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Dive into the research topics where Janice Thomas is active.

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Featured researches published by Janice Thomas.


The Lancet | 2001

Predictions and associations of fatigue syndromes and mood disorders that occur after infectious mononucleosis

Peter D White; Janice Thomas; Hillar O. Kangro; William D. A. Bruce-Jones; John Amess; Dorothy H. Crawford; Shirlyn Grover; Anthony Clare

BACKGROUND Certain infections can trigger chronic fatigue syndromes (CFS) in a minority of people infected, but the reason is unknown. We describe some factors that predict or are associated with prolonged fatigue after infectious mononucleosis and contrast these factors with those that predicted mood disorders after the same infection. METHODS We prospectively studied a cohort of 250 primary-care patients with infectious mononucleosis or ordinary upper-respiratory-tract infections until 6 months after clinical onset. We sought predictors of both acute and chronic fatigue syndromes and mood disorders from clinical, laboratory, and psychosocial measures. FINDINGS An empirically defined fatigue syndrome 6 months after onset, which excluded comorbid psychiatric disorders, was most reliably predicted by a positive Monospot test at onset (odds ratio 2.1 [95% CI 1.4-3.3]) and lower physical fitness (0.35 [0.15-0.8]). Cervical lymphadenopathy and initial bed rest were associated with, or predicted, a fatigue syndrome up to 2 months after onset. By contrast, mood disorders were predicted by a premorbid psychiatric history (2.3 [1.4-3.9]), an emotional personality score (1.21 [1.11-1.35]), and social adversity (1.7 [1.0-2.9]). Definitions of CFS that included comorbid mood disorders were predicted by a mixture of those factors that predicted either the empirically defined fatigue syndrome or mood disorders. INTERPRETATION The predictors of a prolonged fatigue syndrome after an infection differ with both definition and time, depending particularly on the presence or absence of comorbid mood disorders. The particular infection and its consequent immune reaction may have an early role, but physical deconditioning may also be important. By contrast, mood disorders are predicted by factors that predict mood disorders in general.


British Journal of Medical Psychology | 2000

Preventing psychological trauma in soldiers: the role of operational stress training and psychological debriefing.

Martin Deahl; Michael Srinivasan; Norman Jones; Janice Thomas; Carl Neblett; Allan Jolly

Armed conflict is associated with significant long-term psychiatric morbidity. Interventions to reduce the incidence of psychiatric disorder following psychological trauma may be classified into three categories. Primary prevention includes the selection, preparation and training of individuals likely to be exposed to potentially traumatizing events. Secondary prevention comprises a variety of brief psychological techniques immediately or shortly after traumatizing life events, the best known of which is Psychological Debriefing. Tertiary interventions comprise the treatment of established PTSD and others. Psychiatric morbidity was studied in 106 British soldiers returning from UN peace-keeping duties in the former Republic of Yugoslavia. All 106 soldiers received an Operational Stress Training Package prior to their deployment and a randomly selected group also received a post-operational PD. Very low rates of PTSD and other psychopathology were found overall and the Operational Stress Training Package may have contributed to this. Elevated CAGE scores suggestive of significant alcohol misuse were observed in both groups and chemical avoidance behaviours arising from this may have masked psychopathology. CAGE scores diminished significantly in the debriefed group by the end of the follow-up period suggesting that PD may have been of benefit despite the apparent absence of PTSD. This study also demonstrates that a high incidence of psychiatric morbidity is not an inevitable consequence of military conflict.


Psychological Medicine | 1995

The existence of a fatigue syndrome after glandular fever

Peter D White; Janice Thomas; J. Amess; S. A. Grover; H. O. Kangro; Anthony W. Clare

This prospective cohort study was designed to test whether a distinct fatigue syndrome existed after the onset of glandular fever. Two hundred and fifty primary care patients, with either glandular fever or an ordinary upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) were interviewed three times in the 6 months after the clinical onset of their infection. At each interview a standardized psychiatric interview was given and physical symptoms were assessed. There were 108 subjects with and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection; 83 subjects had glandular fever not caused by EBV and 54 subjects had an ordinary URTI. Five subjects were excluded because they had no evidence of an infection. Principal components analyses of symptoms supported the existence of a fatigue syndrome, particularly in the two glandular fever groups. The addition of symptoms not elicited by the standard interviews gave the full syndrome. This included physical and mental fatigue, excessive sleep, psychomotor retardation, poor concentration, anhedonia, irritability, social withdrawal, emotional lability, and transient sore throat and neck gland swelling with pain. A fatigue syndrome probably exists after glandular fever.


Psychological Medicine | 1994

The effect of social adversity on the fatigue syndrome, psychiatric disorders and physical recovery, following glandular fever

W. D. A. Bruce-Jones; Peter D White; Janice Thomas; Anthony W. Clare

Two hundred and fifty patients attending primary care with glandular fever or an upper respiratory tract infection were studied prospectively up to 6 months after onset. Of these patients 228 were interviewed with the Life Events and Difficulties Schedule and the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schzophrenia, giving Research Diagnostic Criteria for psychiatric disorders. The experience of severe social adversity (provoking agents) had a significant association with psychiatric disorder at 2 months (odds ratio = 5.3) and 6 months (odds ratio = 5.8) after onset of infection. This association was especially significant for depressive illness (odds ratio = 9.1 at 2 months and 11.9 at 6 months). In contrast, social adversity had little association with the development of the post-infectious fatigue syndrome, or delayed physical recovery. Social adversity may be an important maintaining factor for psychiatric disorders, especially depressive illness, following acute infections.


British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2000

Serum inhibin, activin and follistatin in postmenopausal women with epithelial ovarian carcinoma

Usha Menon; Simon C. Riley; Janice Thomas; Chinmoy Kumar Bose; Anne Dawnay; Lee W. Evans; Nigel P. Groome; Ian Jacobs

Objective To investigate the role of serum inhibin A, inhibin pro‐αC immunoreactivity, activin A, and follistatin in postmenopausal women with epithelial ovarian cancer.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 1998

Poor concentration and the ability to process information after glandular fever

Peter D White; Aruna R Dash; Janice Thomas

The symptom of poor concentration and the ability to process information were measured prospectively in 245 subjects three times in the 6 months after glandular fever or an ordinary upper respiratory tract infection. The effects of the different infections, having a fatigue state, a psychiatric disorder, sleep disturbance, and estimates of premorbid intelligence were also assessed. The most frequent complaint of poor concentration and the worst information processing occurred at the onset of the infection, but these problems decreased over time, and were not related to each other. Multiple regression modeling showed that higher socioeconomic class and vocabulary IQ were associated with information processing ability at all three interviews. In contrast, logistic regression modeling showed that the symptom of poor concentration was associated with the severity of general psychiatric morbidity (CIS score) followed by suffering from a fatigue state. These results suggest that the ability to process information after these particular infections is related to estimates of premorbid IQ, whereas poor concentration is related independently to both psychiatric morbidity and a fatigue state, but not the particular infection itself.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 1994

Psychological sequelae following the Gulf War. Factors associated with subsequent morbidity and the effectiveness of psychological debriefing

Martin Deahl; Adrian B. Gillham; Janice Thomas; Margaret M. Searle; Michael Srinivasan


British Journal of Psychiatry | 1998

Incidence, risk and prognosis of acute and chronic fatigue syndromes and psychiatric disorders after glandular fever.

Peter D White; Janice Thomas; J. Amess; Dorothy H. Crawford; Shirlyn Grover; H. O. Kangro; Anthony W. Clare


Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine | 2004

Incidence of fatigue symptoms and diagnoses presenting in UK primary care from 1990 to 2001

Arlene M Gallagher; Janice Thomas; William Hamilton; Peter D White


Family Practice | 2005

The prognosis of different fatigue diagnostic labels: a longitudinal survey.

William Hamilton; Arlene M Gallagher; Janice Thomas; Peter D White

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Peter D White

Queen Mary University of London

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J. Amess

St Bartholomew's Hospital

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H. O. Kangro

St Bartholomew's Hospital

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