FACULTY OF CLINICAL SCIENCES

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    Parental psychopathology and the risk of suicidal behavior in their offspring: results from the world mental health surveys
    (Macmillan Publishers Limited, 2011) Gureje, O.; Oladeji, B.; Hwang, I.; Chiu, W. T.; Kessler, R. C.; Sampson, N. A.; Alonso, J.; Andrade, L. H.; Beautrais, A.; Borges, G.; Bromet, E.; Bruffaerts, R.; de Girolamo, G.; de Graaf, R.; Gal, G.; He, Y.; Hu, C.; Iwata, N.; Karam, E. G.; Kovess-Masféty, V.; Matschinger, H.; Moldovan, M. V.; Posada-Villa, J.; Sagar, R.; Scocco, P.; Seedat, S.; Tomov, T.; Nock, M. K.
    Previous research suggests that parental psychopathology predicts suicidal behavior among offspring; however, the more fine-grained associations between specific parental disorders and distinct stages of the pathway to suicide are not well understood. We set out to test the hypothesis that parental disorders associated with negative mood would predict offspring suicide ideation, whereas disorders characterized by impulsive aggression (for example, antisocial personality) and anxiety/agitation (for example, panic disorder) would predict which offspring act on their suicide ideation and make a suicide attempt. Data were collected during face-to-face interviews conducted on nationally representative samples (N= 55 299; age 18þ) from 21 countries around the world. We tested the associations between a range of parental disorders and the onset and persistence over time (that is, time since most recent episode controlling for age of onset and time since onset) of subsequent suicidal behavior (suicide ideation, plans and attempts) among offspring. Analyses tested bivariate and multivariate associations between each parental disorder and distinct forms of suicidal behavior. Results revealed that each parental disorder examined increased the risk of suicide ideation among offspring, parental generalized anxiety and depression emerged as the only predictors of the onset and persistence (respectively) of suicide plans among offspring with ideation, whereas parental antisocial personality and anxiety disorders emerged as the only predictors of the onset and persistence of suicide attempts among ideators. A dose-response relation between parental disorders and respondent risk of suicide ideation and attempt was also found. Parental death by suicide was a particularly strong predictor of persistence of suicide attempts among offspring. These associations remained significant after controlling for comorbidity of parental disorders and for the presence of mental disorders among offspring. These findings should inform future explorations of the mechanisms of intergenerational transmission of suicidal behavior.
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    The gateway hypothesis of substance abuse: an examination of its applicability in Nigeria general population
    (Informa Healthcare USA, Inc., 2010) Makanjuola, V. A.; Oladeji, B. D.; Gureje, O.
    The study aims to estimate the prevalence and predictors of not following the gateway theory. Respondents were selected from a multistage stratified clustered sampling of households in five of Nigeria’s six geopolitical regions. Interviews were conducted between February 2002 and May 2003 using the CIDI-version.3 with a total sample size (N) of 2,143. Cumulative incidence proportions of not following a gateway pattern were estimated with SUDAAN. Predictors of this were estimated using multivariate logistic regression models. The deviation from the normative sequence of drug use occurs albeit infrequently. The public health implications of this are discussed as well as the limitations of the findings.
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    Family related adverse childhood experiences as risk factors for psychiatric disorders in Nigeria
    (Cambridge University Press, 2010) Oladeji, B. D.; Makanjuola, V. A.; Gureje, O.
    "Adverse childhood experiences have been associated with a variety of mental health problems in adult life. Aims To examine whether this reported link between childhood experiences and mental health disorders in adult life applies in a Sub-Saharan African setting where cultural and family attributes may be different. Method A multistage random sampling was used in the Nigerian Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being (NSMHW) to select respondents for face-to-face interviews. Assessments of family-related adverse childhood experiences and lifetime mental health disorders were conducted with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI 3.0). Results Almost half of the respondents had experienced an adverse childhood experience within the context of the family before they were 16 years of age. Associations between adverse childhood experiences and adult mental health disorders were few and were attenuated when clustering of adverse childhood experience and disorder comorbidities were accounted for. There was an elevated likelihood of adult substance use disorders among individuals who had experienced family violence and neglect or abuse. Parental psychopathology was associated with a significantly increased risk for developing mood disorders. Conclusions Adverse childhood experiences reflecting violence in the family, parental criminality and parental mental illness and substance misuse were more likely to have significant mental health consequences in adulthood"
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    The gateway hypothesis of substance abuse: an examination of its applicability in Nigeria general population
    (Informa Healthcare USA, Inc., 2010) Makanjuola, V. A.; Oladeji, B. D.; Gureje, O.
    The study aims to estimate the prevalence and predictors of not following the gateway theory. Respondents were selected from a multistage stratified clustered sampling of households in five of Nigeria’s six geopolitical regions. Interviews were conducted between February 2002 and May 2003 using the CIDI-version.3 with a total sample size (N) of 2,143. Cumulative incidence proportions of not following a gateway pattern were estimated with SUDAAN. Predictors of this were estimated using multivariate logistic regression models. The deviation from the normative sequence of drug use occurs albeit infrequently. The public health implications of this are discussed as well as the limitations of the findings.
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    Clinical correlates of schizophrenia: a study at the University College Hospital, Ibadan
    (2002) Morakinyo, J. J.; Oladeji, B.; Odejide, A. O.
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    Neuropsychological evaluation for persons with HIV and AIDS
    (Oxford University Press, 2017-05) Oladeji, B. D.; Robertson, K. R.
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    Global neuroAIDS
    (Springer, 2015) Oladeji, B. D.; Yosief, S.; Robertson, K. R.
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    Mental health
    (Cambridge University Press, 2013) Gureje, O.; Oladeji, B.
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    Mental health and HIV in Africa
    (Jones and Bartlett Learning, 2012) Oladeji, B. D.; Gureje, O.
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    Women, depression, and mental-physical comorbidity: chronic pain as a mediating factor
    (Cambridge University Press, 2009) Gureje, O.; Oladeji B.