What are the barriers and facilitators affecting engagement with digital mental health interventions?

Featured

Theo Kyriacou and Andie Ashdown blog about a systematic review that explores the barriers and facilitators to engagement with digital mental health interventions, which has some interesting findings for app developers and researchers.

[read the full story...]

mHealth promotion for parents to improve children’s oral health

daniel-korpai-Y3LGWCsrgmg-unsplash

This review of the effectiveness of the mHealth-delivered oral health education to parents parents regarding the improvement of parents’ knowledge, behaviours and children’s oral health status included 12 studies. The studies findings were variable with some demonstrating benefit and some no benefit with all 8 of the included RCTs being at high risk of bias.

[read the full story...]

Suicide prevention gatekeeper training and its long-term efficacy #WSPD2020

Featured

In his debut blog for World Suicide Prevention Day 2020, Steven MacDonald-Hart summarises a systematic review that explores the long-term efficacy of suicide prevention gatekeeper training.

[read the full story...]

GP management of self-harm: low confidence and need for further training

Featured

In her debut blog, Laura Culshaw summarises a recent systematic review exploring the attitudes, knowledge and behaviours of GPs in managing self-harm in primary care.

[read the full story...]

Trainee doctors’ attitudes to mental illness among their peers

shutterstock_486043666 square

Penelope Zoe Stavrou summarises a recent qualitative study exploring UK trainee doctors’ attitudes to mental illness among their peers and their access to support services.

[read the full story...]

Attitudes towards internet interventions make a difference

shutterstock_369632525

Maria Loades explores a randomised controlled trial of people with depression, which looks at the impact and change of attitudes towards internet interventions.

[read the full story...]

Periodontal disease – patient awareness levels low

shutterstock_129331361

Six cross sectional and community-based studies involving a total of 7945 patients were included in this review. While awareness and knowledge of periodontal disease was found to be low the quality of the available studies was not high.

[read the full story...]

How “Big Society” is experienced in the lives of people with learning disabilities: Austerity, broken promises and cruel optimism

festival crowd

Big Society? Disabled people with learning disabilities and civil society is a project funded by the Economic and Social research council (June, 2013 – September, 2015).

The project is a collaboration between universities and organisations of and for people with learning disabilities, further details can be found at: www.bigsocietydis.wordpress.com

Here, just as the project shares its findings at a national conference, Katherine Runswick Cole sets the scene and Silvana Mengoni posts about one of the published papers from the project.

[read the full story...]

Better training for medical students can combat health inequalities for people with learning disabilities

training_laptop_shutterstock_125754086 (2)

People with learning disabilities experience health inequalities and can face significant barriers in accessing healthcare. Whilst doctors have traditionally received little specific training in this area, there are increasingly new initiatives aimed at changing attitudes and improving knowledge and skills.

Here, in her debut blog, Genevieve Young Southward looks at an Australian initiative that aimed to involve people with disabilities directly in the training of medical students.

[read the full story...]

Experiences of the osteoarthritis GP consultation, attitudes and beliefs to OA

shutterstock_119885869

Do GPs tell people that osteoarthritis or ‘wear and tear’ is a normal part of ageing and nothing can be done? This recent narrative review sought to find out.

[read the full story...]