Daria Brennan
BlackRock
6 Papers
2 Citations
Daria Brennan is an academic researcher from BlackRock. The author has contributed to research in topics: Disengagement theory & Psychoeducation. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications. Previous affiliations of Daria Brennan include Mental Health Services.
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Papers
First-Episode Psychosis and Disengagement From Treatment: A Systematic Review
Roisin Doyle,Niall Turner,Felicity Fanning,Daria Brennan,Laoise Renwick,Elizabeth Lawlor,Mary Clarke +6 more
TL;DR: There is a need for a clearly defined and agreed measurement of service engagement and disengagement across FEP services and those who enter an FEP program without family involvement and support as well as those who maintain persistent substance abuse are at higher risk of disengagement.
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A randomised controlled trial of carer-focussed multi-family group psychoeducation in bipolar disorder.
Kevin Madigan,Patrick Egan,Daria Brennan,S. Hill,B. Maguire,F. Horgan,Chris Flood,Anthony Kinsella,E. O'Callaghan,E. O'Callaghan +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, a RCT of family psycho education, 47 carers of 34 patients were allocated to one of three groups; Multifamily Group Psychoeducation, Solution Focussed Group Therapy or Treatment as Usual, and carers in both the MFGP intervention and the SFGP arm demonstrated greater knowledge and reduction in burden than those in the TAU arm.
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First-EpisodePsychosisandDisengagement FromTreatment:ASystematicReview
Roisin Doyle,Felicity Fanning,Daria Brennan,Mary Clarke +3 more
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: Those who enter an FEP program without family involvement and support as well as those who maintain persistent substance abuse are at higher risk of disengagement, and there is a need for a clearly defined and agreed measurement of service engagement and disengagement across FEP services.
A multi-center, randomized controlled trial of a group psychological intervention for psychosis with comorbid cannabis dependence over the early course of illness
Kevin Madigan,Kevin Madigan,Daria Brennan,Daria Brennan,Elizabeth Lawlor,Elizabeth Lawlor,Niall Turner,Niall Turner,Anthony Kinsella,Anthony Kinsella,John J. O'Connor,Vincent Russell,John L. Waddington,Eadbhard O'Callaghan,Eadbhard O'Callaghan +14 more
TL;DR: Over the early phase of psychotic illness, group psychological interventions for those with comorbid cannabis dependence improved subjective quality of life, however, this was not associated with reduction in use of cannabis or improvement in clinical outcomes.