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Dive into the research topics where Beth Ellen Pennell is active.

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Featured researches published by Beth Ellen Pennell.


PubMed | 2009

Cross-national associations between gender and mental disorders in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys.

Soraya Seedat; Kate M. Scott; Matthias C. Angermeyer; Patricia Berglund; Evelyn J. Bromet; Traolach S. Brugha; Koen Demyttenaere; de Girolamo G; J. M. Haro; Robert Jin; Elie G. Karam; Kovess-Masfety; Daphna Levinson; Medina Mora Me; Yutaka Ono; Johan Ormel; Beth Ellen Pennell; J. Posada-Villa; Nancy A. Sampson; David M. Williams; Ronald C. Kessler

CONTEXT Gender differences in mental disorders, including more anxiety and mood disorders among women and more externalizing disorders among men, are found consistently in epidemiological surveys. The gender roles hypothesis suggests that these differences narrow as the roles of women and men become more equal. OBJECTIVES To study time-space (cohort-country) variation in gender differences in lifetime DSM-IV mental disorders across cohorts in 15 countries in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Survey Initiative and to determine if this variation is significantly related to time-space variation in female gender role traditionality as measured by aggregate patterns of female education, employment, marital timing, and use of birth control. DESIGN Face-to-face household surveys. SETTING Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and the Pacific. PARTICIPANTS Community-dwelling adults (N = 72,933). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview assessed lifetime prevalence and age at onset of 18 DSM-IV anxiety, mood, externalizing, and substance disorders. Survival analyses estimated time-space variation in female to male odds ratios of these disorders across cohorts defined by the following age ranges: 18 to 34, 35 to 49, 50 to 64, and 65 years and older. Structural equation analysis examined predictive effects of variation in gender role traditionality on these odds ratios. RESULTS In all cohorts and countries, women had more anxiety and mood disorders than men, and men had more externalizing and substance disorders than women. Although gender differences were generally consistent across cohorts, significant narrowing was found in recent cohorts for major depressive disorder and substance disorders. This narrowing was significantly related to temporal (major depressive disorder) and spatial (substance disorders) variation in gender role traditionality. CONCLUSIONS While gender differences in most lifetime mental disorders were fairly stable over the time-space units studied, substantial intercohort narrowing of differences in major depression was found to be related to changes in the traditionality of female gender roles. Additional research is needed to understand why this temporal narrowing was confined to major depression.


Archive | 2010

Survey Methods in Multinational, Multiregional, and Multicultural Contexts: Harkness/Survey

Janet Harkness; Michael Braun; Brad Edwards; Timothy P. Johnson; Lars Lyberg; Peter Ph. Mohler; Beth Ellen Pennell; Tom W. Smith

This book provides up-to-date insight into key aspects of methodological research for comparative surveys. It discusses methodological considerations for surveys that are deliberately designed for ...


Public Opinion Quarterly | 1995

EFFECTS OF A PREPAID NONMONETARY INCENTIVE ON RESPONSE RATES AND RESPONSE QUALITY IN A FACE-TO-FACE SURVEY

Diane K. Willimack; Howard Schuman; Beth Ellen Pennell; James M. Lepkowski

We conducted a randomized experiment on a face-to- face interview survey in order to test the effects on response rates of a prepaid nonmonetary incentive. Results showed a sta- tistically significant increase in response rates, mostly through reduction in refusal rates, in the half sample that received the incentive (a gift-type ballpoint pen) as compared with a no incen- tive control group. The effect appears to be due to greater cooper- ation from incentive recipients at the initial visit by an inter- viewer. Unexpectedly, the incentive group also showed a significantly higher rate of sample ineligibility, possibly due to easier identification of vacant residences or nonexistent ad- dresses. In addition, evidence suggests greater response com- pleteness among responding incentive recipients early in the in- terview, with no evidence of increased measurement error due


World Psychiatry | 2014

How well can post‐traumatic stress disorder be predicted from pre‐trauma risk factors? An exploratory study in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys

Ronald C. Kessler; Sherri Rose; Karestan C. Koenen; Elie G. Karam; Paul E. Stang; Dan J. Stein; Steven G. Heeringa; Eric Hill; Israel Liberzon; Katie A. McLaughlin; Samuel A. McLean; Beth Ellen Pennell; Maria Petukhova; Anthony J. Rosellini; Ayelet Meron Ruscio; Victoria Shahly; Arieh Y. Shalev; Derrick Silove; Alan M. Zaslavsky; Matthias C. Angermeyer; Evelyn J. Bromet; José Miguel Caldas de Almeida; Giovanni de Girolamo; Peter de Jonge; Koen Demyttenaere; Silvia Florescu; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Hristo Hinkov; Norito Kawakami

Post‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) should be one of the most preventable mental disorders, since many people exposed to traumatic experiences (TEs) could be targeted in first response settings in the immediate aftermath of exposure for preventive intervention. However, these interventions are costly and the proportion of TE‐exposed people who develop PTSD is small. To be cost‐effective, risk prediction rules are needed to target high‐risk people in the immediate aftermath of a TE. Although a number of studies have been carried out to examine prospective predictors of PTSD among people recently exposed to TEs, most were either small or focused on a narrow sample, making it unclear how well PTSD can be predicted in the total population of people exposed to TEs. The current report investigates this issue in a large sample based on the World Health Organization (WHO)s World Mental Health Surveys. Retrospective reports were obtained on the predictors of PTSD associated with 47,466 TE exposures in representative community surveys carried out in 24 countries. Machine learning methods (random forests, penalized regression, super learner) were used to develop a model predicting PTSD from information about TE type, socio‐demographics, and prior histories of cumulative TE exposure and DSM‐IV disorders. DSM‐IV PTSD prevalence was 4.0% across the 47,466 TE exposures. 95.6% of these PTSD cases were associated with the 10.0% of exposures (i.e., 4,747) classified by machine learning algorithm as having highest predicted PTSD risk. The 47,466 exposures were divided into 20 ventiles (20 groups of equal size) ranked by predicted PTSD risk. PTSD occurred after 56.3% of the TEs in the highest‐risk ventile, 20.0% of the TEs in the second highest ventile, and 0.0‐1.3% of the TEs in the 18 remaining ventiles. These patterns of differential risk were quite stable across demographic‐geographic sub‐samples. These results demonstrate that a sensitive risk algorithm can be created using data collected in the immediate aftermath of TE exposure to target people at highest risk of PTSD. However, validation of the algorithm is needed in prospective samples, and additional work is warranted to refine the algorithm both in terms of determining a minimum required predictor set and developing a practical administration and scoring protocol that can be used in routine clinical practice.


Psychological Medicine | 2016

Mental disorders among college students in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys

Randy P. Auerbach; Jordi Alonso; William G. Axinn; Pim Cuijpers; David D. Ebert; Jennifer Greif Green; Irving Hwang; Ronald C. Kessler; H. Liu; Philippe Mortier; Matthew K. Nock; Stephanie Pinder-Amaker; Nancy A. Sampson; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; A. Al-Hamzawi; Laura Helena Andrade; Corina Benjet; Jose Miguel Caldas-de-Almeida; Koen Demyttenaere; S. Florescu; G. de Girolamo; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Elie G. Karam; Andrzej Kiejna; V. Kovess-Masfety; S. Lee; John J. McGrath; Siobhan O'Neill; Beth Ellen Pennell

BACKGROUND Although mental disorders are significant predictors of educational attainment throughout the entire educational career, most research on mental disorders among students has focused on the primary and secondary school years. METHOD The World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys were used to examine the associations of mental disorders with college entry and attrition by comparing college students (n = 1572) and non-students in the same age range (18-22 years; n = 4178), including non-students who recently left college without graduating (n = 702) based on surveys in 21 countries (four low/lower-middle income, five upper-middle-income, one lower-middle or upper-middle at the times of two different surveys, and 11 high income). Lifetime and 12-month prevalence and age-of-onset of DSM-IV anxiety, mood, behavioral and substance disorders were assessed with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). RESULTS One-fifth (20.3%) of college students had 12-month DSM-IV/CIDI disorders; 83.1% of these cases had pre-matriculation onsets. Disorders with pre-matriculation onsets were more important than those with post-matriculation onsets in predicting subsequent college attrition, with substance disorders and, among women, major depression the most important such disorders. Only 16.4% of students with 12-month disorders received any 12-month healthcare treatment for their mental disorders. CONCLUSIONS Mental disorders are common among college students, have onsets that mostly occur prior to college entry, in the case of pre-matriculation disorders are associated with college attrition, and are typically untreated. Detection and effective treatment of these disorders early in the college career might reduce attrition and improve educational and psychosocial functioning.


European Journal of Psychotraumatology | 2017

Trauma and PTSD in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys

Ronald C. Kessler; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; Jordi Alonso; Corina Benjet; Evelyn J. Bromet; Graça Cardoso; Louisa Degenhardt; Giovanni de Girolamo; Rumyana V. Dinolova; Finola Ferry; Silvia Florescu; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Yueqin Huang; Elie G. Karam; Norito Kawakami; Sing Lee; Jean Pierre Lepine; Daphna Levinson; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Beth Ellen Pennell; Marina Piazza; Jose Posada-Villa; Kate M. Scott; Dan J. Stein; Margreet ten Have; Yolanda Torres; Maria Carmen Viana; Maria Petukhova; Nancy A. Sampson

ABSTRACT Background: Although post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) onset-persistence is thought to vary significantly by trauma type, most epidemiological surveys are incapable of assessing this because they evaluate lifetime PTSD only for traumas nominated by respondents as their ‘worst.’ Objective: To review research on associations of trauma type with PTSD in the WHO World Mental Health (WMH) surveys, a series of epidemiological surveys that obtained representative data on trauma-specific PTSD. Method: WMH Surveys in 24 countries (n = 68,894) assessed 29 lifetime traumas and evaluated PTSD twice for each respondent: once for the ‘worst’ lifetime trauma and separately for a randomly-selected trauma with weighting to adjust for individual differences in trauma exposures. PTSD onset-persistence was evaluated with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Results: In total, 70.4% of respondents experienced lifetime traumas, with exposure averaging 3.2 traumas per capita. Substantial between-trauma differences were found in PTSD onset but less in persistence. Traumas involving interpersonal violence had highest risk. Burden of PTSD, determined by multiplying trauma prevalence by trauma-specific PTSD risk and persistence, was 77.7 person-years/100 respondents. The trauma types with highest proportions of this burden were rape (13.1%), other sexual assault (15.1%), being stalked (9.8%), and unexpected death of a loved one (11.6%). The first three of these four represent relatively uncommon traumas with high PTSD risk and the last a very common trauma with low PTSD risk. The broad category of intimate partner sexual violence accounted for nearly 42.7% of all person-years with PTSD. Prior trauma history predicted both future trauma exposure and future PTSD risk. Conclusions: Trauma exposure is common throughout the world, unequally distributed, and differential across trauma types with respect to PTSD risk. Although a substantial minority of PTSD cases remits within months after onset, mean symptom duration is considerably longer than previously recognized.


Psychological Medicine | 2017

Posttraumatic stress disorder in the World Mental Health Surveys

Karestan C. Koenen; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Lauren C. Ng; Kelsey McLaughlin; Evelyn J. Bromet; Dan J. Stein; Elie G. Karam; A. Meron Ruscio; Corina Benjet; Kate M. Scott; Lukoye Atwoli; M. Petukhova; Carmen C. W. Lim; Aguilar-Gaxiola. S.; A. Al-Hamzawi; J. Alonso; Brendan Bunting; Marius Ciutan; G. de Girolamo; Louisa Degenhardt; Oye Gureje; J. M. Haro; Yueqin Huang; Norito Kawakami; Sven J. van der Lee; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Beth Ellen Pennell; Marina Piazza; Nancy A. Sampson; M. ten Have

BACKGROUND Traumatic events are common globally; however, comprehensive population-based cross-national data on the epidemiology of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the paradigmatic trauma-related mental disorder, are lacking. METHODS Data were analyzed from 26 population surveys in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys. A total of 71 083 respondents ages 18+ participated. The Composite International Diagnostic Interview assessed exposure to traumatic events as well as 30-day, 12-month, and lifetime PTSD. Respondents were also assessed for treatment in the 12 months preceding the survey. Age of onset distributions were examined by country income level. Associations of PTSD were examined with country income, world region, and respondent demographics. RESULTS The cross-national lifetime prevalence of PTSD was 3.9% in the total sample and 5.6% among the trauma exposed. Half of respondents with PTSD reported persistent symptoms. Treatment seeking in high-income countries (53.5%) was roughly double that in low-lower middle income (22.8%) and upper-middle income (28.7%) countries. Social disadvantage, including younger age, female sex, being unmarried, being less educated, having lower household income, and being unemployed, was associated with increased risk of lifetime PTSD among the trauma exposed. CONCLUSIONS PTSD is prevalent cross-nationally, with half of all global cases being persistent. Only half of those with severe PTSD report receiving any treatment and only a minority receive specialty mental health care. Striking disparities in PTSD treatment exist by country income level. Increasing access to effective treatment, especially in low- and middle-income countries, remains critical for reducing the population burden of PTSD.


Psychological Medicine | 2017

Post-traumatic stress disorder associated with natural and human-made disasters in the World Mental Health Surveys

Evelyn J. Bromet; Lukoye Atwoli; Norito Kawakami; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Patryk Piotrowski; Andrew J. King; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; Jordi Alonso; Brendan Bunting; Koen Demyttenaere; S. Florescu; G. de Girolamo; Semyon Gluzman; Josep Maria Haro; P. de Jonge; Elie G. Karam; S. Lee; V. Kovess-Masfety; M. E. Medina-Mora; Zeina Mneimneh; Beth Ellen Pennell; J. Posada-Villa; Diego Salmerón; Tadashi Takeshima; Ronald C. Kessler

BACKGROUND Research on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following natural and human-made disasters has been undertaken for more than three decades. Although PTSD prevalence estimates vary widely, most are in the 20-40% range in disaster-focused studies but considerably lower (3-5%) in the few general population epidemiological surveys that evaluated disaster-related PTSD as part of a broader clinical assessment. The World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys provide an opportunity to examine disaster-related PTSD in representative general population surveys across a much wider range of sites than in previous studies. METHOD Although disaster-related PTSD was evaluated in 18 WMH surveys, only six in high-income countries had enough respondents for a risk factor analysis. Predictors considered were socio-demographics, disaster characteristics, and pre-disaster vulnerability factors (childhood family adversities, prior traumatic experiences, and prior mental disorders). RESULTS Disaster-related PTSD prevalence was 0.0-3.8% among adult (ages 18+) WMH respondents and was significantly related to high education, serious injury or death of someone close, forced displacement from home, and pre-existing vulnerabilities (prior childhood family adversities, other traumas, and mental disorders). Of PTSD cases 44.5% were among the 5% of respondents classified by the model as having highest PTSD risk. CONCLUSION Disaster-related PTSD is uncommon in high-income WMH countries. Risk factors are consistent with prior research: severity of exposure, history of prior stress exposure, and pre-existing mental disorders. The high concentration of PTSD among respondents with high predicted risk in our model supports the focus of screening assessments that identify disaster survivors most in need of preventive interventions.


Psychological Medicine | 2017

The association between childhood adversities and subsequent first onset of psychotic experiences: a cross-national analysis of 23,998 respondents from 17 countries

John J. McGrath; Katie A. McLaughlin; Sukanta Saha; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; A. Al-Hamzawi; Jordi Alonso; Ronny Bruffaerts; G. de Girolamo; P. de Jonge; Oluyomi Esan; S. Florescu; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Chiyi Hu; Elie G. Karam; V. Kovess-Masfety; S. Lee; Jean-Pierre Lépine; Carmen C. W. Lim; M. E. Medina-Mora; Zeina Mneimneh; Beth Ellen Pennell; Marina Piazza; J. Posada-Villa; Nancy A. Sampson; Maria Carmen Viana; Miguel Xavier; Evelyn J. Bromet; Kenneth S. Kendler; Ronald C. Kessler

BACKGROUND Although there is robust evidence linking childhood adversities (CAs) and an increased risk for psychotic experiences (PEs), little is known about whether these associations vary across the life-course and whether mental disorders that emerge prior to PEs explain these associations. METHOD We assessed CAs, PEs and DSM-IV mental disorders in 23 998 adults in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys. Discrete-time survival analysis was used to investigate the associations between CAs and PEs, and the influence of mental disorders on these associations using multivariate logistic models. RESULTS Exposure to CAs was common, and those who experienced any CAs had increased odds of later PEs [odds ratio (OR) 2.3, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.9-2.6]. CAs reflecting maladaptive family functioning (MFF), including abuse, neglect, and parent maladjustment, exhibited the strongest associations with PE onset in all life-course stages. Sexual abuse exhibited a strong association with PE onset during childhood (OR 8.5, 95% CI 3.6-20.2), whereas Other CA types were associated with PE onset in adolescence. Associations of other CAs with PEs disappeared in adolescence after adjustment for prior-onset mental disorders. The population attributable risk proportion (PARP) for PEs associated with all CAs was 31% (24% for MFF). CONCLUSIONS Exposure to CAs is associated with PE onset throughout the life-course, although sexual abuse is most strongly associated with childhood-onset PEs. The presence of mental disorders prior to the onset of PEs does not fully explain these associations. The large PARPs suggest that preventing CAs could lead to a meaningful reduction in PEs in the population.


Journal of Official Statistics | 2015

Cultural Variations in the Effect of Interview Privacy and the Need for Social Conformity on Reporting Sensitive Information

Zeina M. Mneimneh; Roger Tourangeau; Beth Ellen Pennell; Steven G. Heeringa; Michael R. Elliott

Abstract Privacy is an important feature of the interview interaction mainly due to its potential effect on reporting information, especially sensitive information. Here we examine the effect of third-party presence on reporting both sensitive and relatively neutral outcomes. We investigate whether the effect of third-party presence on reporting sensitive information is moderated by the respondent’s need for social conformity and the respondent’s country of residence. Three types of outcomes are investigated: behavioral, attitudinal, and relatively neutral health events. Using data from 22,070 interviews and nine countries in the cross-national World Mental Health Survey Initiative, we fit multilevel logistic regression to study reporting effects on questions about suicidal behavior and marital ratings, and contrast these with questions about having high blood pressure, asthma, or arthritis. We find that there is an effect of third-party presence on reporting sensitive information and no effect on reporting of neutral information. Further, the effect of the interview privacy setting on reporting sensitive information is moderated by the need for social conformity and the cultural setting.

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Oye Gureje

World Health Organization

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