Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Tomasz Adamowski is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Tomasz Adamowski.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Coerced Hospital Admission and Symptom Change—A Prospective Observational Multi-Centre Study

Thomas W. Kallert; Christina Katsakou; Tomasz Adamowski; Algirdas Dembinskas; Andrea Fiorillo; Lars Kjellin; Anastasia Mastrogianni; P. Nawka; Georgi Onchev; Jiri Raboch; Matthias Schützwohl; Zahava Solomon; Francisco Torres-González; Stephen Bremner; Stefan Priebe

Introduction Coerced admission to psychiatric hospitals, defined by legal status or patients subjective experience, is common. Evidence on clinical outcomes however is limited. This study aimed to assess symptom change over a three month period following coerced admission and identify patient characteristics associated with outcomes. Method At study sites in 11 European countries consecutive legally involuntary patients and patients with a legally voluntary admission who however felt coerced, were recruited and assessed by independent researchers within the first week after admission. Symptoms were assessed on the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale. Patients were re-assessed after one and three months. Results The total sample consisted of 2326 legally coerced patients and 764 patients with a legally voluntary admission who felt coerced. Symptom levels significantly improved over time. In a multivariable analysis, higher baseline symptoms, being unemployed, living alone, repeated hospitalisation, being legally a voluntary patient but feeling coerced, and being initially less satisfied with treatment were all associated with less symptom improvement after one month and, other than initial treatment satisfaction, also after three months. The diagnostic group was not linked with outcomes. Discussion On average patients show significant but limited symptom improvements after coerced hospital admission, possibly reflecting the severity of the underlying illnesses. Social factors, but not the psychiatric diagnosis, appear important predictors of outcomes. Legally voluntary patients who feel coerced may have a poorer prognosis than legally involuntary patients and deserve attention in research and clinical practice.


BMC Psychiatry | 2011

The development of the Quality Indicator for Rehabilitative Care (QuIRC): a measure of best practice for facilities for people with longer term mental health problems

Helen Killaspy; Sarah White; Christine Wright; Tatiana L. Taylor; Penny Turton; Matthias Schützwohl; Mirjam Schuster; Jorge A. Cervilla; Paulette Brangier; Jiri Raboch; Lucie Kalisova; Georgi Onchev; Spiridon Alexiev; Roberto Mezzina; Pina Ridente; Durk Wiersma; Ellen Visser; Andrzej Kiejna; Tomasz Adamowski; Dimitri Ploumpidis; Fragiskos Gonidakis; Jose Miguel Caldas-de-Almeida; Graça Cardoso; Michael King

BackgroundDespite the progress over recent decades in developing community mental health services internationally, many people still receive treatment and care in institutional settings. Those most likely to reside longest in these facilities have the most complex mental health problems and are at most risk of potential abuses of care and exploitation. This study aimed to develop an international, standardised toolkit to assess the quality of care in longer term hospital and community based mental health units, including the degree to which human rights, social inclusion and autonomy are promoted.MethodThe domains of care included in the toolkit were identified from a systematic literature review, international expert Delphi exercise, and review of care standards in ten European countries. The draft toolkit comprised 154 questions for unit managers. Inter-rater reliability was tested in 202 units across ten countries at different stages of deinstitutionalisation and development of community mental health services. Exploratory factor analysis was used to corroborate the allocation of items to domains. Feedback from those using the toolkit was collected about its usefulness and ease of completion.ResultsThe toolkit had excellent inter-rater reliability and few items with narrow spread of response. Unit managers found the content highly relevant and were able to complete it in around 90 minutes. Minimal refinement was required and the final version comprised 145 questions assessing seven domains of care.ConclusionsTriangulation of qualitative and quantitative evidence directed the development of a robust and comprehensive international quality assessment toolkit for units in highly variable socioeconomic and political contexts.


Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 2004

A comparison of psychiatric day hospitals in five European countries: implications of their diversity for day hospital research.

Thomas W. Kallert; Matthias Glöckner; Stefan Priebe; Jane Briscoe; Joanna Rymaszewska; Tomasz Adamowski; P. Nawka; Helena Reguliova; J. Raboch; Andrea Howardová; Matthias Schützwohl

Abstract.Objective:As the use of “day hospitals” increases, conceptual models of these services are changing dramatically across Europe. Therefore, the need arises for mental health services research to assess this process cross-nationally in a standardised and systematic way. Such research approaches should seek to maximise the generalisability of results from high-quality (e. g. randomised controlled) single- or multi-site trials assessing specific models of day hospital care.Method:Using a self-developed structured questionnaire, the European Day Hospital Evaluation (EDEN) study group carried out national surveys of the characteristics of day hospitals for general psychiatric patients in Germany, England, Poland, the Slovak Republic and the Czech Republic, during the period 2001–2002.Results:Response rates varied from 52 to 91%. Findings show that day hospitals have no consistent profile of structural and procedural features. Similarities across countries focus on three main issues: on average, consideration of concepts oriented toward providing acute treatment are equivalent; disorders associated with disabled functioning in everyday life, high risk of somatic complications, and need for behaviour control are excluded to a comparable degree; and some core therapeutic activities are consistent with the main approaches of social psychiatry. Identified according to self-rated conceptions and extended with data from individual hospital’s statistics on the clientele in 2000, three clusters of limited selectivity subdivide the services. One category focuses mainly on rehabilitative tasks; two categories are oriented toward providing acute treatment as an alternative to inpatient care, but combine this either with rehabilitative tasks or with equal additional functions of shortening inpatient treatment and providing psychotherapy. The distribution of services across these three clusters varies significantly in the five European countries.Conclusion:Future day hospital studies should always clarify the type of services being assessed. To fully consider the impact of their results, the current national and international health policy environment of these services should be taken into account. Such surveys require enhanced methodology, however, in order to identify clear, distinct categories of services characterised by overlapping programme functions, and to increase the generalisability of valid results from single- or multi-site trials.


Adhd Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorders | 2017

The descriptive epidemiology of DSM-IV Adult ADHD in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys

John Fayyad; Nancy A. Sampson; Irving Hwang; Tomasz Adamowski; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; Ali Al-Hamzawi; Laura Helena Andrade; Guilherme Borges; Giovanni de Girolamo; Silvia Florescu; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Chiyi Hu; Elie G. Karam; Sing Lee; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Siobhan O’Neill; Beth-Ellen Pennell; Marina Piazza; J. Posada-Villa; Margreet ten Have; Yolanda Torres; Miguel Xavier; Alan M. Zaslavsky; Ronald C. Kessler

AbstractWe previously reported on the cross-national epidemiology of ADHD from the first 10 countries in the WHO World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys. The current report expands those previous findings to the 20 nationally or regionally representative WMH surveys that have now collected data on adult ADHD. The Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) was administered to 26,744 respondents in these surveys in high-, upper-middle-, and low-/lower-middle-income countries (68.5% mean response rate). Current DSM-IV/CIDI adult ADHD prevalence averaged 2.8% across surveys and was higher in high (3.6%)- and upper-middle (3.0%)- than low-/lower-middle (1.4%)-income countries. Conditional prevalence of current ADHD averaged 57.0% among childhood cases and 41.1% among childhood subthreshold cases. Adult ADHD was significantly related to being male, previously married, and low education. Adult ADHD was highly comorbid with DSM-IV/CIDI anxiety, mood, behavior, and substance disorders and significantly associated with role impairments (days out of role, impaired cognition, and social interactions) when controlling for comorbidities. Treatment seeking was low in all countries and targeted largely to comorbid conditions rather than to ADHD. These results show that adult ADHD is prevalent, seriously impairing, and highly comorbid but vastly under-recognized and undertreated across countries and cultures.


Psychiatria Polska | 2015

[The prevalence of common mental disorders in the population of adult Poles by sex and age structure - an EZOP Poland study].

Andrzej Kiejna; Patryk Piotrowski; Tomasz Adamowski; Jacek Moskalewicz; Jacek Wciórka; Jakub Stokwiszewski; Daniel Rabczenko; Ronald C. Kessler

AIM The article presents lifetime (LT) prevalence of common mental disorders (CMD) in accordance with the DSMIV classification, based on assessment of representative population sample of 10,081 Poles aged 18-64. METHODS Computer based WHO CIDI3.0 was adapted for the Polish population according to WMH protocol. The survey was performed by certified and supervised interviewers. RESULTS Out of the 18 CMDs analyzed the most common was alcohol abuse, significantly more often in males (18.6%) than in women (3.3%), (p<0.01). The second most common disorder was panic, also more frequent in women (8.5%) than in men (3.9%), (p<0.01). Similarly, depression occurred in women (4.0%) two times more often than in males (1.9%), (p<0.01). GAD, agoraphobia, panic, specific phobia (p<0.01), and dysthymia (p<0.05) were also more prevalent in women. On the other hand, alcohol abuse, alcohol and drug dependence (p<0.01), and hypomania (p<0.05) were more common in males. For most analyzed disorders significantly higher prevalence was found in the older age groups. Social phobia, specific phobias, and drug abuse occurred most often in men from the youngest group. No significant differences related to age were found for the prevalence of hypomania both in men and women. CONCLUSIONS Indices of prevalence obtained in the EZOP Poland study differ from the indices of prevalence of mental disorders described earlier in other countries. Lower values were found in Poland for affective disorders and some anxiety disorders. Only alcohol abuse was diagnosed more often than in other studies using similar methods except Ukraine, where this disorder was diagnosed with similar frequency.


Epigenomics | 2014

From Prader-Willi syndrome to psychosis: translating parent-of-origin effects into schizophrenia research

Maja Krefft; Dorota Frydecka; Tomasz Adamowski; Błażej Misiak

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a relatively rare disorder that originates from paternally inherited deletions and maternal disomy (mUPD) within the 15q11-q13 region or alterations in the PWS imprinting center. Evidence is accumulating that mUPD underlies high prevalence of psychosis among PWS patients. Several genes involved in differentiation and survival of neurons as well as neurotransmission known to act in the development of PWS have been also implicated in schizophrenia. In this article, we provide an overview of genetic and epigenetic underpinnings of psychosis in PWS indicating overlapping points in the molecular background of PWS and schizophrenia. Simultaneously, we highlight the need for studies investigating genetic and epigenetic makeup of the 15q11-q13 in schizophrenia indicating promising candidate genes.


Epidemiologia e psichiatria sociale | 2008

Loss to follow-up in longitudinal psychiatric research

T. Eichler; Matthias Schützwohl; Stefan Priebe; Donna Wright; Tomasz Adamowski; Joanna Rymaszewska; Petr Nawka; Ladislav Ocvár; E. Kitzlerova; Jiri Raboch; Thomas W. Kallert

AIMS To analyse factors that differentiate patients who attend follow-up assessments versus those who do not, and to identify predictors for drop-out within the context of the European Day Hospital Evaluation Study (EDEN-Study). METHODS The EDEN-Study, a multi-center RCT comparing acute psychiatric day care with inpatient care, required re-assessment of patients at discharge, 3 and 12 months after discharge. Follow-up rates varied between 54.0% and 99.5%. Socio-demographic and clinical characteristics of patients who did and did not attend follow-up were analysed using uni- and multivariate statistical methods. RESULTS Univariate analyses showed differences between patients regarding study site, treatment setting, living situation, employment, age, psychopathological symptoms and treatment satisfaction. They were not confirmed in multivariate analyses thus meaningful predictors of drop-out could not be identified. CONCLUSIONS Results emphasize the general need to compare patients re-assessed and not re-assessed in terms of their most relevant socio-demographic and clinical variables to assess the generalizability of results.


Psychological Medicine | 2016

The cross-national epidemiology of DSM-IV intermittent explosive disorder

Kate M. Scott; Carmen C. W. Lim; Irving Hwang; Tomasz Adamowski; A. Al-Hamzawi; Evelyn J. Bromet; Brendan Bunting; M. P. Ferrand; S. Florescu; Oye Gureje; Hristo Hinkov; Chiyi Hu; Elie G. Karam; S. Lee; J. Posada-Villa; Dan J. Stein; Hisateru Tachimori; Maria Carmen Viana; Miguel Xavier; Ronald C. Kessler

BACKGROUND This is the first cross-national study of intermittent explosive disorder (IED). METHOD A total of 17 face-to-face cross-sectional household surveys of adults were conducted in 16 countries (n = 88 063) as part of the World Mental Health Surveys initiative. The World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0) assessed DSM-IV IED, using a conservative definition. RESULTS Lifetime prevalence of IED ranged across countries from 0.1 to 2.7% with a weighted average of 0.8%; 0.4 and 0.3% met criteria for 12-month and 30-day prevalence, respectively. Sociodemographic correlates of lifetime risk of IED were being male, young, unemployed, divorced or separated, and having less education. The median age of onset of IED was 17 years with an interquartile range across countries of 13-23 years. The vast majority (81.7%) of those with lifetime IED met criteria for at least one other lifetime disorder; co-morbidity was highest with alcohol abuse and depression. Of those with 12-month IED, 39% reported severe impairment in at least one domain, most commonly social or relationship functioning. Prior traumatic experiences involving physical (non-combat) or sexual violence were associated with increased risk of IED onset. CONCLUSIONS Conservatively defined, IED is a low prevalence disorder but this belies the true societal costs of IED in terms of the effects of explosive anger attacks on families and relationships. IED is more common among males, the young, the socially disadvantaged and among those with prior exposure to violence, especially in childhood.


International Journal of Social Psychiatry | 2015

Predictors of vocational status in schizophrenia patients – Results from the Polish nationwide survey

Andrzej Kiejna; Patryk Piotrowski; Błażej Misiak; Tomasz Adamowski; A Schubert; Iwona Skrzekowska-Baran; Dorota Frydecka

Background: Steady employment constitutes one of most important aspects of functional recovery in schizophrenia. Therefore, there is a need for understanding clinical and demographic factors predicting vocational status in schizophrenia. Methods: Clinical and demographic data of 1,010 schizophrenia patients were gathered from public outpatient clinics. We compared patients who maintained employment between the diagnosis time point and the day of assessment, with the patients who were employed in the diagnosis time point but were unemployed on the day of assessment with respect to clinical and demographic variables. Results: Lower educational attainment, lower-income region of residence, medical comorbidities (obesity, diabetes and hypertension), first hospitalization at inpatient unit in comparison with the day hospital, higher total number of hospitalizations and the number of inpatient hospitalizations were found to serve as predictors of unemployment throughout the course of schizophrenia. After application of Bonferroni correction and logistic binary regression analysis, lower educational attainment, higher number of inpatient hospitalizations and obesity predicted unemployment. Conclusion: Education, obesity and the number of inpatient hospitalizations seem to predict vocational outcome in schizophrenia. This study warrants further investigation of medical comorbidities in schizophrenia in terms of social consequences in order to indicate the direction of this relationship.


Archives of psychiatry and psychotherapy | 2016

Assessment of the needs and clinical parameters in patients with mental disorders residing in forensic psychiatry wards with varying degrees of security.

Mikołaj Trizna; Tomasz Adamowski

Method: The study was conducted at the Regional Mental Hospital in Lubiąz, Poland. It involved patients interned at two low security forensic psychiatric wards and one medium security ward. 93 male patients were assessed. The following research tools were used: Camberwell Assessment of Need – Forensic Version (CANFOR), a sociodemographic and clinical data questionnaire, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), Client’s Assessment of Treatment (CAT) scale, and the Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life (MANSA) scale.

Collaboration


Dive into the Tomasz Adamowski's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrzej Kiejna

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joanna Rymaszewska

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hadryś T

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patryk Piotrowski

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jiri Raboch

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthias Schützwohl

Dresden University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dorota Frydecka

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas W. Kallert

Dresden University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge