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Emily McGlinchey

Researcher at Queen's University Belfast

Publications -  21
Citations -  741

Emily McGlinchey is an academic researcher from Queen's University Belfast. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 14 publications receiving 242 citations.

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Loneliness in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic: Cross-sectional results from the COVID-19 Psychological Wellbeing Study

TL;DR: Supportive interventions to reduce loneliness should prioritise younger people and those with mental health symptoms, and improving emotion regulation and sleep quality, and increasing social support may be optimal initial targets to reduce the impact of COVID-19 regulations on mental health outcomes.
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Examining temporal interactions between loneliness and depressive symptoms and the mediating role of emotion regulation difficulties among UK residents during the COVID-19 lockdown: Longitudinal results from the COVID-19 psychological wellbeing study.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the temporal association between mental health outcomes during the COVID-19 outbreak and found that the longitudinal association between depression and loneliness was reciprocal and depressive symptoms predicted higher loneliness one month later.
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Longitudinal analysis of the UK COVID-19 Psychological Wellbeing Study: Trajectories of anxiety, depression and COVID-19-related stress symptomology.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identified trajectories of anxiety, depression and COVID-19-related traumatic stress (CV19TS) symptomology during the first UK national lockdown and explored risk and protective factors.
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Psychological, social, and situational factors associated with COVID-19 vaccination intentions: A study of UK key workers and non-key workers.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relative influence of relevant psychological, social, and situational factors on intent to engage with a hypothetical COVID-19 vaccine among key workers and non-key workers.
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The COVID-19 Psychological Wellbeing Study: Understanding the Longitudinal Psychosocial Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic in the UK; a Methodological Overview Paper.

TL;DR: The study is in a unique position to make a significant contribution to the growing body of literature to help understand the psychological impact of this pandemic and inform future clinical and research directions that the UK will implement in response to COVID-19.