Breast cancer patients and controls experienced the same number of stressful life events in the five years prior to diagnosis or an equivalent reference date (controls), averaging 2.4 and 2.6 events, respectively. After adjustment for known breast cancer risk factors, there was no association between weighted stressful life event scores and the risk of breast cancer (odds ratio [OR] = 0.90 per unit increase; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.78-1.05). Only one life event, death of a close friend, was significantly more often reported by controls (OR = 0.72; 95% CI, 0.52-1.00). Other life events were inconsistently and nonsignificantly associated with breast cancer risk. CONCLUSIONS. The results of this retrospective study do not suggest any important associations between stressful life events and breast cancer risk.
Treatment plans can be thought of as one of the products of a medical interaction. As such, treatment for illness has been investigated as an outcome measure and seems to reflect bias in some areas of the practice of medicine. Although the evidence for patterns of differential treatment is compelling, determining the source of treatment bias has been difficult. Based on detailed analysis of transcripts of actual interactions in general medicine and oncology clinics, we propose that treatment plans are negotiated through everyday language practices that work to maximize agreement. We demonstrate that, on the level of individual medical encounters, patient agency is both apparent and operative and that physician power does not unilaterally determine outcomes. Thus, this investigation goes beyond the abstract study of physician and patient preferences or prejudices, focusing closely on the consequences of actual talk in settings where medical recommendations are being made.
We evaluated employment after temporal lobectomy for refractory epilepsy in 86 patients (3.5 to 8 years of follow-up). Seventy-three patients qualified for the work force before and after surgery. Unemployment rates declined after surgery (18 patients [25%] unemployed before surgery, eight patients [11%] unemployed after surgery), and underemployment also tended to diminish. Improvement in occupational status related strongly to the degree of postoperative seizure relief. Seizure-free patients fared better (no unemployment, little underemployment) than patients with some seizure-free years and some years with seizures after surgery, whose high underemployment level persisted. Patients with seizures in each year after surgery fared worst (despite reduced seizure frequency), with increased unemployment after surgery. Age at surgery also influenced vocational outcome in patients who were unemployed before surgery. Historical, educational, cognitive, and behavioral measures did not correlate with vocational outcome. Employment gains came slowly; unemployed patients took up to 6 years to obtain work after surgery. Of 13 students at the time of surgery, 11 have graduated and nine are now employed. We conclude that seizures play a large role in limiting employment, and that by alleviating seizures, temporal lobectomy improves employability in people with refractory epilepsy. Surgery thereby provides benefit to individuals with epilepsy by increasing financial independence and to society by reducing unemployment.
This study addresses whether there is a threshold, some particular length of silent gap between two speakers' turns, at which negative social attributions emerge. The effect of such inter-turn silence was tested by constructing dialogues where responses to requests were identical and affirmative so that study participants' (n = 380) ratings about “willingness” would be colored by lag time, not semantics. 100 ms intervals between 200 and 1200 ms were tested in a between groups design. There was a notable drop-off in ratings at 600 ms and a statistically significant difference in ratings between 700 and 800 ms.
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