DGPPN 2018 Programm

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 297 WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Q&A Modul L-11 (e) Lecture 17:15– 18:15 h | Hall A5 TOPIC 19: Early intervention, prevention and health promotion Achievement and future perspectives for the early intervention in psychoses Chairs: Joachim Klosterkötter, Cologne (Germany) Nikolaos Koutsouleris, Munich (Germany) Speaker: Merete Nordentoft, Hellerup (Denmark) S-117 (e) Symposium 17:15– 18:45 h | Hall Paris 1 TOPIC 14: Neurobiology and genetics A highway to scientific progress: interna- tional and national consortia › Section Neurobiology and Genetics Chairs: Jürgen Deckert, Würzburg (Germany) Elisabeth Binder, Munich (Germany) 001 Psychiatric Genomics Consortia (PGC) Stephan Ripke, Berlin (Germany) 002 Initiative for Integrative Psychiatric Research (IPsych) Manuel Mattheisen, Würzburg (Germany) 003 National Cohort (NAKO) Klaus Berger, Münster (Germany) 004 DGPPN-Cohort and Net-Biomics Thomas G. Schulze, Munich (Germany) S-123 (e) Symposium 17:15– 18:45 h | Room M1 TOPIC 3: Psychotic disorders, F2 Impact of aerobic exercise training inter- ventions in individuals with schizophre- nia: cognition, everyday functioning and physical health Chairs: Peter Falkai, Munich (Germany) Berend Malchow, Jena (Germany) 001 Changes in brain connectivity after aerobic endurance training in patients with schizophrenia –findings from the TOPFIT cohort Wiepke Cahn, Utrecht (The Netherlands) 002 The impact of aerobic endurance training on brain structure and function in multi-episode schizophrenia patients Isabel Maurus, Munich (Germany) Alkomiet Hasan, Astrid Röh, Daniel Keeser, Shun Takahashi, Boris-Stephan Rauchmann, Berend Malchow, Andrea Schmitt, Peter Falkai 003 Impaired cardiac response to incremental exercise in patients with schizophrenia Karl-Jürgen Bär, Jena (Germany) S-124 (e) Symposium 17:15– 18:45 h | Room M4 TOPIC 29: Psychiatry and society Human rights promotion in psychiatry Chairs: Andreas Heinz, Berlin (Germany) Danuta Wasserman, Stockholm (Sweden) 001 Prevention of human rights viola- tions in psychiatry Laura Daedelow, Berlin (Germany) 002 How can the human rights of people with mental health conditions be pro- tected? Hilkka Kärkkäinen, Brussels (Belgium) 003 Perspective of carers and family members Hartmut Krausser, Erfurt (Germany) 004 Building capacity in human rights to empower and promote recovery Peter McGovern, Akershus (Norway)

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