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1 posture/facial expression and derealization/depersonalization.
2 ver or with nonpsychotic experiences such as depersonalization.
3 ems assessing flashbacks, derealization, and depersonalization.
4 dissociation, pathological dissociation, and depersonalization.
5 none emerged as specifically related to the depersonalization.
6 ly symptoms of emotional exhaustion (28%) or depersonalization (28%) or reported that their personal-
7 to 20.0; Delta = -6.8; 95% CI, -4.8 to -8.8; depersonalization, 8.4 to 5.9; Delta = -2.5; 95% CI, -1.
8 associated with having less exhaustion, less depersonalization, a greater sense of personal achieveme
9 p and sigh) was significantly shorter in the depersonalization and anxiety groups (1.6 seconds) than
11 rofessional, emotional exhaustion, cynicism, depersonalization and internship and residency, housesta
14 components of burnout-emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and low personal accomplishment-were
15 3 domains of burnout (emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal accomplishment) and symp
17 th the phenomenological conceptualization of depersonalization as a dissociation of perceptions as we
18 l, social capital, emotional exhaustion, and depersonalization as important predictors of nurse repor
19 ality disorder (BPD), as increased levels of depersonalization, body image disturbances, and reduced
20 sonalization disorder and of scores denoting depersonalization but not of general dissociation scores
21 king, overvalued ideas, recurrent illusions, depersonalization, derealization, undue suspiciousness,
22 hors' hypothesis, no evidence was found that depersonalization/derealization during panic attacks was
23 gnosis of panic disorder, those experiencing depersonalization/derealization during panic attacks wou
24 nts with (N=34) and without (N=40) prominent depersonalization/derealization during panic attacks.
25 peech, anxiety, other physical symptoms, and depersonalization/derealization) are not present in the
26 as significantly prolonged in the group with depersonalization disorder (3.01 seconds compared with 2
27 s was significantly reduced in patients with depersonalization disorder (magnitude of 0.017 micro sie
28 ctance responses of 15 patients with chronic depersonalization disorder according to DSM-IV, 15 contr
29 Fifty-three subjects with DSM-IV-defined depersonalization disorder and 22 healthy comparison sub
31 significant predictor both of a diagnosis of depersonalization disorder and of scores denoting depers
32 was highly predictive of both a diagnosis of depersonalization disorder and of scores denoting dissoc
33 This study supports the conceptualization of depersonalization disorder as a distinct disorder with a
35 t in other dissociative disorders, DSM-III-R depersonalization disorder has not been thoroughly inves
38 gh not highly traumatized, the subjects with depersonalization disorder reported significantly more c
41 pared to the healthy subjects, subjects with depersonalization disorder showed significantly lower me
42 nship may exist between childhood trauma and depersonalization disorder that merits further investiga
45 etic resonance images of eight subjects with depersonalization disorder were compared to those of 24
46 rsonalization scores among the subjects with depersonalization disorder were significantly positively
54 similar precipitants and symptoms, including depersonalization, dissociative hallucinations, and inte
55 urned out on the emotional exhaustion and/or depersonalization domain of Maslach Burnout Inventory (A
57 wing 3 months (P=.001, P<.001, and P=.02 for depersonalization, emotional exhaustion, and lower perso
58 3 months, and the Maslach Burnout Inventory (depersonalization, emotional exhaustion, and personal ac
62 ociated with burnout (ORs per 1-unit change: depersonalization OR, 1.09; 95% CI, 1.05-1.12; P < .001;
66 roviding futile care rarely also had a lower depersonalization scores; job satisfaction was independe
67 ut on the "exhaustion" subscale, 44% on the "depersonalization" subscale, and 26% on the "achievement
68 ut is a syndrome of emotional exhaustion and depersonalization that leads to decreased effectiveness
69 ancholic symptoms, retardation, suicidality, depersonalization, typical diurnal variation (mornings w
70 evaluated separately, only a high score for depersonalization was associated with self-reported subo
71 and high levels of emotional exhaustion and depersonalization were reported by 8343 of 16,192 (51.5%
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