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Dive into the research topics where Anne Kaljonen is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne Kaljonen.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1998

Contagion of Deliberate Self-Harm Among Adolescent Inpatients

Tero Taiminen; Kristiina Kallio-Soukainen; Hannele Nokso-Koivisto; Anne Kaljonen; Hans Helenius

OBJECTIVE To explore the quantitative importance and clinical features of deliberate self-harm (DSH) contagion in a closed adolescent psychiatric unit. METHOD The authors investigated with statistical methods and a sociogram whether acts of DSH were clustered during a 12-month study period. Twelve subjects were involved in acts of DSH, and their mean length of hospitalization during the study period was about 90 days. Six adolescents with four or more contagion incidents were interviewed. RESULTS DSH incidents were clustered during the study period (p < .05). Most DSH incidents were skin cutting committed by depressed female subjects with borderline personality disorder. The majority of DSH contagion can be understood in terms of small-group rites for feelings of togetherness. CONCLUSIONS Even a majority of DSH events in closed adolescent units may be triggered by contagion, and DSH can spread to previously DSH-naive adolescents.


Journal of Nursing Care Quality | 2005

Patient education and health-related quality of life: surgical hospital patients as a case in point.

Helena Leino-Kilpi; Kirsi Johansson; Katja Heikkinen; Anne Kaljonen; Heli Virtanen; Sanna Salanterä

The purpose of this study was to analyze the connections between patient education and health-related quality of life as an outcome variable. Data were collected among surgical hospital patients (n = 237) in Finland. On the basis of the results, there seems to be a positive relationship between received knowledge and health-related quality of life, and as such, the study produced knowledge about one quality indicator in nursing care. More research is needed to explore this connection in greater details.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2013

Cohort Profile: Steps to the Healthy Development and Well-being of Children (the STEPS Study)

Hanna Lagström; Päivi Rautava; Anne Kaljonen; Hannele Räihä; Päivi Pihlaja; Pirjo Korpilahti; Ville Peltola; Pirkko Rautakoski; Eva Österbacka; Olli Simell; Pekka Niemi

The STEPS Study aims to search for the precursors and causes of problems in child health and well-being by using a multidisciplinary approach. The cohort consists of all mothers (Finnish or Swedish speaking) who had live deliveries in the Hospital District of Southwest Finland from January 2008 to April 2010 and their children (n=9811 mothers, n=9936 children). Of these, 1797 mothers and their 1827 children were recruited to an intensive follow-up group during the first trimester of pregnancy or soon after delivery. Information about the whole study cohort is based on pregnancy follow-up data from maternity clinics, National Longitudinal Census Files and child welfare clinics. Data from multiple sources are used to obtain a picture of the overall well-being of the child and the family. After birth, study visits include several clinical examinations. Collaboration is encouraged, and access to the data will be available when the data set is complete.


Nursing Ethics | 2003

Perceptions of Autonomy in the Care of Elderly People in Five European Countries

P. Anne Scott; Maritta Välimäki; Helena Leino-Kilpi; Theo Dassen; Maria Gasull; Chryssoula Lemonidou; Marianne Arndt; Anja Schopp; Riitta Suhonen; Anne Kaljonen

The focus of this article is perceptions of elderly patients and nurses regarding patients’ autonomy in nursing practice. Autonomy is empirically defined as having two components: information received/given as a prerequisite and decision making as the action. The results indicated differences between staff and patient perceptions of patient autonomy for both components in all five countries in which this survey was conducted. There were also differences between countries in the perceptions of patients and nurses regarding the frequency with which patients received information from nursing staff or were offered opportunities to make decisions. This is the second of a set of five articles published together in this issue of Nursing Ethics in which the results of this comparative research project are presented.


Schizophrenia Research | 2000

Habituation of the blink reflex in first-episode schizophrenia, psychotic depression and non-psychotic depression

Tero Taiminen; Satu K. Jääskeläinen; Tuula Ilonen; Harriet Meyer; Hasse Karlsson; Hannu Lauerma; Kirsi-Marja Leinonen; Elina Wallenius; Anne Kaljonen; Raimo K. R. Salokangas

OBJECTIVE Electrophysiological recording of the electrically elicited blink reflex is the most reliable method of investigating habituation of the startle reflex. The purpose of this study was to compare the habituation and the late R3-component of the blink reflex between control subjects (N=19) and first-episode patients with schizophrenia (N=17), psychotic depression (N=23), and severe non-psychotic depression (N=25). METHODS The blink reflex was evoked by electrical stimulation of the supraorbital nerve, and the deficient habituation of the R2i-component was measured with a computer-assisted integral area measurement. Prefrontal executive function of the patients was assessed with the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test. Current psychiatric symptoms were assessed with the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, the Hamilton Depression Scale, the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, and the Calgary Depression Scale. RESULTS Deficient habituation of the blink reflex and occurrence of the late R3 component were associated both with a previous diagnosis of psychotic disorder and with the presence of current psychosis. The sensitivity and specificity of the abnormal habituation of the blink reflex in detecting psychotic disorder were 0.50 and 0.80, respectively. The abnormalities of the blink reflex were not associated with psychotropic medication. In schizophrenic patients, defective habituation of the blink reflex was associated with negative and cognitive symptoms, and in depressive patients with the presence of delusions. CONCLUSIONS The deficient habituation of the blink reflex and occurrence of the late R3 component seem to be both trait and state markers of a psychotic disorder. The results suggest that schizophrenia and psychotic depression share some common neurobiological mechanisms involved in the modulation of the startle reflex.


Nursing Ethics | 2003

Perceptions of Autonomy, Privacy and Informed Consent in the Care of Elderly People in Five European Countries: comparison and implications for the future:

Helena Leino-Kilpi; Maritta Välimäki; Theo Dassen; Maria Gasull; Chryssoula Lemonidou; P. Anne Scott; Anja Schopp; Marianne Arndt; Anne Kaljonen

This article discusses nurses’ and elderly patients’ perceptions of the realization of autonomy, privacy and informed consent in five European countries. Comparisons between the concepts and the countries indicated that both nurses and patients gave the highest ratings to privacy and the lowest to informed consent. There were differences between countries. According to the patient data, autonomy is best realized in Spain, privacy in the UK (Scotland), and informed consent in Finland. For the staff data, the best results tended to concentrate in the UK. The conceptual and methodological limitations of the study are identified and discussed. Implications of the results are divided into three areas: nursing practice, education and research. In practice, the analysis of patients’ values and the ethical sensitivity of nurses are important as part of ethically good care. In nurse education, students should learn to recognize ethical problems, generally and particularly, among vulnerable groups of patients. Multicultural international research is needed in this area. This is the last of a set of five articles published together in this issue of Nursing Ethics in which the results of this comparative research project are presented.


Nursing Ethics | 2003

Perceptions of Informed Consent in the Care of Elderly People in Five European Countries

Anja Schopp; Maritta Välimäki; Helena Leino-Kilpi; Theo Dassen; Maria Gasull; Chryssoula Lemonidou; P. Anne Scott; Marianne Arndt; Anne Kaljonen

The focus of this article is on elderly patients’ and nursing staff perceptions of informed consent in the care of elderly patients/residents in five European countries. The results suggest that patients and nurses differ in their views on how informed consent is implemented. Among elderly patients the highest frequency for securing informed consent was reported in Finland; the lowest was in Germany. In contrast, among nurses, the highest frequency was reported in the UK (Scotland) and the lowest in Finland. In a comparison of patients’ and nurses’ perceptions, nurses had more positive views than patients in all countries except Finland. Patients with less need for nursing interventions in Greece and Spain gave their consent less often. The German and Greek patients were older, and the results also point to an association between this and their lower frequency of giving consent. In Spain, patients who were married or who had a family member or friend to look after their personal affairs were more likely to be included in the group whose consent was sought less often. This is the fourth of a set of five articles published together in this issue of Nursing Ethics in which the results of this comparative research project are presented.


Scandinavian Journal of Public Health | 2010

Construction and evaluation of a self-contained index for assessment of diet quality

Johanna Leppälä; Hanna Lagström; Anne Kaljonen; Kirsi Laitinen

Aims: To construct and validate a self-contained index for the evaluation of a health-promoting diet in adults. Methods: Participants (n = 103) were healthy volunteer adults aged 20 to 64 years. A food consumption questionnaire containing 55 questions was formulated and evaluated against seven-day food records. Key questions best reflecting the health-promoting diet, defined in nutrition recommendations, were identified by correlation and ROC analyses in comparison to calculated food and nutrient intakes from the food records. A shorter questionnaire was scored to compile an Index of Diet Quality (IDQ). Results: Based on ROC analyses 18 questions were sufficient to describe the health-promoting diet and comprised the index. IDQ had a sensitivity of 67% and a specificity of 71%. The IDQ score reflected dietary intake, shown as statistically significant correlations between higher IDQ scores and higher intakes of protein (r = 0.35), fibre (r = 0.42), calcium (r = 0.39), iron (r = 0.31), vitamin C (r = 0.31) and a higher ratio of unsaturated to saturated fatty acids (r = 0.23) and a lower intake of saturated fatty acids (r =—0.22) and saccharose (r =—0.25). Conclusions: IDQ reflects dietary intake of key foods and nutrients associated with health and depicts adherence to dietary recommendations. It is applicable in nutritional studies where diet in its entirety is of interest and also in large-scale studies, being fast in execution with analysis free of complex calculations.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1985

Psychotherapeutically Oriented Treatment of Schizophrenia: Results of 5‐year‐follow‐up

Yrjö O. Alanen; Viljo Räkköläinen; Riitta Rasimus; Juhani Laakso; Anne Kaljonen

The authors have developed a psychotherapeutic approach to schizophrenia within the community psychiatric health care system. The orientation is psychodynamic but global in the meaning that the therapeutic plans are made on the basis of case‐specific need of the patients and of their families and include both individual psychotherapy, family therapy and therapeutic communities.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2004

Psychodynamic personality profile in first-episode severe mental disorders

Jyrki Heikkilä; Hasse Karlsson; Tero Taiminen; Hannu Lauerma; T. Ilonen; K.‐M. Leinonen; E. Wallenius; H. Virtanen; Markus Heinimaa; Anne Kaljonen; R.K.R. Salokangas

Objective:  The aim of this study was to relate measures of psychoanalytically derived personality traits to descriptive diagnosis and psychopathology in severe mental disorders.

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Tero Taiminen

Turku University Hospital

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