L
Leanne Hides
Researcher at University of Queensland
Publications - 270
Citations - 9415
Leanne Hides is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 242 publications receiving 6803 citations. Previous affiliations of Leanne Hides include University of Technology, Sydney & University of Wollongong.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Do we do what we know works, and if not why not?
Eoin Killackey,Anthony F. Jorm,Mario Alvarez-Jimenez,Terence V. McCann,Leanne Hides,Anne-Laure Couineau +5 more
TL;DR: There have always been a range of treatments for mental illness as mentioned in this paper, such as blood letting, exorcism, confinement, dietary interventions, environmental interventions, talking therapies, industrial therapies, insulin comas, and ice baths among many others.
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Screening and intervention for mental health problems in alcohol and other drug settings: can training change practitioner behaviour?
Nicole K. Lee,Linda Jenner,Amanda L. Baker,Alison Ritter,Leanne Hides,Josephine Norman,Frances Kay-Lambkin,Kate Hall,Fiona Dann,Jacqui Cameron +9 more
TL;DR: There were significant improvements in detection after training and supervision, with detection rates almost doubling in this time and promise for the implementation of mental health intervention in AOD services.
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A big night out getting bigger: Alcohol consumption, arrests and crowd numbers, before and after legislative change.
TL;DR: People were substantially more inebriated as they entered the NEDs after the legislative change, with approximately 50% fewer people not preloading after the new laws.
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Australia's Adonis: Understanding what motivates young men's lifestyle choices for enhancing their appearance
TL;DR: This article explored men's identification with a muscularity-centred subculture and what contributes to the pursuit of a masculine body image defined by muscularity, and found that increasing numbers of young Australian men are training and dieting to attain high muscle mass and low body fat and using steroids and performance and image enhancing drugs to expedite this process.
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A Web-Based Program for Cannabis Use and Psychotic Experiences in Young People (Keep It Real): Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial.
Leanne Hides,Amanda L. Baker,Melissa M. Norberg,Jan Copeland,Catherine Quinn,Zoe Walter,Janni Leung,Stoyan Stoyanov,David J. Kavanagh +8 more
TL;DR: If effective, the accessibility and scalability of Keep it Real could help reduce growing public health concerns about the significant social, economic, and health impacts of cannabis use.