Aim: To evaluate the impact of living conditions in early childhood on the health-related quality of life (HRQL - Health-related Quality of Life) among 13-year-olds.
Material And Methods: A prospective, three-phase study was carried out on the sample of 605 children born in January 1995 and on their parents. Standardized HRQL scores obtained from the Polish version of the CHQ-PF28 (Child Health Questionnaire Parent Form) questionnaire was used as outcome measure. Information on socioeconomic status was derived from: 1) the questionnaire completed by the parents in 1998 on living conditions and fulfilment of families' material needs during the child's first year of life; 2) the questionnaire completed by parents in 2008--parents' education and a subjective evaluation of family affluence; 3) the questionnaire completed simultaneously by the child--the family affluence scale and a subjective evaluation of family and neighbourhood affluence. For all CHQ-PF28 scores, multivariate linear regression models were estimated.
Results: The mean summary score of psychosocial health increased from 71.9 to 76.17 (p = 0.029) when comparing children who lived in bad and good conditions during the first year of life. When comparing families which were able and unable to satisfy their material needs 13 years earlier, poorer HRQL results in adolescents were noted in the latter group both in relation to the summary scale of physical (81.1 vs 77.9; p = 0.009) and psychosocial health (75.6 vs 71.0; p < 0.001). In 5 out of 12 multivariate models, fulfilment of families' material needs during the first year of children's life proved to be a HRQL predictor independently of the current SES. However, those models were related only to psychosocial health indices.
Conclusions: Family material status during the first year of the child's life has a strong impact on psychosocial health in adolescence. This impact remains, even if current social status was taken into account. The study has confirmed the need for implementing programmes for preventing social inequities in health aimed at families with small children or families expecting children.
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JMIR Res Protoc
January 2025
Division of Services and Interventions Research, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD, United States.
Background: Although substantial progress has been made in establishing evidence-based psychosocial clinical interventions and implementation strategies for mental health, translating research into practice-particularly in more accessible, community settings-has been slow.
Objective: This protocol outlines the renewal of the National Institute of Mental Health-funded University of Washington Advanced Laboratories for Accelerating the Reach and Impact of Treatments for Youth and Adults with Mental Illness Center, which draws from human-centered design (HCD) and implementation science to improve clinical interventions and implementation strategies. The Center's second round of funding (2023-2028) focuses on using the Discover, Design and Build, and Test (DDBT) framework to address 3 priority clinical intervention and implementation strategy mechanisms (ie, usability, engagement, and appropriateness), which we identified as challenges to implementation and scalability during the first iteration of the center.
Cien Saude Colet
January 2025
Instituto René Rachou, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz Minas). Av. Augusto de Lima 1715, Barro Preto. 30190-002 Belo Horizonte MG Brasil.
This integrative review systematized the factors that influence access to mental health services for the Homeless Population (HP) in harmful use of alcohol and other drugs in the Psychosocial Care Network (RAPS) in Brazil by categorizing the factors into access "barriers" and "facilitators". We selected 13 corresponding articles and subsequently assessed their methodological quality. We identified 19 access barriers and 22 access facilitators, observing a convergence and complementarity of the factors identified, with no disagreements between authors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Trauma Nurs
January 2025
Author Affiliations: Department of Psychiatry (Dr Bull and Ms Rohm), Department of Surgery (Dr Urban amd Ms Rohrer), College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences; and Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences (Dr McBain), Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois.
Background: Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) significantly impacts post-injury quality of life; however, many injured patients struggle to access necessary psychosocial care. A brief intervention, Talk, Listen, Communicate to Recover (TLC to Recover), may facilitate access to psychosocial care in low resource trauma centers.
Objective: This study assessed staff and patient perceptions regarding the feasibility and acceptability of implementing TLC to Recover at a Level I trauma center.
JAMA Netw Open
January 2025
Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, Maryland.
Importance: Sensitivity to environmental stress and adversity may influence lung cancer risk, highlighting a critical link between psychosocial factors and cancer etiology.
Objective: To evaluate whether genetically estimated sensitivity to environmental stress and adversity is associated with lung cancer risk.
Design, Setting, And Participants: Data were obtained from a genome-wide association study identifying 37 independent genetic variants strongly associated with sensitivity to environmental stress and adversity and a cross-ancestry genome-wide meta-analysis from the International Lung Cancer Consortium.
Gerontologist
January 2025
School of Aging Studies, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA.
Background And Objectives: To better understand racial/ethnic disparities in hearing aid use, we examined racial differences in discrepancies between subjective hearing ratings and objective hearing tests as a potential source of this disparity.
Research Design And Methods: A cross-sectional assessment was conducted using the data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). Our analytic sample included 2,568 participants aged 50 and older: 1,814 non-Hispanic White Americans and 754 non-Hispanic Black Americans.
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