Results: 335

For: cohort study

Antidepressants and weight gain: long-term population impact #SUSANAsurvey

SUSANA-live

Andrea Cipriani and Anneka Tomlinson summarise a 10-year cohort study of antidepressant use and incidence of weight gain.

They also launch their new SUSANA project: Survey for Understanding Side effects of ANtidepressants in Adults. Please take the SUSANA survey now!

[read the full story...]

Risk factors for suicide in people with bipolar disorder

shutterstock_755088883

Dafni Katsampa explores a recent prospective cohort study of risk factors for suicide in bipolar disorder, which finds significant variation in risk factors in men and women.

[read the full story...]

Can PTSD in refugees affect their children’s well-being via harsher parenting styles?

14924850775_a05bfebd73_o

David Turgoose writes his debut elf blog on a longitudinal cohort study, which looks at the effect of post-traumatic stress disorder on refugees’ parenting and their children’s mental health.

[read the full story...]

Continuity of care: a luxury or need?

anastasia-vityukova-1325166-unsplash

LucÍa Almazán Sánchez and Derek Tracy appraise a new paper in the British Journal of Psychiatry on continuity of care and clinical outcomes in the community for people with severe mental illness.

[read the full story...]

Can smoking cessation improve cognitive functioning in people with psychosis?

diego-lopez-770963-unsplash

Dafni Katsampa explores a recent prospective cohort study that investigates the association between smoking behaviour and cognitive functioning in patients with psychosis, their siblings and healthy control subjects.

[read the full story...]

Genetic predictors of depression trajectories in adolescence

duri-from-mocup-219269-unsplash

Megan Skelton explores a study that uses polygenic scores in the context of longitudinal developmental data, to characterise developmental trajectories and the role of neuropsychiatric genetic risk variants in early-onset depression.

[read the full story...]

Lack of wealth may increase our risk of dementia

5634567317_b4d5b61ff8_b (1)

A group of UCL Mental Health Masters students summarise a recent cohort study of the individual and area-based socioeconomic factors associated with dementia incidence in England.

[read the full story...]

Can museums help prevent dementia?

ryan-stefan-471377-unsplash

Dafni Katsampa and Derek Tracy get all cultured and summarise a retrospective cohort study of museum attendance and dementia incidence, which suggests that cultural engagement may help protect us from cognitive decline.

The research is led by Daisy Fancourt who heads up the new MARCH Network which is launching later this month.

[read the full story...]

Victims of crime with mental illness: differences between Denmark and the US

angelo-pari-1054344-unsplash

Chris Millar writes his debut blog on a recent paper that explores the link between mental illness and being subjected to crime in Denmark and the United States. This blog asks: how much do poverty and the safety net matter? There are some important implications for policy makers.

[read the full story...]

Crime victimisation: vulnerability increased after onset of mental illness

samuel-zeller-1083635-unsplash

Danny Whiting writes his debut elf blog on a recent Danish study that uses police data to measure the risk of being subjected to crime, including violent crime, after onset of mental illness.

[read the full story...]