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C. Herrmann

Researcher at University of Göttingen

Publications -  15
Citations -  3536

C. Herrmann is an academic researcher from University of Göttingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 15 publications receiving 3383 citations.

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International experiences with the hospital anxiety and depression scale- a review of validation data and clinical results

TL;DR: The HADS gives clinically meaningful results as a psychological screening tool, in clinical group comparisons and in correlational studies with several aspects of disease and quality of life.
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Effects of anxiety and depression on 5-year mortality in 5057 patients referred for exercise testing

TL;DR: Anxiety and depression scores have different predictive effects on mortality in patients referred for exercise testing, independent of a highly effective physical risk index, suggesting that psychological screening of cardiology patients might improve risk stratification.
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Diagnostic groups and depressed mood as predictors of 22-month mortality in medical inpatients.

TL;DR: Depressed mood is an independent risk factor for all-cause mortality in medical inpatients and can be identified by means of patients' self ratings of depression, which does not require formal psychiatric diagnoses.
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Standardized assessment of psychological well-being and quality-of-life in patients with implanted defibrillators.

TL;DR: It is concluded that ICD patients have an acceptable mean quality‐of‐life and low mean anxiety, however, a relevant subgroup of about 15%, especially patients with frequent shocks, experience psychological distress and reduced quality of life and should receive special care.
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Frequency of complications of cardiopulmonary resuscitation after thrombolysis during acute myocardial infarction.

TL;DR: No case of bleeding was directly related to cardiocompression despite the often traumatic procedure with rib fractures verified in 17 patients, and 14 patients survived (in-hospital mortality 36%).