1.Analytical report of anxiety and depression of 130 first-line medical staff against COVID-19
Zhongwei GUO ; Yan WANG ; Ruichen ZHU ; Longxi LU ; Lijuan WANG ; Dianyu YU ; Weimin WANG ; Li CHEN ; Zhiqiang YANG ; Xiaocui XU ; Xiaozheng LIU
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2020;53(3):198-203
Objective:This study aims to understand the anxiety and depressive symptoms among the front-line medical staff against the COVID-19 and the related factors.Methods:130 front-line medical staff from Tianyou Hospital Affiliated to Wuhan University of science and technology were assessed by the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7), the Patient Health Questionnaires (PHQ-9) scale, and the simple self-designed questionnaire (including 8 factors related to anxiety and depressive symptoms). The prevalence of anxiety and depression of different participants according to demographic characteristics were compared with χ 2 test. The association between depression/anxiety and impact factors was analyzed using the Pearson correlation method. Results:48 people had anxiety and depressive symptoms, accounting for 36.9%(48/130) of the total sample. 41 people had anxiety symptoms, accounting for 31.8% (41/130) of the total sample. 36 people had depressive symptoms, accounting for 27.7% (36/130) of the total sample. Gender, age, marital status, education level, occupation, professional title, department, and duration of taking part in the fight against the COVID-19 had no correlation with the prevalence of anxiety. Gender, age, marital status, occupation, professional title, department, and duration of taking part in the fight against the COVID-19 had no correlation with the prevalence of depression, however education level had correlation with the prevalence of depression (χ2=5.220, P=0.034). Disease factor, work factor, time factor, and safety factor were all related to anxiety and depression. The proportion of management factors in the anxiety group was significantly higher than that in the group without anxiety (χ2=13.578, P<0.01). The proportion of other factors in the group without anxiety was significantly higher than that in the group with anxiety(χ2=6.229, P=0.012). The severity of anxiety and depression was positively correlated with disease factor, work factor, time factor, safety factor, and management factor, and negatively correlated with other factors ( r=-0.287, P<0.05). Conclusion:There were anxiety and depressive symptoms in front-line medical staff against COVID-19, which was significantly related to the characteristics of the COVID-19 epidemic. It is necessary to carry out psychological intervention for this population.
2.Analytical report of anxiety and depression of 130 first-line medical staff against COVID-19
Zhongwei GUO ; Yan WANG ; Ruichen ZHU ; Longxi LU ; Lijuan WANG ; Dianyu YU ; Weimin WANG ; Li CHEN ; Zhiqiang YANG ; Xiaocui XU ; Xiaozheng LIU
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2020;53(3):198-203
Objective:This study aims to understand the anxiety and depressive symptoms among the front-line medical staff against the COVID-19 and the related factors.Methods:130 front-line medical staff from Tianyou Hospital Affiliated to Wuhan University of science and technology were assessed by the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7), the Patient Health Questionnaires (PHQ-9) scale, and the simple self-designed questionnaire (including 8 factors related to anxiety and depressive symptoms). The prevalence of anxiety and depression of different participants according to demographic characteristics were compared with χ 2 test. The association between depression/anxiety and impact factors was analyzed using the Pearson correlation method. Results:48 people had anxiety and depressive symptoms, accounting for 36.9%(48/130) of the total sample. 41 people had anxiety symptoms, accounting for 31.8% (41/130) of the total sample. 36 people had depressive symptoms, accounting for 27.7% (36/130) of the total sample. Gender, age, marital status, education level, occupation, professional title, department, and duration of taking part in the fight against the COVID-19 had no correlation with the prevalence of anxiety. Gender, age, marital status, occupation, professional title, department, and duration of taking part in the fight against the COVID-19 had no correlation with the prevalence of depression, however education level had correlation with the prevalence of depression (χ2=5.220, P=0.034). Disease factor, work factor, time factor, and safety factor were all related to anxiety and depression. The proportion of management factors in the anxiety group was significantly higher than that in the group without anxiety (χ2=13.578, P<0.01). The proportion of other factors in the group without anxiety was significantly higher than that in the group with anxiety(χ2=6.229, P=0.012). The severity of anxiety and depression was positively correlated with disease factor, work factor, time factor, safety factor, and management factor, and negatively correlated with other factors ( r=-0.287, P<0.05). Conclusion:There were anxiety and depressive symptoms in front-line medical staff against COVID-19, which was significantly related to the characteristics of the COVID-19 epidemic. It is necessary to carry out psychological intervention for this population.
3.Research progress on uniparental disomy in cancer.
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2019;48(5):560-566
Uniparental disomy (UPD) refers to a chromosome defect that an individual's homologous chromosome or segments are inherited from one parent. UPD can cause either aberrant patterns of genomic imprinting or homozygosity of mutations, leading to various diseases, including cancer. The mechanisms of UPD formation are diverse but largely due to the incorrect chromosome separation during cell division. UPD does not alter the number of gene copies, thus is difficult to be detected by conventional cytogenetic techniques effectively. Assisted by the new techniques such as single nucleotide polymorphism arrays, more and more UPD-related cases have been reported recently. UPD events are non-randomly distributed across cancer types, which play important role in the occurrence, development and metastasis of cancer. Here we review the research progress on the formation mechanisms, detection methods, the involved chromosomal regions and genes, and clinical significance of UPD; and also discuss the directions for future studies in this field.
Genomic Imprinting
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Humans
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Neoplasms
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genetics
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Research
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trends
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Uniparental Disomy

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