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1.
Subst Abuse Rehabil ; 15: 31-42, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38567036

ABSTRACT

Background: Substance use disorders (SUD) are prevalent disorders worldwide. Among other associated health problems, patients with SUD are at an increased risk of dying of suicide, with females displaying an even higher risk than males. Therefore, the aim of this study was to conduct a gender-sensitive evaluation of changes in suicidal ideation during multimodal inpatient treatment at a hospital facility specialized in treating addiction. Methods: A total of 694 patients (68.2% male) completed routine assessment including suicidal ideation, abstinence confidence, impulsivity, emotion regulation, self-efficacy and autonomy and joy both before (T1) and at the end (T2) of treatment. Mean changes were evaluated with repeated measures MANOVAs. Results: Before treatment, a total of n=127 (18.3%) of the respondents reported suicidal ideation, which was reduced to n=72 (10.4%) by the end of treatment. Among female patients, the change in reported suicidal ideation compared from T1 to T2 (21.7% vs 7.7%) was significantly higher than among male patients (T1: 16.7%%, T2: 11.6%; p=0.040). Generally, females reported worse symptoms scores and slightly higher numbers of suicidal thoughts at baseline (effect sizes ranging from η²=.008 - 0.044). While both genders significantly profited from the treatment, female patients generally showed larger improvements than male. Discussion: Our study underscores the beneficial effect of addiction-specialized inpatient treatment on suicidal ideation. Additionally, we found a substantial gender effect: while female patients generally were more distressed before treatment, they also reported higher symptom reduction during the treatment. This result highlights the need to perform more gender-sensitive research and develop more gender-sensitive treatment programs.

2.
J Behav Addict ; 12(1): 159-167, 2023 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36790830

ABSTRACT

Objective: According to ICD-11 gaming disorder is currently defined as a behavioral addiction. While our understanding of crucial aspects of this new condition including other subtypes of internet use disorders is growing, less is known about treatment strategies and their effectiveness. Particularly, dimensions of life satisfaction and their meaning for internet use disorders are poorly investigated. The aim of this study was addressing the role of life satisfaction dimensions in a randomized controlled trial. We examined life satisfaction as an additional treatment outcome and investigated in how far life satisfaction is predictive for symptom reduction and related to personality traits. Methods: A multicenter randomized controlled trial with three measure points (baseline, post-treatment, 6-month follow-up) was conducted based on N = 143 patients aged 17 and above meeting diagnostic criteria for internet use disorders. A cognitive-behavioral disorder specific intervention was applied in n = 72 and compared to a wait list control (n = 71). Endpoints included symptoms of internet use disorders, psychosocial functioning, and life satisfaction. Personality traits were assessed as moderating factors. Results: Life satisfaction (η2 = 0.106) and health satisfaction (η2 = 0.173) significantly increased in the intervention group with large effect sizes. Decreasing symptoms of internet use disorders at follow-up were predicted by life satisfaction at post-treatment (ß = -0.51) with extraversion (B = 1.606) and openness (B = 2.069) moderating this association. Conclusion: Life satisfaction yields additional value as a secondary treatment outcome in internet use disorders and can be therapeutically addressed in order to stabilize treatment effects in the long run. Our study indicates that existing treatment strategies might benefit from explicitly addressing and enhancing psychosocial resources in order to prevent relapses in patients.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Addictive , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Humans , Internet Use , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Treatment Outcome , Behavior, Addictive/therapy , Personal Satisfaction , Internet
3.
JAMA Psychiatry ; 76(10): 1018-1025, 2019 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31290948

ABSTRACT

Importance: Internet and computer game addiction represent a growing mental health concern, acknowledged by the World Health Organization. Objective: To determine whether manualized cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), using short-term treatment for internet and computer game addiction (STICA), is efficient in individuals experiencing internet and computer game addiction. Design, Setting, and Participants: A multicenter randomized clinical trial was conducted in 4 outpatient clinics in Germany and Austria from January 24, 2012, to June 14, 2017, including follow-ups. Blinded measurements were conducted. A consecutive sample of 143 men was randomized to the treatment group (STICA; n = 72) or wait-list control (WLC) group (n = 71). Main inclusion criteria were male sex and internet addiction as the primary diagnosis. The STICA group had an additional 6-month follow-up (n = 36). Data were analyzed from November 2018 to March 2019. Interventions: The manualized CBT program aimed to recover functional internet use. The program consisted of 15 weekly group and up to 8 two-week individual sessions. Main Outcomes and Measures: The predefined primary outcome was the Assessment of Internet and Computer Game Addiction Self-report (AICA-S). Secondary outcomes were self-reported internet addiction symptoms, time spent online on weekdays, psychosocial functioning, and depression. Results: A total of 143 men (mean [SD] age, 26.2 [7.8] years) were analyzed based on intent-to-treat analyses. Of these participants, 50 of 72 men (69.4%) in the STICA group showed remission vs 17 of 71 men (23.9%) in the WLC group. In logistic regression analysis, remission in the STICA vs WLC group was higher (odds ratio, 10.10; 95% CI, 3.69-27.65), taking into account internet addiction baseline severity, comorbidity, treatment center, and age. Compared with the WLC groups, effect sizes at treatment termination of STICA were d = 1.19 for AICA-S, d = 0.88 for time spent online on weekdays, d = 0.64 for psychosocial functioning, and d = 0.67 for depression. Fourteen adverse events and 8 serious adverse events occurred. A causal relationship with treatment was considered likely in 2 AEs, one in each group. Conclusions and Relevance: Short-term treatment for internet and computer game addiction is a promising, manualized, short-term CBT for a broad range of internet addictions in multiple treatment centers. Further trials investigating the long-term efficacy of STICA and addressing specific groups and subgroups compared with active control conditions are required. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01434589.


Subject(s)
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Internet Addiction Disorder/therapy , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Video Games , Adolescent , Adult , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Psychotherapy, Brief , Remission Induction , Young Adult
4.
Asia Pac Psychiatry ; 11(2): e12366, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31199084

ABSTRACT

Health is a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity. The multifaceted intertwined nature of optimal health, mental health, and well-being requires operational, sustainable interdisciplinary partnerships in order to improve personal and global well-being and happiness. The initial step must be the assessment of the nature and magnitude of local problems in the global context. The WHO annual reports may be an adequate departure point as they can demonstrate the global nature of stressful situations and their association with physical and mental stress-related disorders. Therein, mental health professionals should spearhead change and progress. Attitudes need to be pro-active and partnerships are essential. Pertinent data should be evaluated by local experts who will determine the needs and how best to face them and achieve solutions. Hopefully, common regional denominators will lead to the formation of Regional Interdisciplinary Collaborative Alliances (RICAs) who will share needed resources and focus particularly on vulnerable populations. The RICAs would be supported by experts and technological facilities located in developed economy centers. The long-term goal is to turn the concept of pursuit of happiness into a well-perceived reality.


Subject(s)
Global Health , Intersectoral Collaboration , Mental Health , Humans
5.
Acta Derm Venereol ; 96(217): 14-7, 2016 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27282846

ABSTRACT

Human-based medicine (HbM), a form of psychiatry that focuses not only on fragments and constructs but on the whole person, no longer finds its theoretical basis in the positivism of the modern era, but rather owes its central maxims to the post-modernist ideal that ultimate truths or objectivity in identifying the final cause of illness remain hidden from us for theoretical reasons alone. Evidence-based medicine (EbM) and HbM are thus not mutually exclusive opposites; rather, despite superficial differences in methods of diagnosis and treatment, EbM must be integrated into HbM as an indispensable component of the latter. Probably the most important difference between EbM and HbM lies in the aims and methods of treatment. In HbM the goal is no longer simply to make illnesses disappear but rather to allow the patient to return to a life that is as autonomous and happy as possible. The human being with all his or her potential and limitations once again becomes the measure of all things. This also implies, however, that the multidimensional diagnostics of HbM are oriented not only towards symptoms, pathogenesis, process and understanding but also to a greater degree towards the patient's resources. Treatment options and forms of therapy do not put the disease construct at the centre of the diagnostic and therapeutic interest, but have as their primary aim the reopening of the possibility of a largely autonomous and joyful life for the patient.


Subject(s)
Dermatology , Evidence-Based Medicine , Patient-Centered Care , Psychosomatic Medicine , Skin Diseases/psychology , Skin Diseases/therapy , Disease Management , Humans
7.
Br J Psychiatry ; 202(4): 306, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23671926
8.
Trials ; 13: 43, 2012 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22540330

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the last few years, excessive internet use and computer gaming have increased dramatically. Salience, mood modification, tolerance, withdrawal symptoms, conflict, and relapse have been defined as diagnostic criteria for internet addiction (IA) and computer addiction (CA) in the scientific community. Despite a growing number of individuals seeking help, there are no specific treatments of established efficacy. METHODS/DESIGN: This clinical trial aims to determine the effect of the disorder-specific manualized short-term treatment of IA/CA (STICA). The cognitive behavioural treatment combines individual and group interventions with a total duration of 4 months. Patients will be randomly assigned to STICA treatment or to a wait list control group. Reliable and valid measures of IA/CA and co-morbid mental symptoms (for example social anxiety, depression) will be assessed prior to the beginning, in the middle, at the end, and 6 months after completion of treatment. DISCUSSION: A treatment of IA/CA will establish efficacy and is desperately needed. As this is the first trial to determine efficacy of a disorder specific treatment, a wait list control group will be implemented. Pros and cons of the design were discussed. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials (NCT01434589).


Subject(s)
Attitude to Computers , Behavior, Addictive/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Internet , Psychotherapy, Group , Research Design , Video Games/psychology , Affect , Anxiety/etiology , Anxiety/psychology , Anxiety/therapy , Behavior, Addictive/diagnosis , Behavior, Addictive/etiology , Behavior, Addictive/psychology , Depression/etiology , Depression/psychology , Depression/therapy , Germany , Humans , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome
9.
Crit Rev Oncol Hematol ; 84 Suppl 2: S17-24, 2012 Dec 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23347414

ABSTRACT

Prognosis is central to clinical medical practice. In oncology, an accurate prognosis is a key requirement for making the right therapeutical decisions. Prognosis is even more important when medicine extends its predictive capacities using genetic data. Based on statistics and probability, indices, survival curves and prognostic scores are established. Intending to be an objective and neutral description of reality, this kind of prognosis and the corresponding practices of medical care however carry and imply a particular conception of human life and destiny. Medical Humanities can help to develop reflexivity regarding prognostic practices. This paper intends to clarify which particular assumptions are implied in the current way of doing prognosis in medicine, and highlights its advantages and limitations. Prognosis not only describes but also affects present and future patient experience. An alternative view on the task of prognosis is then developed with a broader understanding of the prognostic act. Based on a phenomenology of time, distinguishing between a quantitative chronological understanding of time (chronos) and an experienced qualitative time (kairos), the article contrasts a conception of the prognosis as forecast ('probabilistic prognosis') with a conception of prognosis as perspective ('hermeneutic prognosis'). In probabilistic prognosis, the future is seen as something that can be read from presently accessible signs, as something that we can anticipate within ranges of uncertainty. The patient's lifetime, which has been open toward the future, becomes closed through this kind of prognosis. In a hermeneutic conception of prognosis as a perspective on the future, which is thought of as an open space of possibilities, the future as not-yet is what can be envisioned without being known. A hermeneutic approach emphasizes the meanings of the experience of illness for the patient, helps to improve the practice of prognosis today, and offers caregivers and patients an opportunity for living better.


Subject(s)
Humanities , Medical Oncology/methods , Neoplasms/diagnosis , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Medical Oncology/standards , Neoplasms/genetics , Prognosis
10.
World J Biol Psychiatry ; 11(7): 844-51, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20863172

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The present publication sets out to evaluate the position of psychopathology in the 21st century and should also serve as a basis for defining the framework for the future tasks of the WFSBP Task Force. METHODS: Review of publications on the various approaches of psychopathology in general and of different tasks, theories and tools of psychopathology approaches in particular. RESULTS: The main tasks of psychopathology are, to record and describe experiential and behavioral abnormalities in their intersubjective context, to explain their origin from an objective scientific perspective, and to attempt to understand them from the subjective perspective of the patient. In order to provide stable fundaments for the work in clinical and scientific psychiatry all three components are indispensable. CONCLUSIONS: The future of psychiatry hence lies in the hands of a type of psychopathology that we will call Integrative Psychopathology. The main tasks of psychopathology can only be pursued in close cooperation with other branches of science interested in studying psychiatric issues. Whereas contemporary psychopathology must lay the foundations for that cooperation, Integrative Psychopathology must be complemented by further advancements in Theoretical Psychopathology, so as to enable conceptual new developments, which can then be fruitful for cooperative research and psychiatric clinical practice.


Subject(s)
Advisory Committees , Psychopathology/trends , Cooperative Behavior , Forecasting , Humans , Integrative Medicine/trends , Interdisciplinary Communication , Neurosciences/trends , Psychiatry/trends
11.
Curr Opin Psychiatry ; 23(6): 530-5, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20689439

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: One of the main causes of nonadherence is that the goals and forms of addiction treatment are not sufficiently attractive. To study the attractiveness of treatment in clinical practice inevitably means to enter the field of social aesthetics. The call for the implementation of social aesthetics in practice results in a shift of paradigms in the treatment of patients suffering from dependence syndromes. RECENT FINDINGS: The main themes in the literature covered by the article focus on the role of social aesthetics in medicine in general, as well as on the attractiveness of addiction treatment, in particular. SUMMARY: When treatment objectives and programmes become more attractive the result will be reduced drop-out rates, and in turn an increase of treatment effectiveness. Transferring theory of social aesthetics to clinical practice, the Anton Proksch Institute's Orpheus Programme is concerned with opening up spaces and creating atmospheres in which it becomes possible for the individual addicts to realise their possibilities. The challenge in the therapeutic process is not only to recognise the significance of the disorders' pathology but also to find ways out of the imagined impossibilities by opening up new possibilities and uncovering resources of the suffering human.


Subject(s)
Esthetics/psychology , Social Desirability , Substance-Related Disorders/therapy , Activities of Daily Living/psychology , Humans , Mental Health , Personal Autonomy , Psychotherapy/methods , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology
12.
Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci ; 258 Suppl 5: 18-21, 2008 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18985289

ABSTRACT

The problem of inhomogeneous categories and the difficulty of drawing boundaries as well as individual progression of the severity of psychopathologic phenomena necessitate a change of paradigm from categorical to dimensional diagnostics. Not only pathogenetic factors but also disorder maintaining factors such as the stigmatization and the significance of the disorder for the patient must be factored into the diagnostic process to ensure therapy relevancy. In addition to this deficiency-oriented approach holistic person-centred diagnostics focuses on the integration of resources, i.e. the abilities and skills, talents and inclinations of the patient, in order to adequately help a patient to resume/live an autonomous life that is as happy as possible.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/classification , Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Patient-Centered Care , Humans , Physician-Patient Relations , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
13.
Addict Biol ; 12(2): 190-6, 2007 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17508992

ABSTRACT

The present study investigates physical health problems among patients with alcohol use disorders at alcohol treatment agencies in six European cities. The sample comprised 315 patients with a primary alcohol use disorder. Data were collected at admission to treatment using a structured research protocol, and ratings were made by a medically qualified physician subsequent to a physical examination of the patient. Physical health problems were extremely common: 79% of the sample had at least one problem, and 59% had two or more problems. Health problems were often serious, and 60% had at least one health problem that required treatment. The most common problems were gastrointestinal and liver disorders, but about a quarter of the sample had cardiovascular or neurological problems. Frequency of drinking, duration of alcohol use disorder, and severity of alcohol dependence were associated with increased physical morbidity. Current smoking status and age were also associated with poorer physical health. Older drinkers had more physical health problems although they were less severely alcohol dependent than their younger counterparts. The high prevalence of physical health problems among problem drinkers provides opportunities of screening for alcohol use disorders not only in specialist alcohol treatment services but also in other health-care settings. It is recommended that alcohol treatment agencies should provide a full routine health screen of patients at admission to treatment with provision or referral to appropriate treatment.


Subject(s)
Alcohol-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Alcoholism/epidemiology , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Alcohol-Related Disorders/rehabilitation , Alcoholism/rehabilitation , Comorbidity , Europe , Female , Health Status Indicators , Health Surveys , Humans , Male , Mass Screening , Middle Aged
14.
Wien Klin Wochenschr ; 116(21-22): 730-6, 2004 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15628643

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The attitudes of health-care professionals and medical students towards male and female homosexuality are of practical relevance and have increasingly become a topic of scientific research. Comparative investigations between medical students and other student groups have not yet been conducted. OBJECTIVES: To assess the attitudes of Austrian medical students towards homosexuality and to compare these with the attitudes of students of politics and veterinary medicine. METHODS: Students of medicine (122), politics (145), and veterinary medicine (153) completed a questionnaire consisting of validated instruments assessing anti-homosexual attitudes, items assessing knowledge on homosexual issues, and basic demographic information. RESULTS: Participants' attitudes were predominantly positive. For all instruments, two-way analyses of covariance revealed significant influences of participants' sex and study major: students of medicine and veterinary medicine held more negative attitudes than students of politics, and males were more prejudiced than females. Overall, attitudes towards male and female homosexuality were balanced, but male students of politics and veterinary medicine were more prejudiced towards male than female homosexuality. A significant influence of participants' sex (favoring females) was observed in knowledge of homosexual issues. CONCLUSIONS: Although neutrality and empathy are considered vital in the doctor-patient relationship, medical students revealed more negative attitudes than students of politics did, the latter's attitudes being similar to those of students of veterinary medicine. These findings suggest that educational and correcting interventions are required in medical training.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Homosexuality, Male/psychology , Students, Medical/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Austria , Data Collection , Education, Veterinary , Female , Humans , Male , Physician-Patient Relations , Politics , Prejudice , Students/psychology , Students, Health Occupations/psychology
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