Bipolar disorder researchers
Emil Kraepelin, John Cade, Kay Redfield Jamison, Christopher Gillberg, Harrison Pope, E.Fuller Torrey, David Healy, Stephen Faraone, Bipolar disorders research, Massachusetts General Hospital Psychiatry Academy, Bankole Johnson
Erschienen am
29.09.2014, 1. Auflage 2014
Beschreibung
Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 37. Chapters: Emil Kraepelin, John Cade, Kay Redfield Jamison, Christopher Gillberg, Harrison Pope, E. Fuller Torrey, David Healy, Stephen Faraone, Bipolar disorders research, Massachusetts General Hospital Psychiatry Academy, Bankole Johnson, Dennis S. Charney, Joseph W. Eaton, Lyn Yvonne Abramson, Lester Grinspoon, Mogens Schou, Neil Cole, Karl Leonhard, Karl Kleist, Frederick K. Goodwin, Lauren Alloy, The Prince of Wales International Centre for SANE Research, Hagop S. Akiskal, Mental Health Research Institute, Carl Pfeiffer, Johann Christian August Heinroth, Jurgen Del-Favero, Gordon Parker, Jules Baillarger, Joseph Biederman, Ewald Hecker, Jack Pettigrew, Paul Raeburn, Roger Granet, Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute, Ness Foundation, Victor Protopopov, Richard A. Friedman. Excerpt: Lars Christopher Gillberg (born 19 April 1950), who has sometimes published as Gillberg and Gillberg with his wife Carina Gillberg, is a professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at Gothenburg University in Gothenburg, Sweden, and an honorary professor at the Institute of Child Health (ICH), University College London. He has also been a visiting professor at the universities of Bergen, New York, Odense, St George's (University of London), San Francisco, and Strathclyde. Gillberg is known for his research of autism in children, Asperger syndrome, Tourettes syndrome, Fragile X syndrome, Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), ADHD, and anorexia nervosa. He is the founding editor of the journal European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, and is the author and editor of many scientific and educational books. He is the recipient of several scientific awards, including the Philips Nordic Prize 2004 for neurological research, and he has more than 300 scientific papers listed in Medline. Additionally, Gillberg has become known internationally for his contributions to pioneering research projects into the genetics of autism. Gillberg is also known for his role in a controversy relating to the confidentiality of medical records. The controversy involved public access under the Swedish Principle of Publicity (offentlighetsprincipen) to medical records and other personal data about a group of children participating in an early longitudinal study on ADHD/DAMP, commenced in 1977 at Gothenburg University. Two critics of DAMP and ADHD diagnoses, who had previously filed complaints that questioned the integrity of the study, invoked the Swedish Freedom of Information Act in order to gain access to the raw data of the study after their fraud allegations had been investigated and officially dismissed by the regional ethics committee. Gillberg and two chief physicians involved in the study stated that medical ethics principles prevented them from turning over sensitive personal and medical data