Ursula Gast
Hochschule Hannover
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ursula Gast.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2001
Ursula Gast; Frauke Rodewald; Viola Nickel; Hinderk M. Emrich
The aim of the study was to determine the frequency of dissociative disorders among psychiatric inpatients in Germany and to investigate the relationship between childhood trauma and dissociation. The German version of the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES), the Fragebogen für Dissoziative Symptome (FDS), was used to screen 115 consecutive inpatients admitted to the psychiatric clinic of a university hospital. Patients with FDS scores higher than 20 were interviewed by a trained clinician, using the German translation of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Dissociative Disorders (SCID-D-R). The German version of the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) was administered to investigate prevalence of childhood trauma and relations between childhood trauma and dissociation in adult life. Twenty-five of the 115 patients (21.7%) had a score higher than 20 on the FDS. Of these, 15 patients were interviewed with the SCID-D-R. One patient was diagnosed with a dissociative identity disorder, three with dissociative disorders not otherwise specified, and one patient with depersonalization disorder. All diagnoses were confirmed clinically. A significant positive relationship was found between the severity of childhood trauma and dissociation. Dissociative disorders are common among German psychiatric inpatients. Clinicians who work in psychiatric inpatient units should be mindful of these disorders.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2003
Anette Kersting; Michael Reutemann; Ursula Gast; Patricia Ohrmann; Thomas Suslow; Nikolaus Michael; Volker Arolt
In this first prevalence study of dissociative symptoms and different forms of childhood experiences among transsexuals, 41 transsexuals and 115 psychiatric inpatients were compared by means of the Interview for Dissociative Disorders (SCID-D-R), the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES), and the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ). The total score for the dissociative symptoms revealed no significant differences between the transsexuals and the psychiatric inpatients. However, the higher DES score among transsexuals compared with a normal population was found to be due largely to one item. A surprisingly high prevalence of emotional maltreatment was recorded. The results suggest that both the DES and the SCID-D-R have limited validity as instruments for screening and diagnosing dissociative disorders in transsexuals. Psychiatrists should be mindful of the possible existence of dissociative disorders in transsexual patients. Further investigations are needed to clarify the effects of traumatic childhood experiences on sexual identity in transsexuals and to throw more light on the phenomenological correlation between transsexualism and dissociative identity, using taxometric analyses.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2011
Frauke Rodewald; Claudia Wilhelm-Göling; Hinderk M. Emrich; Luise Reddemann; Ursula Gast
The aim of this study was to investigate axis-I comorbidity in patients with dissociative identity disorder (DID) and dissociative disorder not otherwise specified (DDNOS). Using the Diagnostic Interview for Psychiatric Disorders, results from patients with DID (n = 44) and DDNOS (n = 22) were compared with those of patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (n = 13), other anxiety disorders (n = 14), depression (n = 17), and nonclinical controls (n = 30). No comorbid disorders were found in nonclinical controls. The average number of comorbid disorders in patients with depression or anxiety was 0 to 2. Patients with dissociative disorders averagely suffered from 5 comorbid disorders. The most prevalent comorbidity in DDNOS and DID was PTSD. Comorbidity profiles of patients with DID and DDNOS were very similar to those in PTSD (high prevalence of anxiety, somatoform disorders, and depression), but differed significantly from those of patients with depression and anxiety disorders. These findings confirm the hypothesis that PTSD, DID, and DDNOS are phenomenologically related syndromes that should be summarized within a new diagnostic category.
Psychotherapie Psychosomatik Medizinische Psychologie | 2010
Katja Wingenfeld; Carsten Spitzer; Christoph Mensebach; Hans J. Grabe; Andreas Hill; Ursula Gast; Nicole Schlosser; Hella Höpp; Thomas Beblo; Martin Driessen
Psychotherapeut | 2001
Ursula Gast; Frauke Rodewald; Anette Kersting; Hinderk M. Emrich
Psychotherapie Psychosomatik Medizinische Psychologie | 2006
Frauke Rodewald; Ursula Gast; Hinderk M. Emrich
Trauma und Gewalt | 2011
Guido Flatten; Ursula Gast; Arne Hofmann; Christine Knaevelsrud; Astrid Lampe; Peter Liebermann; Andreas Maercker; Luise Reddemann; Wolfgang Wöllern
Neuropsychiatrie : Klinik, Diagnostik, Therapie und Rehabilitation : Organ der Gesellschaft Österreichischer Nervenärzte und Psychiater | 2008
Astrid Lampe; Horst Mitmansgruber; Ursula Gast; Gerhard Schüssler; Luise Reddemann
Psychiatrische Praxis | 2007
Harald J. Freyberger; Carsten Spitzer; Ursula Gast; Frauke Rodewald; Claudia Wilhelm-Gößling; Hinderk M. Emrich
Archive | 2006
Luise Reddemann; Arne Hofmann; Ursula Gast