49 research outputs found

    Perception of Stigma and Its Associated Factors Among Patients With Major Depressive Disorder: A Multicenter Survey From an Asian Population

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    Stigma of major depressive disorder (MDD) is an important public health problem. This study aimed to examine the level of perceived stigma and its associated factors in MDD patients in five Asian countries, including China, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand. A total of 547 outpatients with MDD were included from Asian countries. We used the stigma scale of the Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC) to assess stigma. The Montgomery–Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), Symptoms Checklist 90-Revised (SCL-90-R), Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS), Sheehan Disability Scale (SDS), 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36), and Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS) were used to assess symptoms, clinical features, functional impairment, health status, and social support. The stigma scores of patients under 55 years old were significantly higher than those equal to or greater than 55 years old (P < 0.001). The stigma scores exhibited significant negative correlation with age; MSPSS scores of family, friends, and others; and SF-36 subscale of mental health, but significant positive correlation with MADRS, FSS, SDS, and SCL-90-R subscale scores of depression, interpersonal sensitivity, obsession–compulsion, psychoticism, and somatization. Multivariate regression analysis revealed that age, SCL-90-R interpersonal sensitivity, obsession–compulsion, psychoticism, MSPSS scores of friends and others, and SF-36 of mental health were significantly associated with the level of perceived stigma. These findings suggest that MDD patients who are young, have a high degree of interpersonal sensitivity and psychoticism, have low health-related quality of life, and have low social support are the target population for stigma interventions in Asia

    An outbreak of Streptococcus pyogenes in a mental health facility : advantage of well-timed whole-genome sequencing over emm typing

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    Financial support: The outbreak investigation was supported by Institute of Mental Health.OBJECTIVE:  We report the utility of whole-genome sequencing (WGS) conducted in a clinically relevant time frame (ie, sufficient for guiding management decision), in managing a Streptococcus pyogenes outbreak, and present a comparison of its performance with emm typing. SETTING:  A 2,000-bed tertiary-care psychiatric hospital. METHODS:  Active surveillance was conducted to identify new cases of S. pyogenes. WGS guided targeted epidemiological investigations, and infection control measures were implemented. Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based genome phylogeny, emm typing, and multilocus sequence typing (MLST) were performed. We compared the ability of WGS and emm typing to correctly identify person-to-person transmission and to guide the management of the outbreak. RESULTS:  The study included 204 patients and 152 staff. We identified 35 patients and 2 staff members with S. pyogenes. WGS revealed polyclonal S. pyogenes infections with 3 genetically distinct phylogenetic clusters (C1-C3). Cluster C1 isolates were all emm type 4, sequence type 915 and had pairwise SNP differences of 0-5, which suggested recent person-to-person transmissions. Epidemiological investigation revealed that cluster C1 was mediated by dermal colonization and transmission of S. pyogenes in a male residential ward. Clusters C2 and C3 were genomically diverse, with pairwise SNP differences of 21-45 and 26-58, and emm 11 and mostly emm120, respectively. Clusters C2 and C3, which may have been considered person-to-person transmissions by emm typing, were shown by WGS to be unlikely by integrating pairwise SNP differences with epidemiology. CONCLUSIONS:  WGS had higher resolution than emm typing in identifying clusters with recent and ongoing person-to-person transmissions, which allowed implementation of targeted intervention to control the outbreak.PostprintPeer reviewe

    Case Scenario 2: Clinical Commentary

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    10.1353/asb.2013.0048Asian Bioethics Review53217-22

    "Ravishment of reason": politics and the passions in Restoration heroic drama, 1660-1690

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    © 2011 Dr. Brandon Choon Hong ChuaThe Stuart Restoration of 1660 occurred in the aftermath of a destabilising crisis of authority in which the concept of political legitimacy was opened up to contentious debate. In this crisis, the individual will and affections were posited as crucial elements comprising the foundations of political authority: the consent of subjects to a political contract was increasingly maintained to be a fundamental marker of a government's legitimacy. This rise of a politicised individual psychology threatened to displace traditional moral understandings of the passions, as the moral law of temperance was displaced by a disinterested categorising of the appetites into predictable interests. The literary imagination of the period engaged vehemently with this new political dimension of the human passions. Through readings of heroic drama from 1660-1688, this thesis proposes to shift critical debate away from the plays' alleged function as royalist propaganda or as one-on-one political allegories. The figure of the conflicted hero in these theatrical spectacles provided an effective medium in which playwrights could ask incisive questions about the obligations a subject had to structures of authority, as well as to the limits of his obedience and the revocability of his political consent. The self-reflexive nature of the Restoration heroic play also allowed it a unique position in analysing and debating the political solicitation of affection for the newly legitimised monarchy, a political activity in which the Restoration theatres themselves were deeply invested. My readings of the drama reveal deep ideological divisions on the issue of consent, enacting a vigorous debate on the passions and the need for their suppression or indulgence. This study thus offers a reconsideration of Restoration heroic drama as a serious engagement in wider seventeenth-century debates on political and ethical theory

    A study of industrial policy of Thailand.

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    Study of industrial policy of Thailand.Master of Busines

    Curry consumption and cognitive function in the elderly

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    10.1093/aje/kwj267American Journal of Epidemiology1649898-90

    Economic burden of multimorbidity among older adults: impact on healthcare and societal costs

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    BACKGROUND: Multimorbidity is not uncommon and the associated impact it places on healthcare utilisation and societal costs is of increased concern. The aim of the current study was to estimate the economic burden of multimorbidity among older adults in Singapore by investigating its association with the healthcare and societal resource use and cost. METHODS: The Well-being of the Singapore Elderly (WiSE) study was a single phase, cross sectional survey among a nationally representative sample of Singapore residents (N = 2565) aged 60 years and above. Multimorbidity was defined in this study as having two or more chronic conditions, from a list of 10 conditions. Care was classified into healthcare which included direct medical care, intermediate and long-term care, indirect care, and social care, provided by paid caregivers and family members or friends. Costs were calculated from the societal perspective, including healthcare and social care costs, by multiplying each service unit with the relevant unit cost. Generalized linear models were used to investigate the relationship between total annual costs and various socio-demographic factors. RESULTS: The prevalence of multimorbidity was 51.5 %. Multimorbid respondents utilised more healthcare and social care resources than those with one or no chronic conditions. The total societal cost of multimorbidity equated to SGD15,148perperson,annually,whileforthosewithoneornochronicconditionsthetotalannualsocietalcostsperpersonwereSGD15,148 per person, annually, while for those with one or no chronic conditions the total annual societal costs per person were SGD5,610 and SGD2,806,respectively.Eachadditionalchronicconditionwasassociatedwithincreasedhealthcare(SGD2,806, respectively. Each additional chronic condition was associated with increased healthcare (SGD2,265) and social care costs (SGD$3,177). Older age (i.e. 75–84 years old, and especially over 85 years), Indian ethnicity and being retired were significantly associated with higher total costs from the societal perspective, while older age (75 years and above) and ‘Other’ ethnicity were significantly associated with higher total healthcare costs. CONCLUSION: Multimorbidity was associated with substantially higher healthcare utilisation and social care costs among older adults in Singapore. With the prevalence of multimorbidity increasing, especially as the population ages, we need healthcare systems that are evolving to address the emerging challenges associated with multimorbidity and the respective healthcare and societal costs
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