E
Evyn M. Peters
Researcher at University of Saskatchewan
Publications - 29
Citations - 318
Evyn M. Peters is an academic researcher from University of Saskatchewan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Suicidal ideation. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 22 publications receiving 203 citations. Previous affiliations of Evyn M. Peters include University of South Carolina.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Efficacy of Psychostimulants in Major Depressive Episodes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
Roger S. McIntyre,Yena Lee,Aileen J. Zhou,Joshua D. Rosenblat,Evyn M. Peters,Raymond W. Lam,Sidney H. Kennedy,Carola Rong,Jeanette M. Jerrell +8 more
TL;DR: A testable hypothesis is that psychostimulants may be more appropriately tested in select domains of psychopathology (eg, cognitive emotional processing), rather than as “broad-spectrum” antidepressants.
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Mood instability and impulsivity as trait predictors of suicidal thoughts
TL;DR: Impulsivity significantly predicted the presence of suicidal thoughts, but this effect became non-significant with mood instability included in the same model, suggesting impulsivity may be a redundant concept when predicting future suicidal thoughts if mood instability is considered.
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Self-harm presentation across healthcare settings by sex in young people: an e-cohort study using routinely collected linked healthcare data in Wales, UK
Amanda Marchant,Samantha Turner,Lloyd Balbuena,Evyn M. Peters,Dave Williams,Keith Lloyd,Ronan A Lyons,Ann John +7 more
TL;DR: The first study to compare self-harm in people aged 10–24 years across primary care, emergency departments, outpatients and hospital settings in the UK highlights these as important settings for intervention.
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The Relationship between Mood Instability and Suicidal Thoughts
TL;DR: The study found that both males and females were more likely to experience suicidal thinking with higher affective instability, and negative affect independently predict suicidal thoughts.
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Neuroticism and suicide in a general population cohort: results from the UK Biobank Project.
TL;DR: Screening and therapeutic interventions for neuroticism may be important for early suicide prevention and in a subsample who were assessed for mood disorders, neuroticism remained a significant predictor for women.