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130,125 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Nineteen rhesus monkeys between the ages of 5.9 and 8.5 months were separated from their mothers in five different studies. While in two of the studies, data indicated behavioral responses roughly parallel to Bowlby's protest-despair response to maternal separations, data across all five studies were sufficiently variable to bring this technique into serious question as a reliable and predictable animal model for neurobiologic and rehabilitative studies.
Arch Gen Psychiatry 1976 Jun
PMID:Mother-infant separation in rhesus monkeys as a model of human depression. A reconsideration. 82 Mar 7

Regression as a potentially adaptive psychological response is used as a conceptual model to understand a variety of behaviors seen in beginning psychiatric residents on an inpatient service. The behaviors, discussed and illustrated with brief examples, are (1) competition and identification, (2) sexuality, (3) aggression, (4) depression and despair, (5) dependency, and (6) fusion with patients. Factors on an inpatient service that foster regressive behavior in new residents are discussed, and some of the potential resolutions of the behavoirs are proposed. Regression is seen as an adaptive experience for most residents; with appropriate supervisory intervention, it can foster cognitive development.
Arch Gen Psychiatry 1976 Oct
PMID:Regression in the service of residency education. 97 Oct 37

Verbal expressions and nonverbal indicators of suicidal intent have been frequently regarded as pleas for rescue and help. We investigated the clinical and empirical significance of verbalizations of suicidal ideas, putting one's affairs in order, and previous suicide attempts as forms of "communication of suicidal intent." The patient sample consisted of 211 suicide attempters: 71 "communicators" and 140 "noncommunicators." The results indicated the following: (1) there is no clear evidence that verbal communication, final acts, and previous suicide attempts are justifiably labeled together as ways of communicating suicidal intent; (2) prior verbalization of suicidal ideation or intent bears little relationship to the extent of the wish to die experienced at the time of the suicide attempt; and (3) "talking" or "not talking" about suicidal plans may be a manifestation of personal style rather than an index of despair or hidden motives.
Arch Gen Psychiatry 1976 Feb
PMID:The communication of suicidal intent. A reexamination. 125 96

Much has been written about social worker/general-practitioner collaboration, particularly about conflict of roles, differing functions, avenues of accountability, and problems of distributing scarce resources.We suggest that if the two professions are to work more comfortably together, then it is imperative that both also share the despair, hopelessness, anxiety, and anger that are the occupational hazards of each. We suggest ways in which doctors and social workers can look at the pain their patients are suffering to the benefit of the patient and their own working relationship.
J R Coll Gen Pract 1976 Feb
PMID:Social work and general practice. A report of a three-year attachment. 125 54

There is an increase in suicidal behaviour in the western world providing a major challenge to health care providers. There is an increase in the number of suicides among elderly people in Europe. The problem of suicides among elderly people is in itself a social problem, not solely a medical one. The general practitioner may be the only source of social contact for the elderly. Elderly individuals often present their problems to doctors as somatic complaints; these complaints must not be taken at face value but understood as expressions of psychosocial and social distress. The rise in suicide rates among young people is also alarming. The warning signs of escalating distress in adolescents are known and a treatment programme coordinating medical initiatives, such that recidivism of suicidal behaviour in adolescents is reduced, is necessary. The general practitioner is urged to sense when the problem presented by the individual stems from a source which is predominantly social, and to suggest an appropriate solution which may entail a family intervention. The general practitioner is in the front line of treatment and he or she may be better advised to treat both the social situation and the individual person in cases of attempted suicide. Medical initiatives must incorporate aspects of social medicine whereby community solutions are found for the management of individual distress. Social disruption, isolation, conflict and neglect are the doors to the house of despair. While medicine must respond to those who enter that house, it is the social level at which we must be the architects of change. People will die.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Br J Gen Pract 1992 Nov
PMID:Suicidal behaviour: a continuing cause for concern. 147 97

The central action of oxaprotiline (OXA) enantiomers, administered in a single dose, was studied in rats and mice. (+)-OXA and (-)-OXA attenuated reserpine- and apomorphine-induced hypothermia [(+)-OXA in a more potent manner] in mice and reduced the immobility time in the behavioural despair test in rats. Both OXA enantiomers inhibited locomotor activity in mice and rats, and enhanced and prolonged amphetamine- and apomorphine-induced stereotypy in rats. (-)-OXA potentiated the amphetamine hyperactivity in rats, but not in mice. Nomifensine hyperactivity in rats was unaffected by either enantiomer, and locomotor hypoactivity induced by low doses of apomorphine was also unchanged, as was L-DOPA-induced locomotor hyperactivity in mice. Apomorphine-induced climbing in mice was attenuated by (+)-OXA. Clonidine locomotor hypoactivity and hypothermia were unchanged, and clonidine-induced aggressiveness was attenuated by (+)-OXA. Neither OXA enantiomer affected the action of oxotremorine. In some tests the effect of OXA was stronger at 3 h than at 1 h after administration. The above results indicate that both OXA enantiomers--in particular (-)-OXA--increase some dopaminergic behavioural effects in rats.
J Neural Transm Gen Sect 1990
PMID:Some central pharmacological effects of (+)- and (-)-oxaprotiline. 231 15

This explorative study compared the patients', doctors', and nurses' views regarding their attribution of reasons for attempting suicide and the patients' emotional state immediately preceding their suicide attempts. A sample of 30 out of 94 consecutive patients seen in the emergency room of University Hospital were examined shortly after they had attempted suicide. Immediately after the routine clinical interview, conducted by a psychiatric resident and a nurse, patients filled in a questionnaire giving 14 possible reasons for attempting suicide as well as 8 feelings characterizing the emotional state preceding the suicide attempt. In the meantime, and without prior discussion of the case, the resident and the nurse independently completed the same questionnaire. In addition, sociodemographic and clinical data were obtained. Intrapersonal reasons such as to get relief from a terrible state of mind or from an unbearable situation were most frequently chosen by patients, nurses, and doctors alike. The most striking difference was found for "loss of control": this item was chosen significantly more often by patients than by nurses and doctors. Accordingly, patients reported significantly more often feelings of anxiety/panic and emptiness (mental vacuum), whereas feelings of despair and powerlessness/hopelessness were mentioned most frequently by nurses and doctors. Mental health professionals should bear in mind that many suicide attempters experience feelings of anxiety/panic prior to their suicidal act, and that a majority report having lost control over themselves, thus indicating a state of emotional crisis.
Gen Hosp Psychiatry
PMID:Attempted suicide. Do we understand the patients' reasons? 1006 22

Despite the plethora of research linking spirituality, religiosity and psychological well-being among people living with medical illnesses, the role of afterlife beliefs on psychological functioning has been virtually ignored. The present investigation assessed afterlife beliefs, spiritual well-being and psychological functioning at the end of life among 276 terminally ill cancer patients. Results indicated that belief in an afterlife was associated with lower levels of end-of-life despair (desire for death, hopelessness and suicidal ideation) but was not associated with levels of depression or anxiety. Further analyses indicated that when spirituality levels were controlled for, the effect of afterlife beliefs disappeared. The authors concluded that spirituality has a much more powerful effect on psychological functioning than beliefs held about an afterlife. Treatment implications are discussed.
Gen Hosp Psychiatry
PMID:Belief in an afterlife, spiritual well-being and end-of-life despair in patients with advanced cancer. 1556 16