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Phillip J. Tully
Researcher at University of Adelaide
Publications - 143
Citations - 4283
Phillip J. Tully is an academic researcher from University of Adelaide. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Depression (differential diagnoses). The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 129 publications receiving 3330 citations. Previous affiliations of Phillip J. Tully include Flinders Medical Centre & University of Freiburg.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Depression, anxiety, and cardiac morbidity outcomes after coronary artery bypass surgery: a contemporary and practical review.
Phillip J. Tully,Robert A. Baker +1 more
TL;DR: Practical advice is described for clinicians taking into consideration possible screening aids to improve recognition of anxiety and depression among CABG surgery patients, and an overview of contemporary interventions and randomized, controlled trials are described.
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A review of the affects of worry and generalized anxiety disorder upon cardiovascular health and coronary heart disease
TL;DR: Worry and GAD were commonly associated with blood pressure and diagnosed hypertension or medication use in both disease-free and established CHD populations, and no evidence was found to support worry being beneficial to cardiovascular function or conducive to health promoting behaviors.
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Anxiety and depression as risk factors for mortality after coronary artery bypass surgery
TL;DR: Preoperative anxiety symptoms were significantly associated with increased mortality risk after adjustment for known mortality risk factors, and the simultaneous role of anxiety and depression on mortality following CABG was explored.
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The role of depression and anxiety symptoms in hospital readmissions after cardiac surgery
TL;DR: The results lend further support to previous research that has shown the symptoms of depression and anxiety are associated with morbidity following coronary artery bypass graft surgery.
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The Structure of Anxiety and Depression in a Normative Sample of Younger and Older Australian Adolescents
TL;DR: The results of the current study suggest that the theoretical tripartite structure of depression and anxiety is robust and applicable among Australian youth.