Rationale Advancing marijuana prevention and intervention efforts is important given decreasing perception of harm among adolescents and increasing marijuana legalization. Objectives This study evaluates how a monitored abstinence protocol may contribute to emotional functioning and changes in marijuana problems that can enhance successful outcomes for non-treatment seeking adolescent marijuana users. Methods Adolescent marijuana users (n=26) and demographically matched controls (n=30) completed 28-days of monitored abstinence confirmed by bi-weekly urine toxicology. Participants were given measures of emotional functioning, marijuana use symptoms, and reward sensitivity during monitored abstinence. Results All participants (N=56) completed the protocol, and 69% of marijuana users (n=18 of 26) were confirmed abstinent for 28-days, with all users showing decreasing marijuana use. Reductions in subsyndromal depression, positive marijuana use expectancies, and poor sleep quality were observed by the end of the monitored abstinence period (n=26, ps<.05). Marijuana users also reported more attentional impulsivity and less responsiveness to reward stimuli during the second week of abstinence compared to controls. Later age of onset of regular marijuana use and more cumulative lifetime use was associated with a greater degree of emotional change and increased recognition of the negative effects of marijuana use. Conclusions Monitored abstinence programs may be beneficial in reducing marijuana use, subsyndromal emotional distress symptoms, and changing beliefs about marijuana use. Future prevention and intervention efforts may consider targeting reward sensitivity and impulsivity, in addition to marijuana use, expectancies, and emotional functioning.
Introduction: Patient satisfaction is defined as the extent of agreement between what a patient expects to receive from his or her health experience and the perception of the level of care he or she actually receive. With the COVID-19 pandemic, many practices have to adapt to provide health ensuring patients' safety in first instance. Eye care procedures may be delayed during the pandemic, so eye safety is more important than ever, and it doesn't only focus on the examination room, all the clinic compartments must be adjusted to ensure that no patient is infected by COVID-19 within the clinic. The aim of this study was to assess the satisfaction of patients who attended the Lúrio University Clinic for eye care during COVID-19. Material and Methods: This is a quantitative, descriptive and cross-sectional study conducted from December 30 th , 2020 to April 30 th , 2021. A systematic random sampling method was used to enrol 173 participants. Data were collected using an identification form and the patient satisfaction survey. Ethical clearance was obtained from the Lúrio University Bioethical Committee review board, and informed consent term was also received from the participants before data collection. Results: 173 participants (84 women, 48.6% and 89 men, 51.4%) completed the survey with the mean age of 31.14 and standard deviation of ±14.6 years. We found that 98.3% of the participants were satisfied (63.6% satisfied and 34.7% extremely satisfied) with the eye care provided in Lúrio University Clinic. Conclusion: Most of the patients were satisfied with the eye health examination provided in Lúrio University clinic, thus the directions for future research of the study are now opened.
Context: Neuro-psychiatric disorders are the world's highest cause of incapacity. Mental disease in Africa is taboo and stigmatized, making it a challenge of a silent even hidden epidemy. In Sub-Saharan Africa it is estimated that 20% of patients with mental disorders are treated in primary health care centres and 50-75% are not detected in health facilities. In Mozambique, the prevalence of mental disorders and the frequency with which mental patients are treated at health facilities are not known. Objective: To estimate mental and neurologic disorders burden in Mozambique and evaluate access to mental health care services. Methods: A systematic review of research published in Portuguese, English, French and Spanish during 2017 and 2018 was carried out. We also consulted hospital and outpatient clinical files and yearly reports in the health units of national health system. Quantitative and mixed methods articles were subjected to quantitative meta-analysis and the qualitative and mixed methods articles were submitted to thematic and ethnographic analysis for qualitative meta-synthesis. Results: After selecting 130 articles meeting the search criteria we applied eligibility conditions and reviewed 17 quantitative, 6 mixed-methods and 7 qualitative articles. Population perception about mental illness shows that it is considered a consequence of spiritual problems and patients mainly seek out traditional health practitioners. Epilepsy, a neurologic disorder, is referred in Mozambique as the most prevalent mental disorder. The provision of care for the mentally ill by the national health service is far below the needs. The Mozambican Ministry of Health has a good development program for future mental health services. Discussion: We find scarcity of research in the area of mental health, but progress over time. Studies, though mostly of low quality, show a high burden of mental illness in the Mozambican population, which uses traditional medicine due to lack of conventional health services and cultural adaptation of therapeutic procedures. Conclusion: This study contributes to reveal the beliefs and main mental health problems in the Mozambican population and health system. We propose recommendations for preventive activities and the development of mental health services. This review was registered at www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero (CRD42018103923).
No abstract
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.