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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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Mentally disordered parricide and stranger killers admitted to high-security care. 1 : A descriptive comparison

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a consecutive series of mentally disordered offenders convicted of parricide who were admitted to high security care and compare their index characteristics with a group convicted of killing one or more strangers.
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A comparison of treatment completers and non-completers of an in-patient treatment programme for male personality-disordered offenders.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that teaching impulsive people a rational approach to social problem solving may reduce their level of non-completion.
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The assessment of dangerous and severe personality disorder: service use, cost, and consequences

TL;DR: There was a consistent trend for the DSPD assessment group to have worse outcomes than controls, and in a cost-function analysis, social functioning had a positive impact on cost and psychopathy had a negative impact oncost.
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The relationships between personality disorders and social problem solving in adults

TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between social problem solving and personality disorders was investigated in a sample of 173 men and women in treatment for personality problems, and the social problem-solving profiles of specific personality disorders in Clusters B and C mostly showed the expected associations with personality characteristics.
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Women Admitted to Medium Secure Care: Their Admission Characteristics and Outcome as Compared with Men

TL;DR: Compared to the men, the women admitted to secure care were more likely to have more mental health needs and less criminality, and to have a higher rate of mortality following discharge.