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1 CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014 Issue 7 www.wolfson.qmul.ac.uk/centres/cfp Centre for Psychiatry Latest News in Environmental, Cultural and Health Systems Research Newsletter Summer 2014 International Conference on Female Genital Mutilation and Mental Health Adverse events and deterioration in a trial of therapies for chronic fatigue syndrome Collaborative links with the University of Guadalajara Evaluating of the impact of Olympicled urban regeneration on young people and their families Photograph by Simon Koopmann
Transcript
Page 1: Psychiatry Newsletter summer 2014 2

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014Issue 7 www.wolfson.qmul.ac.uk/centres/cfp

Centre for PsychiatryLatest News in Environmental, Cultural and Health Systems Research

Newsletter Summer 2014

International Conference on

Female Genital Mutilation and Mental Health

Adverse events and deterioration in a trial of therapies for chronic fatigue syndrome

Collaborative links with the University of Guadalajara

Evaluating of the impact

of Olympic-­led urban

regeneration on young

people and their families Photograph by Simon Koopmann

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014 CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014

From the Editor and Centre Lead’s desk

Stephen Stansfeld

CONTENTS4

13 Events

Publications14

10 New Staff

Evaluating of the impact of Olympic-­led urban regeneration on young people and their families – The ORiEL (Olympic Regeneration in East London) study

8International Conference held on Female Genital Mutilation and Mental Health

9Collaborative links between The Centre for Psychiatry and The University of Guadalajara

6 Adverse events and deterioration reported by participants in a trial of therapies for chronic fatigue syndrome

Welcome to the summer edition of our Centre for Psychiatry Newsletter. As you will see we have varied and interesting contributions in this newsletter including reports from our East London Study (ORiEL) of the impact of the Olympic Games and the regeneration surrounding the games on young people’s well-­being and levels of physical activity. This a major NIHR funded study, the results of which will be of great interest in due course for those interested in the effects of regeneration on health and wellbeing. There is also a further report from the ever productive PACE Trial focussing on the important aspect of identifying adverse events and how these relate, or not, to a trial intervention. This is a further example of the research that the Centre carries out on the relationship between mind and body and the importance that we place on investigating the relationships of mental and physical illness. Dr Nasir Warfa reports on an international conference that he arranged on a very topical and traumatic issue – the relationship of female genital mutilation and mental health. This very

another stream of the Centre’s work that is the mental health

of ethnic minorities and cultural

I have some major news to report as far as I am concerned personally. I am stepping down as Centre Lead for Psychiatry, a post which I have held since I arrived here from UCL in September 1999. As ever, nowadays, we are urged to think about succession planning and I think this is a good moment to hand over the reins of the Centre Lead at a time when our REF submission has been completed and submitted and before the REF results are announced in December.

I am delighted to handover the Centre Lead role to Professor Kamaldeep Bhui. Kam is both a distinguished scholar and a very effective administrator and manager. This has been recently abundantly recognised through his becoming the Editor of the British Journal of Psychiatry. Kam’s research interests cover a range of important current issues, suicide in ethnic minorities, involuntary detention in BME groups and developing the innovative Cultural Consultation Service as well as collaborating on projects as varied as hepatitis and dementia. Within the Centre he directs a unique and very successful MSc in Transcultural Mental Healthcare and

Psychological Therapies. This has

in teaching in cultural psychiatry as has his Chairmanship of the World Association of Cultural Psychiatry and his authoritative textbook on cultural psychiatry. His research has both a global reach but is also very relevant to our local community, the focus of the new Life Sciences initiative in Queen Mary.

There is no health without mental health -­ and mental health is, and should remain an important component of undergraduate training of medical students and the research core of the medical school and thus have a central position within the future research and teaching of the Medical

that Kam will take this mission forward and develop the role of the Centre within the Medical School and within the population health component of the new Life Sciences initiative of which mental health is an essential theme.

Thank you for all your continued hard work and I hope you had a good summer break.

Yours sincerely

Stephen Stansfeld

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014 CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014

Evaluating of the impact of Olympic-­led urban regeneration on young people and their families – The ORiEL (Olympic Regeneration in East London) study

Policies and interventions that tackle the wider socio-­economic and environmental determinants of poor health have been promoted by successive UK governments to help improve health and wellbeing and reduce health inequalities. In recent years large-­scale programmes that tackle entrenched social and environmental deprivation through improvements in living conditions have become commonplace. Such programmes have usually taken the form of large-­scale urban regeneration programmes which have good potential to tackle health inequalities

wider social, economic and environmental determinants of physical and mental health, such as employment, housing, education, income and welfare.

Despite continuing large-­scale public investment, there is a dearth of evidence of the effectiveness of urban regeneration programmes in improving health. Most published studies to date have focused on adults: evaluations of the impact of neighbourhood renewal on young people and their families are needed, since adolescence is likely to be a critical point for the emergence of health inequalities in later life.

Underpinning this objective

are the following secondary

research questions:

1. What are the wider socio-­environmental and health impacts of urban regeneration in terms of

educational attainment, social cohesion/capital, diet, smoking, alcohol use and obesity?

2. How are socio-­economic and health impacts of the urban regeneration programme distributed by age, gender and ethnicity?

3. How, and to what

components of the regeneration programme

health behaviours?

4. To what extent are socio-­economic and health impacts of urban regeneration sustained over time?

The primary aim of

the ORiEL (Olympic

Regeneration in East

London) study is to:

Assess the impact of a multifaceted urban regeneration programme linked to the 2012 Olympic Games on the social determinants of health (employment), health behaviours (physical activity) and health outcomes (mental health and wellbeing) of adolescents and their parents.

OVERVIEW

Evaluating of the impact of Olympic-­led urban regeneration on young people and their families – The ORiEL (Olympic Regeneration in East London) study

The study comprises

two main elements:

1. A longitudinal controlled

quasi-­experimental study

examining changes in socio-­economic status, health behaviour and health outcomes in a cohort of adolescent school pupils and their parents or primary carers. Newham residents in the intervention area receiving urban regeneration will be compared with those living in Hackney, Tower Hamlets and Barking & Dagenham who are not receiving urban regeneration of the same magnitude. Adolescent and parent survey data has been collected in three waves: wave one (baseline pre-­intervention, 2012) recruited 3,105 adolescents in year 7 (aged 11-­12 years) and 1,280 of their families;; wave two (six months post-­intervention,

PUBLICATIONS

Smith,N.R., Clark,C., Fahy,A.E., Tharmaratnam,V.,Lewis,D.J., Thompson,C., Renton,A., Moore,D.G., Bhui,K.S., Taylor,S.J.C., Eldridge,S., Petticrew,M., Greenhalgh,T., Stansfeld,S.A., Cummins,S. The Olympic Regeneration in East London (ORiEL) study: protocol for a prospective controlled quasi-­experiment to evaluate the impact of urban regeneration on young people and their families BMJ open. 2012;;2(4).

Thompson C., Lewis D. J., Greenhalgh T., Smith N. R., Fahy A. E, Cummins, S. (2014). “Everyone was looking at you smiling”: East London residents’ experiences of the 2012 Olympics and its legacy on the social determinants of health Social Science and Medicine (submitted)

Lewis, D. J., Evans, T., Cummins, S. (2014). Utility of location-­based web imagery for validating secondary data on the neighbourhood food and alcohol environments: virtual ground-­truthing in the ORiEL Study Journal of Urban Health (submitted)

Thompson, C., Lewis, D. J., Greenhalgh, T., Taylor, S., Cummins, S. (2013). A Health and Social Legacy for East London: Narratives of ‘problem’ and ‘solution’ around London 2012 Sociological Research Online 18(2)

2013) followed up 2,730 adolescents and 504 of their families;; and wave three (18 months post-­intervention, 2014) will complete in summer 2014.

2. An in-­depth longitudinal

qualitative study of family experiences of and attitudes towards regeneration in the intervention area

economic status, health behaviours and health outcomes.

pre-­Olympic Games comprised of a sub-­group of approximately 20 families

of the survey sample;; interviews were repeated at wave two post-­Games.

Further information is available on the study website:

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014 CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014

Adverse events and deterioration reported by participants in a trial of therapies for chronic fatigue syndrome

Dr Dominic Dougall, Consultant Psychiatrist, Newham Centre for

Mental HealthHealth problems occurring during clinical trials are often attributed to the treatments given in a trial. However, the attribution of new health problems to a treatment could be misleading when the illness is remitting and relapsing. In a trial such health problems may be recorded as adverse events, may be considered clinically serious or not, and may be considered a reaction to a trial treatment or not. To date there have been few studies which have examined associations and predictions of adverse events in clinical trials. Our study explored this issue in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) who participated in the PACE trial (White et al, 2011). This was a multicentre four arm randomised trial which was designed to compare the

behaviour therapy (CBT), graded exercise therapy (GET) and adaptive pacing therapy (APT), each added to specialist medical care (SMC), against SMC alone. CBT and GET were designed to be rehabilitative whilst the goal of APT was to optimise adaptation to the illness by planning and pacing activities to avoid or reduce fatigue. Measures of safety included systematic assessments of adverse events

(AEs), serious adverse reactions (SARs) and serious adverse events (SAEs). The PACE trial found that both CBT and GET were more effective than adaptive pacing therapy (APT) when any of these therapies were added to SMC, and also were more effective than SMC alone.

Our paper (Dougall et al, 2014) reported the more commonly reported non-­serious adverse events (NSAEs). We compared their frequency between treatment arms, and also examined baseline factors that might be associated with reporting larger numbers of NSAEs. On the basis of the previous literature, we hypothesised that NSAEs would be associated with female sex, a larger number of physical symptoms at baseline, and both depressive and anxiety disorders present at baseline.

change, disease or disorder experienced by the participant during their participation in the trial, whether or not considered related to the use of treatments being studied in the trial’. They were recorded on three occasions at 12, 24 and 52 weeks over one year in 641 participants. At each time point a research assistant asked participants if a new illness or health event had occurred since the last assessment. For example if a participant had visited their GP, attended

hospital or had commenced medication. Spontaneously reported AEs were also recorded.

In our analysis we compared the numbers and nature of AEs between the four treatment arms. We examined associations of AEs with baseline measures such as demographic characteristics, depression and anxiety scales and a standardised psychiatric interview, physical symptom scales and measures of chronic fatigue. We also compared the proportions of participants who deteriorated by clinically important

We found that serious adverse events and reactions were infrequent, whilst non-­serious adverse events were common. The median number of NSAEs per participant over one year

different between the treatments. A greater number of NSAEs were associated with recruitment

centre, baseline physical symptom count, body mass index, and depressive disorder. Deterioration in physical function

across the treatment arms. In those who received APT 25% deteriorated, 9% after CBT, 11% after GET, and 18% after

differences in worsening fatigue.

was the substantial variation in the number of reported NSAEs between centres. After we had explored alternative explanations, such as the small differences between centres in baseline factors, we concluded the differences were likely due to variation in ascertainment. i.e. research assistants may have asked questions about the occurrence of NSAEs and their thresholds differently. This appears to have occurred despite the use of a standard trial protocol.

expected, such as having more symptoms at baseline, particularly those associated with CFS, predicting subsequent NSAEs in general and also NSAEs

that a diagnosis of a depressive disorder at baseline predicted increased reporting of NSAEs is also consistent with previous studies that found negative affect was associated with NSAEs

symptoms in general. However, unlike some previous studies,

with anxiety, although at least one other trial has also failed

anxiety and adverse events. We also found that a higher BMI was associated with more NSAEs in general. Previous research has found that obese people generally report more physical and mental health related

may also have been due to our sample having a relatively high number of participants who were morbidly obese. We were unable to support our hypothesis that female participants are more likely to report adverse events.

In conclusion, we found no important differences in the frequencies of any of the adverse events between treatment arms, and no excess associated with either CBT or GET, which are both treatments that some patient groups have expressed concerns

safety. Clinically important deterioration occurred least often after the active rehabilitation interventions of CBT and GET and more often with the more

reporting of non-­serious adverse events varied by recruitment centre has implications for the design of future trials. We have therefore suggested that

research assessors require clear manualised guidance

events, and both training and supervision in the implementation of assessments. That baseline symptom count, having a depressive disorder and BMI

with a greater number of NSAEs, independently of the treatment arms, also has both research and clinical implications for clinicians running trials, particularly those including patients with CFS. Adverse events in trials

than reactions to interventions.

References:Dougall D, Johnson AL, Goldsmith KA, Sharpe M, Angus B, Chalder T, White PD. Adverse events and deterioration reported by participants in the PACE trial of therapies for chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of Psychosomatic Research 2014;; 77: 20–6

White PD, Goldsmith KA, Johnson AL, Potts L, Walwyn R, DeCesare JC, et al. Comparison of adaptive pacing therapy, cognitive behaviour therapy, graded exercise therapy, and specialist medical care for chronic fatigue syndrome (PACE): a randomised trial. Lancet 2011;; 377: 823–36

Adverse events and deterioration reported by participants in a trial of therapies for chronic fatigue syndrome

Photograph by Shanghai killer whale

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014 CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014

On Wednesday 16th April 2014 Dr Nasir Warfa organised an International Conference on Female Genital Mutilation and Mental Health Tragedy of Traditions & Translational Knowledge.

This was held with great success at the Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine, Charterhouse Square campus.

Female Genital Mutilation refers to:

“All procedures involving partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs for non-­medical reasons. The removal of normal genital tissue interferes with the natural functioning of the body and causes several immediate and long-­term health consequences”

(WHO, 2008, page 2)

International Conference held on Female Genital Mutilation and Mental Health

The physical health consequences of FGM are frequently discussed at national and international meetings. Previous international studies have consistently showed that women who had genital mutilation are more likely to have maternal complications during pregnancy and delivery, often leading to poor physical health outcomes.

This conference stimulated national and international discussions of FGM and its intersectional sociocultural, political, media, ethical

The conference focused on FGM from several different perspectives that examine the physical and mental health consequences, as well as moral, legal, ethical, media and policy implications of this practice. Presenters and panel members explored the use of translational knowledge in modifying harmful traditional practices.

UNICEF (2013) reports up to 125 million girls and women who have had their genitals mutilated,

and about 30 million young girls who are at risk of genital mutilation in the next 10 years.

http://www.unicef.org.uk/Latest/News/female-­genital-­mutilation-­cutting-­report/

Collaborative links between The Centre for Psychiatry and The University of Guadalajara

Collaborative links between The Centre for Psychiatry and The University of Guadalajara are currently underway to launch an exciting new MSc in Culture and Mental Health: Advanced Clinical Practice. This collaboration has developed following Professor Sergio Villasenor-­Bayardo’s visit to the UK in 2013, where Professor Kamaldeep Bhui and Professor Sergio Villasenor-­Bayardo delivered a popular series of seminars in global mental health and cultural psychiatry.

The MSc will draw upon The Centre for Psychiatry’s expertise in cultural psychiatry and provide theoretical and applied knowledge on cultural capability within mental health care. Students will develop a unique set of applied skills derived from anthropological, medical, sociological, epidemiological, pharmacological and cultural understandings of the presentation, expression and management of psychological distress amongst ethnic minorities.

The launch of this programme

blended learning programme, where students will be taught via a virtual learning environment as well as undertaking applied research at The University of Guadalajara, Mexico. The course is expected to attract international students, especially students from Latin America and will facilitate the career progression for individuals

of mental health including clinical psychology, nursing, medicine, health and policy and research.

“University of Guadalajara (Mexico)” by n75_dsc_p100 Photograph by Amnon s (Amnon Shavit)

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014 CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014

New Staff New StaffNew StaffAysegul DirikAyse joined the Unit for Social and Community Psychiatry in February as a Research Assistant for an NIHR CLAHRC (North Thames) funded mental health project.

develop and manualise an intervention to facilitate carers’ involvement in acute inpatient treatment. Being hospitalised for mental health reasons can be a highly stressful time for the individual, their family and friends. However, carers are often not provided with appropriate information and involvement in care. Facilitating carers’ involvement in the

hospital treatment of patients with psychosis can contribute

in experience of care and patients’ clinical outcomes.

Ayse received her MSc in Research Methods in Psychology from Goldsmiths. Having worked in various research and therapeutic settings, she also

of managing projects for carers. Her work has involved individual and group support whilst also having a strategic role, facilitating participation and contributing to the development of local services and policies.

Cate BaileyCate joined the Centre for Psychiatry in May as an Academic Clinical Fellow in Old Age psychiatry supervised by Professor Bhui. This position means that she spends 9 months of the year in clinical work as a basic psychiatry trainee with East London Foundation trust and 3 months in protected academic time.

She is currently working on an NIHR funded project entitled “Shared Decision Making in Dementia”, which

Exeter University, headed by Professor Rosemarie McCabe. The study is an observational one, utilizing video-­taping

of consultations in memory clinics to obtain quantitative data about shared decision making and qualitative data about communication between doctors, patients and carers. It is anticipated that study will help

to identify both challenges to communication and techniques for supporting patient autonomy and involvement in consultations and decisions.

Cate studied medicine at Monash University and worked in various mental health departments of St Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne before moving to London in 2013.

Danielle HouseDanielle has joined The ORiEL Study as Research Assistant, exploring the impact of Olympic regeneration in East London on the health, wellbeing and physical activity of local young people. Before joining Queen Mary’s

the London 2012 Olympics for a host borough local authority from 2009 to 2012, and more recently she has worked with a social enterprise specialising

in social sustainability, place-­making and building thriving urban communities.

Danielle has a BA Geography

and an MA Latin American Studies from the Institute for the Study of the Americas, University of London. Her academic research has focussed on exploring the interface between the built environment and memory in post-­dictatorship Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Katie MoranKatie joined the Unit for Social and Community Psychiatry in February 2014 as a Research Assistant on the NIHR HTA funded ‘Financial Incentives for Adherence to Treatment’ (FIAT) Trial, led by Professor Stefan Priebe. The FIAT study is examining whether

improve adherence to anti-­psychotic treatment in patients with psychotic disorders. The

investigating patients’ post-­intervention adherence to

medication, and both patients’ and clinicians’ opinions and experiences with the intervention.

In addition to this, Katie is currently working on a systematic review on interventions supporting patients with serious mental illness.

Prior to working with Queen Mary University London, Katie graduated from the University of Nottingham and worked as an Assistant Psychologist/Research Assistant with Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust on a NIHR funded study, investigating

an intervention which aims to improve the wellbeing and health for people living with dementia in care homes.

Nikolia JovanovicNikolina Jovanovic, MD, PhD joined the Unit for Social and Community Psychiatry WHO Collaborating Centre for Mental Health Services Development, Queen Mary University of London in May 2014. Her research interests include employing new psychosocial interventions based on creativity and arts therapies in solving mental health problems, and interaction

between mental health and physical environment (nature, architecture, urban planning).

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014 CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014

EventsRehana PatelBefore joining QMUL Rehana was the Business Development

Business School -­ University of East London (UEL), developing, managing and operationalising Executive Education programmes;; these included UG and PG as well as short courses and CPD (Corporate Professional Development).

Her Previous employment includes working for the Learning Disabilities Team at the Redbridge PCT and working to promote effective trade and export at the UKTI within the Department of Business Innovation and Skills.

Undertaking an active role of Business Development in all areas within the MSc Mental Health Programme portfolio. Working with the Course Director in reviewing current and developing new course

business plans. Establishing and developing partnerships to progress new course accreditation documents addressing academic, business and marketing requirements. Supporting and facilitating student placements and providing executive administrative support to the Director. Also undertaking an active role of managing, organising and administering the smooth running of all MSc programmes.

Rehana holds a BA (Hons) in Psychosocial studies and Prince 2 Foundation in Project Management

Vicky BirdVictoria joined the Unit for Social and Community Psychiatry in April 2014. She is currently working as the study manager for “COmparing policy framework, structure, effectiveness and cost-­effectiveness of Functional and Integrated systems of mental health care (COFI)”, an EU-­FP7 funded project led by prof. Stefan Priebe. The COFI project is a European wide project aiming to compare the effectiveness and cost-­effectiveness of functional (different specialist inpatient and outpatient consultants responsible for care) and integrated (same consultant is responsible for inpatient and

outpatient care) mental health systems. The study is being

Europe (Belgium, Germany, Italy, Poland and United Kingdom). Recruitment of participants is due to begin in October 2014 and will continue for one year.

Prior to joining Queen Mary, Victoria worked at the Institute of Psychiatry on the REFOCUS programme – a 5-­year NIHR funded project which aimed to increase the recovery-­orientation within mental health services. She is currently in

her PhD which focuses on supporting the recovery of black individuals who use community mental health services.

Date: Sept 15th 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: Group music

therapy for acute adult

psychiatric inpatients

By: Catherine Carr

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Sept 22nd 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: Carer involvement in

the treatment of psychosis

By: Aysegul Dirik

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Sept 29th 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: COFI – Comparing

functional and integrated

systems of mental health care

By: Victoria Bird

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Oct 6th 2014

Time: 2pm

from the trial

By: Serif Omer

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Oct 13th 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: VOLUME – Existing

volunteering schemes

By: Joyce Siette

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Oct 27th 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: Review on electronic

monitoring systems in

mental health care

By: Sophie Walsh

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Nov 3rd 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: Recruitment to trials

and mental health care

By: Paulina Szymczynska

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Nov 10th 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: Immediate social

networks in people

with psychosis

By: Domenico Giacco

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Nov 17th 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: Group processes

in therapeutic groups

By: Stavros Orfanos

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Nov 24th 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: FIAT – The follow up

adherence to medication

in non-­adherent patients

By: Hana Pavlickova

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Dec 1st 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: Quest – Quality

and effectiveness of

supported housing

By: Sima Sandhu

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Dec 15th 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: Friendship in Befriending

By: Rose Thompson

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Date: Dec 22nd 2014

Time: 2pm

Title: FIAT – Financial

incentives for adherence

to medication in non-­

adherent patients

By: Katie Moran

Venue: Unit of Social & Community Psychiatry, Newham

Dates for Cultural Consultation Club TBA

New Staff

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014 CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014

New StaffSelected Publications New StaffSelected PublicationsK Barnicot

Barnicot, K., Savill, M., Bhatti, N., & Priebe, S. 2014, “A Pragmatic Randomised Controlled Trial of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy: Effects on Hospitalisation and Post-­Treatment Follow-­Up”, Psychother.Psychosom., vol. 83, no. 3, pp. 192-­193.

K Bhui

Abdul-­Hamid, W. K. & Bhui, K. 2014, “Psychiatry, homeless patients and welfare reforms: Historical links and chains”, Int.J Soc Psychiatry, vol. 60, no. 1, pp. 71-­74. doi: 10.1177/0020764012463303.

Bhui, K., Ullrich, S., & Coid, J. W. 2014, “Which pathways to psychiatric care lead to earlier treatment and a shorter duration

, BMC.Psychiatry, vol. 14, no. 1, p. 72. doi:10.1186/1471-­244X-­14-­72

Bhui, K., Warfa, N., & Jones, E. 2014, “Is violent radicalisation associated with poverty, migration, poor self-­reported health and common mental

, PLoS One, vol. 9, no. 3, p. e90718. 10.1371/journal.pone.0090718.

Shiraz, F., Rahtz, E., Bhui, K., Hutchison, I., & Korszun, A. 2014, “Quality of life, psychological wellbeing and treatment needs of trauma and head and neck cancer patients”, Br.J Oral Maxillofac.Surg., vol. 52, no. 6, pp. 513-­517. doi: 10.1016/j.bjoms.2014.03.019

V Bird

Bird, V. J., Le, B. C., Leamy, M., Williams, J., Bradstreet, S., & Slade, M. 2014, “Evaluating the feasibility of complex interventions in mental health services: standardised measure and reporting guidelines”, Br.J Psychiatry, vol. 204, pp. 316-­321. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.113.128314

J Bourke

Kazmierski, J., Banys, A., Latek, J., Bourke, J., & Jaszewski, R. 2014, “Raised IL-­2 and TNF-­alpha concentrations are associated with postoperative delirium in patients undergoing coronary-­artery bypass graft surgery”, Int Psychogeriatr, vol. 26, no. 5, pp. 845-­855. doi: 10.1017/S1041610213002378

C Clark

Basner, M., Babisch, W., Davis, A., Brink, M., Clark, C., Janssen, S., & Stansfeld, S. 2014, “Auditory and non-­auditory effects of noise on health”, Lancet, vol. 383, no. 9925, pp. 1325-­1332. doi: 10.1016/S0140-­6736(13)61613-­X.

J Coid

Kirkbride, J. B., Jones, P. B., Ullrich, S., & Coid, J. W. 2014, “Social deprivation, inequality, and the neighborhood-­level incidence of psychotic syndromes in East London”, Schizophr.Bull., vol. 40, no. 1, pp. 169-­180. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbs151.

Keers, R., Ullrich, S., Destavola, B. L., & Coid, J. W. 2014, “Association of violence with emergence of persecutory delusions in untreated schizophrenia”, Am J Psychiatry, vol. 171, no. 3, pp. 332-­339. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2013.13010134.

Gonzalez RA, Kallis C, Ullrich S, Zhang T, & Coid JW 2014, “The protective role of higher intellectual functioning on violence in the household population of Great Britain”, Pers Indiv Differ, vol. 61-­62, no. 0, pp. 80-­85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2014.01.012

D Giacco

Kalisova, L., Raboch, J., Nawka, A., Sampogna, G., Cihal, L., Kallert, T. W., Onchev, G., Karastergiou, A., Del, V., V, Kiejna, A., Adamowski, T., Torres-­Gonzales, F., Cervilla, J. A., Priebe, S., Giacco, D., Kjellin, L., Dembinskas, A., & Fiorillo, A. 2014, “Do patient and ward-­

Results from the EUNOMIA international study”, Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. [Epub ahead of print] DOI 10.1007/s00127-­014-­0872-­6

Y Khatib

Mehdizadeh, L., Sturrock, A., Myers, G., Khatib, Y., & Dacre, J. 2014, “How well do doctors think they perform on the General Medical Council’s Tests of Competence pilot

study”, BMJ Open., vol. 4, no. 2, p. e004131. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-­2013-­004131.

A Korszun

Korszun, A., Sarker, S. J., Chowdhury, K., Clark, C., Greaves, P., Johnson, R., Kingston, J., Levitt, G., Matthews, J., White, P., Lister, A., & Gribben, J. 2014, “Psychosocial factors associated with impact of cancer in longterm haematological cancer survivors”, Br.J Haematol., vol. 164, no. 6, pp. 790-­803. 10.1111/bjh.12698.

Hung, C. F., Rivera, M., Craddock, N., Owen, M. J., Gill, M., Korszun, A., Maier, W., Mors, O., Preisig, M., Rice, J. P., Rietschel, M., Jones, L., Middleton, L., Aitchison, K. J., Davis, O. S., Breen, G., Lewis,

2014, “Relationship between obesity and the risk of clinically

randomisation study”, Br.J Psychiatry.[Epub ahead of print] doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.113.130419

S Priebe

Priebe, S., Omer, S., Giacco, D., & Slade, M. 2014, “Resource-­oriented therapeutic models in psychiatry: conceptual review”, Br.J Psychiatry, vol. 204, pp. 256-­261. 10.1192/bjp.bp.113.135038.

Zangrilli, A., Ducci, G., Bandinelli, P. L., Dooley, J., McCabe, R., & Priebe, S. 2014, “How do psychiatrists address delusions

A qualitative study”, BMC.Psychiatry, vol. 14, no. 1, p. 178. [Epub ahead of print] doi:10.1186/1471-­244X-­14-­178

S A Stansfeld

Brunner, E. J., Shipley, M. J., Britton, A. R., Stansfeld, S. A., Heuschmann, P. U., Rudd, A. G., Wolfe, C. D., Singh-­Manoux, A., & Kivimaki, M. 2014, “Depressive disorder, coronary heart disease, and stroke: dose-­response and reverse causation effects in the Whitehall II cohort study”, Eur.J Prev.Cardiol., vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 340-­346. doi: 10.1177/2047487314520785

Das-­Munshi, J., Clark, C., Dewey, M. E., Leavey, G., Stansfeld, S. A., & Prince, M. J. 2014, “Born into adversity: psychological distress in two birth cohorts of second-­generation Irish children growing up in Britain”, J Public Health (Oxf), vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 92-­103. doi: 10.1093/pubmed/fdt034.

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CENTRE FOR PSYCHIATRY NEWSLETTER SUMMER 2014Issue 7 www.wolfson.qmul.ac.uk/centres/cfp

For further information,

please contact:

Jane Archer Centre for Psychiatry Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry Old Anatomy Building Charterhouse Square London EC1M 6BQ

Tel: +44 (0)20 7882 2020 Fax: +44 (0)20 7882 5728 Email: [email protected]


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