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Centre for Psychiatry www.wolfson.qmul.ac.uk/centres/cfp Newsletter Winter 2016/2017 - Issue 11 Latest News in Environmental, Cultural and Health Systems Research

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Centre for Psychiatry

www.wolfson.qmul.ac.uk/centres/cfp

Newsletter Winter 2016/2017 - Issue 11

Latest News in Environmental, Cultural and Health Systems Research

2

Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Editorial

Welcome to the Winter 2016 edition of the Centre for Psychiatry newsletter. Once again, this edition is packed with articles highlighting the achievements and celebrations of our centre in recent months.

The end of 2016 marks the retirement of Professor Stephen Stansfeld who has worked in the Centre for Psychiatry for the past 17 years including 15 years as centre lead. Professor Stansfeld’s career successes were celebrated during the Celebration of Social, Environmental, and Cultural Psychiatry on the 23rd November (detailed on page 8). On the night, Professor Stansfeld’s collegiality and commitment to improving the mental health of everyone in our society throughout his career, including particularly those most marginalised, were celebrated. This unwavering focus on improving mental health outcomes for those most vulnerable in our society - including refugees, young people, those living in poverty, those

with very serious mental illnesses, and those engaging in violent behaviour - is thankfully a core value of all of the teaching and research carried out here in the Centre for Psychiatry.

Few of us will mourn the passing of 2016 - a year characterised internationally by continued war and suffering, rising migrant crises, a polarising Brexit referendum, and a divisive US election. However, here in the Centre for Psychiatry we still, thankfully, have had cause for celebration. In spite of increasing competition within higher education, which makes an academic career evermore challenging, we can still continue to be proud that we work for an institution in which values of integration, fairness, collaboration, and equality are heavily promoted. It’s also great to see members of the department being recognised for the quality of their research. Elisavet Moschopoulou won a prize for her poster presentation at the International Society for Quality of Life conference (page 6) and our Centre Lead Professor Kamaldeep Bhui has been awarded a prestigious Lankelly Chase grant (page 7). The work being carried out to promote Psychiatry as a specialism to students in the early years of their medical training is also highly commendable as achieving parity of esteem for mental and physical health will rely on recruitment and training of excellent future psychiatrists.

Here’s to continued success for the Centre for Psychiatry in 2017! Wishing you all a very happy Christmas and a healthy and prosperous new year.

Dr Amanda Fahy Postdoctoral Research Assistant. Email: [email protected]

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Contents Winter 2016/20174 New developments within the Centre

• ReportfromAwayDay • MacMillanCoffeeMorning

6 Prizes, awards and presentations

7 Lankelly Chase grant

7 Honorary faculty corner

8 Professor Stansfeld’s retirement

9 Report from WPA event

10 New staff at the Centre

11 Education

12 Publications

17 Newham seminars

4

6 11

8

5

4

Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Professor Mike Curtis, Deputy VP Health, spoke about the current competitive HE landscape. His talk focused on future aspirations for the School with regards to research and teaching; SMD’s direction and areas of synergy with the Trust that could secure results for our Centre.

Professor Stephanie Taylor, Deputy Dean for Research Impact, went on to talk about REF 2020 advising us how we could work together to achieve greater impact. She talked about the importance of the Stern Report and that there may be a few more changes to the final version of the REF but it is likely not to change too much more. She encouraged researchers and honorary faculty to be thinking about how to maximise the impact in the local community, in the Mental Health Trust and nationally and internationally. She asked us to nominate Impact Champions.

After the break, Dr Navina Evans, the newly appointed East London NHS Foundation Trust CEO, spoke

about East London NHS Foundation Trust and its current and future priorities as well as potential areas for partnerships. It has been agreed that a follow up meeting would be scheduled in the near future.

Professor Ania Korszun talked about undergraduate education, the new Curriculum plans for 2018, in particular WellMed and Medical Professionalism, and the activities provided for the students.

Next, Teaching Fellows, Hugh Grant-Peterkin and Catherine Marshall, described their work on the new curriculum with ‘Balint groups’ - reflective groups for medical students where they can discuss any difficulties they have experienced on placements in a safe and supportive environment. From this, we went on to talk about a new teaching intervention ‘MAV’ or Managing Aggression & Violence’ which was developed with Prof Annie Cushing as module convenor to help students cope with patients who are angry and potentially dangerous. The Balint

groups are being expanded across ELFT but have been in NELFT for a year, the MAV teaching is new for 2016, and they are looking to get actors so we can deliver it in more realistic way in 2017. Both interventions have already had very positive feedback and fill existing gaps in student wellbeing/professionalism.

Dr Mark Freestone, together with colleagues from MSc team, Drs Victoria Tischler and Erminia Colucci, presented on the new MSc and doctoral courses currently offered in the Department which include MSc in Mental Health and Law, MSc in Creative Arts and Mental Health and Professional Doctorate in Intercultural Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy (IPP).

Drs Simon Dein and Falkowski talked about activities and future plans for the honorary faculty. Dr Dein feels that the future of teaching will be based on research and the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) and this will enable students to receive an excellent teaching experience, put teaching on an equal level with research and have a clear-cut set of assessment criteria and for it to recognise institutions that do the most to welcome students from a range of backgrounds and support their retention and progression.

Dr Falkowski requested that the honorary faculty are included more within the Centre. It was agreed that there would be a regular afternoon tea/early evening event which could include a seminar first and asked if information bulletins and other relevant information could be circulated to them. Although difficult to change and not up to the Centre, he asked for the honorary process to

The event started with a welcome by Professor Bhui, the Centre Lead and Chair of the morning session. Participants were then asked to write down their names on a name card in a creative way that would represent something specific/characteristic about them to facilitate a short warm-up activity.

New developments within the Centre

Report from Away Day

Workshop in progress Away Day poster

5

Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

MacMillan Coffee Morning

A group of colleagues

from the Centre

managed to raise an

amazing £423.03

during the Macmillan

Coffee morning

on Thursday 13th

October.

Many thanks for all

of your generous

donations and

delicious cakes!

New developments within the Centre

be speedier however this is difficult as it goes through a number of committees.

During lunch all participants were encouraged to network, view posters and ask questions of poster presenters. Voting boxes were circulated around the room to facilitate voting

The afternoon session was chaired by Professor Ania Korszun.

All participants chose the two groups to splint into. The first group contained junior researchers (PhD students and recent graduates) who listened and discussed possibilities for careers in academia as well as outside of it with Dr Charlotte Clark.

The second group contained more senior researchers (Lecturers) and the honorary faculty and discussed applying for grants with Domenico Giacco and activities of young psychiatrists with Dr Nikolina Jovanovic. DG has set up a new PI network which all new PIs are welcome to join.

During the workshops a panel of judges, which included Professor

Stansfeld, Dr Taylor and Lisa Kass, gathered to assess the seven posters displayed in the room against set criteria.

Once the workshops and the judging session concluded, Professor Korszun and Ms Samulnik announced the winners. The prize for the most popular poster (Audience prize) went to Amanda Fahy for her poster on ‘Does cyberbullying influence teenagers’ mental health? Longitudinal results from the Olympic Regeneration in East London Study’.

The judges’ prize went to Ann-Marie Brady for her poster on ‘Psychological adjustment to chronic illness in childhood and adolescence: A longitudinal exploration of co-occurring mental illness’.

Professor Korszun also presented Dr Mel Smuk, Statistician in the Centre, with a prize for her assistance and collegiality over the years.

There will be another Away Day in 2017 and dates will be circulated in due course.

The day ended with drinks at a local restaurant.

Report from Away Day (continued)

The judging panel

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Ms Elisavet Moschopoulou, PhD

student in the Centre, was awarded

the Student Poster Presentation

Award at the 23rd Annual Conference

of the International Society for

Quality of Life Research (ISOQOL)

which was held in Copenhagen,

19-22 October 2016.

Finalists for the award were selected based upon the scores received during the abstract review process and during the conference they were invited to present in front of a panel of judges as well as other conference attendees.

The title of the poster was ‘Post-traumatic stress in Head and Neck Cancer Survivors’. It presented results from the first examination of post-traumatic stress in this population with important implications for the development of interventions to improve patients quality of life and overall well-being.

Dr Heidrun Bien gave a presentation at the ELFT (East London NHS Foundation Trust) Conference on ‘Mental Health Research in East London’, held on 5 Oct in the Morris Lecture Theatre in the Robin Brook Centre at Bart’s Hospital, West Smithfield: https://www.elft.nhs.uk/Research/Research-Conference.

The presentation, entitled ‘Preventing premature mortality in people with mental illness,’ was based on a paper published in The British Journal of Psychiatry earlier this year, with Professor Kam Bhui as lead author, Dr Heidrun Bien as co-author, together with our former colleague Dr Yasmin Khatib.

Ms Elisavet Moschopoulou’s Poster Presentation Award

Prizes, awards and presentations

+

++

15 investigators

presenting14

di�erent studies

6 research partners’

stalls

3 hours of entertaining information

=

Wednesday 5 October 201614:00 -17:00

The Morris Lecture Theatre Robin Brooks Centre Barts Hospital, West Smith�eld London EC1A 7BE

Mental Health Research in East London

ELFT presents a half day conference

Details and registration at https://www.elft.nhs.uk/Research #ELFTResearch

Dr Heidrun Bien’s presentation

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Lankelly Chase Grant

Queen Mary University of London, The University of Manchester and Words of Colour Productions have been awarded the Lankelly Chase strategic award - a sum of £1,245,000 - to establish a centre of excellence on ‘ethnicity, inequalities and mental illness’.

The aims are:

1. To establish an independent, leading and authoritative centre of excellence that will collate, synthesise, interpret and communicate data and knowledge on ethnic inequalities in mental health and related systems, and how this relates to severe and multiple disadvantage.

2. To become the point of focus for action leading to systems change in relation to ethnic inequalities in mental health services, with the intellectual credibility, influence, policy connections and user engagement to establish and sustain momentum. We will bring together the full range of stakeholders by establishing mechanisms for co-producing knowledge to develop and implement solutions.

Honorary faculty corner

As discussed at the Away Day, we are establishing a half day for honorary academic staff to come together to consider how they might contribute to academic activity and their own development and how the College and the Centre might contribute CPD activities to ensure you remain optimally skilled to provide teaching both to undergraduates and postgraduates.

This applies to both clinical and non-clinical honorary academic staff and the emphasis is on teaching although research collaborations are welcomed where feasible and likely to lead to research income. If you have any specific training needs, relevant needs or areas of interest you’d like us to address, albeit we will not be able to do everything in one afternoon, please let us know and we will organise a programme in close collaboration with Jan Falkowski who leads the honorary faculty.

Please RSVP to Lisa Kass: [email protected]

Academic Development for Honorary Staff Afternoon

Tuesday 21st February 2017, 2 - 5pm

Dean Rees House Boardroom, Charterhouse Square,

London EC1M 6BQThis application is led by Professor Kamaldeep Bhui (PI) at Queen Mary University of London, working closely with an exceptional team including Professor James Nazroo at the University of Manchester and Ms Joy Francis, Executive Director of Words of Colour Productions.

The proposed work will generate a systematic understanding of how the clustering of severe and multiple disadvantage relates to broader social and structural forces, how this relates to the operation of systems that generate or sustain inequalities, and thereby identifying opportunities for reducing and preventing ethnic inequalities, and improving the health of populations and individuals.

A full announcement and launch will take place in the Spring of 2017.

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

An afternoon celebrating

social, environmental

and cultural psychiatry

was held at Barts on

23rd November to mark

Stephen Stansfeld’s

retirement from the

Centre of Psychiatry.

Family, friends, and colleagues from across Europe attended for afternoon tea, followed by a series of short presentations from colleagues who have worked with Stephen over the years. The event, chaired by Kam Bhui, Queen Mary University of London, showcased the eclectic range of Stephen’s research, highlighting the esteem in which he is held and the worldwide impact of his research activities.

George Davy-Smith from the University of Bristol gave a talk on psychiatric conditions in British cohort data. John Franks from the University of Edinburgh discussed Canadian research that he and Stephen had been involved with on sickness absence from work. Charlotte Clark from Queen Mary University of London discussed the impact of their studies of environmental noise effects of health and learning. Matthew Hotopf from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, Kings College London gave a talk on psychiatric epidemiology, which included warm reflections on Stephen’s contribution to the field from other eminent psychiatrists. Matthew nicely summed up the

common thread across Stephen’s research activities as being a focus on those experiencing environmental, health or social disadvantage.

The event ended with Stephen giving a reflection on the lifecourse of his research interests, thanking family and colleagues who have inspired and supported him over the years.

The evening ended with wine and nibbles in the Great Hall at Barts. We wish Stephen all the best for his retirement, which will surely involve gardening, family, and a continuation of his academic endeavors.

Professor Stansfeld’s retirement

Professors Gaskell, Bhui, and Stansfeld (L-R)

Networking in the Great Hall

Dinner

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Report from WPA event

As a Collaborating Centre of the World Psychiatric Association, The Centre for Psychiatry hosted the first of its international symposia in order to develop new lines of research and to influence policy.

Social division and extremist violence: Gangs, cults, terrorism and violent offending

Delegates included Lord John Alderdice and from the USA, Professor Eisenman and Professor Weine; from the International Academy of Sciences, Louise Flahavan and Justin Snair attended; Antonio Ventriglio from the University of Foggia, Italy; Dorte Sestoft, Ministry of Justice, Denmark; Professor Roger Griffin from Oxford Brookes, UK; Professor Myrna Lashley from McGill, Canada, Dr Adrian James represented the Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK; Carl Steinmetz from the Netherlands; Professor Vivek Furtado from Warwick University; Dr Neil Aggarwal from Columbia, Professor Giorgos Alevizopoulos from the University of Athens, Greece; Professor Edgar Jones from KCL, UK; Dr Kiran Sarma, University of Galway, Ireland; Dr Albert Persaud from Careif; Dr Anita Tunariu and Professor Rachel Tribe were from the University of East London, UK; Jaswant Boora, an Independent researcher, UK; Professor Jeremy Coid from QMUL,

UK; Professor Bhui from QMUL, UK who led the seminar as Director of the Collaborating Centre and Professor Bhugra, The President of the WPA who opened and closed the meeting.

This small group seminar held in Charterhouse Square, at the Barts Cancer Institute, enabled some in-depth discussion around the cause and consequences of group conflict. The sources of grievance among young people, and the pathways through which they engage with gangs, cults and terrorist organisations, were explored. Understanding these in the context of public health research on life-course transitions and points of vulnerability for young people

received positive acclaim; this is an approach that is beginning to be applied in the US and is advocated by the National Academies of Science, although it is well established in Canada.

A fuller briefing of the key findings will be published in due course as a position paper from the World Psychiatric Association and further symposia are proposed for next year.

Professor Kamaldeep Bhui, Centre Lead

Professor Kam Bhui (L) and Dr Albert Persaud, Trustee and Co-founder of Careif (R)

10

Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

New staff at Centre for Psychiatry

Melanie Johnson

Melanie is an MSc Course Coordinator in the Centre. She is a dedicated professional with a passion for providing a caring and efficient service to students, who she is continually inspired by.

She started her career in shared ownership housing sales and marketing. She enjoyed two years working in training and events at Help the Hospices and she has since worked in several London universities.

Working in different departments over the years has enabled her to get a clear picture of the professional services being provided and helps her to signpost students to the right service at the right time.

She is a sports enthusiast; as comfortable watching the darts on Channel 4 on her sofa as going to Queens to watch the tennis!

Landon Kuester, BA, MSc(Res), PhD

Dr Kuester is Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Centre for Psychiatry. He joins an established team of researchers conducting an evaluation of the Psychologically Informed Planned Environments (PIPEs) programme currently being piloted by the National Offender Management Service (NOMS) and National Probation Service (NPS).

Kuester is an experienced prison ethnographer, with a particular interest in understanding offender access to economic, social and health services. His doctoral research explored HIV-positive inmates’ ‘lived experience’ of violence, agency, and negotiated health within a U.S. prison system.

Landon received his Ph.D. from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, MSc(Res) from the University of Edinburgh, and B.A. from Brown University (USA).

Mariana Pinto da Costa, MD, MSC

Dr Mariana Pinto da Costa is a Portuguese medical doctor who achieved her degree at the University of Porto, with her Masters thesis on Burnout in medical doctors.

She has done her postgraduate training at Hospital de Magalhães Lemos in Porto, during which she accomplished the Cognitive Behaviour Therapy Post Graduation at the Advanced Institute of Health Sciences at Porto, and was President of the European Federation of Psychiatry Trainees (EFPT).

She had academic, clinical and research experience at the Psychiatry Hospital in Luanda, Angola, where she completed the International Masters in Mental Health Policy and Services at the New University of Lisbon supported by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Currently, she is doing a PhD at the Unit of Social and Community Psychiatry on volunteering with people with mental health disorders linked with the VOLUME trial.

Michael Parkes

Michael is an E-Learning Technologist in the Centre for Psychiatry.

Working together with Johnny Finnis, he is responsible for providing support in the effective use of learning technologies for the Centre’s postgraduate Mental Healthcare programmes.

He is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and has many years of experience working in the field of learning technologies in both Higher Education and the private sector.

Outside of work, he is a keen tennis player and a loyal supporter of Arsenal FC.

11

Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Following publication of the BASH (Badmouthing, attitudes and stigmatisation in healthcare) paper in the BJPsych Bulletin earlier this year and the subsequent launch of the ‘anti-BASH’ campaign by the Royal College of Psychiatrists, a World Café style event was held on 21st November to develop the work further.

Thanks to the generosity of the Alumni Fund medical and dental students, as well as practising dentists and doctors, were brought together to discuss the issues described in the paper. It is an area of importance as such attitudes and behaviour have been shown to have a direct and deleterious impact

on students’ career choice and perception of specialities.

The evening began with participants voting anonymously on scenarios acted out by the organisers – were seemingly off-hand comments BASHing or just banter? The participants then split into groups and explored written scenarios that each focused on different domains where BASHing might take place - large lecture theatre, on a clinical placement and between students. The line between BASHing and banter was explored and the students quickly provided their own examples. The evening moved towards finding solutions and once again there was plenty of discussion and creative proposals. Before any ideas are put into action we were able to show that the event itself led to change in perception; before and after the event students were asked (using anonymous ‘clickers’) whether they thought BASHing was

inevitable. At the start 91% thought it was inevitable whilst at the end only 48% thought so. The event was also able to directly address barriers within BLSMD as it was one of the very few events that brings together medical and dental students; this was noted by participants, one of many positive pieces of written feedback collected at the end stated: ‘Changed my views. Good idea, especially integration between medics and dentists’.

The evening was documented throughout by a team of illustrators to produce a graphic recording and ended with refreshments as the discussion continued long after the formal end of the event. The event enabled the education research team to explore the findings from the academic work and link it to current experience within the medical school, before moving onto finding ideas for practical actions and further research.

Education

World café event - ‘Bash or Banter?’

World Cafe held on 21st NovemberWorld Cafe in progressBash or banter illustration

12

Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Publications

A Ajaz Ajaz A, David R, Bhat M. The PsychSimCentre: teaching out-of-hours psychiatry to non-psychiatrists. The Clinical Teacher. 2016;13(1):13-7.

Ajaz A, David R, Brown D, Smuk M, Korszun A. BASH: badmouthing, attitudes and stigmatisation in healthcare as experienced by medical students. The Psychiatrist. 2016.

K Bhui Bhui K. Black holes, knowledge and psychiatric sciences. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;208(2):203-4.

Bhui K. Paris, protect and prevent. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;208(1):100.

Ingman T, Ali S, Bhui K, Chalder T. Chronic fatigue syndrome: comparing outcomes in White British and Black and minority ethnic patients after cognitive-behavioural therapy. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016.

Baxter AJ, Harris MG, Khatib Y, Brugha TS, Bien H, Bhui K. Reducing excess mortality due to chronic disease in people with severe mental illness: meta-review of health interventions. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016.

Bhui K. On Blackstar: deaths, dying and dominions of discovery. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;208(3):307-8.

Giebel C, Challis D, Worden A, Jolley D, Bhui KS, Lambat A, et al. Perceptions of self-defined memory problems vary in south Asian minority older people who consult a GP and those who do not: a mixed-method pilot study. International journal of geriatric psychiatry. 2016;31(4):375-83.

Giebel CM, Jolley D, Zubair M, Bhui KS, Challis D, Purandare N, et al. Adaptation of the Barts Explanatory Model Inventory to dementia understanding in South Asian ethnic minorities. Aging & mental health. 2016;20(6):594-602.

Bhui K. Ahead in mental sciences: cultural, environmental and social campaigns. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;208(4):407-8.

Bhui K. Flash, the emperor and policies without evidence: counter-terrorism measures destined for failure and societally divisive. BJPsych bulletin. 2016;40(2):82-4.

Keown P, McBride O, Twigg L, Crepaz-Keay D, Cyhlarova E, Parsons H, et al. Rates of voluntary and compulsory psychiatric in-patient treatment in England: an ecological study investigating associations with deprivation and demographics. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016.

Bhui K. The brave new world of medicine, neuroscience and society. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;208(6):601-2.

Bhui K. Invited commentary on ... Rethinking funding priorities in mental health research. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;208(6):510-1.

Bhui K. BJPsych: Vision, precision and progress. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;208(5):505-6.

Bhui K, Joao Cruz, M, Topciu, R, Jones, E. Depressive symptoms, adversity and political engagement: pathways to sympathies for violent protest and terrorism. British Journal of Psychiatry. 2016.

Bhui KS. Smuggling compassion into care: Is the NHS destined for system D? The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry. 2016;50(7):611-2.

Bhui K. Trials, tribulations, mind and mechanism. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;209(1):92.

Coid JW, Bhui, K, Macmanus D, Kallis C, Bebbington, P, Ullrich, S. Extremism, religion, and psychiatric morbidity in a population sample of young men. British Journal of Psychiatry. 2016.

Russell J, Berney L, Stansfeld S, Lanz D, Kerry S, Chandola T, et al. The role of qualitative research in adding value to a randomised controlled trial: lessons from a pilot study of a guided e-learning intervention for managers to improve employee wellbeing and reduce sickness absence. Trials. 2016;17(1):396.

Bhui K. Brexit, social division and discrimination: impacts on mortality and mental illness? The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;209(2):181-2.

Bhui K. Discrimination, poor mental health, and mental illness. International review of psychiatry. 2016:1-4.

Bhui K. Biosocial interventions in psychological medicine. Br J Psychiatry. 2016;209(3):270.

Bhui KS, Fiorillo A, Stein D, Okasha T, Ndetei D, Lam L, et al. Improving education, policy and research in mental health worldwide: the role of the WPA Collaborating Centres. World Psychiatry. 2016;15(3):300.

Kaufman KR, Malhi GS, Baxter A, Bhui K. In an open publishing house not so far, far away. BJPsych Open. 2016;2(4):e12-e3.

Bhui K, James A, Wessely S. Mental illness and terrorism. BMJ. 2016;354:i4869.

Bhui K, Silva MJ, Topciu RA, Jones E. Pathways to sympathies for violent protest and terrorism. Br J Psychiatry. 2016.

Bhui K. Uncertainty principles in medicine and mental healthcare. Br J Psychiatry. 2016;209(4):357-8.

H Bien Bien H, Hanulikova A, Weber A, Zwitserlood P. A Neurophysiological Investigation of Non-native Phoneme Perception by Dutch and German Listeners. Frontiers in psychology. 2016;7:56.

Baxter AJ, Harris MG, Khatib Y, Brugha TS, Bien H, Bhui K. Reducing excess mortality due to chronic disease in people with severe mental illness: meta-review of health interventions. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016.

C Bird Wallace G, Bird V, Leamy M, Bacon F, Le Boutillier C, Janosik M, et al. Service user experiences of REFOCUS: a process evaluation of a pro-recovery complex intervention. Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology. 2016.

13

Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Leamy M, Clarke E, Le Boutillier C, Bird V, Choudhury R, MacPherson R, et al. Recovery practice in community mental health teams: national survey. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016.

Macpherson R, Pesola F, Leamy M, Bird V, Le Boutillier C, Williams J, et al. The relationship between clinical and recovery dimensions of outcome in mental health. Schizophrenia research. 2016;175(1-3):142-7.

M Cassidy Walsh S, Cassidy M, Priebe S. The Application of Positive Psychotherapy in Mental Health Care: A Systematic Review. J Clin Psychol. 2016.

C Clark Das-Munshi J, Lund C, Mathews C, Clark C, Rothon C, Stansfeld S. Mental Health Inequalities in Adolescents Growing Up in Post-Apartheid South Africa: Cross-Sectional Survey, SHaW Study. PloS one. 2016;11(5):e0154478.

Fahy AE, Stansfeld SA, Smuk M, Smith NR, Cummins S, Clark C. Longitudinal Associations Between Cyberbullying Involvement and Adolescent Mental Health. The Journal of adolescent health: official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. 2016.

Stansfeld SA, Clark C, Smuk M, Power C, Davidson T, Rodgers B. Childhood adversity and midlife suicidal ideation. Psychol Med. 2016:1-14.

L Clark Clark L MP, Ridge D, Cheshire A, Vergara-Williamson M, Pesola F, White PD. Graded Exercise Therapy guided SElf-help Trial for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (GETSET): Protocol for a randomised controlled trial and interview study. JMIR Research Protocols. 2016;5(2)(e70).

LV Clark FP, JM Thomas, M Vergara-Williamson, M Beynon, PD White. Graded exercise therapy guided self-help versus specialist medical care for chronic fatigue syndrome (GETSET): a randomised controlled trial. The Lancet. 2016.

J Coid Gonzalez RA, Kallis C, Ullrich S, Barnicot K, Keers R, Coid JW. Childhood maltreatment and violence: Mediation through psychiatric morbidity. Child abuse & neglect. 2016;52:70-84.

Fazel S, Fiminska Z, Cocks C, Coid J. Patient outcomes following discharge from secure psychiatric hospitals: systematic review and meta-analysis. The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science. 2016;208(1):17-25.

Schoeler T, Theobald D, Pingault JB, Farrington DP, Jennings WG, Piquero AR, et al. Continuity of cannabis use and violent offending over the life course. Psychological medicine. 2016:1-15.

Coid JW, Ullrich S, Bebbington P, Fazel S, Keers R. Paranoid Ideation and Violence: Meta-analysis of Individual Subject Data of 7 Population Surveys. Schizophrenia bulletin. 2016.

Theobald D, Farrington DP, Coid JW, Piquero AR. Are Male Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence Different From Convicted Violent Offenders? Examination of Psychopathic Traits and Life Success in Males From a Community Survey. Journal of interpersonal violence. 2016;31(9):1687-718.

Davoren M, Gonzalez, R, Kallis, C, Freestone, M, Coid, J. Anxiety disorders and Intimate Partner Violence: Can the association be explained by coexisting conditions or Borderline personality traits. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology. 2016.

Gonzalez RA, Igoumenou A, Kallis C, Coid JW. Borderline personality disorder and violence in the UK population: categorical and dimensional trait assessment. BMC psychiatry. 2016;16:180.

Roberts A, Coid J, King R, Murphy R, Turner J, Bowden-Jones H, et al. Gambling and violence in a nationally representative sample of UK men. Addiction. 2016.

Coid JW, Bhui, K, Macmanus D, Kallis C, Bebbington, P, Ullrich, S. Extremism, religion, and psychiatric morbidity in a population sample of young men. British Journal of Psychiatry. 2016.

Newton-Howes G, Mulder, R, Coid, J.W The futility of risk prediction in psychiatry. British Journal of Psychiatry. 2016.

Bui L, Ullrich S, Coid JW. Screening for mental disorder using the UK national offender assessment system. The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology. 2016:1-16.

Theobald D, Farrington DP, Coid JW, Piquero AR. A Longitudinal Analysis of the Criminal Careers of Intimate Partner Violence Offender Subtypes: Results From a Prospective Survey of Males. Violence Vict. 2016.

Coid JW, Gozalez, R., Igoumenou, A., Zhang, T., Yang, Y, Bebbington, P. Personality disorder and violence in the national household population of Britain. The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology. 2016.

E Colucci O’Connor M, Colucci E. Exploring domestic violence and social distress in Australian-Indian migrants through community theater. Transcultural psychiatry. 2016;53(1):24-44.

Colucci E. Breaking the chains. Ethnographic film-making in mental health. The Lancet Psychiatry. 2016;3:590-1.

De Silva SA, Colucci E, Mendis J, Kelly CM, Jorm AF, Minas H. Suicide first aid guidelines for Sri Lanka: a Delphi consensus study. Int J Ment Health Syst. 2016;10(1):53.

A Dirik Malanchini M, Tosto MG, Garfield V, Dirik A, Czerwik A, Arden R, et al. Preschool Drawing and School Mathematics: The Nature of the Association. Child development. 2016;87(3):929-43.

A Fahy Fahy AE, Stansfeld SA, Smuk M, Smith NR, Cummins S, Clark C. Longitudinal Associations Between Cyberbullying Involvement and Adolescent Mental Health. The Journal of adolescent health: official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. 2016.

M Freestone Davoren M, Gonzalez, R, Kallis, C, Freestone, M, Coid, J. Anxiety disorders and Intimate Partner Violence: Can the association be explained by coexisting conditions or Borderline personality traits. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology. 2016.

Publications

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Publications

D Giacco Giacco D, Palumbo C, Strappelli N, Catapano F, Priebe S. Social contacts and loneliness in people with psychotic and mood disorders. Comprehensive psychiatry. 2016;66:59-66.

Giacco D, Priebe S. Suicidality and Hostility following Involuntary Hospital Treatment. PloS one. 2016;11(5):e0154458.

Thomsen CT, Benros ME, Hastrup LH, Andersen PK, Giacco D, Nordentoft M. Patient-controlled hospital admission for patients with severe mental disorders: study protocol for a nationwide prospective multicentre study. BMJ Open. 2016;6(9):e013088.

Priebe S, Giacco D, El-Nagib R. (2016) WHO Health Evidence Network Synthesis Report 47: Public health aspects of mental health among migrants and refugees: a review of the evidence on mental health care for refugees, asylum seekers and irregular migrants in the WHO European Region. Copenhagen

H Grant Peterkin Hayes, J.F., Maughan, D.L. and Grant-Peterkin, H., 2016. Interconnected or disconnected? Promotion of mental health and prevention of mental disorder in the digital age. The British Journal of Psychiatry, 208(3), pp.205-207.

Grant-Peterkin, H., Pickles, H. and Katona, C., 2016. Mental capacity of those in immigration detention in the UK. Medicine, Science and the Law, Vol. 56(4) p 285–292

E Golden Omer S, Golden E, Priebe S. Exploring the Mechanisms of a Patient-Centred Assessment with a Solution Focused Approach (DIALOG+) in the Community Treatment of Patients with Psychosis: A Process Evaluation within a Cluster-Randomised Controlled Trial. PloS one. 2016;11(2):e0148415.

Walsh S, Golden E, Priebe S. Systematic review of patients’ participation in and experiences of technology-based monitoring of mental health symptoms in the community. BMJ open. 2016;6(6):e008362.

Priebe S, Pavlickova H, Eldridge S, Golden E, McCrone P, Ockenden N, et al. Effectiveness of one-to-one volunteer support for patients with psychosis: protocol of a randomised controlled trial. BMJ open. 2016;6(8):e011582.

A Igoumenou Alevizopoulos G, Igoumenou A. Psychiatric disorders and criminal history in male prisoners in Greece. International journal of law and psychiatry. 2016.

Gonzalez RA, Igoumenou A, Kallis C, Coid JW. Borderline personality disorder and violence in the UK population: categorical and dimensional trait assessment. BMC psychiatry. 2016;16:180.

N Jovanovic Jovanovic N, Podlesek A, Volpe U, Barrett E, Ferrari S, Rojnic Kuzman M, et al. Burnout syndrome among psychiatric trainees in 22 countries: Risk increased by long working hours, lack of supervision, and psychiatry not being first career choice. European psychiatry: the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists. 2016;32:34-41.

C Kallis Gonzalez RA, Kallis C, Ullrich S, Barnicot K, Keers R, Coid JW. Childhood maltreatment and violence: Mediation through psychiatric morbidity. Child abuse & neglect. 2016;52:70-84.

Davoren M, Gonzalez, R, Kallis, C, Freestone, M, Coid, J. Anxiety disorders and Intimate Partner Violence: Can the association be explained by coexisting conditions or Borderline personality traits. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology. 2016.

Gonzalez RA, Igoumenou A, Kallis C, Coid JW. Borderline personality disorder and violence in the UK population: categorical and dimensional trait assessment. BMC psychiatry. 2016;16:180.

A Korszun Rucker JJ, Tansey KE, Rivera M, Pinto D, Cohen-Woods S, Uher R, et al. Phenotypic Association Analyses With Copy Number Variation in Recurrent Depressive Disorder. Biological psychiatry. 2016;79(4):329-36.

Mullins N, Power RA, Fisher HL, Hanscombe KB, Euesden J, Iniesta R, et al. Polygenic interactions with environmental adversity in the aetiology of major depressive disorder. Psychological medicine. 2016;46(4):759-70.

Ajaz A, David R, Brown D, Smuk M, Korszun A. BASH: badmouthing, attitudes and stigmatisation in healthcare as experienced by medical students. The Psychiatrist. 2016.

E Moschopoulou Pliatsikas C, DeLuca V, Moschopoulou E, Saddy JD. Immersive bilingualism reshapes the core of the brain. Brain Struct Funct. 2016.

S Priebe Bonavigo T, Sandhu S, Pascolo-Fabrici E, Priebe S. What does dependency on community mental health services mean? A conceptual review with a systematic search. Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology. 2016.

Baier A, Fritsch R, Ignatyev Y, Priebe S, Mundt AP. The course of major depression during imprisonment - A one year cohort study. Journal of affective disorders. 2016;189:207-13.

Thompson R, Valenti E, Siette J, Priebe S. To befriend or to be a friend: a systematic review of the meaning and practice of “befriending” in mental health care. Journal of mental health. 2016;25(1):71-7.

Moran K, Priebe S. Better quality of life in patients offered financial incentives for taking anti-psychotic medication: Linked to improved adherence or more money? Quality of life research: an international journal of quality of life aspects of treatment, care and rehabilitation. 2016.

Priebe S, Savill M, Wykes T, Bentall R, Lauber C, Reininghaus U, et al. Clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of body psychotherapy in the treatment of negative symptoms of schizophrenia: a multicentre randomised controlled trial. Health technology assessment. 2016;20(11):1-100.

Omer S, Golden E, Priebe S. Exploring the Mechanisms of a Patient-Centred Assessment with a Solution Focused Approach (DIALOG+) in the Community Treatment of Patients with Psychosis: A Process Evaluation within a Cluster-Randomised Controlled Trial. PloS one. 2016;11(2):e0148415.

Sandhu S, Killaspy H, Krotofil J, McPherson P, Harrison I, Dowling S, et al. Development and psychometric properties of the client’s assessment of treatment scale for supported accommodation (CAT-SA). BMC psychiatry. 2016;16(1):43.

Giacco D, Palumbo C, Strappelli N, Catapano F, Priebe S. Social contacts and loneliness in people with psychotic and mood disorders. Comprehensive psychiatry. 2016;66:59-66.

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Publications

Ignatyev Y, Fritsch R, Priebe S, Mundt AP. Psychometric properties of the symptom check-list-90-R in prison inmates. Psychiatry research. 2016;239:226-31.

Priebe S. A social paradigm in psychiatry - themes and perspectives. Epidemiology and psychiatric sciences. 2016:1-7.

Killaspy H, White S, Dowling S, Krotofil J, McPherson P, Sandhu S, et al. Adaptation of the Quality Indicator for Rehabilitative Care (QuIRC) for use in mental health supported accommodation services (QuIRC-SA). BMC psychiatry. 2016;16(1):101.

Giacco D, Priebe S. Suicidality and Hostility following Involuntary Hospital Treatment. PloS one. 2016;11(5):e0154458.

Priebe S, Savill M, Wykes T, Bentall RP, Reininghaus U, Lauber C, et al. Effectiveness of group body psychotherapy for negative symptoms of schizophrenia: multicentre randomised controlled trial. The British journal of psychiatry: the journal of mental science. 2016.

Barnicot K, Gonzalez R, McCabe R, Priebe S. Skills use and common treatment processes in dialectical behaviour therapy for borderline personality disorder. Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry. 2016;52:147-56.

Chow WS, Priebe S. How has the extent of institutional mental healthcare changed in Western Europe? Analysis of data since 1990. BMJ open. 2016;6(4):e010188.

de Jong MH, Kamperman AM, Oorschot M, Priebe S, Bramer W, van de Sande R, et al. Interventions to Reduce Compulsory Psychiatric Admissions: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA psychiatry. 2016.

Walsh S, Golden E, Priebe S. Systematic review of patients’ participation in and experiences of technology-based monitoring of mental health symptoms in the community. BMJ open. 2016;6(6):e008362.

Savill M, Orfanos S, Reininghaus U, Wykes T, Bentall R, Priebe S. The relationship between experiential deficits of negative symptoms and subjective quality of life in schizophrenia. Schizophrenia research. 2016.

Priebe S, Pavlickova H, Eldridge S, Golden E, McCrone P, Ockenden N, et al. Effectiveness of one-to-one volunteer support for patients with psychosis: protocol of a randomised controlled trial. BMJ open. 2016;6(8):e011582.

Walsh S, Cassidy M, Priebe S. The Application of Positive Psychotherapy in Mental Health Care: A Systematic Review. Journal of clinical psychology. 2016.

McCabe R, John P, Dooley J, Healey P, Cushing A, Kingdon D, et al. Training to enhance psychiatrist communication with patients with psychosis (TEMPO): cluster randomised controlled trial. The British journal of psychiatry: the journal of mental science. 2016.

John P, Khanom H, Cameli M, McCabe, R, Priebe S. How to value patients with psychosis: An inductive study of psychiatrists’ behaviour in routine consultations. Communication and Medicine,. 2016;12:55-69.

Priebe S, Bremner SA, Pavlickova H. Discontinuing financial incentives for adherence to antipsychotic depot medication: long-term outcomes of a cluster randomised controlled trial. BMJ Open. 2016;6(9):e011673.

Killaspy H, Priebe S, Bremner S, McCrone P, Dowling S, Harrison I, et al. Quality of life, autonomy, satisfaction, and costs associated with mental health supported accommodation services in England: a national survey. Lancet Psychiatry. 2016.

MacInnes D, Kinane C, Parrott J, Mansfield J, Craig T, Eldridge S, et al. A pilot cluster randomised trial to assess the effect of a structured communication approach on quality of life in secure mental health settings: The Comquol Study. BMC Psychiatry. 2016;16(1):335.

Mundt AP, Kastner S, Larrain S, Fritsch R, Priebe S. Prevalence of mental disorders at admission to the penal justice system in emerging countries: a study from Chile. Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci. 2016;25(5):441-9.

Priebe S, Bremner SA, Lauber C, Henderson C, Burns T. Financial incentives to improve adherence to antipsychotic maintenance medication in non-adherent patients: a cluster randomised controlled trial. Health Technol Assess. 2016;20(70):1-122.

Schrank B, Rumpold T, Gmeiner A, Priebe S, Aigner M. Parenthood among people with psychotic disorders: gender differences in a non-selective clinical sample. Psychiatry Res. 2016;246:474-9.

Priebe S, Giacco D, El-Nagib R. (2016) WHO Health Evidence Network Synthesis Report 47: Public health aspects of mental health among migrants and refugees: a review of the evidence on mental health care for refugees, asylum seekers and irregular migrants in the WHO European Region. Copenhagen.

M Smuk Ajaz A, David R, Brown D, Smuk M, Korszun A. BASH: badmouthing, attitudes and stigmatisation in healthcare as experienced by medical students. The Psychiatrist. 2016.

Fahy AE, Stansfeld SA, Smuk M, Smith NR, Cummins S, Clark C. Longitudinal Associations Between Cyberbullying Involvement and Adolescent Mental Health. The Journal of adolescent health: official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. 2016.

Stansfeld SA, Clark C, Smuk M, Power C, Davidson T, Rodgers B. Childhood adversity and midlife suicidal ideation. Psychol Med. 2016:1-14.

S A Stansfeld Pham Q, Khatib Y, Stansfeld S, Fox S, Green T. Feasibility and Efficacy of an mHealth Game for Managing Anxiety: “Flowy” Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial and Design Evaluation. Games for health journal. 2016;5(1):50-67.

Ramchandani D, Marcenes W, Stansfeld SA, Bernabe E. Problem behaviour and traumatic dental injuries in adolescents. Dental traumatology: official publication of International Association for Dental Traumatology. 2016;32(1):65-70.

Murray ET, Head J, Shelton N, Hagger-Johnson G, Stansfeld S, Zaninotto P, et al. Local area unemployment, individual health and workforce exit: ONS Longitudinal Study. European journal of public health. 2016.

Baig Enver M, Marcenes W, Stansfeld SA, Bernabe E. Alcohol consumption at age 11-12 years and traumatic dental injuries at age 15-16 years in school children from East London. Dental traumatology: official publication of International Association for Dental Traumatology. 2016.

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Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter Winter 2016/2017

Carr E, Hagger-Johnson G, Head J, Shelton N, Stafford M, Stansfeld S, et al. Working conditions as predictors of retirement intentions and exit from paid employment: a 10-year follow-up of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. European journal of ageing. 2016;13:39-48.

Das-Munshi J, Lund C, Mathews C, Clark C, Rothon C, Stansfeld S. Mental Health Inequalities in Adolescents Growing Up in Post-Apartheid South Africa: Cross-Sectional Survey, SHaW Study. PloS one. 2016;11(5):e0154478.

Russell J, Berney L, Stansfeld S, Lanz D, Kerry S, Chandola T, et al. The role of qualitative research in adding value to a randomised controlled trial: lessons from a pilot study of a guided e-learning intervention for managers to improve employee wellbeing and reduce sickness absence. Trials. 2016;17(1):396.

Fahy AE, Stansfeld SA, Smuk M, Smith NR, Cummins S, Clark C. Longitudinal Associations Between Cyberbullying Involvement and Adolescent Mental Health. The Journal of adolescent health: official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. 2016.

Stansfeld SA, Clark C, Smuk M, Power C, Davidson T, Rodgers B. Childhood adversity and midlife suicidal ideation. Psychol Med. 2016:1-14.

Stafford M, Cooper R, Cadar D, Carr E, Richards M, Stansfeld S, et al. Physical and cognitive capability in mid-adulthood as determinants of retirement and extended working life in a British cohort study. Scand J Work Environ Health. 2016.

R Taylor Shah R, Taylor RE, Bewley A. Exploring the Psychological Profile of Patients with Delusional Infestation. Acta dermato-venereologica. 2016.

Anyasodor MC, Taylor RE, Bewley A, Goulding JM. Dysaesthetic penoscrotodynia may be a somatoform disorder: results from a two-centre retrospective case series. Clinical and experimental dermatology. 2016.

V Tischler Young R, Camic PM, Tischler V. The impact of community-based arts and health interventions on cognition in people with dementia: a systematic literature review. Aging & mental health. 2016;20(4):337-51.

Carone L, Tischler V, Dening T. Football and dementia: A qualitative investigation of a community based sports group for men with early onset dementia. Dementia (London). 2016;15(6):1358-76.

R Topciu Nsamenang SA, Hirsch JK, Topciu R, Goodman AD, Duberstein PR. The interrelations between spiritual well-being, pain interference and depressive symptoms in patients with multiple sclerosis. Journal of behavioral medicine. 2016.

Nsamenang SA, Hirsch JK, Topciu R, Goodman AD, Duberstein PR. Erratum to: The interrelations between spiritual well-being, pain interference and depressive symptoms in patients with multiple sclerosis. Journal of behavioral medicine. 2016.

S Ullrich Gonzalez RA, Kallis C, Ullrich S, Barnicot K, Keers R, Coid JW. Childhood maltreatment and violence: Mediation through psychiatric morbidity. Child abuse & neglect. 2016;52:70-84.

Coid JW, Ullrich S, Bebbington P, Fazel S, Keers R. Paranoid Ideation and Violence: Meta-analysis of Individual Subject Data of 7 Population Surveys. Schizophrenia bulletin. 2016.

Coid JW, Bhui, K, Macmanus D, Kallis C, Bebbington, P, Ullrich, S. Extremism, religion, and psychiatric morbidity in a population sample of young men. British Journal of Psychiatry. 2016.

Bui L, Ullrich S, Coid JW. Screening for mental disorder using the UK national offender assessment system. The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology. 2016:1-16.

P D White Collin SM, Nikolaus S, Heron J, Knoop H, White PD, Crawley E. Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) symptom-based phenotypes in two clinical cohorts of adult patients in the UK and The Netherlands. Journal of psychosomatic research. 2016;81:14-23.

Sharpe M, Goldsmith KA, Johnson AL, Chalder T, Walker J, White PD. Patient reaction to the PACE trial - Authors’ reply. The lancet Psychiatry. 2016;3(2):e8-9.

White PD, Chalder T, Sharpe M. Comment on: ‘Reports of recovery in chronic fatigue syndrome may present less than meets the eye’. Evidence-based mental health. 2016;19(1):32.

Clark L MP, Ridge D, Cheshire A, Vergara-Williamson M, Pesola F, White PD. Graded Exercise Therapy guided SElf-help Trial for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (GETSET): Protocol for a randomised controlled trial and interview study. JMIR Research Protocols. 2016;5(2)(e70).

Lewith G SB, Chalder T, McDermott C, White PD,. Complementary and alternative healthcare use by participants in the PACE trial of treatments for chronic fatigue syndrome, Journal of psychosomatic research. 2016.

Mallet M, King E, White PD. A UK based review of recommendations regarding the management of chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of psychosomatic research. 2016;88:33-5.

Harris V, White PD, Sharpe M, Pickles A, Chalder T. What mediates change after cognitive behaviour therapy and graded exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome: sequential mediational analysis. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 2016 (in press).

LV Clark FP, JM Thomas, M Vergara-Williamson, M Beynon, PD White. Graded exercise therapy guided self-help versus specialist medical care for chronic fatigue syndrome (GETSET): a randomised controlled trial. The Lancet. 2016.

Publications

Newham Seminars

Newsletter Spring/Summer 2016Centre for Psychiatry

17

Date Title Presenter

12th December 2016Novel interventions for negative symptoms of schizophrenia

Aida Farreny

19th December 2016 VOLUME Megan Cassidy

9th January 2017COFI - Comparing functional and integrated systems of mental health care

Thomas Booker

16th January 2017 DIALOG+ and depression - Update Victoria Bird

23rd January 2017 CLAHRC – carer involvement in acute mental healthcare Justina Kaselionyte

30th January 2017 Title TBC Neelam Laxhman

6th February 2017 VOLUME Husnara Khanom

13th February 2017 COFI - The preliminary findings of the qualitative studyAleksandra Matanov

20th February 2017Nonverbal behaviour and negative symptoms in schizophrenia

Elizabeth Worswick

27th February 2017Designing a digital intervention using the positive psychotherapy model for depression

Sophie Walsh

6th March 2017The involvement of family and friends in inpatient mental health care: what do patients want?

Aysegul Dirik

All seminars are held on Mondays at 2-3pm in the Lecture Theatre of the Academic Unit, Newham Centre for Mental Health, London E13 8SP.

For further information, please contact Carolanne Ellis Email: [email protected]

www.wolfson.qmul.ac.uk/centres/cfp

For further information:Renata Samulnik, Centre for PsychiatryBarts and The London School of Medicine and DentistryOld Anatomy Building, Charterhouse Square, London EC1M 6BQTel: +44 (0)20 7882 2020Email: [email protected]