Publications by authors named "Z J Waters"

Article Synopsis
  • - LGBTQA+ individuals are more likely to experience psychosis and face challenges in accessing timely mental health care, leading to an increased risk of negative outcomes.
  • - A scoping review analyzed 37 studies and identified 89 barriers and 63 facilitators related to mental health care for LGBTQA+ people, categorizing them into five key themes: service-related factors, stigma, social networks, personal factors, and psychosis-related factors.
  • - The findings emphasize the importance of understanding intersectionality and suggest that enhancing knowledge and resources in public services could lead to earlier detection and better treatment of psychosis in the LGBTQA+ community.
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Background: The prevalence of psychosis has been shown to be disproportionately high amongst sexual and gender minority individuals. However, there is currently little consideration of the unique needs of this population in mental health treatment, with LGBTQA+ individuals facing barriers in accessing timely and non-stigmatising support for psychotic experiences. This issue deserves attention as delays to help-seeking and poor engagement with treatment predict worsened clinical and functional outcomes for people with psychosis.

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Background: Individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD) are at a substantial risk of harm to themselves and others, experience high levels of functional impairment and typically are high users of tertiary healthcare to address their mental health concerns. As indicators for BPD typically emerge in adolescence, a day therapy service in Bentley, Western Australia, Touchstone Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS), was developed as an intensive intervention for adolescents with indicators for BPD and its associated symptomology. Touchstone utilizes mentalization-based therapy (MBT) in a therapeutic community setting, where the current study sought to document the anecdotal outcomes using the data provided at Touchstone, to enable a greater understanding of this treatment approach for adolescents with indicators for BPD.

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School toilets have been identified by sexuality and gender diverse (SGD) students as the least safe spaces in educational institutions. They are sites of verbal, physical and sexual victimisation. Providing gender-neutral toilets in primary and secondary schools may reduce the bullying and victimisation of SGD students, particularly those who are transgender or gender-diverse.

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