suicidal attempts
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2022 ◽  
pp. 002076402110678
Author(s):  
Tarek Ahmed Okasha ◽  
Afaf Mohammed Abdelsamei ◽  
Doaa Nader Radwan ◽  
Osama Abdelkader Eissa ◽  
Hanan Hany Elrassas

Objective: Few studies demonstrated the impairment of perceived emotional intelligence ‘EI’ among depressed patients. This study aimed to assess the perceived EI in a group of depressed patients, and its association with different clinical characteristics. Methods: Forty-five patients diagnosed with depression were assessed by the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and compared to 45 controls that were assessed by the Arabic version of General Health Questionnaire to exclude Psychiatric disorders. The Arabic version of Trait Meta-Mood Scale (TMMS) is used to evaluate EI in both groups. Results: Patients with depression showed significantly lower EI scores in the three parts of TMMS (repair, clarity and attention) compared to the controls ( p < .001). Patients showed significant difference in clarity subscale ( p = .005) and attention regarding severity of depression ( p < .001). Clarity of feelings was significantly higher in patients who suffered more than two episodes ( p = .012). Depressive patients with suicidal attempts showed significantly lower scores of repair ( p = .044) and attention ( p = .016) subscales. There were no significant differences of TMMS subscales between patients with and without suicidal ideation, sleep disturbance and somatic symptoms. Conclusions: The current study demonstrates impaired perceived EI among patients with depression that is correlated with symptom severity and suicidal attempts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 038-040
Author(s):  
Drozdova Elena Viktorovna

For a long time there was no explanation of a study which had revealed that people with schizoaffective disorders and in particular suicidal attempts rarely get cancer. But now, we can assume that there are diseases that are “mirrored” because they occur with reverse/feedback pathophysiological mechanisms so that they are, in fact, antagonists.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (22) ◽  
pp. S24-S32
Author(s):  
Margaret Wanjiru Mungai ◽  
Mercy Nyanchama Abere ◽  
Edward Kilamonda Avula

Background: Ostomy surgery is performed to maintain gastrointestinal function. However, there is a lack of knowledge and experience about ostomies among patients and clinicians in public hospitals in Kenya. The issue is compounded by the social isolation and stigma ostomates face in the wards and in the community after discharge. Although it is not easy to identify the exact number of ostomates in Kenya and other African countries, there is need to shift the focus from curing symptoms in ostomates to maximising patients’ quality of life (QoL) and integrating services for ostomates in mainstream public hospitals. Aim: To understand the effects of ostomies on patients’ QoL, with a focus on nutrition, psychosocial aspects and challenges around sexuality after ostomy creation. Method: A descriptive study was undertaken using an interviewer-administered QoL questionnaire with 81 patients. Results: Most patients were male (54%); the largest age group was 35–44 years (24.7%). Colorectal carcinoma, intestinal obstruction and traumatic injuries were the main indications for ostomy. Ostomates resumed sexual activity, but did not find it fulfilling (P=0.002). Most reported feeling depressed, with suicidal attempts that negatively correlated with QoL. Ostomates adjusted their diets regardless of whether their level of QoL was poor, fair, good or excellent after ostomy creation (P=0.564). Conclusion: Ostomates experience low QoL. Patients’ lives can be improved by focusing on providing individualised ostomy care services after discharge. Enhancing stoma therapy training for nurses and running ostomy clinics alongside mainstream services, as well as support for ostomates towards enrolment into the country’s National Hospital Insurance Fund, will also improve patients’ QoL.


2021 ◽  
Vol 53 ◽  
pp. S208-S209
Author(s):  
J. Fernández-Sevillano ◽  
A. González-Pinto ◽  
J. Rodríguez-Revuelta ◽  
S. Alberich ◽  
L. González-Blanco ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 088626052110550
Author(s):  
Judy A. Van Wyk

This study explores treating violence against others as a precursor to self-directed violence. It tests the utility of including violence against others in the measure of acquired capability to test assumptions from the interpersonal theory of violence. Four theoretical hypotheses are assessed that are consistent with the theory: (1) thwarted belongingness (parental abandonment and rejection) and perceived burdensomeness (exposure to parental interpersonal violence and child abuse) independently increase the likelihood of suicidal ideation; (2) the interaction of thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness increases the likelihood of suicidal ideation controlling for other pertinent variables; (3) the three-way interaction of thwarted belongingness, perceived burdensomeness, and acquired capability (violence against others and prior suicidal attempts) increases the likelihood of suicidal attempts controlling for other pertinent variables; and (4) self-harm responds to the theoretical variables and similarly, to attempts. Subjects are court-adjudicated males (ages 13–18) who were residents for up to 1 year at the Ocean Tides School and rehabilitation center from 1975–2019. The data span 44 years and include 2195 youth. Depression, drug/alcohol use, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and interaction terms between SES and race and SES and ethnicity are also examined. Backward conditional logistic regression analyses find mixed support for the hypotheses, but strong support for including violence against others in the concept of acquired capability. Support is also found for conceptualizing child abuse and exposure to parental interpersonal violence as perceived burdensomeness in tests of this theory as well as measures of depression. Major implications for programming in the treatment and rehabilitation of delinquent boys include conceptualizing and approaching violence against others as a precursor to suicidal attempts and other self-directed harm.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 837-842
Author(s):  
Héctor Ocampo Ramos ◽  
Richard Jeremy Febres Ramos ◽  
Sheron Arestegui Saavedra ◽  
Rosa Bravo Torres ◽  
Danitza Cardenas Peralta

The Cotard Syndrome, also known as delirium of negation or nihilistic delirium, was described by the French neurologist, Julius Cotard, on June 1880. From that time until the end of the 20th century, in scientific literature, approximately 100 cases were reported that presented symptoms of depression, anxiety, nihilist delusions concerning the body and existence, hypochondriacal and immortality delusions, as well as auditory and visual hallucinations. We present the case of a female patient, 73-years old, from Ayacucho, with a history of sexual assault at the age of 12 and suicidal attempts on 2 occasions, diagnosed with depression at 40 years of age, received treatment with quetiapine, trazadone and clonazepam. She remained with fluctuating medical progress, with symptoms worsening with stressors such as the death of her mother and husband and when she underwent surgeries. Currently, she presents sad and anxious mood, daily crying, ideas of guilt, disability and death, insomnia of conciliation, nihilistic delusive ideas concerning the body, referring that her stomach and bladder do not work, reason why she doesn’t want to eat or drink water. Due to the total refusal of food intake and persistent suicidal ideation, she was hospitalized to receive psychiatric treatment and nutritional support. It is concluded that there are few cases reported on the use of psychotherapy in Cotard's syndrome. Therefore, this case in which psychotherapy was indicated to reduce anxious-affective symptoms, to avoid isolation of the person and to redirect his personal and social life, is important.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (3B) ◽  
pp. 364-371
Author(s):  
Tatyana I. Bonkalo ◽  
Natalia E. Shafazhinskaya ◽  
Nadezhda I. Karpinskaya ◽  
Maria N. Tsygankova ◽  
Nikita V. Logachev ◽  
...  

The purpose of the study is to identify the factors that determine the formation of a certain type of personality who has committed suicidal attempts at a young age. In order to identify the types of suicides, there was conducted a survey of 25 doctors in psychiatric clinical hospitals in Moscow. The survey results were processed using cluster analysis. To identify the factorial conditioning of suicidal behavior of each personality type, a complex of psychodiagnostic techniques was used, focused on the study of the characteristics of the emotional, value-semantic and behavioral spheres of the personality. The obtained empirical data were processed with the help of factor analysis. Between the ages of 24 and 35, common types of persons with suicidal tendencies are "protester" (negative attitudes toward life and its foundations, repeated attempts to prove oneself right with a high level of pretensions, and low level of development of abilities necessary for self-realization), "self-isolating" (a conviction of their failure and lack of right to life), "self-destructive" (excessive self-criticism and self-blaming).


Author(s):  
Mohammad O AL fattani ◽  
Asmaa M Al Refaie ◽  
Shuruq Hassan Alsulami ◽  
Najia Al Hojaili

Pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infections (PANDAS) is a rear disease in pediatric age group which constitute a unique manifestation associated with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and tic disorder in children. However, this diagnosis has carried a lot of controversies, related mainly to its management. Here we are presenting one case of PANDAS syndrome who was treated successfully with full coarse of antibiotic for 10 days, where all his symptoms disappeared completely in subsequent days including suicidal attempts. PANDAS should be considered in children with neuropsychiatric disorders (tics, obsessive behavior etc.) especially if symptoms associated within a period of infection such as febrile illness or sore throats.


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