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Helen Christensen

Researcher at University of New South Wales

Publications -  629
Citations -  58443

Helen Christensen is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 116, co-authored 596 publications receiving 48002 citations. Previous affiliations of Helen Christensen include Centre for Mental Health & Arcadia University.

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Online cognitive behaviour training for the prevention of postnatal depression in at-risk mothers: a randomised controlled trial protocol.

TL;DR: It is hypothesised that relative to the control group, the intervention group will show a greater reduction in postnatal distress on the EPDS (primary outcome measure), and the Intervention group will demonstrate lower levels of anxiety and stress and higher levels of parenting confidence following intervention and/or follow-up.
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Are personalised treatments of adult depression finally within reach

TL;DR: Kessler and colleagues suggest that true personalised treatments that can be used in clinical practice are one step closer, bringing us a step closer to more effective treatments, which are effective but by far not effective enough.
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What might interrupt men's suicide? Results from an online survey of men

TL;DR: What factors interrupt suicidal behaviour in men are investigated, and differences according to known suicide risk factors are examined, to identify signs that men are becoming depressed or suicidal.
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Online insomnia treatment and the reduction of anxiety symptoms as a secondary outcome in a randomised controlled trial: The role of cognitive-behavioural factors.

TL;DR: It is suggested that online cognitive behavioral therapy interventions for insomnia are beneficial for reducing anxiety regardless of people’s beliefs about their sleep and insomnia, and this is particularly the case for those with high sleep-threat monitoring.
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Comparison of Age and Time-to-Death in the Dedifferentiation of Late-Life Cognitive Abilities

TL;DR: Age dedifferentiation effects may reflect dementia and other mortality-related pathology rather than being an inevitable outcome of advanced age, as alternative developmental theories for cognitive function must better account for the diversity of late-life abilities and pathology.