Age-period-cohort effects on inequalities in psychological distress, 1981-2000.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

In the closing decades of the twentieth century, changes in population sociodemographics took place that might be thought to have an adverse influence on the nation's psychological distress. Here, we examine the stability of social and gender inequalities in psychological distress throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

METHODS:

A hazardous profession : war, journalists, and psychopathology.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

War journalists often confront situations of extreme danger in their work. Despite this, information on their psychological well-being is lacking.

METHOD:

Unforeseen consequences of terrorism : medically unexplained symptoms in a time of fear.

ONE YEAR later, reports related to the psychological and physiological effects of the terrorist attacks perpetrated on September 11, 2001, continue to emerge. These reports and what little is known about the long-term health effects of terrorism suggest that many people will present to their physicians with medically unexplained symptoms. These symptoms may be mistaken for organic medical diseases, but are likely to be physiological manifestations of psychological distress.

Depressive symptoms predict medical care utilization in a population-based sample.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Several examinations have detected a relation between depressive symptoms and medical utilization. However, selection biases have been involved in most previous examinations. We sought to test the association between depressive symptoms and prospective, increased medical care utilization, in a population-based Canadian sample, while controlling for utilization due to medical illness and controlling for selection bias.

METHODS:

Propensity to psychiatric and somatic ill-health : evidence from a birth cohort.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Somatic and psychiatric morbidity may cluster because of reciprocal effects between them but also as a result of common underlying factors.

METHODS:

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