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Philip S. Wang

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  152
Citations -  48738

Philip S. Wang is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & National Comorbidity Survey. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 148 publications receiving 45028 citations. Previous affiliations of Philip S. Wang include Harvard University & Government of the United States of America.

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Antibody to Epiglycanin and Radioimmunoassay to Detect Epiglycanin-Related Glycoproteins in Body Fluids of Cancer Patients

TL;DR: Lower concentrations of epiglycanin-like antigen(s) were found in the peritoneal fluid of patients with hepatitis or liver cirrhosis but not in normal serum, suggesting that the antigenic determinant probably involved the disaccharide and a unique amino acid sequence at the site of its attachment.
Journal Article

Should clozapine continue to be restricted to third-line status for schizophrenia?: a decision-analytic model.

TL;DR: Using clozapine as a first agent would lead to modest gains in life-expectancy as well as quality-adjusted life expectancy, relative to restricting its use to patients who failed 2 conventional antipsychotics, but these results do not shed light on whether clozAPine should be the preferred first-line strategy.
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Psychotropic medication use for behavioral symptoms of dementia

TL;DR: Although various psychotropic medications used for behavioral disturbances in dementia patients may be somewhat effective, they have been increasingly associated with important safety risks, and more is known about their effectiveness and safety.
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Bridging bench and practice: translational research for schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders.

TL;DR: This article discusses one type of translational research—called T1—which is needed to take advantage of developments in the basic neurosciences and translate them into more efficacious diagnostic, preventive, and therapeutic interventions.