24 results on '"Sicouri G"'
Search Results
2. Cognitive bias modification of interpretations for anxiety and depression in children and adolescents: A meta-analysis
- Author
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Sicouri, G., Daniel, E.K., Spoelma, M.J., Salemink, E., McDermott, E.A., Hudson, J.L., Sicouri, G., Daniel, E.K., Spoelma, M.J., Salemink, E., McDermott, E.A., and Hudson, J.L.
- Abstract
Background Evidence suggests that cognitive bias modification of interpretations (CBM-I) is effective in modifying interpretation biases and has a small effect on reducing anxiety in children and adolescents. However, most evidence to date is based on studies which report anxiety or general distress using ad-hoc Likert-type or Visual Analogue Scales, which are useful but do not reliably index symptoms of clinical importance. This meta-analysis aimed to establish the effects of CBM-I for children and adolescents on both anxiety and depression using psychometrically validated symptom measures, as well as state negative affect and negative and positive interpretation bias. Methods We identified studies through a systematic search. To be eligible for inclusion, studies needed to target interpretation biases, not combine CBM-I with another intervention, randomly allocate participants to CBM-I or a control condition, assess a mental health outcome (i.e., anxiety or depression symptoms using validated measures or state measures of negative affect) and/or interpretation bias and have a mean age less than 18 years. Results We identified 36 studies for inclusion in the meta-analysis. CBM-I had a small and non-significant unadjusted effect on anxiety symptoms (g = 0.16), no effect on depression symptoms (g = −0.03), and small and non-significant unadjusted effects on state negative affect both at post-training (g = 0.16) and following a stressor task (g = 0.23). In line with previous findings, CBM-I had moderate to large unadjusted effects on negative and positive interpretations (g = 0.78 and g = 0.52). No significant moderators were identified. Conclusions CBM-I is effective at modifying interpretation bias, however there were no effects on mental health outcomes. The substantial variability across studies and paucity of studies using validated symptom measures highlight the need to establish randomized controlle
- Published
- 2024
3. Cognitive bias modification of interpretations for anxiety and depression in children and adolescents: A meta-analysis
- Author
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Experimental psychopathology, Leerstoel Engelhard, Sicouri, G., Daniel, E.K., Spoelma, M.J., Salemink, E., McDermott, E.A., Hudson, J.L., Experimental psychopathology, Leerstoel Engelhard, Sicouri, G., Daniel, E.K., Spoelma, M.J., Salemink, E., McDermott, E.A., and Hudson, J.L.
- Published
- 2024
4. The prevalence of anxiety disorders in dermatology outpatients: a systematic review and meta‐analysis
- Author
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Storer, B., primary, Kershaw, K. A., additional, Braund, T. A., additional, Chakouch, C., additional, Coleshill, M. J., additional, Haffar, S., additional, Harvey, S., additional, Newby, J., additional, Sicouri, G., additional, and Murphy, M., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Mental Health Symptoms in Children and Adolescents during COVID-19 in Australia
- Author
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Russell J, Brett S, Sicouri G, Pellicano L, Cobham, Uhlmann L, De Young A, March S, Donovan C, Rowe A, and Hudson J
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Mental health - Abstract
Objective: COVID-19 has led to disruptions to the lives of Australian families through social distancing, school closures, a temporary move to home-based online learning, and effective lockdown. Understanding the effects on youth mental health is crucial to inform policies to support communities as they face the pandemic and future crises. This paper sought to report on mental health symptoms in Australian children and adolescents during the initial stages of the pandemic (May to November 2020) and to examine its association with child/family characteristics and exposure to the broad COVID-19 environment. Methods: An online longitudinal survey was completed by 1,324 parents and carers of Australian children aged 4 to 17 years. Parents/carers reported on their child’s mental health using five measures, including emotional symptoms, conduct disorder problems, hyperactivity/inattention, anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms. Child/family characteristics and COVID-related variables were measured. Results: Overall, 30.5%, 26.3% and 9.5% of our sample scored in the high to very high range for emotional problems, conduct problems and hyperactivity/inattention, respectively. Similarly, 20.2% and 20.4% of our sample scored in the clinical range for anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms respectively. A child’s pre-existing mental health diagnosis, neurodevelopmental condition and chronic illness significantly predicted parent-reported youth mental health symptoms. Parental mental health symptoms, having a close contact with COVID-19 and applying for government financial assistance during COVID-19 were also significant predictors of youth mental health symptoms. Conclusions: Our findings show that Australian youth experienced considerable levels of mental health symptoms during the initial phase of COVID-19, and highlight the need for targeted, effective support for affected youth and particularly for those with pre-existing vulnerabilities.
- Published
- 2021
6. Keeping Parents Involved: Predicting Attrition in a Self-Directed, Online Program for Childhood Conduct Problems
- Author
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Dadds, MR, Sicouri, G, Piotrowska, PJ, Collins, DAJ, Hawes, DJ, Moul, C, Lenroot, RK, Frick, PJ, Anderson, V, Kimonis, ER, Tully, LA, Dadds, MR, Sicouri, G, Piotrowska, PJ, Collins, DAJ, Hawes, DJ, Moul, C, Lenroot, RK, Frick, PJ, Anderson, V, Kimonis, ER, and Tully, LA
- Abstract
Positive parenting programs have a strong evidence base for improving parent–child relationships, strengthening families, and reducing childhood behavior disturbances. Their reach is less than optimal however, with only a minority of families in need of help participating. Father involvement is particularly low. Online, self-directed programs have the potential to improve participation rates. This article examines risk factors for dropout/attrition from a free, evidence-based, self-directed, father-inclusive parenting program, Parentworks, which was made available across Australia. Parents (N = 2,967) enrolled in the program and completed preintervention questionnaires. There was a steady and consistent loss of participants through the sequence of core program modules, until a final sample of 218 completed the postintervention questionnaire. A range of demographic and parent and child variables were tested as predictors of 3 subgroups: nonstarters, partial completers, and full completers. Nonstarters (n = 1,625) tended to have older children with fewer behavioral problems and report higher psychopathology and dysfunctional parenting than those who partially (n = 1,124) or fully completed. Contrary to findings from face-to-face research, single parents had the highest completion rates. Coparticipation of partners and interparental conflict had no impact on completion rates. Fathers participated at relatively high levels. Results show that parents with the greatest need tend to engage with online programs, and online programs may be particularly useful for fathers, single parents, and those in conflicted relationships. Directions for future program design and research are discussed.
- Published
- 2019
7. Toward Father-friendly Parenting Interventions: A Qualitative Study
- Author
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Sicouri, G, Tully, L, Collins, D, Burn, M, Sargeant, K, Frick, P, Anderson, V, Hawes, D, Kimonis, E, Moul, C, Lenroot, R, Dadds, M, Sicouri, G, Tully, L, Collins, D, Burn, M, Sargeant, K, Frick, P, Anderson, V, Hawes, D, Kimonis, E, Moul, C, Lenroot, R, and Dadds, M
- Abstract
Levels of father participation in parenting interventions are often very low, yet little is known about the factors which influence father engagement. We aimed to qualitatively explore perceived barriers to, and preferences for, parenting interventions in a community sample of fathers. Forty-one fathers across nine focus groups were interviewed using a semi-structured interview. Data were analysed using inductive thematic analysis. Key barriers to father participation identified included: the perception that interventions are mother-focused; beliefs about gender roles regarding parenting and help-seeking; mothers’ role as ‘gatekeeper’; lack of knowledge and awareness of parenting interventions; and lack of relevance of interventions. Fathers reported preferences for specific content and intervention features, facilitator characteristics, practical factors, and highlighted the need for father-targeted recruitment and advertising. Many of the barriers and preferences identified are consistent with previous research; however, fathers’ beliefs and attitudes around gender roles and help-seeking, as well as the perception that interventions are predominantly mother-focused, may be key barriers for community fathers. Strategies to overcome these barriers and better meet the needs of fathers in promoting and delivering parenting interventions are discussed.
- Published
- 2018
8. Parent-child interactions in children with asthma and anxiety
- Author
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Sicouri, G, Sharpe, L, Hudson, JL, Dudeney, J, Jaffe, A, Selvadurai, H, Hunt, C, Sicouri, G, Sharpe, L, Hudson, JL, Dudeney, J, Jaffe, A, Selvadurai, H, and Hunt, C
- Abstract
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd Anxiety disorders are highly prevalent in children with asthma yet very little is known about the parenting factors that may underlie this relationship. The aim of the current study was to examine observed parenting behaviours – involvement and negativity - associated with asthma and anxiety in children using the tangram task and the Five Minute Speech Sample (FMSS). Eighty-nine parent-child dyads were included across four groups of children (8–13 years old): asthma and anxiety, anxiety only, asthma only and healthy controls. Overall, results from both tasks showed that parenting behaviours of children with and without asthma did not differ significantly. Results from a subcomponent of the FMSS indicated that parents of children with asthma were more overprotective, or self-sacrificing, or non-objective than parents of children without asthma, and this difference was greater in the non-anxious groups. The results suggest that some parenting strategies developed for parents of children with anxiety may be useful for parents of children with asthma and anxiety (e.g. strategies targeting involvement), however, others may not be necessary (e.g. those targeting negativity).
- Published
- 2017
9. ChemInform Abstract: Graph Theoretical Approach to Structural Changes in Chemistry
- Author
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DUBOIS, J.-E., primary and SICOURI, G., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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10. DARC-SYNOPSYS. Designing specific reaction data banks: application to KETO-REACT
- Author
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Picchiottino, R., primary, Georgoulis, G., additional, Sicouri, G., additional, Panaye, A., additional, and Dubois, J. E., additional
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. ChemInform Abstract: Graph Theoretical Approach to Structural Changes in Chemistry.
- Author
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DUBOIS, J.-E. and SICOURI, G.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Psychometric properties of the Child Anxiety and Depression Life Interference Scale - Young Adult version.
- Author
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Ienna AF, Sicouri G, Peters L, and Hudson JL
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adolescent, Young Adult, Reproducibility of Results, Cross-Sectional Studies, Adult, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales standards, Depression psychology, Depression diagnosis, Anxiety psychology, Anxiety diagnosis, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Depressive Disorder psychology, Psychometrics instrumentation, Psychometrics standards
- Abstract
Objectives: A life interference measure specifically designed for young adults with anxiety and depressive symptoms does not currently exist. This paper describes the development and psychometric evaluation of a brief self-report measure of life interference associated with young adult anxiety and depression, the Child Anxiety and Depression Life Interference Scale - Young Adult version (CADLIS-YA)., Design: Cross-sectional, correlational and exploratory factor analysis (EFA)., Methods: Five-hundred and thirty-two participants aged 18-24 years recruited from an undergraduate and community sample completed the CADLIS-YA., Results: An EFA supported a three-factor model describing the impact of young adult anxiety and depression on social life, family and daily life interference. Test-retest reliability and internal consistency were good to excellent. Convergent validity was demonstrated, and the scale differentiated between young adults with and without elevated anxiety and depressive symptoms. Support for divergent validity was limited., Conclusions: The CADLIS-YA is a reliable and valid life interference measure for young adults with symptoms of anxiety and depression. It is potentially suitable for administration in low-resource research settings and it has promise for use in clinical settings; however, it needs validation in a clinical sample., (© 2024 The Author(s). British Journal of Clinical Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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13. The prevalence of anxiety in respiratory and sleep diseases: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Storer B, Holden M, Kershaw KA, Braund TA, Chakouch C, Coleshill MJ, Haffar S, Harvey S, Sicouri G, Newby J, and Murphy M
- Subjects
- Humans, Prevalence, Female, Male, Adult, Respiratory Tract Diseases epidemiology, Respiratory Tract Diseases psychology, Quality of Life, Anxiety epidemiology, Sleep Wake Disorders epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 psychology
- Abstract
Background: Anxiety is common in those with chronic physical health conditions and can have significant impacts on both quality of life and physical health outcomes. Despite this, there are limited studies comprehensively investigating the prevalence of anxiety in respiratory and sleep medicine settings. This systematic review and meta-analysis aims to provide insight into the global prevalence of anxiety symptoms/disorders in respiratory and sleep medicine outpatients., Methods: PubMed, Embase, Cochrane, PsycINFO and Google Scholar databases were searched from database inception to January 23, 2023 for studies assessing the prevalence of anxiety in adult (≥16 years) respiratory and sleep medicine outpatients. Data was screened and extracted independently by two investigators. Anxiety was measured using various self-report questionnaires, structured interviews, and/or patient records. Using CMA software for the meta-analysis, a random-effects model was used for pooled estimates, and subgroup analysis was conducted on relevant models using a mixed-effects model., Results: 116 studies were included, featuring 36,340 participants across 40 countries. The pooled prevalence of anxiety was 30.3 % (95%CI 27.9-32.9 %, 10,679/36,340). Subgroup analysis found a significant difference across type of condition, with pulmonary tuberculosis the highest at 43.1 % and COVID-19 outpatients the lowest at 23.4 %. No significant difference was found across anxiety types, country or age. Female sex and the use of self-report measures was associated with significantly higher anxiety estimates., Conclusions: Anxiety is a common experience amongst patients in respiratory and sleep medicine outpatient settings. Thus, it is crucial that anxiety identification and management is considered by physicians in the field., Registration: The protocol is registered in PROSPERO (CRD42021282416)., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing interest There is no conflict of interest., (Crown Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Codesigned online cognitive bias modification of interpretations for anxiety and depression in children: study protocol of a randomised controlled trial.
- Author
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Sicouri G, Daniel E, Salemink E, Mackinnon A, Allsop A, and Hudson J
- Subjects
- Humans, Anxiety therapy, Anxiety psychology, Cognition, Comorbidity, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Child, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Depression psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: Previous research has shown that cognitive bias modification of interpretations (CBM-I) may be a promising intervention for anxiety in youth; however, results are mixed. Given the high comorbidity between anxiety and depression in youth, it is surprising that no child studies have targeted biases associated with both. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness and acceptability of an online CBM-I intervention (Mindmaster) for children with symptom scores of anxiety or depression above a borderline or clinical threshold. The intervention has been codesigned with children, parents and mental health professionals to promote user engagement., Methods and Analysis: The study is a randomised controlled trial, with two parallel arms. Participants are 143 children aged 8-10 years with scores of anxiety and/or depressive symptoms above a borderline or clinical threshold. They will be allocated to either the intervention group or the waitlist control group. The intervention consists of 2 weeks of online CBM-I training, with four sessions (10-15 min) per week. Outcome assessments will be conducted at baseline, 4 weeks after baseline (post-training/post-waitlist) and 8 weeks after baseline (follow-up) for the intervention group only. The primary outcome is interpretation bias. Secondary outcomes are anxiety and depressive symptoms and life interference. Analyses will be conducted within an intention-to-treat framework using mixed models for repeated measures., Ethics and Dissemination: The study was approved by the University of New South Wales Human Research Ethics Committee (HC220758). Findings will be reported to (1) participating families; (2) presented at scientific conferences and (3) disseminated to peer-review publications. Data will be available from the corresponding author on request., Trial Registration Number: ACTRN12622001493730., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
15. The prevalence of anxiety in adult endocrinology outpatients: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Kershaw KA, Storer B, Braund T, Chakouch C, Coleshill M, Haffar S, Harvey S, Newby J, Sicouri G, and Murphy M
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Adult, Female, Prevalence, Quality of Life, Anxiety Disorders epidemiology, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Anxiety epidemiology, Outpatients, Diabetes Mellitus
- Abstract
Introduction: Anxiety disorders and anxiety symptoms are common mental disorders in the medically unwell and have significant impacts on patients' quality of life and engagement with psychiatric and medical services. Several systematic reviews have examined the prevalence of anxiety in specific endocrinology settings with estimates varying significantly from study to study. No meta-analysis has examined anxiety rates across the endocrinology outpatient setting. The aim of this meta-analysis is to provide endocrinologists with a precise estimate of the prevalence of anxiety - and impacting factors - in their outpatient clinics., Method: PubMed, Embase, Cochrane and PsycINFO databases and Google Scholar were searched to identify studies that assessed anxiety prevalence in endocrinology outpatients published up to 23 January 2023. This was part of a larger systematic review search of anxiety prevalence in common medical outpatient clinics. Data characteristics were extracted independently by two investigators. Studies of patients 16 years and older and representative of the clinic were included. The point prevalence of anxiety or anxiety symptoms was measured using validated self-report questionnaires or structured interviews. Risk of bias was assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist. Pooled estimates were analysed under the random-effects model and subgroup analyses on relevant variables were conducted under a mixed-effects model. Heterogeneity was assessed using the I
2 statistic., Results: Fifty-nine studies with a total of 25,176 participants across 37 countries were included in this study. The overall pooled prevalence of anxiety or anxiety symptoms was 25·1% (95%CI 21·4-29·2; 6372/25,176; n = 59). Subgroup analyses revealed no difference in prevalence between outpatients with diabetes mellitus compared to other grouped endocrine disorders. Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) was the most frequent clinical diagnosis 11·7% (95%CI 8·1-16·7; I2 =87·93%; 443/4604; n = 17), while panic disorder was significantly higher in the non-diabetes group 9·5% (95%CI 5·9-14·9; I2 =57·28%; 56/588; n = 8), compared to the diabetes group 5·2% (95%CI 3·7-7·3; I2 =32·18%; 184/3669; n = 6). Estimates of prevalence were higher when assessed with a self-report scale 32·4% (95%CI 25·6-40·0; I2 =96·06%; 1565/4675; n = 21) compared to diagnostic interview 17·6% (95%CI 12·2-24·7; I2 =94·39%; 636/5168; n = 21). Outpatients in developing countries had higher rates of anxiety than those in developed countries. Female diabetes patients reported higher rates of anxiety compared to males., Conclusion: Our study provides evidence that anxiety occurs frequently amongst endocrinology outpatients and at a higher rate than is estimated in the general population. Given the impact anxiety has on patient outcomes, it is important that effective management strategies be developed to support endocrinologists in identifying and treating these conditions in their outpatient clinics., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Cognitive bias modification of interpretations for anxiety and depression in children and adolescents: A meta-analysis.
- Author
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Sicouri G, Daniel EK, Spoelma MJ, Salemink E, McDermott EA, and Hudson JL
- Abstract
Background: Evidence suggests that cognitive bias modification of interpretations (CBM-I) is effective in modifying interpretation biases and has a small effect on reducing anxiety in children and adolescents. However, most evidence to date is based on studies which report anxiety or general distress using ad-hoc Likert-type or Visual Analogue Scales, which are useful but do not reliably index symptoms of clinical importance. This meta-analysis aimed to establish the effects of CBM-I for children and adolescents on both anxiety and depression using psychometrically validated symptom measures, as well as state negative affect and negative and positive interpretation bias., Methods: We identified studies through a systematic search. To be eligible for inclusion, studies needed to target interpretation biases, not combine CBM-I with another intervention, randomly allocate participants to CBM-I or a control condition, assess a mental health outcome (i.e., anxiety or depression symptoms using validated measures or state measures of negative affect) and/or interpretation bias and have a mean age less than 18 years., Results: We identified 36 studies for inclusion in the meta-analysis. CBM-I had a small and non-significant unadjusted effect on anxiety symptoms ( g = 0.16), no effect on depression symptoms ( g = -0.03), and small and non-significant unadjusted effects on state negative affect both at post-training ( g = 0.16) and following a stressor task ( g = 0.23). In line with previous findings, CBM-I had moderate to large unadjusted effects on negative and positive interpretations ( g = 0.78 and g = 0.52). No significant moderators were identified., Conclusions: CBM-I is effective at modifying interpretation bias, however there were no effects on mental health outcomes. The substantial variability across studies and paucity of studies using validated symptom measures highlight the need to establish randomized controlled trial protocols that evaluate CBM-I in clinical youth samples to determine its future as a clinical intervention., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that they have no competing or potential conflicts of interest., (© 2023 The Authors. JCPP Advances published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2023
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17. Global Prevalence of Anxiety in Adult Cardiology Outpatients: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
- Author
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Storer B, Kershaw KA, Braund TA, Chakouch C, Coleshill MJ, Haffar S, Harvey S, Newby JM, Sicouri G, and Murphy M
- Subjects
- Adult, Male, Humans, Female, Prevalence, Quality of Life, Anxiety Disorders epidemiology, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Anxiety epidemiology, Chest Pain, Outpatients, Cardiology
- Abstract
Anxiety and anxiety disorders are associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes, and reduced quality of life. Despite this, no comprehensive study on the global prevalence of anxiety symptoms and disorders among adult cardiology outpatients exists. This systematic review and meta-analysis aims to provide cardiologists with a precise estimate of the prevalence of anxiety in their outpatient clinics. PubMed, Embase, Cochrane and PsycINFO databases and Google Scholar were searched from database inception to January 23, 2023. Data characteristics were extracted independently by 2 investigators. Ninety-three studies, n = 36,687 participants across 31 countries, were included. Global prevalence of anxiety symptoms/disorders was 28.9% (95%CI 25.7-32.4; 8927/36, 687; I2 = 97.33; n = 93). The highest rates were found in patients presenting with hypertension, 43.6%. Subgroup analyses revealed higher prevalence estimates when using self-report screening compared to gold-standard diagnostic interview. When using diagnostic interview, the highest rates were reported in outpatients with undifferentiated chest pain/palpitations, 19·0%. Panic disorder was the most frequent diagnosis 15.3%, and rates were significantly higher in patients with undifferentiated chest pain/palpitations compared to ischemic heart disease. Higher rates of anxiety were found in studies of outpatients from developing countries, and female outpatients tended to have higher rates compared to males. Anxiety occurred frequently among cardiology outpatients and at a higher rate than estimated in the general population. Given the impact anxiety has on patient outcomes, it is important that effective identification and management strategies be developed to support cardiologists in identifying and treating these conditions in their clinics., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
18. Mental health symptoms in children and adolescents during COVID-19 in Australia.
- Author
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Sicouri G, March S, Pellicano E, De Young AC, Donovan CL, Cobham VE, Rowe A, Brett S, Russell JK, Uhlmann L, and Hudson JL
- Subjects
- Child, Adolescent, Humans, Mental Health, Australia epidemiology, Communicable Disease Control, COVID-19 epidemiology, Mental Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: COVID-19 has led to disruptions to the lives of Australian families through social distancing, school closures, a temporary move to home-based online learning, and effective lockdown. Understanding the effects on child and adolescent mental health is important to inform policies to support communities as they continue to face the pandemic and future crises. This paper sought to report on mental health symptoms in Australian children and adolescents during the initial stages of the pandemic (May to November 2020) and to examine their association with child/family characteristics and exposure to the broad COVID-19 environment., Methods: An online baseline survey was completed by 1327 parents and carers of Australian children aged 4 to 17 years. Parents/carers reported on their child's mental health using five measures, including emotional symptoms, conduct problems, hyperactivity/inattention, anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms. Child/family characteristics and COVID-related variables were measured., Results: Overall, 30.5%, 26.3% and 9.5% of our sample scored in the high to very high range for emotional symptoms, conduct problems and hyperactivity/inattention, respectively. Similarly, 20.2% and 20.4% of our sample scored in the clinical range for anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms, respectively. A child's pre-existing mental health diagnosis, neurodevelopmental condition and chronic illness significantly predicted parent-reported child and adolescent mental health symptoms. Parental mental health symptoms, having a close contact with COVID-19 and applying for government financial assistance during COVID-19, were significantly associated with child and adolescent mental health symptoms., Conclusion: Our findings show that Australian children and adolescents experienced considerable levels of mental health symptoms during the initial phase of COVID-19. This highlights the need for targeted and effective support for affected youth, particularly for those with pre-existing vulnerabilities.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A Single-Session Online Cognitive Bias Modification of Interpretations Modified for Adults With Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms.
- Author
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Rogers J and Sicouri G
- Subjects
- Adult, Anxiety psychology, Anxiety therapy, Bias, Cognition, Humans, Pilot Projects, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Depression psychology, Depression therapy
- Abstract
Anxiety and depression are common, co-occurring, and costly mental health disorders. Cognitive bias modification aims to modify biases to reduce associated symptoms. Few studies have targeted multiple biases associated with both anxiety and depression, and those that have lacked a control condition. This study piloted a single-session online cognitive bias modification (known as CBM-IA) designed to target two biases associated with anxiety and depression-interpretation bias and attribution style-in adults with varying levels of anxiety and depressive symptoms. Participants (18-26 years) with at least mild levels of anxiety/stress and depressive symptoms on the DASS-21 were randomly allocated to an intervention (n = 23) or a control (n = 22) condition. The training consisted of a single-session online CBM-IA to encourage positive interpretations and a positive attribution style. Interpretation bias, attribution style, anxious and depressive mood states, and anxiety, stress and depressive symptoms improved at posttraining and at follow-up, irrespective of condition. Changes in interpretation bias from pre- to posttraining were significantly associated with changes in anxious mood state. CBM-IA, as implemented in this single-session pilot study, did not significantly reduce targeted biases and symptoms compared to a control condition. This adds to the mixed evidence on the efficacy of single-session CBM-I for altering biases and symptoms., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Keeping Parents Involved: Predicting Attrition in a Self-Directed, Online Program for Childhood Conduct Problems.
- Author
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Dadds MR, Sicouri G, Piotrowska PJ, Collins DAJ, Hawes DJ, Moul C, Lenroot RK, Frick PJ, Anderson V, Kimonis ER, and Tully LA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Problem Behavior, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Family Conflict psychology, Internet-Based Intervention statistics & numerical data, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Positive parenting programs have a strong evidence base for improving parent-child relationships, strengthening families, and reducing childhood behavior disturbances. Their reach is less than optimal however, with only a minority of families in need of help participating. Father involvement is particularly low. Online, self-directed programs have the potential to improve participation rates. This article examines risk factors for dropout/attrition from a free, evidence-based, self-directed, father-inclusive parenting program, Parentworks, which was made available across Australia. Parents ( N = 2,967) enrolled in the program and completed preintervention questionnaires. There was a steady and consistent loss of participants through the sequence of core program modules, until a final sample of 218 completed the postintervention questionnaire. A range of demographic and parent and child variables were tested as predictors of 3 subgroups: nonstarters, partial completers, and full completers. Nonstarters ( n = 1,625) tended to have older children with fewer behavioral problems and report higher psychopathology and dysfunctional parenting than those who partially ( n = 1,124) or fully completed. Contrary to findings from face-to-face research, single parents had the highest completion rates. Coparticipation of partners and interparental conflict had no impact on completion rates. Fathers participated at relatively high levels. Results show that parents with the greatest need tend to engage with online programs, and online programs may be particularly useful for fathers, single parents, and those in conflicted relationships. Directions for future program design and research are discussed.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Toward Father-friendly Parenting Interventions: A Qualitative Study.
- Author
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Sicouri G, Tully L, Collins D, Burn M, Sargeant K, Frick P, Anderson V, Hawes D, Kimonis E, Moul C, Lenroot R, and Dadds M
- Abstract
Levels of father participation in parenting interventions are often very low, yet little is known about the factors which influence father engagement. We aimed to qualitatively explore perceived barriers to, and preferences for, parenting interventions in a community sample of fathers. Forty-one fathers across nine focus groups were interviewed using a semi-structured interview. Data were analysed using inductive thematic analysis. Key barriers to father participation identified included: the perception that interventions are mother-focused; beliefs about gender roles regarding parenting and help-seeking; mothers' role as 'gatekeeper'; lack of knowledge and awareness of parenting interventions; and lack of relevance of interventions. Fathers reported preferences for specific content and intervention features, facilitator characteristics, practical factors, and highlighted the need for father-targeted recruitment and advertising. Many of the barriers and preferences identified are consistent with previous research; however, fathers' beliefs and attitudes around gender roles and help-seeking, as well as the perception that interventions are predominantly mother-focused, may be key barriers for community fathers. Strategies to overcome these barriers and better meet the needs of fathers in promoting and delivering parenting interventions are discussed.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Attentional Bias in Children with Asthma with and without Anxiety Disorders.
- Author
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Dudeney J, Sharpe L, Sicouri G, Lorimer S, Dear BF, Jaffe A, Selvadurai H, and Hunt C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Anxiety complications, Anxiety psychology, Anxiety Disorders complications, Asthma complications, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Reaction Time physiology, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Asthma psychology, Attentional Bias physiology
- Abstract
Children with asthma have a high prevalence of anxiety disorders, however, very little is known about the mechanisms that confer vulnerability for anxiety in this population. This study investigated whether children with asthma and anxiety disorders display attentional biases towards threatening stimuli, similar to what has been seen in children with anxiety disorders more generally. We also examined the relationships between attentional biases and anxiety symptomatology and asthma control for children with asthma. Ninety-three children, aged 8-13, took part in the study and were recruited into one of four conditions (asthma/anxiety, asthma, anxiety, control). Asthma was medically confirmed and anxiety was assessed through clinical interview. We used self- and parent-report questionnaires to measure child asthma (ATAQ) and anxiety (SCAS, CASI) variables. Participants completed a visual dot-probe task designed to measure attentional bias towards two types of stimuli: asthma related words and general threat words, as well as tasks to assess reading ability and attentional control. Results showed that attentional biases did not differ between the groups, although children with anxiety disorders displayed poorer attentional control. A significant correlation was found between poor asthma control and an attentional bias of asthma stimuli. While we found no evidence that anxiety disorders in children with asthma were associated with threat- or asthma-related attentional biases, preliminary evidence suggested that children with poor asthma control displayed biases towards asthma-specific stimuli. Future research is needed to explore whether these attentional biases are adaptive.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Parent-child interactions in children with asthma and anxiety.
- Author
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Sicouri G, Sharpe L, Hudson JL, Dudeney J, Jaffe A, Selvadurai H, and Hunt C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Anxiety complications, Asthma complications, Case-Control Studies, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Anxiety psychology, Asthma psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Anxiety disorders are highly prevalent in children with asthma yet very little is known about the parenting factors that may underlie this relationship. The aim of the current study was to examine observed parenting behaviours - involvement and negativity - associated with asthma and anxiety in children using the tangram task and the Five Minute Speech Sample (FMSS). Eighty-nine parent-child dyads were included across four groups of children (8-13 years old): asthma and anxiety, anxiety only, asthma only and healthy controls. Overall, results from both tasks showed that parenting behaviours of children with and without asthma did not differ significantly. Results from a subcomponent of the FMSS indicated that parents of children with asthma were more overprotective, or self-sacrificing, or non-objective than parents of children without asthma, and this difference was greater in the non-anxious groups. The results suggest that some parenting strategies developed for parents of children with anxiety may be useful for parents of children with asthma and anxiety (e.g. strategies targeting involvement), however, others may not be necessary (e.g. those targeting negativity)., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Threat interpretation and parental influences for children with asthma and anxiety.
- Author
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Sicouri G, Sharpe L, Hudson JL, Dudeney J, Jaffe A, Selvadurai H, Lorimer S, and Hunt C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Anxiety Disorders complications, Asthma complications, Avoidance Learning, Case-Control Studies, Child, Humans, Male, Parents psychology, Uncertainty, Young Adult, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Asthma psychology, Fear psychology, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Anxiety disorders are highly prevalent in children with asthma yet very little is known about the cognitive and parent factors that may underpin this relationship. The present study investigated interpretation biases in children with asthma and anxiety and their parents, and whether parent-child discussions influenced children's interpretations. Eighty-nine parent-child dyads were included across four groups: children with asthma and anxiety, children with anxiety only, children with asthma only and healthy children (aged between 8 and 13 years old). Interpretation bias was assessed using ambiguous scenarios. Children with anxiety showed an interpretation bias in the general threat scenarios, whereas children with asthma showed an interpretation bias in the asthma threat scenarios. Parental predictions of their child's responses showed similar results. Parent-child discussions increased avoidance for children with anxiety and no asthma across all scenarios, but only for children with asthma and anxiety in the asthma threat scenarios. The results provide partial support for a cognitive theory of asthma and anxiety in children and suggest that parents play a role in influencing children's thinking styles. Treatment programs could thus aim to target and modify interpretation biases in children with anxiety, and include parents as part of treatment., (Crown Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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