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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Epidemiologie und nosologischer Status der Generalisierten Angststörung / Prevalence and nosological status of generalized anxiety disorder

Hoyer, Jürgen, Beesdo, Katja, Becker, Eni S., Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich 09 October 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Theoretischer Hintergrund: Die diagnostischen Kriterien der Generalisierten Angststörung (GAS) und ihr Status als eigenständige psychische Störung waren lange umstritten. Inzwischen liegen neuere epidemiologische Daten vor, die ein präziseres Bild dieser Störung und ihrer Besonderheiten ermöglichen. Methode: Es wird ein systematischer Überblick zu Prävalenz, Verlauf und Komorbidität, zur Beeinträchtigung und zum Inanspruchnahmeverhalten sowie zur Spezifität des Kernsymptoms (Sorgen) erstellt. Ergebnisse: GAS ist eine häufige Störung, die im jungen Erwachsenenalter einsetzt, jedoch auch – anders als andere Angststörungen – hohe Inzidenzraten im mittleren Lebensalter aufweist. Der Verlauf ist eher chronisch. Trotz hoher Komorbidität lässt sich die Störung valide abgrenzen. Klinisch relevante Sorgen erweisen sich als störungsspezifisch. Die Beeinträchtigungen sind auch bei GAS-Patienten ohne Komorbidität beträchtlich. Schlussfolgerung: Der Forschungsstand spricht für die Bedeutung und Eigenständigkeit der Diagnose sowie für die stärkere Beachtung offener Forschungsfragen. / Background: The diagnostic criteria for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) and its status as an independent mental disorder have been controversial. More recent epidemiological data provide a more precise picture of this disorder and its specific features. Methods: A systematic overview is given in regard to prevalence, course and comorbidity, impairment, and help-seeking behavior as well as to specificity of the core symptom (worries). Results: GAD is a frequent disorder with high incidence rates in middle-age groups, which are not seen in other anxiety disorders. Despite the high comorbidity GAD can be validly distinguished. Clinically relevant worries have been proven as specific for the disorder. The impairments are also considerable for patients without comorbid disorders. Conclusions: Research supports the independent status of GAD and the importance of this diagnosis. Unsolved questions are to be analyzed in future research.
22

Perceived Stress and Generalized Anxiety on Cardiovascular Health Measured by Ultrasound Carotid Intima-media Thickness

Allen, Everett 16 May 2014 (has links)
BACKGROUND: There are many studies that have documented the increasing impact of stress and anxiety on an individual’s health and well-being. Everyone handles stress and anxiety differently with these conditions having varying physiological effects. To better recognize whether or not a person may need help in tackling these conditions, scholars have developed reliable validated instruments. Two prominent instruments that effectively assess stress and anxiety levels are the Perceived Stress (PSS) and Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) scales. Furthermore, the literature has shed light onto the importance of the carotid intima-media thickness (c-IMT) measurement as a tool in evaluating the risk of cardiovascular disease. After all, heart disease has been reported as being the number one killer of Americans in recent years. The specific aims of this study were to determine if there was an association between perceived stress / generalized anxiety and c-IMT (static association), and also if higher levels of perceived stress / generalized anxiety result in a significant increase in c-IMT (changes over time). METHODS: Data was collected on about 700 participants comprised of employees from Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. At baseline, six, twelve, and twenty-four months, the largest number of participants had completed and calculated their scores on the PSS and GAD-7 scales. At these same time points, participants had their IMT measured and recorded for the left and right common carotid arteries by a trained sonographer of the Emory Predictive Health Institute. Due to incomplete measurements and scores, only 228 participants were included for statistical analyses. This was still considered a suitable sample size given that this study only involved four measurement time points. Various statistical models were fitted for the data. All variables in the models were treated as categorical except for time which was continuous. Four separate models were built that included the variables perceived stress, age group, gender and time. In a similar manner, four models were built that included the variables generalized anxiety, age group, gender and time. AIC values, -2 log-likelihoods, partial correlations, p-values, and other relevant information were reported for these models. All statistical analyses were performed using the Statistical Analysis System (SAS), version 9.2. RESULTS: The mean c-IMT measurements for the Emory participants were higher than established normal ranges. A strong correlation existed between the PSS and GAD-7 two-year averages when treated as continuous variables (.7316, p <.0001). Likewise, a meaningful relationship existed when both scales were categorical (.4154, p < .0001). The analyses revealed that the left and right mean IMT measurements for the common carotid arteries modeled a linear trend with an unstructured covariance the best. The partial correlations for perceived stress and generalized anxiety revealed weak, but significant positive associations with the mean c-IMT measurement. Although the slope coefficients were not significant for perceived stress, an increase from below average to above average perceived stress level still resulted in an increase in mean c-IMT measurement. Conversely, mild generalized anxiety was found to be statistically significant in the regression model of the left mean c-IMT. This was after controlling for age group and gender. The p-value for mild generalized anxiety was 0.0258, and the slope coefficient was 0.04856. IMT measurements were consistently higher for males on both sides compared to females. They were also higher on the left side compared to the right. CONCLUSIONS: Failure to control anxiety could lead to c-IMT soaring to dangerous levels resulting in a myocardial infarction and/or cerebrovascular accident. Individuals should engage in healthy lifestyle practices that lower stress and anxiety levels to decrease the chances of cardiovascular disease. Based on this study’s findings, a person can certainly use their c-IMT readings, as well as their perceived stress and generalized anxiety scores, as indicators that lifestyle modifications may be needed.
23

Assimilation analyses of cognitive therapy for generalized anxiety disorder a multiple case study /

Gray, Michael Andrew. January 2010 (has links)
Title from second page of PDF document. Includes bibliographical references (p. 103-109).
24

Patient Motivational Language as a Predictor of Symptom Change, Hazard of Clinically Significant Response, and Time to Response in Psychotherapy for Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Goodwin, Brien J 19 March 2019 (has links)
Change-talk (CT), or self-arguments for change, has been associated with favorable patient outcomes, while counter change-talk (CCT), or self-arguments against change, has been associated with poorer outcomes. Most studies on change language have focused on the prediction of distal posttreatment outcomes, while the prediction of more proximal outcomes has remained largely untested. Addressing this gap, we examined early treatment CT and CCT as predictors of worry change trajectories, “hazard” of clinically significant response, and time to response (i.e., outcome efficiency) in CBT and CBT integrated with MI (MI-CBT) for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). We also explored whether treatment type moderated these associations. Data derived from a randomized controlled trial comparing CBT (n = 43) and MI-CBT (n = 42) for GAD. Independent observers reliably coded CT/CCT during session 1. Patients rated their worry after every session. Multilevel modeling revealed that, across both treatments, more CT associated with lower midtreatment worry level (p = .03), whereas more CCT associated with a slower rate of worry reduction at midtreatment (p = .04). However, treatment moderated the associations between CT and both midtreatment worry level (p = .004) and rate of change (p = .03). In CBT, patients with higher vs. lower CT had less worry and a faster rate of worry reduction; in MI-CBT, CT was unrelated to midtreatment worry level and the rate of worry change. Treatment did not moderate the CCT-worry relations. Survival analyses revealed that, across both treatments, more CT associated with a greater hazard of response (p = .004) and approached a faster time to response (p = .05), and more CCT associated with a lower hazard of response (p = .002) and approached a slower time to response (p = .06). Patient motivational language predicts proximal outcomes, and may be useful in differential treatment selection.
25

Integrating Motivational Interviewing with CBT for Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Direct and Indirect Effects on Interpersonal Outcomes

Muir, Heather 02 July 2019 (has links)
Aim: A randomized clinical trial demonstrated that responsively adding motivational interviewing (MI) to cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) outperformed CBT alone on long-term worry reduction (Westra et al., 2016). Consistent with MI’s additive aim, this effect was mediated by less patient midtreatment resistance in the integrative treatment (Constantino et al., 2019). Insofar as GAD is marked by interpersonal styles of excessive nonassertiveness and over accommodation, I tested here whether MI-CBT also outperformed CBT, across acute treatment and long-term follow up, on reducing these characteristic interpersonal problems. Moreover, as patient resistance is an interpersonal event for which person-centered MI should, according to theory, be more helpful than directive CBT, I tested if resistance also mediated the expected effect of treatment on the long-term interpersonal outcomes. Method: Eighty-five patients with severe GAD were randomly assigned to 15 sessions of MI-CBT or CBT. Patients completed a measure of interpersonal problems repeatedly through treatment and 12 months of follow up. Independent observers rated patient resistance at a midtreatment session. Results: As expected, structural equation models revealed comparable reductions in nonassertiveness and over accommodation across acute MI-CBT and CBT. Also as predicted, MI-CBT vs. CBT promoted significantly greater reduction in over accommodation problems over long-term follow up; however, this differential effect was only marginally significant for nonassertiveness problems. Finally, as predicted, the treatment effect on the level of both interpersonal problems at 12-month follow up was mediated by less midtreatment resistance in MI-CBT vs. CBT. Discussion: Results support that the benefit of adding MI to CBT for GAD extends to long-term interpersonal change, and they implicate resistance management as a candidate mechanism of this additive effect.
26

An Examination of the Relationship Between Pediatric Food Allergies and Anxiety Symptoms

Collins, Adelaide Kaitlyn 14 June 2022 (has links)
No description available.
27

Generaliserat ångestsyndrom och self-efficacy hos elitgymnaster : Förekomst och samband mellan generaliserat ångestsyndrom och self-efficacy till att uppnå idrottsspecifika mål hos unga svenska kvinnliga elitgymnaster / Generalized anxiety disorder and self-efficacyin elite gymnasts : Occurrence and correlation between generalized anxiety disorder and self-efficacy to achieve sports-specific goals in young Swedish female elite gymnasts

Lindgren, Petra, Lindqvist, Sophia January 2021 (has links)
Bakgrund: Psykisk ohälsa är idag ett vanligt hälsoproblem hos unga svenska kvinnor. Ett växande intresse finns även för den psykiska hälsan hos elitidrottare eftersom forskning har identifierat en rad idrottsspecifika stressorer som ökar risken för psykisk ohälsa. Self-efficacy är en annan faktor som har visats kunna påverka elitidrottarens idrottsliga prestation och är tillsammans med ett gott psykiskt mående viktigt för att elitidrottaren ska lyckas. Syfte: Att undersöka förekomst och grad av generaliserat ångestsyndrom (GAD) och self-efficacy (SE) till att nå idrottsspecifika mål hos unga svenska kvinnliga elitgymnaster samt dess korrelation. Metod: Studien är en tvärsnittsstudie med en kvantitativ ansats. Generaliserat ångestsyndrom mättes med en elektronisk version av GAD-7 och SE med General Self-Efficacy Scale (GSES). Deltagarna rekryterades genom ett icke slumpmässigt bekvämlighetsurval och datan analyserades i det statistiska dataprogrammet SPSS. Resultat: 48 deltagare rekryterades till studien och av dessa rapporterade 54,3 % någon grad av GAD. Deltagarna hade ett medianvärde på 29 poäng för SE till att nå idrottsspecifika mål. Det fanns en signifikant, svag och negativ korrelation mellan GAD och SE till att nå idrottsspecifika mål. Konklusion: Studiens resultat går i linje med tidigare forskning som visar att GAD är vanligt förekommande hos kvinnliga elitidrottare. Ett svagt negativt samband kunde visas mellan GAD och SE till att nå idrottsspecifika mål hos de unga, kvinnliga svenska elitgymnasterna. Dock behövs mer forskning på en större population rekryterade från ett slumpmässigt urval för att resultatet ska kunna generaliseras. / Background: Mental illness is a common health problem among young Swedish women. There is also a growing interest for the mental health of elite athletes as previous research has identified several sport-specific stressors that can increase the risk of mental illness. Self-efficacy is another factor that has been shown to affect athletic performance and is, as well as a good mental state, important for an elite athlete to succeed.  Aim: To investigate the prevalence and severity of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) and self-efficacy (SE) to achieve sport-specific goals in young Swedish female elite gymnasts and its correlation. Methods: The study is a cross-sectional, non-randomized study with a quantitative approach. GAD was measured using an electronic version of GAD-7 Scale and SE with the General Self-Efficacy Scale (GSES). Results: 48 participants were recruited and out of these, 54,3% reported some degree of GAD. The participants had a median value of 29 points for SE to achieve sport-specific goals. There was a significant, weak and inverse correlation between GAD and SE to achieve sport-specific goals. Conclusion: The results of the study are in line with previous research that identifies GAD as a common health problem among female elite athletes. A significant, weak and inverse correlation could be shown between GAD and SE to achieve sport-specific goals. However, more research is needed on a larger population recruited from a randomized sample for the results to be generalized.
28

Central neural correlates of generalized anxiety disorder : A systematic review

Rundström, Alexandra January 2021 (has links)
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is a prevalent anxiety disorder that is characterized by persistent excessive worrying that is often difficult to control. The pathology of GAD has been associated with abnormal neural activity and functional connectivity. This systematic review has examined the central neural correlates of GAD which are the prefrontal cortex (PFC), the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the amygdala and how activation and functional connectivity in these brain areas differ between patients with GAD and healthy controls. This review also investigated how abnormal functional connectivity and activation in these brain regions relates to worry which is the most prominent psychological symptom in patients with GAD. A systematic review was conducted and seven original functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies were included after a literature search on PubMed, Scopus and, Web of Science. The main findings from this review revealed decreased activation in the PFC and ACC and enhanced activation in the amygdala during the viewing of negative stimuli in patients with GAD. Identifying the neural correlates of GAD and how it relates to worry may provide improved treatment in the future such as developing more effective psychotropic drugs or improved psychotherapy. GAD has been associated with lower well-being and life satisfaction and may even be a risk factor for suicidal thoughts. One of the limitations from this review is that several of the included studies recruited patients with comorbidities and for that reason results from these studies cannot be generalized and applied to individuals with GAD.
29

Functioning and Connection in a Virtual World: A Generalized Anxiety Disorder Perspective

Buhk, Alex H. January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
30

Do Proximal Risk Factors Mediate the Impact of Affect on Generalized Anxiety Disorderand Major Depressive Disorder?

Koscinski, Brandon January 2021 (has links)
No description available.

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