John Farhall
La Trobe University
112 Papers
472 Citations
John Farhall is an academic researcher from La Trobe University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 102 publications. Previous affiliations of John Farhall include Frankston Hospital & Royal Melbourne Hospital.
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Papers
Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists clinical practice guidelines for the treatment of schizophrenia and related disorders
Patrick D. McGorry,Eoin Killackey,Tim Lambert,Martin Lambert,Henry J. Jackson,D. Codyre,N. James,Christos Pantelis,Jane Pirkis,Peter G. Jones,M. A. Durie,John J. McGrath,Thomas H. McGlashan,Ashok Malla,John Farhall,H. Herman,Barbara Hocking +16 more
TL;DR: The clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) for schizophrenia and related disorders were developed by the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RACP) as mentioned in this paper, with the aim to reduce the impact of schizophrenia on mental health.
375
Quality of Life and Social Isolation Among Caregivers of Adults with Schizophrenia: Policy and Outcomes
TL;DR: Carers still face considerable challenges to their wellbeing as they support people living with mental illness, in spite of progress in the development of policy and services.
126
Coping with hallucinated voices in schizophrenia: a review of self-initiated strategies and therapeutic interventions.
TL;DR: The state of knowledge about strategies used by people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia to cope with hallucinated voices is reviewed, and the role of coping in psychological treatments for persisting symptoms is considered.
118
Acceptance and commitment therapy for psychosis: randomised controlled trial.
Frances Shawyer,John Farhall,John Farhall,Neil Thomas,Neil Thomas,Steven C. Hayes,Robert Gallop,David L. Copolov,David L. Copolov,David J. Castle,David J. Castle +10 more
TL;DR: Improvements reflected the treatment focus on positive symptoms; however, absence of process-measure changes suggests that the ACT intervention used did not manipulate targeted processes beyond befriending.
Recovery After Psychosis: Qualitative Study of Service User Experiences of Lived Experience Videos on a Recovery-Oriented Website.
TL;DR: Making websites with lived experience video content available to service users and mental health workers demonstrates strong potential to support service users’ recovery.