Organisation profile
Organisation profile
Centre for Evidence-Based Psychiatry is part of Psychiatric Research Unit, Region Zealand.
Our aim
The main objective of the centre is to support and promote evidence-based practice in psychiatry by conducting randomised clinical trials and meta-analyses, conducting and updating systematic reviews within psychiatry, teaching and guiding students and researchers in the methodology of evidence-based practice, arranging workshops, seminars and teaching activities.
The Centre conduct research in evidence-based psychiatry, focusing on clinical research projects that investigates the beneficial and harmful effect of pharmacological, electronical devices, and psychological interventions. The Centre also has an interest in more empirical and conceptual foundation, including the effect of control groups within psychiatry, and medicine (placebo interventions). The Centre also works with understanding the basic aspects of the psychiatric diagnosis and are focusing on developing personalized medicine to improve the treatment of patients in clinical practice.
Collaborating partners
• The University of Southern Denmark, Faculty of Health Sciences
• University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
• Aalborg University, The Faculty of Medicine
• Centre for Evidence Based Medicine, Odense University Hospital
• Cochrane Developmental, Psychosocial and Learning Problems
• Cochrane Method Group
• Center for Personality Disorder Research (CPDR), Slagelse, Denmark
• Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Mainz
• Copenhagen Trial Unit, Capital Region of Denmark
Fingerprint
Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
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Methylphenidate denied access to WHO's list of essential medicines for the third time
Storebø, O. J., Edemann-Callesen, H., Pereira Ribeiro, J., Juul, S., Nestved, S. K., Speyer, H., Hoff, A., Lunde, C. & Gluud, C., 8 Jan 2026, (Published, E-pub ahead of print) In: BMJ evidence-based medicine.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review
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Treatment modifiers of interpersonal functioning in psychotherapy for people with borderline personality disorder: Systematic review with meta-analyses of individual participant data
Pereira Ribeiro, J., Stoffers-Winterling, J., Jørgensen, M. S., Juul, S., Matbouriahi, M., Fisher, D., van Ballegooijen, W., Kongerslev, M., Simonsen, E., Karyotaki, E., Cuijpers, P., Bateman, A., Klein, J. P., Amianto, F., Fonagy, P., Dixon-Gordon, K., Chapman, A. L., Thomaes, K., Jacob, G. A. & Kramer, U. & 8 others, , Mar 2026, In: Clinical Psychology Review. 124, 102707.Research output: Contribution to journal › Review › Research › peer-review
Open Access -
Where did I leave my systematic review protocol, and what should it contain regarding Trial Sequential Analysis?
Asante, M. A., Wagner, V., Hafliðadóttir, S. H., Kumburegama, B. W., Pedersen, E. B., Ribeiro, J. P., Schaug, J. P., Milan, J. B., Olsen, M. H., Madsen, C., Riberholt, C. G. & Gluud, C., 29 Jan 2026, In: BMC Medical Research Methodology. 26, 1Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review
Open Access
Press/Media
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Det er, som om vi har glemt, at hyppigt anvendt adhd-medicin er en afart af amfetamin
Storebø, O. J. & Jørring, N. T.
13/04/23
1 Media contribution
Press/Media