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Canterbury Medical Research Foundation funds study of ongoing impact of 'quake brain'

Canterbury Medical Research Foundation funds study of ongoing impact of 'quake brain'
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New research to study ongoing 'quake brain' impact on Cantabrians

John Kirk-Anderson/Stuff Research has found significant impairment in memory and other cognitive functions in Cantabrians who experienced disruption and loss because of the 2011 earthquakes. (File photo) A Christchurch researcher has received more than $200,000 to fund a research project studying the ongoing impact of “‘quake brain” on people’s memory and other cognitive functions a decade after the Canterbury earthquakes. The Canterbury Medical Research Foundation (CMRF) has provided $213,000 in funding to Dr Katie Douglas, who will lead the two-year research project. Douglas, a registered clinical psychologist and senior research fellow at the University of Otago in Christchurch, says the research will build on evidence of “quake brain” already gathered by the university’s psychological research team.

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பல்கலைக்கழகம்-ஆஃப்-ஆடாகொ

Canterbury Medical Research Foundation Funds Study Of Ongoing Impact Of 'Quake Brain'

Thursday, 18 February 2021, 6:35 am The Canterbury Medical Research Foundation (CMRF) is funding a $213,000 research project on the ongoing impact of ‘quake brain’ on people’s memory and other cognitive functions crucial to everyday life. The study builds on evidence of ‘quake brain’ already gathered by a University of Otago psychological research team. They found significant impairment in memory and other cognitive functions such as emotional processing in Cantabrians who experienced disruptions because of the quakes but described themselves as being ‘resilient’. This ‘resilient’ group experienced ‘moderate to severe’ impacts as a result of the quakes – such as loss of income, witnessing

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Eating disorders result in significant financial impact on carers

Date Time Eating disorders result in significant financial impact on carers Anorexia Nervosa has not only a detrimental impact on the people who suffer from the eating disorder, but often a significant financial impact on their carers, new research from the University of Otago, Christchurch, reveals. Associate Professor Jenny Jordan. As part of the Christchurch campus’ Summer Studentship programme psychology student Shistata Dhakal undertook what is believed to be the first New Zealand study exploring the costs and impacts of eating disorders for those caring for someone with an eating disorder. She was supervised by Associate Professor Jenny Jordon who is an expert in the study of eating disorders. The study was sponsored by the Canterbury Medical Research Foundation.

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