Journal article
Prediction of clinical outcomes beyond psychosis in the ultra-high risk for psychosis population
A Polari, HP Yuen, P Amminger, G Berger, E Chen, L deHaan, J Hartmann, C Markulev, P McGorry, D Nieman, M Nordentoft, A Riecher-Rössler, S Smesny, J Stratford, S Verma, A Yung, S Lavoie, B Nelson
Early Intervention in Psychiatry | WILEY | Published : 2021
DOI: 10.1111/eip.13002
Abstract
Aim: Several prediction models have been introduced to identify young people at greatest risk of transitioning to psychosis. To date, none has examined the possibility of developing a clinical prediction model of outcomes other than transition. The aims of this study were to examine the association between baseline clinical predictors and outcomes including, but not limited to, transition to psychosis in young people at risk for psychosis, and to develop a prediction model for these outcomes. Methods: Several evidence-based variables previously associated with transition to psychosis and some important clinical comorbidities experienced by ultra-high risk (UHR) individuals were identified in..
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Awarded by Stanley Medical Research Institute
Funding Acknowledgements
Colonial Foundation; NHMRC Australia Program, Grant/Award Number: 566529; NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship; Stanley Medical Research Institute, Grant/Award Number: 07TGF-1102