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Dive into the research topics where Jamie M. Abelson is active.

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Featured researches published by Jamie M. Abelson.


Psychological Medicine | 1997

The epidemiology of DSM-III-R bipolar I disorder in a general population survey

Ronald C. Kessler; D. R. Rubinow; C. Holmes; Jamie M. Abelson; Shanyang Zhao

BACKGROUND Data are presented on the general population epidemiology of DSM-III-R bipolar I disorder in the United States. METHODS Data come from the US National Comorbidity Survey (NCS), a general population survey of DSM-III-R disorders. A modified version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview was used to make diagnoses. RESULTS A small (N = 59) clinical reappraisal study showed that the only manic symptom profile that could validly be assessed with the CIDI is characterized by euphoria, grandiosity and the ability to maintain energy without sleep, which described approximately half of all clinically validated bipolar I cases in the NCS. Further analysis focused on this symptom profile, which involved N = 29 cases in the total sample. Lifetime prevalence was estimated to be 0.4% and 12-month prevalence only slightly lower. Caseness was negatively related to income, education and age, positively related to urbanicity, and elevated among the previously married, never married and non-whites. All cases reported at least one other NCS/DSM-III-R disorder and 59.3% reported that their episode of bipolar disorder (either mania or depression) occurred at a later age than at least one other NCS/DSM-III-R disorder. Although 93.2% of lifetime cases reported some lifetime treatment, only 44.7% of recent cases were in treatment. CONCLUSIONS The type of bipolar disorder examined here is highly chronic, co-morbid and impairing. Increased efforts are required to attract current cases into appropriate treatment. Methodological research is needed to develop more accurate measures of other bipolar symptom profiles for use in general population epidemiological studies.


Depression and Anxiety | 2008

Obsessive-compulsive disorder among African Americans and blacks of Caribbean descent: results from the National Survey of American Life.

Joseph A. Himle; Jordana Muroff; Robert Joseph Taylor; Raymond E. Baser; Jamie M. Abelson; Gregory L. Hanna; James L. Abelson; James S. Jackson

Background: There is limited research regarding the nature and prevalence of obsessive‐compulsive disorder (OCD) among various racial and ethnic subpopulations within the United States, including African Americans and blacks of Caribbean descent. Although heterogeneity within the black population in the United States has largely been ignored, notable differences exist between blacks of Caribbean descent and African Americans with respect to ethnicity, national heritage, and living circumstances. This is the first comprehensive examination of OCD among African Americans and blacks of Caribbean descent. Methods: Data from the National Survey of American Life, a national household probability sample of African Americans and Caribbean blacks in the United States, were used to examine rates of OCD among these groups. Results: Lifetime and 12‐month OCD prevalence estimates were very similar for African Americans and Caribbean blacks. Persistence of OCD and rates of co‐occurring psychiatric disorders were very high and also similar between African American and Caribbean black respondents. Both groups had high levels of overall mental illness severity and functional impairment. Use of services was low for both groups, particularly in specialty mental health settings. Use of anti‐obsessional medications was also rare, especially among the Caribbean black OCD population. Conclusions: OCD among African Americans and Caribbean blacks is very persistent, often accompanied by other psychiatric disorders, and is associated with high overall mental illness severity and functional impairment. It is also likely that very few blacks in the United States with OCD are receiving evidence‐based treatment and thus considerable effort is needed to bring treatment to these groups. Depression and Anxiety, 2008. Published 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research | 2009

Lessons Learned from the Clinical Reappraisal Study of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview with Latinos

Margarita Alegría; Patrick E. Shrout; Maria Torres; Roberto Lewis-Fernández; Jamie M. Abelson; Meris Powell; Alejandro Interian; Julia Lin; Mara Laderman; Glorisa Canino

Given recent adaptations of the World Health Organizations World Mental Health Composite International Diagnostic Interview (WMH‐CIDI), new methodological studies are needed to evaluate the concordance of CIDI diagnoses with clinical diagnostic interviews. This paper summarizes lessons learned from a clinical reappraisal study done with US Latinos. We compare CIDI diagnoses with independent clinical diagnosis using the World Mental Health Structured Clinical Interview for DSM‐IV (WMH‐SCID 2000). Three sub‐samples stratified by diagnostic status (CIDI positive, CIDI negative, or CIDI sub‐threshold for a disorder) based on nine disorders were randomly selected for a telephone re‐interview using the SCID. We calculated sensitivity, specificity, and weight‐adjusted Cohens kappa. Weighted 12 month prevalence estimates of the SCID are slightly higher than those of the CIDI for generalized anxiety disorder, alcohol abuse/dependence, and drug abuse/dependence. For Latinos, CIDI‐SCID concordance at the aggregate disorder level is comparable, albeit lower, to other published reports. The CIDI does very well identifying negative cases and classifying disorders at the aggregate level. Good concordance was also found for major depressive episode and panic disorder. Yet, our data suggests that the CIDI presents problems for assessing post‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). Recommendations on how to improve future versions of the CIDI for Latinos are offered. Copyright


Depression and Anxiety | 2013

Major Depressive Disorder Among Older African Americans, Caribbean Blacks, And Non‐Hispanic Whites: Secondary Analysis Of The National Survey Of American Life

Amanda Toler Woodward; Robert Joseph Taylor; Jamie M. Abelson; Niki Matusko

Previous epidemiological and clinical research on mental disorders has treated Blacks as a homogenous group and yet Blacks of Caribbean descent and African Americans differ with respect to ethnicity, national heritage, living circumstances, and immigration status. The purpose of this article is to examine the prevalence of major depressive disorder (MDD) among African Americans, Caribbean Blacks, and non‐Hispanic whites aged 50 and older with data on psychiatric and physical comorbidity, mental illness severity, and service use.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2012

Religious involvement and DSM-IV 12-month and lifetime major depressive disorder among African Americans

Robert Joseph Taylor; Linda M. Chatters; Jamie M. Abelson

Abstract This study explores relationships between lifetime and 12-month DSM-IV major depressive disorder and religious involvement within a nationally representative sample of African American adults (n = 3,570). MDD was assessed using the DSM-IV World Mental Health Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Multivariate findings indicate that reading religious materials were positively associated with 12-month (odds ratio [OR], 1.14; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.001–1.29) and lifetime (OR, 1.12; 95% CI, 1.03–1.21) MDD, religious service attendance was inversely associated with 12-month and lifetime MDD, and religious coping was inversely associated with 12-month MDD (OR, 0.75, 95% CI, 0.57–0.99). Findings are discussed in relation to the role of religion for African American mental health, prior research on the effects of religious involvement on physical and mental health, and theoretical and conceptual models of religion-health connections that specify multiple and often divergent pathways (e.g., prevention and resource mobilization) by which diverse forms of religious involvement impact mental health.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1990

Sources of discrepancy in the comparison of a lay-administered diagnostic instrument with clinical diagnosis

Jane D. McLeod; Joanne E. Turnbull; Ronald C. Kessler; Jamie M. Abelson

This article presents a comparison of the diagnostic results from a lay-administered diagnostic interview for depression with a clinical diagnosis in a community sample. The purpose of the comparison is to assess reasons for the discrepancies between the two diagnostic approaches. The majority of the discrepancies result from inconsistent episode reports at the two interviews. We propose a number of possible explanations for the inconsistencies. An empirical analysis that identifies predictors of consistent vs. inconsistent reports supports a strong influence for respondent recall error. We discuss the implications of our analysis for previous comparisons of lay-administered and clinical diagnostic instruments.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2014

Discrimination and social anxiety disorder among African-Americans, Caribbean blacks, and non-Hispanic whites.

Debra Siegel Levine; Joseph A. Himle; Jamie M. Abelson; Niki Matusko; Nikhil Dhawan; Robert Joseph Taylor

Abstract The present study investigated the relationship between discrimination and social anxiety disorder (SAD) in a sample of African-Americans, Caribbean blacks, and non-Hispanic whites using the National Survey of American Life, the most comprehensive study of psychopathology among American blacks to date (N = 6082). Previous work has highlighted a strong association between discrimination and mental health symptoms (Keith, Lincoln, Taylor, and Jackson [Sex Roles 62:48–59, 2010]; Kessler, Mickelson, and Williams [J Health Soc Behav 40:208–230, 1999]; Soto, Dawson-Andoh, and BeLue [J Anxiety Disord 25:258–265, 2011]). However, few studies have examined the effects of particular types of discrimination on specific anxiety disorders or among different black subgroups. In this study, logistic regression analyses indicated that everyday but not major experiences of discrimination are associated with SAD for African-Americans, Caribbean blacks, and non-Hispanic whites. This study adds to the extant literature by demonstrating that specific types of discrimination may be uniquely associated with SAD for different ethnic/racial groups.


JAMA Psychiatry | 2015

Urban vs Rural Residence and the Prevalence of Depression and Mood Disorder Among African American Women and Non-Hispanic White Women

Addie Weaver; Joseph A. Himle; Robert Joseph Taylor; Niki Matusko; Jamie M. Abelson

IMPORTANCE There is a paucity of research among African Americans and rural residents. Little is known about the association between urbanicity and depression or about the interaction of urbanicity, race/ethnicity, and sex on depression and mood disorder prevalence. OBJECTIVE To examine the interaction of urbanicity and race/ethnicity on lifetime and 12-month major depressive disorder (MDD) and mood disorder prevalence for African American women and non-Hispanic white women. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS The US National Survey of American Life data were used to examine the interaction of urbanicity and race/ethnicity on lifetime and 12-month diagnoses of DSM-IV MDD and mood disorder among female respondents, who included noninstitutionalized African American, Caribbean black, and non-Hispanic white women in the United States between February 2001 and June 2003. Participants included 1462 African American women and 341 non-Hispanic white women recruited from the South because all suburban and rural National Survey of American Life respondents resided in this region. Bivariate multiple logistic regression and adjusted prevalence analyses were performed. Urban, suburban, or rural location (assessed via Rural-Urban Continuum Codes), self-reported race/ethnicity, and sociodemographic factors (age, education, household income, and marital status) were included in the analysis. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Lifetime and 12-month MDD and mood disorder assessed via the World Mental Health Composite International Diagnostic Interview. RESULTS Compared with urban African American women, rural African American women had a significantly lower odds of meeting criteria for lifetime (odds ratio [OR], 0.39; 95% CI, 0.23-0.65) and 12-month (OR, 0.29; 95% CI, 0.18-0.46) MDD and for lifetime (F = 0.46; 95% CI, 0.29-0.73) and 12-month (F = 0.42; 95% CI, 0.26-0.66) mood disorder. However, the interaction of urbanicity and race/ethnicity suggested that rural non-Hispanic white women had a significantly higher odds of meeting criteria for lifetime (OR, 2.76; 95% CI, 1.22-6.24) and 12-month (OR, 9.48; 95% CI, 4.65-19.34) MDD and for lifetime (OR, 2.27; 95% CI, 1.06-4.87) and 12-month (OR, 5.99; 95% CI, 3.01-11.94) mood disorder than rural African American women. Adjusted prevalence analyses revealed significantly lower rates of lifetime (4.2%) and 12-month (1.5%) MDD among rural African American women than their urban counterparts (10.4% vs 5.3%; P ≤ .01). The same pattern was found for mood disorder, with rural African American women experiencing significantly lower rates of lifetime (6.7%) and 12-month (3.3%) mood disorder when compared to urban African American women (13.9% vs 7.6%; P ≤ .01) Conversely, rural non-Hispanic white women had significantly higher rates of 12-month MDD (10.3%) and mood disorder (10.3%) than their urban counterparts (3.7% vs 3.8%; P ≤ .01). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Rural residence differentially influences MDD and mood disorder prevalence among African American women and non-Hispanic white women. These findings offer a first step toward understanding the cumulative effect of rural residence and race/ethnicity on womens depression prevalence, suggesting the need for further research in this area.


American Journal of Men's Health | 2013

Their Depression Is Something Different . . . It Would Have to Be: Findings From a Qualitative Study of Black Women's Perceptions of Depression in Black Men

Daphne C. Watkins; Jamie M. Abelson; S. Olivia Jefferson

This study reports findings from the Black Women’s Perceptions of Black Men’s Depression (BWP) study, which included eight focus groups with Black women (N = 46) from southeastern Michigan. Four themes illustrated the impressions of Black women from different socioeconomic backgrounds: Black men’s depression is a cultured and gendered phenomenon, the role of Black women in Black men’s depression, intergenerational differences with how depression is handled by Black men, and the need (and ways) to reach Black men with depression resources. Results underscore not only the importance of understanding the kind of depression in Black men that meets criteria described by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) but also the psychological distress that may coexist with (or be separate from) DSM depression. Implications for interventions that educate, diagnose, and treat depression in Black men are discussed.


BMJ Open | 2015

The mental health of US Black women: the roles of social context and severe intimate partner violence

Krim K. Lacey; Regina Parnell; Dawne M. Mouzon; Niki Matusko; Doreen Head; Jamie M. Abelson; James S. Jackson

Objective Black women continue to have rates of mental health conditions that can be negative for their well-being. This study examined the contribution of social and contextual factors and severe physical intimate partner violence on the mental health of US Black women (African-American and Caribbean Black). Setting Data were largely collected via in-person community interviews at participants’ homes. Participants We studied 3277 African-American and Black Caribbean women from the 2001–2003 National Survey of American Life (NSAL), the largest and most complete sample of Blacks residing in the USA. Primary and secondary outcomes Key outcomes included an array of psychiatric disorders based on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV). Results Bivariate results revealed noticeably high rates of any anxiety disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, any substance disorder, alcohol abuse disorder, suicide ideation and attempts, and any overall mental disorder among African-American women relative to Caribbean Black women. Multiple social and contextual factors were associated with various mental disorders among both sets of Black women in multivariate models, with the most consistent associations found for severe physical intimate partner violence. Everyday discrimination was associated with anxiety disorders (95% AOR=2.08 CI 1.23 to 3.51), eating disorders (95% AOR=2.69 CI 1.38 to 5.22), and any disorder (95% AOR=2.18 CI 1.40 to 3.40), while neighbourhood drug problems contributed to mood (95% AOR=1.19 CI 1.04 to 1.36), substance disorders (95% AOR=1.37 CI 1.11 to 1.69) and any disorder (95% AOR=1.18 CI 1.03 to 1.34). Conclusions Severe physical intimate partner violence, discrimination, and to a lesser extent, neighbourhood problems are important predictors of Black womens health, findings that inform intervention and clinical services tailored to meet the needs of Black women from diverse ethnic and cultural backgrounds.

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Hans-Ulrich Wittchen

Dresden University of Technology

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