T
Tobias R Spiller
Researcher at University of Zurich
Publications - 41
Citations - 466
Tobias R Spiller is an academic researcher from University of Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Burnout. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 24 publications receiving 205 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
The network approach to posttraumatic stress disorder: a systematic review.
TL;DR: A systematic review of network analysis studies of posttraumatic stress symptoms found that Amnesia was consistently reported to have lowest strength, while there was substantial heterogeneity regarding which nodes had highest strength centrality.
Journal ArticleDOI
Symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder in a clinical sample of refugees: a network analysis
Tobias R Spiller,Matthis Schick,Ulrich Schnyder,Richard A. Bryant,Angela Nickerson,Naser Morina +5 more
TL;DR: Although only 51.0% of participants fulfilled criteria for a probable PTSD diagnosis, emotional cue reactivity showed the highest centrality, emphasizing the importance of emotional trauma reminders in severely traumatized refugees attending an outpatient clinic.
Journal ArticleDOI
Health Care Workers' Mental Health During the First Weeks of the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic in Switzerland-A Cross-Sectional Study
Sonja Weilenmann,Jutta Ernst,Heidi Petry,Monique C. Pfaltz,Onur Sazpinar,Samuel Gehrke,Francesca Paolercio,Roland von Känel,Tobias R Spiller +8 more
TL;DR: The finding that some HCWs had elevated levels of anxiety, depression, and burnout underscores the importance to systematically monitor HCWs' mental health during this ongoing pandemic.
Journal ArticleDOI
On the validity of the centrality hypothesis in cross-sectional between-subject networks of psychopathology.
Tobias R Spiller,Ofir Levi,Ofir Levi,Ofir Levi,Yuval Neria,Yuval Neria,Benjamin Suarez-Jimenez,Benjamin Suarez-Jimenez,Yair Bar-Haim,Amit Lazarov,Amit Lazarov +10 more
TL;DR: This work investigated whether three pre-treatment centrality indices were significantly correlated with the strength of the association between a symptom’s change and the change in the severity of all other symptoms in the network from pre- to post-treatment (Δnode-Δnetwork association).
Journal ArticleDOI
Network analysis of PTSD and depressive symptoms in 158,139 treatment‐seeking veterans with PTSD
Or Duek,Or Duek,Tobias R Spiller,Robert H. Pietrzak,Robert H. Pietrzak,Eiko I. Fried,Ilan Harpaz-Rotem,Ilan Harpaz-Rotem +7 more
TL;DR: In recent years, a new framework for analyzing and understanding posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was introduced; the network approach, but only a limited number of network studies investigated comorbidity.