64 results match your criteria: "Glenside Hospital[Affiliation]"

This study investigated gender differences in the correlates of actual and perceived body weight in a sample of young adults, as opposed to the college students usually sampled. Although women were significantly less overweight than men on an objective index of weight (the Body Mass Index). they perceived themselves to be significantly more overweight.

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Clinical and legal data were collected on 1265 schizophrenic patients remanded to a maximum security hospital, for psychiatric evaluation of fitness to stand trial. Schizophrenics accounted for over half of the remand population. When compared to the nonschizophrenic group, they had more previous admissions to the Forensic Psychiatric Institute and the Provincial Mental Hospital.

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The study was carried out by the same research team in two metropolitan hospitals, one in Greece (N = 60) and one in Australia (N = 56). Subjects comprised patients consecutively admitted with a DSM-III-R diagnosis of depressive disorder, all of whom completed questionnaire measures of depression, anxiety and somatic symptoms. Clinical concepts and practices in the two hospitals were very similar.

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Electroconvulsive therapy in a psychiatric intensive care unit.

Aust N Z J Psychiatry

June 1994

Dibden Research Unit, Glenside Hospital, Eastwood, South Australia.

This study reviewed all patients (N = 37) treated with ECT in a psychiatric intensive care unit during 1989-91. Diagnoses were: psychotic depression (8); bipolar disorder, manic phase (13); schizoaffective disorder (14); and schizophrenia (2). All patients were very severely disturbed and had failed to respond to medication given at highest levels judged to be safe, usually over 3-4 weeks.

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Objective: The authors examined associations between patient-related characteristics and assaultiveness on six different psychiatric wards to determine 1) the relative contributions of demographic, disorder-related, and diagnostic variables to prediction of assaultiveness and 2) how ward composition and type of victim affect prediction of assaultiveness.

Method: Hospital records of 1,025 inpatients residing in psychiatric wards within a 6-month time frame were reviewed for evidence of assaultiveness. Data on all 260 assaultive patients and a sample of 136 of the nonassaultive patients were analyzed with multiple regression to predict assaultiveness scores for each ward and each victim category.

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Phobic reactions of mothers to their own babies.

Aust N Z J Psychiatry

December 1992

Glenside Hospital, South Australia.

A systematic review was carried out of all patients admitted to a specialised mother-baby unit who had significant phobic avoidance of their own infants. Demographic and diagnostic information on this group showed phobic avoidance to be common and associated with a range of psychiatric illnesses. There was a trend towards association with relatively prolonged admission.

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Assaults by patients: the experience and attitudes of psychiatric hospital nurses.

Aust N Z J Psychiatry

December 1992

Dibden Research Unit, Glenside Hospital, Eastwood, South Australia.

Four hundred and twenty-five nurses working in a 420 bed metropolitan psychiatric hospital were asked to complete a questionnaire about their experience of physical assault by patients and their attitude toward the problem. 61% returned the questionnaire. The overall mean annual rate of assault per nurse was 2.

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Is it dementia?

Aust Fam Physician

December 1992

Psychogeriatric Unit, Glenside Hospital.

The recognition of early dementia remains a difficult task, calling on the clinician's alertness to subtle clues, skillful assessment and selective use of investigations. This approach may lead to earlier diagnosis, which can reduce carer stress, avoid unnecessary treatments and allow planning and management to begin. The diagnosis of dementia is not an end but the beginning of a partnership in which the general practitioner can greatly assist by adopting a caring and supportive role, while managing practical problems as they arise.

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Quality of life after gastric bypass for morbid obesity.

Int J Obes

August 1991

Dibden Research Unit, Glenside Hospital, Eastwood, SA, Australia.

One year after gastric restriction surgery, 70 per cent of 118 women completed a questionnaire about lifestyle and eating behaviour changes. Mean weight loss was 35.4 kg.

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In 1979 a Guardianship Board assumed responsibility in South Australia for the welfare of those mentally ill or handicapped people unable to look after their own health or safety, or to manage their own affairs. This study examines the attitudes to guardianship and involuntary treatment of 79 patients referred to the Board from a psychiatric hospital, all of whom were under guardianship at the time of the study. Forty-seven of their relatives took part in the project, which included measures of patients' psychiatric symptoms and relatives' punitiveness.

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This study is based on 18 patients admitted to a psychiatric hospital with a DSM-III-R diagnosis of schizophrenia who currently were living with one or both parents. Patients and parents completed several questionnaire, including the Parental Bonding Index (PBI), the Family Environment Scale (FES), the Hostility and Direction of Hostility Questionnaire (HDHQ), and the Brief Symptoms Inventory. Observer ratings of patients' symptoms also were made.

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Associations between the frequency of medical visits and psychological disturbance were explored using chronic low back pain patients from a back education class. Psychometric measures included the illness Behaviour Questionnaire (IBQ), somatic problems, and current mood. Males and females responded similarly on all psychological measures.

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Scores on self-report questionnaire measures of hostility, psychiatric symptoms, marital dissatisfaction, and assertion discomfort/behaviour were compared for male (n = 26) and female (n = 25) patients with essential hypertension and their spouses, and matched normotensive controls. Correlations and factor analysis revealed clinically meaningful associations between elevated psychiatric symptoms, hostility, and assertive behaviour. These differed for male and female patients, especially regarding assertive behaviour.

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Morbid obesity: effects on the marital system of weight loss after gastric restriction.

Psychother Psychosom

February 1992

Dibden Research Unit, Glenside Hospital, Eastwood, Australia.

Eighty morbidly obese married women and 69 of their husbands completed a self-report measure of personal and marital adjustment before the women proceeded to gastric restriction surgery. Fifty-five women and 41 husbands repeated the measure 12 months after surgery, at which time the women had lost a mean of 35.4 kg.

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This study evaluated the naturally occurring behaviour of psychiatric patients in an acute psychiatric setting. Direct behavioural observations were carried out to determine the amount of time patients spent in interaction, with whom they interacted, and the nature of the interaction. Also examined were each respondent group's type and rate of interactive behavior.

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This study examined the personal and marital adjustment of husbands before and one year after their wives had gastric restriction surgery for morbid obesity. Seventy-five married women and their husbands were assessed by clinical interview and self-report questionnaires before surgery. Forty-three husbands (57 per cent) returned questionnaires at the 12 month follow-up, and in 36 cases both partners did so.

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Obsessive-compulsive disorder: an exploration of some unresolved clinical issues.

Aust N Z J Psychiatry

December 1990

Dibden Research Unit, Glenside Hospital, Eastwood, South Australia.

The study data were obtained from a questionnaire survey of a South Australian community support group for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). The response rate was 47%, yielding 81 questionnaire sets completed by members who, on the basis of their questionnaire responses, were judged to meet DSM-III-R criteria for OCD. The clinical and demographic characteristics of the respondents were very similar to those of previously reported clinical populations.

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Persistent auditory hallucinations and their relationship to delusions and mood.

J Nerv Ment Dis

April 1990

Rehabilitation Services, Glenside Hospital, Eastwood, South Australia.

Twelve patients who met DSM-III-R criteria for schizophrenia and had persistent auditory hallucinations completed a diary three times daily for 2 to 3 weeks. Using 5-point equal interval rating scales, nearly all patients were able to record consistently the nature of their hallucinations, the intensity of their delusional beliefs, and the mood and clarity of their thinking. For at least half the patients, there was a statistically significant relationship between the loudness and intrusiveness of hallucinations and the intensity of delusional beliefs; the more intrusive and distressing were the hallucinations, the more anxious and depressed were the patients.

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The aim of the study was to see whether adults who had been sexually abused in childhood were vulnerable to physical symptoms and therefore investigation and intervention. The case histories of seven patients who were aged 22-39, were under the care of three consultant psychiatrists, had experienced childhood sexual abuse, and had a history of medical or surgical intervention were surveyed. The patients had had a mean of 18 contacts with non-psychiatric consultant teams and a mean of eight operations, with a high rate (66-70%) of normal findings.

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Before gastric restriction, 118 morbidly obese women were psychiatrically assessed by clinical interview and self-report questionnaire. One year after surgery, 71 repeated the questionnaires. Weight was assessed at yearly intervals until the four year follow-up (n = 91).

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The use of seclusion within a psychiatric intensive care unit in a South Australian metropolitan mental hospital was documented over a ten week period. The seclusion rate within the unit was 32% of all admissions and 34% of new admissions. The overall seclusion rate for the hospital was 5.

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