15,019 research outputs found
The shock of the real: Psychoanalysis, modernity, survival
The contemporary relevance of psychoanalysis is being increasingly questioned; Off the Couch challenges this view, demonstrating that psychoanalytic thinking and its applications are both innovative and relevant, in particular to the management and treatment of more disturbed and difficult to engage patient groups. Chapters address:
Clinical applications in diverse settings across the age range
the relevance of psychoanalytic thinking to the practice of CBT, psychosomatics and general psychiatry
the contribution of psychoanalytic thinking to mental health policy and the politics of conflict and mediation.
This book suggests that psychoanalysis has a vital position within the public health sector and discusses how it can be better utilised in the treatment of a range of mental health problems. It also highlights the role of empirical research in providing a robust evidence base.
Off the Couch will be essential reading for those practicing in the field of mental health and will also be useful for anyone involved in the development of mental health and public policies. It will ensure that practitioners and supervisors have a clear insight into how psychoanalysis can be applied in general healthcare
Reduced GABA-B/GIRK-mediated regulation of the VTA following a single exposure to cocaine
In this paper, Arora and colleagues expand on their previous work on GIRK channels in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) presenting evidence that a single exposure to cocaine reduces inhibitory GABAergic transmission to dopamine (DA) neurons in the ventral tegmental area. Mice receiving i.p. injections of cocaine saw a short lived (1-5 days) decrease in GABAb mediated G-protein coupled inwardly-rectifying potassium (GIRK) currents in DA neurons in the VTA. This decrease parallels an NMDA-mediated increase in the frequency of glutamatergic neurotransmission. Chronic cocaine injections had no additional effects beyond those seen with single injections. Though they found no change in mRNA levels for GABAb receptors, GIRK channels, or RGS-2 (a G-protein regulator), immunoelectron microscopy indicated a decrease in levels of GIRK channels in the plasma membrane of the dendrites of VTA DA neurons. The cocaine-mediated decrease in GIRK currents was abolished in the presence of D2/3R antagonist sulpiride, but not in the presence of D1/5 antagonist SCH23390, indicating a link between D2/3 receptor activation and GIRK activity. Interestingly, the addition of quinpirole, a D2/3 agonist, elicited similar GIRK currents, though they were smaller than those mediated by GABAb receptors. Similarly, acute injections of cocaine significantly diminished quinpirole-evoked currents
Dropout from Randomized, Controlled Treatments for Depression
Poster Division: Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences: 3rd Place (The Ohio State University Edward F. Hayes Graduate Research Forum)PURPOSE: Premature treatment termination, also known as "dropout", is a ubiquitous problem in the field of mental health. There is an extensive literature investigating this phenomenon in clinical contexts, including large-scale epidemiological studies (e.g., Wang, 2007) and those conducted in community mental health clinics and private practice (e.g., Mueller & Pekarik, 2000). Estimates of dropout rate in these studies vary widely (26 – 66%; Bados, Balaguer, & Saldana, 2007). Dropout is understudied in the burgeoning field of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of psychotherapy, even though it has implications for study design, funding, and data analysis (Lane, 2008). Additionally, dropout from RCTs may be easier to define than in clinical contexts, where doing so can be difficult (Reis & Brown, 1999), suggesting possible differences in observed rates. As such, psychotherapy researchers may benefit from an estimate of expected dropout rate specifically derived from RCTs, and from identification of study features that may influence this rate.
Meta-analytic techniques provide a useful way of providing an estimate of dropout rate, and of investigating potential predictors of dropout. This study focuses on treatments for major depression, one of the most extensively studied mental health issues. Information about dropout rate was collected for each individual psychotherapy treatment arm (treatment-level) and across the study (study-level) in a collection of RCTs for major depression. Study and treatment characteristics were identified as potential predictors of dropout on the basis of the existing dropout literature, and for theoretical reasons; these included therapy type, treatment duration (both intended and observed), therapist experience, mean age and diversity of the sample, and observed effect of treatment on depressive symptoms.
RESEARCH METHODS: Studies were identified using a publicly available database for RCTs of major depression (psychotherapyrcts.org; see Cuijpers, van Straten, Warmerdam, and Andersson, 2008, for details on database creation). Inclusion criteria were: a) individual therapy, b) outpatient setting, c) formal diagnosis of major depression or post partum depression, d) published in English, and e) adequate information for determining dropout rate for psychotherapy condition. Forty-six studies were included in the final dataset, representing 2802 patients. These studies included 69 separate psychotherapy treatment conditions, with an average of 1.5 conditions per study. Overall study sizes ranged from 20 to 681 (mean = 112.1, SD = 114), with individual treatments ranging from 10 to 228 subjects (mean = 40.6, SD = 39.9). The most commonly examined therapy was cognitive-behavioral (CBT). Dropout rates and all predictor variables were rated by a primary coder, with a subset of the sample (11 studies) rated by another coder for comparison purposes. Intra-class correlation coefficients for predictor variables and dropout rates were high (> .9), suggesting very good reliability. However, not all predictor variables were available for all conditions.
FINDINGS: Heterogeneity analyses were conducted for both treatment and study-level dropout rates, to determine the degree of variability in dropout rates attributable to real differences (versus measurement error) and to inform analytic efforts. There was significant heterogeneity in dropout estimates, with approximately 72% of variability in the treatment-level dropout rate, and 80% in the study-level rate being attributable to meaningful differences. Heterogeneity also differed on the basis of treatment type; however, therapy types were not equally represented, ranging from 3 to 36 conditions. Due to high heterogeneity in dropout rates, a random effects model was used in all subsequent analyses, to incorporate treatment variability into pooled estimates (Schulze, 2004). The estimated dropout rate at the treatment level was 17%, with a slightly higher 19% estimate at the study level. None of the proposed study- and treatment-level predictors significantly predicted dropout rate. Intended duration predicted dropout at a trend level (p = .09), such that longer studies tended to have higher dropout rates. However, in analyses controlling for intended duration, none of the treatment characteristics predicted dropout. Moderator analyses were not conducted due to concerns about inflated risk of Type I error in the sample (Hedges & Pigott, 2003).
IMPLICATIONS: The estimated dropout rate from psychotherapy conditions in individual outpatient RCTs for major depression is 17%, with study level dropout rate slightly higher at 19%. Estimates of dropout may be more or less variable based on treatment type, though this may be an artifact of unequal representation of all treatment types in this sample. None of the selected treatment characteristics predicted dropout rate significantly; however, this may have been due to the high level of heterogeneity in the sample, and incomplete information about predictors. The observed dropout rates in this RCT context appear lower than those genrally reported in strictly clinical samples, although this was not a formal comparison, and there is significant true variability in these estimates (0% - 50% in this sample). This study is restricted to a common type of psychotherapy RCT, and may not generalize to other disorders or RCT formats. However, continued efforts to expand on this research may enhance researchers’ ability to make informed judgments about likely dropout rates in all manner of psychotherapy RCTs.A five-year embargo was granted for this item
mGluR5 knockout mice exhibit normal conditioned place-preference to cocaine
Metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) null mutant (-/-) mice have been reported to totally lack the reinforcing or locomotor stimulating effects of cocaine. We tested mGluR5 -/- and +/+ mice for their locomotor and conditioned place- preference response to cocaine. Unlike the previous finding, here we show that compared to mGluR5 +/+ mice, -/- mice exhibit no difference in the locomotor response to low to moderate doses of cocaine (10 or 20 mg/kg). A high dose of cocaine (40 mg/kg) resulted in a blunted rather than absent locomotor response. We tested mGluR5 -/- and +/+ mice for conditioned place-preference to cocaine and found no group differences at a conditioning dose of 10 mg/kg, suggesting normal conditioned rewarding properties of cocaine. These results differ substantially from Chiamulera et al. (2001) and replicates Olsen et al., (2010), who found normal cocaine place-preference in mGluR5 -/- mice at 5 mg/kg. Our results indicate mGluR5 receptors exert a modulatory rather than necessary role in cocaine-induced locomotor stimulation and exert no effect on the conditioned rewarding effects of cocaine
Decline in condition of northern bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) in the Gulf of Maine
The northern bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) is a highly mobile apex predator in the Gulf of Maine. Despite current stock assessments that indicate historically high abundance of its main prey, Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus), commercial fishermen have observed declines in the somatic condition of northern bluefin tuna during the last decade. We examined this claim by reviewing detailed logbooks of northern bluefin tuna condition from a local fishermen’s cooperative and applying multinomial regression, a robust tool for exploring how a categorical variable may be related to other variables of interest. The data set contained >3082 observations of condition (fat and oil content and fish shape) from fish landed between 1991 and 2004. Energy from stored lipids is used for migration and reproduction; therefore a reduction in energy acquisition on bluefin tuna feeding grounds could diminish allocations to growth and gamete production and have detrimental consequences for rebuilding the western Atlantic population. A decline in northern bluefin tuna somatic condition could indicate substantial changes in the bottom-up transfer of energy in the Gulf of Maine, shifts in their reproductive or migratory patterns, impacts of fishing pressure, or synergistic effects from multiple causes
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