Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 72
Filter
1.
Eat Disord ; : 1-15, 2024 Apr 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38666750

ABSTRACT

Clinical perfectionism, self-esteem, mood intolerance, and interpersonal difficulties are associated with eating disorder symptoms in clinical samples. The aim of the current study was to test a model including clinical perfectionism, self-esteem, mood intolerance, and interpersonal difficulties to understand eating disorder symptoms in an adolescent community sample. Adolescents (N = 446, M age = 16.25 years, SD = 1.64; 74.2% female) completed measures of clinical perfectionism, self-esteem, mood intolerance, interpersonal difficulties, and eating disorder symptoms. Path analysis indicated clinical perfectionism, self-esteem, mood intolerance, and interpersonal difficulties were all directly associated with symptoms of eating disorders, and that clinical perfectionism was indirectly associated with eating disorders through self-esteem, mood intolerance, and interpersonal difficulties. The results indicate the cognitive-behavioural model of eating disorders can be applied to adolescents in the community with symptoms of eating disorders. Directional causality between constructs should be established to understand whether increased clinical perfectionism, and reduced self-esteem, mood intolerance, and interpersonal difficulties are vulnerabilities to the development and maintenance of eating disorders.

4.
Innov Aging ; 7(3): igad015, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37033408

ABSTRACT

Background and Objectives: Among the cognitively impaired, arts engagement is associated with improved neurocognitive symptoms. Less is known about arts engagement as a potentially modifiable lifestyle factor to prevent or slow cognitive decline. Our aim was to evaluate the association between arts event attendance and cognition. Research Design and Methods: We used data from the 2014 and 2016 waves of the Health and Retirement Study to evaluate the association between arts event attendance and cognition using multivariable linear regressions. Arts event attendance in 2014 was our exposure of interest and included visiting an art museum or art gallery; attending an arts or crafts fair; attending a live performance (concert, play, or reading); and/or going to a movie theater. Cognitive function in 2016 measured on a 27-point scale by the Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status was our main outcome of interest. Results: Of the 1,149 participants included in the final analysis, 70.7% attended an arts event. The mean baseline cognitive score was higher among those who attended art events (16.8 [standard deviation {SD}, ±3.8] vs 13.8 [SD, ±5.0]; p < .001). In our multivariable regressions, those who attended arts events in 2014 exhibited higher cognitive scores in 2016 after controlling for demographic, socioeconomic, health, and baseline cognitive covariates (ß, 1.07 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 0.50-1.64]; p < .001). This association was primarily observed in those with lower baseline cognitive function (ß, 1.19 [95% CI, 0.33-2.06]; p = .008). Discussion and Implications: Arts event attendance may be associated with better cognitive function. Given concerns for residual confounding and reverse causality, this association warrants further study.

5.
Am J Bioeth ; 23(4): 38-40, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37011354
6.
J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry ; 81: 101856, 2023 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36996628

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Theoretical models of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) propose that individuals who self-injure may find their attention more strongly captured by negative emotion, and that this intensifies distress which leads to episodes of NSSI. Elevated perfectionism is associated with NSSI, and when an individual is highly perfectionistic, a focus on perceived flaws/failures may increase risk of NSSI. We explored how history of NSSI and trait perfectionism are associated with different types of attention bias (engagement vs. disengagement) to stimuli that differ in emotional valence (negative vs positive) and perfectionism relevance (relevant vs irrelevant). METHODS: Undergraduate university students (N = 242) completed measures of NSSI, perfectionism, and a modified dot-probe task to measure attentional engagement with and disengagement from both positive and negative stimuli. RESULTS: There were interactions between NSSI and perfectionism in attention biases. Amongst individuals who engage in NSSI, those with elevated trait perfectionism exhibit speeded responding to and disengagement from emotional stimuli (both positive and negative). Furthermore, individuals with a history of NSSI and elevated perfectionism were slower to respond to positive stimuli, and faster to negative stimuli. LIMITATIONS: This experiment was cross-sectional in design so does not provide information about temporal ordering of these relationships, and given the use of a community sample, would benefit from replication in clinical samples. CONCLUSIONS: These findings lend support to the emerging idea that biased attention plays a role in how perfectionism is associated with NSSI. Future studies should replicate these findings using other behavioural paradigms and diverse samples.


Subject(s)
Attentional Bias , Perfectionism , Self-Injurious Behavior , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emotions , Self-Injurious Behavior/psychology
7.
J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry ; 78: 101791, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36194912

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Research has consistently suggested social media exerts negative effects on sleep and anxiety. Researchers have however, relied heavily on self-report measures of social media use and correlational designs. The present study employed an experimental manipulation to examine the effects of an acute reduction of social media use over a one-week period to assess the potential causal role of social media use in anxiety and sleep quality. METHODS: Baseline social media use across one week was captured via smartphones, in addition to questionnaire measures of anxiety and sleep quality in a group of 93 unselected participants (female = 48, male = 43, did not specify = 2). Participants were then randomly assigned to suspend social media use for one week, whilst the other half used social media as normal. At the end of this week participants returned for a second data collection session where the same measures were re-administered. RESULTS: No evidence of a causal effect of social media use on anxiety or sleep quality was observed. LIMITATIONS: While capturing objective mobile social media data, future research could also benefit from incorporating usage data from computers and other devices. CONCLUSIONS: The discussion considers the possibility that the findings may represent the genuine absence of such a relationship versus the failure to detect an extant relationship and the importance of including objective measures of social media use.


Subject(s)
Social Media , Male , Female , Humans , Anxiety , Sleep , Anxiety Disorders , Computers, Handheld
8.
Eat Behav ; 47: 101683, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36410135

ABSTRACT

Perfectionism has a strong association with eating disorders. Research in non-clinical adults has suggested that perfectionism has both direct and indirect effects on eating disorder symptoms, and that compulsive exercise is a potential mediator. The aim of this study was to understand whether perfectionism is associated with eating disorder symptoms, both directly and indirectly through compulsive exercise in underweight adolescents with eating disorders. Participants were 149 female adolescents (M = 14.90 years, age range 13-17) with eating disorders from the Helping to Outline Paediatric Eating Disorders (HOPE) Project, an ongoing, registry study of individuals consecutively referred individuals to a statewide eating disorder service. The majority had a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa restricting type (66 %), followed by unspecified feeding or eating disorder (21 %), and anorexia nervosa binge-eating purging type (13 %). To test the model, path analyses with bootstrapping were conducted. All paths were statistically significant, including the indirect effect from perfectionism to eating disorder pathology via the mediator of compulsive exercise, and the direct effect of perfectionism on eating disorder pathology. Overall, this research provides further evidence that compulsive exercise may be one factor that can explain the relationship between perfectionism and eating disorder symptoms. Future research should seek to determine the relative efficacy of approaches for the treatment of eating disorders in adolescents which target perfectionism and compulsive exercise.


Subject(s)
Anorexia Nervosa , Feeding and Eating Disorders , Perfectionism , Adult , Adolescent , Female , Humans , Child , Compulsive Exercise , Thinness
9.
Ann Intern Med ; 175(10): 1468-1474, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36037467

ABSTRACT

Many outpatient physicians and patients feel that current scheduling systems do not afford enough time for direct patient-physician interaction, leaving patients feeling unheard and physicians feeling demoralized. This dissatisfaction degrades patients' trust in the health care system and contributes to workforce moral injury and burnout. In the hopes of understanding the roots of this time stress and helping to guide future decisions about how to organize physicians' time, this article describes changes in the organization of U.S. outpatient physicians' time, starting from care at home in the late 19th century. It discusses the origins of the appointment system, which was invented to be highly personalized, with assistants adjusting appointment durations to accommodate clinical activities, specific patient needs, and individual physician proclivities. The article then describes how centralization of appointment scheduling became more common as U.S. medicine became increasingly consolidated into larger and larger groups and health systems. This distanced schedulers from the people and care they were organizing and necessitated standardized appointment durations, which did not accommodate individual patient and physician needs. With the rise of managerialism, schedulers became increasingly accountable to administrators rather than patients and physicians. Whereas early appointment systems depended on personal connection between schedulers and the physicians and patients they supported, today's schedulers have few such interactions. The widespread shift to centralized scheduling and standardized time slots has contributed to misalignment among time allocation, patient care, and health care workforce well-being and is likely exacerbating ongoing tensions among patients, physicians, and administrators.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care , Appointments and Schedules , Humans , Ambulatory Care/organization & administration , United States
10.
J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry ; 76: 101739, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35738686

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Perfectionism is associated with the development and maintenance of anxiety, mood, and eating disorders. Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) results in significant reductions in perfectionism and psychological symptoms however, the majority of studies have not examined clinical samples or impact on diagnostic status and comorbidity. METHODS: Forty participants with elevated perfectionism, of whom 80% had a range of psychological disorders, were randomised to CBT for perfectionism or waitlist control. RESULTS: The treatment group reported significant large effect size reductions in perfectionism measures of personal standards and concern over mistakes (d = 1.1-1.6), dichotomous thinking (d = 1.2), and medium effect size reductions in depression (d = 0.55) and increases in quality of life (d = 0.73), which were maintained at 4 month follow-up. The participants in the treatment group were significantly less likely to present with comorbid psychological disorders at post-treatment than the control group. LIMITATIONS: The sample size was small, and there was no control condition at follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Findings lend further support for CBT for perfectionism as an efficacious transdiagnostic treatment for perfectionism and related psychopathology.


Subject(s)
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Perfectionism , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Comorbidity , Humans , Pilot Projects , Quality of Life , Treatment Outcome
11.
Omega (Westport) ; : 302228221096565, 2022 May 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35549940

ABSTRACT

Bereavement is commonly experienced by students in higher education and is associated with negative health and academic consequences. We conducted a systematic review of the literature to identify how grief affects students in higher education and the types of support they seek and/or find beneficial. A search of Health Collection, Medline, CINAHL Plus, Web of Science, Taylor and Francis online, ProQuest, and Open Grey resulted in 30 articles that met inclusion criteria. A narrative synthesis resulted in 11 themes focused on the university experience following bereavement (six themes) and supports following bereavement (five themes). Our review highlights how grief symptoms can have a negative impact on bereaved students' academic and social experiences. These difficulties are exacerbated by barriers to accessing grief supports, and unhelpful responses from staff and peers. Students' grief is often disenfranchised and so students learn to avoid grief related emotions, communications, and support-seeking.

12.
BMC Med Educ ; 22(1): 302, 2022 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35449075

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Medical humanities courses that incorporate the visual arts traditionally require in-person instruction and visits to museums. The COVID-19 pandemic afforded medical educators a unique opportunity to implement and evaluate virtual visual arts programming. METHODS: A two-week, 7-module visual arts and medicine elective course for third and fourth-year medical students was conducted virtually in the Spring of 2021. The course included traditional didactic components as well as a range of hands-on creative art activities including painting, graphic medicine, photovoice, and Kintsugi (Japanese craft). Digital tools including Canvas, Google Jamboard, and Zoom facilitated student engagement. Student feedback was collected through anonymous post-course surveys. RESULTS: We successfully conducted a virtual visual arts and medicine elective which integrated hands-on creative art activities. Most students "strongly agreed" that remote instruction was sufficient to meet course objectives. However, all students also "agreed" that in-person instruction may promote more in-depth engagement with the visual arts. The hands-on creative art activities were appreciated by all students. CONCLUSION: Visual arts-based medical humanities courses can be delivered virtually and can include hands-on creative art activities such as painting. Future visual arts and medicine courses may benefit from incorporating a range of pedagogical methodologies, digital tools, control groups, and pre-/post-course assessments.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Students, Medical , Curriculum , Humanities/education , Humans , Pandemics
13.
J Clin Psychol ; 78(7): 1463-1477, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35050517

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Using the Emotional Cascade Model as a theoretical framework, this study tested whether the relationship between perfectionism and non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) operates through rumination and negative affect. Additionally, we tested whether the associations between perfectionism and both rumination and negative affect are moderated by attention control. METHODS: Using a correlational cross-sectional design, adults aged 18-25 with (N = 197) and without (N = 271) a history of NSSI completed measures of perfectionism, rumination, negative affect, attention control, and NSSI. RESULTS: Perfectionism was directly associated with increased odds of NSSI, and indirectly associated with odds of NSSI through rumination and negative affect. The relationship between perfectionism and rumination was moderated by attention focusing, such that the relationship was stronger for individuals who were higher in attention focusing. CONCLUSION: Integrating perfectionism and attention with existing models of NSSI may improve understanding of the factors contributing to NSSI and offers insights into future clinical directions.


Subject(s)
Perfectionism , Self-Injurious Behavior , Adolescent , Adult , Attention , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emotions , Humans , Self-Injurious Behavior/psychology , Young Adult
14.
J Affect Disord ; 297: 536-541, 2022 01 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34715177

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Research has suggested a potential link between social media use and psychological distress, though findings have been somewhat inconsistent. Importantly, relatively few studies have examined potential moderators of this relationship, and the majority have relied upon self-report social media use. The present study examined the potential moderating role of attention control, in the relationship between social media use and anxiety and employed an objective measure of social media use via smartphone data. METHODS: Social media use was captured via participants smartphones over a one-week period. Inhibitory attention control was assessed via antisaccade task performance. In addition to a measure of psychological distress that was completed by participants (final n = 69, female = 35, male = 31, did not specify = 3). RESULTS: Attention control, as indexed via total antisaccade accuracy, moderated the relationship between social media use and psychological distress. This relationship was such that those with lower levels of attention control showed a significant positive relationship between social media use and psychological distress, whereas no relationship was observed among those with average or high attention control. LIMITATIONS: While capturing objective mobile social media data, future research could also benefit from incorporating usage data from computers and other devices. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study highlight a potential important factor that may alter the impact of social media use on emotional wellbeing. One possible implication of this finding is that heavy social media use may have problematic mental health consequences specifically for those who experience difficulties with attention control.


Subject(s)
Psychological Distress , Social Media , Anxiety , Attention , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Health
15.
Med Educ Online ; 27(1): 2010299, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34866545

ABSTRACT

The authors conduct a narrative review of the quantitative observation metrics and psychometric scales utilized in the visual arts and medical education literature in order to provide medical educators with a 'toolkit' of quantitative metrics with which to design and evaluate novel visual arts-based pedagogies. These efforts are intended to support the AAMC and National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine's aims to formally evaluate and integrate arts and humanities curricula into traditional scientific educational programming. The scales reviewed examine a variety of domains including tolerance for ambiguity, bias, burnout, communication, empathy, grit, and mindfulness/reflection. Observation skill, given the heterogeneity of quantitative metrics, is reviewed separately.


Subject(s)
Benchmarking , Education, Medical , Curriculum , Humanities , Humans , Psychometrics
16.
Bull Hist Med ; 96(4): 516-544, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38588141

ABSTRACT

Victor C. Vaughan (1851-1929) was a noted medical educator, microbiologist, and active proponent for the idea of eugenics. Vaughan spent his career at the University of Michigan, where he served as Medical School Dean for many years. He lectured widely on the importance of "race betterment" and actively supported passage of state legislation that led to over 3,000 sterilizations in the state of Michigan. After his death, Vaughan's name was applied to student organizations, endowed chairs, buildings, and more. This paper considers how the use of Vaughan's name not only reflected Vaughan's support of eugenics but also gendered and racialized ideas about what it means to be a physician. We conclude that the use of any name from the past carries meanings about what our values are in the present and that, if there was ever a moment to celebrate the life of Victor Vaughan, that moment has passed.

17.
N Engl J Med ; 385(17): e62, 2021 10 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34670060
18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34639472

ABSTRACT

Perfectionism is a transdiagnostic process which may be implicated in the onset and maintenance of non-suicidal self-injury. No study has evaluated whether reported differences in perfectionism between individuals with and without a history of self-injury represent genuine group differences or measurement artefacts. The present study reports an investigation of the measurement invariance of two common scales of perfectionism, the Frost Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale-Brief (FMPS-Brief) and the Clinical Perfectionism Questionnaire (CPQ), among university students (Mage = 20.48, SDage = 2.22, 75.3% female, 22.8% male) with and without a history of self-injury (total n = 711). Results revealed full residual error invariance for the two-factor model of FMPS-Brief, while the bifactor model of the FMPS-Brief and the two-factor model of the CPQ demonstrated partial metric invariance. Accounting for partial metric invariance, the bifactor model of the FMPS-Brief also demonstrated partial residual error invariance. The current findings suggest that observed differences using the FMPS-Brief reflect genuine differences in perfectionism between individuals with and without a history of self-injury. Further, while researchers using the bi-factor model can have confidence that the general factor can adequately assess group differences, differential item functioning should be considered if using the strivings and concerns factors. Finally, in the current data, the CPQ did not perform as expected in baseline model fit and future research should replicate assessments of measurement invariance in this measure.


Subject(s)
Perfectionism , Self-Injurious Behavior , Adult , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Processes , Students , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
20.
J Gen Intern Med ; 36(10): 3199-3201, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34109540

ABSTRACT

Burnout in medicine is a substantial problem with adverse consequences for both physicians and the patients who they treat. In our efforts to combat burnout, we must consider every tool at our disposal, since a complex problem requires a multifaceted approach. Recognizing that many physicians derive meaning from spirituality and religion, attempts to improve physician and trainee wellness should acknowledge the importance of religion and spirituality for self-care more than has heretofore been the case.


Subject(s)
Burnout, Professional , Physicians , Burnout, Professional/prevention & control , Humans , Religion , Spirituality
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...