S
Sadaaki Fukui
Researcher at Indiana University
Publications - 34
Citations - 661
Sadaaki Fukui is an academic researcher from Indiana University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 28 publications receiving 546 citations. Previous affiliations of Sadaaki Fukui include University of Kansas.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of Wellness Recovery Action Plan (WRAP) participation on psychiatric symptoms, sense of hope, and recovery.
Sadaaki Fukui,Vincent R. Starnino,Mariscal Susana,Lori J. Davidson,Karen Severud Cook,Charles A. Rapp,Elizabeth A. Gowdy +6 more
TL;DR: The study results provide evidence that WRAP programming may warrant a place in the current array of services offered through the publicly funded mental health system and offer promising evidence thatWRAP participation has a positive effect on psychiatric symptoms and feelings of hopefulness.
Journal ArticleDOI
Pathways to Recovery (PTR): Impact of peer-led group participation on mental health recovery outcomes.
TL;DR: This initial research is promising for establishing PTR as an important tool for facilitating recovery using a peer-led group format and given the current federal funding stream for peer services, continued research into PTR and otherpeer-led services becomes more important.
Journal ArticleDOI
Strengths Model Case Management Fidelity Scores and Client Outcomes
TL;DR: The study results offer promising evidence that higher SMCM fidelity has a positive effect on clients over an 18-month period, thereby providing an effective complement to current mental health treatment.
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A coding system to measure elements of shared decision making during psychiatric visits.
Michelle P. Salyers,Marianne S. Matthias,Marianne S. Matthias,Sadaaki Fukui,Mark C. Holter,Linda A. Collins,Nichole Rose,John Brandon Thompson,Melinda Coffman,William C. Torrey +9 more
TL;DR: The rating scale appears to reliably assess shared decision making in psychiatric practice and could be helpful for future research, training, and implementation efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI
Outcomes of an illness self-management group using wellness recovery action planning.
Vincent R. Starnino,Susana Mariscal,Mark C. Holter,Lori J. Davidson,Karen Severud Cook,Sadaaki Fukui,Charles A. Rapp +6 more
TL;DR: Preliminary results offer promising evidence that the use of WRAP has a positive effect on self-reported hope and recovery-related attitudes, thereby providing an effective complement to current mental health treatment.