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Geriatric depression and anxiety are increasingly relevant conditions in the ageing population of Singapore. Subsyndromal depression and anxiety in older adults is estimated at 20-50% of the population and often go undetected despite adverse effects on quality of life (Preisig et al., 2001), suicidality (Sadek and Bona, 2000), disability and inappropriate usage of medical services (de Beurs et al., 1999; Wagner et al., 2000), and cognition (Yoachim et al., 2013). BRIGHT is an early intervention group coaching programme to empower older adults to self-manage physical and mental health ailments so as to decrease healthcare utilization and expenditure. This paper aims to present the findings from three pilot runs of BRIGHT with older adults in the community setting.
Methodology:
BRIGHT consists of 4 half-day workshops with both didactic and interactive components that leverage on the group-based therapy setting to promote psychoeducation, self-reflection, and reminiscence. This was delivered by a multidisciplinary team comprising psychiatrists, psychologists, and medical social workers. Simple digital literacy skills were taught and a mobile application to promote active lifestyles was utilized.
Groups are kept small at less than 15 participants each who were referred from community partners. They have been screened for subclinical depression and anxiety using the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), Geriatric Anxiety Inventory (GAI), 12-item Short Form Survey (SF-12), and Health Confidence Score (HCS). The same scales were administered again immediately upon completion of the programme to capture (1) reduction in depressive and anxiety symptoms, (2) quality of life, (3) improvement in health confidence, and (4) participant satisfaction.
Result:
Average participant satisfaction was 82.2% - most qualitative feedback was positive but one group preferred the sessions to be conducted in Mandarin instead of English. GDS, GAI, HCS, and SF12 PCS scores improved by an average of 2.285, 0.969, 0.685, and 1.733 respectively. However, SF12 MCS scores decreased by an average of 1.795.
Conclusion:
Preliminary quantitative data shows that BRIGHT appears to be an effective early intervention modality for older adults with subclinical depressive and anxiety symptoms. After an iterative process of refining the programme content, plans are underway to “train the trainers” so as to increase scale and sustainability.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental condition, with symptoms appearing in the early developmental period. Little is known about its current burden at the global, regional and national levels. This systematic analysis aims to summarise the latest magnitudes and temporal trends of ASD burden, which is essential to facilitate more detailed development of prevention and intervention strategies.
Methods
The data on ASD incidence, prevalence, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) in 204 countries and territories between 1990 and 2019 came from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019. The average annual percentage change was calculated to quantify the secular trends in age-standardised rates (ASRs) of ASD burden by region, sex and age.
Results
In 2019, there were an estimated 60.38 × 104 [95% uncertainty interval (UI) 50.17–72.01] incident cases of ASD, 283.25 × 105 (95% UI 235.01–338.11) prevalent cases and 43.07 × 105 (95% UI 28.22–62.32) DALYs globally. The ASR of incidence slightly increased by around 0.06% annually over the past three decades, while the ASRs of prevalence and DALYs both remained stable over the past three decades. In 2019, the highest burden of ASD was observed in high-income regions, especially in high-income North America, high-income Asia Pacific and Western Europe, where a significant growth in ASRs was also observed. The ASR of ASD burden in males was around three times that of females, but the gender difference was shrunk with the pronounced increase among females. Of note, among the population aged over 65 years, the burden of ASD presented increasing trends globally.
Conclusions
The global burden of ASD continues to increase and remains a major mental health concern. These substantial heterogeneities in ASD burden worldwide highlight the need for making suitable mental-related policies and providing special social and health services.
Anxiety disorders are widespread across the world. A systematic understanding of the disease burden, temporal trend and risk factors of anxiety disorders provides the essential foundation for targeted public policies on mental health at the national, regional, and global levels.
Methods
The estimation of anxiety disorders in the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019 using systematic review was conducted to describe incidence, prevalence and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) in 204 countries and regions from 1990 to 2019. We calculated the estimated annual percentage change (EAPC) to quantify the temporal trends in anxiety disorders burden by sex, region and age over the past 30 years and analysed the impact of epidemiological and demographic changes on anxiety disorders.
Results
Globally, 45.82 [95% uncertainty interval (UI): 37.14, 55.62] million incident cases of anxiety disorders, 301.39 million (95% UI: 252.63, 356.00) prevalent cases and 28.68 (95% UI: 19.86, 39.32) million DALYs were estimated in 2019. Although the overall age-standardised burden rate of anxiety disorders remained stable over the past three decades, the latest absolute number of anxiety disorders increased by 50% from 1990. We observed huge disparities in both age-standardised burden rate and changing trend of anxiety disorders in sex, country and age. In 2019, 7.07% of the global DALYs due to anxiety disorders were attributable to bullying victimisation, mainly among the population aged 5–39 years, and the proportion increased in almost all countries and territories compared with 1990.
Conclusion
Anxiety disorder is still the most common mental illness in the world and has a striking impact on the global burden of disease. Controlling potential risk factors, such as bullying, establishing effective mental health knowledge dissemination and diversifying intervention strategies adapted to specific characteristics will reduce the burden of anxiety disorders.
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