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Thomas Niederkrotenthaler
Researcher at Medical University of Vienna
Publications - 177
Citations - 5610
Thomas Niederkrotenthaler is an academic researcher from Medical University of Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Suicide prevention & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 150 publications receiving 3752 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas Niederkrotenthaler include Centers for Disease Control and Prevention & University of Vienna.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Suicide risk and prevention during the COVID-19 pandemic.
David Gunnell,Louis Appleby,Ella Arensman,Keith Hawton,Ann John,Nav Kapur,Murad M. Khan,Rory C. O'Connor,Jane Pirkis,Eric D. Caine,Lai Fong Chan,Shu-Sen Chang,Ying-Yeh Chen,Helen Christensen,Rakhi Dandona,Michael Eddleston,Annette Erlangsen,Jill M. Harkavy-Friedman,Olivia J. Kirtley,Duleeka Knipe,Duleeka Knipe,Flemming Konradsen,Shiwei Liu,Sally McManus,Lars Mehlum,Matthew J. Miller,Paul Moran,Jacqui Morrissey,Christine Moutier,Thomas Niederkrotenthaler,Merete Nordentoft,Siobhan O'Neill,Andrew Page,Michael Phillips,Steve Platt,Maurizio Pompili,Ping Qin,Mohsen Rezaeian,Morton M. Silverman,Mark Sinyor,Steven Stack,Ellen Townsend,Gustavo Turecki,Lakshmi Vijayakumar,Paul S. F. Yip +44 more
TL;DR: The promise of targeting the inflammation pathway in the management of this challenging condition is today somewhat weaker, but this might not be the last word on the potential role of anti-inflammatory drugs in the treatment of bipolar depression.
Journal ArticleDOI
Role of media reports in completed and prevented suicide: Werther v. Papageno effects
Thomas Niederkrotenthaler,Martin Voracek,Arno Herberth,Benedikt Till,Markus Strauss,Elmar Etzersdorfer,Brigitte Eisenwort,Gernot Sonneck +7 more
TL;DR: The impact of suicide reporting may not be restricted to harmful effects; rather, coverage of positive coping in adverse circumstances, as covered in media items about suicidal ideation, may have protective effects.
Journal ArticleDOI
Suicide trends in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic: an interrupted time-series analysis of preliminary data from 21 countries.
Jane Pirkis,Ann John,Sangsoo Shin,Marcos DelPozo-Banos,Vikas Arya,Vikas Arya,Pablo Analuisa-Aguilar,Louis Appleby,Ella Arensman,Ella Arensman,Jason Bantjes,Anna Baran,José Manoel Bertolote,Guilherme Borges,Petrana Brečić,Eric D. Caine,Giulio Castelpietra,Shu-Sen Chang,David Colchester,David Crompton,Marko Ćurković,Eberhard A. Deisenhammer,Chengan Du,Jeremy Dwyer,Annette Erlangsen,Annette Erlangsen,Jeremy S. Faust,Sarah M. Fortune,Andrew Garrett,Devin George,Rebekka Gerstner,Renske Gilissen,Madelyn S. Gould,Keith Hawton,Joseph Kanter,Navneet Kapur,Murad M. Khan,Olivia J. Kirtley,Duleeka Knipe,Duleeka Knipe,Kairi Kõlves,Stuart Leske,Kedar Marahatta,Ellenor Mittendorfer-Rutz,N. G. Neznanov,Thomas Niederkrotenthaler,Emma Nielsen,Merete Nordentoft,Herwig Oberlerchner,Rory C. O'Connor,Melissa Pearson,Michael R. Phillips,Michael R. Phillips,Steve Platt,Paul L. Plener,Paul L. Plener,Georg Psota,Ping Qin,Daniel Radeloff,Christa Rados,Andreas Reif,Christine Reif-Leonhard,Vsevolod Rozanov,Christiane Schlang,Barbara Schneider,Natalia Semenova,Mark Sinyor,Mark Sinyor,Ellen Townsend,Michiko Ueda,Lakshmi Vijayakumar,Roger T. Webb,Manjula Weerasinghe,Gil Zalsman,Gil Zalsman,David Gunnell,Matthew J Spittal +76 more
TL;DR: In this article, the early effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on suicide rates around the world was assessed using real-time suicide data from countries or areas within countries through a systematic internet search and recourse to our networks and the published literature.
Journal ArticleDOI
Changes in suicide rates following media reports on celebrity suicide: a meta-analysis
Thomas Niederkrotenthaler,King-wa Fu,Paul S. F. Yip,Daniel Y. T. Fong,Steven Stack,Qijin Cheng,Jane Pirkis +6 more
TL;DR: Reports on celebrity suicide are associated with increases in suicides, and study region and celebrity type appear to have an impact on the effect size.
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessing the impact of media guidelines for reporting on suicides in Austria: interrupted time series analysis.
TL;DR: The hypothesis that the media guidelines for reporting on suicides are a widely used means of preventing imitative suicides has had an impact on the quality of reporting as well as on suicidal behaviour in Austria is supported.