39 results on '"Gunnell, David"'
Search Results
2. Delivery of a Mental Health First Aid training package and staff peer support service in secondary schools: a process evaluation of uptake and fidelity of the WISE intervention
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Fisher, Harriet, Harding, Sarah, Bell, Sarah, Copeland, Lauren, Evans, Rhiannon, Powell, Jillian, Araya, Ricardo, Campbell, Rona, Ford, Tamsin, Gunnell, David, Murphy, Simon, and Kidger, Judi
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- 2020
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3. Suicide by pesticide poisoning in India: a review of pesticide regulations and their impact on suicide trends
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Bonvoisin, Toby, Utyasheva, Leah, Knipe, Duleeka, Gunnell, David, and Eddleston, Michael
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- 2020
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4. The relationship between physical activity, mental wellbeing and symptoms of mental health disorder in adolescents: a cohort study
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Bell, Sarah Louise, Audrey, Suzanne, Gunnell, David, Cooper, Ashley, and Campbell, Rona
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- 2019
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5. Are left-behind families of migrant workers at increased risk of attempted suicide? – a cohort study of 178,000+ individuals in Sri Lanka
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Knipe, Duleeka, Lambert, Helen, Pearson, Melissa, Eddleston, Michael, Jayamanne, Shaluka, Wickramage, Kolitha, Hawton, Keith, Konradsen, Flemming, Metcalfe, Chris, and Gunnell, David
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- 2019
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6. Relative toxicity of mood stabilisers and antipsychotics: case fatality and fatal toxicity associated with self-poisoning
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Ferrey, Anne E., Geulayov, Galit, Casey, Deborah, Wells, Claudia, Fuller, Alice, Bankhead, Clare, Ness, Jennifer, Clements, Caroline, Gunnell, David, Kapur, Navneet, and Hawton, Keith
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- 2018
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7. A cluster randomised controlled trial of the Wellbeing in Secondary Education (WISE) Project – an intervention to improve the mental health support and training available to secondary school teachers: protocol for an integrated process evaluation
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Evans, Rhiannon, Brockman, Rowan, Grey, Jillian, Bell, Sarah, Harding, Sarah, Gunnell, David, Campbell, Rona, Murphy, Simon, Ford, Tamsin, Hollingworth, William, Tilling, Kate, Morris, Richard, Kadir, Bryar, Araya, Ricardo, and Kidger, Judi
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- 2018
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8. Accuracy of risk scales for predicting repeat self-harm and suicide: a multicentre, population-level cohort study using routine clinical data
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Steeg, Sarah, Quinlivan, Leah, Nowland, Rebecca, Carroll, Robert, Casey, Deborah, Clements, Caroline, Cooper, Jayne, Davies, Linda, Knipe, Duleeka, Ness, Jennifer, O’Connor, Rory C., Hawton, Keith, Gunnell, David, and Kapur, Nav
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- 2018
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9. Vendor-based restrictions on pesticide sales to prevent pesticide self-poisoning - a pilot study
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Weerasinghe, Manjula, Konradsen, Flemming, Eddleston, Michael, Pearson, Melissa, Jayamanne, Shaluka, Gunnell, David, Hawton, Keith, and Agampodi, Suneth
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- 2018
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10. The global distribution of fatal pesticide self-poisoning: Systematic review
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Gunnell, David, Eddleston, Michael, Phillips, Michael R, and Konradsen, Flemming
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- 2007
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11. Suicide in Sri Lanka 1975–2012: age, period and cohort analysis of police and hospital data
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Knipe, Duleeka W, Metcalfe, Chris, Fernando, Ravindra, Pearson, Melissa, Konradsen, Flemming, Eddleston, Michael, and Gunnell, David
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Incidence ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Period effects ,Middle Aged ,Police ,Cohort Studies ,Hospitalization ,Suicide ,Humans ,Female ,Pesticide poisoning ,Child ,Birth-cohort effects ,Research Article ,Sri Lanka ,Aged - Abstract
Background Sri Lanka has experienced major changes in its suicide rates since the 1970s, and in 1995 it had one of the highest rates in the world. Subsequent reductions in Sri Lanka’s suicide rates have been attributed to the introduction of restrictions on the availability of highly toxic pesticides. We investigate these changes in suicide rates in relation to age, gender, method specific trends and birth-cohort and period effects, with the aim of informing preventative strategies. Methods Secular trends of suicide in relation to age, sex, method, birth-cohort and period effects were investigated graphically using police data (1975–2012). Poisoning case-fatality was investigated using national hospital admission data (2004–2010). Results There were marked changes to the age-, gender- and method-specific incidence of suicide over the study period. Year on year declines in rates began in 17–25 year olds in the early 1980s. Reduction in older age groups followed and falls in all age groups occurred after all class I (the most toxic) pesticides were banned. Distinct changes in the age/gender pattern of suicide are observed: in the 1980s suicide rates were highest in 21–35 year old men; by the 2000s, this pattern had reversed with a stepwise increase in male rates with increasing age. Throughout the study period female rates were highest in 17–25 year olds. There has been a rise in suicide by hanging, though this rise is relatively small in relation to the marked decline in self-poisoning deaths. The patterns of suicides are more consistent with a period rather than birth-cohort effect. Conclusions The epidemiology of suicide in Sri Lanka has changed noticeably in the last 30 years. The introduction of pesticide regulations in Sri Lanka coincides with a reduction in suicide rates, with evidence of limited method substitution. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2458-14-839) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2014
12. Regional variation in suicide rates in Sri Lanka between 1955 and 2011: a spatial and temporal analysis.
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Knipe, Duleeka W., Padmanathan, Prianka, Muthuwatta, Lal, Metcalfe, Chris, and Gunnell, David
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PESTICIDE toxicology ,SUICIDE statistics ,UNEMPLOYMENT & psychology ,DISEASE incidence ,RURAL geography ,RANK correlation (Statistics) ,POISONING prevention ,SUICIDE prevention ,ETHNIC groups ,PESTICIDES ,POISONING ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL population ,STATISTICS ,SUICIDE - Abstract
Background: Between 1955 and 2011 there were marked fluctuations in suicide rates in Sri Lanka; incidence increased six-fold between 1955 and the 1980s, and halved in the early 21st century. Changes in access to highly toxic pesticides are thought to have influenced this pattern. This study investigates variation in suicide rates across Sri Lanka's 25 districts between 1955 and 2011. We hypothesised that changes in the incidence of suicide would be most marked in rural areas due to the variation in availability of highly toxic pesticides in these locations during this time period.Methods: We mapped district-level suicide rates in 1955, 1972, 1980 and 2011. These periods preceded, included and postdated the rapid rise in Sri Lanka's suicide rates. We investigated the associations between district-level variations in suicide rates and census-derived measures of rurality (population density), unemployment, migration and ethnicity using Spearman's rank correlation and negative binomial models.Results: The rise and fall in suicide rates was concentrated in more rural areas. In 1980, when suicide rates were at their highest, population density was inversely associated with area variation in suicide rates (r = -0.65; p < 0.001), i.e. incidence was highest in rural areas. In contrast the association was weakest in 1950, prior to the rise in pesticide suicides (r = -0.10; p = 0.697). There was no strong evidence that levels of migration or ethnicity were associated with area variations in suicide rates. The relative rates of suicide in the most rural compared to the most urban districts before (1955), during (1980) and after (2011) the rise in highly toxic pesticide availability were 1.1 (95% CI 0.5 to 2.4), 3.7 (2.0 to 6.9) and 2.1 (1.6 to 2.7) respectively.Conclusions: The findings provide some support for the hypothesis that changes in access to pesticides contributed to the marked fluctuations in Sri Lanka's suicide rate, but the impact of other factors cannot be ruled out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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13. Changes in parenting strategies after a young person's self-harm: a qualitative study.
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Ferrey, Anne E., Hughes, Nicholas D., Sue Simkin, Locock, Louise, Stewart, Anne, Kapur, Navneet, Gunnell, David, and Hawton, Keith
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PARENTHOOD ,PARENTING ,MENTAL health ,PARENT-child relationships ,ENCOURAGEMENT ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: When faced with the discovery of their child's self-harm, mothers and fathers may re-evaluate their parenting strategies. This can include changes to the amount of support they provide their child and changes to the degree to which they control and monitor their child. Methods: We conducted an in-depth qualitative study with 37 parents of young people who had self-harmed in which we explored how and why their parenting changed after the discovery of self-harm. Results: Early on, parents often found themselves "walking on eggshells" so as not to upset their child, but later they felt more able to take some control. Parents' reactions to the self-harm often depended on how they conceptualised it: as part of adolescence, as a mental health issue or as "naughty behaviour". Parenting of other children in the family could also be affected, with parents worrying about less of their time being available for siblings. Many parents developed specific strategies they felt helped them to be more effective parents, such as learning to avoid blaming themselves or their child for the self-harm and developing new ways to communicate with their child. Parents were generally eager to pass their knowledge on to other people in the same situation. Conclusions: Parents reported changes in their parenting behaviours after the discovery of a child's self-harm. Professionals involved in the care of young people who self-harm might use this information in supporting and advising parents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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14. Association of socio-economic position and suicide/attempted suicide in low and middle income countries in South and South-East Asia - a systematic review.
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Knipe, Duleeka W., Carroll, Robert, Thomas, Kyla H., Pease, Anna, Gunnell, David, and Metcalfe, Chris
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SOCIAL status ,SUICIDAL behavior ,SUICIDE ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries ,META-analysis ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Background: Forty percent of the world's suicide deaths occur in low and middle income countries (LAMIC) in Asia. There is a recognition that social factors, such as socioeconomic position (SEP), play an important role in determining suicidal risk in high income countries, but less is known about the association in LAMIC.Methods: The objective of this systematic review was to synthesise existing evidence of the association between SEP and attempted suicide/suicide risk in LAMIC countries in South and South East Asia. Web of Science, MEDLINE, MEDLINE in Process, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and article reference lists/forward citations were searched for eligible studies. Epidemiological studies reporting on the association of individual SEP with suicide and attempted suicide were included. Study quality was assessed using an adapted rating tool and a narrative synthesis was conducted.Results: Thirty-one studies from nine countries were identified; 31 different measures of SEP were reported, with education being the most frequently recorded. Most studies suggest that lower levels of SEP are associated with an increased risk of suicide/attempted suicide, though findings are not always consistent between and within countries. Over half of the studies included in this review were of moderate/low quality. The SEP risk factors with the most consistent association across studies were asset based measures (e.g. composite measures); education; measures of financial difficulty and subjective measures of financial circumstance. Several studies show a greater than threefold increased risk in lower SEP groups with the largest and most consistent association with subjective measures of financial circumstance.Conclusion: The current evidence suggests that lower SEP increases the likelihood of suicide/attempted suicide in LAMIC in South and South East Asia. However, the findings are severely limited by study quality; larger better quality studies are therefore needed.Systematic Review Registration: PROSPERO 2014: CRD42014006521. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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15. Suicidal behaviour across the African continent: a review of the literature.
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Mars, Becky, Burrows, Stephanie, Hjelmeland, Heidi, and Gunnell, David
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SUICIDAL behavior ,EARLY death ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Background Suicide is a major cause of premature mortality worldwide, but data on its epidemiology in Africa, the world's second most populous continent, are limited. Methods We systematically reviewed published literature on suicidal behaviour in African countries. We searched PubMed, Web of Knowledge, PsycINFO, African Index Medicus, Eastern Mediterranean Index Medicus and African Journals OnLine and carried out citation searches of key articles. We crudely estimated the incidence of suicide and suicide attempts in Africa based on country-specific data and compared these with published estimates. We also describe common features of suicide and suicide attempts across the studies, including information related to age, sex, methods used and risk factors. Results Regional or national suicide incidence data were available for less than one third (16/53) of African countries containing approximately 60% of Africa's population; suicide attempt data were available for <20% of countries (7/53). Crude estimates suggest there are over 34,000 (inter-quartile range 13,141 to 63,757) suicides per year in Africa, with an overall incidence rate of 3.2 per 100,000 population. The recent Global Burden of Disease (GBD) estimate of 49,558 deaths is somewhat higher, but falls within the inter-quartile range of our estimate. Suicide rates in men are typically at least three times higher than in women. The most frequently used methods of suicide are hanging and pesticide poisoning. Reported risk factors are similar for suicide and suicide attempts and include interpersonal difficulties, mental and physical health problems, socioeconomic problems and drug and alcohol use/abuse. Qualitative studies are needed to identify additional culturally relevant risk factors and to understand how risk factors may be connected to suicidal behaviour in different socio-cultural contexts. Conclusions Our estimate is somewhat lower than GBD, but still clearly indicates suicidal behaviour is an important public health problem in Africa. More regional studies, in both urban and rural areas, are needed to more accurately estimate the burden of suicidal behaviour across the continent. Qualitative studies are required in addition to quantitative studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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16. Challenges and opportunities of a paperless baseline survey in Sri Lanka.
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Knipe, Duleeka W., Pearson, Melissa, Borgstrøm, Rasmus, Pieris, Ravi, Weerasinghe, Manjula, Priyadarshana, Chamil, Eddleston, Michael, Gunnell, David, Metcalfe, Chris, and Konradsen, Flemming
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Background: Personal digital assistants (PDAs) have been shown to reduce costs associated with survey implementation and digitisation, and to improve data quality when compared to traditional paper based data collection. Few studies, however, have shared their experiences of the use of these devices in rural settings in Asia. This paper reports on our experiences of using a PDA device for data collection in Sri Lanka as part of a large cluster randomised control trial. Findings: We found that PDAs were useful for collecting data for a baseline survey of a large randomised control trial (54,000 households). We found that the PDA device and survey format was easy to use by inexperienced field staff, even though the survey was programmed in English. The device enabled the rapid digitisation of survey data, providing a good basis for continuous data quality assurance, supervision of staff and survey implementation. An unexpected advantage was the improved community opinion of the research project as a result of the device, because the use of the technology gave data collectors an elevated status amongst the community. In addition the global positioning system (GPS) functionality of the device allowed precise mapping of households, and hence distinct settlements to be identified as randomisation clusters. Future users should be mindful that to save costs the piloting should be completed before programming. In addition consideration of a local after-care service is important to avoid costs and time delays associated with sending devices back to overseas providers. Discussion: Since the start of this study, PDA devices have rapidly developed and are increasingly used. The use of PDA or similar devices for research is not without its problems; however we believe that the universal lessons learnt as part of this study are even more important for the effective utilisation of these rapidly developing technologies in resource poor settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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17. Reporting of drug induced depression and fatal and non-fatal suicidal behaviour in the UK from 1998 to 2011.
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Thomas, Kyla H., Martin, Richard M., Potokar, John, Pirmohamed, Munir, and Gunnell, David
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Background: Psychiatric adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are distressing for patients and have important public health implications. We identified the drugs with the most frequent spontaneous reports of depression, and fatal and non-fatal suicidal behaviour to the UK’s Yellow Card Scheme from 1998 to 2011. Methods: We obtained Yellow Card data from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency for the drugs with the most frequent spontaneous reports of depression and suicidal behaviour from 1964 onwards. Prescribing data were obtained from the NHS Information Centre and the Department of Health. We examined the frequency of reports for drugs and estimated rates of reporting of psychiatric ADRs using prescribing data as proxy denominators from 1998 to 2011, as prescribing data were not available prior to 1998. Results: There were 110 different drugs with ≥ 20 reports of depression, 58 with ≥10 reports of non-fatal suicidal behaviour and 33 with ≥5 reports of fatal suicidal behaviour in the time period. The top five drugs with the most frequent reports of depression were the smoking cessation medicines varenicline and bupropion, followed by paroxetine (a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor), isotretinoin (used in acne treatment) and rimonabant (a weight loss drug). Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, varenicline and the antipsychotic medicine clozapine were included in the top five medicines with the most frequent reports of fatal and non-fatal suicidal behaviour. Medicines with the highest reliably measured reporting rates of psychiatric ADRs per million prescriptions dispensed in the community included rimonabant, isotretinoin, mefloquine (an antimalarial), varenicline and bupropion. Robust denominators for community prescribing were not available for two drugs with five or more suicide reports, efavirenz (an antiretroviral medicine) and clozapine. Conclusions: Depression and suicide-related ADRs are reported for many nervous system and non-nervous system drugs. As spontaneous reports cannot be used to determine causality between the drug and the ADR, psychiatric ADRs which can cause significant public alarm should be specifically assessed and reported in all randomised controlled trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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18. Maternal and offspring fasting glucose and type 2 diabetes-associated genetic variants and cognitive function at age 8: a Mendelian randomization study in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children.
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Bonilla, Carolina, Lawlor, Debbie A., Ben-Shlomo, Yoav, Ness, Andrew R., Gunnell, David, Ring, Susan M., Smith, George Davey, and Lewis, Sarah J.
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GENETICS of type 2 diabetes ,GLUCOSE ,COGNITIVE ability ,CHILD psychology ,MOTHER-child relationship ,RANDOMIZATION (Statistics) - Abstract
Background: In observational epidemiological studies type 2 diabetes (T2D) and both low and high plasma concentrations of fasting glucose have been found to be associated with lower cognitive performance. These associations could be explained by confounding. Methods: In this study we looked at the association between genetic variants, known to be robustly associated with fasting glucose and T2D risk, in the mother and her offspring to determine whether there is likely to be a causal link between early life exposure to glucose and child's intelligence quotient (IQ) scores in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) cohort. We generated a fasting glucose (FGGRS) and a T2D (T2DGRS) genetic risk score and used them in a Mendelian randomization approach. Results: We found a strong correlation between the FGGRS and fasting glucose plasma measurements that were available for a subset of children, but no association of either the maternal or the offspring FGGRS with child's IQ was observed. In contrast, the maternal T2DGRS was positively associated with offspring IQ. Conclusions: Maternal and offspring genetic variants which are associated with glucose levels are not associated with offspring IQ, suggesting that there is unlikely to be a causal link between glucose exposure in utero and IQ in childhood. Further exploration in even larger cohorts is required to exclude the possibility that our null findings were due to a lack of statistical power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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19. Adolescent self-harm and suicidal thoughts in the ALSPAC cohort: a self-report survey in England.
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Kidger, Judi, Heron, Jon, Lewis, Glyn, Evans, Jonathan, and Gunnell, David
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TEENAGE suicide ,SELF-destructive behavior ,SURVEYS ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Background: Substantial numbers of adolescents self-harm, but the majority of cases do not reach the attention of medical services, making community studies essential. The prevalence of suicidal thoughts and plans at this age, and the inter-relationships between suicidal thoughts, plans and self-harm remain largely unexplored. Method: Cross-sectional analysis of self-reported questionnaire data collected from members of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) birth cohort, England. Respondents (n = 4810) were aged 16-17 years old and have been followed up since birth. Results: Altogether 905 (18.8%) respondents had ever self-harmed. The prevalence of lifetime self-harm was higher in females (25.6%) than males (9.1%). The most commonly used method was self-cutting: this was used alone or in combination in 73.5% of episodes, compared to 10.0% who took overdoses alone or in combination with other methods. Of those who reported self-harm, 25.3% wanted to die during the most recent episode. Concurrent depression was associated with a greatly increased risk of self-harm (OR 5.43). Only 12.4% of participants sought medical help following their most recent episode of self-harm, although this figure was higher (30.1%) where self-harm was carried out with desire to die. Of the whole sample, 15.8% had ever thought of killing themselves, and 4.3% had ever made plans to kill themselves. Compared to those who had never self-harmed, those who had self-harmed but not wanted to die during the most recent episode were at increased risk of ever having had suicidal thoughts (37.6% compared to 7.8% χ
2 =102.3, p<0.001) and ever making suicidal plans (8.7% compared to 0.7%, χ2 =166.9, p<0.001). As the frequency of self-harm increased, so did the risk of suicidal thoughts and plans. Conclusions: Self-harm and suicidal thoughts are common among 16/17 year olds. Although the majority of self-harm behaviour is not accompanied by a desire to die, all self-harm regardless of motivation is associated with increased risk of suicidal thoughts and plans, particularly when it is carried out repeatedly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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20. Impact of different pack sizes of paracetamol in the United Kingdom and Ireland on intentional overdoses: a comparative study.
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Hawton, Keith, Bergen, Helen, Simkin, Sue, Arensman, Ella, Corcoran, Paul, Cooper, Jayne, Waters, Keith, Gunnell, David, and Kapur, Navneet
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ACETAMINOPHEN ,PHARMACY laws ,PHARMACY colleges ,DRUGS - Abstract
Background: In order to reduce fatal self-poisoning legislation was introduced in the UK in 1998 to restrict pack sizes of paracetamol sold in pharmacies (maximum 32 tablets) and non-pharmacy outlets (maximum 16 tablets), and in Ireland in 2001, but with smaller maximum pack sizes (24 and 12 tablets). Our aim was to determine whether this resulted in smaller overdoses of paracetamol in Ireland compared with the UK. Methods: We used data on general hospital presentations for non-fatal self-harm for 2002 - 2007 from the Multicentre Study of Self-harm in England (six hospitals), and from the National Registry of Deliberate Self-harm in Ireland. We compared sizes of overdoses of paracetamol in the two settings. Results: There were clear peaks in numbers of non-fatal overdoses, associated with maximum pack sizes of paracetamol in pharmacy and non-pharmacy outlets in both England and Ireland. Significantly more pack equivalents (based on maximum non-pharmacy pack sizes) were used in overdoses in Ireland (mean 2.63, 95% CI 2.57-2.69) compared with England (2.07, 95% CI 2.03-2.10). The overall size of overdoses did not differ significantly between England (median 22, interquartile range (IQR) 15-32) and Ireland (median 24, IQR 12-36). Conclusions: The difference in paracetamol pack size legislation between England and Ireland does not appear to have resulted in a major difference in sizes of overdoses. This is because more pack equivalents are taken in overdoses in Ireland, possibly reflecting differing enforcement of sales advice. Differences in access to clinical services may also be relevant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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21. Suicide epidemics: the impact of newly emerging methods on overall suicide rates - a time trends study.
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Thomas, Kyla, Shu-Sen Chang, and Gunnell, David
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EPIDEMICS ,SUICIDE victims ,PUBLIC health ,AUTOMOBILE emissions - Abstract
Background: The impact of newly emerging, popular suicide methods on overall rates of suicide has not previously been investigated systematically. Understanding these effects may have important implications for public health surveillance. We examine the emergence of three novel methods of suicide by gassing in the 20
th and 21st centuries and determine the impact of emerging methods on overall suicide rates. Methods: We studied the epidemic rises in domestic coal gas (1919-1935, England and Wales), motor vehicle exhaust gas (1975-1992, England and Wales) and barbecue charcoal gas (1999-2006, Taiwan) suicide using Poisson and joinpoint regression models. Joinpoint regression uses contiguous linear segments and join points (points at which trends change) to describe trends in incidence. Results: Epidemic increases in the use of new methods of suicide were generally associated with rises in overall suicide rates of between 23% and 71%. The recent epidemic of barbecue charcoal suicides in Taiwan was associated with the largest rise in overall rates (40-50% annual rise), whereas the smallest rise was seen for car exhaust gassing in England and Wales (7% annual rise). Joinpoint analyses were only feasible for car exhaust and charcoal burning suicides; these suggested an impact of the emergence of car exhaust suicides on overall suicide rates in both sexes in England and Wales. However there was no statistical evidence of a change in the already increasing overall suicide trends when charcoal burning suicides emerged in Taiwan, possibly due to the concurrent economic recession. Conclusions: Rapid rises in the use of new sources of gas for suicide were generally associated with increases in overall suicide rates. Suicide prevention strategies should include strengthening local and national surveillance for early detection of novel suicide methods and implementation of effective media guidelines and other appropriate interventions to limit the spread of new methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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22. Suicide in the Philippines: time trend analysis (1974-2005) and literature review.
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Redaniel, Maria Theresa, Lebanan-Dalida, May Antonnette, and Gunnell, David
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SUICIDE ,SUICIDAL behavior ,VIOLENT deaths - Abstract
Background: Suicide prevention is given a low priority in many Western Pacific countries due to competing health problems, stigma and poor understanding of its incidence and aetiology. Little is known about the epidemiology of suicide and suicidal behaviour in the Philippines and although its incidence is reported to be low, there is likely to be under-reporting because of its non-acceptance by the Catholic Church and the associated stigma to the family. This study aims to investigate trends in the incidence of suicide in the Philippines, assess possible underreporting and provide information on the methods used and the reasons for suicide. Methods: Data for suicide deaths occurring between 1974 and 2005 were obtained from Philippine Health Statistics. Ageand sex-specific trends were examined graphically. Underreporting was investigated by comparing trends in suicides, accidents and deaths of undetermined intent. To provide a fuller picture of suicide in the Philippines, a comprehensive search for published papers, theses and reports on the epidemiology of suicide in the Philippines was undertaken. Results: The incidence of suicide in males increased from 0.23 to 3.59 per 100,000 between 1984 and 2005. Similarly, rates rose from 0.12 to 1.09 per 100,000 in females. Amongst females, suicide rates were highest in 15-24 year olds, whilst in males rates were similar in all age groups throughout the study period. The most commonly used methods of suicide were hanging, shooting and organophosphate ingestion. In non-fatal attempts, the most common methods used were ingestion of drugs, specifically isoniazid and paracetamol, or organophosphate ingestion. Family and relationship problems were the most common precipitants. While rates were lower compared to other countries, there is suggestive evidence of underreporting and misclassification to undetermined injury. Recent increases may reflect either true increase or better reporting of suicides. Conclusions: While suicide rates are low in the Philippines, increases in incidence and relatively high rates in adolescents and young adults point to the importance of focused suicide prevention programs. Improving data quality and better reporting of suicide deaths is likewise imperative to inform and evaluate prevention strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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23. School-based intervention to improve the mental health of low-income, secondary school students in Santiago, Chile (YPSA): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
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Araya, Ricardo, Montgomery, Alan A., Fritsch, Rosemarie, Gunnell, David, Stallard, Paul, Noble, Sian, Martinez, Vania, Barroilhet, Sergio, Vohringer, Paul, Guajardo, Viviana, Cova, Felix, Gaete, Jorge, Gomez, Alejandro, and Rojas, Graciela
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MENTAL depression ,COGNITIVE therapy for teenagers ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: Depression is common and can have devastating effects on the life of adolescents. Psychological interventions are the first-line for treating or preventing depression among adolescents. This proposal aims to evaluate a school-based, universal psychological intervention to reduce depressive symptoms among student's aged 13-14 attending municipal state secondary schools in Santiago, Chile. Study design: This is a cluster randomised controlled trial with schools as the main clusters. We compared this intervention with a control group in a study involving 22 schools, 66 classes and approximately 2,600 students. Students in the active schools attended 11 weekly and 3 booster sessions of an intervention based on cognitivebehavioural models. The control schools received their usual but enhanced counselling sessions currently included in their curriculum. Mean depression scores and indicators of levels of functioning were assessed at 3 and 12 months after the completion of the intervention in order to assess the effectiveness of the intervention. Direct and indirect costs were measured in both groups to assess the cost-effectiveness of this intervention. Discussion: As far as we are aware this is the first cluster randomised controlled trial of a school intervention for depression among adolescents outside the Western world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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24. Supporting adolescent emotional health in schools: a mixed methods study of student and staff views in England.
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Kidger, Judi, Donovan, Jenny L., Biddle, Lucy, Campbell, Rona, and Gunnell, David
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MENTAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,PUBLIC health ,TEACHING - Abstract
Background: Schools have been identified as an important place in which to support adolescent emotional health, although evidence as to which interventions are effective remains limited. Relatively little is known about student and staff views regarding current school-based emotional health provision and what they would like to see in the future, and this is what this study explored. Methods: A random sample of 296 English secondary schools were surveyed to quantify current level of emotional health provision. Qualitative student focus groups (27 groups, 154 students aged 12-14) and staff interviews (12 interviews, 15 individuals) were conducted in eight schools, purposively sampled from the survey respondents to ensure a range of emotional health activity, free school meal eligibility and location. Data were analysed thematically, following a constant comparison approach. Results: Emergent themes were grouped into three areas in which participants felt schools did or could intervene: emotional health in the curriculum, support for those in distress, and the physical and psychosocial environment. Little time was spent teaching about emotional health in the curriculum, and most staff and students wanted more. Opportunities to explore emotions in other curriculum subjects were valued. All schools provided some support for students experiencing emotional distress, but the type and quality varied a great deal. Students wanted an increase in school-based help sources that were confidential, available to all and sympathetic, and were concerned that accessing support should not lead to stigma. Finally, staff and students emphasised the need to consider the whole school environment in order to address sources of distress such as bullying and teacher-student relationships, but also to increase activities that enhanced emotional health. Conclusion: Staff and students identified several ways in which schools can improve their support of adolescent emotional health, both within and outside the curriculum. However, such changes should be introduced as part of a wider consideration of how the whole school environment can be more supportive of students' emotional health. Clearer guidance at policy level, more rigorous evaluation of current interventions, and greater dissemination of good practice is necessary to ensure adolescents' emotional health needs are addressed effectively within schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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25. Pattern of pesticide storage before pesticide self-poisoning in rural Sri Lanka.
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Mohamed, Fahim, Manuweera, Gamini, Gunnell, David, Azher, Shifa, Eddleston, Michael, Dawson, Andrew, and Konradsen, Flemming
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PESTICIDES ,AGRICULTURAL chemicals ,SUICIDE ,PEST control - Abstract
Background: Deliberate self-poisoning with agricultural pesticides is the commonest means of suicide in rural Asia. It is mostly impulsive and facilitated by easy access to pesticides. The aim of this large observational study was to investigate the immediate source of pesticides used for self-harm to help inform suicide prevention strategies such as reducing domestic access to pesticides. Methods: The study was conducted in a district hospital serving an agricultural region of Sri Lanka. Patients who had self-poisoned with pesticides and were admitted to the adult medical wards were interviewed by study doctors following initial resuscitation to identify the source of pesticides they have ingested. Results: Of the 669 patients included in the analysis, 425 (63.5%) were male; the median age was 26 (IQR 20-36). In 511 (76%) cases, the pesticides had been stored either inside or immediately outside the house; among this group only eight patients obtained pesticides that were kept in a locked container. Ten percent (n = 67) of the patients used pesticides stored in the field while 14% (n = 91) purchased pesticides from shops within a few hours of the episode. The most common reasons for choosing the particular pesticide for self-harm were its easy accessibility (n = 311, 46%) or its popularity as a suicide agent in their village (n = 290, 43%). Conclusion: Three quarters of people who ingested pesticides in acts of self-harm used products that were available within the home or in close proximity; relatively few patients purchased the pesticide for the act. The study highlights the importance of reducing the accessibility of toxic pesticides in the domestic environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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26. Simpson's Paradox, Lord's Paradox, and Suppression Effects are the same phenomenon -- the reversal paradox.
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Yu-Kang Tu, Gunnell, David, and Gilthorpe, Mark S.
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STATISTICAL methods in epidemiology , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *HYPOTHESIS , *CAUSAL models - Abstract
This article discusses three statistical paradoxes that pervade epidemiological research: Simpson's paradox, Lord's paradox, and suppression. These paradoxes have important implications for the interpretation of evidence from observational studies. This article uses hypothetical scenarios to illustrate how the three paradoxes are different manifestations of one phenomenon - the reversal paradox - depending on whether the outcome and explanatory variables are categorical, continuous or a combination of both; this renders the issues and remedies for any one to be similar for all three. Although the three statistical paradoxes occur in different types of variables, they share the same characteristic: the association between two variables can be reversed, diminished, or enhanced when another variable is statistically controlled for. Understanding the concepts and theory behind these paradoxes provides insights into some controversial or contradictory research findings. These paradoxes show that prior knowledge and underlying causal theory play an important role in the statistical modelling of epidemiological data, where incorrect use of statistical models might produce consistent, replicable, yet erroneous results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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27. Self-poisoning in rural Sri Lanka: small-area variations in incidence.
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Manuel, Celie, Gunnell, David J., van der Hoek, Wim, Dawson, Andrew, Wijeratne, Ishika K., and Konradsen, Flemming
- Subjects
- *
SELF-poisoning , *PESTICIDES , *PEST control , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Background: Self-poisoning is one of the most common methods of suicide worldwide. The intentional ingestion of pesticides is the main contributor to such deaths and in many parts of rural Asia pesticide self-poisoning is a major public health problem. To inform the development of preventive measures in these settings, this study investigates small-area variation in self-poisoning incidence and its association with area-based socioeconomic and agricultural factors. Methods: Ecological analysis of intentional self-poisoning in a rural area (population 267,613) of Sri Lanka in 2002. The geographic distribution of cases was mapped to place of residence. Using administrative division (GN), median population size 1416, as unit of analysis, associations with socioeconomic and agricultural indicators were explored using negative binomial regression models. Results: The overall incidence of intentional self-poisoning in the study area was 315 per 100,000 (range: 0 - 2168 per 100,000 across GNs). Socioeconomic disadvantage, as indexed by poor housing quality (p = 0.003) and low levels of education (p < 0.001) but not unemployment (p = 0.147), was associated with a low self-poisoning incidence. Areas where a high proportion of the population worked in agriculture had low overall levels of self-poisoning (p = 0.002), but a greater proportion of episodes in these areas involved pesticides (p = 0.01). An association with extent of cultivated land was found only for non-pesticide poisoning (p = 0.01). Conclusion: Considerable small-area variation in incidence rates of intentional self-poisoning was found. The noteworthy concentration of cases in certain areas and the inverse association with socioeconomic deprivation merit attention and should be investigated using individual-level exposure data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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28. Protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial of an intervention to improve the mental health support and training available to secondary school teachers - the WISE (Wellbeing in Secondary Education) study.
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Kidger, Judi, Evans, Rhiannon, Tilling, Kate, Hollingworth, William, Campbell, Rona, Ford, Tamsin, Murphy, Simon, Araya, Ricardo, Morris, Richard, Kadir, Bryar, Moure Fernandez, Aida, Bell, Sarah, Harding, Sarah, Brockman, Rowan, Grey, Jill, and Gunnell, David
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PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout prevention ,PREVENTION of mental depression ,MENTAL illness prevention ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EMPLOYEE orientation ,HEALTH education ,HEALTH promotion ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MENTAL health ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHOOL health services ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: Teachers are reported to be at increased risk of common mental health disorders compared to other occupations. Failure to support teachers adequately may lead to serious long-term mental disorders, poor performance at work (presenteeism), sickness absence and health-related exit from the profession. It also jeopardises student mental health, as distressed staff struggle to develop supportive relationships with students, and such relationships are protective against student depression. A number of school-based trials have attempted to improve student mental health, but these have mostly focused on classroom based approaches and have failed to establish effectiveness. Only a few studies have introduced training for teachers in supporting students, and none to date have included a focus on improving teacher mental health. This paper sets out the protocol (version 4.4 20/07/16) for a study aiming to address this gap.Methods: Cluster randomised controlled trial with secondary schools as the unit of randomisation. Intervention schools will receive: i) Mental Health First Aid (MHFA) training for a group of staff nominated by their colleagues, after which they will set up a confidential peer support service for colleagues ii) training in MHFA for schools and colleges for a further group of teachers, which will equip them to more effectively support student mental health iii) a short mental health awareness raising session and promotion of the peer support service for all teachers. Comparison schools will continue with usual practice. The primary outcome is teacher wellbeing measured using the Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS). Secondary outcomes are teacher depression, absence and presenteeism, and student wellbeing, mental health difficulties, attendance and attainment. Measures will be taken at baseline, one year follow up (teachers only) and two year follow up. Economic and process evaluations will be embedded within the study.Discussion: This study will establish the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an intervention that supports secondary school teachers' wellbeing and mental health, and improves their skills in supporting students. It will also provide information regarding intervention implementation and sustainability.Trial Registration: International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number: ISRCTN95909211 registered 24/03/16. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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29. A pilot cluster randomised controlled trial of a support and training intervention to improve the mental health of secondary school teachers and students - the WISE (Wellbeing in Secondary Education) study.
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Kidger, Judi, Stone, Tracey, Tilling, Kate, Brockman, Rowan, Campbell, Rona, Ford, Tamsin, Hollingworth, William, King, Michael, Araya, Ricardo, and Gunnell, David
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MENTAL illness prevention ,TREATMENT of psychological stress ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EMPLOYEE orientation ,FIRST aid in illness & injury ,FOCUS groups ,HEALTH promotion ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MENTAL health ,MENTAL illness ,OCCUPATIONAL health services ,RESEARCH ,SCHOOL health services ,SCHOOLS ,SOCIAL skills ,STUDENTS ,PILOT projects ,AFFINITY groups ,SOCIAL support ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: Secondary school teachers are at heightened risk of psychological distress, which can lead to poor work performance, poor quality teacher-student relationships and mental illness. A pilot cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT) - the WISE study - evaluated the feasibility of a full-scale RCT of an intervention to support school staff's own mental health, and train them in supporting student mental health.Methods: Six schools were randomised to an intervention or control group. In the intervention schools i) 8-9 staff received Mental Health First Aid (MHFA) training and became staff peer supporters, and ii) youth MHFA training was offered to the wider staff body. Control schools continued with usual practice. We used thematic qualitative data analysis and regression modelling to ascertain the feasibility, acceptability and potential usefulness of the intervention.Results: Thirteen training observations, 14 staff focus groups and 6 staff interviews were completed, and 438 staff (43.5 %) and 1,862 (56.3 %) students (years 8 and 9) completed questionnaires at baseline and one year later. MHFA training was considered relevant for schools, and trainees gained in knowledge, confidence in helping others, and awareness regarding their own mental health. Suggestions for reducing the length of the training and focusing on helping strategies were made. A peer support service was established in all intervention schools and was perceived to be helpful in supporting individuals in difficulty - for example through listening, and signposting to other services - and raising the profile of mental health at a whole school level. Barriers to use included lack of knowledge about the service, concerns about confidentiality and a preference for accessing support from pre-existing networks.Conclusions: The WISE intervention is feasible and acceptable to schools. Results support the development of a full-scale cluster RCT, if steps are taken to improve response rates and implement the suggested improvements to the intervention.Trial Registration: International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number: ISRCTN13255300 retrospectively registered 28/09/16. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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30. The ACE and ACTN3 polymorphisms in female soccer athletes.
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Wei, Qi
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WOMEN athletes ,ATHLETIC ability ,GENE frequency ,CONTROL groups ,SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms ,GENOTYPES - Abstract
Objects: We investigated the association of ACE I/D and ACTN3 R577X polymorphisms with the performance of Chinese elite female soccer athletes for the first time. Material and methods: The genotype distributions of ACE I/D and ACTN3 R577X in the athlete group and the control group of Chinese females were evaluated via PCR and compared. VO2max value was tested as per standard protocol. Results: Regarding the distribution of ACE polymorphisms, the genotype frequency was indifferent between the athletes (II 40 %, ID 46.7 %, DD 13.3 %) and the controls (II 42 %, ID 48 %, DD 10 %). No difference in the I/D allele frequency was observed between the athlete group and the control group. Regarding the distribution of ACTN3 polymorphisms, the genotype frequency was significantly different between the athletes (XX 0 %, XR 53.3 %, RR 46.7 %) and the controls (XX 16 %, XR 44 %, RR 40 %). The allele frequency was observed no different between the athlete and the control group. The ACE ID and ACTN3 RR genotype combination was associated with higher VO2max values among defenders than among other players. According to VO2max values,The ACE and ACTN3 genotype combinations (II/ID/DD + RR/XR) significantly differed between the athletes and the controls (p < 0.05). Conclusion: These results suggested that the Chinese elite female soccer athletes were more likely to harbor the I allele and the R allele and that the combination of ACE II/ID and ACTN3 RR/XR was a synergetic determinant of the athletic performance of females in soccer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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31. Emerging pesticides responsible for suicide in rural Sri Lanka following the 2008-2014 pesticide bans.
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Weerasinghe, Manjula, Pearson, Melissa, Konradsen, Flemming, Agampodi, Suneth, Sumith, J. A., Jayamanne, Shaluka, Senanayake, S. M. H. M. K., Rajapaksha, Sandamali, and Eddleston, Michael
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SUICIDE statistics ,PESTICIDES ,HANGING (Death) ,CARBOSULFAN ,PROFENOFOS - Abstract
Background: Sri Lanka has reduced its overall suicide rate by 70% over the last two decades through means restriction, through a series of government regulations and bans removing highly hazardous pesticides from agriculture. We aimed to identify the key pesticide(s) now responsible for suicides in rural Sri Lanka to provide data for further pesticide regulation.Methods: We performed a secondary analysis of data collected prospectively during a cluster randomized controlled trial in the Anuradhapura district of Sri Lanka from 2011 to 16. The identity of pesticides responsible for suicides were sought from medical or judicial medical notes, coroners' records, and the person's family. Trend analysis was done using a regression analysis with curve estimation to identify relative importance of key pesticides.Results: We identified 337 suicidal deaths. Among them, the majority 193 (57.3%) were due to ingestion of pesticides while 82 (24.3%) were due to hanging. A specific pesticide was identified in 105 (54.4%) of the pesticide suicides. Ingestion of carbosulfan or profenofos was responsible for 59 (56.2%) of the suicides with a known pesticide and 17.5% of all suicides. The increasing trend of suicides due to carbosulfan and profenofos over time was statistically significant (R square 0.846, F 16.541, p 0.027).Conclusion: Ingestion of pesticides remains the most important means of suicides in rural Sri Lanka. The pesticides that were once responsible for most pesticide suicides have now been replaced by carbosulfan and profenofos. Their regulation and replacement in agriculture with less hazardous pesticides will further reduce the incidence of both pesticide and overall suicides in rural Sri Lanka. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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32. Transport-related walking among young adults: when and why?
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Assemi, Behrang, Zahnow, Renee, Zapata-Diomedi, Belen, Hickman, Mark, and Corcoran, Jonathan
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SMARTPHONES ,PHYSICAL activity ,WALKING ,GLOBAL Positioning System ,EXERCISE - Abstract
Background: The existing smartphones' technology allows for the objective measurement of a person's movements at a fine-grained level of geographic and temporal detail, and in doing so, it mitigates the issues associated with self-report biases and lack of spatial details. This study proposes and evaluates the advantages of using a smartphone app for collecting accurate, fine-grained, and objective data on people's transport-related walking.Methods: A sample of 142 participants (mostly young adults) was recruited in a large Australian university, for whom the app recorded all their travel activities over two weekdays during August-September 2014. We identified eight main activity nodes which operate as transport-related walking generators. We explored the participants' transport-related walking patterns around and between these activity nodes through the use of di-graphs to better understand patterns of incidental physical activity and opportunities for intervention to increase incidental walking.Results: We found that the educational node - in other samples may be represented by the workplace - is as important as the residential node for generating walking trips. We also found that the likelihood of transport-related walking trips is larger during the daytime, whereas at night time walking trips tend to be longer. We also showed that patterns of transport-related walking relate to the presence of 'chaining' trips in the afternoon period.Conclusions: The findings of this study show how the proposed data collection and analytic approach can inform urban design to enhance walkability at locations that are likely to generate walking trips. This study's insights can help to shape public education and awareness campaigns that aim to encourage walking trips throughout the day by suggesting locations and times of the day when engaging in these forms of exercise is easiest and least intrusive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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33. Impact of a community contraceptive counselling intervention on adolescent fertility rates: a quasi-experimental study.
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Diez, Elia, Lopez, Maria J., Perez, Gloria, Garcia-Subirats, Irene, Nebot, Laia, Carreras, Ramon, and Villalbi, Joan R.
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REPRODUCTIVE health ,HEALTH policy ,ABORTION ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,CONTRACEPTIVES ,CONTRACEPTION ,IMMIGRANTS ,RESEARCH ,COUNSELING ,BIRTH rate ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,RESEARCH methodology ,COMMUNITY health services ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,POVERTY areas ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,RESEARCH funding ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,METROPOLITAN areas ,CONTRACEPTIVE drugs ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants - Abstract
Background: From 2000 to 2008, in urban areas in Spain, adolescent fertility and abortion rates underwent unprecedented increases, consecutive to intensive immigration from developing countries. To address unmet needs for contraception information and services, a community-based, gender-sensitive and culturally adapted brief counselling intervention (SIRIAN program) was launched in some deprived neighbourhoods with a high proportion of immigrants in Barcelona. Once a randomized controlled trial demonstrated its effectiveness in increasing the use of contraceptives, we aim to examine its population impact on adolescent fertility rates.Methods: Quasi-experimental study with comparison group, using population data from 2005 to 2016. Five neighbourhoods in the lowest tercile of Disposable Household Income were intervened in 2011-13. The comparison group included the three neighbourhoods which were in the same municipal district and in the lowest Disposable Household Income tercile, and displayed the highest adolescent fertility rates. Generalized linear models were fitted to assess absolute adolescent fertility rates and adjusted by immigrant population between pre-intervention (2005-10) and post-intervention periods (2011-16); Difference in Differences and relative pre-post changes analysis were performed.Results: In 2005-10 the intervention group adolescent fertility rate was 27.90 (per 1000 women 15-19) and 21.84 in the comparison group. In 2011-16 intervention areas experienced great declines (adolescent fertility rate change: - 12.30 (- 12.45 to - 12.21); p < 0.001), while comparison neighbourhoods remained unchanged (adolescent fertility rate change: 1.91 (- 2.25 to 6.07); p = 0.368). A reduction of - 10.97 points (- 13.91 to - 8.03); p < 0.001) is associated to the intervention.Conclusion: Adolescent fertility rate significantly declined in the intervention group but remained stable in the comparison group. This quasi-experimental study provide evidence that, in a country with universal health coverage, a community counselling intervention that increases access to contraception, knowledge and sexual health care in hard-to-reach segments of the population can contribute to substantially reduce adolescent fertility rates. Reducing adolescent fertility rates could become a feasible goal in cities with similar conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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34. Implementation research for public sector mental health care scale-up (SMART-DAPPER): a sequential multiple, assignment randomized trial (SMART) of non-specialist-delivered psychotherapy and/or medication for major depressive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder (DAPPER) integrated with outpatient care clinics at a county hospital in Kenya
- Author
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Levy, Rachel, Mathai, Muthoni, Chatterjee, Purba, Ongeri, Linnet, Njuguna, Simon, Onyango, Dickens, Akena, Dickens, Rota, Grace, Otieno, Ammon, Neylan, Thomas C., Lukwata, Hafsa, Kahn, James G., Cohen, Craig R., Bukusi, David, Aarons, Gregory A., Burger, Rachel, Blum, Kelly, Nahum-Shani, Inbal, McCulloch, Charles E., and Meffert, Susan M.
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MENTAL health services ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,MENTAL depression ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,PUBLIC sector ,NURSE prescribing - Abstract
Background: Mental disorders are a leading cause of global disability, driven primarily by depression and anxiety. Most of the disease burden is in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs), where 75% of adults with mental disorders have no service access. Our research team has worked in western Kenya for nearly ten years. Primary care populations in Kenya have high prevalence of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). To address these treatment needs with a sustainable, scalable mental health care strategy, we are partnering with local and national mental health stakeholders in Kenya and Uganda to identify 1) evidence-based strategies for first-line and second-line treatment delivered by non-specialists integrated with primary care, 2) investigate presumed mediators of treatment outcome and 3) determine patient-level moderators of treatment effect to inform personalized, resource-efficient, non-specialist treatments and sequencing, with costing analyses. Our implementation approach is guided by the Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, Sustainment (EPIS) framework. Methods/design: We will use a Sequential, Multiple Assignment Randomized Trial (SMART) to randomize 2710 patients from the outpatient clinics at Kisumu County Hospital (KCH) who have MDD, PTSD or both to either 12 weekly sessions of non-specialist-delivered Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT) or to 6 months of fluoxetine prescribed by a nurse or clinical officer. Participants who are not in remission at the conclusion of treatment will be re-randomized to receive the other treatment (IPT receives fluoxetine and vice versa) or to combination treatment (IPT and fluoxetine). The SMART-DAPPER Implementation Resource Team, (IRT) will drive the application of the EPIS model and adaptations during the course of the study to optimize the relevance of the data for generalizability and scale –up. Discussion: The results of this research will be significant in three ways: 1) they will determine the effectiveness of non-specialist delivered first- and second-line treatment for MDD and/or PTSD, 2) they will investigate key mechanisms of action for each treatment and 3) they will produce tailored adaptive treatment strategies essential for optimal sequencing of treatment for MDD and/or PTSD in low resource settings with associated cost information – a critical gap for addressing a leading global cause of disability. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.govNCT03466346, registered March 15, 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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35. The role of social support and spiritual wellbeing in predicting suicidal ideation among marginalized adolescents in Malaysia.
- Author
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Ibrahim, Norhayati, Che Din, Normah, Ahmad, Mahadir, Amit, Noh, Ghazali, Shazli Ezzat, Wahab, Suzaily, Abdul Kadir, Nor Ba'yah, Halim, Fatimah Wati, and A. Halim, Mohd Radzi Tarmizi
- Subjects
SPIRITUAL life ,SUICIDAL ideation ,ADOLESCENCE ,SOCIAL support ,YOUNG adults ,MULTIPLE regression analysis - Abstract
Background: The high number of adolescents and young adults harbouring suicidal ideation, as reported by the Ministry of Health Malaysia, is alarming. This cross-sectional study aims to examine the association between social support and spiritual wellbeing in predicting suicidal ideation among Malaysian adolescents.Methods: A total of 176 adolescents in selected urban areas in the states of Wilayah Persekutuan and Selangor were selected. The Suicide Ideation Scale (SIS) was used to measure the level of severity or tendency of suicidal ideation. The Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS) was used to measure the perceived social support received by the respondent while the Spiritual Wellbeing Scale (SWBS) was used to measure the religious wellbeing (RWB), the existential wellbeing (EWB) and the overall score of spiritual wellbeing (SWB).Results: The study found that both RWB and EWB showed significant negative correlation with suicidal ideation. Similarly, support from family and friends also showed a negative correlation with suicidal ideation. Further analysis using multiple regressions showed that RWB and SWB, and family support predict suicidal ideation in adolescents.Conclusion: Spiritual wellbeing in combination with family support plays a major role in predicting suicidal ideation. Therefore, intervention for encompassing spirituality and family support may contribute to a more positive outcome in suicidal adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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36. Interventions to improve discharge from acute adult mental health inpatient care to the community: systematic review and narrative synthesis.
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Tyler, Natasha, Wright, Nicola, and Waring, Justin
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MENTAL health services ,COMMUNITY mental health services ,META-analysis ,PATIENT discharge instructions ,MENTAL health ,CONTINUUM of care - Abstract
Background: The transition from acute mental health inpatient to community care is often a vulnerable period in the pathway, where people can experience additional risks and anxiety. Researchers globally have developed and tested a number of interventions that aim to improve continuity of care and safety in these transitions. However, there has been little attempt to compare and contrast the interventions and specify the variety of safety threats they attempt to resolve.Methods: The study aimed to identify the evidence base for interventions to support continuity of care and safety in the transition from acute mental health inpatient to community services at the point of discharge. Electronic Databases including PsycINFO, MEDLINE, Embase, HMIC, CINAHL, IBSS, Cochrane Library Trials, ASSIA, Web of Science and Scopus, were searched between 2000 and May 2018. Peer reviewed papers were eligible for inclusion if they addressed adults admitted to an acute inpatient mental health ward and reported on health interventions relating to discharge from the acute ward to the community. The results were analysed using a narrative synthesis technique.Results: The total number of papers from which data were extracted was 45. The review found various interventions implemented across continents, addressing problems related to different aspects of discharge. Some interventions followed a distinct named approach (i.e. Critical Time Intervention, Transitional Discharge Model), others were grouped based on key components (i.e. peer support, pharmacist involvement). The primary problems interventions looked to address were reducing readmission, improving wellbeing, reducing homelessness, improving treatment adherence, accelerating discharge, reducing suicide. The 69 outcomes reported across studies were heterogeneous, meaning it was difficult to conduct comparative quantitative meta-analysis or synthesis.Conclusions: The interventions reviewed are spread across a spectrum ranging from addressing a single problem within a single agency with a single solution, to multiple solutions addressing multi-agency problems. We recommend that future research attempts to improve homogeneity in outcome reporting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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37. Symptoms of urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse and physical performance in middle-aged women from Northeast Brazil: a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Vieira, Mariana Carmem Apolinário, da Câmara, Saionara Maria Aires, Moreira, Mayle Andrade, Pirkle, Catherine McLean, Vafaei, Afshin, and Maciel, Álvaro Campos Cavalcanti
- Subjects
PELVIC organ prolapse ,MIDDLE-aged women ,URINARY incontinence ,URINARY incontinence in women ,CROSS-sectional method ,URINARY organs ,DYSPAREUNIA - Abstract
Background: Reproductive history and urogynecological disorders have been associated with limitations in physical function. However, little is known about the relationship between symptoms of urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse, and physical performance. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine whether symptoms of urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse are independently associated factors with indicators of lower physical performance in middle-aged women from Northeast Brazil.Methods: This is a cross-sectional study of 381 women between 40 to 65 years old living in Parnamirim, Northeast Brazil. Physical performance was assessed by gait speed, chair stand and standing balance tests. Urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse were self-reported. Multiple linear regression analyses were performed to model the effect of self-reported urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse on each physical performance measure, adjusted for covariates (age, family income, education, body mass index, parity).Results: In the analysis adjusted for confounders, women reporting urinary incontinence spent, on average, half a second longer to perform the chair stand test (β = 0.505 95% CI: 0.034: 0.976). Those reporting pelvic organ prolapse shortened the balance time with eyes open by 2.5 s on average (β = - 2.556; CI: - 4.769: - 0.343).Conclusions: Symptoms of pelvic organ prolapse and urinary incontinence are associated to worse physical performance in middle-aged women. These seemingly small changes in physical performance levels are of clinical importance, since these conditions may influence women's physical ability, with implications for other tasks important to daily functioning and should be addressed by health policies targeting women's health and functionality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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38. Patients and agents - or why we need a different narrative: a philosophical analysis.
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Walach, Harald and Loughlin, Michael
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PATIENTS ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,MEDICAL care ,PHILOSOPHY of medicine ,PREVENTIVE medicine - Abstract
Background: The success of medicine in the treatment of patients brings with it new challenges. More people live on to suffer from functional, chronic or multifactorial diseases, and this has led to calls for more complex analyses of the causal determinants of health and illness.Methods: Philosophical analysis of background assumptions of the current paradigmatic model.Results: While these factors do not require a radical paradigm shift, they do give us cause to develop a new narrative, to add to existing narratives that frame our thinking about medical care. In this paper we argue that the increased focus on lifestyle and shared decision making requires a new narrative of agency, to supplement the narrative of "the patient". This narrative is conceptually linked to the developing philosophy of person-centred care.Conclusions: If patients are seen also as "agents" this will result in a substantial shift in practical decisions: The development and adoption of this narrative will help practitioners work with patients to their mutual benefit, harnessing the patients' motivation, shifting the focus from treatment to prevention and preventing unnecessary and harmful treatments that can come out of our preoccupation with the patient narrative. It will also help to shift research efforts, conceptual and empirical, from "treating" and "battling" diseases and their purported "mechanisms" to understanding complex contributing factors and their interplay. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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39. Study protocol: a pilot randomized controlled trial to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of a counseling intervention, delivered by nurses, for those who have attempted self-poisoning in Sri Lanka.
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De Silva, A. N. L. M., Dawson, Andrew H., Gawarammana, Indika B., Tennakoon, Sampath, and Rajapakse, Thilini
- Subjects
NURSES ,SELF-poisoning ,COUNSELING ,ATTEMPTED suicide ,COGNITIVE therapy - Abstract
Background: Deliberate self-harm in the form of non-fatal self-poisoning is a major public health problem in Sri Lanka. Previous work suggests that many nurses in Sri Lanka—particularly those who work in primary care in the medical treatment of persons who attempt self-poisoning—already approach their role in a holistic fashion and consider "advising" or "counseling" patients after self-poisoning to be a part of their nursing role. But there is no formal training given to such nurses at present nor has the efficacy or feasibility of such an intervention been assessed in Sri Lanka. The aims of this pilot study are to explore the potential efficacy, acceptability, and feasibility of carrying out a counseling intervention that could be delivered by nurses for persons who present to hospital for medical management of non-fatal self-poisoning. Methods/design: The study will be carried out at the Toxicology Unit of Teaching Hospital Peradeniya, Sri Lanka. A pilot randomized controlled trial will be carried out among participants admitted to Teaching Hospital Peradeniya for medical management of non-fatal self-poisoning. The primary objective of this study is to explore the acceptability and feasibility of a counseling intervention being delivered by nurses. The secondary objectives are to explore the efficacy of the intervention for the improvement of skills to cope with situations of acute emotional distress, and to reduce rates of anxiety, depression, and future repetition and suicidal ideation. A nurse's experiences and attitudes regarding the acceptability and feasibility of implementing this intervention and participant experiences of the intervention and its effects will be explored via qualitative interviews and focus group discussions. Discussion: It is anticipated that the findings of this pilot study will help determine and assess the acceptability and feasibility of this counseling intervention, as well as indicate the more useful aspects of this intervention in order to develop it for further exploration in a larger trial. Trial registration: SLCTR/2017/008 Registered on 21st March 2017 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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