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This Comment derives from a group discussion, generously funded by the Transactions Workshop Grant in 2023, to reflect retrospectively on the nature and degree of interaction among six trailblazing women members of Pakistan’s constituent assembly of 1972–3 (‘women constitution-makers’) within and without the assembly against the backdrop of their life histories. I refer to this group discussion as a ‘collective reflection’ to describe its open-ended structure of snowballing conversations among a small cohort of oral history narrators on the women constitution-makers as well as archivists whose work engages with material on or related to Pakistan’s enduring Constitution of 1973. The objective of the collective reflection was twofold: to provide an interactive mnemonic context for storytelling on the women constitution-makers and their personal and political associations; and to explore the extent to which these six women acted in concert in their constitution-making role on the question of women’s political representation. In relation to the former, the collective reflection yielded valuable observations. With respect to the latter, however, it presented a mixed picture and struck a note of caution in reading strong inferences into documentary archives – in this case, the constituent assembly debates.
Accurately quantifying all the components of the surface energy balance (SEB) is a prerequisite for the reliable estimation of surface melt and the surface mass balance over ice and snow. This study quantifies the SEB closure by comparing the energy available for surface melt, determined from continuous measurements of radiative fluxes and turbulent heat fluxes, to the surface ablation measured on the Greenland ice sheet between 2003 and 2023. We find that the measured daily energy available for surface melt exceeds the observed surface melt by on average 18 ± 30 W m−2 for snow and 12 ± 54 W m−2 for ice conditions (mean ± SD), which corresponds to 46 and 10% of the average energy available for surface melt, respectively. When the surface is not melting, the daily SEB is on average closed within 5 W m−2. Based on the inter-comparison of different ablation sensors and radiometers installed on different stations, and on the evaluation of modelled turbulent heat fluxes, we conclude that measurement uncertainties prevent a better daily to sub-daily SEB closure. These results highlight the need and challenges in obtaining accurate long-term in situ SEB observations for the proper evaluation of climate models and for the validation of remote sensing products.
The concept of digital psychiatry, encompassing technologies such as mental health apps, Virtual Reality (VR), Artificial Intelligence (AI), and telepsychiatry, emerges as a potential solution to bridge the existing gaps in the mental health system of Pakistan. However, one of the major barriers to the implementation of these technologies is hesitancy to adopt digital tools by psychiatrists.
Objectives
This study aims to explore the current understanding of digital psychiatry, the barriers faced by psychiatrists in its’ widespread implementation, and their willingness to adopt these services in clinical practice.
Methods
This cross-sectional study surveyed psychiatrists’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices on digital psychiatry from 39 public hospitals across Pakistan using an online validated questionnaire from January to July 2023. Participants included psychiatry residents, fellows, and consultants practicing in Pakistan. Responses were analyzed with Raosoft software, Quirkos, and SPSS 26 using thematic analysis and correlation.
Results
A total of 200 participants responded to the questionnaire, primarily in the age range of 20-30 years (56%). The gender distribution was 55% male (N = 111) and 45% female (N = 89). Among the professional roles, 23% were consultants, 7% were registrars, 54% were psychiatry residents, and 17% were medical officers. Respondents came from both rural (N = 148, 74%) and urban (N = 52, 26%) practice settings. Regarding telepsychiatry, 46% strongly agreed that they are familiar with telepsychiatry, while 58% agreed that telepsychiatry can save time and money. Additionally, 22% strongly agreed that it’s a viable approach for patient care. Concerning perspectives on Artificial Intelligence (AI) in digital psychiatry readiness, only 40% of participants had received AI training. However, 55% expressed interest in collaborating with international centers on AI-related projects. In terms of mental health apps, 62% of respondents reported limited familiarity with them. Nevertheless, 65% believed that these apps could potentially save time and money for psychiatric health systems. Lastly, concerning Virtual Reality (VR) in psychiatric care, 57% of participants were familiar with VR technology, but only 43% were acquainted with its applications in psychiatry. Notably, 71% did not view VR as a viable replacement for in-person psychiatric management.
Conclusions
This is the first study conducted on understanding digital psychiatry in Pakistan’s healthcare system, which revealed multiple challenges to digital health competency among psychiatrists. This emphasizes on the need for formal training and funding towards resources to overcome obstacles in utilizing mental health technologies.
Background: After a transient ischemic attack (TIA) or minor stroke, the long-term risk of subsequent stroke is uncertain. Methods: Electronic databases were searched for observational studies reporting subsequent stroke during a minimum follow-up of 1 year in patients with TIA or minor stroke. Unpublished data on number of stroke events and exact person-time at risk contributed by all patients during discrete time intervals of follow-up were requested from the authors of included studies. This information was used to calculate the incidence of stroke in individual studies, and results across studies were pooled using random-effects meta-analysis. Results: Fifteen independent cohorts involving 129794 patients were included in the analysis. The pooled incidence rate of subsequent stroke per 100 person-years was 6.4 events in the first year and 2.0 events in the second through tenth years, with cumulative incidences of 14% at 5 years and 21% at 10 years. Based on 10 studies with information available on fatal stroke, the pooled case fatality rate of subsequent stroke was 9.5% (95% CI, 5.9 – 13.8). Conclusions: One in five patients is expected to experience a subsequent stroke within 10 years after a TIA or minor stroke, with every tenth patient expected to die from their subsequent stroke.
Background: Since 2018, several CGRP-targeted therapies have entered the migraine market, including eptinezumab. Minimal evidence exists evaluating the real-world effectiveness of switching from a subcutaneous to an intravenous anti-CGRP mAb. Methods: An observational, multi-site (n=4), US-based study, REVIEW evaluated real-world experiences of patients with chronic migraine (CM) treated with eptinezumab using a chart review, patient survey, and physician interviews. Adults (≥18 years) with a diagnosis of CM who had completed ≥2 consecutive eptinezumab infusion cycles were eligible. Results: Enrolled patients were primarily female (83%, 78/94), had a mean age of 49 years and a mean migraine diagnosis duration of 15.4 years. All patients (94/94) self-reported prior preventive therapy with 89% (84/94) reporting prior subcutaneous anti-CGRP mAb use (i.e., fremanezumab, galcanezumab, or erenumab). Regardless of prior exposure to a CGRP ligand or receptor blocker, the number of “good” days/month more than doubled following eptinezumab. Patients experienced a similar mean change in the number of “good” days/month regardless of the number and type of previous subcutaneous anti-CGRP mAb used. Conclusions: This real-world, patient survey showed that patients with prior exposure to subcutaneous anti-CGRP mAbs had high overall satisfaction with the effectiveness of eptinezumab treatment regardless of the number and type of previous therapies used.
Antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) are responsible for addressing unnecessary antimicrobial use. We describe our experience with a unique intervention to withdraw unnecessary antimicrobials.
Methods:
Design, Setting, Participants: descriptive case series of adult inpatients at a single academic medical center, December 2021 to December 2022; Intervention: hospital-wide policy allowing ASP to discontinue inappropriate antimicrobials in select cases not resolved by prospective audit and feedback; Measures: count, date, and generic names of antimicrobials prescribed; reason for antimicrobial withdrawal (prolonged duration, no evidence of infection, or other); withdrawals by inpatient service (surgical or medical); time from antimicrobial start date to withdrawal intervention; days of therapy (DOT) saved; “nudge effect” defined as the prescribing team self-discontinuing withdrawn antimicrobial within 24 hours of withdrawal notice; appeals to withdrawals; ordering of alternative antimicrobials following withdrawal; incident infections, readmission, in-hospital mortality within 30 days of withdrawal intervention.
Results:
There were 54 antimicrobials withdrawn among 36 unique patients during the study period; piperacillin-tazobactam followed by vancomycin were the most frequently withdrawn agents; prolonged duration of therapy or prophylaxis followed by no evidence of infection were the most common reasons for withdrawal; withdrawals occurred most often on surgical services; an estimated 236 DOT (27.2 DOT per 100 patient-days) were saved; 32% of withdrawals were appealed; alternative antimicrobials were ordered following 20% of withdrawals; no incident infections, readmissions or in-hospital deaths were definitively attributed to withdrawal intervention.
Conclusions:
Our antimicrobial withdrawal intervention was a safe and effective addition to ASP activities to reduce inappropriate antimicrobial use and improve prescriber accountability.
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a major cause of acute jaundice in South Asia. Gaps in our understanding of transmission are driven by non-specific symptoms and scarcity of diagnostics, impeding rational control strategies. In this context, serological data can provide important proxy measures of infection. We enrolled a population-representative serological cohort of 2,337 individuals in Sitakunda, Bangladesh. We estimated the annual risks of HEV infection and seroreversion both using serostatus changes between paired serum samples collected 9 months apart, and by fitting catalytic models to the age-stratified cross-sectional seroprevalence. At baseline, 15% (95 CI: 14–17%) of people were seropositive, with seroprevalence highest in the relatively urban south. During the study, 27 individuals seroreverted (annual seroreversion risk: 15%, 95 CI: 10–21%), and 38 seroconverted (annual infection risk: 3%, 95CI: 2–5%). Relying on cross-sectional seroprevalence data alone, and ignoring seroreversion, underestimated the annual infection risk five-fold (0.6%, 95 CrI: 0.5–0.6%). When we accounted for the observed seroreversion in a reversible catalytic model, infection risk was more consistent with measured seroincidence. Our results quantify HEV infection risk in Sitakunda and highlight the importance of accounting for seroreversion when estimating infection incidence from cross-sectional seroprevalence data.
Fahr’s disease is a rare genetic neurological disorder characterized by abnormal idiopathic calcification of the basal ganglia, typically with extrapyramidal symptoms, speech difficulty, behavioral disturbances, and progressive neurologic dysfunction. A small number of case reports have explored the neuropsychological profile of Fahr’s disease patients, and even fewer have followed the course of neuropsychological functioning over time.
Participants and Methods:
A 53-year-old Asian woman presented for a neuropsychological reevaluation (2021) after experiencing a recurrence of memory difficulties and mood changes. Relevant medical history was significant for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and Fahr’s disease. Following an episode of acute confusion, the patient underwent a head CT (2019) which revealed extensive calcification throughout the cerebellum, central pons, and periventricular and subcortical white matter, suggestive of Fahr’s disease. Two months later, she underwent an initial neuropsychological evaluation (2019), which demonstrated prominent attention and processing speed deficits contributing to variably impaired new learning and memory along with spatial planning and problem-solving difficulties. The etiology of her cognitive deficits was determined to likely reflect metabolic and immune instability, consistent with her history of SLE and Fahr’s disease. An updated CT (2021) revealed increased calcification throughout the bilateral corona radiata, basal ganglia, cerebellar hemispheres, and midbrain, which was determined to be compatible with progressive Fahr’s disease.
Results:
The patient’s neurocognitive profile from current neuropsychological testing (2021) was marked by notable deficits in attention and processing speed, delayed memory, problem solving, visuospatial reasoning, and motor dexterity. Compared to her initial evaluation, her cognitive profile remained stable save for a slight decline in processing speed. The largest change was seen within the psychiatric domain. Self-reported depressive symptoms involving anhedonia, concentration difficulties, and anxiety symptoms involving nervousness and tension were more pronounced in her current evaluation. In addition, she endorsed an increase in apathy compared to her initial evaluation.
Conclusions:
The cognitive profile seen in this patient is consistent with the current literature relating to the clinical sequelae of Fahr’s disease in patients that eventually went on to develop dementia. Despite an increase in brain calcification seen on CT imaging over an 18-month interval, the patient’s neurocognitive profile remained relatively stable. An increase in psychiatric symptoms appeared to be the most prominent change over repeated neuropsychological assessment, which elucidates the heterogenous course of Fahr’s disease from a neuropsychological perspective. Further exploration of this disorder is warranted to better understand the clinical progression of symptoms over time.
This research paper presents an application of the integrated process and product design (IPPD) approach for selecting the best joint configuration for dissimilar material joining in the early product design phase. The proposed methodology integrates the multi-criteria decision making (MCDM) approach with quality function deployment (QFD) to identify the key criteria for joint selection, including load-carrying capacity, size, cost per joint, ease of manufacturing, time consumption and deformation. Three types of joints (rivet, weld and adhesive) and two hybrid joints (adhesive-weld and adhesive-rivet) are considered for three dissimilar material configurations: carbon fiber-reinforced plastic (CFRP) aluminum, CFRP steel, and aluminum-steel. QFD is utilised to transform job requirements into design criteria, and in the second phase, the Technique for Order Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) is employed to choose the optimal joint configuration based on the weighted criteria acquired in the previous phase. The selected joint configuration is then validated through experimental study. The findings demonstrate that the proposed IPPD approach with QFD-TOPSIS techniques is highly effective for selecting mechanical joints for dissimilar material joining in the early design phase. The study concludes that the adhesive-rivet hybrid joint is the optimal solution among all alternatives. The proposed methodology can ultimately lead to improved product reliability and performance, as well as reduced development time and cost.
Currently, 7 named Sarcocystis species infect cattle: Sarcocystis hirsuta, S. cruzi, S. hominis, S. bovifelis, S. heydorni, S. bovini and S. rommeli; other, unnamed species also infect cattle. Of these parasites of cattle, a complete life cycle description is known only for S. cruzi, the most pathogenic species in cattle. The life cycle of S. cruzi was completed experimentally in 1982, before related parasite species were structurally characterized, and before the advent of molecular diagnostics; to our knowledge, no archived frozen tissues from the cattle employed in the original descriptions remain for DNA characterization. Here, we isolated DNA from a paraffin-embedded kidney of a calf experimentally infected with S. cruzi in 1980; we then sequenced portions of 18S rRNA, 28S rRNA, COX1 and Acetyl CoA genes and verified that each shares 99–100% similarity to other available isolates attributed to S. cruzi from naturally infected cattle. We also reevaluated histological sections of tissues of calves experimentally infected with S. cruzi in the original description, exploiting improvements in photographic technology to render clearer morphological detail. Finally, we reviewed all available studies of the life cycle of S. cruzi, noting that S. cruzi was transmitted between bison (Bison bison) and cattle (Bos taurus) and that the strain of parasite derived from bison appeared more pathogenic than the cattle strain. Based on these newfound molecular, morphological and physiological data, we thereby redescribed S. cruzi and deposited reference material in the Smithsonian Museum for posterity.
We assessed factors associated with increased risk to loss of follow-up with infectious diseases staff in OPAT patients. Discharge to subacute healthcare facilities is strongly associated with loss to follow-up. We did not identify sociodemographic disparities. Poor communication between OPAT providers and subacute healthcare facilities remains a serious issue.
Childhood obesity is on the rise in South Africa (SA), and child-directed marketing (CDM) is one of the contributing factors to children’s unhealthy food choices. This study assessed CDM on packaged breakfast cereals available in SA supermarkets and their nutritional quality.
Design:
Photographic images were examined in a descriptive quantitative study. A codebook of definitions of CDM was developed for this purpose. REDCap, an online research database, was used for data capturing, and SPSS was used for data analyses including cross-tabulations and one-way ANOVA.
Setting:
The current study was set in the Western Cape province of SA.
Subjects:
Photographic images of all packaged breakfast cereals sold in major retailers in the Western Cape province of SA in 2019 were studied.
Results:
CDM strategies were classified as direct (to the child) or indirect (through the parent). A total of 222 breakfast cereals were studied, of which 96·9 % had a nutritional or health claim, 95·0 % had illustrations, 75·2 % had product and consumption appeals, 10·8 % had characters, 10·8 % consisted of different appeals, 8·6 % alluded to fantasy and 7·7 % had role models. In breakfast cereals with direct CDM, the protein and fibre content was significantly lower than in breakfast cereals without direct CDM. This study found a significantly higher total carbohydrate and total sugar content in breakfast cereals with direct CDM than those without direct CDM.
Conclusion:
CDM was highly prevalent in breakfast cereals sold in SA. Regulations to curb the marketing of packaged foods high in nutrients of concern is recommended.
The climate crisis calls for urgent action from every level of the US healthcare sector, starting with an acknowledgment of our own outsized contribution to greenhouse gas emissions (at least 8.5% of carbon emissions). As the climate continues to become warmer and wetter, the medical establishment must deal with increasing rates of pulmonary and cardiovascular diseases, heat-related illness, and emerging infectious diseases among many other health harms. Additionally, extreme weather events are causing healthcare delivery breakdown due to physical infrastructure damage, slowed supply chains, and workforce burden. Pathways for healthcare systems to meet these challenges are emerging. They entail significant measures to mitigate our carbon footprint, embrace shared and equity-driven governance, develop new metrics of accountability, and build more resilience into our care delivery processes. We call upon SHEA to play a unique leadership role in the fight for sustainable, equitable, and efficient health care in a rapidly changing climate that immediately threatens human well-being.
Low and middle-income countries (LMICs) hold the majority of disease burden attributed to major depressive disorder (MDD). Despite this, there remains a substantial gap for access to evidence-based treatments for MDD in LMICs like Pakistan. Measurement-based care (MBC) incorporates systematic administration of validated outcome measures to guide treatment decision making and is considered a low-cost approach to optimise better clinical outcomes for individuals with MDD but there is a paucity of evidence on the efficacy of MBC in LMICs.
Objectives
This protocol highlights a randomized trial which will include Pakistani outpatients with moderate to severe major depression.
Methods
Participants will be randomised to either MBC (guided by schedule), or standard treatment (guided by clinicians’ judgement), and will be prescribed with paroxetine (10–60mg/day) or mirtazapine (7.5–45mg/day) for 24 weeks. Outcomes will be evaluated by raters blind to study protocol and treatment.
Results
National Bioethics Committee (NBC) of Pakistan has given full ethics approval. The trial is being conducted and reported as per recommendation of the CONSORT statement for RCTs.
Conclusions
With increasing evidence from high-income settings supporting the effectiveness of MBC for MDD, it is now necessary to explore its feasibility, utility. and efficacy in low-resource settings. The results of the proposed trial could inform the development of a low-cost and scalable approach to efficiently optimise outcomes for individuals with MDD in Pakistan.
Suicide is a leading cause of death among young people and most deaths by suicide occur in low and middle-income countries. School is the best place where we can identify and respond to youth suicide risk. School-based interventions for suicide prevention in young people have been successful across US, Europe and Australia, but require adaptations to be acceptable and feasible in Pakistan.
Objectives
To develop and test culturally adapted preventative interventions for suicidal behaviours among pupils in secondary schools in Pakistan. The qualitative component aimed at exploring the views of students, parents, teachers and general practitioners on cultural adaptation, experience of participation, areas of improvement and suggestions for scale-up of the school-based suicide prevention program (SEPAK).
Methods
A clustered randomised controlled trial. The four culturally modified interventions 1) Linking Education and Awareness of Depression and Suicide Awareness (LEADS) Training for pupils (students=260) 2) the Question, Persuade, and Refer (QPR) for teachers (students=203) 3) QPR for parents (students=445); 4) Screening by Professionals (Profscreen) (students=260) were compared against control intervention (educational posters) (students=227). Structured questionnaires were administered at baseline and 1-month post-intervention to assess suicidal behaviours, psychological well-being and quality of life. A total of 8 focus groups (FGs) were conducted at pre and post intervention stage with each stakeholders.
Results
Patient and public involvement and Engagement (PPIE) was strongly embedded in the project to ensure meaningful benefits for participants. A total of 40 schools were recruited from 8 cities across Pakistan. A total of 243 students attended LEADS intervention, 92 teachers and 304 parents completed QPR training, and 9 general practitioners were trained in ProfScreen. The retention rate at follow-up was 99% that shows feasibility of delivering intervention package in Pakistan. All participants marked SEPAK as effective in identifying risk of and preventing self-harm and suicide in young people and in improving pathways to treatment. Interventions were perceived as helpful in improving knowledge about mental health, impact of mental health difficulties on functioning, reducing stigma, equipping stakeholders to identify and signpost at-risk people. Improvement in clinical and teaching practice as well as understanding others behaviors were also reported.
Conclusions
This study suggest feasibility of integrating a suicide prevention program in existing educational system and highlights positive role of creating awareness about suicide in youth, introduction of school-based mental health programs, parental counseling and strengthening of the health system by training general practitioners in early identification of suicide risk and promoting suicide prevention strategies
After the introduction of proposal regarding cannabidiol for the treatment of some psychiatric disorders including anxiety, there is confusion if cannabidiol use is associated with the provocation of anxiety symptoms or it can be safely used for the treatment. In nonmedical terms, (Cannabidiol) Cannabis is referred to as Marijuana and has been considered a potential substance of abuse for ages, that raises few questions for its use as a treating agent. It is an interesting area to be explored.
Objectives
Our aim is to find out the implications of Cannabidiol use. We look forward to knowing the mechanism behind cannabidiol being a potential treatment strategy for anxiety.
Methods
A literature search was conducted using the search terms [anxiety] OR [cannabis] OR[ Marijuana] OR [cannabidiol] OR [tetrahydrocannabinol] OR [phytocannabinoids] OR [panic] OR [generalized anxiety] OR [social anxiety] OR [psycholgic distress] OR[psychosis] OR [depression]. The overall search produced 230 results. We included 30 studies relevant to the subject in this review.
Results
Results revealed that anxiety is highly prevalent in individuals with a history of cannabidiol use in comparison to non-users. Symptoms of stress are more pronounced with more frequent cannabidiol use. Chronic users present with more severe symptoms like palpitations and the constant restlessness that are difficult to be managed. The potential role of Cannabinoids in reducing the conditioning of fear can be considered one of the reasons for investigations being done on it. Cannabidiol (Cb1) receptor plays a potential role in producing anxiolytic effects. The side effects of first-line drugs like distorted body shape due to weight gain, sexual health concerns and resistance along with frequent relapses, available for managing anxiety disorders are one of the reasons to consider alternative substances. Though, human testings are still underway, animal models are used currently for experimentation purposes and show positive anxiolytic effects of cannabidiol.
Conclusions
There is increased need to investigate necessary chemical and physiologic changes that are produced within the body in response to cannabidiol use. More investigations should be done on human subjects along with animal studies. Proper guidelines should be shared with practicing physicians so that new and pretested ways are open for the treatment of resistant cases with proper implications of knowledge in clinical settings so that there is minimal chance of abuse of potentially addictive chemicals.
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a source of marked disability, morbidity, and premature death. There is a paucity of research on personalized psychosocial interventions for BD, especially in lowresource settings. A previously published pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) of a Culturally adapted PsychoEducation (CaPE) intervention for BD in Pakistan reported higher patient satisfaction, enhanced medication adherence, knowledge and attitudes towards BD, and improvement in mood symptom scores and health-related quality of life measures compared to treatment-as-usual (TAU).
Objectives
This protocol describes a larger multicentre RCT to confirm the clinical and cost-effectiveness of CaPE in Pakistan.
Methods
A multicentre individual, parallel arm, RCT of CaPE in 300Pakistani adults with BD. Participants over the age of 18, with adiagnosis of bipolar I and II and who are currently euthymic, will berecruited from seven sites including Karachi, Lahore, Multan, Rawalpindi,Peshawar, Hyderabad and Quetta. Time to recurrence will be the primaryoutcome assessed using Longitudinal Interval Follow-up Evaluation(LIFE). Secondary measures will include mood symptomatology, qualityof life and functioning, adherence to psychotropic medications, andknowledge and attitudes towards BD.
Results
Full ethics approval has been received from National Bioethics Committee (NBC) of Pakistan and Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), Toronto, Canada. The study has completed sixty-five screening across the seven centres, of which forty-eight participants have been randomised.
Conclusions
A successful trial will lead to rapid implementation of CaPE in clinical practice, not only in Pakistan, but also in other low-resource settings including those in high-income countries, to improve clinical outcomes, social and occupational functioning, and quality of life in South Asian and other minority patients with BD.
Depression is the leading cause of disability worldwide and low and middle-income countries (LMICs) carry over 80% of this disease burden. Attempts have been made to address depression in LMICs, with improvements in the home environment and maternal knowledge. However paternal depression is a neglected and under-researched area. Since maternal depression is associated with depression in fathers there is a need for partner inclusive parenting programs to address parental mental health and improve child outcomes.
Objectives
To evaluate the clinical and cost effectiveness of partner inclusive Learning through play plus (LTP+) intervention in reducing depression in fathers and mothers.
To evaluate the effectiveness of LTP + intervention in improving child outcomes.
To conduct process evaluation and identify challenges in transition to scale up of the intervention across Karachi, Pakistan from the perspective of fathers, mothers, and other stakeholders.
Methods
This is a cluster randomised controlled (cRCT) trial of partner inclusive group parenting program called (Learning Through Play (LTP+) across 18 towns in the city of Karachi. Over 5000 parents (fathers and partners) will participate in the study with a capacity building component of training 4000 Community Health Workers across Pakistan.
Results
This large cRCT will confirm the clinical and cost-effectiveness of LTP+ in reducing depression in parents and improving child outcomes along with the barriers and facilitators to implement the LTP+ group parenting program and the possibilities to roll out the innovation at national level through engagement with policy makers.
Conclusions
Addressing depression in parents is hugely important because of its adverse effects both for child and parents. This low-cost group parenting program will help in scaling up the innovation across health services in Pakistan and other LMICs.
As written by Warsan Shire, “no one leaves home until the home is the mouth of a shark”. UNHCR defines forced displacement as “displaced because of persecution, conflict, generalized violence or human rights violations"
Objectives
to study the prevalence of common Mental health disorders among forcibly displaced people and comparing with the common mental health disorders among host community members.
Methods
The OPD of BIPBS in SPH and BMCH of Quetta attends 800+ patients per month the data of the OPD of both hospitals was collected for Jan-May 2022 and was analyzed to numerate both the host community and refugees. out of 4120 for 354 refugee patients identified using their POR card and for 3776 of host community using their CNIC, data was analyzed for the prevalence of mental health disorders among them.
Results
This study states that Afghan Refugees presented to OPD services of BIPBS, 47% were diagnosed as MDD with/without psychosis, 19% with GAD, 5% diagnosed as BAD, 5% With schizophrenia, 4% as PTSD, 3% as migraine, 3% conversion disorder, 2% OCD, 1% somatoform disorder and 10% of them presented with other psychiatric disorders, while in host community 21% were diagnosed as MDD with/without psychosis, 24% as GAD, 12% as somatoform disorder, 10% as OCD, 8% as migraine, 7% as conversion disorder, 4% as BAD, 3% as Schizophrenia, 3% as MBD due to substance misuse and rest of 7% presented with other psychiatric disorders.
Conclusions
The conclusion of this study states that mental health disorders are more common among refugees than in other populations, the result of this study shows that there is a big difference in the prevalence of mental health disorders among displaced people and the rest of the population, some of the Mental health disorders are present in higher percentage among displaced people rather than among host community, while some other disorders are present in lower percentage among displaced people rather than among host community, this study also highlights that further studies are needed to determine, risk and protective factors within the host community.