32 results on '"Valdés-Stauber, J."'
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2. „Verstehen“ in der Psychiatrie – Teil 2: Vom Unverständlichen zur Verständigungsdisposition
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Valdés-Stauber, J.
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- 2018
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3. „Verstehen“ in der Psychiatrie – Teil 1: Philosophische Quellen und Begriffsanalyse
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Valdés-Stauber, J.
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- 2018
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4. Versorgungsunterschiede im Konsiliar- und Liaisondienst
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Valdés-Stauber, J. and Bachthaler, S.
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- 2016
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5. „Verstehen“ in der Psychiatrie – Teil 2
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Valdés-Stauber, J., primary
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- 2017
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6. „Verstehen“ in der Psychiatrie – Teil 1
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Valdés-Stauber, J., primary
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- 2017
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7. Suizidales Verhalten aus anthropologischer Sicht
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Valdés-Stauber, J., additional
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- 2017
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8. Do concepts of childhood trauma and dissociation provide an epistemological linkage between schizophrenia and PTSD?
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Peña-Salazar, C., primary, Arrufat Nebot, F. X., primary, Alvarez, M. J., primary, Fontseré, H. Masramón, primary, Coll-Negre, M., primary, Roura-Poch, P., primary, and Valdés-Stauber, J., additional
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- 2016
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9. Stationär behandelte psychisch kranke spanische Migranten der ersten Generation in Deutschland – Ergebnisse einer Reanalyse
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Valdés-Stauber, J., additional and Valdés-Stauber, M., additional
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- 2015
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10. Psychosomatic inpatient treatment achieves in the medium term sustainable clinical improvement as well as a reduction in utilization of medical services-results of a one-year follow-up
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Valdes-Stauber, J., Merath, S., and Krämer, S.
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- 2017
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11. Sources of meaning in family caregivers of terminally ill patients supported by a palliative nursing care team – A naturalistic three-month cohort study
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Valdes-Stauber, J., Lemanczyk, R., and Kilian, R.
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- 2017
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12. Versorgungsunterschiede im Konsiliar- und Liaisondienst.
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Valdés-Stauber, J. and Bachthaler, S.
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Background: The investigation of the real density of care by a consultation-liaison service (CLS) as a function of patient groups, settings and diagnoses makes sense with respect to a better allocation of resources. Objective: Are there differences concerning the density of care by a CLS in a general hospital depending on patient groups and on the psychiatric diagnosis? Method: A retrospective (2012-2015) survey of all consultations ( n = 7081 corresponding to 4080 patients) was carried out based on the CLS documentation for quality assurance. Bivariate tests (i.e. χ-test and ANOVA) and multivariate linear and logistic models were used to investigate group differences and associations. Results: The number of consultations achieved corresponded to 3.2 % of the total admissions to hospital, especially internal medicine (22.3 %), surgery (26.1 %) as well as gynecology and obstetrics (21.1 %). A suicide attempt was the reason for treatment in 3.3 %. Each patient received on average 1.7 consultations lasting 75 min but only 25 % received 2 or more consultations. Patients with psychiatric comorbidities, non-oncology patients as well as female and young patients received a more intensive care by CLS. Patients with depressive and somatoform disorders received a higher density of treatment. Discussion: The psychotherapeutic interventions performed did not follow the expected diagnostic patterns in other settings. Systemic interventions with indirect treatment should be given priority in older patients and especially in patients with organic mental disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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13. Are there clinical and care differences in real care intensity among patients in general hospitals suffering from psychiatric comorbidity?
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Valdes-Stauber, J. and Bachthaler, S.
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- 2016
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14. “Incomprehensibility” as an approach to the contemporary understanding-explanation dichotomy
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Valdes-Stauber, J.
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- 2016
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15. FC21-05 - Clinical and economical effects one year after establishing a decentralized psychiatric outpatient service
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Valdes-Stauber, J., Kilian, R., and Putzhammer, A.
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- 2011
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16. Dysfunctional self-reported interoception predicts residual symptom burden of fatigue in major depressive disorder: an observational study.
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Eggart M, Valdés-Stauber J, Müller-Oerlinghausen B, and Heinze M
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- Humans, Self Report, Cross-Sectional Studies, Mental Fatigue, Depressive Disorder, Major complications, Interoception
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Background: Fatigue is a core symptom of major depressive disorder (MDD) and is frequently refractory to antidepressant treatment, leading to unfavorable clinical/psychosocial outcomes. Dysfunctional self-reported interoception (i.e., maladaptive focus on the body's physiological condition) is prevalent in MDD and could contribute to residual symptom burden of fatigue. Therefore, we explored (a.) cross-sectional correlations between both dimensions and investigated (b.) prospective associations between interoceptive impairments at admission and symptom severity of fatigue at the end of hospitalization., Methods: This observational, exploratory study included 87 patients suffering from MDD who completed self-rating scales, the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness, Version 2 (MAIA-2), and the Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI-20), at the beginning and end of hospitalization. Bivariate correlations (r) and hierarchical regression analyses were performed., Results: The cross-sectional analysis showed moderate to large negative correlations between the MAIA-2 and MFI-20 dimensions except for the Not-Distracting scale. Symptoms of general, physical, and mental fatigue at the end of hospitalization were predicted by reduced body Trusting (β = -.31, p = .01; β = -.28, p = .02; β = -.31, p = .00, respectively). Increased Body Listening (β = .37, p = .00), Not-Worrying (β = .26, p = .02), and diminished Attention Regulation (β = -.32, p = .01) predicted higher mental fatigue., Conclusions: Diminished body confidence at baseline identified patients at risk for post-treatment fatigue and could therefore serve as a target for improving antidepressant therapy. Body-centered, integrative approaches could address treatment-resistant fatigue in MDD. However, clinicians may also consider the potential adverse effect of increased Body Listening and Not-Worrying on mental fatigue in psychotherapeutic and counselling approaches. Due to the exploratory nature of this study, the results are preliminary and need to be replicated in pre-registered trials with larger sample sizes., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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17. Differences in life attitudes between general population and hospitalized psychosomatic patients: a comparative cross-sectional study.
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Valdés-Stauber J, Böttinger J, Kramer S, and Kämmerle H
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To compare the extent to which value-based life attitudes measured by means of the Life Attitude Profile (LAP-R) could differ between the general population and people suffering from mental disorders hospitalized in a psychosomatic ward. Cross-sectional comparative study between a sample of general population (n = 409) and a sample of unselected patients (n = 147) at admission in a psychosomatic ward. Comparisons were carried out by means of Cronbach's alpha, correlation matrix, t-tests, robust multivariate linear regression models (MLRM), and using propensity scores. The internal consistency of LAP-R is good (alpha = 0.90). Divergent validity with BFI dimensions is widely given. In MLRM general population scored higher for the indexes 'personal meaning' and 'existential transcendence', whereas psychosomatic patients for the dimensions 'responsibleness', 'death acceptance', 'goal seeking' and especially 'existential vacuum'. Sex, partnership and schooling display few associations. Neuroticism is negatively and agreeableness positively associated with life attitudes considered as protective. Norm values and differences were stratified by age ranges. This study demonstrates that basic human attitudes like personal transcendence, personal meaning, having a biographically supported mission in life, and belief in a reason for existence are so fundamental for individuals that they are to some degree given independently of having a mental disorder or not. Neuroticism is a risk trait and agreeableness a protective trait facing life attitudes. The findings of this study indicate that people suffering from mental disorders treated in a specialized psychosomatic unit in a general hospital have important value-based resources and simultaneously higher levels of existential vacuum that have to be considered in treatment planning but should also be embedded in a therapeutic alliance. The existential vacuum deserves special consideration in the treatment of patients, especially facing risk of suicide.
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- 2023
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18. Corrigendum to "Can changes in multidimensional self-reported interoception be considered as outcome predictors in severely depressed patients? A moderation and mediation analysis" [Journal of Psychosomatic Research 141 (2021) 110331].
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Eggart M and Valdés-Stauber J
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- 2023
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19. Exploring Associations between C-Reactive Protein and Self-Reported Interoception in Major Depressive Disorder: A Bayesian Analysis.
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Eggart M, Valdés-Stauber J, Müller-Oerlinghausen B, and Heinze M
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Major depressive disorder (MDD) is associated with dysfunctional self-reported interoception (i.e., abnormal perception of the body's physiological state) and systemic inflammation, both of which adversely affect treatment response. In this study, we explored associations between C-reactive protein (CRP) and self-reported interoception, to gain more insight into the pathophysiology of interoceptive impairments in MDD. We also aimed to replicate previous findings on the associations of depression and fatigue severity with CRP. The study included 97 depressed individuals, who completed self-administered questionnaires (Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA-2); Beck Depression Inventory-II, Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory). CRP concentrations were analyzed in the serum using a particle-enhanced turbidimetric immunoassay. We applied Bayesian inference to estimate robust effect parameters from posterior distributions based on MCMC sampling, and computed Bayes factors (BF
10 ) as indices of relative evidence. The bivariate analysis supported evidence against associations between CRP and self-reported interoception (BF10 ≤ 0.32), except for one dimension (Not-Distracting: r = 0.11, BF10 > 0.43, absence of evidence). Positive correlations with overall depression (r = 0.21, BF10 = 3.19), physical fatigue (r = 0.28, BF10 = 20.64), and reduced activity (r = 0.22, BF10 = 4.67) were found. The multivariate analysis showed moderate evidence that low-grade inflammation predicted higher scores on the MAIA-2 Not-Worrying scale (β = 0.28, BF10 = 3.97), after controlling for relevant confounders. Inflammatory responses, as measured by CRP, may not be involved in the pathophysiology of dysfunctional self-reported interoception. However, systemic low-grade inflammation could potentially exert a protective effect against worries about pain or discomfort sensations. An immunological involvement in interoceptive impairments cannot be ruled out until future studies considering additional biomarkers of inflammation replicate our findings.- Published
- 2023
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20. Psychological changes after coronary angiographic intervention: pre-post comparison and follow-up.
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Valdés-Stauber J, Milani M, Ciurus M, and Bachthaler S
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- Humans, Coronary Angiography, Follow-Up Studies, Anxiety epidemiology, Myocardial Infarction epidemiology, Coronary Disease
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Epidemiological studies demonstrate the relevance of cardiovascular diseases for health policies and medical care, especially coronary heart diseases and myocardial infarction. Research has shown that a significant proportion of patients undergoing coronary angiography suffer from clinically relevant mental stress. The aim of this study is to investigate to what extent the psychological state of cardiology patients changes in short- and mid-term periods after coronary angiography has been performed. The study design is naturalistic, longitudinal and comparative about consecutively admitted patients undergoing coronary angiography ( N = 419; consenting patients fulfilling inclusion criteria n = 68) at four measurement points: before and after angiography and 6 weeks and 6 months after discharge. The statistical analysis includes paired t -tests, chi-square tests, effect sizes and random effects regression models. The sample was representative of the target population. The prevalence of risk factors were: 84% heart attack, 31% diabetes and 84% hypertension. There were no angiographic pathological findings in 12% of the sample. The neuroticism levels of the sample was higher than in the general population. There were almost no pre-post differences for depression, anxiety, psychological well-being, self-efficacy, resilience or locus of control. At the mid-term, well-being and anxiety decreased and internal locus of control increased. Neuroticism was negatively and extraversion and openness were positively associated with mental state and resources. The sample showed persistent adverse subsyndromal depressivity. At the mid-term, patients realised that their prognosis also depends on their own behaviour (internal attribution). Special psychosomatic attention should be given to people with subsyndromal depression, higher emotional instability and those with angina pectoris symptoms displaying normal coronary angiography.
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- 2022
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21. The differences between referred and non-referred patients to a psychiatric consultation-liaison service in a general hospital.
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Valdés-Stauber J and Kendel U
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- Female, Home Environment, Humans, Prospective Studies, Referral and Consultation, Hospitals, General, Quality of Life
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Objective: The primary aim of this study was to investigate whether there are clinical differences between patients who are referred or not referred for psychiatric consultation and liaison service. The secondary aim was to compare the perspectives of doctors, nurses and patients., Methods: This naturalistic, prospective and comparative study (N = 294) utilised a control sample of non-referrals (n = 177, consenting 81) and referrals (n = 177, consenting 49). The normality of the data was examined with the Shapiro-Wilk test; bivariate group comparisons were made using Mann-Whitney, Wilcoxon tests and bivariate regression analyses. Statistically adjusted group comparisons were performed with multivariate median regressions., Results: The sample presented limited representativeness. Referred patients were predominantly women, mostly living alone and not working. Compared to the non-referred patients, their disease episode and length of hospital stay were significantly longer, self-efficacy and quality of life lower and psychological stress was higher. For referred patients, there were no differences between the estimations of mental burden and the need for care among doctors, nurses and patients. Self-efficacy and appraisal of one's own burden were the best predictors of the extent of mental symptoms., Discussion: Patients in an admission ward for internal medicine referred to a psychiatric consultation-liaison service displayed a more adverse psychosocial profile and were more psychologically burdened than non-referred patients, but they are also relevantly subsyndromal burdened. Identifying and supporting burdened patients is an endeavour that requires collaborative care, especially in the transition to specialised mental health and to primary care.
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- 2021
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22. Divergent patterns of confrontation with death using the Anticipated Farewell to Existence Questionnaire (AFEQT): a cross-sectional comparative study of four samples with increasing proximity to death.
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Valdés-Stauber J, Stabenow U, Böttinger J, Kramer S, and Kilian R
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Hospitals, Humans, Middle Aged, Nursing Homes, Surveys and Questionnaires, Palliative Care, Terminal Care
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Background: Based on the concept of "Daseinsverabschiedung", an anthropological theory of "Anticipated Farewell to Existence" (AFE) was suggested on the basis of six grounding dimensions: selfhood, interpersonality, temporality, corporeality, worldliness, and transcendence, which are activated in a genuine manner facing death. The purpose of the study is to quantitatively compare the extent of confrontation with death between dying people in palliative care and those in other stages of life by means of the Anticipated Farewell to Existence Questionnaire" (AFEQT), based on these dimensions., Methods: The sample (N = 485) consists of dying individuals in palliative wards and hospices (n = 121); old people living in nursing homes not suffering from a mortal disease (n = 62); young adults (n = 152), and middle-aged adults (n = 150). The design is cross-sectional and analytical. The relevance of anticipated farewell to existence was measured by means of the AFEQT. The internal consistency of the AFEQT was assessed using Cronbach's alpha and convergent validity by means of dimensions of the Life Attitude Profile-Revised (LAP-R). Differences between groups and associations with control variables were estimated by means of multiple regression models, including propensity scores., Results: Cronbach's alpha for AFEQT was > 0.80 for the whole test and all subsamples, but < 0.70 for most dimensions in dying people. Correlations between each dimension and corresponding two factors was almost overall r > 0.80, p < 0.001. Good convergent validity between dimensions of AFEQT and of Life Attitude Profile-Revised in young and middle-aged participants showed correlations for superordinate indices between -0.23 and 0.72, and an overall p < 0.001. Dying people scored significantly higher for all dimensions, especially "altruistic preoccupation" and "reconciliation with existence" than people in other life stages (p < 0.01- < 0.001). Personality traits of "openness" and "agreeableness" are positively associated with higher scoring of AFEQT dimensions. About 77% of dying participants reported a personal benefit through the interview questions., Conclusions: With proximity to death, the anthropological dimensions proposed scored significant higher than in other stages of life, reflecting a stronger awareness, confrontation and reconciliation with the end of their own life. These dimensions, especially preoccupation for related persons and coexistence of acceptance and struggle with death have to be taken into account in a sensitive way by supporting dialogues with dying people and their relatives., Trial Registration: Observational cross-sectional study., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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23. Validation of the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA-2) questionnaire in hospitalized patients with major depressive disorder.
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Eggart M, Todd J, and Valdés-Stauber J
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- Adult, Depressive Disorder, Major diagnosis, Depressive Disorder, Major physiopathology, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self Report, Surveys and Questionnaires, Depressive Disorder, Major epidemiology, Multidimensional Scaling Analysis, Patients psychology, Psychometrics
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Objectives: Interoception refers to the sensation, interpretation, and integration of internal somatic signals. Abnormalities in self-reported interoception are prevalent features of major depressive disorder (MDD) and may affect treatment outcomes. In the present study, we investigated the psychometric properties of the revised eight-dimensional and 37-item Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness questionnaire (the MAIA-2) in a severely depressed sample, after translating two updated scales (Not-Distracting, Not-Worrying) into German. Specifically, we examined the measure's internal consistency reliability, sensitivity to change, and minimal important differences (MID) with a focus on patient's antidepressive responses to treatment., Methods: The study enrolled 110 participants (age: M = 46.85, SD = 11.23; female: 55.45%) undergoing hospital treatment, of whom 87 were included in the pre-post analysis. Participants completed a German translation of MAIA-2 and the Beck Depression Inventory-II (pre-/post-treatment). Internal consistency reliability was determined by Cronbach's α/McDonalds's ω, sensitivity to change was determined by effect sizes, and MIDs were determined by distribution- (0.5*SD) and anchor-based approaches (mean change method; ROC curve cut-points)., Results: Depression severity reduced over the course of treatment (Median = -65.22%), and 34.48% of patients achieved remission. Reliability was appropriate for post-treatment (range of ω: .70-.90), but questionable for two pre-treatment scales (Noticing: ω = .64; Not-Distracting: ω = .66). The eight dimensions of MAIA-2 were sensitive to change (standardized response mean: .32-.81; Cohen's effect size: .30-.92). Distribution-based MIDs (.38-.61) and anchor-based mean change MIDs (remission vs. partial response: .00-.85; partial response vs. nonresponse: .08-.88) were established on the group level. For six scales, ROC cut-points (remission: .00-1.33; response: -.20-1.00) demonstrated accurate classification to treatment response groups on the individual level., Conclusions: This study demonstrated the applicability of the MAIA-2 questionnaire in MDD. The updated version may have led to reliability improvements regarding the revised scales, but subthreshold reliability was evident prior to treatment. The measure's dimensions were sensitive to change. MIDs were established that corresponded with antidepressive treatment outcomes. Our findings are consistent with a growing area of research which considers somatic feelings as key contributors to mental health., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2021
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24. Can changes in multidimensional self-reported interoception be considered as outcome predictors in severely depressed patients? A moderation and mediation analysis.
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Eggart M and Valdés-Stauber J
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- Female, Humans, Male, Mediation Analysis, Middle Aged, Self Report, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Interoception physiology
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Objective: Somatic complaints (e.g. pain) and abnormal self-reported interoception (e.g. maladaptive bodily self-focus) are common features of major depressive disorder (MDD) with sex-specific manifestations. Whereas somatic symptoms are associated with adverse clinical outcomes (e.g. residual symptoms), studies are scarce investigating the role of interoception as an outcome predictor for specific hospital treatment of MDD. Therefore, multivariate associations between changes in multidimensional self-reported interoception, somatic symptoms, and clinical improvements are explored by hypothesizing interactions with sex and an interoceptive mechanism., Methods: In this naturalistic study, 87 hospitalized participants suffering from MDD completed questionnaires at pre- and post-treatment assessing multidimensional self-reported interoception (MAIA-2), somatic symptom burden (SCL-90-S® SOMA), and depression severity (BDI-II). We performed a multiple hierarchical regression analysis to test for interaction effects. The mediation hypothesis was path-analytically tested in a parallel mediation model by bootstrapping confidence intervals for (in)direct effects., Results: Improvements in self-reported interoception independently predicted positive treatment response, ΔR
adj 2 =8.61%, ΔF(8, 74) = 3.23, p < .01. Prediction effects were moderated by sex, ΔRadj 2 =5.54%, ΔF(8, 66) = 2.22, p < .05. Post-hoc analyses revealed significant effects of body confidence in women, B = -4.26, t(28) = -2.78, p < .01, and of self-regulation in men, B = -3.21, t(17) = -2.27, p < .05. Effects of somatic symptom relief on treatment outcome were partially mediated by self-reported interoception, total indirect = 2.94 [95% BCa CI 0.99, 5.69]., Conclusion: Interoception patterns changed significantly and predicted outcome of hospital treatment in severely depressed patients. Our study could imply the need to consider body sensations additionally as a target for antidepressive treatments. The development of tailored interoceptive interventions in depressive patients represents a promising vision for the future., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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25. Underdiagnosis of psychiatric disorders in people with intellectual disabilities: Differences between psychiatric disorders and challenging behaviour.
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Peña-Salazar C, Arrufat F, Santos JM, Fontanet A, González-Castro G, Más S, Roura-Poch P, and Valdés-Stauber J
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- Adult, Comorbidity, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Intellectual Disability epidemiology, Intelligence Tests, Male, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Intellectual Disability physiopathology, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Problem Behavior
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Background and Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess the level of mental disorders and challenging behaviour in individuals with intellectual disability (ID) supported by specialized services, but without a prior psychiatric diagnosis, and to compare the levels of different disorders depending on the severity of ID., Methods: This is a cross-sectional study ( N = 142) of population with ID. Inclusion criteria were the following: adult patients with ID and with no previous psychiatric diagnosis prior to this survey. The Wechsler Adults Intelligence Scale-II, the Psychiatric Assessment Schedule for Adults with Developmental Disability checklist and clinical interview, the Diagnostic Assessment for the Severely Handicapped scale and the Inventory for Client and Agency Planning were the assessment tools., Results: A previously undiagnosed mental disorder was found in 29.6% of the sample. The most prevalent mental disorders were major depressive and anxiety disorders. An association between psychiatric comorbidity and challenging behaviour was found only for mild/moderate ID, especially for affective disorders., Conclusions: The presence of a psychiatric as well as a medical comorbidity is associated with severe ID, unlike challenging behaviour. Clinical limitations of the study have been discussed.
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- 2020
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26. [Natural history after discharge from a hospital psychosomatic treatment - Results of a one-year follow-up].
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Valdés-Stauber J, Krämer S, and Bachthaler S
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- Follow-Up Studies, Hospitalization, Humans, Patient Discharge, Psychophysiologic Disorders therapy, Psychotherapy
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The effectiveness of the inpatient psychosomatic treatment has been documented in various settings. The question of the sustainability of the improvement achieved as well as the prognostic factors is of interest for public health.Primary outcome variables reflect the stability or change in the clinical status of patients one year after the discharge from the inpatient psychosomatic treatment. Secondary outcome variables reflect differences in utilization of medical services between the year before and after admission.One-year naturalistic follow-up of a sample consisting of patients treated in a psychosomatic hospital service by means of 9 clinical and 3 variables for measurement of utilization of medical services. Four measuring points were considered: agreeing at admission (N = 262), discharge (N = 249), 6 months (N = 148) and 12 months (N = 114) after discharge. Differences and associations were assessed by means of t tests and multivariate linear as well as logistic regressions.The subsample with adherence to the study is representative for the whole sample since hardly any differences to the drop-out group were found. A year after discharge, all clinical variables showed significant differences (p < 0.001) compared with clinical status at admission and no significant differences compared with status at discharge (p > 0.05). Three quarters of sample reported a subjective improvement one year after discharge, contrary to results of clinical scales. Medical aftercare was ensured principally by psychotherapists (78 %), followed by general practitioners (63 %), and psychiatrists (44 %). Relevant associations were found between psychotherapy appointments and clinical variables in follow-up.The clinical improvement attained through the psychosomatic hospitalization remain on average stable a year after discharge. Subjective global assessment of health status shows an improvement for the majority of the sample, contrary to results of clinical scales; that is the reason why both assessment approaches have to be considered. Psychotherapy in aftercare could play a prominent role for health preservation., Competing Interests: Die Autoren geben an, dass kein Interessenkonflikt besteht., (© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)
- Published
- 2019
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27. ["Understanding" in psychiatry -Part 2 : From incomprehensibility to an attitude of participative communication].
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Valdés-Stauber J
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- Comprehension, Humans, Attitude, Communication, Psychiatry methods
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Background: Starting from a systematic research of "incomprehensibility" we propose a turn from an epistemological analysis of "to understand" to an anthropological perspective relying on participative communication in a shared space of resonance., Method: We propose a systematization of the modes of understanding and of incomprehensibility based on a two-dimensional model combining epistemological and ontological perspectives. Finally, we outline "understanding" as a medical stance related to the healing relationship, which implies a disposition to get involved in a participative communication. We put forward the hypothesis that acceptance of the otherness of the patient, without the intention of a complete appropriation of meaning, could be noted as crucial feature of the anthropological approach., Results: In clinical medicine, especially in psychiatry, "not understood" is threefold: as "misunderstanding", as "not-understanding" (as a temporary lack of understanding), and as incomprehensibility (to understand, that there is nothing to be understood). Incomprehensibility may only allow for interpretative operations up to a certain limit. This unidirectional understanding as a diagnosing subsumption or as a psychological explanation in order to grasp meanings has to be completed by a bi-directional personal approach based on an engaging attitude (dialogical as well as quiescent) while acknowledging the incomprehensible., Discussion: A second-person-perspective emphasizes the healing relationship as an existential encounter, especially in personal liminal situations for the patient. From an anthropological perspective "to understand" has not only to be grasped as a semantic agreement, but also as an attitude towards participative communication. That means a disposition to get involved in the encounter with the mentally ill without aiming for grasping rationally significances or even to attribute meanings. The stance therefore should be based on an awareness for the patient's idiosyncrasy as well as on the empathetic production of a shared space of resonance within the healing relationship.
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- 2018
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28. ["Understanding" in psychiatry-part 1 : Philosophical sources and concept analysis].
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Valdés-Stauber J
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- Comprehension, Humans, Psychotherapy standards, Psychiatry methods, Psychiatry standards
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Background: The dichotomy comprehension/understanding vs. explanation has been initially developed with a legitimating intention for the humanities vis à vis the natural sciences. This investigation examines the different usages of understanding/comprehension in psychiatry and psychotherapy as well as its relevance for medical practice., Method: Critical discussion of the historical roots of the comprehension-explanation dichotomy and its introduction into the psychiatry by Jaspers. A propaedeutic logical analysis of the concept of "understanding" will be proposed. This investigation aims to elucidate latent dimensions in the usage of "understanding" in psychiatry and psychotherapy. In more detail the operation of assignment and attribution will be discussed as well as the elucidation of individual meaning and supraindividual significance., Results: The term analysis shows that "to understand" as a predicate is gradually and polysemic; its definition must take the different logically additive meanings into account. These meanings can be condensed into three dimensions: i. Rational diagnostic assignment; ii. Elucidation of meaning through individual empathetic re-experiencing as a psychological approach respectively the supraindividual elucidation of significance, and; iii. Dialogic attitude. Psychological understanding roots in Jaspers' epistemology on assignment to and alignment with supraindividual meaningful connections and not on empathetic re-experiencing., Discussion: "To understand" as a logical operation of assignment and as meaning elucidation takes for granted a predicate in its transitive first-person perspective ("who" should be understood, as objectified) in conjunction to a third-person perspective ("what" should be understood). This analysis should be complemented by a first-person perspective ("who" should be understood, as a subject) in conjunction with a dialogic second-person perspective ("how" should be understood, following a mutual disposition). This last approach will be discussed in an additional article.
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- 2018
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29. [Effectivity of Inpatient Psychosomatic Treatment - Results of a Naturalistic Two-Year Survey in a Psychosomatic Service at a General Hospital].
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Valdés-Stauber J, Fuchs A, Reiner S, and Bachthaler S
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Hospital Departments, Hospitals, General, Humans, Inpatients, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Psychophysiologic Disorders therapy, Psychosomatic Medicine
- Abstract
Background: Hospital psychosomatic treatment matches care expectations of a modern society. Evidence of its effectiveness through investigation in different settings is of importance because of prominent role of psychotherapy in German Healthcare System., Objective: First, to explore whether clinical as well as personal resources could improve significantly due to a hospital psychosomatic treatment. Second, to assess possible associations between outcome variables and other variables from the multidimensional profile of the sample., Method: The sample consists of all 2014 - 2015 admitted patients who agree with investigation (N=283). Pre-post comparisons of results from validated questionnaires were performed by means of t-tests, including effect sizes. Associations between outcome variables (pre-post differences of clinical and resources related variables) and variables from the multidimensional profile were performed by means of bivariate and multivariate regression tests. Outcome differences were assessed by means of logistic regression models., Results: Drop-out-rate due to refusal of participation amounts 11.8%; from remaining participants uncompleted datasets additional 6.9%; due to declining further participation during hospitalisation additional 4.1% (total drop-out rate amounted 22.8%). Functionality, self-efficacy, disease severity, psychological as well as physical symptom burden, depressiveness, interpersonal concerns, and embitterment improved significantly (p<0.001) displaying effect sizes between 0.39 and 1.42 (average level for clinical variables 0.98). Considerable associations between clinical and resources related variables in both directions were found. 10% of patients reported worsening., Discussion: Psychosomatic hospital treatment is effective according to clinical improvement as well as to perceived quality of treatment. Clinical and resources related variables are positively bidirectional associated notwithstanding the kind of working causality. Robust prognostic factors are hard to identify., Conclusions: Inpatient psychosomatic treatment is effective when the admission is indicated and the unit accomplishes mandatory quality criteria. The outcome occurs individually and is hard to be predicted. Depressiveness and embitterment could be considered as epiphenomena of all psychosomatic illnesses., Competing Interests: Die Autoren geben an, dass kein Interessenkonflikt besteht., (© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Sources of meaning in family caregivers of terminally ill patients supported by a palliative nursing care team: A naturalistic three-month cohort study.
- Author
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Valdés-Stauber J, Lemaczyk R, and Kilian R
- Subjects
- Aged, Analysis of Variance, Cohort Studies, Cost of Illness, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Palliative Care methods, Psychometrics instrumentation, Psychometrics methods, Surveys and Questionnaires, Caregivers psychology, Palliative Care psychology, Patient Care Team trends
- Abstract
ABSTRACTObjective:Our aim was to identify possible patterns of change or durability in sources of meaning for family caregivers of terminally ill patients after the onset of support at home by an outreach palliative nursing team during a three-month survey period., Method: The Sources of Meaning and Meaning in Life Questionnaire (SoMe) was administered to 100 caregivers of terminally ill patients at four measurement timepoints: immediately before the onset of the palliative care (t0), and at 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months after t0. Time-dependent changes were assessed for the completed subsample (n = 24) by means of bivariate linear as well as quadratic regression models. Multivariate regressions with dimensions of meaning in life as dependent variables were performed for the whole sample by means of random-effects models: dependent variables changed over time (four timepoints), whereas regressors remained constant., Results: No significant differences were found for psychosocial and clinical variables or for sources of meaning between the uncompleted and completed subsamples. Growth curve analyses revealed no statistically significant but tendentiously parabolic changes for any dimensions or for single sources of meaning. In multivariate models, a negative association was found between patient age, psychological burden of family caregivers, and changes in total SoMe score, as well as for the superordinate dimensions., Significance of Results: According to our hypothesis, sources of meaning and meaning in life seem to remain robust in relatives caring for terminally ill family members during the three-month survey period. A parabolic development pattern of single sources of meaning indicates an adjustment process. An important limitation of our study is the small number of participants compared with larger multivariate models because of high dropout rates, primarily due to the death of three-quarters of the participants during the survey period.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. [Care differences in a consultation and liaison service].
- Author
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Valdés-Stauber J and Bachthaler S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Depressive Disorder therapy, Female, Germany, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, General organization & administration, Hospitals, General statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Medicine statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Middle Aged, Patient Admission statistics & numerical data, Referral and Consultation organization & administration, Retrospective Studies, Somatoform Disorders diagnosis, Somatoform Disorders therapy, Suicide, Attempted prevention & control, Suicide, Attempted psychology, Suicide, Attempted statistics & numerical data, Delivery of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders therapy, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data, Resource Allocation organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: The investigation of the real density of care by a consultation-liaison service (CLS) as a function of patient groups, settings and diagnoses makes sense with respect to a better allocation of resources., Objective: Are there differences concerning the density of care by a CLS in a general hospital depending on patient groups and on the psychiatric diagnosis?, Method: A retrospective (2012-2015) survey of all consultations (n = 7081 corresponding to 4080 patients) was carried out based on the CLS documentation for quality assurance. Bivariate tests (i.e. χ
2 -test and ANOVA) and multivariate linear and logistic models were used to investigate group differences and associations., Results: The number of consultations achieved corresponded to 3.2 % of the total admissions to hospital, especially internal medicine (22.3 %), surgery (26.1 %) as well as gynecology and obstetrics (21.1 %). A suicide attempt was the reason for treatment in 3.3 %. Each patient received on average 1.7 consultations lasting 75 min but only 25 % received 2 or more consultations. Patients with psychiatric comorbidities, non-oncology patients as well as female and young patients received a more intensive care by CLS. Patients with depressive and somatoform disorders received a higher density of treatment., Discussion: The psychotherapeutic interventions performed did not follow the expected diagnostic patterns in other settings. Systemic interventions with indirect treatment should be given priority in older patients and especially in patients with organic mental disorders.- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
32. [Characteristics of Hospitalized Mentally ill Spanish Migrants in Germany - Results of a Statistical Reanalysis].
- Author
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Valdés-Stauber J and Valdés-Stauber MA
- Subjects
- Adult, Chronic Disease, Comorbidity, Emigration and Immigration statistics & numerical data, Female, Germany epidemiology, Hospitalization, Humans, Length of Stay, Male, Mood Disorders epidemiology, Mood Disorders psychology, Psychotic Disorders epidemiology, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Retrospective Studies, Spain ethnology, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders psychology, Mentally Ill Persons statistics & numerical data, Transients and Migrants psychology, Transients and Migrants statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To draft a clinical profile of mentally ill first-generation Spanish immigrants in Germany treated in a special setting in their native language and to identify possible correlations between time of onset of a mental disorder and migration and also between degree of utilization and clinical as well as care variables., Method: Statistical reanalysis of individual data (n = 100) of a previously published descriptive study with aggregated data corresponding to 15 variables. Correlations are calculated using chi-square as well as Fisher's exact test. Multivariate regression and logistic models were conducted. In addition to the explained variance of the models (R(2)), analyses of residuals as well as post-hoc power analyses (1-β) were performed., Results: A quarter of the sample (26 %) was mentally ill before migration; most of the patients received treatment very late (about 10 years after onset) and became chronically ill. Half of the sample shows a relevant somatic comorbidity and large average lengths of inpatient stays (54 days). In 16 % of treated cases, repatriation had to be organized. The degree of chronicity correlates with mental illness prior to migration. Severe mood disorders and psychoses occur late after having migrated, addictions and neurotic disorders are equally distributed over time., Discussion: Migration can not be set in a causal relationship with the development of mental disorders, although there is a positive correlation between affective disorders and the duration of the migration status. Chronicity is related to an outbreak of the disease before migration. The sample is relatively homogeneous (one nationality, first generation), but loses epidemiological representativeness (not related to a catchment area)., (© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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