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David Roe

Researcher at University of Haifa

Publications -  217
Citations -  8068

David Roe is an academic researcher from University of Haifa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental illness & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 197 publications receiving 7097 citations. Previous affiliations of David Roe include Health Science University & Bar-Ilan University.

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The Relationship Between Consumer Insight and Provider-Consumer Agreement Regarding Consumer’s Quality of Life

TL;DR: For most QoL domains, agreement between consumers and providers was higher for persons with high insight, and for the Psychological well being dimension a negative correlation was uncovered for Persons with low insight indicating disagreement between consumer and provider.
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Comparative impact of professional mental health background on ratings of consumer outcome and fidelity in an Illness Management and Recovery program.

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that IMR can be implemented with good fidelity and generate positive outcomes when delivered by practitioners who receive sufficient training and supervision regardless of their professional background.
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Neuro-cognition and social cognition elements of social functioning and social quality of life.

TL;DR: Examination of the mediating role of social cognition in a diagnosis of a serious mental illness showed that emotion recognition and attributional bias were significant mediators such that cognitive assessment was positively related to both, which in turn, were negatively related to SQoL.
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A strengths-based case management service for people with serious mental illness in Israel: A randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: Assessment of a new strengths-based case management service in Israel suggests that SBCM services are effective in helping individuals with serious mental illness set personal goals and use PRS in a better and more focused manner.
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Self-clarity and different clusters of insight and self-stigma in mental illness

TL;DR: Investigating the associations between different insight and self-stigma clusters, self-clarity, hope, recovery, and functioning reveals that when people diagnosed with SMI do not have high levels of self-Stigma they often report a positive and clear sense of self accompanied with hope, regardless of having low insight.