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This Week in PLoS Medicine: Global Mental Health Practice; Consequences of human trafficking; REMARK

Image Credit: Marcie Casas

In a large publishing week for PLoS Medicine, the monthly Editorial announces a new series of papers, along with two of the first articles in the series. Two more papers discuss major finds in human trafficking and an expansion for a checklist for tumor markers:

The PLoS Medicine editors announce the launch of a new series on Global Mental Health Practice, and issue a call for papers.

As one article in a series on Global Mental Health Practice, Simone Honikman and colleagues from South Africa provide a case study of the Perinatal Mental Health Project, which delivered mental health care to pregnant women in a collaborative, step-wise manner, making use of existing resources in primary care.

As another article in a series on Global Mental Health Practice, Peter Ventevogel and colleagues provide a case study of their efforts to integrate brief, practice-oriented mental health training into the Afghanistan health care system at a time when the system was being rebuilt from scratch.

Siân Oram and colleagues conducted a systematic review of the health consequences of human trafficking and find some evidence suggesting a high prevalence of violence and mental distress among women and girls trafficked for sexual exploitation.

The REMARK “elaboration and explanation” guideline, by Doug Altman and colleagues, provides a detailed reference for authors on important issues to consider when designing, conducting, and analyzing tumor marker prognostic studies.

Remember you can comment on, annotate and rate any PLoS Medicine article and see the views, citations and other indications of impact of an article on that articles metrics tab.

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