6 results
Search Results
2. Interrelationships between physical multimorbidity, depressive symptoms and cognitive function among older adults in China, India and Indonesia: A four-way decomposition analysis.
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Anindya, Kanya, Zhao, Yang, Hoang, Thanh, Lee, John Tayu, Juvekar, Sanjay, Krishnan, Anand, Mbuma, Vanessa, Sharma, Tarishi, and Ng, Nawi
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CROSS-sectional method , *COGNITION in old age , *MENTAL health , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DISEASES , *LONGITUDINAL method , *AGING , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
• Reducing modifiable risk factors could prevent the onset of cognitive decline. • Physical multimorbidity–cognitive function association was mediated by depression. • Routine screening for depression in multimorbidity patient may delay dementia onset. This paper explores the role of depressive symptoms (mediator/moderator) in the association between physical multimorbidity (exposure) and cognitive function (outcome) among older adults in the three most populous middle-income countries. This study used cross-sectional data from China (2015 China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study), India (2017/2018 Longitudinal Ageing Study in India), and Indonesia (2014/2015 Indonesian Family Life Survey), with a total sample of 73,199 respondents aged ≥ 45 years. Three domains of cognitive tests were harmonised across surveys, including time orientation, word recall, and numeracy. The four-way decomposition analysis assessed the mediation and interaction effects between exposure, mediator/moderator, and outcome, adjusted for covariates. The mean age of the respondents (in years) was slightly younger in Indonesia (56.0, SD = 8.8) than in China (59.5, SD = 9.3) and India (60.0, SD = 10.5). The proportion of male respondents was 49.3 % in China, 47.3 % in India, and 47.5 % in Indonesia. Respondents in China had the highest mean cognitive function z scores (54.7, SD = 19.9), followed by India (51.1, SD = 20.0) and Indonesia (51.0, SD = 18.4). Physical multimorbidity was associated with lower cognitive function in China and India (p < 0.0001), with 48.4 % and 40.0 % of the association explained by the mediating effect of depressive symptoms ('overall proportion due to mediation'). The association was not found in Indonesia. Cognitive functions were lower among individuals with physical multimorbidity, and depressive symptoms mainly explained the association. Addressing depressive symptoms among persons with physical multimorbidity is likely to have not only an impact on their mental health but could prevent cognitive decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. The Elephant Vanishes: Impact of human–elephant conflict on people's wellbeing
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Jadhav, Sushrut and Barua, Maan
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ANIMAL attacks , *ELEPHANT behavior , *WELL-being , *HUMAN ecology , *MENTAL health , *ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis - Abstract
Abstract: Human-wildlife conflicts impact upon the wellbeing of marginalised people, worldwide. Although tangible losses from such conflicts are well documented, hidden health consequences remain under-researched. Based on preliminary clinical ethnographic inquiries and sustained fieldwork in Assam, India, this paper documents mental health antecedents and consequences including severe untreated psychiatric morbidity and substance abuse. The case studies presented make visible the hidden mental health dimensions of human–elephant conflict. The paper illustrates how health impacts of conflicts penetrate far deeper than immediate physical threat from elephants, worsens pre-existing mental illness of marginalised people, and leads to newer psychiatric and social pathologies. These conflicts are enacted and perpetuated in institutional spaces of inequality. The authors argue that both wildlife conservation and community mental health disciplines would be enhanced by coordinated intervention. The paper concludes by generating questions that are fundamental for a new interdisciplinary paradigm that bridges ecology and the clinic. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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4. Conducting examinations in India: Emergency, contention and challenges of students amidst covid-19 pandemic.
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Roy, Bulton and Roy, Anamika
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ACADEMIC achievement evaluation , *AUTHORITY , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *HEALTH status indicators , *MENTAL health , *NEGOTIATION , *SAFETY , *STUDENTS , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
• Exams emergency amidst covid-19 pandemic has created a contention among government, exam authorities and students in India. • The paper presents challenges and problems faced by students while preparing exams and appearing in the exam centres. • The paper finds no concrete attempt of negotiation from government to deal student's concern. • Safety measures taken by government and exam authorities are inadequate. The paper examines 'exam emergency' in India through an engaging dialogue of importance, dissension, and contention over conducting all the annual entrance examinations amidst this covid-19 pandemic that have been postponed earlier due to nationwide lockdown. Drawing on the pre-exam living experiences, this paper presents the challenges and problems of student communities and the insecurities of their mental and physical health risks while they are preparing and appearing for their scheduled entrance tests. The paper finds no concrete attempt of negotiations from the authorities to channel majoritarian concerns. The lack of preparation from government and exam authorities to facilitate students in this crisis period has finally made many to fail writing their exam papers and left them behind with unfulfilled dreams. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. Design process and protocol description for a multi-problem mental health intervention within a stepped care approach for adolescents in India.
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Chorpita, Bruce F., Daleiden, Eric L., Malik, Kanika, Gellatly, Resham, Boustani, Maya M., Michelson, Daniel, Knudsen, Kendra, Mathur, Sonal, and Patel, Vikram H.
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MENTAL health , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
This paper documents the collaborative design of a mental health intervention for adolescents in India with anxiety, depression, or anger-related concerns. The process was characterized by three phases of formative activities: (1) an intensive review of the service context, (2) selection of an overall design strategy (e.g., whether to choose existing evidence-based treatments or build new treatments in context), and (3) a period of prototyping, testing, and refining. Each phase resulted in specific outputs, which were, respectively, (1) a detailed articulation of values and preferences (setting expectations for what the ideal protocol should be), (2) a set of build parameters representing a blueprint that managed strategic compromises for this context, and (3) a working protocol. We outline the steps of this design process, summarize data from an open-trial clinical case series, and illustrate the resulting working protocol, which will be tested in a future larger trial. We conclude with insights and observations likely to be relevant to protocol design activity in a variety of contexts, most particularly those in low-and-middle-income countries such as India. • Intervention design for Adolescents in India benefitted from a detailed review of context. • Strategy choices included choosing or adapting existing available treatments, versus building a new one in context. • Planning and prototyping yielded a modular intervention for multiple problems suitable for a large research trial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Development of a transdiagnostic, low-intensity, psychological intervention for common adolescent mental health problems in Indian secondary schools.
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Michelson, Daniel, Malik, Kanika, Krishna, Madhuri, Sharma, Rhea, Mathur, Sonal, Bhat, Bhargav, Parikh, Rachana, Roy, Kallol, Joshi, Akankasha, Sahu, Rooplata, Chilhate, Bhagwant, Boustani, Maya, Cuijpers, Pim, Chorpita, Bruce, Fairburn, Christopher G., and Patel, Vikram
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MENTAL health , *SECONDARY schools , *PROBLEM solving , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *PILOT projects , *SELF-help techniques - Abstract
The PRIDE programme aims to establish a suite of transdiagnostic psychological interventions organised around a stepped care system in Indian secondary schools. This paper describes the development of a low-intensity, first-line component of the PRIDE model. Contextual and global evidence informed an intervention 'blueprint' with problem solving as the primary practice element. Successive iterations were tested and modified across two pilot cohort studies (N = 45; N = 39). Participants were aged 13–20 years and presenting with elevated mental health symptoms in New Delhi schools. The first iteration of the intervention, based on a guided self-help modality, showed promising outcomes and user satisfaction when delivered by psychologists. However, delivery was not feasible within the intended 6-week schedule, and participants struggled to use materials outside 'guidance' sessions. In Pilot 2, a modified counsellor-led problem-solving intervention was implemented by less experienced counsellors over a 3–4 week schedule. Outcomes were maintained, with indications of enhanced feasibility and acceptability. High demand was observed across both pilots, leading to more stringent eligibility criteria and a modified sensitisation plan. Findings have shaped a first-line intervention for common adolescent mental health problems in low-resource settings. A forthcoming randomised controlled trial will test its effectiveness. • PRIDE is developing a transdiagnostic, stepped care programme in Indian schools. • Formative evidence supported problem solving as a first-line 'Step 1' intervention. • The format was modified from guided self-help to an active therapy after piloting. • The optimised intervention showed promising impact, acceptability and feasibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
- Full Text
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