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1 is, age, sex, dementia severity, and patient mental health).
2 research clinic at the National Institute of Mental Health.
3  policies, and publicly available data about mental health.
4 ration of deprived neighborhoods can improve mental health.
5 Exposure to bullying is associated with poor mental health.
6 ho filled out a detailed questionnaire about mental health.
7  mental health explained any effect on child mental health.
8 lobal role for Otx2 function in establishing mental health.
9 y approach to improve humanitarian migrants' mental health.
10 , and many caregivers experience declines in mental health.
11 relation (mean r = 0.46) between support and mental health.
12 iation between neighborhood regeneration and mental health.
13 -8% of a standard deviation in self-reported mental health.
14 a reduction in socioeconomic inequalities in mental health.
15 ous studies have shown that flooding affects mental health.
16 t exposure is uniformly associated with poor mental health.
17 change, with topics including well-being and mental health.
18 commuting to work was a risk factor for poor mental health.
19 anitarian migrant is potentially damaging to mental health.
20 ren are likely to improve child and maternal mental health.
21 ssessed the effect of moving into poverty on mental health.
22  pubertal timing, intelligence quotient, and mental health.
23 , builds capacity, and raises the profile of mental health.
24 ion on the basis that abortion harms women's mental health.
25 daily activities and children's physical and mental health.
26 gue, are associated with poorer physical and mental health.
27 rs, such as the symptoms of HS, on patients' mental health.
28 RES) study on the effect of mold exposure on mental health (2002-2003).
29 as a change in HRQoL, symptom experience and mental health across the three different time periods.
30 isorders, or having been sectioned under the Mental Health Act), there was a 39% reduction in the num
31 eeking advice and those who received general mental health advice.
32 e-migration potentially traumatic events and mental health after controlling for confounding factors
33 ween transitions into poverty and subsequent mental health among children and their mothers.
34  diseases, memory, physical functioning, and mental health, among populations who have survived to ol
35 th a range of key stakeholders in health and mental health, analysis of mental health laws and polici
36           In within-group analyses, impaired mental health and elevated trait anxiety were associated
37 mization to minimize the probability of poor mental health and obesity.
38 ternalizing symptoms, regardless of maternal mental health and offspring internalizing.
39 ROs (health-related quality of life (HRQoL), mental health and perceived social support) of HCV patie
40 ssing, affective and nonaffective cognition, mental health and personality, physical health and lifes
41 g as bridge symptoms to other postdeployment mental health and physical symptoms, respectively.
42 escents is associated with morbidity such as mental health and psychological issues, asthma, obstruct
43 ed for sex to provide for their physical and mental health and their social and educational needs.
44                    We included 6 measures of mental health and well-being: 2 measures of depression a
45 tentially traumatic events and stressors and mental health, and assessed the moderating effect of pos
46 ual function and quality of life, education, mental health, and employment among young adults with re
47 ence and warfare on individuals' well-being, mental health, and individual prosociality and risk aver
48  for threatening experiences is critical for mental health, and its dysregulation may lead to psychop
49 t microbiota as a novel treatment option for mental health are described, and important knowledge gap
50                             When considering mental health as chronic conditions, PM2.5 was significa
51 ties, psychotropic medication, and community mental health as funding priorities.
52 ith accompanying differences in physical and mental health as well as cognitive ability.
53                                              Mental health assessments at 11 and 16 years of age incl
54                 The WHO Child and Adolescent Mental Health Atlas, published in 2005, reported that ch
55 ants, as offered by DACA, could confer large mental health benefits to such individuals.
56 ehavior, neuropsychological performance, and mental health burden from the 1- to 5-year follow-up.
57 ehavior, neuropsychological performance, and mental health burden that were essentially identical to
58 shing college pays substantial dividends for mental health but simultaneously exacts costs with regar
59 TATION: Income inequality negatively affects mental health but the effect sizes are small and there i
60 atients who had recently received outpatient mental health care (hazard ratio=1.6, 95% CI=1.2-2.0).
61  families received personalized referrals to mental health care and check-in calls to support accessi
62 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
63 al costs of involuntary commitment and acute mental health care exceeded savings by euro25.5 million
64 by 110 organizations that provide specialist mental health care in the Netherlands.
65  values and concepts have been important for mental health care in the past, this Personal View addre
66 s relating to 2008 to 2015 routine secondary mental health care in the South London and the Maudsley
67 ese factors condition access to, and use of, mental health care is likely to be important for develop
68 uals who will develop psychosis in secondary mental health care is undetermined.
69             A higher out-of-pocket price for mental health care may lead not only to cost savings but
70                        The number of regular mental health care records opened for adults decreased a
71 ctive values of symptoms elicited in primary mental health care settings suggest that symptoms alone
72 te mental health care, and annual specialist mental health care spending.
73 ociation of higher patient cost sharing with mental health care use and downstream effects, such as i
74              Additionally, a higher level of mental health care use was noted.
75 ts, such as involuntary commitment and acute mental health care use.
76 verall 6-year risk of psychosis in secondary mental health care was 3.02 (95% CI, 2.88-3.15), which i
77 arios in which the social aspect is central: mental health care will be patient controlled; it will t
78 alth care, involuntary commitment, and acute mental health care, and annual specialist mental health
79 ecords opened each day in regular specialist mental health care, involuntary commitment, and acute me
80 al disorders around the globe have access to mental health care, yet most have access to a mobile pho
81 ad-reaching and important advance for future mental health care.
82  to those of assisted referral to outpatient mental health care.
83 gnostic prediction of psychosis in secondary mental health care.
84 mpared with referral to outpatient community mental health care.
85 gnostic prediction of psychosis in secondary mental health care.
86 ise for improving access to, and quality of, mental health care.
87 gnostic prediction of psychosis in secondary mental health care.
88 have played a central role in the history of mental health care.
89 im was to map and analyse the development of mental health-care practice for people with severe menta
90                                              Mental health-care practice in the region differs greatl
91 veloped as a partnership between a community mental health center and a Federally Qualified Health Ce
92 tients with recurrent MDD from 58 provincial mental health centers and psychiatric departments of gen
93                                              Mental health clinicians, together with other health spe
94 rated interventions addressing arthritis and mental health comorbidities are warranted to tackle this
95 ively measure the prevalence of physical and mental health comorbidities in adults with asthma using
96 on were established using questions from the Mental Health Composite International Diagnostic Intervi
97 health records is increasingly used to study mental health conditions and risk behaviours on a large
98 frequently co-occurring and highly heritable mental health conditions.
99 odemographic, environmental, individual, and mental health confounders, with multiple imputation of m
100 e is known about the long-term cognitive and mental health consequences of exposure to football-relat
101                                          The mental health consequences of injuries can interfere wit
102 abis use, especially regarding its potential mental health consequences.
103 o hospital admission for patients undergoing mental health crises in the UK.
104  not change after 6 months of treatment, and mental health decreased.
105 gated the relationship between arthritis and mental health (depression spectrum, psychosis spectrum,
106 ures, service-related characteristics, prior mental health diagnosis, and other unit variables, inclu
107 om 10 people diagnosed with schizophrenia, a mental health disorder that is increasingly linked to ox
108 nt gap for depressive disorders, the leading mental health disorder worldwide.
109 apping risk factors, including high rates of mental health disorders and substance use disorders.
110 rgely accounted for by concurrent adolescent mental health disorders and substance use.
111  was not effective at reducing prevalence of mental health disorders nor did it increase help-seeking
112 mechanism and severity, comorbid conditions, mental health disorders, and demographic factors were co
113 mechanism and severity, comorbid conditions, mental health disorders, and demographic factors.
114 rtex (OFC) and the amygdala underlie several mental health disorders, often related to value-based de
115 ing, tracking, and predicting progression of mental health disorders.
116  target relevant to drug addiction and other mental health disorders.
117 tionally poor food is a high-risk factor for mental health disorders.
118 tional content food and higher prevalence of mental health disorders.
119 WH, including persons with substance use and mental health disorders.
120 he relationship between amygdalar volume and mental health, driven by emotional well-being deficits a
121 earch is warranted focusing on the impact of mental health, education, workplace conditions, and empl
122                                      Adverse mental health effects have been reported following oil s
123         We aimed to examine the physical and mental health effects of the Deferred Action for Childho
124 xposures and multiple potential physical and mental health effects.
125 ividuals for latent tuberculosis infection), mental health (eg, highest reported was 9 [4%] of 227 in
126 ssociation for Transgender Health, including mental health, endocrinology, and surgery for trans wome
127 r assessed whether or not change in maternal mental health explained any effect on child mental healt
128 alth professionals (eg, therapists), and (4) mental health facility or office-based practice (ie, any
129 y is associated with poor child and maternal mental health, few studies have assessed the effect of m
130 s (n = 6,695 subjects) was linked to data on mental health from a cohort study with assessments made
131            Patient report of poor general or mental health, functional impairment, activity limitatio
132  potential benefit of green environments for mental health has been recognised, population-level evid
133 e emerging field of 'predictive analytics in mental health' has recently generated tremendous interes
134 he association between income inequality and mental health have shown mixed results, probably due to
135 d women with mental disorder in three secure mental health hospitals in England.
136 ation between service contact and subsequent mental health in adolescents is scarce, and previous fin
137  matching was used to estimate the change in mental health in intervention neighborhoods versus contr
138           Individual factors contributing to mental health in transgender persons include community a
139 ienced significantly greater declines in the Mental Health Inventory score when commuting 4 to 6 hour
140 .33, 95% CI: -0.62, -0.04; P = 0.025) in the Mental Health Inventory score when they commuted for ove
141 tion of exposure to bullying in childhood to mental health is provided.
142 view of the literature examines their common mental health issues, several individual risk factors fo
143 get people's social context to improve their mental health; it will become virtual; and access to car
144 ers in health and mental health, analysis of mental health laws and policies, and publicly available
145 ugby and traumatic brain injury, general and mental health, life stress, concussion symptoms, cogniti
146 to increase the demand for care by enhancing mental health literacy and to improve the supply of evid
147 erved significant improvements in a range of mental health literacy indicators, for example, conceptu
148 e Patient Health Questionnaire [PHQ]-9), and mental health literacy.
149 contact coverage for depression and improved mental health literacy.
150  equitable, the type of services sought, and mental health literacy.
151  people, age, educational level, income, and mental health may be important correlates of eye disease
152 A = 0.75), than between support quantity and mental health (mean rA = 0.54), reflecting the phenotypi
153 ions were higher between support quality and mental health (mean rA = 0.75), than between support qua
154 od measures, diet and exercise, physical and mental health, medication and BMI outcome measures.
155 ectional, multilevel analysis of the 2010-11 Mental Health Minimum Data Set (MHMDS).
156 tient units of the South London and Maudsley Mental Health National Health Service Foundation Trust i
157 ute ward and one male acute ward in three UK Mental Health NHS Trusts.
158 n trials funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) (N=2) are characterized by many met
159                    The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) has made sustained investments in t
160                                N=Sixty eight mental health nurses who were designated keyworkers for
161            To identify relationships between mental health nurses' exposure to patient aggression, th
162 nder-graduate pre-registration adult, child, mental health nursing, midwifery and paramedic practice
163 ter Horizon (Gulf of Mexico) disaster on the mental health of individuals involved in oil spill respo
164 on was associated with an improvement in the mental health of residents in intervention areas compare
165                                              Mental health of soldiers is adversely affected by the d
166 ass, maternal smoking and drinking, maternal mental health, offspring stressful life events, and offs
167 roup differences were detected in general or mental health or estimates of allostatic load.
168 bility (OR, 18.65; 95% CI, 12.29-28.30), and mental health (OR, 1.48; 95% CI, 1.13-1.92).
169  on rates of physical assaults in a large UK mental health organisation.
170  the Impact of Events Scale-Revised for the "mental health" outcome.
171     The authors assessed the extent to which mental health outcomes after disaster are associated wit
172 stigating the relationship of arthritis with mental health outcomes are lacking, particularly among l
173 PRETATION: Traditionally, efforts to improve mental health outcomes have largely focused on the devel
174 bly increasing the lifetime risk of negative mental health outcomes such as depression and suicide.
175 cal goal achievement, and patient and family mental health outcomes were also observed with intervent
176  practices, nutritional status, physical and mental health outcomes, public health service availabili
177 iences, is associated with poor physical and mental health outcomes.
178 ation between same-sex marriage policies and mental health outcomes.
179 pitalized for psychotic disorders in primary mental health outpatient settings, and to investigate wh
180     Between-group differences in disability, mental health, pain acceptance, and mindfulness were not
181 roup analyses investigated associations with mental health, physical health, trait anxiety and depres
182 udy, we investigated the role that caregiver mental health plays in patient mortality.
183 ng an official national child and adolescent mental health policy, covering young people until their
184 ine exposure or deterioration in physical or mental health precipitated by clozapine discontinuation.
185 regiver dyads, we found that worse caregiver mental health predicted greater patient mortality even w
186 xample, conceptualisation of depression as a mental health problem and the intention to seek care for
187 nce against women is also a prominent public mental health problem, and that mental health profession
188 efined as the prevalence or incidence of any mental health problem.
189  trial of a psychological intervention for a mental health problem.
190 s were 359 diverse probationers with serious mental health problems and functional impairment.
191                                 Furthermore, mental health problems and treatments for parents may af
192 s for subsequent onset of maternal and child mental health problems associated with first transition
193 zard models, we followed up families without mental health problems at baseline and estimated odds ra
194              Three-quarters of the burden of mental health problems occurs in low-and-middle-income c
195 income inequality and any mental disorder or mental health problems were 0.06 (95% CI 0.01-0.11) for
196 idence, and behaviour towards employees with mental health problems, and its effect on employee sickn
197 nctioning, along with absence of disability, mental health problems, and major chronic diseases.
198                       At 35 years (wave 10), mental health problems, daily tobacco smoking, illicit d
199 dations for oral health care for people with mental health problems, including providing oral health
200 are costs and, when associated with comorbid mental health problems, it quadruples the costs.
201 ve association between income inequality and mental health problems, six reported mixed results, and
202 oes lead to an increase in the prevalence of mental health problems, then its reduction could result
203 evalence or incidence of mental disorders or mental health problems, use of mental health services, a
204 e the association between income inequality, mental health problems, use of mental health services, a
205 no association between income inequality and mental health problems.
206 n increase in the risk of child and maternal mental health problems.
207 tributory causal factor in the occurrence of mental health problems.
208 ccurrence of psychotic experiences and other mental health problems.
209 mprove occupational outcomes for people with mental health problems.
210 or people with intellectual disabilities and mental health problems.
211 nequality and the prevalence or incidence of mental health problems; ten articles found mixed results
212 ), (3) office-based practice of nonphysician mental health professionals (eg, therapists), and (4) me
213 mmunities, whereas office-based practices of mental health professionals are more likely to be locate
214     Despite clinical guidance on the role of mental health professionals in identifying violence agai
215 inent public mental health problem, and that mental health professionals should be identifying, preve
216           When examining the distribution of mental health professionals, 25.3% of the communities (2
217                   METHOD: The Suffolk County Mental Health Project recruited first-admission patients
218            Data came from the Suffolk County Mental Health Project, a 20-year prospective study of fi
219 ted sleep might require a higher priority in mental health provision.
220 ant medication improved depression symptoms, mental health-related function, and overall life satisfa
221 come in the random-effects meta-analysis was mental health-related morbidity, defined as the prevalen
222 ve therapy may experience a deterioration in mental health-related quality of life.
223 tal contributions of exposure to bullying to mental health remains uncertain, as noncausal relationsh
224 netic and genomic resources available to the mental health research community.
225 rovide important information for general and mental health research.
226 17, respectively) as did those with a higher mental health score on the Short Form 12-Item, version 2
227 d substantially after the operation (SF-36v2 mental health scores improved from 25 preoperatively, to
228                                              Mental health scores were suggestive of anxiety in 36.5%
229 self-reported physical health, self-reported mental health, self-reported life satisfaction, and body
230 National Health Service child and adolescent mental health service (CAMHS) clinics in three regions i
231                       Five themes are key to mental health service delivery in Zimbabwe: policy and l
232 o identify bottlenecks and opportunities for mental health service improvement in Zimbabwe and to gen
233 uidelines on oral health-related outcomes in mental health service users is untested.
234  in 2005, reported that child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) in Europe differed substa
235                  INTERPRETATION: Past use of mental health services and a diagnosis of non-affective
236 ETATION: Our findings show that contact with mental health services at age 14 years by adolescents wi
237 ychological effects and suggest the need for mental health services both before and after the event.
238 ontact with mental health services, but that mental health services could play a major role in primar
239                                              Mental health services elsewhere in the UK and in other
240  well resourced community and hospital-based mental health services for adolescents, with greater inv
241 ernment increased the out-of-pocket price of mental health services for adults by up to euro200 (US$2
242 in the planning, monitoring, and delivery of mental health services for children and adolescents are
243 ur National Health Service primary child and mental health services in Oxfordshire, UK.
244 14-year-old adolescents who had contact with mental health services in the past year had a greater de
245 givers and adolescents reported contact with mental health services in the year before baseline.
246 y feedback at 6 mo), and tolerability (acute mental health services referral).
247                   No subjects required acute mental health services referral.
248 me inequality as a determinant of the use of mental health services reported no association.
249 nts aged 14-35 years presenting to any of 35 mental health services sites across England with first-e
250 in MFQ sum scores from baseline contact with mental health services using multilevel mixed-effects re
251 e rates and predictors of admission to acute mental health services within 1 year of contact with CRT
252 ance confounders between treatment (users of mental health services) and control (non-users of mental
253 l health services) and control (non-users of mental health services) groups.
254 e inequality, mental health problems, use of mental health services, and resilience (defined as the a
255  disorders or mental health problems, use of mental health services, and resilience.
256 hosis detected by ARMS services in secondary mental health services, and to develop and externally va
257  of victims and perpetrators in contact with mental health services, but that mental health services
258 oms in adolescents change after contact with mental health services.
259 n primary- and secondary-care United Kingdom mental health services.
260 f de-escalation techniques currently used in mental health settings and explore factors perceived to
261                                              Mental health settings were the most commonly reported e
262 mmended to manage violence and aggression in mental health settings yet restrictive practices continu
263  serious mental illness treated in community mental health settings.
264 ldren with anxiety referred to routine child mental health settings.
265 umber of concussions in RIRP, differences in mental health, social or work functioning were not found
266 f 7959) in the highest income quartile had a mental health specialist physician practice vs 8.0% (637
267 e populations), (2) office-based practice of mental health specialist physician(s), (3) office-based
268 mong 12.0% of soldiers seen as outpatient by mental health specialists, with risk especially high wit
269 l using administrative data after outpatient mental health specialty visits could be developed to pre
270 disturbances (eg, sleep apnea and insomnia), mental health status (eg, posttraumatic stress disorder
271 ported outcomes: 12-item Short Form physical/mental health status, (2) quality of care measures: stat
272 t satisfaction, confidence in care received, mental health status, self-efficacy, patient attitude/pe
273 be an effective component of a wider student mental health strategy.
274 SS]) plus mental health support as usual, or mental health support as usual alone.
275 (Mindfulness Skills for Students [MSS]) plus mental health support as usual, or mental health support
276 ensic services as a central component of the mental health system, which has been a neglected concept
277  been little external analysis of Zimbabwe's mental health system.
278      We also describe a tailored process for mental health systems that is transferable to other low-
279 recruited from memory services and community mental health teams (CMHTs).
280 ere is an intricate interplay among maternal mental health, the mother-infant relationship, and the n
281 1.88 (1.78-1.98) for financial hardship; for mental health they ranged from 1.61 (1.51-1.72) for depr
282                                     However, mental health training for managers might help improve o
283        We aimed to investigate the effect of mental health training on managers' knowledge, attitudes
284                INTERPRETATION: A 4-h manager mental health training programme could lead to a signifi
285 uster randomised controlled trial of manager mental health training within a large Australian fire an
286  between tiredness and up to 29 physical and mental health traits from GWAS consortia.
287 g (r g = -0.68, s.e = 0.03) alongside other mental health traits.
288 g technologies might support the scale-up of mental health treatment and prevention efforts across lo
289                                              Mental health treatment facilities are more likely to be
290                      In contrast, outpatient mental health treatment facilities were less likely to b
291  code tabulation area had any (1) outpatient mental health treatment facility (more than nine-tenths
292 mean income, $81207) had any community-based mental health treatment resource vs 23.1% of communities
293 ic availability of community-based specialty mental health treatment resources and how these resource
294 ine the geographic availability of specialty mental health treatment resources that serve low-income
295    Measures of the availability of specialty mental health treatment resources were derived using nat
296 om CRTs in two National Health Service (NHS) mental health trusts in London: Camden and Islington NHS
297 tion of exposure to bullying in childhood to mental health using a twin differences design and multi-
298                                              Mental health was evaluated using validated, standardize
299  consisting of substance use, sexual health, mental health, weight and physical exercise, violence, a
300 in the World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys with 34 676 respondents who

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