Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

Concordia Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Multilevel Estimation of the Relative Impacts of Social Determinants on Income-Related Health Inequalities in Urban Canada: Protocol for the Canadian Social Determinants Urban Laboratory Plante C; Datta Gupta S; Bandara T; Beland D; Blaser C; Camillo CA; Villa E; Dutton D; Fuller D; Hasselback J; Lix LM; Marouzi A; Muhajarine N; Notten G; Reimer B; Wolfson M; Young M; Concha DY; Neudorf C; 41313634
SOCANTH
2 The false promise of return to work for migrant workers injured on the job in Canada: When public policies intersect to create exclusion Hanley J; Ventura Sanchez G; Goswami P; Mayell S; McLaughlin J; Hennebry J; 40223307
SOCANTH
3 The GAP Schema: A Critical Examination of Gentrification-Induced Displacement in Later Life Van Vleet S; de Medeiros K; 40096538
SOCANTH
4 The Point of No Return? Impediments to Return to Work for Injured Migrant Agricultural Workers in Two Canadian Provinces Mayell S; McLaughlin J; Hennebry J; Sanchez GV; Goswami P; Hanley J; 39980401
SOCANTH
5 "We don't do any of these things because we are a death-denying culture": Sociocultural perspectives of Black and Latinx cancer caregivers Nwakasi C; Esiaka D; Nweke C; Chidebe RCW; Villamar W; de Medeiros K; 39327878
SOCANTH
6 "It would Never have Happened Without the Pandemic": Understanding the Lived Experience of Individuals who Increased Their Online Gambling Participation Savard AC; Kairouz S; Nadeau-Tremblay J; Brodeur M; Ferland F; French M; Morvannou A; Blanchette-Martin N; Dufour M; VanMourik V; Monson E; 39115755
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7 The politics of population policy in the Islamic Republic of Iran Hoodfar H; Assadpour S; 10765535
SOCANTH
8 Sex work research: methodological and ethical challenges Frances M Shaver 15684139
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9 The beauty mystique Anthony Synnott 17048156
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10 A comparative multi-level analysis of contextual drinking in American and Canadian adults Kairouz S; Greenfield TK; 17207125
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11 Adverse effects of a social contract smoking prevention program among children in Québec, Canada Kairouz S; O' Loughlin J; Laguë J; 19748883
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12 Rising to the challenge: addressing the concerns of people working in the sex industry Shaver FM; Lewis J; Maticka-Tyndale E; 21595370
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13 Are online gamblers more at risk than offline gamblers? Kairouz S; Paradis C; Nadeau L; 22132932
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14 The Lost Creek Fire: managing social relations under disaster conditions Reimer B; Kulig J; Edge D; Lightfoot N; Townshend I; 23278276
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15 Smoking restrictions in homes after implementation of a smoking ban in public places Kairouz S; Lasnier B; Mihaylova T; Montreuil A; Cohen JE; 25140045
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16 Gambling Patterns and Problems of Gamblers on Licensed and Unlicensed Sites in France Costes JM; Kairouz S; Eroukmanoff V; Monson E; 25862019
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17 Experiencing Loss: A Muslim Widow's Bereavement Narrative Kristiansen M; Younis T; Hassani A; Sheikh A; 25958055
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18 A cross-cultural comparison of population gambling patterns and regulatory frameworks: France and Québec Kairouz S; Paradis C; Nadeau L; Tovar ML; Pousset M; 27171860
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19 Factors associated with high use of general practitioner and psychiatrist services among patients attending an addiction rehabilitation center Hu?nh C; Ngamini Ngui A; Kairouz S; Lesage A; Fleury MJ; 27450676
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20 Effects of Enactment of Legislative (Public) Smoking Bans on Voluntary Home Smoking Restrictions: A Review Monson E; Arsenault N; 27613902
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21 The HIV self-testing debate: where do we stand? Gagnon M; French M; Hébert Y; 29347929
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22 Where Lies the Harm in Lottery Gambling? A Portrait of Gambling Practices and Associated Problems Costes JM; Kairouz S; Monson E; Eroukmanoff V; 29536292
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23 A Public Health Ethics Case for Mitigating Zoonotic Disease Risk in Food Production Bernstein J; Dutkiewicz J; 33997264
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24 Nourishing the Nexus: A Feminist Analysis of Gender, Nutrition and Agri-food Development Policies and Practices Vercillo S; Rao S; Ragetlie R; Vansteenkiste J; 37361474
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25 Vulnerability and narrative in later life de Medeiros K; Ermoshkina P; 38761242
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26 Violence, Misrecognition, and Place: Legal Envelopment and Colonial Governmentality in the Upper Skeena River, British Columbia, 1888 Matthew P Unger 38726046
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27 Age does matter for hospice care: Health care providers' attitudes toward hospice care in Binzhou, China Yu H; de Medeiros K; 38163963
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28 New Directions in Qualitative Research at the Social Sciences Section of The Journals of Gerontology Series B Kate de Medeiros 38109420
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29 Older adults' perceptions of the risks associated with contemporary gambling environments: Implications for public health policy and practice Pitt H; McCarthy S; Thomas SL; Randle M; Marko S; Cowlishaw S; Kairouz S; Daube M; 37006633
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30 Using machine learning to retrospectively predict self-reported gambling problems in Quebec Murch WS; Kairouz S; Dauphinais S; Picard E; Costes JM; French M; 36880253
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31 Simulated Gambling: An Explorative Study Based on a Representative Survey Fiedler I; Ante L; Meduna MV; Steinmetz F; Kairouz S; Costes JM; 36757603
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32 Convenient consumption: a critical qualitative inquiry into the gambling practices of younger women in Australia Thomas SL; Pitt H; Randle M; Cowlishaw S; Rintoul A; Kairouz S; Daube M; 36547399
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33 Young women's engagement with gambling: A critical qualitative inquiry of risk conceptualisations and motivations to gamble McCarthy S; Thomas S; Pitt H; Marko S; Randle M; Cowlishaw S; Kairouz S; Daube M; 36002940
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34 Gambling and the COVID-19 pandemic in the province of Quebec (Canada): protocol for a mixed-methods study Brodeur M; Audette-Chapdelaine S; Savard AC; Kairouz S; 34518259
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35 Intersections of Treatment, Surveillance, and Criminal Law Responses to HIV and COVID-19 Hastings C; McClelland A; Guta A; Owino M; Manning E; Orsini M; Elliott R; Gagnon M; Molldrem S; 34110919
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36 COVID-19, public health, and the politics of prevention. Mykhalovskiy E; French M; 33156541
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37 "The Prostitution Problem": Why Isn't Evidence Used to Inform Policy Initiatives? Frances M Shaver 30560344
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38 Consent and criminalisation concerns over phylogenetic analysis of surveillance data. Chung C, Khanna N, Cardell B, Spieldenner A, Strub S, McClelland A, French M, Gagnon M, Guta A 31272660
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Title:Factors associated with high use of general practitioner and psychiatrist services among patients attending an addiction rehabilitation center
Authors:Hu?nh CNgamini Ngui AKairouz SLesage AFleury MJ
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27450676/
DOI:10.1186/s12888-016-0974-7
Publication:BMC psychiatry
Keywords:Addiction rehabilitation centerGeneral practitionersHealth service useHigh users of health servicesPsychiatristsSubstance abuse treatment centerSubstance use disorders
PMID:27450676 Category: Date Added:2016-07-25
Dept Affiliation: SOCANTH
1 Centre de recherche et d'expertise en dépendance du Centre intégré universitaire de santé et des services sociaux du Centre-Sud-de-l'Île-de-Montréal, 950 Louvain East, Montréal, Québec, H2M 2E8, Canada. christophe.huynh.crdm@ssss.gouv.qc.ca.
2 Douglas Mental Health University Institute, McGill University, 6875 LaSalle Boulevard, Montréal, Québec, H4H 1R3, Canada. christophe.huynh.crdm@ssss.gouv.qc.ca.
3 Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Concordia University, 1455 de Maisonneuve Boulevard West, Montréal, Québec, H2G 1M8, Canada.
4 Centre de recherche Fernand-Seguin, Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Montréal, 7401 Hochelaga Street, Montréal, Québec, H1N 3M5, Canada.
5 Centre de recherche et d'expertise en dépendance du Centre intégré universitaire de santé et des services sociaux du Centre-Sud-de-l'Île-de-Montréal, 950 Louvain East, Montréal, Québec, H2M 2E8, Canada.
6 Douglas Mental Health University Institute, McGill University, 6875 LaSalle Boulevard, Montréal, Québec, H4H 1R3, Canada.

Description:

Background: This study aimed to 1) identify the characteristics of individuals with substance use disorders (SUDs) who make high use of services provided by general practitioners (GP) and psychiatrists while receiving services concurrently from an addiction rehabilitation center (ARC), and 2) to compare high service users to moderate and low service users.

Methods: Data were compiled for 4,407 individuals with SUDs who were receiving services from an ARC in 2004. The data came from the merging of four databases: the ARC data registry (January 1(st), 2004-December 31, 2004), the Quebec Health Insurance Board database (March 31, 2003-April 1st, 2005), the Quebec provincial database for hospitalizations (March 31, 2003-April 1st, 2005), and the Quebec National Institute of Public Health database (2004). Independent variables were grouped according to the Andersen Behavioral Model of Health Services Use: predisposing, enabling and need factors. Generalized estimating equations analyses were performed to assess the influence of individual and neighborhood-level characteristics on high use of services outside the ARC provided by GPs and psychiatrists. Benjamini-Hochberg's procedure was applied to correct for multiple comparisons.

Results: About 97 % of individuals attending the ARC consulted a GP or a psychiatrist during the two-year study period, for a mean of 1.5 consultations per month. Findings revealed that 5 % of the sample made 26 % of all consultations over the two years, and they were defined as high users. No single predisposing factor was associated with high use. One enabling factor significantly increased the risk of being a high user of services from general practitioners and psychiatrists: receiving services at the ARC for three years prior to 2004. Four needs factors, all related to mental health diagnoses (schizophrenia, mood disorder, anxiety disorder, personality disorder), predicted high use of general practitioner and psychiatrist services.

Conclusions: This study found that nearly all individuals with SUDs receiving services from an ARC were users of health services from GPs and psychiatrists outside the ARC. High users most probably accessed them in inpatient settings. No previous study has compared high service users with low and moderate users among individuals with SUDs. Considering that ARCs are treating individuals with complex needs, some of whom make high use of medical professionals, both ARCs and their clients could benefit from increased collaboration and integration between the addictions and mental healthcare sectors.





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