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Dive into the research topics where Wai Tat Chiu is active.

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Featured researches published by Wai Tat Chiu.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2008

Cross-National Prevalence and Risk Factors for Suicidal Ideation, Plans, and Attempts

Matthew K. Nock; Guilherme Borges; Evelyn J. Bromet; Jordi Alonso; Matthias C. Angermeyer; Annette L. Beautrais; Ronny Bruffaerts; Wai Tat Chiu; Giovanni de Girolamo; Semyon Gluzman; Ron de Graaf; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Yueqin Huang; Elie G. Karam; Ronald C. Kessler; Jean Pierre Lepine; Daphna Levinson; María Elena Medina-Mora; Yutaka Ono; Jose Posada-Villa; David R. Williams

BACKGROUND Suicide is a leading cause of death worldwide; however, the prevalence and risk factors for the immediate precursors to suicide - suicidal ideation, plans and attempts - are not wellknown, especially in low- and middle-income countries. AIMS To report on the prevalence and risk factors for suicidal behaviours across 17 countries. METHOD A total of 84 850 adults were interviewed regarding suicidal behaviours and socio-demographic and psychiatric risk factors. RESULTS The cross-national lifetime prevalence of suicidal ideation, plans, and attempts is 9.2% (s.e.=0.1), 3.1% (s.e.=0.1), and 2.7% (s.e.=0.1). Across all countries, 60% of transitions from ideation to plan and attempt occur within the first year after ideation onset. Consistent cross-national risk factors included being female, younger, less educated, unmarried and having a mental disorder. Interestingly, the strongest diagnostic risk factors were mood disorders in high-income countries but impulse control disorders in low- and middle-income countries. CONCLUSION There is cross-national variability in the prevalence of suicidal behaviours, but strong consistency in the characteristics and risk factors for these behaviours. These findings have significant implications for the prediction and prevention of suicidal behaviours.


PLOS Medicine | 2008

Toward a global view of alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, and cocaine use: findings from the WHO World Mental Health Surveys

Louisa Degenhardt; Wai Tat Chiu; Nancy A. Sampson; Ronald C. Kessler; James C. Anthony; Matthias C. Angermeyer; Ronny Bruffaerts; Giovanni de Girolamo; Oye Gureje; Yueqin Huang; Aimee N. Karam; Stanislav Kostyuchenko; Jean Pierre Lepine; Maria Elena Medina Mora; Yehuda Neumark; J. Hans Ormel; Alejandra Pinto-Meza; Jose Posada-Villa; Dan J. Stein; Tadashi Takeshima; J. Elisabeth Wells

Background Alcohol, tobacco, and illegal drug use cause considerable morbidity and mortality, but good cross-national epidemiological data are limited. This paper describes such data from the first 17 countries participating in the World Health Organizations (WHOs) World Mental Health (WMH) Survey Initiative. Methods and Findings Household surveys with a combined sample size of 85,052 were carried out in the Americas (Colombia, Mexico, United States), Europe (Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Ukraine), Middle East and Africa (Israel, Lebanon, Nigeria, South Africa), Asia (Japan, Peoples Republic of China), and Oceania (New Zealand). The WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) was used to assess the prevalence and correlates of a wide variety of mental and substance disorders. This paper focuses on lifetime use and age of initiation of tobacco, alcohol, cannabis, and cocaine. Alcohol had been used by most in the Americas, Europe, Japan, and New Zealand, with smaller proportions in the Middle East, Africa, and China. Cannabis use in the US and New Zealand (both 42%) was far higher than in any other country. The US was also an outlier in cocaine use (16%). Males were more likely than females to have used drugs; and a sex–cohort interaction was observed, whereby not only were younger cohorts more likely to use all drugs, but the male–female gap was closing in more recent cohorts. The period of risk for drug initiation also appears to be lengthening longer into adulthood among more recent cohorts. Associations with sociodemographic variables were consistent across countries, as were the curves of incidence of lifetime use. Conclusions Globally, drug use is not distributed evenly and is not simply related to drug policy, since countries with stringent user-level illegal drug policies did not have lower levels of use than countries with liberal ones. Sex differences were consistently documented, but are decreasing in more recent cohorts, who also have higher levels of illegal drug use and extensions in the period of risk for initiation.


Psychological Medicine | 2008

Social fears and social phobia in the USA: results from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication

Ayelet Meron Ruscio; Timothy A. Brown; Wai Tat Chiu; Jitender Sareen; Murray B. Stein; Ronald C. Kessler

BACKGROUND Despite heightened awareness of the clinical significance of social phobia, information is still lacking about putative subtypes, functional impairment, and treatment-seeking. New epidemiologic data on these topics are presented from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R). METHOD The NCS-R is a nationally representative household survey fielded in 2001-2003. The World Health Organization (WHO) Composite International Diagnostic Interview Version 3.0 (CIDI 3.0) was used to assess 14 performance and interactional fears and DSM-IV social phobia. RESULTS The estimated lifetime and 12-month prevalence of social phobia are 12.1% and 7.1% respectively. Performance and interactional fears load onto a single latent factor, and there is little evidence for distinct subtypes based either on the content or the number of fears. Social phobia is associated with significant psychiatric co-morbidity, role impairment, and treatment-seeking, all of which have a dose-response relationship with number of social fears. However, social phobia is the focus of clinical attention in only about half of cases where treatment is obtained. Among non-co-morbid cases, those with the most fears were least likely to receive social phobia treatment. CONCLUSIONS Social phobia is a common, under-treated disorder that leads to significant functional impairment. Increasing numbers of social fears are associated with increasingly severe manifestations of the disorder.


Biological Psychiatry | 2013

The Prevalence and Correlates of Binge Eating Disorder in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys

Ronald C. Kessler; Patricia Berglund; Wai Tat Chiu; Anne C. Deitz; James I. Hudson; Victoria Shahly; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; Jordi Alonso; Matthias C. Angermeyer; Corina Benjet; Ronny Bruffaerts; Giovanni de Girolamo; Ron de Graaf; Josep Maria Haro; Viviane Kovess-Masfety; Siobhan O’Neill; Jose Posada-Villa; Carmen Sasu; Kate M. Scott; Maria Carmen Viana; Miguel Xavier

BACKGROUND Little population-based data exist outside the United States on the epidemiology of binge eating disorder (BED). Cross-national BED data are presented here and compared with bulimia nervosa (BN) data in the World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health Surveys. METHODS Community surveys with 24,124 respondents (ages 18+) across 14 mostly upper-middle and high-income countries assessed lifetime and 12-month DSM-IV mental disorders with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Physical disorders were assessed with a chronic conditions checklist. RESULTS Country-specific lifetime prevalence estimates are consistently (median; interquartile range) higher for BED (1.4%; .8-1.9%) than BN (.8%; .4-1.0%). Median age of onset is in the late teens to early 20s for both disorders but slightly younger for BN. Persistence is slightly higher for BN (6.5 years; 2.2-15.4) than BED (4.3 years; 1.0-11.7). Lifetime risk of both disorders is elevated for women and recent cohorts. Retrospective reports suggest that comorbid DSM-IV disorders predict subsequent onset of BN somewhat more strongly than BED and that BN predicts subsequent comorbid disorders somewhat more strongly than does BED. Significant comorbidities with physical conditions are due almost entirely to BN and to a somewhat lesser degree BED predicting subsequent onset of these conditions. Role impairments are similar for BN and BED. Fewer than half of lifetime BN or BED cases receive treatment. CONCLUSIONS Binge eating disorder represents a public health problem at least equal to BN. Low treatment rates highlight the clinical importance of questioning patients about eating problems even when not included among presenting complaints.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Cross-National Analysis of the Associations between Traumatic Events and Suicidal Behavior: Findings from the WHO World Mental Health Surveys

Dan J. Stein; Wai Tat Chiu; Irving Hwang; Ronald C. Kessler; Nancy A. Sampson; Jordi Alonso; Guilherme Borges; Evelyn J. Bromet; Ronny Bruffaerts; Giovanni de Girolamo; Silvia Florescu; Oye Gureje; Yanling He; Viviane Kovess-Masfety; Daphna Levinson; Herbert Matschinger; Zeina Mneimneh; Yosikazu Nakamura; Johan Ormel; Jose Posada-Villa; Rajesh Sagar; Kate M. Scott; Toma Tomov; Maria Carmen Viana; David R. Williams; Matthew K. Nock

Background Community and clinical data have suggested there is an association between trauma exposure and suicidal behavior (i.e., suicide ideation, plans and attempts). However, few studies have assessed which traumas are uniquely predictive of: the first onset of suicidal behavior, the progression from suicide ideation to plans and attempts, or the persistence of each form of suicidal behavior over time. Moreover, few data are available on such associations in developing countries. The current study addresses each of these issues. Methodology/Principal Findings Data on trauma exposure and subsequent first onset of suicidal behavior were collected via structured interviews conducted in the households of 102,245 (age 18+) respondents from 21 countries participating in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys. Bivariate and multivariate survival models tested the relationship between the type and number of traumatic events and subsequent suicidal behavior. A range of traumatic events are associated with suicidal behavior, with sexual and interpersonal violence consistently showing the strongest effects. There is a dose-response relationship between the number of traumatic events and suicide ideation/attempt; however, there is decay in the strength of the association with more events. Although a range of traumatic events are associated with the onset of suicide ideation, fewer events predict which people with suicide ideation progress to suicide plan and attempt, or the persistence of suicidal behavior over time. Associations generally are consistent across high-, middle-, and low-income countries. Conclusions/Significance This study provides more detailed information than previously available on the relationship between traumatic events and suicidal behavior and indicates that this association is fairly consistent across developed and developing countries. These data reinforce the importance of psychological trauma as a major public health problem, and highlight the significance of screening for the presence and accumulation of traumatic exposures as a risk factor for suicide ideation and attempt.


JAMA Psychiatry | 2015

Psychotic Experiences in the General Population: A Cross-National Analysis Based on 31 261 Respondents From 18 Countries

John J. McGrath; Sukanta Saha; Ali Al-Hamzawi; Jordi Alonso; Evelyn J. Bromet; Ronny Bruffaerts; Jose Miguel Caldas-de-Almeida; Wai Tat Chiu; Peter de Jonge; John Fayyad; Silvia Florescu; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Chiyi Hu; Viviane Kovess-Masfety; Jean Pierre Lepine; Carmen C. W. Lim; Maria Elena Medina Mora; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Susana Ochoa; Nancy A. Sampson; Kate M. Scott; Maria Carmen Viana; Ronald C. Kessler

IMPORTANCE Community-based surveys find that many otherwise healthy individuals report histories of hallucinations and delusions. To date, most studies have focused on the overall lifetime prevalence of any of these psychotic experiences (PEs), which might mask important features related to the types and frequencies of PEs. OBJECTIVE To explore detailed epidemiologic information about PEs in a large multinational sample. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS We obtained data from the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys, a coordinated set of community epidemiologic surveys of the prevalence and correlates of mental disorders in representative household samples from 18 countries throughout the world, from 2001 through 2009. Respondents included 31,261 adults (18 years and older) who were asked about lifetime and 12-month prevalence and frequency of 6 types of PEs (2 hallucinatory experiences and 4 delusional experiences). We analyzed the data from March 2014 through January 2015. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Prevalence, frequency, and correlates of PEs. RESULTS Mean lifetime prevalence (SE) of ever having a PE was 5.8% (0.2%), with hallucinatory experiences (5.2% [0.2%]) much more common than delusional experiences (1.3% [0.1%]). More than two-thirds (72.0%) of respondents with lifetime PEs reported experiencing only 1 type. Psychotic experiences were typically infrequent, with 32.2% of respondents with lifetime PEs reporting only 1 occurrence and 31.8% reporting only 2 to 5 occurrences. We found a significant relationship between having more than 1 type of PE and having more frequent PE episodes (Cochran-Armitage z = -10.0; P < .001). Lifetime prevalence estimates (SEs) were significantly higher among respondents in middle- and high-income countries than among those in low-income countries (7.2% [0.4%], 6.8% [0.3%], and 3.2% [0.3%], respectively; χ²₂ range, 7.1-58.2; P < .001 for each) and among women than among men (6.6% [0.2%] vs 5.0% [0.3%]; χ²₁ = 16.0; P < .001). We found significant associations with lifetime prevalence of PEs in the multivariate model among nonmarried compared with married respondents (χ²₂ = 23.2; P < .001) and among respondents who were not employed (χ²₄= 10.6; P < .001) and who had low family incomes (χ²₃ = 16.9; P < .001). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The epidemiologic features of PEs are more nuanced than previously thought. Research is needed that focuses on similarities and differences in the predictors of the onset, course, and consequences of distinct PEs.


American Journal of Public Health | 2007

Delay of First Treatment of Mental and Substance Use Disorders in Mexico

Guilherme Borges; Philip S. Wang; María Elena Medina-Mora; Carmen Lara; Wai Tat Chiu

OBJECTIVES We studied failure and delay in making initial treatment contact after the first onset of a mental or substance use disorder in Mexico as a first step to understanding barriers to providing effective treatment in Mexico. METHODS Data were from the Mexican National Comorbidity Survey (2001-2002), a representative, face-to-face household survey of urban residents aged 18 to 65 years. The age of onset for disorders was compared with the age of first professional treatment contact for each lifetime disorder (as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition). RESULTS Many people with lifetime disorders eventually made treatment contact, although the proportions varied for mood (69.9%), anxiety (53.2%), and substance use (22.1%) disorders. Delays were long: 10 years for substance use disorders, 14 years for mood disorders, and 30 years for anxiety disorders. Failure and delay in making initial treatment contact were associated with earlier ages of disorder onset and being in older cohorts. CONCLUSIONS Failure to make prompt initial treatment contact is an important reason explaining why there are unmet needs for mental health care in Mexico. Meeting these needs will likely require expansion and optimal allocation of resources as well as other interventions.


Depression and Anxiety | 2015

PREVALENCE AND CORRELATES OF SUICIDAL BEHAVIOR AMONG NEW SOLDIERS IN THE U.S. ARMY: RESULTS FROM THE ARMY STUDY TO ASSESS RISK AND RESILIENCE IN SERVICEMEMBERS (ARMY STARRS)

Robert J. Ursano; Steven G. Heeringa; Murray B. Stein; Sonia Jain; Rema Raman; Xiaoying Sun; Wai Tat Chiu; Lisa J. Colpe; Carol S. Fullerton; Stephen E. Gilman; Irving Hwang; James A. Naifeh; Matthew K. Nock; Anthony J. Rosellini; Nancy A. Sampson; Michael Schoenbaum; Alan M. Zaslavsky; Ronald C. Kessler

The prevalence of suicide among U.S. Army soldiers has risen dramatically in recent years. Prior studies suggest that most soldiers with suicidal behaviors (i.e., ideation, plans, and attempts) had first onsets prior to enlistment. However, those data are based on retrospective self‐reports of soldiers later in their Army careers. Unbiased examination of this issue requires investigation of suicidality among new soldiers.


Annals of Behavioral Medicine | 2008

The Importance of Timing of Transitions for Risk of Regular Smoking and Nicotine Dependence

Lisa Dierker; Jian-Ping He; Amanda Kalaydjian; Joel Swendsen; Louisa Degenhardt; Meyer D. Glantz; Kevin P. Conway; James C. Anthony; Wai Tat Chiu; Nancy A. Sampson; Ronald C. Kessler; Kathleen R. Merikangas

BackgroundEstimating the timing and speed among smoking milestones is an important challenge for epidemiology given that further reductions in smoking prevalence may be best achieved by programs that target potentially malleable smoking behavior before the development of nicotine dependence.PurposeThe purpose of the study was to investigate the association between the timing and speed of transition among major smoking milestones (onset, weekly, and daily smoking) and onset and recovery from nicotine dependence.MethodsAnalyses are based on data from The National Comorbidity Survey—Replication, a nationally representative face-to-face household survey conducted between February 2001 and April 2003.ResultsOf those who had ever smoked (n = 5,692), 71.3% had reached weekly smoking levels and 67.5% had reached daily smoking. Four in ten who had ever smoked met criteria for nicotine dependence. A shorter time since the onset of weekly and daily smoking was associated with a transition to both daily smoking and nicotine dependence, respectively. The risk for each smoking transition was highest within the year following the onset of the preceding milestone. Recovery was associated with a longer period of time between smoking initiation and the development of dependence and a later age of smoking onset.ConclusionsThese findings shed light on the clinical course of smoking and nicotine dependence. Given the importance of timing of smoking transitions, prevalence may be further reduced through intervention targeted at adolescents and young adults in the months most proximal to smoking initiation.


Depression and Anxiety | 2015

Lifetime Prevalence of DSM-IV Mental Disorders Among New Soldiers in the U.S. Army: Results from the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS)

Anthony J. Rosellini; Steven G. Heeringa; Murray B. Stein; Robert J. Ursano; Wai Tat Chiu; Lisa J. Colpe; Carol S. Fullerton; Stephen E. Gilman; Irving Hwang; James A. Naifeh; Matthew K. Nock; Maria Petukhova; Nancy A. Sampson; Michael Schoenbaum; Alan M. Zaslavsky; Ronald C. Kessler

The prevalence of 30‐day mental disorders with retrospectively reported early onsets is significantly higher in the U.S. Army than among socio‐demographically matched civilians. This difference could reflect high prevalence of preenlistment disorders and/or high persistence of these disorders in the context of the stresses associated with military service. These alternatives can to some extent be distinguished by estimating lifetime disorder prevalence among new Army recruits.

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Ronny Bruffaerts

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jordi Alonso

Pompeu Fabra University

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Oye Gureje

University College Hospital

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