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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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Electroconvulsive Therapy at a Veterans Health Administration Medical Center.
TL;DR: The findings suggest that ECT is used as a treatment of last resort, although available evidence and guidelines recommend wider use.
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Choice of randomization to clozapine versus other second generation antipsychotics in the CATIE schizophrenia trial
TL;DR: Data from the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE), a multi-phase, randomized comparative effectiveness trial for schizophrenia, was used to identify factors associated with choosing randomization to clozapine.
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Association between migrant worker experience, limitations on insurance coverage, and hospitalization for schizophrenia in Hunan Province, China.
Yifan Zhu,Xinran Hu,Bo Yang,Guowei Wu,Zheng Wang,Zhimin Xue,Jincheng Shi,Xuan Ouyang,Zhening Liu,Robert A. Rosenheck +9 more
TL;DR: Migrant workers appear to be at greater risk of hospitalization for schizophrenia than other residents of Hunan and showed more severe psychopathology, which may reflect specific lack of health insurance coverage for workers migrating to non-native provinces in China, thereby delaying access to treatment.
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Prescription of Second-Generation Antipsychotics: Responding to Treatment Risk in Real-World Practice
TL;DR: Although this study found a statistically significant sensitivity by providers to cardiometabolic risk, this sensitivity was neither robust nor uniformly statistically significant.
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Expanding service delivery: does it improve relationships among agencies serving homeless people with mental illness?
James McGuire,James McGuire,Robert A. Rosenheck,Robert A. Rosenheck,Craig Burnette,Craig Burnette +5 more
TL;DR: This study examines the association of expanded funding of client-level homeless services, a “bottom-up” approach, with strengthening of interorganizational relationships, and identifies an effective bottom-up resource-based approach to services integration.