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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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Special Section on CATIE Baseline Data: Interrelationships of Psychiatric Symptom Severity, Medical Comorbidity, and Functioning in Schizophrenia

TL;DR: In this sample of persons with schizophrenia, medical comorbidity was associated with depression and neurocognitive impairment but was a weaker correlate of psychosocial functioning or employment status than psychotic symptoms, depression, and neuroCognitive impairment.
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Trauma-Related Symptoms in Veterans of Operation Desert Storm: A Preliminary Report

TL;DR: Preliminary findings suggest that a high percentage of Desert Storm veterans experienced some trauma-related symptoms after returning to the United States.
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Clinicians' reasons for antipsychotic coprescribing.

TL;DR: Prescribers for patients receiving more than one antipsychotic were frequently able to cite plausible and specific target symptoms they were attempting to address with this practice.
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Medication Continuation and Compliance: A Comparison of Patients Treated With Clozapine and Haloperidol

TL;DR: Continuation with medication is greater with clozapine than haloperidol and is partly explained by greater symptom improvement and reduced side effects and no differences were found in regimen compliance.
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Benchmarking treatment of schizophrenia: A comparison of service delivery by the national government and by state and local providers.

TL;DR: VA care was associated with similar satisfaction and clinical outcomes but greater reliance on hospital treatment and less use of community-based psychosocial services, while outpatients were more likely to have been hospitalized during the previous year than non-VA outpat patients.