All Relations between Depression and shame

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
B Andrew. Bodily shame as a mediator between abusive experiences and depression. Journal of abnormal psychology. vol 104. issue 2. 1995-07-27. PMID:7790630. bodily shame, but not childhood abuse, was related to chronic or recurrent depression when both factors were considered together and current depressive symptoms were controlled. 1995-07-27 2023-08-12 Not clear
J R Mille. Substance abuse: the role of depression and trauma--a case report. The Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis. vol 22. issue 4. 1995-07-07. PMID:7775211. this only reinforces the identified patient's feeling of unreality, shame and guilt over verbalizing the depression and the frequent underlying traumatic history. 1995-07-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
L E O'Connor, J W Berry, D Inaba, J Weiss, A Morriso. Shame, guilt, and depression in men and women in recovery from addiction. Journal of substance abuse treatment. vol 11. issue 6. 1995-04-13. PMID:7884834. shame, guilt, and depression in men and women in recovery from addiction. 1995-04-13 2023-08-12 human
L E O'Connor, J W Berry, D Inaba, J Weiss, A Morriso. Shame, guilt, and depression in men and women in recovery from addiction. Journal of substance abuse treatment. vol 11. issue 6. 1995-04-13. PMID:7884834. men and women in recovery from addiction were compared on levels of depression and self-conscious affect including proneness to shame, guilt, externalization, detachment, and pride. 1995-04-13 2023-08-12 human
L E O'Connor, J W Berry, D Inaba, J Weiss, A Morriso. Shame, guilt, and depression in men and women in recovery from addiction. Journal of substance abuse treatment. vol 11. issue 6. 1995-04-13. PMID:7884834. significant differences between the sexes were found for proneness to shame, detachment, and depression. 1995-04-13 2023-08-12 human
L E O'Connor, J W Berry, D Inaba, J Weiss, A Morriso. Shame, guilt, and depression in men and women in recovery from addiction. Journal of substance abuse treatment. vol 11. issue 6. 1995-04-13. PMID:7884834. women were significantly higher on shame and depression; men were significantly higher on detachment. 1995-04-13 2023-08-12 human
D J Jones, C Zalewsk. Shame and depression proneness among female adult children of alcoholics. The International journal of the addictions. vol 29. issue 12. 1995-02-28. PMID:7836021. shame and depression proneness among female adult children of alcoholics. 1995-02-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
D J Jones, C Zalewsk. Shame and depression proneness among female adult children of alcoholics. The International journal of the addictions. vol 29. issue 12. 1995-02-28. PMID:7836021. although recent clinical literature has posited that both shame and depression are important aspects in the treatment of adult children of alcoholics (acas), proneness to shame and depression in this group remains underexamined. 1995-02-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
D J Jones, C Zalewsk. Shame and depression proneness among female adult children of alcoholics. The International journal of the addictions. vol 29. issue 12. 1995-02-28. PMID:7836021. this study tests the hypotheses that acas are more prone to shame and depression than non-acas. 1995-02-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
P Gilbert, J Pehl, S Alla. The phenomenology of shame and guilt: an empirical investigation. The British journal of medical psychology. vol 67 ( Pt 1). 1994-07-12. PMID:8204541. the study further considered the role of submissive behaviour in shame and depression. 1994-07-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
P Gilbert, J Pehl, S Alla. The phenomenology of shame and guilt: an empirical investigation. The British journal of medical psychology. vol 67 ( Pt 1). 1994-07-12. PMID:8204541. evidence was found to support the view that submissive behaviour is involved in both shame and depression. 1994-07-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
T C Carey, A J Finch, M P Care. Relation between differential emotions and depression in emotionally disturbed children and adolescents. Journal of consulting and clinical psychology. vol 59. issue 4. 1991-11-14. PMID:1918564. findings indicate that shyness, anger, enjoyment, and shame explained 51.4% of the variance in depression scores. 1991-11-14 2023-08-11 human
M Crameru. Adolescent anger. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic. vol 54. issue 4. 1991-02-20. PMID:2268757. the author examines how these negative affects, the accompanying victim role, and oppositional defiance enable angry adolescents to defend against depression and loss, to demand nurturance from others, to protect their precarious inner autonomy, and to undo their humiliation and shame by vengeance and reversal. 1991-02-20 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Maes, M Schlösse. Changing health behaviour outcomes in asthmatic patients: a pilot intervention study. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 26. issue 3. 1988-04-21. PMID:3347856. both before and after the intervention cognitive attitudes (optimism, locus of control, and shame or stigma), coping behaviour in attack situations (minimizing the seriousness of the attack, rational action and reacting emotionally), coping in daily life (maintaining a restrictive life-style, focussing on asthma and hiding asthma), emotional distress (anxiety, anger, and depression), and the use of medication were measured in the experimental and control group. 1988-04-21 2023-08-11 Not clear
S J Blatt, B Rounsaville, S L Eyre, C Wilbe. The psychodynamics of opiate addiction. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. vol 172. issue 6. 1986-01-07. PMID:6544806. opiate addicts and polydrug, but nonopiate, substance abusers were assessed for depression on the raskin rating scale for a clinical interview and several self-report measures of depression including the hamilton, scl-90, and the recently developed depressive experiences questionnaire (deq), which differentially assesses depression focused around neediness from a depression focused around self-criticism (guilt and shame). 1986-01-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
P Mollo. Shame in relation to narcissistic disturbance. The British journal of medical psychology. vol 57 ( Pt 3). 1984-12-12. PMID:6487551. using a clinical illustration several features of shame are described, including its association with vision and with sexuality, and its role in certain kinds of depression; the early infantile precursors of shame are also discussed. 1984-12-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
L A Gottschalk, J M Swanson, J Hoigaard-Martin, R Gilbert, C Fior. Hyperactive children: a study of the content analysis of their speech. Psychotherapy and psychosomatics. vol 41. issue 3. 1984-07-16. PMID:6729008. of the eight depression subscales, the hyperactive boys had significantly elevated scores on hopelessness, self-accusation (a cluster composed of shame, guilt, and hostility inwards), and psychomotor retardation. 1984-07-16 2023-08-12 Not clear
F Horta e Silva, J F Ponte. [Psychosomatic medicine and psychoanalytic observation: considerations on the mechanism of symptom formation]. Arquivos de gastroenterologia. vol 18. issue 3. 1982-06-21. PMID:7340750. the clinical symptom, perceived at body level, such as pain, dyskinesia, circulatory changes (tachycardia, blushing, pallor) is intrinsic and simultaneous with parallel changes at the mind level, such as anxiety, sorrow, instability, joy, depression and shame. 1982-06-21 2023-08-12 Not clear
P O Peretti, R Bell, J Jorda. Self-image and emotional stability of Oedipal and non-Oedipal male homosexuals. Acta psychiatrica Belgica. vol 76. issue 1. 1976-12-01. PMID:970188. they had more emotional problems, shame, guilt, withdrawal, and depression than non-oedipal subjects, as well as less success in sexual activity and commitment to the homosexual partner. 1976-12-01 2023-08-11 human