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Dive into the research topics where Chantal Michel is active.

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Featured researches published by Chantal Michel.


European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2017

Age effect on prevalence of ultra-high risk for psychosis symptoms: replication in a clinical sample of an early detection of psychosis service

Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Daniela Hubl; Benno G. Schimmelmann; Chantal Michel

Higher frequencies of perceptual and lesser clinical significance of non-perceptual attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS) have been reported by 8- to 15-year-old of the general population compared to 16- to 40-year-old. We examined if such an age-effect can also be detected in a clinical never-psychotic sample (Nxa0=xa0133) referred to a specialized service for clinical suspicion of developing psychosis. APS and brief intermittent psychotic symptoms (BIPS) were assessed using items P1–P3 and P5 (non-perceptual), and P4 (perceptual) of the Structured Interview for Psychosis-Risk Syndromes, current axis-I disorders with the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview, and psychosocial functioning with the Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale. In the sample, 64% reported APS (61%) or BIPS (7%); any perceptual APS/BIPS was reported by 43% and any non-perceptual APS/BIPS by 44%. In correspondence to the results in the general population sample, perceptual but not non-perceptual APS/BIPS were significantly more frequent in younger age groups below the age of 16 (8–12xa0years: odds ratio (OR)xa0=xa04.7 (1.1–19.5); 13–15xa0years: ORxa0=xa02.7 (0.9–7.7); 20–24-year-old as reference group). An age-effect of APS/BIPS on the presence of any current axis-I disorder (59%) or functional difficulties (67%) was not detected. However, when onset requirements of APS criteria (onset/worsening in past year) were met, the likelihood of a psychiatric diagnosis increased significantly with advancing age. Overall, the replicated age-effect on perceptual APS/BIPS in this clinical sample highlights the need to examine ways to distinguish clinically relevant perceptual APS/BIPS from perceptual aberrations likely remitting over the course of adolescence.


Frontiers in Psychiatry | 2017

Mediators linking childhood adversities and trauma to suicidality in individuals at risk for psychosis

Stefanie Julia Schmidt; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Sarah Bendall; Nicola Svenja Groth; Chantal Michel; Nadja Inderbitzin; Benno G. Schimmelmann; Daniela Hubl; Barnaby Nelson

Suicidality is highly prevalent in patients at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis. Childhood adversities and trauma are generally predictive of suicidality. However, the differential effects of adversity/trauma-domains and CHR-criteria, i.e., ultra-high risk and basic symptom criteria, on suicidality remain unclear. Furthermore, the underlying mechanisms and, thus, worthwhile targets for suicide-prevention are still poorly understood. Therefore, structural equation modeling was used to test theory-driven models in 73 CHR-patients. Mediators were psychological variables, i.e., beliefs about one’s own competencies as well as the controllability of events and coping styles. In addition, symptomatic variables (depressiveness, basic symptoms, attenuated psychotic symptoms) were hypothesized to mediate the effect of psychological mediators on suicidality as the final outcome variable. Results showed two independent pathways. In the first pathway, emotional and sexual but not physical adversity/trauma was associated with suicidality, which was mediated by dysfunctional competence/control beliefs, a lack of positive coping-strategies and depressiveness. In the second pathway, cognitive basic symptoms but not attenuated psychotic symptoms mediated the relationship between trauma/adversity and suicidality. CHR-patients are, thus, particularly prone to suicidality if adversity/trauma is followed by the development of depressiveness. Regarding the second pathway, this is the first study showing that adversity/trauma led to suicidality through an increased risk for psychosis as indicated by cognitive basic symptoms. As insight is generally associated with suicidality, this may explain why self-experienced basic symptoms increase the risk for it. Consequently, these mediators should be monitored regularly and targeted by integrated interventions as early as possible to enhance resilience against suicidality.


European Psychiatry | 2018

Functioning mediates help-seeking for mental problems in the general population

Chantal Michel; Nina Schnyder; Stefanie Julia Schmidt; Nicola Svenja Groth; Benno G. Schimmelmann; Frauke Schultze-Lutter

AIMSnAbsent or delayed help-seeking is considered to aggravate the immense personal and societal burden caused by mental disorders. Therefore, we cross-sectionally examined rates and clinical and sociodemographic moderators of early help-seeking for current clinician-assessed non-psychotic mental problems/disorders in the community.nnnMETHODSnAltogether, 2683 individuals of the Swiss Canton Bern (16-40 years old, response rate 63.4%) were interviewed by telephone for current axis-I problems/disorders using the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview, for psychosocial functioning using the Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale, and for help-seeking for mental problems.nnnRESULTSnIn total, 1122 (41.8%) reported mental problems. Of these, 769 (68.5%) affirmed any one screening question and 353 (31.5%) fulfilled criteria for any current axis-I disorder, and 396 (35.3%) reported any lifetime help-seeking (28.3% sought help in the past and 7.0% were in current treatment). In path analyses, current help-seeking was associated mainly by type and number of mental problems/disorders mediated by functional impairment, in addition to older age, no current partner, and past treatment.nnnCONCLUSIONnOur cross-sectional data indicate a gap in help-seeking for mental problems/disorders. The relationship between number of mental problems/disorders and help-seeking mediated by functional impairment confirm that individuals commonly do not seek help until problems are severe enough to cause problems in occupational and psychosocial functioning, driving the already immense costs of mental disorders. Thus, campaigns promoting early help-seeking, including early diagnostic clarification of and support for subthreshold mental problems in terms of an indicated prevention, should focus on psychosocial functioning, aside from signs of mental illness.


CLiC-it | 2017

Monitoring Adolescents’ Distress using Social Web data as a Source: the InsideOut Project

Roberto Basili; Valentina Bellomaria; Niels Jonas Bugge; Danilo Croce; Francesco De Michele; Federico Fiori Nastro; Paolo Fiori Nastro; Chantal Michel; Stefanie Julia Schmidt; Frauke Schultze-Lutter


Archive | 2018

A structural equation modeling meta-analysis of coping, locus of control, self-efficacy and mental health

Stefanie Julia Schmidt; Nina Schnyder; Michael Kaess; Andjela Markovic; Liz Rietschel; Susann Ochsenbein; Chantal Michel; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Nicola Svenja Groth


Archive | 2018

plan D - Introducing a cognitive-behavioural group therapy program for individuals with depersonalisation and derealisation

Rahel Flückiger; Chantal Michel; Jochen Kindler; Michael Kaess; Stefanie Julia Schmidt


Archive | 2018

Functional and structural correlates of abnormal involuntary movements in psychosis risk, first episode psychosis and clinical controls

Jochen Kindler; Chantal Michel; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Alexandra Martz-Irngartinger; Benno Karl Edgar Schimmelmann; Michael Kaess; Daniela Hubl; Sebastian Walther


Archive | 2018

Direct and indirect effects of coping, self-efficacy and control beliefs to promote mental health and quality of life in a general population sample

Stefanie Julia Schmidt; Chantal Michel; Michael Kaess; Nina Schnyder; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Nicola Svenja Groth


Archive | 2018

Negative symptoms as a mediator between neurocognition, social cognition and social functioning in individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis

Stefanie Julia Schmidt; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Ana Cerne; Benno Karl Edgar Schimmelmann; Jochen Kindler; Daniela Hubl; Michael Kaess; Chantal Michel


Archive | 2018

Help-seeking for mental problems in the general population: results from a Swiss telephone survey

Chantal Michel; Nina Schnyder; Stefanie Julia Schmidt; Susann Ochsenbein; Nicola Svenja Groth; Benno Karl Edgar Schimmelmann; Frauke Schultze-Lutter

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