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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
For some time patients with the dual diagnosis of
mental retardation
and
mental illness
have been recognized as a distinct patient population, but development of programs meeting their special needs is slow. In October 1986 a Massachusetts state psychiatric facility opened a rehabilitative program for such patients in a separate 40-bed unit on the hospital grounds. All patients admitted to the Specialized Habilitative and Rehabilitative Environment (SHARE) program had long histories of institutionalization, and many had been treated with neuroleptic drugs for several years. Most patients now attend day programming, and a few have been able to move on to less restrictive environments. Patients' average neuroleptic dosage has been substantially reduced. This progress has been made in spite of such program-development problems as the need to change staff's long-held perspectives about dual-diagnosis patients, lack of funding, and high staff turnover.
...
PMID:Developing a unit for mentally retarded-mentally ill patients on the grounds of a state hospital. 275 75
In a survey study of psychiatric morbidity, based on a representative sample from the Danish
mental retardation
register, 44 adults with Down's syndrome (DS) were compared with 258 other mentally retarded adults. Assessed by the parameters
psychiatric disorder
, behaviour problems, neurotic traits, and deviant social interaction, the DS group functioned better on all parameters. However, male and female DS patients were very different, the females constituting a superior well-functioning group while the males had major problems in every area. High prevalence rates of dementia and infantile autism were found in the DS group. General function rapidly decreased with age in DS patients.
...
PMID:Psychiatric aspects of Down's syndrome. 297 26
If national differences in psychiatric morbidity could be established, this information could guide us towards greater understanding of psychopathology and perhaps aid in primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention of psychiatric disorders. Obstacles to determining national differences include application of epidemiological concepts in psychiatry, diagnostic criteria and reliability, sampling and data collection problems, and factors affecting rates which are not constant across nations (e.g., mortality associated with
psychiatric disorder
, migration). Despite these problems, four diagnostic entities are considered from the standpoint of national differences (i.e., schizophrenia, substance abuse,
mental retardation
, and pathoplastic or "culture bound" disorders). Three examples of social or "supra-diagnostic" problems relevant to national differences in psychiatric morbidity are also addressed: youth as a high risk group, homeless mentally ill, and adversive migration.
...
PMID:National differences in psychiatric morbidity: methodological issues, scientific interpretations and social implications. 306 28
Barbadian children's understanding of the nature and causes of
mental retardation
, and of the characteristics of mentally retarded children, was investigated using a questionnaire previously employed in the United States by Siperstein and Bak (1980). Subjects were 199 10 to 11-year-olds from four elementary schools in Barbados. Results indicated that many Barbadian children, like their American counterparts, confused retardation with orthopedic disabilities and, to a lesser extent,
mental illness
. A higher proportion of Barbadian children than of American children thought
mental retardation
was caused by post-natal factors such as childhood accidents, illnesses, parental maltreatment, and drug-taking. Equal proportions of boys and girls mentioned causes associated with the pregnant mother, although girls identified a greater variety of such factors. Pupils generally demonstrated a fairly high degree of empathy with the needs and feelings of mentally retarded peers, and recent public awareness campaigns appear to have had a definite impact upon results.
...
PMID:Barbadian children's understanding of mental retardation. 316 Mar 4
College undergraduates were asked the degree to which they believed certain behaviors and characteristics are present in mentally retarded and mentally ill persons. Comparisons of responses showed that subjects clearly differentiated the concepts, although several areas overlapped.
Mental retardation
was characterized by physical stigmata and brain damage, developmental delays, and cognitive deficits;
mental illness
, by emotional lability due to environmental, hereditary, or mixed factors. How knowledge of people's perceptions of these disorders is essential for a more complete understanding of reactions to group homes, mainstreaming, and other "normalized" placements was discussed.
...
PMID:Perceptions of mental retardation and mental illness. 316 99
In present-day African psychiatry, there is a sharp differentiation between serious
mental illness
, which requires medically orientated treatment and chemotherapy, and the more superficial disturbances of personality for which psychological, sociological and educational measures are indicated. With the severe shortage of Western psychiatrists who are prepared to undertake this work, it is providential that black traditional healers address themselves to the latter group of mental abnormalities with a measure of success comparable to psychotherapy in First-World practice. In the back wards of a mental hospital (run on First-World lines) and in outpatient clinics in periurban Durban townships, one meets a large number of patients with severe and chronic disease. All those conditions (
mental retardation
, organic brain syndromes, schizophrenia and affective disorders) with positive symptomatology (excitement, restlessness and aggression) are found to respond to neuroleptic drugs. Possible reasons why patients with negative symptoms (emotional withdrawal, poverty of ideas and speech), especially in schizophrenia, do not react, are discussed, and administrative and socio-economic implications are reviewed.
...
PMID:Severe invalidism--the dominant feature of Third-World psychiatry in southern Africa. 335 19
All 77 residents aged under 65 in geriatric nursing homes and homes for the elderly in the Berlin (W) district of Charlottenburg were assessed in regard to
mental illness
and impairment. Additionally, data were collected covering psychopathology, clinical and personal data, medical and social care as well as the extent of contacts to nonresidents and institutional setting. 85% of these younger residents-8% of the total residential population-proved to be mentally ill. Primarily, they suffered from addiction, schizophrenia or
mental retardation
. Projecting our results to the total residential population of Berlin living in such homes, 728 younger mentally ill or retarded patients or 0,5%o of the population aged under 65 would live in such institutions. These residents had histories of unfavorable living conditions and a long psychiatric case history with frequent hospitalization. Distinct differences in regard to patient data as well as settings were found among public, welfare and private institutions. Results are discussed and arguments for improving care of this population are presented.
...
PMID:[Younger psychiatric patients in homes for the aged and nursing homes]. 342 51
Delay in language development may be associated with an underlying anatomical, neurosensory, or
psychological disorder
such as: deafness, cerebral palsy, cleft palate, autism, or
mental retardation
. A condition called specific developmental language delay may occur in children devoid of any other identifiable disorder or developmental delay. Language delay associated with early onset, severe-to-profound hearing impairment has been well documented. Controversial studies have also appeared in the communicative disorders' literature suggesting that fluctuating conductive hearing loss in early childhood can significantly affect the development of language and related academic skills. Some authors have claimed that these deleterious effects can be irreversible. This study focuses on 3 groups of preschool children, in whom hearing acuity has been documented: One group with recurrent otitis and language delay; a second group with an equally well documented otitis history but without language delay; and a third group with documented language delay in the absence of any known predisposing conditions, including early-onset, recurrent otitis media. Prenatal, birth and developmental histories of the children in each group were compared in detail to identify any factors which may enhance or ameliorate the effects of fluctuating conductive hearing loss on language development. In a population of 1864 children (ages 9-59 months) referred for otolaryngologic and/or communicative evaluation, 480 otherwise normal children (67.6% males; 32.4% females) were found to have a history of early-onset, recurrent otitis media and/or delayed speech and language development on the basis of an extensive evaluation battery. This population was further subdivided into 3 groups (I = otitis-positive/normal language; II = otitis-positive/language delay; and III = otitis-free/language delay). Among the 329 children with positive histories for early otitis media (Groups I & II), a significantly higher percentage of those demonstrating language delay were from homes in the lower socio-economic category. Race and sex showed no significant relationship to language delay among the otitis-positive groups, although males were twice as numerous as females in the over-all study population. Articulation errors on speech measures and borderline delays in other developmental milestones (standing, walking, and toilet training) were also significantly greater in the language-delayed group when compared with otitis-positive children whose language was age-appropriate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Medical profile of the language-delayed child: otitis-prone versus otitis-free. 358 81
Homocystinuria commonly affects the central nervous system (CNS), primarily as
mental retardation
, seizures, and stroke. Case reports have long suggested a predisposition to schizophrenia, but no careful study of predisposition to
psychiatric illness
has been performed. Accordingly, we evaluated 63 persons with homocystinuria due to cystathionine beta-synthase deficiency for psychiatric disturbance, intelligence, evidence of other CNS problems, and responsiveness to vitamin B6. The overall rate of clinically significant psychiatric disorders was 51%, predominated by four diagnostic categories: episodic depression (10%), chronic disorders of behavior (17%), chronic obsessive-compulsive disorder (5%), and personality disorders (19%). The average IQ was 80 +/- 27 (1 SD); and an IQ of less than or equal to 79 was two-thirds more common among vitamin B6-nonresponsive patients compared to vitamin B6-responsive patients. Aggressive behavior and other disorders of conduct were particularly common among patients with
mental retardation
and among vitamin B6-nonresponsive patients.
...
PMID:Psychiatric manifestations of homocystinuria due to cystathionine beta-synthase deficiency: prevalence, natural history, and relationship to neurologic impairment and vitamin B6-responsiveness. 359 41
The neonatal health and family situation of infants admitted for institutional care were evaluated retrospectively. Based on the criteria for admission they were classified into four groups: handicapped infants; infants of mothers with
psychiatric illness
or
mental retardation
; infants of alcoholic or drug-addicted mothers; and infants of mothers with various social dysfunctions. Mentally disturbed and addicted mothers were to a large extent multiparae. One-fourth of them already had children in foster care. The mentally disturbed mothers had a raised frequency of pregnancy and delivery complications. Compared to the general population, the gestational age and birth weight were significantly lower in all groups, and the number of preterm babies was twice as high. The majority of infants at risk for parental failure due to mental disturbance or addiction can be identified in the maternity ward. Deficient maternal behaviour in the maternity ward and the occurrence of previous children in foster care are important risk factors in predicting maternal incapability for parenting.
...
PMID:Early identification of infants at risk for institutional care. 363 88
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