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Dive into the research topics where Glenn Bowes is active.

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Featured researches published by Glenn Bowes.


American Journal of Public Health | 1998

Depression, anxiety, and smoking initiation: a prospective study over 3 years.

George C Patton; John B. Carlin; C. Coffey; Rory St John Wolfe; Marienne Hibbert; Glenn Bowes

OBJECTIVES This report considers the extent to which depression and anxiety predict smoking onset in adolescence. METHODS A 6-wave cohort design was used to study a sample of 14- and 15-year-old students (n = 2032) drawn from 44 secondary schools in the state of Victoria, Australia. The students were surveyed between 1992 and 1995 with a computerized questionnaire that included a 7-day retrospective diary for tobacco use and a structured psychiatric interview. RESULTS Experimental smokers were 29 times more likely than non-smokers to make a transition into daily use in the subsequent 6 months. Depression and anxiety, along with peer smoking, predicted initiation of experimental smoking. Specifically, depression and anxiety accentuated risks associated with peer smoking and predicted experimentation only in the presence of peer smoking. CONCLUSIONS The finding that experimental smoking is an overwhelmingly strong predictor of later daily smoking focuses attention on smoking initiation. Depressive and anxiety symptoms are associated with higher risks for initiation through an increased susceptibility to peer smoking influences. Promoting the psychological well-being of adolescents and addressing perceived interpersonal benefits of smoking may play a role in the prevention of adolescent tobacco use.


American Journal of Public Health | 1996

Is smoking associated with depression and anxiety in teenagers

George C Patton; Marienne Hibbert; Rosier Mj; John B. Carlin; Joanna Caust; Glenn Bowes

OBJECTIVES An association of smoking with depression and anxiety has been documented in adult smokers. This study examines this association in a representative group of teenage smokers. METHODS A two-stage cluster sample of secondary school students in Victoria, Australia, were surveyed by using a computerized questionnaire, which included a 7-day retrospective diary for tobacco use and a structured psychiatric interview. RESULTS Subjects reporting high levels of depression and anxiety were twice as likely to be smokers after the potential confounders of year level, sex, alcohol use, and parental smoking were controlled for. Regular smokers were almost twice as likely as occasional smokers to report high levels of depression and anxiety. In a stratified analysis, an association between regular smoking and psychiatric morbidity was found in girls of all ages but for boys only in the youngest group. CONCLUSIONS The cross-sectional association is consistent with the use of smoking by teenage girls as self-medication for depression and anxiety. Therefore, future health promotional campaigns might consider strategies that attend to perceived psychological benefits of smoking.


BMJ | 1994

Factors in childhood as predictors of asthma in adult life

Mark A. Jenkins; John L. Hopper; Glenn Bowes; John B. Carlin; Louisa Flander; Graham G. Giles

Abstract Objective: To determine which factors measured in childhood predict asthma in adult life. Design: Prospective study over 25 years of a birth cohort initially studied at the age of 7. Setting: Tasmania, Australia. Subjects—1494 men and women surveyed in 1991-3 when aged 29 to 32 (75% of a random stratified sample from the 1968 Tasmanian asthma survey of children born in 1961 and at school in Tasmania). Main outcome measures: Self reported asthma or wheezy breathing in the previous 12 months (current asthma). Results: Of the subjects with asthma or wheezy breathing by the age of 7, as reported by their parents 25.6% (190/741) reported current asthma as an adult compared with 10.8% (81/753) of subjects without parent reported childhood asthma (P<0.001). Factors measured at the age of 7 that independently predicted current asthma as an adult were being female (odds ratio 1.57; 95% confidence interval 1.19 to 2.08); having a history of eczema (1.45; 1.04 to 2.03); having a low mild forced expiratory flow rate (interquartile odds ratio 1.40; 1.15 to 1.71); having a mother or father with a history of asthma (1.74 (1.23 to 2.47) and 1.68 (1.18 to 2.38) respectively); and having childhood asthma (1.59; 1.10 to 2.29) and, if so, having the first attack after the age of 2 (1.66; 1.17 to 2.36) or having had more than 10 attacks (1.70; 1.17 to 2.48). Conclusion—Children with asthma reported by their parents in 1968 were more likely than not to be free of symptoms as adults. The subjects who had more severe asthma (especially if it developed after the age of 2 and was associated with reduced expiratory flow), were female, or had parents who had asthma were at an increased risk of having asthma as an adult. These findings have implications for the treatment and prognosis of childhood asthma, targeting preventive and educational strategies, and understanding the onset of asthma in adult life.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2004

The Gatehouse Project: can a multilevel school intervention affect emotional wellbeing and health risk behaviours?

Lyndal Bond; George C Patton; Saundra Glover; John B. Carlin; Helen Butler; Lindsey A. Thomas; Glenn Bowes

Study objective: The aim of this study was to determine the effect of a multilevel school based intervention on adolescents’ emotional wellbeing and health risk behaviours. Design: School based cluster randomised controlled trial. Students were surveyed using laptop computers, twice in the first year of intervention and annually thereafter for a further two years. Setting: Secondary schools. Participants: 2678 year 8 students (74%) participated in the first wave of data collection. Attrition across the waves was less than 3%, 8%, and 10% respectively with no differential response rate between intervention and control groups at the subsequent waves (98% v 96%; 92% v 92%, and 90% v 89% respectively). Main results: A comparatively consistent 3% to 5% risk difference was found between intervention and control students for any drinking, any and regular smoking, and friends’ alcohol and tobacco use across the three waves of follow up. The largest effect was a reduction in the reporting of regular smoking by those in the intervention group (OR 0.57, 0.62, and 0.72 at waves 2, 3, and 4 respectively). There was no significant effect of the intervention on depressive symptoms, and social and school relationships. Conclusions: While further research is required to determine fully the processes of change, this study shows that a focus on general cognitive skills and positive changes to the social environment of the school can have a substantial impact on important health risk behaviours.


Pediatric Pulmonology | 1997

Childhood asthma and lung function in mid-adult life

Helmut Oswald; Peter D. Phelan; Anna Lanigan; Marienne Hibbert; John B. Carlin; Glenn Bowes; Anthony Olinsky

The longitudinal lung function data in 286 subjects from a 28 year follow‐up of childhood asthma is reported. Airway obstruction in mid‐adult life was present mainly in those with moderately severe asthma. Subjects who had been wheeze free for at least 3 years, even if asthma had been persistent in childhood, had normal lung function and no increased bronchial reactivity. Only two subjects, both with persistent asthma from childhood, failed to show an improvement in FEV1 of greater than 10% following inhalation of a beta‐adrenergic agonist. Subjects with relatively mild asthma who had not taken inhaled steroids did not appear to be disadvantaged with respect to lung function. Pediatr Pulmonol. 1997; 23:14–20.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1995

The prevalence of prodromal features of schizophrenia in adolescence: a preliminary survey

Patrick D. McGorry; Colleen A. McFarlane; George C Patton; Richard C. Bell; Marienne Hibbert; Henry J. Jackson; Glenn Bowes

In most cases of schizophrenia the onset of frank psychosis is preceded by a period of prodromal features. This period has been relatively neglected by researchers and is potentially important in promoting early intervention. The prevalence of DSM‐III‐R schizophrenia prodrome symptoms was assessed as part (n= 657) of a large (n= 2525) questionnaire‐based survey of high school students. Individual symptoms were highly prevalent and the prevalence of DSM‐III‐R prodromes ranged from 10–15% to 50%. Despite methodological weaknesses, the data suggest that DSM‐III‐R prodromal features are extremely prevalent among older adolescents and unlikely to be specific for subsequent schizophrenia. Clinically these features cannot be regarded as sufficient evidence of early schizophrenia and more accurate predictors of incipient schizophrenia need to be defined.


American Journal of Public Health | 2006

Promoting Social Inclusion in Schools: A Group-Randomized Trial of Effects on Student Health Risk Behavior and Well-Being

George C Patton; Lyndal Bond; John B. Carlin; Lyndal Thomas; Helen Butler; Sara Glover; Richard F. Catalano; Glenn Bowes

OBJECTIVES We sought to test the efficacy of an intervention that was designed to promote social inclusion and commitment to education, in reducing among students health risk behaviors and improving emotional well-being. METHODS The design was a cluster-randomized trial in 25 secondary schools in Victoria, Australia. The subjects were 8th-grade students (aged 13 to 14 y) in 1997 (n=2545) and subsequent 8th-grade students in 1999 (n=2586) and 2001 (n=2463). The main outcomes were recent substance use, antisocial behavior, initiation of sexual intercourse, and depressive symptoms. RESULTS At 4-year follow-up, the prevalence of marked health risk behaviors was approximately 20% in schools in the comparison group and 15% in schools in the intervention group, an overall reduction of 25%. In ordinal logistic regression models a protective effect of intervention was found for a composite measure of health risk behaviors in unadjusted models (odds ratio [OR]= 0.69; 95% confidence interval [CI]= 0.50, 0.95) and adjusted models (OR= 0.71; CI =0.52, 0.97) for potential confounders. There was no evidence of a reduction in depressive symptoms. CONCLUSION The study provides support for prevention strategies in schools that move beyond health education to promoting positive social environments.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 1996

Menarche and the onset of depression and anxiety in Victoria, Australia.

George C Patton; Marienne Hibbert; John B. Carlin; Q Shao; Rosier Mj; Joanna Caust; Glenn Bowes

STUDY OBJECTIVE: Psychiatric disorder often begins at adolescence. This study aimed to examine the associations between puberty and social circumstances and the adolescent rise in depression and anxiety. DESIGN: A two stage cluster sampling procedure was used to identify a representative group of Australian secondary school students in years 7 (age 12-13 years), 9 (14-15 years), and 11 (16-17 years) of 45 Victorian schools. The computerised clinical interview schedule (CIS) was used to evaluate psychiatric morbidity. MAIN RESULTS: A total of 2525 subjects completed the survey - an overall participation rate of 83%. Levels of depression and anxiety increased with the secondary school years and girls had significantly higher rates at each school year level. For boys, the clearest independent associations with depression and anxiety were rising school year level and high parental educational achievement. For girls menarchal status emerged as the strongest predictor. Associations with age and school year level, evident on univariate analysis, did not persist when the recency of menarche was taken into account. After addition of measures of perceived social stress to a multivariate model, a significant association between depression/anxiety and parental divorce disappeared but the association with menarche persisted. CONCLUSIONS: Menarche marks a transition in the risk of depression and anxiety in girls. The pattern of findings is consistent with a biological mediation of this association.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1984

Effect of supplemental nocturnal oxygen on gas exchange in patients with severe obstructive lung disease.

Roger S. Goldstein; Vivekanand Ramcharan; Glenn Bowes; Walter T. McNicholas; Douglas Bradley; Eliot A. Phillipson

We studied the effect of supplemental nocturnal oxygen on blood gases in 15 patients with severe but stable chronic obstructive lung disease (ratio of forced expired volume in one second to forced vital capacity, 37.2 +/- 1.8 [mean +/- S.E.] per cent of predicted; arterial oxygen tension, 50.7 +/- 1.4 mm Hg; and arterial carbon dioxide tension [PCO2], 53.1 +/- 1.5 mm Hg). Sleep variables and measures of gas exchange were determined on two consecutive nights; on the first night the subjects breathed supplemental oxygen, and on the second they breathed room air. Transcutaneous PCO2 was measured with an infrared sensor, and arterial oxygen saturation with an ear oximeter. Breathing of supplemental oxygen sufficient to keep oxygen saturation at or above 90 per cent was associated with only small increases (less than 6 mm Hg) in PCO2 throughout sleep, as compared with values while subjects were breathing room air. The increase in PCO2 occurred early in the night and was not progressive. Only three patients, who were found to have obstructive sleep apnea in addition to obstructive lung disease, had larger increases in PCO2 during sleep and reported morning headaches. We conclude that nocturnal oxygen does not induce clinically important increases in PCO2 during sleep in patients with stable obstructive lung disease and therefore can safely be used to prevent the dangerous consequences of hypoxia.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 1995

Reproductive health in young women with cystic fibrosis: Knowledge, behavior and attitudes

Susan M Sawyer; Peter D. Phelan; Glenn Bowes

PURPOSE The improved life-expectancy in cystic fibrosis (CF) results in the fact that the majority of affected young women now survive to face the same reproductive health decisions as other women, in addition to those that specifically relate to CF. The aim of this study was to assess the reproductive health knowledge of women with CF, to investigate the range of their reproductive health problems, and to review their reproductive health attitudes and behaviors. METHODS Women aged 18 years and over attending CF services in the state of Victoria, Australia were invited to complete a reproductive health questionnaire. Comparison subjects (n = 76) were enrolled from 2 primary care practices. RESULTS Fifty-five women participated (89%), with a median age of 22 years (range 18-50). There was no significant difference in marital status between the two groups and a similar proportion were sexually active, yet women with CF were less likely to use contraception. A majority of women with CF believed that fertility was reduced, and there was poor knowledge of the potentially deleterious effect of pregnancy. A relatively high proportion were planning to become pregnant in the near future. Twenty-two percent had tried to conceive, with a success rate of 67%. CONCLUSIONS Women with CF are currently lacking important information about reproductive health that potentially has a major impact on their health and their lives.

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Susan M Sawyer

Royal Children's Hospital

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C. Coffey

University of Melbourne

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Lena Sanci

University of Melbourne

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Rob Selzer

University of Melbourne

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Carolyn Coffey

Royal Children's Hospital

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