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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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Pharmacotherapy for older veterans diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder in Veterans Administration.

TL;DR: Diverse psychotropic medication classes are used to treat veterans diagnosed with PTSD in VA with declining use among older veterans, perhaps reflecting the greater sensitivity of specialists to the risks of elderly veterans.
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From Profession-Based Leadership to Service Line Management in the Veterans Health Administration Impact on Mental Health Care

TL;DR: Service line implementation was associated with significant, although predominantly short-term, improvement in patient level variables such as continuity of care and hospital readmission, but less so with regard to institutional measures addressing emphasis on outpatient care and maintaining proportionate funding of mental health services.
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Assessment of the minimum clinically important difference in quality of life in schizophrenia measured by the Quality of Well-Being Scale and disease-specific measures

TL;DR: The QWB is significantly correlated with disease specific measures of health related quality of life in schizophrenia and identifies threshold values of clinically meaningful change using the Clinical Global Impressions scale (CGI), as the anchor.
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Witchcraft and Biopsychosocial Causes of Mental Illness: Attitudes and Beliefs About Mental Illness Among Health Professionals in Five Countries.

TL;DR: Investigation of the intercorrelation of measures reflecting beliefs about and attitudes toward people with mental illness in a sample of health professionals from five countries found belief in supernatural as contrasted with biopsychosocial causes of mental illness was weakly associated with less stigmatized attitudes towards socializing and normalized roles.
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Measuring money mismanagement among dually diagnosed clients.

TL;DR: The interview had high test-retest reliability and was correlated with self-reported money mismanagement and global assessment of functioning scale scores, but clinician judgment was not associated with these measures.