January 2007
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109 Reads
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89 Citations
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January 2007
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109 Reads
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89 Citations
January 2004
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88 Reads
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215 Citations
January 2004
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59 Reads
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66 Citations
October 2000
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54 Reads
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46 Citations
American Journal of Psychiatry
September 2000
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74 Reads
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143 Citations
The Journal of nervous and mental disease
This study investigated the effect of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) on help-seeking for physical problems. Merging two large data sets resulted in a sample of 1773 male Vietnam veterans from white, black, Hispanic, Native Hawaiian, and Japanese American ethnic groups. Predictors of utilization included PTSD, other axis I disorders, and substance abuse. In analyses that adjusted only for age, PTSD was related to greater utilization of recent and lifetime VA medical services, and with recent inpatient care from all sources. Further analysis showed that the increased utilization associated with PTSD was not merely due to the high comorbidity between PTSD and other axis I disorders. The uniqueness of the association between PTSD and medical utilization is discussed in terms of somatization and physical illness.
April 2000
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96 Reads
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146 Citations
Current posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) associated with participation in secret military tests of mustard gas during World War II was assessed in 363 male military veterans who were randomly sampled from a registry developed by the Department of Veterans Affairs. Current prevalence was 32% for full PTSD and 10% for partial PTSD. Prevalence of PTSD varied as a function of risk and protective factors, including volunteering, physical symptoms during the tests, and prohibited disclosure. Prediction of partial PTSD was weaker than prediction of full PTSD. Veterans with full PTSD reported poorer physical health, a higher likelihood of several chronic illnesses and health-related disability, greater functional impairment, and higher likelihood of health care use than those with no PTSD. Veterans with partial PTSD also had poorer outcomes than did veterans with no PTSD in a subset of these domains. There is discussion of the traumatic elements of experimental mustard gas exposure, vulnerability to PTSD, and the relevance of these findings to understanding the broad range of outcomes associated with PTSD.
February 2000
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62 Reads
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273 Citations
The association between physician-diagnosed medical disorders and combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms was examined in 605 male combat veterans of World War II and the Korean conflict. Physician exams were performed at periodic intervals beginning in the 1960s. PTSD symptoms were assessed in 1990. Cox regression was used to examine the onset of each of 12 disorder categories as a function of PTSD symptoms, controlling for age, smoking, alcohol use, and body weight at study entry. Even with control for these factors, PTSD symptoms were associated with increased onset of arterial, lower gastrointestinal, dermatologic, and musculoskeletal disorders. There was only weak evidence that PTSD mediated the effects of combat exposure on morbidity. Possible mediators of the relationship between combat exposure, PTSD, and physical morbidity are discussed.
July 1999
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56 Reads
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244 Citations
The Journal of nervous and mental disease
We used path analysis to model the effects of combat exposure, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, and health behaviors on physical health. Participants were 921 male military veterans from the Normative Aging Study. Their mean age at time of study was 65. Measures of combat exposure, PTSD symptoms, smoking, and alcohol problems were used to predict subsequent self-reported physical health status. Both combat exposure and PTSD were correlated with poorer health. In path analysis, combat exposure had only an indirect effect on health status, through PTSD, whereas PTSD had a direct effect. Smoking had a small effect on health status but did not mediate the effects of PTSD, and alcohol was unrelated to health status. We conclude that PTSD is an important predictor of physical health and encourage further investigation of health behaviors and other possible mediators of this relationship.
October 1998
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31 Reads
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76 Citations
The Journal of nervous and mental disease
This study modeled physical symptom trajectories from ages 30 to 75 in 1079 older male military veterans who were assessed every 3 to 5 years since the 1960s. Combat exposure and noncombat trauma were used to define four groups: no trauma (N = 249), noncombat trauma only (N = 333), combat only (N = 152), and both combat and noncombat trauma (N = 345). Number of symptoms on the Cornell Medical Index physical symptom scale increased 29% per decade. Men who had experienced either combat or noncombat trauma did not differ from nonexposed men, but those who had experienced both combat and noncombat trauma had 16% more symptoms across all ages. There were no differences in age-related trajectories as a function of trauma history. In cross-sectional analysis, men with combat and noncombat trauma had more posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, but not more depression symptoms, than men with either no trauma or noncombat trauma only. Discussion focuses on the importance of considering physical as well as psychological outcomes of exposure to traumatic events.
January 1998
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337 Reads
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4 Citations
The VA Cooperative Studies project "Group Treatment of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder," is a randomized clinical trial comparing group PTSD treatments. There are 10 clinical, 2 supervision and 2 administrative sites. Clinical sites (staffed with a PI, 4 therapists, 2 case managers, 1 assessor and research assistant) treat 36 male Vietnam veterans in 3 cycles testing at months 0, 7, 12, 18 and 24. Clinical supervision and routine administrative functions—which demanded a high degree of accuracy—are done using low-cost telemedical techniques. Because of budget constraints, the system design had to be done with existing technology. The study is guided by national executive, biostatistics, and treatment committees which teleconference weekly. The clinical teams have monthly group teleconferences with weekly individual phone supervision and daily/PRN e-mail supervision. Communications are stored in searchable, analyzable databases. Routine activities use internet technology. Data are collected using the DataFax data management system. DataFax manages paper forms faxed from remote sites to a central computer. It reads hand written numbers and check boxes to create a record. Quality control reports are automatically faxed back to clinical sites. Quality control reports identify problems and list expected forms which have not yet been received.
... Our study also helps inform understanding of how emotional stress responses such as PTSD may mirror biochemical reactions. 39,40 Theoretical models have related PTSD to physical health outcomes, 41 and these models have been growing in complexity as understanding of the disorder has grown. 42 Indeed, PTSD has been called a metabolic disorder "in disguise," 43 and the AHA labels stress-related CVD as a mind-body interaction. ...
January 2004
... Numbing symptoms could lead to worse outcomes through the mechanism of social isolation; however, that relationship remains to be demonstrated. Conversely, hyperarousal symptoms have been linked to dysregulated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity, greater cardiovascular reactivity, and disordered sleep quality (26), all of which could ultimately impose greater secondary cardiovascular risk. ...
January 1995
... This construal of an enduring emotional state is intuitively summarized by saying that we are in a positive emotional state when reward is becoming generally more available to us, and in a negative emotional state when the availability of reward is decreasing. Though the computation of change in the general availability of reward can, and likely is, made using different algorithms, a useful property of the formula presented above is that the setting of modulates the two properties that are thought to distinguish emotions and moods, namely, how long the emotional state lasts and whether it constitutes a response to a specific event (Ekman, 1999;Ketai, 1975;Morris, 2012;Schnurr, 1989). With = 0, the emotional state only reflects the very last change in value, and the impact of a change only lasts one time step. ...
Reference:
Emotions as Computations
January 1989
... Other research has proposed pathways between trauma and physical health, which include psychological correlates (primarily depression and PTSD), biological functions, prolonged physiological stress activity, and health-risk behavioral factors. 12,44 These findings call attention to the long-term implications of IPV for women's physical and mental health and situates IPV in a similar position to other key determinants of health, such as smoking and obesity. To adequately address the increased likelihood of adverse health outcomes associated with women's exposure to IPV, health professionals need to be engaged in nuanced understanding of IPV identification and appropriate responses and should be well supported to provide robust referral options within proactive and dynamic health care systems. ...
January 2004
... Роблячи це, ми не повинні забувати про той факт, що, хоча це дуже референційна розповідь, свідчення завжди є неповною версією подій, яка, крім того, виражена у художньому контексті, а отже, належить до сфери фантастики. Свідчення також завжди є риторично-перформативним, а це означає, що воно включає процес вилучення необхідного змісту з реєстру власної пам'яті та знань, а отже й унеможливлює розвиток резильєнтності 39 . ...
January 2007
... Competency: represents the skill set of medical participants involved in an activity; Directions: procedures to be followed when performing an activity, including guidelines that govern the behavior of medical participants involved in an activity; Tools: used by telemedicine experts, which include computers, knowledge-based systems, digital radiography, etc. (Stamm et al., 1998) to be used by participants for accessing, forwarding, receiving, and sharing medical objects; ...
January 1998
... The combined use of cigarettes and alcohol is associated with a synergistic increase in the risk of morbidity and mortality (Hart et al., 2010;Vaillant et al., 1991;Xu et al., 2007), and alcohol use in the context of smoking cessation presents a considerable risk for relapse to smoking (Kahler et al., 2010;Lam et al., 2013). To date, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is generally considered the gold standard for treating substance use disorders, and interventions for the combined use of cigarettes and alcohol have primarily used CBT/motivational interviewing (Ames et al., 2010;Baca and Yahne, 2009;Davis et al., 2013;Fridberg et al., 2015;Joseph et al., 2004;Kahler et al., 2008Kahler et al., , 2010. ...
July 1991
Journal of General Internal Medicine
... Meanwhile, research suggests that automated approaches can perform just as well as, or even better than, human coders, especially for large corpora. They make up for weaknesses in language understanding by being systematic, adjustable, completely replicable, and not subject to inter-coder reliability concerns [14][15][16]. In addition, automated coding need not be subject to volume constraints, making sampling unnecessary. ...
February 1990
Journal of Personality Assessment
... The length of the human lifespan makes it difficult to determine if a personality trait was present before a health problems began or if the trait developed concurrently with a health problem and is simply indicative or a response to the health problem and not predictive (e.g., Bell et al., 1993, cf. Schnurr et al., 1990). Again, animal studies can be useful here since animals (particularly many small animals) have much shorter lifespans than humans. ...
Reference:
Animal personality and health
February 1990
The International Journal of Aging and Human Development
... High rates of cannabis substitution for alcohol have been reported by medical cannabis patients and their doctors [22][23][24][25], although results are limited by retrospective self-report and selection bias. A 30-year prospective study of alcohol abusers showed that almost half maintained a year of alcohol abstinence, with some claiming to substitute cannabis for alcohol [26]. Some even propose that medical cannabis could help individuals with AUD reduce drinking [22][23][24]; however, these recommendations are based upon retrospective data, highlighting the need for more rigorous research in this area. ...
May 1988
Archives of General Psychiatry