| Literature DB >> 29522518 |
Chunling Lu1,2,3, Zhihui Li4, Vikram Patel2.
Abstract
In an analysis of data from the Creditor Reporting System, Chunling Lu and colleagues investigate the level of development assistance from high-income countries towards child and adolescent mental health in low- and middle-income countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29522518 PMCID: PMC5844520 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Sectors for identifying DAMH_CA projects: Frequency and the two most common themes.
| Projects with the primary purpose on DAMH_CA (lower bound), | Projects primarily or partially on DAMH_CA (upper bound), | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency (Percentage) of Total Projects | Two most common themes | Frequency (Percentage) of Total Projects, | Two most common themes | |
| 65 (4.70%) | Establish psycho-pedagogical research center for special educational needs; | 423 (10.55%) | Help teenagers grow and enhance their mental and physical health; | |
| 16 (4.70%) | Provide special assistance to traumatized children; | 92 (2.29%) | Emotional service for children, along with education, effort, medical service, and cultural exchange; | |
| 22 (1.59%) | Project targeting disruptive behavior and attention disorders of childhood and adolescence; | 39 (0.97%) | Improve school performance to favor the harmonic physical and psychological development of disadvantaged children; | |
| 36 (2.60%) | Construction of a center for children with autism; | 148 (3.69%) | Provide activities to help enhance youths’ mental and physical health; | |
| 225 (16.26%) | Improving psychological healthcare for children; | 384 (9.58%) | Provide treatment and psychological support for HIV/AIDS patients; | |
| 88 (6.36%) | Provide psychosocial care for young children; | 338 (8.43%) | Improve growth and development of children under 6 years old in terms of nutrition, health, psychosocial, and cognitive aspects; | |
| 35 (2.53%) | Monitor and promote psychosocial care among young children; | 497 (12.40%) | Address the HIV- and AIDS-related needs of high-risk populations, including drug users, sex workers, and orphans; | |
| 149 (10.77%) | Control tobacco and alcohol use among children and young people; | 482 (12.02%) | Address educational and psychosocial impact of armed conflict, build child protection network, promote rights-based work; | |
| 44 (3.18%) | Improve psychological healthcare for children; | 126 (3.14%) | Provide interventions (psychosocial and medical, and vocational training) for women and child soldiers; | |
| 404 (29.19%) | Establish a specialized resource center for preschool- and school-age autism service organizations; | 709 (17.69%) | Improve education and work performance, address delays in children’s cognitive development; | |
| 252 (18.21%) | Provide psychological diagnostics and rehabilitation; | 585 (14.59%) | Establish children-friendly spaces and provide psychosocial support for children; | |
| 17 (1.23%) | Provide support and mental health enhancement for children and families; | 29 (0.72%) | Provide physical, psychological, and social support for Syrian refugee children and families; | |
| 5 (0.36%) | Provide prevention of post-traumatic disorders for children and adolescents; | 15 (0.37%) | Teach communities how to decrease vulnerability and physical and spiritual trauma; | |
| 21 (1.52%) | Establish residential center for psychosocially high-risk children; | 91 (2.27%) | Community-based initiatives to treat depression and provide AIDS prevention for girls; | |
| 5 (0.36%) | Provide psychosocial support for child refugees; | 51 (1.27%) | Provide basic physical care, palliative care, psychosocial support, and counseling, with a particular focus/concern for orphans and vulnerable children; | |
Abbreviation: DAMH_CA, development assistance for child and adolescent mental health.