R
Randall D. Marshall
Researcher at Columbia University
Publications - 65
Citations - 5687
Randall D. Marshall is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Anxiety disorder. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 65 publications receiving 5394 citations. Previous affiliations of Randall D. Marshall include University of York & Temple University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Psychological Risks of Vietnam for U.S. Veterans: A Revisit with New Data and Methods
Bruce P. Dohrenwend,J. Blake Turner,Nicholas A. Turse,Ben G. Adams,Ben G. Adams,Karestan C. Koenen,Karestan C. Koenen,Randall D. Marshall +7 more
TL;DR: A new exposure measure was constructed and exposure reports in diagnoses of 260 Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study veterans were cross-checked to find little evidence of falsification, an even stronger dose-response relationship, and psychological costs that were lower than previously estimated but still substantial.
Journal ArticleDOI
Comorbidity, Impairment, and Suicidality in Subthreshold PTSD
Randall D. Marshall,Mark Olfson,Fredric Hellman,Carlos Blanco,Mary Guardino,Elmer L. Struening +5 more
TL;DR: Higher numbers of subthreshold PTSD symptoms were associated with greater impairment, comorbidity, and suicidal ideation, and more efforts are needed to identify subth threshold PTSD symptoms in clinical populations, epidemiologic surveys, and treatment studies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Efficacy and safety of paroxetine treatment for chronic PTSD: a fixed-dose, placebo-controlled study.
TL;DR: Doses of 20 and 40 mg/day of paroxetine are effective and well tolerated in the treatment of adults with chronic PTSD.
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Is Exposure Necessary? A Randomized Clinical Trial of Interpersonal Psychotherapy for PTSD
John C. Markowitz,Eva Petkova,Yuval Neria,Page E. Van Meter,Yihong Zhao,Elizabeth A. Hembree,Karina Lovell,Tatyana Biyanova,Randall D. Marshall +8 more
TL;DR: Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT), which has demonstrated antidepressant efficacy and shown promise in pilot PTSD research as a non-exposure-based non-cognitive-behavioral PTSD treatment, was tested as a gold-standard treatment for PTSD.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive-Behavioral Group Therapy versus Phenelzine in Social Phobia: Long-Term Outcome
Michael R. Liebowitz,Richard G. Heimberg,Richard G. Heimberg,Richard G. Heimberg,Franklin R. Schneier,Franklin R. Schneier,Franklin R. Schneier,Debra A. Hope,Sharon Davies,Sharon Davies,Sharon Davies,Craig S. Holt,Craig S. Holt,Craig S. Holt,Deborah Goetz,Deborah Goetz,Deborah Goetz,Harlan R. Juster,Harlan R. Juster,Harlan R. Juster,Shu Hsing Lin,Shu Hsing Lin,Shu Hsing Lin,Monroe A. Bruch,Monroe A. Bruch,Monroe A. Bruch,Randall D. Marshall,Randall D. Marshall,Randall D. Marshall,Donald F. Klein,Donald F. Klein,Donald F. Klein +31 more
TL;DR: The superiority seen with PZ on some measures in the acute study persisted in patients who maintained their gains over the course of maintenance and treatment‐free follow‐up, however, CBGT may lead to a greater likelihood of maintaining response after treatment has terminated.