E
Elizabeth Kuipers
Researcher at King's College London
Publications - 284
Citations - 23235
Elizabeth Kuipers is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychosis & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 78, co-authored 277 publications receiving 21440 citations. Previous affiliations of Elizabeth Kuipers include Centre for Mental Health & National Institute for Health Research.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A cognitive model of the positive symptoms of psychosis.
TL;DR: The cognitive processes that are thought to lead to the formation and maintenance of the positive symptoms of psychosis are set out and a fuller integration with the findings of biological research will be required.
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Psychological treatments in schizophrenia: I. Meta-analysis of family intervention and cognitive behaviour therapy
Stephen Pilling,Paul Bebbington,Elizabeth Kuipers,Philippa Garety,John R. Geddes,G Orbach,Celia J. A. Morgan +6 more
TL;DR: Family therapy, in particular single family therapy, had clear preventative effects on the outcomes of psychotic relapse and readmission, and CBT produced higher rates of ‘important improvement’ in mental state and demonstrated positive effects on continuous measures of mental state at follow-up.
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A cognitive model of persecutory delusions
TL;DR: A multifactorial model of the formation and maintenance of persecutory delusions is presented, which includes the (non-defended) direct roles given to emotion in delusion formation, the detailed consideration of both the content and form of delusions, and the hypotheses concerning the associated emotional distress.
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Psychological investigation of the structure of paranoia in a non-clinical population.
Daniel Freeman,Philippa Garety,Paul Bebbington,Benjamin Smith,Rebecca Rollinson,David Fowler,Elizabeth Kuipers,Katarzyna Ray,Graham Dunn +8 more
TL;DR: Assessing a wide range of paranoid thoughts multidimensionally and examining their distribution, to identify the associated coping strategies and to examine social–cognitive processes and paranoia found suspiciousness is common and there may be a hierarchical arrangement of such thoughts that builds on common emotional concerns.
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London-East Anglia randomised controlled trial of cognitive-behavioural therapy for psychosis. I: effects of the treatment phase.
Elizabeth Kuipers,Philippa Garety,David Fowler,Graham Dunn,Paul Bebbington,Daniel Freeman,Clare Hadley +6 more
TL;DR: CBT for psychosis can improve overall symptomatology, and the findings provide evidence that even a refractory group of clients with a long history of psychosis can engage in talking about psychotic symptoms and their meaning, and this can improve outcome.