rome has been researched along with Mood-Disorders* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for rome and Mood-Disorders
Article | Year |
---|---|
Suicide attempters in the emergency department before hospitalization in a psychiatric ward.
The study aims to compare the current suicidal risk of mood disorder patients who had just attempted suicide, as compared with those who had not attempted suicide, admitted to an emergency department (ED), and then hospitalized in a psychiatric unit.. One hundred sixty-one mood disorder patients admitted to the ED were studied. A total of 22.4% of the participants were admitted for a suicide attempt. Patients were assessed for psychopathology and diagnosis.. Suicide attempters were nearly 12 times more likely to report ongoing suicidal ideation during the psychiatric evaluation in the ED than nonattempters. Men and women did not differ for current and previous suicide attempts or for ongoing suicidal ideation.. It is important to conduct a suicide risk assessment when individuals are admitted to an ED. Topics: Adult; Aged; Catharsis; Cross-Sectional Studies; Emergency Services, Psychiatric; Female; Humans; Logistic Models; Male; Middle Aged; Mood Disorders; Multivariate Analysis; Prognosis; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Rome; Suicide; Suicide Prevention; Suicide, Attempted | 2011 |
TEMPS-A (Rome): psychometric validation of affective temperaments in clinically well subjects in mid- and south Italy.
Our aim was to study the psychometrics and factor structure replicability of the Temperament Evaluation of Memphis, Pisa, Paris and San Diego Autoquestionnaire (TEMPS-A) in its Italian (Rome) Version. The questionnaire is a self-report 110-item measure that postulates five affective temperaments-the depressive, cyclothymic, irritable, hyperthymic, and anxious-which embody both strengths and liabilities along affective reactivity. In Italian, the TEMPS has previously been validated in its original 32-item version, the TEMPS-I (Pisa), one which did not yet include an anxious subscale.. The present sample consisted of 948 nonclinical subjects (27.39 years+/-8.22 S.D.). There were 476 men (50.2%: 28.56 years+/-8.63 S.D.) and 472 women (49.8%: 26.21 years+/-7.61 S.D.). Reliability and validity were assessed by standard psychometric tests.. Principal Components Analysis with Varimax rotation resulted in a 3-factor solution: the first with highest explained variance (8.84%) represents Dysthymic, Cyclothymic and Anxious (Dys-Cyc-Anx) temperaments combined; the second identifies Irritable temperament (5.65% of variance); and the third Hyperthymic temperament (5.16% of variance). Cronbach Alpha coefficients for the three subscales were respectively .89, .77 and .74. The rates for the Dys-Cyc-Anx were 2.7%, and for the Irritable 3.1%. Despite the low rate of the Hyperthymic temperament (.2%), nonetheless 16% were between 1st and 2nd SD. Exploratory factor analysis revealed a positive loading combining Dys-Cyc-Anx with the Irritable; the Hyperthymic loaded negatively on this factor. In terms of dominant temperaments, based on z-scores, 2.7% were dysthymic, 1.7% cyclothymic, .7% hyperthymic, 3.5% irritable and 3% anxious.. Although developed for self-rated use, the Italian authors nonetheless administered the TEMPS-A in an interview format. It is uncertain in what ways this procedure could have influenced our results, if any. Another limitation is that we did not assess test-retest reliability.. These data identify at least 3-factors, Dys-Cyc-Anx and Irritable (which are correlated), and Hyperthymic, which is uncorrelated with the others. Though our data are reminiscent of the neuroticism-extraversion distinction, importantly traits are operationalized in affective terms. Beyond the well-known relationship between the Dysthymic and Cyclothymic subscales and that between the Dysthymic and Anxious, the present data reveal a strong relationship between the Cyclothymic and Anxious as well, which is of great relevance for bipolar II. It is also provocative that much of hyperthymia (16%) in the +SD is between the 1st and 2nd SD, thereby "normalizing" this temperament in Italy, as previously reported by TEMPS-I (Pisa) from Northern Italy (and TEMPS-A from Lebanon and Argentina). Topics: Adult; Anxiety Disorders; Argentina; Bipolar Disorder; Cross-Cultural Comparison; Cyclothymic Disorder; Dysthymic Disorder; Factor Analysis, Statistical; Female; Humans; Irritable Mood; Italy; Lebanon; Male; Mood Disorders; Personality Assessment; Personality Inventory; Principal Component Analysis; Psychometrics; Reproducibility of Results; Rome; Sex Factors; Surveys and Questionnaires; Temperament; Translations | 2008 |