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PsyLife

At the Office

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July 7, 2011 • • by dr_jb_kirkbride

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Recent Posts

  • James’ IFPE manifesto
  • Moving houses and increased risk of non-affective psychotic disorders in children and adolescents
  • Migrants at elevated risk for psychotic disorders, but not for non-psychotic bipolar disorder – new PsyLife paper
  • Incidence and risk factors of psychotic disorders in older people
  • PsyLife research in Europe’s cultural capitals

Recent Comments

  • David Aceituno on Epidemiology in Schizophrenia Research: Moving from Trait to State of the Art
  • A Big Week for PsyLife - PsyLife - investigating how our environments affect psychiatric health through life on James Kirkbride
  • SIRS Travel Award for PsyLife PhD student! - PsyLife - investigating how our environments affect psychiatric health through life on James Kirkbride

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About us

We are a research group based in the Division of Psychiatry, University College London (UCL). We investigate how social, economic and environmental factors contribute to mental health and illness over the life course. Our group is currently focussed on exploring the reasons why the risk of developing psychotic symptoms and disorders appears to be elevated in more urban environments and amongst ethnic minority groups. The group is led by Dr James Kirkbride.

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Latest on Twitter

  • @PsyLifeLab February 19, 2019

    UCL PsyLife Lab James is running for election to the IFPE committee. Find out about his vision for IFPE, if elected, here goo.gl/mS5oLc

  • @PsyLifeLab December 13, 2018

    UCL PsyLife Lab New PsyLife post: Moving houses and increased risk of non-affective psychotic disorders in children and adolescents goo.gl/XV3zvS

  • @PsyLifeLab December 5, 2018

    UCL PsyLife Lab New research on #psychosis & #migration from our PhD student @jendykxhoorn goo.gl/GTNS6M

Group news

  • Feb 19James’ IFPE manifesto
  • Dec 13Moving houses and increased risk of non-affective psychotic disorders in children and adolescents
  • Dec 05Migrants at elevated risk for psychotic disorders, but not for non-psychotic bipolar disorder – new PsyLife paper
  • Nov 19Incidence and risk factors of psychotic disorders in older people