Death depression in Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groups

Abstract Aim The main aims of this study were to explore the differences between seven Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical samples in death depression, as well as to estimate gender‐related differences. Design A cross‐sectional study. Methods The Death Depression Scale (DDS) was administered to seven...

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Main Authors: Ahmed M. Abdel‐Khalek, Mahboubeh Dadfar, David Lester
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-01-01
Series:Nursing Open
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.601
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spelling doaj-43c2062922e54636986a129902f372b62021-03-04T21:25:36ZengWileyNursing Open2054-10582021-01-0181485310.1002/nop2.601Death depression in Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groupsAhmed M. Abdel‐Khalek0Mahboubeh Dadfar1David Lester2Department of Psychology Faculty of Arts Alexandria University Alexandria EgyptSchool of Behavioral Sciences and Mental Health‐Tehran Institute of Psychiatry International Campus School of Public Health, Student Committee of Education and Development Center (EDC) Iran University of Medical Sciences Tehran IranPsychology Program Stockton University Stockton NJ USAAbstract Aim The main aims of this study were to explore the differences between seven Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical samples in death depression, as well as to estimate gender‐related differences. Design A cross‐sectional study. Methods The Death Depression Scale (DDS) was administered to seven groups (N = 765) of Egyptian normal (non‐clinical) patients, anxiety outpatients, schizophrenic inpatients (men and women) and addicts (men only) in individual sessions. Results Anxiety outpatients of both sexes obtained significantly and greatly higher death depression scores than did the other five groups, whereas the male schizophrenics, the male addicts, and the male and female non‐clinical groups had the lowest death depression scores. Female schizophrenics obtained a significantly higher death depression scores than did male schizophrenics, addicts and non‐clinical participants. Female anxiety outpatients and schizophrenics had higher death depression mean scores than did their male counterparts. Discussion The present finding is consistent, in general, with previous studies on death anxiety and death obsession. What applied to death anxiety was consistent also with death depression and death obsession. That is, the death distress concept.https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.601addictsanxious outpatientsdeath depressiongender‐related differencesnon‐clinical groupschizophrenics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ahmed M. Abdel‐Khalek
Mahboubeh Dadfar
David Lester
spellingShingle Ahmed M. Abdel‐Khalek
Mahboubeh Dadfar
David Lester
Death depression in Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groups
Nursing Open
addicts
anxious outpatients
death depression
gender‐related differences
non‐clinical group
schizophrenics
author_facet Ahmed M. Abdel‐Khalek
Mahboubeh Dadfar
David Lester
author_sort Ahmed M. Abdel‐Khalek
title Death depression in Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groups
title_short Death depression in Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groups
title_full Death depression in Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groups
title_fullStr Death depression in Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groups
title_full_unstemmed Death depression in Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groups
title_sort death depression in egyptian clinical and non‐clinical groups
publisher Wiley
series Nursing Open
issn 2054-1058
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Aim The main aims of this study were to explore the differences between seven Egyptian clinical and non‐clinical samples in death depression, as well as to estimate gender‐related differences. Design A cross‐sectional study. Methods The Death Depression Scale (DDS) was administered to seven groups (N = 765) of Egyptian normal (non‐clinical) patients, anxiety outpatients, schizophrenic inpatients (men and women) and addicts (men only) in individual sessions. Results Anxiety outpatients of both sexes obtained significantly and greatly higher death depression scores than did the other five groups, whereas the male schizophrenics, the male addicts, and the male and female non‐clinical groups had the lowest death depression scores. Female schizophrenics obtained a significantly higher death depression scores than did male schizophrenics, addicts and non‐clinical participants. Female anxiety outpatients and schizophrenics had higher death depression mean scores than did their male counterparts. Discussion The present finding is consistent, in general, with previous studies on death anxiety and death obsession. What applied to death anxiety was consistent also with death depression and death obsession. That is, the death distress concept.
topic addicts
anxious outpatients
death depression
gender‐related differences
non‐clinical group
schizophrenics
url https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.601
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