about
Recent advances in social skills training for schizophreniaCultural variability in the manifestation of expressed emotion.Perceptions of efficacy, expressed emotion, and the course of schizophrenia: the case of emotional overinvolvement.Expressed emotion and sociocultural moderation in the course of schizophrenia.GAP-REACH: a checklist to assess comprehensive reporting of race, ethnicity, and culture in psychiatric publications.Toward the early recognition of psychosis among Spanish-speaking adults on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border.Using the theory of planned behavior to improve treatment adherence in Mexican Americans with schizophreniaFamily problem solving interactions and 6-month symptomatic and functional outcomes in youth at ultra-high risk for psychosis and with recent onset psychotic symptoms: a longitudinal study.Mania following use of ibogaine: A case series.The ability of multifamily groups to improve treatment adherence in Mexican Americans with schizophrenia.Applications of errorless learning for improving work performance in persons with schizophrenia.Biobehavioral treatment and rehabilitation of schizophrenia.Positive family environment predicts improvement in symptoms and social functioning among adolescents at imminent risk for onset of psychosis.Teaching persons with severe mental disabilities to be their own case managers.Consistency of Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale factor structure across a broad spectrum of schizophrenia patients.Issues for DSM-V: the role of culture in psychiatric diagnosis.Evaluation of expressed emotion in schizophrenia: a comparison of Caucasians and Mexican-Americans.Hemispheric asymmetry in depression and mania. A longitudinal QEEG study in bipolar disorder.A qualitative inquiry into the Taiwanese mentally ill persons' difficulties living in the community.Comparative Effectiveness of a Technology-Facilitated Depression Care Management Model in Safety-Net Primary Care Patients With Type 2 Diabetes: 6-Month Outcomes of a Large Clinical Trial.Outcomes of the Chinese Basic Conversation Skill Module (CBCSM) for people with schizophrenia having mild to moderate symptoms and dysfunction in Hong Kong
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description
researcher
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name
A Kopelowicz
@en
A Kopelowicz
@nl
type
label
A Kopelowicz
@en
A Kopelowicz
@nl
prefLabel
A Kopelowicz
@en
A Kopelowicz
@nl
P106
P31
P496
0000-0002-1728-4105