311 results on '"De Clercq B"'
Search Results
152. The Family Affluence Scale as an Indicator for Socioeconomic Status: Validation on Regional Income Differences in the Czech Republic.
- Author
-
Hobza V, Hamrik Z, Bucksch J, and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Czech Republic, Female, Humans, Male, Family Characteristics, Income statistics & numerical data, Social Class, Surveys and Questionnaires standards
- Abstract
The Health Behaviour in School-Aged Children study (HBSC) uses the Family Affluence Scale (FAS) as a tool to identify the socioeconomic status of children and adolescents. Even though it is now widely applied in research studies, the external criterion validation of FAS has not been verified in terms of objective economic indicators in Central Europe. The aim of this study is to validate FAS in terms of disposable income per capita in 14 Czech administrative regions. Regional differences in the FAS score were analyzed using Pearson correlation and linear regression to measure the dependency of the aggregated mean of the FAS index at the regional level on data from the Czech HSBC survey carried out from April to June 2014 ( n = 10,361). The data analysis has shown an overall positive correlation between the FAS index and regional disposable income (R = 0.77, p < 0.01). The regional disposable income per person could explain 59.7% of the variance in the FAS index ( p < 0.01). By validating individual items, the authors identified three items with a significant correlation ( p < 0.01): number of computers, dishwasher at home, and number of holidays. FAS seems to be a valid instrument to measure adolescents' socioeconomic status., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
153. The relation between indicators of low employment quality and attendance behavior in countries of the European Union.
- Author
-
Janssens H, Braeckman L, De Clercq B, De Bacquer D, and Clays E
- Subjects
- Adult, Employment economics, Employment statistics & numerical data, European Union economics, Female, Humans, Male, Presenteeism economics, Sick Leave economics, Sick Leave statistics & numerical data, Employment standards, European Union statistics & numerical data, Presenteeism statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Previous research demonstrated an association between low employment quality and lower sickness absence, which may be explained by presenteeism. Therefore, this study aimed exploring the relation between three indicators of employment quality (long working hours, precarious employment, job insecurity) and attendance behavior., Methods: The association between employment quality and attendance behavior was investigated in 28.999 workers (mean age: 40.0 years, 53% males) of the fifth wave of the European Working Conditions Survey, using multilevel multinomial logistic regression analysis. Attendance behavior was operationalized as different combinations of sickness absence and presenteeism., Results: Those working >48 h/week, had a higher risk to report presenteeism (with or without sickness absence). They had a lower risk to report sickness absence without presenteeism. Workers with a precarious contract had a lower risk to report absenteeism without presenteeism and the combination of both presenteeism and absenteeism. Finally, for workers perceiving job insecurity, the risk for presenteeism without sickness absence was significantly higher., Conclusions: Several indicators of low employment quality were associated with attendance behavior, suggesting a complex behavioral mechanism in workers facing low job quality employment. Therefore, policy makers are recommended to re-establish the indefinite contractual employment as the standard, avoiding long working hours., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Faculty of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
154. Who does not cut down? Comparing characteristics and drinking motives of drinkers and abstainers during the exam periods.
- Author
-
Van Damme J, Hublet A, De Clercq B, Kuntsche E, Maes L, and Clays E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Young Adult, Alcohol Abstinence psychology, Alcohol Abstinence statistics & numerical data, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Motivation, Students psychology, Students statistics & numerical data, Universities statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: Drinking alcohol during the exams can affect academic performance and future career options, but is rarely investigated. Drinking motives, sociodemographics and personality characteristics are investigated in nonabstainers and weekly drinkers during the exams., Participants: 7,181 Belgian university students who anonymously responded to an email invitation to an online survey., Methods: Logistic regressions and mixed design analysis of variance on cross-sectional data., Results: One-third of the students continued drinking during the exams, with 40% drinking weekly. Nonabstainers were mainly men, elder, internally motivated when drinking, and housed with parents or independently. Weekly drinkers were similar, except mainly housed in student apartments or independently. Personality characteristics were nonsignificant. All drinking motives were less pronounced during the exams, with smaller differences for internal motives., Conclusions: Mainly linked to internal drinking motives, drinking during the exams in higher education is underestimated. The characteristics and motives of students doing so can be used in future interventions.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
155. Understanding adolescent personality pathology from growth trajectories of childhood oddity.
- Author
-
De Clercq B, Verbeke L, De Caluwé E, Vercruysse T, and Hofmans J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Personality Disorders psychology, Personality physiology, Personality Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Research on developmental trajectories of early maladaptive features for understanding later personality disorders (PDs) is increasingly recognized as an important study area. The course of early odd features is highly relevant in this regard, as only a few researchers have addressed childhood oddity in the context of emerging PDs. Using latent growth modeling, the current study explores growth parameters of odd features in a mixed sample of Flemish community and referred children (N = 485) across three measurement waves with 1-year time intervals. Personality pathology was assessed at a fourth assessment point in adolescence. Beyond a general declining trend in oddity characteristics, the results demonstrated that both an early onset and an increasing trend of oddity-related characteristics over time are independent predictors of adolescent PDs. Childhood oddity tends to be the most manifest precursor for PDs with a core oddity feature (i.e., the schizotypal and borderline PD), but also appears to predict most of the other DSM-5 PDs. Results are discussed from an overarching developmental framework on PDs (Cicchetti, 2014), specifically focusing on the principle of multifinality. From a clinical perspective, the significance of increasing or steady-high childhood oddity trajectories for adolescent PDs highlights the relevance of systematic screening processes across time.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
156. Developmental pathways of childhood dark traits.
- Author
-
De Clercq B, Hofmans J, Vergauwe J, De Fruyt F, and Sharp C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Machiavellianism, Male, Narcissism, Personality, Personality Development, Personality Disorders
- Abstract
The dark triad of personality has traditionally been defined by 3 interrelated constructs, defined as Narcissism, Machiavellianism, and Psychopathy. Although the content of each of these constructs is clearly represented in childhood maladaptive trait measures, no studies have jointly addressed the prospective developmental course of this core set of maladaptive characteristics throughout childhood and adolescence. The current study uses latent growth modeling to explore how early dark traits develop over time, relying on a selected set of 6 childhood maladaptive traits that conceptually cover the adult dark triad. Across a 5-wave multi-informant design spanning 10 years of childhood, adolescence, and emerging adulthood (Nwave 1 = 717, 54.4% girls, age range T1 = 8-14.7 years, mean age = 10.73), results indicate that childhood dark traits show to some extent shared growth across time, although notable unique growth variance was also observed. Early dark traits further demonstrate significant association patterns with an adult dark triad measure across informants and are increasingly able to discriminate among more and less prototypical profiles of adult dark triad scores. Findings are discussed from a developmental psychopathology framework, underscoring that the proposed set of childhood dark traits represents a meaningful developmental precursor of the adult dark triad. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
157. A five-factor model of developmental personality pathology precursors.
- Author
-
Verbeke L, De Caluwé E, and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Statistical, Personality Disorders classification
- Abstract
There is growing consensus that the dimensional structure of early personality pathology can be organized within a similar framework as in adults (De Clercq, De Fruyt, Van Leeuwen, & Mervielde, 2006; Tromp & Koot, 2008). From this perspective, the Dimensional Personality Symptom Itempool (DIPSI) was recently expanded from a 4- to a 5-dimensional trait structure (Verbeke & De Clercq, 2014), including Disagreeableness, Emotional Instability, Introversion, Compulsivity, and Oddity. This developmental maladaptive trait structure is in need of further research, however, before it can be accepted as a valid framework for describing early manifestations of personality dysfunction. By use of exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) analyses, the current study explored the fit of the 5-factor DIPSI framework across 4 different samples (N = 1456), and replicated 5 higher-order factors that demonstrated scalar invariance across age and metric invariance across informants and clinical status. These results underscore the robustness of 5 underlying dimensions of personality pathology at a young age and highlight adequate psychometric properties of the proposed DIPSI measure for describing childhood personality pathology precursors. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
158. Social inequality in adolescents' healthy food intake: the interplay between economic, social and cultural capital.
- Author
-
De Clercq B, Abel T, Moor I, Elgar FJ, Lievens J, Sioen I, Braeckman L, and Deforche B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Belgium, Child, Choice Behavior, Feeding Behavior, Female, Food Preferences, Humans, Male, Social Class, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adolescent Behavior, Culture, Diet, Healthy statistics & numerical data, Health Behavior, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Social Capital, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
Background: Current explanations of health inequalities in adolescents focus on behavourial and economic determinants and rarely include more meaningful forms of economic, cultural, and social capital. The aim of the study was to investigate how the interplay between capitals constitutes social inequalities in adolescent healthy food intake., Methods: Data were collected in the 2013/14 Flemish Health Behavior among School-aged Children (HBSC) survey, which is part of the international WHO HBSC survey. The total sample included 7266 adolescents aged 12-18. A comprehensive set of 58 capital indicators was used to measure economic, cultural and social capital and a healthy food index was computed from a 17-item food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) to assess the consumption frequency of healthy food within the overall food intake., Results: The different forms of capital were unequally distributed in accordance with the subdivisions within the education system. Only half of the capital indicators positively related to healthy food intake, and instead 17 interactions were found that both increased or reduced inequalities. Cultural capital was a crucial component for explaining inequalities such that social gradients in healthy food intake increased when adolescents participated in elite cultural practices ( P < 0.05), and were consequently reduced when adolescents reported to have a high number of books at home ( P < 0.05)., Conclusion: A combination of selected resources in the form of economic, cultural and social capital may both increase or reduce healthy food intake inequalities in adolescents. Policy action needs to take into account the unequal distribution of these resources within the education system., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
159. Relationship between non-standard work arrangements and work-related accident absence in Belgium.
- Author
-
Alali H, Braeckman L, Van Hecke T, De Clercq B, Janssens H, and Wahab MA
- Subjects
- Adult, Belgium epidemiology, Employment, Female, Health Status, Health Surveys, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Work Schedule Tolerance, Workload, Young Adult, Absenteeism, Accidents, Occupational statistics & numerical data, Occupational Injuries epidemiology, Occupational Injuries etiology
- Abstract
Objectives: The main objective of this study is to examine the relationship between indicators of non-standard work arrangements, including precarious contract, long working hours, multiple jobs, shift work, and work-related accident absence, using a representative Belgian sample and considering several socio-demographic and work characteristics., Methods: This study was based on the data of the fifth European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS). For the analysis, the sample was restricted to 3343 respondents from Belgium who were all employed workers. The associations between non-standard work arrangements and work-related accident absence were studied with multivariate logistic regression modeling techniques while adjusting for several confounders., Results: During the last 12 months, about 11.7% of workers were absent from work because of work-related accident. A multivariate regression model showed an increased injury risk for those performing shift work (OR 1.546, 95% CI 1.074-2.224). The relationship between contract type and occupational injuries was not significant (OR 1.163, 95% CI 0.739-1.831). Furthermore, no statistically significant differences were observed for those performing long working hours (OR 1.217, 95% CI 0.638-2.321) and those performing multiple jobs (OR 1.361, 95% CI 0.827-2.240) in relation to work-related accident absence. Those who rated their health as bad, low educated workers, workers from the construction sector, and those exposed to biomechanical exposure (BM) were more frequent victims of work-related accident absence. No significant gender difference was observed., Conclusion: Indicators of non-standard work arrangements under this study, except shift work, were not significantly associated with work-related accident absence. To reduce the burden of occupational injuries, not only risk reduction strategies and interventions are needed but also policy efforts are to be undertaken to limit shift work. In general, preventive measures and more training on the job are needed to ensure the safety and well-being of all workers.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
160. The relevance of schizotypal traits for understanding interpersonal functioning in adolescents with psychiatric problems.
- Author
-
Verbeke L, De Clercq B, Van der Heijden P, Hutsebaut J, and van Aken MA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Inpatients, Male, Young Adult, Adolescent Behavior physiology, Interpersonal Relations, Schizotypal Personality Disorder physiopathology
- Abstract
Social relationships are considered highly important throughout adolescence (Kenny et al., 2013), both for the further development and consolidation of identity, social roles, and skills. The schizotypal personality disorder (STPD) has a strong negative impact on these relationships with both parents and peers (Cramer et al., 2006; Hengartner et al., 2014), and can thus be considered as a risk factor for early maladaptive social functioning. The current study focuses on the relevance of different dimensional STPD traits for understanding social functioning, by examining their unique associations with global and more specific parental and peer relationship characteristics in a group of referred late-adolescents (N = 205, mean age = 20.27). Negative schizotypal traits, assessed by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed.; DSM-5; American Psychiatric Association, 2013) STPD traits Restricted Affectivity, Withdrawal, and Suspiciousness (Krueger et al., 2012) appeared to be a unique predictor for less maternal and peer social support. Positive schizotypal traits were measured with the age-specific Oddity trait scale (Verbeke & De Clercq, 2014) and proved to be a unique predictor beyond negative schizotypal traits for negative interactions with adolescents' mother and a best friend. These results highlight the heterogeneous nature of the STPD construct and suggest that a dimensional description may contribute to a more detailed understanding of how the STPD relates to poor interpersonal relationship quality in vulnerable adolescents. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
161. Fat and lean tissue accretion in relation to reward motivation in children.
- Author
-
De Decker A, De Clercq B, Verbeken S, Wells JCK, Braet C, Michels N, De Henauw S, and Sioen I
- Subjects
- Belgium epidemiology, Body Mass Index, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Cues, Female, Food Preferences, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Motivation, Overweight epidemiology, Overweight pathology, Pediatric Obesity epidemiology, Pediatric Obesity pathology, Reward, Risk, Sex Factors, Adiposity, Child Behavior, Child Development, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Muscle Development, Overweight etiology, Pediatric Obesity etiology
- Abstract
'Reward sensitivity' explains inter-individual differences in the motivation to obtain rewards when reward cues are perceived. This psychobiological trait has been linked to higher consumption of palatable food when exposed to palatable food cues. The current study aims to examine if reward sensitivity explains differences in patterns of fat and lean tissue accretion over time in children. A longitudinal observational study with measurement waves in 2011 (baseline), 2012, 2013, and 2015 was conducted. The sample was a population-based Flemish cohort of children (n = 446, 50% boys and 5.5-12 years at baseline; 38.8% of the baseline sample also participated in 2015). Baseline reward sensitivity of the children was assessed by parent ratings on the Drive subscale of the Behavioral Inhibition System/Behavioral Approach System scales. Age- and sex-independent Fat and Lean Mass Index z-scores (zFMI and zLMI respectively) were computed for each study wave based on air-displacement plethysmography. In girls, but not boys, reward sensitivity was positively associated with the baseline zFMI and zLMI (95% confidence intervals of unstandardized estimates: 0.01 to 0.11 and 0.01 to 0.10 respectively, P values 0.01 and 0.02 respectively). Further, reward sensitivity explained 14.8% and 11.6% of the change in girls' zFMI and zLMI respectively over four years: the zFMI and zLMI increased and decreased respectively in high reward sensitive girls (95% confidence intervals of unstandardized estimates: 0.01 to 0.11 and -0.12 to -0.01 respectively, P values 0.01 and 0.02 respectively). Hence, girls high in reward sensitivity had significantly higher adiposity gain over four years parallel with lower increase in lean mass than was expected on the basis of their age and height. These results may help to identify appropriate targets for interventions for obesity prevention., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
162. The role of community social capital in the relationship between socioeconomic status and adolescent life satisfaction: mediating or moderating? Evidence from Czech data.
- Author
-
Buijs T, Maes L, Salonna F, Van Damme J, Hublet A, Kebza V, Costongs C, Currie C, and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Cognition, Cross-Sectional Studies, Czech Republic, Family, Female, Humans, Male, Multilevel Analysis, Social Environment, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adolescent Health, Personal Satisfaction, Residence Characteristics, Social Capital, Social Class
- Abstract
Background: The concept of social capital has been extensively used to explain the relationship between socioeconomic status (SES) and adolescent health and well-being. Much less is known about the specific mechanism through which social capital impacts the relationship. This paper investigates whether an individual's perception of community social capital moderates or mediates the association between SES and life satisfaction., Methods: This study employs cross-sectional data from the 2009-2010 Czech Health Behaviour in School-Aged Children survey: a WHO Collaborative Cross-National Study (HBSC). A sample of 4425 adolescents from the 5
th , 7th and 9th grade (94.5% school response rate, 87% student response) was used to perform multilevel analysis., Results: We found that pupils' life satisfaction was positively related to both family affluence and perceived wealth. Moreover, we found the cognitive component of social capital to be positively associated with life satisfaction. Additionally, a significant interaction was found, such that the social gradient in life satisfaction was flattened when pupils reported high levels of perceived community social capital., Conclusions: The present findings suggest that community social capital acts as an unequal health resource for adolescents, but could potentially represent opportunities for public health policy to close the gap in socioeconomic disparities.- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
163. Associations between social vulnerabilities and dietary patterns in European children: the Identification and prevention of Dietary- and lifestyle-induced health EFfects In Children and infantS (IDEFICS) study.
- Author
-
Iguacel I, Fernández-Alvira JM, Bammann K, De Clercq B, Eiben G, Gwozdz W, Molnar D, Pala V, Papoutsou S, Russo P, Veidebaum T, Wolters M, Börnhorst C, and Moreno LA
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Europe, Fast Foods, Feeding Behavior, Female, Fruit, Humans, Male, Odds Ratio, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Single-Parent Family, Snacks, Social Support, Transients and Migrants, Unemployment, Vegetables, Diet, Life Style, Socioeconomic Factors, Vulnerable Populations
- Abstract
Socio-economic inequalities in childhood can determine dietary patterns, and therefore future health. This study aimed to explore associations between social vulnerabilities and dietary patterns assessed at two time points, and to investigate the association between accumulation of vulnerabilities and dietary patterns. A total of 9301 children aged 2-9 years participated at baseline and 2-year follow-up examinations of the Identification and prevention of Dietary- and lifestyle-induced health EFfects In Children and infantS study. In all, three dietary patterns were identified at baseline and follow-up by applying the K-means clustering algorithm based on a higher frequency of consumption of snacks and fast food (processed), sweet foods and drinks (sweet), and fruits and vegetables (healthy). Vulnerable groups were defined at baseline as follows: children whose parents lacked a social network, children from single-parent families, children of migrant origin and children with unemployed parents. Multinomial mixed models were used to assess the associations between social vulnerabilities and children's dietary patterns at baseline and follow-up. Children whose parents lacked a social network (OR 1·31; 99 % CI 1·01, 1·70) and migrants (OR 1·45; 99 % CI 1·15, 1·83) were more likely to be in the processed cluster at baseline and follow-up. Children whose parents were homemakers (OR 0·74; 99 % CI 0·60, 0·92) were less likely to be in the processed cluster at baseline. A higher number of vulnerabilities was associated with a higher probability of children being in the processed cluster (OR 1·78; 99 % CI 1·21, 2·62). Therefore, special attention should be paid to children of vulnerable groups as they present unhealthier dietary patterns.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
164. The indirect association of job strain with long-term sickness absence through bullying: a mediation analysis using structural equation modeling.
- Author
-
Janssens H, Braeckman L, De Clercq B, Casini A, De Bacquer D, Kittel F, and Clays E
- Subjects
- Adult, Belgium, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Occupational Diseases epidemiology, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Workplace psychology, Absenteeism, Bullying, Occupational Diseases psychology, Sick Leave statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: In this longitudinal study the complex interplay between both job strain and bullying in relation to sickness absence was investigated. Following the "work environment hypothesis", which establishes several work characteristics as antecedents of bullying, we assumed that job strain, conceptualized by the Job-Demand-Control model, has an indirect relation with long-term sickness absence through bullying., Methods: The sample consisted of 2983 Belgian workers, aged 30 to 55 years, who participated in the Belstress III study. They completed a survey, including the Job Content Questionnaire and a bullying inventory, at baseline. Their sickness absence figures were registered during 1 year follow-up. Long-term sickness absence was defined as at least 15 consecutive days. A mediation analysis, using structural equation modeling, was performed to examine the indirect association of job strain through bullying with long-term sickness absence. The full structural model was adjusted for several possible confounders: age, gender, occupational group, educational level, company, smoking habits, alcohol use, body mass index, self-rated health, baseline long-term sickness absence and neuroticism., Results: The results support the hypothesis: a significant indirect association of job strain with long-term sickness absence through bullying was observed, suggesting that bullying is an intermediate variable between job strain and long-term sickness absence. No evidence for the reversed pathway of an indirect association of bullying through job strain was found., Conclusions: Bullying was observed as a mediating variable in the relation between job strain and sickness absence. The results suggest that exposure to job strain may create circumstances in which a worker risks to become a target of bullying. Our findings are generally in line with the work environment hypothesis, which emphasizes the importance of organizational work factors in the origin of bullying. This study highlights that remodeling jobs to reduce job strain may be important in the prevention of bullying and subsequent sickness absence.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
165. Context matters: Student-perceived binge drinking norms at faculty-level relate to binge drinking behavior in higher education.
- Author
-
Van Damme J, Hublet A, De Clercq B, McAlaney J, Van Hal G, Rosiers J, Maes L, and Clays E
- Subjects
- Adult, Belgium epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Peer Group, Sex Factors, Students statistics & numerical data, Universities, Young Adult, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Binge Drinking epidemiology, Binge Drinking psychology, Social Perception, Students psychology
- Abstract
Background: Binge drinking in higher education is an important problem. To target binge drinking in students it is necessary to study the social context of students. Faculties (i.e., colleges or schools in Northern American education) are social contexts in which students behave, but little is known about how the faculty structure relates to monthly binge drinking. This study investigates the relationship with student-perceived binge drinking norms at faculty-level in addition to known personal determinants., Methods: Data were collected in 7181 students within 22 faculty-level units, using an anonymous online survey. Multilevel analyses were used to investigate the relationship of both individual-level determinants (e.g., perceived norms, social drinking motives) and student-perceived binge drinking norms at faculty-level on monthly binge drinking., Results: Two-third (62.2%) of the sample were female and the mean age was 21.06 (SD=2.85) years. In males, significant faculty-level variance in monthly binge drinking was found. At faculty-level, only same-sex student-perceived binge drinking norms showed a positive relationship (OR=2.581; 95%CI=[1.023,6.509]). At individual level, both opposite- and same-sex perceived binge drinking norms, and social drinking motives positively related to monthly binge drinking. In females, no significant faculty-level variance was found. Only individual-level determinants positively related to monthly binge drinking. No cross-level interactions were found., Conclusion: Besides individual determinants, especially in men, faculties are relevant environmental structures and networks to take into account when targeting binge drinking in higher education., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
166. Pain Intensity in Hospitalized Adults: A Multilevel Analysis of Barriers and Facilitators of Pain Management.
- Author
-
Van Hecke A, Van Lancker A, De Clercq B, De Meyere C, Dequeker S, and Devulder J
- Subjects
- Acute Pain diagnosis, Adult, Aged, Belgium, Female, Humans, Inpatients statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Pain Management methods, Patient Care Team, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Acute Pain nursing, Nurse's Role, Nursing Assessment methods, Pain Management nursing
- Abstract
Background: Despite an enhanced interest and evolution in pain management, prevalence remains high. Interventions to optimize pain-related care can only be effective if barriers are identified and accounted for., Aim: To assess pain intensity and examine its association with patient- (including health literacy defined in this study as "requiring help to read health information"), nurse-, and system-related (including social capital defined as "the importance of network and norms at work") barriers/facilitators to pain management., Methods: A two-center, cross-sectional study was performed between October 2012 and April 2013. The study included patients and nurses of 39 noncritical wards of two hospitals in Belgium. Patients who were 18 years of age or older and without impaired cognition or consciousness were eligible to take part. All nurses working in the included ward were invited to participate. Pain intensity and patient-related barriers were collected by a structured and standardized questionnaire, completed in dialogue with the patient. Nurses completed the questionnaire on the nurse- and system-related barriers and the social capital scale. Multilevel analysis was used to analyze the data because of the hierarchical structure of the data., Results: The average pain of all patients across all wards on a 0-10 scale was 2.2 (SD = 3.6). The multilevel analysis indicates that pain intensity can be explained by variables at patient and ward levels. A significant independent association was found between higher pain intensity and younger age, receiving pain medication, the conviction of patients that pain medication does not improve pain, inadequate health literacy in patients, nurses without advanced education, and nurse's concerns about side effects. Social capital did not emerge as predictor of pain intensity., Discussion: Patient and nurse level factors should be taken into account in hospitals when setting up strategies to improve pain management.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
167. Sensitivity to reward and adolescents' unhealthy snacking and drinking behavior: the role of hedonic eating styles and availability.
- Author
-
De Cock N, Van Lippevelde W, Goossens L, De Clercq B, Vangeel J, Lachat C, Beullens K, Huybregts L, Vervoort L, Eggermont S, Maes L, Braet C, Deforche B, Kolsteren P, and Van Camp J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Belgium epidemiology, Beverages, Cross-Sectional Studies, Cues, Dietary Sucrose administration & dosage, Drinking Behavior, Female, Health Behavior, Humans, Male, Netherlands epidemiology, Obesity epidemiology, Schools, Snacks psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Diet standards, Emotions, Environment, Feeding Behavior psychology, Food Preferences psychology, Obesity etiology, Reward
- Abstract
Background: Although previous research found a positive association between sensitivity to reward (SR) and adolescents' unhealthy snacking and drinking behavior, mechanisms explaining these associations remain to be explored. The present study will therefore examine whether the associations between SR and unhealthy snack and/or sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) intake are mediated by external and/or emotional eating and if this mediation is moderated by availability at home or at school., Methods: Cross-sectional data on snacking, availability of snacks at home and at school, SR (BAS drive scale) and external and emotional eating (Dutch eating behavior questionnaire) of Flemish adolescents (n = 1104, mean age = 14.7 ± 0.8 years; 51 % boys; 18.0% overweight) in 20 schools spread across Flanders were collected. Moderated mediation analyses were conducted using generalized structural equation modeling in three steps: (1) direct association between SR and unhealthy snack or SSB intake, (2) mediation of either external or emotional eating and (3) interaction of home or school availability and emotional or external eating., Results: Partial mediation of external eating (a*b = 0.69, p < 0.05) and of emotional eating (a*b = 0.92, p < 0.01) in the relation between SR and intake of unhealthy snacks was found (step 2). The relation between SR and SSB intake was not mediated by external or emotional eating (step 2). No moderation effects of home or school availability were found (step 3)., Conclusion: Our findings indicate that the association between SR and the consumption of unhealthy snacks is partially explained by external and emotional eating in a population-based sample of adolescents irrespective of the home or school availability of these foods.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
168. The Construct Validity of the Dutch Personality Inventory for DSM-5 Personality Disorders (PID-5) in a Clinical Sample.
- Author
-
Bastiaens T, Claes L, Smits D, De Clercq B, De Fruyt F, Rossi G, Vanwalleghem D, Vermote R, Lowyck B, Claes S, and De Hert M
- Subjects
- Humans, Netherlands, Reproducibility of Results, Software, Personality Disorders psychology, Personality Inventory standards
- Abstract
The factor structure and the convergent validity of the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5), a self-report questionnaire designed to measure personality pathology as advocated in the fifth edition, Section III of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), are already demonstrated in general population samples, but need replication in clinical samples. In 240 Flemish inpatients, we examined the factor structure of the PID-5 by means of exploratory structural equation modeling. Additionally, we investigated differences in PID-5 higher order domain scores according to gender, age and educational level, and explored convergent and discriminant validity by relating the PID-5 with the Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology-Basic Questionnaire and by comparing PID-5 scores of inpatients with and without a DSM-IV categorical personality disorder diagnosis. Our results confirmed the original five-factor structure of the PID-5. The reliability and the convergent and discriminant validity of the PID-5 proved to be adequate. Implications for future research are discussed., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
169. Exploring the complexity of the childhood trait-psychopathology association: Continuity, pathoplasty, and complication effects.
- Author
-
De Bolle M, De Clercq B, De Caluwé E, and Verbeke L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Models, Psychological, Mental Disorders psychology, Personality, Personality Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Four different models have been generally proposed as plausible etiological explanations for the relation between personality and psychopathology, namely, the vulnerability, complication, pathoplasty, and spectrum or continuity model. The current study entails a joint investigation of the continuity, pathoplasty, and complication models to explain the nature of the associations between early maladaptive traits and psychopathology over time in 717 referred and community children (54.4% girls), aged from 8 to 14 years. Across a 2-year time span, maladaptive traits and psychopathology were measured at three different time points, thereby relying on comprehensive and age-specific dimensional operationalizations of both personality symptoms and psychopathology. The results demonstrate overall compelling evidence for the continuity model, finding more focused support for pathoplasty and complication effects for particular combinations of personality symptoms and psychopathology dimensions. As expected, the continuity associations were found to be more robust for those personality-psychopathology associations that are conceptually closer, such as the emotional instability/introversion-internalizing problems association and the disagreeableness-externalizing problems association. Continuity associations were also stronger when personality was considered from a maladaptive rather than from a general trait perspective. The implication of the findings for the treatment of psychopathology and personality symptoms are briefly discussed.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
170. Association between psychosocial characteristics of work and presenteeism: A cross-sectional study.
- Author
-
Janssens H, Clays E, de Clercq B, de Bacquer D, Casini A, Kittel F, and Braeckman L
- Subjects
- Adult, Belgium epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Status, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Social Support, Stress, Psychological psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Absenteeism, Presenteeism organization & administration, Sick Leave statistics & numerical data, Stress, Psychological epidemiology, Workload psychology, Workplace psychology
- Abstract
Objectives: This study aimed at investigating cross-sectional relationships between psychosocial characteristics of work and presenteeism in a sample of Belgian middle-aged workers., Material and Methods: Data were collected from 1372 male and 1611 female workers in the Belstress III study. Psychosocial characteristics assessed by the use of self-administered questionnaires were: job demands, job control, social support, efforts, rewards, bullying, home-to-work conflict and work-to-home conflict. Presenteeism was measured using a single item question, and it was defined as going to work despite illness at least 2 times in the preceding year. Logistic regression models were used to investigate the relationship between psychosocial characteristics and presenteeism, while adjusting for several socio-demographic, health-related variables and neuroticism. An additional analysis in a subgroup of workers with good self-rated health and low neuroticism was conducted., Results: The prevalence of presenteeism was 50.6%. Overall results, adjusted for major confounders, revealed that high job demands, high efforts, low support and low rewards were associated with presenteeism. Furthermore, a significant association could be observed for both bullying and work-to-home conflict in relation to presenteeism. The subgroup analysis on a selection of workers with good self-rated health and low neuroticism generally confirmed these results., Conclusions: Both job content related factors as well as work contextual psychosocial factors were significantly related to presenteeism. These results suggest that presenteeism is not purely driven by the health status of a worker, but that psychosocial work characteristics also play a role., (This work is available in Open Access model and licensed under a CC BY-NC 3.0 PL license.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
171. The Relationship Between Immigrant School Composition, Classmate Support and Involvement in Physical Fighting and Bullying among Adolescent Immigrants and Non-immigrants in 11 Countries.
- Author
-
Walsh SD, De Clercq B, Molcho M, Harel-Fisch Y, Davison CM, Madsen KR, and Stevens GW
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Crime Victims psychology, Europe, Female, Humans, Male, Schools organization & administration, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Violence psychology, Adolescent Behavior ethnology, Bullying, Emigrants and Immigrants statistics & numerical data, Peer Group, Violence ethnology
- Abstract
Increasing numbers of migrant youth around the world mean growing numbers of heterogeneous school environments in many countries. Contradictory findings regarding the relationship between immigrant school composition (the percentage of immigrant versus non-immigrant students in a school) and adolescent peer violence necessitate further consideration. The current study examined the relationship between immigrant school composition and peer violence, considering classmate support as a potential moderator among 51,636 adolescents (50.1% female) from 11 countries. The findings showed that a higher percentage of immigrant adolescents in a school was related to higher levels of physical fighting and bullying perpetration for both immigrant and non-immigrant adolescents and lower levels of victimization for immigrants. In environments of low classmate support, the positive relationship between immigrant school composition and fighting was stronger for non-immigrants than in environments with high classmate support. In environments of low classmate support, the negative relationship between immigrant school composition and fighting and bullying victimization was stronger for immigrant adolescents than in environments with high classmate support. In general, the contribution of immigrant school composition was modest in comparison to the contribution of classmate support. The findings emphasize that it is not just the number of immigrants in a class per se, but rather the environment in the classroom which influences levels of peer violence. The results highlight a need for school intervention programs encouraging positive relations in schools with immigrant populations.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
172. Does the association between different dimension of social capital and adolescent smoking vary by socioeconomic status? a pooled cross-national analysis.
- Author
-
Pförtner TK, De Clercq B, Lenzi M, Vieno A, Rathmann K, Moor I, Hublet A, Molcho M, Kunst AE, and Richter M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Canada, Europe, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Adolescent Behavior, Smoking economics, Social Capital, Social Class
- Abstract
Objectives: To analyze how dimensions of social capital at the individual level are associated with adolescent smoking and whether associations differ by socioeconomic status., Methods: Data were from the 'Health Behaviour in School-aged Children' study 2005/2006 including 6511 15-year-old adolescents from Flemish Belgium, Canada, Romania and England. Socioeconomic status was measured using the Family Affluence Scale (FAS). Social capital was indicated by friend-related social capital, participation in school and voluntary organizations, trust and reciprocity in family, neighborhood and school. We conducted pooled logistic regression models with interaction terms and tested for cross-national differences., Results: Almost all dimensions of social capital were associated with a lower likelihood of smoking, except for friend-related social capital and school participation. The association of family-related social capital with smoking was significantly stronger for low FAS adolescents, whereas the association of vertical trust and reciprocity in school with smoking was significantly stronger for high FAS adolescents., Conclusions: Social capital may act both as a protective and a risk factor for adolescent smoking. Achieving higher levels of family-related social capital might reduce socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent smoking.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
173. Correction: Health Behaviours As a Mechanism in the Prospective Relation between Workplace Reciprocity and Absenteeism: A Bridge too Far?
- Author
-
De Clercq B, Clays E, Janssens H, De Bacquer D, Casini A, Kittel F, and Braeckman L
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
174. Health Behaviours As a Mechanism in the Prospective Relation between Workplace Reciprocity and Absenteeism: A Bridge too Far ?
- Author
-
De Clercq B, Clays E, Janssens H, De Bacquer D, Casini A, Kittel F, and Braeckman L
- Subjects
- Adult, Belgium, Female, Humans, Interprofessional Relations, Male, Middle Aged, Workplace psychology, Absenteeism, Health Behavior
- Abstract
Background: The persistent lack of evidence on causal mechanisms between social capital and health threatens the credibility of the social capital-health association. The present study aims to address this ongoing problem by investigating whether health behaviours (i.e. smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical activity) mediate the prospective relation between workplace reciprocity and future sickness absence., Methods: A cohort of 24,402 Belgian employees was followed up during 12 months for sickness absence. Workplace reciprocity was measured with four indicators-colleague help, colleague interest, supervisor help, and supervisor concern. Three types of multilevel mediation models were applied., Results: Overall, workplace reciprocity negatively related to high sickness absence (≥ 10 days) mainly independently from health behaviours. Uniquely, colleague interest positively related to smoking (OR = 1.058, 95% CI = 1.019, 1.098) and smoking in turn, positively related to sickness absence (OR = 1.074, 95% CI = 1.047, 1.101). No behavioural pathways could be identified between company-level reciprocity and sickness absence, and company-level health-related behaviours did not mediate the relation between company-level reciprocity and individual sickness absence., Conclusions: These results suggest that both social capital and health behaviours are relevant for employee health, but health behaviours seem not to be the underlying explanatory mechanism between workplace reciprocity and health.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
175. Obsessive-compulsive symptoms in children and adolescents: symptomatology, impairment and quality of life.
- Author
-
De Caluwé E and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Quality of Life, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder diagnosis
- Abstract
Although the "presence of obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptoms" and "OC-related impairment" are the main criteria to diagnose obsessive-compulsive disorder, the significance of symptomatology versus impairment in explaining quality of life remains unclear. The present study relies on two samples including 462 children (8-11 years old) and 265 children and adolescents (10-17 years old) and explores how self-ratings of specific OC symptoms and OC impairment are associated with father ratings of childhood quality of life. Hierarchical regression analysis was used to investigate the additive effect of OC impairment beyond OC symptomatology (and vice versa) in predicting quality of life. The results demonstrated that specific OC symptoms and OC impairment are differentially related to quality of life, underscoring the additive value of OC impairment beyond OC symptomatology, whereas the reverse was not the case. This finding highlights the importance of measuring impairment besides symptomatology to identify those OC features in childhood that are most significantly related to decreased quality of life.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
176. Assessing maladaptive traits in youth: An English-language version of the Dimensional Personality Symptom Itempool.
- Author
-
Decuyper M, De Clercq B, and Tackett JL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Personality Assessment standards, Personality Disorders diagnosis, Psychometrics methods, Surveys and Questionnaires standards
- Abstract
The present study addresses the psychometric properties of the English version of the Dimensional Personality Symptom Item Pool (DIPSI), a comprehensive taxonomy of trait-related symptoms in childhood. The structural invariance of the English DIPSI and the original Flemish version was investigated in a large sample of Canadian (n = 341) and Flemish (n = 509) adolescents, using both self- and maternal ratings. The original 4-factor structure of the DIPSI, including the dimensions Emotional Instability, Disagreeableness, Introversion, and Compulsivity, was replicated in the Canadian sample across informants. Results provided support for metric invariance across the English and Flemish DIPSI version, indicating that associations between variables across samples can be confidently made, although the meaning of specific items may slightly differ across the different DIPSI versions. Across raters, the Flemish and English DIPSI dimensions showed a similar covariation pattern with internalizing and externalizing psychopathology. High intercorrelations between the DIPSI dimensions in both the Flemish and English version suggest low discriminant validity, potentially resulting from lower variance on personality pathology in general populations, from a general pathology factor, or from developmental issues. To conclude, the English version of the DIPSI can be considered a promising tool for assessing maladaptive traits in younger age groups in internationally oriented research designs., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
177. Socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent health 2002-2010: a time-series analysis of 34 countries participating in the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children study.
- Author
-
Elgar FJ, Pförtner TK, Moor I, De Clercq B, Stevens GW, and Currie C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Health Services standards, Adolescent Health Services statistics & numerical data, Body Weight, Chronic Disease epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Exercise, Female, Global Health statistics & numerical data, Humans, Income, Male, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Personal Satisfaction, Socioeconomic Factors, Health Status Disparities, Healthcare Disparities statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Information about trends in adolescent health inequalities is scarce, especially at an international level. We examined secular trends in socioeconomic inequality in five domains of adolescent health and the association of socioeconomic inequality with national wealth and income inequality., Methods: We undertook a time-series analysis of data from the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children study, in which cross-sectional surveys were done in 34 North American and European countries in 2002, 2006, and 2010 (pooled n 492,788). We used individual data for socioeconomic status (Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Family Affluence Scale) and health (days of physical activity per week, body-mass index Z score [zBMI], frequency of psychological and physical symptoms on 0-5 scale, and life satisfaction scored 0-10 on the Cantril ladder) to examine trends in health and socioeconomic inequalities in health. We also investigated whether international differences in health and health inequalities were associated with per person income and income inequality., Findings: From 2002 to 2010, average levels of physical activity (3·90 to 4·08 days per week; p<0·0001), body mass (zBMI -0·08 to 0·03; p<0·0001), and physical symptoms (3·06 to 3·20, p<0·0001), and life satisfaction (7·58 to 7·61; p=0·0034) slightly increased. Inequalities between socioeconomic groups increased in physical activity (-0·79 to -0·83 days per week difference between most and least affluent groups; p=0·0008), zBMI (0·15 to 0·18; p<0·0001), and psychological (0·58 to 0·67; p=0·0360) and physical (0·21 to 0·26; p=0·0018) symptoms. Only in life satisfaction did health inequality fall during this period (-0·98 to -0·95; p=0·0198). Internationally, the higher the per person income, the better and more equal health was in terms of physical activity (0·06 days per SD increase in income; p<0·0001), psychological symptoms (-0·09; p<0·0001), and life satisfaction (0·08; p<0·0001). However, higher income inequality uniquely related to fewer days of physical activity (-0·05 days; p=0·0295), higher zBMI (0·06; p<0·0001), more psychological (0·18; p<0·0001) and physical (0·16; p<0·0001) symptoms, and larger health inequalities between socioeconomic groups in psychological (0·13; p=0·0080) and physical (0·07; p=0·0022) symptoms, and life satisfaction (-0·10; p=0·0092)., Interpretation: Socioeconomic inequality has increased in many domains of adolescent health. These trends coincide with unequal distribution of income between rich and poor people. Widening gaps in adolescent health could predict future inequalities in adult health and need urgent policy action., Funding: Canadian Institutes of Health Research., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
178. The influence of parental drinking on offspring's drinking motives and drinking: a mediation analysis on 9 year follow-up data.
- Author
-
Van Damme J, Maes L, Kuntsche E, Crutzen R, De Clercq B, Van Lippevelde W, and Hublet A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Mothers psychology, Motivation, Sex Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Parents
- Abstract
Background and Aims: The influence of parental drinking on offspring's drinking is well-documented. However, longitudinal evidence on the mediating role of drinking motives in this relationship is lacking. This study longitudinally investigates the mediating role of drinking motives in the relationship between parental and offspring's drinking., Methods: Using a prospective design, 587 Flemish children (response 30.0%) were followed for 9 years. Parental drinking was documented during the offspring's late childhood (10 and 11 years old) through paper-and-pencil questionnaires distributed by schools. The offspring's drinking habits and -motives were documented in early adulthood (18 and 19 year old) through a web-based questionnaire; invitations were sent by letter. Motives were measured using the Drinking Motives Questionnaire Revised Short-form, and mediation analyses were conducted with the product of coefficient test using bootstrapping., Results: Half the offspring were female (53.8%) and the mean age was 19.35 (SD = 0.52) years. A significant direct effect of maternal drinking during childhood on offspring drinking nine years later was found (β = 0.091, t = 2.071, p = 0.039). However, the association turned non-significant after stratifying the model for boys and girls. No direct effect was found for paternal drinking on offspring's drinking. Nevertheless, paternal drinking indirectly affected offspring's drinking through offspring's enhancement motives (β = 0.041, 95%CI[0.004, 0.082]) and maternal drinking indirectly affected male offspring's drinking through offspring's social motives (β = 0.067, 95%CI[0.007, 0.148])., Conclusion: These results show that parental drinking during late childhood relates to a high level of those drinking motives among young adults that are known risk factors for heavy drinking in early adulthood., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
179. Development and validation of the Youth Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms Scale (YOCSS).
- Author
-
De Caluwé E and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder psychology, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Self Report, Severity of Illness Index, Symptom Assessment, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder diagnosis, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
- Abstract
From the existing self-report measures for youth Obsessive-Compulsive (OC) symptoms, several challenges can be delineated to further improve the assessment of youth OC-related pathology. The current manuscript incorporates these challenges and reports on the development and validation of a new self-report OC scale for younger age groups, that was labeled the Youth Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms Scale (YOCSS), assessing OC symptoms and impairment in adolescents (three independent samples: N = 336; N = 289; and N = 209). Study 1 reports on the construction of the items and facets, and their higher-order structure, whereas Study 2 focuses on the confirmation of this structure, measurement invariance across age, and on the convergent and incremental predictive validity. These psychometric analyses resulted in ten symptom facets (structured in three domains) and one impairment facet, and further suggest that the YOCSS is a promising tool for describing early OC symptoms along a dimensional perspective.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
180. The continuity between DSM-5 obsessive-compulsive personality disorder traits and obsessive-compulsive symptoms in adolescence: an item response theory study.
- Author
-
De Caluwé E, Rettew DC, and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Psychological Theory, Young Adult, Compulsive Personality Disorder classification, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder classification
- Abstract
Objective: Various studies have shown that obsessive-compulsive symptoms exist as part of not only obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) but also obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (OCPD). Despite these shared characteristics, there is an ongoing debate on the inclusion of OCPD into the recently developed DSM-5 obsessive-compulsive and related disorders (OCRDs) category. The current study aims to clarify whether this inclusion can be justified from an item response theory approach., Method: The validity of the continuity model for understanding the association between OCD and OCPD was explored in 787 Dutch community and referred adolescents (70% female, 12-20 years old, mean = 16.16, SD = 1.40) studied between July 2011 and January 2013, relying on item response theory (IRT) analyses of self-reported OCD symptoms (Youth Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms Scale [YOCSS]) and OCPD traits (Personality Inventory for DSM-5 [PID-5])., Results: The results support the continuity hypothesis, indicating that both OCD and OCPD can be represented along a single underlying spectrum. OCD, and especially the obsessive symptom domain, can be considered as the extreme end of OCPD traits., Conclusions: The current study empirically supports the classification of OCD and OCPD along a single dimension. This integrative perspective in OC-related pathology addresses the dimensional nature of traits and psychopathology and may improve the transparency and validity of assessment procedures., (© Copyright 2014 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
181. Social capital and adolescent smoking in schools and communities: a cross-classified multilevel analysis.
- Author
-
De Clercq B, Pfoertner TK, Elgar FJ, Hublet A, and Maes L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Belgium epidemiology, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Multilevel Analysis, Social Determinants of Health, Social Support, Socioeconomic Factors, Students psychology, Family psychology, Residence Characteristics, Schools, Smoking psychology, Social Capital
- Abstract
We sought to determine whether social capital at the individual-, school- and community-level can explain variance in adolescent smoking and accounts for social inequalities in smoking. We collected data as part of the 2005/6 Health Behavior in School-aged Children survey, a nationally representative survey of the health and well-being of high school pupils in Belgium (Flanders). Social capital was assessed by structural and cognitive components of family social capital, a four-factor school social capital scale and a cognitive community social capital scale. We fitted non-hierarchical multilevel models to the data, with 8453 adolescents nested within a cross-classification of 167 schools and 570 communities. Significant variation in adolescent regular smoking was found between schools, but not between communities. Only structural family social capital and cognitive school social capital variables negatively related to regular smoking. No interactions between socio-economic status and social capital variables were found. Our findings suggest that previously observed community-level associations with adolescent smoking may be a consequence of unmeasured confounding. Distinguishing nested contexts of social capital is important because their associations with smoking differ., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
182. Integrating oddity traits in a dimensional model for personality pathology precursors.
- Author
-
Verbeke L and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Female, Humans, Male, Personality Disorders psychology, Personality Inventory, Psychometrics, Surveys and Questionnaires, Models, Psychological, Personality, Personality Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Current dimensional measures of early personality pathology (e.g., the Dimensional Personality Symptom Item Pool, DIPSI; De Clercq, De Fruyt, Van Leeuwen, & Mervielde, 2006) describe personality difficulties within a 4-dimensional framework. The present study corroborates recent evidence on the relevance of including a 5th Oddity-related domain for a more comprehensive description of personality pathology, and presents the construction of an empirically based taxonomy of early Oddity features. Psychometric and factor analytic procedures were conducted on self- and maternal ratings of adolescents (N = 434), resulting in 4 internally consistent facets that empirically collapse in 1 higher-order "Oddity" factor. From a structural perspective, this Oddity factor emerged as a clear 5th factor beyond the earlier proposed 4-dimensional structure of child and adolescent personality pathology. Significant associations of Oddity with both general and maladaptive trait equivalents support the construct validity of this 5th factor, and challenge current hypotheses on the applicability of the continuity hypothesis on general and maladaptive trait variance within the openness field. The results further suggest that Oddity traits are meaningfully associated with general psychopathology at a young age. These findings are discussed in terms of the importance of including a 5th Oddity-related factor in dimensional models of developmental personality pathology in order to acquire a more comprehensive description of the building blocks that underlie early personality difficulties., ((c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
183. The externalizing spectrum in youth: incorporating personality pathology.
- Author
-
Tackett JL, Herzhoff K, Reardon KW, De Clercq B, and Sharp C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Aggression psychology, Checklist, Child, Child Behavior psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Personality Inventory, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Personality Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Although personality disorder characteristics are often grouped with externalizing problems in adults, little is known about the extent to which they define the externalizing spectrum in youth. We examined the extent to which personality pathology traits in youth reflected common and specific variance in externalizing problems and explored differentiation of these connections by age. Parents reported on physical aggression, rule-breaking, relational aggression, and personality pathology traits for 1080 youth (48.8% male) ages 6-18 years. Disagreeableness and emotional instability traits were correlated with a general externalizing factor as well as with specific behavioral subfactors. The magnitude of these correlations varied across age, with the highest magnitude evidenced during the developmental periods of greatest prevalence for the specific externalizing behavior subtype. Taken together, these findings suggest that personality pathology is tightly connected with externalizing problems in youth, especially during developmental periods when externalizing problems are common., (Copyright © 2013 The Foundation for Professionals in Services for Adolescents. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
184. Callous-Unemotional traits in youth from a DSM-5 trait perspective.
- Author
-
Decuyper M, De Caluwé E, De Clercq B, and De Fruyt F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Affect, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders psychology, Personality Inventory, Residence Characteristics, Young Adult, Personality, Personality Disorders psychology
- Abstract
The current study investigated how the Callous-Unemotional (CU) trait specifier is empirically associated with the proposed trait system for personality pathology in DSM-5, and addressed the use of multiple raters in the assessment of CU traits and additional maladaptive traits in an adolescent community sample. Both mothers and adolescents (N = 197) participated in the present study. Results showed that CU traits are located in different parts of the personality space, and are significantly associated with four broad maladaptive trait dimensions, Negative Affect, Detachment, Antagonism, and Disinhibition. Despite moderate agreement between raters, self- and maternal-rated CU traits were related in a congruent manner with PID-5 traits, and adolescents provided incremental information in CU trait assessment above maternal ratings. The present results have clear implications for the conceptualization of CU traits within the overarching model of personality pathology, proposed in DSM-5, and partially supported the application of a multi-informant approach in CU trait assessment.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
185. Severity of pediatric pain in relation to school-related functioning and teacher support: an epidemiological study among school-aged children and adolescents.
- Author
-
Vervoort T, Logan DE, Goubert L, De Clercq B, and Hublet A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Pain diagnosis, Self Report standards, Young Adult, Faculty standards, Pain epidemiology, Pain psychology, Schools standards, Severity of Illness Index, Social Support
- Abstract
The current cross-sectional study examined child and adolescent pain severity in relation to various domains of school functioning and, in line with self-determination theory, the potentially protective role of perceived teacher support of child/adolescent autonomy and competence. Data from a large representative sample of Flemish school children and adolescents (N=10650; 50.8% boys; age range 10-21years; mean age=14.33) was collected as part of the World Health Organization (WHO) collaborative Health Behaviour in School-Aged Children (HBSC) survey. Child/adolescent pain severity was graded based on a pediatric pain classification system adapted from that of Von Korff et al. The current study thus provided insight regarding the prevalence of pain among Flemish children/adolescents and, extending the limitations of existing literature, examined the specific role of pain severity across various domains of school functioning. Findings indicated that a sizeable proportion of children reported moderate to severe pain problems (ie, about 14% of children and adolescents were classified in the highest pain grades: ie, grade III or IV). Furthermore, higher pain grades were associated with poorer outcomes across all indices of school functioning (ie, school absenteeism, school-related pressure and satisfaction, and bullying experiences), with the exception of academic performance. However, the association between pain grade and school absenteeism was less pronounced when children perceived their teachers to be highly supportive of competence and autonomy. Furthermore, teacher support of competence appeared to buffer against the harmful effects of severe pain upon instances of bullying experiences at school. Future research directions and implications for school-based interventions are discussed., (Copyright © 2014 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
186. The hierarchical structure and construct validity of the PID-5 trait measure in adolescence.
- Author
-
De Clercq B, De Fruyt F, De Bolle M, Van Hiel A, Markon KE, and Krueger RF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Psychometrics, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Personality Disorders diagnosis, Personality Inventory
- Abstract
The DSM-5 may be the first edition that enables a developmental perspective on personality disorders because of its proposal to include a trait assessment in the Axis II section. The current study explores the reliability, structure, and construct validity of the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5; Krueger, Derringer, Markon, Watson, & Skodol, 2012) in adolescents, a measure that assesses the proposed DSM-5 traits. A community sample of Flemish adolescents (N = 434; 44.7% male) provided self-reports on the PID-5 and the Dimensional Personality Symptom Itempool (DIPSI; De Clercq, De Fruyt, Van Leeuwen, & Mervielde, 2006). Results indicate an acceptable reliability for the majority of the PID-5 facets and a tendency toward structural convergence of the adolescent PID-5 structure with the adult proposal. Convergent validity with age-specific facets of personality pathology was generally supported, but discriminant validity appeared to be low. Beyond the findings that support the applicability of the PID-5 in adolescents, developmental issues may be responsible for specific differences in the adolescent PID-5 structure, the rather poor discriminant validity of the PID-5, and the lower reliability of a small number of PID-5 facets. These results indicate that further research on the validity of the PID-5 in younger age groups is required., (© 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
187. Hierarchical structure of maladaptive personality traits in older adults: joint factor analysis of the PID-5 and the DAPP-BQ.
- Author
-
Van den Broeck J, Bastiaansen L, Rossi G, Dierckx E, De Clercq B, and Hofmans J
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Personality Disorders classification, Personality Disorders diagnosis, Personality Inventory statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
In DSM-5, the categorical model and criteria for the 10 personality disorders included in DSM-IV will be reprinted in Section II. Moreover, an alternative dimensional classification model will appear in Section III. This alternative DSM-5 proposal for the diagnosis of a personality disorder is based on two fundamental criteria: impairments in personality functioning (Criterion A) and the presence of pathological personality traits (Criterion B). In the maladaptive trait model that has been developed to operationalize Criterion B, 25 pathological traits are organized according to five higher order dimensions. The current study focuses on the convergence of the proposed DSM-5 trait model (as measured by the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 [PID-5]) with the Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology (DAPP) model (as measured by the Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology-Basic Questionnaire [DAPP-BQ]) in a sample of older people. A joint hierarchical factor analysis showed clear convergence between four PID-5 dimensions (Negative Affect, Detachment, Antagonism, Disinhibition) and conceptually similar DAPP-BQ components. Moreover, the PID-5 and the DAPP-BQ showed meaningful associations on different levels of their joint hierarchical factor structure. Methodological and theoretical implications of these initial results for the conceptualization of personality pathology are discussed.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
188. Analysis of alpha3 GlyR single particle tracking in the cell membrane.
- Author
-
Notelaers K, Rocha S, Paesen R, Smisdom N, De Clercq B, Meier JC, Rigo JM, Hofkens J, and Ameloot M
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Cell Membrane genetics, Diffusion, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Membrane Proteins genetics, Protein Transport, RNA Splicing, Receptors, Cell Surface genetics, Receptors, Cell Surface metabolism, Receptors, Glycine genetics, Cell Membrane metabolism, Membrane Proteins metabolism, Receptors, Glycine metabolism
- Abstract
Single particle tracking (SPT) of transmembrane receptors in the plasma membrane often reveals heterogeneous diffusion. A thorough interpretation of the displacements requires an extensive analysis suited for discrimination of different motion types present in the data. Here the diffusion pattern of the homomeric alpha3-containing glycine receptor (GlyR) is analyzed in the membrane of HEK 293 cells. More specifically, the influence of the alpha3 RNA splice variants alpha3K and alpha3L on lateral membrane diffusion of the receptor is revealed in detail. Using a combination of ensemble and local SPT analysis, free and anomalous diffusion parameters are determined. The GlyR alpha3 free diffusion coefficient is found to be 0.13 +/- 0.01 microm2/s and both receptor variants display confined motion. The confinement probability level and residence time are significantly elevated for the alpha3L variant compared to the alpha3K variant. Furthermore, for the alpha3L GlyR, the presence of directed motion was also established, with a velocity matching that of saltatory vesicular transport. These findings reveal that alpha3 GlyRs are prone to different types of anomalous diffusion and reinforce the role of RNA splicing in determining lateral membrane trafficking.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
189. Antecedents of personality disorder in childhood and adolescence: toward an integrative developmental model.
- Author
-
De Fruyt F and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Models, Psychological, Adolescent Development, Child Development, Personality Development, Personality Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Antecedents of personality disorder in childhood and adolescence have been a neglected area in official taxonomies of mental disorders such as the International Classification of Diseases or the different editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. An evolving research field, however, underscores the importance of antecedents for understanding psychopathology and personality pathology in adulthood. The current article summarizes the history, updates reviews, and incorporates new research findings into an integrative scheme for conceptualizing personality pathology in childhood and adolescence. Implications of this model for assessment, future research, and intervention are discussed.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
190. A general and maladaptive personality perspective on youth obsessive-compulsive symptoms.
- Author
-
De Caluwé E, De Clercq B, De Bolle M, and De Wolf T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder psychology, Personality Inventory, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychometrics, Young Adult, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder diagnosis, Personality
- Abstract
Based on Krueger's (2005) conceptual model of the personality-psychopathology relationship, this study examines how personality predicts different youth obsessive-compulsive symptoms, comparing the relative contribution of general and maladaptive personality traits. Three-hundred forty-four adolescents provided self-reports on an obsessive-compulsive scale, and their mothers rated their child's general and maladaptive personality. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that personality differentially predicts obsessive-compulsive symptomatology, and that the relative significance of general versus maladaptive personality predictors differs across various forms of obsessive-compulsive pathology. The results are discussed in terms of the value of including both general and maladaptive personality measures in the assessment of early obsessive-compulsive difficulties.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
191. Development and evaluation of a new occupational medicine teaching module to advance self-efficacy and knowledge among medical students.
- Author
-
Braeckman L, De Clercq B, Janssens H, Gehanno JF, Bulat P, Pauncu EA, Smits P, van Dijk F, Vanderlinde R, and Valcke M
- Subjects
- Educational Measurement, Female, Humans, Male, Occupational Health education, Program Evaluation, Education, Medical, Undergraduate methods, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Occupational Medicine education, Self Efficacy, Students, Medical psychology
- Abstract
Objectives: Self-efficacy is defined as a person's beliefs in his or her abilities to successfully complete a task, and has been shown to influence student motivation and academic achievement. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a new European teaching module in occupational medicine on undergraduate students' self-efficacy and knowledge in the subject matter., Methods: Pre-, in-between, and posttraining tests were used to assess self-efficacy and knowledge building of 261 third-year medical students on occupational health issues. Determinants of self-efficacy and knowledge were also identified. Repeated measurement data were analyzed with multilevel statistical procedures., Results: The level of self-efficacy and knowledge in occupational medicine increased after the training. Students who frequently attended the lectures scored significantly higher than sporadic attendees. There was no relation between the level of self-efficacy and the final knowledge score., Conclusions: Teaching with the new occupational medicine module was effective. Lecture attendance is an important determinant of self-efficacy and performance. Self-efficacy was not associated with knowledge score. Encouraging classroom participation may enhance student achievement.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
192. The joint hierarchical structure of adolescent personality pathology: converging evidence from two approaches to measurement.
- Author
-
Kushner SC, Tackett JL, and De Clercq B
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the joint hierarchical structure of two measures of adolescent personality pathology within a community sample of Canadian adolescents., Method: Self-reported data on demographic information and pathological personality traits were obtained from 144 youth (M age = 16.08 years, SD = 1.30). Personality pathology was measured using the youth-version of the Schedule for Nonadaptive and Adaptive Personality (SNAP-Y; Linde, Stringer, Simms, & Clark, in press) and the Dimensional Personality Symptom Item Pool (DIPSI; De Clercq, De Fruyt, Van Leeuwen, & Mervielde, 2006). Lower-order scales were subjected to structural hierarchical analyses., Results: Scales from the two measures were complementary in defining higher-order traits. Traits at the 4-factor level of the hierarchy (Need for Approval, Disagreeableness, Detachment, and Compulsivity) showed similarities and differences with previous results in adults., Conclusions: The current investigation integrated top-down and bottom-up measures for a comprehensive account of the higher-order hierarchy of adolescent personality pathology. Results are discussed in the context of convergence across approaches and in comparison with previous findings in adult samples.
- Published
- 2013
193. Absolute and relative family affluence and psychosomatic symptoms in adolescents.
- Author
-
Elgar FJ, De Clercq B, Schnohr CW, Bird P, Pickett KE, Torsheim T, Hofmann F, and Currie C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Canada epidemiology, Child, Europe epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Psychophysiologic Disorders epidemiology, Socioeconomic Factors, Turkey epidemiology, Family, Health Status Disparities, Psychophysiologic Disorders psychology, Social Class
- Abstract
Previous research on the links between income inequality and health and socioeconomic differences in health suggests that relative differences in affluence impact health and well-being more than absolute affluence. This study explored whether self-reported psychosomatic symptoms in adolescents relate more closely to relative affluence (i.e., relative deprivation or rank affluence within regions or schools) than to absolute affluence. Data on family material assets and psychosomatic symptoms were collected from 48,523 adolescents in eight countries (Austria, Belgium, Canada, Norway, Scotland, Poland, Turkey, and Ukraine) as part of the 2009/10 Health Behaviour in School-aged Children study. Multilevel regression analyses of the data showed that relative deprivation (Yitzhaki Index, calculated in regions and in schools) and rank affluence (in regions) (1) related more closely to symptoms than absolute affluence, and (2) related to symptoms after differences in absolute affluence were held constant. However, differences in family material assets, whether they are measured in absolute or relative terms, account for a significant variation in adolescent psychosomatic symptoms. Conceptual and empirical issues relating to the use of material affluence indices to estimate socioeconomic position are discussed., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
194. Distinguishing free and anomalous diffusion by rectangular fluorescence recovery after photobleaching: a Monte Carlo study.
- Author
-
De Clercq B, Cleuren B, Deschout H, Braeckmans K, and Ameloot M
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Diffusion, Monte Carlo Method, Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching methods, Models, Theoretical
- Abstract
Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) is a common technique to probe mobility of fluorescently labeled proteins in biological membranes by monitoring the time-dependence of the spatially integrated fluorescence signals after a bleaching pulse. Discrimination by FRAP between free diffusion with an immobile fraction (FDIM) and the phenomenological model for anomalous diffusion based on the time-dependent diffusion coefficient (TDDC) is a challenging problem, requiring extremely long observation times for differentiation. Recently, rectangular FRAP (rFRAP) has been introduced for normal diffusion by considering not only the temporal but also spatial information, taking the effective point spread function of the optical system into account. In this work we provide an extension of rFRAP toward anomalous diffusion according to the continuous time random walk (CTRW). We explore whether the spatial information in rFRAP allows for enhanced discrimination between FDIM, TDDC, and CTRW in a single experiment within a feasible time window. Simulations indicate that rFRAP can indeed differentiate the different models by evaluating the spatial autocorrelation of the differences between the measured and fitted pixel values. Hence, rFRAP offers a tool that is capable of discriminating different types of diffusion at shorter time scales than in the case where spatial information is discarded.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
195. Reciprocity and depressive symptoms in Belgian workers: a cross-sectional multilevel analysis.
- Author
-
De Clercq B, Clays E, Janssens H, De Bacquer D, Casini A, Kittel F, and Braeckman L
- Subjects
- Adult, Belgium, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Job Satisfaction, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Psychological, Cooperative Behavior, Depression etiology, Interprofessional Relations, Occupational Diseases etiology, Social Facilitation
- Abstract
Objective: This study examines the multidimensional association between reciprocity at work and depressive symptoms., Methods: Data from the Belgian BELSTRESS survey (32 companies; N = 24,402) were analyzed. Multilevel statistical procedures were used to account for company-level associations while controlling for individual-level associations., Results: Different dimensions of individual reciprocity were negatively associated with depressive symptoms. On the company level, only vertical emotional reciprocity was negatively associated (β = -4.660; SE = 1.117) independently from individual reciprocity (β = -0.557; SE = 0.042). Complex interactions were found such that workplace reciprocity (1) may not uniformly benefit individuals and (2) related differently to depressive symptoms, depending on occupational group., Conclusions: This study extends the existing literature with evidence on the multidimensional, contextual, and cross-level interaction associations of reciprocity as a key aspect of social capital on depressive symptoms.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
196. The child behavior checklist dysregulation profile predicts adolescent DSM-5 pathological personality traits 4 years later.
- Author
-
De Caluwé E, Decuyper M, and De Clercq B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child Behavior, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Personality Disorders psychology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Surveys and Questionnaires, Checklist, Child Behavior Disorders diagnosis, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Personality, Personality Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Emotional dysregulation in childhood has been associated with various forms of later psychopathology, although no studies have investigated the personality related adolescent outcomes associated with early emotional dysregulation. The present study uses a typological approach to examine how the child behavior checklist-dysregulation profile (CBCL-DP) predicts DSM-5 pathological personality traits (as measured with the personality inventory for the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders 5 or PID-5 by Krueger et al. (Psychol Med 2012)) across a time span of 4 years in a sample of 243 children aged 8-14 years (57.2 % girls). The results showed that children assigned to the CBCL-DP class are at risk for elevated scores on a wide range of DSM-5 personality pathology features, including higher scores on hostility, risk taking, deceitfulness, callousness, grandiosity, irresponsibility, impulsivity and manipulativeness. These results are discussed in the context of identifying early manifestations of persistent regulation problems, because of their enduring impact on a child's personality development.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
197. General and maladaptive traits in a five-factor framework for DSM-5 in a university student sample.
- Author
-
De Fruyt F, De Clercq B, De Bolle M, Wille B, Markon K, and Krueger RF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Psychological, Psychometrics, United States, Young Adult, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Personality Disorders diagnosis, Personality Inventory
- Abstract
The relationships between two measures proposed to describe personality pathology, that is the Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI-3) and the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5), are examined in an undergraduate sample (N = 240). The NEO inventories are general trait measures, also considered relevant to assess disordered personality, whereas the PID-5 measure is specifically designed to assess pathological personality traits, as conceptualized in the DSM-5 proposal. A structural analysis of the 25 PID-5 traits confirmed the factor structure observed in the U.S. derivation sample, with higher order factors of Negative Affectivity, Detachment, Antagonism, Disinhibition, and Psychoticism. A joint factor analysis of, respectively, the NEO domains and their facets with the PID-5 traits showed that general and maladaptive traits are subsumed under an umbrella of five to six major dimensions that can be interpreted from the perspective of the five-factor model or the Personality Psychopathology Five. Implications for the assessment of personality pathology and the construction of models of psychopathology grounded in personality are discussed.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
198. Latent personality profiles and the relations with psychopathology and psychopathic traits in detained adolescents.
- Author
-
Decuyper M, Colins OF, De Clercq B, Vermeiren R, Broekaert E, Bijttebier P, Roose A, and De Fruyt F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Personality Inventory, Self Report, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Conduct Disorder psychology, Juvenile Delinquency psychology, Personality
- Abstract
The present study constructed empirically derived subtypes of adolescent offenders based on general traits and examined their associations with psychopathology and psychopathic traits. The sample included 342 detained minors (172 boys and 170 girls; mean age 15.85 years, SD = 1.07) recruited in various Youth Detention Centers across the Flemish part of Belgium. All adolescents provided self-reports on the quick big five, the youth self report, and the youth psychopathic traits inventory to assess general traits, psychopathology, and psychopathic traits respectively. Latent class analyses based on general personality traits were performed and suggested three personality types, consisting of an emotionally labile, close-minded and goal-oriented class, an undercontrolled class, and an emotionally labile-careless class. These three personality types within detained minors showed particular constellations of general traits and differed meaningfully in terms of their mean-scores on externalizing psychopathology and psychopathy measures.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
199. The association between leisure time physical activity and coronary heart disease among men with different physical work demands: a prospective cohort study.
- Author
-
Clays E, De Bacquer D, Janssens H, De Clercq B, Casini A, Braeckman L, Kittel F, De Backer G, and Holtermann A
- Subjects
- Belgium epidemiology, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sedentary Behavior, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Work, Coronary Disease epidemiology, Exercise, Leisure Activities, Motor Activity, Occupations statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The interplay of occupational and leisure time physical activity (LTPA) in affecting cardiovascular health is subject to debate. This study aimed to examine the independent and interacting associations of leisure time and occupational physical activity (OPA) with the incidence of coronary events within the BELSTRESS cohort. The study included 14,337 middle-aged men free from coronary heart disease at baseline. Standardized questionnaires and clinical examinations were used to assess socio-demographic factors, level of physical activity, job strain and classical coronary risk factors. The incidence of clinical coronary events was monitored during a mean follow-up time of 3.15 years. Results demonstrated overall a beneficial relation of LTPA and an adverse relation of physical work demands with cardiovascular health. However, an interaction effect between both physical activity types was observed, showing that men with high physical job demands who also engaged in physical activity during leisure time had an almost four times increased incidence of coronary events after adjusting for socio-demographic and classical coronary risk factors (HR 3.82; 95% CI 1.41-10.36). Stratified analyses revealed that moderate to high physical activity during leisure time was associated with a 60% reduced incidence rate of coronary events in men with low OPA (age adjusted HR 0.40; 95% CI 0.21-0.76), while this protective association was not observed in workers being exposed to high physical work demands (age adjusted HR 1.67; 95% CI 0.63-4.48). These findings suggest that recommendations regarding LTPA should be tailored according to the level of occupational physical activity.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
200. The relation between presenteeism and different types of future sickness absence.
- Author
-
Janssens H, Clays E, De Clercq B, De Bacquer D, and Braeckman L
- Subjects
- Adult, Environment, Female, Health Behavior, Health Status, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Absenteeism, Occupational Health, Sick Leave statistics & numerical data, Workplace statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was to examine the relation between sickness presenteeism and different types of future sickness absence in 2,983 Belgian middle-aged workers., Methods: Data were collected from 1,372 male and 1,611 female workers. Presenteeism was assessed by a single question, evaluating the frequency of occasions of going at work, despite illness, during the preceding year. Prospective, registered sickness absence data were collected during 12 months of follow-up. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to investigate the relationship between presenteeism and short/long spells of absenteeism and high sickness absence frequency., Results: High rates (>5 times) of presenteeism at baseline were significantly and independently associated with both long spells of sickness absence (at least 15 consecutive sick leave days) (men, OR=2.73, 95% CI=1.24-6.03; women, OR=2.40, 95% CI=1.31-4.40) and short spells of sickness absence (sick leave between 1 and 3 days) (men, OR=2.38, 95% CI=1.25-4.51; women, OR=1.90, 95% CI=1.17-3.11) in both genders during one year follow-up. Moderate rates (2-5 times) of presenteeism were significantly associated with long spells of sickness absence only in the male group (OR=1.90, 95%CI= 1.21-2.97). With regard to high sickness frequency (at least 3 sick leave episodes), a significant and positive association with high rates of presenteeism was demonstrated only in the female workers (OR=2.38, 95% CI=1.40-4.04)., Conclusions: These results suggest that presenteeism was related to different types of future sickness absence.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.