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In this Review the authors address the intersection between mental illness and homelessness in high-income countries, and propose policy and practice priorities to reduce homelessness and to improve health outcomes.
In this Perspective the authors provide recommendations for researchers conducting school-based mental health research to minimize potential harm in designing and delivering interventions.
Combining accelerometry, electronic diaries and neuroimaging, we found that physical activity is reproducibly linked to better wellbeing in people lacking social contact in everyday life, especially in people at neural and psychological risk of affective disorders.
In this Perspective, Minnis and co-authors propose a new framework, the bio-exposome, to integrate the multiple aspects of biological and exposome factors associated with childhood adversity that interact and influence outcomes for individuals across their lifespan.
Erritzoe et al. review the current evidence from neuroimaging studies on psychedelics and discuss how these data advance our understanding of their action.
In this Perspective the authors survey the state of computerized cognitive training interventions for mental health and identify some of the challenges and opportunities in the scale-up of certain interventions.
In this Review, the authors outline the current evidence on a precision medicine approach to Alzheimer’s disease risk reduction and propose how to integrate personalized strategies into routine clinical practice.
Inconsistent results have been obtained regarding the role of obesity and its related metabolic syndrome in neurological and psychiatric diseases. This systematic research using the UK Biobank demonstrates effects of body weight on the risk of several neurological and psychiatric disorders, and suggests that the higher risks may be partially explained by brain structure, food intake and inflammation.