Childhood Abdominal Pain May Be Linked to Disordered Eating in Teenagers
13 May 2021
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Early intervention Mental Health
New research shows that people who suffer from recurrent abdominal pain in childhood may be more likely to have disordered eating as teenagers.
Messaging Focused on Personal Rather Than Collective Benefits is More Effective for COVID-19 Vaccination
13 May 2021
The largest ever study of COVID-19 vaccine messaging shows that emphasising the personal benefits of vaccination may be the most effective way to persuade people who are sceptical about the jab.
Future-Proofing Mental Health
10 May 2021
COVID-19 Early intervention Mental Health
UK academics are calling for targets for mental health research in order to meet the healthcare challenges of the next decade. Published today in Journal of Mental Health, researchers set out four overarching goals that will speed up implementation of mental health research and give a clear direction for researchers and funders to focus their efforts when it comes to better understanding the treatment of mental health.
Children and Adolescents’ Mental Health: One Year On
5 May 2021
COVID-19 Child and adolescent Mental Health
Parents and carers reported that behavioural, emotional and attentional difficulties in their children changed considerably throughout the past year, increasing in times of national lockdown and decreasing as restrictions eased and schools reopened, according to the latest Co-SPACE (COVID-19 Supporting Parents, Adolescents, and Children in Epidemics) study, led by experts at the University of Oxford.
Oxford Course on Systematic Reviews & Meta-Analyses - 16-18 June 2021
20 April 2021
This online course is specifically designed for psychiatrists, psychologists, mental health professionals, mental health pharmacists and neuroscientists with an interest in evidence synthesis and evidence-based practice, although it is open to all.
New UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator Brings Ethical Thinking into Pandemic Policy-Making
15 April 2021
The UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator, which launched today, harnesses and mobilises the UK’s internationally renowned expertise in ethics research. Four major UK universities and the Nuffield Council on Bioethics form the collaborative.
Risk of Rare Blood Clotting Higher for COVID-19 than for Vaccines
15 April 2021
Researchers at the University of Oxford have today reported that the risk of the rare blood clotting known as cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) following COVID-19 infection is around 100 times greater than normal, several times higher than it is post-vaccination or following influenza.
No Evidence of Significant Increase in Risk of Suicide in First Months of Pandemic
13 April 2021
COVID-19 Mental Health Suicide
A new observational study is the first to examine suicides occurring during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in multiple countries and finds that suicide numbers largely remained unchanged or declined in the pandemic’s early months, however continued monitoring is needed.
Largest study to date suggests link between COVID-19 infection and subsequent mental health and neurological conditions
7 April 2021
One in three COVID-19 survivors received a neurological or psychiatric diagnosis within six months of infection with the SARS-CoV-2 virus, an observational study of more than 230,000 patient health records published in The Lancet Psychiatry journal estimates.
Opportunities for Final Goodbyes Must be Prioritised in COVID-19 Pandemic
31 March 2021
COVID-19 Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Mental Health
Bereaved relatives described the ongoing pain of being absent at the end of a loved-one's life. Many had not seen their relative for weeks or months due to the pandemic. Opportunities must be prioritised for essential connections between families at end-of-life care.
New Transatlantic Partnership will Transform Research and Clinical Landscapes in Mental Health
30 March 2021
The new partnership between Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, the University of Oxford, the University of Toronto, and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto, will enable the development of key structures to facilitate collaboration.
Seven in Ten Patients Hospitalised with COVID-19 Not Fully Recovered After Five Months
29 March 2021
The majority of survivors who left hospital following COVID-19 did not fully recover five months after discharge and continued to experience negative impacts on their physical and mental health, as well as ability to work, according to results released by the PHOSP-COVID study.
Healthy Start, Happy Start Study
23 March 2021
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Early intervention Mental Health
Healthy Start, Happy start is a randomised controlled trial that tested the clinical- and cost-effectiveness of a brief parenting programme - Video-feedback Intervention to promote Positive Parenting and Sensitive Discipline (VIPP-SD).
Oxford Awarded Major Funding to Probe Childhood Poverty and Social Inequalities
22 March 2021
Awards Child and adolescent Mental Health
Ground-breaking multi-disciplinary research is to be launched today by the University of Oxford into the impact of poverty and social inequalities in early childhood, thanks to major funding from the Leverhulme Trust.
New Way of Understanding Dissociation Could Improve Patient Care
25 February 2021
New research has developed a novel measure of dissociative experiences that share a subjective 'felt sense of anomaly'. This new approach could revolutionise how clinicians understand dissociative experiences across a range of mental health disorders, and how they work with patients with dissociation in the future.
Covid-19 vaccination programme: where do people with mental health difficulties lie within the order of priority?
18 February 2021
A new blog authored by mental health clinicians and researchers in the Department of Psychiatry and Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, and published in thebmjopinion, discusses the priority groups for COVID-19 vaccinations.
New Analysis Challenges Guidelines on Treating Anorexia Nervosa
18 February 2021
Mental Health Psychological therapy
A new analysis, published in The Lancet Psychiatry, has shown a lack of strong evidence to support current guidance on psychological therapies for treating anorexia nervosa over expert treatment as usual.
Children’s Mental Health Worse in the New Lockdown
17 February 2021
Anxiety COVID-19 Child and adolescent Early intervention Mental Health Psychological therapy
The proportion of secondary school aged girls with emotional problems in January 2021 was at the highest level reported since March 2020, highlights latest report from the Co-SPACE study. It also shows parent and carer reported behavioural, emotional, and restless/attentional difficulties in their offspring have increased again since the latest national lockdown was introduced.
IF Funds New VR Treatment for Young People with Schizophrenia
16 February 2021
The International Foundation has awarded Professor Daniel Freeman and team in the Department of Psychiatry a £1 million grant to develop and test a virtual reality program to help young people with schizophrenia increase their self-confidence.
Dame Fiona Caldicott
16 February 2021
Dame Fiona Caldicott sadly passed away yesterday. She was Principal of Somerville College, Oxford, from 1996 until 2012, also serving as Pro Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University, responsible for personnel and equal opportunities. From 2009 until 2019 she was chair of Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.