P
Paul French
Researcher at Manchester Metropolitan University
Publications - 127
Citations - 5061
Paul French is an academic researcher from Manchester Metropolitan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Cognitive therapy. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 119 publications receiving 4441 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul French include Mental Health Services & Greater Manchester West Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive therapy for the prevention of psychosis in people at ultra-high risk: randomised controlled trial.
Anthony P. Morrison,Paul French,Walford L,Shôn Lewis,A. Kilcommons,Joanne Green,Sophie Parker,Richard P. Bentall +7 more
TL;DR: Cognitive therapy appears to be an acceptable and efficacious intervention for people at high risk of developing psychosis.
Journal ArticleDOI
A systematic review and meta-analysis of exercise interventions in schizophrenia patients
TL;DR: Interventions that implement a sufficient dose of exercise, in supervised or group settings, can be feasible and effective interventions for schizophrenia.
Journal ArticleDOI
Preventing a first episode of psychosis: Meta-analysis of randomized controlled prevention trials of 12 month and longer-term follow-ups
Mark van der Gaag,Filip Smit,Andreas Bechdolf,Paul French,Don H. Linszen,Alison R. Yung,Alison R. Yung,Patrick D. McGorry,Pim Cuijpers +8 more
TL;DR: A meta-analysis can demonstrate the effectiveness of the efforts to prevent or postpone a first episode of psychosis and Integrated psychological interventions need replication with more methodologically sound studies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Early detection and intervention evaluation for people at risk of psychosis: multisite randomised controlled trial
Anthonty P. Morrison,Paul French,Suzanne L. K. Stewart,Max Birchwood,David Fowler,Andrew Gumley,Peter B. Jones,Richard P. Bentall,Shôn Lewis,Graham K. Murray,Paul Patterson,Kat Brunet,Jennie Conroy,Sophie Parker,T Reilly,Rory Byrne,Linda Davies,Graham Dunn +17 more
TL;DR: Cognitive therapy plus monitoring did not significantly reduce transition to psychosis or symptom related distress but reduced the severity of psychotic symptoms in young people at high risk of psychosis.
Journal ArticleDOI
A randomized controlled trial of cognitive behavioral therapy for individuals at clinical high risk of psychosis.
Jean Addington,Irvin Epstein,Lu Liu,Paul French,Paul French,Katherine M. Boydell,Robert B. Zipursky +6 more
TL;DR: Both the results of this study and the possible explanations have significant implications for early detection and intervention in the pre-psychotic phase and for designing future treatments.