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Amanda Sacker

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  225
Citations -  11198

Amanda Sacker is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Millennium Cohort Study (United States) & Cohort study. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 219 publications receiving 9787 citations. Previous affiliations of Amanda Sacker include King's College London & University of Oxford.

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Childhood antecedents of schizophrenia and affective illness: social adjustment at ages 7 and 11.

TL;DR: Abnormalities of social adjustment are detectable in childhood in some people who develop psychotic illness, and sex and the rate of development of different components of the capacity for social interaction are important determinants of the risk of psychosis and other psychiatric disorders in adulthood.
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Breastfeeding and Hospitalization for Diarrheal and Respiratory Infection in the United Kingdom Millennium Cohort Study

TL;DR: Breastfeeding, particularly when exclusive and prolonged, protects against severe morbidity in contemporary United Kingdom, and a population-level increase in exclusive, prolonged breastfeeding would be of considerable potential benefit for public health.
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Lifetime Antecedents of Cognitive Reserve

TL;DR: This article used path analysis on data from the British 1946 birth cohort to model lifetime antecedents of cognitive reserve, represented by the NART at 53 years, and compared this model for verbal memory and psychomotor function at this age, cognitive outcomes that are sensitive to ageassociated decline.
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The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale: A meta confirmatory factor analysis

TL;DR: A bifactor structure provides the most acceptable empirical explanation for the HADS correlation structure and it is recommended it is best used as a measure of general distress.
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Social Media Use and Adolescent Mental Health: Findings From the UK Millennium Cohort Study

TL;DR: The authors' findings highlight the potential pitfalls of lengthy social media use for young people's mental health and calls on industry to more tightly regulate hours of social mediause.