Gabrielle K. Welle-Strand
University of Oslo
17 Papers
48 Citations
Gabrielle K. Welle-Strand is an academic researcher from University of Oslo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Methadone. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 16 publications. Previous affiliations of Gabrielle K. Welle-Strand include Oslo University Hospital.
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Papers
Opioid Maintenance Treatment during Pregnancy: Occurrence and Severity of Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome
TL;DR: Maternal methadone/buprenorphine dose predicted neither the occurrence nor the need for NAS treatment for the infant, as well as the mean number of cigarettes consumed correlated significantly with NAS treatment duration for the methad one group.
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A 2-year prospective study of psychological distress among a national cohort of pregnant women in opioid maintenance treatment and their partners
Ingunn Olea Lund,Svetlana Skurtveit,Monica Sarfi,Brittelise Bakstad,Gabrielle K. Welle-Strand,Edle Ravndal +5 more
TL;DR: The overall results indicate a reduction in psychological distress for both OMT women and their male partners during the first period after birth, probably affecting parenting abilities and treatment outcome in a positive way.
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Substance use during and after pregnancy among a national cohort of pregnant women in opioid maintenance treatment and their partners
Ingunn Olea Lund,Svetlana Skurtveit,Monica Sarfi,Brittelise Bakstad,Gabrielle K. Welle-Strand,Edle Ravndal +5 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that a majority of OMT mothers in Norway and their partners are able to abstain from most illegal substances 1 year after pregnancy, but the tendency of problem drinking among the women is a concern.
•Journal Article
Substance misuse education for physicians: Why older people are important
Cornelis A. J. De Jong,Christine Goodair,Ilana Crome,Darius Jokubonis,Nady el-Guebaly,Geert Dom,Arnt F. A. Schellekens,Barbara Broers,Emilis Subata,Gabrielle K. Welle-Strand,Lonneke Luycks,Michel Wolters,Tamara Schoof +12 more
TL;DR: The need for training and education for undergraduate medical students on substance-related disorders and initiatives undertaken in the United Kingdom, Netherlands, United States, and Norway to develop the skills, knowledge, and attitudes needed by future doctors to treat patients adequately are described.
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Living a normal life? Follow-up study of women who had been in opioid maintenance treatment during pregnancy
Gabrielle K. Welle-Strand,Gabrielle K. Welle-Strand,Svetlana Skurtveit,Svetlana Skurtveit,Kristine Fiksdal Abel,Fatemeh Chalabianloo,Fatemeh Chalabianloo,Monica Sarfi,Monica Sarfi +8 more
TL;DR: This follow-up study describes a predominantly well rehabilitated cohort of women who had given birth while in OMT ten years earlier, with the women having experienced turning points when starting OMT or becoming mothers.
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