Discontinuation of Somatic Medication During Psychiatric Hospitalization

2014 ◽  
Vol 48 (11) ◽  
pp. 1415-1424 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heshu Abdullah-Koolmees ◽  
Helga Gardarsdottir ◽  
Lennart J. Stoker ◽  
Judith Vuyk ◽  
Toine C. G. Egberts ◽  
...  

Background: Psychiatric hospitalization can increase the risk of discontinuation of pharmacotherapy, which may negatively influence patients’ health. Objective: To investigate the association between psychiatric hospitalization and discontinuation of somatic medication. Methods: A retrospective crossover study was performed in patients admitted to a psychiatric hospital (index date), who had got somatic medication dispensed during the 3 months prior to hospitalization. Discontinuation of somatic medication was investigated at the following time points: index date and 3, 6, and 9 months before the index date. Relative risks (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) of discontinuing somatic medication at the index date versus the time points before the index date were estimated using Cox regression. Results: In all, 471 hospitalized patients were included in the study; 38.9% of the patients were discontinuers on the index date. RR for discontinuation of ≥1 somatic medication was 1.88 (95% CI = 1.55-2.27) at the index date compared with the other time points and highest for patients <45 years (RR = 2.83; 95% CI = 1.92-4.18). Conclusions: Psychiatric hospitalization was associated with an almost doubled risk of discontinuation of somatic medication. Future studies should address the influence of discontinuation of care on patients’ health.

Author(s):  
Emily Shultz ◽  
Rebecca Heilman ◽  
Kathleen J. Hart

While previous research has examined mainly self-reported bystander behavior during cyber-bullying, the current study explored if and how bystanders responded when presented with a cyber-bullying simulation. We hypothesized that individuals high in empathy would supportively intervene (defend the victim) most frequently. College age participants (M = 20.34, SD = 1.26, range 18-27; N = 149), viewed a simulated Facebook conversation in which negative comments were directed towards another student and were provided open-ended opportunities to be involved in the Facebook conversation (i.e., “comment” to the other fictitious characters) and explain their reasoning for their behavior (“motivators”) at two time points in the conversation (Time 1 and Time 2). Using a deductive-inductive process, we categorized participants’ comments and motivators, the frequency of these responses, and their reasons for them. While the majority of participants (91%) asserted that cyber-bullying occurred in the conversation, most participants did not comment (Time 1: 69%, Time 2: 52%). Among those who commented, the most frequently cited motivators were either to defend the victim or mediate the situation. Consistent with our hypothesis, individuals who identified with the victim had higher empathy scores than those who identified with the bullies, although this was true only for the second part of the conversation (Time 2). Empathy scores did not differ by type of response at either time period. Future studies could utilize the categories and motivators established in this study as a framework for more extensive quantitative research to more comprehensively understand the underlying reasons for low intervention rates in cyber-bullying.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (Supplement_4) ◽  
Author(s):  
E Framke ◽  
J K Sørensen ◽  
I E H Madsen ◽  
R Rugulies

Abstract Background Emotional demands concern aspects of work requiring an emotional effort of employees and have been associated with risk of depression and long-term sickness absence (LTSA) in previous studies. Associations may, however, partly be affected by reporting bias. Further, previous studies have primarily been conducted using smaller samples in selected job groups or sectors. We, therefore, examined the association between emotional demands and LTSA using a job exposure matrix (JEM) in a nationwide cohort. Methods We included all employed individuals in Denmark who were 30 to 59 years old in 2000. We assessed emotional demands at work with a JEM. JEM values were categorized into quartiles based on the distribution within each year and updated annually from 2000 to 2009. LTSA was register-based, defined as ≥ 6 weeks and assessed until 2015. Individuals with LTSA from 1998 to 2000 were excluded, yielding a sample of 1,521,352 individuals. Exposure in year t was related to outcome in year t + 1 until 2009. We estimated hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) using Cox regression adjusted for age, sex, income and ergonomic job demands. Results During 15,453,980 person-years, we identified 594,858 LTSA cases. In the fully adjusted model, individuals in the highest emotional demands quartile had a HR of 1.30 (95%CI: 1.29-1.31) compared to individuals the lowest quartile Repeating the analysis separately for women and men showed similar results. Conclusions Emotional demands at work were prospectively associated with an increased LTSA risk in this JEM based nationwide cohort study. Key messages This study found that emotional demands at work predict risk of long-term sickness absence. Future studies should focus on factors that may buffer the association between emotional demands at work and long-term sickness absence.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. e001939
Author(s):  
Francesco Franchi ◽  
Dmitry M Yaranov ◽  
Fabiana Rollini ◽  
Andrea Rivas ◽  
Jose Rivas Rios ◽  
...  

IntroductionCurrent dietary guidelines recommend limiting sugar intake for the prevention of diabetes mellitus (DM). Reduction in sugar intake may require sugar substitutes. Among these, D-allulose is a non-calorie rare monosaccharide with 70% sweetness of sucrose, which has shown anti-DM effects in Asian populations. However, there is limited data on the effects of D-allulose in other populations, including Westerners.Research design and methodsThis was a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study conducted in 30 subjects without DM. Study participants were given a standard oral (50 g) sucrose load and randomized to placebo or escalating doses of D-allulose (2.5, 5.0, 7.5, 10.0 g). Subjects crossed-over to the alternate study treatment after 7–14 days of wash out. Plasma glucose and insulin levels were measured at five time points: before and at 30, 60, 90 and 120 min after ingestion.ResultsD-allulose was associated with a dose-dependent reduction of plasma glucose at 30 min compared with placebo. In particular, glucose was significantly lower with the 7.5 g (mean difference: 11; 95% CI 3 to 19; p=0.005) and 10 g (mean difference: 12; 95% CI 4 to 20; p=0.002) doses. Although glucose was not reduced at the other time points, there was a dose-dependent reduction in glucose excursion compared with placebo, which was significant with the 10 g dose (p=0.023). Accordingly, at 30 min D-allulose was associated with a trend towards lower insulin levels compared with placebo, which was significant with the 10 g dose (mean difference: 14; 95% CI 4 to 25; p=0.006). D-allulose did not reduce insulin at any other time point, but there was a significant dose-dependent reduction in insulin excursion compared with placebo (p=0.028), which was significant with the 10 g dose (p=0.002).ConclusionsThis is the largest study assessing the effects of D-allulose in Westerners demonstrating an early dose-dependent reduction in plasma glucose and insulin levels as well as decreased postprandial glucose and insulin excursion in subjects without DM. These pilot observations set the basis for large-scale investigations to support the anti-DM effects of D-allulose.Trial registration numberNCT02714413.


Author(s):  
Kathleen B. Kerr

BACKGROUND: A number of variables have been shown to influence whether an individual who experiences an emergency psychiatric assessment is admitted to a psychiatric hospital. This study focused on the theoretical orientation of the assessing clinician as a possibly influential variable. The theoretical orientation being studied was Bowen family systems theory or Bowen theory (Bt). Overall the Bt perspective looks at the family as the primary crucible that generates symptoms but at the same time as the natural unit and the best built-in resource to deal with those symptoms. AIMS: This study examined whether the theoretical orientation of the nurse psychiatric assessor would affect her inpatient admission rate of patients seen for psychiatric evaluation in an emergency department (ED). METHOD: A clinician/researcher with extensive experience applying Bt in clinical practice worked in a Crisis Management Service providing psychiatric evaluation and disposition in a busy community hospital ED. Given Bt’s emphasis on the system rather than individual pathology, the clinician researcher hypothesized that her psychiatric hospitalization rate would be lower than the other clinical nurse specialists. A retrospective chart review analyzed 1 year of cases from all referrals that might have resulted in psychiatric hospitalizations ( n = 1,801). RESULTS: The clinician/researcher’s psychiatric hospitalization rate was significantly lower ( p = .004) than the other clinicians. CONCLUSION: An approach to psychiatric assessment in the ED applied a Bt perspective in a way that significantly reduced psychiatric hospitalizations.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Schredl ◽  
Arthur Funkhouser ◽  
Nicole Arn

Empirical studies largely support the continuity hypothesis of dreaming. The present study investigated the frequency and emotional tone of dreams of truck drivers. On the one hand, the findings of the present study partly support the continuity regarding the time spent with driving/being in the truck and driving dreams and, on the other hand, a close relationship was found between daytime mood (feelings of stress, job satisfaction) and dream emotions, i.e., different dream characteristics were affected by different aspects of daytime activity. The results, thus, indicate that it is necessary to define very clearly how this continuity is to be conceptualized. The approach of formulating a mathematical model (cf. [1]) should be adopted in future studies in order to specify the factors and their magnitude in the relationship between waking and dreaming.


1974 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 124-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Virkkunen

The purpose of this study was to clarify whether alcoholic incest offenders differ from other criminals who commit these offences. The series consisted of 45 cases of incest, of which 22 cases (48.9 per cent) gave an indication of alcoholism in the offender. The alcoholics showed more evidence of previous criminal offences, and this was especially true when considering acts of violence only. The alcoholics had also exhibited more often than the others aggressive features at home before the detection of incest. Statistically, significant differences were not arrived at as to depression, psychotic disturbances, intellectual defects, problems of jealousy, psychiatric hospitalization, and earlier sexual behaviour. The spouse had a rejective sexual attitude towards the offender in alcoholic cases more frequently than in other cases. The cause of this appeared to be mainly disgust at the abuse of alcoholic drinks and its consequences, as well as the result of a large family and/or poor living conditions. In more than half of the cases of incest in both groups actual intercourse had taken place. Generally, the relationship had, however, started by only touching sexual organs and so forth. According to the offender the victim had shown activity in one-third of the cases of alcoholics. The alcoholic offender tended to be under the influence of alcohol at least at the beginning of the relationship more often than the non-alcoholic person. Offences or an offence were reported by the victim or the offender's spouse in the cases of alcoholics more often than in the other cases; then the informer was usually an outsider. However, the victim's and the spouse's fear of the offender was one reason for concealment when the alcoholics were involved.


2015 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Camiel L.M. de Roij van Zuijdewijn ◽  
Menso J. Nubé ◽  
Piet M. ter Wee ◽  
Peter J. Blankestijn ◽  
Renée Lévesque ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: Treatment time is associated with survival in hemodialysis (HD) patients and with convection volume in hemodiafiltration (HDF) patients. High-volume HDF is associated with improved survival. Therefore, we investigated whether this survival benefit is explained by treatment time. Methods: Participants were subdivided into four groups: HD and tertiles of convection volume in HDF. Three Cox regression models were fitted to calculate hazard ratios (HRs) for mortality of HDF subgroups versus HD: (1) crude, (2) adjusted for confounders, (3) model 2 plus mean treatment time. As the only difference between the latter models is treatment time, any change in HRs is due to this variable. Results: 114/700 analyzed individuals were treated with high-volume HDF. HRs of high-volume HDF are 0.61, 0.62 and 0.64 in the three models, respectively (p values <0.05). Confidence intervals of models 2 and 3 overlap. Conclusion: The survival benefit of high-volume HDF over HD is independent of treatment time.


2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-88
Author(s):  
Dean Radin ◽  
Helané Wahbeh ◽  
Leena Michel ◽  
Arnaud Delorme

An experiment we conducted from 2012 to 2013, which had not been previously reported, was designed to explore possible psychophysical effects resulting from the interaction of a human mind with a quantum system. Participants focused their attention toward or away from the slits in a double-slit optical system to see if the interference pattern would be affected. Data were collected from 25 people in individual half-hour sessions; each person repeated the test ten times for a total of 250 planned sessions. “Sham” sessions designed to mimic the experimental sessions without observers present were run immediately before and after as controls. Based on the planned analysis, no evidence for a psychophysical effect was found. Because this experiment differed in two essential ways from similar, previously reported double-slit experiments, two exploratory analyses were developed, one based on a simple spectral analysis of the interference pattern and the other based on fringe visibility. For the experimental data, the outcome supported a pattern of results predicted by a causal psychophysical effect, with the spectral metric resulting in a 3.4 sigma effect (p = 0.0003), and the fringe visibility metric resulting in 7 of 22 fringes tested above 2.3 sigma after adjustment for type I error inflation, with one of those fringes at 4.3 sigma above chance (p = 0.00001). The same analyses applied to the sham data showed uniformly null outcomes. Other analyses exploring the potential that these results were due to mundane artifacts, such as fluctuations in temperature or vibration, showed no evidence of such influences. Future studies using the same protocols and analytical methods will be required to determine if these exploratory results are idiosyncratic or reflect a genuine psychophysical influence.


2003 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 147-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaime Aparecido Cury ◽  
Aline Soler Marques ◽  
Cíntia Pereira Machado Tabchoury ◽  
Altair Antoninha Del Bel Cury

Since dental plaque reservoirs of fluoride (F), calcium (Ca) and inorganic phosphorus (Pi) are susceptible to decreases in pH, this in situ crossover study was conducted to test the hypothesis that the low concentration of these ions in plaque, formed in the presence of sucrose, could be attributed merely to the fermentation of this sugar. Eleven volunteers wore palatal appliances containing 6 human enamel blocks during two stages. In each stage, the treatments were either 20% sucrose solution or distilled deionized water, which were dripped onto the blocks 8 times a day. After 28 days, in each stage, the dental plaque formed on two blocks was collected, the treatment was inverted and after a further 24 and 48 h, the biofilm formed was collected from the other blocks. The concentration of acid-soluble F, Ca and Pi, and the concentration of insoluble polysaccharide (IP) were determined in the dental plaque. Statistically lower concentrations of F, Ca and Pi, and a higher concentration of IP were found in the 28-day biofilm formed in the presence of sucrose than in its absence; after the treatment inversion the change in F, Ca and Pi was not statistically significant, but the IP concentration changed significantly. The hypothesis was rejected because change in concentration of F, Ca and Pi is not due to fermentation of the sucrose.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 409-409
Author(s):  
Petra Breithaupt ◽  
Barbara Meissner ◽  
Martin Zimmermann ◽  
Anja Möricke ◽  
André Schrauder ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 409 Alteration of the IKZF1 gene – encoding the transcription factor IKAROS, a key player in lymphoid development and tumor suppression – has been reported to be associated with a poor outcome in pediatric precursor B-cell ALL, especially in cases positive for the BCR-ABL1 fusion gene. In order to assess the prognostic value of IKZF1 deletions in a representative cohort of pediatric ALL patients treated on the German ALL-BFM 2000 study protocol, we screened 409 patients by applying a multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) assay covering all eight IKZF1 exons (P335-A3 ALL-IKZF1 probemix; MRC-Holland, Amsterdam, The Netherlands). In ALL-BFM 2000, risk group stratification (standard, SR; intermediate, MR; high, HR) was based on minimal residual disease (MRD) analysis at two different time points (TP) and required two MRD targets with sensitivities of ≤10−4 (Flohr et al. Leukemia 2008). SR patients were MRD-negative on treatment days 33 (TP1) and 78 (TP2). HR patients had residual disease (≥10−3) at TP2. MRD MR patients had positive MRD detection at either one and or both time points but at a level of <10−3 at TP2. Although MRD-based stratification criteria were introduced in ALL-BFM 2000, established high-risk parameters were also retained: patients with prednisone poor-response or ≥5% leukemic blasts in the bone marrow on day 33 or positivity for a t(9;22) or t(4;11) or their molecular equivalents (BCR/ABL1 or MLL/AF4 fusion RNA) were stratified into the high-risk group independent of their MRD results. First results on MRD and outcome were published earlier (Conter et al. Blood 2010). Out of the 409 patients analyzed in our study, 46 (11%) displayed a deletion in at least one of the eight IKZF1 exons. Forty-three out of the 46 cases showed heterozygous deletions, while 3 patients displayed homozygous loss of IKZF1 exons. MLPA results of 11 patients were validated with results derived from copy number/LOH analyses using Affymetrix SNP 6.0 arrays. IKZF1 deletion was significantly more common in precursor B compared to T cell ALL (13% vs. 4%, P = 0.03) and less frequent in TEL/AML1-positive ALL (3% vs. 13%, P = 0.004). Out of 11 BCR/ABL1-positive samples, only two were characterized by an IKZF1 deletion. Forty-four patients with IKZF1-deleted ALL had results of MRD analyses available for both informative time points (day 33 after induction and day 78 after consolidation). Despite a trend towards increasing incidence of IKZF1 deletion in patients with slow response, the distribution of IKZF1-deleted ALL patients over the risk groups was not significantly different from non-deleted ALL (SR: 40.9 vs. 41.9; MR: 45.5 vs. 52.3; HR: 13.6 vs. 5.7%; P = 0.153). Regarding treatment outcome, patients with an IKZF1 deletion had a significantly lower 5-year event-free survival (EFS) compared to non-deleted patients (0.78±0.06 vs. 0.86±0.02; P = 0.015). This result was due to a higher cumulative incidence of relapses in IKZF1-deleted patients (0.16±0.05 vs. 0.10±0.02; P = 0.031). In multivariate Cox regression analyses including known prognostic variables (gender, immunophenotype, WBC count at diagnosis, TEL/AML1 status, risk group criteria of ALL-BFM 2000), IKZF1 deletion conferred a risk of 2.16 (95% confidence interval 1.14 – 4.10; P = 0.018) for an event when compared to non-deleted patients. We conclude that IKZF1 deletion is an independent predictor of treatment outcome for patients enrolled on the ALL-BFM 2000 protocol and represents a candidate marker to be integrated in future algorithms for early risk stratification in pediatric ALL. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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