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People who have psychosis are usually given treatment to help them feel better. These drugs are called antipsychotics. They can be helpful for some patients, but less so for others. The patients who don’t find them helpful often want to change to another treatment to help them feel better. Many people with psychosis have problems with things like concentration, memory, learning, and day to day activities; we call these 'cognitive problems', or 'cognitive deficits'.

Who are we looking for?

We are looking for people aged between 18 and 55 with psychosis OR people without psychosis, known as 'Healthy Controls'.

 

For more information, and to see whether you may be eligible to take part, please download the relevant Participant Information Sheet, below:

People with Psychosis

Healthy Controls

Pictorial Summary Sheet

Investigators

Professor Oliver Howes - Principal Investigator at our South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust Site.

Dr Ellice Caldwell-Dunn - King's College London, Clinical Researcher

Professor Belinda Lennox - University of Oxford

Professor Philip McGuire - University of Oxford

Dr Thomas Kabir - University of Oxford

Dr Bodyl Brand - University of Oxford

Dr Sameer Jauhar - Imperial College London

Professor Paolo Fusar-Poli - King's College London

Lucy Cureton - University of Oxford

Funded by Wellcome