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Jeanne L. Steiner

Researcher at Yale University

Publications -  41
Citations -  745

Jeanne L. Steiner is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Public health. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 40 publications receiving 693 citations.

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A comparison of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III—R and clinical diagnoses.

TL;DR: The patient version of the SCID appears to produce results that are very different from clinical practice, which, in turn, may be influenced strongly by location, and there was considerable variability among the major diagnostic categories.
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Effects of a nursing intervention on quality of life outcomes in post-surgical women with gynecological cancers

TL;DR: Women with gynecological cancers have reported poor health‐related quality of life (QOL), with complex physical and psychological needs post‐surgery and during chemotherapy treatment, and there are no studies reporting interventions addressing these needs post-hospital discharge.
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On the road to collaborative treatment planning: consumer and provider perspectives.

TL;DR: A needs assessment of providers and consumers to assess both groups' current involvement, interest in, and attitudes toward collaborative treatment planning indicates that providers tend to place much of the responsibility for the difficulties in implementing collaborative treatment plans on consumers.
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Reducing Risks for Mental Disorders: Frontiers for Preventive Intervention Research

TL;DR: An Agenda for the Next Decade describes methodological and ethical issues; issues of culture, ethnicity, and mace; and the role of the community in the developm#{231}nt of prevention interventions.
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Stakeholders' perspectives on community-based participatory research to enhance mental health services.

TL;DR: This paper presents the first-person accounts of four stakeholder groups who were part of a consumer-involved CBPR project purposed to improve the services of a local community mental health center in the hope that by illustrating the unique outcomes associated with CBPR, there will be invigorated interest in CBPR as a vehicle for consumer involvement in adult mental health services research and enhancement.