6 results on '"Kocsis-Bogar K"'
Search Results
2. Caregivers' depressive symptoms and eating disorder severity in adults with anorexia and bulimia nervosa.
- Author
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Kocsis-Bogar K, Ossege M, Aigner M, Wancata J, and Friedrich F
- Abstract
Background: Negative affectivity of caregivers has been linked to difficulties in the caregiver-patient relationship and it is assumed to contribute to the maintenance of eating disorder (ED) symptoms., Aims: The present study investigated the relationship of patients' ED symptom severity to patients' and caregivers' depressive symptoms, and caregivers' involvement in a mixed sample of adult inpatients with anorexia (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN), as well as their caregivers., Method: The Eating Disorder Examination and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) were administered to 55 adult ED patients (26 AN and 29 BN), and the BDI as well as the Involvement Evaluation Questionnaire were filled in by one caregiver of each patient., Results: Our results showed caregivers' depressive symptoms to be significantly related to patients' ED symptom severity, however depressive symptoms and ED symptoms of patients were not related. No connection of involvement of caregivers and ED severity of patients was found. AN and BN patients did not significantly differ on ED severity or depressive symptoms. Caregivers of AN and BN patients did not differ significantly on depressive symptoms and involvement., Conclusions: Our results support the importance of mental health support for caregivers of adults with AN and BN.
- Published
- 2024
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3. Involvement, depressive symptoms, and their associations with problems and unmet needs in caregivers of adult eating disorder patients.
- Author
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Kocsis-Bogar K, Ossege M, Aigner M, Wancata J, and Friedrich F
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- Humans, Adult, Caregivers, Depression, Inpatients, Feeding and Eating Disorders, Anorexia Nervosa
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to examine the most important problems and needs caregivers of adult inpatients with eating disorders (EDs) are confronted with in their everyday lives. A further aim was to investigate the associations between problems, needs, involvement, and depression in carers., Methods: Fifty-five caregivers of inpatients with EDs (26 anorexia nervosa, 29 bulimia nervosa) completed the Carers' Needs Assessment, Beck Depression Inventory, and the Involvement Evaluation Questionnaire. The relationships between variables were tested via multiple linear regressions and mediation analyses., Results: The most frequent problem reported by caregivers was a lack of information about the course and treatment of the illness and consequent disappointment, whereas their most frequently reported needs were different forms of information and counselling. Problems, unmet needs, and worrying were especially high in parents compared to other caregivers. Involvement mediated significantly between problems (b = 0.26, BCa CI [0.03, 0.49]) as well as unmet needs (b = 0.32, BCa CI [0.03, 0.59]) of caregivers and their depressive symptoms., Conclusion: Our findings underline the importance of including the problems and needs of caregivers of adult eating disorder patients in the planning of family and community interventions, to support their mental health., Level of Evidence: Level III: Evidence obtained from cohort or case-control analytic studies., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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4. Adverse childhood experiences as risk factors for recurrent admissions in young psychiatric inpatients.
- Author
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Fellinger M, Knasmüller P, Kocsis-Bogar K, Wippel A, Fragner L, Mairhofer D, Hochgatterer P, and Aigner M
- Abstract
Background: Patients who require psychiatric inpatient treatment early in life are a particularly at-risk population. Factors such as adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are, however, not well studied in those requiring psychiatric inpatient treatment during both childhood or adolescence and adulthood. Thus, the aim of the current study was to investigate, in young adult inpatients, the risk factors for prior admissions in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, with a focus on ACEs., Materials and Methods: An explorative population-based systematic chart investigation of psychiatric inpatients aged 18-25 was conducted at the University Hospital Tulln, Austria. Data analysis was done with descriptive methods and Pearson's chi- squared-, Fisher's exact-, Mann-Whitney- U -tests and predictive logistic regression models., Results: The sample comprised 390 inpatients (51.8% female), with an average age of 20 years at first psychiatric hospital admission. Those with a former child and adolescent psychiatry inpatient treatment (10.3%) were predominantly female (77.5%). Their number of documented ACEs was increased compared to those without former child and adolescent psychiatry admissions (2 vs 1.1), with up to twice as many experiences of family dysfunction, neglect or abuse. Sexual abuse (OR: 3.0), having been an adopted or fostered child (OR: 4.5), and female sex (OR: 3.0) were identified as main risk factors. Furthermore, former child and adolescent psychiatry inpatients suffered from higher rates of psychosomatic or personality disorders, comorbidities and functional impairment, and were readmitted twice as often in young adulthood., Conclusion: Young adult inpatients with reoccurring psychiatric inpatient treatments have increased rates of severe ACEs. Thus, special attention should be given to identifying ACEs, evaluating needs for psychosocial support and therapy, and meeting these needs after discharge., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Fellinger, Knasmüller, Kocsis-Bogar, Wippel, Fragner, Mairhofer, Hochgatterer and Aigner.)
- Published
- 2022
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5. A comparison of the three year course between chronic depression and depression with multiple vs. few prior episodes.
- Author
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Humer E, Kocsis-Bogar K, Berger T, Schröder J, Späth C, Meyer B, Moritz S, Lutz W, Probst T, and Klein JP
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- Adult, Chronic Disease, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Health Questionnaire, Quality of Life psychology, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Self Report, Time Factors, Depression psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology
- Abstract
This study tested the hypothesis that chronic depression (CD) is more similar to depression with multiple prior episodes (ME) than to depression with few prior episodes (FE). Data from participants (n = 1013) with mild to moderate depressive symptoms (Patient Health Questionnaire [PHQ-9] score 5 - 14) who took part in a randomized control trial of an internet intervention for depression (EVIDENT trial) were re-analyzed. The MINI-interview was conducted to diagnose CD (n = 376). If CD was not diagnosed, the self-reported number of depressive episodes was used to categorize participants as having episodic depression with up to five (FE, n = 422) or more than five (ME, n = 215) prior episodes. Over a three-year period, participants were assessed repeatedly regarding the course of depression (PHQ-9, QIDS), quality of life (SF-12) and therapeutic progress (FEP-2). At baseline, most scores were different between CD and FE but comparable between CD and ME. Time to remission did not differ between CD and ME but was longer in CD compared to FE. Results suggest that ME closely resembles CD and that CD differs from FE., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interests JPK received payments for presentations and publications by the following companies: Beltz, Hogrefe, Elsevier. BM is employed as research director at GAIA AG, the company that developed, owns, and operates the internet intervention investigated in this trial. All the other authors report no relationships with commercial interests., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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6. Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task.
- Author
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Pietschnig J, Gittler G, Stieger S, Forster M, Gadek N, Gartus A, Kocsis-Bogar K, Kubicek B, Lüftenegger M, Olsen J, Prem R, Ruiz N, Serfas BG, and Voracek M
- Subjects
- Humans, Psychological Tests, Self Concept
- Abstract
Background: The initial preference task (IPT) is an implicit measure that has featured prominently in the literature and enjoys high popularity because it offers to provide an unobtrusive and objective assessment of self-esteem that is easy to administer. However, its use for self-esteem assessment may be limited because of weak associations with direct personality measures. Moreover, moderator effects of sample- and study-related variables need investigation to determine the value of IPT-based assessments of self-esteem., Methods: Conventional and grey-literature database searches, as well as screening of reference lists of obtained articles, yielded a total of 105 independent healthy adult samples (N = 17,777) originating from 60 studies. Summary effect estimates and subgroup analyses for potential effect moderators (e.g., administration order, algorithm, rating type) were calculated by means of meta-analytic random- and mixed-effects models. Moreover, we accounted for potential influences of publication year, publication status (published vs. not), and participant sex in a weighted stepwise hierarchical multiple meta-regression. We tested for dissemination bias through six methods., Results: There was no noteworthy correlation between IPT-based implicit and explicit self-esteem (r = .102), indicating conceptual independence of these two constructs. Effects were stronger when the B-algorithm was used for calculation of IPT-scores and the IPT was administered only once, whilst all other moderators did not show significant influences. Regression analyses revealed a somewhat stronger (albeit non-significant) effect for men. Moreover, there was no evidence for dissemination bias or a decline effect, although effects from published studies were numerically somewhat stronger than unpublished effects., Discussion: We show that there is no noteworthy association between IPT-based implicit and explicit self-esteem, which is broadly consistent with dual-process models of implicit and explicit evaluations on the one hand, but also casts doubt on the suitability of the IPT for the assessment of implicit self-esteem on the other hand., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2018
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