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1.
BMJ Open ; 13(7): e072641, 2023 07 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37451741

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: There is a high prevalence of mental health problems among university students. Better prediction and treatment access for this population is needed. In recent years, short-term dynamic factors, which can be assessed using experience sampling methods (ESM), have presented promising results for predicting mental health problems. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Undergraduate students from five public universities in Spain are recruited to participate in two web-based surveys (at baseline and at 12-month follow-up). A subgroup of baseline participants is recruited through quota sampling to participate in a 15-day ESM study. The baseline survey collects information regarding distal risk factors, while the ESM study collects short-term dynamic factors such as affect, company or environment. Risk factors will be identified at an individual and population level using logistic regressions and population attributable risk proportions, respectively. Machine learning techniques will be used to develop predictive models for mental health problems. Dynamic structural equation modelling and multilevel mixed-effects models will be considered to develop a series of explanatory models for the occurrence of mental health problems. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The project complies with national and international regulations, including the Declaration of Helsinki and the Code of Ethics, and has been approved by the IRB Parc de Salut Mar (2020/9198/I) and corresponding IRBs of all participating universities. All respondents are given information regarding access mental health services within their university and region. Individuals with positive responses on suicide items receive a specific alert with indications for consulting with a health professional. Participants are asked to provide informed consent separately for the web-based surveys and for the ESM study. Dissemination of results will include peer-reviewed scientific articles and participation in scientific congresses, reports with recommendations for universities' mental health policy makers, as well as a well-balanced communication strategy to the general public. STUDY REGISTRATION: osf.io/p7csq.


Subject(s)
Ecological Momentary Assessment , Mental Health , Humans , Universities , Students/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Observational Studies as Topic
2.
BMJ Open ; 10(7): e037365, 2020 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32660952

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Suicide attempts represent an important public health burden. Centralised electronic health record (EHR) systems have high potential to provide suicide attempt surveillance, to inform public health action aimed at reducing risk for suicide attempt in the population, and to provide data-driven clinical decision support for suicide risk assessment across healthcare settings. To exploit this potential, we designed the Catalonia Suicide Risk Code Epidemiology (CSRC-Epi) study. Using centralised EHR data from the entire public healthcare system of Catalonia, Spain, the CSRC-Epi study aims to estimate reliable suicide attempt incidence rates, identify suicide attempt risk factors and develop validated suicide attempt risk prediction tools. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The CSRC-Epi study is registry-based study, specifically, a two-stage exposure-enriched nested case-control study of suicide attempts during the period 2014-2019 in Catalonia, Spain. The primary study outcome consists of first and repeat attempts during the observation period. Cases will come from a case register linked to a suicide attempt surveillance programme, which offers in-depth psychiatric evaluations to all Catalan residents who present to clinical care with any suspected risk for suicide. Predictor variables will come from centralised EHR systems representing all relevant healthcare settings. The study's sampling frame will be constructed using population-representative administrative lists of Catalan residents. Inverse probability weights will restore representativeness of the original population. Analysis will include the calculation of age-standardised and sex-standardised suicide attempt incidence rates. Logistic regression will identify suicide attempt risk factors on the individual level (ie, relative risk) and the population level (ie, population attributable risk proportions). Machine learning techniques will be used to develop suicide attempt risk prediction tools. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This protocol is approved by the Parc de Salut Mar Clinical Research Ethics Committee (2017/7431/I). Dissemination will include peer-reviewed scientific publications, scientific reports for hospital and government authorities, and updated clinical guidelines. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04235127.


Subject(s)
Suicidal Ideation , Suicide, Attempted , Case-Control Studies , Humans , Risk , Risk Factors , Spain/epidemiology
3.
Rev. psiquiatr. salud ment. (Barc., Ed. impr.) ; 12(3): 187-195, jul.-sept. 2019. tab
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-187012

ABSTRACT

Pese al éxito (o consenso) conseguido en la homogeneización de criterios clínicos por los sistemas de clasificación psiquiátrica categoriales (DSM y CIE), su validez y utilidad, clínica y en investigación, son cuestionables. En este artículo de revisión presentamos el marco Criterios de Investigación por Dominios (Research Domain Criteria, RDoC) como una alternativa para la investigación traslacional en psiquiatría. El marco de investigación traslacional RDoC sistematiza dianas y métodos de investigación en psiquiatría. RDoC parte de un catálogo de bases neurofuncionales de la conducta y plantea la psicopatología como la expresión fenotípica de las alteraciones en dichas funciones. Estas se clasifican en 5sistemas psicobiológicos. Los constructos funcionales se validan mediante evidencia proveniente de estudios básicos en 7 niveles de análisis: genes, moléculas, células, circuitos nerviosos, fisiología, conducta y autoinformes. Frente a los sistemas categoriales centrados en el diagnóstico, RDoC propone centrar el estudio de la psicopatología como correlato de alteraciones funcionales detectables, biológicas y comportamentales. RDoC es un marco de investigación que vincula el sustrato biológico con las manifestaciones fenotípicas, para llegar a una nosología psiquiátrica útil para guiar el tratamiento. Pese a que los hallazgos de RDoC no articulan un modelo concreto de guía para la práctica clínica, es un sistema de transición útil para crear hipótesis de investigación clínica, básica y epidemiológica


Despite the consensus achieved in the homogenization of clinical criteria by categorical psychiatric classification systems (DEM and CIE), they are criticized for a lack of validity and inability to guide clinical treatment and research. In this review article we introduce the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework as an alternative framework for translational research in psychiatry. The RDOC framework systematizes both research targets and methodology for research in psychiatry. RDoC is based on a catalogue of neurobiological and neurocognitive evidence of behaviour, and conceives psychopathology as the phenotypic expression of alterations of functional domains that are classified into 5psychobiological systems. The RdoC framework also proposes that domains must be validated with evidence in 7levels of analysis: genes, molecules, cells, nerve circuits, physiology, behaviour and self-reports. As opposed to categorical systems focused on diagnosis, RDoC focuses on the study of psychopathology as a correlate of detectable functional, biological and behavioural disruption of normal processes. In order to build a useful psychiatric nosology for guiding clinical interventions, the RDoC research framework links the neurobiological basis of mental processes with phenotypical manifestations. Although the RDoC findings have not yet been articulated into a specific model for guiding clinical practice, they provide a useful transition system for creating clinical, basic and epidemiological research hypotheses


Subject(s)
Humans , Translational Research, Biomedical/trends , Psychiatry/trends , Mental Disorders/classification , Scientific Domains , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/trends , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
4.
Rev Psiquiatr Salud Ment (Engl Ed) ; 12(3): 187-195, 2019.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29941228

ABSTRACT

Despite the consensus achieved in the homogenization of clinical criteria by categorical psychiatric classification systems (DEM and CIE), they are criticized for a lack of validity and inability to guide clinical treatment and research. In this review article we introduce the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework as an alternative framework for translational research in psychiatry. The RDOC framework systematizes both research targets and methodology for research in psychiatry. RDoC is based on a catalogue of neurobiological and neurocognitive evidence of behaviour, and conceives psychopathology as the phenotypic expression of alterations of functional domains that are classified into 5psychobiological systems. The RdoC framework also proposes that domains must be validated with evidence in 7levels of analysis: genes, molecules, cells, nerve circuits, physiology, behaviour and self-reports. As opposed to categorical systems focused on diagnosis, RDoC focuses on the study of psychopathology as a correlate of detectable functional, biological and behavioural disruption of normal processes. In order to build a useful psychiatric nosology for guiding clinical interventions, the RDoC research framework links the neurobiological basis of mental processes with phenotypical manifestations. Although the RDoC findings have not yet been articulated into a specific model for guiding clinical practice, they provide a useful transition system for creating clinical, basic and epidemiological research hypotheses.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders , Psychiatry/methods , Research Design/standards , Translational Research, Biomedical/methods , Humans , Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Mental Disorders/physiopathology , Mental Disorders/psychology , Mental Disorders/therapy , Neurosciences/methods , Neurosciences/standards , Psychiatry/standards , Translational Research, Biomedical/standards
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