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Dive into the research topics where Neil Greenberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Neil Greenberg.


The Lancet | 2006

The health of UK military personnel who deployed to the 2003 Iraq war: a cohort study.

Matthew Hotopf; Lisa Hull; Nicola T. Fear; Tess Browne; Oded Horn; Amy Iversen; Margaret Jones; Dominic Murphy; Duncan Bland; Mark Earnshaw; Neil Greenberg; Jamie Hacker Hughes; A Rosemary Tate; Christopher Dandeker; Roberto J. Rona; Simon Wessely

BACKGROUNDnConcerns have been raised about the mental and physical health of UK military personnel who deployed to the 2003 war in Iraq and subsequent tours of duty in the country.nnnMETHODSnWe compared health outcomes in a random sample of UK armed forces personnel who were deployed to the 2003 Iraq war with those in personnel who were not deployed. Participants completed a questionnaire covering the nature of the deployment and health outcomes, which included symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, common mental disorders, general wellbeing, alcohol consumption, physical symptoms, and fatigue.nnnFINDINGSnThe participation rate was 62.3% (n=4722) in the deployed sample, and 56.3% (n=5550) in the non-deployed sample. Differences in health outcomes between groups were slight. There was a modest increase in the number of individuals with multiple physical symptoms (odds ratio 1.33; 95% CI 1.15-1.54). No other differences between groups were noted. The effect of deployment was different for reservists compared with regulars. In regulars, only presence of multiple physical symptoms was weakly associated with deployment (1.32; 1.14-1.53), whereas for reservists deployment was associated with common mental disorders (2.47, 1.35-4.52) and fatigue (1.78; 1.09-2.91). There was no evidence that later deployments, which were associated with escalating insurgency and UK casualties, were associated with poorer mental health outcomes.nnnINTERPRETATIONnFor regular personnel in the UK armed forces, deployment to the Iraq war has not, so far, been associated with significantly worse health outcomes, apart from a modest effect on multiple physical symptoms. There is evidence of a clinically and statistically significant effect on health in reservists.


Archive | 2014

returning from Iraq Mental health outcomes in US and UK military personnel

Lyndon A. Riviere; Jeffrey L. Thomas; Simon Wessely; Paul D. Bliese; Josefin Sundin; Richard K. Herrell; Charles W. Hoge; Nicola T. Fear; Amy B. Adler; Neil Greenberg


Archive | 2014

PTSD IN THE MILITARY: PREVALENCE, PATHOPHYSIOLOGY, TREATMENT The mental health of the UK Armed Forces: where facts meet fiction

Elizabeth J. F. Hunt; Simon Wessely; Norman Jones; Roberto J. Rona; Neil Greenberg


PsycTESTS Dataset | 2013

Combat and Deployment Experience Scale

Carlos Osório; Neil Greenberg; Norman Jones; Laura Goodwin; Mohammed Fertout; Ângela Maia


Archive | 2012

BRIEF REPORT Trauma-Related Guilt and Posttraumatic Stress Among Journalists

Tess Browne; Michael Evangeli; Neil Greenberg


Archive | 2012

Iraq and Afghanistan Effects of home on the mental health of British forces serving in

Neil Greenberg; Kathleen Mulligan; Norman Jones; Mark Davies; Peter McAllister; Nicola T. Fear; Simon Wessely


Archive | 2011

has it gone away? - Gulf War syndrome

Mark Tarn; Neil Greenberg; Simon Wessely


Archive | 2011

stress disorder The dangers of inflation: memories of trauma and post-traumatic

Neil Greenberg; Simon Wessely


Archive | 2010

personneland receipt of treatment among UK service

Roberto J. Rona; Simon Wessely; Graham Thornicroft; Nicola T. Fear; Amy Iversen; Lauren van Staden; Jamie Hacker Hughes; Tess Browne; Neil Greenberg


Archive | 2009

ARTICLE Mental health of regular and reserve military veterans

Amy Iversen; Neil Greenberg

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Norman Jones

University of South Wales

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