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Matthew Bambling

Researcher at University of Queensland

Publications -  71
Citations -  2832

Matthew Bambling is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Mindfulness. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 63 publications receiving 2187 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthew Bambling include Australian Catholic University & Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital.

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The Role of Telehealth in Reducing the Mental Health Burden from COVID-19.

TL;DR: This research highlights the need to understand more fully the role of emotion and self-consistency in the development of healthy emotions in the context of health services research.
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Clinical supervision: Its influence on client-rated working alliance and client symptom reduction in the brief treatment of major depression

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the impact of clinical supervision on client working alliance and symptom reduction in the brief treatment of major depression in a setting with 127 clients with a diagnosis of depression to 127 supervised or unsupervised therapists to receive eight sessions of problems-solving treatment.

Clinical supervision: Its influence on client-rated working alliance and client symptom reduction in the brief treatment of major depression

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the impact of clinical supervision on client working alliance and symptom reduction in the brief treatment of major depression, and found that supervision had a significant effect on working alliance from the first session of therapy.
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Online counselling: The motives and experiences of young people who choose the Internet instead of face to face or telephone counselling

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a Consensual Qualitative Research methodology to explore the motivations and experiences of young people who utilize the Internet for counselling over other counselling media, and found that five domains relevant to the adolescents' motives and experiences and the frequency of categories within and across cases were analyzed.
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Telephone and online counselling for young people: A naturalistic comparison of session outcome, session impact and therapeutic alliance

TL;DR: Results suggested that telephone counselling is associated with better counselling outcomes, higher session impact and stronger counselling alliance when compared with online counselling, and the greatest communication efficiency of telephone counselling enables more counselling work to be undertaken in the time it is undertaken.