11 research outputs found

    Effectiveness of the Relaxation Response-Based Group Intervention for Treating Depressed Chinese American Immigrants: A Pilot Study

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    Background:: This study examined the feasibility, safety and efficacy of an 8-week Relaxation Response (RR)-based group. Methods:: Twenty-two depressed Chinese American immigrants were recruited. Outcomes measures were response and remission rates, the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, Clinical Global Impressions Scale, Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire, and the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support Scale. Results: Participants (N = 22) were 82% female, mean age was 53 (±12). After intervention, completers (N = 15) showed a 40% response rate and a 27% remission rate, and statistically significant improvement in most outcome measures. Discussion: The RR-based group is feasible and safe in treating Chinese American immigrants with depression

    Palliative Care Provider Attitudes Toward Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy For Existential Distress

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    Existential distress is a significant source of suffering for patients facing life-threatening or life-limiting illness. Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy (PAT) is a novel treatment that has shown promise in treating existential distress, but openness to PAT may be limited by the paucity of educational material for the use of psychedelics in medicine and stigma against psychedelics due to their status as Schedule I substances. The present study aims to elucidate attitudes of palliative care clinicians toward current treatments for existential distress and potential of PAT as a treatment for existential distress. We recruited palliative care physicians, advanced practice nurses, chaplains, and mental health specialists from multiple US sites using purposive and snowball sampling methods. Semi-structured interviews targeted at attitudes toward existential distress and PAT were transcribed and analyzed for thematic content according to grounded theory. 19 respondents (7 physicians, 4 advanced practice nurses, 4 chaplains, and 4 social workers/psychologists) were interviewed. Four core themes were identified: 1) Existential distress is a common experience that is frequently insufficiently treated within the current treatment framework; 2) Palliative care, ultimately, sees existential distress as a psychosocial-spiritual problem that evades medicalized approaches; 3) Palliative providers believe PAT holds promise for treating existential distress but that a stronger evidence base is needed; 4) Because PAT does not currently fit existing models of existential distress treatment, barriers remain. Palliative care providers acknowledged gaps in treatment of existential distress among patients with life-threatening and life-limiting illness, and are supportive of efforts to expand research of PAT in this population. Further work to adapt PAT to the palliative care setting, including greater collaboration with spiritual care providers, is needed to ensure broad and equitable access to this novel treatment

    Measuring Voluntary Control Over Hallucinations: The Yale Control Over Perceptual Experiences (COPE) Scales

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    Auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) frequently cause significant distress and dysfunction, and may be unresponsive to conventional treatments. Some voice-hearers report an ability to fully control the onset and offset of their AVH, making them significantly less disruptive. Measuring and understanding these abilities may lead to novel interventions to enhance control over AVH. 52 voice-hearers participated in the pilot study. 318 participants with frequent AVH participated in the validation study. A pool of 59 items was developed by a diverse team including voice-hearers and clinicians. After the pilot study, 35 items were retained. Factorial structure was assessed with exploratory (EFA, n = 148) and confirmatory (CFA, n = 170) factor analyses. Reliability and convergent validity were assessed using a comprehensive battery of validated phenomenological and clinical scales. CFA supported two factors for a Methods of Control Scale (5 items each, average ω = .87), and one factor for a Degree of Control Scale (8 items, average ω = .95). Correlation with clinical measures supported convergent validity. Degree of control was associated with positive clinical outcomes in voice-hearers both with and without a psychosis-spectrum diagnosis. Degree of control also varied with quality of life independently of symptom severity and AVH content. The Yale COPE Scales are the first measure of voice-hearers’ control over AVH and exhibit sound psychometric properties. Results demonstrate that the capacity to voluntarily control AVH is independently associated with positive clinical outcomes. Reliable measurement of control over AVH will enable future development of interventions meant to bolster that control

    Measuring Voluntary Control Over Hallucinations: The Yale Control Over Perceptual Experiences (COPE) Scales

    No full text
    Auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) frequently cause significant distress and dysfunction, and may be unresponsive to conventional treatments. Some voice-hearers report an ability to fully control the onset and offset of their AVH, making them significantly less disruptive. Measuring and understanding these abilities may lead to novel interventions to enhance control over AVH. Fifty-two voice-hearers participated in the pilot study. 318 participants with frequent AVH participated in the validation study. A pool of 59 items was developed by a diverse team including voice-hearers and clinicians. After the pilot study, 35 items were retained. Factorial structure was assessed with exploratory (EFA, n = 148) and confirmatory (CFA, n = 170) factor analyses. Reliability and convergent validity were assessed using a comprehensive battery of validated phenomenological and clinical scales. CFA on the final 18 items supported two factors for a Methods of Control Scale (5 items each, average omega = .87), and one factor for a Degree of Control Scale (8 items, average omega = .95). Correlation with clinical measures supported convergent validity. Degree of control was associated with positive clinical outcomes in voice-hearers both with and without a psychosis-spectrum diagnosis. Degree of control also varied with quality of life independently of symptom severity and AVH content. The Yale control over perceptual experiences (COPE) Scales robustly measure voice-hearers' control over AVH and exhibit sound psychometric properties. Results demonstrate that the capacity to voluntarily control AVH is independently associated with positive clinical outcomes. Reliable measurement of control over AVH will enable future development of interventions meant to bolster that control

    Protein Kinase C in Neoplastic Cells

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