G
Graham Thornicroft
Researcher at King's College London
Publications - 695
Citations - 56137
Graham Thornicroft is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Mental illness. The author has an hindex of 109, co-authored 648 publications receiving 46180 citations. Previous affiliations of Graham Thornicroft include San Antonio River Authority & Public Health Foundation of India.
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Rural vs urban residence and experience of discrimination among people with severe mental illnesses in Ethiopia
Sarah Forthal,Abebaw Fekadu,Girmay Medhin,Medhin Selamu,Graham Thornicroft,Charlotte Hanlon,Charlotte Hanlon +6 more
TL;DR: Persons with SMI living in urban settings report more experience of discrimination than their rural counterparts, which may reflect a downside of wider social opportunities in urban setting.
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Joint decision making and reduced need for compulsory psychiatric admission
TL;DR: It is found that advance statements can reduce the occurrence of compulsory admissions by approximately one-quarter, while community treatment orders, medication compliance enhancement, and integrated treatment measures were ineffective in reducing compulsory admissions.
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Analysis of the barriers of mental distress disclosure in medical inpatients in Taiwan
TL;DR: Communication of mental distress in medical settings was uncommon due to medical or psychosocial barriers in Taiwan, particularly under the influence of stigma in the Chinese societies.
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Effectiveness of enhancing contact model on reducing stigma of mental illness among family caregivers of persons with schizophrenia in rural China: A cluster randomized controlled trial
Mao-Sheng Ran,Yi Zhou Wang,Pei-yi Lu,Xue Weng,Tianyuan Zhang,Shu-Yu Deng,Ming Li,Wei Lu,Irene Yin-Ling Wong,Lawrence H. Yang,Graham Thornicroft,Lin Lu +11 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors conducted a cluster randomized controlled trial in FCPWS in eight rural townships in Xinjin district of Chengdu city in Southwest China, where participants in these townships were randomly allocated to the Enhancing Contact Model (ECM), Psychoeducational Family Intervention (PFI), or Treatment as Usual (TAU) group.