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Featured researches published by Lise-Lotte Nilsson.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2001

Comparison of key worker and patient assessment of needs in schizophrenic patients living in the community:a Nordic multicentre study

Lars Hansson; H R Vinding; Torben Mackeprang; André Sourander; Ginie Werdelin; Anita Bengtsson-Tops; Olafur Bjarnason; Jesper Dybbro; Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Mikael Sandlund; Knut W. Sørgaard; Thomas Middelboe

Objective:  The present study is part of a Nordic multicentre study investigating the life and care situation of community samples of schizophrenic patients. The specific aim of the present part of the study was to examine the agreement between patients and their key worker concerning the presence of met and unmet needs in a number of life domains, and help or support given in these domains.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2002

Living situation, subjective quality of life and social network among individuals with schizophrenia living in community settings.

Lars Hansson; Thomas Middelboe; Knut W. Sørgaard; Anita Bengtsson-Tops; Olafur Bjarnason; Lars Merinder; Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Mikael Sandlund; Jyrki Korkeila; H R Vinding

Objective:  To investigate the relationships between characteristics of the living situation in the community and subjective quality of life and social network among community‐based individuals with schizophrenia.


Nordic Journal of Psychiatry | 2003

The relationship of needs and quality of life in persons with schizophrenia living in the community. A Nordic multi-center study

Lars Hansson; Mikael Sandlund; Anita Bengtsson-Tops; Olafur Bjarnason; Hasse Karlsson; Torben Mackeprang; Lars Merinder; Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Knut W. Sørgaard; H R Vinding; Thomas Middelboe

The relationship between needs for care and support and subjective quality of life was investigated in a cross-sectional multi-center study including 418 individuals with schizophrenia from 10 centers in Nordic countries. Needs in 22 domains were investigated by interviews with key workers and their patients using the Camberwell Assessment of Need scale, and quality of life by the Lancashire Quality of Life Profile. The results showed that key workers rated slightly more needs than patients. To have more unmet needs, as rated by both key workers and patients, were correlated to a worse overall subjective quality of life, while met needs showed no such association. A regression analysis, controlling for clinical and social characteristics of the patients, showed more unmet needs to be associated with a worse quality of life, accounting for 6% out of a total of 41% explained variance in subjective quality of life. Regression analyses of the relationship of unmet needs in specific life domains and overall quality of life showed that unmet needs in five domains as perceived by patients accounted for 17% of the explained variance in overall quality of life. More than half of this variance was related to an unmet need in the domain of social relationships. It is concluded that unmet needs are of specific importance in needs assessment and that attention must be paid to separate met needs for care and services from unmet needs, since the latter seem more important to consider in order to improve outcome of interventions with regard to quality of life. Specific attention should in this context also be paid to unmet needs concerning social relationships and problems with accommodation.


Quality of Life Research | 2005

Subjective versus interviewer assessment of global quality of life among persons with schizophrenia living in the community: A Nordic multicentre study

Anita Bengtsson-Tops; Lars Hansson; Mikael Sandlund; Olafur Bjarnason; Jyrki Korkeila; Lars Merinder; Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Knut W. Sørgaard; H R Vinding; Thomas Middelboe

Background: Few studies have investigated differences between subjective and externally assessed quality of life in individuals with a severe mental illness. In a sample of 387 patients with schizophrenia living in the community the present study investigated the association between subjective and interviewer-rated quality of life, clinical and sociodemographic factors related to the two assessments, and if discrepancies in the assessments were related to any clinical or social features of the patients. Method: The study was a Nordic multicentre study with a cross-sectional design. Instruments used were the Lancashire Quality of Life Profile, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, the Interview Schedule for Social Interaction, Camberwell Assessment of Needs and General Assessment of Functioning. Results: The correlation between subjective and interviewer-rated quality of life was moderate (ICC=0.33). More severe affective symptoms, fewer emotional relations and a lower monthly income were related to poorer subjectively rated quality of life but in a stepwise multiple regression analysis accounted for only 14.1 of the variance. Poorer interviewer-rated quality of life was mainly related to a more severe psychopathology but also to a lower monthly income, fewer emotional relations and not being employed. Together these factors accounted for 45.5 of the variance. A greater discrepancy between the subjective and the interviewer rating was found in patients with less affective symptoms, unemployment, and a better social network. Conclusion: Only a moderate correlation between subjective and interviewer-assessed global quality of life was found, implying that the sources of assessment differed, as was also shown in subsequent regression models. It is concluded that both perspectives on the patient’s quality of life may be valuable for treatment planning, especially in cases where differences in quality of life assessment related to the patient’s psychopathology may be expected.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2004

Schizophrenia, neighbourhood, and crime

Bengt Lögdberg; Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Marie Torstensson Levander; Sten Levander

Objective:  To investigate the relationship between the prevalence of schizophrenia and measures of social deprivation in varying areas in the city of Malmö.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1975

THE LONGITUDINAL COURSE OF PARA-NATAL EMOTIONAL DISTURBANCE

N. Uddenberg; Lise-Lotte Nilsson

Ninety‐five nulliparous women were interviewed during pregnancy and 4 months post partum. The possibility of predicting mental disturbance post partum from that during pregnancy was studied. When the woman was mentally disturbed during pregnancy, the prognosis was better in the case of a poor social situation at the time of the pregnancy than in the case of a good social situation. Negative attitude towards further pregnancies and repudiation of the own mother, however, implied unfavourable prognosis. In the case of a woman without mental symptoms during pregnancy, denial of the pregnancy and sensations connected with it suggested poor adaptation postpartum.


Nordic Journal of Psychiatry | 2003

Schizophrenia and contact with health and social services: A Nordic multi-centre study

Knut W. Sørgaard; Mikael Sandlund; Jyrki Heikkilä; Lars Hansson; H R Vinding; Olafur Bjarnason; Anita Bengtsson-Tops; Lars Merinder; Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Thomas Middelboe

Background: In a Nordic multi-centre study investigating the life and care situation of persons with schizophrenia living in the community, factors explaining use of health and social services were examined. Method: Four hundred and eighteen individuals with schizophrenia from 10 sites were interviewed about their contact with different services (support functions within and outside the mental health services, general practitioners (GPs), physicians in the mental health, psychotherapy, day-care and inpatient treatment), psychopathology, social network and needs for care. Results: Physicians and support contacts within the mental health system were most used and GPs and psychotherapy least. Three groups of variables were stabile predictors of contact: rural-urban differences, diagnoses (hebephrenic schizophrenia associated with less contact with physicians in the mental services and more with GPs) and health needs as experienced by the patients. No differences between the centres with regard to total service use were found, but the patterns of contact reflected urban-rural variance. A low number of health needs predicted contact with physicians within the mental health services, whereas a high number of such needs was related to contact with GPs and support functions within the mental health services. Social relations exhibited the highest number of unmet needs. Conclusions: Contact with physicians working in the mental health services was much more common than contact with GPs. Based on a broad spectre of demographic, clinical and network variables, it was not possible to find models that explained substantial parts of the variance of service use. Patterns of contact were different in rural, town and city-surroundings, and with the exception of psychotherapy, the rural pattern was characterized by use of less specialized services. The importance of health needs and diagnosis as predictors of contact illustrate the profound and lasting effects on health of having a diagnosis of schizophrenia.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1992

Sex differences in problem drinking among 42-year-old residents of Malmö, Sweden

A. Österling; Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Mats Berglund; Moberg Al; Hans Kristenson

The main objective was to describe sex‐related differences in rates of nonidentified vs identified problem drinking in 42‐year‐old Malmö residents. All 1264 women and 1368 men born in 1941 were invited to a health screening at the Preventive Medicine Section, Malmö General Hospital. Individuals registered at the Department of Alcohol Diseases because of problem drinking prior to screening (identified problem drinkers) were excluded and analyzed separately. Intervention in the remaining subjects was made if any of 3 sets of inclusion criteria was met. The sex ratios (female:male) of identified and nonidentified problem drinking were 1:4.1 and 1:2.8 respectively. Thus, nonidentified problem drinking is by and large proportional to identified problem drinking in both sexes, arguing against hidden drinking being an exclusively female phenomenon.


European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 2004

Neurocognitive and psychopathological correlates of self-monitoring ability in schizophrenia.

Jimmy Jensen; Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Sten Levander

Abstract.In a previous study reported by our group one salient finding was that many patients with schizophrenia appeared to be unable to judge their own quality of life (QoL) and that this inability was associated with negative symptoms. The association between negative symptoms, poor self-monitoring capacity and lack of insight might be explained by a common underlying factor, i. e. neurocognitive impairment. Fifty schizophrenic patients were examined by symptom ratings and a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery. The cognitive performance of the patients was very poor. The major findings of the present study were the association between clinically rated Lack of judgement (PANSS G12) and 1) a set of standard performance and executive indices of the computerised tests, and 2) difference scores between objective performance/strategies and self-ratings of the same attributes. There appears to be a substantial contribution of cognitive and executive problems to the poor judgement and lack of insight of schizophrenic patients, and these problems can to some extent be assessed objectively.


International Review of Psychiatry | 1998

Efficacy of conversational skills training of schizophrenic patients in Sweden and Norway

Lise-Lotte Nilsson; Rolf W. Gråwe; Levander Sten; Anne-Lise Løvaas

A structured method of conversational skills training was applied to ten Swedish outpatients (mean age 45) and five Norwegian inpatients (mean age 26), all with chronic schizophrenia. Conversational skills were assessed before and after training through video-taped standardized role-plays. Patients improved substantially and to approximately the same extent regardless of age, sex, chronicity, symptoms (BPRS), nationality, or being in- or outpatients. The older Swedish outpatients needed more motivational work before they were willing to enrol in the training program, in contrast to the younger Norwegian inpatients. Improvement was not mediated by symptom reduction; thus, substantial training effects can be attained for a wide range of schizophrenic patients.

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