Results: 152

For: topical

Under the skin: How childhood maltreatment may trigger lifelong multimorbidity

feat

Why do people who were maltreated as children face higher risks of both mental and physical illness? A new Mendelian randomisation study suggests that metabolic markers — like triglycerides and blood sugar — may be part of the chain connecting adversity to later multimorbidity.

[read the full story...]

Core beliefs in psychosis: new insights from a systematic review

A person gazing up at something out of shot

Negative core beliefs like “I’m worthless” or “people can’t be trusted” are linked to hallucinations, paranoia, and suicidality. This new systematic review shows how deep-rooted schemas shape psychosis, and what this means for psychological therapies.

[read the full story...]

Housing as care: Building recovery pathways for homeless women with severe mental illness

Featured

Fragmented systems leave many homeless women with severe mental illness excluded from care, re-traumatised, and at risk. This study developed a gender-sensitive housing model that integrates tertiary care, transitional homes, and community reintegration; centring dignity, safety, and recovery.

[read the full story...]

Pragmatic prescribing: why GPs offer beta-blockers for anxiety, despite guideline gaps

GPs’ perceived benefits of beta-blockers for anxiety underscore a need for further research and updated clinical guidance to align practice with evidence.

Beta-blockers like propranolol are being prescribed more often for anxiety in UK primary care, even though they don’t appear in national guidelines. This new qualitative study explores why GPs turn to them, and what that says about evidence, safety, and patient choice.

[read the full story...]

Starting over: Post-migration challenges experienced by refugees when integrating in a new country

salah-darwish-iLDT_k1zWNU-unsplash

Many displaced people reach safety only to find new challenges waiting. This new qualitative systematic review synthesises the experiences of 490 refugees, revealing the mental, social, and structural barriers they face in trying to integrate.

[read the full story...]

Does harsh parenting increase the risk of self-harm and suicide in young people?

dan-burton-IRYJp_1Fdk0-unsplash

This brand new Lancet Psychiatry paper looks across 38 longitudinal cohort studies to uncover how parenting and family dysfunction predict later self-harm or suicidality. The findings may surprise you.

[read the full story...]

Medical diagnosis increases the risk of depression: but who’s most vulnerable?

Older woman with grey hair sitting on park bench holding back in discomfort. Image captures concept of age, health, and lifestyle in serene outdoor setting.

Dona Mathews highlights a new study showing a doubled risk of depression after a medical diagnosis – especially in the first month post-diagnosis, for those who are hospitalised for their medical condition, those with multiple medical conditions, those over 60, and for women.

[read the full story...]

Putting oil on the fire: Do people with high inflammation react differently to immune stress?

feat

Inflammation is a key factor in depression for many people. This new RCT used an experimental immune challenge to explore how individuals with high inflammation respond differently—shedding light on a distinct biological subtype of depression.

[read the full story...]

Collaborative care for depression: what are the key components?

Collaborative care is a complex intervention for chronic disease that has been shown to be significantly more effective for depression than usual care. Yet, implementation in routine practice is rare.

Despite strong evidence, collaborative care remains underused in the NHS. This blog explores new findings that highlight which components of the model are most effective in reducing depression symptoms.

[read the full story...]

AWARE and INSPIRE: school mental health trials show mixed results and unexpected harms

creative-christians-HN6uXG7GzTE-unsplash

The Education for Wellbeing programme, funded by the Department for Education, was one of England’s largest school-based mental health research initiatives. It included two major trials (AWARE and INSPIRE) testing universal mental health approaches in schools between 2018 and 2024. What did these big studies really find?

[read the full story...]