Both attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and conduct disorder (CD) were explored as possible antecedents of opioid dependence and personality disorder. One hundred adult opioid-dependent, treatment-seeking male inpatients were explored; an extended clinical semistructured interview to collect sociodemographic, drug use related, and clinical data and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV personality disorders SCID-II were carried out. Four groups of patients, namely ADHD alone (4 patients), ADHD + CD (7 patients), CD alone (47 patients) and no ADHD/no CD (42 patients) were identified and compared with each other. The results indicate that ADHD alone does not predispose to the development of opioid dependence in male inpatients. Childhood ADHD may nevertheless be found more frequently in male opioid addicts due to its comorbidity with CD, which was identified in more than half of our sample. Patients with ADHD history seemed to go through the drug abuse career earlier and to develop more frequently histrionic and obsessive-compulsive personality disorder. Over half of the CD patients developed borderline and/or antisocial personality disorder; both ADHD and CD predispose significantly to the PD development. Early substance use preventive measures are necessary in children and adolescents suffering from CD and from ADHD comorbid with CD.
To find possible differences between new long-stay inpatients and patients with shorter lengths of stay, a prospective study of 340 inpatients in the 4th week of hospitalization was carried out. The new long-stay patients differed from the others in diagnoses, symptoms, duration of prior hospitalizations, and socio-demographic data. On the basis of the data assessed in the 4th week of hospitalization, we tried not only to predict future new long-stay patients, but also to estimate the length of stay for all 340 patients. A time-function model was employed with length of stay as a continuous variable, and this resulted in correct allocation to the quartiles in 38-48% of the cases. Six variables proved to be important for estimating length of stay: emotional withdrawal, blunted affect, mannerisms, duration of previous hospitalizations, living conditions (prior to admission), and marital status.
Methodological approaches in which data on nonverbal behavior are collected usually involve interpretative methods in which raters must identify a set of defined categories of behavior. However, present knowledge about the qualitative aspects of head movement behavior calls for recording detailed transcriptions of behavior. These records are a prerequisite for investigating the function and meaning of head movement patterns. A method for directly collecting data on head movement behavior is introduced. Using small ultrasonic transducers, which are attached to various parts of an index person's body (head and shoulders), a microcomputer determines receiver-transducer distances. Three-dimensional positions are calculated by triangulation. These data are used for further calculations concerning the angular orientation of the head and the direction, size, and speed of head movements (in rotational, lateral, and sagittal dimensions). Further analyses determine relevant changes in movements, identify segments of movements, and classify the quantifications of movement patterns. The measured patterns of nonverbal behavior can be accurately related to features of verbal communication and other time-related variables (e.g., psychophysiological measures). To estimate the possible meanings of behavioral patterns, a heuristic is proposed that includes the situational context as the basis of interpretation. Movement Notation: "Indirect" Observation or "Direct" MeasurementConducting empirical research in the area of nonverbal behavior requires reliable methods of measuring the behavior evidenced by participants in a conversation. Both Wallbott (1980) and Rosenfeld (1982) distinguish between two different approaches to measuring nonverbal behavior. First, indirect, or observational, methods rely on subjectively applied operational definitions to identify parameters of nonverbal behavior. Since the researchers are usually the ones who do the observing, they are an integral part of the coding process, which is influenced by their interpretations of the nonverbal aspects of behavior. The researchers' ability to judge nonverbal behavior appropriately can be improved with the help of methods that ensure interpretations that are more objective. For instance, when one is videotaping nonverbal behavior in human social interaction, reference points (a coordinate system with adjustable x/y-axes) can be assigned to compare definable points of the body frame-by-frame and to code position changes in quantitative terms (see Wallbott, 1980).
The distribution of patients suffering from schizophrenia, affective disorders and alcoholism by months of their birth was studied, all patients having been reliably diagnosed using Research Diagnostic Criteria. Significant differences were found between the three groups. The winter-spring birth rate excess in schizophrenia was confirmed, a spring-summer birth rate excess in alcoholics was demonstrated. Different distributions are due to different reasons: for schizophrenic patients the harmful effects hypothesis and for alcoholics the procreational hypothesis seem to be appropriate explanations.
SummaryIn recent years a two types classification of male alcoholism has been proposed by several authors. The study aimed at a testing of type I/type II classification of alcoholism in an independent sample. A total of 351 Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) male alcoholics consecutively admitted for an inpatient psychiatric treatment were studied. Type II characteristics were extracted from the pertinent literature; 19 available variables best representing these characteristics were selected. The data was collected using the method of a retrospective evaluation of clinical records. Cluster analysis yielded two clusters which were well separated from each other. Heterogeneity of the male inpatient population of alcoholics was demonstrated and the existence of broadly defined type I and type II alcoholism was confirmed.
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