Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 19 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Mental Health Services Data Dashboards for Reporting to Australian Governments during COVID-19

Sonam Shelly    
Emily Lodge    
Carly Heyman    
Felicity Summers    
Amy Young    
Jennifer Brew and Matthew James    

Resumen

The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) has been providing support to the Australian Government Department of Health to report on mental health-related data to Australian governments on a frequent basis since April 2020 in the form of COVID-19 mental health services data dashboards. These dashboards feature extensive use of data visualizations which illustrate the change in mental health service use over time as well as comparisons with pre-pandemic levels of service use. Data are included from the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS), Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS/RPBS), Australian Government-funded crisis and support organizations, and key findings from emerging research. Demand for telehealth, crisis and support organizations and online mental health information services, in particular, have increased during the pandemic. The dashboards incorporate both new and existing data sources and represent an innovative way of reporting mental health services data to Australian governments. The reporting has enabled timely, targeted adjustments to mental health service delivery during the pandemic with improved cooperative data sharing arrangements having the potential to yield ongoing benefits.

Palabras claves

 Artículos similares

       
 
Nasong A. Luginaah, Evans S. Batung, Bianca R. Ziegler, Daniel Amoak, John Paul Trudell, Godwin Arku and Isaac Luginaah    
The COVID-19 pandemic and the accompanying social changes severely impacted mental health globally. Children and adolescents may have been vulnerable to adverse mental health outcomes, especially obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), due to their underdev... ver más

 
Sergio Urriza-Trejo, Héctor Hurtazo, Jorge Palacios and Martha Cruz-Soto    
During the pandemic confinement, the WHO changed the term ?social distancing? to ?physical distancing?, to help people deal with the lack of social contact. As a result, there was an increase in mental health problems, including insomnia and stress, with... ver más

 
Raphiel Murden, Jon Agley, Lilian Golzarri-Arroyo, Armando Peña, Danny Valdez, Abu Bakkar Siddique, Moonseong Heo and David B. Allison    
We conducted a critical review of the article ?Effects on Children?s Physical and Mental Well-Being of a Physical-Activity-Based School Intervention Program: A Randomized Study?, published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public... ver más

 
Xinyi Ren, Elizabeth Pritchard, Caryn van Vreden, Sharon Newnam, Ross Iles and Ting Xia    
Background: Fatigued driving is one of the leading factors contributing to road crashes in the trucking industry. The nature of trucking, prolonged working time, and irregular sleep patterns can negatively impact drivers? health and wellbeing. However, t... ver más

 
Nurul Iman Abdul Jalil, Soon Aun Tan, Nur Shakila Ibharim, Anisah Zainab Musa, Siew Hui Ang and Wustari L. Mangundjaya    
The emergence of coronavirus disease has impacted human lives, one of which is economic disruption. Many Malaysian organisations have devised various crisis-response techniques, such as downsizing, laying off, retrenching, and combining. As a result, the... ver más