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Sujit D Rathod

Researcher at University of London

Publications -  61
Citations -  2041

Sujit D Rathod is an academic researcher from University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 57 publications receiving 1436 citations. Previous affiliations of Sujit D Rathod include Southern Health NHS Foundation Trust & University of California, San Francisco.

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Challenging assumptions about women's empowerment: social and economic resources and domestic violence among young married women in urban South India

TL;DR: The study findings suggest that the effectiveness of anti-dowry laws may be limited without additional strategies that mobilize women, families and communities to challenge the widespread acceptance of dowry and to promote gender equity.
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Accuracy of the PHQ-2 Alone and in Combination With the PHQ-9 for Screening to Detect Major Depression: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Brooke Levis, +148 more
- 09 Jun 2020 - 
TL;DR: The combination was estimated to reduce the number of participants needing to complete the full PHQ-9 by 57% (56%-58%) and to understand the clinical and research value of this combined approach to screening.
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Factors associated with health service utilisation for common mental disorders: a systematic review.

TL;DR: In HIC, failure to seek treatment for CMD is associated with less disabling symptoms and lack of perceived need for healthcare, consistent with suggestions that “treatment gap” statistics over-estimate unmet need for care as perceived by the target population.
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The validity of the Patient Health Questionnaire for screening depression in chronic care patients in primary health care in South Africa

TL;DR: The PHQ-9 is useful as a screening tool for depression among patients receiving treatment for chronic care in a public health facility and has sensitivity of 51 % and specificity of 94 %.
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Treatment gap and barriers for mental health care: A cross-sectional community survey in Nepal.

TL;DR: With more than 90% of the respondents with DD or AUD not participating in treatment, it is crucial to identify avenues to promote help seeking and uptake of treatment to pursue general population-wide approaches to promoting service use.