10 research outputs found

    A study of postpartum depression and maternal risk factors in Qatar

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    Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate the association between maternal complications and postpartum depression (PPD) among postpartum women in Qatar by using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) as well as a structured questionnaire

    Recent advances in Parkinson\u27s disease therapy: use of monoamine oxidase inhibitors.

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    Monoamine oxidase inhibitors inhibit dopamine metabolism and are therefore effective in treating Parkinson\u27s disease, a condition associated with progressive striatal dopamine deficiency secondary to degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. Selegiline is currently the most widely used monoamine oxidase-B inhibitor for Parkinson\u27s disease, but has a low and variable bioavailability, and is metabolized to L-methamphetamine and L-amphetamine that carry a risk for potential neurotoxicity. There are two new approaches that circumvent these potential disadvantages. First, selegiline orally disintegrating tablets provide a novel delivery form of selegiline, avoiding first pass metabolism by rapid absorption through the oral mucosa, thus leading to significantly lower plasma concentrations of L-metamphetamine and L-amphetamine. Selegiline orally disintegrating tablets prove to be clinically effective and safe in patients with moderately advanced Parkinson\u27s disease. Second, rasagiline is a new monoamine oxidase inhibitor, without known neurotoxic metabolites. In large clinical trials, rasagiline proves effective as monotherapy in early Parkinson\u27s disease, as well as adjunctive therapy to levodopa in advanced disease. Clinical data suggest, in addition, a disease-modifying effect of rasagiline that may correlate with neuroprotective activity of monoamine oxidase-B inhibitors in animal models of Parkinson\u27s disease

    A STUDY OF POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION IN A FAST DEVELOPING COUNTRY: PREVALENCE AND RELATED FACTORS

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    Background: Depression is a common and disabling complication of postpartum women. There is a paucity of research on postpartum depressive disorders and their predictors in women from Arab countries. Aim: The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence and identify risk factors of postpartum depression among Arab women in Qatar using Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale Score (EPDS). Design: This is a prospective cross-sectional study conducted during the period from January 2010 to May 2011. Setting: Primary healthcare centers of the Supreme Council of Health, State of Qatar. Subjects: A representative sample of 1669 mothers within 6 months after delivery were approached and 1379 (82.6%) mothers participated in this study. Methods: The study was based on a face-to-face interview with a designed diagnostic screening questionnaire. Occurrence of postpartum depressive symptoms was assessed by the EPDS. Also, socio-demographic characteristics, medical and family history, and obstetric variables of patients were collected through a designed questionnaire. The diagnostic screening questionnaire was reviewed and calculated the final score which identified the risk cases. Results: The prevalence of postpartum depression among the study sample was 17.6%. Mothers of age above 35 years (49.9% vs. 39.2%; p < 0.001), low education below intermediate level (51% vs. 35.8%; p < 0.001), housewives (38.7% vs. 29%; p = 0.03), with low monthly income (QR 5000-9999) (43.2% vs. 32.2%; p < 0.001) were significantly at high risk for postpartum depression. Maternal complications (38.7% vs. 26.1%; p < 0.001) and caesarean section (36.2% vs. 28.8%; p = 0.022) were significantly higher among depressed mothers compared to non-depressed women. Financial difficulties (OR = 2.04; p < 0.001), prematurity (OR = 1.64; p = 0.025), poor family support (OR = 1.52; p = 0.016), dissatisfaction in marital life (OR = 1.26; p = 0.005), poor marital relationship (OR = 1.13; p = 0.05) were the main predictors of postpartum depression. Conclusion: This prevalence of postpartum depression in women living in Qatar was comparable to previous epidemiological research done in developing countries. Financial difficulties, prematurity, lack of family support, and poor marital relationships have been identified as main risk factors for developing postpartum depression. (Int'l. J. Psychiatry in Medicine 2012;43:325-337

    Gender Differences in Prevalence of Somatoform Disorders in Patients Visiting Primary Care Centers

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    The aim of this study was to examine the gender differences in the prevalence of somatoform disorders among a sample of Qatari patients who were visiting primary health care centers and to investigate the severity of diagnostic categories and the most frequent somatic symptoms in these patients. The first stage of the study was conducted with the help of general practitioners, using the somatic symptom module of the Patient Health Questionnaire 12-item General Health Questionnaire. Overall, 2320 subjects were approached, and a total of 1689 patients, of whom 892 were men and 797 were women, agreed to participate in the study. The prevalence rate of somatoform disorders among the total screened sample was 23.9%. The prevalence rate was slightly higher in Qatari women (24.2%) than in Qatari men (23.7%). Housewives (43.5%) and men in administrative posts (37.9%) reported higher somatic symptoms compared to other professions. Prolonged depressive reaction was significantly higher in women compared to men ( P = .003). There was a significant gender difference in certain psychiatric diagnostic categories such as depressive episode, recurrent depressive disorder, dysthymia, and brief depressive reaction. Backache was the most common reported symptom in men, whereas headache was more common in women. The present study revealed that the prevalence of somatoform disorders in Qatar is as high as the overall prevalence reported in prior studies done in other primary care settings. The prevalence of somatoform disorders was slightly higher in Qatari women than in men

    Differences and similarities in cross-cultural perceptions of boundaries: A comparison of results from two studies

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    There has been substantial literature on boundary excursions in clinician-patient relationships; however, very little empirical research exists. Even less information exists on how perceptions of this issue might differ across cultures. Prior to this study, empirical data on various kinds of boundary excursions were collected in different cultural contexts. First, clinicians from the US. and Brazil were asked to rate 173 boundary excursions for both their perceived harmfulness and their professional unacceptability (Miller et al., 2006). In a second study, colleagues from Qatar administered a slightly modified version to mental health care professional staff of a hospital in Doha, Qatar (Ghuloum et al., 2011). In this paper, the results of these two separate studies are compared. The results showed some similarities and some differences in perceptions of the boundary behaviors. For example, both sets of cultures seem to agree that certain behaviors are seriously harmful and/or professionally unacceptable. These behaviors include some frankly sexual behavior, such as having sexual intercourse with a patient, as well as behavior related to doing business with the patient, and some disclosing behavior. There are also significant cultural differences in perceptions of how harmful some of the behaviors are. Qatari practitioners seemed to rate certain behaviors that within therapy mix disclosing or personal behavior with therapy as more harmful, but behaviors that involved interacting with patients outside of therapy as less serious. A factor analysis suggested that participants in U.S./Brazil saw a much larger number of behaviors as making up a set of Core Boundary Violations, whereas Qatari respondents separated sexual behaviors from others. Finally, a Rasch analysis showed that both cultures perceived a continuum of boundary behaviors, from those that are least harmful or unprofessional to those that are highly harmful or unprofessional. One interpretation is that cultural factors may be most influential on those kinds of behaviors that are perceived as relatively less serious. Implications for training and supervision are also discussed. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Prognosis and prognostic factors for unexplained subarachnoid hemorrhage: Review of 84 cases

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    PubMedID: 11950404OBJECTIVE: We conducted a retrospective study to investigate the prognosis, possible prognostic factors, and long-term natural history of subarachnoid hemorrhage of unexplained cause. METHODS: This report contains a retrospective analysis of data for 84 patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage of unknown cause who were monitored for 1 month to 9.5 years, with an average follow-up period of 5.6 years. We evaluated the associations between computed tomographic (CT) scan features, clinical grade, loss of consciousness during hemorrhage, ventricular ratio, angiographic spasm, complications (such as death resulting from ischemia, early rebleeding, late rebleeding, epilepsy, hydrocephalus, and fixed ischemic deficits), and outcomes, using a nonparametric, two-sample, Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. The X2 test was used to test the independence of two categorical variables. RESULTS: CT class exhibited a significant association with clinical grade (? = 0.865, P = 0.006), loss of consciousness during hemorrhage (? = 0.69, P = 0.001), and ventricular ratio (? = 0.8175, P = 0.01) but a nonsignificant association with angiographic vasospasm (? = 0.21, P = 0.2). Death resulting from ischemic complications and fixed ischemic deficits were strongly associated with clinical grade (P = 0.003 and P = 0.008, respectively) but weakly associated with CT class (P = 0.06 and P = 0.084, respectively). Angiographic vasospasm was strongly associated only with fixed ischemic deficits among complications (P = 0.001). Clinical outcome was strongly positively associated with CT class (? = 0.685, P = 0.001), clinical grade (? = 0.81, P = 0.001), and ventricular ratio (? = 0.57, P = 0.002) but weakly positively associated with loss of consciousness during hemorrhage (? = 0.459, P = 0.0487) and angiographic vasospasm (? = 0.48, P = 0.04). CONCLUSION: Our study confirms earlier studies reporting a good prognosis for survival, but it does not confirm the earlier statements regarding low morbidity rates. Although clinical grade and the presence and amount of subarachnoid blood on CT scans are the major prognostic factors related to the incidence of ischemic complications, clinical grade and CT class are also the main parameters, with ventricular ratio, indicating clinical outcomes for patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage of unknown cause

    Perceptions of boundaries and cultural influences in Qatar

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    Background: Boundary issues, which regularly arise in therapy, can present dilemmas for most clinicians. There has been substantial literature on boundary excursions in clinician-patient relationships, however, very little empirical research exists and is documented. As mental health researchers, we need to investigate a wide range of sensitive topics to enhance our understanding of the many issues that arise in the psychotherapeutic frame
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