Search Results - "Selten, J P"
-
1
Racism and the Social Defeat Hypothesis of Psychosis
Published in European psychiatry (01-06-2022)“…Introduction The social defeat hypothesis of psychosis posits that an outsider status or subordinate position is a common denominator of several psychosis risk…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
2
Social disorganization of neighborhoods and incidence of psychotic disorders: a 7-year first-contact incidence study
Published in Psychological medicine (01-07-2015)“…Environmental factors such as urban birth and ethnic minority position have been related to risk for psychotic disorders. There is some evidence that not only…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
3
Childhood bullying and the association with psychosis in non-clinical and clinical samples: a review and meta-analysis
Published in Psychological medicine (01-12-2012)“…Approximately 11% of schoolchildren are bullied on a regular basis. It has been argued that continuous exposure to stress is related to the development of…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
4
Sexual minority status and psychotic symptoms: findings from the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Studies (NEMESIS)
Published in Psychological medicine (01-01-2014)“…Ethnic minority position is associated with increased risk for psychotic outcomes, which may be mediated by experiences of social exclusion, defeat and…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
5
The influence of ethnic minority background and migration history on recovery in psychotic disorders: A systematic literature review
Published in European psychiatry (01-04-2021)“…Introduction Recovery in psychotic disorders is a concept that evolved through the last decades. Thanks to the contribution of different researchers, together…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
6
Evidence of an excessive gender gap in the risk of psychotic disorder among North African immigrants in Europe: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Published in Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (01-12-2016)“…Purpose Epidemiological studies in the Netherlands have reported an excessive gender gap in the risk for non-affective psychotic disorder (NAPD) among…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
7
Mentalization and Psychosis: A Rationale for the Use of Mentalization Theory to Understand and Treat Non-affective Psychotic Disorder
Published in Journal of contemporary psychotherapy (01-09-2020)“…Social functioning can be severely impaired in non-affective psychotic disorder (NAPD). Current models of psychosis pathogenesis do not tend to focus on social…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
8
Childhood trauma and the treatment for psychotic disorder
Published in Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica (01-06-2014)Get full text
Journal Article -
9
Incidence of psychotic disorders in immigrant groups to The Netherlands
Published in British journal of psychiatry (01-04-2001)“…Previous reports on the incidence of schizophrenia in immigrant groups to The Netherlands were based on hospital data. To compare the incidence of psychotic…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
10
Risk of psychiatric treatment for mood disorders and psychotic disorders among migrants and Dutch nationals in Utrecht, The Netherlands
Published in Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (01-02-2012)“…Purpose While there are consistent reports of a high psychosis rate among certain groups of migrants in Europe, there is little information on their risk for…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
11
The denial of a psychosis epidemic
Published in Psychological medicine (01-05-2010)Get more information
Journal Article -
12
An incidence study of diagnosed autism-spectrum disorders among immigrants to the Netherlands
Published in Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica (01-07-2013)“…Objective To estimate the risk of developing autism‐spectrum disorder (ASD) in children born to immigrants as compared with children of Dutch‐born parents…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
13
Testing Ødegaard's selective migration hypothesis: a longitudinal cohort study of risk factors for non-affective psychotic disorders among prospective emigrants
Published in Psychological medicine (01-03-2015)“…The selection hypothesis posits that the increased rates of psychosis observed among migrants are due to selective migration of people who are predisposed to…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
14
Urbanization and psychosis: a study of 1942-1978 birth cohorts in The Netherlands
Published in Psychological medicine (01-07-1998)“…Urban birth is associated with later schizophrenia. This study examined whether this finding is diagnosis-specific and which individuals are most at risk. All…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
15
Associations between ethnicity and self-reported hallucinations in a population sample of young adults in The Netherlands
Published in Psychological medicine (01-08-2008)“…Psychotic disorders are more common in people from ethnic minorities. If psychosis exists as a continuous phenotype, ethnic disparities in psychotic disorder…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
16
Neuregulin 1: genetic support for schizophrenia subtypes
Published in Molecular psychiatry (01-12-2004)Get full text
Journal Article -
17
-
18
Schizophrenia in Surinamese and Dutch Antillean immigrants to The Netherlands: evidence of an increased incidence
Published in Psychological medicine (01-07-1997)“…Reports of an increased incidence of schizophrenia in Afro-Caribbean immigrants to the UK are a matter of much debate. It is of interest, therefore, that in…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
19
Mentalization-based treatment for psychotic disorder: a rater-blinded, multi-center, randomized controlled trial
Published in Psychological medicine (01-12-2021)“…Impaired mentalizing ability - an impaired ability to understand one's own and other people's behavior in terms of mental states - is associated with social…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
20
Use of illicit substances in a psychosis incidence cohort: a comparison among different ethnic groups in the Netherlands
Published in Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica (01-06-2002)“…Objective: Use of illicit substances has been suggested as an explanation for the increased incidence of psychosis among some immigrant groups. The aim of the…”
Get full text
Journal Article