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25th European Congress of Psychiatry / European Psychiatry 41S (2017) S645–S709
S691
EV0880
Relationship between the risk of
relapse and via of administration of
treatment antipsychotic
L.F. Laura
1 ,∗
, A. González Suárez
2, A. Alonso Huerta
2,
S. Ocio León
2, M. Gómez Simon
2, M.J. Hernández González
2,
O. Walid Muquebil Ali Al Shaban Rodriguez
3,
M.P. Estebanez Suarez
2, J. Lopéz Fernandez
21
Hospital VItal Alvarez Buylla, Unidad de Hospitalización
psiquiátrica, P, Spain
2
CSM Mieres, Adults, MIeres, Spain
3
CSM Luarca, Adults, Luarca, Spain
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
He income hospital represents a rupture in the con-
tinuity of life of the patient. It would be advisable to determine
those variables that help to reduce them. Some studies are running
to a paper protector of the treatment injection in the relapses and
number of hospitalizations.
Objectives
Compare the risk of decompensation, measured in
terms of income hospital or consultations to emergency, between
patients to treatment injection versus oral.
Aims/methods
He is a descriptive study which assesses the
number of hospital admissions and consultations to emergency
departments in the period of one year (between September 2015
and September 2016) of a sample of 28 patients registered as TMS
and the results are compared with the type used for antipsicotivo
treatment via.
Results
We start from a sample of 28 patients, of which 17 are
still a treatment intramuscular and 11 have all your guideline pre-
scribed in oral. Patients injection treatment group needed to be
admitted to a psychiatric inpatient unit at least on one occasionin
the past year, 7 patients and 11 patients to oral treatment, only
2 patients wereadmitted and other 2 came once to your referral
hospital emergency department.
Conclusions
Of the 17 patients to treatment with injectable ingre-
sason or needed care urgently a 41.18%, facing the 36.36% of those
patients to treatment by via oral. These results do not have a protec-
tive role of injectable treatment compared with decompensation
measures according to need hospitalization or urgent attention.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1210EV0881
Academic burnout and personality
traits in Korean medical students
H. Chae
1, S.J. Lee
2 ,∗
1
Pusan National University, School of Korean Medicine, Yangsan,
Republic of Korea
2
Kyungil University, Department of Psychotherapy, Gyeongsan-si,
Republic of Korea
∗
Corresponding author.
Objectives
Personality was shown to play an important role for
well being under academic stress. The purpose of the present study
was to evaluate how temperament and character traits predict aca-
demic burnout in Korean medical students.
Methods
One hundred and seventy-eight Korean medical stu-
dents completed the Cloninger’s temperament and character
inventory (TCI) at the beginning of semester and Maslach burnout
inventory-student survey (MBI-SS) was also measured around the
final examwhen academic stress and burnout is at the highest. The
correlation between TCI and MBI-SS was examined and stepwise
regression analysis was performed to measure how well personal-
ity traits predict academic burnout level.
Results
The MBI-SS total burnout score was correlated positively
with harm-avoidance (r = 0.247,
P <
0.05) and negatively with self-
directedness (
r
= -0.296,
P <
0.001) and Cooperativeness (
r
= -0.169,
P <
0.05) scores. The regression analysis showed that the harm-
avoidance ( = 0.269,
P <
0.001) accounted for exhaustion score and
the self-directedness explained the Total burnout score ( = -0.296,
P <
0.001) and Inefficacy score ( = -0.284,
P <
0.001). The Cynicism
score was accounted for high Novelty-Seeking ( = 0.150,
P <
0.05)
and low Cooperativeness ( = -0.182,
P <
0.05).
Conclusion
This study showed that the Cloninger’s temperament
and character might explain the burnout level from the stress-
ful medical education. The temperament of novelty-seeking and
harm-avoidance could provide the susceptibility to the academic
burnout and the character of self-directedness and cooperative-
ness might determine the resilience to the negative influence of
academic stress.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1211EV0882
Community behavioral health care
linkages for youth
C. Leukefeld
1 ,∗
, M. Tilson
2, E. McNees-Winston
2, R. Seaver
2,
M. Dickson
21
University of Kentucky, Behavioral Science, Lexington, USA
2
University of Kentucky, Center on Drug and Alcohol Research,
Lexington, USA
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction and objective
behavioral health (BH) agencies have
care linkages for youth including juvenile justice (JJ). However,
there are few studies on youth care linkages. This study focuses
on six sites with the objective of examining BH and JJ staff percep-
tions about information exchange on screening, assessment and
treatment.
Methods
We developed an index to quantify BH and JJ staff per-
ceptions of information exchange on youth screening, assessment
and treatment. After Informed Consent, staff rated past year inter-
actions fromagree to disagree on a 7-point Likert scale. Chi-squares
and T-tests were used.
Results
All 64 staff consented 17 (26.5%) BH staff and 47 (73.5%)
JJ staff. Significant differences included BH staff were more likely to
be licensed (
P
< .001) and had a masters degree or higher (
P
= < .01).
Professional experience ranged from 9.8 to 15.8 years. However,
there were no statistically significant differences. BH staff was
somewhat higher from 5.7 for “shared assessment results” to 6.8
for “been easy to talk to” while JJ staff were from 5.1 for “shared
screening results” to 6.1 for “treated youth with respect”.
Conclusions
This pilot study found high rates of staffs agree-
ment including ease of talking and listening, sharing screenings
and assessments information, and helping begin, continue, and
complete treatment. This high agreement was not expected with
confidentiality restrictions and traditions. Future studies should
target care linkages including letters of agreement, case confer-
ences, and guidelines.
The study is supported by the National Institutes of Health.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1212EV0883
The reality of domestic violence in the
US
J. Gonc¸ alves
1, C. Lima
2 ,∗
1
Psychology, USA
2
Desenvolvimento Pessoal e Bem, Estar, Unipessoal, Lda, Psicologia,
Porto, Portugal
∗
Corresponding author.