Erfolgreiche Zwischenbilanz der Initiative Bürokratieabbau: Ma\nahmen entlasten Bürger, Unternehmen und Verwaltungen
In: Innovative Verwaltung: die Fachzeitschrift für erfolgreiches Verwaltungsmanagement, Band 27, Heft 5, S. 15-17
ISSN: 2192-9068
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In: Innovative Verwaltung: die Fachzeitschrift für erfolgreiches Verwaltungsmanagement, Band 27, Heft 5, S. 15-17
ISSN: 2192-9068
In: Innovative Verwaltung: IV : das Fachmedium für erfolgreiches Verwaltungsmanagement, Band 27, Heft 5, S. 15-17
ISSN: 1618-9876
In: Truppenpraxis, Wehrausbildung: Zeitschrift für Führung, Ausbildung und Erziehung, Band 42, Heft 3, S. 200-203
ISSN: 0947-6164
In: Innovative Verwaltung: IV : das Fachmedium für erfolgreiches Verwaltungsmanagement, Band 26, Heft 9, S. 18-20
ISSN: 1618-9876
In: European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Band 18, Heft 3, S. 136-143
Objective: The study examined parent-youth agreement regarding reports on psychopathology among adolescents suffering from psychiatric disorders. Method: A total of 1,718 patients between the age of 11 and 18, as well as their parents, were assessed using the child behavior checklist (CBCL), and the youth self-report (YSR). Results: Poor to low agreement between parent- and adolescent-reported problem behavior on the internalizing scale, the total problem scale and moderate agreement concerning the externalizing scale of the CBCL and the YSR were found. Independent from the amount of psychiatric diagnoses, adolescents reported significantly less behavioral problems than their parents. Concerning externalizing problems, parent-youth disagreement was stronger for patients suffering from comorbid psychiatric disorders, than for adolescents displaying only one psychiatric disorder. Conclusion: In clinically referred children, parents are likely to emphasize the severity of the difficulties, whereas adolescents' under-report symptoms.
In: European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Band 18, Heft 11, S. 701-704
The current study describes the short-term outcome of adolescent inpatient population suffering from anorexia nervosa (AN) and analyzes the clinical predictors of poor outcome in these patients. Fifty-seven female AN patients (mean = 15.8, SD = 1.3) admitted for inpatient treatment to a specialized eating disorder unit at a university medical center were reassessed 1 year after being discharged. Assessments were made at the beginning and at the end of the inpatient treatment as well as at the 1-year follow-up. Self-rating data and expert-rating interview data were obtained. Adequate data for 55 (96.5%) cases allowed for the assignment of an outcome category. A total of 28.1% of the patients' cases showed a good outcome, meaning the patients fully recovered, and 8.8% had an intermediate outcome, and 59.6% of the patients' cases had a poor outcome. Significant predictors of poor outcome included the patient's BMI at the beginning of the treatment as well as psychiatric comorbidity, and purging behavior. Adolescent AN is a severe disorder with a poor outcome in a substantial amount of adolescents.