Publications by authors named "Maximillian Wood"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how people cope with difficult experiences during psychedelic use and how these strategies relate to emotional breakthroughs, using data from psilocybin retreat participants.
  • Researchers developed the Responses to Challenging Psychedelic Experiences Inventory (ReCiPE) based on qualitative feedback and conducted an online survey to analyze response strategies.
  • Findings revealed three main coping strategies—Acceptance and Reappraisal, Sensory Regulation and Physical Interaction, and Social Support and Disclosure—with the first two being linked to better emotional outcomes, while fear-related challenges hindered positive experiences.
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Resettlement schemes can offer refugees an opportunity to rebuild their lives and to heal from loss and trauma. Mental health services in host countries may have an important role to play in aiding refugees in this journey to recovery. However, facilitating the process of healing for refugees raises challenges for mental health services working within Western medicalised settings.

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Objective: We retrospectively evaluated the effectiveness of trauma-focused psychotherapy (TF-P) versus stabilization and waiting in a civilian cohort of patients with an 11th version of the international classification of disease (ICD-11) diagnosis of complex post-traumatic stress disorder (CPTSD).

Methods: We identified patients with CPTSD treated at a specialist trauma service over a 3-year period by triangulating evidence from self-report questionnaires, file review, and expert-clinician opinion. Patients completed a phase-based treatment: stabilization consisting of symptom management and establishing safety, followed by waiting for treatment (phase 1); individual TF-P in the form of trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (TF-CBT), or eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) or TF-CBT plus EMDR (phase 2).

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Health care workers worldwide are at an increased risk of a range of adverse mental health outcomes, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), following the unprecedented demand placed upon them during the COVID-19 pandemic. Psychosocial interventions offered to mitigate these risks should be based on the best available evidence; however, limited information regarding the comparative effectiveness of interventions is available. We undertook a systematic review of psychosocial interventions delivered to health care workers before, during, and after disasters.

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