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Arvid Sjölander

Researcher at Karolinska Institutet

Publications -  180
Citations -  5136

Arvid Sjölander is an academic researcher from Karolinska Institutet. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 145 publications receiving 3807 citations. Previous affiliations of Arvid Sjölander include King's College London & Harvard University.

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Medication for Attention Deficit–Hyperactivity Disorder and Criminality

TL;DR: It is raised the possibility that the use of medication reduces the risk of criminality among patients with ADHD, and rates of criminality were lower during periods when they were receiving ADHD medication.
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Sibling comparison designs: bias from non-shared confounders and measurement error.

TL;DR: Analytically and through a series of simulations, it is shown that the standard interpretation of the models is subject to several limitations that are rarely acknowledged, leading within-pair associations to be weaker than corresponding unpaired associations, even in the absence of confounding.
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Serious transport accidents in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and the effect of medication: a population-based study.

TL;DR: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder is associated with an increased risk of serious transport accidents, and this risk seems to be possibly reduced by ADHD medication, at least among male patients.
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Paternal age at childbearing and offspring psychiatric and academic morbidity.

TL;DR: In the study population, advancing paternal age was associated with increased risk of some psychiatric disorders but decreased risk of the other indexes of morbidity, consistent with the hypothesis that new genetic mutations during spermatogenesis are causally related to offspring morbidity.
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Drug treatment for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and suicidal behaviour: register based study

TL;DR: This study found no evidence for a positive association between the use of drug treatments for ADHD and the risk of concomitant suicidal behaviour among patients with ADHD, but pointed to a potential protective effect of drugs for ADHD on suicidal behaviour, particularly for stimulant drugs.