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Gregory P. Yates
Researcher at King's College London
Publications - 8
Citations - 165
Gregory P. Yates is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Factitious disorder & Munchausen syndrome. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 130 citations.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Factitious disorder: a systematic review of 455 cases in the professional literature
Gregory P. Yates,Marc D. Feldman +1 more
TL;DR: Based on the largest sample of patients with factitious disorder analyzed to date, the findings offer an important first step toward an evidence-based approach to the disorder.
Journal ArticleDOI
The perpetrators of medical child abuse (Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy) – A systematic review of 796 cases
TL;DR: Clinicians are urged to consider mothers with a personal history of childhood maltreatment, obstetric complications, and/or factitious disorder at heightened risk for MCA, from the largest analysis of MCA perpetrators to date.
Journal ArticleDOI
Complex regional pain syndrome type 1 in the medico-legal setting: High rates of somatoform disorders, opiate use and diagnostic uncertainty.
TL;DR: The CRPS diagnosis lacks reliability in medico-legal settings and may cause iatrogenic harm, and patients diagnosed with CRPS involved in litigation have high rates of prior psychopathology and pain-related disability for which opiate use is common.
Book
Dying to be Ill: True Stories of Medical Deception
Marc D. Feldman,Gregory P. Yates +1 more
TL;DR: Feldman as mentioned in this paper describes people's strange motivations to fabricate or induce illness or injury to satisfy deep emotional needs, and explains how people can be lured into a costly, frustrating, and potentially deadly web of deceit.
Sprawcy medycznego krzywdzenia dzieci (przeniesionego zespołu Munchausena) – przegląd systematyczny 796 przypadków
TL;DR: Wprowadzenie. Niewiele wiadomo o sprawcach medycznego krzywdzenia dzieci (MKD, medical child abuse), czesto nazywanego takze przeniesionym zespolem Munchausena lub udzielonym zaburzeniem pozorowanym as mentioned in this paper.