored significantly higher on the HCS Somatic and Cognitive scales as compared with self-reports of
depression
and anxiety (p < 0.0001). Health complaints were unrelated to severity of cardiac disease and rather reflected subjective perception of quality of life. These findings show that the HCS is a valid instrument that is equally applicable in Danish cardiac patients to monitor perceived health as a major component of quality of life.
...
PMID:Perceived health following myocardial infarction: cross-validation of the Health Complaints Scale in Danish patients. 1237 30
This is the first paper on suicidal ideation and attempts among ambulance personnel. This study aimed to investigate levels of suicidal ideation and suicide attempts among ambulance personnel, and to identify important correlates and the factors to which ambulance personnel attribute their serious suicidal ideation. A comprehensive nationwide questionnaire survey of 1,180 operational ambulance personnel was conducted. Measurements included: Paykel's Suicidal Feelings in the General Population questionnaire, the Hospital Anxiety and
Depression
scale, the Subjective
Health Complaints
Questionnaire, the Maslach Burnout Inventory, the Job Satisfaction Scale, the Basic Character Inventory, and the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale. Lifetime prevalence ranged from 28% for feelings that life was not worth living to 10.4% for seriously considered suicide and 3.1% for a suicide attempt. Serious suicidal ideation was independently associated with job-related emotional exhaustion (feelings of being overextended and depleted of resources) (OR 1.5, 95% CI 1.1-2.0) and bullying at work (OR 1.7, 95% CI 1.02-2.7), younger age, not married/cohabitant,
depression
symptoms, low self-esteem and the personality trait reality weakness. In general, suicidal thoughts were hardly attributable to working conditions, since only 1.8% of ambulance personnel attributed suicidal ideation to work problems alone. In conclusion, ambulance personnel reported a moderate level of suicidal ideation and suicide attempts. Although serious suicidal ideation was rarely attributed to working conditions in general, this study suggests that job-related factors like emotional exhaustion and bullying may be of importance.
...
PMID:Suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in a nationwide sample of operational Norwegian ambulance personnel. 1865 42
The aim of the study was to assess whether exposed workers had more subjective health complaints than controls 1 1/2 years after a chemical explosion involving a mixture of hydrocarbons and sulfurous compounds. A cross-sectional survey based on the Subjective
Health Complaints
Inventory (SHC) was conducted among 147 exposed workers and 137 controls. A significantly higher total SCH score (linear regression, p=.01) was found for the exposed workers compared with controls when adjusting for gender, age, smoking habits, and educational level. The exposed workers reported significantly more headache, hot flashes, sleep problems, tiredness, dizziness, and sadness/
depression
. The cause of these complaints is unknown, but health personnel should be aware that health complaints might be related to polluting episodes even when exposure levels are below occupational guideline levels.
...
PMID:Subjective Health Complaints Among Workers in the Aftermath of an Oil Tank Explosion. 2513 35