https://www.selleckchem.com/products/a-196.html No abstract available.Studying suicide notes, - last personal documents before a suicide act - as well as investigation of media and internet texts on self-destruction (including contents, "messages") can have a great significance. Individual and cultural valuations appear in the way farewell notes, media letters and other personal documents present self-destruction. These "messages", ideas about life, death and suicide are deeply embedded within the public context of culture too. In the present content analysis formal, syntactic and grammatical characteristic features, as well as speech patterns and verbal expressions of selected notes, samples have been investigated. Suicidal - fatal (n=49) and nonfatal group (n=31) of farewell letters were compared with the sample of a control group (n=33). Results have been discussed, interpreted and concluded. These appear to be useful and important not only in understanding of suicidal phenomenon and its psychodynamic background in clinical work or in suicide hotlines, but also in prevention, social-, and clinical intervention of self-destruction. The investigation of these new data may provide a much broader perspective in understanding suicidal process. The aim of our study is to provide a theoretical and practical framework to the better under standing of insomnia and its relationship with perceived stress, burnout, cognitive restructuring and gender. The prior findings supported the integration of these constructs into a comprehensive model that helps us identify their complex system. In our cross-sectional self-report study, 216 responders participated. The gender ratio was 23.6% (N=51) to 76.4% (N=165) with female dominance. The mean age was 22.5 years (MAge=22.51; SDAge=4.38) between 18 and 54. The applied pathway analysis supported the assumption that insomnia has a mediating role between perceived stress and burnout syndrome with the relevant effects of gender and cognit