Disease patterns of the homeless in Tokyo. (1/29)

In recent years, homelessness has been recognized as a growing urban social problem in various countries throughout the world. The health problems of the homeless are considerable. The purpose of this study was to elicit, with sociodemographic profiles, the disease patterns among Tokyo's homeless. The subjects were 1,938 men who stayed at a welfare institution from 1992 to 1996. Diagnosed diseases/injuries and sociodemographic profiles were analyzed. The disease patterns of the homeless were compared to those of the male general population. Of the subjects, 8.3% were admitted to the hospital; 64.0% received outpatient care. Their observed morbidity rates by disease category were greater than those of the male general population in both Japan and Tokyo. Comorbidity of alcoholic psychosis/alcohol-dependent syndrome to both liver disease and pulmonary tuberculosis were greater than the average (P < .01). Construction work brought a higher risk of pulmonary tuberculosis (odds ratio = 2.0) and dorsopathies (odds ratio = 1.4) than did other jobs (P < .05). Disease patterns among the homeless in Tokyo were characterized by alcoholic psychosis/alcohol-dependence syndrome; liver disease; pulmonary tuberculosis; diabetes mellitus; fractures, dislocations, sprains, strains; hypertension; and cerebrovascular disease. Although the sociodemographic backgrounds of Tokyo's homeless have become more diverse, the principal occupation of the homeless was unskilled daily construction work, which underlay the characteristics of their disease patterns.  (+info)

Utilising survey data to inform public policy: comparison of the cost-effectiveness of treatment of ten mental disorders. (2/29)

BACKGROUND: Mental health survey data are now being used proactively to decide how the burden of disease might best be reduced. AIMS: To study the cost-effectiveness of current and optimal treatments for mental disorders and the proportion of burden avertable by each. METHOD: Data for three affective, four anxiety and two alcohol use disorders and for schizophrenia were compared interms of cost, burden averted and efficiency of current and optimal treatment. We then calculated the burden unavertable given current knowledge. The unit of health gain was a reduction in the years lived with disability (YLDs). RESULTS: Summing across all disorders, current treatment averted 13% of the burden, at an average cost of 30,000 Australian dollars per YLD gained. Optimal treatment at current coverage could avert 20% of the burden, at an average cost of 18,000 Australian dollars per YLD gained. Optimal treatment at optimal coverage could avert 28% of the burden, at 16,000 Australian dollars per YLD gained. Sixty per cent of the burden of mental disorders was deemed to be unavertable. CONCLUSIONS: The efficiency of treatment varied more than tenfold across disorders. Although coverage of some of the more efficient treatments should be extended, other factors justify continued use of less-efficient treatments for some disorders.  (+info)

Rehabilitation during alcohol detoxication in comorbid neuropsychiatric patients. (3/29)

For this study, we evaluated the effectiveness of a cognitive training program in improving cognitive function in patients with alcoholism comorbid with another neuropsychiatric disorder and going through the subacute phase of detoxication. We employed a randomized clinical trial design in which 20 subjects were assigned to a five-session cognitive rehabilitation program and 20 subjects were assigned to an attention placebo control condition. All subjects received a battery of cognitive tests for reasoning, attention, and visual-spatial abilities. These tests were repeated at the completion of the study. The training consisted of a number of component tasks designed to improve attention, speed of information processing, perceptual analysis, and visual-spatial cognition. We plotted performance on training results across sessions to detect evidence of learning effects. Comparisons of the cognitive tests revealed greater improvement in the training as compared to the attention placebo group on measures of attention and conceptual flexibility. We concluded that the training produced significant improvement over and above natural recovery during detoxication.  (+info)

Alcohol withdrawal and prolonged hospital stay in a patient with neuroimaging abnormalities: a case report. (4/29)

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Alcohol-induced psychotic disorder and delirium in the general population. (5/29)

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Contribution of alcohol in accident related mortality in Belarus: a time series approach. (6/29)

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Alcohol-related brain damage: a 21st-century management conundrum. (7/29)

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Quetiapine improves response inhibition in alcohol dependent patients: a placebo-controlled pilot study. (8/29)

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