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Bradley N. Gaynes

Researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Publications -  308
Citations -  17237

Bradley N. Gaynes is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Depression (differential diagnoses) & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 274 publications receiving 14553 citations. Previous affiliations of Bradley N. Gaynes include University of Pennsylvania & University of Florida.

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Perinatal depression: a systematic review of prevalence and incidence.

TL;DR: To better delineate periods of peak prevalence and incidence for perinatal depression and identify high risk subpopulations, studies with larger and more representative samples are needed.
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The efficacy of light therapy in the treatment of mood disorders: a review and meta-analysis of the evidence.

TL;DR: This analysis of randomized, controlled trials suggests that bright light treatment and dawn simulation for seasonal affective disorder and bright light for nonseasonal depression are efficacious, with effect sizes equivalent to those in most antidepressant pharmacotherapy trials.
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Psychological treatments for adults with posttraumatic stress disorder: A systematic review and meta-analysis:

TL;DR: Evidence supports efficacy of exposure therapy including the manualized version Prolonged Exposure (PE); cognitive therapy (CT), cognitive processing therapy (CPT), cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)-mixed therapies ( moderate SOE); eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) and narrative exposure therapy (low-moderate SOE).
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What did STAR*D teach us? Results from a large-scale, practical, clinical trial for patients with depression

TL;DR: The authors provide an overview of the STAR*D study, a large-scale practical clinical trial to determine which of several treatments are the most effective "next-steps" for patients with major depressive disorder whose symptoms do not remit or who cannot tolerate an initial treatment and, if needed, ensuing treatments.
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Deployment and the Use of Mental Health Services among U.S. Army Wives

TL;DR: Prolonged deployment was associated with more mental health diagnoses among U.S. Army wives, and these findings may have relevance for prevention and treatment efforts.