2 research outputs found
Locus of control, negative live events and psychopathological symptoms in collectivist adolescents
This document is the authors’ version of the final accepted manuscript, published online 21.10.2019 by Personality and Individual Differences. - Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Prof. Paulo Moreira, Instituto de Psicologia e de Ciências da Educação, Universidade Lusíada, Rua de Moçambique 21 e 71, Porto 4100-348, Portugal. Email: [email protected] current research trend is the identification of psychosocial variables that moderate and/or mediate the association between stressors and psychopathological symptoms. Research has shown Locus of Control (LoC) is a key cognitive component of this psychological process in adolescents from individualist cultures. It is unclear whether this finding can be generalized to collectivist adolescents given that LoC is argued to be a culturally relative construct. The study examined the moderating and mediating effects of LoC on the relationship between negative events and psychopathological symptoms (anxiety and depressive symptoms) in adolescents from collectivist countries (n = 2800). Consistent with prior research, negative life events and external LoC were associated with more psychopathological symptoms. Unlike past studies with samples from individualist countries, the study did not produce clear evidence that LoC moderated or mediated this relationship. Results are discussed in terms of cultural differences in the (un)desirability of external control
Infections caused by naturally AmpC-producing Enterobacteriaceae: Can we use third-generation cephalosporins? A narrative review
International audienceThe burden of antibiotic-resistant infections among Gram-negative bacteria is increasing. Resistance to third-generation cephalosporins (3GCs) in Enterobacteriaceae is mainly conferred by the acquisition of β-lactamases or by deregulation of natural genetically-encoded β-lactamase enzymes. Enterobacteriaceae such as Enterobacter spp., Serratia marcescens, Citrobacter freundii, Providencia spp. and Morganella morganii (ESCPM group) possess chromosomally-encoded inducible AmpC β-lactamases. AmpC can be overproduced as a response to β-lactam antibiotic exposure or by constitutive dysfunction of the AmpC regulation system. This overproduction can lead to the inactivation of 3GCs. Based on small clinical studies, international guidelines and expert recommendations suggest that 3GCs should be avoided as definitive therapy for infections caused by ESCPM group organisms. In this narrative review, we discuss the published literature and evaluate the risk related to 3GC use in the case of documented ESCPM infectio