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Virtual reality-based Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement (MORE-VR) as an adjunct to medications for opioid use disorder: a Phase 1 trial
Garland EL, Recasens M, Taple BJ, Donaldson GW and Weisberg RB
Medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) are the most effective interventions for this condition, yet many patients discontinue treatment. Though adjunct psychosocial treatments are recommended to increase retention and reduce relapse, the scarcity of trained providers hinders access to and utilization of evidence-based interventions. We conducted a Phase 1 study to assess the feasibility of a virtual reality-delivered Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement (MORE-VR) intervention for patients receiving MOUD.
Molecular hydrogen supplementation in mice ameliorates lipopolysaccharide-induced loss of interest
Koga M, Sato M, Nakagawa R, Tokuno S, Asai F, Maezawa Y, Nagamine M, Yoshino A and Toda H
The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential of hydrogen in preventing and treating psychiatric symptoms, particularly depressed mood and loss of interest, and to explore its underlying mechanisms. A mouse model exhibiting inflammation-derived depressive symptoms was used for the investigation.
International Delirium Pathophysiology & Electrophysiology Network for Data sharing (iDEPEND)
Sanders RD, Watne L, Roberson SW, Kimchi EY, Slooter AJC, Cunningham C, Nourski KV, Palanca BJA, Lennertz R and Banks MI
In an era of 'big data', we propose that a collaborative network approach will drive a better understanding of the mechanisms of delirium, and more rapid development of therapies. We have formed the International Delirium Pathophysiology & Electrophysiology Network for Data sharing (iDEPEND) group with a key aim to 'facilitate the study of delirium pathogenesis with electrophysiology, imaging, and biomarkers including data acquisition, analysis, and interpretation'. Our initial focus is on studies of electrophysiology as we anticipate this methodology has great potential to enhance our understanding of delirium. Our article describes this principle and is used to highlight the endeavour to the wider community as we establish key stakeholders and partnerships.
NEGR1 Modulates Mouse Affective Discrimination by Regulating Adult Olfactory Neurogenesis
Kim KH, Noh K, Lee J, Lee S and Lee SJ
Affective recognition and sensory processing are impaired in people with autism. However, no mouse model of autism comanifesting these symptoms is available, thereby limiting the exploration of the relationship between affective recognition and sensory processing in autism and the molecular mechanisms involved.
Maternal emotion socialization trajectories in an early-childhood, predominantly White sample
Price NN and Kiel EJ
Several developmental theories identify caregiver emotion socialization (ES) as predicting multiple child psychological outcomes, including anxiety. The present study delineated developmental trajectories of mothers' ES practices, specifically the initial levels and growth across time of their supportive and nonsupportive responses to their young children's emotions. To contextualize the developmental role of these processes, we examined multiple predictors (i.e., maternal emotion dysregulation, child negative emotionality, demographic covariates) and one outcome (i.e., child anxiety) of ES trajectories, as well as how trajectories varied by emotion type-sadness, anger, or worry. We investigated these questions in a community sample of 173 predominantly White, non-Hispanic mother-child dyads who participated at four time points when children were aged 2-5 years, with assessments 1 year apart. Mothers reported on study variables. Results varied by ES type. Mothers' supportive global and emotion-specific ES were highly stable across time and did not relate to predictors, outcomes, or demographic covariates. Mothers endorsed gradual decreases in nonsupportive ES across time, with some variations across emotion type. Nonsupportive responses to worry and sadness each comprised two classes varying by intercept and slope. Nonsupportive worry responses linearly decreased, whereas nonsupportive sadness responses linearly increased. Across global and emotion-specific models, maternal emotion dysregulation, child negative emotionality, and demographic covariates showed unique relations with nonsupportive ES intercept and slope. Trajectories were mostly unrelated to later child anxiety, with the exception of class-specific differences for nonsupportive worry responses. Implications and future directions are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
Use of smartphone sensor data in detecting and predicting depression and anxiety in young people (12-25 years): A scoping review
Beames JR, Han J, Shvetcov A, Zheng WY, Slade A, Dabash O, Rosenberg J, O'Dea B, Kasturi S, Hoon L, Whitton AE, Christensen H and Newby JM
Digital phenotyping is a promising method for advancing scalable detection and prediction methods in mental health research and practice. However, little is known about how digital phenotyping data are used to make inferences about youth mental health. We conducted a scoping review of 35 studies to better understand how passive sensing (e.g., Global Positioning System, microphone etc) and electronic usage data (e.g., social media use, device activity etc) collected via smartphones are used in detecting and predicting depression and/or anxiety in young people between 12 and 25 years-of-age. GPS and/or Wifi association logs and accelerometers were the most used sensors, although a wide variety of low-level features were extracted and computed (e.g., transition frequency, time spent in specific locations, uniformity of movement). Mobility and sociability patterns were explored in more studies compared to other behaviours such as sleep, phone use, and circadian movement. Studies used machine learning, statistical regression, and correlation analyses to examine relationships between variables. Results were mixed, but machine learning indicated that models using feature combinations (e.g., mobility, sociability, and sleep features) were better able to predict and detect symptoms of youth anxiety and/or depression when compared to models using single features (e.g., transition frequency). There was inconsistent reporting of age, gender, attrition, and phone characteristics (e.g., operating system, models), and all studies were assessed to have moderate to high risk of bias. To increase translation potential for clinical practice, we recommend the development of a standardised reporting framework to improve transparency and replicability of methodology.
Qualitative Evaluation of Acceptability and Feasibility of a Behavioral Intervention to Reduce Violence Among Young Adults with Early Psychosis
Rolin SA, Caffrey D, Flores MG, Mootz J, Bello I, Nossel I, Compton MT, Stanley B, Wainberg ML, Dixon LB, Appelbaum PS and Pope LG
Young adults with early psychosis are at higher risk of violent behavior, but no studies have explored using CBT-based interventions to reduce violence in specialized early intervention services (EIS) settings. This study describes formative research about the acceptability and feasibility of the Psychological Intervention for Complex PTSD and Schizophrenia-Spectrum disorder (PICASSO) to reduce violence, using interviews with EIS participants and staff. Generated themes regarding acceptability included negative experiences of violence and the desire to control and minimize violence. Themes regarding feasibility raised concerns about time constraints, consistency of participation in the intervention, and implementation issues in the context of stigma related to both psychosis and perpetration of violence. Findings from this study suggest there is a need for an intervention addressing violence risk. If adequate resources are devoted to addressing implementation issues, a CBT intervention for violence like PICASSO appears both acceptable and feasible for EIS participants and staff.
Italian report on RARE epilepsies (i-RARE): A consensus on multidisciplinarity
Riva A, Coppola A, Bisulli F, Verrotti A, Bagnasco I, Elia M, Darra F, Lattanzi S, Meletti S, La Neve A, Di Gennaro G, Brambilla I, Santoro K, Prisco T, Macari F, Gambardella A, di Bonaventura C, Balestrini S, Marini C, Pruna D, Capovilla G, Specchio N, Gobbi G, Striano P and
Rare and complex epilepsies encompass a diverse range of disorders characterized by seizures. We aimed to establish a consensus on key issues related to these conditions through collaboration among experienced neurologists, neuropediatricians, and patient advocacy representatives.
Racial and ethnic disparities in potentially inappropriate medication use in patients with dementia
Zhu CW, Choi J, Hung W and Sano M
Racial and ethnic disparities in potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) use among older adults with dementia are unclear.
Examining the Link Between Social Affect and Visual Exploration of Cute Stimuli in Autistic Children
Zaharia A, Kojovic N, Rojanawisut T, Sander D, Schaer M and Samson AC
Baby schema refers to physical features perceived as cute, known to trigger attention, induce positive emotions, and prompt social interactions. Given the reduced visual attention to social stimuli observed in individuals on the autism spectrum, the current study examines whether the sensitivity to baby schema is also affected. We expected that the looking time towards cute-featured stimuli would vary with symptom severity levels and would be associated with social affect. Ninety-four children (31 typically developing; 63 diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder - ASD) aged 20-83 months (M = 49.63, SD = 13.59) completed an eye-tracking visual exploration task. Autistic participants were separated into two groups based on symptom severity: children with high autism severity symptoms (HS ASD; N = 23) and low-moderate autism symptoms (LMS ASD; N = 40). Animals and neutral objects were simultaneously presented on the screen along with either human babies (condition 1) or adults (condition 2). The results indicated that visual attention oriented to cute-featured stimuli varied with autism symptom severity: only LMS and TD groups spend more time looking at cute-featured stimuli (babies; animals) than neutral objects. Moreover, children with higher severity in the social affect domain spent less time on the stimuli depicting cute than non-cute stimuli. These findings suggest that autism symptom severity and social skills are linked to variations in visual attention to cute stimuli. Implications of baby schema sensitivity are discussed in relation to the development of social competencies and play, responsiveness to robot-based interventions, as well as appraised relevance in autistic children.
Perspectives of Sexual and Gender Minority Youth on Anti-Vaping Messages in Social Media
Theis RP, Pilla J, Okker-Edging K, Pluta K, LeLaurin JH, Hanby E, Zulkiewicz BA, Clark D, Bteddini D, Wright SE, Fahnlander AM, Katz-Wise SL, Lydon-Staley DM, Maziak W, Charlton BM, Scout , Machado AM, Gordon B, Applegate JM, Potter JE, Strasser AA, Liu S, Salloum RG and Tan ASL
Sexual and gender minority (SGM) youth have higher rates of nicotine vaping than other youth in the United States. While social media can be effective in reaching youth and discouraging vaping, informed cultural tailoring is necessary to ensure effective messaging to SGM youth. This study aimed to understand SGM youth perspectives on anti-vaping social media messages and tailoring approaches.
My friends made me do it: Peer influences and different types of vaping in adolescence
Skinner AT, Golonka M, Godwin J, Kwiatek S, Sweitzer M and Hoyle RH
Vaping is one of the most common forms of substance use among adolescents. Social influences play a key role in the decision to use substances and frequency of use during adolescence, and vaping is no exception. Using a sample of 891 adolescents across two time points (M = 15.1 and M = 17.2) in this pre-registered study, we explored whether the frequency of vaping nicotine and the frequency of vaping marijuana at age 17 were related to concurrent reports of resistance to peer influence (RPI), perceptions of friends vaping, and perceptions of classmates vaping. Then, we investigated whether resistance to peer influence reported at age 15 was similarly related to age 17 vaping of both substances. Higher RPI at both ages 15 and 17 was associated with a higher probability of abstaining from vaping both substances but was not related to the frequency of vaping among those who vaped. Perceiving that a higher proportion of friends - but not classmates - vaped was associated with a lower probability of abstaining and a greater frequency of vaping among those who vape (for both substances). Higher RPI had an attenuating effect on the relation between perceptions of vaping among peers and an adolescent's own vaping behavior, but that differed by age and peer group (e.g., friends vs. classmates). Overestimation about the prevalence of classmate vaping may have played a role in the findings, but our results suggest that interventions to strengthen peer resistance across adolescence are warranted.
Prevalence and incidence measures for schizophrenia among commercial health insurance and medicaid enrollees
Finnerty MT, Khan A, You K, Wang R, Gu G, Layman D, Chen Q, Elhadad N, Joshi S, Appelbaum PS, Lencz T, Markx S, Kushner SA and Rzhetsky A
Given the chronic nature of schizophrenia, it is important to examine age-specific prevalence and incidence to understand the scope of the burden of schizophrenia across the lifespan. Estimates of lifetime prevalence of schizophrenia have varied widely and have often relied upon community-based data estimates from over two decades ago, while more recent studies have shown considerable promise by leveraging pooled datasets. However, the validity of measures of schizophrenia, particularly new onset schizophrenia, has not been well studied in these large health databases. The current study examines prevalence and validity of incidence measures of new diagnoses of schizophrenia in 2019 using two U.S. administrative health databases: MarketScan, a national database of individuals receiving employer-sponsored commercial insurance (N = 16,365,997), and NYS Medicaid, a large state public insurance program (N = 4,414,153). Our results indicate that the prevalence of schizophrenia is over 10-fold higher, and the incidence two-fold higher, in the NYS Medicaid population compared to the MarketScan database. In addition, prevalence increased over the lifespan in the Medicaid population, but decreased in the employment based MarketScan database beginning in early adulthood. Incident measures of new diagnoses of schizophrenia had excellent validity, with positive predictive values and specificity exceeding 95%, but required a longer lookback period for Medicaid compared to MarketScan. Further work is needed to leverage these findings to develop robust clinical outcome predictors for new onset of schizophrenia within large administrative health data systems.
Differential role of negative and positive parenting styles on resting-state brain networks in middle-aged adolescents
Lee S, Choi H, Park MH and Park B
Parenting styles encompass negative and positive approaches, potentially affecting adolescents' brain reward and emotion regulation systems. However, the association between parenting style and brain networks remains unknown. This study investigates the link between parenting style and functional connectivity (FC) within the reward and emotion regulation brain networks, using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI). A total of forty-two middle-aged adolescents (26 males; 16 females) with no neurological or psychiatric symptoms participated in this study. We assessed parenting behaviors and extracted reward/emotion regulation FC from rs-fMRI. We examined the association between FC and parenting style, identified through principal component analysis. Correlation analysis investigated these links while controlling for sex. We delineated both positive (love-autonomy) and negative (hostility-control) parenting styles, accounting for 79 % of the explained variance in parenting behaviors. The negative parenting style displayed connections with FC within the reward system, particularly in the left nucleus accumbens (NAc), showcasing links to multiple frontal regions. Furthermore, it correlated with the social reward network, specifically the insula-NAc FC in bilateral hemispheres. Conversely, the positive parenting style exhibited an association with FC between the hippocampus and right lateral prefrontal cortex. Our findings support negative parenting's association with an immature reward system and suggest positive parenting's potential to enhance emotion regulation in brain function. These observations highlight two distinct parenting styles, including single-parenting behaviors. Thus, we advance understanding of each style's unique contributions to adolescent reward- and emotion regulation-related brain network development.
Twenty-Three Years of Declining Lithium Use: Analysis of a Pharmacoepidemiological Dataset from German-Speaking Countries
Greil W, de Bardeci M, Nievergelt N, Toto S, Grohmann R, Seifert J and Schoretsanitis G
Pharmacoepidemiological data suggest that lithium prescriptions for bipolar disorder are gradually decreasing, with less attention having been paid to other indications.
Corrigendum to "The orbitofrontal cortex: A goal-directed cognitive map framework for social and non-social behaviors" [Neurobiol. Learn. Mem. 203 (2023) 107793]
Shi W, Meisner OC, Blackmore S, Jadi MP, Nandy AS and Chang SWC
Neurological soft signs and olfactory dysfunction in patients with borderline personality disorder
Bettinger S, Höpfner S, Deest-Gaubatz S, Simon L, Matin-Mann F, Weber C, Schülke R, Bleich S, Frieling H, Neyazi A and Maier HB
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a serious disorder with a lifetime prevalence of 2.7-5.9% and is thought to correlate with altered neuroplasticity. The aim of the present study is to investigate possible associations of BPD (-severity) and alterations in neurological soft signs (NSS) and olfactory function.
The relationship between social media dependency and psychological distress due to misunderstanding and fear of COVID-19 in medical students
Vaezpour P, Jahani MA, Gholamnia-Shirvani Z, Nikbakht HA, Hamzehpour R, Pakpour A and Mirzaie A
Improper use of social media during the COVID-19 outbreak, leading to fear and misunderstanding, can contribute to psychological disorders in vulnerable populations. This descriptive and analytical cross-sectional study was conducted in 2023 on 511 medical students of Babol University of Medical Sciences. Data were collected using demographic, psychological distress, fear and misunderstanding questionnaires related to COVID-19 and social media dependency. A total of 511 medical students, with an average age of Mean and S.D; 23.57 ± 3.03 participated in the study. The average psychological distress score was 23.82 ± 7.73 (out of 54), the average score of social media dependency was 17.53 ± 3.09 (out of 30), for the fear of COVID-19 was12.63 ± 2.56 (out of 35), and for the misperception of COVID-19 was 0.53 ± 0.09 (out of 18). Path analysis results) showed that direct path from improper use of social media to psychological distress is significant (P < 0.001, B = 0.19) but this relationship is not significant through fear and misperception related to COVID-19. Improper use of social media, identified as the strongest predictor, can directly increase psychological distress in medical students, without mediation through fear and misperception related to COVID-19. These findings should be taken into consideration when designing and evaluating interventions aimed at promoting mental health and fostering appropriate use of social media among students during disease outbreaks.
A mixed method study exploring similarities and differences in general and social services-specific barriers to treatment-seeking among individuals with a problematic use of alcohol, cannabis, or gambling
Schettini G, Lindner P, Ekström V and Johansson M
The treatment gap for addictive disorders is one of the largest in health care. Several studies have investigated barriers to treatment for different addictive disorders, but very few studies conducted have explored whether the barriers differ depending on substance or behavior or if they are common among all addictive disorders. In Sweden, addiction care is provided both by the healthcare and social services, where the latter is common, but also less popular. To our knowledge, there are no studies exploring whether the barriers are different depending on where the treatment is given.
Exploring the relationship between media use and depressive symptoms among gender diverse youth: findings of the Mental Health Days Study
Klinger D, Plener PL, Marboe G, Karwautz A, Kothgassner OD and Dienlin T
Over the past decades, media use has become a key aspect of young people's daily lives, significantly shaping their social interactions, learning processes, and recreational pursuits. At the same time, healthcare professionals and researchers are increasingly concerned about the impact of media use on young people's mental health. This concern is particularly relevant for gender diverse youth who may have distinct experiences with media that could impact their mental health uniquely compared to their peers, such as increased exposure to cyberbullying and negative content regarding their gender identity. This study aims to explore the associations between media use and depressive symptoms among youth and examine if gender moderates this association.
Implementing a Metabolism-informed approach for smoking cessation in an Alaska Tribal health system: study protocol for a single-arm implementation pilot trial
Jansen KJ, Tranby BN, Shane AL, Takeno T, Chadwick K, Sinicrope P, Shaw JL, Tyndale RF, Harris JR, Patten CA and Avey JP
Individualized treatment for commercial tobacco smoking cessation, such as through the utilization of the nicotine metabolite ratio (NMR), offers potential clinical benefit. NMR is a metabolism-informed biomarker that can be used to guide medication selection. NMR testing is particularly promising for tobacco cessation efforts in populations with high rates of smoking, such as some Alaska Native and American Indian (AN/AI) communities. To date, no prior study has evaluated the implementation of NMR-guided tobacco cessation with AN/AI populations.
Mapping neural correlates of biological motion perception in autistic children using high-density diffuse optical tomography
Yang D, Svoboda AM, George TG, Mansfield PK, Wheelock MD, Schroeder ML, Rafferty SM, Sherafati A, Tripathy K, Burns-Yocum T, Forsen E, Pruett JR, Marrus NM, Culver JP, Constantino JN and Eggebrecht AT
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), a neurodevelopmental disorder defined by social communication deficits plus repetitive behaviors and restricted interests, currently affects 1/36 children in the general population. Recent advances in functional brain imaging show promise to provide useful biomarkers of ASD diagnostic likelihood, behavioral trait severity, and even response to therapeutic intervention. However, current gold-standard neuroimaging methods (e.g., functional magnetic resonance imaging, fMRI) are limited in naturalistic studies of brain function underlying ASD-associated behaviors due to the constrained imaging environment. Compared to fMRI, high-density diffuse optical tomography (HD-DOT), a non-invasive and minimally constraining optical neuroimaging modality, can overcome these limitations. Herein, we aimed to establish HD-DOT to evaluate brain function in autistic and non-autistic school-age children as they performed a biological motion perception task previously shown to yield results related to both ASD diagnosis and behavioral traits.
Development of loneliness and social isolation after spousal loss: A systematic review of longitudinal studies on widowhood
Niino K, Patapoff MA, Mausbach BT, Liu H, Moore AA, Han BH, Palmer BW and Jester DJ
Spousal loss is a stressful life event that is associated with loneliness and social isolation, both of which affect mental and physical health. The primary objective of this paper was to synthesize longitudinal studies that investigated loneliness and social isolation in widowhood.
The association between cultural and linguistic maintenance and mental health in migrant adolescents: A scoping review
Hasnain A, Hajek J and Borschmann R
Although previous reviews have examined the relationship between heritage cultural maintenance and mental health outcomes among migrants, none have focussed specifically on migrant adolescents (i.e. those aged 10-24 years).
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Older Veterans admitted to VA Community Living Centers: Prevalence and Risk Correlates
O'Malley K, Moye J, Leng J and Burningham Z
To examine prevalence and risk correlates for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) occurring during or after admission to a Veterans Administration (VA) skilled nursing facility.
Cross-lagged panel analysis of the relationship between social networking sites use (SNSU) and sleep problems among university students
Li X, Li H and Luo J
Sleep remains a cornerstone for sociopsychological well-being, but it is in decline, especially among today's youth. Simultaneously, engagement with social media is escalating. Research has identified a link between social networking sites use and sleep problems; however, the nature and direction of the relations remain obscure. Therefore, it is imperative to pursue longitudinal research to elucidate this correlation and guide suitable intervention practices. The present study aimed to examine the reciprocal relationship between social networking sites use and sleep problems.
Twelve-Month Sustainment of IPV Screening and Response Programs in Primary Care: Contextual Factors Impacting Implementation Success
Iverson KM, Brady JE, Adjognon OL, Stolzmann K, Dichter ME, Bruce LE, Portnoy GA, Iqbal S, Gerber MR, Haskell SG and Miller CJ
The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) employed implementation facilitation (IF) as a strategy to boost uptake of intimate partner violence (IPV) screening programs in primary care. This study examined the sustainment of screening uptake 1 year after IF and identified factors impacting sustainment success.
Risk and protective factors associated with substance use among Puerto Rican youths after Hurricane María: a cross-sectional study
Gonzalez JC, Feinberg DK, Stewart RW, Young J and Orengo-Aguayo R
Identifying factors associated with post-disaster youth substance use is a crucial element of developing evidence-based prevention and intervention efforts. Hurricane María struck Puerto Rico in September of 2017 and the wide-spread impact from this disaster, including exposure to trauma, displacement, and disrupted social supports had the potential to negatively impact levels of substance use among youth across the archipelago. However, post-disaster substance use remains under-investigated in this context. The current study sought to identify risk and protective factors associated with substance use among Puerto Rican youth in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria.
Needs of family caregivers of hospitalised adults with dementia during care transitions: a qualitative study in a US Department of Veterans Affairs Hospital
Horstman MJ, Evans TL, Guo C, Sonnenfeld M, Naik AD, Stevens A and Kunik ME
To identify the needs of caregivers of hospitalised adults with dementia in the hospital and during care transitions.
One hundred years of EEG for brain and behaviour research
Mushtaq F, Welke D, Gallagher A, Pavlov YG, Kouara L, Bosch-Bayard J, van den Bosch JJF, Arvaneh M, Bland AR, Chaumon M, Borck C, He X, Luck SJ, Machizawa MG, Pernet C, Puce A, Segalowitz SJ, Rogers C, Awais M, Babiloni C, Bailey NW, Baillet S, Bendall RCA, Brady D, Bringas-Vega ML, Busch NA, Calzada-Reyes A, Chatard A, Clayson PE, Cohen MX, Cole J, Constant M, Corneyllie A, Coyle D, Cruse D, Delis I, Delorme A, Fair D, Falk TH, Gamer M, Ganis G, Gloy K, Gregory S, Hassall CD, Hiley KE, Ivry RB, Jerbi K, Jenkins M, Kaiser J, Keil A, Knight RT, Kochen S, Kotchoubey B, Krigolson OE, Langer N, Liesefeld HR, Lippé S, London RE, MacNamara A, Makeig S, Marinovic W, Martínez-Montes E, Marzuki AA, Mathew RK, Michel C, Millán JDR, Mon-Williams M, Morales-Chacón L, Naar R, Nilsonne G, Niso G, Nyhus E, Oostenveld R, Paul K, Paulus W, Pfabigan DM, Pourtois G, Rampp S, Rausch M, Robbins K, Rossini PM, Ruzzoli M, Schmidt B, Senderecka M, Srinivasan N, Stegmann Y, Thompson PM, Valdes-Sosa M, van der Molen MJW, Veniero D, Verona E, Voytek B, Yao D, Evans AC and Valdes-Sosa P
The relationship of race, ethnicity, gender identity, sex assigned at birth, sexual orientation, parental education, financial hardship and comorbid mental disorders with quality of life in college students with anxiety, depression or eating disorders
Baik SY, Shin KE, Fitzsimmons-Craft EE, Eisenberg D, Wilfley DE, Taylor CB and Newman MG
Previous studies showed that comorbidity and demographic factors added to burden on health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Only one study explored the relationship between HRQoL and comorbidity in college students with mental disorders, leaving generalizability of findings uncertain. Less is known about the association of demographics on HRQoL. This study investigated HRQoL based on demographics and comorbidity among college students with mental disorders.
Increased expression of ER stress, inflammasome activation, and mitochondrial biogenesis-related genes in peripheral blood mononuclear cells in major depressive disorder
Munshi S, Alarbi AM, Zheng H, Kuplicki R, Burrows K, Figueroa-Hall LK, Victor TA, Aupperle RL, Khalsa SS, Paulus MP, Teague TK and Savitz J
A subset of major depressive disorder (MDD) is characterized by immune system dysfunction, but the intracellular origin of these immune changes remains unclear. Here we tested the hypothesis that abnormalities in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, inflammasome activity and mitochondrial biogenesis contribute to the development of systemic inflammation in MDD. RT-qPCR was used to measure mRNA expression of key organellar genes from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) isolated from 186 MDD and 67 healthy control (HC) subjects. The comparative C (2) method was applied to quantify mRNA expression using GAPDH as the reference gene. After controlling for age, sex, BMI, and medication status using linear regression models, expression of the inflammasome (NLRC4 and NLRP3) and the ER stress (XBP1u, XBP1s, and ATF4) genes was found to be significantly increased in the MDD versus the HC group. Sensitivity analyses excluding covariates yielded similar results. After excluding outliers, expression of the inflammasome genes was no longer statistically significant but expression of the ER stress genes (XBP1u, XBP1s, and ATF4) remained significant and the mitochondrial biogenesis gene, MFN2, was significantly increased in the MDD group. NLRC4 and MFN2 were positively correlated with serum C-reactive protein concentrations, while ASC trended significant. The altered expression of inflammasome activation, ER stress, and mitochondrial biogenesis pathway components suggest that dysfunction of these organelles may play a role in the pathogenesis of MDD.
Differences in parental behaviour, emotions, and cognitions and between children's eating profiles
Edwards KL, Pickard A, Farrow C, Haycraft E, Herle M, Llewellyn C, Croker H and Blissett J
A variety of parent psychological characteristics (e.g., wellbeing) have been related to children's eating behaviour. However, parent-child feeding interactions are reciprocal and complex, including relationships between parental cognitions, emotions, as well as the influence of children's varying appetitive traits. Using a person-centred approach, children's appetitive traits can be clustered into meaningful eating profiles. To date, no research has examined whether parental behaviours, emotions, and cognitions differ depending on a child's eating profile. Hence, this study recruited parents/primary caregivers from the APPETItE project, whose child had previously been identified as having an avoidant, typical, happy, or avid eating profile. Parents/primary caregivers of children (3-6 years; N = 632) completed online questionnaires examining broader parenting behaviour (parenting styles), parental emotions (stress, wellbeing), and parental cognitions (goals, self-efficacy, time and energy for meal planning and preparation, and perceptions about children's body size). Findings showed significant differences in parent responses to the questionnaires based on children's eating profiles. Parents of children with a happy eating profile reported better psychological wellbeing and greater parenting time and energy for meal planning and preparation, as well as being less likely to report goals of avoiding mealtime stress and conflict. In contrast, parents of children with an avoidant eating profile reported poorer psychological wellbeing. Children with an avid eating profile were perceived by parents as having a higher body weight, whereas children with an avoidant eating profile were perceived as having a lower body weight. Overall, these findings demonstrate that differences in parental characteristics and perceptions exist between children's eating profiles and thus should be considered in the development of tailored interventions to support children's healthy eating.
Long-term clinical recovery and treatment resistance in first-episode psychosis: a 10-year follow-up study
Wold KF, Kreis IV, Åsbø G, Flaaten CB, Widing L, Engen MJ, Lyngstad SH, Johnsen E, Ueland T, Simonsen C and Melle I
Illness trajectories in people with first-episode psychosis (FEP) vary significantly over time. Identifying early-course parameters predicting outcomes is essential, but long-term data still needs to be provided. We conducted a 10-year follow-up study of a comprehensive first-episode psychosis (FEP) cohort investigating the prevalence of clinical recovery (CR) and treatment resistance (TR) after ten years, as well as clinical, demographic, and pre-illness predictors of long-term outcomes. 102 participants with FEP DSM-IV Schizophrenia spectrum disorders were recruited within their first year of treatment. The Treatment Response and Resistance in Psychosis Working Group (TRRIP) and the Remission in Schizophrenia Working Group (RSWG) criteria were used to define TR and CR, respectively. At 10-year follow-up, 29 (29%) of the participants were classified as in CR, while 32 (31%) were classified as TR. We also identified a larger middle group (n = 41, 40%) consisting of participants in partial recovery. 7% of all participants had tried Clozapine at the 10-year follow-up. Logistic regression analyses identified insidious onset (OR = 4.16) and baseline disorganized symptoms (OR = 2.96) as significantly associated with an increased risk of developing TR. Good premorbid academic adjustment (OR = 1.60) and acute onset (OR = 3.40) were associated with an increased chance of CR. We identified three long-term outcome groups by using recent consensus definitions. We also identified the potential importance of assessing baseline disorganized symptoms and monitoring patients with insidious onset more closely. Further, the findings suggest that clinicians should pay close attention to early-course parameters and provide adequate treatment to improve long-term outcomes of FEP.
Extracellular microRNAs associated with psychiatric symptoms in the Normative Aging Study
Qiu X, Danesh Yazdi M, Wang C, Kosheleva A, Wu H, Vokonas PS, Spiro A, Laurent LC, DeHoff P, Kubzansky LD, Weisskopf MG, Baccarelli AA and Schwartz JD
Earlier studies have revealed microRNAs (miRNAs) as potential biomarkers for neurological conditions, however, such evidence on psychiatric outcomes is limited. We utilized the Normative Aging Study (NAS) cohort to investigate the associations between extracellular miRNAs (ex-miRNA) and psychiatric symptoms among a group of older male adults, along with the targeted genes and biological pathways. We studied 569 participants with miRNA profile primarily measured in extracellular vesicles isolated from plasma, and psychiatric symptoms reported over 1996-2014 with repeated measures. Global and dimension scales of psychiatric symptoms were measured via the administration of Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) per visit covering nine aspects of psychiatric health, such as anxiety, depression, hostility, psychoticism, etc. Ex-miRNAs were profiled using small RNA sequencing. Associations of expression of 395 ex-miRNAs (present in >70% samples) with current mental status were assessed using single-miRNA as well as Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO)-based multi-miRNAs linear mixed effects models adjusting for key demographic and behavioral factors. Biological functions were explored using pathway analyses. We identified ex-miRNAs associated with each BSI scale. In particular, hsa-miR-320d was consistently identified for two global scales. Similar overlapping miRNAs across global and dimension scores included hsa-miR-379-3p, hsa-miR-1976, hsa-miR-151a-5p, hsa-miR-151b, hsa-miR-144-3p, etc. Top KEGG pathways for identified miRNAs included p53 signaling, Hippo signaling, FoxO signaling, protein processing in endoplasmic reticulum and several pathways related with cancer and neurological diseases. This study provided early evidence supporting the associations between extracellular miRNAs and psychiatric conditions. MiRNAs may serve as biomarkers of subclinical psychiatric illness in older adults.
Individual and organizational outcomes of engaging peers in the cocreation of digital mental health interventions
Schneider ML, Cha BS, Borghouts J, Eikey EV, Schueller SM, Stadnick NA, Zheng K, Mukamel DB and Sorkin DH
Within mental health services, persons in recovery from their own experiences of mental health challenges (peers) are increasingly being trained to provide peer support. This study describes individual and organizational outcomes related to engaging peers in a multisite demonstration project in California that sought to integrate them as cocreators throughout planning and implementation of digital mental health interventions. We collected data from key informants across 11 sites. Quarterly online surveys invited key informants to report perceived outcomes of the peer component. Biannual interviews elicited details regarding survey-reported outcomes. Quantitative data provided indications of outcome prevalence and consistency, and quotes from the interviews illustrated the complex realities underlying survey responses. One hundred three quarterly surveys and 39 biannual interviews were completed between Summer 2020 and Fall 2022. Key informants reported diverse outcomes, including integration of peer input into local decision making, mental health benefits to peers and community members, reduced workplace mental health stigma, and new cross-site collaborations. Five sites reported outcomes with greater consistency compared to the other six sites. Reports of increased peer visibility in the workplace coincided with reports of reduced stigma and increased value of peer input by mental health professionals. This study offers encouragement for the potential positive impact of engaging peers as cocreators of mental health interventions. Data suggest integrating peers does not increase mental health stigma and may instead result in various positive outcomes. The degree to which these outcomes manifest in a specific setting, however, may vary. Future research should seek to identify contextual factors that support actualization of positive outcomes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
Altered dynamic functional connectivity of nucleus accumbens subregions in major depressive disorder: The interactive of childhood trauma and diagnosis
Zou Y, Yu T, Zhu L, Xu Q, Li Y, Chen J, Luo Q and Peng H
Major depressive disorder (MDD) with childhood trauma represents a heterogeneous clinical subtype of depression. Previous research has observed alterations in the reward circuitry centered around the nucleus accumbens (NAc) in MDD patients. However, limited investigations have focused on aberrant functional connectivity (FC) within NAc subregions among MDD with childhood trauma. Thus, this study adopts analyses of both static FC and dynamic FC to examine neurobiological changes in MDD with childhood trauma. The bilateral NAc-shell and NAc-core were selected as the seeds. Four participant groups were included: MDD with childhood trauma (n = 48), MDD without childhood trauma (n = 30), healthy controls (HCs) with childhood trauma (n = 57), and HCs without childhood trauma (n = 46). Our findings revealed both abnormal static FC and dynamic FC between NAc-shell and NAc-core and regions including the middle occipital gyrus (MOG), anterior cingulate cortex, inferior frontal gyrus in MDD with childhood trauma. Furthermore, a significant correlation was identified between the dFC of the left NAc-shell and the right MOG in relation to childhood trauma. Additionally, abnormal dFC moderated the link between childhood abuse and the depression severity. These outcomes shed light on the neurobiological underpinnings of MDD with childhood trauma.
How to design equitable digital health tools: A narrative review of design tactics, case studies, and opportunities
Bucher A, Chaudhry BM, Davis JW, Lawrence K, Panza E, Baqer M, Feinstein RT, Fields SA, Huberty J, Kaplan DM, Kusters IS, Materia FT, Park SY and Kepper M
With a renewed focus on health equity in the United States driven by national crises and legislation to improve digital healthcare innovation, there is a need for the designers of digital health tools to take deliberate steps to design for equity in their work. A concrete toolkit of methods to design for health equity is needed to support digital health practitioners in this aim. This narrative review summarizes several health equity frameworks to help digital health practitioners conceptualize the equity dimensions of importance for their work, and then provides design approaches that accommodate an equity focus. Specifically, the Double Diamond Model, the IDEAS framework and toolkit, and community collaboration techniques such as participatory design are explored as mechanisms for practitioners to solicit input from members of underserved groups and better design digital health tools that serve their needs. Each of these design methods requires a deliberate effort by practitioners to infuse health equity into the approach. A series of case studies that use different methods to build in equity considerations are offered to provide examples of how this can be accomplished and demonstrate the range of applications available depending on resources, budget, product maturity, and other factors. We conclude with a call for shared rigor around designing digital health tools that deliver equitable outcomes for members of underserved populations.
The value of decentralized clinical trials: Inclusion, accessibility, and innovation
Jean-Louis G and Seixas AA
In this Review, we explore the transformative potential of decentralized clinical trials (DCTs) in addressing the limitations of traditional randomized controlled trials (RCTs). We highlight the merits of DCTs fostering greater inclusivity, efficiency, and adaptability. We emphasize the challenges of RCTs, including limited participant diversity and logistical barriers, geographical constraints, and mistrust in research institutions, showing how DCTs are preferred in addressing these challenges by utilizing remote digital technologies and community providers to enable broader, more inclusive participation. Furthermore, we underscore the potential of DCTs for democratizing clinical research. We also stress the importance of addressing unresolved challenges, including data security and privacy, remote patient monitoring, and regulatory variations. Research is needed to devise standardized protocols to streamline DCT processes, explore its long-term impacts on patient outcomes, and overcome challenges through equitable stakeholder engagement.
Transgender health research needed
Keuroghlian AS and Radix AE
Ever since the Cass Review was released in April-an evaluation by the United Kingdom's National Health Service that has led to a ban on pubertysuppressing medication for transgender and gender diverse (TGD) youth-there has been criticism of the assessment and its recommendations, and concern about how it could be leveraged to more broadly affect public health care. In response, physicians, researchers, and major medical organizations worldwide have emphasized that scientific studies point to the benefits of medical interventions supporting gender affirmation. Indeed, more care innovation is needed, driven by community-led research, to improve the well-being of TGD people in ways that can benefit all of society.
Cultivating Common Ground: The Intersection of Mental Health and Faith
Verduin ML and Tower K
During and following the COVID-19 pandemic, the world experienced a significant increase in the prevalence of mental health problems along with a concomitant increase in mental health service utilization rates. Even though the stigma associated with mental health problems has been decreasing and service utilization rates have increased, these have not been seen in all segments of the population; for instance, some religious beliefs have been associated with less frequent and lower rates of mental health service use. In this commentary, the authors, an academic psychiatrist and a community-based pastor, describe how their informal academic-community collaboration led to a series of speaking opportunities to help an international group of clergy members develop a better understanding of mental health and how mental health problems may intersect with faith. They reflect on lessons learned from these opportunities and their professions, discuss opportunities for academic faculty to apply these lessons in their daily practices, and encourage academic faculty to consider a "common ground" approach in their own community outreach efforts. The authors underscore the importance of building connections with people who might have beliefs, views, or understandings of medical concepts that differ from academic medicine's and of teaching trainees how to build these connections. They challenge individual clinicians and academic faculty to identify spheres of influence that they have in their own lives through which they can create a positive impact for medicine and public health by finding shared experiences and common ground, clarifying misunderstandings, educating where needed, and serving as role models to encourage trainees to do the same.
Which diagnoses and arguments regarding severe mental disorder do forensic psychiatric experts in Sweden consider in different cases? A qualitative vignette study
Göranson L, Svensson O, Andiné P, Bromander S, Ask K, Bagge AL and Hildebrand Karlén M
The decision-making process of experts in forensic psychiatric investigations (FPI) is complex and reasoning regarding psychiatric diagnosis and severe mental disorder (SMD, the judicial concept central to legal exemption in Swedish law) has severe ramifications. Nevertheless, the qualitative aspects of FPI experts' decision-making process have seldom been studied systematically.
Reducing Alcohol Misuse and Promoting Treatment Initiation Among Veterans Through a Brief Internet-Based Intervention: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial
Pedersen ER, Davis JP, Hummer JF, Bouskill K, Buch KD, Shute IM, Fitzke RE, Tran DD, Neighbors C and Saba S
Young adult veterans who served after the September 11 attacks on the United States in 2001 (ie, post-9/11) are at heightened risk for experiencing behavioral health distress and disorders including hazardous drinking, posttraumatic stress disorder, and depression. These veterans often face significant barriers to behavioral health treatment, and reaching them through brief mobile phone-based interventions may help reduce drinking and promote treatment engagement.
Current Status of Barriers to mHealth Access Among Patients With Stroke and Steps Toward the Digital Health Era: Systematic Review
Niyomyart A, Ruksakulpiwat S, Benjasirisan C, Phianhasin L, Nigussie K, Thorngthip S, Shamita G, Thampakkul J and Begashaw L
Mobile health (mHealth) offers significant benefits for patients with stroke, facilitating remote monitoring and personalized health care solutions beyond traditional settings. However, there is a dearth of comprehensive data, particularly qualitative insights, on the barriers to mHealth access. Understanding these barriers is crucial for devising strategies to enhance mHealth use among patients with stroke.
Self-compassion-based online group psychotherapy for bereavement-related grief: The COMPACT feasibility trial
Uneno Y, Kotera Y, Kikuchi K, Yamada M, Sugitani M, Terado S, Maehara H, Sakamoto Y, Sugao S, Tani H, Shimizu A, Kubo Y, Fujisawa D and Muto M
This study aimed to examine the feasibility and effectiveness of online group psychotherapy focused on self-compassion for individuals experiencing bereavement-related grief.
Facial emotion perception in individuals with clinical high risk for psychosis compared with healthy controls, first-episode psychosis, and in predicting psychosis transition: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Tsui HKH, Luk SL, Hsiao J and Chan SKW
Facial emotion perception deficits, a possible indicator of illness progression and transdiagnostic phenotype, were examined in high-risk psychosis (CHR) patients through a systematic review and meta-analysis of 35 studies (2567 CHR individuals, 1103 non-transitioned [CHR-NT], 212 transitioned [CHR-T], 512 first-episode psychosis [FEP], and 1936 healthy controls [HC]). CHR showed overall (g = -0.369 [95 % CI, -0.485 to -0.253]) and specific impairments in detecting anger, disgust, fear, happiness, neutrality, and sadness compared to HC, except for surprise. FEP revealed a general deficit than CHR (g = -0.378 [95 % CI, -0.509 to -0.247]), and CHR-T displayed more pronounced baseline impairments than CHR-NT (g = -0.217 [95 % CI, -0.365 to -0.068]). FEP only exhibited a poorer ability to perceive fear, but not other individual emotions, compared to CHR. Similar performances in perceiving individual emotions were observed regardless of transition status (CHR-NT and CHR-T). However, literature comparing the perception of individual emotions among FEP, CHR-T, and CHR is limited. This study primarily characterized the general and overall impairments of facial emotion perception in CHR which could predict transition risk, emphasizing the need for future research on multimodal parameters of emotion perception and associations with other psychiatric outcomes.
A Randomized Trial Evaluating Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Smart Phone Care Management Application to Augment Buprenorphine Therapy for Opioid Use and Chronic Pain
Gallo L, Bhambhani Y, Lu T, Holzman S, Bao Y, Musicaro R, Roske C, Richard JT, Delgado GE, Baker Z, Starrels J, Stotts AL, Deng Y, Rodgers CRR, Perez HR, Norton BT and Gabbay V
There is high comorbidity of opioid use disorder (OUD) and chronic pain (CP), which is often addressed by prescribing buprenorphine (BUP). While BUP is effective in preventing overdose, it does not address the psychological aspects of OUD and CP comorbidity and treatment retention rates are as low as 50%. The Virtual Opioid use disorder Integrated Chronic Pain Treatment (VOICE) study (NCT05039554) is a novel effectiveness-implementation trial to test a 12-week virtual group Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) protocol and a care management smartphone application (app; Valera Health) on pain and opioid use in patients with OUD and CP receiving BUP. Using a 2 × 2 factorial design, participants (expected N = 280) are randomized into: ACT, Valera app, ACT + Valera, or Treatment as Usual arm. This study is taking place in the Bronx, NY, a racially/ethnically diverse community that faces numerous socioeconomic stressors and is one of the nation's epicenters of the opioid epidemic. We created a culturally responsive ACT group protocol, and Valera psychoeducational material. Outcome measures include NIH HEAL Common Data Elements and ACT and Valera-specific measures. We are conducting a novel 2 × 2 trial investigating augmenting BUP treatment with ACT and Valera, with the goal that improved mental health and access to care will result in decreased and opioid use and pain interference.
An Exploration of the Peri-Diagnostic Experiences of Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual People With Dementia Using the Candidacy Framework
Hammond J, Hicks B, Daley S and Banerjee S
How dementia affects lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer people or those with other minoritised sexual/gender identities (LGBTQ+) is not well understood. Furthermore, existing research often excludes the voices of LGBTQ+ people living with dementia and focuses instead on their care partners. This study addresses this evidence gap by drawing on the ESRC/NIHR funded DETERMIND cohort, consisting of 940 newly diagnosed people with dementia, to explore the peri-diagnostic experiences of people living with dementia who identify as LGBTQ+.
Unique genetic and risk-factor profiles in clusters of major depressive disorder-related multimorbidity trajectories
Gezsi A, Van der Auwera S, Mäkinen H, Eszlari N, Hullam G, Nagy T, Bonk S, González-Colom R, Gonda X, Garvert L, Paajanen T, Gal Z, Kirchner K, Millinghoffer A, Schmidt CO, Bolgar B, Roca J, Cano I, Kuokkanen M, Antal P and Juhasz G
The heterogeneity and complexity of symptom presentation, comorbidities and genetic factors pose challenges to the identification of biological mechanisms underlying complex diseases. Current approaches used to identify biological subtypes of major depressive disorder (MDD) mainly focus on clinical characteristics that cannot be linked to specific biological models. Here, we examined multimorbidities to identify MDD subtypes with distinct genetic and non-genetic factors. We leveraged dynamic Bayesian network approaches to determine a minimal set of multimorbidities relevant to MDD and identified seven clusters of disease-burden trajectories throughout the lifespan among 1.2 million participants from cohorts in the UK, Finland, and Spain. The clusters had clear protective- and risk-factor profiles as well as age-specific clinical courses mainly driven by inflammatory processes, and a comprehensive map of heritability and genetic correlations among these clusters was revealed. Our results can guide the development of personalized treatments for MDD based on the unique genetic, clinical and non-genetic risk-factor profiles of patients.
The physical health and premature mortality of Indigenous Māori following first-episode psychosis diagnosis: A 15-year follow-up study
Monk NJ, Cunningham R, Stanley J, Crengle S, Fitzjohn J, Kerdemelidis M, Lockett H, McLachlan AD, Waitoki W and Lacey C
People experiencing psychosis are at greater risk of physical health conditions and premature mortality. It is likely that Indigenous Māori youth, who experience additional systemic inequities caused by settler-colonisation, face even greater physical health and mortality risks following a diagnosis of first-episode psychosis.
Financing pandemic prevention, preparedness and response: lessons learned and perspectives for future
Ndembi N, Dereje N, Nonvignon J, Aragaw M, Raji T, Fallah MP, Abdulaziz M, Djoudalbaye B, Aluso A, Boum Ii Y, Mwaba G, Shisana O, Ngongo N and Kaseya J
The attainment of global health security goals and universal health coverage will remain a mirage unless African health systems are adequately funded to improve resilience to public health emergencies. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed the global inequity in accessing medical countermeasures, leaving African countries far behind. As we anticipate the next pandemic, improving investments in health systems to adequately finance pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response (PPPR) promptly, ensuring equity and access to medical countermeasures, is crucial. In this article, we analyze the African and global pandemic financing initiatives and put ways forward for policymakers and the global health community to consider.
A replication and extension of adverse and benevolent childhood experiences along with contemporaneous social support and sociodemographic stress for perinatal mental health problems
Merrick JS and Narayan AJ
This study replicated and extended Narayan and colleagues' (2018) original benevolent childhood experiences (BCEs) study. We examined associations between adverse and positive childhood experiences and mental health problems in a second sample of low-income, ethnically diverse pregnant individuals (replication). We also examined effects of childhood experiences on perinatal mental health problems while accounting for contemporaneous support and stress (extension). Participants were 175 pregnant individuals ( = 28.07 years, SD = 5.68, range = 18-40; 38.9% White, 25.7% Latina, 16.6% Black, 12.0% biracial/multiracial, 6.8% other) who completed standardized instruments on BCEs, childhood maltreatment and exposure to family dysfunction, sociodemographic stress, and perinatal depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms. They completed the Five-Minute Speech Sample at pregnancy and postpartum to assess social support from the other biological parent. Higher family dysfunction predicted higher prenatal depression symptoms, while higher BCEs and prenatal social support predicted lower prenatal PTSD symptoms. Prenatal depression and prenatal PTSD symptoms were the most robust predictors of postnatal depression and PTSD symptoms, respectively, although higher postnatal social support also predicted lower postnatal PTSD symptoms. Findings replicated many patterns found in the original BCEs study and indicated that contemporaneous experiences are also associated with perinatal mental health problems.
A preliminary randomized controlled study of the PEERS® program for Taiwanese autistic adolescents: The effectiveness on reducing school bullying and enhancing social function
Hsiao MN, Chien YL, Tai YM, Chen HM, Shih HH, Chen LW, Chen YY, Soong WT, Chiu YN, Tsai WC, Laugeson E, Tseng MH and Gau SS
Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) often experience lifelong social communication challenges and are more vulnerable to school bullying. Addressing their social difficulties and school bullying requires evidence-based interventions. PEERS® (Program for the Education and Enrichment of Relational Skills) was adapted and translated for Taiwanese adolescents. This randomized controlled study aimed to examine the effectiveness of the Taiwanese version of PEERS® in reducing school bullying and enhancing social function among autistic adolescents. Twenty-one autistic adolescents (mean age 14.29 ± 1.67 years; female n = 733.33%) were randomized to a treatment group (TG, n = 10) or a delayed treatment control group (DTG, n = 11). The outcome measures (school bullying, social challenges, social skills knowledge, and social skills performance) were assessed at baseline, post-treatment, and follow-up. The group and time interaction analyses revealed greater magnitudes of reduction in general school bullying (p < 0.001), victimization (p < 0.001), perpetration (p = 0.012), social challenges (p = 0.001), and peer conflicts (p < 0.001), and improvement in social knowledge (p < 0.001) in the TG group than the DTG group. The findings suggest that the PEERS® program tailored for Taiwanese adolescents is effective in reducing school bullying, decreasing social challenges, and enhancing social skills among autistic adolescents, with very large effect sizes (Cohen's d ranging from 1.19 to 2.88). Consequently, participation in the PEERS® program is recommended for adolescents with social difficulties to improve their social communication and interactions to offset school bullying and other social challenges related to adverse outcomes.
Social and Quality of Life Impact of Refractive Surgery in Children with Developmental Disorders and Spectacle Non-Adherence
Strelnikov J, Zdonczyk A, Pruett JR, Culican S, Tychsen L, Gordon M, Marrus N, Todorov A and Reynolds M
Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and intellectual disability (ID) often cannot tolerate wearing spectacles or contact lenses, which are the standard of care for treating ametropia.. We aimed to assess the impact of refractive surgery on social functioning and vision-specific quality of life in this population.
An exploration of self-continuity for rural Indigenous youth: Considering the influence of community and cultural factors on perceiving oneself across time
Klassen GAH, Cole D, Klassen R, MacGillvary T, Nepinak T, Murray J, Nepinak C, Park C, Oswold S, Hoover M, Loran Y, Sutherland D and Burack JA
Research on self- and cultural continuity has contributed to our understanding of resilience processes in Indigenous communities, as connecting oneself to the past, present, and future of one's family, community, and traditional culture has been found to protect against deleterious developmental outcomes. To examine factors associated with self-continuity for Indigenous youth in the current study, Indigenous youth from six rural Ojibway and Métis communities in Treaty 2 Territory completed self-report questionnaires aimed at understanding the relationship between the concept of oneself across time and protective and risk factors at different systemic levels (family, community, culture, and colonial). The concept of oneself across time was measured by self-efficacy (global self-worth) and future orientations (optimism and sense of self in the future). The findings indicated that connectedness to caregivers, siblings, friends, neighborhoods, and culture was associated with higher self-efficacy, seeing oneself as more connected to the future, and seeing the future more positively. These findings support the notion that familial, community, and cultural connectedness are associated positive self-concepts in the present and future, which aligns with our understanding of self- and cultural continuity in Indigenous communities.
Determinants of potential HIV vaccine uptake among young sexual minoritized men 17-24 years old
John SA, Walsh JL, Doherty RM, Rine SR, O'Neil AM, Dang M and Quinn KG
Failures in prior roll-out of HIV prevention efforts have widened disparities in HIV incidence by race/ethnicity among young sexual minoritized men (YSMM). We hypothesized greater perceptions of medical mistrust would be associated with lower willingness to get an HIV vaccine, mediating the relationship between race/ethnicity and willingness to accept a future HIV vaccine.
Achieving gender equity in academic psychiatry - barriers to involvement and solutions for success
Galbally M, Kotze B, Bell C, Quadrio C, Galletly C, Herrman H, Milroy H, Curtis J, Green J, Power J, Hope J, Sevar K, Dean K, Northwood K, Lampe L, Kalucy M, Korman N, Lautenschlager N, Warren N, Chua P, Anglin R, De Alwis Seneviratne R, Loi S, Burton S, Arunogiri S and Morgan S
Women face considerable barriers in pursuing careers in academic psychiatry.
Urban resilience reduces depressive symptoms among middle-aged and elderly adults: A multidimensional analysis based on China longitudinal healthy longevity survey
Xu H, Zhang Z and Hua L
With the rapid urbanization and aging population, depression has become a severe public health issue globally, affecting millions of individuals and significantly impacting their quality of life and healthcare costs. Urban resilience refers to a city's ability to absorb, recover, and prepare for future shocks, ensuring sustainable development despite challenges. This study aims to explore the impact of urban resilience on depressive symptoms among middle-aged and elderly adults. Using data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS), we analyzed five dimensions of urban resilience: economic, social, ecological, institutional, and infrastructural resilience. The results of cox proportional hazards model indicate that high levels of urban resilience significantly reduce the risk of depressive symptoms (HR = 0.875, 95% CI: 0.832-0.920, P < 0.001). Specifically, economic resilience (HR = 0.883, 95% CI: 0.846-0.921, P < 0.001), social resilience (HR = 0.916, 95% CI: 0.876-0.958, P < 0.001), ecological resilience (HR = 0.670, 95% CI: 0.516-0.869, P = 0.003), institutional resilience (HR = 0.922, 95% CI: 0.886-0.960, P < 0.001), and infrastructural resilience (HR = 0.875, 95% CI: 0.826-0.926, P < 0.001) all show significant negative correlations with depressive symptoms. Furthermore, the mitigation of depressive symptoms risk resulting from improved urban resilience disproportionately benefits vulnerable groups and those with healthy living habits. These findings provide scientific evidence for urban planning and policy formulation, contributing to the promotion of mental health and healthy aging among middle-aged and elderly populations.
The effect of facial BOTOX injection on quality of life and happiness, a descriptive/prevalence study
Roohaninasab M, Mansouri P, Shariati B, Zeinali R, Jafari P, Dehghani A, Goodarzi A, Behrangi E, Sadeghzadeh-Bazargan A, Rashedi V and Gaeini FR
Assessing Psychosocial Risk and Resilience to Support Readiness for Gene Therapy in Sickle Cell Disease: A Consensus Statement
Hardy SJ, Crosby LE, Porter JS, Sil S, Valrie CR, Jonassaint CR, Bediako SM, Andrews C, Rivera M, Woolford T and Coleman-Cowger VH
The introduction of gene therapies into the clinical care landscape for individuals living with sickle cell disease (SCD) represents a momentous achievement with the potential to rewrite the story of the world's most prevalent heritable blood disorder. This disease, which was first described in 1910 and did not see a US Food and Drug Administration-approved therapeutic until 1998, is poised to be among the first to realize the promise of gene therapy and genome editing. However, the future of these treatments now rests on how evidence of safety, outcomes, and acceptance in clinical practice unfolds in SCD. Furthermore, historic injustices involving the exploitation of individuals from minoritized racial and ethnic groups in medical contexts necessitate extreme care in ensuring readiness among individuals with SCD considering genetic therapies.
Exploring cumulative identity-based discrimination, distress, and traumatic exposure among Muslims living in the United States
Ahmad SS, Hammad I, Rbeiz K, Ebrahimi CT, Alshabani N, McLaughlin MM, Kia-Keating M and Weisman de Mamani A
Muslims living in the United States (MLUS), a highly heterogeneous group, experience high rates of discrimination that may cumulatively contribute to traumatic stress. This study explored whether identity-based discrimination (i.e., due to religion, gender, race) was individually and cumulatively associated with psychological distress and exposure to trauma among MLUS.
Visualizing Mental Health Insights: A Pipeline from Social Media to Chernoff Faces
Nagi F, Alzubaidi M, Shah U, Shah H, Alabdulla M, Househ M and Agus M
This study proposes an approach for analyzing mental health through publicly available social media data, employing Large Language Models (LLMs) and visualization techniques to transform textual data into Chernoff Faces. The analysis began with a dataset comprising 15,744 posts sourced from major social media platforms, which was refined down to 2,621 posts through meticulous data cleaning, feature extraction, and visualization processes. Our methodology includes stages of Data Preparation, Feature Extraction, Chernoff Face Visualization, and Clinical Validation. Dimensionality reduction techniques such as PCA, t-SNE, and UMAP were employed to transform complex mental health data into comprehensible visual representations. Validation involved a survey among 60 volunteer psychiatrists, underscoring the visualizations' potential for enhancing clinical assessments. This work sets the stage for future evaluations, specifically focusing on a combined features method to further refine the visual representation of mental health conditions and to augment the diagnostic tools available to mental health professionals.
Disparities and Medical Expenditure Implications in Pediatric Tele-Mental Health Services During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Mississippi
Zhang Y, Lal LS, Lin YY, Swint JM, Zhang Y, Summers RL, Jones BF, Chandra S and Ladner ME
Tele-mental health (TMH) services, including both mental and behavioral healthcare (MBH) services, emerged as a cornerstone in delivering pediatric mental healthcare during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, yet their utilization and effects on healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) and medical expenditures remain unclear. To bridge the gap, this study aims to investigate the association between TMH utilization and sociodemographic factors and assess its associated HCRU and medical expenditures within a pediatric population in Mississippi. Studying 1,972 insured pediatric patients who accessed outpatient MBH services at the study institution between January 2020 and June 2023, age, race, insurance type, rural residency, and household income were identified as key determinants of TMH utilization. Adjusting for sociodemographics, TMH utilization was associated with 122% more MBH-associated outpatient visits and 36% higher related medical expenditures, but 27% less overall medical expenditures. This study reveals sociodemographic disparities in pediatric TMH utilization, highlights its role in augmenting outpatient mental healthcare access, and shows its potential for cost savings. Future efforts should aim at fostering more digitally inclusive, equitable, and affordable pediatric mental healthcare services.
Trajectories of behavior and social cognition in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and primary psychiatric disorders: A call for better operationalization of socioemotional changes
Fieldhouse JLP, van Engelen ME, Handgraaf D, de Boer SCM, van 't Hooft JJ, Schouws SNTM, van Grootheest D, Kerssens C, Duits FH, van Harten AC, Oudega ML, Vijverberg EGB and Pijnenburg YAL
Behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) and primary psychiatric disorders (PPD), such as mood, psychotic, and autism spectrum disorders, share similar clinical characteristics of behavior and social cognition. Better understanding of clinical progression in bvFTD and PPD is essential for adequate disease monitoring and trial design.
Trajectories of childhood bullying behaviors and conduct problems: Associations with cognitive functioning in a nationally representative cohort study
Thériault-Couture F, Agnew-Blais J, Carter Leno V, Danese A, Ganaesan K, Matthews T, Morneau-Vaillancourt G, Thompson KN, Shakoor S and Arseneault L
Bullying behaviors and conduct problems are two forms of antisocial behavior that frequently co-occur in childhood. However, it remains unclear whether their developmental trajectories are distinct and the extent to which different aspects of cognitive functioning account for their development. We aimed to disentangle the developmental trajectories of bullying behaviors and conduct problems, test their interrelations across childhood, and assess associations with children's early cognitive functioning (executive functions, intelligent quotient [IQ], and theory of mind). Participants included 2,232 children from the Environmental Risk (E-Risk) Longitudinal Twin Study. We performed dual group-based trajectory modeling on combined parent and teacher reports of children's bullying behaviors and conduct problems at 5, 7, 10, and 12 years. We assessed associations with age 5 cognitive functioning using regression analyses. We identified five developmental trajectories for bullying behaviors and four for conduct problems. The developmental course of both behaviors was interrelated most strongly among those with high levels. A subgroup of children was likely to transition from conduct problems to bullying behaviors as they got older. Lower IQ was associated with both antisocial behavior trajectories, whereas lower theory of mind was only associated with conduct problems trajectories. The developmental course of bullying behaviors and conduct problems is distinct but linked across childhood. Interventions targeting bullying behaviors or conduct problems could benefit from more integration and should take into account children's cognitive functioning. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
Partnerships with primary care providers: Opportunities to prevent eating disorders and mitigate their progression in young people
Hooper L, Lebow J, Gewirtz O'Brien JR, Puhl RM and Neumark-Sztainer D
Epidemiologic research has identified numerous interpersonal and individual risk factors for and warning signs of emerging eating disorders in adolescents. These findings have informed public health prevention and treatment strategies, including translation of findings to clinical recommendations for primary care providers (PCPs). A next step in this translational work could include a comprehensive approach where PCPs are seen as partners in efforts to improve population health outcomes. PCPs have great potential to implement high-yield interventions that prevent or attenuate the course of adolescent eating disorders. To illustrate this potential, we present a case that highlights missed opportunities for a PCP to prevent, detect, and intervene during a patient's developing eating disorder. We then relate the case to two emerging research programs that utilize PCP partnerships: one trains PCPs in Strengths-Based Adolescent Healthcare to improve eating disorder prevention; the other adapts Family-Based Treatment for primary care to improve early access to evidence-based treatment. In addition to these promising areas of research, efforts are needed to widen requirements for eating disorder curricula in medical training programs and to address weight stigma in primary care. Together these efforts will help PCPs become effective partners in the prevention and treatment of eating disorders.
Development and psychometric evaluation of a new domain-specific coparenting measure: Coparenting Children's Emotion Scale
Ambrosi CC, Kavanagh PS, Evans S and Havighurst SS
Caregivers play an integral role in supporting children's development, not only through their individual parenting practices but also how they work together as coparents. The literature on coparenting is extensive; however, most of the research has relied on global measures to assess the quality and functioning of the coparenting relationship. Examining the coparenting relationship with domain-specific measures enables a deeper understanding of this complex family process. One domain of particular interest is emotion socialization given the vast and long-term consequences emotion socialization has on children's emotional, social, behavioral, and psychological functioning. Emotion socialization literature would benefit from a domain-specific coparenting measure, as researchers have rarely explored how coparents work together when responding to their children's emotions (i.e., coparenting children's emotions). As such, an emotion-focused coparenting measure could address gaps in both coparenting and emotion socialization literature. This study outlines the development and psychometric evaluation of a domain-specific measure of coparenting, the Coparenting Children's Emotion Scale (CCES), which assesses how parents work together when responding to their children's emotions. In the current study, the factor structure, reliability, and validity of the CCES were examined in an Australian sample. Findings from exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses showed that the CCES comprises two subscales that capture coparents' levels of support/cooperation and undermining. In the current sample, both CCES subscales demonstrated good to excellent internal consistency, and good convergent and concurrent validity. The CCES will provide researchers and practitioners with a domain-specific measure to use in exploratory and intervention research.
Later Life Food Insecurity and Social Isolation in Ghana: The Importance of Psychological Factors
Gyasi RM, Phillips DR, Aikins E, Peltzer K, Accam BT, Frempong F, Dwumah P, Koomson-Yalley ENM, Asiedu HB, Abass K and Hajek A
Social isolation (SI) and food insecurity (FI) are important social determinants of health that can negatively impact well-being in old age. While research on the association between FI and SI is limited in LMICs, the mediators of this association are largely unknown. This cross-sectional study examined whether FI is associated with SI among older adults in Ghana and whether psychological factors (i.e., depression, anxiety, and sleep problems) mediated the association.
Examining community-level protection from Alaska Native suicide: An Indigenous knowledge-informed extension of the legacy of Michael Chandler and Christopher Lalonde
Rasmus S, Wexler L, White L and Allen J
Chandler and Lalonde broadened the scope of inquiry in suicide research by providing theoretical grounding and empirical support for the role of community, culture, and history in understanding Indigenous youth suicide and reimagining its prevention. Their work pushed the field to consider the intersectional process of individual and collective meaning-making in prevention of Indigenous suicide, together with the central role culture plays in bringing coherence to this process over time. Their innovation shifted the research focus to include the shared histories, contexts, and structures of meaning that shape individual lives and behaviors. We describe here a new generation of research extending their pathbreaking line of inquiry. Recent work aims to identify complex associations between community-level structures and suicidal behavior by collaborating with Alaska Native people from rural communities to describe how community protective factors function as preventative resources in their daily lives. Community engagement and knowledge co-production created a measure of community protection from suicide. Structured interviews with rural Alaska Native community members allowed use of this measure to produce relevant, accessible, and actionable knowledge. Ongoing investigations next seek to describe their mechanisms in shaping young people's lives through a multilevel, mixed-methods community-based study linking community-level protection to protection and well-being of individual youth. These efforts to understand the multiple culture-specific and culturally mediated pathways by which communities build on their strengths, resources, and practices to support Indigenous young people's development and reduce suicide risk are inspired by and expand on Chandler and Lalonde's remarkable legacy.
Strategies to Advance Stroke Care in Women: An International Conversation
Khedr EM, Al-Attar G, Rosales J, Sampaio Silva G, Sebastian IA, Orjuela KD and de Souza AC
Prevalence of Common Child Mental Health Disorders Using Administrative Health Data and Parent Report in a Prospective Community-Based Cohort from Alberta, Canada: Prévalence des troubles communs de santé mentale de l'enfant à l'aide des données de santé administratives et des rapports des parents dans une cohorte prospective communautaire d'Alberta, Canada
Racine N, Pitt T, Premji S, McDonald SW, Patten SB, Tough S and Madigan S
Knowing the prevalence of mental health difficulties in young children is critical for early identification and intervention. In the current study, we examine the agreement among three different data sources estimating the prevalence of diagnoses for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and emotional disorders (i.e., anxiety or mood disorder) for children between birth and 9 years of age.
Process evaluation of a New psychosocial goal-setting and manualised support intervention for Independence in Dementia (NIDUS-Family)
Wyman D, Butler LT, Morgan-Trimmer S, Bright P, Barber J, Budgett J, Walters K, Lang I, Rapaport P, Banks S, Palomo M, Orgeta V, Livingston G, Rockwood K, Lord K, Manthorpe J, Dow B, Hoe J and Cooper C
We report a mixed-methods process evaluation embedded within a randomised controlled trial. We aimed to test and refine a theory of change model hypothesising key causal assumptions to understand how the New Interventions for Independence in Dementia Study (NIDUS)-Family (a manualised, multimodal psychosocial intervention), was effective relative to usual care, on the primary outcome of Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) over 1 year.
Fair and Safe Eligibility Criteria for Women's Sport
Tucker R, Hilton EN, McGawley K, Pollock N, Millet GP, Sandbakk Ø, Howatson G, Brown GA, Carlson LA, Chen MA, Heron N, Kirk C, Murphy MH, Pringle J, Richardson A, Santos-Concejero J, Christiansen AV, Jones C, Alonso JM, Robinson R, Jones N, Wilson M, Parker MG, Chintoh A, Hunter S, Senefeld JW, O'Connor MI, Joyner M, Carneiro EM, Devine C, Pike J and Lundberg TR
Different patterns of persistent somatic symptoms after COVID-19 reported by the Dutch media and the general population
Ballering AV, Plug I, van Zon SKR, Olde Hartman T, Das E and Rosmalen J
Post COVID-19 condition is characterized by persistent symptoms after COVID-19 with yet unknown etiology. To explore whether media-related nocebo effects potentially contribute to post COVID-19 condition, we studied in an observational cohort whether frequencies of media coverage of symptoms after COVID-19 corresponded with prevalence rates of these symptoms in participants from a general population cohort diagnosed with COVID-19.
Psychometric evaluation of the affiliate stigma scale for caregivers of people with mental illness in Uganda
Favina A, Munaru G, Muwanguzi M, Rubega A, Lutasingwa D, Maling S and Ashaba S
Affiliate stigma is common among caregivers of people with mental illness and impacts negatively on the caregivers' quality of life and their ability to care for the patients. Although there is evidence of affiliate stigma in sub-Saharan Africa, the psychometric properties of commonly used tools are not available in the African context. The aim of this analysis was to evaluate the factor structure of the affiliate stigma scale among caregivers of people with mental illness in southwestern Uganda. Having a validated method to assess affiliate stigma in the Ugandan setting helps to appropriately evaluate affiliate stigma among caregivers of people with mental illnesses, which could inform the development of interventions to support such caregivers.
Impact of pandemics on primary care: changes in general practitioner antidepressant prescriptions and mental health referrals during lockdowns in England, UK
Fu Y, Tang EYH and Yu G
In recent times, the world has witnessed unprecedented challenges, with the COVID-19 pandemic being a major disruptor to various aspects of daily life. This article delves into the profound impact of pandemics on primary care, specifically focussing on changes in antidepressant prescriptions and mental health referrals before, during, and after lockdowns in England, UK.
Breaking the silence: leveraging social interaction data to identify high-risk suicide users online using network analysis and machine learning
Lekkas D and Jacobson NC
Suicidal thought and behavior (STB) is highly stigmatized and taboo. Prone to censorship, yet pervasive online, STB risk detection may be improved through development of uniquely insightful digital markers. Focusing on Sanctioned Suicide, an online pro-choice suicide forum, this work derived 17 egocentric network features to capture dynamics of social interaction and engagement within this uniquely uncensored community. Using network data generated from over 3.2 million unique interactions of N = 192 individuals, n = 48 of which were determined to be highest risk users (HRUs), a machine learning classification model was trained, validated, and tested to predict HRU status. Model prediction dynamics were analyzed using introspection techniques to uncover patterns in feature influence and highlight social phenomena. The model achieved a test AUC = 0.73 ([0.61, 0.85], 95% CI), suggesting that network-based socio-behavioral patterns of online interaction can signal for heightened suicide risk. Transitivity, density, and in-degree centrality were among the most important features driving this performance. Moreover, predicted HRUs tended to be targets of social exchanges with lesser frequency and possessed egocentric networks with "small world" network properties. Through the implementation of an underutilized method on an unlikely data source, findings support future incorporation of network-based social interaction features in descriptive, predictive, and preventative STB research.
Why some homeless individuals are unsheltered: A narrative review of self-reported reasons
Tsai J, Haley G and Kinney RL
The rising rate of unsheltered homelessness is a troubling and important public health issue. This narrative review sought to answer the question: What are the reasons that homeless individuals report for being unsheltered? To identify studies, systematic search methods were applied to PubMed, Google Scholar, and PsycINFO databases using the following eligibility criteria: English-written, peer-reviewed studies published from 2000 to 2023 that reported qualitative or quantitative data related to reasons why homeless individuals in a Western country were unsheltered. After duplicates were removed, 14,690 studies were screened and filtered to 10 final studies that fit all eligibility criteria and were included in the review. Eight of the 10 studies reported qualitative data from interviews and focus groups; the two quantitative studies reported data from interviewer-administered surveys. Across studies, eight thematic categories were identified as barriers to staying in shelters or other sheltered locations: lack of safety, triggers for substance use, strict shelter rules, triggers for substance use, perceived inadequate care, unsanitary conditions, required treatment to participate in housing program, no pet or family accommodations, and lack of accessibility for individuals with disabilities. Together, these findings indicate the delicate balance needed in homeless shelters to have both an inclusive/permissive and structured/safe environment for homeless individuals. Attention to the design and operation of homeless shelters, as well as staff training and accommodation for clients with special needs may improve some of these issues.
Neural correlates of proactive avoidance deficits and alcohol use motives in problem drinking
Le TM, Oba T, Couch L, McInerney L and Li CR
Physical pain and negative emotions represent two distinct drinking motives that contribute to harmful alcohol use. Proactive avoidance, in contrast, can reduce consumption in response to these motives but appears to be impaired in those with problem drinking. Despite such evidence, proactive avoidance and its underlying neural deficits have not been assessed experimentally. How these deficits inter-relate with drinking motives to influence alcohol use also remains unclear. The current study leveraged neuroimaging data in forty-one problem and forty-one social drinkers who performed a probabilistic learning go/nogo task featuring proactive avoidance of painful outcomes. We identified the brain responses to proactive avoidance and contrasted the neural correlates of drinking to avoid negative emotions vs. physical pain. Behavioral results confirmed proactive avoidance deficits in problem drinking individuals' learning rate and performance accuracy, both which were associated with greater alcohol use. Imaging findings in the problem drinking group showed that negative emotions as a drinking motive predicted attenuated right anterior insula activation during proactive avoidance. In contrast, physical pain motive predicted reduced right putamen response. These regions' activations as well as functional connectivity with the somatomotor cortex also demonstrated a negative relationship with drinking severity and positive relationship with proactive avoidance performance. Path modeling further delineated the pathways through which physical pain and negative emotions influenced the neural and behavioral measures of proactive avoidance. Taken together, the current findings provide experimental evidence for proactive avoidance deficits in alcohol misuse and establish the link between their neural underpinnings and drinking behavior.
Efficacy and acceptability of long-acting antipsychotics in acutely ill individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders: A systematic review and network meta-analysis
Vita G, Pollini D, Canozzi A, Papola D, Gastaldon C, Correll CU, Barbui C and Ostuzzi G
To assess the effect of Long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotics in acutely ill patients, we systematically searched major databases for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing LAIs with other LAIs, oral antipsychotics, or placebo in acutely symptomatic adults with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. Data were analyzed with a random-effects network meta-analysis. Co-primary outcomes were efficacy (mean change in psychopathology rating scales) and acceptability (all-cause discontinuations) at study endpoint. Of 25 RCTs, 19 studies tested second-generation LAIs (SGA-LAIs) and six first-generation LAIs (FGA-LAIs). Due to a disconnected network, FGA-LAIs were analyzed separately, with poor data quality. The SGA-LAIs network included 8,418 individuals (males=63%, mean age=39.3 years). All SGA-LAIs outperformed placebo in reducing acute symptoms at study endpoint (median follow-up=13 weeks). They were more acceptable than placebo with the only exception of olanzapine, for which no differences with placebo emerged. Additionally, we distinguished between different LAI formulations of the same antipsychotic to explore potential pharmacokinetic differences. Most formulations outperformed placebo in the very short-term (2 weeks or less), regardless of the need for initial oral supplementation. SGA-LAIs are evidence-based treatments in acutely ill individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. Findings support the use of SGA-LAIs to manage psychopathology and improve adherence right from the acute phases of illness.
Specificity of Episodic Future Thinking in Adolescents: Comparing Childhood Maltreatment, Autism Spectrum, and Typical Development
Lau-Zhu A, Chan C, Gibson D, Stark E, Wang J, Happé F, Stacey J and Cooper M
Maltreatment and autism can be associated with overlapping difficulties across functional domains (e.g., social, emotional, and sensory) and high rates of mental health problems. A cognitive approach focussing on affect-laden cognition, here on episodic future thinking (FT), could help inform cognitive assessments and adapt psychological interventions. Three groups of adolescents (N = 85), (i) maltreatment (n = 28), (ii) autism (n = 29), and (iii) typical development without maltreatment/autism (TD; n = 28), matched in age (10-16 years old), sex (assigned at birth), and socioeconomic status, completed a newly adapted online Autobiographical Future Thinking Test. As predicted, the maltreatment group generated significantly fewer specific future events relative to the TD group, however, the number of specific future events did not significantly differ between the autism and the other groups. Exploratory analyses showed that lower FT specificity was significantly associated with more depressive (but not anxiety) symptoms across the three groups. These findings shed light on the cognitive profiles of both maltreatment and autism during adolescence and signal FT as a potential therapeutic target for adolescents with these developmental differences. Our study lays the foundation for additional comparisons of maltreatment-related presentations versus autism with improved designs and a broader set of cognitive and clinical domains.
Prevalence of work hour alcohol use and associated factors among psychiatrists in China
Jiang L, McCord E, Liu H, Liu Y, Jiang F and Tang YL
Since 2012, work-hour alcohol use (WHAU) has been prohibited in China. However, there is a lack of national data on WHAU among healthcare workers, including psychiatrists.
Psychedelic public health: State of the field and implications for equity
Kuiper H, Alley C, Harris Z, Kuiper Rauch C, Robbins M, Rodriguez P, Tomczak P, Urrutia J and Magar V
Psychedelic Public Health is an emerging discipline uniting the practices of public health with the potential benefits of psychedelics to reduce harm and promote health, wellness, and equity at community and population levels. Little is known regarding the current state of psychedelic public health despite rising psychedelic usage, evidence of its health efficacy, opening policy environments, and concerns regarding equity and potential harms.
Development and psychometric evaluation of the epilepsy lifestyle questionnaire
Nadernejad M, Shamsalinia A, Ghadimi R, Saadat P, Ahmadi Ahangar A, Gharagozli K and Ghaffari F
Epilepsy, particularly in older people, is associated with significant changes in physical activities, social and occupational functions, and diet. It is associated with significant changes in physical activities, social and occupational functions, and diet. Valid and reliable instruments are needed to assess these changes. This study aimed to develop and validate a questionnaire to assess lifestyle in older people with epilepsy, named the Epilepsy Lifestyle Questionnaire (ELQ). This methodological study was conducted in 2022. The primary ELQ items were generated through reviewing the literature. Then, its face, content, construct, convergent, and discriminant validity, internal consistency, and test-retest stability were evaluated. Older patients aged ≥ 60 years were recruited from the Iranian Epilepsy Association to assess construct validity using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Data were analyzed using the SPSS (v. 26.0), AMOS (v. 24.0), and JASP software. The primary ELQ had 99 items with five subscales, namely health-oriented self-care, risk-averse behavior, emotional and psychosocial adaptation, epilepsy stigma, and intimacy and sexual behaviors. Sixty five items were deleted during psychometric evaluation. CFA showed the good fitting of the five-factor structure of the 34-item ELEQ (PCFI = 0.741, PNFI = 0.693, CMIN/DF = 0.073, IFI = 0.917, CFI = 0.916, AND GFI = 0.902). The values of internal consistency based on Cronbach's alpha and test-retest reliability based on intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of ELQ were 0.89 and 0.95, respectively. The ELQ is a valid and reliable self-report instrument. The results suggest that the ELQ is a useful clinical tool for assessing the lifestyle of patients with epilepsy.
The need for smoking cessation counselling and nicotine withdrawal therapy for hospitalised patients: A smoking point prevalence study at Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa
Soin G, Kok J, Allie A, Bhawoodien Q, Dheda K, Geragotellis A, Mulisa K, Sibi A, Tarwa T, Leone F and van Zyl-Smit RN
South Africa has high tobacco-attributable mortality and a smoking prevalence of 32.5% in males and 25.6% in females. There are limited data on smoking prevalence and desire to quit in hospitalised patients, who have limited access to smoking cessation services.
Status and trends of TMS research in depressive disorder: a bibliometric and visual analysis
Yang J, Tang T, Gui Q, Zhang K, Zhang A, Wang T, Yang C, Liu X and Sun N
Depression is a chronic psychiatric condition that places significant burdens on individuals, families, and societies. The rapid evolution of non-invasive brain stimulation techniques has facilitated the extensive clinical use of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) for depression treatment. In light of the substantial recent increase in related research, this study aims to employ bibliometric methods to systematically review the global research status and trends of TMS in depression, providing a reference and guiding future studies in this field.
Risk factors and strategies for relapse prevention among individuals living with serious mental illness in South Africa: Qualitative inquiry from patients' and caregivers' perspectives
Mlay JP, Naidu T, Ramlall S, Mhlungu SS, Zondi M, Lessells R, Manuel JI and Tomita A
Relapse among individuals with serious mental illnesses in resource-limited contexts, including South Africa, is a significant concern. To date, the risks for relapse among this population is well documented, but little is known about prevention strategies to reduce its occurrence in these resource-limited settings. Therefore, this qualitative study explores the risk factors and strategies for relapse prevention from the patients' and caregivers' perspectives.
Supervised Group-Based Exercise for Preventing Falls Among Older Adults in the Community: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Zhou J, Yu M, Zheng Y and Zhou X
Supervised group exercise may have greater health benefits than no exercise or exercise alone.
Digital access among a national sample of currently and formerly homeless veterans in 2022
Tsai J, Lampros A and Blue-Howells J
Digital technologies are essential for connecting to the Internet and communicating with others. This study used data from the 2022 Project Community Homelessness Assessment, Local Education and Networking Groups (CHALENG) survey, which surveyed a national sample of 1992 homeless-experienced veterans (HEV) about use of cell phones, smart phones, computers, laptops, and the Internet. Data were analyzed to compare currently and formerly homeless veterans on digital access and to identify characteristics associated with never using the Internet. Over 75% of HEV reported having a cellphone and over 65% reported having a smartphone. Internet use was common among HEV as 74% of currently homeless veterans and 77% of formerly homeless veterans reported using the Internet. Among HEV who used the Internet, over 70% used the Internet at least weekly. There was no significant difference between currently and formerly homeless veterans on their Internet use in the total sample and subsamples of only black and only Hispanic veterans. Overall, HEV who were older, black non-Hispanic, and living in the Southeast were more likely to never use the Internet. These findings highlight the potential for technology-based interventions among HEV, and suggest a digital divide based on age, race, and geography.
Long-term effects of an alcohol prevention program at licensed premises: a Swedish 20-year follow-up study
Elgán TH, Andréasson S and Gripenberg J
In 1996, a multicomponent community-based alcohol prevention program in Responsible Beverage Service (RBS) targeting licensed premises was developed by STAD (Stockholm Prevents Alcohol and Drug Problems) and implemented in Stockholm, Sweden. The program consists of community mobilization and collaboration, training, and enforcement. Early evaluations have shown a significant increase in the refusal rates of alcohol service to intoxicated patrons, from 5% in 1996 to 70% in 2001, and a 29% decrease in the frequency of police-reported violence. A cost-effectiveness analysis showed a cost-saving ratio of 1:39. The program was institutionalized by a collaborative steering group consisting of community stakeholders. This study aimed to evaluate the long-term effects over 20 years of the RBS program. The indicator chosen was the rate of alcohol overserving to obviously intoxicated patrons at licensed premises in Stockholm.
Sleep disturbances and psychological well-being among military medical doctors of the Swiss Armed Forces: study protocol, rationale and development of a cross-sectional and longitudinal interventional study
Sadeghi-Bahmani D, Rigotti V, Stanga Z, Lang UE, Blais RK, Kelley ML and Brand S
Compared to civilians and non-medical personnel, military medical doctors are at increased risk for sleep disturbances and impaired psychological well-being. Despite their responsibility and workload, no research has examined sleep disturbances and psychological well-being among the medical doctors (MDs) of the Swiss Armed Forces (SAF). Thus, the aims of the proposed study are (1) to conduct a cross-sectional study (labeled 'Survey-Study 1') of sleep disturbances and psychological well-being among MDs of the SAF; (2) to identify MDs who report sleep disturbances (insomnia severity index >8), along with low psychological well-being such as symptoms of depression, anxiety and stress, but also emotion regulation, concentration, social life, strengths and difficulties, and mental toughness both in the private/professional and military context and (3) to offer those MDs with sleep disturbances an evidence-based and standardized online interventional group program of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (eCBTi) over a time lapse of 6 weeks (labeled 'Intervention-Study 2').
The role of community resilience as a protective factor in coping with mental disorders in a sample of psychiatric migrants
Olcese M, Madera F, Cardinali P, Serafini G and Migliorini L
Over the past decade migration to Italy has increased significantly for various reasons including armed conflicts. Generally, the migration process is exposed to different risk factors during different periods of migration, which can compromise well-being and promote the onset or exacerbation of mental disorders. A community with resources and the perception of one's community as resilient can be important protective factor in the context of migration.
Prison healthcare service use and associated factors: a cross sectional study in Northwestern Ethiopia
Yesuf YM, Birhan AA, Birara AG, Adimas BD, Bezabh AB and Agmase NG
Studies on inmates' Health Care Service (HCS) utilization are scarce globally, infrequent in Ethiopia while findings about the factors associated with HCS utilization are inconsistent. The present study, therefore, examined inmates' HCS utilization and associated socio-demographic and imprisonment related factors in Northwestern Ethiopia.
Human reasoning on social interactions in ecological contexts: insights from the theory of mind brain circuits
Isernia S, Pirastru A, Rossetto F, Cacciatore DM, Cazzoli M, Blasi V, Baksh RA, MacPherson SE and Baglio F
The relationship between neural social cognition patterns and performance on social cognition tasks in daily life is a topic of debate, with key consideration given to the extent to which theory of mind (ToM) brain circuits share properties reflecting everyday social functioning. To test the efficacy of ecological stimuli in eliciting brain activation within the ToM brain circuits, we adapted the Edinburgh Social Cognition test social scenarios, consisting of dynamic ecological contextually embedded social stimuli, to a fMRI paradigm.
Can cognitive behavioral therapy improve vasomotor symptoms and recurrent depression in postmenopausal women?
Tamashiro LAD, Soares-Jr JM, Renno J, Turri JAO, Linhares IM, Baracat EC and Mello NR
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy in the treatment of vasomotor, sexual dysfunction, and recurrent depression in postmenopausal women.
Adolescents' Perceptions of Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment Service at Pediatric Trauma Centers
Mello MJ, Baird J, Spirito A, Scott K, Zonfrillo MR, Lee LK, Kiragu A, Christison-Lagay E, Bromberg J, Ruest S, Pruitt C, Lawson KA, Nasr IW, Aidlen JT, Maxson RT and Becker S
Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) for adolescent alcohol and drug (AOD) use is recommended to occur with adolescents admitted to pediatric trauma centers. Most metrics on SBIRT service delivery only reference medical record documentation. In this analysis we examined changes in adolescents' perception of SBIRT services and concordance of adolescent-report and medical record data, among a sample of adolescents admitted before and after institutional SBIRT implementation.
Self-prescription with psychotropic medications by healthcare professionals working at mental health institutions in Saudi Arabia
Albawardi IM, Abdullah LAA, Alzouri FS, Aldar HM, Al-Shiban MA, AlBakr DM, AlMusailhi JA, AlSaidan SM and Sonbaa AM
Healthcare professionals who work in mental health institutions are more exposed to psychotropic medications than those in other healthcare institutions and are, therefore, more likely to self-prescribe. Self-prescription is a concerning phenomenon because of the potential for medication misuse, drug interaction, addiction, and other social, physical, and psychological consequences. This study investigated the prevalence of self-prescription of psychotropic medications and the most common self-prescribed psychotropic medications by healthcare professionals in mental health institutions in Saudi Arabia. It also aimed to determine the possible side effects and factors associated with self-prescription of psychotropic medications.
The effectiveness of a mental health, parenting support, and violence prevention program for families affected by the war in Ukraine: Findings from a pre-post study
Hillis S, Tucker S, Baldonado N, Taradaika E, Bryn L, Kharchenko S, Machabelii T, Taylor R, Green P, Goldman P, Awah I, Baldonado J, Gomez P, Flaxman S, Ratmann O, Lachman JM, Villaveces A, Sherr L and Cluver L
Nearly one in six children lived in war zones in 2023. Evidence-based psychosocial and parenting support has potential to mitigate negative impacts for parents and children co-exposed to war and displacement, especially in relation to mental health and harsh parenting reactions. In the current war in Ukraine, local mental health experts co-created and evaluated, with global experts, the effectiveness of psychosocial and parenting support groups, called on improvements in mental health, positive parenting, and violence against children. This paper aimed to assess the effectiveness of psychosocial and parenting support groups, called 'Hope Groups,' on improvements in caregiver mental health, positive parenting, and prevention of violence against children, for families affected by the war in Ukraine, using a pre/post study design.
Impulsiveness, suicide, and aggression in a sample of patients with disorders of methyl amphetamine use
Ali MI, Rashad MM, Alzain NM, Al-Awad FA, Alzaharani MA, Alshamarani AS, Almuqahwi MS and Afifi SY
Research has showed a link between patients with methamphetamine dependence and the risk of impulsiveness, aggression, and the risk of suicide. But, this link has not been studied in patients abusing methamphetamine, and it is unknown how impulsiveness, aggression, and the risk of suicide affect them.
The Fully Understanding Eating and Lifestyle Behaviors (FUEL) trial: Protocol for a cohort study harnessing digital health tools to phenotype dietary non-adherence behaviors during lifestyle intervention
Goldstein SP, Mwenda KM, Hoover AW, Shenkle O, Jones RN and Thomas JG
Lifestyle intervention can produce clinically significant weight loss and reduced disease risk/severity for many individuals with overweight/obesity. Dietary lapses, instances of non-adherence to the recommended dietary goal(s) in lifestyle intervention, are associated with less weight loss and higher energy intake. There are distinct "types" of dietary lapse (e.g., eating an off-plan food, eating a larger portion), and behavioral, psychosocial, and contextual mechanisms may differ across dietary lapse types. Some lapse types also appear to impact weight more than others. Elucidating clear lapse types thus has potential for understanding and improving adherence to lifestyle intervention.
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Psychiatry AI RAISR 4D System Psychiatry + Mental Health