271 results on '"Tomlinson, Mark"'
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2. Termination of pregnancy for fetal anomaly: a systematic review of the healthcare experiences and needs of parents.
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Heaney, Suzanne, Tomlinson, Mark, and Aventin, Áine
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Background: Improved technology and advances in clinical testing have resulted in increased detection rates of congenital anomalies during pregnancy, resulting in more parents being confronted with the possibility of terminating a pregnancy for this reason. There is a large body of research on the psychological experience and impact of terminating a pregnancy for fetal anomaly. However, there remains a lack of evidence on the holistic healthcare experience of parents in this situation. To develop a comprehensive understanding of the healthcare experiences and needs of parents, this systematic review sought to summarise and appraise the literature on parents' experiences following a termination of pregnancy for fetal anomaly.Review Question: What are the healthcare experiences and needs of parents who undergo a termination of pregnancy following an antenatal diagnosis of a fetal anomaly?Methods: A systematic review was undertaken with searches completed across six multi-disciplinary electronic databases (Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Web of Science, and Cochrane). Eligible articles were qualitative, quantitative or mixed methods studies, published between January 2010 and August 2021, reporting the results of primary data on the healthcare experiences or healthcare needs in relation to termination of pregnancy for fetal anomaly for either, or both parents. Findings were synthesised using Thematic Analysis.Results: A total of 30 articles were selected for inclusion in this review of which 24 were qualitative, five quantitative and one mixed-methods. Five overarching themes emerged from the synthesis of findings: (1) Contextual impact on access to and perception of care, (2) Organisation of care, (3) Information to inform decision making, (4) Compassionate care, and (5) Partner experience.Conclusion: Compassionate healthcare professionals who provide non-judgemental and sensitive care can impact positively on parents' satisfaction with the care they receive. A well organised and co-ordinated healthcare system is needed to provide an effective and high-quality service.Trial Registration: PROSPERO registration number: CRD42020175970 . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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3. First 1,000 days: enough for mothers but not for children? Long‐term outcomes of an early intervention on maternal depressed mood and child cognitive development: follow‐up of a randomised controlled trial.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Skeen, Sarah, Melendez‐Torres, G. J., Hunt, Xanthe, Desmond, Chris, Morgan, Barak, Murray, Lynne, Cooper, Peter J, Rathod, Sujit D., Marlow, Marguerite, and Fearon, Pasco
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ATTITUDES of mothers , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *CHILD development , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *MEDICAL care costs , *MENTAL health , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *PARENT-infant relationships , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *MENTAL depression , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *COGNITIVE testing , *EARLY medical intervention , *LONG-term health care - Abstract
Background: Child cognitive development is often compromised in contexts of poverty and adversity, and these deficits tend to endure and affect the child across the life course. In the conditions of poverty and violence that characterise many low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMIC), the capacity of parents to provide the kind of care that promotes good child development may be severely compromised, especially where caregivers suffer from depression. One avenue of early intervention focuses on the quality of the early mother–infant relationship. The aim of this study was to examine the long‐term impact of an early intervention to improve the mother–infant relationship quality on child cognitive outcomes at 13 years of age. We also estimated the current costs to replicate the intervention. Method: We re‐recruited 333 children from an early childhood maternal–infant attachment intervention, 'Thula Sana', when the children were 13 years old, to assess whether there were impacts of the intervention on child cognitive outcomes, and maternal mood. We used the Kaufman Assessment Battery to assess the child cognitive development and the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ‐9) and the Self‐Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ‐20) to assess maternal mental health. Results: Effect estimates indicated a pattern of null findings for the impact of the intervention on child cognitive development. However, the intervention had an effect on caregiver psychological distress (PHQ‐9, ES = −0.17 [CI: −1.95, 0.05] and SRQ‐20, ES = −0.30 [CI: −2.41, −0.19]), but not anxiety. The annual cost per mother–child pair to replicate the Thula Sana intervention in 2019 was estimated at ZAR13,365 ($780). Conclusion: In a socio‐economically deprived peri‐urban settlement in South Africa, a home visiting intervention, delivered by community workers to mothers in pregnancy and the first six postpartum months, had no overall effect on child cognitive development at 13 years of age. However, those caregivers who were part of the original intervention showed lasting improvements in depressed mood. Despite the fact that there was no intervention effect on long‐term child outcomes, the improvements in maternal mood are important. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. When less is more: The way forward for mental health interventions during the perinatal period.
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Tomlinson, Mark and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
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PERINATAL period , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL health services - Abstract
Initial screening can be followed by a diagnostic interview to determine diagnosis and/or the severity of the depression in order to inform treatment [[13]]. Using a screening tool in routine primary health care settings in resource-constrained health systems may overwhelm fragile health systems and direct already limited resources away from people with an actual diagnosis [[6]]. Screening vs. diagnosis The extent to which screening actually improves detection or management of depression remains contested [[4]]. It has been estimated that while screening tools may miss less than 3% of people with a potential diagnosis of depression, fewer than 50% of those screening positive, in fact, have depression [[5]]. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2022
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5. Intimate Partner Violence and Food Insecurity Predict Early Behavior Problems Among South African Children over 5-years Post-Birth.
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Hayati Rezvan, Panteha, Tomlinson, Mark, Christodoulou, Joan, Almirol, Ellen, Stewart, Jacqueline, Gordon, Sarah, Belin, Thomas R., and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
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INTIMATE partner violence , *FOOD security , *SOUTH Africans , *ABUSED women , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *CHILD psychology - Abstract
Households experiencing intimate partner violence (IPV) and food insecurity are at high risk of lifelong physical and behavioral difficulties. Longitudinal data from a perinatal home-visiting cluster-randomized controlled intervention trial in South Africa townships were used to examine the relationships between household settings and mothers' histories of risk and children's behavior problems at 3 and 5 years of age. IPV, food insecurity, maternal depressed mood, and geriatric pregnancy (at age of 35 or older) were consistently associated with children's internalizing and externalizing behavior problems. Aggressive behavior was more prevalent among 3- and 5-year olds boys, and was associated with maternal alcohol use. The effects of these factors on child behavior were more prominent than maternal HIV status. There is a continuing need to reduce IPV and household food insecurity, as well as supporting older, depressed, alcohol using mothers in order to address children's behavioral needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. Programmatic guidance for interventions to improve early childhood development in high HIV burden countries: a narrative review.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Hunt, Xanthe, Watt, Kathryn, Naicker, Sara, and Richter, Linda
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HIV , *MIDDLE-income countries , *PARAPROFESSIONALS , *CHILD care workers , *FOOD security - Abstract
Exposure to a multitude of risks, including food insecurity, poverty, and – perhaps most prominently – HIV can be damaging for early childhood survival, healthy growth and development. Yet, guidance regarding the implementation factors that contribute to early child development-focussed programme success is lacking in low- and middle-income countries broadly, and sub-Saharan Africa in particular. Having access to guidelines for practice and implementation could assist in improving the implementation of programmes to improve early childhood development. We conducted a narrative review of the literature with the goal of identifying how implementation features of these early interventions may influence the effectiveness of such work in the complex contexts which characterise this region. Our final review included 197 for final analysis. There were two primary cross-cutting findings. Firstly, the benefit for parents was less clear than they were for children, and secondly, while the benefits for children were clear, those most at risk benefited the most. Home visiting was found to be the predominant service delivery platform, and positive outcomes for children were reported when home visiting programmes were implemented by trained non-professionals, whereas positive parent outcomes were reported more frequently when delivered by professionals. In early childhood care and education programmes, positive outcomes for children and parents were reported when they were implemented by both trained non-professionals and professionals. Trained non-professionals facilitating parent groups produced similar benefits to groups run by professionals. Take-home lessons for successful programmes were that high levels of attendance, regular sessions of at least an hour duration, with the programme continuing for more than 6 months and closer to a year are key for effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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7. Improving mother–infant interaction during infant feeding: A randomised controlled trial in a low‐income community in South Africa.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Rabie, Stephan, Skeen, Sarah, Hunt, Xanthe, Murray, Lynne, and Cooper, Peter J
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RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *POOR communities , *INFANTS , *ANIMAL feeding , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *BREASTFEEDING - Abstract
Background: Maternal–infant feeding interactions are a primary context for engagement between mothers and their infants, and constitute a unique space in which reciprocity, attunement and maternal sensitivity can be expressed. Increasingly, research demonstrates the importance of the psychological and social nature of the feeding context, and how it may be affected by maternal mental state, feeding skills and sensitivity. As such, feeding interactions may provide useful contexts for observations of maternal sensitivity, reflecting well on day‐to‐day maternal sensitivity. Aims and Objectives: This paper is a post hoc examination of the impact of an intervention on maternal sensitivity during a feeding interaction when the infants were 6 months old. Participants: A total of 449 women consented to participate in the original intervention and were randomly assigned to the intervention or control groups. Mothers and infants were assessed during pregnancy, and then at 2, 6, 12 and 18 months of infant age. At the 6 month follow‐up visit, 79% (354 out of 449) of the participants were retained. Post hoc analyses were conducted on the original sample to determine breastfeeding status. Sixty‐nine percent of the women completed the feeding observation at the 6 months follow‐up visit, of which 47% reported exclusively breastfeeding and 22% reported bottle‐feeding. Results: Results demonstrated that during a feeding interaction, maternal sensitivity was significantly improved among non‐breastfeeding mothers who received the intervention. Particularly, maternal responsiveness to infant cues and synchronous interactions was higher among non‐breastfeeding intervention mothers compared to control group mothers. The results also show that non‐breastfeeding mothers who received the intervention were significantly less intrusive in their interactions with their infants. Conclusion: The intervention had particular beneficial effects for mothers who were not breastfeeding and suggest that the intervention offered a protective effect for non‐breastfeeding mothers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. Identifying and treating maternal mental health difficulties in Afghanistan: A feasibility study.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Chaudhery, Deepika, Ahmadzai, Habibullah, Rodríguez Gómez, Sofía, Rodríguez Gómez, Cécile, van Heyningen, Thandi, and Chopra, Mickey
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ACUTE stress disorder , *MENTAL health services , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL health personnel , *HEALTH facilities , *MATERNAL health services , *MENTAL health facilities , *BREASTFEEDING promotion - Abstract
Background: The disproportionately high burden of mental disorders in low- and middle-income countries, coupled with the overwhelming lack of resources, requires an innovative approach to intervention and response. This study evaluated the feasibility of delivering a maternal mental health service in a severely-resource constrained setting as part of routine service delivery. Methods: This exploratory feasibility study was undertaken at two health facilities in Afghanistan that did not have specialist mental health workers. Women who had given birth in the past 12 months were screened for depressive symptoms with the PHQ9 and invited to participate in a psychological intervention which was offered through an infant feeding scheme. Results: Of the 215 women screened, 131 (60.9%) met the PHQ9 criteria for referral to the intervention. The screening prevalence of postnatal depression was 61%, using a PHQ9 cut-off score of 12. Additionally, 29% of women registered as suicidal on the PHQ9. Several demographic and psychosocial variables were associated with depressive symptoms in this sample, including nutritional status of the infant, anxiety symptoms, vegetative and mood symptoms, marital difficulties, intimate partner violence, social isolation, acute stress and experience of trauma. Of the 47 (65%) women who attended all six sessions of the intervention, all had significantly decreased PHQ9 scores post-intervention. Conclusion: In poorly resourced environments, where the prevalence of postnatal depression is high, a shift in response from specialist-based to primary health care-level intervention may be a viable way to provide maternal mental health care. It is recommended that such programmes also consider home-visiting components and be integrated into existing infant and child health programmes. Manualised, evidence-based psychological interventions, delivered by non-specialist health workers, can improve outcomes where resources are scarce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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9. Home visits by community health workers in rural South Africa have a limited, but important impact on maternal and child health in the first two years of life.
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Stansert Katzen, Linnea, Tomlinson, Mark, Christodoulou, Joan, Laurenzi, Christina, le Roux, Ingrid, Baker, Venetia, Mbewu, Nokwanele, le Roux, Karl W., and Rotheram Borus, Mary Jane
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RURAL health , *PUBLIC health , *CHILDREN'S health , *MEDICAL personnel , *MATERNAL health , *NEONATAL mortality , *LACTATION consultants , *HOME health aides - Abstract
Background: More than 50% of Africa's population lives in rural areas, which have few professional health workers. South Africa has adopted task shifting health care to Community Health Workers (CHWs) to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, but little is known about CHWs' efficacy in rural areas.Methods: In this longitudinal prospective cohort study, almost all mothers giving birth (N = 470) in the Zithulele Hospital catchment area of the OR Tambo District were recruited and repeatedly assessed for 2 years after birth with 84.7-96% follow-up rates. During the cohort assessment we found that some mothers had received standard antenatal and HIV care (SC) (n = 313 mothers), while others had received SC, supplemented with home-visiting by CHWs before and after birth (HV) (n = 157 mothers, 37 CHWs). These visits were unrelated to the cohort study. Multiple linear and logistic regressions evaluated maternal comorbidities, maternal caretaking, and child development outcomes over time.Results: Compared to mothers receiving SC, mothers who also received home visits by CHWs were more likely to attend the recommended four antenatal care visits, to exclusively breastfeed at 3 months, and were less likely to consult traditional healers at 3 months. Mothers in both groups were equally likely to secure the child grant, and infant growth and achievement of developmental milestones were similar over the first 2 years of life.Conclusion: CHW home visits resulted in better maternal caretaking, but did not have direct benefits for infants in the domains assessed. The South African Government is planning broad implementation of CHW programmes, and this study examines a comprehensive, home-visiting model in a rural region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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10. Older people and Social Quality – what difference does income make?
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Foster, Liam, Tomlinson, Mark, and Walker, Alan
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INCOME , *ALTRUISM , *CULTURE , *FACTOR analysis , *HEALTH status indicators , *PENSIONS , *POLICY sciences , *POVERTY , *REGRESSION analysis , *RETIREMENT , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL participation , *SOCIAL security , *SURVEYS , *GOVERNMENT policy , *OLD age - Abstract
This article explores the relationship between Social Quality and income in later life and represents the first application of the concept to a United Kingdom data-set with an explicit focus on older people. In order to undertake this analysis, confirmatory factor analysis models are employed in conjunction with the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS). This enables various dimensions or domains of Social Quality to be measured and then subjected to further scrutiny via regression analysis. Initially, the paper explores links between low income, poverty and older people, prior to outlining the concept of Social Quality and its four conditional factors. Following the methodology, the impact of income on Social Quality domains is explored. We identify that differences in income in older age provide a partial explanation of differences in individual Social Quality. While there is a statistically significant relationship between income and certain aspects of Social Quality such as economic security, altruism, social networks and culture/participation, other factors such as health, identity and time did not have a statistically significant relationship with income. This indicates that improvements in the income of older people are likely to positively impact on aspects of their Social Quality. Finally, some policy implications of the finding are outlined with particular reference to the potential role for pensions in enhancing aspects of Social Quality in retirement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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11. Early means early: understanding popular understandings of early childhood development in South Africa.
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Richter, Linda M., Tomlinson, Mark, Watt, Kathryn, Hunt, Xanthe, and Lindland, Eric H.
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CHILD development , *STAKEHOLDERS , *CAREGIVERS , *MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Scientific and policy advances are putting early childhooddevelopment (ECD) at the center of efforts to improve humandevelopment. This study was undertaken to understand whatknowledge and attitudinal barriers exist that 25 hinder the full-scaleroll-out of services for the youngest children and their families.We used anthropological methods honed by the FrameworksInstitute to plumb beliefs about early childhood development amongmembers of the public and implementation and policy stakeholders,and compare those with the findings from ECD research. Whilemembers of the public and stakeholders agree on the importance ofECD, as demonstrated in other country settings, a major barrier todirecting services to the youngest children is a perceptual tendencyto 'age up'. That is, to consider learning and other important skillsas being acquired in the pre-school rather than infancy period.Communication strategies that incorporate debate are neededto give full effect to the ECD and related policies, especiallyaround the topics of prioritizing the youngest 40 children, physicalpunishment, child rights, and the pervasiveness Q5 of threats toECD arising from poverty and disadvantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. Confirmatory factor analysis of the Kaufman assessment battery in a sample of primary school-aged children in rural South Africa.
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Mitchell, Joanie M., Tomlinson, Mark, Bland, Ruth M., Houle, Brian, Stein, Alan, and Rochat, Tamsen J.
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KAUFMAN Assessment Battery for Children , *COGNITIVE ability , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY of school children - Abstract
The Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition, measures cognitive processing, includes non-verbal sub-tests, and is increasingly used in low- and middle-income countries. While the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition, has been validated in the United States, a psychometric evaluation has not been conducted in Southern Africa. This study aims to establish the reliability and validity of the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition, among a sample of 376 primary school-aged children in rural South Africa (7–11 years). We examined Cronbach's alpha and conducted a confirmatory factor analysis. The battery showed good reliability (mental processing index [α = .78]), and the originally validated structure of the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition, was maintained (χ2 = 16.30, p = .432). Mean scores were low on the Planning sub-scale. On the Simultaneous sub-scale, the mean score was higher for the supplementary sub-test Block Counting versus the core sub-test Triangles. With translation and the inclusion of supplementary sub-tests, the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition, is an appropriate assessment to use in this context (150/150). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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13. Editorial Perspective: Stop describing and start fixing – the promise of longitudinal intervention cohorts.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Fearon, Pasco, Christodoulou, Joan, and Rotheram‐Borus, Mary Jane
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ADOLESCENCE , *CHILD development , *CHILD psychology , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SUSTAINABLE development , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
An editorial is presented on the life-course longitudinal studies are essential for understanding how early factors shape and impact later development, for describing the interplay of biology and environment, and for charting how adversity affects human potential. Topics include the crucial for informing the development and implementation of evidence-based interventions to improve child and adolescent outcomes.
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- 2020
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14. Maternal depression, alcohol use, and transient effects of perinatal paraprofessional home visiting in South Africa: Eight-year follow-up of a cluster randomized controlled trial.
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Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane, Tomlinson, Mark, Worthman, Carol M., Norwood, Peter, le Roux, Ingrid, and O'Connor, Mary J.
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HIV infection epidemiology , *PREVENTION of mental depression , *PREVENTION of alcoholism , *MATERNAL health services , *CULTURE , *ALCOHOLISM , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *HOME care services , *SOCIAL factors , *PARENTHOOD , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MOTHERHOOD , *PARENTING , *PUERPERIUM , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DISEASE prevalence , *MENTAL depression , *STATISTICAL sampling , *ALLIED health personnel , *LONGITUDINAL method , *AIDS - Abstract
South African mothers confront synergistic challenges from depression, alcohol use, and HIV/AIDS. The importance of maternal functioning for child development motivates interventions, yet long-term outcomes seldom are tracked. Furthermore, little is known about trajectories and the role of social-cultural factors in maternal depression and alcohol use across parenthood in low- and middle-income countries. We examined maternal outcomes at 5- and 8-years' post-birth, from the Philani Intervention Program (PIP), a randomized controlled trial of a prenatally-initiated home visiting intervention lasting through 6 months' post-birth which yielded some benefits for children and mothers through 3 years. Longitudinal Bayesian mixed-effects models assessed intervention effects for maternal depression and alcohol use from pre-birth through 8 years post-birth. We plotted trajectories of depression and alcohol use and analyzed their relationship over time. Maternal benefits appeared limited and intervention outcomes differed at 5 and 8 years. Reduced depression in PIP versus standard care (SC) mothers at 3 years disappeared by 5 and 8 years. Depression prevalence declined from 35.1% prenatally to 5.5% at 8 years, independent of intervention or alcohol use. Alcohol use in both groups rebounded from a post-birth nadir; fewer PIP than SC mothers drank alcohol and reported problematic use at 5 but not 8 years. HIV+ prevalence did not differ by condition and increased from 26% to 45% over the reported period. Dissipation of early child benefits from home visiting by age 8 years likely reflects lack of durable change in maternal behaviors compounded by social-cultural factors and cumulative effects of community deprivation. High prenatal rates warrant screening and treatment for depression in standard antenatal care. Low-and-middle income countries may need sustained interventions, including alcohol use reduction, to capitalize on initial gains from targeted interventions and address community social-cultural factors. HIV/AIDS continues to spread in this population. • Home visiting yields early mother-child benefits that erode without sustained intervention. • High rates of maternal depression in pregnancy decline systematically over time. • Pregnancy appears a teachable moment for reducing alcohol mis/use but risk recurs with time. • Perinatal alcohol intervention can slow resumption of use but benefits disappear by 8 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Unrealistic optimism with regard to drinking during pregnancy among women of childbearing age in a South African community.
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Louw, Jacobus G., Tomlinson, Mark, and Olivier, Leana
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ALCOHOL use in pregnancy , *OPTIMISM , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CHILDBEARING age , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Drinking alcohol during pregnancy is a risk factor in a range of adverse birth outcomes, including fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, and is a major health concern. For this behaviour to change one of the necessary conditions is for women to have an accurate perception of the risks drinking during pregnancy poses. A major obstacle to this is the presence of unrealistic optimism which leads to women believing they are less at risk than others. This study examined a sample of women (N = 129) from a community in the Northern Cape Province in South Africa with a high prevalence of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder for signs of unrealistic optimism. A questionnaire about the perception of personal and general risk was administered during a one-on-one interview and responses compared. Neither a Student’s t-test (t(115) = −1.720, p = .088, 95% confidence interval [−0.180, 0.013]) nor a Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank test (z = −1.72, p = .285) showed a significant difference. The perception of risk posed by drinking during pregnancy to others, knowledge of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, and the perception of how easy it would be for the participant to quit drinking were significant predictors of the perception of personal risk. Only the perception of personal risk predicted the perception of general risk. There was no evidence that participants believed themselves to be less at risk than their peers when it came to the risks of drinking during pregnancy. Future directions for research into unrealistic optimism and drinking during pregnancy are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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16. Diffusing and scaling evidence‐based interventions: eight lessons for early child development from the implementation of perinatal home visiting in South Africa.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Hunt, Xanthe, and Rotheram‐Borus, Mary Jane
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CHILD development , *MATERNAL health services , *HOME care services , *COMMUNITY health services , *MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Abstract: Most low‐ and middle‐income countries lack resources with which to implement public health programs. As such, there is a necessity to facilitate programing that judiciously makes use of what resources there are. However, despite evidence for the efficacy of many interventions, translating these into real‐world effectiveness, and then into scalability, is complex and has often been neglected. We draw on a case study of Philani+ (a maternal and child health intervention implemented in South Africa) to distil eight features of health programing that aid intervention effectiveness. We argue that implementation science should turn its attention to the human resource “process” features of interventions. We describe the importance of staff selection (rigorous selection and hiring procedures); training (developing a set of common core pragmatic problem‐solving skills); monitoring (feedback about quality); community and institutional support (rapport with intervention communities); the importance of stable leadership (consistent leadership focusing on how to optimize the potential of staff); the importance of implementing with sustainable, long‐term change in mind; and, finally, we describe how cultivating consistency within an organization requires disciplined action and disciplined focus on the organization's vision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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17. Maternal Patterns of Antenatal and Postnatal Depressed Mood and the Impact on Child Health at 3-Years Postpartum.
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Rotheram-Fuller, Erin J., Tomlinson, Mark, Scheffler, Aaron, Weichle, Thomas W., Rezvan, Panteha Hayati, Comulada, Warren Scott, and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
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POSTPARTUM depression , *PRENATAL care - Abstract
Objective: The consequences of maternal depressed mood on children's growth, health, and cognitive and language development are examined over the first 3 years of life. Method: Pregnant women in 24 periurban township neighborhoods in Cape Town, South Africa (N = 1,238 mothers) were randomized by neighborhood to a home visiting intervention or a standard care condition. Reassessments were conducted for 93%-85% of mothers at 2-weeks, 6-, 18-, and 36-months postbirth. Regressions were conducted on measures of children's growth, behavior, language, and cognition to examine the impact of four patterns of depressed mood: antenatal only (n = 154, 13.8%), postnatal only (n = 272, 24.3%), antenatal and postnatal (n = 220, 19.7%), and no depressed mood on any assessment (n = 473, 42.3%). Results: Patterns of depressed mood were similar across intervention conditions. Depressed mothers were significantly less educated, had lower incomes, were less likely to be employed or to have electricity; were more likely to report problematic drinking of alcohol, experience food insecurity, interpersonal partner violence, and to be HIV seropositive. At 36 months, the pattern of maternal depressed mood over time was significantly associated with children's compromised physical growth, both in weight and height, and more internalizing and externalizing symptoms of behavior problems. Measures of language and cognition were similar across maternal patterns of depressed mood. Conclusions: Mothers who report depressed mood face significantly more life challenges, both environmental stressors related to poverty and other problematic behaviors. More proximal, postnatal depressed mood appears to have a larger influence on their children, compared with antenatal depressed mood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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18. Criterion Validity of Self-Reports of Alcohol, Cannabis, and Methamphetamine Use Among Young Men in Cape Town, South Africa.
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Arfer, Kodi B., Tomlinson, Mark, Mayekiso, Andile, Bantjes, Jason, van Heerden, Alastair, and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
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METHAMPHETAMINE abuse , *ALCOHOLISM , *MARIJUANA abuse , *YOUNG men , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
Valid measurement of substance use is necessary to evaluate preventive and treatment interventions. Self-report is fast and inexpensive, but its accuracy can be hampered by social desirability bias and imperfect recall. We examined the agreement between self-report of recent use and rapid diagnostic tests for three substances (alcohol, cannabis, and methamphetamine) among 904 young men living in Cape Town, South Africa. Rapid diagnostic tests detected the respective substances in 32, 52, and 22% of men. Among those who tested positive, 61% (95% CI [56%, 66%]), 70% ([67%, 74%]), and 48% ([42%, 54%]) admitted use. Men were moderately more willing to admit use of cannabis than alcohol (log OR 0.42) or admit use of alcohol than methamphetamine (log OR 0.53). Our findings show that self-report has reasonable criterion validity in this population, but criterion validity can vary substantially depending on the substance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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19. Research priority setting for integrated early child development and violence prevention (ECD+) in low and middle income countries: An expert opinion exercise.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Jordans, Mark, MacMillan, Harriet, Betancourt, Theresa, Hunt, Xanthe, and Mikton, Christopher
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CHILD development , *VIOLENCE prevention , *MIDDLE-income countries , *STAKEHOLDERS , *CHILDREN'S health - Abstract
Child development in low and middle income countries (LMIC) is compromised by multiple risk factors. Reducing children’s exposure to harmful events is essential for early childhood development (ECD). In particular, preventing violence against children – a highly prevalent risk factor that negatively affects optimal child development – should be an intervention priority. We used the Child Health and Nutrition Initiative (CHNRI) method for the setting of research priorities in integrated Early Childhood Development and violence prevention programs (ECD+). An expert group was identified and invited to systematically list and score research questions. A total of 186 stakeholders were asked to contribute five research questions each, and contributions were received from 81 respondents. These were subsequently evaluated using a set of five criteria: answerability; effectiveness; feasibility and/or affordability; applicability and impact; and equity. Of the 400 questions generated, a composite group of 50 were scored by 55 respondents. The highest scoring research questions related to the training of Community Health Workers (CHW’s) to deliver ECD+ interventions effectively and whether ECD+ interventions could be integrated within existing delivery platforms such as HIV, nutrition or mental health platforms. The priority research questions can direct new research initiatives, mainly in focusing on the effectiveness of an ECD+ approach, as well as on service delivery questions. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first systematic exercise of its kind in the field of ECD+. The findings from this research priority setting exercise can help guide donors and other development actors towards funding priorities for important future research related to ECD and violence prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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20. Effect of caregiver depression on adolescent internalising and externalising behaviour: findings from a longitudinal study in a high-risk South African environment.
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Du Toit, Stefani, Haag, Katharina, Tomlinson, Mark, Sherr, Lorraine, Marlow, Marguerite, Stewart, Jackie, and Skeen, Sarah
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STATISTICS , *ADOLESCENT development , *CAREGIVERS , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MIDDLE-income countries , *THIRD trimester of pregnancy , *WOMEN , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *MENTAL depression , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *LOW-income countries , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Adolescents living in low- and-middle incomeand middle-income countries are at a particular risk of poor mental health. Caregiver mental health plays a crucial role in a child's emotional and behavioural development and may directly impact a child's risk for future development of mental health problems. Data collected as part of a two-decade longitudinal multiphase research project were used. Participants, originally women in their third trimester of pregnancy (n = 449), were recruited from a peri-urban impoverished community outside of Cape Town, South Africa, and assessed at several time-points over subsequent years. Data collected during the three phases of the research were used to assess the effects of early and current caregiver depression on adolescent internalising and externalising behaviour. Analyses of Covariance models were used to explore the effect of caregiver depression on adolescent internalising and externalising behaviour, while controlling for multiple covariates. We analysed data for 313 adolescent participants and their primary caregivers. Caregiver depression patterns had a significant main effect on externalising behaviour, F(3,305) = 4.10 (p = 0.007), but not on internalising behaviour, F(3,305) = 2.71 (p = 0.09). Post-hoc analysis showed that those adolescents exposed to early and current caregiver depression scored on average 3.83 points (95% CI [0.99; 6.66]) higher in externalising behaviour than those exposed to no caregiver depression. Also, adolescents who experienced a change in caregiver, compared to those whose biological mother were still their primary caregiver, reported significantly higher levels of externalising behaviour F(1,305) = 5.10, p = 0.03. The study findings provide crucial insight into critical periods of risk, as well as opportunities for prevention. Preventive interventions should ideally target caregivers and adolescents to prevent or reduce behavioural problems and disrupt intergenerational cycles of mental disorders or behavioural problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Barriers to and Facilitators of Adherence to Exclusive Breastfeeding Practices Among HIV Infected and Non-Infected Women in Jos, Nigeria.
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Coetzee, Bronwynè, Tomlinson, Mark, Osawe, Sophia, Amibiku, Alash'le, and Kagee, Ashraf
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BREASTFEEDING , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *HIV-positive persons , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH funding , *JUDGMENT sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *MEDICAL coding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objectives In Nigeria adherence to exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) practices is currently suboptimal and a better understanding of the factors affecting adherence to EBF is needed. We sought to identify and delineate the barriers to and facilitators of adherence to EBF amongst HIV-infected and uninfected women in Nigeria. Methods We explored the barriers and facilitators to EBF amongst 37 (25 HIV-infected and 12 HIV-uninfected) pregnant women attending an antenatal clinic in Jos, Nigeria. In-depth interviews were conducted with each of the pregnant women in their third trimester of pregnancy and again 1 month after giving birth. Results The themes that emerged were mothers' feeding intentions, significant role players in the decision to breastfeed, perceived barriers (e.g. physiological issues, stigma, employment) and perceived facilitators (e.g. pleasure and enjoyment derived from breastfeeding, natural milk from God, disclosure and family support) associated with EBF. Conclusions Most women preferred EBF and offered it to their infants. However, more efforts are needed to improve support structures at home and at work to accommodate women who choose to do EBF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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22. Improving early childhood care and development, HIV-testing, treatment and support, and nutrition in Mokhotlong, Lesotho: study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Skeen, Sarah, Marlow, Marguerite, Cluver, Lucie, Cooper, Peter, Murray, Lynne, Mofokeng, Shoeshoe, Morley, Nathene, Makhetha, Moroesi, Gordon, Sarah, Esterhuizen, Tonya, and Sherr, Lorraine
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CHILD mortality , *DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections , *CHILD development , *HEALTH of caregivers - Abstract
Background: Since 1990, the lives of 48 million children under the age of 5 years have been saved because of increased investments in reducing child mortality. However, despite these unprecedented gains, 250 million children younger than 5 years in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) cannot meet their developmental potential due to poverty, poor health and nutrition, and lack of necessary stimulation and care. Lesotho has high levels of poverty, HIV, and malnutrition, all of which affect child development outcomes. There is a unique opportunity to address these complex issues through the widespread network of informal preschools in rural villages in the country, which provide a setting for inclusive, integrated Early Childhood Care and Development (ECCD) and HIV and nutrition interventions. Methods: We are conducting a cluster randomised controlled trial in Mokhotlong district, Lesotho, to evaluate a newly developed community-based intervention program to integrate HIV-testing and treatment services, ECCD, and nutrition education for caregivers with children aged 1-5 years living in rural villages. Caregivers and their children are randomly assigned by village to intervention or control condition. We select, train, and supervise community health workers recruited to implement the intervention, which consists of nine group-based sessions with caregivers and children over 12 weeks (eight weekly sessions, and a ninth top-up session 1 month later), followed by a locally hosted community health outreach day event. Group-based sessions focus on using early dialogic book-sharing to promote cognitive development and caregiver-child interaction, health-related messages, including motivation for HIV-testing and treatment uptake for young children, and locally appropriate nutrition education. All children aged 1-5 years and their primary caregivers living in study villages are eligible for participation. Caregivers and their children will be interviewed and assessed at baseline, after completion of the intervention, and 12 months post intervention. Discussion: This study provides a unique opportunity to assess the potential of an integrated early childhood development intervention to prevent or mitigate developmental delays in children living in a context of extreme poverty and high HIV rates in rural Lesotho. This paper presents the intervention content and research protocol for the study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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23. Thirty-Six-Month Outcomes of a Generalist Paraprofessional Perinatal Home Visiting Intervention in South Africa on Maternal Health and Child Health and Development.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Rotheram-Borus, Mary, Roux, Ingrid, Youssef, Maryann, Nelson, Sandahl, Scheffler, Aaron, Weiss, Robert, O'Connor, Mary, Worthman, Carol, Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane, le Roux, Ingrid M, Nelson, Sandahl H, Weiss, Robert E, and Worthman, Carol M
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MATERNITY nursing , *HOME care services , *MATERNAL health , *CHILDREN'S health , *CHILD development , *COMMUNITY health workers , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *POSTPARTUM depression , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *EVALUATION research , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Almost all pregnant women (98 %) in 24 Cape Town neighborhoods were randomized by neighborhood to (1) the standard care (SC) condition (n = 12 neighborhoods; n = 594 pregnant women) or (2) the Philani Intervention Program (PIP) in which home visits by Community Health Workers (CHW) were conducted (n = 12 neighborhoods; n = 644 pregnant women). At 36 months post-birth (84.6 % follow-up), PIP mothers were significantly less depressed compared to the SC mothers. Children in PIP were significantly less likely to be stunted (24.3 vs 18.1 %, p = 0.013), to have better vocabularies, and were less likely to be hospitalized than children in the SC condition. These data suggest home visits may need to continue for several years post-birth. Sustainable, scalable perinatal intervention models are needed in LMIC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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24. The Philani Mentor Mothers Intervention: neighbourhood wide impact on child growth in Cape Town’s peri-urban settlements.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Hartley, Mary, Le Roux, Ingrid M., and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
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GROWTH of children , *HOME care services , *CHILDREN'S health , *NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
The purpose of this research was to determine whether or not routine home visiting (by the Philani Maternal Child Health and Nutrition Project) influences the prevalence of stunted, wasted and underweight children in Cape Town peri-urban settlements. The study was a cross-sectional cohort in which weight and height measurements were collected for all children from 24 matched neighbourhoods; three years earlier 12 of these neighbourhoods were randomized to receive the home visiting intervention and 12 did not. The research took place at all households located within the 24 neighbourhoods in Khayelitsha and Mfuleni peri-urban settlements. Participants included 8715 children aged 0–6 years old (4694 intervention; 4021 control). A total of 41.3% of children were stunted, 3.1% were underweight and 1.4% were wasted. Children in the intervention group were significantly less likely to be underweight or severely underweight for age than children in the control group. While the rates of stunting were also significantly lower in intervention areas, the effect was not clinically significant, and no significant differences were found between the study arms on the prevalence of wasting. The Philani model is effective in the prevention and rehabilitation of underweight children. Philani could strengthen their intervention by focussing specifically on screening for child stunting in addition to underweight children. The results also suggests that efforts to address the long-term adverse effects of undernutrition require structural and economic transformation, in addition to socio-medical interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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25. Social Quality and Work: What Impact Does Low Pay Have on Social Quality?
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TOMLINSON, MARK, WALKER, ALAN, and FOSTER, LIAM
- Abstract
Using Confirmatory Factor Analysis models in conjunction with the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) this paper reports the first application of the concept of Social Quality to a UK data set. Social Quality is concerned with the quality of society, or social relations, and consists of both a theoretical model and an empirically tested set of measures. Social Quality is explored in relation to the policy issues of low pay and the working poor given the challenges presented by the rising number of households in work and in poverty. This analysis reveals several striking characteristics. In terms of poverty per se poor employees are worse off in terms of economic security, housing, health, human capital, trust, voluntarism, citizenship, knowledge and culture whichever part of the employment structure they belong to. However, in addition, even those in the so-called upper level of the labour market (professional, managerial occupations which require reasonably high levels of skill and motivation) are significantly worse off on these dimensions if they are low paid. Therefore it suggests that measures to raise low pay, such as the living wage, are likely to have considerable implications for Social Quality. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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26. When can parents most influence their child's development? Expert knowledge and perceived local realities.
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Worthman, Carol M., Tomlinson, Mark, and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
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ADOLESCENCE , *CHILD development , *FOCUS groups , *INTELLECT , *HEALTH policy , *PARENT-child relationships , *PARENTING - Abstract
Compelling evidence for the long-term impact of conditions in gestation and early childhood on both physical and psychosocial functioning and productivity has stimulated a focus in global health policy and social services on the “first 1000 days”. Consequently, related initiatives may assume that rationale for this orientation and the agency of parents during this period is self-evident and widely shared among parents and communities. In 2012, we tested this assumption among a sample of 38 township-dwelling caregivers in Cape Town, by asking a question identified during a study of cultural models of parenting, namely: At what age or stage can a parent or caregiver have the most influence on a child's development? Formal cultural consensus analysis of responses met criteria for strong agreement that the period for greatest impact of parenting on a child's development occurs at adolescence, at a median age of 12 years. In follow-up focus groups and structured interviews, caregivers articulated clear ecological and developmental reasons for this view, related to protection both of developmental potential and against powerful, context-specific ecological risks (early pregnancy, substance ab/use, violence and gangs) that emerge during adolescence. Such risks threaten educational attainment, reproductive health, and social derailment with enduring consequences for lifetime well-being that caregivers are highly motivated to prevent. Developmental needs in pregnancy and early childhood, by contrast, were considered more manageable. These findings resonate with emerging evidence for multiple sensitive periods with corresponding developmental needs, and urge the value of complementing efforts to optimize early development with those to sustain and enhance it during later windows of developmental opportunity such as adolescence. Our results also indicate the need to consult local views of developmental risk and parenting practice in communicating with caregivers and planning interventions, and the value of using available methodological tools to do so. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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27. Food insufficiency, depression, and the modifying role of social support: Evidence from a population-based, prospective cohort of pregnant women in peri-urban South Africa.
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Tsai, Alexander C., Tomlinson, Mark, Comulada, W. Scott, and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
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- *
MENTAL depression , *HUNGER , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *CITY dwellers , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SOCIAL support , *EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *FOOD security , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Rationale Food insecurity has emerged as an important, and potentially modifiable, risk factor for depression. Few studies have brought longitudinal data to bear on investigating this association in sub-Saharan Africa. Objective To estimate the association between food insufficiency and depression symptom severity, and to determine the extent to which any observed associations were modified by social support. Methods and results We conducted a secondary analysis of population-based, longitudinal data collected from 1238 pregnant women during a three-year cluster-randomized trial of a home visiting intervention in Cape Town, South Africa. Surveys were conducted at baseline, 6 months, 18 months, and 36 months (85% retention). A validated, single-item food insufficiency measure inquired about the number of days of hunger in the past week. Depression symptom severity was measured using the Xhosa version of the 10-item Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale. In multivariable regression models with cluster-correlated robust estimates of variance, lagged food insufficiency had a strong and statistically significant association with depression symptom severity (β = 0.70; 95% CI, 0.46–0.94), suggesting a 6.5% relative difference in depression symptom severity per day of hunger. In stratified analyses, food insufficiency had a statistically significant association with depression only among women with low levels of instrumental support. Using quantile regression, we found that the adverse impacts of food insufficiency were experienced to a greater degree by women in the upper end of the conditional distribution of depression symptom severity. Estimates from fixed-effects regression models and fixed-effects quantile regression models, accounting for unobserved confounding by time-invariant characteristics, were similar. Conclusions Food insufficiency was associated with depression symptom severity, particularly for women in the upper end of the conditional depression distribution. Instrumental social support buffered women against the adverse impacts of food insufficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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28. Intimate Partner Violence and Depression Symptom Severity among South African Women during Pregnancy and Postpartum: Population-Based Prospective Cohort Study.
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Tsai, Alexander C., Tomlinson, Mark, Comulada, W. Scott, and Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
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- *
INTIMATE partner violence , *VIOLENCE against women , *MENTAL depression , *PREGNANT women -- Abuse of , *POSTPARTUM depression , *DIAGNOSIS of mental depression , *PSYCHOLOGY of puerperium , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PUBLIC health surveillance , *PREGNANCY complications , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *EVALUATION research , *EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *CROSS-sectional method , *SEVERITY of illness index , *DIAGNOSIS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Violence against women by intimate partners remains unacceptably common worldwide. The evidence base for the assumed psychological impacts of intimate partner violence (IPV) is derived primarily from studies conducted in high-income countries. A recently published systematic review identified 13 studies linking IPV to incident depression, none of which were conducted in sub-Saharan Africa. To address this gap in the literature, we analyzed longitudinal data collected during the course of a 3-y cluster-randomized trial with the aim of estimating the association between IPV and depression symptom severity.Methods and Findings: We conducted a secondary analysis of population-based, longitudinal data collected from 1,238 pregnant women during a 3-y cluster-randomized trial of a home visiting intervention in Cape Town, South Africa. Surveys were conducted at baseline, 6 mo, 18 mo, and 36 mo (85% retention). The primary explanatory variable of interest was exposure to four types of physical IPV in the past year. Depression symptom severity was measured using the Xhosa version of the ten-item Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale. In a pooled cross-sectional multivariable regression model adjusting for potentially confounding time-fixed and time-varying covariates, lagged IPV intensity had a statistically significant association with depression symptom severity (regression coefficient b = 1.04; 95% CI, 0.61-1.47), with estimates from a quantile regression model showing greater adverse impacts at the upper end of the conditional depression distribution. Fitting a fixed effects regression model accounting for all time-invariant confounding (e.g., history of childhood sexual abuse) yielded similar findings (b = 1.54; 95% CI, 1.13-1.96). The magnitudes of the coefficients indicated that a one-standard-deviation increase in IPV intensity was associated with a 12.3% relative increase in depression symptom severity over the same time period. The most important limitations of our study include exposure assessment that lacked measurement of sexual violence, which could have caused us to underestimate the severity of exposure; the extended latency period in the lagged analysis, which could have caused us to underestimate the strength of the association; and outcome assessment that was limited to the use of a screening instrument for depression symptom severity.Conclusions: In this secondary analysis of data from a population-based, 3-y cluster-randomized controlled trial, IPV had a statistically significant association with depression symptom severity. The estimated associations were relatively large in magnitude, consistent with findings from high-income countries, and robust to potential confounding by time-invariant factors. Intensive health sector responses to reduce IPV and improve women's mental health should be explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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29. Alcohol Use, Partner Violence, and Depression: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial Among Urban South African Mothers Over 3 Years.
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Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane, Tomlinson, Mark, Roux, Ingrid Le, Stein, Judith A., and Le Roux, Ingrid
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ALCOHOL use in pregnancy , *INTIMATE partner violence , *DEPRESSION in women , *PREGNANT women , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *URBAN women , *SOUTH Africans , *MENTAL health , *HIV infection epidemiology , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MENTAL depression , *ALCOHOL drinking , *HOME care services , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *POVERTY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *QUALITY of life , *RESEARCH , *CITY dwellers , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Introduction: Pregnant South African women with histories of drinking alcohol, abuse by violent partners, depression, and living with HIV are likely to have their post-birth trajectories over 36 months significantly influenced by these risks.Design: All pregnant women in 24 Cape Town neighborhoods were recruited into a cluster RCT by neighborhood to either: (1) a standard care condition (n=12 neighborhoods, n=594 mothers); or (2) a home-visiting intervention condition (n=12 neighborhoods, n=644 mothers).Setting/participants: Pregnant women residing in urban, low-income neighborhoods in Cape Town, South Africa.Intervention: Home visiting included prenatal and postnatal visits by community health workers (Mentor Mothers) focusing on general maternal and child health, HIV/tuberculosis, alcohol use, and nutrition.Main Outcome Measures: Mothers were assessed in pregnancy and at 18 and 36 months post birth: 80.6% of mothers completed all assessments between 2009 and 2014 and were included in these analyses performed in 2014. Longitudinal structural equation modeling examined alcohol use, partner violence, and depression at the baseline and 18-month interviews as predictors of maternal outcomes at 36 months post birth.Results: Relative to standard care, intervention mothers were significantly less likely to report depressive symptoms and more positive quality of life at 36 months. Alcohol use was significantly related to use over time, but was also related to depression and HIV status at each assessment and partner violence at 36 months.Conclusions: Alcohol, partner violence, and depression are significantly related over time. A home-visiting intervention improved the emotional health of low-income mothers even when depression was not initially targeted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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30. INFANT MENTAL HEALTH IN THE NEXT DECADE: A CALL FOR ACTION.
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Tomlinson, Mark
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INFANTS , *INFANT development , *COGNITIVE development , *NUTRITION disorders , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *MENTAL health - Published
- 2015
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31. Community health workers can improve child growth of antenatally-depressed, South African mothers: a cluster randomized controlled trial.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane, Harwood, Jessica, le Roux, Ingrid M., O'Connor, Mary, and Worthman, Carol
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COMMUNITY health workers , *CHILD development , *DEPRESSION in children , *PRENATAL care , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: Maternal antenatal depression has long-term consequences for children's health. We examined if home visits by community health workers (CHW) can improve growth outcomes for children of mothers who are antenatally depressed. Methods: A cluster randomized controlled trial of all pregnant, neighbourhood women in Cape Town, South Africa. Almost all pregnant women (98%, N = 1238) were recruited and assessed during pregnancy, two weeks post-birth (92%) and 6 months post-birth (88%). Pregnant women were randomized to either: 1) Standard Care (SC), which provided routine antenatal care; or 2) an intervention, The Philani Intervention Program (PIP), which included SC and home visits by CHW trained as generalists (M = 11 visits). Child standardized weight, length, and weight by length over 6 months based on maternal antenatal depression and intervention condition. Results: Depressed mood was similar across the PIP and SC conditions both antenatally (16.5% rate) and at 6 months (16.7%). The infants of depressed pregnant women in the PIP group were similar in height (height-forage Z scores) to the children of non-depressed mothers in both the PIP and the SC conditions, but significantly taller at 6 months of age than the infants of pregnant depressed mothers in the SC condition. The intervention did not moderate children's growth. Depressed SC mothers tended to have infants less than two standard deviations in height on the World Health Organization's norms at two weeks post-birth compared to infants of depressed PIP mothers and non-depressed mothers in both conditions. Conclusions: A generalist, CHW-delivered home visiting program improved infant growth, even when mothers' depression was not reduced. Focusing on maternal caretaking of infants, even when mothers are depressed, is critical in future interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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32. Parenting in Adversity: Effects of Older Caregivers, Biological Carers and Troubled Carers on Child Outcomes in High HIV-Affected Communities.
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Sherr, Lorraine, Macedo, Ana, Tomlinson, Mark, Skeen, Sarah, Hensels, Imca S., and Steventon Roberts, Kathryn J.
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CAREGIVERS , *HIV , *MENTAL health , *CHILD development , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Caregiving by older adults is a common phenomenon, enhanced in the era of HIV infection. This longitudinal study was set up to examine the effect of caregiver age, relationship and mental wellbeing on child (4–13 years) outcomes (psychosocial and cognitive) in a sample of 808 caregiver- child dyads in South Africa and Malawi. Respondents were drawn from consecutive attenders at Community Based Organisations (CBOs) and interviewed with standardised inventories at baseline and followed up 12–15 months later. Analysis focused on three separate aspects of the caregiver; age, relationship to the child, and mental wellbeing, results are stratified with regard to these factors. Results showed that compared to younger caregivers, over 50 years were carrying a heavy load of childcare, but caregiver age for the most part was not associated with child outcomes. Being biologically related to the child (such as biological grandparenting) was also not a significant factor in child outcomes measured. However, irrespective of age and relationship, caregiver mental health was associated with differences in child outcome – those children of caregivers with a greater mental health burden were found to report experiencing more physical and psychologically violent discipline. Over time, the use of violent discipline was found to reduce. These data suggest that older caregivers and grandparents are providing comparable care to younger caregivers, for young children in the face of the HIV epidemic and that interventions should focus on mental health support for all caregivers, irrespective of age or relationship to the child. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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33. From surviving to thriving: What evidence is needed to move early child-development interventions to scale?
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Tomlinson, Mark
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CHILD development , *LOW-income countries , *MIDDLE-income countries , *MEDICAL screening , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PARENTING , *RESEARCH - Abstract
In a Perspective, Mark Tomlinson discusses research on early interventions to support child development in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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34. Where are the children and adolescents?
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Tomlinson, Mark
- Published
- 2022
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35. Inequitable and Ineffective: Exclusion of Mental Health from the Post-2015 Development Agenda.
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Tsai, Alexander C. and Tomlinson, Mark
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MENTAL health , *NON-communicable diseases , *PUBLIC health , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Alex Tsai and Mark Tomlinson argue for a place for mental health on the post-2015 development agenda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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36. Autoinjector preference in multiple sclerosis and the role of nurses in treatment decisions: results from an international survey in Europe and the USA.
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Verdun di Cantogno, Elisabetta, Tomlinson, Mark, Manuel, Laure, and Thakur, Kunal
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MULTIPLE sclerosis , *MEDICAL decision making , *PARENTERAL therapy , *PATIENT education , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Purpose: This international survey recorded the opinions of multiple sclerosis (MS) nurses about their role in treatment decision making and about the importance of different attributes of autoinjectors used to deliver first-line parenteral therapy. The survey involved 52 MS nurses in different practice settings in France, Germany, Methods: Italy, the UK, and the USA. Nurses described their role in patient education and in treatment decision making. They also rated the importance of nine prespecified attributes of autoinjectors and stated their preference, both overall and by attribute, for one of two autoinjectors used to deliver interferon ß-1b (ExtaviPro® 30G and Betacomfort®). Nurses' preferences were compared with those previously collected from patients using an identical questionnaire. Results: There were pronounced differences between practice settings and between countries in the opinions of MS nurses about their influence on treatment decision making. Nurses considered themselves instrumental in helping patients decide between treatment options offered by neurologists. Of the nine autoinjector attributes, nurses rated "reliable to use" as most important, followed by attributes associated with convenience ("easy to operate," "ergonomic shape," "reach" [of injection sites], and "one-handed injection"). Nurses' and patients' rankings of attributes were closely aligned. For the nine attributes, 74%-98% of nurses preferred ExtaviPro® 30G to Betacomfort®, 94% preferring ExtaviPro® 30G overall. Nurses showed a greater preference than patients for ExtaviPro® 30G with respect to "easy to operate" (92% vs 78%), "intuitive to use" (98% vs 78%), and "attractive design" (98% vs 83%; P,0.05, all), but preference rates were otherwise similar across the two groups. The most common reasons in both groups for preferring ExtaviPro® 30G to Betacomfort® were "easy to use" and "ergonomic shape." Conclusion: MS nurses play a key role in patient guidance and education. Their preferences for ExtaviPro® 30G likely reflect their understanding of the challenges patients face when self-administering treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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37. IMBALANCES IN THE KNOWLEDGE ABOUT INFANT MENTAL HEALTH IN RICH AND POOR COUNTRIES: TOO LITTLE PROGRESS IN BRIDGING THE GAP.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Bornstein, Marc H., Marlow, Marguerite, and Swartz, Leslie
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INFANTS , *HIGH-income countries , *MIDDLE-income countries , *SURVEYS , *MENTAL health ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
ABSTRACT The vast majority of infants are born in poor countries, but most of our knowledge about infants and children has emerged from high-income countries. In 2003, M. Tomlinson and L. Swartz conducted a survey of articles on infancy between 1996 and 2001 from major international journals, reporting that a meager 5% of articles emanated from parts of the world other than North America, Europe, or Australasia. In this article, we conducted a similar review of articles on infancy published between 2002 and 2012 to assess whether the status of cross-national research has changed in the subsequent decade. Results indicate that despite slight improvements in research output from the rest of world, only 2.3% of articles published in 11 years included data from low- and middle-income countries-where 90% of the world's infants live. These discrepancies are indicative of the progress still needed to bridge the so-called 10/90 gap (S. Saxena, G. Paraje, P. Sharan, G. Karam, & R. Sadana, ) in infant mental health research. Cross-national collaboration is urgently required to ensure expansion of research production in low-resource settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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38. Child development in HIV-positive and HIV-affected children in South Africa and Malawi—What role for community organisations?
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Skeen, Sarah, Tomlinson, Mark, Macedo, Ana, Miltz, Ada, Croome, Natasha, and Sherr, Lorraine
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QUALITY of life , *CAREGIVERS , *CHILD development , *FAMILIES , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HIV-positive persons , *HOUSING , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL screening , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SOCIAL skills , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *SOCIAL support , *COMMUNITY-based social services , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *PREDICTIVE validity , *CROSS-sectional method , *HEALTH & social status , *CHILDREN - Abstract
There is evidence that children who are HIV positive (HIV +) are at risk for poor developmental outcomes. The aims of this study were to use developmental screening tools to measure outcomes of children affected by HIV/AIDS attending community-based organisations (CBO) and to determine what types of CBO provision these children were receiving. In a cross-sectional study, we interviewed 979 children and their carers (4 to 13 years) at 28 randomly selected CBOs funded by 11 major donors in South Africa and Malawi. Developmental outcomes were assessed using the Ten Questions childhood disability screening tool and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. Health-related quality of life was measured using the Paediatric Quality of Life Scale. Overall, 13.8% ( n = 135) were HIV +. HIV + children were more likely to have developmental difficulties and lower health and educational quality of life, controlling for a range of factors. Developmental difficulties and poorer quality of life were predicted by being HIV +, living in South Africa, not attending school regularly, poor housing conditions and living with a sick family member. HIV + children tended to have been enrolled in CBO programmes for a longer period compared to other children but reported lower rates of contact. A greater proportion of HIV + children received medical services, psychosocial interventions and emotional support, compared to HIV − children. However, fewer HIV + children were enrolled in play groups, early childhood intervention programmes and educational programmes. Screening for developmental problems using short tools is possible in community settings in order to identify children with developmental difficulties and plan services for children infected with and affected by HIV. This study highlights the important role of CBOs to intervene to improve child development outcomes. The delivery of evidence-based services that target child development outcomes will enable HIV-infected children to meet their developmental potential and promote their participation in their communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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39. Mental health of carers of children affected by HIV attending community-based programmes in South Africa and Malawi.
- Author
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Skeen, Sarah, Tomlinson, Mark, Macedo, Ana, Croome, Natasha, and Sherr, Lorraine
- Subjects
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MENTAL status examination , *CHILDREN'S health , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *HIV-positive persons , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *QUALITY assurance , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REFERENCE values , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL isolation , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *COMMUNITY-based social services , *BURDEN of care , *SUICIDAL ideation , *CROSS-sectional method , *FOOD security , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *CHILDREN , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors - Abstract
There is strong evidence that both adults and children infected with and affected by HIV have high levels of mental health burden. Yet there have been few studies investigating carer mental health outcomes in the context of HIV in Malawi and South Africa. The objective of this study was to assess the mental health of carers of children affected by HIV as a part of the Child Community Care study, which aims to generate evidence on the effectiveness of community-based organisation (CBO) services to improve child outcomes. In a cross-sectional study, we interviewed 952 carers of children (aged 4–13 years) attending 28 randomly selected CBOs funded by 11 major donors in South Africa and Malawi. Psychological morbidity was measured using the Shona Symptom Questionnaire and suicidal ideation was measured using an item from the Patient Health Questionnaire. Carers were asked about care-seeking for emotional problems. Overall, 28% of carers scored above the clinical cut-off for current psychological morbidity and 12.2% reported suicidal ideation. We used logistic regression models to test factors associated with poor outcomes. Household unemployment, living with a sick family member and perceived lack of support from the community were associated with both psychological morbidity and suicidal ideation in carers. Reported child food insecurity was also associated with psychological morbidity. In addition, carers living in South Africa were more likely to present with psychological morbidity and suicidal ideation than carers in Malawi. Rates of help-seeking for mental health problems were low. Carers of children affected by HIV are at risk for mental health problems as a result of HIV, socio-economic, care-giving and community factors. We call for increased recognition of the potential role of CBOs in providing mental health care and support for families as a means to improve equity in mental health care. Specifically, we highlight the need for increased training and supervision of staff at CBOs for children affected by HIV, and the inclusion of CBOs in broader efforts to improve population mental health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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40. Antenatal depression case finding by community health workers in South Africa: feasibility of a mobile phone application.
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Tsai, Alexander, Tomlinson, Mark, Dewing, Sarah, Roux, Ingrid, Harwood, Jessica, Chopra, Mickey, and Rotheram-Borus, Mary
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DIAGNOSIS of mental depression , *POSTPARTUM depression , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *COMMUNITY health workers , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *STATISTICAL correlation , *CASE studies , *PRENATAL care , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *TELEMEDICINE , *WIRELESS communications , *PILOT projects , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *CROSS-sectional method , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *DATA analysis software , *ODDS ratio , *PREGNANCY , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Randomized controlled trials conducted in resource-limited settings have shown that once women with depressed mood are evaluated by specialists and referred for treatment, lay health workers can be trained to effectively administer psychological treatments. We sought to determine the extent to which community health workers could also be trained to conduct case finding using short and ultrashort screening instruments programmed into mobile phones. Pregnant, Xhosa-speaking women were recruited independently in two cross-sectional studies ( N = 1,144 and N = 361) conducted in Khayelitsha, South Africa and assessed for antenatal depression. In the smaller study, community health workers with no training in human subject research were trained to administer the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) during the routine course of their community-based outreach. We compared the operating characteristics of four short and ultrashort versions of the EPDS with the criterion standard of probable depression, defined as an EPDS-10 ≥ 13. The prevalence of probable depression (475/1144 [42 %] and 165/361 [46 %]) was consistent across both samples. The 2-item subscale demonstrated poor internal consistency (Cronbach's α ranged from 0.55 to 0.58). All four subscales demonstrated excellent discrimination, with area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) values ranging from 0.91 to 0.99. Maximal discrimination was observed for the 7-item depressive symptoms subscale: at the conventional screening threshold of ≥10, it had 0.97 sensitivity and 0.76 specificity for detecting probable antenatal depression. The comparability of the findings across the two studies suggests that it is feasible to use community health workers to conduct case finding for antenatal depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
41. A Cluster Randomised Controlled Effectiveness Trial Evaluating Perinatal Home Visiting among South African Mothers/Infants.
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Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane, Tomlinson, Mark, le Roux, Ingrid M., Harwood, Jessica M., Comulada, Scott, O'Connor, Mary J., Weiss, Robert E., and Worthman, Carol M.
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- *
PRENATAL care , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *COMMUNITY health workers ,PERINATAL care - Abstract
Background: Interventions are needed to reduce poor perinatal health. We trained community health workers (CHWs) as home visitors to address maternal/infant risks. Methods: In a cluster randomised controlled trial in Cape Town townships, neighbourhoods were randomised within matched pairs to 1) the control, healthcare at clinics (n = 12 neighbourhoods; n = 594 women), or 2) a home visiting intervention by CBW trained in cognitive-behavioural strategies to address health risks (by the Philani Maternal, Child Health and Nutrition Programme), in addition to clinic care (n = 12 neighbourhoods; n = 644 women). Participants were assessed during pregnancy (2% refusal) and 92% were reassessed at two weeks post-birth, 88% at six months and 84% at 18 months later. We analysed 32 measures of maternal/infant well-being over the 18 month follow-up period using longitudinal random effects regressions. A binomial test for correlated outcomes evaluated overall effectiveness over time. The 18 month post-birth assessment outcomes also were examined alone and as a function of the number of home visits received. Results: Benefits were found on 7 of 32 measures of outcomes, resulting in significant overall benefits for the intervention compared to the control when using the binomial test (p = 0.008); nevertheless, no effects were observed when only the 18 month outcomes were analyzed. Benefits on individual outcomes were related to the number of home visits received. Among women living with HIV, intervention mothers were more likely to implement the PMTCT regimens, use condoms during all sexual episodes (OR = 1.25; p = 0.014), have infants with healthy weight-for-age measurements (OR = 1.42; p = 0.045), height-for-age measurements (OR = 1.13, p<0.001), breastfeed exclusively for six months (OR = 3.59; p<0.001), and breastfeed longer (OR = 3.08; p<0.001). Number of visits was positively associated with infant birth weight ≥2500 grams (OR = 1.07; p = 0.012), healthy head-circumference-for-age measurements at 6 months (OR = 1.09, p = 0.017), and improved cognitive development at 18 months (OR = 1.02, p = 0.048). Conclusions: Home visits to neighbourhood mothers by CHWs may be a feasible strategy for enhancing maternal/child outcomes. However, visits likely must extend over several years for persistent benefits. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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42. Community-based prenatal screening for postpartum depression in a South African township.
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Hung, Kristin J., Tomlinson, Mark, le Roux, Ingrid M., Dewing, Sarah, Chopra, Mickey, and Tsai, Alexander C.
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- *
POSTPARTUM depression , *PUBLIC health , *COMMUNITY health workers , *PRENATAL care , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: To assess the feasibility of using community health workers to administer short or ultra-short screening instruments during routine community-based prenatal outreach for detecting probable depression at 12weeks postpartum. Methods: During pregnancy and at 12weeks postpartum, the 10-item Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS-10) was administered to 249 Xhosa-speaking black African women living in Khayelitsha, South Africa. We compared the operating characteristics of the prenatal EPDS-10, as well as 4 short and ultra-short subscales, with the criterion standard of probable postpartum depression. Results: Seventy-nine (31.7%) women were assessed as having probable postpartum depression. A prenatal EPDS-10 score of 13 or higher had 0.67 sensitivity and 0.67 specificity for detecting probable postpartum depression. Briefer subscales performed similarly. Conclusion: Community health workers successfully conducted community-based screening for depression in a resource-limited setting using short or ultra-short screening instruments. However, overall feasibility was limited because prenatal screening failed to accurately predict probable depression during the postpartum period. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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43. Multiple Risk Factors During Pregnancy in South Africa: The Need for a Horizontal Approach to Perinatal Care.
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Tomlinson, Mark, O'Connor, Mary, le Roux, Ingrid, Stewart, Jacqueline, Mbewu, Nokwanele, Harwood, Jessica, and Rotheram-Borus, Mary
- Subjects
- *
HIGH-risk pregnancy , *XHOSA (African people) , *ALCOHOL use in pregnancy , *PREGNANT women , *MENTAL health ,PERINATAL care - Abstract
South African children's long-term health and well-being is jeopardized during their mothers' pregnancies by the intersecting epidemics of HIV, alcohol use, low birth weight (LBW; <2,500 g) related to poor nutrition, and depressed mood. This research examines these overlapping risk factors among 1,145 pregnant Xhosa women living in 24 township neighborhoods in Cape Town, South Africa. Results revealed that 66 % of pregnant women experienced at least one risk factor. In descending order of prevalence, 37 % reported depressed mood, 29 % were HIV+, 25 % used alcohol prior to knowing that they were pregnant, and 15 % had a previous childbirth with a LBW infant. Approximately 27 % of women had more than one risk factor: depressed mood was significantly associated with alcohol use and LBW, with a trend to significance with HIV+. In addition, alcohol use was significantly related to HIV+. These results suggest the importance of intervening across multiple risks to maternal and child health, and particularly with depression and alcohol use, to positively impact multiple maternal and infant outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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44. Psychometric properties of instruments for assessing depression among African youth: A systematic review.
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Mutumba, Massy, Tomlinson, Mark, and Tsai, Alexander C
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CINAHL database , *DEPRESSION in children , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDLINE , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
ObjectiveThis study aimed to systematically review the psychometric properties of instruments used to screen for major depressive disorder or assess depression symptom severity among African youth. MethodsSystematic search terms were applied to seven bibliographic databases: African Journals Online, the African Journal Archive, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Embase, the Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online (MEDLINE), PsycINFO, and the World Health Organization (WHO) African Index Medicus. Studies examining the reliability and/or validity of depression assessment tools were selected for inclusion if they were based on data collected from youth (any author definition) in an African member state of the United Nations. We extracted data on study population characteristics, sampling strategy, sample size, the instrument assessed, and the type of reliability and/or validity evidence provided. ResultsOf 1 027 records, we included 23 studies of 10 499 youth in 10 African countries. Most studies reported excellent scale reliability, but there was much less evidence of equivalence or criterion-related validity. No measures were validated in more than two countries. ConclusionsThere is a paucity of evidence on the reliability or validity of depression assessment among African youth. The field is constrained by a lack of established criterion standards, but studies incorporating mixed methods offer promising strategies for guiding the process of cross-cultural development and validation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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45. Goodstart: a cluster randomised effectiveness trial of an integrated, community-based package for maternal and newborn care, with prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV in a South African township.
- Author
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Tomlinson, Mark, Doherty, Tanya, Ijumba, Petrida, Jackson, Debra, Lawn, Joy, Persson, Lars Åke, Lombard, Carl, Sanders, David, Daviaud, Emmanuelle, Nkonki, Lungiswa, Goga, Ameena, Rohde, Sarah, Sitrin, Deborah, Colvin, Mark, and Chopra, Mickey
- Subjects
- *
RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MATERNAL health services , *NEWBORN infant care , *HIV infection transmission , *MOTHER-child relationship - Abstract
Background Progress towards MDG4 for child survival in South Africa requires effective prevention of mother-to-child transmission ( PMTCT) of HIV including increasing exclusive breastfeeding, as well as a new focus on reducing neonatal deaths. This necessitates increased focus on the pregnancy and early post-natal periods, developing and scaling up appropriate models of community-based care, especially to reach the peri-urban poor. Methods We used a randomised controlled trial with 30 clusters (15 in each arm) to evaluate an integrated, scalable package providing two pregnancy visits and five post-natal home visits delivered by community health workers in Umlazi, Durban, South Africa. Primary outcomes were exclusive and appropriate infant feeding at 12 weeks post-natally and HIV-free infant survival. Results At 12 weeks of infant age, the intervention was effective in almost doubling the rate of exclusive breastfeeding (risk ratio 1.92; 95% CI: 1.59-2.33) and increasing infant weight and length-for-age z-scores (weight difference 0.09; 95% CI: 0.00-0.18, length difference 0.11; 95% CI: 0.03-0.19). No difference was seen between study arms in HIV-free survival. Women in the intervention arm were also more likely to take their infant to the clinic within the first week of life (risk ratio 1.10; 95% CI: 1.04-1.18). Conclusions The trial coincided with national scale up of ARVs for PMTCT, and this could have diluted the effect of the intervention on HIV-free survival. We have demonstrated that implementation of a pro-poor integrated PMTCT and maternal, neonatal and child health home visiting model is feasible and effective. This trial could inform national primary healthcare reengineering strategies in favour of home visits. The dose effect on exclusive breastfeeding is notable as improving exclusive breastfeeding has been resistant to change in other studies targeting urban poor families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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46. Leveraging paraprofessionals and family strengths to improve coverage and penetration of nutrition and early child development services.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Rahman, Atif, Sanders, David, Maselko, Joanna, and Rotheram‐Borus, Mary Jane
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CHILD development , *PARAPROFESSIONALS , *CHILD nutrition , *AFFECTIVE disorders in children , *DYSFUNCTIONAL families , *HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
Children need to be protected in intergenerational networks, with parents who have positive mood, resources to feed their children, and skills to promote early childhood development (ECD). Globally, more than 200 million children are raised annually without these resources. This article reviews the potential contributions of increasing coverage and penetration of services for these children, challenges to achieving penetration of services in high-risk families, opportunities created by bundling multiple services within one provider, potential leveraging of paraprofessionals to deliver care, and mobilizing communities to support children in households at high risk for negative outcomes. We end with a number of suggestions for how to ensure the equitable scale-up of integrated ECD and nutrition services that take into account current global priorities, as well as coverage and penetration of services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Detection of antenatal depression in rural HIV-affected populations with short and ultrashort versions of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS)
- Author
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Rochat, Tamsen, Tomlinson, Mark, Newell, Marie, and Stein, Alan
- Abstract
Risk of antenatal depression has been shown to be elevated in Southern Africa and can impact maternal and child outcomes, especially in the context of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). Brief screening methods may optimize access to care during pregnancy, particularly where resources are scarce. This research evaluated shorter versions of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to detect antenatal depression. This cross-sectional study at a large primary health care (PHC) facility recruited a consecutive series of 109 antenatal attendees in rural South Africa. Women were in the second half of pregnancy and completed the EPDS and Structured Clinical Interview for Depression (SCID). The recommended EPDS cutoff (≥13) was used to determine probable depression. Four versions, including the 10-item scale, seven-item depression, and novel three- and five-item versions developed through regression analysis, were evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. High numbers of women 51/109 (47 %) were depressed, most depression was chronic, and nearly half of the women were HIV positive 49/109 (45 %). The novel three-item version had improved positive predictive value (PPV) over the 10-item version and equivalent specificity to the seven-item depression subscale; the novel five-item provided the best overall performance in terms of ROC and Cronbach's reliability statistics and had improved specificity. The brevity, sensitivity, and reliability of the short and ultrashort versions could facilitate widespread community screening. The usefulness of the novel three- and five-item versions are underscored by the fact that sensitivity is important at first screening, while specificity becomes more important at higher levels of care. Replication in larger samples is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Detection of antenatal depression in rural HIV-affected populations with short and ultrashort versions of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS).
- Author
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Rochat, Tamsen, Tomlinson, Mark, Newell, Marie, and Stein, Alan
- Subjects
- *
POSTPARTUM depression diagnosis , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *STATISTICAL correlation , *HIV-positive persons , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *POSTPARTUM depression , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *RURAL population , *EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Risk of antenatal depression has been shown to be elevated in Southern Africa and can impact maternal and child outcomes, especially in the context of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). Brief screening methods may optimize access to care during pregnancy, particularly where resources are scarce. This research evaluated shorter versions of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to detect antenatal depression. This cross-sectional study at a large primary health care (PHC) facility recruited a consecutive series of 109 antenatal attendees in rural South Africa. Women were in the second half of pregnancy and completed the EPDS and Structured Clinical Interview for Depression (SCID). The recommended EPDS cutoff (≥13) was used to determine probable depression. Four versions, including the 10-item scale, seven-item depression, and novel three- and five-item versions developed through regression analysis, were evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. High numbers of women 51/109 (47 %) were depressed, most depression was chronic, and nearly half of the women were HIV positive 49/109 (45 %). The novel three-item version had improved positive predictive value (PPV) over the 10-item version and equivalent specificity to the seven-item depression subscale; the novel five-item provided the best overall performance in terms of ROC and Cronbach's reliability statistics and had improved specificity. The brevity, sensitivity, and reliability of the short and ultrashort versions could facilitate widespread community screening. The usefulness of the novel three- and five-item versions are underscored by the fact that sensitivity is important at first screening, while specificity becomes more important at higher levels of care. Replication in larger samples is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Food insecurity and its association with co-occurring postnatal depression, hazardous drinking, and suicidality among women in peri-urban South Africa.
- Author
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Dewing, Sarah, Tomlinson, Mark, le Roux, Ingrid M., Chopra, Mickey, and Tsai, Alexander C.
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SUICIDAL behavior of women , *POSTPARTUM depression , *PUBLIC health , *MENTAL depression , *FOOD security , *NUTRITIONAL status - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Although the public health impacts of food insecurity and depression on both maternal and child health are extensive, no studies have investigated the associations between food insecurity and postnatal depression or suicidality. Methods: We interviewed 249 women three months after they had given birth and assessed food insecurity, postnatal depression symptom severity, suicide risk, and hazardous drinking. Multivariable Poisson regression models with robust standard errors were used to estimate the impact of food insecurity on psychosocial outcomes. Results: Food insecurity, probable depression, and hazardous drinking were highly prevalent and co-occurring. More than half of the women (149 [59.8%]) were severely food insecure, 79 (31.7%) women met screening criteria for probable depression, and 39 (15.7%) women met screening criteria for hazardous drinking. Nineteen (7.6%) women had significant suicidality, of whom 7 (2.8%) were classified as high risk. Each additional point on the food insecurity scale was associated with increased risks of probable depression (adjusted risk ratio [ARR], 1.05; 95% CI, 1.02–1.07), hazardous drinking (ARR, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.00–1.09), and suicidality (ARR, 1.12; 95% CI, 1.02–1.23). Evaluated at the means of the covariates, these estimated associations were large in magnitude. Limitations: The study is limited by lack of data on formal DSM-IV diagnoses of major depressive disorder, potential sample selection bias, and inability to assess the causal impact of food insecurity. Conclusion: Food insecurity is strongly associated with postnatal depression, hazardous drinking, and suicidality. Programmes promoting food security for new may enhance overall psychological well-being in addition to improving nutritional status. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. What the science of child and adolescent development contributes to understanding the impacts of COVID-19.
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Tomlinson, Mark, Richter, Linda, and Slemming, Wiedaad
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ADOLESCENCE , *COVID-19 , *CHILD development , *LIFE sciences , *PANDEMICS , *CHILD mortality , *ADOLESCENT development - Abstract
The article offers information on science of child and adolescent development contributes to understanding the impacts of COVID-19. Topics include the data on the consequences of the pandemic are stark, the globally it is predicted that more than a million preventable child deaths will occur a hunger pandemic is happening, and rising rates of malnutrition and stunting are going to massively impact children's cognitive trajectories across the life course.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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