Psychiatric morbidity, quality of life and marital satisfaction among spouse of men with opioid dependence syndrome: A study from North India

Author(s):  
Ruchi Soni ◽  
Ritesh Upadhyay ◽  
Mahendra Jain
2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 556
Author(s):  
Ruchi Soni ◽  
Ritesh Upadhyay ◽  
Parth Singh Meena ◽  
Mahendra Jain

Background: Opioid dependence syndrome has deleterious consequences not only on addict but also on the members of family especially his spouse who is most vulnerable to develop significant psychiatric disorder given the intimate nature of their relationship. Addressing these issues will be beneficial as spouses are important source of moral support and assistance to the substance user’s quest toward abstinence.Methods: For psychiatric morbidity, 100 spouses of men with opioid dependence syndrome were evaluated. Severity of opioid dependence in the husbands was assessed using severity of opioid dependence questioner (SODQ). Quality of life and marital satisfaction was assessed using short form health survey 36 (SF 36) and marital satisfaction scale (MSS) respectively.Results: Data analysis reveals that 33% of spouses had a psychiatric disorder. Primarily mood and anxiety disorder was present in 22% and 9% of subjects respectively. Highly significant difference existed between cases and controls in terms of marital satisfaction (p = 0.0001) and quality of life (p≤0.05) indicating low marital satisfaction and poor quality of life in spouses of opioid dependent individuals.Conclusions: Psychological distress and psychiatric morbidity in spouses of opioid dependent men is high, with poor quality of marital life and marital satisfaction being low. Hence, interventions that aim at allaying their distress and improving their mental health can improve the condition of the substance user and contribute to a better outcome of substance abuse treatment.


2021 ◽  
pp. 28-29
Author(s):  
Vinay Kumar ◽  
Sunila Rathee ◽  
Sidharth Arya ◽  
Priti Singh ◽  
Rajiv Gupta

Background: Opioid and alcohol consumption is considered as an on-going stressor, not only for the individual, but for family members as well. Spouses are particularly affected given the intimate nature of their relationship and constant exposure to the behaviour of the dependent persons. Quality of life has emerged as an important treatment outcome measure for alcohol and opioid dependence whose natural course comprises of remission and relapse. Objective: To assess the quality of life, marital adjustment and among the patients of alcohol and opioid dependence syndrome. Materials and Methods: This was a cross sectional hospital based study and included 100 treatment seeking population 50 each with alcohol dependence and opioid dependence as per ICD-10 criteria. The participants were purposively selected and informed consent were taken. Research tools were Hindi version of Kansas Marital Satisfaction scale and WHOQOL-BREF. Results: The mean age of the participants were 34.87 +12.48 years. The study did not observe a signicant difference in the overall domains of quality of life. Except the overall health domain, quality of life was more in alcohol subjects as compared to opioid subjects (p < 0.05). There was a signicant difference in the marital quality of life which was lower in opioid dependence than alcohol dependence subjects. Conclusion: Improved marital adjustment are most important part of improved quality of life and its sustainability plays key role in preventing relapse and reaching to the recuperation. Effective management for the alcohol and opioid patients must include the marital intervention to improve the recovery and rehabilitation of the patients.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Archana Anandakumar Geetha ◽  
Ettappurath N. Abdul Latheef ◽  
Sreekanth Sukumarakurup ◽  
Keerankulangara Devi ◽  
Mohammad Jafferany

1995 ◽  
Vol 166 (4) ◽  
pp. 521-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Collis ◽  
Andrew Burroughs ◽  
Keith Rolles ◽  
Geoffrey Lloyd

BackgroundThis study measures psychiatric morbidity, quality of life, and cognitive function after liver transplantation.MethodWe undertook a cross-sectional study, with a longitudinal subgroup. The setting was a tertiary referral centre for liver transplantation. The subjects were 30 post-liver-transplantation patients, including 11 also interviewed before the operation. The main outcome measures were the Clinical Interview Schedule (CIS), the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ), the Nottingham Health Profile (NHP), and the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE).ResultsOf the patients, 8/30 were CIS cases, and 7/30 were GHQ cases. NHP scores were higher than a previous postal study indicated, with less impairment after than before transplant. MMSE scores were 24–30. Median GHQ was 7.0 before operation and 1.0 after operation (P = 0.03), with no significant change in CIS score.ConclusionLiver transplantation improves quality of life, but not to the level of the general population; post-transplantation patients have a prevalence of psychiatric morbidity comparable with that of general medical patients.


2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (Suppl 2) ◽  
pp. A43.2-A43
Author(s):  
Jagnoor Jagnoor ◽  
Shankar Prinja ◽  
Belinda Gabbe ◽  
Rebecca Q Ivers

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 344-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enver Turan ◽  
Hasan Kandemir ◽  
Yavuz Yeşilova ◽  
Suat Ekinci ◽  
Osman Tanrıkulu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Marta Castro ◽  
Isabela Freitas ◽  
Sofia Sarmento ◽  
Flávio Teixeira ◽  
Rosália Coelho ◽  
...  

Introduction: High rates of survival in Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) allowed patients to face different challenges in life cycle, and made the topics on adjustment and quality of life more and more central in healthcare. Hypothesis: We tested the hypothesis that CHD has a negative impact over psychosocial adjustment, psychiatric morbidity, quality of life and school performance, and that the severity of disease and the number of surgeries increase the negative impact over adjustment and the social support generates a buffer, good effect on it. Objective: We aimed to study Quality of Life (QOL), Psychosocial Adjustment (PSA), Psychiatric Morbidity, School Performance, Physical Limitations, and Social Support of adolescents and young adults with CHD. Methods: We evaluated 110 CHD patients, 62 males, aged from 12 to 26 years old (M=18.00 ± 3.62), 58 cyanotic. The participants were interviewed on such topics as social support, family/educational background, self-image, physical limitations and emotional adjustment, were administered a standardized psychiatric interview (SADS-L) and completed self-report questionnaires on QOL (WHOQOL-BREF) and PSA (YSR and ASR). Observational versions of the same questionnaires (CBCL, ABCL) were filled by one of their relatives. Full clinical and demographic history was collected. Results: We found a 22% rate of lifetime prevalence of psychopathology (14.5% in males and 31.3% in females) and 50% of school retentions (M=1.50 years + 0.50). Patients with severe forms of CHD showed worse PSA than those with moderate and mild forms of illness (internalization: u=939.000; p=0.030), the cyanotic versus acyanotic and those with moderate-to-severe residual lesions versus mild ones have worse QOL on physical dimension; those submitted to surgery showed worse QOL on physical (t=-2.525; p=0.013), psychological (t=-2.394; p=0,018), social relationships (t=-2.502; p=0,014) and general (u=1294,000; p=0.006) dimensions, and worse PSA (more withdrawn: u=719,000; p=0,037). Social support has a great impact improving patients’ physical (t=2.707; p=0,008), psychological (t= 2.755; p=0.007), social relationships (t=4.976; p=0,000), environment (t=3.085; p=0,003) and general (u=623.500; p=0,000) QOL and poorer social support resulted in more withdrawn (u=557.500; p=0.000) and social problems (u=748.500; p=0,023). Patients with more physical limitations showed worse physical (t=-2.093; p=0,039), psychological (t=-2.674; p=0.009) and general (u=971.500; p=0,002) QOL and more withdrawn (u=1023.000; p=0,015). Female patients showed more somatic complaints (u=260.000;p=0,011), anxiety/ depression (u=984.000;p=0,002), aggressive behavior (u=920.500;p=0,001), thought problems (u=1069.500;p=0,010), internalization (u=869.000;p=0,000) and externalization (u=1163.000; p=0,050). Good performance in school also showed a significant impact incrementing QOL and PSA. Conclusion: We concluded that we should set a special emphasis in maximizing social support and improving school performance, when supplying care in CHD, as they have a positive impact over self-confidence of patients and life adjustment.


Author(s):  
Kusum Lata Mathur ◽  
Manu Sharma ◽  
Mohua Mazumdar ◽  
Shikha Talati ◽  
Siddharth Srivastav

Background: Hysterectomy is the most common major gynecological surgery often performed for benign lesions. Many studies have reported adverse psychosocial outcomes post-hysterectomy. There is a paucity of studies from India addressing psychiatric morbidity after hysterectomy. To evaluate psychological wellbeing, marital adjustment and quality of life in patients undergoing hysterectomy for non-malignant conditions, in comparison with patients undergoing surgery other than hysterectomy.Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted on 100 consecutive out-patients who underwent hysterectomy for non-malignant indications at least 6 months ago. The comparison group comprised of 50 consecutive out-patients who underwent gynecological surgery other than hysterectomy at least 6 months ago formed the comparison group. The study participants were evaluated on Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), Psychological General Well-being Index (PGWBI), Marital Adjustment Test (MAT) and Women’s Quality of Life Questionnaire (WOMQOL).Results: The indications for hysterectomy were: uterine leiomyoma (69%), uterovaginal prolapse (18%), dysfunctional uterine bleeding (12%), and endometriosis (1%). Abdominal hysterectomy was performed in 92 patients while 8 patients underwent vaginal hysterectomy. There were no significant differences in the study groups on scores of HADS, PGWBI, MAT and WOMQOL (p>0.05). Both the study groups had good marital adjustment and majority reported no depression and anxiety.Conclusions: There is no major psychiatric morbidity, decline in marital adjustment and quality of life after hysterectomy for benign conditions among Indian women. Future research on the ethno-cultural implications and effect of hysterectomy on mental health will be a significant addition to the available evidence in India.


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