M
Max Birchwood
Researcher at University of Warwick
Publications - 268
Citations - 20099
Max Birchwood is an academic researcher from University of Warwick. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 259 publications receiving 18491 citations. Previous affiliations of Max Birchwood include University of Birmingham & Royal College of Psychiatrists.
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Attachment: developmental pathways to affective dysregulation in young people at ultra-high risk of developing psychosis.
TL;DR: Clinical implications for the treatment of affective dysregulation in young people at UHR in relation to their attachment styles have been discussed and there was no support for a mediating role of social anxiety between attachment styles and depression.
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Predicting compliance with command hallucinations: anger, impulsivity and appraisals of voices' power and intent.
TL;DR: The tendency to appraise the voice as powerful, to be impulsive, to experience anger and to regulate anger were significantly associated with compliance with command hallucinations to do harm.
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Personal beliefs about illness questionnaire-revised (PBIQ-R): Reliability and validation in a first episode sample
TL;DR: Although the PBIQ-R was not designed to produce an overall 'personal beliefs about illness' score, its five subscales provide a rapid and valid method to assess and measure common psychological reactions to a first episode of psychosis.
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Pathways to care in subjects at high risk for psychotic disorders - a European perspective.
Heinrich Graf von Reventlow,Seza Krüger-Özgürdal,Stephan Ruhrmann,Frauke Schultze-Lutter,Frauke Schultze-Lutter,Andreas Heinz,Paul Patterson,Paul Patterson,Markus Heinimaa,Peter Dingemans,Paul French,Max Birchwood,Raimo K. R. Salokangas,Don H. Linszen,Don H. Linszen,Anthony P. Morrison,Joachim Klosterkötter,Georg Juckel +17 more
TL;DR: The study underlines the need for regionally adapted implementation of early detection and intervention programs within respective mental health and health care networks, including enhancing public awareness of early psychosis.
Journal Article
Early intervention in psychosis
TL;DR: The early phase of psychosis may be considered as a critical period that offers major opportunities for secondary prevention of impairments and disabilities accompanying psychosis as discussed by the authors, and several studies of first-episode schizophrenics support the critical period hypothesis and indicate that progress can be made.