Olivia Gibbons
Central Mental Hospital
4 Papers
67 Citations
Olivia Gibbons is an academic researcher from Central Mental Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Forensic psychiatry. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Susceptibility (risk and protective) factors for in-patient violence and self-harm: prospective study of structured professional judgement instruments START and SAPROF, DUNDRUM-3 and DUNDRUM-4 in forensic mental health services
Zareena Abidin,Mary Davoren,Mary Davoren,Leena Naughton,Olivia Gibbons,Andrea Nulty,Harry G Kennedy,Harry G Kennedy +7 more
TL;DR: The START and SAPROF, DUNDRUM-3 and DUN DRUM-4 can be used to assess both reduced and increased risk of violence and self-harm in mentally ill in-patients in a secure setting, useful for planning treatment and risk management.
Prospective study of factors influencing conditional discharge from a forensic hospital: the DUNDRUM-3 programme completion and DUNDRUM-4 recovery structured professional judgement instruments and risk
Mary Davoren,Mary Davoren,Zareena Abidin,Leena Naughton,Olivia Gibbons,Andrea Nulty,Brenda Wright,Harry G Kennedy,Harry G Kennedy +8 more
TL;DR: Structured professional judgement instruments should improve the quality, consistency and transparency of clinical recommendations and decision making at mental health review boards.
Prospective in-patient cohort study of moves between levels of therapeutic security: the DUNDRUM-1 triage security, DUNDRUM-3 programme completion and DUNDRUM-4 recovery scales and the HCR-20
Mary Davoren,Mary Davoren,Sarah O'Dwyer,Zareena Abidin,Leena Naughton,Olivia Gibbons,Elaine Doyle,Kim McDonnell,Stephen Monks,Harry G Kennedy,Harry G Kennedy +10 more
TL;DR: Clinicians appear to decide moves based on combinations of current and imminent (dynamic) risk measured by HCR-20 dynamic score and historical seriousness of risk as measured by need for therapeutic security (DUNDRUM-1) in keeping with Scott's formulation of risk and seriousness.
Therapeutic alliance in forensic mental health: coercion, consent and recovery.
Vidis Donnelly,Aideen Lynch,Conal Devlin,Leena Naughten,Olivia Gibbons,Damian Mohan,Harry G Kennedy +6 more
TL;DR: Working alliance and interpersonal trust can be measured reliably even in forensic settings, although the extent to which they measure a mutual quality is unclear.
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