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Brendan D. Kelly
Researcher at Trinity College, Dublin
Publications - 394
Citations - 5781
Brendan D. Kelly is an academic researcher from Trinity College, Dublin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Mental illness. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 369 publications receiving 4678 citations. Previous affiliations of Brendan D. Kelly include University College Dublin & Mental Health Services.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Mental health in the COVID-19 pandemic.
TL;DR: A considerable increase in anxiety and depressive symptoms among people who do not have preexisting mental health conditions is expected, with some experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder in due course, during the current Covid-19 pandemic.
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Schizophrenia and the city: A review of literature and prospective study of psychosis and urbanicity in Ireland
Brendan D. Kelly,Brendan D. Kelly,Brendan D. Kelly,Eadbhard O'Callaghan,Eadbhard O'Callaghan,John L. Waddington,Larkin Feeney,Stephen Browne,Paul Scully,Mary Clarke,John F. Quinn,Orflaith McTigue,Maria G. Morgan,Anthony Kinsella,Anthony Kinsella,Conall Larkin +15 more
TL;DR: Results of a prospective study of urbanicity and schizophrenia in Ireland are presented, which provides persuasive evidence that risk for schizophrenia increases with urban birth and/or upbringing, especially among males.
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Structural violence and schizophrenia.
TL;DR: There are urgent needs for the development of enhanced aetiological models of schizophrenia, which elucidate the interactions between genetic risk and social environment, and can better inform bio-psycho-social approaches to treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dual-process cognitive interventions to enhance diagnostic reasoning: a systematic review
TL;DR: While many of the studies found some effect of interventions, guided reflection interventions emerged as the most consistently successful across five studies, and cognitive forcing strategies improved accuracy and confidence judgements.
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Factors associated with suicidal ideation in the general population : Five-centre analysis from the ODIN study
Patricia Casey,Graham Dunn,Brendan D. Kelly,Gail Birkbeck,Odd Stefan Dalgard,Ville Lehtinen,Sohlam Britta,José Luis Ayuso-Mateos,Christopher Dowrick +8 more
TL;DR: Age, marriage, concern by others and severity of depressed mood independently increased or decreased the odds of suicidal ideation overall, and an interaction between life events and social supports was identified, although this differed between men and women.