Psychiatric epidemiologists and public health researchers
Planning a systematic review on social stressors and psychosis in African populations
This mind map template, 'Harmonizing mental health perspectives and data Analysis in the African setting', is designed for researchers and public health professionals conducting systematic reviews and meta-analyses on mental health in Africa. It covers 81 nodes across four main branches: associations of social stressors with psychotic symptoms, meta-analysis of depression and anxiety, assessment of mental health data quality, and a harmonization framework. Key nodes include 'Urbanicity (urban vs. rural residence)', 'Newcastle-Ottawa Scale', and 'Data sharing/access'. The template provides a structured approach to standardizing diverse datasets from African countries, addressing gaps in data availability and quality.
Условия использованияPlanning a systematic review on social stressors and psychosis in African populations
Conducting a meta-analysis on depression and anxiety prevalence across African countries
Assessing the quality and availability of mental health data for a multi-country study
Open the template in Xmind to review the four main branches covering social stressors, meta-analysis, data quality, and harmonization frameworks.
Replace placeholder text with your specific search strings and add your own data extraction tables or quality assessment scores as sub-nodes.
Utilize the harmonization framework branch to map your diverse African datasets into a unified structure for standardized cross-study analysis.
The template includes four main sections: associations of social stressors with psychotic symptoms, meta-analysis of depression and anxiety, assessment of mental health data quality, and a harmonization framework for integrating datasets across African countries.
Follow the 'Meta-analysis on prevalence, risk factors and treatment outcomes' branch: conduct a literature search, apply inclusion criteria, extract data, assess quality using tools like the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, and synthesize findings with random-effects models.
The template covers validity, reliability, recency, data completeness (percentage of missing data), and data availability/sharing, focusing on psychosis, depression, and anxiety in African settings.
While the template is tailored to the African context, its framework for harmonizing mental health data can be adapted to other regions by modifying geographical focus and study populations.
Yes, you can edit all nodes in Xmind to add your own data sources, risk factors, or assessment criteria. The template provides a structure that you can expand or modify.
It standardizes and integrates diverse mental health datasets from various African countries, creating a unified data structure for cross-comparisons and in-depth analyses.
Поделитесь своими шаблонами интеллект-карт с авторами по всему миру и начните зарабатывать на своих работах.