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J Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv. 1985 Dec ;23 (12):13-5 3853586 (P,S,G,E,B)
A Bingham, J Bargar

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Eur J Clin Nutr. 2010 Jan 20;: 20087373 (P,S,G,E,B,D)
Department of Human Nutrition, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Background/Objectives:The role of individual fatty acids in the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD) is well established, but the effects of an overall pattern of fatty acids in CVD risk has yet to be elucidated. Circulating fatty acid levels are related to metabolic disturbances associated with the metabolic syndrome and CVD, due to disturbances in the activity of enzymes that catalyse fatty acid desaturation (Delta-desaturases). Therefore, we determined patterns of fatty acids and estimated desaturase activity in plasma and analysed how these patterns were related to a 10-year CVD risk estimates in a middle-aged male population in Northern Ireland.Subjects/Methods:Principal components analysis (PCA) was performed for defining fatty acid patterns in 379 men aged 30-49 years. Logistic regression analyses were then carried out for analysing the relationship between these fatty acid patterns and the 10-year CVD risk estimates.Results:The PCA generated three high fatty acid patterns: high saturated fatty acid (SFA), high omega 3 fatty acid (omega 3) and high monosaturated fatty acid (MNFA). Results from logistic regression analyses show that a 1 s.d. increase in the SFA pattern score was significantly and positively associated with an increase in the 10-year CVD risk category (odds ratio 1.71, 95% confidence interval 1.33-2.21, P<0.0001) even after adjustment for lifestyle factors. There were no significant relationships between the other two pattern scores and the 10-year CVD risk.Conclusions:An unhealthy fatty acid pattern representing both dietary intake and in vivo fatty acid metabolism is related to the 10-year CVD risk estimates and provide evidence that, as with dietary patterns, the synergistic effect of multiple fatty acids may be more important in relation to the development of CVD risk.European Journal of Clinical Nutrition advance online publication, 20 January 2010; doi:10.1038/ejcn.2009.144.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2009 Oct 13;: 19823188 (P,S,G,E,B,D)
[1] Université de Lille Nord de France, Lille, France [2] INSERM U545, Faculté de Médecine, Pôle Recherche, University of Lille 2, Lille, France [3] UDSL, Lille, France [4] Institut Pasteur de Lille, Lille, France.
Background:Adipokines play an important role in glucose, lipid and lipoprotein metabolisms, as well as in coagulation and inflammatory processes. So far, studies have evaluated the association of individual adipokines with future coronary heart disease (CHD) event and provided mixed results.Objectives:We sought to investigate the association of a set of adipocytokines, including total adiponectin, adipsin, resistin, leptin and plasminogen activator inihibitor-1 (PAI-1), with future CHD events in apparently healthy men.Methods:We built a nested case-control study within the PRIME Study, a multicenter prospective cohort of 9779 healthy European middle-aged men. Total adiponectin, adipsin, resistin, leptin and PAI-1 were measured in the baseline plasma sample of 617 men who developed a first CHD event (coronary death, myocardial infarction, stable or unstable angina) during 10 years of follow-up and in 1215 study-matched controls, by multiplex assays using commercial kits. HRs for CHD were estimated by conditional logistic regression analysis.Results:Median concentrations of total adiponectin, adipsin and resistin were similar in cases and in controls, whereas those of leptin and PAI-1 were higher in cases than in controls, 6.30 vs 5.40 ng ml(-1), and 10.09 vs 8.48 IU ml(-1), respectively. The risk of future CHD event increased with increasing quintiles of baseline leptin and PAI-1 concentrations only in unadjusted analysis (P-value for trend <0.003 and <0.0001, respectively). However, these associations were no longer significant after adjustment for usual CHD risk factors including hypertension, diabetes, smoking, total cholesterol, triglycerides and HDL cholesterol. Conversely, baseline CRP and IL-6 levels remained associated with CHD risk in multivariate analysis.Conclusions:In apparently healthy men, circulating total adiponectin, adipsin, resistin, leptin and PAI-1 were not independent predictors of future CHD event.International Journal of Obesity advance online publication, 13 October 2009; doi:10.1038/ijo.2009.204.
J Hum Hypertens. 2009 May 28;: 19474798 (P,S,G,E,B,D)
[1] INSERM, Hôpital Paul Brousse, Villejuif, France [2] Hôtel-Dieu, APHP, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France.
Although pharmacological treatments of hypertension and dyslipidaemia are both associated with a reduction in cardiovascular risk, little is known about the degree of cardiovascular risk remaining in treated individuals, by assessing the levels of their risk factors achieved, that is their 'residual cardiovascular risk'. We then used the data from the Prospective Epidemiological Study of Myocardial Infarction (PRIME), which involved 9649 men aged 50-59 years, from France and Northern Ireland with a 10-year follow-up, to test the presence of specific residual cardiovascular risks of coronary heart disease, stroke, total of fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events and cardiovascular mortality, in patients treated with antihypertensive agents or lipid-lowering agents. In the whole cohort, a total of 796 patients developed a fatal or non-fatal cardiovascular event. Antihypertensive drug use at baseline was significantly associated (RR=1.50, 95% CI: 1.25-1.80) with total cardiovascular event risk, but not lipid-lowering drug use, after adjusting for classic risk factors (age, smoking, total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, systolic blood pressure and diabetes). Similar results were obtained for coronary heart disease (RR=1.46, 95% CI: 1.18-1.80), stroke (RR=1.75, 95% CI: 1.14-2.70) and cardiovascular death (RR=1.62, 95% CI: 1.02-2.58), but neither for total death (RR=1.15, 95% CI: 0.89-1.48) nor for non-cardiovascular death (RR=1.00, 95% CI: 0.74-1.36). For any cardiovascular end point, residual risks did not globally differ according to the antihypertensive drug class prescribed at baseline. In conclusion, treatment with antihypertensive agents, but not with lipid-lowering agents, was associated with a sizeable residual cardiovascular risk, suggesting that more efficient risk reduction strategies in hypertension should be developed as a priority.Journal of Human Hypertension advance online publication, 28 May 2009; doi:10.1038/jhh.2009.34.
Diabetes Metab. 2009 May 14;: 19447061 (P,S,G,E,B,D)
Inserm U744, UMR, institut Pasteur de Lille, université de Lille 2, BP 245, 1, rue du Pr-Calmette, 59019 Lille cedex, France.
AIM: Although the ANGPTL6 (angiopoietin-like 6) gene product is now known to be involved in the regulation of fat mass and insulin sensitivity in mice, its physiological functions in humans have yet to be determined. METHODS: Subjects from the population-based French MONICA Study (n=3402) were genotyped for single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in ANGPTL6, and associations with anthropometric or biochemical phenotypes were looked for. RESULTS: On evaluating the frequency of 17 ANGPTL6 SNPs in 100 randomly selected subjects on the basis of linkage disequilibrium mapping, four SNPs (rs6511435, rs8112063, rs11671983 and rs15723) were found to cover more than 95% of the known ANGPTL6 genetic variability. Subjects from the entire MONICA Study were then genotyped for these four SNPs. No significant association was detected for rs11671983 and rs15723. In contrast, the G allele of rs8112063 was associated with lower plasma glucose levels (P=0.009). Also, obese subjects carrying the G allele of rs6511435 had higher plasma insulin levels than AA subjects (P=0.0055). Moreover, the G allele of rs6511435 tended to be associated with a 20% higher risk of the metabolic syndrome (P=0.034). However, when false discovery rate testing (40 tests) was applied, these associations were no longer statistically significant. CONCLUSION: These findings constitute the first study in humans of ANGPTL6 genetic variability. Although there was no evidence that polymorphisms in ANGPTL6 might be significantly associated with the metabolic syndrome-related phenotypes, a weak association of these polymorphisms with these parameters cannot be excluded. Further association studies are needed to arrive at any definite conclusions.
Afr J Reprod Health. 2008 Dec ;12 (3):159-72 19435020 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:1
Child Health and Development Centre, Makerere University Medical School, P.O. Box 6717, Kampala, Uganda.
Formative research assessing human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine readiness in Uganda was conducted in 2007. The objective was to generate evidence for government decision-making and operational planning for HPV vaccine introduction. Qualitative research methods with children, parents, teachers, community leaders, health workers, technical experts and political leaders were used to capture understanding of socio-cultural, health system and policy environments. We found low levels of knowledge about cervical cancer and HPV. Vaccination and its benefits were well-understood; respondents were positive about HPV vaccination. Health systems were deemed adequate for HPV vaccine delivery. Schools were identified as a vaccination venue, given high attendance by girls aged 10-12 years. Communication and advocacy strategies to foster acceptance should provide information on cervical cancer, HPV vaccine safety, and side effects. Policymakers requested further detail on costs. Introduction of HPV vaccine could be integrated into existing reproductive health and immunization policies.
Proc Nutr Soc. 2008 May ;67 (OCE):E183 18598511 (P,S,G,E,B)
Institut Pasteur Unité Inserm U744, Lille, France.
Appetite. 2007 Apr 3;: 17498842 (P,S,G,E,B,D)
School of Psychology, Queen's University of Belfast, 18-30 Malone Road, Belfast BT9 5BP, UK.
It has previously been suggested that the association between Type A behaviour and coronary heart disease (CHD) may be mediated through diet. This analysis investigates associations between Type A behaviour and diet, with particular focus on foods high in saturated fats and cholesterol (cake, cheese, eggs and fried potatoes), foods high in unsaturated fats (fish and nuts), and fruit and vegetables. The analysis was conducted on data collected from 10,602 men from Northern Ireland and France screened for inclusion in the PRIME cohort study. Type A behaviour was measured using the Framingham Type A Behaviour Patterns Questionnaire, diet was measured using a Food Frequency Questionnaire and various demographic details were also assessed. Levels of Type A behaviour and intakes of all food groups were similar to previous studies. Using regression, Type A behaviour was significantly associated with diet, and specifically with a higher consumption of cheese and vegetables in Northern Ireland, and a higher consumption of cake, fish and vegetables in France. These associations are most plausibly explained as a result of lifestyle, although the possibility of independent associations between Type A behaviour and diet remains. The work is limited by the use of questionnaires, but the findings available suggest that Type A behaviour is unlikely to be associated with the consumption of a diet that has previously been linked to CHD. These findings suggest that any association between Type A behaviour and CHD is unlikely to be mediated through diet.
J Affect Disord. 2007 Apr 30;: 17475339 (P,S,G,E,B,D)
School of Psychology, Queen's University Belfast, 18-30 Malone Road, Belfast, BT9 5BP, United Kingdom.
Previous studies have suggested an association between depressed mood and the dietary intake of fish. In all cases, however, dietary fish intake has been considered at the exclusion of all other aspects of the diet. This analysis investigates associations between depressed mood and dietary fish intake, while also concurrently investigating intake of a number of other dietary components. The analysis is conducted on data from 10,602 men from Northern Ireland and France screened for inclusion into the PRIME cohort study. Depressed mood was assessed using a self-report questionnaire based on the Welsh Pure Depression sub-scale of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, diet was assessed using a Food Frequency Questionnaire, and limited demographics were also measured. Using regression, depressed mood is initially inversely associated with dietary fish intake. On inclusion of all other dietary variables, the strength of this relationship reduces but remains, and significant associations with a number of other foods are also found. On additional inclusion of all demographic variables, the strength of the above relationships again reduces, and associations with various measures of socio-economic status and education are also significant. These findings suggest that depressed mood is associated with fish intake both directly, and indirectly as part of a diet that is associated with depression and as part of a lifestyle that is associated with depression. Additional support for these conclusions is also provided in the pattern of associations between depressed mood and diet in the two countries. The relative contributions of fish intake to depressed mood both directly and indirectly are yet to be determined. However, while diet is not measured and until lifestyle can be adequately measured, the potential roles of diet and lifestyle in the association between depressed mood and dietary fish intake should not be ignored.
Health Educ Res. 2007 Jan 17;: 17229778 (P,S,G,E,B,D)
1PATH, 1455 NW Leary Way, Seattle, WA 98107-5136, USA.
Cervical cancer is often the most common cancer among women in developing countries, yet current screening efforts have not been effective in reducing incidence and mortality rates in these settings. In an effort to increase knowledge about screening participation in low-resource settings, this study sought to identify key factors affecting women's participation in a cervical screening program in north central Peru. We studied women who were exposed to various health promotion educational activities and compared a total of 156 women who sought screening between July 2001 and October 2003 with 155 women who did not. Results from logistic regression identified four significant predictors of screening: higher relative wealth, knowing other screened women, seeking care from a health facility when sick and satisfaction with services at the health facility. When we restricted our analysis to women who had experienced screening in the past, two additional predictors emerged: having a husband who was supportive of screening participation and attending an awareness-raising session. These results have important programmatic value for tailoring outreach efforts for women and indicate that different strategies may be required to best reach women who have never been screened.
Rev Epidemiol Sante Publique. 2006 Oct ;54 (5):453-61 17149166 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:1
INSERM Unité 258--IFR69, 16, avenue Paul-Vaillant-Couturier, 94807 Villejuif Cedex, France. ducimeti@vjf.inserm.fr
BACKGROUND: Since 1985, two sources of information currently yield coronary disease frequency indicators among the French population: the national cause of death statistics set up by the CépiDC (INSERM), on the one hand, and three registries recording myocardial infarction and coronary deaths as defined by the WHO MONICA Project in three regions (Bas-Rhin, Communauté Urbaine de Lille, Haute-Garonne) on the other hand. Particularly, an inquiry for each possibly coronary death allows the registries to conclude positively (with or without a myocardial infarction), negatively or that no conclusion can be drawn because of insufficient data. The aim of the present work is to analyze concordance between coronary deaths issuing from the two sources according to their definition, while taking into account, or not, multiple causes listed on the death certificates. MATERIAL: and methods: In total, 4,664 deaths occurring in 2000 in the 35-64 year-old population of the three regions identified by the CépiDc were paired with the 812 deaths analyzed by the registries. The MONICA classification was compared with that of the CépiDC which used the ICD 10th Revision of the initial cause or after taking into account multiple causes. In each case, the concordance between the final classifications (coronary deaths or not) and the mortality ratio obtained from the two sources were computed. RESULTS: and conclusions: Eight hundred and six deaths could be paired: 310 with a coronary cause according to the registries, 420 of presumed coronary cause but with insufficient data and 76 of non coronary origin. Whereas the total number of coronary deaths was similar for the two sources, their concordance was relatively low (kappa=0.61). However, when the deaths with insufficient data were included in the MONICA definition, concordance decreased and a large underestimation (59%) of the coronary mortality is given by the national statistics as compared to the registries. Taking into account multiple causes of death and not only the initial cause permitted partly to reduce this underestimation (42%) and to increase concordance (kappa from 0.46 to 0.51). These findings have important consequences for international comparisons concerning coronary disease. Indeed, the MONICA Project showed that the frequency of deaths with insufficient data was especially elevated in France leading to an underestimation of the coronary death rates provided by the national statistics in comparison with other countries, particularly in Europe.

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An Med Interna. 2007 Jun ;24 (6):273-7 17907897 (P,S,G,E,B)
BACKGROUND: Of the factors identified in different studies as the possible causes of alcoholism, heredity appears to be the most important. However, environmental factors can increase or decrease the risk of an individual developing alcohol dependence. METHOD: To clarify the possible influence of heredity on alcoholism, we studied the plasma concentration of beta-endorphins in 25 families with alcoholic members: 27 children whose father was alcoholic and 7 whose father and mother were both alcoholics. The results were compared with finding in an age-matched control group of no-drinking adults and normal children in non-drinking families. RESULTS: The children of alcoholic parents had significantly lower beta-endorphin levels (p < 0.001) than control individuals, and concentrations were especially low when both parents were alcoholics. CONCLUSION: We conclude that plasma beta-endorphin concentration may have predictive value in identifying persons likely to become alcoholics.
J Stud Alcohol. 2004 May ;65 (3):309-19 15222587 (P,S,G,E,B)
Research Institute on Addictions, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, 1021 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14203, USA. eiden@ria.buffalo.edu
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was (1) to examine the association between fathers' alcoholism and children's effortful control and (2) to examine the role of parental warmth and toddler temperament as mediators or moderators of this relationship. METHOD: Families were recruited through New York State birth records when their infant was age 12 months. The final sample consisted of 226 families (116 boys) constituting two major groups: a nonalcoholic group consisting of parents with no or few current alcohol problems (n = 102) and a father alcoholic group (n = 124). Families were assessed when their child was ages 12, 18, 24 and 36 months. RESULTS: Results indicate that boys of alcoholic fathers exhibit lower overall levels of effortful control than boys of nonalcoholic fathers. For boys, fathers' warmth over the second year of life mediated the association between fathers' alcoholism and effortful control. Maternal warmth was a unique predictor of effortful control for boys. For girls, fathers' alcoholism was associated with lower paternal warmth, which was in turn a significant predictor of effortful control. Child activity level and negative affect were associated with effortful control for boys but did not account for significant variance when entered in regression models with fathers' alcoholism and parenting variables. CONCLUSIONS: Sons of alcoholic fathers are at an increased risk of problems in self-regulation when they are ages 2 to 3 years. Paternal warmth mediates the association between fathers' alcoholism and self-regulation for both boys and girls, although the nature of mediation may vary by child gender.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2004 May ;45 (4):687-96 15056301 (P,S,G,E,B)
Department of Human Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University, ISA.
Background: It is not known if the prevalence of parental psychiatric disorders is higher in stepfather than intact families, or if parental alcoholism is differentially associated with risk for conduct disorder (CD) symptoms in stepfather families versus intact families. Method: The sample comprised 839 girls and 741 boys from 792 intact families and 99 girls and 67 boys from 83 stepfather families from a population-based registry of twins aged between 8 and 17 years. Children's current psychiatric symptoms were assessed at personal interview with the child, mother and father. Parental histories of psychiatric disorder were assessed at personal interview with each residential parent. Associations between CD symptoms and parental alcoholism were characterized using both linear and Poisson regression, and results are presented with and without adjustment for maternal drug use during pregnancy, parental conflict, and estimated socioeconomic status (SES) based on census tract data. Results: Mothers from stepfather families had a higher lifetime prevalence of alcoholism, antisocial personality disorder, depression and social phobia than mothers from intact families. Stepfathers had a higher lifetime prevalence of alcoholism and depression than biological fathers from intact families. Children from stepfather families had more externalizing (CD/ODD) symptoms than children from intact families. Girls who lived with an alcoholic stepfather had significantly more CD symptoms than girls who lived with an alcoholic biological father. Boys who lived with an alcoholic stepfather had significantly fewer CD symptoms than boys who lived with an alcoholic biological father. This sex difference was statistically significant. Adjustment for maternal drug use during pregnancy, parental conflict, and estimated SES based on census tract data did not change these findings. Conclusions: Children living in stepfather families are exposed to more parental psychiatric risk factors than children from intact families. The increased risk for CD symptoms in girls (but not boys) from stepfather families is partly mediated by or associated with the stepfather's history of alcoholism.
Holist Nurs Pract. ;18 (1):32-5 14765690 (P,S,G,E,B)
Department of Nursing, Brenau University, Gainesville, GA 30501, USA. froberts@lib.brenau.edu
Baccalaureate nursing students who participated in equine-facilitated psychotherapy (EFP) clinical observation found that they could benefit as much from the program as the child clients. By identifying beneficial educational outcomes of this nontraditional learning assignment, the authors hope readers will explore similar possibilities for nurses at various stages of their professional development.
J Marital Fam Ther. 2003 Oct ;29 (4):491-504 14593691 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:22
Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology, Ohio State University, 1670 Upham Drive, Suite 460G, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1250, USA. fristad.1@osu.edu
This study examined the impact of adjunctive multi-family psychoeducation groups (MFPG) on mood-disordered children aged 8 to 11 and their families. Participants were 35 children and 47 parents from families randomly assigned to either immediate MFPG plus treatment as usual (n = 18) or a 6-month wait-list condition plus treatment as usual (n = 17). At the 6 month follow up, immediate treatment families reported: Increased parental knowledge about childhood mood symptoms; increased positive family interactions as reported by the parent; increased perceptions of parental support as reported by children; and increased utilization of appropriate services by families. Expected impact on decreasing negative family interactions was not found. Results are largely consistent with hypothesized findings and support the need to further investigate the adjunctive role of psychoeducation in the treatment of childhood mood disorders.
Medizinische. 1957 Nov 30;25 (48):1797-801 13492986 (P,S,G,E,B)
T BREHME
Pediatrics. 2003 Aug ;112 (2):e119-31 12897317 (P,S,G,E,B) Cited:1
Judge Baker Children's Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA. beardslee@a1.tch.harvard.edu
OBJECTIVE: Depression in parents is a prevalent and impairing illness that is encountered frequently in medical practice. Children of depressed parents are at risk for psychopathology and other difficulties. A series of recent national reports have recommended the development of prevention efforts targeting children of depressed parents. Yet, to date, few controlled prevention studies of depression in children and adolescents have been conducted. In this study, we report the evaluation of 2 preventive intervention strategies that target children living in homes with depressed parents. Both are public health approaches that were designed to be used by a wide range of practitioners from a variety of disciplines, including pediatricians, internists, school counselors, nurses, and mental health practitioners. We adopted a developmental perspective and intervened with families when children were entering the age of highest risk for depression onset (ie, adolescence). We chose a family-based approach to prevention and sought to reduce risk factors and enhance protective factors for early adolescents by increasing positive interactions between parents and children, and by increasing understanding of the illness for everyone in the family. Our prevention approaches were designed to provide information about mood disorders to parents, to equip parents with the skills they need to communicate information to their children, and to open a dialogue with their children about the effects of parental depression. We hypothesized that participation in these prevention programs would result in parental change in child-related behaviors and attitudes about depression and its impact on the family. In addition, we hypothesized that this parental change would produce change in children's self-understanding, and in children's depressive symptomatology. METHODS: We conducted a large-scale efficacy trial of 2 manual-based preventive intervention programs that were designed to be used widely in public health settings. These interventions target the relatively healthy children (ages 8-15) of parents with mood disorder. Ninety-three families (88.5% of our initial sample), including 121 children, participated in this study through the fourth assessment point. These families were assigned randomly to either a lecture or a clinician-facilitated intervention. Both interventions were specified in manuals. The lecture condition consisted of 2 separate meetings delivered in a group format without children present. The clinician-facilitated condition consisted of 6 to 11 sessions, including separate meetings with parents and children, and a family meeting in which the parents led a discussion of the illness and of positive steps that can be taken to promote healthy functioning in the children. In addition, telephone contacts or refresher meetings were conducted at 6- to 9-month intervals. In both conditions, psychoeducational material about mood disorders, risk, and resilience was presented and efforts were made to decrease feelings of guilt and blame in children. Parents were helped to build resilience in their children through encouraging their friendships, their success outside of the home, and their understanding of parental illness and of themselves. In addition, in the clinician-facilitated condition, efforts were made to link the psychoeducational material presented to the family's own unique illness experience. To address directly how their lives had changed, all family members in both conditions were assessed for psychopathology and for overall functioning at intake, and for psychopathology, functioning, and response to intervention immediately postintervention, approximately 1 year postintervention, and again approximately 2.5 years postintervention. RESULTS: We examined the outcomes of child understanding and internalizing symptomatology, and a number of predictor variables, using repeated measures analyses with generalized estimating equations. We found that parents in both conditions reported significant change in child-related behaviors and and attitudes, and that the amount of change reported increased over time from time 3 to time 4 (chi2(1)= 18.1). Moreover, relative to parents in the lecture program (mean number of changes = 6.3), parents in the clinician-facilitated program reported more change in child-related behaviors and attitudes (mean number of changes = 9.8). Children in both conditions reported increased understanding of parental illness attributable to participation in our intervention programs. There was a positive association between the amount of change children reported in their understanding of parental illness and the number of changes couples reported in child-related behaviors/attitudes (chi2(1)= 37.3; ie, parents who had changed the most in response to intervention had children who also changed the most). Finally, internalizing scores for all children decreased with increased time since intervention (chi2(1)= 7.3). In addition, females had higher internalizing scores than males (chi2(1)= 5.3). There was no significant effect of group on children's change in internalizing symptomatology (chi2(1)= 0.2). CONCLUSIONS: We enrolled families with relatively healthy children, administered carefully designed preventive interventions that are manual-based and relatively brief, and found that these programs do have long-standing positive effects in how families problem solve around parental illness. Our results show significant benefits from both interventions. Moreover, changes in parents' perceptions translated directly into changes in children's own understanding of parental illness. Parental behavior and attitude changes and their connection to child changes in understanding identify an important mediating variable: family change. By increasing children's understanding of parental mood disorder, our interventions were found to promote resilience-related qualities in these children at risk. This presentation represents the first and only longitudinal primary prevention study of relatively healthy children at risk for psychopathology attributable to parental mood disorder and demonstrates a significant reduction in risk factors and increase in protective factors in these families over a long time interval--2(1/2) years. Our results provide support for a family-based approach to preventive intervention.
J Stud Alcohol. 2003 Mar ;64 (2):195-9 12713192 (P,S,G,E,B)
Departamento de Psicoloxía Clínica e Psicobioloxía, Facultade de Psicoloxía, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Campus Sur. Santiago de Compostela, A Coruña 15782, Spain. mcorral@usc.es
OBJECTIVE: We performed a follow-up study of a group of young children from high-density alcoholism families (HD children), who were first assessed about 3.5 years ago, with the aim of evaluating verbal span and visuospatial abilities (which differed significantly between HD and control [C] children at the first assessment), as well as other neuropsychological measures. METHOD: In this second assessment, 22 boys and girls were evaluated. They were comparable in family income and parents' level of education. The 12 HD children had an alcoholic father and at least two other alcoholic relatives, whereas the 10 C children had no family history of alcoholism in either the first or second generation. A neuropsychological battery was set up with standardized tasks to measure attention, memory, visuospatial and executive functions. RESULTS: Analysis revealed significant Group x Assessment interactions in the digit span subtest where high-density children increased their performance until it reached that of the control children, and in the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) where high-density children did not show the same improvement as the C children with maturation. A main effect was also observed for group factor in perseverative responses of the WCST. CONCLUSIONS: High-density children attain the same level of performance as control children for verbal span, but differences between groups increase over time for executive functioning as measured by the WCST. These results are considered in the context of the developmental delay hypothesis. The small sample size, however, means further studies will be necessary to confirm our findings.
Int J Palliat Nurs. 2002 Oct ;8 (10):470-80 12419986 (P,S,G,E,B)
Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service, Isle of Man.
This article explores the literature relating to the needs of bereaved children and families and describes the course of a family bereavement group run in a hospice. The interventions involved dramatherapy and other creative arts media. The group comprised of four families all of whom had had a parent die in the hospice. Their ages ranged from 6-46 years. Two one-day workshops were followed by six closed-group evening sessions. The aims and interventions for each session are outlined and a short commentary on the process given. Significant aspects of containing families' grief through the use of therapeutic group work is highlighted.
Int J Group Psychother. 2002 Apr ;52 (2):189-213 11928199 (P,S,G,E,B)
Marsha Vannicelli
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, USA.
This article provides a clinical framework for a dualistic group treatment model: abstinence-based treatment for alcohol dependent individuals and moderation training for problem drinkers. The major premises of these models are set forth, compared, and contrasted. An integrated approach for synthesizing these models is then detailed along with suggestions for clinical implementation and management of countertransference.
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