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Dusan Hadzi-Pavlovic

Researcher at University of New South Wales

Publications -  317
Citations -  14986

Dusan Hadzi-Pavlovic is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bipolar disorder & Anxiety. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 309 publications receiving 13490 citations. Previous affiliations of Dusan Hadzi-Pavlovic include St. Vincent's Health System & Sydney Hospital.

Papers
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John Cade and the discovery of lithium treatment for manic depressive illness.

TL;DR: 50 years ago in the Medical Journal of Australia, John Frederick Joseph Cade reported the successful use of lithium therapy for manic depressive illness.
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New-generation antidepressants, suicide and depressed adolescents: how should clinicians respond to changing evidence?

TL;DR: Better evidence is required regarding psychological treatments, clinical course, and clinical practice trends, and in moderate–severe depression the risk of suicide if NGAs are not used may outweigh any risk of self-harm associated with them.
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Depression Sub-Typing: Unitary, Binary or Arbitrary?

TL;DR: It is suggested that the clinician should not proceed to conclude that the default option is necessarily an entity “neurotic depression” and that instead a heterogeneous group of options (e.g. anxiety, personality disorder) require review.
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Mental health informed physical activity for first responders and their support partner: a protocol for a stepped-wedge evaluation of an online, codesigned intervention.

TL;DR: This study will examine the efficacy of a group-based online intervention in increasing PA in first responders and their support partners, iteratively codesigned with advisors with lived experience of mental illness among first responders.
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Explicating links between acute coronary syndrome and depression: study design and methods.

TL;DR: The strong interdependence between anxiety and depression in this sample of patients admitted with an ACS will allow examination of the comparative extent to which expressions of ‘depression’ and ‘anxiety’ contribute to post-ACS morbidity.