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Stephen V. Faraone

Researcher at State University of New York Upstate Medical University

Publications -  1470
Citations -  155368

Stephen V. Faraone is an academic researcher from State University of New York Upstate Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder & Bipolar disorder. The author has an hindex of 188, co-authored 1427 publications receiving 140298 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen V. Faraone include University of Bergen & National Institute for Health Research.

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Further evidence of an association between maternal smoking during pregnancy and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: findings from a high-risk sample of siblings.

TL;DR: Findings extend the previous findings of an association between maternal smoking during pregnancy and ADHD and highlight the importance of programs aimed at smoking prevention in nonsmoking women and smoking cessation in smoking women of child-bearing age.
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Pregnancy, delivery and infancy complications and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: issues of gene-environment interaction.

TL;DR: A positive association was found between ADHD and PDICs in the probands andPDICs were associated with the correlates of ADHD (i.e., impaired cognitive functioning and poor school performance) and may help clinicians focus on particular complications rather than the wide range of possible perinatal complications.
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Symptoms versus impairment: the case for respecting DSM-IV's Criterion D.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors correlated measures reflecting each construct in four separate, large-scale ADHD research samples and found that the correlation between symptoms and impairment accounted for less than 10% of variance.
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Adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: key conceptual issues

TL;DR: It is concluded that ADHD should be recognised in the same way as other common adult mental health disorders, and that failure to recognise and treat ADHD is detrimental to the wellbeing of many patients seeking help for common mental health problems.