Undergraduate medical students' attitudes and beliefs toward mental illnesses are a crucial phenomenon as these students will be care providers of the future. The current study aimed to analyze whether the psychiatry clerkship/internship affects these students' level of knowledge about schizophrenia as well as their attitudes and beliefs toward schizophrenia and other mental illnesses. A total of 158 medical students, 92 in their fifth year and 66 in their sixth year, were included in the study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: In comparison with the general population, several studies have reported higher anxiety and depression rates not only in children with allergic diseases but also in their parents. We aimed to evaluate the mental health of children and their mothers affecting quality of life (QoL) in children with allergic diseases, and to compare anxiety and depression in these patients and their mothers with the general population.
Methods: One hundred and sixty-eight patients aged 8-18 years diagnosed with an allergic disease who visited our outpatient clinic and a control group of 61 children who did not have any chronic or allergic diseases were included in the study.
Objective: One of the METHODS used to assess autonomic nervous system dysfunction in the etiology of panic disorder (PD) is heart rate variability (HRV). HRV is controlled by the sympathetic and parasympathetic (vagal) branches of the autonomic nervous system and reflects the capacity of autonomic stimulation by the parasympathetic system. The aim of this study was to evaluate heart rate variability (HRV) time domain parameters based on twenty four hour holter ECG analysis among drug-naive patients with panic disorder (PD) without any other medical and psychiatric comorbidity.
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