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Dive into the research topics where M Vazquez-Montes is active.

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Featured researches published by M Vazquez-Montes.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2012

A Randomized Clinical Trial of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy Versus Unrestricted Services for Health Anxiety (Hypochondriasis)

Freda McManus; Christina Surawy; Kate Muse; M Vazquez-Montes; J. Mark G. Williams

Objective: The efficacy and acceptability of existing psychological interventions for health anxiety (hypochondriasis) are limited. In the current study, the authors aimed to assess the impact of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) on health anxiety by comparing the impact of MBCT in addition to usual services (unrestricted services) with unrestricted services (US) alone. Method: The 74 participants were randomized to either MBCT in addition to US (n = 36) or US alone (n = 38). Participants were assessed prior to intervention (MBCT or US), immediately following the intervention, and 1 year postintervention. In addition to independent assessments of diagnostic status, standardized self-report measures and assessor ratings of severity and distress associated with the diagnosis of hypochondriasis were used. Results: In the intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis (N = 74), MBCT participants had significantly lower health anxiety than US participants, both immediately following the intervention (Cohens d = 0.48) and at 1-year follow-up (d = 0.48). The per-protocol (PP) analysis (n = 68) between groups effect size was d = 0.49 at postintervention and d = 0.62 at 1-year follow-up. Mediational analysis showed that change in mindfulness mediated the group changes in health anxiety symptoms. Significantly fewer participants allocated to MBCT than to US met criteria for the diagnosis of hypochondriasis, both immediately following the intervention period (ITT 50.0% vs. 78.9%; PP 47.1% vs. 78.4%) and at 1-year follow-up (ITT 36.1% vs. 76.3%; PP 28.1% vs. 75.0%). Conclusions: MBCT may be a useful addition to usual services for patients with health anxiety.


The Lancet Psychiatry | 2015

Effect of increased compulsion on readmission to hospital or disengagement from community services for patients with psychosis: follow-up of a cohort from the OCTET trial

Tom Burns; Ksenija Yeeles; Constantinos Koshiaris; M Vazquez-Montes; Andrew Molodynski; Stephen Puntis; Francis Vergunst; Alexandra Forrest; Amy Mitchell; Kiki Burns; Jorun Rugkåsa

BACKGROUND Community treatment orders (CTOs) have not been shown in randomised trials to reduce readmission to hospital in patients with psychosis, but these trials have been short (11-12 months). We previously investigated the effect of CTOs on readmission rates over 12 months in a randomised trial (OCTET). Here, we present follow-up data for a cohort of individuals recruited to our original trial to examine the long-term effect of CTOs on readmissions and the risk of patients disengaging from mental health services temporarily or enduringly. METHODS For OCTET, an open-label, parallel, randomised controlled trial, we recruited patients aged 18-65 years involuntarily admitted to mental health hospitals in 32 trusts in England, with a diagnosis of psychosis and deemed suitable for CTOs by their clinicians. Between Nov 10, 2008, and Feb 22, 2011, we recruited and randomly assigned 336 eligible patients (1:1) to be discharged on either a CTO (n=167) or to voluntary status via Section 17 leave (control group; n=169). For the analysis presented in this report, we assessed data at 36 months for 330 of these patients. We tested rates of readmission to hospital, time to first readmission, number of readmissions, and duration of readmission in patients assigned to CTO versus those assigned to control, and in all patients with CTO experience at any time in the 36 months versus those without. We also tested whether duration of CTO affected readmission outcomes in patients with CTO experience. We examined discontinuation (≥60 days between clinical contacts) and disengagement from services (no clinical contact for ≥90 days with no return to contact) in the whole cohort. OCTET is registered with isrctn.com, number ISRCTN73110773. FINDINGS We obtained data for 330 patients in the relevant period between Nov 10, 2008 and Feb 22, 2014 (36 months after the last patient was randomly assigned to OCTET). We identified no difference between the randomised groups in the numbers of patients readmitted (100 [61%] of 165 CTOs vs 113 [68%] of 165 controls; relative risk 0·88 [95% CI 0·75-1·03]), number of readmissions (mean 2·4 readmissions [SD 1·91] vs 2·2 [1·43]; incident density ratio [IDR] 0·97 [95% CI 0·76-1·24]), duration of readmissions (median 117·5 days [IQR 63-303] vs 139·5 days [63·0-309·5]; IDR 0·84 [95% CI 0·51-1·38]), or time to first readmission (median 601·0 days [95% CI 387·0-777·0] vs 420·0 days [352·0-548·0]; hazard ratio [HR] 0·81 [95% CI 0·62-1·06]). The CTO experience group had significantly more readmissions than the group without (IDR 1·39 [95% CI 1·07-1·79]) and we noted no significant difference between groups in readmission rates, duration of readmission, or time to first readmission. We did not identify a linear relationship between readmission outcomes and duration of CTO. 19 (6%) patients disengaged from services (12 [7%] of 165 CTOs vs 7 [4%] of 165 controls). Longer duration of compulsion was associated with later disengagement (HR 0·946 [95% CI 0·90-0·99, p=0·023). 187 (57%) experienced no discontinuities, and we noted no significant difference between the CTO and control groups for time to disengagement or number of discontinuities. Levels of discontinuity were associated with compulsion (IDR 0·973 [95% CI 0·96-0·99, p<0·0001]. We identified no effect of baseline characteristics on the associations between compulsion and disengagement. INTERPRETATION We identified no evidence that increased compulsion leads to improved readmission outcomes or to disengagement from services in patients with psychosis over 36 months. The level of persisting clinical follow-up was much higher than expected, irrespective of CTO status, and could partly account for the absence of CTO effect. The findings from our 36-month follow-up support our original findings that CTOs do not provide patient benefits, and the continued high level of their use should be reviewed. FUNDING National Institute for Health Research.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2015

Pediatric reference intervals for plasma free and total metanephrines established with a parametric approach: Relevance to the diagnosis of neuroblastoma

Laura Crosazzo Franscini; M Vazquez-Montes; Thierry Buclin; Rafael Perera; Marielle Dunand; Eric Grouzmann; Maja Beck‐Popovic

Urine catecholamines, vanillylmandelic, and homovanillic acid are recognized biomarkers for the diagnosis and follow‐up of neuroblastoma. Plasma free (f) and total (t) normetanephrine (NMN), metanephrine (MN) and methoxytyramine (MT) could represent a convenient alternative to those urine markers. The primary objective of this study was to establish pediatric centile charts for plasma metanephrines. Secondarily, we explored their diagnostic performance in 10 patients with neuroblastoma.


Transplant International | 2010

The deceased donor score system in kidney transplants from deceased donors after cardiac death.

Juan J. Plata-Munoz; M Vazquez-Montes; Peter J. Friend; S. V. Fuggle

A clinical score to identify kidneys from donors after cardiac death (DCD) with a high risk of dysfunction following transplantation could be a useful tool to guide the introduction of new algorithms for the preservation of these organs and improve their outcome after transplantation. We investigated whether the deceased donor score (DDS) system could identify DCD kidneys with higher risk of early post‐transplant dysfunction. The DDS was validated in a cohort of 168 kidney transplants from donors after brain death (DBD) and then applied to a cohort of 56 kidney transplants from DCD. In the DBD cohort, the DDS grade predicted the incidence of delayed graft function (DGF) and levels of serum creatinine at 3 and 12 months post‐transplant. Similarly, in the DCD cohort, the DDS grade correlated with DGF and also predicted the levels of serum creatinine at 3 and 12 months. Interestingly, the DDS identified a subgroup of marginal DCD kidneys in which minimization of cold ischemia time produced better early clinical outcome. These results highlight the impact of early interventions on clinical outcome of marginal DCD kidneys and open the possibility of using the DDS to identify those kidneys that may benefit most from therapeutic interventions before transplantation.


Psychological Assessment | 2017

Factorial structure and long-term stability of the Autonomy Preference Index.

Stéphane Morandi; Philippe Golay; M Vazquez-Montes; Jorun Rugkåsa; Andrew Molodynski; Ksenija Yeeles; Tom Burns

The autonomy preference index scale (API) has been designed to measure patient preference for 2 dimensions of autonomy: Their desire to take part in making medical decisions (decision making, [DM]) and their desire to be informed about their illness and the treatment (information seeking; [IS]). The DM dimension is measured by 6 general items together with 9 items related to 3 clinical vignettes (3 × 3 items). The IS dimension is measured by 8 items. While the API is widely used, a review of literature has identified several inconsistencies in the way it is scored. The first aim of this study was to determine the best scoring structure of the API on the basis of validity and reliability evidence. The second aim was to investigate the long-term stability of API scores. Two-hundred and 85 patients with a diagnosis of psychosis were assessed as they were about to be discharged from involuntary psychiatric hospitalization and they were reassessed after 6 and 12 months. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) revealed that a 3-factor solution was most adequate and that 2 distinct DM subscales should be preferred to 1 total DM score. While internal consistency estimates of the 3 subscales were good, the long-term stability of API scores was only modest. Multigroup-CFA revealed scalar invariance indicating API scores kept the same meaning longitudinally. In conclusion, a 3-factor structure seemed to be most adequate for the API scale. Long-term stability estimates suggested that clinicians should regularly assess patients’ preferences for autonomy because API scores fluctuate over time.


The Lancet | 2013

Community treatment orders for patients with psychosis (OCTET): a randomised controlled trial

Tom Burns; Jorun Rugkåsa; Andrew Molodynski; John Dawson; Ksenija Yeeles; M Vazquez-Montes; Merryn Voysey; Julia Sinclair; Stefan Priebe


Health Technology Assessment | 2012

Surveillance for ocular hypertension: an evidence synthesis and economic evaluation.

Jennifer Burr; P Botello-Pinzon; Yemisi Takwoingi; R Hernández; M Vazquez-Montes; Andrew Elders; R Asaoka; Katie Banister; J. van der Schoot; Cynthia Fraser; A King; Hans G. Lemij; Roshini Sanders; S Vernon; A Tuulonen; Aachal Kotecha; Paul Glasziou; David F. Garway-Heath; David P. Crabb; Luke Vale; Augusto Azuara-Blanco; Rafael Perera; Mandy Ryan; Jon Deeks; Jonathan Cook


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2011

Pressures to adhere to treatment (‘leverage’) in English mental healthcare

Tom Burns; Ksenija Yeeles; Andrew Molodynski; Helen Nightingale; M Vazquez-Montes; Kathleen Sheehan; Louise Linsell


Behaviour Research and Therapy | 2010

An evaluation of the effectiveness of diploma-level training in cognitive behaviour therapy.

Freda McManus; David Westbrook; M Vazquez-Montes; Melanie J. V. Fennell; Helen Kennerley


Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 2013

The reliability, validity, and applicability of an English language version of the Mini-ICF-APP

Andrew Molodynski; Michael Linden; George Juckel; Ksenija Yeeles; Catriona Anderson; M Vazquez-Montes; Tom Burns

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A King

University of Nottingham

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Aachal Kotecha

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Andrew Elders

Glasgow Caledonian University

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Jennifer Burr

University of St Andrews

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Jon Deeks

University of Birmingham

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