During early adolescence, youth begin to make choices about their future. Sundberg and Tyler (1970) found differences between adolescents in the Netherlands and the United States as to their possibilities for future occupations and leisure activities. Since there have been many changes in both countries over the past twenty-five years, the present study was designed as a replication and expansion of that research. Participants were 522 14- and 15-year-olds in the Netherlands and the United States who filled out the Sundberg and Tyler questionnaire (in the original Dutch and English forms) and drew a picture of the ideal man or woman engaged in an activity. Two-way (country by gender) ANOVAs indicated that the number of occupations listed was greater for adolescents in the Netherlands than in the United States, and that girls listed more occupations than did boys, but considered fewer occupations as actual possibilities for themselves. There was an apparent increase in the number of leisure activities listed by adolescents in the Netherlands. In the U.S., the ideal person was more often drawn as being at work (44.9%) as compared with the Netherlands (20.4%). U.S. students seemed more inclined to glamorize work; popular drawings had themes which linked work and success, achievement and wealth. Dutch students seemed to be interested in quality of life; their drawings depicted sports, relaxation, attractiveness, and humor.
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PLoS One
January 2025
King's College London-Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, London, United Kingdom.
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is defined by an array of symptoms that make it challenging to understand the condition at a population level. Subtyping offers a way to unpick this phenotypic diversity for improved disorder characterisation. We aimed to identify depression subtypes longitudinally using the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology: Self-Report (IDS-SR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnesthesiology
February 2025
Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Management, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Parkville, Victoria, Australia; Department of Paediatrics, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Background: The general anaesthesia or awake-regional anaesthesia in infancy (GAS) trial demonstrated evidence that most neurodevelopmental outcomes at 2 and 5 yr of age in infants who received a single general anesthetic for elective inguinal herniorrhaphy were clinically equivalent when compared to infants who did not receive general anesthesia. More than 20% of the children in the trial had at least one subsequent anesthetic exposure after their initial surgery. Using the GAS database, this study aimed to address whether multiple (two or more) general anesthetic exposures compared to one or no general anesthetic exposure in early childhood were associated with worse neurodevelopmental outcomes at 5 yr.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Surg Oncol
January 2025
Department of Endocrine Surgery, Royal North Shore Hospital, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Background: With the current shift toward de-escalation of surgical management in low-risk papillary thyroid cancer (PTC), understanding predictors and the clinical significance of additional tumors in the contralateral lobe is important. This study investigated the histopathologic predictors of bilateral disease in low-risk PTC patients and the utility of preoperative ultrasonography in guiding completion thyroidectomy decisions.
Methods: Patients treated with total thyroidectomy (TT) for low-risk PTCs (< 4 cm) at the Endocrine Surgical Unit of the Royal North Shore Hospital, University of Sydney from 2013 to 2020 were identified from a prospectively maintained database.
Alzheimers Dement
January 2025
Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Limbic predominant age-related TDP-43 encephalopathy neuropathologic change (LATE-NC) is highly prevalent in late life and a common co-pathology with Alzheimer's disease neuropathologic change (ADNC). LATE-NC is a slowly progressive, amnestic clinical syndrome. Alternatively, when present with ADNC, LATE-NC is associated with a more rapid course.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
December 2024
Digital Cognitive Dx, Philips, Eindhoven, Netherlands.
We evaluated a digital cognitive assessment platform, Philips IntelliSpace Cognition, in a case-control study of patients diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and cognitively normal (CN) older adults. Performance on individual neuropsychological tests, cognitive -scores, and Alzheimer's disease (AD)-specific composite scores was compared between the CN and MCI groups. These groups were matched for age, sex, and education.
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