38,055 research outputs found
TB STIGMA – MEASUREMENT GUIDANCE
TB is the most deadly infectious disease in the world, and stigma continues to play a significant role in worsening the epidemic. Stigma and discrimination not only stop people from seeking care but also make it more difficult for those on treatment to continue, both of which make the disease more difficult to treat in the long-term and mean those infected are more likely to transmit the disease to those around them. TB Stigma – Measurement Guidance is a manual to help generate enough information about stigma issues to design and monitor and evaluate efforts to reduce TB stigma. It can help in planning TB stigma baseline measurements and monitoring trends to capture the outcomes of TB stigma reduction efforts. This manual is designed for health workers, professional or management staff, people who advocate for those with TB, and all who need to understand and respond to TB stigma
How patients contribute to an online psychoeducation forum for bipolar disorder: a virtual participant observation study
Background: In a recent exploratory randomized controlled trial, an online psychoeducation intervention for bipolar disorder
has been found to be feasible and acceptable to patients and may positively impact on their self-management behaviors and quality
of life.
Objective: The objective of the study was to investigate how these patients contribute to an online forum for bipolar disorder
and the issues relevant for them.
Methods: Participants in the intervention arm of the Bipolar Interactive PsychoEDucation (“BIPED”) trial were invited to
contribute to the Beating Bipolar forum alongside receiving interactive online psychoeducation modules. Within this virtual
participant observation study, forum posts were analyzed using thematic analysis, incorporating aspects of discourse analysis.
Results: The key themes which arose from the forum posts included: medication, employment, stigma, social support, coping
strategies, insight and acceptance, the life chart, and negative experiences of health care. Participants frequently provided personal
narratives relating to their history of bipolar disorder, life experiences, and backgrounds, which often contained emotive language
and humor. They regularly sought and offered advice, and expressed encouragement and empathy. The forum would have
benefitted from more users to offer a greater support network with more diverse views and experiences.
Conclusions: Online forums are inexpensive to provide and may offer peer support and the opportunity for patients to share
their experiences and explore issues related to their illness anonymously. Future research should focus on how to enhance patient
engagement with online health care forums
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The (Mis)appropriation of HIV/AIDS advocacy strategies in Global Mental Health: towards a more nuanced approach
Background: Mental health is increasingly finding a place on global health and international development agendas. Advocates for Global Mental Health (GMH), and international organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Bank, argue that treatments available in high-income countries should also be made available in low- and middle-income countries. Such arguments are often made by comparing mental health to infectious diseases, including the relative disease and economic burdens they impose, and pointing to the applicability of the right to access treatment for mental health, not only infectious diseases. HIV/AIDS advocacy in particular has been held up by GMH advocates as offering an appropriate strategy for generating global commitment.
Discussion: There is a need to assess how health issues are framed not only in relation to social goods outside of health (such as human rights, security or development), but also in relation to other health or disease models, and how health policy and practice is shaped as a result. The article debates the merits and consequences of likening mental health to HIV/AIDS, and identifies four major problems with the model for GMH advocacy being developed through these analogies: 1. An inappropriately universalizing global approach to context-specific problems; 2. A conception of human rights that focuses on the right to access treatment at the expense of the right to refuse it; 3. A tendency to treat poverty as a psychiatric issue, rather than recognizing that mental distress can be the result of poverty and other forms of inequality; 4. The prioritization of destigmatization of disease over social justice models.
Conclusion: There are significant problems with the wholesale adoption of an (often simplified) version of HIV/AIDS advocacy as a model for GMH. Yet critical engagement with the important and nuanced differences between HIV/AIDS and mental health may nevertheless point to some possibilities for productive engagement and cross-fertilisation between advocates, activists and scholars in both fields
Generative Adversarial Text to Image Synthesis
Automatic synthesis of realistic images from text would be interesting and
useful, but current AI systems are still far from this goal. However, in recent
years generic and powerful recurrent neural network architectures have been
developed to learn discriminative text feature representations. Meanwhile, deep
convolutional generative adversarial networks (GANs) have begun to generate
highly compelling images of specific categories, such as faces, album covers,
and room interiors. In this work, we develop a novel deep architecture and GAN
formulation to effectively bridge these advances in text and image model- ing,
translating visual concepts from characters to pixels. We demonstrate the
capability of our model to generate plausible images of birds and flowers from
detailed text descriptions.Comment: ICML 201
Social and Cultural Contexts of Alcohol Use: Influences in a Social-Ecological Framework.
Alcohol use and misuse account for 3.3 million deaths every year, or 6 percent of all deaths worldwide. The harmful effects of alcohol misuse are far reaching and range from individual health risks, morbidity, and mortality to consequences for family, friends, and the larger society. This article reviews a few of the cultural and social influences on alcohol use and places individual alcohol use within the contexts and environments where people live and interact. It includes a discussion of macrolevel factors, such as advertising and marketing, immigration and discrimination factors, and how neighborhoods, families, and peers influence alcohol use. Specifically, the article describes how social and cultural contexts influence alcohol use/misuse and then explores future directions for alcohol research
Pillars for Progress on the Right to Health: Harnessing the Potential of Human Rights Through a Framework Convention on Global Health
Ever more constitutions incorporate the right to health, courts continue to expand their right to health jurisprudence, and communities and civil society increasingly turn to the right to health in their advocacy. Yet the right remains far from being realized. Even with steady progress on numerous fronts of global health, vast inequities at the global and national levels persist, and are responsible for millions of deaths annually. We propose a four-part approach to accelerating progress towards fulfilling the right to health: 1) national legal and policy reform, incorporating right to health obligations and principles including equity, participation, and accountability in designing, implementing, and monitoring the health sector, as well as an all-of-government approach in advancing the public\u27s health; 2) litigation, using creative legal strategies, enhanced training, and promotion of progressive judgments to increase courts\u27 effectiveness in advancing the right to health; 3) civil society and community engagement, empowering communities to understand and claim this right and building the capacity of right to health organizations; and 4) innovative global governance for health, strengthening World Health Organization leadership on health and human rights, further clarifying the international right to health, ensuring sustained and scalable development assistance, and conforming other international legal regimes (e.g., trade, intellectual property, and finance) to health and human rights norms. We offer specific steps to advance each of these areas, including how a new global health treaty, a Framework Convention on Global Health, could help construct these four pillars
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