6 research outputs found
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Parenting and Adjustment in Schizophrenia
Objective: Patients with schizophrenia who became parents and those who remained childless were compared on premorbid characteristics and current clinical and social adjustment.
Methods: Subjects were 400 men and women with a DSM-III-R diagnosis of chronic schizophrenia based on the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID). Assessments
measured concurrent substance abuse and antisocial behavior, positive and negative symptoms using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, functional status using the Global Assessment of Functioning scale, family support, and treatment compliance. A total of 158 patients were parents (47 men and 111 women), and 242 were childless (153 men and 89 women).
Results: Compared with childless subjects, parents were more likely to have had better premorbid social adjustment, to have ever been married or involved in a conjugal relationship, and to have become ill at a later age. More than two-thirds of parents entered parenthood before the onset of schizophrenia. More women than men were parents, and parents were more likely to be members of ethnic minority groups. No differences were found in current clinical and social adjustment of parents and childless subjects.
Conclusions: Parenthood was associated with better premorbid social adjustment, but it conferred no advantage in the long-term course of schizophrenia. Patients who experience a later onset of schizophrenia or have better premorbid social skills may be more likely to undertake marriage and parenthood, but they will then also be more likely to need special support for the parenting role once the illness begins and takes its typical course
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Risk factors for homelessness among women with schizophrenia
A study of risk factors for homelessness among the severely mentally ill was extended to include women, and a case-control study of 100 indigent women with schizophrenia meeting criteria for literal homelessness and 100 such women with no history of homelessness was conducted. Subjects were recruited from shelters, clinics, and inpatient psychiatric programs in New York City. Clinical interviewers used standardized research instruments to probe three domains of risk factors: severity of mental illness, family background, and prior mental health service use. Findings adjusted for ethnicity revealed that homeless women had higher rates of a concurrent diagnosis of alcohol abuse, drug abuse, and antisocial personality disorder. Homeless women also had less adequate family support
Homelessness, Health Status, and Health Care Use
Objectives. Little is known about the health status of those who are newly homeless. We sought to describe the health status and health care use of new clients of homeless shelters and observe changes in these health indicators over the study period. Methods. We conducted a longitudinal study of 445 individuals from their entry into the homeless shelter system through the subsequent 18 months. Results. Disease was prevalent in the newly homeless. This population accessed health care services at high rates in the year before becoming homeless. Significant improvements in health status were seen over the study period as well as a significant increase in the number who were insured. Conclusion. Newly homeless persons struggle under the combined burdens of residential instability and significant levels of physical disease and mental illness, but many experience some improvements in their health status and access to care during their time in the homeless shelter system
Risk Factors for Long-Term Homelessness: Findings From a Longitudinal Study of First-Time Homeless Single Adults
Objectives. We examined risk factors for long-term homelessness among newly homeless men and women who were admitted to New York City shelters in 2001 and 2002. Methods. Interviews were conducted with 377 study participants upon entry into the shelter and at 6-month intervals for 18 months. Standardized assessments of psychiatric diagnosis, symptoms, and coping skills; social and family history; and service use were analyzed. Kaplan—Meier survival analysis and Cox regression were used to examine the association between baseline assessments and duration of homelessness. Results. Eighty-one percent of participants returned to community housing during the follow-up period; the median duration of homelessness was 190 days. Kaplan—Meier survival analysis showed that a shorter duration of homelessness was associated with younger age, current or recent employment, earned income, good coping skills, adequate family support, absence of a substance abuse treatment history, and absence of an arrest history. Cox regression showed that older age group P<.05) and arrest history (P<.01) were the strongest predictors of a longer duration of homelessness. Conclusions. Identification of risk factors for long-term homelessness can guide efforts to reduce lengths of stay in homeless shelters and to develop new preventive interventions
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Brain Macrophage Surface Marker Expression with HIV-1 Infection and Drug Abuse: A Preliminary Study
Goal: To determine the heterogeneity of surface marker expression of macrophages in the temporal lobe of patients who died with AIDS who were also Drug Abusers (DAs). We studied the expression of macrophage surface markers CD1 1c, CD14, CD68, and HLA-DR and T cell surface markers CD4, and CD8.
Background: The macrophage is the prime locus for HIV-1-associated pathology, is the most frequently infected cell in the brain, and has the highest virus load compared to other cells. We previously described the heterogeneity of macrophage surface marker expression and performed morphometric analysis in peripheral nerves of patients who died from AIDS compared to HIV-1 negative individuals. We showed that the HIV-related neuropathy in AIDS is a multifocal process. It is similarly important to determine the expression of macrophage surface markers in brain. Temporal lobe tissue was selected for this preliminary study because we previously found elevated HIV-1 proviral DNA load and inflammatory processes in this neuroanatomic location for subjects who died with AIDS. There is a high prevalence of Drug Abuse in Miami, Florida, associated with AIDS that may interactively affect HIV-associated pathology.
Methods: Temporal lobe tissue was examined from 17 HIV-1-seropositive patients (4 with Drug Abuse and 13 without Drug Abuse) and 11 HIV-seronegative individuals (5 with Drug Abuse and 6 without Drug Abuse). Standard immunohistochemistry utilized alkaline phosphatase conjugate secondary antibody and fuchsin substrate.
Results: We found that HIV-1 infection and the interaction of HIV-1 infection and Drug Abuse produced changes in macrophage surface marker expression. Macrophage surface markers, CD11c, CD14, CD68, and HLA-DR, and T-cell marker CD4 were increased with statistical significance due to HIV-1 infection (all p < .001) whereas CD8 remained unchanged. Changes due to Drug Abuse alone were not significant. Interaction of Drug Abuse and HIV-infected individuals showed increased expression of CD68 (p = .011), HLA-DR (p = .001), CD4 (p = .027), and CD8 (p = .016).
Conclusion: Drug Abuse and HIV-1 infection are factors that differentially and interactively result in multiple macrophages surface marker effects. In HIV-1 infected individuals, Drug Abuse stimulates surface marker expression. Since brain macrophage surface makers do not change uniformly as a result of Drug Abuse and HIV infection, these cells may be heterogeneous and contain sub-types (sub-sets). It remains to be determined which macrophage sub-types may be most pathognomic for pathology