Neurodevelopmental conditions and mental health research: it’s time to #EmbraceComplexity!

Featured

In her debut blog, Suzi Sapiets summarises a review exploring psychological treatment of depression in young people with neurodevelopmental conditions, which finds very limited evidence to help neurodiverse individuals. She also tells us that it’s time to #EmbraceComplexity and encourages people to join the Embracing Complexity Research Network.

[read the full story...]

The COVID-19 pandemic is harming our mental health, and it’s affecting some more than others

When interpreting the results from this study, the recruitment method and representativeness of the sample need to be considered.

In his debut blog, Christian Dalton-Locke reviews a recent longitudinal (online survey) study, which looks at mental health outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic. The research finds that women, young adults, those from socially disadvantaged backgrounds, and people with pre-existing mental health problems were affected worse than others.

[read the full story...]

Parents and carers of children with an intellectual disability: what do we know about their wellbeing?

nathan-anderson-GM5Yn5XRVqA-unsplash

Charlie Lynch and Derek Tracy review a study on childhood intellectual disability and parents’ wellbeing, which integrates social, psychological and genetic influences.

[read the full story...]

Living in anxious times? The rise of anxiety disorders in the UK

Close,Up,Frustrated,Thoughtful,Young,Woman,Thinking,About,Problems,,Sitting

Alice Grishkov and Derek Tracy explore a recent paper, which finds that generalised anxiety disorder is on the rise in the UK, especially in young women.

[read the full story...]

Coercion in psychiatry: do interventions to reduce coercive practice work?

tatiana-pavlova-bC0uxTH7aS0-unsplash

John Baker reviews a recent umbrella review of randomised controlled trials on the efficacy of interventions to reduce coercion in mental health services.

[read the full story...]

Suicide awareness materials: do they help people with suicidal ideation?

joanna-kosinska-I3adKpDNAjM-unsplash

Hanzla Amir and Derek Tracy summarise a recent online randomised controlled trial on the effects of suicide awareness materials on people who feel suicidal, which finds that the Papageno effect is real and that stories of hope and recovery can help.

[read the full story...]

The ‘syndemics’ theory: a better explanation for ethnic disparities in the incidence and prevalence of psychosis?

shutterstock_1208950645

Today Bibire Baykeens looks into ethnic disparities in psychotic experiences explained by area-level syndemic effects; a brand new paper in the British Journal of Psychiatry.

[read the full story...]

Home treatment by crisis resolution teams can prevent hospital admission, according to Swiss research

Featured

Emmeline Lagunes Cordoba and Magdalena Skowronska review a recent Swiss RCT, which found that crisis resolution teams led to fewer hospital days per patient, but did not prevent hospital admission entirely.

[read the full story...]

Passive sedentary behaviours increase the risk of depression in adults

shutterstock_1383885212

Susie Rudge highlights a recent paper in the British Journal of Psychiatry which suggests that people with depression should be encouraged to replace passive sedentary behaviours with mentally active ones for the best possible chance of symptom improvement.

[read the full story...]

Suicide awareness materials: do they help people with suicidal ideation?

thought-catalog-o0Qqw21-0NI-unsplash

Edel Ennis writes her debut blog and reviews an online RCT on the effects of suicide awareness materials on individuals with recent suicidal ideation or attempt. Do stories of hope and recovery help protect people from suicide?

[read the full story...]