Wai Tat Chiu’s research while affiliated with Harvard Medical School and other places

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Publications (47)


Overview of methodology used in the Qatar‐based clinical reappraisal study of the composite international diagnostic interview (CIDI version 3.3).
Clinical reappraisal of the composite international diagnostic interview version 3.3 in Qatar's National Mental Health Study
  • Article
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May 2024

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33 Reads

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4 Citations

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Menatalla Abdelkader

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Ronald C. Kessler

Objectives Lifetime DSM‐5 diagnoses generated by the lay‐administered Composite International Diagnostic Interview for DSM‐5 (CIDI) in the World Mental Health Qatar (WMHQ) study were compared to diagnoses based on blinded clinician‐administered reappraisal interviews. Methods Telephone follow‐up interviews used the non‐patient edition of the Structured Clinician Interview for DSM‐5 (SCID) oversampling respondents who screened positive for five diagnoses in the CIDI: major depressive episode, mania/hypomania, panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and obsessive‐compulsive disorder. Concordance was also examined for a diagnoses of post‐traumatic stress disorder based on a short‐form versus full version of the PTSD Checklist for DSM‐5 (PCL‐5). Results Initial CIDI prevalence estimates differed significantly from the SCID for most diagnoses (χ12 χ12{\chi }_{1}^{2} = 6.6–31.4, p = 0.010 < 0.001), but recalibration reduced most of these differences and led to consistent increases in individual‐level concordance (AU‐ROC) from 0.53–0.76 to 0.67–0.81. Recalibration of the short‐form PCL‐5 removed an initially significant difference in PTSD prevalence with the full PCL‐5 (from χ12 χ12{\chi }_{1}^{2} = 610.5, p < 0.001 to χ12 χ12{\chi }_{1}^{2} = 2.5, p = 0.110) while also increasing AU‐ROC from 0.76 to 0.81. Conclusions Recalibration resulted in valid diagnoses of common mental disorders in the Qatar National Mental Health Survey, but with inflated prevalence estimates for some disorders that need to be considered when interpreting results.

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Age of onset and cumulative risk of mental disorders: a cross-national analysis of population surveys from 29 countries

July 2023

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1,560 Reads

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175 Citations

The Lancet Psychiatry

Summary Background Information on the frequency and timing of mental disorder onsets across the lifespan is of fundamental importance for public health planning. Broad, cross-national estimates of this information from coordinated general population surveys were last updated in 2007. We aimed to provide updated and improved estimates of age-of-onset distributions, lifetime prevalence, and morbid risk. Methods In this cross-national analysis, we analysed data from respondents aged 18 years or older to the World Mental Health surveys, a coordinated series of cross-sectional, face-to-face community epidemiological surveys administered between 2001 and 2022. In the surveys, the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview, a fully structured psychiatric diagnostic interview, was used to assess age of onset, lifetime prevalence, and morbid risk of 13 DSM-IV mental disorders until age 75 years across surveys by sex. We did not assess ethnicity. The surveys were geographically clustered and weighted to adjust for selection probability, and standard errors of incidence rates and cumulative incidence curves were calculated using the jackknife repeated replications simulation method, taking weighting and geographical clustering of data into account. Findings We included 156 331 respondents from 32 surveys in 29 countries, including 12 low-income and middle�income countries and 17 high-income countries, and including 85 308 (54·5%) female respondents and 71 023 (45·4%) male respondents. The lifetime prevalence of any mental disorder was 28·6% (95% CI 27·9–29·2) for male respondents and 29·8% (29·2–30·3) for female respondents. Morbid risk of any mental disorder by age 75 years was 46·4% (44·9–47·8) for male respondents and 53·1% (51·9–54·3) for female respondents. Conditional probabilities of first onset peaked at approximately age 15 years, with a median age of onset of 19 years (IQR 14–32) for male respondents and 20 years (12–36) for female respondents. The two most prevalent disorders were alcohol use disorder and major depressive disorder for male respondents and major depressive disorder and specific phobia for female respondents. Interpretation By age 75 years, approximately half the population can expect to develop one or more of the 13 mental disorders considered in this Article. These disorders typically first emerge in childhood, adolescence, or young adulthood. Services should have the capacity to detect and treat common mental disorders promptly and to optimise care that suits people at these crucial parts of the life course.


Findings From the World Mental Health Surveys of Civil Violence Exposure and Its Association With Subsequent Onset and Persistence of Mental Disorders

June 2023

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81 Reads

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8 Citations

JAMA Network Open

Importance: Understanding the association of civil violence with mental disorders is important for developing effective postconflict recovery policies. Objective: To estimate the association between exposure to civil violence and the subsequent onset and persistence of common mental disorders (in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition [DSM-IV]) in representative surveys of civilians from countries that have experienced civil violence since World War II. Design, setting, and participants: This study used data from cross-sectional World Health Organization World Mental Health (WMH) surveys administered to households between February 5, 2001, and January 5, 2022, in 7 countries that experienced periods of civil violence after World War II (Argentina, Colombia, Lebanon, Nigeria, Northern Ireland, Peru, and South Africa). Data from respondents in other WMH surveys who immigrated from countries with civil violence in Africa and Latin America were also included. Representative samples comprised adults (aged ≥18 years) from eligible countries. Data analysis was performed from February 10 to 13, 2023. Exposures: Exposure was defined as a self-report of having been a civilian in a war zone or region of terror. Related stressors (being displaced, witnessing atrocities, or being a combatant) were also assessed. Exposures occurred a median of 21 (IQR, 12-30) years before the interview. Main outcomes and measures: The main outcome was the retrospectively reported lifetime prevalence and 12-month persistence (estimated by calculating 12-month prevalence among lifetime cases) of DSM-IV anxiety, mood, and externalizing (alcohol use, illicit drug use, or intermittent explosive) disorders. Results: This study included 18 212 respondents from 7 countries. Of these individuals, 2096 reported that they were exposed to civil violence (56.5% were men; median age, 40 [IQR, 30-52] years) and 16 116 were not exposed (45.2% were men; median age, 35 [IQR, 26-48] years). Respondents who reported being exposed to civil violence had a significantly elevated onset risk of anxiety (risk ratio [RR], 1.8 [95% CI, 1.5-2.1]), mood (RR, 1.5 [95% CI, 1.3-1.7]), and externalizing (RR, 1.6 [95% CI, 1.3-1.9]) disorders. Combatants additionally had a significantly elevated onset risk of anxiety disorders (RR, 2.0 [95% CI, 1.3-3.1]) and refugees had an increased onset risk of mood (RR, 1.5 [95% CI, 1.1-2.0]) and externalizing (RR, 1.6 [95% CI, 1.0-2.4]) disorders. Elevated disorder onset risks persisted for more than 2 decades if conflicts persisted but not after either termination of hostilities or emigration. Persistence (ie, 12-month prevalence among respondents with lifetime prevalence of the disorder), in comparison, was generally not associated with exposure. Conclusions: In this survey study of exposure to civil violence, exposure was associated with an elevated risk of mental disorders among civilians for many years after initial exposure. These findings suggest that policy makers should recognize these associations when projecting future mental disorder treatment needs in countries experiencing civil violence and among affected migrants.


Figure 1 Cumulative proportion of patients who would be expected to receive helpful treatment by number of professionals seen pooled across all diagnostic categories
Figure 2 Cumulative proportion of patients who would be expected to persist in professional help-seeking after previous treatments were not helpful pooled across all diagnostic categories
Conditional probabilities of patient-reported treatment helpfulness by number of professionals seen pooled across diagnostic categories
Significant predictors of patient-level variation in treatment helpfulness across diagnostic categories other than alcohol use disorder decomposed through associations with the helpfulness of individual professionals and persistence in help-seeking pooled across number of pro- fessionals seen
Patterns and correlates of patient‐reported helpfulness of treatment for common mental and substance use disorders in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys

June 2022

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719 Reads

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23 Citations

World psychiatry: official journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA)

Patient‐reported helpfulness of treatment is an important indicator of quality in patient‐centered care. We examined its pathways and predictors among respondents to household surveys who reported ever receiving treatment for major depression, generalized anxiety disorder, social phobia, specific phobia, post‐traumatic stress disorder, bipolar disorder, or alcohol use disorder. Data came from 30 community epidemiological surveys – 17 in high‐income countries (HICs) and 13 in low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMICs) – carried out as part of the World Health Organization (WHO)’s World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys. Respondents were asked whether treatment of each disorder was ever helpful and, if so, the number of professionals seen before receiving helpful treatment. Across all surveys and diagnostic categories, 26.1% of patients (N=10,035) reported being helped by the very first professional they saw. Persisting to a second professional after a first unhelpful treatment brought the cumulative probability of receiving helpful treatment to 51.2%. If patients persisted with up through eight professionals, the cumulative probability rose to 90.6%. However, only an estimated 22.8% of patients would have persisted in seeing these many professionals after repeatedly receiving treatments they considered not helpful. Although the proportion of individuals with disorders who sought treatment was higher and they were more persistent in HICs than LMICs, proportional helpfulness among treated cases was no different between HICs and LMICs. A wide range of predictors of perceived treatment helpfulness were found, some of them consistent across diagnostic categories and others unique to specific disorders. These results provide novel information about patient evaluations of treatment across diagnoses and countries varying in income level, and suggest that a critical issue in improving the quality of care for mental disorders should be fostering persistence in professional help‐seeking if earlier treatments are not helpful.


Perceived helpfulness of treatment for social anxiety disorder: findings from the WHO World Mental Health Surveys

March 2022

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122 Reads

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14 Citations

Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology

Purpose: To investigate the prevalence and predictors of perceived helpfulness of treatment in persons with a history of DSM-IV social anxiety disorder (SAD), using a worldwide population-based sample. Methods: The World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys is a coordinated series of community epidemiological surveys of non-institutionalized adults; 27 surveys in 24 countries (16 in high-income; 11 in low/middle-income countries; N = 117,856) included people with a lifetime history of treated SAD. Results: In respondents with lifetime SAD, approximately one in five ever obtained treatment. Among these (n = 1322), cumulative probability of receiving treatment they regarded as helpful after seeing up to seven professionals was 92.2%. However, only 30.2% persisted this long, resulting in 65.1% ever receiving treatment perceived as helpful. Perceiving treatment as helpful was more common in female respondents, those currently married, more highly educated, and treated in non-formal health-care settings. Persistence in seeking treatment for SAD was higher among those with shorter delays in seeking treatment, in those receiving medication from a mental health specialist, and those with more than two lifetime anxiety disorders. Conclusions: The vast majority of individuals with SAD do not receive any treatment. Among those who do, the probability that people treated for SAD obtain treatment they consider helpful increases considerably if they persisted in help-seeking after earlier unhelpful treatments.


Perceived helpfulness of treatment for alcohol use disorders: Findings from the World Mental Health Surveys

December 2021

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143 Reads

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6 Citations

Drug and Alcohol Dependence

Aim We examined prevalence and factors associated with receiving perceived helpful alcohol use disorder (AUD) treatment, and persistence in help-seeking after earlier unhelpful treatment. Methods Data came from 27 community epidemiologic surveys of adults in 24 countries using the World Health Organization World Mental Health surveys (n = 93,843). Participants with a lifetime history of treated AUD were asked if they ever received helpful AUD treatment, and how many professionals they had talked to up to and including the first time they received helpful treatment (or how many ever, if they had not received helpful treatment). Results 11.8% of respondents with lifetime AUD reported ever obtaining treatment (n = 9378); of these, 44% reported that treatment was helpful. The probability of obtaining helpful treatment from the first professional seen was 21.8%; the conditional probability of subsequent professionals being helpful after earlier unhelpful treatment tended to decrease as more professionals were seen. The cumulative probability of receiving helpful treatment at least once increased from 21.8% after the first professional to 79.7% after the seventh professional seen, following earlier unhelpful treatment. However, the cumulative probability of persisting with up to seven professionals in the face of prior treatments being unhelpful was only 13.2%. Conclusion Fewer than half of people with AUDs who sought treatment found treatment helpful; the most important factor was persistence in seeking further treatment if a previous professional had not helped. Future research should examine how to increase the likelihood that AUD treatment is found to be helpful on any given contact.


Changes in Prevalence of Mental Illness Among US Adults During Compared with Before the COVID-19 Pandemic

November 2021

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40 Reads

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49 Citations

Psychiatric Clinics of North America

The authors review trend and cohort surveys and administrative data comparing prevalence of mental disorders during, versus, and before the COVID-19 pandemic and changes in mental health disparities. Best evidence suggests clinically significant anxiety-depression point prevalence increased by relative-risk (RR) = 1.3 to 1.5 during the pandemic compared with before. This level of increase is much less than the implausibly high RR = 5.0 to 8.0 estimates reported in trend studies early in the pandemic based on less-appropriate comparisons. Changes in prevalence also occurred during the pandemic, but relative prevalence appears not to have changed substantially over this time.


Abbreviations CIDI: Composite International diagnostic interview; GAD: Generalized anxiety disorder; RCT: Randomized control trial; WHO: World health organization; WMH: World mental health
Multivariable analysis of predictors of obtaining helpful treatment (person-level composite outcome) and of the decomposed encounter-level outcomes of helpful treatment and persistence, among people with lifetime DSM-5 generalized anxiety disorder who obtained treatment
Perceived helpfulness of treatment for generalized anxiety disorder: a World Mental Health Surveys report

August 2021

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281 Reads

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24 Citations

BMC Psychiatry

Background: Treatment guidelines for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) are based on a relatively small number of randomized controlled trials and do not consider patient-centered perceptions of treatment helpfulness. We investigated the prevalence and predictors of patient-reported treatment helpfulness for DSM-5 GAD and its two main treatment pathways: encounter-level treatment helpfulness and persistence in help-seeking after prior unhelpful treatment. Methods: Data came from community epidemiologic surveys in 23 countries in the WHO World Mental Health surveys. DSM-5 GAD was assessed with the fully structured WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview Version 3.0. Respondents with a history of GAD were asked whether they ever received treatment and, if so, whether they ever considered this treatment helpful. Number of professionals seen before obtaining helpful treatment was also assessed. Parallel survival models estimated probability and predictors of a given treatment being perceived as helpful and of persisting in help-seeking after prior unhelpful treatment. Results: The overall prevalence rate of GAD was 4.5%, with lower prevalence in low/middle-income countries (2.8%) than high-income countries (5.3%); 34.6% of respondents with lifetime GAD reported ever obtaining treatment for their GAD, with lower proportions in low/middle-income countries (19.2%) than high-income countries (38.4%); 3) 70% of those who received treatment perceived the treatment to be helpful, with prevalence comparable in low/middle-income countries and high-income countries. Survival analysis suggested that virtually all patients would have obtained helpful treatment if they had persisted in help-seeking with up to 10 professionals. However, we estimated that only 29.7% of patients would have persisted that long. Obtaining helpful treatment at the person-level was associated with treatment type, comorbid panic/agoraphobia, and childhood adversities, but most of these predictors were important because they predicted persistence rather than encounter-level treatment helpfulness. Conclusions: The majority of individuals with GAD do not receive treatment. Most of those who receive treatment regard it as helpful, but receiving helpful treatment typically requires persistence in help-seeking. Future research should focus on ensuring that helpfulness is included as part of the evaluation. Clinicians need to emphasize the importance of persistence to patients beginning treatment.


Multivariate associations between temporally prior DSM-IV mental disorders and subsequent NSSI in the WMH-ICS
Non-suicidal self-injury among first-year college students and its association with mental disorders: results from the World Mental Health International College Student (WMH-ICS) initiative

June 2021

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575 Reads

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82 Citations

Psychological Medicine

Background Although non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) is an issue of major concern to colleges worldwide, we lack detailed information about the epidemiology of NSSI among college students. The objectives of this study were to present the first cross-national data on the prevalence of NSSI and NSSI disorder among first-year college students and its association with mental disorders. Methods Data come from a survey of the entering class in 24 colleges across nine countries participating in the World Mental Health International College Student (WMH-ICS) initiative assessed in web-based self-report surveys (20 842 first-year students). Using retrospective age-of-onset reports, we investigated time-ordered associations between NSSI and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-IV) mood (major depressive and bipolar disorder), anxiety (generalized anxiety and panic disorder), and substance use disorders (alcohol and drug use disorder). Results NSSI lifetime and 12-month prevalence were 17.7% and 8.4%. A positive screen of 12-month DSM-5 NSSI disorder was 2.3%. Of those with lifetime NSSI, 59.6% met the criteria for at least one mental disorder. Temporally primary lifetime mental disorders predicted subsequent onset of NSSI [median odds ratio (OR) 2.4], but these primary lifetime disorders did not consistently predict 12-month NSSI among respondents with lifetime NSSI. Conversely, even after controlling for pre-existing mental disorders, NSSI consistently predicted later onset of mental disorders (median OR 1.8) as well as 12-month persistence of mental disorders among students with a generalized anxiety disorder (OR 1.6) and bipolar disorder (OR 4.6). Conclusions NSSI is common among first-year college students and is a behavioral marker of various common mental disorders.


Perceived helpfulness of treatment for specific phobia: Findings from the World Mental Health Surveys

April 2021

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103 Reads

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16 Citations

Journal of Affective Disorders

Background Although randomized trials show that social phobia treatments can be effective, it is unclear whether patients experience treatment as helpful in clinical practice. We investigated this issue by assessing perceived treatment helpfulness for specific phobia in a cross-national epidemiological survey. Methods Cross-sectional population-based WHO World Mental Health (WMH) surveys in 24 countries (n=112,507) assessed lifetime specific phobia. Respondents who met lifetime criteria were asked whether they ever received treatment they considered helpful and the number of professionals seen up to the time of receiving helpful treatment. Discrete-event survival analysis was used to calculate conditional-cumulative probabilities of obtaining helpful treatment across number of professionals seen and of persisting in help-seeking after prior unhelpful treatment. Results 23.0% of respondents reported receiving helpful treatment from the first professional seen, whereas cumulative probability of receiving helpful treatment was 85.7% after seeing up to 9 professionals. However, only 14.7% of patients persisted in seeing up to 9 professionals, resulting in the proportion of patients ever receiving helpful treatment (47.5%) being much lower than it could have been with persistence in help-seeking. Few predictors were found either of perceived helpfulness or of persistence in help-seeking after earlier unhelpful treatments. Limitations Retrospective recall and lack of information about either types of treatments received or objective symptomatic improvements limit results. Conclusions Despite these limitations, results suggest that helpfulness of specific phobia treatment could be increased, perhaps substantially, by increasing patient persistence in help-seeking after earlier unhelpful treatments. Improved understanding is needed of barriers to help-seeking persistence.


Citations (45)


... As described in another manuscript published in this journal issue (Khaled, Amro, Abdelkader, et al., 2024), blind clinical reinterviews using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5 (SCID) (First et al., 2015) found generally good concordance between WMH-CIDI-5 diagnoses and SCID diagnoses (AU-ROC from 0.67 to 0.81). Comorbid disorders were defined as the number of disorders, exactly 1, exactly 2, and 3 or more. ...

Reference:

Lifetime prevalence, risk, and treatment of mood and anxiety disorders in Qatar's national mental health study
Clinical reappraisal of the composite international diagnostic interview version 3.3 in Qatar's National Mental Health Study

... At present, an estimated 1 in 8 adults [2] and more than 1 in 10 youths [3] around the world meet criteria for a mental disorder (as defined by classification manuals such as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)). According to a cross-national analysis of population surveys from 29 countries published in 2023, by the age of 75 years, approximately half the population will have endured one or more mental health conditions, which typically first emerged in childhood, adolescence, or young adulthood [4]. In these surveys, the Composite International Diagnostic Interview of the World Health Organisation (WHO), a fully structured psychiatric diagnostic interview, was used to assess age of onset and lifetime prevalence of mental health conditions. ...

Age of onset and cumulative risk of mental disorders: a cross-national analysis of population surveys from 29 countries
  • Citing Article
  • July 2023

The Lancet Psychiatry

... Detrimental effects of such subjugation have widespread repercussions as shown by research. In a long-term study of 18,212 respondents from seven countries, researchers found that exposure to civil violence was associated with an elevated risk of mental disorders among civilians for many years after initial exposure (Axinn et al., 2023). This study used data from cross-sectional World Health Organisation, World Mental Health (WMH) surveys administered to households between 5 February 2001 and 5 January 2022, in countries that experienced periods of civil violence after World War II (Argentina, Colombia, Lebanon, Nigeria, Northern Ireland, Peru and South Africa). ...

Findings From the World Mental Health Surveys of Civil Violence Exposure and Its Association With Subsequent Onset and Persistence of Mental Disorders

JAMA Network Open

... At present, many types of antidepressants and anxiolytics that are used in the clinic are able to effectively help many patients; nonetheless, a high percentage of patients have delayed responses or no response to treatment and develop certain side effects, suggesting that the current pathophysiological understanding of depression/anxiety is still very weak. In particular, the methods and techniques for observing intracranial lesions are limited; researchers do not yet have the means to explain a series of complex symptoms, let alone resolve the weaknesses of current drug treatments for depression/anxiety (10). Given this situation, rodent models may be an important resource for exploring the fundamental mechanism of depression/anxiety, potentially advancing the research on core symptoms and aiding in the development of targeted treatments (11,12). ...

Patterns and correlates of patient‐reported helpfulness of treatment for common mental and substance use disorders in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys

World psychiatry: official journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA)

... Despite available effective treatments including CBT, less than 40% of Canadians with a past year episode of SAD consulted a healthcare professional for their symptoms [3,4]. Worldwide estimates have shown that on average 20% of individuals with a lifetime SAD received any treatment [35]. Barriers to health service use and access to psychological services for common mental disorders like anxiety disorders include those related to geography (living in rural communities), language, ethnicity and race (diverse groups), as well as age (older adults) [36][37][38][39]. ...

Perceived helpfulness of treatment for social anxiety disorder: findings from the WHO World Mental Health Surveys
  • Citing Article
  • March 2022

Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology

... Alcohol misuse results in substantial health care costs and lost work productivity in addition to the psychological, interpersonal, and chronic health difficulties associated with high levels of alcohol use [1][2][3]. Unfortunately, only a small fraction of individuals struggling with alcohol misuse seek and/or receive treatment, often due to barriers such as stigma, lack of available services in primary care locations, or low perceived helpfulness of accessible treatments [4][5][6]. There is growing acknowledgement of Internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy (ICBT) as an innovative and evidence-based treatment method for overcoming some of these barriers to seeking and receiving face-to-face alcohol misuse treatment [7]. ...

Perceived helpfulness of treatment for alcohol use disorders: Findings from the World Mental Health Surveys
  • Citing Article
  • December 2021

Drug and Alcohol Dependence

... Nevertheless, they acknowledged that the studies included in their review are extremely diverse, with large variations in sample sizes, methods, and national contexts, making it difficult to interpret the aggregated results. Kessler et al. (2022) reviewed thousands of studies conducted in the United States but found that many of them were of poor quality and few included data from both before and during the pandemic. Despite these limitations, focusing on high quality studies they were able to conclude that COVID-19 has had a significant negative impact on Americans' reports of anxiety and depression symptoms, with the impact especially strong among women, adults in low-SES groups, and relatively younger adults (under age 60). ...

Changes in Prevalence of Mental Illness Among US Adults During Compared with Before the COVID-19 Pandemic
  • Citing Article
  • November 2021

Psychiatric Clinics of North America

... The disorder is typically chronic (Hoge et al., 2004) and results in substantial individual and economic burden (Konnopka & König, 2020). Globally, the combined lifetime prevalence of GAD is 4.5% (Stein et al., 2021), and the 12-month prevalence is 1.8% (Ruscio et al., 2017). The effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) for the treatment of GAD is well established, with results of a previous meta-analysis demonstrating large effect sizes (g = 1.01; 95% CI: .44-1.57) (Carpenter et al., 2018). ...

Perceived helpfulness of treatment for generalized anxiety disorder: a World Mental Health Surveys report

BMC Psychiatry

... Additionally, the alcohol use disorder rates were 35.8% and 41.7% 4 . Experiencing mental health issues is associated with poor academic achievements 5 , increased academic drop-out rates 6 , and a high prevalence of suicide-related outcomes 7 and non-suicidal self-injury 8 . Improving early detection and pinpointing vulnerable populations in schools, the community, and clinical settings has been highlighted 9 . ...

Non-suicidal self-injury among first-year college students and its association with mental disorders: results from the World Mental Health International College Student (WMH-ICS) initiative

Psychological Medicine

... Specific phobias are associated with impairment and show high comorbidity with other mental health disorders [32]. Moreover, a recent population-based survey in 24 countries showed that patients suffering from specific phobias who were seeking professional help received helpful treatment only in 23% of cases from their first professional contact [34]. In the case of claustrophobia, the limitations due to this phobia become highly relevant for patients preparing for an MRI scan. ...

Perceived helpfulness of treatment for specific phobia: Findings from the World Mental Health Surveys
  • Citing Article
  • April 2021

Journal of Affective Disorders