36 results
Search Results
2. Evaluation of a Health Education Intervention to Improve Parental Knowledge and Attitudes About Chronic Stress and Depression Among Head Start Families.
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Guerrero, Alma D., Herman, Ariella, Teutsch, Carol, and Dudovitz, Rebecca
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HEALTH education evaluation , *PARENT attitudes , *HEAD Start programs , *CHRONIC diseases , *SELF-evaluation , *CHILD development , *BEHAVIOR , *MENTAL health , *T-test (Statistics) , *HEALTH literacy , *MENTAL depression , *INTELLECT , *RESEARCH funding , *CHI-squared test , *STRESS management , *POVERTY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Background. Chronic stress and depression disproportionately affect families experiencing poverty, and likely contribute to disparities in early childhood developmental outcomes. Developing strategies to address chronic stress and depression may help mitigate these disparities. Early Head Start (EHS) and Head Start (HS) programs provide an important platform to address the disproportionate burden of stress and mental health issues experienced by EHS/HS families. However, few low-literacy, broad, scalable interventions improve parents' knowledge and attitudes around these topics. Objectives. We examined parents' knowledge and attitudes regarding stress and depression before and after a train-the-trainer (TTT) intervention delivered to 28 EHS/HS agencies across the United States. Methods. Following a TTT workshop, 18 agencies chose to deliver the stress training to 1,089 parents and 5 chose to deliver the depression training to 670 parents. Participating parents completed paper assessments at baseline and 3 months following the training. Paired T-tests and chi-square analyses tested whether responses significantly improved over time. Results. At baseline, 37.2% of parents reported feeling stressed most of the time and 13.4% reported feeling depressed most of the time. Following the trainings and reinforcement activities, parents' knowledge, attitudes and self-reported behaviors significantly improved, including willingness to seek help for depression, avoidance of negative health-risk behaviors and utilization of healthy stress management practices. At follow up, 18.6% of parents reported feeling stressed most of the time and 11% reported feeling depressed. Conclusion. Findings suggest this low-literacy TTT approach is potentially a promising health promotion intervention with broad dissemination potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Diagnostic accuracy of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0) in an urban Indigenous Australian sample.
- Author
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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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4. 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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5. Self-Sentiments and Depressive Symptoms: A Longitudinal Analysis.
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Boyle, Kaitlin M. and Rogers, Kimberly B.
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MENTAL depression , *DOCTORAL students , *MENTAL health , *ANXIETY , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Social psychological theories provide useful tools for identifying interpretive processes that affect individual mental health outcomes. In this paper, we use the affect control theory of self (ACT-Self) to examine the relationship between depressive symptoms and global feelings about the self—self-sentiments—that are evoked by the constellation of identities, traits, moods, characteristics, and roles we hold and have held. We examine this relationship in two separate longitudinal studies conducted with undergraduates (N = 147) and doctoral students (N = 178) at a university in the Southeastern U.S., which employ different measures of depressive symptoms (the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale and Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale Short Form, respectively). We present key findings about links between depressive symptoms and evaluation (goodness), potency (powerfulness), and activity (liveliness). First, evaluation negatively predicts depressive symptoms at follow-up in both samples; activity predicts symptoms among undergraduates, and potency predicts symptoms among doctoral students. Second, respondents in both samples with self-sentiments closer to cultural sentiments for "depressed" report more depressive symptoms at follow-up. Third, evaluation gains over time predict less Wave 2 depressive symptoms in both samples; potency gains also predict symptoms among doctoral students. Finally, Wave 1 depressive symptoms—and increases in depression over time—predict lower levels of evaluation and potency in both samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. A longitudinal study of the mental health of autistic children and adolescents and their parents during COVID-19: Part 2, qualitative findings.
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Asbury, Kathryn and Toseeb, Umar
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COVID-19 , *WELL-being , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *AUTISM in adolescence , *QUALITATIVE research , *AUTISM in children , *PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers , *MENTAL depression , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INFORMATION needs , *ANXIETY , *CONTENT analysis , *COVID-19 pandemic , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
In Part 1 of this UK-based study, across four timepoints between March and October 2020, autistic children and young people showed higher levels of parent-reported depression and anxiety symptoms than those with other special educational needs and disabilities. In this study, we draw on qualitative data from 478 parents/carers of autistic pupils and those with other special educational needs and disabilities to conduct a longitudinal qualitative content analysis examining stability and change in the mental health of these young people, and their parents/carers, during the first 6 months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Worry and psychological distress were dominant categories at all timepoints and we noted that, in line with quantitative findings, worry in autistic pupils stayed stable over time but decreased for those with other special educational needs and disabilities. The third dominant category was wellbeing and we saw evidence that removing demands, especially the demand to attend school, was a driver of wellbeing for a significant minority of pupils, particularly autistic pupils, and their parents/carers. Overall, we observed no differences in mental health experiences between the two groups of parents, also mirroring quantitative findings. We know that autistic children and young people, and their caregivers, are at increased risk of mental ill health. We asked whether the first 6 months of COVID-19 exacerbated that risk, and whether the implications were different for autistic pupils and their caregivers, than for those with other special educational needs and difficulties. In a linked paper, we found that caregivers of autistic pupils reported higher levels of depression and anxiety symptoms in their children than parents of children with other special educational needs and difficulties (Toseeb & Asbury, 2022). For pupils with other special educational needs and difficulties, their parent-reported anxiety symptoms eased over time while remaining high throughout for autistic pupils. There were no differences in mental health and wellbeing between caregivers of autistic pupils and those with other special educational needs and difficulties. Here, we used parents' written descriptions of their own and their child's mental health during the first 6 months of COVID-19 to explore these linked findings in greater depth. We identified strong evidence of worry and distress for all, but most prominently autistic children and young people. Our finding that worry and distress declined over time for pupils with other special educational needs and difficulties, but not for autistic pupils, was supported and we observed a few differences between caregivers. We also found evidence of wellbeing throughout the sample, and examples of some (mainly autistic) pupils benefitting from a reduction in demands (e.g. going to school). This has implications for our understanding of the school experience for autistic pupils. Findings suggest that the mental health of autistic children and young people may have been disproportionately affected during the first 6 months of COVID-19 and that careful consideration of optimal support, from both health and education perspectives, is vital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. Implementation and Preliminary Evaluation of a 12-Week Cognitive Behavioural and Motivational Enhancement Group Therapy for Cannabis Use Disorder.
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Trick, Leanne, Butler, Kevin, Bourgault, Zoe, Vandervoort, Julianne, and Le Foll, Bernard
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *RESEARCH , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *SELF-evaluation , *PATIENT satisfaction , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *MENTAL health , *DRUG withdrawal symptoms , *HUMAN services programs , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *SELF-efficacy , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MENTAL depression , *ANXIETY , *GROUP psychotherapy , *COGNITIVE therapy , *OUTPATIENT services in hospitals , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this paper is to provide a preliminary evaluation of treatment outcomes, retention and client satisfaction following a 12-week combined cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and motivational enhancement therapy (MET) group treatment for cannabis use disorder (CUD) delivered in an outpatient setting. Implementation of the program is also described. METHODS: A retrospective observational cohort study was conducted using data collected from medical records and self-report assessments. Participants were treatment-seeking cannabis users at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto. Cannabis use, cannabis-related problems, craving, withdrawal symptoms, self-efficacy for remaining abstinent, depression and anxiety were assessed pre- and post-treatment. Treatment retention was calculated by inspecting clinic attendance records, and client satisfaction was evaluated using an anonymous feedback survey. Potential predictors of treatment outcomes and retention were investigated in exploratory analyses. RESULTS: Cannabis use was lower and days of abstinence higher post-treatment (vs pre-treatment). Post-treatment improvements in can-nabis-related problems, craving, withdrawal symptoms, self-efficacy and mood were also observed. Completion of group treatment (≥75% of sessions attended) was 57% and moderate levels of treatment satisfaction were reported. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides preliminary evidence that a 12-week combined CBT and MET treatment for cannabis use disorder delivered in a novel group setting improves cannabis use outcomes. Potential predictors of reduced cannabis use and retention were identified. Future controlled studies are warranted, and strategies for increasing retention should be explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Environment and mental health: empirical study on the relationship between contact with nature and symptoms of anxiety and depression (Ambiente y salud mental: estudio empírico sobre la relación entre contacto con la naturaleza, síntomas de ansiedad y de depresión)
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Tomasi, Samantha, Di Nuovo, Santo, and Hidalgo, M. Carmen
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MENTAL health , *ANXIETY , *RANK correlation (Statistics) , *WELL-being , *SYMPTOMS , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
This paper sets out to investigate the relationship between environment and mental health, and specifically between contact with nature and the presence of well-being, satisfaction with life, personality traits and symptoms of anxiety and depression. The sample comprised 59 people aged 18 to 70, and included 29 subjects from Spain and 30 from Italy. The following tests were utilized: a questionnaire about the frequency of activities carried out in natural surroundings, the Five Factor Inventory, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Beck Depression Inventory II, the Satisfaction With Life Scale and the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale. All variables were analysed using Pearson's correlation coefficient with the exception of level of education, which was analysed using Spearman's coefficient. The results suggest that contact with nature positively affects well-being and satisfaction with life, and that there is a negative correlation between contact with nature and symptoms of anxiety and depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Borderline personality disorder and depressive disorder.
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Rao, Sathya and Broadbear, Jillian
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BORDERLINE personality disorder , *MENTAL depression , *ANTIDEPRESSANTS , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Objective: Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is frequently accompanied by low mood, the features of which may satisfy the diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD). Treatment of depressive symptoms in the absence of BPD-appropriate treatment is less effective and may cause iatrogenic harm. This paper briefly reviews the co-occurrence of BPD and depressive disorder and suggests ways of differentiating these disorders and optimising treatment within the Australian Mental Health context.Conclusions: Depressive symptoms are present in the majority of people with BPD. To address the difficulty differentiating clinically distinct MDD from depressive symptoms that are integral to BPD psychopathology, it is suggested that depressive symptoms arising from a primary diagnosis of BPD (i) may exhibit transience and be stress reactive, (ii) lack a robust clinical response to antidepressant medication and/or electroconvulsive treatment and (iii) are responsive to BPD-appropriate psychotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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10. 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]
- Published
- 2018
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11. The Longitudinal Association Between Self‐esteem and Depressive Symptoms in Adolescents: Separating Between‐Person Effects from Within‐Person Effects.
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Masselink, M., Van Roekel, E., Hankin, B.L., Keijsers, L., Lodder, G.M.A., Vanhalst, J., Verhagen, M., Young, J.F., Oldehinkel, A.J., and Laceulle, Odilia
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MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health , *ADOLESCENT psychology , *SELF-esteem , *BORDERLINE personality disorder - Abstract
Many longitudinal studies have investigated whether self‐esteem predicts depressive symptoms (vulnerability model) or the other way around (scar model) in adolescents. The most common method of analysis has been the cross‐lagged panel model (CLPM). The CLPM does not separate between‐person effects from within‐person effects, making it unclear whether the results from previous studies actually reflect the within‐person effects or whether they reflect differences between people. We investigated the associations between self‐esteem and depressive symptoms at the within‐person level, using random intercept cross‐lagged panel models (RI‐CLPMs). To get an impression of the magnitude of possible differences between the RI‐CLPM and the CLPM, we compared the results of both models. We used data from three longitudinal adolescent samples (age range: 7–18 years; study 1: N = 1948; study 2: N = 1455; study 3: N = 316). Intervals between the measurements were 1–1.5 years. Single‐paper meta‐analyses showed support for small within‐person associations from self‐esteem to depressive symptoms, but not the other way around, thus only providing some support for the vulnerability model. The cross‐lagged associations in the aggregated RI‐CLPM and CLPM showed similar effect sizes. Overall, our results show that over 1‐ to 1.5‐year time intervals, low self‐esteem may negatively influence depressive symptoms over time within adolescents, but only weakly so. © 2018 The Authors. European Journal of Personality published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Association of Personality Psychology [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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12. Unguided Mental Health Self-help Apps: Reflections on Challenges through a Clinician's Lens.
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Mehrotra, Seema, Kumar, Satish, Sudhir, Paulomi, Rao, Girish N., Thirthalli, Jagadisha, and Gandotra, Aditi
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SELF-help techniques , *MENTAL health , *MOBILE apps , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
The past one decade has witnessed a boom in the availability of Internet-based self-help apps in the field of mental health. Several apps have emerged that aim to provide information and strategies to empower individuals with self-help approaches to deal with issues and concerns related to mental health. A large number of these apps in developing countries are likely to be those which depend entirely on the users to go over the self-help program on their own (unguided internet-based self-help). Only a few apps add a component of periodic professional contact/technical support through phone/email or other means to supplement the self-help strategies suggested in the app that the user is expected to utilize. This scenario poses several challenges in use of unguided self-help apps for mental health. This paper enumerates some of these challenges for potential users of the apps from the perspective of clinicians. These range from difficulties in choosing the right app, limited scope for contextualization, and motivation management to awareness about when to step up to a higher intensity intervention. Despite these challenges, unguided self-help apps can serve important purposes, and hence we propose a few recommendations to address such challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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13. Decreased mental time travel to the past correlates with default-mode network disintegration under lysergic acid diethylamide.
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Speth, Jana, Speth, Clemens, Kaelen, Mendel, Schloerscheidt, Astrid M., Feilding, Amanda, Nutt, David J., and Carhart-Harris, Robin L.
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TIME travel , *LSD (Drug) , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *THERAPEUTICS , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health , *BRAIN , *BRAIN mapping , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CROSSOVER trials , *HALLUCINOGENIC drugs , *DIGITAL image processing , *INTRAVENOUS therapy , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEMORY , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *EVALUATION research , *HUMAN research subjects , *NEURAL pathways - Abstract
This paper reports on the effects of LSD on mental time travel during spontaneous mentation. Twenty healthy volunteers participated in a placebo-controlled crossover study, incorporating intravenous administration of LSD (75 μg) and placebo (saline) prior to functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Six independent, blind judges analysed mentation reports acquired during structured interviews performed shortly after the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans (approximately 2.5 h post-administration). Within each report, specific linguistic references to mental spaces for the past, present and future were identified. Results revealed significantly fewer mental spaces for the past under LSD and this effect correlated with the general intensity of the drug's subjective effects. No differences in the number of mental spaces for the present or future were observed. Consistent with the previously proposed role of the default-mode network (DMN) in autobiographical memory recollection and ruminative thought, decreased resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) within the DMN correlated with decreased mental time travel to the past. These results are discussed in relation to potential therapeutic applications of LSD and related psychedelics, e.g. in the treatment of depression, for which excessive reflection on one's past, likely mediated by DMN functioning, is symptomatic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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14. WHAT WILL I DO...? TEENAGE GIRLS AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF MOTHERHOOD.
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Prendergast, Shirley and Prout, Alan
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MENTAL health , *MOTHERHOOD , *TEENAGE girls , *SOCIAL norms , *MENTAL depression , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The ideas explored in this paper were initially brought to our notice whilst analysing data derived from interviews with 15 year olds on motherhood and mental health. The aim of the paper is to explore and describe the relationship between powerful social norms about motherhood and the ideas and knowledge which the 15 year olds in our study revealed to us, ideas which often contradict the normative view. Our own data will be used to show some of the ways in which 15 year olds appear to negotiate for themselves, and attempt to resolve, the contradictions between normative and self-experienced knowledge about motherhood. In doing this we will be especially concerned to describe some of the solutions the girls develop. We have data on the same themes for boys, collected in the same way. For reasons of space we were unable to look at this in detail but want to write it up more fully at a later date. Our analysis will stress the active role that children play in the construction of their own views and futures rather than a more straightforwardly deterministic model which would see children as products of a social culture. We intend to relate this data to recent research on motherhood and depression and to some reflections on how normative conceptions come to be reproduced and socially maintained, focusing on the. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1980
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15. Will a new genotyping test help the clinician predict response to antidepressant drugs?
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Parker, Gordon, Rowe, Mark, Mehta, Farzaan, and Kumar, Sonia
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ANTIDEPRESSANTS , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this paper is to evaluate the accuracy of a new genotyping test (Antidepressant PredictAR) in assigning patients as likely 'poor', 'rapid' or 'normal' metabolizers of antidepressant drugs. Method: Eighty-nine patients were clinically assigned (on the basis of their historical response to antidepressant drugs) as 'poor', 'rapid' or 'normal' metabolizers and comparison was then made to their test-based 2D6 and C19 genotyping status reports. Results: The overall capacity of the test to allocate patients to four differing phenotypic categories reporting for the genotyping test was not significant in relation to either C19 or 2D6 analyses. However, the C19 test did appear to have some capacity to identify rapid metabolizers, and we note how we then sought to manage such patients clinically. Conclusions: The test may have some capacity to identify patients with a rapid metabolizing profile. Any further advantages were not identified by this study, whether reflecting methodological and/or assay limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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16. STAR*D: has it taught us anything about the management of depression?
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Castle, David, Schweitzer, Isaac, and Tiller, John
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DISEASE management , *MENTAL depression , *MEDICAL practice , *MENTAL health , *CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this paper was to review the large US National Institute of Mental Health-sponsored depression intervention effectiveness study, STAR*D, in order to evaluate critically its relevance for Australasian clinicians. Conclusions: STAR*D is a landmark study which tried to address issues of effectiveness rather than efficacy, of a number of interventions for depression. However, methodological shortcomings limit the utility of the study in informing Australasian clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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17. 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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18. Industry Supported Satellite Symposia.
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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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19. Using the Internet to enhance the treatment of depression.
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Robertson, Lucy, Smith, Michael, Castle, David, and Tannenbaum, Dennis
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MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH care reform , *PUBLIC hospitals - Abstract
Objective: Deficiencies in Australia’s mental health systems persist despite over a decade of mental health reform. Recent developments in e-health provide the opportunity to facilitate health reform and improve services. This paper presents preliminary findings from the implementation of a comprehensive e-health system, called RecoveryRoad , which was designed to augment the routine clinical treatment of depression. Methods: Depressed patients (n = 144) were referred to RecoveryRoad from a public hospital and public and private clinics in Perth, Western Australia. Online features included secure e-consultations, progress monitoring questionnaires, psychoeducation and evidence-based therapy. Treating clinicians had online access to patients’ progress monitoring outcomes and e-consultations. There were two types of adherence reminders: automated email reminders and personalized case management delivered by email and telephone. Results: Adherence to the system was high (from 53% to 84%, depending on the modality of reminder), and self-reported medication adherence was over 90%. Average depression severity declined from severe to mild by the eighth session, a large effect (d = 1.0). Both clinicians and patients were generally satisfied with the programme and reported that it improved clinician–patient relationships. Clinicians also reported that it helped patients to better manage depression. Conclusions: Preliminary findings support the feasibility of comprehensive e-health systems in enhancing the delivery of mental health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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20. 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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21. Assessing cost-effectiveness in mental health: helping policy-makers prioritize and plan health services.
- Author
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Vos, Theo, Haby, Michelle M., Magnus, Anne, Mihalopoulos, Cathrine, Andrews, Gavin, and Carter, Rob
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *COST effectiveness , *MENTAL health services , *HEALTH policy , *MENTAL depression , *BEHAVIOR therapy - Abstract
Objective: We assessed, from a health sector perspective, options for change that could improve the efficiency of Australia's current mental health services by directing available resources toward ‘best practice’ cost-effective services. Method: We summarize cost-effectiveness results of a range of interventions for depression, schizophrenia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and anxiety disorders that have been presented in previous papers in this journal. Recommendations for change are formulated after taking into account ‘second-filter criteria’ of equity, feasibility of implementing change, acceptability to stakeholders and the strength of the evidence. In addition, we estimate the impact on total expenditure if the recommended mental health interventions for depression and schizophrenia are to be implemented in Australia. Results: There are cost-effective treatment options for mental disorders that are currently underutilized (e.g. cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) for depression and anxiety, bibliotherapy for depression, family interventions for schizophrenia and clozapine for the worst course of schizophrenia). There are also less cost-effective treatments in current practice (e.g. widespread use of olanzapine and risperidone in the treatment of established schizophrenia and, within those atypicals, a preference for olanzapine over risperidone). Feasibility of funding mechanisms and training of staff are the main second-filter issues for CBT and family interventions. Acceptability to various stakeholders is the main barrier to implementation of more cost-effective drug treatment regimens. More efficient drug intervention options identified for schizophrenia would cost A$68 million less than current practice. These savings would more than cover the estimated A$36M annual cost of delivering family interventions to the 51% of people with schizophrenia whom we estimated to be eligible and this would lead to an estimated 12% improvement in their health status. Implementing recommended strategies for depression would cost A$121M annually for the 24% of people with depression who seek care currently, but do not receive an evidence-based treatment. Conclusions: Despite considerable methodological problems, a range of cost-effective and less cost-effective interventions for major mental disorders can be discerned. The biggest hurdle to implementation of more efficient mental health services is that this change would require reallocation of funds between interventions, between disorders and between service providers with different funding mechanisms. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 2005; 39:701–712 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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22. Critique of the guidelines for the treatment of depression: flaws in the construction.
- Author
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Parker, Gordon
- Subjects
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MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health , *DEPRESSED persons , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
To examine the likely utility of the recently published Australian and New Zealand clinical practice guidelines for the treatment of depression.The guidelines are critiqued for their intrinsic logic and their success in extracting potentially valid and useful management templates.This paper provides examples of key limitations to many specific interpretations and conclusions.It is argued that these guidelines are far less precise and informative for clinical practice than they appear and with a disturbing lack of rigour for a document promulgated by a professional college. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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23. A tale of three pathways: the experience of RBWH Mental Health.
- Author
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Emmerson, Brett, Fawcett, Lisa, Frost, Aaron, Lacey, Maree, Todd, Cathy, and Powell, Jacinta
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *PATIENTS , *HOSPITALS , *CONSULTANTS , *PSYCHOSES , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health services , *THERAPEUTICS , *MENTAL illness treatment , *PSYCHIATRIC treatment , *AUDITING , *COMPARATIVE studies , *HEALTH care teams , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL protocols , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals , *RESEARCH , *WOMEN'S health services , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objectives: Australian research has identified that there are significant variations between service providers in terms of clinical management of patients with comparable presenting problems. Internal audits within the facility at Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital revealed that these variations occurred between wards, treating teams and psychiatric consultants. Given the increasing emphasis on evidence-based practice, it was decided that the literature should be reviewed to determine what the standard of care should be. The paper then examines how clinical pathways for psychosis and for depression were developed and how they eventually evolved into an acute inpatient pathway. It identifies the framework used and examines important aspects relating to the adaptation of these frameworks to mental health issues. The process for the development and implementation of the clinical pathway is discussed. Recommendations for their future use in a mental health setting are also presented.Conclusions: Mental Health care is complex. For this reason, mental health clinical pathways have to remain flexible and innovative. With the present project, it was found that the pathways were not suited for specific diagnoses so that they evolved into a single acute inpatient pathway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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24. 'There just aren't enough hours in the day': the mental health consequences of time pressure.
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Roxburgh, Susan
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *MENTAL depression , *WOMEN employees , *SOCIAL networks , *HOME economics ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
In this paper I examine the association between subjective time pressure and depression and consider whether time pressure mediates the relationship between roles and depression, whether social and economic resources moderate the association between time pressure and depression, and whether time pressure explains gender differences in depression. Results of a telephone survey of 790 respondents indicate that time pressure is significantly associated with distress for men and women, and that subjective time pressure accounts for the significantly higher depression of employed women. Time pressure mediates the impact of housework and the volunteer role among women and it partially explains the differential depression of divorced men. Several resources moderate the impact of time pressure on depression: income among both men and women and perceived co-worker social support among men. Results suggest that the subjective experience of time pressure can be thought of as a potentially important mechanism by which lived experience is transformed into depression. However, in spite of the ubiquity of time pressure in the North American context, the depressing consequences of this subjective experience are not distributed equitably, suggesting that the capacity to manage time pressure and avoid depression may be another benefit associated with strategically advantageous social locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Major depression and mental health care utilization in Canada: 1994 to 2000.
- Author
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Patten, Scott B. and Beck, Cynthia
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- *
MENTAL health , *MENTAL depression , *STATISTICS , *NUMERICAL analysis , *MENTAL health services , *HEALTH surveys , *MEDICAL care , *THERAPEUTICS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL support , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: Major depression makes an important contribution to disease burden in Canada. In principle, the burden of major depression can be reduced by the provision of treatment within the health care system. In a previous data analysis, the National Population Health Survey (NPHS) reported an increase in antidepressant (AD) use between 1994 and 1998. In this paper, the analysis is extended to 2000, and additional aspects of health care utilization are described.Methods: The NPHS provides a unique source of longitudinal data concerning major depression and its treatment in Canada. In this survey, probable cases of major depression were identified using a brief predictive instrument; health care utilization was evaluated using additional survey items; and the latest data release from Statistics Canada (that is, 2000) was used to make weighted estimates of the frequency of health care utilization in relation to major depression status.Results: The use of ADs has continued to escalate. These increases have been largest in men and in persons aged under 35 years. There has been an increase in polypharmacy: in 2000, almost 9% of persons taking an AD reported taking more than 1 AD medication-a tripling since 1994. The frequency of consultations with alternative practitioners has also grown. Although the overall proportion of persons with major depression who report consulting with health professionals about their mental health has not increased, the number of persons with major depressive disorder reporting 6 or more visits to nurses, social workers, and psychologists may have.Conclusion: The provision of AD treatment continues to expand in Canada. This probably represents a changing pattern of practice, because the frequency of professional consultation has not increased. More detailed data are required to evaluate the extent to which treatment needs are being met. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
26. The Mental Health Continuum: From Languishing to Flourishing in Life.
- Author
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Keyes, Corey L. M.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *WELL-being , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL depression , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
This paper introduces and applies an operationalization of mental health as a syndrome of symptoms of positive feelings and positive functioning in life. Dimensions and scales of subjective well-being are reviewed and conceived of as mental health symptoms. A diagnosis of the presence of mental health, described as flourishing, and the absence of mental health, characterized as languishing, is applied to data from the 1995 Midlife in the United States study of adults between the ages of 25 and 74 (n = 3, 032). Findings revealed that 17.2 percent fit the criteria for flourishing, 56.6 percent were moderately mentally healthy, 12.1 percent of adults fit the criteria for languishing, and 14.1 percent fit the criteria for DSM-III-R major depressive episode (12-month), of which 9.4 percent were not languishing and 4.7 percent were also languishing. The risk of a major depressive episode was two times more likely among languishing than moderately mentally healthy adults, and nearly six times greater among languishing than flourishing adults. Multivariate analyses revealed that languishing and depression were associated with significant psychosocial impairment in terms of perceived emotional health, limitations of activities of daily living, and workdays lost or cutback. Flourishing and moderate mental health were associated with superior profiles of psychosocial functioning. The descriptive epidemiology revealed that males, older adults, more educated individuals, and married adults were more likely to be mentally healthy. Implications for the conception of mental health and the treatment and prevention of mental illness are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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- View/download PDF
27. Socioeconomic status and depressive syndrome: the role of inter- and intra-generational mobility, government assistance, and work environment.
- Author
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Eaton, William W., Muntaner, Carles, Bovasso, Gregory, Smith, Corey, Eaton, W W, Muntaner, C, Bovasso, G, and Smith, C
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL depression , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL psychiatry , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
This paper assesses the hypothesis that depressive syndrome is associated with socioeconomic status, using longitudinal data from the Baltimore Epidemiologic Catchment Area Followup. Socioeconomic measures include those used in most studies of status attainment, as well as measures of financial dependence, non-job income, and work environment. Analyses include inter- and intra-generational mobility, and replicate the basic aspects of the status attainment process, as well as psychiatric epidemiologic findings regarding gender, family history of depression, life events, and depressive syndrome. But the involvement of depressive syndrome in the process of status attainment, either as cause or consequence, is small and not statistically significant. There are strong effects of financial dependence and work environment on depressive syndrome. The findings shed doubt on the utility of the causation/selection/drift model for depression, to the extent it is based on linear relationships and socioeconomic rank at the macro level, while lending credibility to social-psychologically oriented theories of work environment, poverty, and depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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28. The Stress Process and the Social Distribution of Depression.
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Turner, R. Jay and Lloyd, Donald A.
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- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *MENTAL depression , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *SOCIAL status , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Mental health generally and depression in particular have been repeatedly shown to vary in relation to gender, socioeconomic status, marital status, and age. These status differences may be linked to mental health because they tend to define important differences in stress exposure and in the availability of coping resources. This paper examines the capacity of the stress-process model to account for the social distribution of depression. We employ mediation analyses using data from a 1990-1991 survey of Toronto community residents. In general, we found hypothesized risk factors to vary across these statuses with depressive symptoms and disorder and the distribution of protective factors to vary inversely. Results indicate that the model as expressed in our analyses accounts for a substantial minority of observed depression differences across individuals and for a considerable portion of reliably observed variation across social statuses. Our findings with respect to major depressive disorder parallel those for depressive symptomatology. Most compelling is the nearly total explanation of the socioeconomic status association with depressive symptoms and the substantial contribution toward explaining the socioeconomic status-disorder relationship when stress process mediators are accounted for. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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29. Marital Transitions, Marital Beliefs, and Mental Health.
- Author
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Simon, Robin W. and Marcussen, Kristen
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- *
MARRIAGE , *MARITAL status , *MARITAL adjustment , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health - Abstract
In this paper, we examine whether people "s beliefs about the permanence, desirability, and importance of marriage moderate the impact of marital transitions-including marital losses and gains--on depression, a disorder associated with both marital status and role transitions. Using two waves of panel data from the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 10,005), we find that a marital loss results in increased symptoms, whereas a marital gain results in decreased symptoms. We also find, however, that the negative effects of a marital loss are greater for people who believe in the permanence of marriage than they are for those who do not. Conversely, the positive effects of a marital gain are greater for people who believe in the desirability and importance of marriage than they are for those who do not. Our results highlight the potential utility of more systematically incorporating people's beliefs--and sociocultural factors more generally--into theory and research on the impact of stressors on mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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30. Homeless Mothers and Depression: Misdirected Policy.
- Author
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Bogard, Cynthia J., McConnell, J. Jeff, Gerstel, Naomi, and Schwartz, Michael
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness , *HOMELESSNESS , *MENTAL health , *SERVICES for homeless people , *FAMILIES , *MENTAL health services , *MENTAL depression , *SOCIAL networks , *MOTHERS - Abstract
This paper is a critique of recent service-intensive shelter programs for homeless mothers and the policies that underlie these shelters. We first document the process by which mental health problems and family homelessness became so closely but mistakenly linked. We then demonstrate empirically that shelter programs for homeless families nonetheless presume that mental health problems are part of the causal nexus of family homelessness and indiscriminately deliver mental health services to homeless mothers. Simultaneously, shelter programs encourage the isolation of their residents from what they presume to be their "problematic" social networks. We show that, while mental health services had little impact on depression levels among homeless mothers, isolation from social networks did increase depression among homeless mothers. Our findings suggest that policy should put more emphasis on rapid reintegration into the community through providing housing, and it should put less emphasis on providing services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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- View/download PDF
31. How the Negative and Positive Aspects of Partner Relationships Affect the Mental Health of Young Married People.
- Author
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Horwitz, Allan V., McLaughlin, Julie, and White, Helene Raskin
- Subjects
- *
MARRIAGE , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *FAMILY relations , *SPOUSES , *QUALITY of life , *MENTAL depression ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
The relationship between marriage and positive mental health is one of the most established findings in the stress literature. Few studies, however, examine the problematic as well as the supportive impacts of marriage on mental health. This paper uses a cohort of young adults who were sampled at 18, 21, or 24 years of age and resampled seven years later when they were married at 25, 28, or 31. It examines what factors are associated with the quality of marital relationships, the relative impact of and balance between negative and positive partner relationships on mental health, and sex differences in the determinants and outcomes of marital quality. The results indicate that the structural strains of parenthood and financial need and their interaction predict problematic and supportive spousal relationships and the difference in the levels of these two relationships. Problematic relationships with spouses have considerably stronger impacts than supportive relationships on depression. However, the difference between the amounts of supportive and problematic relationships with spouses has a greater impact on mental health than levels of either considered separately. Finally, relational quality has a greater impact on the mental health of wives than husbands. These findings indicate the importance of considering how marriage affects mental health in complex, rather than in straightforward, ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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32. The Fulfillment of Career Dreams at Midlife: Does It Matter for Women's Mental Health?
- Author
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Carr, Deborah
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN'S mental health , *MIDDLE-aged women , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL depression , *VOCATIONAL interests , *HEALTH - Abstract
This paper examines whether a woman's mental health at midlife is affected by the degree to which her earlier career aspirations have been fulfilled. Two dimensions of mental health are considered: depression and purpose in life. Based on data for 3,499 female respondents to the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (WLS), the results indicate that women who have fallen short of their earlier career goals suffer from lower levels of purpose in life and higher levels of depression, even after controlling for social background, human capital, family, and health characteristics. For purpose in life, the harmful effects of falling short of one's goal attenuate considerably when current family characteristics are controlled. For depression, the harmful effects of falling short of one's goal decline considerably once health characteristics are considered. Although women who aspired to be housewives evidenced lower levels of purpose in life at midlife than women with work aspirations, this difference was not statistically significant once human capital characteristics were controlled. Women who, at age 35, "did not know" what they hoped to do in the future had significantly lower levels of purpose in life in their 50s, even after controlling for social background, human capital, family, and health characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Economic Context and the Health Effects of Unemployment.
- Author
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Turner, J. Blake
- Subjects
- *
UNEMPLOYMENT , *EMPLOYMENT , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health , *ACADEMIC achievement , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Most studies of the health consequences of unemployment ignore the economic context within which job loss occurs. Using data from a subset (N = 1,252) of a national probability sample, this paper compares the effects of current and previous unemployment on depression and subjective physical health status across levels of educational attainment and local job availability. Results show that current unemployment effects among the previously unemployed are strongest in low unemployment areas, particularly among individuals with a college-level education. These findings are interpreted in terms of the two categories of unemployment-related stress most frequently identified in the literature: financial strain, which is thought to be more salient for people in lower socioeconomic statuses, and damage to sense of self, which may primarily characterize higher status victims of job loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Becoming Married, Depression, and Alcohol Problems Among Young Adults.
- Author
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Horwitz, Allan V. and White, Helene Raskin
- Subjects
- *
MARRIAGE , *MENTAL health , *PUBLIC health , *MENTAL depression , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *INTERPERSONAL conflict - Abstract
This paper examines three questions regarding the relationship between marriage and mental health, specifically depression and alcohol problems. First, does marriage lead to improved mental health compared to never marrying? Second, do any mental health benefits of marriage primarily accrue to men? Third, what qualitative aspects of marriage are related to psychological disorder? We explore these questions in a longitudinal sample of young adults sampled at age 21 and again at age 24. We find no indication that marriage reduces depression. Married people do report fewer alcohol problems than the never-married but this could be due to the selection of less problematic drinkers into marriage. We also fail to find that men receive disproportionate mental health benefits from marriage. Finally, we find that marital conflict is associated with problem drinking for men and depression for women. The results indicate the importance of considering stage in the life cycle and gender-sensitive indicators of psychological disorder in studies of marriage and mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Open Symposia.
- Subjects
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CONFERENCES & conventions , *ABUSE of older people , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of several papers discussed at the Open Symposia including "Increasing Consumer and Carer Participation--Rhetoric to Reality?," "Elder Abuse in Aged Residential Facilities: Causes and Consequences," and "Depression and Physical Illness."
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Can we reduce the burden of depression? The Australian experience withbeyondblue: the national depression initiative.
- Author
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Hickie, Ian
- Subjects
- *
THERAPEUTICS , *MENTAL depression , *DEPRESSED persons , *SCHOOLS , *EMPLOYEE health promotion , *AWARENESS , *MENTAL health , *LIFE insurance - Abstract
Objective:Throughout the Asia Pacific region, there is an urgent need to reduce the burden of depression by increasing depression awareness, reducing stigma and dismantling those social barriers that prevent full participation by people with depression. This paper describes the development and early achievements of the Australian depression initiative,beyondblue.Methods:A review of the key priorities ofbeyondblue andtheir impacts during the first three years of operation (2001−03).Results:Key achievements include: the degree of national recognition ofbeyondblue; size and scope of media impact; growth in website utilisation; increased reporting of the community's recognition of people with depression; genuine reforms in life insurance and income protection; development of a new national consumer and carer organisation; establishment of major population-based preventative and early intervention programs; system-wide reform of primary care-based mental health services; national educational program uptake by general practitioners; and, development of key awareness and intervention programs for use in schools and the workplace.Conclusions:In its first three years of operation,beyondbluehas had a major impact on depression awareness in Australia and demonstrable gains have been made in reducing stigma and major social barriers. A pre-existing national mental health policy and implementation plan, a substantial funding base and participation by key political, media and community leaders have been essential elements of its short-term success. Its longer-term impact will now depend on more sustainable community and business partnerships as well as the growth of a more influential consumer and carer voice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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