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Lilly Shanahan

Researcher at University of Zurich

Publications -  125
Citations -  6902

Lilly Shanahan is an academic researcher from University of Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Young adult. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 96 publications receiving 4940 citations. Previous affiliations of Lilly Shanahan include Pennsylvania State University & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Childhood and adolescent psychiatric disorders as predictors of young adult disorders.

TL;DR: Stringent tests of homotypic and heterotypic prediction patterns suggest a more developmentally and diagnostically nuanced picture in comparison with the previous literature.
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Longitudinal Patterns of Anxiety From Childhood to Adulthood: The Great Smoky Mountains Study

TL;DR: Clinically significant anxiety is a common mental health problem to have had by adulthood and there was little evidence to support the consolidation of anxiety disorders, and some evidence to justify reintroduction of DSM-III-R overanxious disorder.
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Emotional distress in young adults during the COVID-19 pandemic: evidence of risk and resilience from a longitudinal cohort study.

TL;DR: Pre-COVID-19 emotional distress was the strongest predictor of during-pandemic emotional distress, followed by during-Pandemic economic and psychosocial stressors, and pre- pandemic social stressors (e.g. bullying victimization and stressful life events).
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Non-compliance with COVID-19-related public health measures among young adults in Switzerland: Insights from a longitudinal cohort study.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors leveraged a prospective-longitudinal cohort study with data before and during the pandemic to describe patterns of noncompliance with COVID-19 related public health measures in young adults and to identify which characteristics increase the risk of non-compliance.
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Adult Functional Outcomes of Common Childhood Psychiatric Problems: A Prospective, Longitudinal Study.

TL;DR: Common, typically moderately impairing, childhood psychiatric problems are associated with a disrupted transition to adulthood even if the problems do not persist into adulthood and evenif the problems are subthreshold.