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Showing papers by "Kenneth M. Carpenter published in 2000"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between relative body weight and clinical depression, suicide ideation, and suicide attempts in an adult US general population sample was investigated, where the primary predictor was the body mass index (BMI) treated both continuously and categorically in logistic regression analyses.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study sought to test the relationships between relative body weight and clinical depression, suicide ideation, and suicide attempts in an adult US general population sample. METHODS: Respondents were 40,086 African American and White participants interviewed in a national survey. Outcome measures were past-year major depression, suicide ideation, and suicide attempts diagnosed according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition. The primary predictor was relative body weight, treated both continuously (i.e., body mass index [BMI]) and categorically in logistic regression analyses. Covariates included age, income and education, disease status, and drug and alcohol use. RESULTS: Relative body weight was associated with major depression, suicide attempts, and suicide ideation, although relationships were different for men and women. Among women, increased BMI was associated with both major depression and suicide ideation. Among men, lower BMI was associated with major depression, suicide attempts, and suicide ideation. There were no racial differences. CONCLUSIONS: Differences in BMI, or weight status, were associated with the probability of past-year major depression, suicide attempts, and suicide ideation. Longitudinal studies are needed to differentiate the causal pathways and mechanisms linking physical and psychiatric conditions.

960 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The reliability and validity of the Substance Dependence Severity Scale is investigated, consisting of substance-specific scales of both severity and frequency of DSM-IV criteria, and results for joint rating and internal consistency reliability were comparable to test-retest findings.

93 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: SDSS scores were significantly associated with time to first post treatment use of alcohol, cocaine and heroin, although the nature of the associations was complex.

81 citations