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Recent research: articles from December journals

I read a lot of research. When I find an article of particular interest I download it to my bibliographic database - EndNote - which currently contains over 20,700 abstracts.

Every few weeks I scan through all the articles I've found interesting in the previous month (in the general areas of stress, health & wellbeing) and then filter them into four narrower, more specific mailings. One is primarily for cognitive-behavioural therapists linked with the British Association for Behavioural & Cognitive Psychotherapies (BABCP) and other CBT organizations around the world. This set of abstracts focuses particularly on cognitive therapy in its many applications (anxiety, depression, psychotic disorders, etc).  Click on BABCP mailing to see the 30 abstracts (mostly from December) that I have listed.

A second, and more recent development, is for people who have expressed an interest in keeping up to date with research relevant to compassion - see the post "Proposal for a BABCP special interest group on compassion" - this month there are 12 abstracts in the Compassion mailing.

A third mailing is to various people involved with Action on Depression Scotland (AOD). AOD is the only charity specifically working for people with depression who live in Scotland.  I served on their Clinical Advisory Board for some years.  These abstracts focus more on depression and many are about antidepressant medication as well as others which overlap with the BABCP mailing on psychotherapy.  Click on AOD mailing to see the 17 abstracts recently sent out.

The fourth mailing is to the editor of the British Holistic Medical Association (BHMA) newsletter. Back in the early 1980's I was on the working party that set up the BHMA. I'm not much involved with them now - partly because many of their original objectives have been achieved and are now mainstream. This month's BHMA mailing contains 48 abstracts covering a multitude of stress, health & wellbeing related subjects including marital adjustment & life satisfaction, physician mindfulness & healthcare quality, extraordinary research on parental olfactory experience producing changed behaviour in both children & grandchildren, the central value placed by individuals on ‘experiencing love', the links between therapists' theoretical orientation and how they behave in both therapeutic & also close personal relationships, the potential value of zinc for depression, and of flaxseed for high blood pressure, and much more. 

AttachmentSize
bhma abstracts.14.01.pdf256.34 KB
babcp abstracts.14.01.pdf181.02 KB
das abstracts.14.01.pdf119.45 KB
compassion abstracts.14.01.pdf86.5 KB
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