156 results
Search Results
2. Trends in mental health inequalities for people with disability, Australia 2003 to 2020.
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Bishop, Glenda M, Kavanagh, Anne Marie, Disney, George, and Aitken, Zoe
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STROKE , *CROSS-sectional method , *AGE distribution , *MENTAL health , *SEX distribution , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HEALTH equity , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *BRAIN injuries , *DATA analysis software , *LONGITUDINAL method , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities - Abstract
Objective: Cross-sectional studies have demonstrated that people with disability have substantial inequalities in mental health compared to people without disability. However, it is not known if these inequalities have changed over time. This study compared the mental health of people with and without disability annually from 2003 to 2020 to investigate time trends in disability-related mental health inequalities. Methods: We use annual data (2003–2020) of the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey. Mental health was measured using the five-item Mental Health Inventory. For each wave, we calculated population-weighted age-standardised estimates of mean Mental Health Inventory scores for people with and without disability and calculated the mean difference in Mental Health Inventory score to determine inequalities. Analyses were stratified by age, sex and disability group (sensory or speech, physical, intellectual or learning, psychological, brain injury or stroke, other). Results: From 2003 to 2020, people with disability had worse mental health than people without disability, with average Mental Health Inventory scores 9.8 to 12.1 points lower than for people without disability. For both people with and without disability, Mental Health Inventory scores decreased, indicating worsening mental health, reaching the lowest point for both groups in 2020. For some subpopulations, including young females and people with intellectual disability, brain injury or stroke, mental health inequalities worsened. Conclusion: This paper confirms that people with disability experience worse mental health than people without disability. We add to previous findings by demonstrating that disability-related inequalities in mental health have been sustained for a long period and are worsening in some subpopulations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. The use of implementation science to close the research-to-treatment gap for cognitive impairment in psychosis.
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Zbukvic, Isabel, Bryce, Shayden, Moullin, Joanna, and Allott, Kelly
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MEDICAL quality control , *PSYCHOSES , *COGNITION , *CLINICAL medicine research , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH care teams , *QUALITY of life , *QUALITY assurance , *MEDICAL research - Abstract
For people living with psychosis, cognitive impairment is common and can have significant impacts for functional recovery, impacting engagement with treatment and quality of life more broadly. There is now strong evidence for the effectiveness of cognition-focused treatments, such as cognitive remediation to improve clinical and functional outcomes for people with psychosis. However, engagement with treatment has been a long-standing issue in mental health care, including for people with psychosis, who often experience difficulties with motivation. While research on clinical effectiveness of cognition-focused treatment is growing, to date there has been little research focused on the implementation of such treatments and it is not clear how best to support uptake and engagement across diverse mental health settings. Implementation science is the study of methods and strategies to promote the adoption, application, and maintenance of evidence-based practices in routine care. To integrate cognition-focused treatments into routine practice, and improve engagement with treatment and the quality and effectiveness of care for people with psychosis, researchers need to embrace implementation science and research. This paper provides a succinct overview of the field of implementation science, current evidence for implementation of cognition-focused treatments for psychosis and practical guidance for using implementation science in clinical research. The future of psychosis research includes multidisciplinary teams of clinical researchers and implementation scientists, working together with providers and consumers to build the evidence that can improve the implementation of cognition-focused treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Regional evolution of psychosocial services in Australia before and after the implementation of the National Disability Insurance Scheme.
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Salvador-Carulla, Luis, Furst, Mary Anne, Gillespie, James, Rosenberg, Sebastian, Aryani, Amir, Anthes, Lauren, Ferdousi, Shahana, and Salinas-Perez, Jose A.
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NONPROFIT organizations , *SOCIAL support , *HEALTH services accessibility , *DISABILITY insurance , *HUMAN services programs , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *PRIMARY health care , *HEALTH care reform , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Objectives: This paper compares the evolution of the psychosocial sector in two Australian regions pre and post introduction of the National Disability Insurance Scheme – a major reform to the financing, planning and provision of disability services in Australia, intended to create greater competition and efficiency in the market, and more choice for service users. Methods: We used a standardised service classification instrument based on a health ecosystems approach to assess service availability and diversity of psychosocial services provided by non-government organisations in two Primary Health Network regions. Results: We identified very different evolutionary pathways in the two regions. Service availability increased in Western Sydney but decreased in the Australian Capital Territory. The diversity of services available did not increase in either Primary Health Network 4 years after the reform. Many services were experiencing ongoing funding uncertainty. Conclusion: Assumptions of increased efficiency through organisational scaling up, and a greater diversity in range of service availability were not borne out. Implications: This study shows the urgent need for evaluation of the effects of the NDIS on the provision of psychosocial care in Australia. Four years after the implementation of the NDIS at vast expense key objectives not been met for consumers or for the system as a whole, and an environment of uncertainty has been created for providers. It demonstrates the importance of standardised service mapping to monitor the effects of major reforms on mental health care as well as the need for a focus at the local level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. First Nations Peoples in the forensic mental health system in New South Wales: Characteristics and rates of criminal charges post-release.
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Dean, Kimberlie, Lyons, Georgia, Johnson, Anina, and McEntyre, Elizabeth
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INDIGENOUS Australians , *STATISTICS , *PRISON psychology , *MENTAL health , *CRIME , *RESEARCH funding , *FORENSIC medicine , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *CRIMINAL justice system , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models - Abstract
Background: It is well established that First Nations Peoples in Australia are overrepresented within the criminal justice system. However, First Nations Peoples appear to be comparatively underrepresented in the forensic mental health system, and little is known about their outcomes once released from secure care. Objective: To compare the characteristics and rates of repeat criminal justice contact for a criminal charge of First Nations and non-First Nations forensic patients in New South Wales. Methods: Data on the sample were extracted from the New South Wales Mental Health Review Tribunal paper and electronic files matched to the Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research Reoffending Database. Characteristics of First Nations and non-First Nations patients were compared using univariate logistic regression analysis. Univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazard regression was used to determine predictors of post-release criminal charges. Results: Key differences in the sociodemographic, clinical and forensic characteristics of First Nations compared with non-First Nations forensic patients were identified. The time to first criminal justice contact following release was significantly shorter for First Nations forensic patients (p < 0.01). Conclusion: The findings of this study confirm that First Nations forensic patients have distinct and complex needs that are apparent at entry to the forensic mental health system and that their poorer criminal justice contact rates following release from secure care indicate that these needs are not being adequately met either during treatment or once in the community. Responses to these study findings must consider the complex and continuing impact of colonisation on First Nations Peoples, as well as the need for solutions to be culturally safe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Diagnostic accuracy of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0) in an urban Indigenous Australian sample.
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Basit, Tabinda, Anderson, Mathew, Lindstrom, Akiaja, Santomauro, Damian F, Whiteford, Harvey A, and Ferrari, Alize J
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DIAGNOSIS of bipolar disorder , *INDIGENOUS Australians , *ALCOHOLISM , *HEALTH of indigenous peoples , *CROSS-sectional method , *TIME , *MENTAL health , *INTERVIEWING , *POST-traumatic stress disorder , *SURVEYS , *INDEPENDENT living , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *REPEATED measures design , *MENTAL depression , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *POPULATION health , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective: The Composite International Diagnostic Interview 3.0 is a standardised diagnostic interview commonly used in population-based mental health surveys, but has not been used in community-residing Indigenous Australians. This paper seeks to determine whether the Composite International Diagnostic Interview 3.0 can produce valid diagnostic information when compared with a diagnostic interview in an urban Indigenous Australian sample. Method: This research was conducted over 10 weeks with adult Indigenous clients of two participating Aboriginal Medical Services in South-East Queensland. Using a cross-sectional, repeated-measures design, participants were administered the Composite International Diagnostic Interview 3.0 by an Indigenous interviewer and within 2 weeks attended a second appointment with an Indigenous clinical psychologist, who produced a diagnostic summary. The Composite International Diagnostic Interview 3.0 diagnoses were compared with the diagnostic summaries and clinical concordance between the two measures was calculated. Results: The diagnostic accuracy of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview 3.0 differed by module. The Post-traumatic Stress Disorder and Major Depression modules had good utility in diagnosing post-traumatic stress disorder and major depressive episodes, respectively; however, the Mania module that provides diagnoses of bipolar disorder was found to be unsuitable for this population. Although there were no identified contraindications for the use of the Generalised Anxiety and Alcohol Use Disorder modules, further research on the diagnostic accuracy of these modules is warranted. Conclusions: The Composite International Diagnostic Interview 3.0 can accurately diagnose some common mental disorders in an Indigenous Australian population, but was found to be unsuitable for others. Given these findings, care should be taken when using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview 3.0 in epidemiological prevalence studies with Indigenous Australian populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Mental health symptoms in children and adolescents during COVID-19 in Australia.
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Sicouri, Gemma, March, Sonja, Pellicano, Elizabeth, De Young, Alex C, Donovan, Caroline L, Cobham, Vanessa E, Rowe, Arlen, Brett, Simon, Russell, Jeremy K, Uhlmann, Laura, and Hudson, Jennifer L
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HYPERKINESIA , *MENTAL health , *SURVEYS , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *ALEXITHYMIA , *MENTAL depression , *EMOTIONS , *PARENT-child relationships , *ANXIETY , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Objective: COVID-19 has led to disruptions to the lives of Australian families through social distancing, school closures, a temporary move to home-based online learning, and effective lockdown. Understanding the effects on child and adolescent mental health is important to inform policies to support communities as they continue to face the pandemic and future crises. This paper sought to report on mental health symptoms in Australian children and adolescents during the initial stages of the pandemic (May to November 2020) and to examine their association with child/family characteristics and exposure to the broad COVID-19 environment. Methods: An online baseline survey was completed by 1327 parents and carers of Australian children aged 4 to 17 years. Parents/carers reported on their child's mental health using five measures, including emotional symptoms, conduct problems, hyperactivity/inattention, anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms. Child/family characteristics and COVID-related variables were measured. Results: Overall, 30.5%, 26.3% and 9.5% of our sample scored in the high to very high range for emotional symptoms, conduct problems and hyperactivity/inattention, respectively. Similarly, 20.2% and 20.4% of our sample scored in the clinical range for anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms, respectively. A child's pre-existing mental health diagnosis, neurodevelopmental condition and chronic illness significantly predicted parent-reported child and adolescent mental health symptoms. Parental mental health symptoms, having a close contact with COVID-19 and applying for government financial assistance during COVID-19, were significantly associated with child and adolescent mental health symptoms. Conclusion: Our findings show that Australian children and adolescents experienced considerable levels of mental health symptoms during the initial phase of COVID-19. This highlights the need for targeted and effective support for affected youth, particularly for those with pre-existing vulnerabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. The RANZCP guidelines for Schizophrenia: Why is our practice so far short of our recommendations, and what can we do about it?
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Nielssen, Olav, McGorry, Patrick, Castle, David, and Galletly, Cherrie
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SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment , *MENTAL health services , *MEDICAL quality control , *MEDICAL protocols , *MEDICAL societies , *QUALITY assurance - Abstract
The new RANZCP guidelines for the treatment of schizophrenia and related disorders highlights what we know works. In this paper, we examine why patients so often fail to benefit from this knowledge and why clinical practice falls so far short of the recommended standard. Instead of the continuous improvement that we expect of health care in general, in psychiatry we face an accelerating decline in systems of care. There has been a sustained underinvestment in public mental health care and a shared failure by State and Federal governments to construct and commit to a governance and funding model that can deliver the standard of care that is available in other major non-communicable diseases, and which we know is equally possible for severe mental illness. This paper sets out some of the reasons for the poor quality of care received by many people with schizophrenia and related disorders in Australia, and describes ways that care could be improved. In particular, we recommend an explicit statement of what constitutes an adequate standard of care, for people at all stages of these illnesses. This would help provide transparency about whether the care provided by mental health services achieves these benchmarks, and enable publication of results comparing the performance of different states and regional services. Patients and families, as well as professional, consumer and carer organizations would then be able to see clearly where the deficits are and demand resources and care that match the recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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9. Be You: A national education initiative to support the mental health of Australian children and young people.
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Hoare, Erin, Thorp, Andrew, Bartholomeusz-Raymond, Nadine, McCoy, Alicia, Butler, Helen, and Berk, Michael
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COMMUNITIES , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *CURRICULUM , *EMOTIONS , *HEALTH education , *HEALTH promotion , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HIGH schools , *INTERNET , *MEDICAL consultants , *MENTAL health , *MIDDLE schools , *PREVENTIVE health services , *SCHOOL environment , *TEACHERS , *GOVERNMENT programs , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIAL support , *WELL-being , *POPULATION health , *HUMAN services programs , *EARLY medical intervention - Abstract
Early learning services and schools provide unique settings for mental health promotion and early intervention due to the potential for population-level dosage and reach in terms of reducing multiple risk factors and enabling protective factors among young people. Educators play a key role in supporting children and young people's experiences of, and access to mental health promotion opportunities, and hold unparalleled opportunity in terms of creating mental health–promoting learning environments. In 2018, the Australian National Mental Health in Education Initiative, Be You, was launched. Be You is a multi-million-dollar Australian government–supported initiative, freely available to all 24,000 early learning services, primary and secondary schools throughout Australia. The potential for subsequent population reach is proposed to potentially exceed that of any mental health promotion initiative for children and young people previously observed in Australia. Be You aims to foster mentally healthy learning communities across Australia through building capacity among educators to embed mental health promotion strategies. The Initiative was developed based on a review and integration of previous national mental health promotion frameworks, with an overall alignment to existing state and territory education, social and emotional well-being frameworks, and the Australian Curriculum. In delivering facilitated support from specialised consultants to early learning services and schools participating in the initiative, Be You draws on professional learning principles designed to build capacity in educators and educational systems relating to mental health promotion. It uses an updated, multi-module online platform providing interactive, evidence-based resources. This paper presents the Be You framework, describes the evidence sources used to inform the underlying principles and objectives, discusses the specific components that form the initiative, details the professional learning modules and content, and discusses potential implications for population mental health and prevention efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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10. Prevalence estimates of mental health problems in children and adolescents with intellectual disability: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Buckley, Nicholas, Glasson, Emma J, Chen, Wai, Epstein, Amy, Leonard, Helen, Skoss, Rachel, Jacoby, Peter, Blackmore, Amanda Marie, Srinivasjois, Ravisha, Bourke, Jenny, Sanders, Richard J, and Downs, Jenny
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PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *AGE distribution , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDLINE , *PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities , *META-analysis , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *SEX distribution , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *CHILDREN with disabilities , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DISEASE prevalence , *SEVERITY of illness index , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ADOLESCENCE , *ADULTS , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Children and adolescents with intellectual disability are at risk of developing psychiatric symptoms and disorders; yet, the estimates reported in the literature have been inconsistent, presenting a potential barrier for service planning and delivery. Sources of variability could arise from differences in measurement instruments as well as subgroup membership by severity of intellectual disability, gender and age. This systematic review aimed to address these gaps. Method: MEDLINE and PsycINFO databases were searched from inception to 2018 and selected studies were reviewed. Studies were included if they reported point prevalence estimates of mental health symptomology or diagnoses in a general population of 6- to 21-year-old individuals with intellectual disability. The Joanna Briggs Institute Prevalence Critical Appraisal Checklist was applied to eligible papers to appraise their scientific strength. Pooled prevalence for mental health symptomology was determined using a random-effects meta-analysis. Results: A total of 19 studies were included, including 6151 children and adolescents. The pooled prevalence estimate captured by the Developmental Behaviour Checklist was 38% (95% confidence interval = [31, 46]), contrasting with 49% (95% confidence interval = [46, 51]) captured by the Child Behaviour Checklist; both rates were higher than a non-intellectual disability population. Severity of intellectual disability did not significantly influence the Developmental Behaviour Checklist risks. Insufficient data were available to conduct statistical analyses on the effects of age, gender and socioeconomic status. Of diagnosed psychiatric disorders, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (30%), conduct disorder (3–21%) and anxiety disorders (7–34%) were the most prevalent conditions. Conclusion: This review consists of the largest sample hitherto evaluated. In the intellectual disability population, mental health comorbidities could be better detected by a symptom phenotype than a psychiatric diagnostic phenotype. Crucially, future research needs to address the effect of measurement validity in the intellectual disability population. Estimated prevalence rates were high compared to the general population, indicating the importance of systematic screening, case detection and appropriate management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Systems modelling and simulation to inform strategic decision making for suicide prevention in rural New South Wales (Australia).
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Atkinson, Jo-An, Skinner, Adam, Hackney, Sue, Mason, Linda, Heffernan, Mark, Currier, Dianne, King, Kylie, and Pirkis, Jane
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SUICIDE prevention , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DECISION making , *DECISION support systems , *HEALTH service areas , *HOSPITAL care , *PATIENT aftercare , *MANAGEMENT information systems , *MATHEMATICAL models , *MENTAL health , *RURAL conditions , *SELF-injurious behavior , *STRATEGIC planning , *SUICIDAL behavior , *SUICIDE , *THEORY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: The need to understand and respond to the unique characteristics and drivers of suicidal behaviour in rural areas has been enabled through the Australian Government's 2015 mental health reforms facilitating a move to an evidence-based, regional approach to suicide prevention. However, a key challenge has been the complex decision-making environment and lack of appropriate tools to facilitate the use of evidence, data and expert knowledge in a way that can inform contextually appropriate strategies that will deliver the greatest impact. This paper reports the co-development of an advanced decision support tool that enables regional decision makers to explore the likely impacts of their decisions before implementing them in the real world. Methods: A system dynamics model for the rural and remote population catchment of Western New South Wales was developed. The model was based on defined pathways to mental health care and suicidal behaviour and reproduced historic trends in the incidence of attempted suicide (self-harm hospitalisations) and suicide deaths in the region. A series of intervention scenarios were investigated to forecast their impact on suicidal behaviour over a 10-year period. Results: Post-suicide attempt assertive aftercare was forecast to deliver the greatest impact, reducing the numbers of self-harm hospitalisations and suicide deaths by 5.65% (95% interval, 4.87−6.42%) and 5.45% (4.68−6.22%), respectively. Reductions were also projected for community support programs (self-harm hospitalisations: 2.83%, 95% interval 2.23−3.46%; suicide deaths: 4.38%, 95% interval 3.78−5.00%). Some scenarios produced unintuitive impacts or effect sizes that were significantly lower than what has been anticipated under the traditional evidence-based approach to suicide prevention and provide an opportunity for learning. Conclusion: Systems modelling and simulation offers significant potential for regional decision makers to better understand and respond to the unique characteristics and drivers of suicidal behaviour in their catchments and more effectively allocate limited health resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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12. Depression literacy and help-seeking in Australian police.
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Reavley, Nicola J., Milner, Allison J., Martin, Angela, Too, Lay San, Papas, Alicia, Witt, Katrina, Keegel, Tessa, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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MENTAL illness treatment , *CONFIDENCE , *MENTAL depression , *EMPLOYMENT , *HEALTH attitudes , *HELP-seeking behavior , *INTENTION , *LITERACY , *RESEARCH methodology , *CASE studies , *MENTAL health , *GENERAL practitioners , *POLICE psychology , *PROFESSIONAL ethics , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SOCIAL stigma , *SURVEYS , *WORK environment , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *AFFINITY groups , *SOCIAL boundaries , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *HEALTH literacy , *LEADERS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: To assess depression literacy, help-seeking and help-offering to others in members of the police force in the state of Victoria, Australia. Methods: All staff in police stations involved in a cluster randomised controlled trial of an integrated workplace mental health intervention were invited to participate. Survey questions covered sociodemographic and employment information, recognition of depression in a vignette, stigma, treatment beliefs, willingness to assist co-workers with mental health problems, help-giving and help-seeking behaviours, and intentions to seek help. Using the baseline dataset associated with the trial, the paper presents a descriptive analysis of mental health literacy and helping behaviours, comparing police station leaders and lower ranks. Results: Respondents were 806 staff, comprising 618 lower-ranked staff and 188 leaders. Almost 84% of respondents were able to correctly label the problem described in the vignette. Among those who had helped someone with a mental health problem, both lower ranks and leaders most commonly reported ‘talking to the person’ although leaders were more likely to facilitate professional help. Leaders’ willingness to assist the person and confidence in doing so was very high, and over 80% of leaders appropriately rated police psychologists, general practitioners, psychologists, talking to a peer and contacting welfare as helpful. However, among both leaders and lower ranks with mental health problems, the proportion of those unlikely to seek professional help was greater than those who were likely to seek it. Conclusion: Knowledge about evidence-based interventions for depression was lower in this police sample than surveys in the general population, pointing to the need for education and training to improve mental health literacy. Such education should also aim to overcome barriers to professional help-seeking. Interventions that aim to improve mental health literacy and help-seeking behaviour appear to be suitable targets for better protecting police member mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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13. Culturally specific process measures to improve mental health clinical practice: indigenous focus.
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O'Brien, Anthony P., Boddy, Julie M., and Hardy, Derrylea J.
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MENTAL health education , *MENTAL health services , *CULTURAL psychiatry , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *MEDICAL care , *PSYCHIATRIC nursing , *PHYSICIAN practice patterns - Abstract
Objective: In New Zealand and Australia, a renewed emphasis on equity and efficiency in the provision of mental health care has seen outcomes-focused, culturally appropriate clinical practice become essential within mental health services. Ascertaining the degree to which quality improvement and monitoring systems are enhancing professional practice and patient outcomes, however, is hindered by the difficulty of measuring the process of quality care delivery. Method: This paper argues that it is the process of care delivery (i.e. what clinicians do to, and for, patients) that is critical to the effectiveness of treatment and the degree to which treatment either inhibits or promotes an improvement in mental health recovery. Identification of the underlying causes of poor achievement of process factors is likely to positively impact on things such as readmission rates, shared care initiatives, and ultimately patient recovery. Such attention could be the difference between low-quality service provision and a high-quality service provision with positive recovery outcomes for patients. Results: Ascertaining the degree to which quality improvement and monitoring systems are enhancing professional practice and patient outcomes for indigenous people, however, is hindered by the difficulty of measuring such concepts. Australia has indeed embraced 'culturally appropriate' practice in recent years, but this appears to be piecemeal when compared with New Zealand. Certainly, there are inconsistent and variable approaches to cultural practices with indigenous people when comparing the two countries. Conclusions: Using evidence from a bicultural mental health nursing study that developed and validated generic and Maori-specific (indigenous) clinical indicators for mental health nursing standards of practice in New Zealand, it is argued that the process of care delivery is equally as important as outcome measures when ascertaining the effectiveness of nursing care. Second, this paper contends that accurate process measures must be culturally responsive to indigenous and other ethnic groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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14. Better outcomes in mental health care: impact of different models of psychological service provision on patient outcomes.
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Morley, Belinda, Pirkis, Jane, Sanderson, Kristy, Burgess, Philip, Kohn, Fay, Naccarella, Lucio, and Blashki, Grant
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MENTAL health , *MEDICAL personnel , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *PATIENTS , *MEDICAL care , *QUALITY of life , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *MEDICARE , *FAMILY medicine - Abstract
Objective: One hundred and eight Access to Allied Psychological Services projects have been funded under Australia's Better Outcomes in Mental Health Care programme since July 2001. All projects are run by Divisions of General Practice and enable general practitioners (GPs) to refer patients to allied health professionals for evidence-based care. They differ in the models they use to retain, locate and direct referrals to their allied health professionals. This paper examines the extent to which the projects are achieving positive patient outcomes, and explores the association between different models of service delivery and varying levels of patient outcomes. Method: The paper draws on two data sources (a purpose-designed minimum dataset and a survey of models of service delivery) to examine the level of patient outcomes within and across projects, and variations in the level of patient outcomes by models of service delivery. Results: The projects are achieving positive effects and these are mostly of large or medium magnitude. The projects do not differ markedly in terms of the patient outcomes they are achieving, despite differences in the models of service delivery they are using. However, those projects implementing a direct referral model, where the GP refers the patient directly to the allied health professional, have significantly greater effect sizes, indicating that they are achieving greater improvements in patient outcomes. In addition, there are non-significant trends toward direct employment of allied health professionals by Divisions being predictive of greater improvements in patient outcomes, and delivery of services from allied health professionals' own rooms being predictive of weaker patient outcomes. Conclusions: Overwhelmingly, the Access to Allied Psychological Services projects are having a positive impact for patients in terms of their level of functioning, severity of symptoms and/or quality of life. Preliminary indications suggest that a service delivery model incorporating the use of a direct referral system may be associated with superior outcomes. The findings are discussed in the light of the imminent listing of psychologists' services on the Medicare Benefits Schedule. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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15. Mapping the onset of psychosis: the Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States.
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Yung, Alison R., Yuen, Hok Pan, McGorry, Patrick D., Phillips, Lisa J., Kelly, Daniel, Dell'Olio, Margaret, Francey, Shona M., Cosgrave, Elizabeth M., Killackey, Eoin, Stanford, Carrie, Godfrey, Katherine, and Buckby, Joe
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PSYCHOSES , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *DIAGNOSIS , *PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
Objective: Recognizing the prodrome of a first psychotic episode prospectively creates the opportunity of intervention, which could delay, ameliorate or even prevent onset. Valid criteria and a reliable methodology for identifying possible prodromes are needed. This paper describes an instrument, the Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States (CAARMS), which has been designed for such a purpose. It has two functions: (i) to assess psychopathology thought to indicate imminent development of a first-episode psychotic disorder; and (ii) to determine if an individual meets criteria for being at ultra high risk (UHR) for onset of first psychotic disorder. This paper describes the pilot evaluation of the CAARMS. Method: Several methodologies were used to test the CAARMS. First, CAARMS scores in a group of UHR young people and the association between CAARMS scores and the risk of transition to psychotic disorder, were analysed. Second, CAARMS scores in a UHR group were compared to a control group. To assess concurrent validity, CAARMS-defined UHR criteria were compared to the existing criteria for identifying the UHR cohort. To assess predictive validity, the CAARMS-defined UHR criteria were applied to a sample of 150 non-psychotic help-seekers and rates of onset of psychotic disorder at 6-month follow-up determined for the CAARMS-positive (i.e. met UHR criteria) group and the CAARMS-negative (i.e. did not meet UHR criteria) group. The inter-rater reliability of the CAARMS was assessed by using pairs of raters. Results: High CAARMS score in the UHR group was significantly associated with onset of psychotic disorder. The control group had significantly lower CAARMS scores than the UHR group. The UHR criteria assessed by the CAARMS identified a similar group to the criteria measured by existing methodology. In the sample of non-psychotic help-seekers those who were CAARMS-positive were at significantly increased risk of onset of psychotic disorder compared to those who were CAARMS-negative (relative risk of 12.44 (95% CI = 1.5–103.41, p = 0.0025)). The CAARMS had good to excellent reliability. Conclusions: In these preliminary investigations, the CAARMS displayed good to excellent concurrent, discriminant and predictive validity and excellent inter-rater reliability. The CAARMS instrument provides a useful platform for monitoring subthreshold psychotic symptoms for worsening into full-threshold psychotic disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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16. Hurly-burly of psychiatric ethics.
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Hughes, Julian C. and Fulford, K. W. M. Bill
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PSYCHIATRIC ethics , *MEDICAL ethics , *ETHICS , *PSYCHIATRY , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This is the introductory paper to the special issue on ethics in psychiatry. We introduce the other papers that follow and set them in a context. Inevitably, they represent only a thin slice of the work going on in psychiatric ethics. But they serve to show two unique features of this discipline. First, it has a tendency to dig deep and to make connections with other philosophical concepts. So, for example, in a number of ways the papers that follow touch on the nature of personhood. We examine this notion. Second, psychiatric ethics, because of its content and its embededness in the real world, tends to hit upon diverse and sometimes conflicting values. We introduce the idea of values-based medicine, which provides both a theoretical framework and a practical approach to the common dilemmas of psychiatric practice. The need to think deeply, but also clearly and coherently, combined with the need to engage with the hurly-burly of the world of patients, users and carers, suggests the reasons why psychiatric ethics offers a paradigm for practical ethics generally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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17. Mental disorders among Māori attending their general practitioner.
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Bushnell, John
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MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *MORI (Indonesian people) , *ETHNICITY , *PSYCHIATRY , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
This paper identifies rates of common mental disorders among Māori and non-Māori consulting a general practitioner (GP), and explores the association between ethnicity and social and material deprivation.Survey of GPs and their patients. Participants were randomly selected GPs (n = 70), and their patients (n = 3414, of whom a subset of 786 form the basis of this paper). The main comparison is between self-identified ethnicity, mental disorder assessed by the Composite International Diagnostic Interview, and social and material deprivation measured by NZDep2001 (an area based measure), and an individualized index of deprivation.Rates of mental disorder among Māori general practice attenders were higher than among non-Māori. Overall, Māori women attenders were twice as likely as non-Māori women attenders to have a diagnosable mental disorder. The rates of anxiety, depressive and substance use disorders were all higher for Māori than for others attending GPs. Treatment for psychological problems was offered by the GP at similar rates to both Māori and non-Māori. Although there were differences between Māori and non-Māori in terms of social and material deprivation, higher rates of mental disorder among Māori attending GPs compared to non-Māori cannot be accounted for by these differences alone.These findings support the view that whilst social and material deprivation may play a role in the high rates of mental disorders among Māori general practice attenders, there are additional ethnicity-specific factors involved. Interventions to address Māori mental health (whether by reducing risk factors for mental disorder, by promoting disclosure, early recognition and intervention, or by ensuring access to acceptable and effective treatments) may need to explicitly take those factors into account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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18. The First-Time Fathers Study: a prospective study of the mental health and wellbeing of men during the transition to parenthood.
- Author
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Condon, John T., Boyce, Philip, and Corkindale, Carolyn J.
- Subjects
- *
PARENTHOOD & psychology , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *PREGNANCY , *MEN'S sexual behavior , *LIFESTYLES - Abstract
In comparison to its female counterpart, the transition of men to parenthood has been relatively neglected in previous research. The present paper argues that men may have gender-specific risk factors for perinatal psychological distress and may manifest distress in ways different from women. The prime objective of this research was to document changes in psychological, relationship and lifestyle parameters in a cohort of first time fathers from pregnancy to the end of the first postnatal year. The present paper reports on these changes. Three hundred and twelve men were assessed at 23 weeks of pregnancy and followed up at 3, 6 and 12 months postnatally, using a battery of self-report questionnaires covering psychological symptom levels, lifestyle variables and relationship/sexual functioning. Two hundred and four men completed all four assessments. The men exhibited highest symptom levels in pregnancy with general, through small, improvement at 3 months and little change thereafter. Lifestyle variables showed small changes over the first postnatal year. Sexual functioning appeared to deteriorate markedly from pre-pregnancy levels with only minimal recovery by the end of the first year. The results highlight that the majority of men anticipated return of sexual activity to pre-pregnancy levels; however, this failed to eventuate. Pregnancy, rather than the postnatal period, would appear to be the most stressful period for men undergoing the transition to parenthood. The results suggest that the most important changes occur relatively early in pregnancy. Thereafter, lack of change (rather than change) is the most noteworthy feature. These men appeared to be ill-prepared for the impact of parenthood on their lives, especially in terms of the sexual relationship. Further research to determine the timing and trigger of stress in pregnancy is recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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19. Evaluating complex, collaborative programmes: the Partnership Project as a case study.
- Author
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Pirkis, Jane, Herrman, Helen, Schweitzer, Isaac, Yung, Alison, Grigg, Margaret, and Burgess, Philip
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health services , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Objective: In Australia, mental health services are delivered by a complex web of public- and private-sector providers. There is a growing recognition that linkages between these groups are not optimal, and a concern that this may lead to poor outcomes. This paper illustrates a conceptual framework for developing, implementing and evaluating programmes concerned with linkages. Method: Drawing on theoretical and practical literature, this paper identifies different levels of integration, issues in evaluating programmes to address poor linkages, and features of useful evaluations. Within this context, it describes the method by which the Public and Private Partnerships in Mental Health Project (Partnership Project) is being evaluated. Conducted by St Vincent’s Mental Health Service and The Melbourne Clinic, this is one of several Demonstration Projects in Integrated Mental Health Care funded under the National Mental Health Strategy. Results: Collaboration is hard to conceptualize and collaborative programmes usually have many players and components, and tend to operate within already-complex systems. This creates difficulties for evaluation, in terms of what to measure, how to measure it, and how to interpret findings. In spite of these difficulties, the illustrative example demonstrates a model for evaluating collaborative programmes that is currently working well because it is strongly conceptualized, descriptive, comparative, constructively sceptical, positioned from the bottom up, and collaborative. Conclusions: This model, or aspects of it, could be extended to the evaluation of other mental health programmes and services that have collaborative elements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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20. The Christchurch Health and Development Study: review of findings on child and adolescent mental health.
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Fergusson,, David M. and Horwood, L. John
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- *
MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Objective: This paper provides an overview of the Christchurch Health and Development Study (CHDS) and a summary of findings relating to child and adolescent mental health. Method: The CHDS is a longitudinal study of a birth cohort of 1265 children born in the Christchurch (New Zealand) urban region during mid 1977. This cohort has now been studied from birth to age 21. Results: The paper examines the ways in which the study has been able to examine a wide range of issues. Key issues examined include: (i) measurement of disorder (respondent effects; dimensionality; scales vs categories); (ii) prevalence and treatment of disorder; (iii) stability and continuity of disorders; (iv) the contribution of risk and aetiological factors (e.g. lead exposure, parental divorce, child abuse, family adversity, sexual orientation) to psychosocial adjustment; and (v) the psychosocial consequences of mental health problems in adolescence. Conclusions: The study findings illustrate the many advantages of a longitudinal study, such as the CHDS, in providing methodologically sound, theoretically relevant and cost effective research that caters for the interests of multiple end-users including the scientific community, clinicians and applied policy makers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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21. Mental health system development in Asia: Does Australia have a role?
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Arandjelovic, Katarina, Eyre, Harris A., Forbes, Malcolm P., Bauer, Renee, Aggarwal, Shilpa, Singh, Ajeet B., Baune, Bernhard T., Everall, Ian, Berk, Michael, and Ng, Chee
- Subjects
- *
POLICY sciences , *HEALTH services accessibility , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *MEDICAL ethics , *FOREIGN medical personnel , *MENTAL health services , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL stigma , *TRANSCULTURAL medical care , *ATTITUDES toward mental illness , *HEALTH & social status , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Socioeconomic trends herald what many describe as the Asian Century, whereby Asian economic, political and cultural influence is in global ascendency. Broadening relevant ties between Australia and Asia is evident and logical and may include strengthening alliances in mental health systems. Aim: We argue the importance of strengthening Asian mental health systems and some of the roles Australian mental health workers could have in promoting strengthening the Asian mental health system. Methods: This paper is a narrative review which sources data from reputable search databases. Results: A well-articulated Australian strategy to support strengthening the mental health system in Asia is lacking. While there are active initiatives operating in this space, these remain fragmented and underdeveloped. Coordinated, collaborative and culturally respectful efforts to enhance health education, research, policy, leadership and development assistance are key opportunities. Conclusion: Psychiatrists and other mental health professionals have a unique opportunity to contribute to improved mental health outcomes in Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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22. Conducting qualitative research in mental health: Thematic and content analyses.
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Crowe, Marie, Inder, Maree, and Porter, Richard
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- *
CONTENT analysis , *DOCUMENTATION , *INTERVIEWING , *BIPOLAR disorder , *RESEARCH methodology , *MENTAL illness , *QUALITATIVE research , *DATA analysis , *THEMATIC analysis , *MEDICAL coding ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Objective: The objective of this paper is to describe two methods of qualitative analysis - thematic analysis and content analysis - and to examine their use in a mental health context. Method: A description of the processes of thematic analysis and content analysis is provided. These processes are then illustrated by conducting two analyses of the same qualitative data. Transcripts of qualitative interviews are analysed using each method to illustrate these processes. Results: The illustration of the processes highlights the different outcomes from the same set of data. Conclusion: Thematic and content analyses are qualitative methods that serve different research purposes. Thematic analysis provides an interpretation of participants' meanings, while content analysis is a direct representation of participants' responses. These methods provide two ways of understanding meanings and experiences and provide important knowledge in a mental health context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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23. Australia's Better Access initiative: an evaluation.
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Pirkis, Jane, Ftanou, Maria, Williamson, Michelle, Machlin, Anna, Spittal, Matthew J., Bassilios, Bridget, and Harris, Meredith
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis , *ANALYSIS of variance , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL quality control , *MEDICARE , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *RESEARCH funding , *INDUSTRIAL research , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PSYCHIATRIC treatment , *PRE-tests & post-tests - Abstract
Background: Australia's Better Access to Psychiatrists, Psychologists and General Practitioners through the Medicare Benefits Schedule (Better Access) initiative involves a series of Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) item numbers which offer a rebate for selected services delivered by eligible clinicians. There has been considerable debate about the appropriateness and effectiveness of Better Access, much of which has been based on limited evidence. The current paper contributes to this debate by presenting the findings of a study which profiled the clinical and treatment characteristics of Better Access patients and examined the outcomes of their care. Method: We approached a stratified random sample of providers who had billed for at least 100 occasions of service under the Better Access item numbers in 2008 (509 clinical psychologists, 640 registered psychologists, 1280 GPs) and invited them to participate. Those who agreed were asked to recruit 5-10 Better Access patients according to a specific protocol. We collected data that enabled us to profile providers, patients and sessions. We also collected pre- and post-treatment patient outcome data, using the Kessler-10 (K-10) and the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS-21). Results: In total, 883 patients were recruited into the study (289 by 41 clinical psychologists, 317 by 49 registered psychologists and 277 by 39 GPs). More than 90% of participating patients had diagnoses of depression and/or anxiety (compared with 13% of the general population). More than 80% were experiencing high or very high levels of psychological distress (compared with 10% of the general population). Around half of all participating patients had no previous history of mental health care. Patients experienced statistically significant improvements in average K-10 and DASS-21 scores from pre- to post-treatment. Conclusions: The findings suggest that Better Access is playing an important part in meeting the community's previously unmet need for mental health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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24. Clinical improvement after treatment provided through the Better Outcomes in Mental Health Care (BOiMHC) programme: Do some patients show greater improvement than others?
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Pirkis, Jane, Bassilios, Bridget, Fletcher, Justine, Sanderson, Kristy, Spittal, Matthew J., King, Kylie, Kohn, Fay, Burgess, Philip, and Blashki, Grant
- Subjects
- *
ANALYSIS of variance , *MENTAL health services , *REHABILITATION of people with mental illness , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *PROBABILITY theory , *REGRESSION analysis , *T-test (Statistics) , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Objective: Australia's Better Outcomes in Mental Health Care (BOiMHC) programme enables GPs to refer patients with common mental disorders to allied health professionals for time-limited treatment, through its Access to Allied Psychological Services (ATAPS) projects. This paper considers whether patients who receive care through the ATAPS projects make clinical gains, if so, whether particular patient-related and treatment-related variables are predictive of these outcomes. Method: Divisions of General Practice (Divisions), which run the ATAPS projects, are required to enter de-identified data into a minimum dataset, including data on patients'' socio-demographic and clinical characteristics, the sessions of care they receive, and their clinical outcomes. We extracted data from January 2006 to June 2010, and examined the difference between mean pre- and post-treatment scores on the range of outcome measures being used by Divisions. We then conducted a linear regression analysis using scores on the most commonly-used outcome measure as the outcome of interest. Results: Pre- and post-treatment outcome data were available for 16 700 patients from nine different outcome measures. Across all measures, the mean difference was statistically significant and indicative of clinical improvement. The most commonly-used measure was the Kessler-10 (K-10), and pre- and post-treatment K-10 data were available for 7747 patients. After adjusting for clustering by Division, outcome on the K-10 was associated with age, levels of income and education, previous receipt of mental health care, number of sessions, treatment received and pre-treatment K-10 score. The benchmark was sufficiently high, however, that even the groups that fared relatively less well still showed strong improvement in absolute terms. Conclusions: Patients who receive care through the ATAPS projects are making considerable clinical gains. A range of socio-demographic, clinical and treatment-based variables are associated with the levels of outcomes achieved, but improvements are still substantial even for those in the relatively disadvantaged groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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25. The social determinants of mental health: implications for research and health promotion.
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Fisher, Matthew and Baum, Fran
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *PREVENTIVE health services , *PUBLIC health , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL context - Abstract
Social determinants of health have come to greater prominence through the recent work of the WHO Commission on the Social Determinants of Health, and the Marmot Review of Health Inequalities in England. These reports also have significant implications for promotion of mental health in developed countries. In particular they reflect a growing research interest in the view that certain adverse social conditions may detrimentally affect mental or physical health by acting as chronic stressors. However, although the case for chronic arousal of stress systems as a risk factor for mental health is empirically well-founded, questions remain about how and why psychological exposure to certain kinds of proximal social conditions might contribute to such arousal. In this paper we argue that combining evidence and ideas from a number of disciplines, including public health research and psychiatry, presents an opportunity to understand the relationship better, and so inform complementary strategies in treatment, prevention and health promotion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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26. Using the interaction of mental health symptoms and treatment status to estimate lost employee productivity.
- Author
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Hilton, Michael F., Scuffham, Paul A., Vecchio, Nerina, and Whiteford, Harvey A.
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- *
MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness , *EMPLOYEES , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
Objective: In Australia it has been estimated that mental health symptoms result in a loss of $ AU2.7 billion in employee productivity. To date, however, there has been only one study quantifying employee productivity decrements due to mental disorders when treatment-seeking behaviours are considered. The aim of the current paper was to estimate employee work productivity by mental health symptoms while considering different treatment-seeking behaviours. Method: A total of 60 556 full-time employees responded to the World Health Organization Health and Work Performance Questionnaire. This questionnaire is designed to monitor the work productivity of employees for chronic and acute physical and mental health conditions. Contained within the questionnaire is the Kessler 6, a scale measuring psychological distress along with an evaluation of employee treatment-seeking behaviours for depression, anxiety and any other emotional problems. A univariate analysis of variance was performed for employee productivity using the interaction between Kessler 6 severity categories and treatment-seeking behaviours. Results: A total of 9.6% of employees have moderate psychological distress and a further 4.5% have high psychological distress. Increasing psychological distress from low to moderate then to high levels is associated with increasing productivity decrements (6.4%, 9.4% and 20.9% decrements, respectively) for employees in current treatment. Combining the prevalence of Kessler 6 categories with treatment-seeking behaviours, mean 2009 salaries and number of Australian employees in 2009, it is estimated that psychological distress produces an $ AU5.9 billion reduction in Australian employee productivity per annum. Conclusions: The estimated loss of $ AU5.9 billion in employee productivity due to mental health problems is substantially higher than previous estimates. This finding is especially pertinent given the global economic crisis, when psychological distress among employees is likely to be increasing. Effective treatment for mental health problems yields substantial increases in employee productivity and would be a sound economic investment for employers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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27. Policy implications of the 2007 Australian National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing.
- Author
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Whiteford, Harvey and Groves, Aaron
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health surveys , *MENTAL illness treatment , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *DISEASE prevalence , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
Objectives: To describe some of the policy implications of the Australian National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing. Methods: A review of the initial findings from the Survey published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics and the five papers in this issue of the Journal, was done. Results: Mental disorders are highly prevalent with the prevalence essentially unchanged since Australia's 1997 mental health survey. Mental disorders are often comorbid with each other and with physical disorders. Despite the disability they cause, most people with disorders do not seek treatment. This is largely because they do not perceive a need for treatment. Conclusions: National epidemiological surveys are important for service planning. They are especially important in gaining an understanding of the population not accessing services. Innovative strategies, including action on mental health literacy, will be necessary to increase the treatment rates for common mental disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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28. Profile of young people attending alcohol and other drug treatment services in Aotearoa, New Zealand: clinical file search.
- Author
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Schroder, Ria, Sellman, Doug, Frampton, Chris, and Deering, Daryle
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- *
ALCOHOL drinking , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHIATRY , *CRIMINAL convictions - Abstract
Objective: The aim of the present study was to provide a profile of young people attending alcohol and other drug (AOD) treatment services in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Method: Data were gathered from a clinical file search of 184 randomly selected young people aged 13-19 years who had attended one of eight youth AOD treatment services in New Zealand during 2003 or 2004. These services represented eight of the 11 youth-specific AOD services available to youth in New Zealand. Results: Young people who attend youth-specific AOD services in New Zealand present with a range of complex needs including substance use and mental health issues, criminality, family conflict and disengagement from school. A total of 62.0% were male, 56.4% had criminal convictions, 40.6% had spent some time in Child, Youth and Family Services care and 53.8% were reported to have a coexisting substance use and mental health disorder. Low rates of reporting of substance use and mental health diagnoses in treatment files suggest that substance use and mental health disorders among this population are likely to be higher than those reported. Conclusions: This paper provides a unique profile of young people attending youth-specific AOD treatments in New Zealand. Such information is useful in informing treatment planning and funding and ensuring that service development occurs to specifically meet the complex needs of this patient group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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29. Attitudes of staff towards patients with personality disorder in community mental health teams.
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Newton-Howes, Giles, Weaver, Tim, and Tyrer, Peter
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health personnel , *PERSONALITY disorder treatment , *PEOPLE with mental illness , *COMORBIDITY , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH services administration , *MENTAL illness treatment , *SOCIAL skills , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Objective: The purpose of the present paper was to assess the attitudes of clinicians working with personality disordered patients. Methods: Secondary analysis of the Comorbidity of Substance Misuse and Mental Illness Collaborative (COSMIC) data set was undertaken using a priori hypothesis testing. The null hypothesis was that there would be no measurable difference between the attitudes of mental health professionals toward patients with a clinical diagnosis of personality disorder and those with an instrument-rated diagnosis of personality disorder. The potential confounders of global psychopathology, need, social functioning and documented aggression were assessed as possible reasons explaining a rejection of the null hypothesis. Results: Clinicians believed those with the clinical diagnostic label of personality disorder to be more difficult to manage than personality-disordered patients identified by a research tool who did not carry this label. These attitudes were not explained by the potential confounders of psychopathology, social morbidity or acts of aggression. Conclusions: An awareness of a personality disorder diagnosis is associated with a clinician belief that patients will be harder to manage. Objective measures of potential confounders do not explain why this group should be harder to manage. One explanation of this finding is that the label 'personality disorder' is stigmatizing. This may also explain the disparity between clinical and research assessments of personality disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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30. New-generation antidepressants, suicide and depressed adolescents: how should clinicians respond to changing evidence?
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Dudley, Michael, Hadzi-Pavlovic, Dusan, Andrews, Doug, and Perich, Tania
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- *
DRUG efficacy , *PRESCRIPTION writing , *ANTIDEPRESSANTS , *THERAPEUTICS , *MENTAL depression , *SUICIDE prevention , *MENTAL health , *EMOTIONAL intelligence , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
The purpose of the present paper was to identify, from the voluminous literature on efficacy and safety in new-generation antidepressants (NGAs) with depressed children and adolescents, practical clinical strategies for acute phase treatment. To this end a pragmatic survey of studies and reviews was undertaken. Meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials of NGAs in depressed children and adolescents have noted a comparative lack of efficacy, and a weak but statistically significant increased risk of self-harm and suicidal thoughts. But NGA prescription rates and youth suicide rates are generally inversely related, and ensuing 'black box' warnings about NGAs, by deterring NGA prescribing, have possibly contributed to rising youth suicide rates. In moderate-severe depression, benefits for fluoxetine and possibly other NGAs demonstrably outweigh risks. NGAs are not present in adolescents who die by suicide. Concern about NGA risks must be balanced against risks of non-treatment. While mild depression entails regular review, psychoeducation, self-care strategies and psychological interventions, NGAs should be administered concurrently with psychological treatments if depression is moderate- to severe, or if mild depression persists. Patients should be warned about off-label status of NGAs in depression, serious side-effects such as 'activation', suicidality, emotional blunting and manic switches, the need for adherence and avoiding abrupt discontinuation. They should be monitored early and regularly. Better evidence is required regarding psychological treatments, clinical course, and clinical practice trends. In moderate-severe depression the risk of suicide if NGAs are not used may outweigh any risk of self-harm associated with them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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31. Women, catastrophe and mental health.
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Raphael, Beverley, Taylor, Mel, and McAndrew, Virginia
- Subjects
- *
DISASTERS , *WOMEN'S mental health , *WOMEN'S health , *MAN-woman relationships , *CHILD care , *TERRORISM , *VIOLENCE , *SEX crimes , *WELL-being - Abstract
This paper examines the concept of catastrophic experience, its relationship to the range of acute and prolonged stressors to which women may be exposed and the broad impacts on their mental health and well-being. It identifies catastrophe in terms of multiple accumulated stresses including death, loss, victimization, demoralization, shame, stigmatization, helplessness and identity. Catastrophic experiences include personal violence in domestic circumstances of intimate partner abuse, sexual assault and child physical and sexual abuse. Women's experiences of loss through the violent deaths of children and loved ones may also have such enduring impacts. Terrorism victimizes men and women in this way, with the enduring impacts for women in terms of threat of ongoing attacks as well as acute effects and their aftermath. The catastrophes of war, conflict, genocide, sexual exploitation and refugee status differentially affect large numbers of women, directly and through their concerns for the care of their children and loved ones. Ultimate catastrophes such as Hiroshima and the Holocaust are discussed but with recognition of the very large numbers of women currently experiencing catastrophe in ongoing ways that may be silent and unrecognized. This is significant for clinical care and population impacts, and in the losses for women across such contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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32. Industry Supported Satellite Symposia.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *MENTAL depression , *OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder , *MENTAL health - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of several papers discussed at the Industry Supported Satellite Symposia including "Importance of Rhythm," "Unique Challenges of Managing Depression in Mid-Life Women," "Cognition in BDD and OCD: Recent Data on Similarities and Differences," and "Concept of Impulsivity and Compulsivity in Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders."
- Published
- 2007
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33. Validity and reliability of the Behavioural Assessment Tool for Cognition and Higher Function (BATCH) in neuropsychiatric patients.
- Author
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Miller, Kathryn, Walterfang, Mark, Randhawa, Sharan, Scholes, Amelia, Mocellin, Ramon, and Velakoulis, Dennis
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PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *MENTAL health , *COGNITION , *COGNITIVE ability , *HUMAN behavior , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *NEUROLOGY , *SYMPTOMS , *PSYCHOLOGY ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Objective: Patients with mental health disorders frequently have difficulties with their cognitive functioning. Assessment of cognition in this population can be complicated by psychiatric symptomatology, making standard written and verbal assessment methods difficult. In these situations, observations by nursing and allied staff of patients' routine activities provide an important source of information about cognitive ability. The Behavioural Assessment Tool for Cognition and Higher Function (BATCH) was developed to record observations of patients' daily functioning under subheadings that reflect cognitive domains. Its capacity to provide a measure of cognitive function through observational means was assessed in a neuropsychiatric unit. Method: A consecutive sample of 76 adult neuropsychiatry inpatients were assessed over 6 months using BATCH. BATCH measures the frequency of given behaviours grouped under 10 functional and cognitive domains: orientation, attention/concentration, personal responsibility, volition, adaptation, problem-solving/judgement, executive function, memory, language, and visuospatial function. Data from routine standardized cognitive (Mini-Mental Status Examination, MMSE; Neuropsychiatry Unit Cognitive Screening Tool, NUCOG), psychiatric (Neuropsychiatric Inventory; Health of the Nation Outcome Scale) and functional (Bristol Activities of Daily Living Scale; Barthel Index) instruments were collected to determine the relative contribution of cognitive function to scores on the BATCH. Results: A strong correlation was found between total BATCH scores and total NUCOG and MMSE scores. BATCH and NUCOG subdomains correlated significantly in all subscales. BATCH demonstrated very high internal consistency. Linear regression analysis showed that the strongest determinant of BATCH scores was cognitive function as measured on the NUCOG. A significant subscale×group effect showed lower BATCH scores in memory, orientation, attention, executive function and language in dementia sufferers compared to psychiatric and neurological patient groups. Conclusion: BATCH scores correlated strongly with pencil-and-paper measures of cognitive function. BATCH provides clinicians with a means of assessing cognitive function through behavioural observation, thus enabling assessment of patients with behavioural disturbance or severe psychopathology. This tool has practical application for adult and aged clients across all observational mental health settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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34. Age shall not weary them: mental health in the middle-aged and the elderly.
- Author
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Trollor, Julian N., Anderson, Tracy M., Sachdev, Perminder S., Brodaty, Henry, and Andrews, Gavin
- Subjects
- *
OLDER people , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *GERIATRIC psychiatry , *MIDDLE-aged persons , *DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
Objective: The prevalence of mental disorders in the elderly is disputed. The debate in this area can be informed by data from large population surveys that contain sufficient elderly participants. The aim of the present paper was to provide the first direct comparison of the prevalence and demographic correlates of ICD-10 anxiety and affective disorders in the middle-aged and the elderly. Method: The 12 month prevalence and demographic correlates of affective and anxiety disorders were compared in a community sample of middle-aged and elderly Australian residents who took part in the Australian National Mental Health and Well-being Survey (NMHWS). Results: One in seven middle-aged participants and one in 16 elderly participants experienced symptoms consistent with any anxiety or affective disorder in the preceding 12 months. Compared to the middle-aged participants, the elderly had lower rates for most affective and anxiety disorders, and for the combined presence of any disorder. Demographic correlates of mental disorder, especially marital status, were different for the two groups. Conclusions: Community-dwelling elderly in Australia have lower rates of mental disorder compared to the middle-aged. Differences in demographic correlates between groups support the notion that the determinants of mental disorder in the elderly differ substantially from those in middle age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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35. Indigenous Australians' understandings regarding mental health and disorders.
- Author
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Ypinazar, Valmae A., Margolis, Stephen A., Haswell-Elkins, Melissa, and Tsey, Komla
- Subjects
- *
ETHNOLOGY , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *ETHNIC groups , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *AUSTRALIANS , *ABORIGINAL Australians ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
The purpose of the present paper was to determine what is currently documented about Indigenous Australians' understandings of mental health and mental disorders through a meta-synthesis of peer-reviewed qualitative empirical research. The following databases were electronically searched (1995-April 2006): AOA-FT and AIATSIS, Blackwell Synergy, CINAHL and Pre CINHAL, Health source: nursing/academic edition, Medline, Proquest health and medical complete, PsycInfo, Science Direct, Synergy and HealthInfoNet. Eligible studies were those written in English and published in peer-reviewed journals, empirical studies that considered Indigenous people's understandings of mental health and provided details on methodology. Five articles from four qualitative studies met these criteria. Meta-ethnography was used to identify common themes emerging from the original studies. Reciprocal translation was used to synthesize the findings to provide new interpretations extending beyond those presented in the original studies. An overarching theme emerged from the synthesis: the dynamic interconnectedness between the multi-factorial components of life circumstances. Reciprocal translations and synthesis regarding Indigenous understandings of mental health and illness resulted in five themes: (i) culture and spirituality; (ii) family and community kinships; (iii) historical, social and economic factors; (iv) fear and education; and (v) loss. The application of a meta-synthesis to these qualitative studies provided a deeper insight into Indigenous people's understandings of mental health and illness. The importance of understanding Indigenous descriptions and perceptions of mental health issues is crucial to enable two-way understandings between Indigenous people's constructs of wellness and Western biomedical diagnostic labels and treatment pathways for mental disorders and mental health problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Are violence risk assessment tools clinically useful?
- Author
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Carroll, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
VIOLENCE , *MENTAL health , *RISK assessment , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *RISK management in business , *CLINICAL medicine , *HUMAN behavior , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Despite increasing concerns regarding the prevalence of violent behaviour in mainstream mental health settings, the impressive body of forensic research on violence risk assessment has thus far had only limited impact on front-line general mental health practice. The common objection raised by clinicians that risk assessment tools lack utility for clinical practice may contribute to this. The present paper argues that this objection, although understandable, is misplaced. Usage of appropriate, validated risk assessment tools can augment standard clinical approaches in a number of ways. Some of their advantages derive simply from having a well-structured approach, others from consideration of specific kinds of risk factors: 'static' and 'dynamic'. The inappropriate use of tools without a firm evidence base, however, is unlikely to enhance clinical practice significantly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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37. Reassessing the aftercare treatment of individuals found not guilty due to a mental disability in Hunan, China: supplemental study into the disposition of mentally ill offenders after forensic psychiatric assessment.
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Wang, Xiaoping, Zhang, Dengke, Jiang, Shaoai, Bai, Yining, Cucolo, Heather Ellis, and Perlin, Michael L.
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CRIME & psychology , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *QUESTIONNAIRES ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Objective: The purpose of the present paper was to examine the disposition of individuals in Hunan, China who are found not criminally responsible due to a mental disorder or defect. Method: Self-developed questionnaires were mailed to the family members of 240 patients who had received forensic psychiatric evaluations at the forensic psychiatric assessment center of Central South University, between 2001 and 2002. Results: One hundred and seventy questionnaires were fully completed and returned by the patients' family members. According to the answers, 64.1% (109 patients) were found not criminally responsible due to a mental disorder or defect. In 87.6% of the cases, a judgement of guilty was in agreement with the psychiatrist's recommendation concerning criminal responsibility. A total of 61.8% of the patients found not guilty were discharged to their families and did not receive any further psychiatric treatment. Conclusion: In most cases, judicial decisions are consistent with a psychiatrist's opinion of criminal responsibility due to a mental disorder or defect. After such adjudication, further psychiatric treatment is often neglected due to the lack of resources and information. Hunan, China must make a continued investment into the availability and quality of outpatient mental health treatment for forensic patients after they have been discharged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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38. New Zealand psychiatrists views on global features of ICD-10 and DSM-IV.
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Mellsop, Graham, Dutu, Gaelle, and Robinson, Gail
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MENTAL health , *PSYCHIATRISTS , *PROGNOSIS , *SURVEYS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *MENTAL health personnel , *CLASSIFICATION , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: The present accepted classificatory systems (ICD-10 and DSM-IV) represent the culmination of 100 years of post-Kraepelinian evolution. The present paper reports on a study to ascertain the views of New Zealand psychiatrists on their requirements of a classificatory system, and their opinions on those currently in use. Method: An anonymous postal survey of 542 psychiatrists and trainees was undertaken in New Zealand. Results: A total of 235 questionnaires were returned, completed. New Zealand psychiatrists primarily use DSM-IV and do so because that is what they were taught on. They make relatively limited use of the multiaxiality. The purposes of classificatory systems that they value most highly are reliable interclinician communication, and to inform patient management planning. The two purposes they valued least were usefulness for a national statistical base, or to indicate prognosis. Conclusions: New Zealand psychiatrists' views are consistent with some of the stated objectives of ICD-10 and DSM-IV, but there is significant diversity in the former and over-ambition in the latter, with much to be resolved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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39. Insanity acquittee outcomes in New Zealand.
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Skipworth, Jeremy, Brinded, Phil, Chaplow, David, and Frampton, Chris
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INSANITY (Law) , *FORENSIC psychiatry , *MENTAL health , *INPATIENT care , *VIOLENT crimes , *REHABILITATION of people with mental illness , *COMMUNITY-based corrections - Abstract
Objective: This paper examines clinical and forensic outcomes for defendants found not guilty by reason of insanity in New Zealand, and explores the implications for policy development and clinical rehabilitation in this population. Method: All insanity acquittees disposed of by the courts as special patients after 1976 and released before 2004 are described. Their duration of inpatient care, rates of reconviction and rehospitalization following release are examined. The high resolution rate for violent crime reported to police suggests that reconviction rates are a reasonable proxy for violent reoffending. Factors predicting duration of inpatient care and reoffending are analysed. Results: Severity of Index Offence was the only variable predicting duration of inpatient care of the 135 special patients. Offenders of more serious offences were securely detained for longer periods – averaging 6 years in the case of those charged with murder. Most patients were readmitted over the decade following discharge. Only 6% had violently reoffended 2 years after release into the community. Prior offending, age at release, ethnicity and gender predicted reoffending, but not diagnosis or duration of inpatient admission. Conclusions: Following discharge into the community, insanity acquittees are reconvicted of violent crimes at a very low rate, although readmission to hospital is common. It may be that insanity acquittees are initially detained in hospital longer than is clinically indicated, and that safe forensic community treatment can occur at an earlier stage of recovery without compromising public safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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40. Lifetime prevalence and projected lifetime risk of DSM-IV disorders in Te Rau Hinengaro: The New Zealand Mental Health Survey.
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Oakley Browne, Mark A., Wells, J. Elisabeth, Scott, Kate M., and McGee, Magnus A.
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MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Objective: To estimate the lifetime prevalence and projected lifetime risk at age 75 years of DSM-IV disorders in New Zealand. Method: A nationwide face-to-face household survey carried out in 2003–2004. A fully structured diagnostic interview, the World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0), was used. There were 12 992 completed interviews from participants aged 16 years and over. The overall response rate was 73.3%. In this paper, the outcomes reported are lifetime prevalence and projected lifetime risk at age 75 years. Results: The lifetime prevalence of any disorder was 39.5%. The lifetime prevalences for disorder groups were: anxiety disorders, 24.9%; mood disorders, 20.2%; substance use disorders, 12.3%; and eating disorders, 1.7%. The prevalences for all disorders were higher in the younger age groups. Females had higher prevalences of anxiety, mood and eating disorders compared with males; males had higher prevalences of substance use disorders. The estimated projected lifetime risk of any disorder at age 75 years was 46.6% with the median age of onset being 18 years. Adjustment for age, sex, education and household income did not remove all differences between Māori and the composite other ethnic group in the risk of disorder (hazard ratio = 1.1–1.4). After adjustment, hazard ratios for Pacific people ranged from 0.8 to 2.5. Conclusions: These results confirm those of other studies: mental disorders are relatively common and tend to have early onset. Females are more likely to experience anxiety, mood and eating disorders than males, who experience more substance use disorders. Adjustment for socioeconomic factors and demography does not explain all ethnic differences, although remaining differences are small relative to cohort and even sex differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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41. Twelve-month and lifetime health service use in Te Rau Hinengaro: The New Zealand Mental Health Survey.
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Oakley Browne, Mark A., Wells, J. Elisabeth, and McGee, Magnus A.
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MEDICAL care , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH surveys , *MENTAL illness treatment - Abstract
Objective: To estimate the 12 month and lifetime use of health services for mental health problems. Method: A nationwide face-to-face household survey carried out in 2003–2004. A fully structured diagnostic interview, the World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0) was used. There were 12 992 completed interviews from participants aged 16 years and over. The overall response rate was 73.3%. In this paper, the outcomes reported are 12 month and lifetime health service use for mental health and substance use problems. Results: Of the population, 13.4% had a visit for a mental health reason in the 12 months before interview. Of all 12 month cases of mental disorder, 38.9% had a mental health visit to a health or non-health-care provider in the past 12 months. Of these 12 month cases, 16.4% had contact with a mental health specialist, 28.3% with a general medical provider, 4.8% within the human services sector and 6.9% with a complementary or alternative medicine practitioner. Most people with lifetime disorders eventually made contact if their disorder continued. However, the percentages seeking help at the age of onset were small for most disorders and several disorders had large percentages who never sought help. The median duration of delay until contact varies from 1 year for major depressive disorder to 38 years for specific phobias. Conclusions: A significant unmet need for treatment for people with mental disorder exists in the New Zealand community, as in other comparable countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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42. Mental–physical comorbidity in Te Rau Hinengaro: The New Zealand Mental Health Survey.
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Scott, Kate M., Oakley Browne, Mark A., McGee, Magnus A., and Wells, J. Elisabeth
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COMORBIDITY , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Objective: To estimate the prevalence of chronic physical conditions, and the risk factors for those conditions, among those with 12 month mental disorder; to estimate the prevalence of 12 month mental disorder among those with chronic physical conditions. Method: A nationally representative face-to-face household survey was carried out in October 2003 to December 2004 with 12 992 participants aged 16 years and over, achieving a response rate of 73.3%. Mental disorders were measured with the World Mental Health version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0). Physical conditions were self-reported. All associations are reported adjusted for age and sex. Results: People with (any) mental disorder, relative to those without mental disorder, had higher prevalences of several chronic physical conditions (chronic pain, cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure and respiratory conditions) and chronic condition risk factors (smoking, overweight/obesity, hazardous alcohol use). Around a quarter of people with chronic physical conditions had a comorbid mental disorder compared with 15% of the population without chronic conditions. Significant relationships occurred between some mental disorders and obesity, cardiovascular disease and diabetes for females, but not for males. Conclusions: This paper provides evidence of substantial comorbidity between mental disorders and chronic physical conditions in New Zealand. This should be borne in mind by clinicians working in both mental health and medical services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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43. Prevalence, interference with life and severity of 12 month DSM-IV disorders in Te Rau Hinengaro: The New Zealand Mental Health Survey.
- Author
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Wells, J. Elisabeth, Browne, Mark A. Oakley, Scott, Kate M., McGee, Magnus A., Baxter, Joanne, and Kokaua, Jesse
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MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Objective: To estimate the 12 month prevalence of DSM-IV disorders in New Zealand, and associated interference with life and severity. Method: A nationally representative face-to-face household survey carried out in 2003–2004. A fully structured diagnostic interview, the World Health Organization World Mental Health Survey Initiative version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0) was used. There were 12 992 completed interviews from participants aged 16 years and over. The overall response rate was 73.3%. In this paper the outcomes reported are 12 month prevalence, interference with life and severity for individual disorders. Results: The prevalence of any disorder in the past 12 months was 20.7%. The prevalences for disorder groups were: anxiety disorders 14.8%, mood disorders 7.9%, substance use disorders 3.5%, eating disorders 0.5%. The highest prevalences for individual disorders were for specific phobia (7.3%), major depressive disorder (5.7%) and social phobia (5.1%). Interference with life was higher for mood disorders than for anxiety disorders. Drug dependence, bipolar disorder and dysthymia had the highest proportion of severe cases (over 50%), when severity was assessed over the disorder itself and all comorbid disorders. Overall, only 31.7% of cases were classified as mild with 45.6% moderate and 22.7% serious. Conclusions: Compared with other World Mental Health survey sites New Zealand has relatively high prevalences, although almost always a little lower than for the US. For all disorders, except specific phobia, interference with life was reported to be moderate, on average, which has lead to less than a third of cases being classified as mild. Most people who have ever met full DSM-IV criteria, including the impairment criterion, and who experience symptoms or an episode in the past 12 months find that their disorders impact on their lives to a non-trivial extent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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44. Prevalence of mental disorders among Māori in Te Rau Hinengaro: The New Zealand Mental Health Survey.
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Baxter, Joanne, Kingi, Te Kani, Tapsell, Rees, Durie, Mason, and McGee, Magnus A.
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MENTAL illness , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Objective: To describe the prevalence of mental disorders (period prevalence across aggregated disorders, 12 month and lifetime prevalence) among Māori in Te Rau Hinengaro: The New Zealand Mental Health Survey. Method: Te Rau Hinengaro: The New Zealand Mental Health Survey, undertaken between 2003 and 2004, was a nationally representative face-to-face household survey of 12 992 New Zealand adults aged 16 years and over, including 2595 Māori. Ethnicity was measured using the 2001 New Zealand census ethnicity question. A fully structured diagnostic interview, the World Health Organization World Mental Health Survey Initiative version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0), was used to measure disorder. The overall response rate was 73.3%. This paper presents selected findings for the level and pattern of mental disorder prevalence among Māori. Results: Māori lifetime prevalence of any disorder was 50.7%, 12 month prevalence 29.5% and 1 month prevalence 18.3%. The most common 12 month disorders were anxiety (19.4%), mood (11.4%) and substance (8.6%) disorders and the most common lifetime disorders were anxiety (31.3%), substance (26.5%) and mood (24.3%) disorders. Levels of lifetime comorbidity were high with 12 month prevalence showing 16.4% of Māori with one disorder, 7.6% with two disorders and 5.5% with three or more disorders. Twelve-month disorders were more common in Māori females than in males (33.6% vs 24.8%) and in younger age groups: 16–24 years, 33.2%; 25–44 years, 32.9%; 45–64 years, 23.7%; and 65 years and over, 7.9%. Disorder prevalence was greatest among Māori with the lowest equivalized household income and least education. However, differences by urbanicity and region were not significant. Of Māori with any 12 month disorder, 29.6% had serious, 42.6% had moderate and 27.8% had mild disorders. Conclusion: Mental disorders overall and specific disorder groups (anxiety, mood and substance) are common among Māori and measures of severity indicate that disorders have considerable health impact. Findings provide a platform for informing public health policy and health sector responses to meeting mental health needs of Māori. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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45. Court diversion in perspective.
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James, David V.
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COURTS , *MENTAL health , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
Court diversion schemes have been running for a decade in New Zealand and are increasing in number in Australia. This paper aims to give an international and historical context to these developments, by reference to psychiatric initiatives at courts in the US and in England and Wales. From a review of the specialist literature, an account is given of three forms of psychiatric intervention in courts over the last 90 years: court psychiatric clinics and mental health courts in the US, and court diversion schemes in England and Wales. High levels of psychiatric morbidity among prisoners, coupled with a continuing increase in prisoner numbers, demonstrate the need for systems for dealing with mentally ill people who come before the courts. Court diversion in England and Wales developed as part of a system where the mentally ill who are found guilty are sent to hospital in lieu of any other sentence. Its focus is on a form of psychiatric triage, and its ethos is the health of the patient. Court psychiatric clinics in the US grew up as an alternative to assessment in prison. Their focus has been on full psychiatric evaluation in an insanity and incompetence jurisdiction. The ethos has been that of serving the court. Mental health courts are heavily influenced by ideas of therapeutic jurisprudence, and their emphasis has been on a judge holding minor offenders in community care through the threat of judicial sanction. Experience in England and Wales has shown that court diversion can be a powerful and effective intervention. In order for it to function properly, those running court schemes need direct admission rights to psychiatric beds, both open and locked. Court diversion schemes are best as part of a spectrum of services to police stations, courts and prisons, which involved both general and forensic psychiatrists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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46. Empirical basis and forensic application of affective and predatory violence.
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Meloy, J. Reid
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VIOLENCE , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) , *SOCIAL psychology , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGY , *MENTAL health , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to address the empirical basis and forensic application of a bimodal theory of violence. The definitions of affective and predatory violence, the relevant animal and clinical research, and the current empirical evidence in neurochemistry, neuropsychology and psychophysiology are reviewed. Forensic evidence for the relevance of this bimodal theory is investigated. An appropriate methodology for data gathering, and two observational measures along with one self-report measure are explicated. Integration of this bimodal theory into forensic practice is suggested. Affective and predatory modes of violence represent an empirically valid bimodal theory of violence, find application in forensic psychiatry, and scientifically deepen the understanding of discrete violent acts for both retrospective and prospective psychiatric and psychological investigations. This bimodal theory of violence should have a place in forensic psychiatric practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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47. Changes in private sector electroconvulsive treatment in Australia.
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Doessel, Darrel P., Scheurer, Roman W., Chant, David C., and Whiteford, Harvey A.
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ELECTROCONVULSIVE therapy , *MENTAL health , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *HEALTH insurance , *PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
Objectives: This paper reports on changes, over time and between states, in the use of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in the private psychiatric sector in Australia between 1984 and 2004. Method: Data for ECT services, and all specialist psychiatry services provided under the Medicare system, have been analysed in absolute numbers and as utilization rates. Results: Changes in the use of ECT over time are different from other services provided by private psychiatrists. As in other countries, the use of ECT initially declined in period studied but has increased in recent years. In addition, there is a clear pattern of differential use of ECT between the states and territories. Conclusions: This descriptive study cannot ‘explain’ the results obtained: other data, incorporated into an explanatory model using regression analysis, are needed to determine the factors underlying the utilization patterns obtained in this study. Thus, further work is needed. Furthermore, it is important to analyse data at a lower level of geographical aggregation than that of the state/territory: this (state/territory) aggregation conceals differences in utilization between metropolitan, minor city, rural and remote regions of the country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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48. Trauma, post-migration living difficulties, and social support as predictors of psychological adjustment in resettled Sudanese refugees.
- Author
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Schweitzer, Robert, Melville, Fritha, Steel, Zachary, and Lacherez, Philippe
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REFUGEES , *MENTAL health , *SUDANESE , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *ACCULTURATION , *LIFE skills , *SOCIAL networks - Abstract
Objective: This paper explores the impact of pre-migration trauma, post-migration living difficulties and social support on the current mental health of 63 resettled Sudanese refugees. Method: A semistructured interview including questionnaires assessing sociodemographic information, pre-migration trauma, anxiety, depression and posttraumatic stress, post-migration living difficulties and perceived social support were administered assisted by a bilingual community worker. Results: Resettled refugees from Sudan evidenced a history of trauma. Less than 5% met criteria for posttraumatic stress but 25% reported clinically high levels of psychological distress. The results indicate that social support – particularly perceived social support from the migrant's ethnic community – play a significant role in predicting mental health outcomes. Pre-migration trauma, family status and gender were also associated with mental health outcomes. Conclusions: Refugees in Australia may constitute a particularly vulnerable group in terms of mental health outcomes. Culturally specific sequelae in terms of social isolation and acculturation may be particularly problematic for these migrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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49. Cannabis use and the mental health of young people.
- Author
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Hall, Wayne D.
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CANNABIS (Genus) , *YOUNG adults , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL influence , *POLARIZATION (Social sciences) , *DRUG abuse ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Objective: To review the evidence on the mental health and psychosocial consequences of rising rates of cannabis use among young people in developed countries. Method: This paper critically reviews epidemiological evidence on the following psychosocial consequences of adolescent cannabis use: cannabis dependence; the use of heroin and cocaine; educational underachievement; and psychosis. Leading electronic databases such as PubMed have been searched to identify large-scale longitudinal studies of representative samples of adolescents and young adults conducted in developed societies over the past 20 years. Results: Cannabis is a drug of dependence, the risk of which increases with decreasing age of initiation. Cannabis dependence in young people predicts increased risks of using other illicit drugs, underperforming in school, and reporting psychotic symptoms. Uncertainty remains about which of these relationships are causal although the evidence is growing that cannabis is a contributory cause of psychotic symptoms. Conclusions: We face major challenges in communicating with young people about the most probable risks of cannabis use (dependence, educational underachievement and psychosis) given uncertainties about these risks and polarized community views about the policies that should be adopted to reduce them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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50. Free range users and one hit wonders: community users of an Internet-based cognitive behaviour therapy program.
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Christensen, Helen, Griffiths, Kathy, Groves, Chloe, and Korten, Ailsa
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INTERNET in psychotherapy , *MENTAL depression , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *NEUROLOGY , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *MENTAL health services , *THERAPEUTICS , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Objective: Little is known about the predictors of symptom change or the methods that might increase user ‘compliance’ on websites designed to improve mental health outcomes. The present paper: (i) examines predictors of expected final depression and anxiety scores on the MoodGYM website as a function of user characteristics; and (ii) compares the compliance rates of the original site with the new public version of the site (MoodGYM Mark II). The latter site requires compulsory completion of ‘core’ online assessments and may increase completion of site questionnaires. Method: MoodGYM Mark I participants were 19 607 visitors (public registrants) between April 2001 and September 2003 plus 182 participants who had been randomly assigned to MoodGYM in an earlier trial (The BlueMood Trial). MoodGYM Mark II participants were 38 791 public registrants of the MoodGYM Mark II site collected between September 2003 and October 2004. Symptom assessments are repeated within the website intervention to allow the examination of change in symptoms. Outcome variables were gender, initial depression severity scores, number of assessments completed and final anxiety and depression scores. Results: Men are predicted to be 0.19 units (SE = 0.095) higher than women on depression, controlling for the initial depression level and number of modules completed. For initial depression scores above 2, it is predicted that the final score will indicate improvement relative to the initial score, the magnitude of the improvement increasing as a function of the number of modules attempted. For initial anxiety scores above 2, it is predicted that the final score will indicate improvement relative to the initial score, the magnitude of the improvement increasing as a function of the number of modules attempted. Mark II registrants were more likely than to Mark I registrants to complete onsite assessments. Conclusions: Visitors to the MoodGYM site are likely to have better psychological outcomes if they complete more of the site material. Compulsory completion of core sections increases assessment completion. There is a need to examine further the significance of attrition from online interventions, to develop methods of handling missing data, and to investigate strategies to improve visitor dropout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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