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ABSTRACT: There is considerable debate regarding the clinical issues surrounding the wish to hasten death (WTHD) in the terminally ill. The clinical factors contributing to the WTHD need further investigation among the terminally ill in order to enhance understanding of the clinical assessment and treatment needs that underlie this problem. A more detailed understanding may assist with the development of appropriate therapeutic interventions.
A sample of terminally ill cancer patients (N = 256) recruited from an in-patient hospice unit, home palliative care service and a general hospital palliative care consulting service from Brisbane Australia between 1998-2001 completed a questionnaire assessing psychological (depression and anxiety), social (family relationship, social support, level of burden on others) and the impact of physical symptoms. The association between these factors and the WTHD was investigated.
A high WTHD was reported by 14 % of patients. A discriminant function analysis revealed that the following variables were associated with a high WTHD (P < 0.001): higher levels of depressive symptoms, being admitted to an in-patient hospice setting, a greater perception of being a burden on others, lower family cohesion, lower levels of social support, higher levels of anxiety and greater impact of physical symptoms.
Psychological and social factors are related to a WTHD among terminally ill cancer patients. Greater attention needs to be paid to the assessment of psychological and social issues in order to provide appropriate therapeutic interventions for terminally ill patients.
Psychological Medicine 01/2003; 33(1):75-81. · 6.16 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This exploratory study investigated factors associated with the wish to hasten death among a sample of terminally ill cancer patients. Semi-structured interviews conducted on a total of 72 hospice and home palliative care patients were subjected to qualitative analysis using QSR-NUDIST. The main themes to emerge suggested that patients with a high wish to hasten death had greater concerns with physical symptoms and psychological suffering, perceived themselves to be more of a burden to others, and experienced higher levels of demoralization, while also reporting less confidence in symptom control, fewer social supports, less satisfaction with life experiences and fewer religious beliefs when compared with patients who had a moderate or no wish to hasten death. The implications of these findings will be discussed.
Palliative Medicine 08/2002; 16(4):339-45. · 2.38 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A modified version of the Mental Adjustment to Cancer Scale (The Mental Adjustment to HIV Scale--MAHIVS) was used to evaluate patterns of psychological adjustment in response to HIV infection.
A sample of 164 HIV positive homosexual/bisexual men were recruited across three Australian centers (79 asymptomatic (CDC II/III) and 85 symptomatic HIV infection (CDC IV)). Factor analysis of the MAHIVS was conducted and the predictive validity of the MAHIVS was investigated using the General Health Questionnaire, while The Diagnostic Interview Schedule was used to assess current and lifetime psychiatric disorder. Other measures of adjustment/coping were used to investigate the construct validity of the MAHIVS (neuroticism, locus of control, defense style).
Factor analysis of the MAHIVS detected four factors: Hopelessness, Fighting Spirit/Self Efficacy, Personal Control, and Minimization. Hopelessness and Fighting Spirit factors exhibited acceptable levels of internal consistency and validity, with significant correlations detected with psychological symptoms and significant association with other measures of psychological adjustment and personality. Fighting Spirit emerged as a potential indicator of psychological resilience, whereas Hopelessness was significantly associated with psychological symptoms and current major depression (but not past depression).
The findings indicate the validity of the MAHIVS and support the presence of common themes in the psychological adaptation to life-threatening illness that can be detected across disease categories and groups.
The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine 02/2000; 30(1):41-59. · 1.03 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This study investigated the psychological impact of HIV infection through assessment of posttraumatic stress disorder in response to HIV infection. Sixty-one HIV-positive homosexual/bisexual men were assessed for posttraumatic stress disorder in response to HIV infection (PTSD-HIV) using a modified PTSD module of the DIS-III-R. Thirty percent met criteria for a syndrome of posttraumatic stress disorder in response to HIV diagnosis (PTSD-HIV). In over one-third of the PTSD cases, the disorder had an onset greater than 6 months after initial HIV infection diagnosis. PTSD-HIV was associated with other psychiatric diagnoses, particularly the development of first episodes of major depression after HIV infection diagnosis. PTSD-HIV was significantly associated with a pre-HIV history of PTSD from other causes, and other pre-HIV psychiatric disorders and neuroticism scores, indicating a similarity with findings in studies of PTSD from other causes. The findings from this preliminary study suggest that a PTSD response to HIV diagnosis has clinical validity and requires further investigation in this population and other medically ill groups. The results support the inclusion of the diagnosis of life-threatening illness as a traumatic incident that may lead to a posttraumatic stress disorder, which is consistent with the DSM-IV criteria.
General Hospital Psychiatry 12/1998; 20(6):345-52. · 2.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This study aimed to investigate rates of psychiatric disorder in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, in an Australian sample of homosexual and bisexual men.
A cross-sectional study of a total of 65 HIV sero-negative (HIV-) and 164 HIV sero-positive men (HIV+) (79 CDC stage II/III and 85 CDC stage IV) was conducted in three centres. Lifetime and current prevalence rates of psychiatric disorder were evaluated using the Diagnostic Interview Schedule Version IIIR (DIS-IIIR).
Elevated current and lifetime rates of major depression were detected in both HIV negative and HIV positive homosexual/bisexual men. Lifetime rates of alcohol abuse/dependence were significantly elevated in HIV positive men (CDC group IV) when compared with HIV negative men. Among the HIV positive group the majority of psychiatric disorders detected were preceded by a pre-HIV diagnosis of psychiatric disorder. Major depression represented the disorder most likely to have first onset after HIV infection diagnosis.
Lifetime rates of major depression were elevated in this sample of HIV-negative and HIV-positive men. In the HIV-positive men, psychiatric disorder was significantly associated with the presence of lifetime psychiatric disorder prior to HIV infection diagnosis. The findings indicate the importance of evaluation of psychiatric history prior to HIV infection and the clinical significance of depressive syndromes in this population.
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 07/1998; 32(3):441-53. · 2.93 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This study compares the psychological symptoms and bereavement distress of individuals bereaved by AIDS with a group bereaved by a cancer death, and addresses the question of whether an AIDS death is associated with a higher rate of adverse psychosocial factors that may increase risk of psychological morbidity in the bereaved individuals.
AIDS (n = 28) and cancer (n = 30) bereaved individuals (all within 3 months of the bereavement) completed measures of psychological morbidity and measures addressing a range of other adverse factors, e.g., number of losses, levels of social support and stigma.
The cancer and AIDS bereaved were essentially similar on all psychological symptom measures. The AIDS group reported lower levels of social support in response to the bereavement than cancer bereaved individuals; a greater number of bereavements, were more likely to conceal the cause of death from significant others including their own family and perceived, in some instances, a greater level of rejection from others. The AIDS group reported higher levels of social support from friends than from family.
At three months following bereavement, AIDS and cancer bereaved were similar in levels of distress. While this may change with the progress of grief over time, it suggests essentially similar early bereavement responses. Those bereaved by AIDS reported a range of other adverse factors such as a greater number of losses, lower social support, stigma, and less open disclosure of the cause of death.
The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine 02/1996; 26(1):35-49. · 1.03 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A cross-sectional study of 95 individuals with malignant melanoma was conducted to investigate posttraumatic stress responses to a diagnosis of melanoma and to validate the use of the Impact of Event Scale (IES) as a measure of the response to the trauma of life-threatening disease. The diagnosis and progression of malignant disease are likely to present a range of acute and chronic trauma to the individual and the individual's family. The findings suggest that the IES is a reliable and valid measure of this distress, with scores varying according to disease progression and prognostic status of nonmetastatic disease patients. This indicates the importance of clinical attention to the specific symptoms that may best reflect the traumatic impact of life-threatening illness and its progression, and the applicability of posttraumatic stress syndromes in understanding the psychological distress of this clinical population.
General Hospital Psychiatry 04/1995; 17(2):126-34. · 2.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The Loin Pain and Haematuria Syndrome is a relatively new diagnosis applied to the problem of persistent loin pain, often with haematuria, in the absence of identifiable explanatory organic pathology. Case reports have suggested a range of salient psychopathological features associated with the complaints of pain and haematuria, although the psychological factors have been largely neglected in understanding the aetiology or in approaches to management. The roles of illness behaviour, patterns of somatisation, and psychiatric disorder associated with chronic pain syndromes, need to be addressed, as do the patterns of medical and surgical response to these patients. The use of the term "syndrome" to describe these symptoms implies a degree of uniformity in clinical features and outcome that has not yet been substantiated. New surgical techniques have been developed such as renal denervation and renal auto-transplantation to treat the pain, with limited success. A review of this condition illustrates the frequent failure of medicine to apply multi-factorial biopsychosocial models to understanding the aetiology and management of unexplained physical symptoms. It also illustrates the failure of our current nosology and understanding of somatoform disorders to achieve application outside psychiatry.
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 07/1994; 28(2):302-6. · 2.93 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Scopolamine usually is found to impair various aspects of human cognitive performance. Recently, however, a significant (though modest) improvement in verbal fluency has been reported following scopolamine hydrobromide (0.6 and 1.2 mg p.o.). This study replicated that effect, finding significantly better FAS letter fluency in contrast to poorer performance on other neuropsychological measures following sub cutaneous injection of 0.4 mg scopolamine. Data are discussed in terms of a functional state model of drug action.
Journal of Psychopharmacology 01/1993; 7(2):159-63. · 3.04 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This paper examines patterns of psychological adjustment in a small sample of asymptomatic HIV antibody positive men. Comparison is made with data available on male cancer patients. HIV positive men reported greater degrees of anxious preoccupation and hopelessness, and lower levels of the more adaptive 'fighting spirit' response. In HIV-infected men, depression correlated positively with frequency of high risk sexual practices.
British Journal of Clinical Psychology 12/1991; 30 ( Pt 4):370-2. · 1.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: There is an increasing demand for improved skills by medical graduates in the psychosocial aspects of medical care. Psychiatrists as educators need to play an important role in the development and evaluation of education in many areas of the undergraduate curriculum in addition to the continuing education of graduates. In this review approaches to the evaluation of undergraduate psychiatric education are discussed with particular emphasis on students' attitudes to psychiatry. Key issues that remain to be addressed include the clarification of the most appropriate goals for undergraduate education in psychiatry, the most valid means of evaluating such educational programmes, particularly clinical competency and, finally, the many tasks in improving the status of the psychosocial aspects of medical care for students and their clinical teachers.
Medical Teacher 02/1991; 13(1):77-87. · 1.22 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This study examined ten measures of personality, self-image, and emotional and family problems in a sample of 2,158 Australian adolescents, some of whom had suffered parental loss. The data reveal a pattern of poorer adjustment in adolescents who have lost a parent, but clearly demonstrate that type of loss and family reconstitution have no differential effects on psychosocial development. Implications for future research are discussed.
Adolescence 02/1990; 25(99):689-700. · 0.64 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A cross-sectional study was performed to investigate the prevalence and predictors of suicidal ideation and past suicide attempt in an Australian sample of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive and HIV-negative homosexual and bisexual men. Sixty-five HIV-negative and 164 HIV-positive men participated. A suicidal ideation score was derived from using five items selected from the Beck Depression Inventory and the General Health Questionnaire (28-item version). Lifetime and current prevalence rates of psychiatric disorder were evaluated with the Diagnostic Interview Schedule Version-III-R. The HIV-positive (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC] Stage IV) men (n = 85) had significantly higher total suicidal ideation scores than the asymptomatic HIV-positive men (CDC Stage II/III) (n = 79) and the HIV-negative men. High rates of past suicide attempt were detected in the HIV-negative (29%) and HIV-positive men (21%). Factors associated with suicidal ideation included being HIV-positive, the presence of current psychiatric disorder, higher neuroticism scores, external locus of control, and current unemployment. In the HIV-positive group analyzed separately, higher suicidal ideation was discriminated by the adjustment to HIV diagnosis (greater hopelessness and lower fighting spirit), disease factors (greater number of current acquired immunodeficiency syndrome [AIDS]-related conditions), and background variables (neuroticism). Significant predictors of a past attempted suicide were a positive lifetime history of psychiatric disorder (particularly depression diagnoses), a lifetime history of infection drug use, and a family history of suicide attempts. The findings indicate increased levels of suicidal ideation in symptomatic HIV-positive men and highlight the role that multiple psychosocial factors associated with suicidal ideation and attempted suicide play in this population.
Psychosomatics 39(5):405-15. · 2.12 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The psychological outcome of family carers after bereavement is an important issue in evaluating palliative care services. Palliative care services have the potential to provide preventive psychosocial intervention to family carers prior to bereavement, but are faced with the need to identify those who may have greatest risk of adverse outcome. This prospective study examines predictors of psychological outcome for family carers of cancer patients following bereavement based on factors identified at referral to a palliative care agency.
Cancer patients and their family carer were consecutively recruited and assessed on a range of clinical and psychological measures at referral to a palliative home care service in a metropolitan centre (Time 1). Carers were again assessed following the death of the patient, on average at 4 months post-bereavement (Time 2), using measures of bereavement symptoms and psychological morbidity.
178 carers were assessed on both occasions. The chief predictors of carer psychological symptoms and severity of grief at follow-up were psychological symptom scores at the time of referral (Time 1). Factors also measured at Time 1 were significant predictors of symptoms and grief scores at Time 2: greater number of adverse life events, carer's coping responses, past bereavement and separation experiences, the relationship with the patient, and greater severity of patient's illness at the time of palliative care referral.
The findings indicate clinical risk factors for adverse short-term bereavement outcome that can be identified in family carers during palliative care treatment, that have implications for identifying the psychological needs of carers, and that form a potential basis for interventions to enhance the psychological outcome for family carers.
Psycho-Oncology 8(3):237-49. · 3.34 Impact Factor