45 research outputs found
An Integrated Approach to the delivery of Child Mental Health Services
While these documents contain very welcome recommendations for the well being of
children, they touch upon the issues of child mental health only indirectly. Further, they
do not set up any priorities; nor do they offer any data, which would help to set up the
priorities.
One would have imagined that the mental health professionals would themselves have
taken up the issue of priorities. What one sees is that while the professionals have fought
valiant battles to safeguard the mental health of adult population, they have done very
little for the mental health of children. In this context it is of interest that intense lobbying
has been carried out for the care of children with developmental disabilities, so much so
that mental handicap has become synonymous with mental health of children in the minds
of the NGOs advocating the cause of the former, the authorities to whom representations
are made and the population at large. One has no quarrel with the concern for mental
handicap, but the effort seems to be unbalanced. One can only assume that if the mental
health professionals had themselves taken part in this lobbying process, mental health
issues could have been projected with as much enthusiasm as that of mental handicap.
One must remember that in the West, a strong lobby for the cause of the mentally
handicapped children arose as a part of an overall push for extensive and broad
based mental health and counselling services for the children
Indian psychiatric interview schedule (IPIS)
The paper discusses the advantages of the structured interview in psychiatric research and goes on to describe the details of development of a structured interview Schedule (IPIS) suitable for an Indian setting. The Schedule is described, as well as the results of interinvestigator reliability tests. Possible uses of the instrument and the necessary further developments are outlined
Indian psychiatric survey schedule (IPSS)
The paper describes the development of Indian Psychiatric Survey Schedule (IPSS) which is designed to inquire about the presence of 124 psychiatric symptoms and 10 items of historical information in the general population. The symptoms as well as the items of historical information are the same as those in IPIS (Kapur et al., 1974) but because of a multi-stage procedure adopted with IPSS, the inquiry takes much less time than that for IPIS. - A "preliminary interview schedule" which is meant for all members of the population can be used by a nonpsychiatrist after a short period of training. The other sections in IPSS, that is "detailed inquiry with the subject", "detailed inquiry with an informant" and "observations during interview" are completed when necessary by a trained psychiatrist who also gives a physical examination when somatic symptoms are reported. - The paper describes the reasons why a multi-stage procedure was designed, a pilot study which helped reach certain decisions regarding the construction of the schedule and the results of a study carried out to test the level of agreement obtained when three non-psychiatrists (after a short period of training) and a psychiatrist used the preliminary interview schedule with 40 hospital patients and 40 members of the general population
Organisation chart of Department of Public Instruction-Government Schools in Karnataka
This dataset contains Organisation Chart of Department of Public Instruction in Karnataka, Block Education Officers (BESOs) addresses and contact numbers, Contact Information of Deputy Director of Public Instruction (DDPI)and BEOs, List of Government Schools in Karnataka. This is a premilinary databset
NIAS Research Ethics Policy 2017
A research ethics statement or protocol is an essential part of every proposal for research involving human and/or animal subjects, and must be submitted to the NIAS Ethics Committee for review and approval. This document contains the Principles and Guidelines on Research Ethics adopted by NIAS