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Featured researches published by Dana March.


Nature | 2011

Grand challenges in global mental health

Pamela Y. Collins; Vikram Patel; Sarah S. Joestl; Dana March; Thomas R. Insel; Abdallah S. Daar; Isabel Altenfelder Santos Bordin; E. Jane Costello; Maureen S. Durkin; Christopher G. Fairburn; Roger I. Glass; Wayne Hall; Yueqin Huang; Steven E. Hyman; Kay Redfield Jamison; Sylvia Kaaya; Shitij Kapur; Arthur Kleinman; Adesola Ogunniyi; Angel Otero-Ojeda; Mu-ming Poo; Vijayalakshmi Ravindranath; Barbara J. Sahakian; Shekhar Saxena; Peter Singer; Dan J. Stein; Warwick P. Anderson; Muhammad A. Dhansay; Wendy Ewart; Anthony Phillips

A consortium of researchers, advocates and clinicians announces here research priorities for improving the lives of people with mental illness around the world, and calls for urgent action and investment.


Epidemiologic Reviews | 2008

Psychosis and Place

Dana March; Stephani L. Hatch; Craig Morgan; James B. Kirkbride; Michaeline Bresnahan; Paul Fearon; Ezra Susser

One important line of epidemiologic inquiry implicating social context in the etiology of psychosis is the examination of spatial variation in the distribution of psychotic illness. The authors conducted a systematic review of evidence from urbanicity and neighborhood studies regarding spatial variation in the incidence of psychosis in developed countries since 1950. A total of 44 studies (20 of urbanicity and 24 of neighborhood) were culled from three databases with similar time frames: Medline (1950-2007), PsychInfo (1950-2007), and Sociological Abstracts (1952-2007). With a special emphasis on social factors potentially relevant to etiology, the authors elucidated contributions, limitations, and issues related to study design, measurement, and theory. Evidence from both arenas supports a possible etiologic role for social context. Studies of urbanicity indicate that early-life exposure may be important; dose-response relations, spatial patterning of schizophrenia, and interactions with other factors may exist. Neighborhood studies indicate heterogeneity in rates, hint at spatial patterning of schizophrenia, and offer intriguing evidence implying more proximal social (as opposed to physical) exposures. The authors encourage the exploration of social pathways engaging theory, methodological advances, and the life-course perspective. They also propose a conceptual shift from studies of spatial variation in outcomes to research addressing the etiologic effect of exposures shaped by place as a reservoir of risk or resilience.


Social Science & Medicine | 2013

Do socio-economic gradients in smoking emerge differently across time by gender? Implications for the tobacco epidemic from a pregnancy cohort in California, USA

Katherine M. Keyes; Dana March; Bruce G. Link; Howard Chilcoat; Ezra Susser

Understanding current patterns of population smoking by socioeconomic position (SEP) can be substantially enhanced by research that follows birth cohorts over long periods of time, yet such data in the US are rare. Information from birth cohorts followed during critical time periods when the health consequences of smoking became widely known can inform the ways in which current smoking prevalence has been shaped by the historical processes that preceded it. The present study utilizes data from a substudy of the Child Health and Development Study pregnancy cohort (N = 1612). Women were queried about smoking status in 1959-1962, 1971-1972 and 1977-1980. Women were divided into three cohorts based on date of birth. Offspring represented another birth cohort assessed for smoking in 1977-1980. Results indicated that the overall prevalence of smoking exhibited cohort-specific patterns that persisted across time. Notably, the youngest maternal cohort (born 1937-1946) had high smoking prevalence throughout and showed no appreciable decrease (44.7%, 41.4%, 40.1% for 1959-1962, 1971-1972, and 1977-1980). Results also indicated that the relation of smoking to SEP exhibited cohort-specific patterns over time. Among the oldest birth cohort (born 1914-1930), no inverse relation of SEP to smoking was observed at any time; in contrast, an inverse relation emerged by 1959-1962 among the youngest cohort of mothers. Among the adolescent offspring, there was a strong SEP gradient (OR = 2.0, 95% CI = 1.4-3.0) that was stronger than in any maternal birth cohort at any assessment (β = 0.40, SE = 0.1, p<0.01). We conclude that SEP gradients in smoking emerge across birth cohorts rather than time alone, with increasingly strong gradients across time especially among younger cohorts.


Mental Health and Substance Use: Dual Diagnosis | 2011

Levels of risk: maternal-, middle childhood-, and neighborhood-level predictors of adolescent disinhibitory behaviors from a longitudinal birth cohort in the United States

Katherine M. Keyes; Margaret Keyes; Dana March; Ezra Susser

OBJECTIVE: Disruptive behavior in adolescence may indicate a broad vulnerability to disinhibition, which begins in childhood and culminates in adult externalizing psychopathology. We utilized prospective birth cohort data to assess childhood predictors of adolescent disinhibition. We also examined the effect of pre-adolescent fluctuation in cognitive ability. METHODS: Data were drawn from the Child Health and Development Study cohort, born 1961-1963; we used the subsample who participated in follow-up through adolescence (n=1752). Six indicators of behavioral disinhibition (BD), reported in adolescence, were analyzed as a count outcome. Predictor variables were drawn from several waves of data collection and included individual-, maternal-, and neighborhood-level measures. Cognitive ability was assessed with the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test at two time points. Neighborhood characteristics were assessed using census data from 1970. RESULTS: Number of BD indicators was predicted by maternal characteristics at prenatal assessment (maternal age and alcohol consumption) and age-10 assessment (maternal smoking, education, and separation from father). Characteristics of the child that predicted BD included birth order and conduct problems in middle childhood. Neighborhood poverty did not predict BD. Regardless of initial cognitive ability score, movement to a higher quartile by adolescence was associated with lower BD, while movement to a lower quartile was associated with higher BD. CONCLUSION: Risk for adolescent BD exists prenatally and extends through middle childhood. Change in cognitive ability during pre-adolescence emerged as a potentially important factor that merits further investigation. A greater focus on the life course can aid in comprehensively understanding disruptive behavior emergence in adolescence.


Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved | 2014

High rates of depressive symptoms in low-income urban hispanics of caribbean origin with poorly controlled diabetes: Correlates and risk factors

Dana March; Jose A. Luchsinger; Jeanne A. Teresi; Joseph P. Eimicke; Sally E. Findley; Olveen Carrasquillo; Walter Palmas

Little is known about diabetes and depression in disadvantaged urban Hispanic subgroups, particularly those of Caribbean origin. Using data from 360 urban Hispanics of Caribbean origin with poorly controlled diabetes, our objectives were to examine the prevalence and correlates of depressive symptoms and depression using the Euro-D, and the association of depressive symptoms and depression with diabetes self-management and clinical parameters of diabetes control, employing multivariate analyses. The prevalence of depression was 52.8%. Higher levels of depressive symptoms were related to female gender (p < .0001), antidepressant use (p < .0001), stressful life events (p < .0001), SSI (p = .0011), lower education (p < .0001), lower statin use (p = .0014), and less walking (p = .0152). Depression (Euro-D > 3), was associated significantly with female gender (OR = 2.30, 95%CI = 1.38– 3.82), SSI (OR = 2.44, 95%CI = 1.45–4.12), antidepressant use (OR = 2.94, 95%CI = 1.54–5.64), and stressful life events (OR = 1.93, 95%CI = 1.52–2.44). Depressive symptoms and depression were related to markers of adversity and two indicators of diabetes self-management, but not clinical parameters of diabetes control.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2014

Social disorder and diagnostic order: the US Mental Hygiene Movement, the Midtown Manhattan study and the development of psychiatric epidemiology in the 20th century

Dana March; Gerald M. Oppenheimer

Recent scholarship regarding psychiatric epidemiology has focused on shifting notions of mental disorders. In psychiatric epidemiology in the last decades of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century, mental disorders have been perceived and treated largely as discrete categories denoting an individuals mental functioning as either pathological or normal. In the USA, this grew partly out of evolving modern epidemiological work responding to the States commitment to measure the national social and economic burdens of psychiatric disorders and subsequently to determine the need for mental health services and to survey these needs over time. Notably absent in these decades have been environmentally oriented approaches to cultivating normal, healthy mental states, approaches initially present after World War II. We focus here on a set of community studies conducted in the 1950s, particularly the Midtown Manhattan study, which grew out of a holistic conception of mental health that depended on social context and had a strong historical affiliation with: the Mental Hygiene Movement and the philosophy of its founder, Adolf Meyer; the epidemiological formation of field studies and population surveys beginning early in the 20th century, often with a health policy agenda; the recognition of increasing chronic disease in the USA; and the radical change in orientation within psychiatry around World War II. We place the Midtown Manhattan study in historical context--a complex narrative of social institutions, professional formation and scientific norms in psychiatry and epidemiology, and social welfare theory that begins during the Progressive era (1890-1920) in the USA.


Social Science & Medicine | 2017

Disparities in self-rated health across generations and through the life course

Bruce G. Link; Ezra Susser; Pam Factor-Litvak; Dana March; Katrina Kezios; Gina S. Lovasi; Andrew Rundle; Shakira F. Suglia; Kim M. Fader; Howard Andrews; Eileen Johnson; Piera M. Cirillo; Barbara A. Cohn

Extensive evidence leads us to expect that health disparities by race and socioeconomic status found in one generation might be reproduced in the next. To the extent that this occurs it is important to assess life course processes responsible for the reproduction. Prospective evidence concerning such life course processes is hard to come by as it requires long-term follow-up of individuals from childhood through adult life. We present data from the Child Health and Development Disparities study that provides evidence relevant to this issue with respect to self-rated health. Mothers and offspring recruited in Californias Bay Area between 1959 and 1967 were assessed during pregnancy with follow-up exams of offspring along with in-person interviews with mothers (at offspring ages 5, 9-11, 15-17) and offspring (at ages 15-17, ∼50). Available data allow us to assess the importance of three potential life course pathways in the reproduction of inequalities in self-rated health - socioeconomic pathways, cognitive pathways and pathways involving emerging health itself. As expected we found that race and SES disparities in SRH are reproduced across generations. They are evident in mothers, not strong or significant in offspring at 15-17, but present once again in offspring at age ∼50. Concerning potential pathways, we found that indicators of child health were related to adult SRH and played some role in accounting for race but not SES disparities in adult SRH. Cognitive abilities were unrelated to adult SRH with childhood SES controlled. Childhood SES was associated with adult SRH independent of other childhood factors and is reduced to non-significance only when offspring college attainment is controlled. Race and SES disparities in self-reported health in one generation are re-expressed in the next with strongest support for SES pathways in this transmission.


Psychological Medicine | 2010

Psychosis in migrant and minority populations: prescriptions for scientific and social policy

Dana March; Stephani L. Hatch; Ezra Susser

Despite evidence implicating social determinants, Morgan & Hutchinson (2009) argue in their review that public health has failed to mount a policy-driven response to a seeming epidemic of psychosis in migrant and minority populations in the UK (Fearon et al. 2006), other European Union countries (CantorGraae & Selten, 2005), and in the USA (Bresnahan et al. 2007). According to the authors, the lack of policy initiatives directed specifically at reducing the high rates of psychosis in these populations is a public health tragedy. We agree that elevated rates of psychosis documented in these populations constitute an important health disparity that warrants action. Here we present further evidence to fortify their position and discuss policy considerations.


Fatigue: Biomedicine, Health & Behavior | 2015

Chronic fatigue syndrome and co-morbid and consequent conditions: evidence from a multi-site clinical epidemiology study

Lucinda Bateman; Salima Darakjy; Nancy G. Klimas; Daniel L. Peterson; Susan Levine; Ali Allen; Shane A. Carlson; Elizabeth Balbin; Gunnar Gottschalk; Dana March

Background: Epidemiologic data that inform our understanding of the type, frequency, and burden of co-morbidities with chronic fatigue syndrome is limited. Purpose: To elucidate co-morbid and consequent conditions, using data from a clinical epidemiology study of long-term CFS patients. Methods: Some 960 adults with CFS were identified at four sites specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of CFS. Patients reported their demographics, CFS course, other medical diagnoses, and current functioning. We determined associations between: co-morbidities and a patients current health relative to their health when diagnosed with CFS; CFS symptom severity at onset and subsequent diagnosis with a co-morbid condition; and presence of a co-morbidity and functional ability. We also modeled the change in CFS symptom severity over time as it relates to the presence of a co-morbidity. Results: Of the sample, 84% was diagnosed with one or more co-morbid conditions after CFS onset. Fibromyalgia, depression, anxiety, and hypothyroidism were the most common diagnoses. Nearly 60% of the sample reported a mental illness. Conclusions: In general, co-morbid conditions reduced functional ability and were associated with the worsening of CFS symptoms over time. This study provides important new information on the prevalence of co-morbid conditions and their impact on the course of CFS.


American Journal of Public Health | 2018

Cause and Association: Missing the Forest for the Trees

Melissa D. Begg; Dana March

A response is offered to an article in the issue by author Miguel A. Hernan on the causality of diseases, associational statistics and observational research. An overview of the teaching of causation of diseases in public health graduate studies is provided.

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Diana H. Marta

Rush University Medical Center

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