4 results on '"Bording MK"'
Search Results
2. Development and psychometric properties of a five-language multiperspective instrument to assess clinical decision making style in the treatment of people with severe mental illness (CDMS)
- Author
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Puschner, B, Neumann, P, Jordan, H, Slade, M, FIORILLO, Andrea, Giacco, D, Egerhazi, A, Ivanka, T, Bording, Mk, Sorensen, Ho, Bar, A, Kawohl, W, Loos, S, CEDAR STUDY GROUP: Puschner, B, Arnold, K, Ay, E, Becker, T, Konrad, J, Steffen, S, Zentner, N, Clarke, E, MAJ, Mario, Fiorillo, A, LUCIANO, Mario, De Rosa, C, Sampogna, G, Del Vecchio, V, Cozzolino, P, Del Vecchio, Hg, Salzano, A, Ivánka, T, Nagy, M, Berecz, R, Glaub, T, Suveges, Á, Kovacs, A, Magyar, E, Munk Jorgensen, P, Larsen, Ji, Bär, A, Rössler, W, Krömer, S, Mutschler, J, Obermann, C., Puschner, B, Neumann, P, Jordan, H, Slade, M, Fiorillo, Andrea, Giacco, D, Egerhazi, A, Ivanka, T, Bording, Mk, Sorensen, Ho, Bar, A, Kawohl, W, Loos, S, CEDAR STUDY GROUP: Puschner, B, Arnold, K, Ay, E, Becker, T, Konrad, J, Steffen, S, Zentner, N, Clarke, E, Maj, Mario, Fiorillo, A, Luciano, Mario, De Rosa, C, Sampogna, G, Del Vecchio, V, Cozzolino, P, Del Vecchio, Hg, Salzano, A, Ivánka, T, Nagy, M, Berecz, R, Glaub, T, Suveges, Á, Kovacs, A, Magyar, E, Munk Jorgensen, P, Larsen, Ji, Bär, A, Rössler, W, Krömer, S, Mutschler, J, Obermann, C., University of Zurich, and Puschner, Bernd
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Male ,AUTONOMY ,Psychometrics ,Denmark ,RECOVERY INSTRUMENT ,2738 Psychiatry and Mental Health ,0302 clinical medicine ,PHYSICIANS ,lcsh:Psychiatry ,Germany ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Language ,Item analysis ,Mental Disorders ,Great Britain ,Orvostudományok ,3. Good health ,Italy ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Scale (social sciences) ,Mental Disorder ,Female ,Autonomy ,Psychometric ,Switzerland ,Clinical psychology ,Research Article ,Human ,Adult ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,lcsh:RC435-571 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Decision Making ,Reproducibility of Result ,PARTICIPATION PREFERENCES ,610 Medicine & health ,Klinikai orvostudományok ,VALIDATION ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,BREAST-CANCER ,Psychological testing ,Patient participation ,Psychological Tests ,Hungary ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,CARE ,Mental illness ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,United Kingdom ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychological Test ,10054 Clinic for Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, and Psychosomatics ,Patient Participation ,business - Abstract
Background The aim of this study was to develop and evaluate psychometric properties of the Clinical Decision Making Style (CDMS) scale which measures general preferences for decision making as well as preferences regarding the provision of information to the patient from the perspectives of people with severe mental illness and staff. Methods A participatory approach was chosen for instrument development which followed 10 sequential steps proposed in a current guideline of good practice for the translation and cultural adaptation of measures. Following item analysis, reliability, validity, and long-term stability of the CDMS were examined using Spearman correlations in a sample of 588 people with severe mental illness and 213 mental health professionals in 6 European countries (Germany, UK, Italy, Denmark, Hungary, and Switzerland). Results In both patient and staff versions, the two CDMS subscales “Participation in Decision Making” and “Information” reliably measure distinct characteristics of decision making. Validity could be demonstrated to some extent, but needs further investigation. Conclusions Together with two other five-language patient- and staff-rated measures developed in the CEDAR study (ISRCTN75841675) – “Clinical Decision Making in Routine Care” and “Clinical Decision Making Involvement and Satisfaction” – the CDMS allows empirical investigation of the complex relation between clinical decision making and outcome in the treatment of people with severe mental illness across Europe.
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- 2013
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3. An outreach collaborative model for early identification and treatment of mental disorder in Danish workplaces.
- Author
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Sørensen HØ, Valentin JB, Bording MK, Larsen JI, Larsen A, and Omland Ø
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- Adult, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Denmark epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Middle Aged, Psychotherapy methods, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Treatment Outcome, Ambulatory Care methods, Intersectoral Collaboration, Mental Disorders psychology, Mental Disorders therapy, Workplace psychology
- Abstract
Background: Depression and anxiety are prevalent mental disorders among the working population with potentially high personal and financial cost. The overall aim of this study was to test the applicability of an outreach collaborative model for early identification and treatment of clinical and sub-clinical mental disorders among Danish employees. This applicability was examined by I) investigating the fractions of identified and treated clinical and subclinical cases, II) describing the distribution and characteristics of cases identified and III) investigating the effect of allocated treatment., Methods: A longitudinal study design with four assessments (T0-T3) over 16 months was applied. Self-reporting questionnaires probing for psychopathology were distributed to all employees in six consecutively enrolled companies at the four time points. Employees meeting the screening criteria at T1 were assessed diagnostically. Subjects diagnosed with a clinical mental disorder were allocated to outpatient psychiatric treatment, and subjects with subclinical conditions were allocated to preventive cognitive behavioural therapy. Follow-up was conducted 6 and 12 months after initiation of treatment. We used chi-squared test and F-test to compare the different groups on baseline characteristics and mixed effects linear regression to analyse the treatment effects., Results: Forty (6.8%) of the 586 responders at T1 were diagnosed with a clinical mental disorder and referred to outpatient psychiatric treatment. Thirty-three (5.6%) were affected by a subclinical condition and referred to preventive treatment. Nearly two-thirds (63%) of the employees diagnosed with a clinical condition had never received treatment before. Symptom severity decreased significantly for both treated groups until follow-up. When compared to a composed control group, subclinical cases displayed a more rapid initial significant symptomatic decrease on the global symptom scale (coefs = - 0.914, 95% CI [- 1.754, - 0,075]) and anxiety sub-scale (coefs = - 1.043, 95% CI [- 2.021, - 0.066]). This did not apply to the clinical cases as no significant difference in change were identified., Conclusions: The outreach collaborative model demonstrated an applicability to identify both clinical and subclinical cases, among these a high number of employees with an unmet need for treatment. We found evidence of a positive initial effect on symptomatology from the allocated preventive treatment among the subclinical cases, but not for clinical cases., Trial Registration: Retrospectively registered at December 18, 2018 at clinicaltrials.gov, identifier: NCT03786328 .
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- 2019
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4. Content and implementation of clinical decisions in the routine care of people with severe mental illness.
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Konrad J, Loos S, Neumann P, Zentner N, Mayer B, Slade M, Jordan H, De Rosa C, Del Vecchio V, Égerházi A, Nagy M, Bording MK, Sørensen HØ, Kawohl W, Rössler W, and Puschner B
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Middle Aged, Decision Making, Mental Disorders therapy, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Patient Participation, Physician-Patient Relations
- Abstract
Background: Clinical decision making (CDM) in the treatment of people with severe mental illness relates to a wide range of life domains., Aims: To examine content of CDM in mental health care from the perspectives of service users and staff and to investigate variation in implementation of decisions for differing content., Method: As part of the European multicenter study clinical decision making and outcome in routine care for people with severe mental illness (ISRCTN75841675), 588 service users and their clinicians were asked to identify the decisions made during their last meeting. Decisions were then coded into content categories. Two months later, both parties reported if these decisions had been implemented., Results: Agreement between patients and staff regarding decision making was moderate (k = 0.21–0.49; p < 0.001). Decisions relating to medication and social issues were most frequently identified. Overall reported level of implementation was 73.5% for patients and 74.7% for staff, and implementation varied by decision content., Conclusions: A variety of relevant decision topics were shown for mental health care.Implementation rates varied in relation to topic and may need different consideration within the therapeutic dyad.
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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