scispace - formally typeset
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.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Mental health in Europe

TL;DR: The background to these new policies is a clear divide between the countries of western Europe, which have largely completed the process of deinstitutionalisation, and the position in most central and east European states, in which the transition from institutional care to a more balanced mix of services is starting only now.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developing mental health research in sub-Saharan Africa: capacity building in the AFFIRM project.

TL;DR: Having protected time for research is a barrier to carrying out research activities for busy clinicians and adoption of a train-the-trainers model for specialist skills training and strategies for improving the rigor of evaluation of capacity-building activities should be considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic review of frameworks for the interrelationships of mental health evidence and policy in low- and middle-income countries

TL;DR: A systematic review of theories and models identified frameworks on evidence and policy interrelations that differ in their elements and processes and identified agenda-setting as a research theory gap in the context of mental health knowledge translation in LMICs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in treatment status of patients with severe mental illness in rural China, 1994-2015.

TL;DR: Culture-specific, community-based interventions and targeted poverty-alleviation programmes should be developed to improve the early identification, treatment and recovery of individuals with SMI in rural China.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community beds: the future for mental health care?

TL;DR: Home-based and day-patient forms of treatment may not fulfil the needs of all psychiatric patients, and a significant proportion of those who are admitted do need hospital in-patient treatment or its equivalent, although for a shorter period of time than in traditional services.