All Stories

  1. Relational Therapies for People Who Hear Voices: Operationalisation and Current Status of an Emergent Group of Psychological Therapies
  2. Guided self-help CBT for distressing voices (the GiVE intervention): predictors of engagement and outcome in routine clinical practice
  3. “We Are Humans, and We Are People” - A Thematic Analysis Exploring the Disclosure and Help-Seeking Experiences of Young People Who Experience Voice-Hearing Within Mental Health Services in the UK
  4. Are measures of voice hearing distinct from measures of emotional states, recovery and well-being? A factor analysis study
  5. Avatar therapy: does 3D add value?
  6. Relating Therapy for distressing voices: A treatment protocol
  7. Support for young people who are distressed by hearing voices: protocol for an uncontrolled feasibility evaluation of a psychological intervention package delivered within secondary schools (the ECHOES study)
  8. A network analysis of voice hearing, emotional distress and subjective recovery before and after cognitive behavioural interventions
  9. Reducing Distress from Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Multicenter, Parallel, Single-Blind, Randomized Controlled Feasibility Trial of Relating Therapy
  10. Feeling heard: an uncontrolled feasibility study evaluating a novel intervention pathway for psychosis patients distressed by hearing voices
  11. Multi-modal hallucinations across diagnoses: What relationships do they have with voice-related distress?
  12. Exploring service users’ and practitioners’ priorities regarding outcomes of cognitive behavioural therapy for distressing voices: a thematic analysis
  13. Relating Therapy for Distressing Voices in the Context of Anorexia Nervosa
  14. What’s the impact of voice-hearing experiences on the social relating of young people: A comparison between help-seeking young people who did and did not hear voices
  15. Increasing access to CBT for psychosis patients: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial evaluating brief, targeted CBT for distressing voices delivered by assistant psychologists (GiVE3)
  16. A Psychoeducational Workshop for the Parents of Young Voice Hearers: A Preliminary Investigation into Acceptability and Outcomes in an NHS Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service
  17. “Attitudes to voices”: a survey exploring the factors influencing clinicians’ intention to assess distressing voices and attitudes towards working with young people who hear voices
  18. A systematic review and thematic synthesis of qualitative literature on personal recovery and voice hearing
  19. Coping Strategy Enhancement for Auditory Verbal Hallucinations Within Routine Clinical Practice
  20. Caring for Carers (C4C): Results from a feasibility randomised controlled trial of positive written disclosure for older adult carers of people with psychosis
  21. Measuring the longitudinal course of voice hearing under psychological interventions: A systematic review
  22. Smartphone-assisted guided self-help cognitive behavioral therapy for young people with distressing voices (SmartVoices): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
  23. How should psychological interventions for distressing voices be delivered? A comparison of outcomes for patients who received interventions remotely or face-to-face within routine clinical practice
  24. The psychological therapy preferences of patients who hear voices
  25. Distress factors of voice‐hearing in young people and social relating: Exploring a cognitive‐interpersonal voice‐hearing model
  26. Pilot evaluation of a brief training video aimed at reducing mental health stigma amongst emergency first responders (the ENHANcE II study)
  27. Coping strategy enhancement for the treatment of distressing voices in young people: A service evaluation within routine clinical practice
  28. A grounded theory study exploring change processes following cognitive behavioural therapy for distressing voices
  29. Voice Hearing in Borderline Personality Disorder Across Perceptual, Subjective, and Neural Dimensions
  30. A cross‐sectional study of auditory verbal hallucinations experienced by people with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder
  31. Increasing access to cognitive–behavioural therapy for patients with psychosis by evaluating the feasibility of a randomised controlled trial of brief, targeted cognitive–behavioural therapy for distressing voices delivered by assistant psychologists: ...
  32. Brief coping strategy enhancement for the treatment of distressing voices in the context of borderline personality disorder: A comparison with outcomes in the context of psychosis
  33. RELATE—a randomised controlled feasibility trial of a Relating Therapy module for distressing auditory verbal hallucinations: a study protocol
  34. Enhancing mental health awareness in emergency services (the ENHANcE I project): cross-sectional survey on mental health stigma among emergency services staff
  35. Quiet time via transcendental meditation in secondary school pupils with special educational needs: effects on well-being and behaviour
  36. Multimodal versus unimodal auditory hallucinations in clinical practice: Clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes
  37. Validation of the Hamilton Program for Schizophrenia Voices Questionnaire: Associations with emotional distress and wellbeing, and invariance across diagnosis and sex
  38. Can Gender Differences in Distress Due to Difficult Voices Be Explained by Differences in Relating?
  39. Increasing access to brief Coping Strategy Enhancement for distressing voices: a service valuation exploring a possible role for briefly-trained therapists – CORRIGENDUM
  40. Increasing access to brief Coping Strategy Enhancement for distressing voices: a service valuation exploring a possible role for briefly-trained therapists
  41. Exploring the Development, Validity, and Utility of the Short-Form Version of the CHoice of Outcome In Cbt for PsychosEs: A Patient-Reported Outcome Measure of Psychological Recovery
  42. Relating between the voice and voice-hearer: Validation of a revised version of the Voice And You
  43. A service evaluation of a group mindfulness-based intervention for distressing voices: how do findings from a randomized controlled trial compare with routine clinical practice?
  44. Associations between responses to voices, distress and appraisals during daily life: an ecological validation of the cognitive behavioural model
  45. Demographic predictors of wellbeing in Carers of people with psychosis: secondary analysis of trial data
  46. Construction and validation of the Approve questionnaires – Measures of relating to voices and other people
  47. A systematic review of structural MRI investigations within borderline personality disorder: Identification of key psychological variables of interest going forward
  48. Increasing access to CBT for psychosis patients: a feasibility, randomised controlled trial evaluating brief, targeted CBT for distressing voices delivered by assistant psychologists (GiVE2)
  49. A qualitative study exploring how Practitioners within Early Intervention in Psychosis Services engage with Service Users’ experiences of voice hearing?
  50. Increasing access to CBT for psychosis patients: a feasibility, randomized controlled trial evaluating brief, targeted CBT for distressing voices delivered by Assistant Psychologists (GiVE2)
  51. Pilot randomised controlled trial of a brief coping-focused intervention for hearing voices blended with smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment and intervention (SAVVy): Feasibility, acceptability and preliminary clinical outcomes
  52. Increasing access to CBT for psychosis patients: a feasibility, randomized controlled trial evaluating brief, targeted CBT for distressing voices delivered by Assistant Psychologists (GiVE2)
  53. Being a Scientist–Practitioner in the Field of Psychosis: Experiences From Voices Clinics
  54. Patient experience of Guided self-help CBT intervention for VoicEs (GiVE) delivered within a pilot randomized controlled trial
  55. Evaluating the “C” and “B” in brief cognitive behaviour therapy for distressing voices in routine clinical practice in an uncontrolled study
  56. “It’s just a bit like a rollercoaster”: a longitudinal qualitative study exploring a model of the phases of voice hearing
  57. Increasing access to CBT for psychosis patients
  58. Hallucinations in Children and Adolescents: An Updated Review and Practical Recommendations for Clinicians
  59. Smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment and intervention in a blended coping-focused therapy for distressing voices: Development and case illustration
  60. Building a Grounded Theory of Engagement in Mindfulness-Based Group Therapy for Distressing Voices
  61. Increasing access to psychological treatments for mental illness
  62. Mindfulness-based exposure and response prevention for obsessive compulsive disorder: Findings from a pilot randomised controlled trial
  63. Brief coping strategy enhancement for distressing voices: Predictors of engagement and outcome in routine clinical practice
  64. Understanding the Barriers to Accessing Symptom-Specific Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) for Distressing Voices: Reflecting on and Extending the Lessons Learnt From the CBT for Psychosis Literature
  65. Smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment and intervention in a coping-focused intervention for hearing voices (SAVVy): study protocol for a pilot randomised controlled trial
  66. Guided self-help cognitive-behaviour Intervention for VoicEs (GiVE): Results from a pilot randomised controlled trial in a transdiagnostic sample
  67. Evidence-based psychological approaches for auditory hallucinations
  68. Relating Therapy for distressing voices: Who, or what, is changing?
  69. Continuing the conversation about AVATAR therapy
  70. Relating to the Speaker behind the Voice: What Is Changing?
  71. The Beliefs about Voices Questionnaire – Revised: A factor structure from 450 participants
  72. “That little doorway where I could suddenly start shouting out”: Barriers and enablers to the disclosure of distressing voices
  73. Caring for Caregivers (C4C): study protocol for a pilot feasibility randomised control trial of Positive Written Disclosure for older adult caregivers of people with psychosis
  74. Understanding clinician attitudes towards implementation of guided self-help cognitive behaviour therapy for those who hear distressing voices: using factor analysis to test normalisation process theory
  75. A Randomised Controlled Trial of a Brief Online Mindfulness-Based Intervention on Paranoia in a Non-Clinical Sample
  76. Brief Coping Strategy Enhancement for Distressing Voices: an Evaluation in Routine Clinical Practice
  77. Barriers to disseminating brief CBT for voices from a lived experience and clinician perspective
  78. Relating Therapy for distressing auditory hallucinations: A pilot randomized controlled trial
  79. Does insecure attachment mediate the relationship between trauma and voice-hearing in psychosis?
  80. Mindfulness as a Mediator Between the Relational Style with Voices and Negative Affect
  81. Editorial: Hallucinations: New Interventions Supporting People with Distressing Voices and/or Visions
  82. Group mindfulness-based intervention for distressing voices: A pragmatic randomised controlled trial
  83. Guided self-help cognitive behavioral intervention for VoicEs (GiVE): study protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial
  84. A systematic review and meta-analysis of low intensity CBT for psychosis
  85. Establishing the “Fit” between the Patient and the Therapy: The Role of Patient Gender in Selecting Psychological Therapy for Distressing Voices
  86. Overcoming Distressing Voices: a Self-Help Guide Using Cognitive Behavioral Techniques, Mark Hayward, Clara Strauss & David Kingdon, Constable & Robinson, 2012, £10.99, pb, 288 pp. ISBN: 9781780330846
  87. Hallucinations: New Interventions Supporting People with Distressing Voices and/or Visions
  88. Can we respond mindfully to distressing voices? A systematic review of evidence for engagement, acceptability, effectiveness and mechanisms of change for mindfulness-based interventions for people distressed by hearing voices
  89. Bringing the “self” into focus: conceptualising the role of self-experience for understanding and working with distressing voices
  90. Feasibility and Participant Experiences of a Written Emotional Disclosure Intervention for Parental Caregivers of People with Psychosis
  91. Investigating the Lived Experience of Recovery in People Who Hear Voices
  92. Mindfulness-based exposure and response prevention for obsessive compulsive disorder: study protocol for a pilot randomised controlled trial
  93. An Exploration of the Reliability and Validity of the Spanish Version of the ‘Voice and You’ (VAY): A Scale for Measuring the Relationship with Voices
  94. Voicing Caregiver Experiences: Wellbeing and Recovery Narratives for Caregivers, Ruth Chandler, Simon Bradstreet & Mark Hayward, Scottish Recovery Network & Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, 2013, 166 pp. ISBN: 9780955635960 Available fr...
  95. Person-Based Cognitive Therapy for Distressing Psychosis
  96. Psychological Approaches to Understanding and Treating Auditory Hallucinations
  97. Can brief mindfulness practice be of benefit? Evidence from an evaluation of group Person-based Cognitive Therapy for depression
  98. Relating therapy for voices (the R2V study): study protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial
  99. Beyond beliefs: A qualitative study of people’s opinions about their changing relations with their voices
  100. Psychological Therapies for Auditory Hallucinations (Voices): Current Status and Key Directions for Future Research
  101. Better Than Mermaids and Stray Dogs? Subtyping Auditory Verbal Hallucinations and Its Implications for Research and Practice
  102. Beyond the omnipotence of voices: further developing a relational approach to auditory hallucinations
  103. Hear Today, Not gone Tomorrow? An Exploratory Longitudinal Study of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations (Hearing Voices)
  104. Group Person‐based Cognitive Therapy for Distressing Psychosis
  105. The Service User Experience of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Person‐based Cognitive Therapy
  106. Cognitive Behavioural Relating Therapy (CBRT) for Voice Hearers: A Case Study
  107. Can we risk recovery? A grounded theory of clinical psychologists' perceptions of risk and recovery‐oriented mental health services
  108. Person-based cognitive therapy groups for distressing voices: a thematic analysis of participant experiences of the therapy
  109. Response from the author
  110. Group person‐based cognitive therapy for chronic depression: A pilot randomized controlled trial
  111. Testing a Model of Research Intention Among U.K. Clinical Psychologists: A Logistic Regression Analysis
  112. Another rather than other: experiences of peer support specialist workers and their managers working in mental health services
  113. Applying interpersonal theories to the understanding of and therapy for auditory hallucinations: A review of the literature and directions for further research
  114. Service user involvement in clinical guideline development and implementation: Learning from mental health service users in the UK
  115. Hope in psychiatry
  116. Voice hearing within the context of hearers' social worlds: An interpretative phenomenological analysis
  117. What Can Qualitative Research Tell Us about Service User Perspectives of CBT for Psychosis? A Synthesis of Current Evidence
  118. Group person-based cognitive therapy for distressing voices: Pilot data from nine groups
  119. Carers' experiences of assertive outreach services: An exploratory study
  120. Relating therapy for people who hear voices: perspectives from clients, family members, referrers and therapists
  121. Developing positive relationships with voices: A preliminary Grounded Theory
  122. Group person-based cognitive therapy for distressing voices: Views from the hearers
  123. Service user perceptions of involvement in developing NICE mental health guidelines: A grounded theory study
  124. Service-users and carers as placement advisors: Part 1 – getting started
  125. A UK validation of the Stages of Recovery Instrument
  126. Expectations and illusions: a position paper on the relationship between mental health practitioners and social exclusion
  127. Perceived Improvements in Service User Involvement in Two Clinical Psychology Training Courses
  128. Interpersonal Processes and Hearing Voices: A Study of the Association Between Relating to Voices and Distress in Clinical and Non-Clinical Hearers
  129. The Role of Work in Recovery
  130. Analysis of Accident and Emergency Doctors' Responses to Treating People Who Self-Harm
  131. Relating therapy for people who hear voices: A case series
  132. Relating to voices: Exploring the relevance of this concept to people who hear voices
  133. Patients’ perceptions of the impact of involuntary inpatient care on self, relationships and recovery
  134. Evaluating socially inclusive practice: part one ‐ a tool for mental health services
  135. Evaluating socially inclusive practice: part two ‐ findings from a mental health team
  136. The voice and you: development and psychometric evaluation of a measure of relationships with voices
  137. A move towards a culture of involvement: involving service users and carers in the selection of future clinical psychologists
  138. Recovery, psychosis and psychiatry: research is better than rhetoric
  139. Daring to talk back
  140. Revisiting Psychosis: A Two‐Day Workshop
  141. Talking to people about their psychotic experiences
  142. Enabling Occupational Therapy Students to Take a Fresh Approach to Psychosis
  143. Service innovations
  144. Making it work: service users and professionals as research partners
  145. Interpersonal relating and voice hearing: To what extent does relating to the voice reflect social relating?