Background: Brua is an Afro-Caribbean set of spiritual beliefs found on the ABC Islands (Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao), which are part of the Dutch Antilles. Psychiatric patients from these islands...Show moreBackground: Brua is an Afro-Caribbean set of spiritual beliefs found on the ABC Islands (Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao), which are part of the Dutch Antilles. Psychiatric patients from these islands may believe that their mental health is influenced by Brua-related practices. It is therefore important that mental health professionals are knowledgeable of Brua, but it is not yet known to what extent they are. Goal: This study investigated the knowledge of Brua among psychologists, psychiatrists, and psychiatrists in training in The Netherlands. Methods: All psychologists, psychiatrists, and psychiatrists in training in the service of Parnassia Psychiatric Institute were contacted to fill out a tailor-made survey on knowledge of Brua. Sufficient knowledge of Brua was defined as a score of 6 or higher out of 10. Three potential predictors of knowledge of Brua were investigated, namely work experience, ethnicity, and inquiry into religious beliefs in the clinical practice. Results: Out of the 152 participants, 13.2% scored a sufficient score on knowledge of Brua. Work experience did not predict total score on the survey. There were too few participants of non-Caucasian ethnicities to investigate the relationship between ethnicity and knowledge of Brua. Practitioners who often inquired into religious beliefs in the clinical practice did not score higher than practitioners who sometimes inquired into religious beliefs. Conclusion: Knowledge of Brua among psychologists, psychiatrists, and psychiatrists in training in The Netherlands is limited. Informational or educational campaigns on how to assess the role of Brua in clinical practice are recommended.Show less
One-sided premature termination of the treatment may generate serious implications to patients and health system in general. Patients not recover fully or sufficiently to qualify for good end-state...Show moreOne-sided premature termination of the treatment may generate serious implications to patients and health system in general. Patients not recover fully or sufficiently to qualify for good end-state criteria; treatments that did not work or had to be repeated because of insufficient sessions attended increase waiting list times; early phases of treatment cost a considerable amount of money and resources. All this is likely to not pay off, since a larger number of sessions significantly correlates with improvement from PTSD and depression and an average number of sessions attended by early responders is between 6-7. The aim of this study is to investigate in which phase of the treatment do most of the dropouts occur, which patient and clinical factors are associated with the dropout and whether various types of treatment modality have different dropout rates. Sample contains 3084 patients getting treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder in Sinai center in Amsterdam. Bivariate regression analyses were conducted to examine relationship between demographic, clinical ant treatment variables in treatment dropouts and completers. Out of 3084 patients 2369 (76.8%) patients successfully completed the treatment, 715 (23.2%) dropped out, from those, 78 patients dropped out early. Contrary to predictions, more dropouts took place in later stages. Analysis showed that age was the only significant predictor variable of dropout.Show less