G
Glyn Lewis
Researcher at University College London
Publications - 768
Citations - 57050
Glyn Lewis is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Longitudinal study. The author has an hindex of 113, co-authored 734 publications receiving 49316 citations. Previous affiliations of Glyn Lewis include University College Hospital & St Bartholomew's Hospital.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Geographic Variation in the Prevalence of Common Mental Disorders in Britain: A Multilevel Investigation
TL;DR: Findings suggest that future interventions should target persons and households rather than places, and further research is first required to establish whether other (particularly smaller) areas lead to similar results.
Journal ArticleDOI
Studying suicide from the life course perspective: implications for prevention
David Gunnell,Glyn Lewis +1 more
TL;DR: Suicide prevention programmes might usefully focus on two discrete areas: the prevention of the psychiatric illnesses that precede suicide and tackling those risk factors particular to suicide such as media influences, help-seeking, the availability of methods and the medical management of self-harm.
Journal ArticleDOI
A systematic review of the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of pharmacological and psychological interventions for the management of obsessive–compulsive disorder in children/adolescents and adults
Petros Skapinakis,Deborah M Caldwell,William Hollingworth,Peter Bryden,Naomi A. Fineberg,Paul M. Salkovskis,Nicky J Welton,Helen Baxter,David Kessler,Rachel Churchill,Glyn Lewis +10 more
TL;DR: In adults, Psychological interventions, clomipramine, SSRIs or combinations of these are all effective, whereas in children and adolescents, psychological interventions, either as monotherapy or combined with specific SSRis, were more likely to be effective.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cost-effectiveness of therapist-delivered online cognitive–behavioural therapy for depression: randomised controlled trial
TL;DR: Online CBT delivered by a therapist in real time is likely to be cost-effective compared with usual care if society is willing to pay at least £20 000 per QALY; it could be a useful alternative to face-to-face CBT.
Journal ArticleDOI
Heritability of social cognitive skills in children and adolescents.
TL;DR: Social cognition appears to be under considerable genetic influence in the population and shows significant male–female differences, with younger twins showing greater genetic influence on social cognition.