J
John Gleeson
Researcher at Australian Catholic University
Publications - 163
Citations - 6408
John Gleeson is an academic researcher from Australian Catholic University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 145 publications receiving 5023 citations. Previous affiliations of John Gleeson include University of Melbourne.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Risk factors for relapse following treatment for first episode psychosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis of longitudinal studies.
Mario Alvarez-Jimenez,A. Priede,Sarah E Hetrick,Sarah Bendall,Eoin Killackey,Alexandra G. Parker,Alexandra G. Parker,Patrick D. McGorry,John Gleeson +8 more
TL;DR: Clinical variables and general demographic variables have little impact on relapse rates, but non-adherence with medication, persistent substance use disorder, carers' criticism and poorer premorbid adjustment significantly increase the risk for relapse in FEP.
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Online, social media and mobile technologies for psychosis treatment: a systematic review on novel user-led interventions
Mario Alvarez-Jimenez,Miguel Ángel Alcázar-Córcoles,César González-Blanch,Sarah Bendall,Patrick D. McGorry,John Gleeson +5 more
TL;DR: Preliminary evidence indicated that online and mobile-based interventions show promise in improving positive psychotic symptoms, hospital admissions, socialization, social connectedness, depression and medication adherence.
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Non-pharmacological management of antipsychotic-induced weight gain: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
TL;DR: Adjunctive non-pharmacological interventions, either individual or group interventions, or cognitive-behavioural therapy as well as nutritional counselling were effective in reducing or attenuating antipsychotic-induced weight gain compared with treatment as usual, with treatment effects maintained over follow-up.
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Preventing the Second Episode: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Psychosocial and Pharmacological Trials in First-Episode psychosis
TL;DR: Overall, the available data suggest that FGAs and SGAs have the potential to reduce relapse rates and Cognitive-based individual and family interventions may need to specifically target relapse to obtain relapse prevention benefits that extend beyond those provided by specialist FEP programs.
Journal ArticleDOI
The "online brain": how the Internet may be changing our cognition
Joseph Firth,John Torous,Brendon Stubbs,Josh A. Firth,Genevieve Z. Steiner,Lee Smith,Mario Alvarez-Jimenez,John Gleeson,Davy Vancampfort,Christopher J. Armitage,Jerome Sarris +10 more
TL;DR: How Internet research could be integrated into broader research settings to study how this unprecedented new facet of society can affect the authors' cognition and the brain across the life course is proposed.