Hollie Duff
University College Dublin
5 Papers
12 Citations
Hollie Duff is an academic researcher from University College Dublin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Child abuse & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
A systematic review of reviews of the outcome of noninstitutional child maltreatment
TL;DR: The aim of the systematic review described in this article was to synthesize available high-quality evidence on the outcomes of noninstitutional child maltreatment across the life span to highlight the importance of implementing evidence-based child protection policies and practices to prevent maltreatment and treat child abuse survivors.
139
A Systematic Review of the Outcome of Child Abuse in Long-Term Care
TL;DR: There were significant associations between the experience of child abuse in long-term care and adjustment across the life span in the domains of mental health, physical health, and psychosocial adjustment.
70
A Systematic Review of Reviews of the Outcome of Severe Neglect in Underresourced Childcare Institutions.
TL;DR: Early placement in adoptive or foster families, with access to routine physical and mental health-care service available in developed countries, is the most viable effective intervention for child survivors of severe neglect.
37
Evaluations of self-referential thoughts and their association with components of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated associations among several ACT-consistent factors and how they relate to evaluations of positive and negative self-relevant thoughts, with stronger negative thought believability positively associated with greater levels of psychological distress.
13
Survivors of institutional abuse in long-term child care in Scotland.
Alan Carr,Finiki Nearchou,Hollie Duff,Dearbhaile' Ní Mhaoileoin,Katie Cullen,Annie O’Dowd,Laaura Battigelli +6 more
TL;DR: Evidence-based child protection policies and practices should be implemented to prevent institutional abuse and treat child abuse survivors in Scotland.