keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38664696/comparative-analysis-of-village-doctors-relative-deprivation-based-on-two-cross-sectional-surveys
#41
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Qiusha Li, Zixuan Zhao, Chunxiao Yang, Bei Lu, Chenxiao Yang, Jiahui Qiao, Dongmei Huang, Zhongming Chen, Wenqiang Yin
BACKGROUND: Village doctors are the main health service providers in China's rural areas. Compared with other rural groups, they will have a sense of relative deprivation, which has an impact on their practice mentality and job stability. This study aims to analyze the changes and causes of relative deprivation among village doctors, so as to improve the stability of them. METHODS: The data were collected from two surveys conducted in Shandong Province in 2015 and 2021...
April 25, 2024: BMC Prim Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38664620/effects-on-physical-activity-physical-fitness-and-well-being-in-a-36-months-randomized-controlled-study-comparing-a-multimodal-hospital-based-intervention-programme-for-primary-cardiovascular-prevention-with-usual-care
#42
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Hilde Bergum, Jostein Grimsmo, Sigmund Alfred Anderssen, Tor Ole Klemsdal
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular disease is a major cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide, and primary prevention efforts are poorly developed in people at high cardiovascular risk. On this background, we performed the Hjerteløftet Study and demonstrated that participation over 36 months in a multimodal primary prevention programme, significantly reduced validated cardiovascular risk scores. In the current substudy we aimed to further explore several elements and effects following the intervention programme...
April 25, 2024: BMC Cardiovascular Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38664066/gender-and-autism-program-a-novel-clinical-service-model-for-gender-diverse-transgender-autistic-youth-and-young-adults
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John F Strang, Abigail L Fischbach, Sharanya Rao, Ann Clawson, Megan Knauss, Sarah N Bernstein, Anna I R van der Miesen, Anne P Inge, Kenia Alonzo, Julia Zeroth, Lauren Kenworthy, Colleen I Morgan, Abigail Brandt, Christina C Moore, Kaitlyn Ahlers, Mary K Jankowski, Lucy S McClellan, Shane B Henise, Caitlyn J Cap, Shannon L Exley, Amy Youmatz, Minneh Song, Jennifer L McLaren, Benjamin Parchem
Objective: Situated in Children's National Hospital (CNH)'s Neuropsychology Division, the Gender and Autism Program (GAP) is the first clinical service dedicated to the needs of autistic gender-diverse/transgender youth. This study describes GAP clinical assessment profiles and presents a multi-perspective programmatic review of GAP evaluation services. Method: Seventy-five consecutive gender- and neuropsychologically-informed GAP evaluations were analyzed, including demographics, gender and autism characterization, and primary domains evaluated...
April 25, 2024: Clinical Neuropsychologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38663983/a-mixed-methods-evaluation-of-patients-views-on-primary-care-multi-disciplinary-teams-in-scotland
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kieran D Sweeney, Eddie Donaghy, David Henderson, Harry Hx Wang, Andrew Thompson, Bruce Guthrie, Stewart W Mercer
BACKGROUND: Expanding primary care multi-disciplinary teams (MDTs) was a key component of the 2018 Scottish GP contract, with over 4,700 MDT staff appointed since then. AIM: To explore patients' views on primary care MDT expansion in Scotland. DESIGN AND METHODS: (1) Survey of patients recently consulting a GP in deprived-urban, affluent-urban and remote/rural areas, assessing awareness of five MDT roles and attitudes towards receptionist signposting; (2) 30 individual interviews exploring MDT-care experiences...
April 25, 2024: BJGP Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38663043/transcranial-direct-current-stimulation-tdcs-for-neurological-disability-among-subacute-stroke-survivors-to-improve-multiple-domains-in-health-related-quality-of-life-randomized-controlled-trial-protocol
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vandana Esht, Mohammed M Alshehri, Karthick Balasubramanian, Ramya R Sanjeevi, Mohammed A Shaphe, Ahmed Alhowimel, Aqeel M Alenazi, Bader A Alqahtani, Norah Alhwoaimel
OBJECTIVES: The primary goal of the current proposal is to fill the gaps in the literature by studying the effectiveness of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on lifestyle parameters, and physical, behavioral, and cognitive functions among stroke survivors, and understanding the factors that mediate the effects of various domains related to Health-related Quality of life (HRQoL) improvements. METHODS: Anticipated 64 volunteer subacute stroke survivors (>7 days to 3 months post stroke) aged 40-75 years with National Institutes of Health stroke scale (NIHSS) score of >10 and Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score between 18 and 23 will be randomly assigned at a ratio of 1:1 to receive either: (1) 20 sessions of anodal tDCS or (2) sham tDCS in addition to conventional rehabilitation...
April 24, 2024: Clinical Neurophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38663011/remote-short-sessions-of-heart-rate-variability-biofeedback-monitored-with-wearable-technology-open-label-prospective-feasibility-study
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert P Hirten, Matteo Danieletto, Kyle Landell, Micol Zweig, Eddye Golden, Renata Pyzik, Sparshdeep Kaur, Helena Chang, Drew Helmus, Bruce E Sands, Dennis Charney, Girish Nadkarni, Emilia Bagiella, Laurie Keefer, Zahi A Fayad
BACKGROUND: Heart rate variability (HRV) biofeedback is often performed with structured education, laboratory-based assessments, and practice sessions. It has been shown to improve psychological and physiological function across populations. However, a means to remotely use and monitor this approach would allow for wider use of this technique. Advancements in wearable and digital technology present an opportunity for the widespread application of this approach. OBJECTIVE: The primary aim of the study was to determine the feasibility of fully remote, self-administered short sessions of HRV-directed biofeedback in a diverse population of health care workers (HCWs)...
April 25, 2024: JMIR Mental Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38662661/joint-observation-in-nicu-join-a-randomized-controlled-trial-testing-an-early-one-session-intervention-during-preterm-care-to-improve-perceived-maternal-self-efficacy-and-other-mental-health-outcomes
#47
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Juliane Schneider, Mathilde Morisod Harari, Noémie Faure, Alain Lacroix, Ayala Borghini, Jean-François Tolsa, Antje Horsch
BACKGROUND: Parents of preterm infants in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) environment may experience psychological distress, decreased perceived self-efficacy, and/or difficulties in establishing an adaptive parent-infant relationship. Early developmental care interventions to support the parental role and infant development are essential and their impact can be assessed by an improvement of parental self-efficacy perception. The aims were to assess the effects of an early intervention provided in the NICU (the Joint Observation) on maternal perceived self-efficacy compared to controls (primary outcome) and to compare maternal mental health measures (perceived stress, anxiety, and depression), perception of the parent-infant relationship, and maternal responsiveness (secondary outcomes)...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38662459/risk-of-adverse-outcomes-during-gabapentinoid-therapy-and-factors-associated-with-increased-risk-in-uk-primary-care-using-the-clinical-practice-research-datalink-a-cohort-study
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara Muller, James Bailey, Ram Bajpai, Toby Helliwell, Sarah A Harrisson, Rebecca Whittle, Christian D Mallen, Julie Ashworth
Growing evidence from pharmacovigilance data and postmortem toxicology reports highlights the misuse potential of gabapentinoids. This study aimed to investigate the risk of serious adverse outcomes (drug misuse, overdose, major trauma), and their risk factors, in primary care patients who are prescribed gabapentinoids. Using the UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink, a matched cohort study calculated adverse event rates separately for gabapentinoid-exposed and unexposed cohorts. In the exposed cohort, event rates for exposure to a range of potential risk factors were calculated...
April 11, 2024: Pain
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661831/community-health-workers-deliver-mental-health-intervention-to-uninsured-latinx-in-baltimore-evaluation-and-lessons-learned-in-a-pilot-program
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Monica Guerrero Vazquez, Jin Hui Joo, Suzanne M Dolwick Grieb, Marzena Maksym, Katherine Phillips, Rheanna Platt, Rohanit Singh, Cecilia Suarez, Veronica Torres, SangEun Yeom, Sarah Polk
BACKGROUND: Implementation of evidence-based interventions to reduce depression among uninsured Latinx patients who are at high risk of depression are rare. OBJECTIVES: Our goal was to evaluate Strong Minds, a language and culturally tailored, evidence-based intervention adapted from cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for mild-moderate depression and anxiety, delivered by community health workers (CHWs) in Spanish to uninsured Latinx immigrants. METHODS: As part of the pilot, 35 participants, recruited from a free community primary care clinic, completed Strong Minds...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661823/bridging-the-gap-addressing-immigrant-health-through-community-initiated-screening-events
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sally Moyce, Nathaniel Sisson, Madeline Metcalf
BACKGROUND: In areas of new-immigrant population growth, medical and social infrastructure may be lagging behind the needs of those who do not identify with the majority culture or language. Subsequently, information regarding this population's health status and access to care is limited. Montana's Hispanic population is one such group. Despite its low total population, the state has experienced unprecedented growth in the number of Spanish-speaking individuals and families over the last decade...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661620/cost-effectiveness-of-hiv-screening-in-emergency-departments-results-from-the-pragmatic-randomized-hiv-testing-using-enhanced-screening-techniques-in-emergency-departments-trial
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jason Haukoos, Emily Hopkins, Jonathan D Campbell, Michael S Lyons, Richard E Rothman, Yu-Hsiang Hsieh, Douglas A E White, Stacy Trent, Alia A Al-Tayyib, Edward M Gardner, Allison L Sabel, Sarah E Rowan
STUDY OBJECTIVE: Identification of HIV remains a critical health priority for which emergency departments (EDs) are a central focus. The comparative cost-effectiveness of various HIV screening strategies in EDs remains largely unknown. The goal of this study was to compare programmatic costs and cost-effectiveness of nontargeted and 2 forms of targeted opt-out HIV screening in EDs using results from a multicenter, pragmatic randomized clinical trial. METHODS: This economic evaluation was nested in the HIV Testing Using Enhanced Screening Techniques in Emergency Departments (TESTED) trial, a multicenter pragmatic clinical trial of different ED-based HIV screening strategies conducted from April 2014 through January 2016...
April 23, 2024: Annals of Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660984/-does-it-matter-how-old-i-feel-the-role-of-subjective-age-in-a-psychosocial-intervention-for-improving-depressive-symptomatology-among-older-adults-in-brazil-proactive
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M Clara de Paula Couto, Klaus Rothermund, Carina A Nakamura, Nadine Seward, Pepijn van de Ven, William Hollingworth, Tim J Peters, Ricardo Araya, Marcia Scazufca
OBJECTIVES: Depression is a prevalent mental health condition that also often affects older adults. The PROACTIVE psychosocial intervention was developed to reduce depressive symptomatology among older adults within primary care settings in Brazil. An important psychological marker that affects individuals' aging experience relates to how old people feel. Known as subjective age, this marker has been shown to be a risk factor for experiencing greater depressive symptoms if individuals report feeling older than their (chronological) age...
April 25, 2024: Aging & Mental Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660395/rehabilitation-delivery-models-to-foster-healthy-ageing-a-scoping-review
#53
REVIEW
Vanessa Seijas, Roxanne Maritz, Patricia Fernandes, Renaldo M Bernard, Luz Helena Lugo, Jerome Bickenbach, Carla Sabariego
INTRODUCTION: Rehabilitation is essential to foster healthy ageing. Older adults have unique rehabilitation needs due to a higher prevalence of non-communicable diseases, higher susceptibility to infectious diseases, injuries, and mental health conditions. However, there is limited understanding of how rehabilitation is delivered to older adults. To address this gap, we conducted a scoping review to describe rehabilitation delivery models used to optimise older adults' functioning/functional ability and foster healthy ageing...
2024: Front Rehabil Sci
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660331/environmental-injustice-tree-canopy-cover-and-academic-proficiency-at-utah-public-primary-schools
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara E Grineski, Angel Griego, Casey Mullen, Timothy W Collins, Shawna Nadybal, Aparna Mangadu
BACKGROUND: Tree canopy cover has mental and physical health benefits for children, yet distributional environmental injustices in tree canopy cover near schools are rarely investigated. Some evidence suggests that tree canopy coverage positively influences aggregated school-level children's academic proficiency metrics. There is a lack of research if canopy cover moderates the negative effect of particulate matter on academic proficiency. METHODS: We linked data on schools from the National Center for Education Statistics, Utah's Student Assessment of Growth and Excellence, the National Land Cover Database, and the U...
February 2024: Environmental Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38659129/physical-psychological-cultural-and-pharmacological-factors-influencing-the-treatment-of-patients-in-primary-care-settings
#55
EDITORIAL
Harold G Koenig
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
May 2024: International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38657227/an-integrated-mhealth-app-for-smoking-cessation-in-black-smokers-with-hiv-protocol-for-a-randomized-controlled-trial
#56
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Andre Bizier, Arielle Jones, Michael Businelle, Krista Kezbers, Bettina B Hoeppner, Thomas P Giordano, Jessica M Thai, Jacqueline Charles, Audrey Montgomery, Matthew W Gallagher, Marshall K Cheney, Michael Zvolensky, Lorra Garey
BACKGROUND: Black adults who smoke and have HIV experience immense stressors (eg, racial discrimination and HIV stigma) that impede smoking cessation success and perpetuate smoking-related health disparities. These stressors also place Black adults who smoke and have HIV at an increased risk of elevated interoceptive stress (eg, anxiety and uncomfortable bodily sensations) and smoking to manage symptoms. In turn, this population is more likely to smoke to manage interoceptive stress, which contributes to worse HIV-related outcomes in this group...
April 24, 2024: JMIR Research Protocols
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38656787/momentary-factors-and-study-characteristics-associated-with-participant-burden-and-protocol-adherence-ecological-momentary-assessment
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Allan D Tate, Angela R Fertig, Junia N de Brito, Émilie M Ellis, Christopher Patrick Carr, Amanda Trofholz, Jerica M Berge
BACKGROUND: Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) has become a popular mobile health study design to understand the lived experiences of dynamic environments. The numerous study design choices available to EMA researchers, however, may quickly increase participant burden and could affect overall adherence, which could limit the usability of the collected data. OBJECTIVE: This study quantifies what study design, participant attributes, and momentary factors may affect self-reported burden and adherence...
April 24, 2024: JMIR Formative Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38656779/the-impact-of-video-based-microinterventions-on-attitudes-toward-mental-health-and-help-seeking-in-youth-web-based-randomized-controlled-trial
#58
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Diana Lemmer, Markus Moessner, Nicolas Arnaud, Harald Baumeister, Agnes Mutter, Sarah-Lena Klemm, Elisa König, Paul Plener, Christine Rummel-Kluge, Rainer Thomasius, Michael Kaess, Stephanie Bauer
BACKGROUND: Mental health (MH) problems in youth are prevalent, burdening, and frequently persistent. Despite the existence of effective treatment, the uptake of professional help is low, particularly due to attitudinal barriers. OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the effectiveness and acceptability of 2 video-based microinterventions aimed at reducing barriers to MH treatment and increasing the likelihood of seeking professional help in young people. METHODS: This study was entirely web based and open access...
April 24, 2024: Journal of Medical Internet Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38656403/adolescents-who-do-not-endorse-risk-via-the-patient-health-questionnaire-before-self-harm-or-suicide
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jean P Flores, Geoffrey Kahn, Robert B Penfold, Elizabeth A Stuart, Brian K Ahmedani, Arne Beck, Jennifer M Boggs, Karen J Coleman, Yihe G Daida, Frances L Lynch, Julie E Richards, Rebecca C Rossom, Gregory E Simon, Holly C Wilcox
IMPORTANCE: Given that the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ) item 9 is commonly used to screen for risk of self-harm and suicide, it is important that clinicians recognize circumstances when at-risk adolescents may go undetected. OBJECTIVE: To understand characteristics of adolescents with a history of depression who do not endorse the PHQ item 9 before a near-term intentional self-harm event or suicide. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was a retrospective cohort study design using electronic health record and claims data from January 2009 through September 2017...
April 24, 2024: JAMA Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38655564/improving-connections-to-early-childhood-systems-of-care-via-a-universal-home-visiting-program-in-massachusetts
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chie Kotake, Rebecca C Fauth, Katie Stetler, Jessica L Goldberg, Christine F Silva, Susan E Manning
Welcome Family is a universal, short-term nurse home visiting program designed to promote optimal maternal and infant physical and mental well-being and provide an entry point into the early childhood system of care to all families with newborns up to 8 weeks old living in defined communities in Massachusetts. The present study examines whether: 1) Welcome Family meets its goal of successfully connecting families to two early childhood programs-evidence-based home visiting (EBHV) and early intervention (EI)-relative to families with similar background experiences who do not participate in Welcome Family, and 2) whether these impacts are conditional on families' race and ethnicity and their primary language-two characteristics that are related to structural racism and health inequities...
July 2023: Children and Youth Services Review
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