Английская Википедия:Helen Minnis

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Шаблон:Infobox scientist Helen Minnis is a Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the University of Glasgow. She studies reactive attachment disorder and other developmental conditions.

Early life and education

Minnis earned a bachelor's degree in biochemistry at the University of Glasgow in 1985.[1] She remained there for her medical studies and completed a bachelor of medicine, bachelor of surgery in 1988.[1] In the 1990s Minnis worked as a doctor in an orphanage in Guatemala.[2] Here she worked with children that had been abused and neglected.[3] It was whilst she was in Guatemala that she became interested in attachment disorder.[4] She noticed that children in orphanages would cling to visitors, whilst children in nearby villages hid from strangers.[3] When she returned to Glasgow she noticed that children there were suffering from similar conditions; which she attributed to neglect.[5] She moved to the Maudsley Hospital, where she trained in psychiatry and focussed her research on children with reactive attachment disorder.[5] She was awarded a Wellcome Trust Clinical Fellowship to work at the Institute of Psychiatry Social, Genetic and Developmental Research Centre from 1995 to 1999.[1] In 1996 she was award a master's degree in epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.[1] She earned a PhD in child and adolescent psychiatry in 1998.[1]

Research and career

Her research today considers the clinical aspects and behavioural genetics of attachment disorder.[2][6][7] She completed her psychiatric training in the University of the West of Scotland before joining the University of Glasgow as a lecturer in 2003. Minnis has studied the mental health of adopted children in Scotland. She found that nurturing parents were incredibly important in a child's psychological development. She has shown that children who suffer from early neglect sometimes have problems with their frontal lobe.[8] In Glasgow she has been piloting the New Orleans Intervention Model,[9] which provides attachment-based assessments for the caregiving relationships of children under five.[8][10] The process takes a few months, including intensive trials of treatment to improve the relationships of people in their homes.[8] She is Chief Investigator of the BeST? randomised controlled trial that compared the New Orleans Intervention Model with social work services.[11] She has been involved with the Scottish Government Scottish Attachment in Action which looks to train and support people about the importance of attachment relationships.[8][12] She has investigated how reactive attachment disorder impacts other developmental disorders, including autism spectrum disorder.

Minnis is part of the Autism Innovative Medicine Studies-2-Trials that studies the biology and development of autism in an effort to inform new treatments.[13][14] Minnis is a member of the United Kingdom's Black Female Professors Forum.[15] She delivered a TEDx talk Lead by admitting you don't know where she spoke about attachment theory and family relationships.[16] In 2011 she was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.[1]

Selected publications

References

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