Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Fadi T. Maalouf is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Fadi T. Maalouf.


The Lancet | 2016

Global burden of diseases, injuries, and risk factors for young people's health during 1990-2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013.

Ali H. Mokdad; Mohammad H. Forouzanfar; Farah Daoud; Arwa A. Mokdad; Charbel El Bcheraoui; Maziar Moradi-Lakeh; Hmwe H Kyu; Ryan M. Barber; Joseph A. Wagner; Kelly Cercy; Hannah Kravitz; Megan Coggeshall; Adrienne Chew; Kevin F. O'Rourke; Caitlyn Steiner; Marwa Tuffaha; Raghid Charara; Essam Abdullah Al-Ghamdi; Yaser A. Adi; Rima Afifi; Hanan Alahmadi; Fadia AlBuhairan; Nicholas B. Allen; Mohammad A. AlMazroa; Abdulwahab A. Al-Nehmi; Zulfa AlRayess; Monika Arora; Peter Azzopardi; Carmen Barroso; Mohammed Omar Basulaiman

BACKGROUND Young peoples health has emerged as a neglected yet pressing issue in global development. Changing patterns of young peoples health have the potential to undermine future population health as well as global economic development unless timely and effective strategies are put into place. We report the past, present, and anticipated burden of disease in young people aged 10-24 years from 1990 to 2013 using data on mortality, disability, injuries, and health risk factors. METHODS The Global Burden of Disease Study 2013 (GBD 2013) includes annual assessments for 188 countries from 1990 to 2013, covering 306 diseases and injuries, 1233 sequelae, and 79 risk factors. We used the comparative risk assessment approach to assess how much of the burden of disease reported in a given year can be attributed to past exposure to a risk. We estimated attributable burden by comparing observed health outcomes with those that would have been observed if an alternative or counterfactual level of exposure had occurred in the past. We applied the same method to previous years to allow comparisons from 1990 to 2013. We cross-tabulated the quantiles of disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) by quintiles of DALYs annual increase from 1990 to 2013 to show rates of DALYs increase by burden. We used the GBD 2013 hierarchy of causes that organises 306 diseases and injuries into four levels of classification. Level one distinguishes three broad categories: first, communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders; second, non-communicable diseases; and third, injuries. Level two has 21 mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive categories, level three has 163 categories, and level four has 254 categories. FINDINGS The leading causes of death in 2013 for young people aged 10-14 years were HIV/AIDS, road injuries, and drowning (25·2%), whereas transport injuries were the leading cause of death for ages 15-19 years (14·2%) and 20-24 years (15·6%). Maternal disorders were the highest cause of death for young women aged 20-24 years (17·1%) and the fourth highest for girls aged 15-19 years (11·5%) in 2013. Unsafe sex as a risk factor for DALYs increased from the 13th rank to the second for both sexes aged 15-19 years from 1990 to 2013. Alcohol misuse was the highest risk factor for DALYs (7·0% overall, 10·5% for males, and 2·7% for females) for young people aged 20-24 years, whereas drug use accounted for 2·7% (3·3% for males and 2·0% for females). The contribution of risk factors varied between and within countries. For example, for ages 20-24 years, drug use was highest in Qatar and accounted for 4·9% of DALYs, followed by 4·8% in the United Arab Emirates, whereas alcohol use was highest in Russia and accounted for 21·4%, followed by 21·0% in Belarus. Alcohol accounted for 9·0% (ranging from 4·2% in Hong Kong to 11·3% in Shandong) in China and 11·6% (ranging from 10·1% in Aguascalientes to 14·9% in Chihuahua) of DALYs in Mexico for young people aged 20-24 years. Alcohol and drug use in those aged 10-24 years had an annual rate of change of >1·0% from 1990 to 2013 and accounted for more than 3·1% of DALYs. INTERPRETATION Our findings call for increased efforts to improve health and reduce the burden of disease and risks for diseases in later life in young people. Moreover, because of the large variations between countries in risks and burden, a global approach to improve health during this important period of life will fail unless the particularities of each country are taken into account. Finally, our results call for a strategy to overcome the financial and technical barriers to adequately capture young peoples health risk factors and their determinants in health information systems. FUNDING Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2011

Neurocognitive impairment in adolescent major depressive disorder: State vs. trait illness markers

Fadi T. Maalouf; David A. Brent; Luke Clark; Lucy Tavitian; Rebecca Munnell McHugh; Barbara J. Sahakian; Mary L. Phillips

BACKGROUND Current treatment outcomes of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) in adolescents remain suboptimal. Discriminating between state and trait markers of MDD in adolescents would help identify markers that may guide choice of appropriate interventions and help improve longer-term outcome for individuals with the illness. METHODS We compared neurocognitive performance in executive function, sustained attention and short-term memory in 20 adolescents with MDD in acute episode (MDDa), 20 previously depressed adolescents in remission (MDDr) and 17 healthy control participants (HC). RESULTS There was a group difference that emerged for executive function with increasing task difficulty (p=0.033). MDDa showed impaired executive function, as measured by using more moves to solve 4-move problems on a forward planning task, relative to MDDr and HC (p=0.01, d=0.94 and p=0.015, d=0.77 respectively). MDDa showed more impulsivity as measured by lower response bias (B″) on a sustained attention task than both MDDr and HC (p=0.01, d=0.85 and p=0.008, d=0.49 respectively). Higher impulsivity was associated with more severe depression (r=-0.365, p=0.022) and earlier age of onset of depression (r=0.402, p=0.012) and there was a trend for a correlation between more executive dysfunction and more severe depression (r=0.301 p=0.059) in MDDa and MDDr combined. The three groups did not differ significantly on short-term memory or target detection on the sustained attention task. LIMITATION These results need to be replicated in the future with a larger sample size. CONCLUSION Executive dysfunction and impulsivity appear to be state-specific markers of MDD in adolescents that are related to depression severity and not present in remission.


Neuropsychologia | 2010

Impaired sustained attention and executive dysfunction:bipolar disorder versus depression-specific markers of affective disorders

Fadi T. Maalouf; Crystal R. Klein; Luke Clark; Barbara J. Sahakian; Edmund J. LaBarbara; Amelia Versace; Stefanie Hassel; Jorge Almeida; Mary L. Phillips

OBJECTIVE To identify neurocognitive measures that could be used as objective markers of bipolar disorder. METHODS We examined executive function, sustained attention and short-term memory as neurocognitive domains in 18 participants with bipolar disorder in euthymic state (Beuth), 14 in depressed state (Bdep), 20 with unipolar depression (Udep) and 28 healthy control participants (HC). We conducted four-group comparisons followed by relevant post hoc analyses. RESULTS Udep and Bdep, but not Beuth showed impaired executive function (p=0.045 and p=0.046, respectively). Both Bdep and Beuth, but not Udep, showed impaired sustained attention (p=0.001 and p=0.045, respectively). The four groups did not differ significantly on short-term memory. Impaired sustained attention and executive dysfunction were not associated with depression severity, duration of illness and age of illness onset. Only a small number of abnormal neurocognitive measures were associated with medication in Bdep and Beuth. CONCLUSION Impaired sustained attention appears specific to bipolar disorder and present in both Beuth and Bdep; it may represent an objective marker of bipolar disorder. Executive dysfunction by contrast, appears to be present in Udep and Bdep and likely represents a marker of depression.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2009

Pediatric depression: is there evidence to improve evidence‐based treatments?

David A. Brent; Fadi T. Maalouf

Although there have been advances in our ability to treat child and adolescent depression, use of evidence-based treatments still results in many patients with residual symptoms. Advances in our understanding of cognitive, emotional, and ecological aspects of early-onset depression have the potential to lead to improvements in the assessment and treatment of depression. A search for endophenotypes, i.e., traits that are related to depression, mediate the familial transmission of depression, and are genetically determined, may help in understanding etiology and in personalizing treatment. However, advances in treatment may also come from the identification of biomarkers, i.e., modifiable neurocognitive, physiological, or biochemical indices that are correlated with, or mediate, treatment outcome. More effective treatments may emerge from being able to personalize interventions to the patients cognitive, emotional, and developmental profile.


Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America | 2012

Child and Adolescent Depression Intervention Overview: What Works, for Whom and How Well?

Fadi T. Maalouf; David A. Brent

The authors review the currently available evidence-based treatments of child and adolescent major depressive disorder. Medication monotherapy, namely with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, is supported by large clinical trials in adolescents. For mild to moderate depression, cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) and interpersonal therapy are reasonable options as monotherapies. There is also evidence that the combination of medication and CBT is superior to medication alone for accelerating the pace of treatment response and remission, despite some negative studies. Response, remission, and recurrence rates after acute treatment and during long-term follow-ups are also presented and discussed.


International Journal of Inflammation | 2012

Chronic Postoperative Endophthalmitis: A Review of Clinical Characteristics, Microbiology, Treatment Strategies, and Outcomes

Fadi T. Maalouf; Marwan Abdulaal; Rola N. Hamam

Chronic postoperative endophthalmitis (CPE) is a delayed infectious intraocular inflammation process that occurs more than six weeks after ocular surgery and frequently masquerades as autoimmune uveitis. These cases are at risk of delayed diagnosis and erroneous long-term treatment with corticosteroids. This paper aims to review the epidemiology, microbiology, clinical characteristics, diagnosis, management strategies, and outcome of chronic postoperative endophthalmitis. The incidence of CPE is still uncommon, and multiple pathogens have been reported with varying frequencies. Review of the literature reveals that CPE cases have a high incidence of visual impairment and recurrence rate might be decreased with aggressive surgical approach.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2013

Reliability and validity of the Arabic Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders (SCARED) in a clinical sample

N. Hariz; S. Bawab; Mia Atwi; Lucy Tavitian; Pia Zeinoun; Munir Khani; Boris Birmaher; Ziad Nahas; Fadi T. Maalouf

This study aimed at investigating the reliability and validity of the Arabic Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders (SCARED) as a first child and adolescent anxiety screening tool in the Arab World. The English parent (SCARED-P) and child (SCARED-C) versions were translated into Arabic and administered along with the Arabic Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) to 77 parents and 67 children attending a Psychiatry clinic. DSM-IV-TR diagnoses were made by a psychiatrist without knowledge of the scale scores. Internal consistency was confirmed by Cronbachs α=0.92 for SCARED-P and 0.91 for SCARED-C. Their subscales had internal consistencies between 0.65 and 0.89. Parent-child agreement was r=0.67, p<0.001. SCARED-P demonstrated good discriminant validity between participants with anxiety disorders and those with other psychiatric disorders (t(72)=3.13, p=0.003). For SCARED-C, this difference was significant when participants with depressive disorders were excluded (t(43)=2.58, p=0.01). Convergent validity was evident through a significant correlation between SCARED-P and the parent SDQ emotional subscale (r=0.70, p<0.001), and SCARED-C and the child SDQ emotional subscale (r=0.70, p<0.001). Divergent validity with the SDQ hyperactivity subscale was observed as no significant correlation was found. Overall, the Arabic SCARED demonstrated satisfactory psychometric properties in a clinical sample in Lebanon.


Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy | 2010

Pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy of pediatric depression

Fadi T. Maalouf; David A. Brent

Importance of the field: Depressive disorders in children and adolescents are prevalent and impairing. Current available treatments of childhood depression have advanced over the years but still leave many patients with residual symptoms. Areas covered in this review: We here review the pharmacotherapy and psychoptherapy of pediatric major depressive disorder. We conducted a Pubmed review on this topic covering the last 30 years. What the reader will gain: The reader will learn about the current evidence on the efficacy and safety of the different pediatric depression treatment modalities. We review evidence-based treatments, namely cognitive behavioral therapy, interpersonal therapy, and antidepressant treatments. We critically review the extant clinical trials for these treatments, and discuss both antidepressants efficacy and adverse events, including risk for suicidal events. Take home message: Current treatments lead to a sustained response rate of up to 80% and a remission rate of 60% by 6 months, but we are in need of more personalized treatment to optimize treatment response. The identification of biomarkers of response may be the first step towards personalized treatment development.


PLOS ONE | 2017

The Burden of Mental Disorders in the Eastern Mediterranean Region, 1990-2013.

Raghid Charara; Mohammad H. Forouzanfar; Mohsen Naghavi; Maziar Moradi-Lakeh; Ashkan Afshin; Theo Vos; Farah Daoud; Haidong Wang; Charbel El Bcheraoui; Ibrahim Khalil; Randah Ribhi Hamadeh; Ardeshir Khosravi; Vafa Rahimi-Movaghar; Yousef Khader; Nawal Al-Hamad; Carla Makhlouf Obermeyer; Anwar Rafay; Rana Jawad Asghar; Saleem M. Rana; Amira Shaheen; Niveen M E Abu-Rmeileh; Abdullatif Husseini; Laith J. Abu-Raddad; Tawfik Ahmed Muthafer Khoja; Zulfa A.Al Rayess; Fadia AlBuhairan; Mohamed Hsairi; Mahmoud A. Alomari; Raghib Ali; Gholamreza Roshandel

The Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR) is witnessing an increase in chronic disorders, including mental illness. With ongoing unrest, this is expected to rise. This is the first study to quantify the burden of mental disorders in the EMR. We used data from the Global Burden of Disease study (GBD) 2013. DALYs (disability-adjusted life years) allow assessment of both premature mortality (years of life lost–YLLs) and nonfatal outcomes (years lived with disability–YLDs). DALYs are computed by adding YLLs and YLDs for each age-sex-country group. In 2013, mental disorders contributed to 5.6% of the total disease burden in the EMR (1894 DALYS/100,000 population): 2519 DALYS/100,000 (2590/100,000 males, 2426/100,000 females) in high-income countries, 1884 DALYS/100,000 (1618/100,000 males, 2157/100,000 females) in middle-income countries, 1607 DALYS/100,000 (1500/100,000 males, 1717/100,000 females) in low-income countries. Females had a greater proportion of burden due to mental disorders than did males of equivalent ages, except for those under 15 years of age. The highest proportion of DALYs occurred in the 25–49 age group, with a peak in the 35–39 years age group (5344 DALYs/100,000). The burden of mental disorders in EMR increased from 1726 DALYs/100,000 in 1990 to 1912 DALYs/100,000 in 2013 (10.8% increase). Within the mental disorders group in EMR, depressive disorders accounted for most DALYs, followed by anxiety disorders. Among EMR countries, Palestine had the largest burden of mental disorders. Nearly all EMR countries had a higher mental disorder burden compared to the global level. Our findings call for EMR ministries of health to increase provision of mental health services and to address the stigma of mental illness. Moreover, our results showing the accelerating burden of mental health are alarming as the region is seeing an increased level of instability. Indeed, mental health problems, if not properly addressed, will lead to an increased burden of diseases in the region.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2013

Validation of an Arabic multi-informant psychiatric diagnostic interview for children and adolescents: Development and Well Being Assessment-Arabic (DAWBA-Arabic)

Pia Zeinoun; S. Bawab; Mia Atwi; N. Hariz; Lucy Tavitian; Mounir Khani; Ziad Nahas; Fadi T. Maalouf

BACKGROUND Countries in the Arab region lack a valid Arabic psychiatric diagnostic interview for children and adolescents. We set out to establish the diagnostic validity of the Arabic version of the Development and Well Being Assessment (DAWBA-Arabic), a multi-informant structured interview for predicting DSM-IV-TR diagnoses. METHODS The DAWBA was translated, updated, and administered to 45 participants (child and adolescent psychiatric outpatients and their parents) as part of a clinic registry. Two clinicians, blinded to their respective diagnoses, formulated the DAWBA diagnoses. Participants also underwent a clinical evaluation by a child and adolescent psychiatrist who generated clinical diagnoses according to the DSM-IV-TR. RESULTS Inter-rater reliabilities were .93, .82, and .72 for disruptive disorders, mood disorders and anxiety disorders respectively. Agreement between DAWBA and clinical diagnoses was substantial for disruptive disorders (κ=.0.82) and mood disorders (κ=0.74), and moderate for anxiety disorders (κ=0.46). CONCLUSION The DAWBA-Arabic could serve as a valid and reliable clinical tool for assessing psychiatric disorders among children and adolescents in the Arab region.

Collaboration


Dive into the Fadi T. Maalouf's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lucy Tavitian

American University of Beirut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pia Zeinoun

American University of Beirut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David A. Brent

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mia Atwi

American University of Beirut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

N. Hariz

American University of Beirut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ziad Nahas

American University of Beirut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Munir Khani

American University of Beirut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. Bawab

American University of Beirut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lilian A. Ghandour

American University of Beirut

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge