Output list
Journal article
First online publication 24-Jun-2026
International Journal of Bullying Prevention, Advanced access
Peer-to-peer bullying is a widespread, persistent form of harm among young people with profound and lasting impacts on their development and wellbeing. Anonymous harm reporting tools, like Stymie, offer a valuable response to known help-seeking barriers, enabling earlier identification and intervention to prevent or limit these harms. This paper reports on findings from a foundational study exploring educators' (n = 14) experiences of Stymie in Australian schools. Semantic thematic analysis identified five overarching themes, demonstrating the utility and positive impact of Stymie in creating safer school environments. Specifically, the results showed that Stymie addressed an identified need and pathway for reporting concerns within schools, with anonymity a core feature. Educators suggested Stymie had helped to facilitate early intervention and deterrence, while creating positive shifts in school safety culture. However, the results also suggested that scaffolded implementation and integration is essential to ensure active engagement with the tool and to maxi-mise outcomes.
Journal article
Early Maladaptive Schemas and Risky Sexual Behavior
First online publication 20-May-2026
International Journal of Sexual Health, Advanced access
Objectives
Risky sexual behaviors (RSB; e.g., condomless sex with strangers) contribute to global health epidemics by facilitating the transmission of STIs and increasing exposure to sexual violence, particularly in younger populations. Therefore, understanding the etiological factors influencing RSB is crucial for informing tailored prevention and intervention approaches. Early Maladaptive Schemas (EMS) offer a potential etiological explanation with associated intervention through Schema Therapy. This study extends previous research regarding EMS and RSB by investigating the influence of schema-driven coping responses.
Methods
An anonymous, cross-sectional online survey recruited 238 participants (135 women, 101 men, 2 non-binary) with a mean age of 29.45 (SD = 6.75). Data were analyzed using bivariate correlations and hierarchical regression models.
Results
EMS domains of Impaired Limits and Other-Directedness were significantly associated with RSB engagement, as were overcompensation and avoidance coping responses. These associations were observed among younger participants.
Conclusions
The findings support the role of EMS as an etiological factor for RSB engagement while identifying behavioral patterns that may be targeted with Schema Therapy to protect sexual health and promote wellbeing.
Journal article
The Importance of Considering Personal Recovery for Eating Disorders
First online publication 21-Apr-2026
European Eating Disorders Review, Advanced access
Objective
Definitions of recovery from eating disorders (EDs) have traditionally emphasised symptom reduction and functional restoration. However, growing research highlights the importance of integrating personal recovery, defined by self-acceptance, autonomy, and psychological wellbeing. This study explored the relationship between partial clinical remission and personal recovery in individuals with lived experience of an ED.
Method
A total of 234 participants (N = 234; Mage = 28.10; 89.3% female; 49.6% non-heterosexual) were recruited online and completed measures assessing ED symptom severity, quality of life, and personal recovery. Criteria for partial clinical remission were based on established cut-offs for measures of ED symptomology. Personal recovery was defined by self-endorsement of a validated recovery framework.
Results
Chi-square tests revealed that rates of personal recovery (52.1%) were significantly higher than rates of partial clinical remission (22.6%). While clinical remission increased the likelihood of personal recovery (OR = 6.46), many participants endorsed personal recovery despite not meeting clinical criteria. No significant differences in personal recovery were found between ED types or between heterosexual and non-heterosexual participants as an exploratory analysis.
Conclusions
These findings underscore the importance of incorporating personal recovery constructs into ED assessment, treatment, and outcome monitoring.
Journal article
First online publication 12-Mar-2026
Psychology, Crime & Law, Advanced access
Non-consensual condom removal (NCCR) is a form of sexual violence involving the removal of a condom before or during sexual intercourse without a partner's knowledge or consent. There is evidence linking the perpetration of non-consensual condom removal to personality characteristics associated with condom use resistance (CUR) tactics and broader categories of sexual violence. The current study aimed to expand on this research by examining NCCR in relation to early maladaptive schemas (EMS) and Schema Theory in an Australian sample. A national cross-sectional survey of people with a penis (N = 106) measured NCCR through modifiable behavioural precursors: sexual arousal and intent to engage in the act. The results identified significant positive associations between certain EMS, CUR, and NCCR arousal but not NCCR intent. Logistic regression analyses indicated that stronger entitlement-related beliefs (e.g. expecting to get one's own way) and other-directed punitiveness (e.g. believing others should be punished for mistakes) were associated with higher odds of NCCR arousal; entitlement-related beliefs were also associated with higher odds of NCCR intent. These findings contribute to understanding the relationship between patterns of dysfunctional cognitions and the perpetration of sexual violence. Intervention efforts may benefit from targeting dysfunctional entitlement and punitive beliefs alongside condom negotiation.
Journal article
Published 2026
Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 85, 1 - 6
Physical activity is a well-established intervention for improving mental health outcomes, yet its integration into psychological practice remains under-researched. Psychologists, as mental health professionals, are well-positioned to promote physical activity. This Short Communication describes the case for physical activity promotion within psychological practice. We explore both clinical and ethical considerations for incorporating physical activity promotion into psychological practice, practical strategies using the '5As model' and a case study to guide psychologists, addressing barriers to change and enhancing client motivation. Importantly, we discuss the need for further training and development for psychologists to ensure safe, impactful physical activity promotion is implemented in practice. By providing actionable recommendations, we aim to support psychologists in integrating physical activity promotion into their clinical practice, ultimately enhancing mental health care.
Magazine article
Why eating disorder recovery is about more than what you eat or weigh
Published 2026
The Conversation, 22 April 2026
Recovering from an eating disorder can be long and complex.
Treatment typically focuses on reducing the unhelpful behaviours and thoughts that characterise these disorders. These include extreme dieting, binge eating, purging, negative body image, and – in some (but not all) cases – having a very low body weight.
But when recovery focuses on a clinical checklist of symptoms, such as reaching a healthy weight, it may ignore other important aspects of getting better.
Eating disorders are not just physical. They are complex mental health conditions that severely disrupt people’s relationship with themselves, their bodies and other people. So the psychological aspects of recovery, and the way people feel about it, also plays an important role.
Our new research shows when people’s broader wellbeing improves – such as developing a sense of self-acceptance or hope – they are more likely to report a “personal” recovery from an eating disorder, even if they still have some clinical symptoms.
Journal article
Published 2026
Journal of Affective Disorders, 401, 1 - 12
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) is prevalent and often co-occurs with depression, contributing to significant disability and healthcare burden. Although treatments such as CBT and SSRIs are effective, access remains limited. This exploratory, randomized controlled trial evaluated the effectiveness of an AI-powered mental health app (PATH) in reducing symptoms of anxiety and depression. A total of 316 UK-based participants (aged 19-70) were randomized to either the intervention group (PATH) or a control group (NHS self-help website). The intervention provided evidence-based strategies including CBT-informed chat therapy and interactive tools. Anxiety (GAD-7) and depression (PHQ-9) scores were measured at baseline, two, eight, and twelve weeks. Of the 316 randomized participants, 235 completed the post-intervention assessment (33.0% attrition in the intervention group vs. 18.5% in the control group). Retention at 8-week and 12-week follow-ups was 77.4% and 54.0%, respectively. At two weeks, the intervention group showed significantly lower GAD-7 and PHQ-9 scores compared to control, with medium effect sizes. At eight weeks, those who continued using the app showed significant reductions in both anxiety and depression, while those who discontinued still showed medium improvements in anxiety. Effects were maintained at twelve weeks, with moderate to large effect sizes. Findings suggest that PATH significantly reduces anxiety and depressive symptoms, particularly with continued use. These results support the app's potential as a scalable, accessible digital intervention to address mental health treatment gaps.
Journal article
Sexual rehabilitation support experiences of Australian adults living with a spinal cord injury
Published 2026
The Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine, 49, 2, 356 - 365
Objective
Sexuality constitutes a fundamental component of wellbeing, which can be profoundly compromised by spinal cord injury. Yet, sexual quality of life associated with rehabilitation remains inadequately addressed.
Design
Using a theory-driven, qualitative methodology and applying Material, Discursive, Intrapsychic Theory (encompassing multiple dimensions of sexuality), this study explored the sexual quality of life support experiences of nine Australian adults with spinal cord injury (SCI); male (n=8) and female (n=1) with varying levels of SCI using online interviews.
Results
Participants’ responses reflected previous research on sexuality in SCI, noting an emphasis on physical aspects (e.g. erection and ejaculation ability) to the neglect of the psychological and interpersonal. The three core components of Material, Discursive, Intrapsychic Theory were mapped onto themes from the data, demonstrating that aside from the physical impact of SCI, one’s identity and relational connection to others, in addition to sociocultural discourse related to disability stigma, collectively impacted sexual wellbeing.
Conclusions
Practical sexual rehabilitation support that provides individualized assistance to build emotional connection, develop skills and offer personalized recommendations for equipment is fundamental to improving sexual wellbeing after a SCI.
Lay Summary
: This study collected information from people with a spinal cord injury to better understand their perceptions of sexual quality of life guided by a theoretical framework. Following analysis of collected information, prominent themes encompassed sexual functioning, loss of autonomy, disability stigma and shame, and partner openness and ability.
Journal article
Published 2026
Psychology and Psychotherapy, 99, 1, 80 - 96
Objectives
Research consistently reports an association between auditory hallucinations and traumatic experiences, yet the psychological mechanisms underpinning this relationship remain poorly understood. Empirical evidence suggests that enduring dispositions, including early maladaptive schemas, interact with immediate stressors to elicit auditory hallucinations. The inner critic represents the activation of such enduring dispositions and concurs with common themes in auditory hallucinations. This study aimed to investigate the effect of the inner critic on speech illusions and the emotional valence of perceived words.
Design
A quasi-experimental design was utilised.
Methods
Forty-two non-clinical participants (67.40% female, Mage = 29.63) completed self-report questionnaires measuring predisposition to hallucination-like experiences, self-criticism and demanding and punitive parent schema modes. Participants then completed an auditory perception task, the Babble Task, inducing speech illusions before and after an inner critic imagery manipulation.
Results
A mixed factorial analysis of variance revealed a significant main effect of the inner critic manipulation on speech illusions, with participants reporting more speech illusions after the manipulation. Participants scoring high on the demanding parent mode reported more speech illusions overall. Linguistic analysis of speech illusions demonstrated an increase in negative tone across groups following the inner critic manipulation.
Conclusions
While acknowledging concerns regarding the convergent validity of the Babble Task, these findings add nuance to existing theories by suggesting that an activated inner critic impairs source monitoring and shapes the content of ensuing auditory intrusions. Additionally, the findings indicate the inner critic as a potential target for treatment in distressing auditory hallucinations.
Journal article
Empowering Women Engaged with Community Corrections to Enhance Outcomes
First online publication 31-Oct-2025
Corrections, Advanced access
Using reflexive thematic analysis, this qualitative study explored factors perceived to foster or impede order completion, drawing on the lived experiences of women sentenced under community corrections and their Case Managers. Fifteen female clients and twelve Case Managers participated in semi-structured interviews. Combined, findings highlight shared awareness of personal (e.g. self-efficacy), social (e.g. positive supports), and system (e.g. resources) conditions required to harness optimal internal motivation and resilience among female corrections clients to enable positive change. Mental health co-morbidity and the complex interplay of past and current traumas reinforce the need for trauma-informed and strength-based approaches to empower women and optimize their chances of success.