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172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The K-FAST and K-SNAP, two new brief cognitive measures designed for adolescents and adults, were validated against another brief measure--a four-subtest short form of the WAIS-R--using a sample of 20 adult patients hospitalized for depression. Data supported the validity of these two new instruments.
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PMID:Validation of two new brief cognitive tests with a WAIS-R short form using a hospitalized depressed sample. 817 44

Psychologic factors have been considered to play an important role in the etiology of chronic prostatitis. Earlier studies are often based on a psychoanalytical perspective and seldomly used quantitative approaches. In the present study quantitative tests are used to investigate personality variables which are suggested in the literature as underlying chronic prostatitis. A group of 50 chronic prostatitis patients was compared with a group of 50 patients seen for a vasectomy. Psychologic measures were taken by means of a personality inventory (NVM, Dutch short form of the MMPI), a symptom checklist (SLC-90), and a depression inventory (IDD). Results showed statistically significant differences between the groups, with the chronic prostatitis patients scoring consistently higher on the measures than vasectomy patients. However, these differences in scores were not of a great magnitude and minor compared with differences in scores from psychiatric patients. Discriminant analysis suggested somatization and depression to be the key variables to distinguish chronic prostatitis patients from vasectomy patients. Overall, it seemed unfounded to label chronic prostatitis patients "neurotic" or "psychopathologic," and it was impossible to conclude that there are personality variables that specifically identify the chronic prostatitis patients.
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PMID:Personality variables involved in chronic prostatitis. 825 99

There is a need for a short form questionnaire with known psychometric characteristics that may be used as an indicator of level of global mental distress. A weighted sum of 5 questions from the Symptom Check List (SCL) anxiety and depression subscales (SCL-25) correlates at r = 0.92 with the global SCL-25 score. The alpha reliability for the (5-item) short form questionnaire was 0.85%. Age differences seemed to be trivial, and sex differences were moderate. Descriptive statistics for short form scores in a large, representative sample are given.
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PMID:How well can a few questionnaire items indicate anxiety and depression? 851 78

In this study, the concept of loneliness is examined in relation to different types of depression. The Depressive Experience Questionnaire and the short form of the Revised UCLA Loneliness scale were administered to 70 normal subjects. Both anaclitic and introjective factors of depression were found to be significantly related to loneliness. Contrary to expectations self-critical (introjective) depression accounted for twice the variance of the loneliness measure than dependent (anaclitic) depression. Introjective depression as an integral component of the inner dynamic of loneliness is discussed.
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PMID:Self-critical and dependent aspects of loneliness. 854 61

The aim of the present investigation was to assess and compare health status instruments in SLE. One hundred and twenty-five patients completed five health status instruments: the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ), Functional Ability Index, the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS), the Disability Days Measure (DDM), the Centre for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D), and the Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) Short Form Health Survey during their Clinic visit. Disease activity was measured using the SLE Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI). All instruments described a spectrum of quality of life outcomes in these patients. An inter-instrument correlation analysis revealed that components of the MOS correlated significantly with each of the other instruments used. There was no correlation between any of the instruments used and the SLEDAI. We conclude that health status assessment as measured by the MOS short form is a valid independent outcome measure in patients with SLE.
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PMID:A comparison of five health status instruments in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). 880 89

One commonly used instrument for evaluating general health and functional status is the medical outcomes survey short form 36 (MOS). Scores obtained from this instrument are known to vary with chronic diseases and depression. However, the degree to which these health dimensions may be influenced by sleep quality or sleepiness is not well understood. A cross-sectional study was performed on the association between general health status, as determined by the MOS, with sleepiness, assessed using a standardized questionnaire [the Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS)] and the multiple sleep latency test (MSLT). One hundred twenty-nine subjects (68 women), aged 25-65 years, without severe chronic medical or psychiatric illnesses, underwent an overnight sleep study, followed by an MSLT (consisting of a series of four attempts at napping at 2-hour intervals), and completed the MOS and the ESS. The mean MSLT score was 11 +/- 2 minutes, (range 2-20) and the mean ESS score was 10 +/- 5 (range 0-24). Scores for the MOS dimensions "general health perceptions", "energy/fatigue", and "role limitations due to emotional problems" were correlated significantly with ESS scores (r = -0.30, -0.41, and -0.30, respectively; p values were all < 0.001). The MSLT was also significantly correlated with "energy/fatigue" (r = -0.19; p < 0.05). After considering the effects of chronic illness and/or body mass index in a multiple hierarchical regression analysis, sleepiness, as assessed by the ESS score, explained 8% of the variance in general health perceptions, 17% of the variance in energy/fatigue, 6% of the variance in the summary measure of well-being, and 3% of the variance in the summary measure of functional status. The variation of MOS scores with sleepiness, unrelated to age or chronic disease, suggests that measures of general health status may be broadly influenced by sleepiness and sleep quality. These data suggest that 1) sleepiness has an important impact on general health and functional status, specifically influencing self-perceptions regarding energy/fatigue; 2) a more specific assessment of sleepiness in general health evaluations may help explain some of the observed variability in these measures across subjects; and 3) general health measures may be useful in the evaluations of patients with sleep disorders.
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PMID:Relationship between sleepiness and general health status. 889 38

Asthma is a common but neglected problem in older people, the impact of which is relatively unstudied. The aim of this study was to objectively assess quality of life and depression in older asthmatics. The subjects studied were 50 hospitalized known asthmatics, over 55 yrs of age (mean age 72 yrs). Of these, 40 had objective evidence of asthma, and were compared to 40 age- and sex-matched controls. Using a structured questionnaire, the Geriatric Depression Score, subjective health status (short form (SF)-36), and other comparative disability data were recorded. Spirometric results were also recorded. Depressive symptoms were common in both groups but were not significantly different. Mean SF-36 scores were significantly worse in the asthmatics, especially for components of physical function (p = 0.04), physical role limitation (p = 0.01), energy (p = 0.01), health change (p = 0.01), and general health perception (p = 0.01). However mental, mental role and social scores were similar in both groups. We conclude that quality of life is impaired in hospitalized asthmatics compared to controls. Physical components appear to be most adversely affected. Depressive symptoms are common but no overall difference was found for psychological disability. Older asthmatics appear to adapt well to adverse situations.
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PMID:A hospital-based case-control study of quality of life in older asthmatics. 904 29

Based on a longitudinal study of a national representative sample aged 60 and over, we examined the impact of retirement on mental health and social well-being among elderly Japanese. From the baseline interviewees, we selected 178 study subjects who were full-time workers employed at least five days per week for at least six hours per day. At a follow-up survey three years after baseline, 34 had retired from their jobs and the rest still continued working. Mental health was rated from an aspect of depression, using a short form of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. Social well-being was measured by two indicators: the degree of social participation and the frequency of meeting friends or neighbors. Multiple regression analyses were used to investigate the effect of retirement on mental health and social well-being, controlling for baseline health characteristics. Results showed there was no significant effect of retirement on either mental health or the degree of social participation. On the frequency of social contacts with friends or neighbors, however, the retirement x sex x age interaction contributed a significant effect. Early retirement among elderly men tended to decrease the frequency of social contrasts. This finding suggests that an extra-workplace social relationship should be recommended especially to middle-aged working men to prevent them from falling into social isolation after retirement.
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PMID:[Effect of retirement on mental health and social well-being among elderly Japanese]. 913 Aug 49

The study investigated the relationship between reflective or impulsive cognitive style, metacognitive functioning, and depression in young adolescents. Metacognitive functioning (metacognitive knowledge about reading and memory, monitoring of text comprehension) and self-reported depressive feelings were analyzed in a group of subjects who showed a Reflective or Impulsive cognitive style. The sample consisted of 56 junior high-school students (Grades 6, 7, and 8) selected from a larger original group of 61 subjects. We excluded from the original group those with an IQ below 75 on both the Verbal and Performance subscales on the short form of the WISC-R, those reported by teachers to have a severe learning disability, and those that did not complete the test battery due to long absences from school. The reflective-impulsive cognitive style was identified with the Matching Familiar Figures Test-20. Using the median of the distribution for both Latency (17 sec. per item) and Errors (9 errors) on this task, the sample was divided in four partially overlapping subgroups: 16 with Impulsive cognitive style (Latency below the median, Errors above the median), 13 with Reflective cognitive style (Latency above the median, Error below the median), 4 fast and accurate (both scores below the median), and 11 slow and inaccurate (both scores above the median). Twelve subjects with one or both scores coinciding with the critical value (median) were excluded. Analysis showed that subjects with Impulsive cognitive style had significantly lower scores than those with Reflective cognitive style in monitoring of comprehension of text. No differences were found on monitoring by eighth graders, irrespective of cognitive style. No differences between the two groups were found in metacognitive knowledge. Subjects with Impulsive cognitive style had significantly higher scores than subjects with Reflective cognitive style on a self-rating scale for childhood depression, the Children's Depression Inventory. The implications of these data are discussed.
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PMID:Impulsive-reflective cognitive style, metacognition, and emotion in adolescence. 913 33

Employment, functional status, health status, and prevalence of anxiety and depression were assessed in patients who had undergone orthotopic liver transplantation at Duke University from 1984 to 1993 to identify social and economic factors that might influence return to work after liver transplantation. Patients were asked to complete mailed questionnaires. A transplant nurse coordinator assigned patients a Karnofsky score, unaware of the questionnaire responses. The response rate was 71% (52 of 72 patients). The median age of the post-liver transplantation patients was 49 years. Median years of education were 13. Sixty-five percent of patients were male. Sixty percent of patients were employed posttransplantation. Employed and unemployed posttransplantation patients showed no significant difference in age, education, gender, marital status, race, family coping skills, or cause of liver disease. Return to work after transplantation did not correlate with socioeconomic status or spouse's employment. Posttransplantation return to work was highly correlated with pretransplant employment (P < .0005). The prevalence of anxiety and depression, assessed by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HAD), was 9% and was no different in the employed or unemployed patients. Health status, as measured by Karnofsky score, was excellent; all patients received Karnofsky scores > or = 80%. Health perceptions were compared in employed versus unemployed posttransplantation patients with the SF-36, a 36-item short form survey developed by the investigators of the Medical Outcome Study. This revealed significantly different values in the subscale, physical functioning, with a mean score of 70.6 in the employed and a mean score of 48.4 in the unemployed posttransplantation patients (P = .004) and role-physical with a mean score of 61.8 in the employed and a mean score of 27.6 in the unemployed posttransplantation patients (P = .005). Eighty percent of patients not returning to work cited "problems with their health" as their major obstacle to employment. Although objective health status was good to excellent in all patients after transplantation, patients perceived that their health status was poor, with the lowest scores observed in unemployed posttransplantation patients.
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PMID:Effect of orthotopic liver transplantation on employment and health status. 934 41


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