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Dive into the research topics where Sandor Fekete is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandor Fekete.


Suicide and Life Threatening Behavior | 2002

Why people engage in parasuicide: a-cross-cultural study of Intentions.

Heidi Hjelmeland; Keith Hawton; Hilmar Nordvik; Unni Bille-Brahe; Diego De Leo; Sandor Fekete; Onja Grad; Christian Haring; Ad J. F. M. Kerkhof; Jouko Lönnqvist; Konrad Michel; Ellinor Salander Renberg; Armin Schmidtke; Kees van Heeringen; Danuta Wasserman

Information obtained at interview from 1,646 parasuicide patients in 14 regions in 13 European countries participating in the WHO/EURO Multicentre Study on Suicidal Behaviour was used to study self-reported intentions involved in parasuicide. Comparisons were made across cultures, genders, and age groups. Although some statistically significant differences were found, the effect sizes were very small. The main finding from this study is thus that parasuicide patients in different countries tend to indicate that similar types of intentions are involved in their acts of parasuicide, and that the intentions do not vary greatly with gender or age. The hypothesis that rates of suicide and parasuicide vary between regions with the frequency with which suicidal intention is indicated by the patients was also tested, but was supported only for women and in relation to national suicide rates. The findings from this study are likely to be generalizable to other settings and have implications for clinical practice.


Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 2009

Reasons for adolescent deliberate self-harm: a cry of pain and/or a cry for help? Findings from the child and adolescent self-harm in Europe (CASE) study.

Gerrit Scoliers; Gwendolyn Portzky; Nicola Madge; Anthea Hewitt; Keith Hawton; Erik Jan de Wilde; Mette Ystgaard; Ella Arensman; Diego De Leo; Sandor Fekete; Kees van Heeringen

The present study examines reasons for adolescent deliberate self-harm. A cross-sectional survey using an anonymous self-report questionnaire was carried out in seven countries (Australia, Belgium, England, Hungary, Ireland, the Netherlands and Norway). Data on 30,477 school pupils between the ages of 14–17 were analysed. Past year and lifetime deliberate self-harm were assessed, along with the self-reported reasons for deliberate self-harm. The results showed that ‘wanted to get relief from a terrible state of mind’ and ‘wanted to die’ were most commonly reported. Principal component analysis indicated two underlying dimensions in the reasons for deliberate self-harm, i.e. a cry of pain motive and/or a cry for help motive. The majority of self-harmers reported at least one cry of pain motive (‘to die’, ‘to punish myself’, and ‘to get relief from a terrible state of mind’) and an additional cry for help motive (‘to show how desperate I was feeling’, to frighten someone’, ‘to get my own back on someone’, ‘to find out whether someone really loved me’, and ‘to get some attention’). Females reported more reasons than males. Only females showed an age difference, with girls aged 16–17 more frequently reporting a cry for help motive. There was considerable consistency in choice of motives across countries and genders. Systematic assessment of the reasons for deliberate self-harm can help clinicians to better understand the meaning of self harming behaviour, select appropriate treatment, suggest alternative coping strategies, and hopefully prevent future suicidal behaviour.


Journal of Adolescence | 2009

Deliberate self-harm in adolescents: comparison between those who receive help following self-harm and those who do not.

Mette Ystgaard; Ella Arensman; Keith Hawton; Nicola Madge; Kees van Heeringen; Allyson Hewitt; Erik Jan de Wilde; Diego De Leo; Sandor Fekete

This international comparative study addresses differences between adolescents who engage in deliberate self-harm (DSH) and who receive help following the DSH episode versus those who do not. A standardised self-report questionnaire was completed by pupils aged 14-17 in Australia, Belgium, England, Hungary, Ireland, The Netherlands, and Norway (n=30,532). An act of DSH in the year prior to the study was reported by 1660 participants. Nearly half (48.4%) had not received any help following DSH, 32.8% had received help from their social network only and 18.8% from health services. Except for Hungary, cross-national comparisons revealed remarkably similar findings. Adolescents who had been in contact with health services following DSH reported more often a wish to die, lethal methods, alcohol/drug problems and DSH in the family compared to those who had not. However, those who received no help or help from their social network only were also heavily burdened.


Psychological Medicine | 2005

Problem solving ability and repetition of deliberate self-harm: a multicentre study.

Carmel McAuliffe; Paul Corcoran; Helen Keeley; Ella Arensman; Unni Bille-Brahe; Diego De Leo; Sandor Fekete; Keith Hawton; Heidi Hjelmeland; Margaret Kelleher; Ad J.F.M. Kerkhof; Jouko Lönnqvist; Konrad Michel; Ellinor Salander Renberg; Armin Schmidtke; Kees van Heeringen; Danuta Wasserman

BACKGROUND While recent studies have found problem-solving impairments in individuals who engage in deliberate self-harm (DSH), few studies have examined repeaters and non-repeaters separately. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether specific types of problem-solving are associated with repeated DSH. METHOD As part of the WHO/EURO Multicentre Study on Suicidal Behaviour, 836 medically treated DSH patients (59% repeaters) from 12 European regions were interviewed using the European Parasuicide Study Interview Schedule (EPSIS II) approximately 1 year after their index episode. The Utrecht Coping List (UCL) assessed habitual responses to problems. RESULTS Factor analysis identified five dimensions--Active Handling, Passive-Avoidance, Problem Sharing, Palliative Reactions and Negative Expression. Passive-Avoidance--characterized by a pre-occupation with problems, feeling unable to do anything, worrying about the past and taking a gloomy view of the situation, a greater likelihood of giving in so as to avoid difficult situations, the tendency to resign oneself to the situation, and to try to avoid problems--was the problem-solving dimension most strongly associated with repetition, although this association was attenuated by self-esteem. CONCLUSIONS The outcomes of the study indicate that treatments for DSH patients with repeated episodes should include problem-solving interventions. The observed passivity and avoidance of problems (coupled with low self-esteem) associated with repetition suggests that intensive therapeutic input and follow-up are required for those with repeated DSH.


Drugs | 2005

Use of antipsychotics in the management of schizophrenia during pregnancy

Mátyás Trixler; Ágnes Gáti; Sandor Fekete; Tamás Tényi

The rapid development of pharmacotherapy has resulted in a growing clinical importance for the treatment of the increasing number of women with schizophrenia during pregnancy. An evolving database on reproductive health safety factors for women with schizophrenia has begun to be of assistance in optimising clinical benefits for women with childbearing potential.Given the prevalence of antipsychotic use during pregnancy in women with schizophrenia, it is important for the clinician to have a prepared approach to the administration of these agents. In general, the use of psychotropic medication during pregnancy is indicated when risk to the fetus from exposure to this medication is outweighed by the risks of untreated psychiatric illness in the mother. The preponderance of evidence from registries to large health surveys indicate that treatment with antipsychotic medication confers either no or a small nonspecific risk for organ malformations.According to the relevant literature published on the safety of antipsychotic medication during pregnancy, the findings are encouraging; however, the currently available data are very limited. Until there are more controlled prospective data on the impact of drugs on fetal and later development, the clinician will continue to work in a state of potential uncertainty, weighing partially estimated risks against managing individual clinical problems. The aim for the clinician should be to provide the best information available regarding the scope of possible risks associated with the treatment of schizophrenia during pregnancy. On the basis of the available data, generalisation is impossible and recommendations should be made on a drug-by-drug basis. The risks and benefits must always be carefully weighed for each patient on an individual basis. Only a woman who is well enough to acknowledge her pregnancy and her mental illness can effectively weigh the relative and partially unknown risks of treatment with antipsychotic medication against the highly probable risks of illness exacerbation if untreated.


Suicide and Life Threatening Behavior | 2007

Cross‐National Comparisons of the Association between Alcohol Consumption and Deliberate Self‐Harm in Adolescents

Ingeborg Rossow; Mette Ystgaard; Keith Hawton; Nicola Madge; Kees van Heeringen; Erik Jan de Wilde; Diego DeLeo; Sandor Fekete; Carolyn Morey

How differences in drinking patterns may affect the impact of alcohol consumption on deliberate self-harm among adolescents is explored in this international comparative study. Schools in Australia, Belgium, England, Hungary, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Norway (N = 30,532) were surveyed. In all countries the risk of deliberate self-harm was significantly elevated among adolescents who reported some or numerous episodes of intoxication, controlling for confounding factors. The results support the assumption that intoxication is significantly related to the association between alcohol consumption and deliberate self-harm in adolescents.


Psychopathology | 2004

Life events and psychopathology in a group of suicide attempters

Peter Osvath; Viktor Vörös; Sandor Fekete

Researchers examined the incidence of negative life events and associated these events with psychological scales (depression, hopelessness, self-esteem and state-trait anger) in a group of suicide attempters (n = 101) within the framework of the WHO/EURO Multicenter Study on Suicidal Behavior. Certain negative life events (especially relationship problems and physical/mental abuse in childhood) turned out to be the main indicators of severe mental problems in the family of the attempters (e.g. addiction, self-destructive behavior or psychiatric hospitalization). Significant positive correlations were found between the number of events and some psychopathological symptoms like depression, hopelessness, anger and lack of self-esteem. The role of stressful life events in suicidal behavior is emphasized. Particularly traumatic events (e.g. abuse in childhood) may be involved in the development of psychological and/or biological vulnerability (stress-diathesis model) and cognitive dysfunction. Therefore, in the psychotherapy of suicide attempters, it is essential to explore and discuss negative life events.


Crisis-the Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention | 2003

The main factors of repetition: Review of some results of the Pecs center in the WHO/EURO multicentre study on suicidal behaviour

Peter Osvath; Gabor Kelemen; Marta B. Erdos; Viktor Vörös; Sandor Fekete

The authors obtained more information about the characteristics of suicide attempters in order to examine the most important differences between those who attempted suicide for the first time (first-evers) and those who had a previous attempt (repeaters). Within the framework of the WHO/EURO Multicentre Study on Suicidal Behaviour in Pecs Center, 1158 cases of parasuicide were collected over 4 years (July 1, 1997-June 30, 2001). In the monitoring sample, 728 (62.9%) parasuicide acts were committed by women and 430 (37.1%) by men, and more than half of the attempters had made a previous attempt In the logistic regression model a higher risk of repetition was found to be related to being divorced (OR 1.84), unemployed or economically inactive (OR 1.45), and without higher education (OR 2.54). In the sample, mental disorders were the most significant risk factor for repeated attempts. The odds ratio was highest (OR 5) for personality disorders. The results may reflect (besides some factors of social destabilization) a higher importance of major mental health problems among repeaters. For this reason, more effective recognition and treatment of the underlying psychiatric and social conditions of suicide attempters has special importance to prevent future suicidal behaviour.


Archives of Suicide Research | 2002

The Internet - A New Source of Data on Suicide, Depression and Anxiety: A Preliminary Study

Sandor Fekete

On the world wide web, self-help newsgroups of suicidal, depressive and anxious people were investigated in a 3-month period. After analyzing the content of the letters (966 letters collected, 222 analyzed) and comparing the suicide ideator group with all other groups, the author tried to find characteristic differences among them and to understand the underlying psychological mechanisms better. The modified version of the Weintraub technique was used in the content analysis. The negatives and dichotomous structures were found to be the strongest differentiating verbal categories among the groups in both sexes, which may reflect the important role of denial and dichotomous thinking among suicidal people. Helpers have to find new ways to approach this Internet-user high risk population.


Crisis-the Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention | 2001

Mass media, cultural attitudes, and suicide. Results of an international comparative study.

Sandor Fekete; Armin Schmidtke; Yoshitomo Takahashi; Elmar Etzersdorfer; M. Upanne; Peter Osvath

Many studies indicate that the suicidal behavior in a society is affected by the suicide stories publicized. Cultural valuations appear in the way media present self-destruction. The reflection of sociocultural attitudes toward suicide can be observed and analyzed in these texts. In this research, reports about suicide (n = 2203) in the years from 1981 and 1991 taken from daily newspapers were gathered--three central and regional papers in each country. A content analysis was performed of the suicide reports in Hungary (n = 244), Japan (n = 684), the United States (n = 265), Germany (former West n = 458, former East n = 60), Austria (n = 405), and Finland (n = 81), on the basis of the following variables: mentioning of the name, personal data, prominence of the suicidal person, qualification of the suicide, methods, motives, positive or negative consequences, alternatives, and the expression(s) used to refer to the act. After a coding process, an analysis was conducted as to whether any significant differences existed in the rate of the several characteristics in the countries from the point of view of the possible imitation-identification and of the cultural differences are the most important findings interpreted.

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Andras Hajnal

Pennsylvania State University

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