Functional Bowel Disorders
- D. Drossman, Zhiming Li, E. Guthrie
- MedicineAmerican Journal of Gastroenterology
- 1 May 1995
The FBDSI can be used to select patients for research protocols and/or follow their clinical outcome or response to treatments over time to develop a functional bowel disorder severity index for research and clinical care.
Randomised controlled trial of brief psychological intervention after deliberate self poisoning.
- E. Guthrie, N. Kapur, B. Tomenson
- Psychology, MedicineBMJ : British Medical Journal
- 21 July 2001
Brief psychodynamic interpersonal therapy may be a valuable treatment after people have deliberately tried to poison themselves and reduced suicidal ideation and self reported attempts at self harm.
Psychological stress and burnout in medical students: a five-year prospective longitudinal study
- E. Guthrie, D. Black, H. Bagalkote, C. Shaw, M. Campbell, F. Creed
- Psychology, MedicineJournal of the Royal Society of Medicine
- 1 May 1998
It is suggested that a small group of students repeatedly experience psychological distress during their medical training, and the best predictor of psychological morbidity in the final year of the course was the GHQ-12 score in year 1.
Gender, age, society, culture, and the patient's perspective in the functional gastrointestinal disorders.
- Lin Chang, B. Toner, A. Sperber
- Medicine, PsychologyGastroenterology
- 1 April 2006
There is evidence for sex- and gender-related differences in FGID, particularly irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and there appears to be a greater clinical response to serotonergic agents developed for IBS in women compared to men.
Psychological disorder and severity of inflammatory bowel disease predict health-related quality of life in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease
- E. Guthrie, J. Jackson, J. Shaffer, D. Thompson, B. Tomenson, F. Creed
- Medicine, PsychologyAmerican Journal of Gastroenterology
- 1 August 2002
The presence of psychological disorder in inflammatory bowel disease contributes to poor health-related quality of life, regardless of the severity of the condition.
Health-Related Quality of Life and Health Care Costs in Severe, Refractory Irritable Bowel Syndrome
- F. Creed, J. Ratcliffe, D. Thompson
- Medicine, PsychologyAnnals of Internal Medicine
- 1 May 2001
If impairment of health-related quality of life and increased health care and other costs are largely attributable to the psychological disturbance that often accompanies IBS, psychological treatment may improve these outcomes even if bowel symptoms change little.
The cost-effectiveness of psychotherapy and paroxetine for severe irritable bowel syndrome.
- F. Creed, L. Fernandes, B. Tomenson
- Medicine, PsychologyGastroenterology
- 1 February 2003
For patients with severe IBS, both psychotherapy and paroxetine improve health-related quality of life at no additional cost.
Bi-directionality of Brain-Gut Interactions in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
- D. Gracie, E. Guthrie, P. Hamlin, A. Ford
- Medicine, PsychologyGastroenterology
- 1 May 2018
Evidence is found for bi-directional effects of IBD activity and psychological disorders in patients with CD or UC from a 2-year longitudinal prospective study of patients in secondary to care.
Is there a better term than "medically unexplained symptoms"?
- F. Creed, E. Guthrie, P. White
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of Psychosomatic Research
- 2010
Brief psychodynamic interpersonal psychotherapy for patients with multisomatoform disorder: randomised controlled trial
- H. Sattel, C. Lahmann, P. Henningsen
- Medicine, PsychologyBritish Journal of Psychiatry
- 1 January 2012
Psychodynamic interpersonal therapy improved patients' physical quality of life at follow-up better than EMC (mean improvement in SF-36 score: PIT 5.3, EMC 2.2), and there was a significant improvement in somatisation but not in depression, health anxiety or healthcare utilisation.
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