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Ehud Bodner
Researcher at Bar-Ilan University
Publications - 135
Citations - 3704
Ehud Bodner is an academic researcher from Bar-Ilan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 124 publications receiving 2699 citations. Previous affiliations of Ehud Bodner include Medical Corps.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The loneliness pandemic: Loneliness and other concomitants of depression, anxiety and their comorbidity during the COVID-19 outbreak.
Yuval Palgi,Amit Shrira,Lia Ring,Ehud Bodner,Sharon Avidor,Yoav S. Bergman,Sara Cohen-Fridel,Shoshi Keisari,Yaakov Hoffman +8 more
TL;DR: Loneliness was the main risk factor for depression, anxiety and their comorbidity and adults above 60, displayed greater resilience to psychiatric disorders associated with the COVID-19 crisis.
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A systematic review of social factors and suicidal behavior in older adulthood
Madeleine Mellqvist Fässberg,Kimberly A. Van Orden,Paul R. Duberstein,Annette Erlangsen,Sylvie Lapierre,Ehud Bodner,Silvia Sara Canetto,Diego De Leo,Katalin Szanto,Margda Waern +9 more
TL;DR: Findings indicated that at least in industrialized countries, limited social connectedness is associated with suicidal ideation, non-fatal suicidal behavior, and suicide in later life.
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Association between nonpsychotic psychiatric diagnoses in adolescent males and subsequent onset of schizophrenia.
Mark Weiser,Araham Reichenberg,Jonathan Rabinowitz,Zeev Kaplan,Mordehai Mark,Ehud Bodner,Daniella Nahon,Michael H. Davidson +7 more
TL;DR: These results reflect the relatively common finding of impaired functioning in patients later hospitalized for schizophrenia and the relatively low power of these disorders in predicting schizophrenia.
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On the origins of ageism among older and younger adults
TL;DR: A dissociation of the linkage between death and old age in younger adults can be achieved by changing the concepts of death and olds age, according to the Terror Management Theory and the Social Identity Theory.
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COVID-19-Related Loneliness and Psychiatric Symptoms Among Older Adults: The Buffering Role of Subjective Age.
TL;DR: Young subjective age may weaken the loneliness-symptom association among older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic, and suggest interventions aimed at ameliorating both loneliness and older subjective ages.