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Conor Duggan
Researcher at University of Nottingham
Publications - 158
Citations - 5653
Conor Duggan is an academic researcher from University of Nottingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Personality disorders. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 153 publications receiving 5357 citations. Previous affiliations of Conor Duggan include University of Leicester & Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Quantification of Violence Scale: a simple method of recording significant violence.
Peter Tyrer,Sylvia Cooper,Elizabeth Herbert,Conor Duggan,Mike J. Crawford,Eileen M. Joyce,Deborah Rutter,Helen Seivewright,Sandra O'Sullivan,Bharti Rao,Domenic V. Cicchetti,Tony Maden +11 more
TL;DR: The QOVS, in its two forms, is a useful measure of recording significant violence in clinical and forensic practice and was quick and easy to use in practice.
Journal ArticleDOI
Researching outcomes from forensic services for people with intellectual or developmental disabilities: a systematic review, evidence synthesis and expert and patient/carer consultation
Catrin Morrissey,Nicole Geach,Regi Alexander,Verity Chester,John Devapriam,Conor Duggan,Peter E. Langdon,Peter E. Langdon,Bill Lindsay,Jane McCarthy,Dawn-Marie Walker +10 more
TL;DR: This work synthesised evidence in relation to the outcome domains that have been researched in the existing literature from hospital and community forensic services for people with IDD, within the broad domains of service effectiveness, patient safety and patient experience to develop an evidence-based framework of key outcome domains and subdomains.
Journal ArticleDOI
Medium-term course of disaster victims. A naturalistic follow-up.
Conor Duggan,J Gunn +1 more
TL;DR: Traumatised victims generally showed recovery in the 2–3 years after the trauma, but this was slow and was not universal.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cortical correlates of impaired self-regulation in personality disordered patients with traits of psychopathy.
TL;DR: Findings are consistent with the idea that psychopathic patients' unsuccessful attempts to self-regulate reflect a cognitive deficit characterised by a failure to attend and respond to a mismatch between expected and obtained outcomes.
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To move or not to move – that is the question! Some reflections on the transfer of DSPD patients in the face of uncertainty
TL;DR: While there are explicit criteria denoting those who are appropriate for admission to the new dangerous with severe personality disorder (DSPD) services in England and Wales, there are no correspon...