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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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Caregiver burden, health utilities, and institutional service costs among community-dwelling patients with Alzheimer disease.

TL;DR: Interventions to support caregivers should be based on caregiver burden, regardless of care recipient health status, for even seemingly manageable patients may be at heightened risk for institutionalization if caregivers experience sufficiently high levels of burden.
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Rethinking Antipsychotic Formulary Policy

TL;DR: This commentary reviews recent research and proposes a new algorithm for maintenance antipsychotic therapy that relies on standardized documentation and feedback, without a restrictive formulary that would limit physician choice.
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Inpatient treatment of war-related posttraumatic stress disorder: a 20-year perspective.

TL;DR: These papers show that long-stay inpatient PTSD programs provide treatment that is quite different from other programs but that they are neither as effective, from a psychometric perspective, nor as helpful, from the veterans' subjective perspective, as has been expected.
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Clinical Epidemiology of Urban Violence: Responding to Children Exposed to Violence in Ten Communities

TL;DR: Adolescents were at a higher risk than children of being: (a) victimized, (b) involved in incidents outside their home, (c) experiencing a threat to their lives, and (d) suffering physical injuries.
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Predictors of Hospitalization of Individuals With First-Episode Psychosis: Data From a 2-Year Follow-Up of the RAISE-ETP.

TL;DR: Results indicate that hospital use may be decreased by reducing the duration of untreated psychosis and prior hospitalizations, minimizing residual symptoms, preventing substance misuse, and facilitating adherence to medication taking.