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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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The simulation of hallucinations to reduce the stigma of schizophrenia: a systematic review

TL;DR: Several methods have been produced to simulate the auditory and visual hallucinations experienced by people with schizophrenia in order to increase empathy and understanding about the condition as discussed by the authors. However, there has been no review of such methods.
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Effects of training community staff in interventions for substance misuse in dual diagnosis patients with psychosis (COMO study): cluster randomised trial.

TL;DR: A cluster randomised controlled trial was used to investigate the effectiveness of training staff in 13 London community mental health teams to deliver substance misuse interventions to patients with psychosis and comorbid substance misuse (‘dual diagnosis’).
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Needs for care of patients with schizophrenia and the consequences for their informal caregivers- results from the EPSILON multi centre study on schizophrenia.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether needs for care of patients with schizophrenia are related to negative consequences for their informal caregivers, and found that subjective needs are not a good indicator for consequences experienced by the informal care system.
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Can the therapeutic relationship predict 18 month outcomes for individuals with psychosis

TL;DR: A small but significant association was found between service user ratings and instances of psychiatric hospital admissions, self harm and suicide attempts over an 18 month period; clinicians should prioritise interactions that strengthen therapeutic relationships.