Contents A9 Editorial Board A11 Highlights of this issue Editorials 205 Interconnected or disconnected? Promotion of mental health and prevention of mental disorder in the digital age J. F. Hayes, D. L. Maughan and H. Grant-Peterkin 208 Psychotherapies should be assessed for both benefit and harm J. Scott and A. H. Young 210 Iatrogenic harm from psychological therapies – time to move on G. D. Parry, M. J. Crawford and C. Duggan 212 The Babadook – psychiatry in the movies Jayesh Busgeet Review articles 213 Psychological interventions for adults with bipolar disorder: systematic review and meta-analysis M. Oud, E. Mayo-Wilson, R. Braidwood, P. Schulte, S. H. Jones, R. Morriss, R. Kupka, P. Cuijpers and T. Kendall 222 From Greek tragedy to a psychiatry lexicon – in 100 words John H. M. Crichton 223 Anxiety and new onset of cardiovascular disease: critical review and meta-analysis N. M. Batelaan, A. Seldenrijk, M. Bot, A. J. L. M. van Balkom and B. W. J. H. Penninx Papers 232 Premature mortality in autism spectrum disorder T. Hirvikoski, E. Mittendorfer-Rutz, M. Boman, H. Larsson, P. Lichtenstein and S. Bölte 239 Differences in cancer stage, treatment and in-hospital mortality between patients with and without schizophrenia: retrospective matched-pair cohort study H. Ishikawa, H. Yasunaga, H. Matsui, K. Fushimi and N. Kawakami 245 The effect of experimentally induced sedentariness on mood and psychobiological responses to mental stress R. Endrighi, A. Steptoe and M. Hamer 252 The effect of flexible cognitive–behavioural therapy and medical treatment, including antidepressants on post-traumatic stress disorder and depression in traumatised refugees: pragmatic randomised controlled clinical trial C. B. Buhmann, M. Nordentoft, M. Ekstroem, J. Carlsson and E. Lykke Mortensen 260 Patient experience of negative effects of psychological treatment: results of a national survey M. J. Crawford, L. Thana, L. Farquharson, L. Palmer, E. Hancock, P. Bassett, J. Clarke and G. D. Parry 265 Night Visit – poems by doctors Ann Lilian Jay 266 Evaluation of cumulative cognitive deficits from electro- convulsive therapy G. G. Kirov, L. Owen, H. Ballard, A. Leighton, K. Hannigan, D. Llewellyn, V. Escott-Price and M. Atkins 271 Comparison of antidepressant classes and the risk and time course of suicide attempts in adults: propensity matched, retrospective cohort study R. J. Valuck, A. M. Libby, H. D. Anderson, R. R. Allen, I. Strombom, L. B. Marangell and D. Perahia 280 Mechanical ventilation as an indicator of somatic severity of self-poisoning: implications for psychiatric care and long-term outcomes E. Baer, C. Barré, C. Fleury, C. de Montchenu, J.-B. Garré, N. Lerolle and B. Gohier 286 Needs and fears of young people presenting at accident and emergency department following an act of self-harm: secondary analysis of qualitative data C. Owens, L. Hansford, S. Sharkey and T. Ford 291 An 18th-century view of demonomania. 2: Vampirism – introduction – psychiatry in history Fiona Subotsky 292 Substance misuse in life and death in a 2-year cohort of suicides K. Galway, D. Gossrau-Breen, S. Mallon, L. Hughes, M. Rosato, J. Rondon-Sulbaran and G. Leavey Columns 298 Correspondence 299 Contents of BJPsych Advances 300 Ten books . . . chosen by Iain McClure 302 Book reviews 304 Contents of the American Journal of Psychiatry 305 Kaleidoscope 307 From the Editor’s desk Cover picture Portrait of Cathy with a Cat (c.1955) by Stanley Lench (1934–2000) Stanley Lench taught himself to paint as a teenager and excelled, holding an exhibition at the Beaux Art Gallery in London in 1955 that helped him secure a place in the stained glass department of the Royal College of Art. Inspired by ancient cultures, Cubism and the stars of silent film, Lench studied during the emergence of pop art, from 1955 to 1958. After graduating from the Royal College of Art, Lench enjoyed some commercial success, selling work to Dame Edith Sitwell, and a portrait of actress Pola Negri to the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Throughout his career, Lench experienced periods of great artistic creativity interspersed with periods of introspection and seclusion, and was treated on a number of occasions at Bethlem Royal Hospital and the Maudsley Hospital. Lench worried about his career as an artist, and felt rejected by the art world he continued to support through frequenting exhibitions and later working at the Tate. Despite concerns about his career, Lench succeeded in forging a strong aesthetic and thematic style that was grounded in art history and bound up in his own interests and ideas. In doing this, Lench left a collection of artwork for posterity that is both beautiful and didactic. Image: Stanley Lench B Bethlem Museum of the Mind. We are always looking for interesting and visually appealing images for the cover of the Journal and would welcome suggestions or pictures, which should be sent to Dr Allan Beveridge, British Journal of Psychiatry, 21 Prescot Street, London E1 8BB, UK or bjp@rcpsych.ac.uk. MARCH 2016 VOL 208 NO 3 A10 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. 06 Apr 2021 at 01:45:54, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use. https://www.cambridge.org/core