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1.
Psychol Med ; 42(4): 769-80, 2012 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21995856

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND. This paper examined the hypothesis that males with first-episode psychosis (FEP) experience lower pre-morbid adjustment, greater social disability and more self-perceived needs at illness onset than females(by controlling for duration of untreated psychosis, diagnosis, age and symptoms at onset). Results disconfirming this hypothesis were thought to suggest the potentially mediating role of social context in determining the impact of symptoms and disability on the everyday lives of male patients in the early phase of psychosis. METHOD. A large epidemiologically representative cohort of FEP patients (n=517) was assessed within the Psychosis Incident Cohort Outcome Study (PICOS) framework ­ a multi-site research project examining incident cases of psychosis in Italy's Veneto region. RESULTS. Despite poorer pre-morbid functioning and higher social disability at illness onset, males reported fewer unmet needs in the functioning domain than females did. An analysis of help provided by informal care givers showed that males received more help from their families than females did. This finding led us to disconfirm the second part of the hypothesis and suggest that the impact of poorer social performance and unmet needs on everyday life observed in male patients might be hampered by higher tolerance and more support within the family context.CONCLUSIONS. These findings shed new light on rarely investigated sociocultural and contextual factors that may account for the observed discrepancy between social disability and needs for care in FEP patients. They also point to a need for further research on gender differences, with the ultimate aim of delivering gender-sensitive effective mental health care.


Sujet(s)
Besoins et demandes de services de santé , Troubles psychotiques/épidémiologie , Schizophrénie/épidémiologie , Psychologie des schizophrènes , Caractères sexuels , Adaptation sociale , Adolescent , Adulte , Analyse de variance , Enfant , Études de cohortes , Études transversales , Famille , Femelle , Humains , Incidence , Italie/épidémiologie , Mâle , Services de santé mentale/organisation et administration , Adulte d'âge moyen , Échelles d'évaluation en psychiatrie , Troubles psychotiques/psychologie , Indice de gravité de la maladie , Facteurs sexuels , Environnement social , Médecine d'État , Jeune adulte
2.
Brain Res Cogn Brain Res ; 7(4): 451-63, 1999 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10076090

RÉSUMÉ

Behavioural sleep during the first 2 weeks of life was investigated in female chicks reared with an imprinting object or in social (visual) isolation. Binocular sleep tended to decrease and monocular sleep to increase with age in both rearing conditions. In chicks reared with an imprinted object. during the first week, monocular sleep with either right or left eye closure occurred with approximately the same frequency, except that on day 5 in which right eye closure dominated; during the second week, however, there was a clear bias towards more monocular sleep with left eye closure. During the second week, the pattern of monocular sleep was similar in both rearing conditions, but during the first week chicks reared with the imprinting object showed relatively more right eye closure compared to chicks reared without the imprinting object, an effect that might tentatively be associated with consolidation of imprinting memories in the left hemisphere. Binocular sleep occurred in all four body postures adopted by chicks during sleep: standing sleep, sleep with bill forward, sleep with bill on the ground, and sleep with head on the ground. Monocular sleep, in contrast, only occurred when chicks adopted the bill forward posture. When the colour of the imprinting object was suddenly changed on day 8, a striking shift towards predominant right eye closure during monocular sleep was observed. The same occurred when the imprinting object was suddenly removed from the home-cage on day 8, but not with other types of changes (i.e., when a novel different object was inserted into the home-cage or when a novel-coloured imprinting object was inserted into the home-cage together with the original one). It is argued that this phenomenon could be associated with right hemisphere involvement in response to novelty.


Sujet(s)
Sommeil/physiologie , Vision monoculaire/physiologie , Vieillissement/physiologie , Animaux , Animaux domestiques , Poulets , Femelle , Latéralité fonctionnelle , , Posture , Isolement social , Vision binoculaire
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