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To develop effective mental health interventions for children and adolescents, it is essential to understand the intricate link between functional disability and mental well-being in this group.
Aims
To explore the network connections between various aspects of functional disability and mental well-being in young people with disabilities.
Method
We analysed data from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys in 47 low- and middle-income countries, tracking progress towards health-related sustainable development goals. Our focus was on children and adolescents aged 5–17 with functional disabilities. Mental well-being was gauged using carer-reported signs of depression, anxiety and disability on the Child Functioning Module. Network-analysis techniques were used to examine links between mental well-being and functional disability domains.
Results
The study included 32 669 eligible children aged 5–17 with functional disabilities (14 826 females and 17 843 males). The core domains of disability with the strongest connections to poor mental well-being were difficulties in accepting change, making friends, behavioural control (controlling own behaviour) and remembering/concentrating. These associations remained largely consistent across different genders and developmental stages. However, there were notable gender differences and age-related shifts in the relationships between specific disabilities and mental well-being. In particular, signs of anxiety in males and depression in females were most associated with functional disability overall, while signs of depression had the closest links to disability in adolescents.
Conclusions
The network perspective may enable the design of tailored interventions and support services that consider age and gender differences. Further research should continue to explore these complex relationships, incorporating novel methodologies like network-analysis to enhance the understanding of these associations.
This chapter outlines the policy background for the care of the seriously mentally ill in the United States, and examines the definitions and practices of case management and its variants. For individual patients, case management has been defined as the coordination of care for patients who require a multiplicity of services. The many variations in the practice of case management share a common set of underlying principles. Their starting point is that vulnerable patients with long-term psychiatric disorders need therapeutic interventions which optimise their social adjustment and minimise their functional disabilities. Community Support Treatment and Rehabilitation (COSTAR) is a community mobile treatment team, closely modelled on Program for Assertive Community Treatment (PACT), which combines case management and psychiatric treatment for a group of long-term mentally ill patients who are unable to utilise effectively the traditional outpatient mental health service system.
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