8,819 results
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2. Introducing yoga‐integrated psychotherapy (YiP): A discussion paper.
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Childs‐Fegredo, Jasmine
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MENTAL health personnel , *MENTAL health services , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *RESEARCH personnel , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Despite a plethora of treatments available for alleviating mental health issues, it has been reported that interventions, as they stand, are simply just not good enough (Kalin, Am. J. Psychiatry, 176, 2019, 885). Increasing figures of suicides are published each year, most recently standing at over 49,000 in the United States. Contested arguments continue in the field of psychotherapy with regard to finding the ‘best’ treatments for mental health issues. Recently, there have been calls for mental health practitioners and researchers to move towards innovation by asking different questions and creating new methods, albeit underpinned by rigorous scientific investigation. One such method currently being adopted with promising outcomes is the integration of mind–body techniques, such as yoga, into mental health treatments. Yoga is an ancient practice which provides a holistic system of healing and complementary philosophy to western understandings of the human mind. Like psychotherapy, yoga seems to work with unconscious processes, which can enable long‐term change. Combined with psychotherapeutic discovery, novel treatment models which incorporate both yoga and psychotherapy could therefore be provided. Yoga‐integrated psychotherapy (YiP), as a new model of treatment, could enhance outcomes for clients presenting with a range of difficulties as it aims to work with these methods as well as transdiagnostic understandings of distress. Additionally, YiP underscores the importance of a humanistic approach, which values the uniqueness of individuals and their subjective understandings of distress. Promising data from a recent pilot study of a YiP model in which participants describe the approach as ‘life changing’ form the basis of this discussion paper. The question arising is whether a humanistic and yoga‐integrated approach to psychotherapy could assist in enhancing client outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Call for papers on psychedelic‐assisted treatment for substance use disorders.
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *SERIAL publications , *EDIBLE mushrooms , *MENTAL health , *SEROTONIN agonists , *HALLUCINOGENIC drugs - Abstract
A call for papers on psychedelic-assisted treatment for substance use disorders is presented.
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- 2024
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4. Developing a woman‐centered, inclusive definition of positive childbirth experiences: A discussion paper.
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Leinweber, Julia, Fontein‐Kuipers, Yvonne, Karlsdottir, Sigfridur Inga, Ekström‐Bergström, Anette, Nilsson, Christina, Stramrood, Claire, and Thomson, Gill
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CHILDBIRTH , *MATERNAL health services , *WELL-being , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *SOCIAL support , *WOMEN , *PATIENT-centered care , *MEDICAL personnel , *MENTAL health , *EXPERIENCE , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *TERMS & phrases , *HEALTH care teams , *EXPERTISE , *RESPECT , *CONTENT analysis , *SOCIAL integration , *PATIENT safety - Abstract
Introduction: A positive childbirth experience promotes women's health, both during and beyond the perinatal period. Understanding what constitutes a positive childbirth experience is thus critical to providing high‐quality maternity care. Currently, there is no clear, inclusive, woman‐centered definition of a positive childbirth experience to guide practice, education, and research. Aim: To formulate an inclusive woman‐centered definition of a positive childbirth experience. Methods: A six‐step process was undertaken: (a) Key concepts associated with a positive childbirth were derived from a rapid literature review; (b) The key concepts were used by interdisciplinary experts in the author group to create a draft definition; (c) The draft definition was presented to clinicians and researchers during a European research meeting on perinatal mental health; (d) The authors integrated the expert feedback to refine the working definition; (e) A revised definition was shared with women from consumer groups in six countries to confirm its face validity; and (f) A final definition was formulated based on the women's feedback (n = 42). Results: The following definition was formulated: "A positive childbirth experience refers to a woman's experience of interactions and events directly related to childbirth that made her feel supported, in control, safe, and respected; a positive childbirth can make women feel joy, confident, and/or accomplished and may have short and/or long‐term positive impacts on a woman's psychosocial well‐being." Conclusions: This inclusive, woman‐centered definition highlights the importance of provider interactions for facilitating a positive childbirth experience. Feeling supported and having a sense of control, safety, and respect are central tenets. This definition could help to identify and validate positive childbirth experience(s), and to inform practice, education, research, advocacy, and policy‐making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Electronic Versus Paper and Pencil Survey Administration Mode Comparison: 2019 Youth Risk Behavior Survey*.
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Bryan, Leah N., Smith‐Grant, Jennifer, Brener, Nancy, Kilmer, Greta, Lo, Annie, Queen, Barbara, and Underwood, J. Michael
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RISK-taking behavior , *CLUSTER sampling , *STATISTICS , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *TIME , *HUMAN sexuality , *NUTRITION , *VIOLENCE , *MENTAL health , *SURVEYS , *PHYSICAL activity , *PSYCHOLOGY of high school students , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SEX customs , *ALCOHOL drinking , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *STATISTICAL sampling , *DATA analysis software , *PROBABILITY theory , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since the inception of the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System in 1991, all surveys have been conducted in schools, using paper and pencil instruments (PAPI). For the 2019 YRBSS, sites were offered the opportunity to conduct their surveys using electronic data collection. This study aimed to determine whether differences in select metrics existed between students who completed the survey electronically versus using PAPI. METHODS: Thirty risk behaviors were examined in this study. Data completeness, response rates and bivariate comparisons of risk behavior prevalence between administration modes were examined. RESULTS: Twenty‐nine of 30 questions examined had more complete responses among students using electronic surveys. Small differences were found for student and school response rates between modes. Twenty‐five of 30 adolescent risk behaviors showed no mode effect. CONCLUSIONS: Seven of 44 states and DC participated electronically. Because survey data were more complete; school and student response rates were consistent; and minor differences existed in risk behaviors between modes, the acceptability of collecting data electronically was demonstrated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Developing a woman‐centered, inclusive definition of traumatic childbirth experiences: A discussion paper.
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Leinweber, Julia, Fontein‐Kuipers, Yvonne, Thomson, Gill, Karlsdottir, Sigfridur Inga, Nilsson, Christina, Ekström‐Bergström, Anette, Olza, Ibone, Hadjigeorgiou, Eleni, and Stramrood, Claire
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CHILDBIRTH & psychology , *MATERNAL health services , *WELL-being , *PATIENT abuse , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *NURSING specialties , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *POST-traumatic stress disorder , *MENTAL health , *NURSE-patient relationships , *HEALTH care teams , *EMOTIONS , *PATIENT-professional relations , *INFANT health services , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
Introduction: Many women experience giving birth as traumatic. Although women's subjective experiences of trauma are considered the most important, currently there is no clear inclusive definition of a traumatic birth to help guide practice, education, and research. Aim: To formulate a woman‐centered, inclusive definition of a traumatic childbirth experience. Methods: After a rapid literature review, a five‐step process was undertaken. First, a draft definition was created based on interdisciplinary experts' views. The definition was then discussed and reformulated with input from over 60 multidisciplinary clinicians and researchers during a perinatal mental health and birth trauma research meeting in Europe. A revised definition was then shared with consumer groups in eight countries to confirm its face validity and adjusted based on their feedback. Results: The stepwise process confirmed that a woman‐centered and inclusive definition was important. The final definition was: "A traumatic childbirth experience refers to a woman's experience of interactions and/or events directly related to childbirth that caused overwhelming distressing emotions and reactions; leading to short and/ or long‐term negative impacts on a woman's health and wellbeing." Conclusions: This definition of a traumatic childbirth experience was developed through consultations with experts and consumer groups. The definition acknowledges that low‐quality provider interactions and obstetric violence can traumatize individuals during childbirth. The women‐centered and inclusive focus could help women to identify and validate their experiences of traumatic birth, offering benefits for practice, education, and research, as well as for policymaking and activism in the fields of perinatal mental health and respectful maternity care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. Microaggressions, perceptions of campus climate, mental health, and alcohol use among first-year college students of color.
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Samek DR, Crumly B, Akua BA, Dawson M, and Duke-Marks A
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- Humans, Students psychology, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Anxiety epidemiology, Mental Health, Microaggression
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Depressive and anxiety symptoms are increasingly common, and problematic alcohol use remains prevalent in college. To expand on prior research on mostly white samples, we surveyed first-year students of color from our predominately white university (Southeastern US) to identify risk factors for mental health symptoms and potentially co-occurring problematic alcohol use. Results showed significant associations between microaggressions and poor campus climate (hypothetical predictors) with depressive, anxiety, somatic symptoms (hypothetical outcomes) that were indirectly linked through perceived stress, poor sleep, and academic burnout (hypothetical mediators). Poor campus climate, academic burnout, and using alcohol to cope were the most relevant to alcohol use disorder symptoms. Results support efforts to address and reduce racial microaggressions and promote a positive campus climate for all., (© 2023 Society for Research on Adolescence.)
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- 2024
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8. No one will be left behind-Goal in Agenda 2030 requires a commitment to change.
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Korhonen L
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- Humans, China, Goals, Mental Health
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- 2024
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9. Care transitions from the specialty to the primary care setting: A scoping literature review of potential barriers and facilitators with implications for mental health care.
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Kim B, Benzer JK, Afable MK, Fletcher TL, Yusuf Z, and Smith TL
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- Humans, Mental Health, Patient Transfer
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Background, Aims and Objectives: This scoping review aimed to understand potential barriers and facilitators in transitioning patients from specialty to primary care settings, to inform the implementation of an intervention to promote active consideration of psychiatrically stable patients for transition from the specialty mental health setting back to primary care., Methods: Guided by Levac and colleagues' six-stage methodological framework for conducting scoping studies, we systematically searched electronic article databases for peer-reviewed literature from January 2000 to May 2016. We included identified articles that discuss findings related to potential barriers and facilitators in transitioning patients from specialty to primary care settings. We performed descriptive and thematic analyses of results to generate emergent codes and their categorizations., Results: Our database search yielded 906 unique articles, 23 of which we included in our scoping review. All but one of the included studies were conducted in North America. Identified potential barriers and facilitators spanned eight emergent themes-(i) primary care accessibility, especially in terms of timely availability of appointments, (ii) clarity in respective roles of specialty care and primary care in managing a patient, (iii) timely exchange of information, (iv) transition process management, (v) perceived ability of primary care providers to manage specialty conditions, (vi) perceived ability of patients to self-manage, (vii) leadership support and (viii) support for implementing initiatives to promote transitions., Conclusions: Findings from this scoping review enable an increased understanding of current practices and considerations regarding care transitions from specialty to primary care settings. The importance of role clarification, shared clinical information systems, confidence in care competency, and adequate organizational support to promote appropriate transitions were themes most widely reported across the reviewed studies. Few studies specifically examined the transition from specialty mental health to primary care. Future studies should account for mental health-specific symptomatic patterns and recovery trajectories, such as prevalent chronicity and frequency of relapse, in planning and conducting transitions from specialty mental health back to primary care., (Published 2023. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.)
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- 2023
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10. Open Dialogue, need‐adapted mental health care, and implementation fidelity: A discussion paper.
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Waters, Edward, Ong, Benjamin, Mikes‐Liu, Kristof, McCloughen, Andrea, Rosen, Alan, Mayers, Steven, Sidis, Anna, Dawson, Lisa, and Buus, Niels
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PSYCHIATRIC nursing , *CONVALESCENCE , *PATIENT-centered care , *MEDICAL care , *PHILOSOPHY of nursing , *EVIDENCE-based nursing , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *MENTAL health services - Abstract
Open Dialogue is a need‐adapted approach to mental health care that was originally developed in Finland. Like other need‐adapted approaches, Open Dialogue aims to meet consumer's needs and promote collaborative person‐centred dialogue to support recovery. Need‐adapted mental health care is distinguished by flexibility and responsiveness. Fidelity, defined from an implementation science perspective as the delivery of distinctive interventions in a high quality and effective fashion is a key consideration in health care. However, flexibility presents challenges for evaluating fidelity, which is much easier to evaluate when manualization and reproducible processes are possible. Hence, it remains unclear whether Open Dialogue and other need‐adapted mental health interventions can be meaningfully evaluated for fidelity. The aim of this paper was to critically appraise and advance the evaluation of fidelity in need‐adapted mental health care, using Open Dialogue as a case study. The paper opens a discussion about how fidelity should be evaluated in flexible, complex interventions, and identifies key questions that need to be asked by practitioners working in need‐adapted mental health care to ensure they deliver these interventions as intended and in an evidence‐based fashion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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11. Co-producing to understand what matters to young people living in youth residential rehabilitation services.
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Ennals P, Lessing K, Spies R, Egan R, Hemus P, Droppert K, Tidhar M, Wood T, van Dijk C, Bride R, Asche A, Bendall S, and Simmons M
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- Adolescent, Grounded Theory, Humans, Mental Health
- Abstract
Aim: Residential group care is an important service for vulnerable young people experiencing mental health, substance abuse and/or behavioural challenges. Yet little is written about specific models and their outcomes, especially from the perspectives of the young people who use these services. This project aimed to explore what matters to young people living in a 12-month voluntary residential program for young people aged 16-25., Methods: This participatory action research study was co-produced with Youth Residential Rehabilitation Service residents and staff as co-researchers. A steering group comprising residents, staff and researchers oversaw all research stages. 18 young people and 17 staff members participated in either individual or group interviews to discuss what was important in Youth Residential Rehabilitation Services. Data analysis drew on grounded theory techniques; subsequent codes and themes were refined in the steering group., Results: We identified the 'change work' that young people were expected to do, and the milieu factors that created a supportive environment. As young people were figuring out their directions and learning new skills, they needed to be understood as the developing expert of their own lives. Real relationships with staff and other young people created a culture of belonging, safety and feeling known. These findings are metaphorically captured in the image of an egg., Conclusions: Our study highlights that real relationships between all Youth Residential Rehabilitation Service community members are central to creating the atmosphere of safety and belonging that enables healing and self-development to occur., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
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- 2022
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12. Introducing the youth residential rehabilitation service: An operational and experiential overview of a psychosocial residential support option for young people experiencing mental health challenges.
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Spies R, Ennals P, Egan R, Hemus P, Gonzales R, Droppert K, Tidhar M, McMullan S, Lessing K, Wood T, Bride R, Bendall S, and Simmons M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Australia, Hope, Humans, Young Adult, Mental Health, Psychosocial Support Systems
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Aim: A range of residential supports is available for young people experiencing mental health challenges. One Australian example is the Youth Residential Rehabilitation Service, which provides up to 12 months of intensive psychosocial support in a residential setting to young people aged 16-25 experiencing serious mental health challenges. This paper aimed to add to the scant literature on these services, describing the experiences of young people and staff members across the duration of a stay., Methods: This study drew on collaborative autoethnography to engage and centre the direct lived experience of young people who had lived, and staff who had worked, in a Youth Residential Rehabilitation Service., Results: We identified three phases that young people typically journey through during their stay at the service. The Arriving phase was marked by appropriate referrals, a warm welcome, a period of settling in and the development of trusting relationships. The Discovering phase saw young people identifying and enacting their strengths, hopes and values. Community connections were a focus of the Continuing phase as lives after service exit were envisioned and created., Conclusions: Drawing on collaborative autoethnography methods represents one approach to amplify the voice of young people in service design and evaluation. This paper richly described some of the possibilities and complexities of the Youth Residential Rehabilitation Service experience, which can be used to inform the service's pacing and structure of support., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
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- 2022
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13. Research to Clinical Practice-Youth seeking mental health information online and its impact on the first steps in the patient journey.
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Scott J, Hockey S, Ospina-Pinillos L, Doraiswamy PM, Alvarez-Jimenez M, and Hickie I
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- Adolescent, Anxiety Disorders, Health Personnel, Humans, Internet, Young Adult, Mental Health, Social Media
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Background: Online searches about anxiety and depression are recorded every 3-5 s. As such, information and communication technologies (ICT) have enormous potential to enable or impair help-seeking and patient-professional interactions. Youth studies indicate that ICT searches are undertaken before initial mental health consultations, but no publications have considered how this online activity affects the first steps of the patient journey in youth mental health settings., Methods: State-of-the-art review using an iterative, evidence mapping approach to identify key literature and expert consensus to synthesize and prioritise clinical and research issues., Results: Adolescents and young adults are more likely to seek health advice via online search engines or social media platforms than from a health professional. Young people not only search user-generated content and social media to obtain advice and support from online communities but increasingly contribute personal information online., Conclusions: A major clinical challenge is to raise professional awareness of the likely impact of this activity on mental health consultations. Potential strategies range from modifying the structure of clinical consultations to ensure young people are able to disclose ICT activities related to mental health, through to the development and implementation of 'internet prescriptions' and a youth-focused 'toolkit'., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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14. Digital mental health outcome monitoring for a structured text-based youth counselling intervention: Demographic profile and outcome change.
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Blackshaw E, Sefi A, Mindel C, Maher H, and De Ossorno Garcia S
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adolescent, Child, Young Adult, Adult, Pandemics, Gender Identity, Counseling, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Demography, Mental Health, COVID-19 prevention & control
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Background: Digital mental health interventions comprise a potentially effective and accessible form of support for young people, particularly at times when traditional face-to-face service delivery is reduced, as in the COVID-19 pandemic., Aims: This study assessed the demographic profile of young people using a digital mental health support service and evaluated outcome change over the course of a structured online counselling intervention (synchronous text-chat sessions with a practitioner)., Materials and Methods: The data were collected from 23,260 young people aged between 10 and 25 years engaging with the intervention between April 2019 and June 2021., Results: Young people accessing these services had high levels of mental health needs, particularly those identifying with non-binary gender identity. Service users were mostly female, with equitable rates of access for young people from racialised communities. Overall outcome change demonstrated small effect sizes according to the YP-CORE (0.19) and CORE-10 (0.38), which increased to a moderate level when young people remained engaged with a dedicated practitioner for at least seven sessions (0.38, 0.58). Regression analysis illustrated the effect of the number of sessions on outcome change, but this can be also influenced by other variables such as age and gender., Discussion and Conclusion: Further research is required to explore ways to engage with young people using digital web-based services for a longer period and to collect and analyse single-session outcome data., (© The Authors. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The British Psychological Society.)
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- 2023
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15. Psychological support within tier 2 adult weight management services, are we doing enough for people with mental health needs? A mixed-methods survey.
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Marwood J, Brown T, Kaiseler M, Clare K, Feeley A, Blackshaw J, and Ells LJ
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- Humans, Adult, Surveys and Questionnaires, Mental Health, Counseling
- Abstract
Depression and obesity are two of the most highly prevalent global public health concerns. Obesity and poor mental health are strongly associated, and it is likely that mental health needs are common in people seeking weight management services. The aim was to identify what psychological support is provided and required in tier 2 adult weight management services (T2 WMS). Online survey was conducted: quantitative data were summarized, and open-ended free-text questions were coded and thematically analysed. Participants were current or recent service users with self-reported mental health needs (n = 27), commissioners (n = 9) or providers (n = 17). Over half of service users did not feel their mental health needs were met and 60% said they would like additional psychological support within T2 WMS. Findings highlight the lack of psychological and emotional support. Psychological support and behaviour change techniques are conflated, with a lack of clear understanding or definition of what psychological support is, either between or within service users, providers, and commissioners. Moving towards more person-centred care, better identification and triaging of those living with mental health issues, together with improved resources and training of providers, is crucial to improve outcomes for people living with obesity and poor mental health., (© 2023 The Authors. Clinical Obesity published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of World Obesity Federation.)
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- 2023
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16. Approaches to the identification and management of depression in people living with chronic kidney disease: A scoping review of 860 papers.
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Pearce, Christina J., Hall, Natalie, Hudson, Joanna L., Farrington, Ken, Tucker, Madeleine J. Ryan, Wellsted, David, Jones, Julia, Sharma, Shivani, Norton, Sam, Ormandy, Paula, Palmer, Nick, Quinnell, Anthony, Fitzgerald, Lauren, Griffiths, Sophie, and Chilcot, Joseph
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CHRONIC kidney failure complications ,DIAGNOSIS of mental depression ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SELF-evaluation ,MEDICAL screening ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,MENTAL depression ,RESEARCH funding ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,DISEASE management ,COGNITIVE therapy ,ADULTS - Abstract
Background: Depression is prevalent across the spectrum of Chronic Kidney Disease and associated with poorer outcomes. There is limited evidence regarding the most effective interventions and care pathways for depression in Chronic Kidney Disease. Objectives: To investigate how depression is identified and managed in adults with Chronic Kidney Disease. Design: Scoping review. Methods: Systematic search of eight databases with pre‐defined inclusion criteria. Data relevant to the identification and/or management of depression in adults with Chronic Kidney Disease were extracted. Results: Of 2147 articles identified, 860 were included. Depression was most identified using self‐report screening tools (n = 716 studies, 85.3%), with versions of the Beck Depression Inventory (n = 283, 33.7%) being the most common. A total of 123 studies included data on the management of depression, with nonpharmacological interventions being more frequently studied (n = 55, 45%). Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (n = 15) was the most common nonpharmacological intervention, which was found to have a significant effect on depressive symptoms compared to controls (n = 10). However, how such approaches could be implemented as part of routine care was not clear. There was limited evidence for antidepressants use in people with Chronic Kidney Disease albeit in a limited number of studies. Conclusions: Depression is commonly identified using validated screening tools albeit differences exist in reporting practices. Evidence regarding the management of depression is mixed and requires better‐quality trials of both pharmacological and nonpharmacological approaches. Understanding which clinical care pathways are used and their evidence, may help facilitate the development of kidney care specific guidelines for the identification and management of depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Acceptability and feasibility of a multidomain harmonized data collection protocol in youth mental health.
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Youn S, Mamsa S, Allott K, Berger M, Polari A, Rice S, Schmaal L, Wood S, and Lavoie S
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- Humans, Adolescent, Feasibility Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Focus Groups, Mental Health, Mental Disorders diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objective: To develop targeted treatment for young people experiencing mental illness, a better understanding of the biological, psychological, and social changes is required, particularly during the early stages of illness. To do this, large datasets need to be collected using standardized methods. A harmonized data collection protocol was tested in a youth mental health research setting to determine its acceptability and feasibility., Method: Eighteen participants completed the harmonization protocol, including a clinical interview, self-report measures, neurocognitive measures, and mock assessments of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and blood. The feasibility of the protocol was assessed by recording recruitment rates, study withdrawals, missing data, and protocol deviations. Subjective responses from participant surveys and focus groups were used to examine the acceptability of the protocol., Results: Twenty-eight young people were approached, 18 consented, and four did not complete the study. Most participants reported positive subjective impressions of the protocol as a whole and showed interest in participating in the study again, if given the opportunity. Participants generally perceived the MRI and neurocognitive tasks as interesting and suggested that the assessment of clinical presentation could be shortened., Conclusion: Overall, the harmonized data collection protocol appeared to be feasible and generally well-accepted by participants. With a majority of participants finding the assessment of clinical presentation too long and repetitive, the authors have made suggestions to shorten the self-reports. The broader implementation of this protocol could allow researchers to create large datasets and better understand how psychopathological and neurobiological changes occur in young people with mental ill-health., (© 2022 The Authors. Early Intervention in Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
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- 2023
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18. Educational inequalities in suicide in a middle-income country: A socioeconomic approach of mental health.
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Ordóñez-Monak I, Arroyave I, and Cardona D
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- Adult, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Quality of Life, Socioeconomic Factors, Mental Health, Suicide
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Objective: This research aims to describe trends in inequalities in suicide mortality by educational level in Colombia between 1998 and 2015., Method: Standardized suicide mortality rates (SMR) were calculated by educational level, sex, and age in adult men and women over 25 years of age. Poisson regression models were used to calculate the RR (rate ratio) with those highly educated as a reference, and the RII (relative index of inequality)., Results: The number of reported deaths by suicide between 1998 and 2015 was 24,654, of which 84.7% were men. By age-group, 48.5% of suicides were among young adult men and women (25-44). Men had higher suicide rates than women (SMR men = 10.44/100,000; SMR women = 1.72/100,000). The age-standardized mortality rates (SMR) were higher in the groups with the lowest educational level in both sexes and all age-groups, except for senior adult women (65+). Broadly, while SMR reduced throughout most of the period, inequalities grew., Conclusions: We found that the educational inequities associated with suicide in Colombia grew slightly. This suggests the need to work on suicide prevention strategies that go beyond the individual risk factors. Socioeconomic issues need to be considered as a key tool to prevent suicide by improving peoples' quality of life and their mental health., (© 2020 The American Association of Suicidology.)
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- 2021
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19. Community initiatives for well‐being in the United Kingdom and their role in developing social capital and addressing loneliness: A scoping review.
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Tierney, Stephanie, Rowe, Rosie, Connally, Emily L, Roberts, Nia W, Mahtani, Kamal R, and Gorenberg, Jordan
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WELL-being ,CINAHL database ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SOCIAL support ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SOCIAL capital ,COMMUNITY support ,MENTAL health ,SOCIAL isolation ,LONELINESS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL attitudes ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,SOCIAL skills ,TRUST - Abstract
Introduction: Loneliness can have a negative impact on people's physical and psychological well‐being; building social capital is a potential means of addressing this connection. Community initiatives (e.g. groups, clubs, neighbourhood activities) may be a route that enables people to build social capital to tackle loneliness. Understanding what is known, and where gaps in knowledge exist, is important for advancing research on this topic. Methods: A scoping review was undertaken to explore the question – What community initiatives, with a focus on well‐being, have been evaluated in the United Kingdom that include information about social capital and loneliness? Four databases (Medline, CINAHL, ASSIA and Embase) were searched for relevant research papers. References were screened by two researchers to identify if they met the review's inclusion criteria. Data were summarised as a narrative and in tables. Results: Five papers met the review's inclusion criteria. They all used qualitative methods. Findings suggested that social capital could be developed through creating a sense of trust, group cohesion and reciprocity among participants in the community initiatives. This connection enabled people to experience a sense of belonging and to feel they had a meaningful relationship with others, which appeared to alleviate feelings of loneliness. Conclusion: More research is warranted on the review topic, including studies that have employed quantitative or mixed methods. Clarity around definitions of social capital and loneliness in future research is required. Engagement with community initiatives can provide a formalised route to help people develop connections and counteract limitations in their social networks. However, individuals may be wary about attending community initiatives, needing support and encouragement to do so. Social prescribing link workers are one means of motivating people to access groups, events or organisations that could improve their well‐being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Adult mental health service engagement with patients who are parents: Evidence from 15 English mental health trusts.
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Dunn A, Startup H, and Cartwright-Hatton S
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- Adult, Humans, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Mental Health, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Objectives: Ascertaining whether mental health service users have children is a clinical requirement in UK health services, and acknowledgement of a patient's parenting role is necessary to enable engagement with their parenting experience and to facilitate support, both of which are associated with improved outcomes for the parent-child dyad. The current study sought to investigate the practice of mental health practitioners working in UK adult mental health services with regard to the following: Ascertaining whether patients have children; engagement with the parenting role of patients; engagement with the construct of 'think patient as parent'., Methods: Self-report online/paper survey of 1105 multi-disciplinary adult mental health practitioners working in 15 mental health trusts in England., Results: A quarter of adult mental health practitioners did not routinely ascertain whether patients had dependent children. Less than half of practitioners engaged with the parenting experience or the potential impact of parental mental health on children., Conclusions: The parenting role of patients is not routinely captured by large numbers of practitioners working in adult mental health settings. This is despite it being a mandatory requirement and an integral component of the systematic care of the adult, and preventative care for the offspring. Failure to engage with patients who are parents is a missed opportunity with profound downstream public health implications. The practice deficits identified in this study should be viewed in terms of broader structural failures to address the intergenerational transmission of poor mental health., Practitioner Points: Some parents who have mental health difficulties may struggle to provide appropriate and effective care to their children. The parenting role can also exacerbate mental health difficulties. Identification of dependent children is a mandatory component of adult mental health clinical practice and is necessary to understand a parent's support needs. A quarter of adult mental health practitioners are failing to do so. A missed opportunity to engage with the support needs of the parent-child dyad., (© 2021 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.)
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- 2022
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21. New thinking about old ways: Cultural continuity for improved mental health of young Central Australian Aboriginal men.
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Liddle J, Langton M, Rose JWW, and Rice S
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- Australia, Humans, Language, Male, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Indigenous Peoples, Mental Health
- Abstract
Decades of reports and policy have drawn attention to the significant social and occupational impairment of many young Aboriginal men in Central Australia. However, the role of mental ill-health as a contributing factor to this impairment, and culturally appropriate intervention targets have received insufficient attention in the psychiatry literature. Despite having the worst health outcomes of any population in Australia, Aboriginal men chronically underuse primary health care services. It's proposed that interventions ensuring cultural continuity through Identity-strengthening with a particular focus on positive Aboriginal masculinities will address a critical mental health gap for young men. In Central Australian and broader Indigenous populations, tangible and measurable kinship, language, religious and economic (KLRE) activities are catalytic vehicles for restoring traditional knowledge that suffer ongoing pressures as a result of colonization and assimilationist Government policy. By transforming KLRE knowledge content from ethnographic archives, these culturally rich repositories may be utilized to create education and engagement materials that will support young Aboriginal men's efforts to obtain and maintain positive mental health. This proposal focuses on building resilience through the acquisition of KLRE knowledge which young Aboriginal men can utilize as resources for enhancing positive identity and mental health outcomes., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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22. Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) has potential but is not sufficient: How can it better meet the range of primary care mental health needs?
- Author
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Martin C, Iqbal Z, Airey ND, and Marks L
- Subjects
- Anxiety Disorders, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Primary Health Care, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Mental Health
- Abstract
Background: The Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme has been impactful in increasing access to psychological therapies at primary care level. However, it remains unclear whether IAPT's widely disseminated achievements include the reduction in service users' transition to secondary care services and whether IAPT services are providing interventions that match the level of complexity of presenting problems of those who are referred., Aims: This review sets out to clarify the clinical characteristics of IAPT cohorts, whether the interventions provided target these characteristics, and whether outcomes are related to the use of the stepped-care model advocated in the operationalization of IAPT services., Method: A systematic literature search was undertaken on PsycINFO, MEDLINE, and Embase using the terms: IAPT, anxiety, and depression., Results: Of 472 paper identified, 24 articles were deemed pertinent. It appears that IAPT cohorts are complex and current service delivery frameworks may not meet their needs. IAPT developments and research for long-term physical health conditions and serious mental illness have been recently advocated, though whether these are sufficient and viable when set in IAPT's prescriptive backdrop remains unclear., Conclusions: Improving Access to Psychological Therapies provision and research at present does not adequately consider the complexity of its clientele in the context of treatment outcomes and service delivery. Recommendations are provided for future research and practice to tackle these deficiencies., Practitioner Points: Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) has significantly increased access to psychological therapies within primary care over the last decade, though it is unclear whether its interventions are sufficiently tailored to meet the actual levels of complexity of its clientele and prevent them from needing onward referral to secondary care as originally envisaged. Given the ongoing focus on and investment in IAPT informed developments into long-term conditions and serious mental illness, this review considers whether additional elucidation of the model's original objectives is required, as a precursor to its expansion into other clinical areas. The review indicates that there is a stark lack of data pertaining to the generalisable, real-world clinical benefits of the IAPT programme as it currently stands. Recommendations are provided for future areas of research, and practice enhancements to ensure the value of IAPT services to clients in the wider context of NHS mental health services, including the interface with secondary care, are considered., (© 2021 British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. NABH white paper calls attention to residential treatment.
- Author
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Canady, Valerie A.
- Subjects
ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,MENTAL health ,HEALTH education ,EVALUATION of medical care ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PATIENT advocacy ,HOME care services ,EXECUTIVES ,PEDIATRICS ,CONTINUUM of care ,DECISION making ,MANAGEMENT ,POLICY sciences ,POLITICAL participation ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
Intensive outpatient and partial hospitalization or day treatment programs can provide more intensive levels of care with multiple types of therapy, more frequent sessions with mental health professionals, and clinically informed care coordination and case management. This observation on residential treatment is included in a new white paper released this month by the National Association for Behavioral Healthcare (NABH). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Clinician stakeholder experiences of a new youth mental health model in Australia: A qualitative study.
- Author
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Nash L, Isobel S, Thomas M, Nguyen T, and van der Pol R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Australia, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Personnel Turnover, Referral and Consultation, Adolescent Health Services, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Aim: Late teens and early adulthood is the peak age of onset for mental disorders. Currently, there is a gap between primary mental health care and more intensive mental health services for young people in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. Two headspace Early Intervention Teams (hEITs) were developed to bridge this gap in Sydney Local Health District (SLHD), in Sydney, Australia. This study aims to explore clinician experiences of hEIT after the first 2 years of implementation., Methods: Semistructured interviews were conducted with key clinicians working within hEIT or closely associated with hEIT. Nine interviews were conducted, transcribed and analysed using qualitative thematic analysis., Results: Four themes were identified: (1) building a bridge between services, (2) filling a clinical gap, (3) service collaborations and their challenges and (4) difficulties of small team size., Conclusions: There is evidence that clinicians value the service provided by hEIT. There are difficulties such as referral confusion, staff turnover and suggestions to increase staffing to improve the stability, skill diversity and viability of the service. Findings have implications for other collaborative youth mental health models., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. NASMHPD, SAMHSA papers tout 988 opportunities for field.
- Author
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Canady, Valerie A.
- Subjects
SUICIDE prevention ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,HEALTH policy ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,SERIAL publications ,MENTAL health ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,INFORMATION resources ,POLICY sciences ,MENTAL health services ,CRISIS intervention (Mental health services) - Abstract
Observing that the transition to the 988 National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline offers an opportunity to grow crisis response services along a continuum, the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors (NASMHPD) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) last month released a series of 10 technical assistance collaborative papers providing important resources for stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Discussion of Neil Altman's paper, ‘psychoanalysis and war’.
- Author
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Altman, Neil, Cushman, Phil, Goldsmith, Marlene, Hartman, Stephen, Hollander, Nancy, Lesser, Ronnie, Lotto, David, McCarroll, Jennifer, People, Karen, Riethmiller, Rob, Samuels, Andrew, Soldz, Stephen, and Stopford, Annie
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOANALYSIS , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper consists of a discussion of Neil Altman's ‘Psychoanalysis and war’, which was conducted online through PsyBC in the fall of 2006. Discussants were a group of psychoanalytically oriented thinkers chosen by the author and Nancy Hollander, the author of the other paper included in the discussion. The paper represents the full discussion with only minor edits to correct typographical errors and improve clarity. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Innovative approach to adolescent mental health in Japan: School-based education about mental health literacy.
- Author
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Ojio Y, Mori R, Matsumoto K, Nemoto T, Sumiyoshi T, Fujita H, Morimoto T, Nishizono-Maher A, Fuji C, and Mizuno M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Health, Humans, Japan, Schools, Health Literacy, Mental Health
- Abstract
Aims: Improving mental health literacy through school-based education may encourage mental health promotion, prevention and care and reduce stigma in adolescents. In Japan, instruction about mental illness has been formulated in a Course of Study that reflects governmental curriculum guidelines, which will be enforced from 2022 to promote an understanding of current issues of adolescent health. Educational resources available to schoolteachers have been developed. This article describes the development processes and contents of these resources., Methods: Our collaborating team, consisting of mental health professionals and schoolteachers, developed educational resources, based on feedback from high school students in general and young people who had experienced mental health problems., Results: The new Course of Study covers: (1) mechanisms of mental illness, prevalence, age at onset, risk factors and treatability; (2) typical symptoms of mental health problems and illnesses; (3) self-help strategies for prevention of and recovery from mental illness; (4) enhancing help-seeking and helping behaviour and (5) decreasing stigma associated with people with mental health problems. The educational strategy is targeted at high school students (grades 10-12) and is conducted by teachers of health and physical education. The educational resources include short story animated films, filmed social contact and educators' manuals, which are freely available through the internet and open to all concerned including schoolteachers in Japan., Conclusions: Our efforts are expected to help implement mental health education of the public throughout Japan and other countries and promote the practice of early intervention and prevention of mental illnesses in adolescents., (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Evolution of the mental health care system in Poland[This paper].
- Author
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Puzynski, S. and Moskalewicz, J.
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH services accessibility , *CITIZEN participation in community health services , *HEALTH insurance , *HEALTH policy - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this paper is to trace evolution of mental health system in Poland. Method: Available Polish literature and fundamental policy documents including mental health legislation are reviewed and major milestones in this evolution identified and then discussed against the background of political and social developments. Results: The mental health system evolved since the beginning of the 1970s from large hospitals towards community-based care. It was found that the changes were rather slow due to financial shortages and lack of clear demand from users. Recent transitions offer opportunities to increase impact of users and their families. On the other hand, however, introduction of health insurance system reduces prospects for well co-ordinated mental health policy and may lead to inequalities in access to services. Conclusion: It can be concluded that evolution of mental health services has been influenced by prevailing ideologies as much as by technical and professional considerations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Dieting and health in young Australian women<FNR>*</FNR><FN>Sections of this paper were presented at the Challenge the Body Culture Conference, Brisbane, Australia, 7 September 1997. </FN>.
- Author
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Kenardy, Justin, Brown, Wendy J., and Vogt, Emma
- Subjects
- *
REDUCING diets , *YOUNG women , *MENTAL health , *EATING disorders , *HEALTH - Abstract
This paper examines the prevalence of dieting behaviours and correlates with physical and mental health in young Australian women who are participants in the Australian Longitudinal Study of Women's Health. A total of 14 686 women aged 18–23 years, randomly selected from the National Medicare database, with over-sampling from rural and remote areas, responded to a questionnaire seeking dieting and health information. The results showed that 66.5 percent of the women had a BMI within the healthy weight range (18– < 25 kg/m[sup 2] ). However only 21.6 percent of these women were happy with their weight and almost half (46 percent) had dieted to lose weight in the last year (also one in five who had a BMI < 18.5 kg/m[sup 2] ). High frequency of dieting (rather than dieting per se) and earlier dieting onset were associated with poorer physical and mental health (including depression), more disordered eating (bingeing and purging), extreme weight and shape dissatisfaction and more frequent general health problems. The results suggest that there is a need for programmes that will enhance self esteem and weight/shape acceptance and promote more appropriate strategies for maintenance of healthy weight. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Mental health is biological health: Why tackling "diseases of the mind" is an imperative for biological anthropology in the 21st century.
- Author
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Syme KL and Hagen EH
- Subjects
- Humans, Anthropology, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health
- Abstract
The germ theory of disease and the attendant public health initiatives, including sanitation, vaccination, and antibiotic treatment, led to dramatic increases in global life expectancy. As the prevalence of infectious disease declines, mental disorders are emerging as major contributors to the global burden of disease. Scientists understand little about the etiology of mental disorders, however, and many of the most popular psychopharmacological treatments, such as antidepressants and antipsychotics, have only moderate-to-weak efficacy in treating symptoms and fail to target biological systems that correspond to discrete psychiatric syndromes. Consequently, despite dramatic increases in the treatment of some mental disorders, there has been no decrease in the prevalence of most mental disorders since accurate record keeping began. Many researchers and theorists are therefore endeavoring to rethink psychiatry from the ground-up. Anthropology, especially biological anthropology, can offer critical theoretical and empirical insights to combat mental illness globally. Biological anthropologists are unique in that we take a panhuman approach to human health and behavior and are trained to address each of Tinbergen's four levels of analysis as well as culture. The field is thus exceptionally well-situated to help resolve the mysteries of mental illness by integrating biological, evolutionary, and sociocultural perspectives., (© 2019 American Association of Physical Anthropologists.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Meeting the challenges of medical student mental health and well-being today.
- Author
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Choi AMK, Moon JE, and Friedman RA
- Subjects
- Education, Medical, Undergraduate, Humans, Students, Medical psychology, Mental Health, Stress, Psychological prevention & control
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Does an American puppy Amaeru? A Comment on Dr. Doi's Paper.
- Author
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Maruta, Toshihiko
- Subjects
- *
ATTACHMENT behavior in infants , *EMOTIONS in infants , *INFANT psychology , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *CHILD psychology , *DEPENDENCY (Psychology) , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *INFANT development , *MENTAL health , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Doi's paper has successfully spelled out several important points on amae: (1) Amae is an interpersonal process; (2) the origin of amae probably lies in the infant-mother relationship: (3) the concept of amae provides no absolute standard to classify a behavior in terms of amae;, (4) amae is best understood as a combination of patterns of behaviors; and (5) amae is g very broad concept. Implicit, but insufficiently recognized in Doi's paper, is the concept that amae is an interpersonal process of negotiation that is continuously revised throughout life. it is not just a motivational factor embedded in. an individual: underneath the surface phenomenon of amae, an amaeru-ing person usually allows the other to feel needed, valued, and respected. Operationalizing the concept of amae for international research requires that the term be defined in relation to a combination or patterns of behaviors observable in the infant/child-mother dyad. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. White paper addresses VBP opportunities, challenges for BH providers.
- Author
-
Canady, Valerie A.
- Subjects
VALUE-based healthcare ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,COST control ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAID ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,MENTAL health ,POLICY sciences ,QUALITY assurance ,PATIENT Protection & Affordable Care Act ,ELECTRONIC health records ,MEDICAL laws - Abstract
Health care payments continue to evolve and shift away from fee‐for‐service payment systems that typically reward volume and move to value‐based payment (VBP) models that incentivize high‐quality, cost‐effective care. While this is happening more for physical health services, there's more uncertainty about the role of behavioral health. A new white paper aims to tackle that question with information about existing models that have been implemented along with recommendations for federal and state policymakers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Physical and mental well‐being of cobot workers: A scoping review using the Software‐Hardware‐Environment‐Liveware‐Liveware‐Organization model.
- Author
-
Storm, Fabio A., Chiappini, Mattia, Dei, Carla, Piazza, Caterina, André, Elisabeth, Reißner, Nadine, Brdar, Ingrid, Delle Fave, Antonella, Gebhard, Patrick, Malosio, Matteo, Peña Fernández, Alberto, Štefok, Snježana, and Reni, Gianluigi
- Subjects
ERGONOMICS ,MENTAL health ,MENTAL health personnel ,INDUSTRIAL robots ,SOCIOTECHNICAL systems - Abstract
The present scoping review investigated the current state of the art concerning factors affecting physical and mental health and well‐being of workers using collaborative robots (cobots) in manufacturing industries. Each identified factor was classified using the SHELLO (Software‐Hardware‐Environment‐Liveware‐Liveware‐Organization) conceptual model. Strengths and limitations of such an approach were outlined. A total of 53 papers were included in the scoping review and analyzed following PRISMA guidelines. In 35 papers at least one risk factor referred to the SHELLO Liveware‐Hardware interaction, followed by factors concerning Liveware‐Software (16 papers), Liveware‐Liveware (11 papers), Liveware intrinsic factor (10 papers), Liveware‐Organization (8 papers), and Liveware‐Environment (8 papers). This work highlighted that methodological research is still primarily focused on traditional risk assessment and physical safety. However, several research directions concerning the design of cobots as active collaborators were identified, promoting workers' mental health and well‐being, too. The SHELLO model proved to effectively highlight human factors relevant for the design of cobots and can provide a systemic approach to investigate human factors in other complex sociotechnical systems. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time the model is applied in the field of human–cobot interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A systematic review of preceptor's experience in supervising undergraduate nursing students: Lessons learned for mental health nursing.
- Author
-
Benny, Jessy, Porter, Joanne E., and Joseph, Bindu
- Subjects
CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,TEACHING methods ,NURSES' attitudes ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RESEARCH methodology ,MENTAL health ,UNDERGRADUATES ,MEDICAL preceptorship ,NURSING students ,MEDLINE ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Background: Preceptorship in nursing has been a valued concept in nursing. Speciality area such as mental health nursing has a massive gap in research study. To develop sturdy mental health nursing workforce, it is necessary to conduct more studies. Aim: This literature review aims to explore preceptor's experience in precepting undergraduate nursing students in mental health. Design: Systematic review of literature. Methods: The systematic review was conducted from January 2021 to August 2021. Population of the studies included Registered Nurses supervising nursing students in the clinical area. Only studies conducted in English were included. A systematic search using EBSCO Host databases, CINAHL Complete, MEDLINE APA Psycinfo & APA PsycArticles, has been used in this review paper. Papers were also selected from the citation reference of included papers. The new version of the PRISMA 2020 guidelines used to represent the process of selection of papers has been incorporated as part of this review. The final set of data included 14 original papers meeting the eligibility criteria which involved quantitative (n = 5), qualitative (n = 4) and mixed‐method studies (n = 5). Result: Results were presented under three major themes: time‐consuming, lack of recognition and need extra support. Further research is required in the mental health clinical setting to effectively explore the impact of relationships between preceptors and the preceptees. Conclusion: Preceptors reported supervising students in the clinical area has many benefits. However, some challenges they raised were increase in workload, requiring some guidance and acknowledgement from the organization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Privacy considerations when predicting mental health using social media.
- Author
-
Wang, Tian and Bashir, Masooda
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,SOCIAL media ,INFORMATION sharing ,MENTAL health services ,PRIVACY - Abstract
In recent years the number of individuals struggling with mental illness has increased, and traditional mental health services are now considered insufficient under the current circumstances which has prompted researchers to develop new approaches for mental healthcare. Social media usage is growing, and it is been utilized to help provide additional insight on mental health by using the information shared by individuals, as well as data taken from their social media activity. While this approach may provide a unique and effective perspective for mental health services, it is critical that privacy risks and protections are considered in the process. Social media services collect, process, and stores a substantial amount of information about its users and how that information is shared as well as what type of predictions are made may pose serious privacy concerns. This study aims to understand how privacy is addressed and emphasized during the process of using social media data for mental healthcare by constructing a systematic review on previous scholarly papers related to the topic. Solove's taxonomy of privacy is used to evaluate these publications privacy considerations and to demonstrate the privacy risks that may arise when social media data is used for mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Review of Infant Mental Health papers.
- Author
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Modell, Arnold H.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *CONSCIOUSNESS , *THERAPEUTICS , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The paper of the Change Process Study Group of Boston addresses an unsolved conceptual problem: How does one codify intersubjective states? The transfer of concepts from infant research to the adult therapeutic dyad is more than an analogy in that certain primitive aspects of mind appear in infancy, but persist throughout life. The regulation of consciousness is one salient example. The adult therapeutic dyad and the mother–infant dyad can be viewed as self-regulating dynamic systems that are also self-reparative. The concept of implicit relational knowledge is offered as an alternative way of thinking about internal object relations. © 1998 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A systems perspective on the integrative child psychiatry approach. Discussion of paper: 'Working here and now with the individual and family system: A case of a traumatized child'.
- Author
-
Fivaz‐Depeursinge, Elisabeth
- Subjects
- *
CHILD psychiatry , *PEDIATRIC neurology , *CHILD psychology , *MENTAL health , *FAMILIES , *THERAPEUTIC complications , *PSYCHODYNAMIC psychotherapy , *WOUNDS & injuries - Abstract
In this discussion, after a few general comments, I will propose a systems reading of the intervention so elegantly described by Kaija Puura. I will draw parallels between the therapeutic and the family groups as framing-developing systems and formalize the steps taken by the family toward healing under the influence of the therapist's team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The challenges of purpose in the face of chaos: commentary paper by Professor Beverley Raphael.
- Author
-
RAPHAEL, BEVERLEY
- Subjects
- *
DISASTERS & psychology , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness , *PUBLIC health research , *NEEDS assessment , *POPULATION health ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Trauma in military and civilian settings<FNR></FNR><FN>This paper is in memory of Professor Marianne Amir, who passed away in January 2004. </FN>.
- Author
-
Ben-Ya'acov, Yoram, Amir, Marianne, Arzy, Ronit, and Kotler, Moshe
- Subjects
- *
POST-traumatic stress disorder , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *MENTAL health , *MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Previous works on clinical populations have indicated that trauma experienced in military settings is characterized by a higher prevalence of PTSD, intensity of post-traumatic symptoms, and psychological distress than trauma experienced in a civilian setting. The present study was designed to compare these reactions to military and civilian trauma in a non-clinical population in Israel of 140 males, aged 25–45. The results showed that responses following exposure to civilian traumas were characterized by higher levels in all indicators examined, as compared with responses to military trauma exposure. The findings of this study broaden our knowledge with regard to emotional reactions to both kinds of trauma in Israel and emphasize the uniqueness of Israeli society and the special place of military and civilian traumas therein. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Framing heterosexism in lesbian families: a preliminary examination of resilient coping<FNR>1</FNR><FN>Parts of this paper were presented as a poster for the New England Psychological Association annual conference (October, 2002), Nashua, New Hampshire, USA. </FN>
- Author
-
Litovich, Marianna L. and Langhout, Regina Day
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL psychology , *HETEROSEXISM , *LESBIAN families , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *MENTAL health , *CHILD psychology - Abstract
The goals of this study are to examine the kinds of difficulties children face vis-à-vis heterosexism, how families help their children cope with these difficulties, and how coping leads to children's resilience. The experiences of six daughters of lesbian parents, ranging in age from 7 to 16, were empirically investigated through semi-structured interviews with parents and children. Analysis included open and focused coding. Results suggest heterosexism is evident, but does not seem to negatively impact children's development. Themes include: how parents prepare their children to deal with heterosexism and how parents and children cope with incidents. Results elucidate the findings of previous studies, call for more qualitative research, and suggest future research directions. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Psychiatric reform in Russia[This paper].
- Author
-
Poloshij, B. and Saposhnikova, I.
- Subjects
- *
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL psychiatry , *MENTAL health services , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Objective: To describe the mental health care system in Russia against the background of rapid social, economic and political change since the late 1980s. Method: Indicators of social stress and deteriorating population mental health and official data on service provision are presented. Results: In the current system of psychiatric care dispensaries take a central position. Key issues of the discussion on mental health care include ways of coping with social stress disorders, strategies to redefine psychiatric rehabilitation in a changed social-economic context and steps towards strengthening social support networks for people with mental illness. Following political abuse of psychiatry, professionals have had to face justified and unjustified accusations, and been faced with a general challenge to their role. Conclusion: Tackling problems of social stress, the integration of mental health care in the general medical care system and the building-up of general hospital in-patient psychiatric units are of strategic importance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Mental health care reform in the Netherlands[This paper].
- Author
-
Schene, A. H. and Faber, A. M. E.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health services , *PSYCHOLOGY of adults , *MENTAL health laws , *LAW reform , *MENTAL health , *SOCIETIES ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Objective: To describe the major changes in mental health care for adults in the Netherlands during the past 25 years. Method: Scientific literature and official documents. Results: Phases of the reform process are the integration of ambulatory services in the early 1980s and the following implementation of community mental health centres (RIAGGs); the differentiation and extramuralization of mental hospitals; the differentiation within the field of living accommodations; and the final fusion process between these three into integrated regional mental health care organizations. Current issues in the development of services are, e.g. the ever growing demand for mental health care, special programmes for defined target populations, legislation and patient rights, rehabilitation and empowerment. Conclusion: The Dutch mental health care system has a low threshold and a comparatively good quality. There is a long-lasting and strong influence of user and family organizations on the content and quality of services. Recently important organizational changes are taking place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Mental health in Europe: problems, advances and challenges[This paper].
- Author
-
Rutz, W.
- Subjects
- *
PEOPLE with mental illness , *CARE of people , *MENTAL health services , *CITIZEN participation in community health services , *HEALTH promotion , *FAMILIES - Abstract
Objective: To describe mental health care needs and challenges across the WHO European region of 51 nations. Method: Based on morbidity and mortality data from HFA Statistical Database and Health21, the policy framework of WHO Europe, major trends in mental health care needs, psychiatric reform and mental health promotion are discussed. Results: There is a mortality crisis related to mental ill health in Eastern European populations of transition. Destigmatization is required to improve early intervention and humanization of services, and national mental health audits are needed to create the basis for national mental health planning, implementation and monitoring. There are both problems and advances in service restructuring, and comprehensive mental health promotion programmes, preventive and monitoring strategies are required. Conclusion: Partnerships between national and international organizations, especially WHO and the European Union, have to be strengthened to make progress on the way to integrated community mental health services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Commentary on Sander's paper, “Where are we going in the field of infant mental health?”.
- Author
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Fajardo, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
INTERPERSONAL relations , *INFANTS , *CAREGIVERS , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOANALYSIS - Abstract
In this article, the author describes psychoanalytic therapist Louis W. Sander's new ways of exploring the child-caretaker relationship. Nearly two decades ago in pioneering work on newborn state organization, Sander studied the infant-caretaker relationship by describing each infant's uniquely characteristic regulatory patterns in the context of his or her particular and unique care taking environment. Sander's ideas about the infant-caregiver system are profound in their implications for the new way: to investigate and understand development.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. World Health Organization life-skills training is efficacious in reducing youth self-report scores in primary school going children in Kenya.
- Author
-
Ndetei DM, Mutiso V, Gitonga I, Agudile E, Tele A, Birech L, Musyimi C, and McKenzie K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Curriculum, Female, Humans, Kenya, Male, Random Allocation, Schools, Early Intervention, Educational, Mental Health education, Self Report, World Health Organization
- Abstract
Aim: Documented evidence shows that training in life skills for school going children improves their physical and mental health status. Although Kenya has a curriculum and a policy for life-skills training in schools, these have not been implemented because lack of local evidence for efficacy. Therefore, the objective of this study was to determine the efficacy and effectiveness of the life-skill training curriculum for primary schools developed by the Ministry of Education, Kenya., Methods: We randomly selected 23 schools from two randomly selected sub-counties representing urban/peri-urban and rural contexts in Kenya. We collected baseline socio-demographic characteristics and administered the locally validated youth self-report (YSR) for 11 to 18 years old at baseline and 9 months post-intervention. We used the Ministry of Education validated curriculum for life-skills training for upper primary school as the intervention immediately after the baseline., Results: The World Health Organization life-skills training is efficacious in reducing YSR scores in primary school going children in Kenya. We found that socio-demographic characteristics were predictors for mental health and that there were significant positive improvements in internalizing and externalizing YSR symptoms and syndromes in both sites. The improvement was over 40% and therefore unlikely to be attributable to placebo effect or natural recovery without intervention. However, attention problems worsened more so in rural sites and particularly in girls., Conclusions: Life-skills training is efficacious in improving mental health in school going children in the Kenyan context. However, it is not effective in attention problems which seem to be cognitive in nature., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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47. Comparison of web-based versus paper-and-pencil self-administered questionnaire: effects on health indicators in Dutch adolescents.
- Author
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Van De Looij‐Jansen, Petra M., De Wilde, Erik Jan, and Van De Looij-Jansen, Petra M
- Subjects
ADOLESCENT health ,HEALTH of school children ,PREVENTIVE health services ,MENTAL health ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study is to investigate differences in responses related to (mental) health and behavior between two methods of data collection: web-based (web) and paper-and-pencil (p&p).Study Design: Within each participating school all third-grade classes (mainly 14-15-year-old pupils) were randomly assigned to either the Internet condition (n=271) or the paper-and-pencil condition (n=261).Principal Findings: Significant but small differences were found for the strengths and difficulties subscales "emotional symptoms" (p&p>web) and "prosocial behavior" (p&p>web), and carrying a weapon (web>p&p). Perceived level of privacy and confidentiality did not differ between the two modes.Conclusions: The findings suggest that in a controlled school setting, web-based administration of health indicators yields almost the same results as paper-and-pencil administration. To generalize these findings, we recommend repeated studies in other populations and settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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48. KEY PAPERS IN GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY SERIES EDITOR: ALISTAIR BURNS.
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Burns, Alistair
- Subjects
- *
GERIATRIC psychiatry , *MENTAL health , *GENERAL practitioners , *DISEASES in older people , *PEOPLE with mental illness , *MENTAL health services , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
This article presents information on research work related to geriatric psychiatry. The depressed subjects for this study were drawn from two groups. The first consisted of 100 elderly patients referred to the psychogeriatric service at Goodmayes and the London Hospital, all of whom had experienced onset of depression in the year prior to interview. To this group was added 19 who were found in the general population sample, drawn from local General Practitioners' lists, with a similar psychiatric history. The comparison group (controls) consisted of elderly subjects on this list who were free of psychiatric disorder. In view of the well identified influence on depression of age and sex, the groups were matched on those variables.
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- 1996
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49. KEY PAPERS IN GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY SERIES EDITOR: ALISTAIR BURNS: AUTHOR'S RETROSPECTIVE.
- Author
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Roth, Martin
- Subjects
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MENTAL health of older people , *MENTAL illness , *OLD age , *GERIATRIC psychiatry , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
Presents the author's retrospective of his interest in the mental disorders of the aged. Review of studies on brain pathology regarding the types of mental illness that confronted older people; Identification of the frequency of concomittant chronic physical illness with weakness.
- Published
- 1996
50. White paper on MH well‐being backs 'bold' national strategy.
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,WELL-being ,MENTAL health ,ENDOWMENTS ,MENTAL health services ,FEDERAL government - Abstract
Boldly proclaiming to Congress that it's time to redesign the U.S. mental and behavioral health system, Senate lawmakers last month released a white paper outlining a national strategy to integrate mental health care, enhance delivery within local communities and improve how federal funds and other resources are planned for and allocated to increase the nation's investment through better mental and behavioral health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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