- COVID-19 and Mental Health
- Mental Health Treatment and Access
- COVID-19 epidemiological studies
- Suicide and Self-Harm Studies
- Psychiatric care and mental health services
- Healthcare Decision-Making and Restraints
- Opioid Use Disorder Treatment
- Digital Mental Health Interventions
- Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Research
- scientometrics and bibliometrics research
- Treatment of Major Depression
- Topic Modeling
- Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders
- Mental Health and Psychiatry
- Workplace Violence and Bullying
- Health and Medical Research Impacts
- COVID-19 and healthcare impacts
- Body Image and Dysmorphia Studies
- Grief, Bereavement, and Mental Health
- COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
- Bipolar Disorder and Treatment
- Healthcare professionals’ stress and burnout
- COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies
- Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life
- Schizophrenia research and treatment
Ministry of Health
2025
University of Auckland
2023-2025
Taranaki Base Hospital
2023
Waikato District Health Board
2021-2022
University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital
2021
Hospital de Magalhães Lemos
2021
Waikato Hospital
2021
St Petersburg University
2021
National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences
2020
University of Cape Town
2020
The COVID-19 pandemic has posed a serious threat to global mental health. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that there is varying yet considerable increase in health issues among the general population and vulnerable groups.1 2 aftermath obscure speculative from social, economic, individual public perspective. Recently published studies support existence an emotional epidemic curve, describing high probability burden postpandemic era.3 4 Furthermore, previous major emergencies showed more...
The COVID-19 pandemic has captured the mental health discussion worldwide. Examining countries' representation in this could prove instrumental identifying potential gaps terms of ensuring a truly global conversation times crisis.We collected and COVID-19-related journal articles published PubMed 2020. We focused on corresponding authors' countries affiliation to explore representation. also examined these articles' academic impact correlations with their affiliation. Additional journals...
We examined the associations of lockdown stringency and duration with Google searches for four mental health concepts (i.e., "Anxiety," "Depression," "Suicide," "Mental Health") in nine countries Hungary, India, Iran, Italy, Paraguay, Serbia, South Africa, Spain, Turkey) during COVID-19 pandemic.We retrieved national-level data each country from Trends Global Panel Database Pandemic Policies. In our primary analysis, we used all to estimate a set multilevel regression models examining...
Every health care system requires an adequate workforce, service delivery, financial support, and information technology. During the COVID-19 pandemic, global systems were ill prepared to address rising prevalence of mental problems, especially in low- middle-income countries (LMICs), thereby increasing treatment gaps. To close these gaps globally, task shifting telepsychiatry should be made available maximized, particularly LMICs. Task nonspecialist workers improve essential coverage...
Alcohol use is a major risk factor for infectious disease and reduction of harms associated with alcohol consumption are essential during times humanitarian crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. As network early career professionals working in area addiction medicine, we provide our views regards to national actions related reducing alcohol-related harm providing care people disorder COVID-19. We believe that measures have affected majority countries represented this commentary. Examples...
Globally, there are concerns about access to healthcare and harm reduction services for people who use drugs (PWUD) during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Members from Network of Early Career Professionals working in Addiction Medicine shared their experiences providing treatment PWUD COVID-19 Drawing on these qualitative reports, we highlight similarities discrepancies 16 countries under COVID-10 restrictions. In most reported here, efforts have been made ensure continued...
There is an increasing movement toward international collaboration and global discussion in mental health. If provided with the right opportunities, early career psychiatrists (ECPs) researchers health can contribute meaningfully to this discussion. However, they often experience multiple barriers when attempting add their voices via academic publications. We represent a diverse group of ECPs from all six World Health Organization regions. In piece, we discuss these barriers, grounded our...
The Impact of Stigma on Treatment Services for People With Substance Use Disorders During the COVID-19 Pandemic—Perspectives NECPAM Members
Healthcare workers have faced an unprecedented workload in overstretched health facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic, and we describe various initiatives to support them. Psychological, financial peer support, accommodation meal services, proper personal protective equipment, applause gratitude community, spiritual religious life, child care volunteering were identified. The potential effects of pandemic – permanent stress, burnout other mental problems among healthcare professionals can...
Florian Scheibein1M. J. Stowe2Sidharth Arya3Nirvana Morgan4Tomohiro Shirasaka5Paolo Grandinetti6Noha Ahmed Saad7Abhishek Ghosh8Ramyadarshni Vadivel9Woraphat Ratta-apha10Sagun Ballav Pant11Ramdas Ransing12Rodrigo Ramalho13Angelo Bruschi14Tanay Maiti15Anne Yee HA16Mirjana Delic17Shobhit Jain18Eric Peyron19Kristiana Siste20Joy Onoria21Saïd Boujraf22Lisa Dannatt23Arnt Schellekens24Tanya Calvey25*
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN CRPD) has been broadly incorporated into national frameworks for compulsory psychiatric treatment. Recently, instructions issued by UN CRPD Committee discouraged any involuntary treatment and detention people mental disabilities, which sparked clinical, legal, ethical debates. Early-career psychiatrists (ECPs) are often at front line decisions to involuntarily detain patients; here, authors surveyed ECPs gain...
L’article rend compte de différents modes d’appréhensions culturelles la toute première vague pandémie COVID-19 et des mécanismes d’adaptation subséquents en Inde, au Bangladesh, Japon, Syrie, Nouvelle-Zélande, Afrique du Sud, Kenya, Tunisie, Salvador, aux États-Unis, Italie Belgique. La culture influence façon dont une épidémie touche société, selon l’interprétation son origine, mode propagation traitement, ainsi que les réponses à détresse pratiques santé. Les contribuent contrôler ou...
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