

24th European Congress of Psychiatry / European Psychiatry 33S (2016) S349–S805
S643
andwith a Computerized adaptive test formental health (CAT-MH).
Ameasure of frequency of discrepancies and an adjusted and unad-
justed comparison of results and demographic characteristics or
respondents were made for mental health, substance abuse or for
discrepancies in both categories.
Results
35.4% of cases were discrepant in mental health (AC-
OK-Mental Health vs. Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Generalized
Anxiety Disorder 7 or PTSD Checklist) and 14.2% in substance abuse
(AC-OK-substance abuse vs. drug abuse screening test or Alco-
hol use disorders identification test). When CAT-MH scale was
incorporated, discrepant results were found in 24.3% and 14.2%,
respectively. No association was found between substance abuse
discrepancies and patient demographics. In logit regressions being
from Barcelona, of younger age and male were significant predic-
tors of discrepancies.
Conclusions
Discrepancies were observed in the diagnostic pre-
diction, with differences detected for site and sociodemographic
characteristics of participants suggesting the importance of testing
screeners for site and population differences. Evidence for the mis-
classification of young males is discussed. Caution is warranted in
the implementation of screeners for at risk populations.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.1904EV920
Emotional regulation of mothers
bringing up children with burn injury
D. Dovbysh
Moscow state university, clinical psychology, Moscow, Russia
Introduction
Burn injuries occupy 11th place in the list of causes
of infant mortality and 5th in the list of the most common non-fatal
childhood injuries (WHO, 2014). The situation of getting a burn
injury, prolonged hospitalization, painful medical procedures, the
threat of a child’s life results in mother’s unusual and heavy emo-
tional experience. Adequate processing of this experiencewill be an
important factor in her future mental health. The study involved 35
mothers hospitalized with their children because of burn trauma.
Objectives
The aim of the study was to describe the character-
istics of emotional regulation and emotional response of mothers
bringing up children with burn injury.
Goals
(1) Describe the phenomen
ɑ
of emotional regulation,
found in mothers whose children have experienced a burn injury;
(2) determine factors that cause appearance of special emotional
phenomena among these mothers.
Methods
Clinical interview, Beck Depression Inventory, State
Trait Anxiety Inventor, Cognitive Emotion Regulation Question-
naire (CERQ).
Results
A significant numbers of mothers shows a high level of
anxiety and depression, which may be predictive of the develop-
ment of PTSD. The main cognitive strategies of emotion regulation
– self-blame and disasterization are maladaptive. An important
role played by unconscious strategy of emotion regulation, basi-
cally – situation selection and attentional deployment, as well as
the social regulation of emotions: the availability of a good support
from family members with adaptive strategies of emotional regu-
lation, adequate reactions of other mothers in hospital associated
with less emotional distress above mothers. There is no correlation
between the severity of burn injury and the emotional response of
the mother.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.1905EV921
Preventing attachment disorder (AD):
Attachment-focused dyadic group
therapy with borderline personality
disorder – and former AD – mothers
C. Compés , A. Iniesta , V. Pereira , C. Martínez , C. Justo ,
M.E. Herrero
∗
Proyecto Sirio, H. Menchu Herrero, Madrid, Spain
∗
Corresponding author.
Children with mothers with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)
have a high risk of developing attachment difficulties, and this risk
is like to grow when their mothers experienced severe neglect
and/or abuse in their childhood and early adolescence. Our objec-
tive was to clinically assess and lend support to a small group of
youngmothers at risk. We recruitedmothers aged 18-25, with 1-12
month-old children. None was married, had a stable residence and
sexual partner, and most were unemployed. All had early diagnosis
of AD, had at present BPD, and had received extended global and
residential psychiatric treatment in our Therapeutic Community
(SIRIO Project) along their adolescence. We conducted six consec-
utive 4 h weekly sessions, which were attended by mothers with
their babies in the familiar setting of the Community. The explicit
aim proposed to them was: “to come to be listened and accompa-
nied and to share their motherhood experiences” with members
of our multidisciplinary team (nurse, social worker, therapeutic
educator, psychologist and psychiatrist), whowere known to them.
Fears, somatizations, more-or-less concealed rejection of her baby,
apathy, sadness, suspiciousness, jealousy, relational difficulties
with their couples and family figures
. . .
were common findings that
were addressed in the sessions.
Main conclusion
Minor but positive changes occurred in the
dyadicmother-baby relationship. This was more patent concerning
breastfeeding, relationships with their couple and extended fam-
ily and pediatricians, and attitudes toward job seeking. In addition,
the frequent contact with these mothers elicited markedly positive
reactions in the 8-9 children/adolescents currently residing in our
community.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.1906EV922
Psychiatric re-hospitalization in
mental disorders
P. Hervías Higueras
1 ,∗
, L. Maroto Martín
1,
P. Jimenez de los Galanes Marchán
2, A. San Román Uría
3,
N. Nu˜nez Morales
41
Hospital Dr. R. Lafora, Psiquiatría, Madrid, Spain
2
Centro San Juan de Dios, Psiquiatría, Psiquiatría, Spain
3
Complejo Asistencial de Zamora. Sacyl., Psiquiatría, Zamora, Spain
4
Hospital Universitario de Álava, Psiquiatría, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
∗
Corresponding author.
Many patients with severe mental illness are admission in hos-
pital; but little is known about psychiatric re-hospitalization in
this population. Our objective was to identify motives of psychi-
atric re-hospitalization in Dr. Rodriguez Lafora hospital. It is an
observational, descriptive and retrospective study. We collected
information about patients aged 18 to 64 who were hospital-
ized during the month of January of 2015 in the acute psychiatric
hospitalization by Selene software. We reviewed psychiatric re-
hospitalization for 6 months later and the results were analyzed
by SPSS software. The percentage of inpatients with a diagnosis of