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1 phrenia or a bipolar disorder (ie, a serious mental illness).
2 patients with breast cancer with and without mental illness.
3 pproach for early screening and detection of mental illness.
4 forts to further our understanding of severe mental illness.
5 rial dynamics are also associated with major mental illness.
6 then compared with those of patients without mental illness.
7 hood behavior problems associated with later mental illness.
8 ification and the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness.
9 entification of individuals at high risk for mental illness.
10 otein could be a major mechanism in sporadic mental illness.
11 ate the human, social, and economic costs of mental illness.
12  inhibitory control deficits associated with mental illness.
13 borne viral infection in people with serious mental illness.
14 ms in early childhood that can presage later mental illness.
15 or behavioral control and may have a role in mental illness.
16 h a significant role of DISC1 misassembly in mental illness.
17 impairments in this chronic and debilitating mental illness.
18 e understanding, prediction and treatment of mental illness.
19 n risk factors such as a parental history of mental illness.
20 ism linking early life risk factors to adult mental illness.
21 ing antipsychotics and/or those with serious mental illness.
22 the causal neural interactions that underlie mental illness.
23 ay underlie, in part, the pathophysiology of mental illness.
24 aspects of health care for people with major mental illness.
25 abuse in families of origin, disability, and mental illness.
26 ders, including schizophrenia, a devastating mental illness.
27 ing hypotheses for the mechanistic causes of mental illness.
28 to explain the link between urbanization and mental illness.
29 chanisms that protect against stress-related mental illness.
30 mmonly used by a large number of people with mental illness.
31 n neurobiological substrate may exist across mental illness.
32 =806,835), of whom 11,343 persons had severe mental illness.
33 or overweight and obese persons with serious mental illness.
34 sponse to traumatic memory recall leading to mental illness.
35 597, which has been strongly linked to major mental illness.
36  potential players in the pathophysiology of mental illness.
37 abolic disorders in schizophrenia and severe mental illness.
38 e than the behavioral symptoms that classify mental illness.
39 might be possible in the care of people with mental illness.
40 acteristics of trafficked people with severe mental illness.
41 rlier on average than persons without severe mental illness.
42  victims were killed by another patient with mental illness.
43  such as with friends or family members with mental illness.
44  US adults used prescription medications for mental illness.
45 bility of DAT dysfunction to impact risk for mental illness.
46  understanding the pathophysiology of severe mental illness.
47 ate investigating head injury and subsequent mental illness.
48  mental illness compared with people without mental illness.
49 to improve the lives of millions affected by mental illness.
50 guage produced by adult patients with severe mental illness.
51                Depression is a heterogeneous mental illness.
52 hed as a robust genetic risk factor in major mental illness.
53 utes to the emergence of individual risk for mental illness.
54  of general liability as individual risk for mental illness.
55 e, training, and research; and beliefs about mental illness.
56  health of people with or at risk of serious mental illness.
57 1.43%) individuals had a diagnosis of severe mental illness.
58  candidate protein in the pathology of major mental illness.
59 rocess underlying the development of chronic mental illness.
60 Nearly 3% of patients had preexisting severe mental illness.
61 for the overrepresented group of people with mental illness.
62 ding influences shared by smoking and severe mental illness.
63 ive functions that are commonly disrupted in mental illness.
64 uman brain function associated with risk for mental illness.
65 e positively associated with PTSD and severe mental illness.
66  risk factors for BBVs in people with severe mental illness.
67 illness are two of the most serious forms of mental illness.
68 cohol dependence in outpatients with serious mental illness.
69 e brain function, behavior, and the risk for mental illness.
70 aging of dopamine receptors in patients with mental illnesses.
71 nce in outpatients with co-occurring serious mental illnesses.
72 irments in cognitive flexibility observed in mental illnesses.
73 ated in the pathophysiology of these complex mental illnesses.
74 ith heightened risk for depression and other mental illnesses.
75 ted with cognitive and emotional deficits in mental illnesses.
76 ated executive function impaired in multiple mental illnesses.
77 t is likely relevant for a number of chronic mental illnesses.
78 al signatures of core dysfunctions underling mental illnesses.
79  of this protein in a variety of devastating mental illnesses.
80 of new strategies to treat stress-associated mental illnesses.
81 ased nature experience to the development of mental illness?
82 ple and is epidemiologically linked to major mental illnesses(2) and cognitive impairment(3).
83  groups: no mental health (19%) versus other mental illness (23%) versus SMI (27%; chi(2) = 5.11; df
84 zed controlled trial, 107 people with severe mental illness (46% with schizophrenia or schizoaffectiv
85                          Our estimates place mental illness a distant first in global burden of disea
86 s to recognise and classify posts related to mental illness according to 11 disorder themes.
87 al illness to show that the global burden of mental illness accounts for 32.4% of years lived with di
88 e mental illness compared with those without mental illness after adjusting for age, income, race, et
89 , with multiple risk factors, such as severe mental illness, alcohol abuse, a painful loss, exposure
90 milar in different ethnic groups with severe mental illness, although the south Asian group had a red
91 measures were the occurrence and severity of mental illness among those who underwent strabismus surg
92 ,052 (9.3%) persons with a history of severe mental illness and 58,683 (7.4%) persons without a histo
93                         Persons with serious mental illness and a body mass index (BMI) >25 receiving
94                       Depression is a common mental illness and a leading cause of disability.
95  depressive disorder (MDD) is a debilitating mental illness and a major cause of lost productivity wo
96 male, 44% nonwhite) outpatients with serious mental illness and alcohol dependence receiving treatmen
97 ve quality of care for patients with serious mental illness and cardiovascular risk factors.
98 d exception rates for BP indicators in major mental illness and chronic kidney disease and BMI indica
99 c kidney disease and BMI indicators in major mental illness and diabetes.
100 tiveness of these alternative approaches for mental illness and discuss challenges in research.
101 iews the data relating adult neurogenesis to mental illness and discusses where research needs to hea
102 iry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness and from the Mental Health Minimum Datase
103 sorder (BD) is a common and highly heritable mental illness and genome-wide association studies (GWAS
104 her prevalence of BBVs in people with severe mental illness and identify interventions preventing inf
105 ence interval], 1.42 [1.35-1.47]), driven by mental illness and injury and/or poisoning.
106 ted by CHRNA7 variants associated with later mental illness and is related to their enhanced cerebral
107 n offspring in a MVC experience considerable mental illness and marital disruption.
108 works and canonical pathways associated with mental illness and molecular signaling processes (e.g.,
109  experiences similarly affect development of mental illness and neurogenesis; and ablation of new neu
110       A total of 447 patients with a serious mental illness and one or more cardiometabolic risk fact
111 indings is transforming the understanding of mental illness and represents a hopeful sign that the ap
112 prevalence of smoking in people with serious mental illness and the effectiveness of available smokin
113      It has drawn attention to the burden of mental illness and to the relative gap in mental health
114 e a simple web-based risk calculator (Oxford Mental Illness and Violence tool [OxMIV]).
115 sted for differential risks for MD and other mental illnesses and cognitive differences between subty
116  (SES) are at increased risk of physical and mental illnesses and tend to die at an earlier age [1-3]
117 1.28 for PTSD and 1.28, 1.16-1.41 for severe mental illness) and the number of social integration str
118 ly associated with the development of severe mental illness, and a long follow-up period is needed to
119 patients with breast cancer with preexisting mental illness, and elderly women are of special interes
120 k taking are common in patients with serious mental illness, and have severe clinical repercussions i
121 nical care for prisoners, and substance use, mental illness, and infectious disease further complicat
122 w they contribute to risk and resilience for mental illness, and inform personalized treatment opport
123  psychosis, which are markers of severity of mental illness, and older age, which is a marker of chro
124  psychosis, which are markers of severity of mental illness, and older age, which is a marker of chro
125 tal disorders (eg, mental disorders, serious mental illness, and severe mental illness), specific dia
126 risks for the next generation (eg, violence, mental illness, and substance use).
127 f stimulation protocols for the treatment of mental illnesses, and the improvement of perception and
128 ce, when there is a peak in the emergence of mental illness, anxiety disorders in particular.
129                         Patients with severe mental illness are at increased risk for cardiovascular
130                          People with serious mental illness are at risk of blood-borne viral infectio
131 ssments of substance use in individuals with mental illness are based on population surveys that do n
132 elevated glucocorticoids, stress, aging, and mental illness are each linked to decreased apical dendr
133                           Stress, aging, and mental illness are each linked to decreased prefrontal p
134 which schizophrenia and patients with severe mental illness are susceptible to cardiometabolic disord
135                            We defined severe mental illness as a clinical diagnosis of schizophrenia,
136 teins in the brains of patients with chronic mental illness as a result of disruptions in proteostasi
137  Criteria (RDoC) framework for understanding mental illnesses as brain circuit disorders that extend
138 to drug misuse) with people who have serious mental illness, as well as offering testing and treatmen
139      Bipolar disorder (BD) is a debilitating mental illness associated with high costs to diagnosed i
140 84 children identified were diagnosed with a mental illness at a mean age of 23.3 years (range, 6 to
141               The high risk of patients with mental illness being victims of homicide is an important
142 individuals with a valid diagnosis of severe mental illness between Jan 1, 2007, and Dec 31, 2014, fr
143 ss of a family member may cause physical and mental illness, but an association between bereavement a
144  approaches to be promising for treatment of mental illness, but most clinical trials included in the
145 enia-1 (DISC1) protein is a driver for major mental illness by influencing neurodevelopmental process
146 illness compared with persons without severe mental illness by linking data from Danish national regi
147  used approaches underestimate the burden of mental illness by more than a third.
148                         However, people with mental illness can also be victims of violence.
149 polar disorder (BD) is a genetically complex mental illness characterized by severe oscillations of m
150  for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a mental illness characterized by the recurring avoidance
151 disorders (EDs) are severe, life-threatening mental illnesses characterized by marked disturbances in
152 c rat model for a subset of sporadic chronic mental illness (CMI), which modestly overexpresses human
153 ndromes like bipolar disorder or why so many mental illnesses co-occur together.
154 s is particularly associated with (maternal) mental illnesses - commonly, depression and anxiety, but
155 ion per 100 persons with a history of severe mental illness compared with 100 persons without such a
156 cess to physical health care for people with mental illness compared with people without mental illne
157 ission for infection for persons with severe mental illness compared with persons without severe ment
158 ortality hazard between patients with severe mental illness compared with those without mental illnes
159 prevalence of smoking in people with serious mental illness contributes substantially to the dispropo
160               Reform efforts for people with mental illness could leverage probation-a ubiquitous and
161                   Excess mortality in severe mental illness (defined here as schizophrenia, schizoaff
162 index (BMI) and blood pressure (BP) in major mental illness, diabetes, and chronic kidney disease.
163 bipolar disorders); 301 (31%) had some other mental illness diagnosis (such as anxiety, adjustment re
164                                      Serious mental illness diagnosis does not appear to be associate
165                          Persons with severe mental illness die 15-20 years earlier on average than p
166 3 (7.4%) persons without a history of severe mental illness died.
167 ions was consistent across subsets of severe mental illness disorders and was supported by further se
168 C1), a well-accepted genetic risk factor for mental illness, display abnormal behaviours in response
169 rait that may contribute to the emergence of mental illness during adolescence.
170 nvestigation of a defined model for sporadic mental illness enables a clearer definition of neuroanat
171 disorders exhibit increased vulnerability to mental illness, even years after the stress experience,
172 nical subgroup, despite the heterogeneity of mental illnesses examined.
173 mate excess mortality for people with severe mental illness for five ethnic groups (white British, bl
174 g and investigate the importance of parental mental illness for such an association.
175  perception, cardio-metabolic conditions and mental illnesses from the Ontario Health Study.
176    Disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) is a mental illness gene first identified in a Scottish pedig
177 drugs fills were recorded were similar among mental illness groups, as were rates of diagnosed immuno
178 s have evaluated whether persons with severe mental illness have a higher mortality after infection t
179                          Persons with severe mental illness have a markedly elevated 30-day mortality
180                           People with severe mental illness have both increased mortality and are mor
181           INTERPRETATION: People with severe mental illness have excess mortality relative to the gen
182     Few studies targeting obesity in serious mental illness have reported clinically significant risk
183                 Although people with serious mental illnesses have a high risk of contracting blood-b
184     Stigma and discrimination in relation to mental illnesses have been described as having worse con
185                Within the cohort with severe mental illness, hazard ratios for all-cause mortality an
186 onfers higher risk of adulthood physical and mental illness; however, the biological mechanism mediat
187    Patients were classified as having severe mental illness if an International Classification of Dis
188                   Among homeless adults with mental illness in 4 Canadian cities, scattered site hous
189 ovide an insight into molecular signaling in mental illness in general.
190 during pregnancy to increased risk of severe mental illness in offspring (eg, bipolar disorder, schiz
191  between smoking during pregnancy and severe mental illness in offspring were estimated with adjustme
192  between smoking during pregnancy and severe mental illness in offspring, adjusting for measured cova
193 f smoking during pregnancy on risk of severe mental illness in offspring.
194 ral change, either by people with or without mental illness in the complex processes of stigmatisatio
195 of deployment and number of deployments with mental illness in the UK forces.
196 cumulative length of deployment might reduce mental illness in the UK military.
197 led prevalence of HIV in people with serious mental illness in the USA was 6.0% (95% CI 4.3-8.3).
198                                       Severe mental illness in trafficked people is associated with l
199 eived increase of incidences associated with mental illnesses in the population, as a consequence of
200  health-care practice for people with severe mental illnesses in this region since then.
201 rotonergic system gives rise to a variety of mental illnesses including depression, anxiety, obsessiv
202 ence is a vulnerable period for the onset of mental illnesses including schizophrenia and affective d
203     The DISC1 protein is implicated in major mental illnesses including schizophrenia, depression, bi
204  also is associated with increased levels of mental illness, including depression.
205  on a locus of chromosome 15 associated with mental illness, including schizophrenia.
206  and hepatitis C (HCV) in people with severe mental illness, including the total adult (>/=18 years)
207 ompetitive employment for people with severe mental illness, including those who receive supported em
208  of adversity emerges as individual risk for mental illness is an important step toward developing st
209                                       Severe mental illness is associated with increased morbidity an
210 lth-care professionals have with people with mental illness is associated with positive attitudes abo
211                     Mortality in people with mental illness is far higher in individuals with substan
212 dence that DAT dysfunction supports risk for mental illness is indirect.
213 d-borne viruses (BBVs) in people with severe mental illness is of concern, but the full extent of thi
214             The number of people affected by mental illness is on the increase and with it the burden
215                                              Mental illness is one of the most rapidly increasing cau
216 ived by homicides committed by patients with mental illness is thought to increase stigma.
217 sm by which this occurs and how DISC1 causes mental illness is unclear, partly because knowledge of t
218           We argue that the global burden of mental illness is underestimated and examine the reasons
219                                      Serious mental illness is unlikely to be a sole risk factor and
220 atology during childhood predicts persistent mental illness later in life.
221 have extensively been studied and related to mental illness, limited evidence is available with respe
222 ase after Part D for patients with a serious mental illness living in states with relatively generous
223              Conclusion Patients with severe mental illness may need assistance with coordinating med
224 ontrols without a first-degree relative with mental illness (mean [SD] age, 32.69 [10.09] years; 55 w
225 individuals with a valid diagnosis of severe mental illness (median follow-up 6.36 years, IQR 3.26-9.
226                                      Serious mental illness occurs in 25% of the general population,
227 e of BBVs was elevated in people with severe mental illness, of which 230 (0.24%) had HIV, 518 (0.53%
228 tudies best designed to reduce the burden of mental illness on patients.
229 s (interaction effect between age and severe mental illness on smoking initiation, P = 4.5 x 105).
230 iry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness, on behalf of NHS England, NHS Wales, the
231  a transdiagnostic risk factor implicated in mental illness onset, treatment non-response, and suicid
232 campal neurogenesis can mediate treatment of mental illness or affect the brain's capacity for repair
233 udents aged 18 years or older with no severe mental illness or crisis (self-assessed) were randomly a
234                                 A history of mental illness or suicide attempt in both parents was as
235 was weaker when controlled for past maternal mental illness (OR, 1.52; 95% CI, 1.09-2.12).
236  made in the field of biomarker research for mental illnesses over the past few decades.
237 s risk partly comes from other patients with mental illness; overall, the risk of patients committing
238                            The prevalence of mental illness, particularly depression and dementia, is
239 asingly implicated in the etiology of common mental illnesses, particularly depression and Alzheimer'
240                                          The mental illness perspective that currently frames health-
241  of suicidality with or without a history of mental illness (PR, 1.20; 95% CI, 0.96-1.51) were as lik
242 neuroscience into benefits for patients with mental illness presents enormous challenges because it i
243                             Animal models of mental illness provide a foundation for evaluating hypot
244 and hepatitis C virus in people with serious mental illness, published between Jan 1, 1980, and Jan 1
245  smoking during pregnancy had greater severe mental illness rates than did unexposed offspring (moder
246 has focused on attitudes towards people with mental illness rather than on interventions to reduce st
247 l risk factor of early-life social stress in mental illness, rearing rodents in persistent postweanin
248 ntion, tailored for individuals with serious mental illnesses, reduced weight and diabetes risk.
249 -1.16; P = 0.206) and a reduction in overall mental illness related hospitalizations (IRR 0.76, 95% C
250 g approach, we could automatically recognise mental illness-related posts in our balenced dataset wit
251 n effective interventions intended to reduce mental-illness-related stigma or discrimination.
252 ets for BP and BMI in individuals with major mental illness relative to diabetes and chronic kidney d
253  the odds of BBVs in individuals with severe mental illness, relative to the general population, and
254 epartment of Veterans Affairs Sierra Pacific Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center.
255 erse non-genetic allelic effects that impact mental illness risk genes exist in the macaque and human
256  aged 15-65 years with a diagnosis of severe mental illness (schizophrenia spectrum or bipolar disord
257 gh incentives are given for aspects of major mental illness (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and rel
258 hiatry, novel therapies for individuals with mental illnesses seem just around the corner.
259  past 14 years of stigma research (including mental illness, sexual orientation, HIV/AIDS, and race/e
260 the impact of disrupted dopamine function in mental illness.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT To choose optimall
261 ent-keeping, clinicians may consider serious mental illness (SMI) a significant concern in organ tran
262 ty as an independent risk factor for serious mental illness (SMI) remains limited.
263                           People with severe mental illness (SMI), including schizophrenia and bipola
264  beds create problems for people with severe mental illness (SMI), when they face extended emergency
265 ed that more than half of those with serious mental illness smoke tobacco regularly.
266                      Among those with severe mental illness, some ethnic minorities have lower mortal
267 r knowledge improvement; (2) for people with mental illness, some group-level anti-stigma inventions
268 isorders, serious mental illness, and severe mental illness), specific diagnoses (eg, schizophrenia,
269 of deployments was not associated with worse mental illness status or problems at home.
270 ing protective against symptoms of the three mental illnesses studied, and the severity of flooding m
271  regulation of mood by psychoactive drugs in mental illnesses such as bipolar disorder.
272 ent rates were significantly lower for major mental illness than for chronic kidney disease (94.1% vs
273 ment rates for BMI and BP recording in major mental illness than in diabetes and chronic kidney disea
274 ection was 52% higher in persons with severe mental illness than in persons without (mortality rate r
275 p<0.0001) times higher in people with severe mental illness than in the general population, whereas t
276 ve social feedback is a prominent feature of mental illnesses that involve social anxiety.
277  consideration of the contribution of severe mental illness to mortality from associated causes.
278 s an urgent need to help people with serious mental illness to quit smoking.
279 hed data, we estimate the disease burden for mental illness to show that the global burden of mental
280 are health services to patients with serious mental illness treated in community mental health settin
281 A substantial proportion of individuals with mental illness use traditional, complementary, and alter
282 are Part D on essential treatment of serious mental illness vary by state.
283  Stress Disorder 8 items (PTSD-8) and severe mental illness was measured with the Kessler Screening S
284 orne viral infections in people with serious mental illness were higher than in the general populatio
285 controls from the same study setting without mental illness were included.
286 ortality ratios (SMRs) in people with severe mental illness were increased for a range of causes, inc
287                         Patients with severe mental illness were more likely to be diagnosed with adv
288 ment rates for BMI and BP recording in major mental illness were significantly lower in Scotland than
289 achievement rates for BMI recording in major mental illness were significantly lower than were those
290 rdant on smoking during pregnancy and severe mental illness were then compared, which helped to accou
291 y into Suicides and Homicides by People with Mental Illness, which includes all suicides by people (a
292 tutes for cigarettes in smokers with serious mental illness who are unable to quit smoking.
293  less-costly option for homeless adults with mental illness who do not require the treatment intensit
294 on and competitive employment in people with mental illness who had not responded to supported employ
295 (BD) is a highly heritable and heterogeneous mental illness whose manifestations often include impuls
296                                       Severe mental illness, with clinical diagnosis obtained from in
297 manage effectively the substantial burden of mental illness within their population.
298 able analyses, adolescents with a history of mental illness without a history of suicidality (prevale
299 in social interactions, which accompany many mental illnesses, would benefit from comprehensive treat
300 site for therapeutic intervention in serious mental illness, yet we know very little about their dist

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