Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Vaughan Bell

Just want to say what a fantastic resource this is. Many thanks Micah.

1 day ago 0 0 1 0
Post image Post image

New from us:

A special issue on secondary ("organic") psychosis just published in Schizophrenia Research - edited by Graham Blackman and me, but very much led by Graham:

www.sciencedirect.com/special-issu...

Excellent articles on pressing clinical and scientific issues from a host of authors👇

1 week ago 12 5 0 1

Asylum Magazine is 40.

One of the most consistently thought-provoking voices on mental health in the UK. Rooted in grassroots perspectives, unwavering in its commitment to featuring a diversity of opinion and critique that puts many academic debates to shame. Still a bit punk.

4 weeks ago 7 2 1 0

...consisting of:

Charlotte Constable Fernandez, Alida Acosta-Ortiz, María Camila García Durán, @elisavetpappa.bsky.social, Rob Saunders, @francescasolmi.bsky.social, William Tamayo-Agudelo, Fabio Idrobo and me

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
Preview
Intervention provision and engagement in Colombia’s PAPSIVI – a national psychosocial support service for over half a million victims of armed conflict - Conflict and Health Background Colombia’s PAPSIVI program is the world’s largest psychosocial support service for victims of armed conflict providing support for over half a million civilians. However, service delivery h...

New from our Colombia-UK team:

Intervention provision and engagement in Colombia’s PAPSIVI – a national psychosocial support service for over half a million victims of armed conflict link.springer.com/article/10.1...

1 month ago 1 2 1 0

Does anyone use the Spanish version of the RBANS ("Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status")? If you are able to send us an original form, we would be happy to compensate you for it.

2 months ago 1 3 0 0

¿Alguien utiliza la versión en español del RBANS (“Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status”)? Si puede enviarnos un formulario original, con gusto le ofreceremos una compensación por ello.

2 months ago 0 2 0 0
Advertisement
British Neuropsychiatry Association founded in 1987. Academic & professional body for practitioners & professionals allied to medicine at the interface of the clinical & cognitive neurosciences, & psychiatry

Not a British Neuropsychiatry Association member but want to keep informed about our events?

You can sign up to the announcements mailing list at the bottom of this page: bnpa.org.uk

2 months ago 2 1 0 0
Post image

🚨The programme for our March conference is now online
bnpa.org.uk/agm/

Sessions on
🔹neuropsychiatry of epilepsy
🔹rethinking TBI
🔹functional cognitive disorder
🔹identity and memory
🔹fixation and forensic risk
🔹ultrasound as neurostim
🔹insight disorders

and more!

2 months ago 3 1 0 0
Emotional and cognitive effects of menopause and hormone replacement therapy | Psychological Medicine | Cambridge Core Emotional and cognitive effects of menopause and hormone replacement therapy - Volume 56

Lots of headlines linking menopause to dementia this morning based on a study that doesn't link menopause to dementia www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

2 months ago 3 0 0 0
Preview
The Mythology Of Conscious AI | NOEMA Why consciousness is more likely a property of life than of computation and why creating conscious, or even conscious-seeming AI, is a bad idea.

Epic piece from @anilseth.bsky.social on The Mythology Of Conscious AI www.noemamag.com/the-mytholog...

3 months ago 8 4 1 0
Preview
Methodological flaw may upend network mapping tool The lesion network mapping method, used to identify disease-specific brain networks for clinical stimulation, produces a nearly identical network map for any given condition, according to a new study.

Lesion network mapping method, used to identify disease-specific brain networks, produces a nearly identical network map for any given condition, according to a new study www.thetransmitter.org/brain-imagin... via @drrickadams.bsky.social

3 months ago 7 1 0 0
Post image

The NIMH have seemingly set most of their RDoC videos to private www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyGt...

I've used an excerpt of that talk for teaching for about 10 years and it's suddenly gone.

There's only a single video on their channel with mentions RDoC now www.youtube.com/@NIMHgov/sea...

3 months ago 2 0 0 0
Post image

What a magnificent book. Just recently finished @matthewcobb.bsky.social's The Idea of the Brain which is a wonderful history of neuroscience.

I'll be straight, it's not gripping, it goes into too much detail but it is deeply enjoyable and absolutely epic in scope.

3 months ago 35 8 1 0

Reliably one of the most fascinating conferences of the year. Registration now open. See you there!

3 months ago 2 0 0 0
Advertisement
Preview
British Neuropsychiatry Association founded in 1987. Academic & professional body for practitioners & professionals allied to medicine at the interface of the clinical & cognitive neurosciences, & psychiatry

2026 British Neuropsychiatry Association Conference. Registration is open.

Memory & identity, brain injury, epilepsy, functional cognitive disorder, evolving forensic risk, neurostimulation

📍 London | 🗓 12–13 March 2026
🤝 Joint meeting with DoN

Programme and registration👉 bnpa.org.uk/agm/

3 months ago 2 2 0 1

...as well as the 'mainstream' of neuropsychiatry.

All of the authors made massive contributions but I owe a special debt to @jrbneuropsiq.bsky.social, @santamaria-garcia.bsky.social and Jorge Holguín who have really shaped my neuropsychiatry thinking over the years. Mil gracias.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

It's also just fascinating.

Lots of Latin American neuropsychiatrists have additional expertise in managing things like snakebite-induced stroke, mercury poisoning from gold mining, impact of armed conflict, neuropsychiatric effects of 'tropical disease', mountain sickness, rare dementias...

3 months ago 2 0 1 0
Post image

I don't think first author @jrbneuropsiq.bsky.social is very active here but new from us in Lancet Americas:

Towards a Latin American neuropsychiatry
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

Co-written between colleagues on what makes Latin American neuropsychiatry important, regionally and globally.

3 months ago 9 3 1 0
Victorian Psychiatry

For a more nuanced view of C19th psychiatry in general, I have been spending years compiling this bibliography - it wasn't all restraints and stigma - www.lesleyahall.net/victpsyc.htm

3 months ago 2 2 1 0

Great round up

3 months ago 7 0 0 0
Preview
Why Couples Therapists Are Sick of ‘Therapy-Speak’ What happens when spouses accuse each other of gaslighting? Nothing good.

Misused therapy concepts absorbed into popular culture are making run-of-the-mill relationship problems harder to resolve www.theatlantic.com/family/2025/...

Interesting @olgakhazan.bsky.social piece in The Atlantic

Archived version: archive.is/P7Tf6

3 months ago 2 0 0 0

To be fair, he does do this. Grabbing from my bookshelf, it's in the preface of Man Who Mistook and Awakenings. "...names and some circumstantial details have been changed for reasons of personal and professional confidence, but my aim has been to preserve the essential 'feeling' of their lives".

4 months ago 0 0 0 0

Sacks was a pioneer in crossing the medical / popular 'case study' writing traditions, so there was little precedent. In some ways, I think he chose the worse of both worlds. Accurate enough to identify patients, embellished enough to not satisfy academic tradition.

4 months ago 0 0 0 0

So, I think the issue is a little more complex. What Sacks should have done in terms of accuracy is not entirely clear to me. Most modern 'case study' writers have actually gone the other way and aimed for greater embellishment, especially for clinical details, for the sake of anonymity.

4 months ago 0 0 1 0
Advertisement

Clinicians writing popular accounts of 'cases' don't have the same journalist responsibility to be accurate. They have a medical ethical responsibility to obscure clinical details that could identify (unless with consent). The question of what counts as 'truth' here has not been well explored.

4 months ago 2 0 1 0

Including yourself aside, this would make any clinician who's written a 'book about case studies' that are necessarily fictionalised composites, a fraud. My concern is mostly the reverse, that in early work he wrote about patients in enough detail to identify them, without well established consent.

4 months ago 0 0 2 0

So, this isn't a clear case of journalistic fraud, and notably, Aviv doesn't identify it as such. It does raise important questions about the use of fictionalisation in clinical writing though - questions that have been very poorly considered until now. Aviv raises them very effectively.

4 months ago 4 1 1 0

What's notable about Aviv's Sacks article is not so much that he fictionalised (although you can argue about the extent to which this was appropriate for any particular case), but that he fictionalised using his own story to fill other people's stories.

4 months ago 4 3 1 0
Preview
Should Therapists Write About Patients? Even when we disguise their identities, we risk betraying them.

Gary Greenberg has written about the challenges of this in The NYT, noting it involves legal review, ethics, and personal considerations: “The question isn’t whether someone else will recognize your patients, it’s whether or not they would recognize themselves” archive.nytimes.com/opinionator....

4 months ago 5 2 1 0