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Robert A. Rosenheck

Researcher at Yale University

Publications -  993
Citations -  58354

Robert A. Rosenheck is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Veterans Affairs. The author has an hindex of 114, co-authored 963 publications receiving 54357 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert A. Rosenheck include Eastern Virginia Medical School & The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research.

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Substance abuse and the need for money management assistance among psychiatric inpatients.

TL;DR: There is a need to examine the process by which the Social Security and Veterans Benefits Administrations assign payees to determine whether patients with co-morbid substance abuse are not being assigned a payee in spite of their discernible need for one.
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Naltrexone is associated with reduced drinking by alcohol dependent patients receiving antidepressants for mood and anxiety symptoms: results from VA Cooperative Study No. 425, "Naltrexone in the treatment of alcoholism".

TL;DR: In this paper, a secondary analysis of the first 13 weeks of VA CSP #425, a study that evaluated the efficacy of naltrexone 50 mg/d in 627 alcohol dependent military veterans receiving Twelve Step Facilitation therapy at 20 VA Medical Centers.
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Buprenorphine prescribing for opioid use disorder in medical practices: can office‐based out‐patient care address the opiate crisis in the United States?

TL;DR: In office-based medical practices in the US, diagnoses for opioid use disorder (OUD) and buprenorphine prescriptions for adults with OUD increased from 0.14% and 56.1%, respectively, in 2006-10 to 0.38% and 73.6% in 2011-15.
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Association Between Community and Client Characteristics and Subjective Measures of the Quality of Housing

TL;DR: Clients who were living in their own place with others, those who were less bothered by side effects of medications, and those who are living in higher-income neighborhoods were more satisfied with the overall quality of their housing.
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Nicotine dependence and its risk factors among users of veterans health services, 2008-2009.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the prevalence of nicotine dependence and associated risk factors among veterans who used health services in the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) system using a case-control design, using all VA health service users in fiscal year 2008-2009 (N = 5,031,381) who received a nicotine dependence diagnosis with those who did not.