Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis
January 2008
Depression is common in COPD patients. Around 40% are affected by severe depressive symptoms or clinical depression. It is not easy to diagnose depression in COPD patients because of overlapping symptoms between COPD and depression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Few studies have investigated differences between subjective and externally assessed quality of life in individuals with a severe mental illness. In a sample of 387 patients with schizophrenia living in the community the present study investigated the association between subjective and interviewer-rated quality of life, clinical and sociodemographic factors related to the two assessments, and if discrepancies in the assessments were related to any clinical or social features of the patients.
Method: The study was a Nordic multicentre study with a cross-sectional design.
A review of the literature revealed high comorbidity of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and states of anxiety and depression, indicative of excess, psychiatric morbidity in COPD. The existing studies point to a prevalence of clinical significant symptoms of depression and anxiety amounting to around 50%. The prevalence of panic disorder and major depression in COPD patients is correspondingly markedly increased compared to the general population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To estimate the validity of the Hamilton Depression Scale (HDS) in a population of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Methods: Forty-nine patients with moderate to severe COPD were examined using the ICD-10 criteria for depression. The mean age of the patients was 71 years and 33 (64%) were women.
Background: In a Nordic multi-centre study investigating the life and care situation of persons with schizophrenia living in the community, factors explaining use of health and social services were examined.
Method: Four hundred and eighteen individuals with schizophrenia from 10 sites were interviewed about their contact with different services (support functions within and outside the mental health services, general practitioners (GPs), physicians in the mental health, psychotherapy, day-care and inpatient treatment), psychopathology, social network and needs for care.
Results: Physicians and support contacts within the mental health system were most used and GPs and psychotherapy least.
The purpose of the study was to compare patient and staff perceptions of the social climate in a psychiatric department, in order to investigate to what extent the two groups agree in their view of the ward milieu. Ninety-six patients and 66 staff members answered the Ward Atmosphere Scale (WAS) questionnaire, comprising a 100-item "real-form" concerning the ward atmosphere as it is actually perceived and a 100-item "ideal-form" concerning the atmosphere in an imagined "best of all" ward. Staff scores were significantly higher than patient scores on the WAS-R subscales Involvement, Spontaneity, Practical orientation, Personal problems orientation and Program clarity, and on the WAS-I subscales Spontaneity, Practical orientation, and Anger and aggression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relationship between needs for care and support and subjective quality of life was investigated in a cross-sectional multi-center study including 418 individuals with schizophrenia from 10 centers in Nordic countries. Needs in 22 domains were investigated by interviews with key workers and their patients using the Camberwell Assessment of Need scale, and quality of life by the Lancashire Quality of Life Profile. The results showed that key workers rated slightly more needs than patients.
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