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Featured researches published by Evelien Coppens.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2013

Public attitudes toward depression and help-seeking in four European countries baseline survey prior to the OSPI-Europe intervention

Evelien Coppens; Chantal Van Audenhove; Gert Scheerder; Ella Arensman; Claire Coffey; Susana Costa; Nicole Koburger; Katrin Gottlebe; Ricardo Gusmão; Rory C. O’Connor; Vita Postuvan; Merike Sisask; András Székely; Christina van der Feltz Cornelis; Ulrich Hegerl

BACKGROUND Stigmatizing attitudes toward depression and toward help-seeking are important barriers for people with mental health problems to obtain adequate professional help. This study aimed to examine: (1) population attitudes toward depression and toward seeking professional help in four European countries; (2) the relation between depression stigma and attitudes toward help-seeking; (3) the relation between both attitudes and socio-demographic characteristics; and (4) differences in attitudes across countries. METHODS A representative general population survey (n=4011) was conducted in Germany, Hungary, Ireland, and Portugal, assessing attitudes toward depression and toward help-seeking, and a number of socio-demographic variables. RESULTS Respondents showed a moderate degree of personal stigma toward depression and a strikingly higher degree of perceived stigma. Although a substantial majority showed openness to seek professional help, only half of the people perceived professional help as valuable. More negative attitudes were found in Hungary and were associated with male gender, older age, lower educational level and living alone. Also, personal stigma was related to less openness to and less perceived value of professional treatment. LIMITATIONS The survey was cross-sectional, so no causal inferences could be drawn. CONCLUSIONS Personal and perceived stigma toward depression deserves public health attention, since they impact upon the intention of people with depression to seek professional help. Public media campaigns should focus on the credibility of the mental health care sector, and target males, older people, and those with a lower educational level and living alone. The content of each campaign should be adapted to the cultural norms of the country for which it is intended.


Neuropsychologia | 2006

Evaluative conditioning is intact after unilateral resection of the anterior temporal lobe in humans.

Evelien Coppens; Debora Vansteenwegen; Frank Baeyens; Mathieu Vandenbulcke; Wim Van Paesschen; Paul Eelen

Several lesion and functional imaging studies conducted in animals and humans suggest that structures within the amygdaloid nuclear complex (ANC) are important for the occurrence of fear conditioning. Whether this brain structure is also critical for evaluative conditioning, has been investigated less frequently. In the current experiment, a group of participants with unilateral resection of the anterior temporal lobe and a control group received a differential evaluative flavor-taste conditioning task. In the pre-acquisition phase, two fruit flavors (the conditioned stimuli (CSs)) were presented and participants were instructed to evaluate both. In the subsequent acquisition phase, one of these fruit flavors (CS+) was presented together with a bad tasting substance Tween20 (polysorbate 20, the US), while the other flavor (CS-) was never paired with Tween20. Finally, in the post-acquisition phase, the two flavors were presented again without Tween20 and participants were asked to evaluate both of them for a last time. The control group as well as the lesion group rated the CS+ in the post-acquisition phase less favorable than in the pre-acquisition phase, while the ratings of the CS- remained the same in both phases. We clearly demonstrated evaluative conditioning in both test groups. Because the lesion group had still one intact ANC it would be premature, however, to conclude that the ANC is not involved in evaluative conditioning. We conclude that despite evidence for impaired fear conditioning, unilateral damage to the ANC does not impair evaluative conditioning.


Neuropsychologia | 2007

Automatic affective stimulus processing is intact after unilateral resection of the anterior temporal lobe in humans

Evelien Coppens; Debora Vansteenwegen; Adriaan Spruyt; Mathieu Vandenbulcke; Wim Van Paesschen; Paul Eelen

Only hundreds of milliseconds after an incoming stimulus is perceived, we make an evaluation of whether it is good or bad. This evaluation seems to occur automatically and can significantly influence behavior. According to several functional imaging studies, the amygdala, which is localized in the temporal lobes of the brain, is an important structure for the automatic processing of affective stimuli. To investigate how critical a role the amygdala plays in this process, we had 20 participants with unilateral resection of the temporal lobe and 20 controls perform an affective priming task. Both controls and patients demonstrated shorter response latencies on trials where prime and target had the same valence than on trials where prime and target had the opposite valence. This finding is generally known as the affective priming effect and is considered to reflect automatic stimulus evaluation. More specifically, it is assumed that the valence of the prime stimulus is activated automatically and exerts an influence on the speed by which the target stimulus is evaluated. Given that the affective priming effect is equally large in both groups, our results suggest that the automatic processing of stimulus valence is intact in participants who sustained unilateral resection of the temporal lobe.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2017

Public attitudes toward depression and help-seeking: Impact of the OSPI-Europe depression awareness campaign in four European regions

Elisabeth Kohls; Evelien Coppens; Juliane Hug; Eline Wittevrongel; Chantal Van Audenhove; Nicole Koburger; Ella Arensman; András Székely; Ricardo Gusmão; Ulrich Hegerl

BACKGROUND Public attitudes toward depression and help-seeking behaviour are important factors influencing depressed people to obtain professional help and adequate treatment. OSPI-Europe is a multi-level suicide prevention programme including a public awareness campaign. It was implemented in four regions of four European countries (Germany, Hungary, Ireland and Portugal). This paper reports the results of the evaluation of the campaign, including its visibility and effects of the campaign on stigma associated with depression and help-seeking behaviour. METHODS A representative general population survey (N=4004) including measures on personal stigma, perceived stigma, openness to help, perceived value of help, and socio-demographic variables was conducted in the four intervention and four control regions in a cross-sectional pre-post design. RESULTS The public awareness campaign was considerably more visible in Germany and Portugal compared to Ireland and Hungary. Visibility was further affected by age and years of schooling. Personal stigma, perceived stigma and openness toward professional help varied significantly across the four countries. Respondents in the intervention regions showed significantly less personal depression stigma than respondents in the control regions after the campaign. Respondents of the intervention region who were aware of the campaign reported more openness toward seeking professional help than respondents who were unaware of it. CONCLUSION The OSPI-Europe awareness campaign was visible and produced some positive results. At the same time, it proved to be difficult to show strong, measurable and unambiguous effects, which is in line with previous studies. Public awareness campaigns as conducted within OSPI-Europe can contribute to improved attitudes and knowledge about depression in the general public and produce synergistic effects, in particular when the dissemination of awareness campaign materials is simultaneously reinforced by other intervention levels of a multi-level intervention programme. LIMITATIONS The survey was cross-sectional and based on self-report, so no causal inferences could be drawn.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2014

Effectiveness of community facilitator training in improving knowledge, attitudes, and confidence in relation to depression and suicidal behavior: Results of the OSPI-Europe intervention in four European countries.

Evelien Coppens; Chantal Van Audenhove; Samuel Iddi; Ella Arensman; Katrin Gottlebe; Nicole Koburger; Claire Coffey; Ricardo Gusmão; Sónia Quintão; Susana Costa; András Székely; Ulrich Hegerl


Journal of Advanced Nursing | 2015

Study protocol for ‘we DECide’: implementation of advance care planning for nursing home residents with dementia

Sophie Ampe; Aline Sevenants; Evelien Coppens; Nele Spruytte; Tinne Smets; Anja Declercq; Chantal Van Audenhove


Acta Neurologica Belgica | 2010

Fear conditioning following a unilateral anterior temporal lobectomy: reduced autonomic responding and stimulus contingency knowledge.

Evelien Coppens; Wim Van Paesschen; Mathieu Vandenbulcke; Debora Vansteenwegen


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2018

Effectiveness of General Practitioner training to improve suicide awareness and knowledge and skills towards depression

Evelien Coppens; Chantal Van Audenhove; Ricardo Gusmão; György Purebl; András Székely; Margaret Maxwell; Nicole Koburger; Ella Arensman; Ulrich Hegerl


Archive | 2015

ADOCARE – A preparatory action related to the creation of an EU network of experts in the field of adapted care for adolescents with mental health problems

Evelien Coppens; Iona Vermet; Jeroen Knaeps; M De Clerck; I De Schrijver; J.P. Matot; Chantal Van Audenhove


Sociaal.Net | 2016

Eerstelijnspsycholoog is succes. Lage drempel, toegankelijk en flexibel

Evelien Coppens; Chantal Van Audenhove

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Chantal Van Audenhove

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Debora Vansteenwegen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Mathieu Vandenbulcke

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Wim Van Paesschen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Anja Declercq

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Paul Eelen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Sophie Ampe

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Aline Sevenants

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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