All Relations between Depression and belief

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Liza Day, John Maltb. Belief in good luck and psychological well-being: the mediating role of optimism and irrational beliefs. The Journal of psychology. vol 137. issue 1. 2003-06-17. PMID:12661707. the authors examined the relationship of belief in good luck with depression and anxiety within the context of a number of cognitive and personality variables used to explain depression and anxiety. 2003-06-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Liza Day, John Maltb. Belief in good luck and psychological well-being: the mediating role of optimism and irrational beliefs. The Journal of psychology. vol 137. issue 1. 2003-06-17. PMID:12661707. a number of models were tested to determine whether irrational beliefs or optimism mediated the relationship between belief in good luck and depression and anxiety. 2003-06-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Liza Day, John Maltb. Belief in good luck and psychological well-being: the mediating role of optimism and irrational beliefs. The Journal of psychology. vol 137. issue 1. 2003-06-17. PMID:12661707. the findings suggested that negative relationships between belief in good luck and both depression and anxiety are best addressed by the theory that belief in good luck engenders optimistic traits and a reduced level of irrational beliefs. 2003-06-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Kate M Loewenthal, Andrew K MacLeod, Susan Cook, Michelle Lee, Vivienne Goldblat. Beliefs about alcohol among UK Jews and Protestants: do they fit the alcohol-depression hypothesis? Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology. vol 38. issue 3. 2003-05-30. PMID:12616309. differences in beliefs about alcohol, and different patterns of use, may play a role in accounting for cultural and gender variations in depression prevalence. 2003-05-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
Peter Muris, Erik Schouten, Cor Meesters, Hanneke Gijsber. Contingency-competence-control-related beliefs and symptoms of anxiety and depression in a young adolescent sample. Child psychiatry and human development. vol 33. issue 4. 2003-05-23. PMID:12723904. contingency-competence-control-related beliefs and symptoms of anxiety and depression in a young adolescent sample. 2003-05-23 2023-08-12 human
Peter Muris, Erik Schouten, Cor Meesters, Hanneke Gijsber. Contingency-competence-control-related beliefs and symptoms of anxiety and depression in a young adolescent sample. Child psychiatry and human development. vol 33. issue 4. 2003-05-23. PMID:12723904. results showed that contingency-competence-control-related beliefs were intercorrelated and that these beliefs, in turn, were significantly associated with symptoms of anxiety and depression. 2003-05-23 2023-08-12 human
Peter Muris, Erik Schouten, Cor Meesters, Hanneke Gijsber. Contingency-competence-control-related beliefs and symptoms of anxiety and depression in a young adolescent sample. Child psychiatry and human development. vol 33. issue 4. 2003-05-23. PMID:12723904. a prospective test of this model indicated that none of the contingency-competence-control-related beliefs was able to predict symptoms of anxiety and depression at 4-weeks follow-up. 2003-05-23 2023-08-12 human
Mark D Sullivan, Wayne J Katon, Joan E Russo, Ellen Frank, James E Barrett, Thomas E Oxman, John W William. Patient beliefs predict response to paroxetine among primary care patients with dysthymia and minor depression. The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice. vol 16. issue 1. 2003-05-15. PMID:12583647. patient beliefs predict response to paroxetine among primary care patients with dysthymia and minor depression. 2003-05-15 2023-08-12 Not clear
Mark D Sullivan, Wayne J Katon, Joan E Russo, Ellen Frank, James E Barrett, Thomas E Oxman, John W William. Patient beliefs predict response to paroxetine among primary care patients with dysthymia and minor depression. The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice. vol 16. issue 1. 2003-05-15. PMID:12583647. dysthymia and minor depression are common problems in primary care, but it is not known how patient health beliefs shape response to antidepressant treatment of these less severe forms of depression. 2003-05-15 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jennifer Q Morse, Clive J Robins, Marci Gittes-Fo. Sociotropy, autonomy, and personality disorder criteria in psychiatric patients. Journal of personality disorders. vol 16. issue 6. 2003-05-14. PMID:12616830. sociotropy and autonomy (beck, 1983) are sets of beliefs, concerns, and behavioral tendencies that are proposed to create vulnerability to depression and other psychopathology and to influence its manifestation and treatment response. 2003-05-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
Lawrence P Riso, P L du Toit, Jaime A Blandino, Suzanne Penna, Sean Dacey, Jason S Duin, Elizabeth M Pacoe, Merida M Grant, Christi S Ulme. Cognitive aspects of chronic depression. Journal of abnormal psychology. vol 112. issue 1. 2003-04-23. PMID:12653415. in this cross-sectional study, 42 outpatients with chronic depression were compared with 27 outpatients with nonchronic major depressive disorder and 24 never psychiatrically ill controls on cognitive variables thought to be related to vulnerability to depression (e.g., dysfunctional attitudes, attributional style, a ruminative response style, and maladaptive core beliefs). 2003-04-23 2023-08-12 Not clear
Nick Hasla. Essentialist thinking about depression: evidence for polarized beliefs. Psychological reports. vol 91. issue 3 Pt 2. 2003-04-07. PMID:12585546. essentialist thinking about depression: evidence for polarized beliefs. 2003-04-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Nick Hasla. Essentialist thinking about depression: evidence for polarized beliefs. Psychological reports. vol 91. issue 3 Pt 2. 2003-04-07. PMID:12585546. mixture modeling of 309 undergraduates' beliefs about the nature of depression yielded two polarized latent classes--those who held essentialist beliefs and those who did not--consistent with the view that essentialist thinking is a distinct cognitive mode. 2003-04-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Mari Lloyd-Williams, Sheila Payn. Nurse specialist assessment and management of palliative care patients who are depressed--a study of perceptions and attitudes. Journal of palliative care. vol 18. issue 4. 2003-03-21. PMID:12611317. these beliefs were substantiated by the difficulties nurses encountered in assessing depression and by their beliefs regarding antidepressant medication. 2003-03-21 2023-08-12 Not clear
Laura J Fisher, Robert D Goldne. Differences in community mental health literacy in older and younger Australians. International journal of geriatric psychiatry. vol 18. issue 1. 2003-03-05. PMID:12497554. it is now recognised that patients' understanding of depression and beliefs about its appropriate treatment, mental health literacy, influences treatment-seeking behaviour. 2003-03-05 2023-08-12 Not clear
Kate E Hamilton, Keith S Dobso. Cognitive therapy of depression: pretreatment patient predictors of outcome. Clinical psychology review. vol 22. issue 6. 2003-01-16. PMID:12214329. high pretreatment levels of dysfunctional attitudes and certain beliefs about the nature of depression were also found to predict differential response to cognitive therapy of depression. 2003-01-16 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Bouvar. [A standardized cognitive-behavioural group treatment program for obsessive compulsive disorder: preliminary outcomes]. L'Encephale. vol 28. issue 5 Pt 1. 2003-01-16. PMID:12386546. evaluations involved: 1) one or more face-to-face interviews, 2) scales or questionnaires which are designed to provide information relevant to anxiety (beck anxiety inventory), depression (beck depression inventory), ocd symptoms (ybocs, four target rituals and four target obsessions) and ocd cognitive measures (obsessive beliefs questionnaire: obq). 2003-01-16 2023-08-12 human
O Pelletier, P Gosselin, F Langlois, R Ladouceu. [Study of psychometric properties of two new questionnaires assessing beliefs in hypochondriasis in a non-clinical population]. L'Encephale. vol 28. issue 4. 2002-12-19. PMID:12232539. the questionnaires were: the general health beliefs questionnaire (ghbq), the why do people worry about health (ww-h), the illness worry scale (iws), the beck depression inventory-short form (bdi-short form) and the beck anxiety inventory (bai). 2002-12-19 2023-08-12 human
Anna M Lehman, Darrin R Lehman, Kenneth J Hemphill, David R Mandel, Lynne M Coope. Illness experience, depression, and anxiety in chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of psychosomatic research. vol 52. issue 6. 2002-09-19. PMID:12069870. given the high rate of psychiatric comorbidity with chronic fatigue syndrome (cfs), we considered two possible correlates of anxiety and depression: lack of illness legitimization and beliefs about limiting physical activity. 2002-09-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
Rita Schreiber, Gwen Hartric. Keeping it together: how women use the biomedical explanatory model to manage the stigma of depression. Issues in mental health nursing. vol 23. issue 2. 2002-07-16. PMID:11901663. our purposes in doing this study were to (1) examine how women experience and manage depression and treatment, and (2) investigate the core components of women's explanatory models of depression (including beliefs about etiology, onset of symptoms, pathophysiology, course of illness, and treatment needs). 2002-07-16 2023-08-12 Not clear