Dinesh Bhugra
King's College London
735 Papers
4K Citations
Dinesh Bhugra is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 682 publications. Previous affiliations of Dinesh Bhugra include World Psychiatric Association & University of Cambridge.
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Papers
Sexual dysfunction in Asian couples.
Dinesh Bhugra,Christine Cordle +1 more
TL;DR: There are many ways in which people who stammer can be helped, but the one way above all others is to give us complete attention while the authors concentrate all their efforts on the verbal steeplechase that lies ahead.
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Depression in North India comparison of symptoms and life events with ocher patient groups.
TL;DR: Study of family history and life events suggests that in those with a negative family history, the onset of depression was more likely to be related to a significant life event the commonest being family conjunct.
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What does COVID mean for UK mental health care
TL;DR: The coronavirus disease (COVID) pandemic is the biggest disaster United Kingdom has seen for many decades and this is the first UK mass trauma in the presence of the National Health Service in which developed mental health and social care support systems can offer help.
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Mental Disorder in People with Debt in the General Population
R. Jenkins,Paul Bebbington,Terry Brugha,Dinesh Bhugra,Michael Farrell,Jeremy W. Coid,N Singleton,H Meltzer +7 more
- 01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: This article found that people with debt have higher rates of neurosis, psychosis, alcohol dependence, and drug dependence compared with people with no debt, and that disconnected utilities, trying to reduce consumption of utilities and borrowing from informal sources are all predictors of mental disorders.
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Physical or psychological? - a comparative study of causal attribution for chronic fatigue in Brazilian and British primary care patients
TL;DR: This study compared causal attribution of patients with unexplained chronic fatigue in Brazil and Britain and found that causal attribution influences symptom experience, help‐seeking behaviour and prognosis in chronic fatigue syndrome.
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