5 resultados para Children of depressed persons - Mental health

em Universidad de Alicante


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Fundamento: La salud mental de las personas cuidadoras se ve perjudicada por las tareas de cuidado. Son necesarios estudios que especifiquen la influencia de diversas variables en la asociación entre cuidado informal y salud mental. El objetivo del trabajo es analizar los efectos del tiempo dedicado al cuidado informal en la salud mental por sexo según el tipo de personas dependientes. Métodos: Los datos que se utilizaron fueron los de la Encuesta Nacional de Salud 2006, cuya muestra estaba compuesta por 29.478 participantes. Variables: salud mental (GHQ-12), tiempo de cuidado, edad, clase social y apoyo funcional (Duke-UNC). Se realizó análisis de regresión logística para determinar la probabilidad de contar con mala salud mental según horas de cuidado, ajustado por edad, clase social y apoyo funcional. Resultados: Las mujeres presentan peor salud mental a partir de 97 horas semanales en el cuidado a menores (OR=1,372), de 25 horas en el cuidado a personas mayores de 74 años (OR=1,602 entre 25 y 48 horas; OR=1,467 49-96h; OR=1,874 97-168h) y cuando dedican alguna hora al cuidado de personas adultas con discapacidad (OR=1,996 0-24h; OR=2,507 25-48h; OR=3,016 49-96h; OR=1,651 97-168h). Los varones muestran deterioro de la salud psicológica cuando dedican un elevado número de horas al cuidado de personas mayores de 74 años (OR=2,810 97168h.) y personas con discapacidad (OR=3,411 97-168h.) y cuando dedican de 0 a 24h al cuidado de menores (OR=1,595). Conclusiones: El efecto del número de horas de cuidado en la salud mental de las personas cuidadoras está influido por el tipo de persona dependiente y por el sexo de la persona cuidadora.

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Objectives: To assess changes in mental health in a sample of migrant workers after the eruption of the economic crisis in Spain. Methods: 318 migrant workers were interviewed. Mental health, sociodemographic, and economic crisis related variables were obtained through face-to-face (2008) and phone (2011) interviews. Prevalence of poor mental health (PMH) was compared (2011–2008) and multivariate logistic regression models were fitted. Results: Change in prevalence of PMH was higher in men (aOR 4.63; 95 % CI 2.11–10.16). Subgroups of men showing the largest detrimental mental health effects were: unemployed, with low salaries (≤1,200 euros) and those reporting family burden. An increase of PMH was found in women, without significant associations. Conclusions: Mental health of migrant workers in Spain has worsened during the economic crisis.

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Since the last decades, academic research has paid much attention to the phenomenon of revitalizing indigenous cultures and, more precisely, the use of traditional indigenous healing methods both to deal with individuals' mental health problems and with broader cultural issues. The re-evaluation of traditional indigenous healing practices as a mode of psychotherapeutic treatment has been perhaps one of the most interesting sociocultural processes in the postmodern era. In this regard, incorporating indigenous forms of healing in a contemporary framework of indigenous mental health treatment should be interpreted not simply as an alternative therapeutic response to the clinical context of Western psychiatry, but also constitutes a political response on the part of ethno-cultural groups that have been stereotyped as socially inferior and culturally backward. As a result, a postmodern form of "traditional healing" developed with various forms of knowledge, rites and the social uses of medicinal plants, has been set in motion on many Canadian indigenous reserves over the last two decades.

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Background: Migrant workers have been one of the groups most affected by the economic crisis. This study evaluates the influence of changes in employment conditions on the incidence of poor mental health of immigrant workers in Spain, after a period of 3 years, in context of economic crisis. Methods: Follow-up survey was conducted at two time points, 2008 and 2011, with a reference population of 318 workers from Colombia, Ecuador, Morocco and Romania residing in Spain. Individuals from this population who reported good mental health in the 2008 survey (n = 214) were interviewed again in 2011 to evaluate their mental health status and the effects of their different employment situations since 2008 by calculating crude and adjusted odds ratios (aORs) for sociodemographic and employment characteristics. Findings: There was an increased risk of poor mental health in workers who lost their jobs (aOR = 3.62, 95%CI: 1.64–7.96), whose number of working hours increased (aOR = 2.35, 95%CI: 1.02–5.44), whose monthly income decreased (aOR = 2.75, 95%CI: 1.08–7.00) or who remained within the low-income bracket. This was also the case for people whose legal status (permission for working and residing in Spain) was temporary or permanent compared with those with Spanish nationality (aOR = 3.32, 95%CI: 1.15–9.58) or illegal (aOR = 17.34, 95%CI: 1.96–153.23). In contrast, a decreased risk was observed among those who attained their registration under Spanish Social Security system (aOR = 0.10, 95%CI: 0.02–0.48). Conclusion: There was an increase in poor mental health among immigrant workers who experienced deterioration in their employment conditions, probably influenced by the economic crisis.

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There is limited evidence on the influence of social determinants on the self-perceived and mental health of immigrants settled at least 8 years in Spain. The aim of this study was to examine differences between workers related to migrant-status, self-perceived and mental health, and to assess their relationship to occupational conditions, educational level and occupational social class, stratified by sex. Using data from the Spanish National Health Survey of 2011/12, we computed prevalence, odds ratios and explicative fractions. Mental (OR 2.02; CI 1.39–2.93) and self-perceived health (OR 2.64; CI 1.77–3.93) were poorer for immigrant women compared to natives. Occupational social class variable contributes 25 % to self-perceived health OR in immigrant women. Settled immigrant women workers are a vulnerable group in Spain.