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Dive into the research topics where Jacek Moskalewicz is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacek Moskalewicz.


Addiction | 2008

Key findings from the WHO collaborative study on substitution therapy for opioid dependence and HIV/AIDS

P Lawrinson; Robert Ali; A Buavirat; S Chiamwongpaet; S Dvoryak; B Habrat; S Jie; R Mardiati; A Mokri; Jacek Moskalewicz; David Newcombe; Poznyak; Emilis Subata; Ambros Uchtenhagen; D S Utami; R Vial; C Zhao

AIMS Opioid substitution treatment has been studied extensively in industrialized countries, but there are relatively few studies in developing/transitional countries. The aim of this study was to examine the effectiveness of opioid substitution treatment (OST) in less resourced countries. DESIGN Longitudinal cohort study. SETTING Purposively selected OST sites in Asia (China, Indonesia, Thailand), Eastern Europe (Lithuania, Poland, Ukraine), the Middle East (Iran) and Australia. PARTICIPANTS Seven hundred and twenty-six OST entrants. MEASUREMENTS Participants were interviewed at treatment entry, 3 and 6 months. Standardized instruments assessed drug use, treatment history, physical and psychological health, quality of life, criminal involvement, blood-borne virus (BBV) risk behaviours and prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis C. FINDINGS Participants were predominantly male, aged in their early 30s and had attained similar levels of education. Seroprevalence rates for HIV were highest in Thailand (52%), followed by Indonesia (28%) and Iran (26%), and lowest in Australia (2.6%). Treatment retention at 6 months was uniformly high, averaging approximately 70%. All countries demonstrated significant and marked reductions in reported heroin and other illicit opioid use; HIV (and other BBV) exposure risk behaviours associated with injection drug users (IDU) and criminal activity, and demonstrated substantial improvement in their physical and mental health and general wellbeing over the course of the study. CONCLUSIONS OST can achieve similar outcomes consistently in a culturally diverse range of settings in low- and middle-income countries to those reported widely in high-income countries. It is associated with a substantial reduction in HIV exposure risk associated with IDU across nearly all the countries. Results support the expansion of opioid substitution treatment.


Human Psychopharmacology-clinical and Experimental | 2012

Phenomenon of new drugs on the Internet: The case of ketamine derivative methoxetamine

Ornella Corazza; Fabrizio Schifano; Pierluigi Simonato; Suzanne Fergus; Sulaf Assi; Jacqueline L. Stair; John Corkery; Giuseppina Trincas; Paolo Deluca; Zoe Davey; Ursula Blaszko; Zsolt Demetrovics; Jacek Moskalewicz; Aurora Enea; Giuditta di Melchiorre; Barbara Mervó; Lucia Di Furia; Magí Farré; Liv Flesland; Manuela Pasinetti; Cinzia Pezzolesi; Agnieszka Pisarska; Harry Shapiro; Holger Siemann; Arvid Skutle; Elias Sferrazza; Marta Torrens; Peer van der Kreeft; Daniela Zummo; Norbert Scherbaum

On the basis of the material available both in the scientific literature and on the web, this paper aims to provide a pharmacological, chemical and behavioural overview of the novel compound methoxetamine. This is a dissociative drug related to ketamine, with a much longer duration of action and intensity of effects. A critical discussion of the availability of information on the web of methoxetamine as a new recreational trend is here provided. Those methodological limitations, which are intrinsically associated with the analysis of online, non‐peer reviewed, material, are here discussed as well. It is concluded that the online availability of information on novel psychoactive drugs, such as methoxethanine, may constitute a pressing public health challenge. Better international collaboration levels and novel forms of intervention are necessary to tackle this fast‐growing phenomenon. Copyright


Human Psychopharmacology-clinical and Experimental | 2013

Promoting innovation and excellence to face the rapid diffusion of Novel Psychoactive Substances in the EU: the outcomes of the ReDNet project

Ornella Corazza; Sulaf Assi; Pierluigi Simonato; John Corkery; Francesco Saverio Bersani; Zsolt Demetrovics; Jacqueline L. Stair; Suzanne Fergus; Cinzia Pezzolesi; Manuela Pasinetti; Paolo Deluca; Colin Drummond; Zoe Davey; Ursula Blaszko; Jacek Moskalewicz; Barbara Mervó; Lucia Di Furia; Maggi Farre; Liv Flesland; Agnieszka Pisarska; Harry Shapiro; Holger Siemann; Arvid Skutle; Elias Sferrazza; Marta Torrens; F. Sambola; Peer van der Kreeft; Norbert Scherbaum; Fabrizio Schifano

The recent emergence of new psychoactive compounds (novel psychoactive substances (NPS)) has raised prominent challenges in the fields of drug policy, substance use research, public health and service provision. The Recreational Drugs European Network project, funded by the European Commission, was implemented to improve the information stream to young people and professionals about effects/risks of NPS by identifying online products and disseminating relevant information through technological tools.


Addiction | 2011

Staff regard towards working with substance users: a European multi-centre study

Gail Gilchrist; Jacek Moskalewicz; Silvia Slezakova; Lubomir Okruhlica; Marta Torrens; Rajko Vajd; Alex Baldacchino

AIMS To compare regard for working with different patient groups (including substance users) among different professional groups in different health-care settings in eight European countries. DESIGN A multi-centre, cross-sectional comparative study. SETTING Primary care, general psychiatry and specialist addiction services in Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Poland, Scotland, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain. PARTICIPANTS A multi-disciplinary convenience sample of 866 professionals (physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists, nurses and social workers) from 253 services. MEASUREMENTS The Medical Condition Regard Scale measured regard for working with different patient groups. Multi-factor between-subjects analysis of variance determined the factors associated with regard for each condition by country and all countries. FINDINGS Regard for working with alcohol (mean score alcohol: 45.35, 95% CI 44.76, 45.95) and drug users (mean score drugs: 43.67, 95% CI 42.98, 44.36) was consistently lower than for other patient groups (mean score diabetes: 50.19, 95% CI 49.71, 50.66; mean score depression: 51.34, 95% CI 50.89, 51.79) across all countries participating in the study, particularly among staff from primary care compared to general psychiatry or specialist addiction services (P<0.001). After controlling for sex of staff, profession and duration of time working in profession, treatment entry point and country remained the only statistically significant variables associated with regard for working with alcohol and drug users. CONCLUSIONS Health professionals appear to ascribe lower status to working with substance users than helping other patient groups, particularly in primary care; the effect is larger in some countries than others.


Addiction | 2010

The dimensionality of alcohol use disorders and alcohol consumption in a cross-national perspective

Guilherme Borges; Yu Ye; Jason Bond; Cheryl J. Cherpitel; Mariana Cremonte; Jacek Moskalewicz; Grazyna Swiatkiewicz; Maritza Rubio-Stipec

AIMS To replicate the finding that there is a single dimension trait in alcohol use disorders and to test whether the usual 5+ drinks for men and 4+ drinks for women and other measures of alcohol consumption help to improve alcohol use disorder criteria in a series of diverse patients from emergency departments (EDs) in four countries. DESIGN Cross-sectional surveys of patients aged 18 years and older that reflected consecutive arrival at the ED. The Composite International Diagnostic Interview Core was used to obtain a diagnosis of DSM-IV alcohol dependence and alcohol abuse; quantity and frequency of drinking and drunkenness as well as usual number of drinks consumed during the last year. SETTING Participants were 5195 injured and non-injured patients attending seven EDs in four countries: Argentina, Mexico, Poland and the United States (between 1995-2001). FINDINGS Using exploratory factor analyses alcohol use disorders can be described as a single, unidimensional continuum without any clear-cut distinction between the criteria for dependence and abuse in all sites. RESULTS from item response theory analyses showed that the current DSM-IV criteria tap people in the middle-upper end of the alcohol use disorder continuum. Alcohol consumption (amount and frequency of use) can be used in all EDs with the current DSM-IV diagnostic criteria to help tap the middle-lower part of this continuum. Even though some specific diagnostic criteria and some alcohol consumption variables showed differential item function across sites, test response curves were invariant for ED sites and their inclusion would not impact the final (total) performance of the diagnostic system. CONCLUSIONS DSM-IV abuse and dependence form a unidimensional continuum in ED patients regardless of country of survey. Alcohol consumption variables, if added, would help to tap patients with more moderate severity. The DSM diagnostic system for alcohol use disorders showed invariance and performed extremely well in these samples.


JAMA Psychiatry | 2016

Association of Mental Disorders With Subsequent Chronic Physical Conditions: World Mental Health Surveys From 17 Countries

Kate M. Scott; Carmen C. W. Lim; Ali Al-Hamzawi; Jordi Alonso; Ronny Bruffaerts; Jose Miguel Caldas-de-Almeida; Silvia Florescu; Giovanni de Girolamo; Chiyi Hu; Peter de Jonge; Norito Kawakami; María Elena Medina-Mora; Jacek Moskalewicz; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Siobhan O'Neill; Marina Piazza; Jose Posada-Villa; Yolanda Torres; Ronald C. Kessler

IMPORTANCE It is clear that mental disorders in treatment settings are associated with a higher incidence of chronic physical conditions, but whether this is true of mental disorders in the community, and how generalized (across a range of physical health outcomes) these associations are, is less clear. This information has important implications for mental health care and the primary prevention of chronic physical disease. OBJECTIVE To investigate associations of 16 temporally prior DSM-IV mental disorders with the subsequent onset or diagnosis of 10 chronic physical conditions. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Eighteen face-to-face, cross-sectional household surveys of community-dwelling adults were conducted in 17 countries (47,609 individuals; 2,032,942 person-years) from January 1, 2001, to December 31, 2011. The Composite International Diagnostic Interview was used to retrospectively assess the lifetime prevalence and age at onset of DSM-IV-identified mental disorders. Data analysis was performed from January 3, 2012, to September 30, 2015. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Lifetime history of physical conditions was ascertained via self-report of physicians diagnosis and year of onset or diagnosis. Survival analyses estimated the associations of temporally prior first onset of mental disorders with subsequent onset or diagnosis of physical conditions. RESULTS Most associations between 16 mental disorders and subsequent onset or diagnosis of 10 physical conditions were statistically significant, with odds ratios (ORs) (95% CIs) ranging from 1.2 (1.0-1.5) to 3.6 (2.0-6.6). The associations were attenuated after adjustment for mental disorder comorbidity, but mood, anxiety, substance use, and impulse control disorders remained significantly associated with onset of between 7 and all 10 of the physical conditions (ORs [95% CIs] from 1.2 [1.1-1.3] to 2.0 [1.4-2.8]). An increasing number of mental disorders experienced over the life course was significantly associated with increasing odds of onset or diagnosis of all 10 types of physical conditions, with ORs (95% CIs) for 1 mental disorder ranging from 1.3 (1.1-1.6) to 1.8 (1.4-2.2) and ORs (95% CIs) for 5 or more mental disorders ranging from 1.9 (1.4-2.7) to 4.0 (2.5-6.5). In population-attributable risk estimates, specific mental disorders were associated with 1.5% to 13.3% of physical condition onsets. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE These findings suggest that mental disorders of all kinds are associated with an increased risk of onset of a wide range of chronic physical conditions. Current efforts to improve the physical health of individuals with mental disorders may be too narrowly focused on the small group with the most severe mental disorders. Interventions aimed at the primary prevention of chronic physical diseases should optimally be integrated into treatment of all mental disorders in primary and secondary care from early in the disorder course.Importance: It is clear that mental disorders in treatment settings are associated with higher chronic physical condition incidence but whether this is true of mental disorders in the community, and how generalized (across a range of physical health outcomes) these associations are, is less clear. This information has important implications for mental health care and the primary prevention of chronic physical disease. Objective: To investigate associations of 16 temporally prior DSM-IV mental disorders with the subsequent onset/diagnosis of 10 chronic physical conditions.Design; Setting; Participants: 18 face-to-face cross-sectional household surveys of community-dwelling adults were conducted in 16 countries (n=47,609; person years=2,032,942). The Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) retrospectively assessed lifetime prevalence and age at onset of DSM-IV mental disorders. Main Outcome Measures: Lifetime history of physical conditions was ascertained via self-report of physician’s diagnosis and year of onset or diagnosis. Survival analyses estimated associations of temporally prior first onset of mental disorders with subsequent onset/diagnosis of physical conditions.Results: The vast majority of associations between 16 mental disorders and subsequent onset/diagnosis of 10 physical conditions were statistically significant, with odds ratios ranging from 1.2 to 3.6. Associations were attenuated after adjustment for mental disorder comorbidity, but mood, anxiety, substance use and impulse control disorders remained significantly associated with onset of between 7/10 and 10/10 of the physical conditions (ORs 1.2-2.0). An increasing number of mental disorders experienced over the life course was associated with increasing odds of onset/diagnosis of all types of physical conditions. In population attributable risk estimates specific mental disorders were associated with 1.5% to 13.3% of physical condition onsets. Conclusions: If confirmed in prospective studies, these findings suggest that mental disorders of all kinds are associated with increased risk of onset of a wide range of chronic physical conditions. Current efforts to improve the physical health of the mentally ill may be too narrowly focused on the very small group with the most severe disorders. Interventions aimed at the primary prevention of chronic physical diseases should optimally be integrated into treatment of all mental disorders, from early in the disorder course, in primary and secondary care.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2010

Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT): 12-month outcomes of a randomized controlled clinical trial in a Polish emergency department.

Cheryl J. Cherpitel; Rachael Korcha; Jacek Moskalewicz; Grazyna Swiatkiewicz; Yinjiao Ye; Jason Bond

BACKGROUND  A randomized controlled trial of screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) among at-risk (based on average number of drinks per week and drinks per drinking day) and dependent drinkers was conducted in an emergency department (ED) among 446 patients 18 and older in Sosnowiec, Poland. METHODS Patients were recruited over a 23-week period (4:00 pm to 12:00 midnight) and randomized to 1 of 3 conditions: screened-only (n = 147), assessed (n = 152), and intervention (n = 147). Patients in the assessed and intervention conditions were blindly reassessed via a telephone interview at 3 months, and all 3 groups were assessed at 12 months (screened-only = 92, assessed = 99, and intervention = 87). RESULTS No difference was found across the 3 conditions in at-risk drinking at 12 months, as the primary outcome variable, or in decrease in the number of drinks per drinking day, with all 3 groups showing a significant reduction in both. Significant declines between baseline and 12 months in secondary outcomes of the RAPS4, number of drinking days per week, and the maximum number of drinks on an occasion were seen only for the intervention condition, and in negative consequences for both the assessment and intervention conditions. CONCLUSIONS Data suggest that improvements in drinking outcomes found in the assessment condition were not because of assessment reactivity, with both the screened and intervention conditions demonstrating greater (although nonsignificant) improvement than the assessed condition. Only those in the intervention condition showed significant improvement in all outcome variables from baseline to 12-month follow-up. Although group by time interaction effects were not found to be significant, these findings suggest that declines in drinking measures for those receiving a brief intervention can be maintained at long-term follow-up.


Psycho-oncology | 2014

Comorbidity of common mental disorders with cancer and their treatment gap: findings from the World Mental Health Surveys

Ora Nakash; Itzhak Levav; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; Jordi Alonso; Laura Helena Andrade; Matthias C. Angermeyer; Ronny Bruffaerts; Jose Miguel Caldas-de-Almeida; S. Florescu; Giovanni de Girolamo; Oye Gureje; Yanling He; Chiyi Hu; Peter de Jonge; Elie G. Karam; Viviane Kovess-Masfety; María Elena Medina-Mora; Jacek Moskalewicz; Sam Murphy; Yosikazu Nakamura; Marina Piazza; Jose Posada-Villa; Dan J. Stein; Nezar Ismet Taib; Zahari Zarkov; Ronald C. Kessler; Kate M. Scott

This study aimed to study the comorbidity of common mental disorders (CMDs) and cancer, and the mental health treatment gap among community residents with active cancer, cancer survivors and cancer‐free respondents in 13 high‐income and 11 low‐middle‐income countries.


BMC Health Services Research | 2012

Service provision and barriers to care for homeless people with mental health problems across 14 European capital cities

Reamonn Canavan; Margaret Mary Barry; Aleksandra Matanov; Henrique Barros; Edina Gabor; Tim Greacen; Petra Holcnerová; Ulrike Kluge; Pablo Nicaise; Jacek Moskalewicz; José Manuel Díaz-Olalla; Christa Straßmayr; Aart H. Schene; Joaquim Soares; Andrea Gaddini; Stefan Priebe

BackgroundMental health problems are disproportionately higher amongst homeless people. Many barriers exist for homeless people with mental health problems in accessing treatment yet little research has been done on service provision and quality of care for this group. The aim of this paper is to assess current service provision and identify barriers to care for homeless people with mental health problems in 14 European capital cities.MethodTwo methods of data collection were employed; (i) In two highly deprived areas in each of the 14 European capital cities, homeless-specific services providing mental health, social care or general health services were assessed. Data were obtained on service characteristics, staff and programmes provided. (ii) Semi-structured interviews were conducted in each area with experts in mental health care provision for homeless people in order to determine the barriers to care and ways to overcome them.ResultsAcross the 14 capital cities, 111 homeless-specific services were assessed. Input from professionally qualified mental health staff was reported as low, as were levels of active outreach and case finding. Out-of-hours service provision appears inadequate and high levels of service exclusion criteria were evident. Prejudice in the services towards homeless people, a lack of co-ordination amongst services, and the difficulties homeless people face in obtaining health insurance were identified as major barriers to service provision.ConclusionsWhile there is variability in service provision across European capital cities, the reported barriers to service accessibility are common. Homeless-specific services are more responsive to the initial needs of homeless people with mental health problems, while generic services tend to be more conducive to long term care. Further research is needed to determine the effectiveness of different service delivery models, including the most effective coordination of homeless specific and generic services.


BMC Public Health | 2012

Good practice in mental health care for socially marginalised groups in Europe: a qualitative study of expert views in 14 countries

Stefan Priebe; Aleksandra Matanov; Ruth Schor; Christa Straßmayr; Henrique Barros; Margaret Mary Barry; José Manuel Díaz-Olalla; Edina Gabor; Tim Greacen; Petra Holcnerová; Ulrike Kluge; Vincent Lorant; Jacek Moskalewicz; Aart H. Schene; Gloria Macassa; Andrea Gaddini

BackgroundSocially marginalised groups tend to have higher rates of mental disorders than the general population and can be difficult to engage in health care. Providing mental health care for these groups represents a particular challenge, and evidence on good practice is required. This study explored the experiences and views of experts in 14 European countries regarding mental health care for six socially marginalised groups: long-term unemployed; street sex workers; homeless; refugees/asylum seekers; irregular migrants and members of the travelling communities.MethodsTwo highly deprived areas were selected in the capital cities of 14 countries, and experts were interviewed for each of the six marginalised groups. Semi-structured interviews with case vignettes were conducted to explore experiences of good practice and analysed using thematic analysis.ResultsIn a total of 154 interviews, four components of good practice were identified across all six groups: a) establishing outreach programmes to identify and engage with individuals with mental disorders; b) facilitating access to services that provide different aspects of health care, including mental health care, and thus reducing the need for further referrals; c) strengthening the collaboration and co-ordination between different services; and d) disseminating information on services both to marginalised groups and to practitioners in the area.ConclusionsExperts across Europe hold similar views on what constitutes good practice in mental health care for marginalised groups. Care may be improved through better service organisation, coordination and information.

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Dive into the Jacek Moskalewicz's collaboration.

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Marta Torrens

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Yu Ye

University of California

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Jason Bond

University of California

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Stefan Priebe

Queen Mary University of London

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Guilherme Borges

Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana

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Mariana Cremonte

National University of Mar del Plata

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Cinzia Pezzolesi

University of Hertfordshire

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Fabrizio Schifano

University of Hertfordshire

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