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1 lts demonstrate that inner speech - a purely mental action - is associated with an efference copy wit
2 airment, regardless of intelligence level or mental age.
3 CSF) abnormalities in syphilis underwent the mental alternation test (MAT), venipuncture, and lumbar
4 osis and cirrhosis of the liver (23.7%), and mental and behavioral disorders due to alcohol (7.9%).
5 lated processes, which are disrupted in many mental and emotional disorders.
6 eurological disorder with potentially severe mental and physical health consequences.
7 iences (ACEs) have been associated with poor mental and physical health outcomes.
8 ime and high-risk behaviors, leading to poor mental and physical health.
9 mpletion is associated with benefits to both mental and physical health.
10            Surgeons are routinely subject to mental and physical stresses through the course of their
11 d as the trigger of a previously unexplained mental condition.
12 ups demonstrated significant improvements in mental control function; 2) the Tai Chi Chuan group show
13 ge and sex and results in moderate to severe mental deficiencies and decreased lifespan.
14 The associations between diabetes and common mental disorder in husbands and those same conditions in
15 d medium secure wards for men and women with mental disorder in three secure mental health hospitals
16 on the basis of having no symptoms of common mental disorder or limiting physical health conditions,
17 ssociation between income inequality and any mental disorder or mental health problems were 0.06 (95%
18 rvices at age 14 years by adolescents with a mental disorder reduced the likelihood of depression by
19 dex diagnosis of nonorganic and nonpsychotic mental disorder within South London and the Maudsley Nat
20 roblems were 0.06 (95% CI 0.01-0.11) for any mental disorder, and 0.12 (0.05-0.20) for depressive dis
21              The associations between common mental disorder, hypertension, obesity, and high cholest
22 of 57 377 individuals had at least one major mental disorder.
23                                              Mental disorders (any disorder, mood, posttraumatic stre
24   has been used as an herbal brain tonic for mental disorders and enhancing memory, but no review of
25 ance of mitochondrial targeted treatments to mental disorders and their potential to become a novel t
26 orm for modeling the genetic contribution to mental disorders and yields access to patient-specific c
27                  Few individuals living with mental disorders around the globe have access to mental
28  services data were used to identify primary mental disorders during the 3 prior years, psychotropic
29                                  People with mental disorders have higher mortality rates than the ge
30 technologies for treatment and prevention of mental disorders in low-income and middle-income countri
31 d services related to drug use disorders and mental disorders in the last year of life, though opioid
32 e inequality with prevalence or incidence of mental disorders or mental health problems, use of menta
33 t a further adjustment for adolescent common mental disorders substantially attenuated most associati
34                                  Symptoms of mental disorders were elicited using a semi-structured i
35 DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition) PTSD due to that trauma w
36 occal throat infection had elevated risks of mental disorders, particularly OCD and tic disorders.
37 mber of which have been previously linked to mental disorders, raising intriguing implications for po
38 ave important implications for understanding mental disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder
39 en increased focus on subthreshold stages of mental disorders, with attempts to model and predict whi
40 mptoms, impairment, substance use, and other mental disorders, with consideration of symptom context
41 er, had Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-5 opioid use disorder, and had used non
42 etic and environmental aetiologies of severe mental disorders.
43 dissociative symptoms in the entire range of mental disorders.
44 r determinants in mPFC for stress-associated mental disorders.
45 tolerance, membrane transport, epilepsy, and mental disorders.
46 nd the mechanisms linking unhealthy diet and mental disorders.
47 atform for modeling morphological changes in mental disorders.
48 tic and environmental architecture of severe mental disorders.
49  was highly significant for all physical and mental domains.
50 vity to promote neurodevelopment and prevent mental dysfunction.
51 mechanism, examining both the limitations to mental effort exertion and how we manage those limited c
52 ation links to altered PNS regulation during mental effort in older adults, and that the compensatory
53 pport the suitability of fNIRS to assess the mental effort related to human operations and represents
54 her questions regarding how best to allocate mental effort to minimize those costs and maximize the a
55 ation intensity shed insight on the level of mental effort, i.e., how hard an individual was working
56                             Social maturity, mental energy, and emotional stability assessed at consc
57  The nurse to patient ratio and physical and mental fatigue (measured by the number of hours into a s
58 provements in physical performance (57%) and mental focus (38%); 87% of respondents planned to contin
59 geon pain, enhance performance, and increase mental focus without extending operative time.
60        Self representation is fundamental to mental functions.
61 A = 0.75), than between support quantity and mental health (mean rA = 0.54), reflecting the phenotypi
62 ions were higher between support quality and mental health (mean rA = 0.75), than between support qua
63                    The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) has made sustained investments in t
64 bility (OR, 18.65; 95% CI, 12.29-28.30), and mental health (OR, 1.48; 95% CI, 1.13-1.92).
65 in the World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys with 34 676 respondents who
66 as a change in HRQoL, symptom experience and mental health across the three different time periods.
67 eeking advice and those who received general mental health advice.
68 e-migration potentially traumatic events and mental health after controlling for confounding factors
69 mization to minimize the probability of poor mental health and obesity.
70 ssing, affective and nonaffective cognition, mental health and personality, physical health and lifes
71 g as bridge symptoms to other postdeployment mental health and physical symptoms, respectively.
72 ed for sex to provide for their physical and mental health and their social and educational needs.
73 ith accompanying differences in physical and mental health as well as cognitive ability.
74                 The WHO Child and Adolescent Mental Health Atlas, published in 2005, reported that ch
75 ants, as offered by DACA, could confer large mental health benefits to such individuals.
76 TATION: Income inequality negatively affects mental health but the effect sizes are small and there i
77 5% CI, 87.7%-105.9%; P < .001) and for acute mental health care by 25.1% (95% CI, 20.8%-29.4%; P < .0
78 s relating to 2008 to 2015 routine secondary mental health care in the South London and the Maudsley
79             A higher out-of-pocket price for mental health care may lead not only to cost savings but
80                        The number of regular mental health care records opened for adults decreased a
81 ctive values of symptoms elicited in primary mental health care settings suggest that symptoms alone
82 ociation of higher patient cost sharing with mental health care use and downstream effects, such as i
83 ts, such as involuntary commitment and acute mental health care use.
84 al disorders around the globe have access to mental health care, yet most have access to a mobile pho
85 gnostic prediction of psychosis in secondary mental health care.
86 have played a central role in the history of mental health care.
87 ad-reaching and important advance for future mental health care.
88  to those of assisted referral to outpatient mental health care.
89 veloped as a partnership between a community mental health center and a Federally Qualified Health Ce
90 on were established using questions from the Mental Health Composite International Diagnostic Intervi
91 health records is increasingly used to study mental health conditions and risk behaviours on a large
92 frequently co-occurring and highly heritable mental health conditions.
93 odemographic, environmental, individual, and mental health confounders, with multiple imputation of m
94 e is known about the long-term cognitive and mental health consequences of exposure to football-relat
95 o hospital admission for patients undergoing mental health crises in the UK.
96 ures, service-related characteristics, prior mental health diagnosis, and other unit variables, inclu
97 om 10 people diagnosed with schizophrenia, a mental health disorder that is increasingly linked to ox
98 rgely accounted for by concurrent adolescent mental health disorders and substance use.
99 mechanism and severity, comorbid conditions, mental health disorders, and demographic factors were co
100 rtex (OFC) and the amygdala underlie several mental health disorders, often related to value-based de
101 WH, including persons with substance use and mental health disorders.
102  target relevant to drug addiction and other mental health disorders.
103 ing, tracking, and predicting progression of mental health disorders.
104 r assessed whether or not change in maternal mental health explained any effect on child mental healt
105  potential benefit of green environments for mental health has been recognised, population-level evid
106 d women with mental disorder in three secure mental health hospitals in England.
107 ation between service contact and subsequent mental health in adolescents is scarce, and previous fin
108  matching was used to estimate the change in mental health in intervention neighborhoods versus contr
109           Individual factors contributing to mental health in transgender persons include community a
110 ers in health and mental health, analysis of mental health laws and policies, and publicly available
111 contact coverage for depression and improved mental health literacy.
112  equitable, the type of services sought, and mental health literacy.
113 tient units of the South London and Maudsley Mental Health National Health Service Foundation Trust i
114 ter Horizon (Gulf of Mexico) disaster on the mental health of individuals involved in oil spill respo
115                                              Mental health of soldiers is adversely affected by the d
116  on rates of physical assaults in a large UK mental health organisation.
117 bly increasing the lifetime risk of negative mental health outcomes such as depression and suicide.
118  practices, nutritional status, physical and mental health outcomes, public health service availabili
119 iences, is associated with poor physical and mental health outcomes.
120 ation between same-sex marriage policies and mental health outcomes.
121 regiver dyads, we found that worse caregiver mental health predicted greater patient mortality even w
122 nce against women is also a prominent public mental health problem, and that mental health profession
123  trial of a psychological intervention for a mental health problem.
124 s were 359 diverse probationers with serious mental health problems and functional impairment.
125 s for subsequent onset of maternal and child mental health problems associated with first transition
126 zard models, we followed up families without mental health problems at baseline and estimated odds ra
127 income inequality and any mental disorder or mental health problems were 0.06 (95% CI 0.01-0.11) for
128 idence, and behaviour towards employees with mental health problems, and its effect on employee sickn
129 nctioning, along with absence of disability, mental health problems, and major chronic diseases.
130                       At 35 years (wave 10), mental health problems, daily tobacco smoking, illicit d
131 dations for oral health care for people with mental health problems, including providing oral health
132 are costs and, when associated with comorbid mental health problems, it quadruples the costs.
133 ve association between income inequality and mental health problems, six reported mixed results, and
134 e the association between income inequality, mental health problems, use of mental health services, a
135 evalence or incidence of mental disorders or mental health problems, use of mental health services, a
136 tributory causal factor in the occurrence of mental health problems.
137 ccurrence of psychotic experiences and other mental health problems.
138 mprove occupational outcomes for people with mental health problems.
139 or people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems.
140 no association between income inequality and mental health problems.
141 nequality and the prevalence or incidence of mental health problems; ten articles found mixed results
142 mmunities, whereas office-based practices of mental health professionals are more likely to be locate
143     Despite clinical guidance on the role of mental health professionals in identifying violence agai
144 inent public mental health problem, and that mental health professionals should be identifying, preve
145           When examining the distribution of mental health professionals, 25.3% of the communities (2
146 ted sleep might require a higher priority in mental health provision.
147 tal contributions of exposure to bullying to mental health remains uncertain, as noncausal relationsh
148 netic and genomic resources available to the mental health research community.
149 rovide important information for general and mental health research.
150 National Health Service child and adolescent mental health service (CAMHS) clinics in three regions i
151 uidelines on oral health-related outcomes in mental health service users is untested.
152  in 2005, reported that child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) in Europe differed substa
153                  INTERPRETATION: Past use of mental health services and a diagnosis of non-affective
154 ETATION: Our findings show that contact with mental health services at age 14 years by adolescents wi
155 ontact with mental health services, but that mental health services could play a major role in primar
156  well resourced community and hospital-based mental health services for adolescents, with greater inv
157 in the planning, monitoring, and delivery of mental health services for children and adolescents are
158 givers and adolescents reported contact with mental health services in the year before baseline.
159 y feedback at 6 mo), and tolerability (acute mental health services referral).
160 me inequality as a determinant of the use of mental health services reported no association.
161 in MFQ sum scores from baseline contact with mental health services using multilevel mixed-effects re
162 e inequality, mental health problems, use of mental health services, and resilience (defined as the a
163  disorders or mental health problems, use of mental health services, and resilience.
164  of victims and perpetrators in contact with mental health services, but that mental health services
165 n primary- and secondary-care United Kingdom mental health services.
166                                              Mental health settings were the most commonly reported e
167 mmended to manage violence and aggression in mental health settings yet restrictive practices continu
168 f 7959) in the highest income quartile had a mental health specialist physician practice vs 8.0% (637
169 l using administrative data after outpatient mental health specialty visits could be developed to pre
170 ensic services as a central component of the mental health system, which has been a neglected concept
171      We also describe a tailored process for mental health systems that is transferable to other low-
172 1.88 (1.78-1.98) for financial hardship; for mental health they ranged from 1.61 (1.51-1.72) for depr
173                                     However, mental health training for managers might help improve o
174        We aimed to investigate the effect of mental health training on managers' knowledge, attitudes
175  between tiredness and up to 29 physical and mental health traits from GWAS consortia.
176 g (r g = -0.68, s.e = 0.03) alongside other mental health traits.
177                                              Mental health treatment facilities are more likely to be
178 mean income, $81207) had any community-based mental health treatment resource vs 23.1% of communities
179 ic availability of community-based specialty mental health treatment resources and how these resource
180 ine the geographic availability of specialty mental health treatment resources that serve low-income
181    Measures of the availability of specialty mental health treatment resources were derived using nat
182 is, age, sex, dementia severity, and patient mental health).
183  diseases, memory, physical functioning, and mental health, among populations who have survived to ol
184 th a range of key stakeholders in health and mental health, analysis of mental health laws and polici
185            Patient report of poor general or mental health, functional impairment, activity limitatio
186 od measures, diet and exercise, physical and mental health, medication and BMI outcome measures.
187 umber of concussions in RIRP, differences in mental health, social or work functioning were not found
188 ant medication improved depression symptoms, mental health-related function, and overall life satisfa
189 daily activities and children's physical and mental health.
190 gue, are associated with poorer physical and mental health.
191 rs, such as the symptoms of HS, on patients' mental health.
192 research clinic at the National Institute of Mental Health.
193  policies, and publicly available data about mental health.
194 ration of deprived neighborhoods can improve mental health.
195 ho filled out a detailed questionnaire about mental health.
196  mental health explained any effect on child mental health.
197 lobal role for Otx2 function in establishing mental health.
198 y approach to improve humanitarian migrants' mental health.
199 , and many caregivers experience declines in mental health.
200 Exposure to bullying is associated with poor mental health.
201 relation (mean r = 0.46) between support and mental health.
202 , builds capacity, and raises the profile of mental health.
203 ion on the basis that abortion harms women's mental health.
204  aged 15-65 years with a diagnosis of severe mental illness (schizophrenia spectrum or bipolar disord
205 s to recognise and classify posts related to mental illness according to 11 disorder themes.
206  depressive disorder (MDD) is a debilitating mental illness and a major cause of lost productivity wo
207 ve quality of care for patients with serious mental illness and cardiovascular risk factors.
208 her prevalence of BBVs in people with severe mental illness and identify interventions preventing inf
209                            We defined severe mental illness as a clinical diagnosis of schizophrenia,
210 individuals with a valid diagnosis of severe mental illness between Jan 1, 2007, and Dec 31, 2014, fr
211  for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a mental illness characterized by the recurring avoidance
212 g and investigate the importance of parental mental illness for such an association.
213           INTERPRETATION: People with severe mental illness have excess mortality relative to the gen
214  between smoking during pregnancy and severe mental illness in offspring, adjusting for measured cova
215 f smoking during pregnancy on risk of severe mental illness in offspring.
216              Conclusion Patients with severe mental illness may need assistance with coordinating med
217 (BD) is a highly heritable and heterogeneous mental illness whose manifestations often include impuls
218 1.28 for PTSD and 1.28, 1.16-1.41 for severe mental illness) and the number of social integration str
219 patients with breast cancer with preexisting mental illness, and elderly women are of special interes
220  psychosis, which are markers of severity of mental illness, and older age, which is a marker of chro
221 risks for the next generation (eg, violence, mental illness, and substance use).
222 C1), a well-accepted genetic risk factor for mental illness, display abnormal behaviours in response
223 l risk factor of early-life social stress in mental illness, rearing rodents in persistent postweanin
224                                       Severe mental illness, with clinical diagnosis obtained from in
225 site for therapeutic intervention in serious mental illness, yet we know very little about their dist
226 then compared with those of patients without mental illness.
227 entification of individuals at high risk for mental illness.
228 impairments in this chronic and debilitating mental illness.
229 ism linking early life risk factors to adult mental illness.
230 597, which has been strongly linked to major mental illness.
231 ding influences shared by smoking and severe mental illness.
232 ing protective against symptoms of the three mental illnesses studied, and the severity of flooding m
233 ve social feedback is a prominent feature of mental illnesses that involve social anxiety.
234 ated in the pathophysiology of these complex mental illnesses.
235 ted with cognitive and emotional deficits in mental illnesses.
236 al signatures of core dysfunctions underling mental illnesses.
237 nce in outpatients with co-occurring serious mental illnesses.
238 umans, robots, God) but not how people parse mental life itself.
239 s designed to assess people's conceptions of mental life more directly.
240 interpreted as evidence that people consider mental life to have two core components-experience (e.g.
241 ing body of work is investigating the use of mental maps during decision-making.
242                  People could then use these mental models of emotion transitions to predict others'
243 ateralization patterns induced by unilateral mental motor imagery and the performance of a physical m
244 al centers rated pain/fatigue, physical, and mental performance using validated scales during 2 opera
245 n neurotransmission abnormalities in complex mental phenomena.
246                          The excess risks of mental, physical, and social health outcomes highlight a
247                            Sociodemographic, mental/physical health, smoking and treatment characteri
248 g programs claim to improve a broad range of mental processes; however, evidence for transfer beyond
249 n the KABC-II Learning (p=0.0424) and on the Mental Processing Index (MPI; p=0.0111) assessments at 2
250  method for experimentally investigating the mental representation of linguistic structure.
251  evidence that is directly informative about mental representation"
252                                The nature of mental representations of linguistic expressions in rela
253     The expression levels of FXR1 (fragile X mental retardation autosomal homolog 1), an RNA-binding
254 9 (Pcdh19) cause female-limited epilepsy and mental retardation in humans.
255 sults from the loss of function of fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP), which represses trans
256 that disrupts the transcription of Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein (FMRP).
257 Y box-binding protein 1 (YB-1) and fragile X mental retardation protein, proteins that function in tr
258  spectrum of clinical outcomes, ranging from mental retardation to microcephaly, caused by congenital
259 e the Arabidopsis thaliana Alpha Thalassemia-mental Retardation X-linked (ATRX) ortholog and show tha
260 problems in which past experience leads to a mental rut.
261 alth status (12-item Short Form physical and mental scales and fatigue), psychological distress (Hosp
262 onses but also strengths - that is, enhanced mental skills and abilities.
263 rely on the consideration of a perpetrator's mental state as well as harmfulness of the outcomes prod
264 gnition was assessed using the Modified Mini-Mental State Examination (3MSE) 4 times and the Digit Sy
265                We analyzed standardized Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and memory, processing s
266  intermediate M1-M2 Mvarphi type, and a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) rate of change of +1.8 p
267                     Outcomes: Change in Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores during the 6 year
268 ga-3s, antioxidants, and resveratrol on Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores, macrophage M1M2
269 nitive subscale (ADAS-Cog; p=0.011) and Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE; p=0.004) at 1 year; thes
270 global cognitive impairment (defined as Mini Mental State Examination [MMSE] </=25) using data from n
271 ormal cognition (29 of 30 points on the Mini-Mental State Examination and 27 of 30 points on the Mont
272 ed cognitive impairment, as assessed by Mini-Mental State Examination and Alzheimer's Disease Assessm
273  of participants was performed with the Mini-Mental State Examination and the Grober-Buschke, Set, vi
274 er 4.57 m (15 ft), and cognition on the Mini-Mental State Examination and Trail Making Test Parts A a
275  and Cued Selective Reminding test, ten Mini-Mental State Examination orientation items, Digit Symbol
276 mory, processing speed, vocabulary, and Mini-Mental State Examination performance, but not in reasoni
277  were cognitively normal at baseline (a Mini-Mental State Examination score of 26 or higher) with no
278 rformance (per SD increment of Modified Mini-Mental State Examination score, aOR = 0.74, 95% CI: 0.58
279 g data to predict, with high accuracy, which mental state our participants were in.
280 tute Visual Function Questionnaire (VFQ-25), mental state with the Hospital and Anxiety and Depressio
281 plex interventions addressing the domains of mental state, behaviour, and substance use are likely to
282 act was performed in a statutorily specified mental state.
283 l states than for behaviors and for negative mental states and physical symptoms than for positive st
284 , or the capacity to introspect on one's own mental states, has been mostly characterized through con
285 ty to access, report, and regulate one's own mental states.
286 bility to explain and predict other people's mental states.
287                                              Mental status (normal vs. delirium vs. coma) was assesse
288  fever (99%), descending paralysis (93%), no mental status change (91%), at least 1 ocular weakness f
289                Although acute alterations in mental status due to inflammation are a hallmark of cent
290 lows: brain herniation, four points; altered mental status, three points; hydrocephalus, two points;
291 ed in traditional medicine as a physical and mental stimulant.
292 l increasingly be based on health, continued mental stimulation, and consumption of cultural products
293 tem (SNS) and haemodynamic reactivity during mental stress, as well as impaired arterial baroreflex s
294 g both combat-related and non-combat related mental stress, impaired sympathetic and cardiovagal baro
295 ons of health status as well as physical and mental summary scores; higher scores represent better he
296 inds of victimisation were related to poorer mental well-being (adjusted analyses, traditional: b coe
297 Scale score: 6 versus 9; P=0.015) and better mental well-being (mean Short Form Health Survey score:
298 or less than 0.1% of observed variability in mental well-being compared with 5.0% of variability acco
299  England, and assess its relative effects on mental well-being.
300 c conditions, unhealthy lifestyle, and lower mental wellbeing might reduce excess mortality among the

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