C
C.J. Slooff
Researcher at University Medical Center Groningen
Publications - 21
Citations - 1185
C.J. Slooff is an academic researcher from University Medical Center Groningen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schizophrenia & Cohort. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 21 publications receiving 1100 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Natural Course of Schizophrenic Disorders: A 15-Year Followup of a Dutch Incidence Cohort
TL;DR: The study reveals a pattern of chronicity and relapses with a high risk of suicide and supports the need for an adequate relapse prevention program as a priority for mental health services.
Journal ArticleDOI
A systematic review of instruments to measure depressive symptoms in patients with schizophrenia.
Irene M. Lako,Richard Bruggeman,Richard Bruggeman,Henderikus Knegtering,Henderikus Knegtering,Durk Wiersma,Robert A. Schoevers,C.J. Slooff,Katja Taxis +8 more
TL;DR: The CDSS most accurately differentiated depressive symptoms from other symptoms of schizophrenia, correlated well with other depression instruments (concurrent validity), and was least likely to miss cases of depression or misdiagnose depression (predictive validity).
Journal ArticleDOI
The effects of lifestyle interventions on (long-term) weight management, cardiometabolic risk and depressive symptoms in people with psychotic disorders: a meta-analysis.
Jojanneke Bruins,Frederike Jörg,Richard Bruggeman,C.J. Slooff,Eva Corpeleijn,Marieke Pijnenborg +5 more
TL;DR: Lifestyle interventions are effective in treating and preventing obesity, and in reducing cardiometabolic risk factors, however, the quality of the studies leaves much to be desired.
Journal ArticleDOI
Learning (potential) and social functioning in schizophrenia.
TL;DR: The results show that learning, as assessed by measures of explicit and implicit learning and learning potential, was not associated with social functioning or rehabilitation outcome, and optimized cognitive performance seems to be a better predictor of complex domains of functioning than naive or everyday performance.
Journal ArticleDOI
The course of depressive symptoms and prescribing patterns of antidepressants in schizophrenia in a one-year follow-up study
Irene M. Lako,Katja Taxis,Richard Bruggeman,Richard Bruggeman,H. Knegtering,H. Knegtering,Huibert Burger,Durk Wiersma,C.J. Slooff +8 more
TL;DR: Routine outcome monitoring in patients with psychotic disorders revealed a high prevalence of depressive symptoms, and antidepressants were frequently prescribed and continued in routine clinical practice.