SARAH MCDAVITT EGAN, M.D.

BROOKLYN, NY

Research Active
Internal Medicine - Hospice and Palliative Medicine NPI registered 20+ years 50 publications 2024 – 2026 NPI: 1396718094

Practice Location

6300 8TH AVE
BROOKLYN, NY 11220-4718

Phone: (718) 765-2500

What does SARAH EGAN research?

Sarah J Egan studies various aspects of mental and physical health, particularly in children. One of her significant research areas involves developing online therapies for grief, co-designed with young people to suit their preferences and needs. She also investigates the genetic underpinnings of childhood epilepsy, specifically related to the CDKL5 gene, and how it affects brain function and seizure susceptibility. Additionally, Egan explores interventions for conditions such as glycogen storage disease, emphasizing patient experiences to improve treatment protocols.

Key findings

  • In a study on auditory brain responses, N1 amplitudes were reduced only when sounds were generated by a human agent, while P2 amplitudes were reduced regardless of the source, indicating different brain mechanisms at play.
  • The online therapy program for grief, developed with children's input, showed improved engagement, with 97% of participants reporting satisfaction and noticeable reductions in anxiety and depression symptoms.
  • A mouse model lacking the CDKL5 gene exhibited severe, often fatal seizures when exposed to loud sounds, highlighting the genetic link to audiogenic epilepsy and providing a model to test new treatments.
  • Adults with glycogen storage disease type Ia reported improved physical and emotional functioning following gene therapy, with most reducing their reliance on cornstarch for blood sugar management during trials.
  • Automated microscopy using deep neural networks for detecting sperm in forensic evidence achieved over 99.9% accuracy, significantly speeding up the investigation process without sacrificing precision.

Frequently asked questions

Does Dr. Egan study grief interventions?
Yes, Dr. Egan focuses on developing online therapies for grief, particularly tailored for children and adolescents.
What conditions related to epilepsy does Dr. Egan research?
Dr. Egan studies CDKL5 deficiency disorder, a severe childhood epilepsy condition, examining how genetic factors influence seizure susceptibility.
Is Dr. Egan's work relevant to dietary management of glycogen storage disease?
Absolutely, she has researched gene therapy for glycogen storage disease type Ia, focusing on patient experiences and treatment outcomes.
Are there technological innovations in Dr. Egan's research?
Yes, she has explored the use of artificial intelligence in therapy training and in forensic applications to enhance accuracy and reduce time in analysis.
What is the significance of co-design in Dr. Egan's work?
Co-design is crucial in her research, particularly for therapy programs, as it ensures the interventions are relatable and effective for the end-users, particularly children and adolescents.

Publications in plain English

Co-designed unguided internet cognitive behaviour therapy for grief in adolescence: a pilot randomised controlled trial.

2026

Cognitive behaviour therapy

Egan SJ, Pauley-Gadd SB, Callaghan T, O'Brien A, Greene D +13 more

Plain English
A pilot trial tested an online self-help CBT program for grief — co-designed with young people — in 88 adolescents, comparing it to a four-week waitlist. The program was feasible and highly acceptable, with 97% of completers reporting they liked it, and participants showed improvements in wellbeing compared to the waitlist, as well as within-group reductions in anxiety, depression, and trauma symptoms by follow-up. No significant group differences were found for anxiety, depression, trauma, or prolonged grief at the primary post-intervention timepoint, indicating larger trials are needed.

PubMed

Automated microscopy in forensic biology: Validating the use of deep neural networks for the detection of human spermatozoa in Christmas Tree stained slides.

2026

Science & justice : journal of the Forensic Science Society

Topping DC, Tran T, Hymus CM, Mountford NS, Liew YC +2 more

Plain English
Forensic laboratories traditionally rely on manual microscopy to detect sperm cells in sexual assault evidence, which is time-consuming especially when sperm numbers are very low. An automated system using deep neural networks correctly identified sperm cells with accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity all above 99.9%, and in some low-sperm samples outperformed human examiners. Automating this process can substantially speed up forensic casework without sacrificing accuracy.

PubMed

Corrigendum to "Automated microscopy in forensic biology: Validating the use of deep neural networks for the detection of human spermatozoa in Christmas Tree stained slides". [Sci. Just. 66(1) (2026) 101370].

2026

Science & justice : journal of the Forensic Science Society

Topping DC, Tran T, Hymus CM, Mountford NS, Liew YC +2 more

PubMed

From innovation to implementation: Artificial intelligence in cognitive behaviour therapy training and supervision.

2026

Behaviour research and therapy

Shafran R, Bond L, Carlbring P, Cohen ZD, Creed TA +15 more

Plain English
This paper examines how artificial intelligence could change the way therapists are trained and supervised in cognitive behavioral therapy, including using AI to simulate patients, give real-time feedback on technique, and build cultural competence. Key challenges identified include ensuring data quality, addressing ethical concerns, and making AI tools work in low-resource settings where mental health care is most needed. The authors propose guidelines for developing and evaluating AI in therapy training responsibly.

PubMed

A haplotype-resolved, chromosome-scale genome assembly for the southern live oak, Quercus virginiana.

2026

G3 (Bethesda, Md.)

Aközbek L, Meharg Z, Abendroth-McGhee J, Akinsipe T, Dhakal R +20 more

Plain English
Scientists assembled a high-quality, complete reference genome for the southern live oak, Quercus virginiana, using a tree cloned from a historically significant specimen at Auburn University. This is the first reference genome for the live oak group and reveals details about the tree's chromosome structure, genetic variation, and regions important for inheritance. The resource will help researchers study how oaks adapt, hybridize, and evolve across their range.

PubMed

Trial Interviews to Explore Glycogen Storage Disease Type Ia Patient Experiences Following Gene Therapy.

2026

Journal of health economics and outcomes research

Turner-Bowker DM, Butler J, Egan S, Weinstein DA, Rodriguez-Buritica DF +5 more

Plain English
Adults with glycogen storage disease type Ia — a condition requiring strict dietary management to keep blood sugar stable — were interviewed at multiple time points during a gene therapy trial to capture their lived experience of treatment. Most reported reduced reliance on cornstarch, improved physical and emotional functioning, and overall satisfaction with the therapy, though some experienced blood sugar instability during dietary transitions. The results highlight both the promise of gene therapy for this condition and the need for close dietary monitoring during treatment.

PubMed

Loss of cyclin-dependent kinase-like 5 results in susceptibility to audiogenic seizures in mice.

2026

Epilepsia open

Higgins J, Egan S, El-Mansoury B, Henshall DC, Mamad O

Plain English
Mice lacking the CDKL5 gene — a model for a severe form of childhood epilepsy — were exposed to loud sounds, and nearly all male knockout mice had severe, often fatal seizures in response, while female carrier mice and normal mice were largely unaffected. This is the first demonstration of sound-triggered seizures in this mouse model, and a subset of knockout mice also had spontaneous seizures captured on video-EEG recording. The finding provides a reliable and practical way to test potential seizure treatments for CDKL5 deficiency disorder.

PubMed

The process of co-design with children of supporting kids in loss: An unguided internet cognitive behavior therapy intervention for grief.

2026

Death studies

Egan SJ, O'Brien A, Bills E, Pauley-Gadd SB, Zammit T +11 more

Plain English
Researchers worked directly with 11 children to co-design an internet-based therapy program for grief, incorporating the children's preferences for colorful visuals, audio recordings, drawing, and interactive features. The resulting program consists of eight modules delivered over four weeks, targeting anxiety as the primary outcome along with depression, wellbeing, trauma, and prolonged grief in children aged 6–12. A planned randomized controlled trial will test whether this child-informed design improves both effectiveness and engagement.

PubMed

I, You, Robot: Attenuation for auditory outcomes of actions performed by different agents shows distinct patterns for N1 and P2 amplitudes.

2026

Biological psychology

Egan S, Weber C, Ghio M, Bellebaum C

Plain English
Researchers measured brain responses to sounds triggered by different agents — a person's own hand, another person's hand, a robotic hand controlled by a person, and a computer-driven robot — to understand how the brain predicts and dampens incoming sensory signals. The early brain response (N1) was only reduced when a human was involved in generating the sound, while a later response (P2) was reduced for all observed actions regardless of whether a human or machine was responsible. This shows that two distinct brain mechanisms govern how we dampen sensory signals from others' actions, with only one of them depending on recognizing a human agent.

PubMed

Intersectin-1 enhances calcium-dependent replenishment of the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles during development.

2025

The Journal of physiology

Yang YM, Fekete A, Arsenault J, Sengar AS, Aitoubah J +9 more

Plain English
Researchers studied how the scaffold protein Intersectin-1 (Itsn1) influences the ability of neurons to sustain rapid firing at a key auditory brain synapse in mice at different developmental stages. Itsn1 loss had no effect in young mice but, in mature mice, slowed the recovery of the synapse after heavy use by impairing a calcium-dependent process that refills the pool of ready-to-release neurotransmitter packages. The findings reveal a specific developmental mechanism by which Itsn1 helps maintain reliable signal transmission at high firing rates.

PubMed

Assessing Communication Impairments in a Rare Neurodevelopmental Disorder: TheClinical Trials Readiness Study.

2025

Neurology. Clinical practice

Berg AT, Nili AN, Evans L, Paltell KC, Kaiser AJE +5 more

Plain English
Standard developmental assessment tools commonly used in clinical practice were evaluated in children with SCN2A-related disorders — a severe genetic condition causing epilepsy and neurodevelopmental impairment — to determine if they are suitable for measuring communication abilities in clinical trials. Age-standardized scores performed poorly due to severe floor effects and insensitivity to meaningful differences between patients, while alternative scoring approaches (growth scale values and raw scores) captured real differences and tracked change over time. The findings have direct implications for how future trials in this and similar rare conditions should measure treatment outcomes.

PubMed

Establishing national diagnostic reference levels in fluoroscopy and fluoroscopically guided interventions in Ireland and comparing these with national diagnostic reference levels in Europe and internationally.

2025

European journal of radiology

O'Hora L, O'Brien K, Tuffy J, Craig A, Neville N +5 more

Plain English
Ireland established national radiation dose reference levels for 52 types of fluoroscopy procedures used in medical imaging, using data collected from all relevant facilities across the country. Separate reference levels were set for different equipment types and for pediatric patients. When compared internationally, Irish dose levels are generally lower than those reported in other countries, providing a useful benchmark for ongoing quality improvement in radiation safety.

PubMed

Perfectionism and compulsive exercise: a systematic review and preliminary meta-analysis.

2025

Eating and weight disorders : EWD

Bills E, Muir SR, Stackpole R, Egan SJ

Plain English
A meta-analysis of seven studies pooling data from over 3,100 participants found that higher perfectionism — whether measured as striving for high standards or worry about mistakes — was significantly associated with more compulsive exercise. The pooled correlations were moderate in size, consistent across different dimensions of perfectionism. Given that compulsive exercise is involved in maintaining eating disorders, the findings point to perfectionism as a relevant treatment target when addressing unhealthy exercise patterns.

PubMed

A forward genetic screen identifies potassium channel essentiality in SHH medulloblastoma maintenance.

2025

Developmental cell

Fan JJ, Erickson AW, Carrillo-Garcia J, Wang X, Skowron P +35 more

Plain English
A genetic screening approach in mice with a common type of childhood brain tumor identified a potassium channel protein called KCNB2 as essential for keeping tumor cells alive. KCNB2 controls cell volume in tumor-propagating cells, and removing it causes the cells to swell, take up less growth factor signaling, and proliferate more slowly. Notably, blocking KCNB2 had little effect on normal development and worked even better when combined with standard anti-tumor therapy.

PubMed

Subtype-specific role for Jagged1 in promoting or inhibiting breast tumor formation.

2025

Oncogenesis

Chung WC, Wang W, Challagundla L, Moore CD, Egan SE +1 more

Plain English
Experiments in mice showed that Jagged1, a signaling protein in breast tissue, acts as a tumor suppressor in luminal breast cancer but promotes tumor growth in the more aggressive basal subtype. Deleting Jagged1 from the mammary gland disrupted normal cell development and changed the balance between stem-like and mature cell types. Analysis of human breast cancer data confirmed these opposing effects, suggesting that the role of Jagged1 in breast cancer depends critically on the cell type of origin.

PubMed

Perfectionism as a risk factor for psychopathology in a community sample of young women: disorder-specific pathways to disordered eating or obsessive-compulsive symptoms.

2025

Cognitive behaviour therapy

Claus N, Cludius B, Egan SJ, Shafran R, Ehring T +2 more

Plain English
A three-wave online study of nearly 500 young women examined whether perfectionism predicts later development of eating disorder or OCD symptoms, and whether disorder-specific factors like body dissatisfaction mediate these links. Perfectionism predicted increased OCD symptoms but not eating disorder symptoms, while eating disorder symptoms actually predicted later increases in perfectionism. Body dissatisfaction independently predicted both types of symptoms, suggesting it is a broad vulnerability factor rather than specific to eating disorders.

PubMed

Characterization of the dual ITK/JAK3 small molecule covalent inhibitor ATI-2138.

2025

The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics

Kaul A, Hope H, Xu C, Basavalingappa R, Binz SK +31 more

Plain English
ATI-2138 is a new drug candidate that simultaneously blocks two enzymes — ITK and JAK3 — that drive inflammation in autoimmune diseases. In laboratory and animal studies it reduced disease in models of arthritis and colitis, and in a first-in-human trial it was safe and well-tolerated, with measurable effects on the intended biological targets. These results position ATI-2138 as a promising candidate for treating autoimmune and inflammatory conditions.

PubMed

Bacterial transfer during sexual intercourse as a tool for forensic detection.

2025

iScience

Dixon R, Egan S, Payne M, Mullally C, Chapman B

Plain English
This study demonstrated that bacteria naturally present in the reproductive tract are transferred between sexual partners during unprotected intercourse and can be detected using advanced DNA sequencing. These unique bacterial signatures could serve as forensic evidence in sexual assault investigations, particularly in cases where no male DNA is found. The use of barrier contraceptives affects transfer, which has practical implications for evidence interpretation.

PubMed

Longitudinal study on immunologic, lipoproteomic, and inflammatory responses indicates the safety of sequential COVID-19 vaccination.

2025

Journal of molecular medicine (Berlin, Germany)

Lang J, Bernal A, Wist J, Egan S, Bong SH +10 more

Plain English
A longitudinal study tracked immune, inflammatory, and metabolic markers in 33 people receiving two to four COVID-19 vaccine doses over more than a year. Vaccine-related changes in these markers were temporary and minor, with the overall metabolic profiles of vaccinated individuals closely resembling those of unvaccinated, uninfected controls rather than people who had COVID-19. The data support the metabolic safety of repeated COVID-19 vaccination.

PubMed

Bacterial Supplements Significantly Improve the Growth Rate of Cultured Asparagopsis armata.

2025

Marine biotechnology (New York, N.Y.)

Li J, Alperstein L, Tatsumi M, de Nys R, Nappi J +1 more

Plain English
Researchers tested whether adding specific growth-promoting bacteria to cultures of Asparagopsis armata — a red seaweed being farmed as a feed additive to reduce methane emissions from cattle — could improve how fast the seaweed grows. All tested bacterial strains significantly increased the seaweed's growth rate, and the introduced bacteria integrated into the seaweed's microbial community without disrupting existing microbes. Microbial inoculation appears to be a practical and safe strategy to boost seaweed farm productivity.

PubMed

Self-compassion, body appreciation, and eating disorder symptoms among young adults with weight loss goals: a diary study.

2025

Eating and weight disorders : EWD

Batchelor R, O'Leary B, Egan SJ, Thøgersen-Ntoumani C

Plain English
Young adults trying to lose weight reported their levels of self-compassion, body appreciation, and disordered eating behaviors twice a day for a week, allowing researchers to look at how these variables shifted together within the same person over time. On days and at times when individuals felt more self-compassionate or more appreciative of their body, they also reported less disordered eating. The findings suggest that interventions targeting self-compassion and body appreciation may help reduce disordered eating in people actively trying to manage their weight.

PubMed

Effect of a portion-size default nudge on meat consumption and diner satisfaction: controlled experiments in Stanford University dining halls.

2025

BMC public health

Voşki A, Braginsky M, Zhang A, Bertoldo J, Egan S +3 more

Plain English
Two field experiments in Stanford University dining halls tested whether reducing serving spoon size would lead diners to eat less meat without harming their satisfaction. A moderate 25% reduction showed a non-significant trend toward less meat served, while a larger 50% reduction had no effect on meat consumption and actually reduced diner satisfaction. The results suggest that very large portion reductions may backfire, and that moderate nudges warrant further study in different food service contexts.

PubMed

Sea-weeding enhances early coral survival on seeding devices, but benefits of seeding diminish after one year.

2025

Journal of environmental management

Smith HA, Dallmeyer-Drennen G, Bourne DG, Egan S, Page CA

Plain English
Researchers tested whether placing coral larvae on specially designed "seeding devices" and removing competing macroalgae improved coral survival on degraded reefs over two years. Devices improved first-year survival compared to natural recruitment, especially in areas where seaweed was actively removed, but those advantages largely disappeared by the second year. The study provides realistic survival estimates and cost data to help managers assess whether coral seeding is a worthwhile restoration investment at specific sites.

PubMed

Widening the Reach: The Broad Impact of Unguided Self-Help for Eating Disorders.

2025

The International journal of eating disorders

Shafran R, Egan SJ

Plain English
A commentary on a meta-analysis of self-help interventions for eating disorders, highlighting that these interventions also improved comorbid difficulties such as anxiety, depression, and low self-esteem — not just the primary eating disorder symptoms. The author argues that this broad impact is consistent with findings in other areas and emphasizes the value of tracking session-by-session progress to guide decisions when multiple problems are present. The key practical message is that focused self-help for eating disorders can deliver benefits that extend well beyond the primary condition.

PubMed

Comparative proteomics of biofilm development indiscovers a distinct family of Ca-dependent adhesins.

2025

mBio

Ali S, Stavropoulos A, Jenkins B, Graves S, Ahmadi A +11 more

Plain English
Using protein analysis across different stages of biofilm formation in a marine bacterium, researchers identified 248 proteins involved in the transition from free-swimming to surface-attached life, including a large previously unknown protein called BapP. Experiments showed BapP is essential for biofilm formation and that its function depends on calcium levels, similar to adhesion proteins found in other bacteria. This work expands knowledge of how bacteria stick to surfaces and could inform strategies to control biofilm formation in marine and medical contexts.

PubMed

Disruption of host-associated and benthic microbiota affects reproductive output and settlement of a habitat-forming macroalga.

2025

Proceedings. Biological sciences

McGrath AH, Steinberg PD, Egan S, Kjelleberg S, Marzinelli EM

Plain English
Researchers disrupted the microbes living on and around a dominant seaweed on Australian rocky shores to test how those microbes affect the seaweed's ability to reproduce and establish new plants. Disrupting the seaweed's own microbiome reduced egg release, while disrupting both the seaweed and surrounding surface microbes together significantly reduced how many young plants successfully settled. The results show that both the seaweed's personal microbial community and the broader surface environment are important for its reproduction and long-term survival.

PubMed

Assigning Targetable Molecular Pathways to Transdiagnostic Subgroups Across Autism and Related Neurodevelopmental Disorders.

2025

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology

Ellegood J, Beauchamp A, Yee Y, Devenyi G, Ziolkowski J +122 more

Plain English
Researchers used brain imaging and gene expression data from over 3,500 mice spanning 135 genetic models of neurodevelopmental disorders, then matched brain structure patterns to over 2,000 humans with autism, ADHD, OCD, and related conditions. Four consistent brain structure clusters were identified across both species, each linked to a specific molecular pathway — two involving gene regulation and two involving the connections between neurons. This cross-species approach makes it possible to assign previously unexplained human cases to biological subtypes, which could improve the precision of future treatments.

PubMed

Two Cases of Chromosome 27 Trisomy in Horses Detected Using Illumina BeadChip Genotyping.

2025

Animals : an open access journal from MDPI

Ryan CA, Berry DP, Bugno-Poniewierska M, Burke MK, Raudsepp T +2 more

Plain English
Genetic data from over 17,000 horses were screened for chromosomal abnormalities, identifying two young male Irish Sport Horses with an extra copy of chromosome 27 — a condition rarely documented in horses. Both cases arose from a cell division error (heterodisomy), one from the father and one from an older mother, and neither showed obvious physical abnormalities at the time of detection. The findings suggest that routine genetic screening for chromosomal abnormalities at registration could be a cost-effective way to identify potentially infertile horses early.

PubMed

A New Twist on an Old Story: Pollination and Seed Predation in.

2025

The American naturalist

Comerford MS, Carroll SP, Egan SP

Plain English
A common red-shouldered bug was identified as the first insect in the order Hemiptera known to both pollinate a plant and have its offspring eat that plant's seeds — a rare type of insect-plant relationship. Lab and field experiments confirmed the bugs drink nectar and transfer pollen, providing a pollination benefit, while their offspring destroy seeds in the same fruit. This finding also expands understanding of how this bug's feeding behavior evolved, challenging the previous assumption that seed-eating alone drove its morphology.

PubMed

The impact of perfectionism on treatment outcomes of mental health disorders: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials.

2025

Cognitive behaviour therapy

Jiang Z, Egan SJ, Greene D, Frost M, Ma Y +1 more

Plain English
A systematic review examined 16 randomized controlled trials to determine whether perfectionism at the start of treatment predicts how well people respond to therapy for mental health conditions including eating disorders, anxiety, OCD, and depression. Across these studies, higher baseline perfectionism was associated with worse treatment outcomes in about half the trials, with the most consistent negative effects found in studies involving children and adolescents. Clinicians are advised to assess and directly address perfectionism when it appears to be blocking progress in therapy.

PubMed

A World That Recognises, Validates, and Supports Young People's Grief: A Co-Designed Study.

2025

Health promotion journal of Australia : official journal of Australian Association of Health Promotion Professionals

Breen LJ, Zammit T, Payne N, Lobo R, Black A +1 more

Plain English
Young people aged 14–24 with lived experience of grief co-designed a research project to explore what grief literacy means to them, conducting workshops and creating scenarios depicting a grief-literate world. Key findings were that young people want to understand grief, know how to support grieving peers, and be supported themselves — and that they reject outdated stage-based grief models and unsolicited advice. The study provides a foundation for creating youth-centered grief education and support resources.

PubMed

Stenotrophomonas maltophilia impedes Bacillus biocontrol of tomato wilt disease by degrading its lipopeptide antibiotics.

2025

The ISME journal

Peng J, Mavrodi DV, Li J, Egan S, Zhang H +7 more

Plain English
Researchers investigated why Bacillus bacteria — which produce natural antibiotics to protect tomato plants from a wilt-causing pathogen — often perform worse in the field than in the lab. They found that a soil bacterium called Stenotrophomonas maltophilia breaks down the antibiotics produced by Bacillus, effectively helping the plant pathogen survive. Understanding this three-way interaction is critical for improving the reliability of biological pest control in real agricultural settings.

PubMed

Molecular detection of avian parasites in Australian mosquitoes (Culicidae).

2025

Journal of medical entomology

Peck AM, Lymbery A, Egan S, Ash A

Plain English
Over two years, researchers collected and tested more than 3,000 mosquitoes from 12 species across Perth, Western Australia, screening them for blood parasites using molecular techniques. Avian malaria-like parasites were detected in nearly 4% of pools, mostly in Culex mosquitoes, including three newly identified parasite types unique to the region. The study demonstrates that mosquito-based surveillance is an effective way to track blood parasites in wildlife and adds new information about the diversity of these parasites in Australia.

PubMed

Development of patient-centric conceptual frameworks for symptoms and impacts of ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD).

2025

Journal of patient-reported outcomes

Theodore-Oklota C, O'Mara A, Butler J, Egan S, Hribal E +1 more

Plain English
Researchers interviewed patients, caregivers, and medical experts to document the full burden of ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, a rare genetic disorder causing dangerous ammonia buildup, and to build a framework of its most important symptoms and impacts. The most commonly reported problems included cognitive and neurological symptoms, gut issues, fatigue, and wide-ranging effects on diet, emotions, and social life. This framework is designed to guide the development of patient-relevant outcome measures for use in clinical trials of new treatments, including gene therapy.

PubMed

Identification of CDC25 as a Common Therapeutic Target for Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.

2025

Cell reports

Liu JC, Granieri L, Shrestha M, Wang DY, Vorobieva I +12 more

PubMed

A qualitative study of perceptions and acceptability of unguided internet cognitive behavior therapy for grieving adolescents.

2025

Death studies

Egan SJ, O'Brien AB, Bills E, Pauley-Gadd SB, Callaghan T +12 more

Plain English
Nine adolescents who participated in a trial of online self-help CBT for grief were interviewed about their experience with exposure and imagery transformation techniques — components typically delivered by therapists. Most found these techniques acceptable, even when delivered without professional guidance through an internet platform. This supports the feasibility of including these methods in unguided digital grief interventions for teens.

PubMed

Altered Short Non-Coding RNA Landscape in the Hippocampus of a Mouse Model of CDKL5 Deficiency Disorder.

2025

Biomolecules

El-Mansoury B, Hayes A, Egan S, Higgins J, Keane SB +6 more

Plain English
Researchers mapped changes in small non-coding RNA molecules in the brains of mice lacking the CDKL5 gene, which causes a severe childhood epilepsy syndrome. Extensive disruptions were found across multiple types of non-coding RNA, including microRNAs, and two specific microRNAs were confirmed as altered in the disease model. These findings open a new avenue of research into how CDKL5 loss disrupts brain function and point toward potential biomarkers and treatment targets.

PubMed

A Rule-Based Conversational Agent for Mental Health and Well-Being in Young People: Formative Case Series During the Rise of Generative AI.

2025

JMIR formative research

Wrightson-Hester AR, Anderson G, Dunstan J, McEvoy PM, Sutton CJ +8 more

Plain English
A rule-based mental health chatbot called MYLO, co-designed with young people, was tested over four weeks with 24 young Australians with anxiety or depression, partly to see how it compared with users' experiences of newer AI tools like ChatGPT. Participants showed moderate to large improvements in distress, anxiety, and functioning despite many expecting more human-like conversation from the chatbot. The findings highlight the need to either upgrade rule-based chatbots or clearly communicate their limitations to users who now have high expectations from generative AI.

PubMed

A qualitative exploration of family experiences with a virtual cooking and nutrition programme.

2025

Public health nutrition

Egan S, Saxe-Custack A

Plain English
Families in Flint, Michigan participated in virtual focus groups after completing a five-week online cooking and nutrition program that included ingredient delivery and instruction from a chef and dietitian. Five main themes emerged around cooking challenges, class format, family support, food provision, and learning, with many families reporting that the program strengthened family bonds and supported children's emotional wellbeing. Virtual cooking programs like this appear particularly valuable in under-resourced communities where in-person services are limited.

PubMed

The relationship between perfectionism and self-esteem in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

2024

Behavioural and cognitive psychotherapy

Khossousi V, Greene D, Shafran R, Callaghan T, Dickinson S +1 more

Plain English
A systematic review and meta-analysis of 83 studies with over 32,000 adults quantified the relationship between perfectionism and self-esteem. People with high perfectionistic concerns — excessive worry about mistakes and self-criticism — had meaningfully lower self-esteem, while people high in perfectionistic strivings — setting very high personal standards — showed only a negligible positive association with self-esteem. The results support the idea that it is the negative, self-critical dimension of perfectionism that undermines self-worth, and they suggest that CBT for perfectionism may be worth comparing directly to self-esteem treatments.

PubMed

A protocol for a pilot randomised controlled trial of unguided internet cognitive behaviour therapy for grief in adolescents.

2024

Internet interventions

Egan SJ, Munro C, Pauley-Gadd SB, O'Brien A, Callaghan T +13 more

Plain English
This paper describes the design and protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial of an internet-delivered CBT program for grief specifically tailored for adolescents, which was built through a co-design process with young people. Participants are randomized to eight online modules over four weeks or a four-week waitlist, with outcomes including wellbeing, anxiety, depression, trauma symptoms, and prolonged grief measured at three timepoints. The protocol also includes qualitative feedback to assess acceptability and programmatic data to assess feasibility.

PubMed

Caregiver-reported barriers to engagement in a paediatric fresh fruit and vegetable prescription programme.

2024

Journal of nutritional science

Saxe-Custack A, Egan S, Farmer B, Pulka K, Sampson A

Plain English
Researchers interviewed 32 caregivers of children enrolled in a produce prescription program in Flint, Michigan, to understand why some families struggled to use the program despite finding it valuable. Five barrier themes emerged: food insecurity, how prescriptions were distributed, difficulty redeeming them, lack of educational support, and program design issues. Caregivers recommended concrete solutions including partnering with larger grocery retailers and creating digital prescriptions, offering practical guidance for improving similar programs elsewhere.

PubMed

Description of a new species ofAshmead from Houston, Texas, USA (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea, Eulophidae).

2024

ZooKeys

O'Loughlin B, Brandão-Dias PFP, Gates MW, Egan SP

Plain English
A new species of parasitoid wasp was discovered on the Rice University campus in Houston, Texas, emerging from galls made by a gall wasp on southern live oak leaves. This is the first parasitoid of its genus found anywhere in the world to target cynipid gall wasps, and hints at a previously unknown ecological relationship between these parasitoids, gall wasps, and oaks in North America. The discovery is supported by DNA barcoding and behavioral observations of the female wasp scanning leaves to locate host galls.

PubMed

Outcomes of tunnelled cuffed centrally inserted central catheter removal: A retrospective cohort study.

2024

Pediatric blood & cancer

Borello E, Egan S, Dale S, Barlow A, Hu YJ +2 more

Plain English
A retrospective study at a children's cancer hospital in Melbourne compared two methods for removing a type of tunnelled central venous catheter used to deliver chemotherapy: pulling it out with traction versus surgically exposing the cuff through a small dissection. The dissection method had a higher first-attempt success rate (99% vs. 91%) and no cases of cuff retention, while the traction method was far less expensive (approximately A$387 vs. A$2,560 per removal). The results support traction as the preferred first-line approach, with dissection reserved for cases where traction fails.

PubMed

Exploring the role of home play and learning activities in socioemotional development at 36-months: Findings from a large birth cohort study.

2024

Infant behavior & development

Hoyne C, Egan SM

Plain English
A secondary analysis of data from nearly 10,000 three-year-olds in Ireland examined which specific home play activities predicted children's social and emotional development, accounting for family and parenting factors. Informal activities like games, painting, drawing, and reading predicted better socioemotional outcomes, while structured academic activities like letter and number games showed weaker associations. The quality of the parent-child relationship — particularly warmth and closeness — was the strongest predictor overall.

PubMed

PIMMS-Dash: Accessible analysis, interrogation, and visualisation of high-throughput transposon insertion sequencing (TIS) data.

2024

Computational and structural biotechnology journal

Blanchard AM, Taylor A, Warry A, Shephard F, Curwen A +3 more

Plain English
PIMMS-Dash is a free web-based tool that lets researchers explore and visualize data from high-throughput transposon insertion sequencing experiments — a technique used to identify which bacterial genes are essential for survival under different conditions. The tool requires no bioinformatics expertise and generates interactive tables and publication-quality figures directly from existing pipeline outputs. Making this kind of analysis accessible to non-specialists lowers barriers to entry and speeds up the identification of genes relevant to bacterial fitness and disease.

PubMed

A patient organization perspective: charting the course to a cure for SCN2A-related disorders.

2024

Therapeutic advances in rare disease

Schust LF, Burke J, SanInocencio C, Bryan BA, Ho KS +1 more

Plain English
This article describes the mission and strategic approach of the FamilieSCN2A Foundation, a patient advocacy organization working to develop treatments for SCN2A-related disorders — severe genetic conditions causing epilepsy, autism, and intellectual disability. The foundation has raised approximately $6 million and funded 26 research grants to build the scientific and clinical infrastructure needed to advance drug development. The article outlines how the foundation is creating a research ecosystem — including natural history studies and outcome measure development — to maximize the chances of bringing effective treatments to patients.

PubMed

Incidence of puerperal metritis and associated risk factors in dairy cows in Hawassa, Southern Ethiopia.

2024

Research in veterinary science

Alemu M, Aragaw K, Sheferaw D, Sibhat B, Abebe R +3 more

Plain English
A prospective study followed 120 dairy cows in Ethiopia for three weeks after calving to measure how often they developed uterine infection and what factors increased risk. The cumulative incidence was 17.5%, with most cases occurring within the first 10 days after birth, and retained placenta was the only significant risk factor — increasing the odds of infection nearly 15-fold. E. coli and Staphylococcus were the most common bacteria isolated, and the findings highlight the importance of preventing retained placenta to reduce uterine infections in this herd.

PubMed

Correction: An Artificial Therapist (Manage Your Life Online) to Support the Mental Health of Youth: Co-Design and Case Series.

2024

JMIR human factors

Wrightson-Hester AR, Anderson G, Dunstan J, McEvoy PM, Sutton CJ +7 more

PubMed

Artificial intelligence as a virtual coach in a cognitive behavioural intervention for perfectionism in young people: A randomised feasibility trial.

2024

Internet interventions

Johnson C, Egan SJ, Carlbring P, Shafran R, Wade TD

Plain English
An online CBT program for perfectionism was tested in 85 university students, comparing pure self-help with a version where participants were guided to consult an AI chatbot for help. Both groups completed similar numbers of modules and showed similar improvements in perfectionism, anxiety, and disordered eating over eight weeks, but the AI-guided group became nearly 3.5 times more open to receiving support from AI. The trial establishes feasibility but was underpowered to detect differences in outcomes between conditions, pointing to the need for a larger fully-powered study.

PubMed

Frequent Co-Authors

Bronwyn Myers Roz Shafran Elizabeth Bills Lauren J Breen Sarah Egan Suhelen Egan Sian B Pauley-Gadd Danyelle Greene Christopher Hall Hayden Wilson

Physician data sourced from the NPPES NPI Registry . Publication data from PubMed . Plain-English summaries generated by AI. Not medical advice.