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Friend

A person with whom one has a bond of mutual affection, typically one exclusive of sexual or family relations.
Friends are individuals who provide companionship, support, and a shared sense of camaraderie.
They play a vital role in human social and emotional development, fostering personal growth, well-being, and a sense of belonging.
Friendships can be formed through a variety of contexts, such as school, work, shared interests, or common experiences.
Maintaining healthy friendships is an important aspect of overall health and quality of life.

Most cited protocols related to «Friend»

Demographic data included age (≥14 years), sex, marital and employment status, religion, migrant background, education and total income of household.
The German version of the PSS-10 (PSS-10; [10 (link)]) was used to measure the degree to which life in the past month has been experienced as unpredictable, uncontrollable and overwhelming (e.g. “In the last month, how often have you felt nervous and "stressed"?) on a 5-point response scale (0 = “never”, 1=”almost never”, 2=”sometimes”, 3=”fairly often”, 4=”very often”). The scale was forward translated from English to German and subsequently back translated by two interdependent bilingual speakers. After reversing the scores on the four positively stated items (Items 4, 5, 7, and 8), a PSS-10 total score was obtained by summing up all 10 items. Higher scores indicated a higher level of perceived stress. As the PSS is not a diagnostic instrument, there are no cut-off scores.
In addition to the PSS-10, socio-demographic questions and additional psychological variables were measured by validated and standardized self-report inventories. These included screening questionnaires for depression and generalized anxiety (PHQ-4), the short form of the General Procrastination Scale (GPS-K), the Copenhagen Burnout Inventory (CBI), and the Life Satisfaction Questionnaire (FLZ-M) during the interview.
The PHQ-4 [28 (link)] consists of two items reliably assessing the core symptoms of depressed mood and loss of interest plus two screening items of the short form of the GAD-7 (Generalized Anxiety Disorder [GAD]-7 Scale) : “Feeling nervous, anxious or on edge” and “not being able to stop or control worrying”. The frequency of occurrence in the past two weeks was rated from 0 =”not at all”, 1 =”several days”, 2 =”over half the days”, and 3 =”nearly every day”. Answers of the first two items were added into a total score (0 to 6); a score ≥ 3 has a good sensitivity (87 %) and specificity (78 %) for major depression. Cronbach alpha in the present study was = .83. A sum score ≥ 3 (range 0–6) of the other two items indicates generalized anxiety with good sensitivity (86 %) and specificity (83 %), performing well as a screening tool for all anxiety disorders [29 (link)]. The internal consistency in the current study was Cronbach alpha = .77.
Procrastination was assessed by the 9-item short form of the General Procrastination Scale (GPS-K; [30 (link)]). Participants rated how characteristic they considered each behaviour (e.g. “I delay the completion of certain things”) on a 4-point scale (1=”very uncharacteristic” to 4 = “very characteristic”). The scale showed good reliability and validity in a representative German community sample [30 (link)]. The internal consistency was Cronbach alpha = .92.
The Copenhagen Personal Burnout Inventory (CBI; [31 (link)]) is part of the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire assessing physical and mental exhaustion, independently from work. It assessed the frequency of six items („How often do you feel …“): “tired, physically, emotionally exhausted, unable to go on, weak and prone to illness.” The items were rated on a 5-point scale 1 =”never/almost never”, 2 = “rarely”, 3 = “occasionally”, 4 = “often” to 5 = “always” (COPSOQ; [32 (link)]). The scale was reliable (Cronbach alpha in the present study = .91).
The Questionnaire on Life Satisfaction FLZM [33 ] is a multi-dimensional self-report measure of individual life satisfaction covering eight relevant areas of life (friends, leisure time activities/hobbies, general health, income, work/career school, housing/living conditions, family life and partnership/sexuality). Additionally, a sum score of all dimensions was used as an index of global life satisfaction. Respondents rated the present satisfaction with these dimensions on a scale from 1 = “dissatisfied” to 5 = “very satisfied”. As the scale bases conceptually on different domains, the life satisfaction sum-scores indicated only sufficient internal consistency (Cronbach alpha = .70).
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Publication 2016
Anxiety Anxiety Disorders Burnout, Psychological Debility Depressive Symptoms Diagnosis Feelings Friend Households Hypersensitivity Major Depressive Disorder Migrants Nervousness Physical Examination Procrastination Satisfaction

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Publication 2020
Berries BLOOD Calcium Cannulation Cell Cycle Checkpoints Cells ChIP-Chip Collagenase Dental Anesthesia Digestion Extracellular Matrix Friend Hepatocyte Liberase Liver Mice, House Percoll Perfusion Veins, Portal Venae Cavae
Based on prior research on stress and health, our assessment of stressors utilized multiple stressors, adapted from some of the best available measures, in each of eight domains (acute life events, employment, financial, life discrimination, job discrimination, relationship, early life, and community stressors) that reflect key arenas in which people operate (e.g., home, job, neighborhood) and the major roles/statuses they assume (Lantz et al., 2005 (link); Pearlin 1989 (link)). Before fielding the CCAHS survey, a large pretest was conducted with various psychosocial instruments (including stressors) in suburban Chicago to develop shorter versions of existing scales that maintained good psychometric properties. Although some of the specific stress measures are short, our assessment reflects an effort to provide broad coverage of the critical stressors that appear to matter for health given that the failure to measure stressors comprehensively understates the association between stressors and health (Thoits 2010 (link)).
Appendix A describes the stressors, including internal reliability scores for the subscales within each type. Correlations among our summary stressors were low (ranging from −0.1 to 0.33). The acute life events domain consists of standard measures of traumatic experiences (lifetime) and acute life events (past five years). Employment stressors (Karasek and Theorell, 1990 ) comprise six measures: job dissatisfaction, job autonomy, job insecurity, work demands, work-life conflicts, and job hazards. Financial stressors contain two measures (Pearlin and Schooler, 1978 (link)): financial strain and an inventory of economic problems. Life discrimination combines measures of both racial and nonracial discrimination from an abbreviated inventory of major discriminatory events and a shortened version of the Everyday Discrimination Scale (Williams et al., 1997 (link)). Preliminary analyses revealed that both racial and nonracial discrimination were similarly related to our health outcomes. Job discrimination includes two scales (job harassment and unfair treatment at work) adapted from the Perceived Racism Scale (McNeilly et al., 1996 (link)) and the Los Angeles Study of Urban Inequality (Bobo and Suh, 2000 ). The relationship stressors domain consists of five measures adapted from the Americans’ Changing Lives study (House et al., 1994 (link)): marital stressors, marital abuse, child-related stressors, an inventory of problems experienced by one’s children, and friend criticism. Early life stressors assess adversities prior to age twelve, including abuse, educational neglect, and hunger. Finally, community stressors combine measures of community disorder, community violence, and personal victimization adapted from the PHDCN (Sampson et al., 1997 (link)).
Our eight final summary stressors were created by standardizing each stressor (into a z-score) and then summing all indicators of stressors composing a given domain, restandardizing the resulting summary measure to facilitate comparisons across domains, and dichotomously scoring the final variable, to contrast scores in the top quintile (“high stress”) versus all others. Focusing on the top quintile allows us to capture both severity and accumulation of stressors. We chose a top-quintile threshold based on prior research that indicates that the negative effects of stressors are most clearly evident among those experiencing chronic, cumulative, and severe stressors (Williams and Mohammed, 2009 (link)). Sensitivity analyses utilizing alternative thresholds (top tertile, top quartile) revealed similar results.
Publication 2011
Child Discrimination, Psychology Drug Abuse Friend Hunger Hypersensitivity Psychometrics Strains Victimization

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Publication 2013
Clip CTSB protein, human Friend Medical Devices
Health-related quality of life was measured by German age-specific self-report versions and parent-proxy versions of the KINDL-R questionnaire [27 ]. KINDL-R is a generic HRQoL measure that distinguishes six dimensions with reference to the last week: physical (e.g. “I felt ill”) and emotional well-being (e.g. “I had fun and laughed a lot”), self-esteem (e.g. “I was proud of myself”), family (e.g. “I got on well with my parents”), friends (e.g. “I got along well with my friends”), and school (e.g. “Doing the schoolwork was easy”). In the parent-versions analogous items were answered by proxy. Each dimension is measured by 4 items and transformed to a range from 0 (low) to 100 (high). A total score for overall HRQoL from 0 to 100 can also be computed. Parents and adolescents also filled in the 12-item disease-specific obesity module of KINDL-R. To reduce the burden on younger children, for children aged 8-11 years the questionnaire was shortened, and therefore did not include the obesity module.
The KINDL-R was chosen because of its sensitivity to change [8 (link),27 ] and because the disease-specific module as well as German norms are available [28 (link)]. It showed acceptable reliability and validity in different applications [12 ,28 (link),29 (link)]. Cronbach’s alphas in this study were α > 0.80 for the self-reported and parent-reported total scores as well as weight-specific HRQoL scores. Cronbach’s alphas for the generic HRQoL subscales varied from α = 0.54 to 0.80 with the lowest reliability for the friends subscales and values α < 0.70 for self- and proxy-reported self-esteem and school as well as parent-reported emotional well-being and self-reported physical well-being.
HRQoL measures were z-standardized using German norms from a recent representative sample [28 (link)] to allow for easier interpretation of the scores relative to the population and to compensate for age-typical changes in HRQoL. Since population norms for the child self-report version of the KINDL-R are only available from 11 years upwards, for the younger children norms of an 8-12 year-old sample from the KINDL-R manual [27 ] were applied. Because HRQoL was measured every six months over a period of 1.5 years, some children shifted reference category between two measurement points, which may have resulted in discontinuities or leaps in the scores. Moreover, there are no norms available for the disease-specific obesity module. To also allow interpretation of absolute changes in HRQoL, KINDL-R original 0-100 scores were, therefore, analyzed in separate models.
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Publication 2013
Adolescent Child Emotions Feelings Friend Generic Drugs Hypersensitivity Obesity Parent Physical Examination Self Esteem

Most recents protocols related to «Friend»

Workplace isolation was measured with the ten-item scale developed by Marshall et al60 (link) Sample items are “I have friends available to me at work”, “I have one or more co-workers available who I talk to about day-to-day problems at work”, “I am well integrated with the department/company where I work”, “Upper management knows about my achievements” (Cronbach’s α=0.944).
Publication 2023
Friend isolation Speech Workers
Demographic characteristics included age at treatment entry, gender, education level (low: 10 years primary and secondary education or less, or medium/high: high school/vocational school or more) and housing situation (living in owned home/rented housing, or in an unstable living arrangement, including living with family or friends).
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Publication 2023
Friend Gender
All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki Declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. The study was approved by the Human Research Ethics Committee of the Affiliated Hospital of Nantong University (No.201,915). All participants provided written informed consent before participating in the study. Inclusion criteria for enrollment of patients in the study were: [1 (link)] age 18 to 60 years old; [2 (link)] diagnosis of cancer; [3 (link)] completed the treatment plan formulated by the physician based on the condition, and the results of the tumor imaging and/or markers showed that only regular monitoring is required; [4 (link)] working before treatment and had returned to work by the start of the study; [5 (link)] understand their own conditions; The exclusion criteria were: [1 (link)] other severe systemic complications and [2 (link)] diagnosis of stage IV cancer. The sample size is based on data saturation. From June 2019 to January 2020, with the support of the Nantong Cancer Friends Association, the researchers visited cancer patients’ group exercise sites (where patients usually work out in pairs) and the Cancer Friends Association’s science halls (where patients usually share their recovery experiences with each other) in the field. Then, using purposive sampling, the researcher recruited the first three patients who were considered to be informative. After completing interviews with these three patients, the researcher used snowball sampling to obtain contact information for additional patients and to schedule appointments with them for interviews. Data saturation was achieved when interviews with 25 patients were finished. To build the theory and refine it, the researchers recruited 5 patients with some special characteristics and experiences by theoretical sampling. Finally, 30 patients (numbered N1 to N30 according to the interview order) participated in the study. (Table 1).

Basic information of interviewees

Serial numberAgeGenderCancer siteCancer stagingTreatment modeWork before illnessCurrent JobTime to end treatment (months)
N156WomanBreastIIIR、C、TTeacherTeacher119
N242ManLungIIIR、C、TCivil servantsCivil servants26
N349WomanBreastIIOp、C、RRear-serviceLibrarian40
N446WomanThyroidIIIOpWorkerRear-service190
N550WomanOvaryIIIOp、CCivil servantsCivil servants41
N653ManNasopharynxIIOp、C、RSelf-employedEngineering contractor25
N758ManLungIIIOp、CCookRetailer61
N853ManRectumIIIOp、C、RRetailerRetailer74
N959ManRectumIIOp、CCivil servantsCivil servants59
N1047WomanBreastIIIOp、C、RCivil servantsCivil servants63
N1157ManColonIIOp、CWorkerCemetery keeper97
N1234WomanBreastIIOp、CCompany staffCompany staff43
N1334WomanBreastIIIOp、CCivil servantsCivil servants49
N1443WomanBreastIOp、CCompany staffInsurance salesman72
N1555ManLiverIIIC、OpStreet clerkStreet clerk35
N1659ManStomachIIOp、CTeacherVolunteer61
N1753WomanBreastIIIOp、C、REnterprise leadersEnterprise leaders48
N1849WomanLungIIIOp、C、RSelf-employedSelf-employed73
N1950WomanCervixIIOpICU nurseOrthopedic nurse84
N2041WomanSkinIIOpNurseNurse181
N2127WomanGulletIIOpDoctorDoctor61
N2240WomanBreastIIR、E、OpHead nurseNurse60
N2335ManRectumIIIOp、C、RDoctorDoctor72
N2436WomanStomachIIIOpDoctorResearcher36
N2552WomanColonIIIOp、CDoctorResearcher34
N2646ManThyroidIIOpTeacherTeacher33
N2745WomanCartilageIIOp、CTeacherTeacher71
N2840ManGulletIOpTeacherTeacher47
N2949WomanRectumIIIOp、CTeacherTeacher123
N3055ManLungIIOp、C、REnterprise leadersEnterprise leaders95

注: Note: Op: operation, C: chemotherapy, R: radiotherapy, T: targeted therapy, E: endocrine therapy

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Publication 2023
Diagnosis Ethics Committees, Research Friend Homo sapiens Malignant Neoplasms Neoplasms Outpatients Patients Pharmacotherapy Physicians Radiotherapy Staging, Cancer System, Endocrine Therapeutics
The mediating variable in this study was social participation. Participants were asked in the questionnaire whether they had engaged in 10 activities in the past month. Participants were considered to be socially engaged if they participated in any of the activities. We also measured the levels of social participation. Participants earn one point for engaging in an activity. Points were accumulated, and the total score ranged from 0 to 10 points. The higher the score, the higher the levels of social participation.
We also tried to explore which type or types of social participation have a mediating role. Based on the experience of previous papers [29 ], we categorized the 10 activities mentioned in the questionnaire into voluntary activities, recreational activities, cultural activities, and other activities. Voluntary activities included: providing assistance to family, friends or neighbors who do not live with participants; doing volunteer or charitable work; caring for a sick or disabled adult who does not live with participants. Recreational activities included: Interacting with friends; playing Mahjong, chess, cards, or going to community clubs; going to sports, social or other types of clubs. Cultural activities included: participating in a community-related organization; participating in an educational or training course. Other activities contained: stock investment; and other activities. Participants were considered to have taken part in the type if they engaged in any of the activities in that type. Participants earn one point for engaging in an activity. Voluntary activities, recreational activities, cultural activities and other activities were respectively scored cumulatively to measure the participation levels in these four types of activities.
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Publication 2023
Adult Friend Voluntary Workers
Repeated experiences of domestic abuse were apparent in the biographies of almost all women though it was not always perceived as such. Relationships were often idealised in the first few months then quickly descended into abuse:

You think you find the right person, you think they’re so nice and everything’s perfect for the first 6 to 12 months and then after 12 months it just goes pfffft. Like woah. And by the time that’s happened you’re just too far involved. And then you end up the one that’s out on the street (Rosa).

One of the most harmful aspects of domestic abuse is detachment from social networks, thus further deepening exclusion. Here, Sally describes being isolated her from family and friends and eventually her children: Nobody knew what was going on. So I eventually left, and unknown to me … I was made out to be the bad person, like a complete weirdo (Sally).
Several women described long term physical and mental health impact resulting from injuries caused by their partner. Dee was using heroin to manage chronic pain caused by physical injuries as well as trauma from abuse: “I was married once. And I’d never do it again. He was a woman batterer. Steel plate in my head. He was so violent” (Dee).
Other women described how their partner provided resources but also perpetuated further trauma:

he used to say “you’ve got nobody. You’ll never go hungry if you stay with me...” And it’s just hard like. I struggle every day. So it’s like I’m either, it’s easier for food, I’d get lifts if I needed to go to places or I’m not being with that person and struggle. Erm, but not arguing and not fighting. It’s just hard (Sienna).

Michelle describes how her relationship commands a lot of her attention and energy, with expressions of affection interspersed with mental turmoil and uncertainty:

Me partner who lives with me, [name], he’s really well known here. He got kicked out of a hostel a while ago and that’s how I met him... he’s playing us [me] along saying he loves me and wants to be with me, and it’s ripping me to bits, my heads battered. … he doesn’t have a good word for us. Constantly puts us down. I don’t know. But he walked away a couple of month ago when he got paid, spent £750 left me with not a penny and went away for a week and come back when he had nothing. I knew then, he didn’t love me. No-one who loved someone would do that to them. You know. I couldn’t see the lad on the streets, I just couldn’t (Michelle).

Amongst the women who had exited homelessness, many chose to live alone: “I mean I just don’t intend getting into a relationship to discover how to have one. I’m done. I’ve had enough bad ones. I’ve loved, and I’ve been loved back a couple of times. But it hurts even harder when they’re the ones that try to kill you” (Tracy).
Most of the women who had successfully exited homelessness actively avoided situations where they might meet a new partner and expressed no desire for intimate relationships. This perhaps relates to not only their overwhelmingly bad experiences of relationships, but provides context to their perception of relationships primarily driven by necessity to obtain shelter, protection and resources.
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Publication 2023
Attention Child Chronic Pain Drug Abuse ErbB Receptors Food Friend Head Heroin Hunger Injuries Mental Health Physical Examination Rosa Steel Woman Wounds Wounds and Injuries

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More about "Friend"

Companion, Buddy, Pal, Confidant, Amigo, Comrade, Chum, BFF, Bestie.
Friendship is a close, interpersonal bond between two or more people that is characterized by mutual affection, trust, and support.
It plays a vital role in human social and emotional development, fostering personal growth, well-being, and a sense of belonging.
Friendships can be formed through a variety of contexts, such as school, work, shared interests, or common experiences.
Maintaining healthy friendships is an important aspect of overall health and quality of life.
Friendships can provide companionship, emotional support, and a shared sense of camaraderie.
They offer a safe space for individuals to be themselves, express their thoughts and feelings, and seek advice or guidance.
Strong friendships have been linked to improved mental health, reduced stress and anxiety, and a greater sense of life satisfaction.
In the realm of statistical software, tools like SAS 9.4, Stata 15, Stata 12.0, SPSS version 23, SPSS Statistics, and Stata version 14 can be utilized to analyze data related to friendship, social connections, and their impact on well-being.
Researchers may use these tools to study the dynamics of friendship, the factors that contribute to the formation and maintenance of friendships, and the connection between friendship and various aspects of physical and mental health.