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Merete Nordentoft

Researcher at University of Copenhagen

Publications -  870
Citations -  50975

Merete Nordentoft is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 89, co-authored 723 publications receiving 36487 citations. Previous affiliations of Merete Nordentoft include Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg & SUNY Downstate Medical Center.

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Exploring protective and risk factors in the home environment in high-risk families – results from the Danish High Risk and Resilience Study—VIA 7

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated associations between risk factors and an adequate home environment of children having a parent diagnosed with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, and found that exposure to inadequate home environment may put the healthy development of familial high-risk children at risk.
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Early intervention services are effective and must be defended

TL;DR: The absence of reliable neurobiological measures of psychosis is a critical gap in developing targeted stage-specific interventions and, till these are available, the staging outlined in Fusar-Poli et al’s paper should be considered as provisional in nature.
Journal Article

Suicide among psychiatric patients

TL;DR: Investigation of the development in the incidence of suicide among psychiatric patients concluded that the majority of investigations have demonstrated an increasing suicide rate even when the increasing numbers of admissions and discharges are taken into consideration.
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From Speech Illusions to Onset of Psychotic Disorder: Applying Network Analysis to an Experimental Measure of Aberrant Experiences

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the network approach to investigate how speech illusions relate to individual symptoms and onset of a psychotic disorder and found that affective, not all, speech illusions were directly associated with hallucinatory experiences.
Posted ContentDOI

Genome-wide association study of febrile seizures identifies seven new loci implicating fever response and neuronal excitability genes

TL;DR: A polygenic risk score based on all genome-wide significant loci was associated within patients with number of hospital admissions with febrile seizures and age at first admission, suggesting potential clinical utility of improved genetic understanding of febRIle seizure genesis.