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      Evaluation of the Psychoneurotic Tendencies Risk Using the Woodworth Mathews Personality Inventory in Non-Institutionalized Persons

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          Abstract

          INTRODUCTION: Multiple factors of vulnerability may lead to development of abnormal social behaviour and to important psychiatric diseases. The psychopathological characteristics present at individual level can lead to a pattern of population groups that are subject to developing mental illness risks. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Multidisciplinary study (2009-2011) to assessing the current situation of mental health and identifying population risk groups for developing psychiatric disorders in a non-institutionalised population. We used the Woodworth Mathews Inventory (76 items) to a randomly selected sample of 1,200 men and women, residents in urban and rural areas. RESULTS: The extreme scores for emotiveness had a frequency more than triple for women, and we found a similar situation for obsessive-neurasthenic and depressive tendencies. People aging over 35 years had a double score (limit and poignancy) for depression than younger people, meanwhile correlation between age under 35 years and instability and antisocial tendencies is highly statistically significant (p<0.001), the frequency of extreme scores being almost double than in the older people. CONCLUSIONS: Female gender has a vulnerability for develop depressive and emotional disorders and age over 35 is also significant correlated with depressive tendencies. Younger people (under 35 years) are predisposed for pathological antisocial behaviour, fact revealed by the high scores for instability and antisocial tendencies. It is necessary to develop a program focused on the two risk categories to prevent the possible occurrence of psychiatric disorders.

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          The world health report 2001 - Mental health: new understanding, new hope

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            Schizophrenia: manifestations, incidence and course in different cultures. A World Health Organization ten-country study.

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              Genetic and environmental influences on antisocial behavior: a meta-analysis of twin and adoption studies.

              A meta-analysis of 51 twin and adoption studies was conducted to estimate the magnitude of genetic and environmental influences on antisocial behavior. The best fitting model included moderate proportions of variance due to additive genetic influences (.32), nonadditive genetic influences (.09), shared environmental influences (.16), and nonshared environmental influences (.43). The magnitude of familial influences (i.e., both genetic and shared environmental influences) was lower in parent-offspring adoption studies than in both twin studies and sibling adoption studies. Operationalization, assessment method, zygosity determination method, and age were significant moderators of the magnitude of genetic and environmental influences on antisocial behavior, but there were no significant differences in the magnitude of genetic and environmental influences for males and females.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Curr Health Sci J
                Curr Health Sci J
                CHSJ
                Current Health Sciences Journal
                Medical University Publishing House Craiova
                2067-0656
                2069-4032
                Jul-Sep 2014
                04 August 2014
                : 40
                : 3
                : 177-183
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Medical Sociology Discipline, University of Medicine and Pharmacy of Craiova
                [2 ]Institute of Anthropology “Fr. I. Rainer”, Romanian Academy, Bucharest
                [3 ]Environmental Health Discipline, University of Medicine and Pharmacy of Craiova
                [4 ]Doctoral School, University of Medicine and Pharmacy of Craiova
                Author notes
                Corresponding Author: Mihail C. Pîrlog Medical Sociology DisciplineUniversity of Medicine and Pharmacy of Craiova 2-4 Petru Rares St.CraiovaRomania mihai.pirlog@ 123456gmail.com +377(0)44-111-926
                Article
                2014.3.04
                10.12865/CHSJ.40.03.04
                4340437
                fc1967e0-95ad-4a38-a59c-f801b0441112
                Copyright © 2014, Medical University Publishing House Craiova

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International Public License, which permits unrestricted use, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium, non-commercially, provided the new creations are licensed under identical terms as the original work and the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 3 April 2014
                : 10 June 2014
                Categories
                Original Paper

                personality traits,depression,antisocial behaviour
                personality traits, depression, antisocial behaviour

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