4 results match your criteria: "University of Gunma Faculty of Medicine[Affiliation]"
Psychiatry Res
August 2002
Department of Neuropsychiatry, University of Gunma Faculty of Medicine, Maebashi, Japan.
The Anorectic Behavior Observation Scale (ABOS) is a questionnaire developed to obtain information from relatives about behaviors and attitudes of patients with eating disorders. The original report of the ABOS revealed three factors. This is the first study to confirm the factor structure by use of confirmatory analyses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychopathology
July 2002
Department of Neuropsychiatry, University of Gunma Faculty of Medicine, Maebashi, Japan.
The relationship between coping styles and mental health has received considerable attention, but the state effects on coping measures in a clinical sample are not well known. This study investigated changes in scores on the Coping Inventory for Stressful Situations between two treatment phases (acute and remitted phase) in 49 outpatients with major depression or anxiety disorders. Task-oriented coping changed significantly between the treatment phases in both depressive and anxious patients, as analyzed by two-way multivariate analysis of variance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCompr Psychiatry
June 2001
Department of Neuropsychiatry, University of Gunma Faculty of Medicine, 3-39-22 Showa-cho, Maebashi, Gunma 371-8511, Japan.
Psychosocial variables such as expressed emotion (EE) have prognostic significance, and family psychoeducation has been developed to aid in the treatment of various psychiatric disorders. This study reports relationships among EE, family factors, and symptoms observed while conducting multifamily psychoeducation for eating disorders. Group sessions were held once a month for the relatives of patients with DSM-IV eating disorders, and the group met for five sessions that included both education and problem-solving.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatry Clin Neurosci
April 2000
Department of Psychiatry, Fujita Health University School of Medicine, University of Gunma Faculty of Medicine, Toyoake City, Aichi, Japan.
This study explores whether personality is mediating the effects of adverse parenting on having had a lifetime history of major depressive disorder and whether personality dimensions, related to the development of lifetime depression, are disposed by adverse parenting in cross-sectional data derived from an epidemiological sample of volunteer workers. Of 447 individuals who were asked to complete the Munich Personality Test (MPT), the Parental Bonding Instrument (PBI) and the Inventory to Diagnose Depression Lifetime version (IDDL), 322 subjects were included in the analyses (150 male and 172 female; and 38 were diagnosed as having had a history of depression). Comparisons in fit between logistic regression models revealed that a combination of frustration tolerance and rigidity among personality dimensions, as measured by the MPT, and maternal care among the PBI scales were most primary in predicting a lifetime history of depression.
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