To describe the incidence, presentation and long-term health outcomes of suicidal thoughts and behaviours (STBs) in children aged 12 years or under.
This population-based study included children identified through the Rochester Epidemiology Project who presented between 2005 and 2023 with STBs across primary, secondary and tertiary care centres in Olmsted County, Minnesota, USA. Information related to the patient and family characteristics, presentation, prior history and outcomes was manually extracted by two independent researchers. Patients were excluded if the index visit note could not be located, the patient had no suicidal ideation, attempts, intent or plan, was older than 12 years 11 months at the index date, less than 2 years old or was a duplicate entry.
The average annual population was 28,035 children, of which 637 presented with STBs (mean (SD) age, 10.6 (1.7) years; 51.2% girls, 76.3% White, average follow-up 7 years). The majority of the cases presented to the emergency department (ED) 491 (77.1%). The annual incidence per 100,000 person-years tripled from 68.8 in 2005 to 208.6 in 2023. Overall, 105 patients (16.5%) presented with a suicidal attempt. There were no cases of death by suicide. A prior psychiatric diagnosis was present in 454 (71.3%). STB events were preceded by a precipitating event in 471 (73.9%), the most common of which was an argument with a parent, followed by a bullying event and family distress. A specific suicide plan was reported by 328 (51.5%) with laceration reported most frequently, followed by hanging and overdose. Significant predictors of a suicide attempt were previous use of mood stabilisers (OR 3.21; 95% CI 1.24 to 7.97) and having a specific plan (OR 2.73; 95% CI 1.72 to 4.41). Children who had suicidal attempts had more subsequent ED visits (3.50 vs 2.58; p=0.009) and hospitalisations for psychiatric reasons (1.90 vs 1.30; p=0.003) and psychiatric hospitalisation days (12.70 vs 9.04; p=0.048). Subsequent suicide attempts occurred in 31% of the cohort during follow-up.
STBs in preadolescent children are rare but are increasing in incidence. Such children have significant psychological diagnoses, use of mental health services, and subsequent suicide attempts. Novel age-appropriate interventions are needed.
This study aims to identify factors associated with early antenatal care (ANC) initiation using a survival analysis approach applied to nationally representative data.
This study used a cross-sectional design based on data from the nationally representative 2022 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey. The survey was conducted at the community level across all administrative divisions of Bangladesh. A total of 5128 ever-married women aged 15–49 years who had a live birth within 5 years prior to the survey were included in the analysis. Women with missing or incomplete information regarding the timing of their first ANC visit were excluded from the study.
The primary outcome was early initiation of ANC, defined as the first ANC contact within the first trimester.
The study applied survival analysis methods, including Kaplan-Meier survival curves, log-rank tests and an Accelerated Failure Time model, to assess the determinants of early ANC initiation.
Only 37.9% (95% CI 36.0% to 39.9%) of women in Bangladesh initiated ANC within the first trimester. Early ANC initiation was associated with higher maternal age, education, skilled employment, wealthier households, media exposure, higher decision-making autonomy, higher husband’s education and urban residence. Women who reported that distance to a health facility was not a big problem had initiated ANC earlier than those who considered distance a major barrier. Regional disparities were also evident, with women from Barishal, Chattogram, Rajshahi, Khulna and Rangpur accessing ANC later than those in Dhaka.
Persistent inequalities in early ANC initiation highlight the need for targeted policies to reduce financial barriers, improve healthcare accessibility and strengthen awareness campaigns to ensure equitable maternal healthcare in Bangladesh.
Pain in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an unmet clinical need. Targeting joint inflammation with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs has not resulted in the anticipated reduction in pain for many patients. This can partly be explained by the concept of central sensitisation whereby spinal and supraspinal pathways have a lower threshold of activation, leading to increased perception of pain. Synovial stromal cells, such as fibroblasts, are also thought to play a role through peripheral sensitisation of nerves in the joint. Synovial fibroblasts are known to produce pro-algesic mediators such as interleukin 6 and nerve growth factor at the messenger RNA level. These pro-algesic mediators could activate sensory nerve fibres that send signals from the joint to the spinal cord, thereby driving persistent pain in RA. The purpose of this study is to evaluate which pro-algesic mediators are produced by lining versus sub-lining fibroblasts and whether the level of these mediators correlates with clinical measures of pain in patients with RA.
FiND-Pain RA is a multicentre observational study which will recruit 50 patients with seropositive RA who attend the rheumatology department of Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital, London, and the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre, Oxford. Clinical examination, pain-focused patient-reported outcome measures, ultrasound examination and ultrasound-guided synovial biopsy of the knee will be performed. The levels of known and putative pro-algesic mediators will be measured in fibroblasts from the lining and sub-lining layer of the synovium. The location and spatial morphology of sensory nerve fibres and their proximity to lining and sub-lining fibroblasts will be characterised. The primary outcome will be to determine whether the knee pain scores of participants correlate with the level of leukaemia inhibitory factor, a novel putative pain-mediator expressed in sub-lining fibroblasts. The secondary outcomes will be to determine whether other pro-algesic mediators produced by lining or sub-lining fibroblasts correlate with clinical measures of pain and to assess the location and proximity of sensory nerve fibres to lining versus sub-lining fibroblasts.
The study is a sub-study of the PUMIA (Pain Phenotypes and their Underlying Mechanisms in Inflammatory Arthritis) study, which has been approved by the Bromley Research Ethics Committee (REC: 21/LO/0712). The findings of this study will be disseminated through open-access publications, as well as scientific and clinical conferences.
Economic evaluations are essential for informing healthcare resource allocation. When conducted from a societal perspective, they may include productivity costs such as paid and unpaid productivity losses for patients and their caregivers. Although several methods exist to measure and value productivity costs, there is limited methodological consensus on which methods should be used. This scoping review aims to synthesise existing methods for measuring and valuing patient and caregiver productivity costs.
This review will follow the Arksey and O’Malley framework, enhanced by subsequent methodological guidance from Levac and the Joanna Briggs Institute. The six stages include identifying the research question; identifying relevant studies; selecting studies; charting the data; collating, summarising and reporting the results; and consultation. We will search MEDLINE, Embase and EconLit from 1996 to July 2025. Eligible sources will include peer-reviewed literature that reports methods for the measurement or valuation of productivity costs related to paid or unpaid work among patients or caregivers. Screening and data extraction will be conducted independently by two reviewers. Extracted data will include types of productivity costs, instruments used, valuation approaches, as well as recommendations on preferred measurement and valuation methods. Results will be synthesised thematically and reported using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis for Scoping Reviews checklist.
Ethics approval is not required as this review will rely exclusively on publicly available literature and does not involve human participants or the use of primary data. The findings will first be shared with Canada’s Drug Agency as a report and then disseminated through peer-reviewed publication and academic presentations to inform future research and practice.
This protocol has been registered with the Open Science Framework (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/FK9D4).
Post-traumatic neck pain is common, representing a substantial human and societal burden. About 15%–25% of individuals involved in an accident causing whiplash continue to experience moderate-to-severe symptoms and functional impairment 1 year post-trauma. Factors such as age, high pain intensity, hypersensitivity to pain and early post-traumatic hyperarousal are associated with persistent neck pain. However, multiple questions remain unanswered regarding how best to improve early care. As such, research on recovery patterns (including indicators for health economic burden) and their predictors is still needed, including biomarkers for pre-traumatic and peri-traumatic stress, and the value of early prediction tools.
This prospective cohort study will include 100 participants (≥18 years) suffering from post-traumatic neck pain sustained within 72 hours of an accident. At baseline (a combination of inclusion and 1 week assessment), eligible participants will undergo a thorough evaluation, including assessment of descriptive characteristics, self-reported variables (eg, pain, disability, sleep quality and post-traumatic stress), biomarkers (eg, heart rate variability (HRV) and hair cortisol) and clinical tests (eg, cervical range of motion). Follow-up will be conducted at 3, 6 and 12 months post-trauma. Further, register data (eg, data on labour market attachment) will be added for the period. Among other methods, a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve and multivariable regression analyses will be used to evaluate performance and associations of the prediction tools and their associations with measures of HRV.
The sample size calculation is based on previous studies, estimating that 15% of participants will develop moderate-to-severe ongoing symptoms. Using a conservative estimate, 64 participants are needed to achieve a statistical power of 90% with an expected area under the curve of 0.80. Accounting for a 25% loss to follow-up, 80 participants are required. For regression analysis, 100 participants will be included. The prediction tool will be validated using ROC analysis, sensitivity and specificity. Logistic regression models will be performed with and without biomarkers and pain sensitivity. Health economic costs will be compared across groups. Multivariable regression will examine the link between HRV and post-traumatic stress disorder, adjusting for confounders and a moderation analysis will assess hair cortisol as a potential moderator.
The study is approved by the Regional Committee on Health Research Ethics of Southern Denmark (S-20230037). Due to the acute nature of recruitment, the study design does not allow for a 24-hour reflection period; however, this approach has been approved by the Committee.
Study results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and disseminated through non-scientific outlets, including patient and professional publications, press releases and social media. If effective, workshops for clinicians will be organised. Results will be published regardless of outcome, with coauthorships following ICMJE guidelines.
To explore perceptions regarding the approved and actual prescribed doses of protein kinase inhibitors (PKIs) in clinical practice in the European Union among medicine regulators and healthcare professionals (HCPs).
A qualitative descriptive study was conducted using semistructured interviews, continuing until thematic saturation was reached. Thematic analysis was undertaken using a combined deductive-inductive approach. Deductive main analytical themes were derived from the theoretical framework of questioning-based policy design, namely problem sensing, problem categorisation and problem decomposition. Subthemes were generated inductively and could coherently be situated within these main analytical themes.
Interviews were held online or in person at a location convenient for the interviewee, depending on the participant’s preference.
Seven medicine regulators involved in the regulation of cancer medicines—including PKIs—and 10 HCPs prescribing PKIs in clinical practice, from various countries within Europe, were included.
Regulators highlighted insufficient attention to optimal dose finding, yielding approved doses often based on outdated maximum tolerated dose concepts, leading to uncertainties in efficacy and safety. HCPs reported using alternative dosing strategies in clinical practice to improve tolerability and quality of life (QoL) but noted a lack of robust evidence to guide such adjustments and faced legal constraints to deviate from the approved dose. Participants emphasised the need for improved pre-approval and post-approval dose optimisation to improve safety, enhance QoL and bridge gaps between trial data and real-world patient diversity.
Collaborative efforts involving multistakeholders including HCPs, regulators, pharmaceutical companies, insurers, governments and patient representatives are essential to advance dose optimisation and improve patient-centric outcomes, with further research needed to understand these stakeholders’ perspectives.
Fibrosis is a pathological feature that can occur in a wide range of diseases including diabetes mellitus. We investigated whether in people with type 1 (T1DM) or type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), glycaemia or diabetes-related complications are associated with fibrotic diseases.
Retrospective cohort study using UK Clinical Resource Datalink (CPRD) Aurum and Hospital Episode Statistics.
We included people with prevalent T1DM or T2DM as of 31 December 2015 (recorded in CPRD Aurum), eligible for linkage with Hospital Episode Statistics and followed up for 3 years.
We defined diabetes status using blood/urine biomarkers and complications. In the T2DM cohort, we also investigated exposures of hyperglycaemia, insulin resistance and metformin prescription. Fibrotic condition diagnoses were determined from both primary and secondary care records. Logistic regression analyses were undertaken to understand the strength of association between diabetes status/diabetic complications and fibrotic conditions, respectively.
The T1DM cohort consisted of 9669 people while the T2DM cohort included 504 066 people. In T1DM, we found that albuminuria was associated with lung fibrosis (ORadj: 2.07, 99% CI 1.35 to 2.17), and microvascular complications were associated with atherosclerosis (ORadj: 1.81, 99% CI 1.18 to 2.77) and cardiomyopathy (ORadj 1.53, 99% CI:1.15 to 2.04). In the T2DM cohort, both glycaemia above target and diabetes complications were associated with most fibrotic conditions.
Within the T1DM population, no consistent association between diabetes status and all fibrotic diseases was observed. More research is required to understand whether the association between diabetes complications and fibrotic diseases is due to shared risk factors or whether glycaemia in T2DM may be influenced by fibrotic pathology.
Antenatal depression (AD), a maternal mental health condition, has been increasingly prevalent in recent years. It is often triggered by various stressors, including hormonal changes, relationship problems and economic challenges. In Ghana, there is currently no recent nationally representative prevalence data on AD, despite a number of studies conducted in various regions.
Review will include observational studies which employed standardised diagnostic criteria or validated screening tools. We will search the PubMed, SCOPUS, African Index Medicus (AIM), Science Direct, Web of Science (WoS) and Google Scholar databases. The African Journal Online (AJOL) will also be handsearched. Targeted grey literature search will include selected tertiary institutional repositories, Ghana Health Service, Ministry of Health and Mental Health Authority websites. Studies in English will be included with no limits to date. Data extraction will be performed by two independent reviewers using a structured table, with a third reviewer resolving any discrepancies. Quality assessment of included studies will be conducted using the adapted National Institiute of Health (NIH) Quality Assessment Tool for observational studies. Pooled prevalence estimates will be calculated using a random-effects meta-analysis if studies are sufficiently homogeneous and subgroup analysis.
Given that this study involves no primary data collection, an ethical review is not necessary. The findings will be disseminated through publication in a peer-reviewed journal, presentations at academic conferences and key national stakeholder events.
CRD42025644715.
This study aimed to estimate the frequency of depression in mothers during the antepartum and postpartum periods and identify predictors of perinatal depression in the tertiary care hospital of Karachi, Pakistan.
Analytical cross-sectional study.
Public Tertiary Care Hospital, Civil Hospital, Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan.
The study involved 262 mothers for the assessment of frequency and predictors of perinatal depression in Pakistan.
The Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale (EPDS) was used as the tool to screen for depression. The data were collected through a structured questionnaire encompassing the sociodemographic factors, pregnancy and birth-related information, newborn characteristics sections, family relationship and marital status and psychosocial and psychological history. Mean and SD were computed for continuous data, whereas frequencies and percentages were determined for categorical data. Pearson 2 test was applied to determine the association between categorical variables. Predictors of perinatal depression were identified through multivariate logistic regression.
Out of 262 enrolled mothers, 198 screened positive for depressive symptoms using EPDS with a cut-off value ≥10. The mean age of participating mothers was 27.4±5.95 years. Approximately 39.7% of the mothers were illiterate, 75% were housewives and about 42% had a family income of less than US$126. Women with access to a healthcare facility had higher odds of antepartum depression symptoms, possibly due to poor healthcare experiences during antenatal visits. Emotional support by husband reduces the odds by 45.8% while experiencing abuse increases odds by three times. Significant predictors of postpartum depression symptoms included decision-making power, which reduced the odds of postpartum depression symptoms by 72.5% and emotional support by 80%.
The study concluded that maternal decision-making power is a significant protective factor against postpartum depression. Strikingly, access to health facilities by the mother was associated with higher odds of antepartum depression. Other factors, including household income, husband’s employment status, domestic violence, emotional support and family abuse, did not show significant associations with either antepartum or postpartum depression. These findings emphasise the importance of routine screening to identify women at risk during the perinatal period.
Despite the abundant evidence showing the benefits of muscle-strengthening exercise (MSE), no epidemiological tool is available for assessing MSE among Indonesian university students. This study is the first to adapt the Muscle-Strengthening Exercise Questionnaire (MSEQ) from its original English version into another language, specifically Indonesian, incorporating cultural adaptations and to pilot test it to assess its validity and reliability among university students in Indonesia.
Translation and cultural adaptation, content validity studies, concurrent validity studies and reliability studies were conducted following COnsensus-based Standards for the Selection of Health Status Measurement INstruments guidelines. Content validation, conducted with three experts and nine university students, informed the development of the MSEQ Indonesian version. The concurrent validity study compared the results of measuring MSE frequency, intensity, duration and volume with those of the 7-day diary and relative handgrip strength with 22 respondents for concurrent validity against subjective measurement and 70 respondents for concurrent validity against objective measurement. For the reliability study, 39 respondents were asked to fill the MSEQ Indonesian version twice with a time interval of 7 days.
The study involved 143 participants, including experts and university students from three universities across two different islands in Indonesia.
Single administration MSEQ, consecutive administration MSEQ and 7-day diary recording resulted in 0%, 33.8% and 68.5% dropout rate, respectively. Moderate-to-strong correlations were observed between the results for the weekly frequency, duration, intensity and volume of MSE and those of the 7-day diary and hand grip strength. Test–retest reliabilities were good to excellent for machine weight, holistic and overall MSE but poor for bodyweight MSE. In assessing the target muscle group, the MSEQ Indonesian version showed good test–retest reliability for machine-weight MSE but poor-to-very good test–retest reliability for bodyweight, free weight and holistic MSE.
Our study demonstrated the acceptable validity and reliability of the Indonesian version of the MSEQ for assessing MSE among university students in Indonesia, not only by comparing each dimension of MSE with subjective measures but also by comparing MSE volume with objective measures. To enhance the generalisability of these findings, future studies should assess the MSEQ Indonesian version in diverse adult populations by considering dropout rates found by our study, ensuring its broader applicability and sample size adequacy.
To develop a consensus curriculum describing what information service users should be given prior to cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT).
A Delphi study was undertaken. Following development work with professionals and experts by experience, 30 initial statements were prepared and survey rounds were undertaken until 90% of statements achieved 80% consensus on inclusion or exclusion.
NHS Talking Therapies services in England provide CBT following referral by a professional or self-referral. Out of 1.7 million referrals in 2022–2023 more than 1 million disengaged before or during therapy. Ensuring patients are adequately prepared for CBT is one promising approach to improving engagement and outcomes.
Participants were only included if they had either 3 years of clinical experience in NHS Talking Therapies services or a leadership role in NHS Talking Therapies services. They reported current employment at seven NHS Trusts in England as well as private practice.
Of the 41 participants, 36 completed all three rounds. After three rounds, 27 statements were included by consensus in the curriculum, covering six domains: Emergency information (two statements), What is CBT? (six statements), Practical preparation for CBT (five statements), What does a CBT session look like? (five statements), What is CBT not? (two statements) and How can people get the most out of CBT? (seven statements).
This consensus curriculum provides a basis for ensuring patients are well-prepared for CBT within the context of NHS Talking Therapies. Further research on improving engagement and outcomes from NHS Talking Therapies services should aim to address these 27 topics.
This study aimed to assess the pattern of disease and predictors of mortality among critically ill geriatric patients admitted to the intensive care unit at a teaching hospital.
A single-centre retrospective cohort study.
Medical-surgical intensive care unit of Tibebe Ghion Specialized Hospital, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
We enrolled 296 critically ill patients (age 60+) admitted to the intensive care unit who stayed for more than 2 hours. Those patients with missing or incomplete records were excluded.
The primary outcome of this study was the time to death within 30 days following intensive care unit admission.
In this cohort, the overall mortality rate of geriatric patients in the intensive care unit was found to be 42.9%. The incidence rate of mortality was 6.3 deaths per 100 person-days observation. Acute kidney injury (adjusted HR=2.36, 95% CI: 1.16, 3.68), coexisting diseases (adjusted HR=1.66, 95% CI: 1.13, 2.42), the presence of shock (adjusted HR=2.27, 95% CI: 1.66, 4.53) and mechanical ventilation (adjusted HR=1.82, 95% CI: 1.14, 2.89) were predictors of mortality in the intensive care unit.
The mortality rate in the intensive care unit among geriatric patients was high. Predictors of mortality in this population of critically ill geriatric patients included acute kidney injury, the presence of shock, coexisting diseases and mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit.