Browsing Faculty of Social Sciences by Author "Vancampfort, D."
Now showing items 1-4 of 4
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Depression and pain: primary data and meta-analysis among 237 952 people across 47 low- and middle-income countries
Stubbs, B.; Vancampfort, D.; Veronese, N.; Thompson, T.; Fornaro, M.; Schofield, P.; Solmi, M.; Mugisha, J.; Carvalho, A. F.; Koyanagi, A. (Cambridge University Press: Psychological Medicine, 2017-06-22)Depression and pain are leading causes of global disability. However, there is a paucity of multinational population data assessing the association between depression and pain, particularly among low- and middle-income ... -
Depression and physical health multimorbidity: primary data and country-wide meta-analysis of population data from 190 593 people across 43 low- and middle-income countries
Stubbs, B.; Vancampfort, D.; Veronese, N.; Kahl, K. G.; Mitchell, A. J.; Lin, P.-Y.; Tseng, P.-T.; Mugisha, J.; Solmi, M.; Carvalho, A. F.; Koyanagi, A. (Cambridge University Press, 2017-04-04)Despite the known heightened risk and burden of various somatic diseases in people with depression, very little is known about physical health multimorbidity (i.e. two or more physical health co-morbidities) in individuals ... -
Dropout from physical activity interventions in people living with HIV: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Vancampfort, D.; Mugisha, J.; Richards, J.; De Hert, M.; Lazzarotto, A. R.; Schuch, F. B.; Probst, M.; Stubbs, B. (Taylor and Francis online : AIDS Care Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV, 2017)Physical activity (PA) interventions have been shown to improve the health of people living with HIV (PLWH), yet treatment dropout poses an important challenge. We conducted a meta-analysis to investigate the prevalence ... -
Physical activity and depression: a large cross-sectional, population-based study across 36 low- and middle-income countries
Stubbs, B.; Koyanagi, A.; Schuch, F. B.; Firth, J.; Rosenbaum, S.; Veronese, N.; Solmi, M.; Mugisha, J.; Vancampfort, D. (Wiley Online Library: Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 2016-10-05)Physical activity (PA) is good for health, yet several small-scale studies have suggested that depression is associated with low PA. A paucity of nationally representative studies investigating this relationship exists, ...