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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Journal ArticleDOI
Service innovations: Coexisting severe mental health and substance use problems: developing integrated services in the UK
Hermine L. Graham,Alex Copello,Max Birchwood,Jim Orford,Dermot P.B. McGovern,George Georgiou,Emma Godfrey +6 more
TL;DR: One of the challenges for services in the UK has been how best to meet the needs of those people who experience severe mental health problems and use drugs and alcohol problematically.
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Cognitive Therapy for Command Hallucinations: Not a Quasi-Neuroleptic
Max Birchwood,Peter Trower +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the efficacy of cognitive therapy (CT) modified in accordance with social rank theory, in a single blind randomised controlled trial, was reported and discussed, and large reductions in compliance behaviour were obtained (effect size = 0.97).
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NICE v. SIGN on psychosis and schizophrenia: same roots, similar guidelines, different interpretations.
Tim Kendall,Craig Whittington,Elizabeth Kuipers,Sonia Johnson,Max Birchwood,Max Marshall,Anthony P. Morrison +6 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that the authors of the editorial appear to have succumbed to bias themselves, and that the NICE guideline has more rigorous methodology.
Journal ArticleDOI
The COMMAND trial of cognitive therapy for harmful compliance with command hallucinations (CTCH): a qualitative study of acceptability and tolerability in the UK.
Max Birchwood,Laura Mohan,Alan Meaden,Nicholas Tarrier,Shôn Lewis,Til Wykes,Linda Davies,Graham Dunn,Emmanuelle Peters,Maria Michail +9 more
TL;DR: Service user experiences of a 9-month cognitive behavioural therapy for command hallucinations in the context of a randomised controlled trial including their views on acceptability and tolerability of the intervention are explored.
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Study protocol for a randomised controlled trial of CBT vs antipsychotics vs both in 14-18-year-olds: Managing Adolescent first episode Psychosis: A feasibility study (MAPS)
Melissa Pyle,Matthew R. Broome,Emmeline Joyce,Graeme MacLennan,John Norrie,Daniel Freeman,Daniel Freeman,David Fowler,Peter M. Haddad,David Shiers,Chris Hollis,Jo Smith,Ashley Liew,Ashley Liew,Rory Byrne,Paul French,Sarah Peters,Jemma Hudson,Linda Davies,Richard Emsley,Alison R. Yung,Alison R. Yung,Max Birchwood,Eleanor Longden,Anthony P. Morrison +24 more
TL;DR: This is the first study to compare APs to PI in an adolescent population with FEP and aimed to establish the feasibility and acceptability of conducting such a trial by recruiting 14–18-year-olds into a feasibility prospective randomised open blinded evaluation (PROBE) design.