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Dr. Lorraine Swords

Assistant Professor (Psychology)


Lorraine Swords is an Assistant Professor with the School of Psychology and board member of the Trinity Research in Childhood Centre. Lorraine graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (First Class Honours) in Psychology from University College Dublin (UCD) in 2000 before completing a Master of Psychological Science in Health Psychology at the National University of Ireland, Galway, in 2002. She returned to UCD in 2003 to study for her PhD in Psychology on the topic of children's perceptions of psychological disorders in their peers. Prior to taking up her lectureship at Trinity in 2009, Lorraine worked as a researcher on the National Longitudinal Study of Children in Ireland, Growing Up in Ireland. Lorraine's primary teaching responsibilities are in the area of developmental psychology and, along with her collaborators and postgraduate students, she researches, presents and publishes on topics relating to children's health and wellbeing. She has particular research interest in peer interactions in the context of physical or mental health conditions in childhood and adolescence, focusing on help-seeking, help-giving and stigmatizing responses.
  Child and Adolescent Mental Health   Child Health Psychology   Developmental Psychology   Peer Relationships
 Evaluating Early Childhood & Family Centre Services
 Evaluating the Dublin Safer Families Service
 Transnational Academic Careers in Child and Youth Welfare (TACHYwe)
 Family Well-being in Difficult Times: A Model of Factors Influencing the Well-being of Families on Limited Incomes in Ireland
 All You Need Is... Children's Perceptions and Experiences of Deprivation in Ireland

Details Date
Member of Barnardos Services Committee. This committee meets six times a year to advise on the implementation of the Barnardos" strategic plan as it applies to services to children, young people and their families, drawing on best international practice and research knowledge. 2022
Journal Reviewer for Child Development; Journal of Adolescence; Early Intervention in Psychiatry; Journal of Adolescent Research; BMC Public Health; BMC Psychiatry; Frontiers in Public Health, among many others. 2012-Present
Member of the Scientific Advisory Group (SAG) for Growing Up in Ireland, the National Longitudinal Study of Children in Ireland. The SAG is made up of experts from a range of fields, drawn from many of the third-level and related institutions in Ireland as well as overseas. It considers issues around procedures and protocols; policy; inclusion of sensitive themes and topics in the surveys; and the content of the questionnaires across all waves of the study. 2010
Details Date From Date To
Children's Research Network 2016 Present
European Network for Social & Emotional Competence 2015 Present
International Association for Youth Mental Health 2013 Present
Psychological Society of Ireland 2003 2019
Calatrava, M., Swords, L., & Spratt, T., Socio-emotional adjustment in children attending family centres: The role of the parent-child relationship, British Journal of Social Work, 2023, Journal Article, ACCEPTED
Stigma in, editor(s)Eilis Hennessy, Caroline Heary & Maria Michail , Understanding Youth Mental Health, Open University Press, 2022, [Lorraine Swords, Eilis Hennessy & Caroline Heary], Book Chapter, PUBLISHED
Lee CT, Palacios J, Richards D, Hanlon AK, Lynch K, Harty S, Claus N, Swords L, O'Keane V, Stephan KE, Gillan CM, The Precision in Psychiatry (PIP) study: an internet-based methodology for accelerating research in treatment prediction and personalisation, BMC Psychaitry, 2022, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
Bhargav, M. & Swords, L., The Role of Thwarted Belongingness, Perceived Burdensomeness, and Psychological Distress in the Association between Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Suicidal Ideation in College Students., British Journal of Psychology (Open), 2022, Journal Article, ACCEPTED
Donohue, D., & Swords, L., The portrayal of mental illness in popular children"s programmes on Netflix: A content and thematic analysis, Journal of Popular Media Culture, 2022, Journal Article, ACCEPTED  URL
Bhargav, M., & Swords, L., Risk factors for COVID-19-related stress among college-going students., Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine, 2022, p1 - 7, Journal Article, PUBLISHED
Byrne, S., Nixon, E., Swords, L., Depression literacy in parents of Irish adolescents., International Association for Youth Mental Health,, Copenhagen, 2022, Oral Presentation, PUBLISHED
Byrne, S., Vallières, F., Swords, L., Nixon, E., McQuillan, K., Effective mental health and psychosocial support practices for the integration of refugee adolescents in education settings. , European Association for Research on Adolescence., Dublin, 2022, Oral Presentation, PUBLISHED
McQuillan, K., Byrne, S., Vallieres, F., Nixon, E., Swords, L., Effective Mental Health and Psychosocial Support Practices for the Inclusion and Integration of Migrant and Refugee Children in Educational Settings: A Systematic Search and Literature Review., Psychological Society of Ireland., Portlaois, Ireland., 2022, Oral Presentation, PUBLISHED
McQuillan, K., Vallieres, F., Nixon, E & Swords, L., School-based Trauma-informed Care for Migrant and Refugee Youth; a Systematic Review of Mental Health and Psychosocial Support Practices., Trauma Informed Practice Ireland, In from the margins, trauma informed practice as a driver for inclusion., Dún Laoghaire, Ireland., 2022, Oral Presentation, PUBLISHED
  

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Byrne, S., Vallières, F., Swords, L., Nixon, E. , The REFUGE-ED project: Plan and progress to date., Child and Youth Research Summer Seminar Series., Online, 2021, Oral Presentation, PUBLISHED
Spratt, T., Swords, L. and Hanlon, H., A Therapeutic Response to Domestic Violence: Signs on the Road to Safety, Dublin, Daughters of Charity Child & Family Services, 2019, p1 - 57, Report, PUBLISHED
Spratt, T., Swords, L. and Vilda, D., Why Measures Matter: Charting Change in the Lives of Children and Families, Daughters of Charity, October, 2018, p1 - 135, Notes: [ Example of evidence based practice], Report, PUBLISHED
Swords, L., Greene, S., Boyd, E., & Kerrins, L., All You Need Is Children's Perceptions and Experiences of Deprivation in Ireland , Dublin, September, 2011, Notes: [ISBN: 1-902230-38-8; 978-1-902230-38-2], Report, PUBLISHED

  

Award Date
Provost Award for Excellence in Research Student Supervision Nominee 2022
Union of Students in Ireland 'Teaching Hero' Award Recipient 2021
Provost PhD Award Recipient 2019
Provost Teaching Award Nominee 2017
I lead a research programme at Trinity that centres on children's psychological health and wellbeing. Studies conducted as part of related research streams align with Trinity's `Inclusive Society' research theme and range from psychology-focused projects with my PhD students (e.g. Provost Project Award-funded research on children's experiences of domestic violence) to collaborations with partners and multidisciplinary consortiums within Ireland, Europe and the US (e.g. Horizon 2020-funded research on the mental health and wellbeing of refugee children). I am best known for my work on mental health stigma over the past twenty years and I have recently had a chapter published in a graduate-level text book on this topic with McGraw-Hill (2022). I have an impressive track record of funding. As Principal or Co-Investigator I have secured over €700,000 in research grants from prestigious national and international funders such as the Irish Research Council and the European Commission. This money has facilitated multiple research studies and enabled me to support and mentor research assistants, PhD students and post-docs. It has also supported me in writing many impactful, practice and policy-relevant research reports and peer-reviewed articles, book chapters and conference papers. As an example of output, to date I have had a senior role in over 50 academic products and received almost 950 citations (ref Google Scholar). Regarding impact, work as co-principal investigator on an Irish child and family NGO-funded project led to three high-quality peer-reviewed articles in 2021 that, along with two related intervention evaluation reports, were presented to a national statutory organisation to secure service funding. My future objectives are to (i) secure national/international research funding, (ii) grow my network of collaborators and research outputs so as to broaden my own, and the College's, local and global impact, and (iii) see my research benefit the lives of children and families.