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Volume 153, 01
 
 
Swiss Archives of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychotherapy is published by MDPI from Volume 176 Issue 1 (2026). Previous articles were published by another publisher in Open Access under a CC-BY (or CC-BY-NC-ND) licence, and they are hosted by MDPI on mdpi.com as a courtesy and upon agreement with the previous journal publisher.

Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother., Volume 153, Issue 5 (01 2002) – 10 articles

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413 KB  
Book Review
J. Scherer, K. Kuhn: Angststörungen nach ICD-10. Manual zu Diagnostik und Therapie
by E. Hurwitz
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 252; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01291 - 1 Jan 2002
Abstract
Die Forschungsbemühungen der letzten Jahrzehnte stellen ein beachtliches Repertoire an therapeutischen Möglichkeiten zur Behandlung von Angststörungen bereit [...] Full article
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News
Aktualitäten
by Karl Studer
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 252; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01290 - 1 Jan 2002
Abstract
Aus den Kantonen [...] Full article
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Article
Betrifft: Koch-Weber H. Kasuistik: Differentialdiagnostische Schwierigkeiten bei einer im Jugendalter diagnostizierten bipolaren Erkrankung. Schweiz Arch Neurol Psychiatr 2001;152:244–6.
by H. Braun-Scharm
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 251; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01289 - 1 Jan 2002
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Abstract
Es ist sehr erfreulich, dass durch die Kasuistik von Frau Koch-Weber die Aufmerksamkeit auf die Existenz, frühe Erkennung und Behandlung affektiver Psychosen im Jugendalter gelenkt worden ist [...] Full article
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Article
Arbeitssucht (Workaholism)
by K.-E. Bühler and Chr. Schneider
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 245-250; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01288 - 1 Jan 2002
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Abstract
The following article gives an overview of the complex phenomenon workaholism. Although it has become increasingly relevant to our society, it has not often been subject to research. Up to now, there exists a lack of consciousness that this addiction is a serious [...] Read more.
The following article gives an overview of the complex phenomenon workaholism. Although it has become increasingly relevant to our society, it has not often been subject to research. Up to now, there exists a lack of consciousness that this addiction is a serious syndrome with grave consequences for the individual as well as for society, and not – as often propagated – a positive personality trait or even a virtue. This article summarises definitions, characteristics and typologies of workaholics, which are described by different authors. In order to get a general impression of this syndrome including its relevance to society, the causes, consequences, and the therapy of this addiction are shown. Full article
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Review
Konsequenzen von Rückfall und Behandlungsabbruch im stationären Drogenentzug: eine 1-Monats-Katamnese
by P. Rüesch and J. Hättenschwiler
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 238-244; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01287 - 1 Jan 2002
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 49
Abstract
The success of inpatient drug detoxification is often measured by the number of addicts fully completing treatment. Indeed, treatment adherence is one of the most important predictors of the long-term course of addictive disorders. However, less is known about the consequences of relapse [...] Read more.
The success of inpatient drug detoxification is often measured by the number of addicts fully completing treatment. Indeed, treatment adherence is one of the most important predictors of the long-term course of addictive disorders. However, less is known about the consequences of relapse during drug-detoxification treatment and the relationship of relapse to premature treatment drop-out. The following questions were addressed in this study: What is the frequency of premature drop-out and relapse in an inpatient drug detoxification programme? How often does relapse during detoxification result in premature termination of treatment? What are the consequences of relapse and drop-out on substance use and social integration of the patients one month after treatment? Data of 104 inpatients (24 women, 80 men) having undergone voluntary detoxification treatment at the Psychiatric University Hospital of Zurich between 1995 and 1996 were analysed. Most patients fulfilled the criteria of multiple drug use including opiates according to ICD-10.Almost two thirds (63%) of inpatients completed detoxification treatment successfully,18% were abstinent from any substance use one month after treatment. Almost every second inpatient (45%) lapsed or relapsed, i.e. used substances during detoxification. Substance use during treatment was significantly related to drop-out: a majority of patients (81%) without lapse completed the detoxification successfully, but less than half of patients (41%) with lapse did so. The higher rate of drop-out of lapsers was mainly due to premature exclusion from the programme. Results indicate that lapse during treatment is not generally related to negative outcome, rather its consequences depend on the kind of treatment termination: thus, not any patient prematurely discharged from treatment achieved abstinence one month after leaving the hospital. However, patients who had completed detoxification achieved abstinence even when they had lapsed during treatment. Furthermore, premature exclusion has also negative consequences on referral to further treatment and the housing situation of addict patients. Consequently, lapses during detoxification treatment should not necessarily lead to premature discharge. Instead, patients should have the chance to work through the experience of lapse within a qualified treatment setting. Full article
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Article
Les applications de la télépsychiatrie: une revue
by Bertrand Baleydier, G. Bertschy and G. Bondolfi
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 232-237; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01286 - 1 Jan 2002
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Abstract
Since the nineties, videoconferencing has become increasingly important in medicine. Improvements in technology and competitive telecommunication rates have largely contributed to making this technology largely accessible to the medical field as well as the public. Over the past ten years, the technology of [...] Read more.
Since the nineties, videoconferencing has become increasingly important in medicine. Improvements in technology and competitive telecommunication rates have largely contributed to making this technology largely accessible to the medical field as well as the public. Over the past ten years, the technology of “livemedicine” has been the object of increasing publications, especially in the psychiatric field or “telepsychiatry”. The latter was actually one of the first to directly benefit from this technology by using cellular telephones.Today, there exists a specialised publication in this domain and even a telemedical chair. This technology uses 4 to 8 ISDN telephone lines enabling rapid telecommunication transmissions. On either receiving end, users employ a television screen or a personal computer equipped with a mobile camera. The availability of a close output telephone line has revolutionised the procedure making it accessible to both doctors and patients. The value of these psychiatric interviews has been analysed for all of the different traumas encountered, i.e. affective disorders, psychotic disorders and personality disorders. It actually appears that these evaluations are valid in telepsychiatry and actual medical situations.The acceptance of the method, however, is more complex. When it was first introduced, the majority of the medical core and patients were sceptical. The benefits and the practicality of the method soon proved effective. It has become as invaluable as the telephone by a medical core who today still prefers to deal on a human level. Many patients find it less time consuming than actually seeing the psychiatrist, and it also makes the therapist available to the patient who otherwise may not have been able to consult a physician. Favourable situations for this method include urgent interventions, especially in locations that are geographically far away from a therapeutic centre. Also, it may be difficult for patients to seek the supervision of therapists that may be distant from treatment centres. Finally, many authors predict that psychiatrists will benefit the most from this technology through supervised activities as well as training programmes. The technology has found its place within treatment; it does not, however, replace the human contact found between therapists and their patients. It is imperative for the well-being of the patient/physician relationship that human contact still takes place at least once in the course of a treatment. From a legal point of view, medical decisions concerning a patient via “livemedicine” (i.e. commitment or non-voluntary commitment to a psychiatric hospital, choice of medication, etc.) did not meet with any opposition in countries already advanced in this field and using the technology widely. On the contrary, in legal situations, judges are able to forge an opinion based on taped interviews. As far as patient/physician confidentiality is concerned the commitment of the therapist is to keep any taped interviews confidential and private. Full article
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Article
Les écrivains et le suicide
by Pierre-Bernard Schneider
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 221-231; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01285 - 1 Jan 2002
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 51
Abstract
We know that certain parts of the population, for example physicians or offenders in jail, show an overmortality by suicide. Many hints give the impression that writers more often commit suicide than the general population.We hope to confirm this hypothesis by comparing the [...] Read more.
We know that certain parts of the population, for example physicians or offenders in jail, show an overmortality by suicide. Many hints give the impression that writers more often commit suicide than the general population.We hope to confirm this hypothesis by comparing the mortality rate by suicide of different groups of “creators” (writers, artists, philosophers, composers, mathematicians) to the suicidal rate of the Swiss population which is very high and to the suicide rate of Swiss writers. To achieve this epidemiological research we work with biographic dictionaries which regularly mention suicide as a relevant fact. The results of these analyses show an overmortality by suicide of Swiss writers compared with the mortality rate of the Swiss population. We also prove a higher mortality by suicide of artists and philosophers of the whole world compared to the suicide rate of the Swiss population. However, the suicide is not frequently used by composers and mathematicians. Concerning suicide two groups of “creators” emerge: writers, artists and philosophers, on one side, with a higher suicide rate than the Swiss population, and composers and mathematicians, on the other side, with a suicide rate, at least for composers, lower than the Swiss rate. How can we explain these differences in the suicide rate of theses groups of “creators”, first of all of the Swiss writers? The explanation by the predominance of a higher rate of psychopathology, especially depression, in suicidal writers, has no consistence. These psychopathological factors may play a role in the determination to end one’s life by suicide, but alone they cannot explain the fatal issue. The same goes for the theory of life events. They exist in the biography of some suicidal writers, but they are not more frequent than in the general population. We must follow other tracks in order to understand the high mortality by suicide of writers and the low mortality rate of composers and probably mathematicians. To write is painful and laborious. Many writers complain of the martyrdom they endure. We do not find the equivalent in composers. The essential loneliness of the writer when wrestling with his emerging work is undeniable. The same goes for the immediateness of the process of writing. No intermediate object exists between conception and work as we observe in the artist or the composer. The true writer must always speak of himself even if he is not aware of it. His work is ultimately an autobiography and death appears very often, a link with the physician, the superman of suicide. Finally, the structure and the working of the psyche are different in the writer and in the composer and the mathematician, rather hysterical in the former and compulsive in the latter. Full article
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Article
Leaving the sheltered workshop
by J. Modestin and M. Lieb
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 214-220; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01284 - 1 Jan 2002
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 38
Abstract
Occupational activity is an important part of the psychosocial adjustment even in those mental patients who cannot be fully rehabilitated and integrated into the competitive labour market. Yet some patients do not adhere to the occupational programmes and quit. We studied a group [...] Read more.
Occupational activity is an important part of the psychosocial adjustment even in those mental patients who cannot be fully rehabilitated and integrated into the competitive labour market. Yet some patients do not adhere to the occupational programmes and quit. We studied a group of chronic patients who had left after an average stay of 6.4 months a sheltered workshop designed specifically for seriously disabled patients with mental disorders.We compared these patients with two groups of control patients who remained in the workshop for a shorter (11.9 months on average) or longer (7.4 years on average) time, assessed possible reasons for the patients’ leaving the workshop and inquired about their later occupational status. The purpose was to obtain information which could help to improve the patients’ work adherence and thus promote their psychosocial adjustment. All patients, 16 in each group, were assessed using three instruments: (1) a self-devised interview schedule with items related to sociodemographic and clinical data, circumstances of patients’ entry in the workshop and, if appropriate, situation at the time of their leaving the workshop and afterwards; (2) the ABB (“Arbeitsbeschreibungsbogen”) questionnaire measuring patients’ work satisfaction; (3) the Work Importance List (“Bedeutungsliste Arbeit”) assessing the importance ascribed by the patients to 17 different aspects of work. Regarding sociodemographic and the majority of clinical variables, there were no significant differences between the three groups. All patients entered the workshop relatively late in their illness career at the average age of 39 years. The diagnosis schizophrenia was given to 75% of patients in the long stay group, 50% in the short stay group and to only one patient in the study group. The patients of the study group were mostly diagnosed with personality (borderline) and substance use disorder. They had received higher school education, spent less time in inpatient treatment and were more intensively cared for as outpatients. By all patients the highest values of satisfaction in ABB were given to superiors, the lowest values to payment and career perspectives, however, the patients of the study group indicated less satisfaction in all ABB dimensions. Structuring of the day, possibility to be active and to do something meaningful were indicated as the most important aspects of work in all three groups. There were no significant differences between the groups with regard to the item means and rankings. After leaving the workshop, 5 of 16 patients pursued another rehabilitation programme. However, the majority stayed at home without any occupation and they were not able to give a precise reason for their leaving the workshop. The results indicate that only a small minority of vocationally disabled chronic mental patients who leave a low entry threshold sheltered workshop after a relatively short time do so in order to progress in their rehabilitation process. The majority stay at home without being sufficiently occupied, and they are not able to find an adequate alternative without specialised help. Production oriented simple serial industrial activity in the workshop appears appropriate for the schizophrenic patients, but obviously it did not meet the needs of the study group patients with a higher previous school education. For these patients alternative options in the sheltered workshop itself must be considered along with the new approaches in general, better tailored to their needs and preferences. Full article
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Article
Group psychotherapists: professional and cultural differences
by Danielle Goerg, S. Ehrensperger, W. Fischer, E. Zbinden and J. Guimón
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 207-213; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01283 - 1 Jan 2002
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 41
Abstract
Objective: The aim of this survey is to explore the differences in certain salient aspects of the practice of group therapy between psychiatrists and psychologists and between the two cultural regions of Switzerland. Psychiatrists and psychologists, who differ in their training and forms [...] Read more.
Objective: The aim of this survey is to explore the differences in certain salient aspects of the practice of group therapy between psychiatrists and psychologists and between the two cultural regions of Switzerland. Psychiatrists and psychologists, who differ in their training and forms of professional activity, might also differ in their practice of group activities and their theoretical orientations. In the same way, with the probable existence of diverse schools of thought according to region, group therapists might present differences according to whether their cultural heritage is Germanic or Latin. Methods: A brief questionnaire, comprising questions concerning the therapists and the main group they were handling, was sent to the members of the Swiss Psychiatric Association and the members of the Swiss Federation of Psychologists. This survey covers the therapists who indicated that they practised group psychotherapy (n = 533). Results: Psychologists constitute three-quarters of group therapists, while psychiatrists only represent a quarter. Two-thirds of these therapists live in the German-speaking region and one-third in the French- or Italian-speaking region.The overall results show that there exists a sort of basic practice and common theoretical reference in both the professions considered herein and in both cultural regions of Switzerland. The groups that these therapists are handling are mainly small, made up of adults, with diagnoses of depressive, anxiety or personality disorders, and often taking place in psychiatric institutions. Questioned about their principal theoretical orientation,group therapists first mention a psychodynamic approach, then systemic and cognitive-behavioural orientations. Beyond this set of features which are common to both professions and both regions, the main differences appear between psychiatrists and psychologists. Psychiatrists, who are in the majority men, more frequently conduct adult, long-term groups, in private practice. They have a more marked psychodynamic profile than psychologists. In contrast, psychologists, who tend to be younger, are mainly women.They spend more time on group therapies than psychiatrists and they more frequently deal with children and adolescents, sometimes in non-medical settings. More eclectic in their theoretical references, they more often endorse systemic and/or humanist orientations. There is little differentiation between the two cultural regions, nevertheless eclecticism and the choice of a systemic orientation appear more frequently in the German-speaking region of Switzerland than in the region where French and Italian are spoken. Conclusion: Several of the features described for the groups handled by psychologists indicate the practice of family therapies.Thus, it seems that this form of therapy is currently more the domain of psychologists than of psychiatrists. Psychiatrists more often practise a type of group therapy which has been used since the end of the Second World War (with adults, a longer duration, in private practice and with a psychodynamic orientation). In the future, new norms for training, growing economic pressure and a tendency to favour shortterm therapies rather than long psychodynamic therapies will undoubtedly influence the evolution of these different care models and the practice of group therapists, be they psychiatrists or psychologists. Full article
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Editorial
Editorial
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2002, 153(5), 205-206; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2002.01282 - 1 Jan 2002
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Abstract
Die Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Psychiatrie hielt ihre Jahresversammlung letzten Sommer in Lugano ab [...] Full article
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