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S342
25th European Congress of Psychiatry / European Psychiatry 41S (2017) S303–S364
admission. We developed the Italian AES through translation back-
translation and administered it to acutely hospitalized psychiatric
patients.
Objectives/Aims
To verify psychometric characteristics of the Ita-
lian AES. To Examine the AES factor structure.
Methods n
= 156 acutely hospitalized patients (48% women, 69%
voluntary) were recruited in two university hospitals in Rome
(Umberto I Policlinic, Sant’Andrea Hospital) and were administe-
red the Italian AES. We conducted a principal component analysis
(PCA) with equamax rotation.
Results
Socio-demographic and clinical characteristics of the
sample are reported in Table 1. The Italian AES had good inter-
nal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.90); Guttmann split-half
reliability coefficient was 0.90. AES total score significantly dif-
fered between voluntary and involuntary patients (5.08
±
4.1 vs.
8.1
±
4.9,
P
< 0.05). PCA disclosed a three-factor solution explaining
59.3 of the variance. Significant correlations emerged between AES
total score and clinical variables (Table 2). Pearson’s correlation
coefficient disclosed a significant correlation between perceived
coercion and psychiatric symptoms severity (BPRS total score).
Conclusions
The Italian version of AES and proposed new factor
structure proved reliable.
Table 1
Table 2
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.02.304EW0691
Sexual dysfunctions and treatment
compliance in individuals with
psychotic disorder
G. Unsal
1 ,∗
, S . Karaca
1 , N.Onan
2 , Y. Can Oz
1 , S. Aydın
3 ,H. Aydöner
4 , H.Gulec
5 , E. Ongun
1 , N.Eren
61
Marmara university, faculty of health sciences, psychiatric nursing
department, Istanbul, Turkey
2
Karabuk university school of health science, psychiatric nursing
department, Karabuk, Turkey
3
Erenköy psychiatric and neurological diseases training and research
hospital, training psychiatric nursing, Istanbul, Turkey
4
Erenköy psychiatric and neurological diseases training and research
hospital, management nursing, Istanbul, Turkey
5
Erenköy psychiatric and neurological diseases training and research
hospital, cominity mental health, Istanbul, Turkey
6
Istanbul university Istanbul, faculty of medicine, psychiatry,
Istanbul, Turkey
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
Sexual dysfunctions are more common in indivi-
duals with psychotic disorders and has a major impact on both
quality of life and compliance.
Objectives
The purpose of this study is to investigate whether
a relationship between sexual dysfunction and level of treatment
compliance in individuals with psychotic disorders.
Methods
The sample group of the study consisted of 173 in-
patients who agreed to participate were selected by random
samplingmethod. The permissionwas obtained from the hospital’s
ethics committee. In this study, to assess the sexual functionality
Golombok-Rust inventory of sexual satisfaction male and female
form and to assess the treatment compliance; medical treatment
compliance rate scale is used.
Results
When sexual problems and treatment compliance com-
pared to gender, subscales of satisfaction (
t
= 4,423,
P
= 0.000),
avoidance (
t
= 3.348,
P
= 0.001), touch (
t
= 2.165,
P
= 0.032) and ove-
rall total (
t
= 4.015,
P
= 0.000), although a statistically significant
difference was found, there were no differences in treatment
compliance. Aditionally, there is no relation between sexual pro-
blems and treatment compliance in men. It is also found that
there is a weak negative statistical relation amongst treatment
compliance and communication (
r
=
−
0.244,
P
= 0.027), avoidance
(
r
=
−
0.270,
P
= 0.014), anorgasmia (
r
=
−
0.253,
P
= 0.022) and overall
total (
r
=
−
0.249,
P
= 0.024) in women. According to these findings
while sexual problems increase, treatment compliance decreases.
Conclusions
The level of compliance to the treatment and sub-
scales of sexual problems; satisfaction, avoidance, and touch mean
scores differ fromeach other. Therewas aweak negative correlation
in between Women’s compliance and sexual problems.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.02.305EW0692
Post-traumatic stress disorder
screening among Syrian war victims
A. Kutluo˘glu
1, B.Ö. Ünsalver
2 ,∗
, A. Evrensel
11
Uskudar university, psychology, ˙Istanbul, Turkey
2
Uskudar university, medical documentation and secretariat,
˙Istanbul, Turkey
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
War in Syria and related refugee crisis has caught
worldwide attention for the past few years. The war is still conti-
nuing by the time of the writing of this abstract. War is one of
the reasons of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Syrian people
experience many traumatic events like witnessing death, torture
and rape.
Aims
The aim of this research is to screen for PTSD among Syrian
war victims.
Methods
A total of 150 (women = 52, men = 98) war victims bet-
ween18–65 years, inhabiting a Syrian campnear the Turkishborder
were screened with trauma response checklist for PTSD between
March 11 and April 11 2015.
Results
Significant amount of the interviewed participants were
found to show symptoms of PTSD. Seventy-six percent (
n
= 114)
of the participants had experienced a traumatic event. In total,
80.6% (
n
= 121) were experiencing distress. Seventy-eight percent
(
n
= 117) had avoidance. Eighty-four percent (
n
= 126) had negative