3 results match your criteria: "East London NHS Foundation Trust and Queen Mary University of London[Affiliation]"
Cult Med Psychiatry
December 2024
East London NHS Foundation Trust and Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.
Emerging consensus among enactivist philosophers and embodied mind theorists suggests that seeking to understand mental illness we need to look out of our skulls at the ecology of the brain. Still, the complex links between materiality (in broadest sense of material objects, habits, practices and environments) and mental health remain little understood. This paper discusses the benefits of adopting a material engagement approach to embodied and enactive psychiatry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
July 2017
Wolfson Institute, Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom.
To assess the association between different types of coercive measures (forced medication, seclusion, and restraint) used during involuntary psychiatric admission and two treatment outcomes: retrospective views of patients towards their admission and length of inpatient stay. A secondary analysis was conducted of data previously gathered by the EUNOMIA study (n = 2030 involuntarily detained inpatients across 10 European countries, of whom 770 were subject to one or more coercive measures). Associations between coercive measures and outcomes were tested through multivariable regression models adjusted for patients' socio-demographic and clinical characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAddiction
December 2016
Department of Psychology, Gambling and Addictions Research Centre Faculty of Health and Environmental Sciences, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand.
Background And Aims: The relationship between violence and problem gambling in general population samples is under-researched and requires further attention to inform treatment and prevention efforts. We investigated the relationship between gambling problems and violence among men and sought to determine if the link can be accounted for by mental disorders, alcohol and drug dependence and impulsivity.
Design: A cross-sectional survey.