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Browsing by Author "Esan, O."

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    Determinants of transition across the spectrum of alcohol use and misuse in Nigeria
    (Elsevier, 2013) Esan, O.; Makanjuola, V.; Oladeji, B.; Gureje, O.
    Many studies have examined the risk factors associated with alcohol use disorders. No information is available from developing countries about the factors that may determine the transitions across different levels of use and misuse. Alcohol use and its misuse were assessed in a cohort of 2143 Nigerians using Version 3.0 of the World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview (WHO-CIDI). This generated six levels of alcohol use and related disorders. Using age of onset variables created for the purpose, analysis was done to determine rates of and risk factor for transition between the levels. Lifetime prevalence estimates were 57.8% for alcohol use, 27.6% for regular use, 2.9% for abuse, and 0.3% for dependence. Whereas 47.8% transited to regular use from lifetime ever use, only 10.5% transited to abuse from regular use and 9.5% from abuse to dependence. Male sex, age 18e49 years and being never married predicted onset of alcohol use. Transition to regular use was predicted only by male sex while transition to abuse was predicted by male sex and age 35e49 years. Factors associated with recovery from abuse were female sex and a student status. Higher rates of transition occurred in the stages preceding the onset of alcohol use disorders. Sex and age were the main determinants of transition, with male gender and middle age being risk factors for transition to problematic use of alcohol.
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    The confirmatory factor structure of neurological soft signs in Nigerians with first episode schizophrenia
    (Elsevier BV, 2015) Ojagbemi, A.; Akpa, O.; Esan, O.; Emsley, R.; Gureje, O.
    We describe empirically derived categories of NSS in first episode schizophrenia among indigenous Africans. A total of 84 Nigerian patients with the disease were assessed using the neurological evaluation scale. An exploratory factor analysis with orthogonal varimax rotation was first conducted and the factors derived based on a priori criteria were subjected to confirmatory analyses using SPSS 18.0 and AMOS 18.0. We tested four different competing models to identify the structure with the best fit to the data. The relationship of the derived NSS structure with the clinical characteristics of schizophrenia was then explored using the Pearson correlation method. The overall clinical status was assessed using the positive and negative syndrome scale and clinical global impression. Additional assessments included the pre-morbid adjustment scale and calgary depression scale for schizophrenia. A three factor structure in which stereognosis is prescribed to load into a ‘perceptual and motor sequencing’ category (audio–visual integration, fist-edge palm, rhythm tapping, extinction, right–left confusion) provided the best fit to the data (chi-square goodness of fit test = 1.25; comparative fit index = 0.95; root square means error of approximation < 0.001), and disorganization (r = 0.559, p < 0.001) psychopathologies. NSS in this sample are heterogeneous, but aggregates into three correlated categories with significant overlap with previously described classifications.
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    The natural history of insomnia in the Ibadan study of ageing
    (2011) Gureje, O.; Oladeji, B. D.; Abiona, T.; Makanjuola, V.; Makanjuola, V.; Esan, O.
    Study Objectives: To determine the incidence and risk factors for insomnia among an under-studied population of elderly persons in Sub-Saharan Africa. Setting: Eight contiguous predominantly Yoruba-speaking states in south-west and north-central Nigeria representing about 22% of the national population. Participants: 1307 elderly community-dwelling persons, aged 65 years and older. Measurements: Face-to-face assessment with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview, version 3 (CIDI.3) in 2007 and 12 months later in 2008 to determine the occurrence and risk factors of incident and persistent insomnia, defined as syndrome or symptom. Results: The incidence of insomnia syndrome in 2008 at 12 months was 7.97% (95% CI, 6.60–9.60), while that of insomnia symptom was 25.68% (22.68-28.66). Females were at elevated risk for both syndrome and symptom. Among persons with insomnia symptom or syndrome at the base¬line, 47.36% (95% CI 43.07–51.68) continued to have it one year later. Decreasing economic status was associated with increasing incidence of insomnia. Persons with chronic medical conditions at baseline were at increased risk for new onset of insomnia. Compared to persons with the lowest body mass index (BMI) (< 18.5), those with higher BMI were at elevated risk for persistence of their insomnia, with those in the obese range (≥ 30) having a 4-fold risk. Conclusions: There is a high incidence and chronicity of insomnia in this elderly population. Persons with chronic health conditions are particularly at risk of new onset as well as persistence of insomnia.

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