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Featured researches published by Lene Lindberg.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2009

School performance and hospital admissions due to self-inflicted injury: a Swedish national cohort study

Beata Jablonska; Lene Lindberg; Frank Lindblad; Finn Rasmussen; Viveca Östberg; Anders Hjern

BACKGROUND Self-inflicted injury in youth has increased in many Western countries during recent decades. Education is the most influential societal determinant of living conditions in young people after early childhood. This study tested the hypothesis that school performance predicts self-inflicted injury. METHODS A national cohort of 447 929 children born during 1973-77 was followed prospectively in the National Patient Discharge Register from the end of their ninth and last year of compulsory school until 2001. Multivariate Cox analyses of proportional hazards were used to test hypotheses regarding grades in ninth grade as predictors of hospital admission due to self-inflicted injury. RESULTS The risk of hospital admission because of self-inflicted injury increased steeply in a step-wise manner with decreasing grade point average. Hazard ratios were 6.2 (95% confidence interval 5.5-7.0) in those with the lowest level of grade point average compared with the highest. The risks were similar for women and men. Adjustment for potential socio-economic confounders in a multivariate proportional hazards regression analysis attenuated this strong gradient only marginally. CONCLUSION School performance is a strong factor for predicting future mental ill-health as expressed by self-inflicted injury.


Psychological Medicine | 2009

Ethnicity, socio-economic status and self-harm in Swedish youth: a national cohort study.

Beata Jablonska; Lene Lindberg; Frank Lindblad; Anders Hjern

BACKGROUND Previous studies have shown an elevated risk for self-harm in adolescents from ethnic minorities. However, potential contributions to this risk from socio-economic factors have rarely been addressed. The main aim of this article was to investigate any such effects. METHOD A national cohort of 1009 157 children born during 1973-1982 was followed prospectively from 1991 to 2002 in Swedish national registers. Multivariate Cox analyses of proportional hazards were used to estimate the relative risk of hospital admission for self-harm. Parental country/region of birth was used as proxy for ethnicity. RESULTS Youth with two parents born outside Sweden (except those from Southern Europe) had higher age- and gender-adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) of self-harm than the majority population (HR 1.6-2.3). The HRs decreased for all immigrant groups when socio-economic factors were accounted for but remained significantly higher for immigrants from Finland and Western countries and for youth with one Swedish-born and one foreign-born parent. CONCLUSIONS Socio-economic factors explain much of the variation by parental country of birth of hospital admissions for self-harm in youth in Sweden.


BMC Public Health | 2012

A national cohort study of parental socioeconomic status and non-fatal suicidal behaviour-the mediating role of school performance

Beata Jablonska; Frank Lindblad; Viveca Östberg; Lene Lindberg; Finn Rasmussen; Anders Hjern

BackgroundA link between low parental socioeconomic status and mental health problems in offspring is well established in previous research. The mechanisms that explain this link are largely unknown. The present study investigated whether school performance was a mediating and/or moderating factor in the path between parental socioeconomic status and the risk of hospital admission for non-fatal suicidal behaviour.MethodsA national cohort of 447 929 children born during 1973-1977 was followed prospectively in the National Patient Discharge Register from the end of their ninth and final year of compulsory school until 2001. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards and linear regression analyses were performed to test whether the association between parental socioeconomic status and non-fatal suicidal behaviour was mediated or moderated by school performance.ResultsThe results of a series of multiple regression analyses, adjusted for demographic variables, revealed that school performance was as an important mediator in the relationship between parental socioeconomic status and risk of non-fatal suicidal behaviour, accounting for 60% of the variance. The hypothesized moderation of parental socioeconomic status-non-fatal suicidal behaviour relationship by school performance was not supported.ConclusionsSchool performance is an important mediator through which parental socioeconomic status translates into a risk for non-fatal suicidal behaviour. Prevention efforts aimed to reduce socioeconomic inequalities in non-fatal suicidal behaviour among young people will need to consider socioeconomic inequalities in school performance.


Attachment & Human Development | 2014

Mothers with intellectual disability, their experiences of maltreatment, and their children’s attachment representations: a small-group matched comparison study

Pehr Granqvist; Tommie Forslund; Mari Fransson; Lydia Springer; Lene Lindberg

Maternal intellectual disability (ID) is regarded a risk factor in child development, but there is no scientific evidence on maternal ID in relation to children’s attachment. Using a matched comparison design, a small group (n = 23) of mothers diagnosed with ID was studied to help fill this gap. Besides maternal ID, we examined the role of abuse/trauma/maltreatment (ATM) in the mothers’ biographies, along with potential confounds. Comparison group mothers (n = 25) had normal variations in intelligence and matched mothers with ID on residential area, income, child age, and sex. History of maternal ATM was assessed using a semi-structured interview and was found to be significantly more likely in the ID group mothers’ experience than the comparison group mothers. Children’s (M age = 77 months) attachment representations were assessed with the Separation Anxiety Test. Among children of mothers with ID, a substantial minority (35%) had a secure and the vast majority (>80%) an organized attachment representation. Mothers with ID who had suffered elevated ATM were significantly more likely to have children who were scored high on disorganization and insecurity. We discuss possible implications of our findings for societal considerations regarding parenting and child attachment in the context of parental ID status.


BMC Public Health | 2014

Positive versus negative mental health in emerging adulthood: a national cross-sectional survey

Regina Winzer; Frank Lindblad; Kimmo Sorjonen; Lene Lindberg

BackgroundThe dual continuum model suggests that positive mental health not only implies the absence of mental illness, but also constitutes an entity of its own. Measures that encompass both positive and negative mental health in young adults are rare. Thus, we assessed whether dimensions corresponding to positive and negative mental health could be identified in a sample of young individuals. Additionally, we explored how such dimensions were associated with potential health-related factors.MethodsWe obtained data from the Swedish National Public Health Survey 2004–2009 (23,394 women, 18,274 men, aged 16–29 years). We used exploratory factor analysis (EFA) to identify relevant factors revealed by the 12-item General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to verify the factor structure. We tested the significance of the difference between effects of potential health-related factors on positive mental health (PMH) and negative mental health (NMH).ResultsThe EFA for the GHQ-12 revealed a two factor model with negative items that had high positive loadings on one factor and lower negative loadings on the other factor. The positive items had loading trends that were opposite those of the negative items. The fit of this model was supported by the CFA, which yielded a significantly better match than a unidimensional model. When we investigated the associations between GHQ-scores and potential predictors of health, we found that most potential predictors had significant and opposing effects on both PMH and NMH; with the strongest effects from suicidal ideation and perceived humiliation.ConclusionsOur results could be seen to indicate that positive and negative mental health are distinct and complementary constructs. Still, the results of our factor analysis may specifically reflect the wording of the items. We conclude that the GHQ-12 is an appropriate tool for its original purpose, to detect “psychiatric morbidity”. More refined measures, including predictors of health, are needed to assess PMH and validate the bidimensionality hypothesis.


Archive | 2013

Prevention of Depressive Symptoms Among Adolescent Girls

Britt-Marie Treutiger; Lene Lindberg

The incidence of depression increases rapidly during adolescence, when almost 50% of all adolescents report subclinical levels of depression. However, girls are overrepresented in these figures. In fact, girls of all ages are less happy with life than their boy peers. Depression and depression-related issues are a huge problem for individuals as well as for society. Elevated, but subclinical, levels of depression have been shown to be one of the strongest predictors of future episodes of depression. The presence of depressive symptoms during youth predicts not only depression, but also an increased long-term risk of substance use, employment problems, and marital difficulties. Hence, the problem is common, and the potential consequences diverse and severe. Prevention programs need to target multiple components as the causes of depression are multifaceted as well as having multiple outcome measures. This Swedish study includes 61 girls who attended the DISA-program (intervention group) and 126 girls who were on waiting list (control group). The DISA is a prevention program targeting depression, which is based on cognitive-behavioral methods. The results of the evaluation suggest that a cognitive-behavioral universal intervention, with the present selection of girls, and delivered in schools, can be successful in preventing depressive symptoms.


Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences | 2015

Power to the patient: care tracks and empowerment a recipe for improving rehabilitation for hip fracture patients

Susanne Löfgren; Margareta Hedström; Wilhelmina Ekström; Lene Lindberg; Lena Flodin; Leif Ryd

BACKGROUND/AIM New surgical procedures, early operation and medical optimisation in patients with hip fracture have shown positive results on length of hospital stay. Our aims were to investigate whether patient empowerment along with an individually designed, postoperative rehabilitation programme could reduce length of hospital stay and whether the patients would have better chances to return to their previous living. DESIGN/METHOD Patients were recruited during a 12-month period 2009-2010, with an intervention group treated with an individually designed, postoperative rehabilitation programme and a control group treated in a traditional way according to the hospitals routines. Final assessment was performed 4 month after surgery. The postoperative programme for the intervention group consisted of four standardised care tracks adapted individually for the patients. Assessments of Activity of Daily Living, American Society of Anesthesiologists classification of medical disease status and Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire and living conditions were used to determine which care track was most appropriate. The patients were cared for with focus of empowerment in their rehabilitation. RESULTS The study involved 503 hip fracture patients, 285 patients in the intervention group and 218 patients in the control group. The mean length of stay was 4 days shorter in the intervention group than in the control group (p = 0.04). Varied only to a small extent between the age groups in the intervention group and was greater between the age groups in the control. Patients in the intervention group returned to their previous living in 90% compared with 80% in the control group (p < 0.05). There were no significant differences between the age groups. CONCLUSION Patient empowerment administrated by specially trained nursing staff and with specialised, tailor-made rehabilitation programme may be of benefit in helping patients to a shorter hospital stay and to return to their previous living.


Feminism & Psychology | 2011

Neutrality, gender stereotypes, and analytical voids : The ideals and practices of Swedish child psychologists

Ulrika Eskner Skoger; Lene Lindberg; Eva Magnusson

This article reports a study of the meanings of gender that are active in Swedish child psychologists’ narratives about their practice. The analysis is informed by constructionist and discourse-psychological approaches. We identify and describe four different interpretative repertoires: a repertoire of neutrality and equal treatment, based on a liberal political vision of equality in combination with a neutral knowledge ideal; an individualizing repertoire that focuses on individual differences and symptoms, and reduces the impact of context for children’s problems; a repertoire of gender-specific characteristics, in which notions of fundamental internal differences between girls and boys are central when assessing what is normal; and a repertoire of gender-specific expectations, focusing on how girls and boys are raised differently. The repertoires were often used unreflectingly, and narratives tended to slide between the different meanings of gender, often ending in accounts of individualizing and symptom-focused treatments. In the analysis, these patterns are brought into a more general discussion of the limited, and limiting, analytical tools that these psychologists relied on in their work. Since their analytical tools stop short of the societal level, gendered patterns of power are left outside of their understanding of ‘the psychological’. As a consequence, it would appear that these psychologists adopt treatment strategies focused on gender-stereo-typical adjustment to socially expected behaviors.


American Journal of Men's Health | 2016

Waiting for Better Times: Experiences in the First Postpartum Year by Swedish Fathers With Depressive Symptoms.

Maigun Edhborg; Magdalena Carlberg; Fia Simon; Lene Lindberg

Swedish fathers are largely involved in their infant’s care, and Sweden has a generous parental leave, with 2 months especially assigned for fathers. The prevalence of depressive symptoms postpartum for fathers appears to be similar as for mothers in Sweden. This study aimed to describe fathers’ experiences of the first year postpartum, when they showed depressive symptoms 3 to 6 months postpartum. Semistructured interviews with 19 fathers were conducted and analyzed with content analysis. The fathers experienced loss of control and powerlessness due to discrepancies between their expectations and the reality they met after birth. They found the everyday-life turbulent, with much stress and worries for the infant, conflicts between family and work, and lack of support in everyday life. In addition, the fathers struggled with impaired partner-relationship, losses, and contradictory messages from both the society and their partners. These findings indicate that the fathers had difficulties to balance the competing demands of family, work, and their own needs. Thus, it is important to identify fathers with depressive symptoms at the Child Health Care Centers and attend to fathers’ needs of support and acknowledge them as parents equal to mothers.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of the Swedish Universal Parenting Program All Children in Focus.

Malin Ulfsdotter; Lene Lindberg; Anna Månsdotter

Objective There are few health economic evaluations of parenting programs with quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) as the outcome measure. The objective of this study was, therefore, to conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis of the universal parenting program All Children in Focus (ABC). The goals were to estimate the costs of program implementation, investigate the health effects of the program, and examine its cost-effectiveness. Methods A cost-effectiveness analysis was conducted. Costs included setup costs and operating costs. A parent proxy Visual Analog Scale was used to measure QALYs in children, whereas the General Health Questionnaire-12 was used for parents. A societal perspective was adopted, and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was calculated. To account for uncertainty in the estimate, the probability of cost-effectiveness was investigated, and sensitivity analyses were used to account for the uncertainty in cost data. Results The cost was €326.3 per parent, of which €53.7 represented setup costs under the assumption that group leaders on average run 10 groups, and €272.6 was the operating costs. For health effects, the QALY gain was 0.0042 per child and 0.0027 per parent. These gains resulted in an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for the base case of €47 290 per gained QALY. The sensitivity analyses resulted in ratios from €41 739 to €55 072. With the common Swedish threshold value of €55 000 per QALY, the probability of the ABC program being cost-effective was 50.8 percent. Conclusion Our analysis of the ABC program demonstrates cost-effectiveness ratios below or just above the QALY threshold in Sweden. However, due to great uncertainty about the data, the health economic rationale for implementation should be further studied considering a longer time perspective, effects on siblings, and validated measuring techniques, before full scale implementation.

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