43 results on '"Swartz, Marvin"'
Search Results
2. Violent Behavior Preceding Hospitalization among Persons with Severe Mental Illness
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Swanson, Jeffrey, Borum, Randy, Swartz, Marvin, and Hiday, Virginia
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- 1999
3. Psychiatric Advance Directives and Social Workers: An Integrative Review
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Van Dorn, Richard A., Scheyett, Anna, Swanson, Jeffrey W., and Swartz, Marvin S.
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- 2010
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4. Reducing Barriers to Completing Psychiatric Advance Directives
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Van Dorn, Richard A., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Swartz, Marvin S., Elbogen, Eric, and Ferron, Joelle
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- 2008
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5. Healthcare Barriers among Severely Mentally Ill Homeless Adults: Evidence from the Five-site Health and Risk Study
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Kim, Mimi M., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Swartz, Marvin S., Bradford, Daniel W., Mustillo, Sarah A., and Elbogen, Eric B.
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- 2007
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6. A brief mental health and substance abuse screener for persons with HIV
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Whetten, Kathryn, Reif, Susan, Swartz, Marvin, Stevens, Rachel, Hanisch, Laura, and Eron, Joseph J., Jr.
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Substance abuse ,Psychodiagnostics ,HIV (Viruses) ,Mental illness ,Mental health ,HIV patients ,Health - Abstract
Mental illness and substance abuse are common among HIV-infected individuals and are associated with negative outcomes, including poor medication adherence. Therefore, quick and effective methods for detecting these co-occurring disorders are necessary for health care practitioners. This article reports on the creation and preliminary testing of a brief screening tool, the Substance Abuse and Mental Illness Symptoms Screener (SAMISS). The 13-item screener was developed primarily from existing scales and administered to HIV-infected individuals receiving care at infectious diseases clinics in the Southeast. To assess the validity of the SAMISS, a subset of those who screened positive for both mental illness symptoms and substance use problems (n = 207) were administered the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Disorders (SCID). The positive predictive value of the screener in comparison to the SCID was 98.6% for mental disorders and 98.6% for substance use disorders. The agreement between specific screener symptoms and their corresponding SCID diagnoses was relatively high for alcohol dependence ([kappa] = 0.50, p < 0.001), drug dependence ([kappa] = 0.30, p < 0.001), and drug abuse ([kappa] = 0.42, p < 0.001). The finding that the screener is highly predictive of having a general mental disorder and substance use disorder among those screening positive for mental illness symptoms and substance use problems, as well as its brevity and ease of administration, make it a useful tool to detect symptoms of co-occurring disorders so that patients can be referred to mental health and substance abuse specialists. The screener is not a diagnostic instrument and has limited value in predicting specific psychiatric diagnoses.
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- 2005
7. Recent Victimization in Women and Men with Severe Mental Illness: Prevalence and Correlates
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Goodman, Lisa A., Salyers, Michelle P., Mueser, Kim T., Rosenberg, Stanley D., Swartz, Marvin, Essock, Susan M., Osher, Fred C., Butterfield, Marian I., and Swanson, Jeffrey
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- 2001
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8. Implementing Psychiatric Advance Directives: The Transmitter and Receiver Problem and the Neglected Right to Be Deemed Incapable.
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Swartz, Marvin S., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Easter, Michele M., and Robertson, Allison G.
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MEDICAL personnel ,TRANSMITTERS (Communication) ,LEGAL documents ,FORUMS ,MENTAL illness ,MENTAL illness treatment ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,ADVANCE directives (Medical care) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COMMUNICATION - Abstract
Psychiatric advance directives (PADs) can help adults with serious mental illnesses preserve their autonomy and avoid involuntary interventions during an incapacitating mental health crisis. A PAD is a legal document prepared while mentally competent and states the person's treatment preferences to be implemented during a future crisis, ideally with the advocacy of an authorized proxy decision maker. PADs have been available in the United States for more than three decades but have yet to be robustly implemented in practice. This Open Forum describes PADs metaphorically as a device for remote communication among the person with mental illness, a proxy decision maker, and health care providers. Barriers to PAD usage occur on both "transmitter" and "receiver" sides and must be addressed to advance PAD implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. Medication-Assisted Treatment for Alcohol-Dependent Adults With Serious Mental Illness and Criminal Justice Involvement: Effects on Treatment Utilization and Outcomes.
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Robertson, Allison G., Easter, Michele M., HsiuJu Lin, Frisman, Linda K., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Swartz, Marvin S., and Lin, HsiuJu
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PEOPLE with mental illness ,CRIMINAL justice system ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,MENTAL health services ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,BIPOLAR disorder ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,CRIME & psychology ,PSYCHOLOGY of alcoholism ,COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism ,RESEARCH ,ALCOHOLISM ,ALCOHOL deterrents ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,RESEARCH methodology ,CRIME ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,CRIMINOLOGY ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MENTAL depression ,RESEARCH funding ,MENTAL illness ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Objective: Adults with serious mental illness and comorbid alcohol dependence are at high risk for both high utilization of crisis-driven health care services and criminal justice involvement. Evidence-based medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for alcohol dependence may reduce both crisis service utilization and criminal recidivism. The authors estimated the effect of MAT on behavioral health treatment utilization and criminal justice outcomes for this population.Method: Relevant administrative data were merged from several public agencies in Connecticut for 5,743 adults ≥18 years old who had schizophrenia spectrum disorder, bipolar disorder, or major depressive disorder comorbid with moderate to severe alcohol dependence and who were incarcerated for at least one night during the study window (2002-2009). Longitudinal multivariable regression models were used to estimate the effect of MAT compared with other outpatient substance abuse treatments on inpatient mental health and substance abuse hospitalizations, emergency department visits, criminal convictions, and incarcerations.Results: MAT was associated with significant improvements in clinical outcomes in the 12 months following initiation compared with non-MAT comparison treatment, including greater reductions in mental health hospitalization and emergency department visits and greater improvements in psychotropic medication adherence. No benefits of MAT were found for most criminal justice outcomes, except for significant reductions in felony convictions among adults with bipolar disorder.Conclusions: MAT is underused for treating alcohol dependence, especially among adults with serious mental illness. These results suggest that MAT can have important benefits for clinical outcomes in this population. More research is needed to improve its use in this patient population as well as to address barriers to its availability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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10. Involuntary Outpatient Commitment and the Elusive Pursuit of Violence Prevention.
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Swartz, Marvin S., Bhattacharya, Sayanti, Robertson, Allison G., and Swanson, Jeffrey W.
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VIOLENCE prevention , *INVOLUNTARY hospitalization , *INSTITUTIONALIZED persons , *COMMUNITY services , *PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities , *OUTPATIENT medical care , *COMMUNITY-based corrections , *THERAPEUTICS , *MENTAL illness treatment , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Objective: Involuntary outpatient commitment (OPC)-also referred to as 'assisted outpatient treatment' or 'community treatment orders'-are civil court orders whereby persons with serious mental illness and repeated hospitalisations are ordered to adhere to community-based treatment. Increasingly, in the United States, OPC is promoted to policy makers as a means to prevent violence committed by persons with mental illness. This article reviews the background and context for promotion of OPC for violence prevention and the empirical evidence for the use of OPC for this goal.Method: Relevant publications were identified for review in PubMed, Ovid Medline, PsycINFO, personal communications, and relevant Internet searches of advocacy and policy-related publications.Results: Most research on OPC has focussed on outcomes such as community functioning and hospital recidivism and not on interpersonal violence. As a result, research on violence towards others has been limited but suggests that low-level acts of interpersonal violence such as minor, noninjurious altercations without weapon use and arrests can be reduced by OPC, but there is no evidence that OPC can reduce major acts of violence resulting in injury or weapon use. The impact of OPC on major violence, including mass shootings, is difficult to assess because of their low base rates.Conclusions: Effective implementation of OPC, when combined with intensive community services and applied for an adequate duration to take effect, can improve treatment adherence and related outcomes, but its promise as an effective means to reduce serious acts of violence is unknown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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11. A Randomized Clinical Trial of a Money Management Intervention for Veterans With Psychiatric Disabilities.
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Elbogen, Eric B., Hamer, Robert M., Swanson, Jeffrey W., and Swartz, Marvin S.
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ASSET management ,VETERANS ,MENTAL health ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHIATRY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INCOME ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,SOCIAL services case management - Abstract
Objective: The study evaluated an intervention to help veterans with psychiatric disabilities, who face a unique set of challenges concerning money management.Methods: A randomized clinical trial was conducted of a brief (one to three hours) psychoeducational, recovery-oriented money management intervention called $teps for Achieving Financial Empowerment ($AFE).Results: Analyses revealed no main effects on outcomes of random assignment to $AFE (N=67) or a control condition consisting of usual care (N=77). Veterans who reported using $AFE skills showed significantly lower impulsive buying, more responsible spending, higher rates of engaging in vocational activities, and greater number of work hours compared with veterans in the control condition.Conclusions: Findings have clinical implications for case management services involving informal money management assistance. Offering veterans with psychiatric disabilities a one-time money management intervention is unlikely to lead to substantial changes. Results imply that efforts to improve psychosocial outcomes among veterans must not only teach but also increase use of money management skills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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12. Cost-Effectiveness of Long-Acting Injectable Paliperidone Palmitate Versus Haloperidol Decanoate in Maintenance Treatment of Schizophrenia.
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Rosenheck, Robert A., Leslie, Douglas L., Sint, Kyaw J., Haiqun Lin, Yue Li, McEvoy, Joseph P., Byerly, Matthew J., Hamer, Robert M., Swartz, Marvin S., Stroup, T. Scott, Lin, Haiqun, and Li, Yue
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HALOPERIDOL ,ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,MENTAL illness ,INTRAMUSCULAR injections ,DRUG therapy for psychoses ,DRUG therapy for schizophrenia ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONTROLLED release preparations ,COST effectiveness ,INJECTIONS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PSYCHOSES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,BLIND experiment ,QUALITY-adjusted life years ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,PHARMACODYNAMICS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Objective: This study assessed the relative cost-effectiveness of haloperidol decanoate (HD), a first-generation long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotic, and paliperidone palmitate (PP), a second-generation LAI antipsychotic.Methods: A double-blind, randomized 18-month clinical trial conducted at 22 clinical research sites in the United States compared the cost-effectiveness of HD and PP among 311 adults with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder who had been clinically assessed as likely to benefit from an LAI antipsychotic. Patients were randomly assigned to monthly intramuscular injections of HD (25-200 mg) or PP (39-234 mg) for up to 24 months. Quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) were measured by a schizophrenia-specific algorithm based on the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale and side-effect assessments; total health care costs were assessed from the perspective of the health system.Results: Mixed-model analysis showed that PP was associated with .0297 greater QALYs over 18 months (p=.03) and with $2,100 more in average costs per quarter for inpatient and outpatient services and medication compared with HD (p<.001). Bootstrap analysis with 5,000 replications showed an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for PP of $508,241 per QALY (95% confidence interval=$122,390-$1,582,711). Net health benefits analysis showed a .98 probability of greater cost-effectiveness for HD compared with PP at an estimated value of $150,000 per QALY and a .50 probability of greater cost-effectiveness at $500,000 per QALY.Conclusions: HD was more cost-effective than PP, suggesting that PP's slightly greater benefits did not justify its markedly higher costs, which are likely to fall once the medication's patent expires. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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13. Proximal Risk Factors for Short-Term Community Violence Among Adults With Mental Illnesses.
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Johnson, Kiersten L., Desmarais, Sarah L., Grimm, Kevin J., T ueller, Stephen J., Swartz, Marvin S., Van Dorn, Richard A., and Tueller, Stephen J
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RISK of violence ,VIOLENCE in the community ,MENTAL illness ,REGRESSION analysis ,SUBSTANCE-induced disorders ,ALCOHOL drinking ,PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK assessment ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,CRIME victims ,VIOLENCE - Abstract
Objective: This study examined the role of static indicators and proximal, clinically relevant indicators in the prediction of short-term community violence in a large, heterogeneous sample of adults with mental illnesses.Methods: Data were pooled from five studies of adults with mental illnesses (N=4,484). Follow-up data were available for 2,579 participants. A hierarchical linear regression assessed the incremental validity of a series of variable clusters in the prediction of violence risk at six months: static characteristics (age, sex, race-ethnicity, and primary diagnosis), substance use (alcohol use and drug use at baseline), clinical functioning (psychiatric symptoms at baseline and recent hospitalization), recent violence, and recent victimization.Results: Results demonstrated improved prediction with each step of the model, indicating that proximal indicators contributed to the prediction of short-term community violence above and beyond static characteristics. When all variables were entered, current alcohol use, recent violence, and recent victimization were positive predictors of subsequent violence, even after the analysis controlled for participant characteristics.Conclusions: This study provides empirical evidence for three proximal, clinically relevant indicators in the assessment and management of short-term violence risk among adults with mental illnesses: current alcohol use, recent violence, and recent victimization. Consideration of these indicators in clinical practice may assist in the identification of adults with mental illnesses who are at heightened risk of short-term community violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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14. Patterns of Justice Involvement Among Adults With Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder: Key Risk Factors.
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Robertson, Allison G., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Frisman, Linda K., Lin, Hsiuju, and Swartz, Marvin S.
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MENTAL illness ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,PSYCHOSES ,MENTAL health ,BIPOLAR disorder - Abstract
Objective: Adults with serious mental illness have a relatively high risk of criminal justice involvement. Some risk factors for justice involvement are known, but the specific interaction of these risk factors has not been examined. This study explored the interaction of gender, substance use disorder, and psychiatric diagnosis among patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder to identify subgroups at higher risk of justice involvement. Methods^ Administrative service records of 25,133 adults with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder who were clients of Connecticut's public behavioral health system during 2005-2007 were merged with state records of criminal convictions, incarceration, and other measures of justice involvement. The main effects and the effects of interactions of gender, substance use disorder, and psychiatric diagnosis on risk of justice involvement ("offending") were estimated by using multivariable logistic regression. Results: Men with bipolar disorder and co-occurring substance use disorder had the highest absolute risk of offending in every category of justice involvement. For both men and women, bipolar disorder was associated with an increased risk of offending versus schizophrenia, but the increase was significandy greater for women. Substance use disorder also increased risk of offending more among women than men, especially among those widi schizophrenia. Conclusions: Men and women with bipolar disorder and substance use disorders have much higher risk of justice involvement than diose with schizophrenia, especially those without a substance use disorder. Research is needed to validate these effects in other populations and specify risk factors for justice involvement among adults with mental illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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15. Using Medicaid Coverage to Improve Peer Support and Other Services for Incarcerated Persons With Mental Illness.
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Swartz, Marvin S., Carlo, Andrew D., and Brinkley, Amy
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PRISONERS ,MEDICAID ,MENTAL illness ,MENTAL health services ,NATIONAL health insurance ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MENTAL illness treatment ,COUNSELING - Published
- 2021
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16. The Cost of Assisted Outpatient Treatment: Can It Save States Money?
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Swanson, Jeffrey W., Van Dorn, Richard A., Swartz, Marvin S., Robbins, Pamela Clark, Steadman, Henry J., McGuire, Thomas G., and Monahan, John
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MEDICAL care costs ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,MENTAL health services ,HEALTH programs ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
Objective: The authors assessed a state's net costs for assisted outpatient treatment, a controversial court-ordered program of community-based mental health services designed to improve outcomes for persons with serious mental illness and a history of repeated hospitalizations attributable to nonadherence with outpatient treatment. Method: A comprehensive cost analysis was conducted using 36 months of observational data for 634 assisted outpatient treatment participants and 255 voluntary recipients of intensive community-based treatment in New York City and in five counties elsewhere in New York State. Administrative, budgetary, and service claims data were used to calculate and summarize costs for program administration, legal and court services, mental health and other medical treatment, and criminal justice involvement. Adjusted effects of assisted outpatient treatment and voluntary intensive services on total service costs were examined using multivariate time-series regression analysis. Results: In the New York City sample, net costs declined 43% in the first year after assisted outpatient treatment began and an additional 13% in the second year. In the five-county sample, costs declined 49% in the first year and an additional 27% in the second year. Psychotropic drug costs increased during the first year after initiation of assisted outpatient treatment, by 40% and 44% in the city and five-county samples, respectively. Regression analyses revealed significant declines in costs associated with both assisted outpatient treatment and voluntary participation in intensive services, although the cost declines associated with assisted outpatient treatment were about twice as large as those seen for voluntary services. Conclusions: Assisted outpatient treatment requires a substantial investment of state resources but can reduce overall service costs for persons with serious mental illness. For those who do not qualify for assisted outpatient treatment, voluntary participation in intensive community-based services may also reduce overall service costs over time, depending on characteristics of the target population and local service system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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17. Costs of Criminal justice Involvement Among Persons With Serious Mental Illness in Connecticut.
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Swanson, Jeffrey W., Frisman, Linda K., Robertson, Allison Gilbert, Hsiu-Ju Lin, Trestman, Robert L., Shelton, Deborah A., Parr, Kathryn, Rodis, Eleni, Buchanan, Alec, and Swartz, Marvin S.
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CRIMINAL justice system ,MENTAL illness ,COST effectiveness - Abstract
Objective: This study sought to describe patterns and costs of criminal justice involvement among adults with serious mental illness who received services across public agencies within a single state. Costs were examined from the perspective of state agencies providing mental health, substance abuse, and criminal justice services. Methods: Administrative records for 25,133 adults who were served by the Connecticut Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services (DMHAS) during fiscal years 2006 and 2007 and who had a diagnosis of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder were matched with records of the state Medicaid program, Judicial Branch, Department of Correction, and Department of Public Safety. Unit costs for service events were combined with utilization data to calculate costs per person. Results: About one in four individuals was involved with the justice system during the two-year period. The justice-involved group incurred costs approximately double those of the group with no involvement-$48,980 compared with $24,728 per person. Costs were shared by several state agencies and Medicaid. DMHAS bore the largest proportion of state service costs, covering 49% of total costs for persons with justice involvement and 69% of costs for those without involvement. Conclusions: Criminal justice involvement is a complex and costly problem that affects a substantial proportion of adults with serious mental illness who receive services across state agencies. Applying per-person cost estimates in other states could help mental health and criminal justice systems to better plan, coordinate, and deliver cost-effective services to individuals with serious mental illness who become involved with the criminal justice system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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18. Criminal Justice System Involvement Among People with Schizophrenia.
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Greenberg, Greg, Rosenheck, Robert, Erickson, Steven, Desai, Rani, Stefanovics, Elina, Swartz, Marvin, Keefe, Richard, McEvoy, Joe, and Scott Stroup, T.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA ,MENTAL illness ,AGE distribution ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents ,ATTITUDE testing ,CHI-squared test ,COURTS ,DRUGS ,DUAL diagnosis ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PATIENT compliance ,PROBABILITY theory ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL justice ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,VIOLENCE ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,CRIMINALS with mental illness ,DATA analysis ,SECONDARY analysis ,BODY mass index ,SEVERITY of illness index - Abstract
There is growing concern that people with schizophrenia and other severe mental illnesses are increasingly at risk for unnecessary criminal justice system (CJS) involvement. There has been limited examination, however, of which individual characteristics predict future CJS involvement. This study uses data from the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness on sociodemograhic characteristics, baseline clinical status, and service use among patients diagnosed with schizophrenia to prospectively identify predictors of CJS involvement during the following year. A series of bivariate chi-square and F tests were conducted to examine whether significant relationships existed between CJS involvement during the first 12 months of the trial and baseline measures of sociodemographic characteristics, psychiatric status, substance abuse, and other patient characteristics. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was then used to identify the independent strength of the relationship between 12-month CJS involvement and potential risk factors that were found to be significant in bivariate analyses. Multivariate logistic regression analyses indicated that past adolescent conduct disorder, being younger and male, symptoms of Akathisia (movement disorder, most often develops as a side effect of antipsychotic medications), and particularly drug abuse increase the risk for CJS involvement. Since CJS involvement among people with schizophrenia was most strongly associated with drug abuse, treatment of co-morbid drug abuse could reduce the risk of stigma, pain, and other adverse consequences of CJS involvement as well as save CJS expenditures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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19. A Conceptually Based Scale to Measure Consumers’ Treatment Motivation.
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Ferron, Joelle C., Elbogen, Eric B., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Swartz, Marvin S., and McHugo, Gregory J.
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STATISTICAL correlation ,FACTOR analysis ,GOODNESS-of-fit tests ,GUILT (Psychology) ,MENTAL health services ,MENTAL illness ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PATIENT compliance ,RESEARCH funding ,THEORY ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation - Abstract
Objectives: The objective of this work was to assess the reliability and validity of the Treatment Motivation Questionnaire— Revised (TMQ-R) in people with serious mental illness (SMI). Method: A large sample of consumers of mental health services (n = 469) were administered the TMQ-R. Results: The factor structure specified in previous research did not fit the data well. However, a five-factor model with the two subtypes of introjected (i.e., feeling guilty about not attending treatment) and external motivation (i.e., pressure to attend treatment) fit the data well. Conclusions: The current analyses partially confirm the TMQ-R structure and reflect the need for future work to evaluate the complexities of motivational measurement within people with SMI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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20. Autonomy and the Use of Directive Intervention in the Treatment of Individuals with Serious Mental Illnesses: A Survey of Social Work Practitioners.
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Scheyett, Anna, Kim, Mimi, Swanson, Jeffrey, Swartz, Marvin, Elbogen, Eric, Van Dorn, Richard, and Ferron, Joelle
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MENTAL illness ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL workers ,PUBLIC welfare ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Social workers in mental health settings struggle to support the principle of autonomy while weighing the need to directively intervene when there is a risk of harm or when clients are nonadherent to treatment. However, our understanding of this tension is incomplete. We therefore engaged in a survey of 193 social workers in North Carolina regarding attitudes toward autonomy and directive interventions, and examined correlates of these attitudes. Findings revealed that respondents having a client with a psychiatric advance directive were significantly more supportive of client autonomy. Respondents who were licensed, working in an inpatient setting, or had briefer client contacts were more likely to endorse the need for directive interventions, and those working in the public sector reported more use of warnings to improve adherence. Implications for practice, training, and research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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21. A Clinical Trial Comparing Interviewer and Computer-Assisted Assessment Among Clients With Severe Mental Illness.
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Wolford, George, Rosenberg, Stanley D., Rosenberg, Harriet J., Swartz, Marvin S., Butterfield, Marian I., Swanson, Jeffrey W., and Jankowski, M. Kay
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COMPUTER assisted testing (Education) ,MENTAL illness ,MENTAL health ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
Objective: Demographic, behavioral, and diagnostic information should routinely be collected from clients with severe mental illness, and data gathering should employ the most efficient techniques available. Surveys are increasingly conducted via Web-based computer-assisted interviewing (CAI), but this technique is not well validated for patients with severe mental illness. A randomized clinical trial of 245 clients was carried out to compare face-to face and computer-assisted interviewing (233 clients completed two surveys). Methods: Self-report data were collected on demographic characteristics, substance abuse, risk behaviors for blood- borne diseases, trauma history, and posttraumatic stress disorder. Each client was assessed twice and randomly assigned to one of the four possible combinations of interviewer and computer (computer and computer, N=53; computer and interviewer, N=56; interviewer and computer, N=59; and interviewer and interviewer, N=65). The two formats were compared on feasibility, client preference, cost, reliability, convergent validity, and criterion validity. Results: This study demonstrated the feasibility of CAI across a variety of inpatient and outpatient settings. All participants who began the CAI process completed the interview and responded to over 95% of the survey items. Participants liked using the computers as well as they liked face-to-face interviews, and they completed the CAI as quickly. CAI produced data as reliable and valid as face-to-face interviews produced and was less expensive, and results were available more quickly. The two formats were similar in criterion validity. Conclusions: CAI appears to be a viable technology for gathering clinical data from the population with severe mental illness and for transforming such information into a useful, quickly accessible form to aid in clinical decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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22. Assessing risk of violent behavior among veterans with severe mental illness.
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Elbogen, Eric B., Beckham, Jean C., Butterfield, Marian I., Swartz, Marvin, and Swanson, Jeffrey
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MENTAL illness ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,VIOLENCE ,VETERANS with mental illness ,MENTAL health ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,HUMAN behavior ,HOMELESSNESS ,SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
Although empirical research has examined factors associated with increased violence risk among individuals with severe mental illness (SMI) and among veterans without SMI, less attention has been devoted to identifying violence risk factors among veterans with SMI. Using multivariable analysis of a large pooled sample of individuals with SMI, this study examines violence risk factors of N = 278 veterans with SMI. In multivariate modeling, violence by veterans with SMI was associated with head injury, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance abuse, and homelessness. Results support the view clinicians assessing violence risk among veterans with SMI should consider a combination of characteristics empirically related to violence by non-veterans with SMI (e.g., homelessness) and veterans without SMI (e.g., PTSD). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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23. An Integrated, Multidimensional Treatment Model for Individuals Living with HIV, Mental Illness, and Substance Abuse.
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Bouis, Stephanie, Reif, Susan, Whetten, Kathryn, Scovil, Janet, Murray, Andrea, and Swartz, Marvin
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THERAPEUTICS ,HIV infections ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,MENTAL illness ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The challenge of providing effective treatment services for the growing population of HIV-positive individuals who are also dually diagnosed with substance use and mental disorders has only recently been recognized as an important public health concern affecting both HIV treatment and prevention. This article describes a treatment model that was created for a study of integrated treatment for HIV-positive individuals with substance use and mental disorders. The treatment model was based on the transtheoretical model of behavior change as well as evidence-based practices that are widely used in the treatment of individuals dually diagnosed with substance use and mental disorders. The model involved collaboration between medical and behavioral health care professionals and emphasized the importance of goal reinforcement across disciplines. Furthermore, it included the development and enhancement of client motivation to modify medical and behavioral health-risk behaviors using individual readiness for change and offered comprehensive care addressing a continuum of client needs that may influence treatment outcomes. Treatment modalities included individual therapy, group therapy, and psychiatric medication management. This treatment intervention was associated with positive outcomes in the integrated treatment study and can be adapted for use in a variety of psychiatric or medical treatment settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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24. Interrelationships of Psychiatric Symptom Severity Medical Comorbidity and Functioning in Schizophrenia.
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Chwastiak, Lydia A., Rosenheck, Robert A., McEvoy, Joseph P., Keefe, Richard S., Swartz, Marvin S., and Lieberman, Jeffrey A.
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PEOPLE with schizophrenia ,MENTAL illness ,COMORBIDITY ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents - Abstract
The article presents a cross-sectional study which evaluates the interrelationships of psychiatric symptom severity, medical comorbidity and psychosocial functioning in patients with schizophrenia. The baseline data from the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness was used. Bivariate correlations were used to evaluate associations between schizophrenia symptoms and medical comorbidity.
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- 2006
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25. Patient Preferences for Psychiatric Advance Directives.
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Swartz, Marvin S., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Van Dorn, Richard A., Elbogen, Eric B., and Shumway, Martha
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ADVANCE directives (Medical care) , *PEOPLE with mental illness , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL health services - Abstract
Limited research has examined patients' preferences for psychiatric advance directives (PADs). This study examines the preferences and interest in PADs among patients with severe mental illness. Participants in a randomized controlled trial of PAD facilitation versus usual care were interviewed about their preferences and interest in PADs. Preferences scores were estimated and compared among patients wishing to complete types of PADs. The large majority of participants indicating an interest in a PAD that included a healthcare power of attorney gave greatest importance to enabling surrogate decision making and continuity of care during crises, a minority who expressed interest in a stand-alone advance instruction for mental health treatment or no PAD at all gave highest priority to avoiding unwanted treatment. Persons with severe mental illness have diverse interests in PADs. Most patients give high priority to improving surrogate decision making and continuity of care with PADs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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26. Barriers to Employment for People With Schizophrenia.
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Rosenheck, Robert, Leslie, Douglas, Keefe, Richard, McEvoy, Joseph, Swartz, Marvin, Perkins, Diana, Stroup, Scott, Hsiao, John K., and Lieberman, Jeffrey
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SCHIZOPHRENIA ,EMPLOYMENT ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,REHABILITATION ,PSYCHOLOGY ,EMPATHY ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
Objective: There is growing interest in identifying and surmounting barriers to employment for people with schizophrenia. The authors examined factors associated with participation in competitive employment or other vocational activities in a large group of patients with schizophrenia who participated in the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) study, a multisite clinical trial comparing the effects of first- and second-generation antipsychotics. Method: Baseline data on more than 1,400 patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia were collected before their entry into the CATIE study. Multinomial logistic regression was used to examine the relationship between participation in either competitive employment or other vocational activities and sociodemographic characteristics, schizophrenia symptoms, neurocognitive functioning, intrapsychic functioning, availability of psychosocial rehabilitation services, and local unemployment rates. Results: Altogether, 14.5% of the patients reported participating in competitive employment in the month before the baseline assessment, 12.6% reported other (noncompetitive) employment activity, and 72.9% reported no employment activity. Participation in either competitive or noncompetitive employment was associated with having less severe symptoms, better neurocognitive functioning, and higher scores on a measure of intrapsychic functioning that encompassed motivation, empathy, and other psychological characteristics. Competitive employment, in contrast to other employment or no employment, was negatively associated with receipt of disability payments as well as with being black. Greater access to rehabilitation services was associated with greater participation in both competitive and noncompetitive employment. Conclusions: Overall employment of persons with schizophrenia seems to be impeded by clinical problems, including symptoms of schizophrenia and poorer neurocognitive and intrapsychic functioning. However, participation in competitive employment may be specifically impeded by the potentially adverse incentives of disability payments and by race and may be promoted by the availability of rehabilitation services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
27. Family Representative Payeeship and Violence Risk in Severe Mental Illness.
- Author
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Elbogen, Eric B., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Swartz, Marvin S., and Van Dorn, Richard
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHIATRY ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,PERSONALITY disorders ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Although representative payeeship is prevalent among people with mental illness and shows promise to positively influence clinically relevant outcomes, research also suggests this legal mechanism could be implemented in ways that are problematic. The current study examined whether family representative payeeship was associated with elevated risk of family violence perpetrated by persons with severe mental illness (SMI). Data were collected every 4 months for 1 year in structured interviews with N = 245 persons with SMI who received disability benefits. Multivariate analyses showed that substance abuse, history of violence, frequency of family contact, and family representative payeeship were associated with elevated odds of family violence. Analyses also showed family contact and family representative payeeship had a cumulative effect on increasing the predicted probability of family violence (controlling for covariates such as violence history and substance abuse). The data shed light on the potential for family representative payeeship to be associated with increased risk of interpersonal conflict and violence in SMI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Involuntary Outpatient Commitment, Community Treatment Orders, and Assisted Outpatient Treatment: What's in the Data?
- Author
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Swartz, Marvin S. and Swanson, Jeffrey W.
- Subjects
- *
INVOLUNTARY treatment , *PATIENTS , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL illness treatment , *CARE of people , *PEOPLE with mental illness , *PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
Objective: Involuntary outpatient commitment (OPC), also referred to as community treatment orders or assisted outpatient treatment, is a legal intervention intended to improve treatment adherence among persons with serious mental illness. This paper reviews the empirical literature on the procedure's effectiveness. Methods: We identified and reviewed all English-language studies of OPC and related procedures available in Medline and other bibliographic search services. Results: Existing naturalistic and quasi-experimental studies, taken as a whole, moderately support the view that the procedure is effective, although all do have methodological limitations. Two randomized controlled studies of OPC have conflicting findings and are reviewed in detail. Conclusions: On balance, empirical studies support the view that OPC is effective under certain conditions, although some of the evidence has been contested and the policy remains controversial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Involuntary Outpatient Commitment and Homelessness in Persons with Severe Mental Illness.
- Author
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Compton, Scott N., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Wagner, H. Ryan, Swartz, Marvin S., Burns, Barbara J., and Elbogen, Eric B.
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HOMELESSNESS ,MENTAL illness ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,MENTAL health - Abstract
This study took preliminary steps to explore the relationship between involuntary outpatient commitment (OPC) and the risk of homelessness among individuals with severe mental disorders. Involuntarily hospitalized patients were randomly assigned to be released or maintained under OPC following hospital discharge. Multivariate analyses demonstrated that involuntary OPC was associated with a significant decrease in the risk of homelessness during the first 4 months following hospital discharge for participants with severe functional impairment at baseline. OPC did not appear to affect risk of homelessness among participants with mild-to-moderate functional impairment. Co-occurring substance abuse, treatment nonadherence, and outpatient services intensity were found to be strongly associated with episodes of homelessness. This study suggests that involuntary OPC may provide a short-term reduction in the risk of homelessness among a subgroup of treatment-reluctant individuals with severe mental disorders combined with severe functional impairment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The Social-Environmental Context of Violent Behavior in Persons Treated for Severe Mental Illness.
- Author
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Swanson, Jeffrey W., Swartz, Marvin S., Essock, Susan M., Osher, Fred C., Wagner, H. Ryan, Goodman, Lisa A., Rosenberg, Stanley D., and Meador, Keith G.
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- *
VIOLENCE , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *OUTPATIENT services in psychiatric hospitals , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *LIFE spans - Abstract
Objectives. This study examined the prevalence and correlates of violent behavior by individuals with severe mental illness. Methods. Participants (N = 802) were adults with psychotic or major mood disorders receiving inpatient or outpatient services in public mental health systems in 4 states. Results. The 1-year prevalence of serious assaultive behavior was 13%. Three variables--past violent victimization, violence in the surrounding environment, and substance abuse--showed a cumulative association with risk of violent behavior. Conclusions. Violence among individuals with severe mental illness is related to multiple variables with compounded effects over the life span. Interventions to reduce the risk of violence need to be targeted to specific subgroups with different clusters of problems related to violent behavior. (Am J Public Health. 2002;92:1523-1531) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Impact of Outpatient Commitment on Victimization of People With Severe Mental Illness.
- Author
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Aldigé, Virginia, Swartz, Marvin S., Swanson, Jeffrey W., Borum, Randy, and Wagner, H. Ryan
- Subjects
- *
OUTPATIENT services in psychiatric hospitals , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Investigates the effect of outpatient commitment on victimization among people with severe mental illness. Objectives of outpatient commitment; Protection of mentally-ill patients from victimization; Enhancement of patients' involvement in community services.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Sexual Assault and Psychiatric Disorders Among a Community Sample of Women.
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Winfield, Idee, George, Linda K., Swartz, Marvin, and Blazer, Dan G.
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RAPE ,RAPE victims ,SEXUAL abuse victims ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
The authors examined the relationships between sexual assault and psychiatric disorders in a sample of 1,157 women 18-64 years old in the North Carolina site of the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program. The results suggest that sexual assault is a risk factor for a number of psychiatric disorders. In addition, several characteristics of the assault among sexual assault victims were significantly related to one or more psychiatric disorders. However, there was no clear pattern relating characteristics of the assault to the risk of specific psychiatric disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Emergency Department Boarding: Nowhere Else to Go.
- Author
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Swartz, Marvin S.
- Subjects
MENTAL illness ,PSYCHIATRIC hospitals ,EMERGENCY medical services ,MEDICAID ,HEALTH insurance ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,PATIENTS - Abstract
The article discusses concern of growing number of patients at the Florida emergency departments (EDs). Topics discussed include loss of state and general psychiatric bed capacity, depopulation of state hospitals due to intent to grow Medicaid-eligible services, failure of states to manage behavioral health funding, and services for persons with severe mental illness.
- Published
- 2016
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34. Advancing Research at the Intersection of Two Systems.
- Author
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SWARTZ, MARVIN S.
- Subjects
MENTAL illness ,CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
The author presents an introduction to the journal, in which various articles address issues related to improving services for individuals with mental illness in the criminal justice system.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Latent class analysis of discordance between results of drug use assessments in the CATIE data.
- Author
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Johnson, Kiersten L., Desmarais, Sarah L., Swartz, Marvin S., and Van Dorn, Richard A.
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- *
DRUG utilization , *SCHIZOPHRENIA in adolescence , *SYMPTOMS , *MENTAL illness , *DATA analysis , *LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Objective The primary aim is to examine concordant/discordant results of drug use assessments in adults with schizophrenia. Methods Latent class analysis and multinomial logistic regression were used to examine concordance/discordance between drug use measures and identify characteristics differentiating participants across classes. Results Four classes – non-users , users , probable users , and RIA discordant – fit best. Age, sex, race/ethnicity, and psychiatric symptoms differed significantly across classes. Conclusions Findings showed that discordance between results occurs at non-trivial rates and is, in part, attributable to individual characteristics. Results suggest the need for strategies to limit discordance and improve detection of drug use in adults with schizophrenia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Substance use disorders and medical comorbidities among high-need, high-risk patients with diabetes.
- Author
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Wu, Li-Tzy, Ghitza, Udi E., Zhu, He, Spratt, Susan, Swartz, Marvin, and Mannelli, Paolo
- Subjects
- *
SUBSTANCE-induced disorders , *DIABETES risk factors , *MEDICAL care costs , *COMORBIDITY , *DISEASE prevalence , *DIABETES complications , *PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *ALGORITHMS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MENTAL illness , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EVALUATION research , *RELATIVE medical risk , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *HOSPITAL mortality , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: The majority of the U.S. healthcare resources are utilized by a small population characterized as high-risk, high-need persons with complex care needs (e.g., adults with multiple chronic conditions). Substance use disorders (SUDs) and mental health disorders (MHDs) are a driver of poor health and additional healthcare costs, but they are understudied among high-need patients.Objective: We examine the prevalence and correlates of SUDs and MHDs among adults with high-risk diabetes, who are patients at the top 10% risk score for developing poor outcomes (hospital admission or death).Methods: A risk algorithm developed from Duke University Health System electronic health records (EHRs) data was used to identify patients with high-risk diabetes for targeting home-based primary care. The EHR data of the 263 patients with high-risk diabetes were analyzed to understand patterns of SUDs and MHDs to inform care-coordinating efforts.Results: Both SUDs (any SUD 48.3%, alcohol 12.5%, tobacco 38.8%, drug 23.2%) and MHDs (any MHD 74.9%, mood 53.2%, sleep 37.3%, anxiety 32.7%, schizophrenia/psychotics/delusional 14.8%, dementia/delirium/amnestic/cognitive 14.4%, adjustment 9.1%) were prevalent. Overall, 81.7% of the sample had SUD or MHD. Elevated odds of SUD were noted among men (tobacco, alcohol) and those who were never-married (alcohol, cannabis). African-American race (vs. other race/ethnicity) was associated with lower odds of anxiety disorders.Conclusion: While data are limited to one large academic health system, they provide clinical evidence revealing that 82% of patients with high-risk diabetes had SUD and/or MHD recorded in their EHRs, highlighting a need for developing service models to optimize high-risk care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Associations between pharmacotherapy for opioid dependence and clinical and criminal justice outcomes among adults with co-occurring serious mental illness.
- Author
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Robertson, Allison G., Easter, Michele M., Lin, Hsiu-Ju, Frisman, Linda K., Swanson, Jeffrey W., and Swartz, Marvin S.
- Subjects
- *
OPIOID abuse , *DRUG therapy , *DRUG addiction , *MENTAL illness , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *BUPRENORPHINE , *CLINICAL trials , *CRIMINALS , *NARCOTIC antagonists , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Adults suffering from a serious mental illness (SMI) and a substance use disorder are at especially high risk for poor clinical outcomes and also arrest and incarceration. Pharmacotherapies for treating opioid dependence could be a particularly important mode of treatment for opioid-dependent adults with SMI to lower their risk for overdose, high-cost hospitalizations, repeated emergency department visits, and incarceration, given relapse rates are very high following detoxification in the absence of one of the three FDA-approved pharmacotherapies. This study estimates the effects of methadone, buprenorphine, and oral naltrexone on clinical and justice-related outcomes in a sample of justice-involved adults with SMI, opioid dependence, and criminal justice involvement. Administrative data were merged from several public agencies in Connecticut for 8736 adults 18years of age or older with schizophrenia spectrum disorder, bipolar disorder, or major depression; co-occurring moderate to severe opioid dependence; and who also had at least one night in jail during 2002-2009. Longitudinal multivariable regression models estimated the effect of opioid-dependence pharmacotherapy as compared to outpatient substance abuse treatment without opioid-dependence pharmacotherapy on inpatient substance abuse or mental health treatment, emergency department visits, criminal convictions, and incarcerations, analyzing instances of each outcome 12months before and after an index treatment episode. Several baseline differences between the study groups (opioid-dependence pharmacotherapy group versus outpatient treatment without opioid-dependence pharmacotherapy) were adjusted for in the regression models. All three opioid-dependence pharmacotherapies were associated with reductions in inpatient substance abuse treatment, and among the oral naltrexone subgroup, also reductions in inpatient mental health treatment, as well as improved adherence to SMI medications. Overall, the opioid-dependence pharmacotherapy group had higher rates of arrest and incarceration in the follow-up period than the comparison group; but those using oral naltrexone had lower rates of arrest (including felonies). The analysis of observational administrative data provides useful population-level estimates but also has important limitations that preclude conclusive causal inferences. Large reductions in crisis-driven service utilization associated with opioid-dependence pharmacotherapy in this study suggest that evidence-based medications for treating opioid dependence can be used successfully in adults with SMI and should be considered more systematically during assessments of treatment needs for this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A longitudinal analysis of the overlap between violence and victimization among adults with mental illnesses.
- Author
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Johnson, Kiersten L., Desmarais, Sarah L., Tueller, Stephen J., Grimm, Kevin J., Swartz, Marvin S., and Van Dorn, Richard A.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness , *VIOLENCE , *CRIME victims , *SUICIDAL behavior ,DISEASES in adults - Abstract
Prior research suggests considerable overlap of violence perpetration and victimization among adults with mental illnesses. However, there has been no examination of how the likelihood of being a victim and/or perpetrator of violence may change over time, nor consideration of clinically-relevant factors affecting these transitions. In a pooled sample of adults with mental illnesses (N=3,473) we employed latent transition analysis to: (a) determine prevalence of four violence and victimization classifications (i.e., non-victim/non-perpetrator, victim only, perpetrator only, and victim-perpetrator) over a 6-month period; (b) calculate the likelihood that adults with mental illnesses will remain in or transition between these classifications over time; and (c) assess the effects of recent substance use, psychiatric symptoms, and suicidal behaviors on transitions over time. At each time point, the majority of participants identified as non-victim/non-perpetrators, followed by victim-perpetrators, victims only, and perpetrators only. Analyses also revealed many individuals transitioned between classifications over time. These distinct pathways towards, and away from, violent outcomes were, in part, a function of recent violence and/or victimization, as well as substance use, psychiatric symptoms, and suicidal behaviors. Findings inform the identification of adults with mental illnesses at risk of violence and victimization and highlight points of intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The latent structure of psychiatric symptoms across mental disorders as measured with the PANSS and BPRS-18.
- Author
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Van Dorn, Richard A., Desmarais, Sarah L., Grimm, Kevin J., Tueller, Stephen J., Johnson, Kiersten L., Sellers, Brian G., and Swartz, Marvin S.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness , *FACTOR structure , *PSYCHIATRIC rating scales , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis - Abstract
Raw data were used from five studies of adults with mental illnesses ( N =4,480) in an attempt to identify a psychiatric symptoms factor structure, as measured by the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale or the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, that was generalizable across participant characteristics. First, the fit of four extant models was tested via confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), then exploratory factor analyses (EFA) were conducted with a 50% random sample, followed by a CFA with the remaining 50% to confirm the EFA factor structure. Measurement invariance of the factor structure was also examined across diagnosis, sex, race, age, and hospitalization status. The extant models were not generalizable to these data. However, a 4-factor ( Affective , Positive , Negative , Disorganized Cognitive Processing ) model was identified that retained all items and showed invariance across participant characteristics. It is possible to obtain a psychiatric symptoms factor structure that is generalizable across patient characteristics, which has clinical and research implications. Specifically, future research examining the impact of various interventions on psychiatric symptoms among adults with mental illnesses should confirm, and assuming good model-data fit, use the 4-factor model identified in this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Comorbid substance use disorders with other Axis I and II mental disorders among treatment-seeking Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders, and mixed-race people.
- Author
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Wu, Li-Tzy, Blazer, Dan G., Gersing, Kenneth R., Burchett, Bruce, Swartz, Marvin S., and Mannelli, Paolo
- Subjects
- *
COMORBIDITY , *SUBSTANCE-induced disorders , *MENTAL illness , *ASIAN Americans , *ETHNICITY , *HAWAIIANS , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL records , *DISEASES , *SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
Abstract: Little is known about behavioral healthcare needs of Asian Americans (AAs), Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders (NHs/PIs), and mixed-race people (MRs)—the fastest growing segments of the U.S. population. We examined substance use disorder (SUD) prevalences and comorbidities among AAs, NHs/PIs, and MRs (N = 4572) in a behavioral health electronic health record database. DSM-IV diagnoses among patients aged 1–90 years who accessed behavioral healthcare from 11 sites were systematically captured: SUD, anxiety, mood, personality, adjustment, childhood-onset, cognitive/dementia, dissociative, eating, factitious, impulse-control, psychotic/schizophrenic, sleep, and somatoform diagnoses. Of all patients, 15.0% had a SUD. Mood (60%), anxiety (31.2%), adjustment (30.9%), and disruptive (attention deficit-hyperactivity, conduct, oppositional defiant, disruptive behavior diagnosis, 22.7%) diagnoses were more common than others (psychotic 14.2%, personality 13.3%, other childhood-onset 11.4%, impulse-control 6.6%, cognitive 2.8%, eating 2.2%, somatoform 2.1%). Less than 1% of children aged <12 years had SUD. Cannabis diagnosis was the primary SUD affecting adolescents aged 12–17. MRs aged 35–49 years had the highest prevalence of cocaine diagnosis. Controlling for age at first visit, sex, treatment setting, length of treatment, and number of comorbid diagnoses, NHs/PIs and MRs were about two times more likely than AAs to have ≥2 SUDs. Regardless of race/ethnicity, personality diagnosis was comorbid with SUD. NHs/PIs with a mood diagnosis had elevated odds of having SUD. Findings present the most comprehensive patterns of mental diagnoses available for treatment-seeking AAs, NHs/PIs, and MRs in the real-world medical setting. In-depth research is needed to elucidate intraracial and interracial differences in treatment needs. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The effects of early sexual abuse on adult risky sexual behaviors among persons with severe mental illness
- Author
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Van Dorn, Richard A., Mustillo, Sarah, Elbogen, Eric B., Dorsey, Shannon, Swanson, Jeffrey W., and Swartz, Marvin S.
- Subjects
- *
SEX crimes , *CHILDREN'S sexual behavior , *MENTAL health , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: There were two aims: first, to examine the relationship between prior sexual abuse and three types of adult risky sexual behaviors [(1) ever traded sex for drugs or money, (2) had unprotected sex in the past 6 months, and (3) frequency of unprotected sex in the past 6 months] among persons with severe mental illness (SMI), and second, to examine the potential mediating effects of adult rape, substance use, and PTSD. Method: Using a pooled sample of individuals with SMI (N =609), logistic and negative binomial regression analyses were used to investigate the impact of prior sexual abuse on these adult risky sexual behaviors. Results: Childhood sexual abuse was associated with having ever traded sex for money and having engaged in unprotected sex in the past 6 months. However, childhood sexual abuse was inversely associated with the number of times males had unprotected sex in the past 6 months. Results differed between males and females and the impact of potential mediators also varied by gender and type of outcome studied. Conclusion: These findings suggest a complex link between childhood sexual abuse and adult risky sexual behaviors in persons with SMI. Clinical assessments of child abuse sequelae should include a variety of indicators and parameters of adult risky sexual behavior, as persons with SMI are at an increased risk of engaging in high-risk sexual behaviors and tend to have a higher exposure to childhood sexual abuse than does the general population. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Substance Abuse and Symptoms of Mental Illness Among HIV-positive Persons in the Southeast.
- Author
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Whetten, Kathryn, Reif, Susan S., Napravnik, Sonia, Swartz, Marvin S., Thielman, Nathan M., Eron, Jr., Joseph J., Lowe, Kristin, and Soto, Tomas
- Subjects
- *
DUAL diagnosis , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *MENTAL illness , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *HIV-positive persons , *CARE of people , *PEOPLE with mental illness - Abstract
Objectives: Mental illness and substance abuse have been consistently associated with poor HIV-medication adherence and other negative health outcomes. Methods: A brief mental health and substance use screening instrument was administered to 1,362 HIV-infected individuals receiving care at two academic medical center Infectious Diseases Clinics in North Carolina. Results: Study results indicated high frequencies of symptoms of mental illness (60%), substance abuse (32%), and co-occurring symptoms of mental illness and substance abuse (23%). Younger age (P = 0.03), male sex (P < 0.001), and higher viral load (P < 0.001) were associated with substance use problems. White race (P = 0.001), younger age (P = 0.023), and higher viral load (P = 0.042) were associated with symptoms of mental illness. Conclusions: In the Southeast, mental health and substance abuse services are sparse and stigma is high; thus, innovative treatment strategies are needed to address the high levels of co-occurring mental illness and substance abuse. Antiretroviral therapies will not reach their potential for slowing the HI V/AIDS epidemic and prolonging survival if comorbidities that influence patient behavior are not addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Gender-specific participation and outcomes among jail diversion clients with co-occurring substance use and mental health disorders.
- Author
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Robertson, Allison G., Easter, Michele M., Lin, Hsiu-Ju, Khoury, Dalia, Pierce, Joshua, Swanson, Jeffrey, and Swartz, Marvin
- Subjects
- *
ALTERNATIVES to imprisonment , *MENTAL health services , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
Men and women with co-occurring substance use disorders and mental illness are at relatively high risk for becoming involved in the criminal justice system. Programs, such as post-booking jail diversion, aim to connect these individuals to community-based treatment services in lieu of pursuing criminal prosecution. Gender appears to have an important influence on risk factors and pathways through the criminal justice system, which in turn may influence how interventions like jail diversion work to engage men and women in treatment services and reduce recidivism. Different circumstances, levels of engagement, and outcomes by gender may be related to both person-level characteristics and external factors such as availability of gender-specific services and resources. This mixed-methods study identified specific ways in which men and women use services and reoffend after being diverted, and complemented those findings with in-depth insights from program clinicians about how program experiences and resources differ in important ways by gender. We matched and merged administrative records from 2007 to 2009 for 16,233 adults from several state agencies in Connecticut, and included data on demographic characteristics, clinical diagnoses, outpatient and inpatient behavioral health treatment utilization, arrest, and incarceration. Using propensity analysis, the 1693 men and women who participated in the statewide jail diversion program were matched to respective comparison groups of nondiverted men and women. We used longitudinal multivariable regression analyses to estimate the effects of jail diversion participation on treatment utilization, arrest, and incarceration, separately for men and women. We conducted three focus groups with jail diversion clinicians from around the state (n = 21) to gain in-depth insight from them about how circumstances, program experiences, and resources differ by gender in important ways; these subjective clinician insights complement the quantitative analyses of diversion outcomes for men and women. For both men and women, diversion was associated with reductions in risk for incarceration and increases in utilization of outpatient treatment services. For men only, diversion was associated with higher utilization of inpatient mental health care. No differences in treatment or criminal justice outcomes were observed in models that compared men and women directly. Major themes from the focus groups included: the existence of too few inpatient and residential resources for women with co-occurring disorders; different challenges to treatment engagement that men and women face; and a need for more effective, gender-specific services for all program participants. Results from this mixed-methods study offer information on gender-specific program outcomes and surrounding circumstances that can help programs to better understand and address unique risks and needs for men and women with co-occurring substance use and mental health disorders who are involved in the criminal justice system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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