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An Oxford University-led project, to significantly improve the health and life prospects of a generation of Africa’s youth, is one of 12 individual studies taking place as part of the new UKRI Global Research Hubs.
PUMA Working Groups
This page provides and overview of the PUMA trial's working groups set up to develop a Multi-arm multi-stage (MAMS) platform for Early Psychosis. You will find the aims rationale and plan for each group below.
PA Early Psychosis Research - PUMA
We are looking to recruit 14 clinicians from Early Intervention in Psychosis services to work with us on the design and setup of a new platform trial. The commitment is 1 PA/4 hours per week for June 2024- October 2026
Early Psychosis Multi-arm, Multi-stage Platform Trial (PUMA)
With lived-experience involvement being central to their design and implementation, multi-arm multi-stage (MAMS) trials have revolutionised clinical trials methodology, updated standard-of-care and resulted in improved patient outcomes in many illnesses. As mechanistically-based experiments they also illuminate underlying biology. The PUMA project aims a similar transformation for the treatment of early psychosis.
Photovoice Exhibition - Experiences of people detained under the Mental Health Act
Photovoice Exhibition
During employment
What opportunities and support are available during your employment in the Department of Psychiatry.
Annual Report 2022
A summary of key events and achievements in Oxford's Department of Psychiatry in 2022.
Trichotillomania - hair pulling disorder
Trichotillomania, or hair-pulling disorder, is an example of a body focused repetitive behaviour (alongside skin-picking and nail-biting). Most people - and many animals - engage in some pulling/picking/biting as part of normal grooming behaviour, but some people find it difficult to stop, resulting in visible damage (lesions, scars, bald patches) and a lot of distress.
Addressing young mums' and dads' low mood And their Parenting (AADAPT)
The AADAPT study is trying to find out whether a new way to support parents aged 16-24 years who are experiencing low mood and stress is helpful. We would like to see whether an online package of information and activities, supported by volunteer parents who were previously young parents themselves (Parent Buddies) is more helpful than a control group.