Lutz Goetzmann
University of Zurich
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Featured researches published by Lutz Goetzmann.
Transplantation | 2008
Lutz Goetzmann; Linda Ruegg; Martina Stamm; Patrice M. Ambühl; Annette Boehler; Jörg Halter; Beat Muellhaupt; Georg Noll; Urs Schanz; Regula Wagner-Huber; Anja Spindler; Claus Buddeberg; Richard Klaghofer
Objectives. Quality of life and psychosocial well-being usually improve after an organ transplant and remain stable for a minimum of several years. These findings, however, mainly apply to the “average” trend for transplant patients. This study aims to investigate whether transplant patients fall into different groups in good or poor psychosocial outcome after organ transplantation. Methods. One hundred thirty-one patients were assessed before and 6, 12, and 24 months after a heart, lung, liver, kidney, or bone-marrow transplant. Cluster analysis was applied to identify typical outcome profiles of the patients’ mental health (SF-36); differences between the clusters were investigated with regard to further psychosocial parameters (sense of coherence, optimism, psychosocial functioning, anxiety, depression, life/health satisfaction, medication experience). Results. The analysis revealed two clusters of transplant patients. Cluster A (n=78, 59.5%) showed a fairly good psychosocial outcome, improving over the posttransplant period of 2 years. Cluster B (n=53, 40.5%) included patients who reported a limited or poor outcome, deteriorating after the transplant. Furthermore, there are significant differences between clusters A and B in psychosocial parameters and physical functioning. Conclusions. These findings indicate that the experience of the transplant process may vary greatly from patient to patient, and that a considerable number of transplant recipients require psychosocial support, despite the majority of patients showing an unquestionable posttransplant improvement in psychosocial well-being.
American Journal of Transplantation | 2006
Sarosh Irani; C. Mahler; Lutz Goetzmann; Erich W. Russi; Annette Boehler
Since lung transplant recipients are susceptible to infections and inhaled pollution, many centers warn against pets. However, data supporting this recommendation are lacking. Our program is less restrictive regarding pets. This study, for the first time, investigates the association of pets with physiological and psychological parameters in these patients. A questionnaire concerning pets was sent to 104 lung transplant recipients. Lung function tests, levels of exhaled nitric oxide (FENO), need for antibiotic treatments and hospitalizations, creatinine clearance, body mass index (BMI) and demographic data were assessed. Additionally, the questionnaire of life satisfaction (FLZ), a question on summarized life satisfaction (LS), the life orientation test (LOT), the hospital anxiety depression scale (HADS) and the social support questionnaire (F‐SozU) were assessed.
Psychology Health & Medicine | 2007
Lutz Goetzmann; Karin S. Moser; Esther Vetsch; Richard Klaghofer; Rahel Naef; Erich W. Russi; Claus Buddeberg; Annette Boehler
Abstract Non-compliance is one of the crucial problems impairing outcome after transplantation. Fourteen lung transplant recipients were interviewed about their thoughts regarding transplant-related topics. Compliance was assessed by doctors. The psychological processing was investigated by content analysis. Highly compliant patients perceived more advantages by transplantation. In contrast, low-compliant patients reported either an emotional distance to the lung or a closer relationship to the donor. Furthermore, they showed a contradictory relationship to the medical staff. There are some indications that perception of advantages by transplantation is crucial to compliance. This experience takes place in the context of a good staff – patient relationship. Emotional distance to the lung or nearness to the donor are further contributing factors of non-compliance.
Progress in Transplantation | 2013
Sabina De Geest; Hanna Burkhalter; Lut Berben; Laura Jane Bogert; Kris Denhaerynck; Tracy R. Glass; Lutz Goetzmann; Monika Kirsch; Alexander Kiss; Michael T. Koller; Chantal Piot-Ziegler; Arno Schmidt-Trucksäss
Background Understanding outcomes after transplant requires a biopsychosocial model that includes biomedical and psychosocial factors. The latter, to date, are assessed only in a limited way as part of transplant registries or cohort studies. The Swiss Transplant Cohort Study (STCS) is a nationwide open cohort study (starting May 2008) to systematically and prospectively assess psychosocial factors. This article describes the framework underpinning STCSs psychosocial assessment. Methods The STCS framework was adapted from the multidimensional conceptual perspective of Dew et al to describe transplant psychosocial domains and specific outcomes by adding a time perspective, a system perspective, and interaction among domains. Results We propose a multidimensional, multilevel biopsychosocial framework representing mutually influencing domains from before to after transplant, and exemplify each domain by factors included in STCS and their measurement. The transplant patient, centrally positioned, is described by clinical and sociodemographic characteristics (eg, socioeconomic status, educational, professional, and relationship status). The following psychosocial domains further describe the patient: (1) physical/functional (eg, perceived health status, sleep quality, daytime sleepiness), (2) psychological (eg, depression, stress), (3) behavioral (eg, medication adherence, smoking, drug use, physical activity, sun protection), (4) social (eg, work capacity/return to work), and (5) global quality of life. Factors associated with health care system level (eg, trust in transplant team) are also included in the model. Conclusion The STCSs psychosocial framework provides a basis for studying the interplay of biomedical, sociodemographic, psychosocial, behavioral, and health care system factors in view of transplant outcomes and therefore has the potential to guide biopsychosocial transplant research.
Anxiety Stress and Coping | 2010
Lutz Goetzmann; Sarosh Irani; Kyrill Schwegler; Martina Stamm; Anja Spindler; Rosemarie Bricman; Claus Buddeberg; Christoph Schmid; Annette Boehler; Richard Klaghofer
Abstract Chronic stress is a well-known consequence of somatic diseases. In this study, we investigated whether physical, sociodemographic, or transplant-related psychological factors were associated with the patients chronic stress level. A cross-sectional study enrolling 76 patients measured chronic stress (Screening Scale, Screening Subscale of Chronic Stress of the Trier Inventory for the Assessment of Chronic Stress) and the emotional effects of the transplant (Transplant Effects Questionnaire), as well as physical and sociodemographic conditions (lung function, bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome, working status, and parenting). Chronic stress after a lung transplant was significantly lower than in a normal community sample. In the multiple regression analysis, worries concerning the transplant were significantly associated with the patients chronic stress, but not with physical or sociodemographic parameters, nor with interactions between physical and psychological parameters. These results underscore the importance of transplant-related worries, regardless of the patients current state of health.
Swiss Medical Weekly | 2015
Annina Seiler; Josef Jenewein; Chantal Martin-Soelch; Lutz Goetzmann; Ilhan Inci; Walter Weder; Macé M. Schuurmans; Christian Benden; Angela Brucher; Richard Klaghofer
QUESTIONS UNDER STUDY To (1) assess distinct clusters of psychological distress and health-related quality of life during the first 6 months following lung transplantation; (2) identify patients with poor psychosocial outcomes; and (3) determine potential predictors regarding psychological distress and health-related quality (HRQoL) of life at 6 months post-transplant. METHODS A total of 40 patients were examined for psychological distress (Symptom Checklist short version-9) and quality of life (EuroQOL five-dimension health-related quality of life questionnaire) during their first 6 months post-transplant. Hierarchical cluster analyses were performed to identify specific types of post-transplant outcomes in terms of psychological distress and HRQoL over the first six post-transplant months. Correlational analyses examined medical and psychosocial predictors of the outcome at 6 months post-transplant. RESULTS Three distinctive clusters were identified, summarizing either groups of patients with (1) optimal (35%), (2) good (42%), and (3) poor outcome-clusters (23%). The latter tended to be older, to suffer from more severe disease, to have more co-morbidities, to have had a prolonged intensive care unit and/or hospital stay, to have more hospital admissions and were more frequently treated with antidepressants post-transplant. Disease severity, length of stay, quality of life two weeks post-transplant, hospital admissions and use of antidepressants were strong predictors of psychological distress and impaired health-related quality of life at six months of follow-up. CONCLUSION Almost a quarter of the investigated patients suffered from elevated distress and substantially impaired HRQoL, with no improvements over time. Results underscore the psychosocial needs of patients with poor post-transplant outcomes.
The International Journal of Psychoanalysis | 2012
Marius Neukom; Valentina Corti; Brigitte Boothe; Annette Boehler; Lutz Goetzmann
The present study examines the relationships between lung transplant recipients and their unknown, deceased donors. Out of 20 semi‐structured interviews, eight narratives, by three female and three male recipients respectively, were identified in which the figure of the donor played a role. These narratives were examined using JAKOB, a qualitative research tool that analyses relational configurations and diagnoses psychodynamic conflicts. Analysis revealed a broad range of varying themes and relationships with equally varying wish and fear themes. All the narrators dealt either explicitly or implicitly with whether and how they are connected to their donors. In five narratives, specific personality traits were attributed to the figure of the donor; in four narratives, latent feelings of guilt concerning the donor’s death were expressed. Indeed, the figure of the donor was not always perceived as an independent person, separate from the narrator’s self: in two cases, the donor appears as part of the recipient’s self, while in another case, the donor is presented as a transitional object for the recipient. The findings of the narrative analysis are discussed within a theoretical model of psychical organ integration.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2010
Kyrill Schwegler; Dominik A. Ettlin; Iris Buser; Richard Klaghofer; Lutz Goetzmann; Claus Buddeberg; Eli Alon; Mike Brügger; Dominique J.-F. de Quervain
Remembering painful incidents has important adaptive value but may also contribute to clinical symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder and chronic pain states. Because glucocorticoids are known to impair memory retrieval processes, we investigated whether cortisol affects recall of previously experienced pain in healthy young men. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study, 20 male participants were presented pictures, half of them combined with a heat-pain stimulus. The next day, the same pictures were shown in the absence of pain. Cortisol (20 mg) administered 1h before retention testing reduced recall of explicit contextual pain memory, whereas it did not affect pain threshold or pain tolerance.
The International Journal of Psychoanalysis | 2004
Lutz Goetzmann; Kyrill Schwegler
The fi eld of semiotics, established by Charles S. Peirce, is characterised by its recognition of non‐linguistic signs and embedment in a communicative interaction; for this reason, it is especially well suited for a semiotic investigation of intersubjective processes. In this paper, the authors show how these intersubjective processes can be understood in semiotic terms within the transference‐countertransference setting. Based on a case vignette, the relationship between the ‘real object’ (e.g. an unconscious fantasy) and the sign (e.g. a particular facial expression) is fi rst demonstrated. In this mediation between sign and referent, an important role is played by the ‘immediate object’, by which Peirce understood the mental concept of a sign. However, a further component of the Peircian sign is responsible for the emergence of the countertransference, namely, the ‘interpretant’. The core of Peircian semiotics, namely the concept of an (infi nite) process of signifi cation, sheds light in semiotic terms on the dialectical movement between transference‐signs and countertransference‐signs, the interpretation and encounter between two subjects. The paper concludes with a discussion of both the interdisciplinary applicability of Peircian semiotics, for example in the context of the neurosciences, and the differences between the Peircian epistemological position and psychoanalytical conceptions of the objective cognition of mental processes.
Psyche | 2018
Lutz Goetzmann; Lutz Wittmann; Nele Thomas; Uwe Wutzler; Roland Weierstall; Barbara Ruettner
Die Autoren verstehen die Erfassung unbewusster Dimensionen verbaler wie averbaler Reprasentanzen als zentrales psychoanalytisches Forschungsanliegen. In ihrem Beitrag stellen sie die Methodik einer Bildinterpretation vor, die vor- und unbewusste Anteile der Aussage eines Bildes erfassen soll. Hierfur wird die strukturale Analyse von Daten, die sich am »Zurich Dream Process Coding System« orientiert, mit der »Visual Grounded Theory«-Methodologie kombiniert, die auf den Prinzipien des »offenen Codierens«, »Memo-Writings« und der »Konstruktion zentraler Kategorien« beruht. Das methodische Vorgehen wird anhand der Bildinterpretation von Arbeiten der Malerinnen Regine Kuschke und Bettina Blohm sowie der Zeichnung »Die Giraffe mit dem Wiwimacher« veranschaulicht, die Freuds »Analyse der Phobie eines funfjahrigen Knaben« entnommen ist.