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Institution

Bradley Hospital

HealthcareEast Providence, Rhode Island, United States
About: Bradley Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in East Providence, Rhode Island, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Mental health & Bipolar disorder. The organization has 261 authors who have published 265 publications receiving 10477 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
Anthony Davids1
TL;DR: The background, development, and preliminary appraisal of rating scales for assessing characteristics of the hyperkinetic syndrome are presented to make the instrument available to other investigators who are conducting studies on the diagnosis and treatment of hyperkinesis.
Abstract: The background, development, and preliminary appraisal of rating scales for assessing characteristics of the hyperkinetic syndrome are presented. The main purpose of this report is to make the instrument available to other investigators who are conducting studies on the diagnosis and treatment of hyperkinesis.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Piecemeal information processing, of which AP is an extreme and rare example, is characteristic of autism and may be associated as well with subclinical variants in language and behavior.
Abstract: Reports of a relatively high prevalence of absolute pitch (AP) in autistic disorder suggest that AP is associated with some of the distinctive cognitive and social characteristics seen in autism spectrum disorders. Accordingly we examined cognition, personality, social behavior, and language in 13 musicians with strictly defined AP (APS) and 33 musician controls (MC) without AP using standardized interviews and tests previously applied to identify the broad autism phenotype seen in the relatives of autistic probands. These included the Pragmatic Rating Scale (PRS) (social aspects of language) the Personality Assessment Schedule (PAS) (rigidity, aloofness, anxiety/worry, hypersensitivity), and WAIS performance subtests (PIQ). On the basis of their behavior in the interviews, subjects were classified as socially eccentric, somewhat eccentric, or not eccentric. Forty-six percent of the APS, but only 15% of the MC, were classified as socially eccentric (p < .03). APS but not MC showed higher scores on block design than on the other PIQ tests (p < .06), a PIQ pattern seen in autism spectrum disorders. Although APS and MC did not differ significantly on other measures it is of note that APS mean scores on the PRS and PAS (5.69, 4.92) were almost twice as high as those for the MC (3.03, 2.45). Thus, musicians with AP show some of the personality, language, and cognitive features associated with autism. Piecemeal information processing, of which AP is an extreme and rare example, is characteristic of autism and may be associated as well with subclinical variants in language and behavior. We speculate that the gene or genes that underlie AP may be among the genes that contribute to autism.

85 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Compared with other pediatric emergency visits, mental health visits are longer, are more frequently triaged to urgent evaluation, and more likely to result in patient admission or transfer, thereby placing distinctive burdens on US emergency departments.
Abstract: Objective To compare pediatric mental health emergency department visits to other pediatric emergency department visits, focusing on length of stay. Method We analyzed data from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, a nationally representative sample of US emergency department visits from 2001 to 2008, for patients aged ≤18 years (n = 73,015). Visits with a principal diagnosis of a mental disorder (n = 1,476) were compared to visits (n = 71,539) with regard to patient and hospital characteristics, treatment, and length of stay. Predictors of prolonged mental health visits were identified. Results Mental health visits were more likely than other visits to arrive by ambulance (21.8% versus 6.3%, p p p p Conclusions Compared with other pediatric emergency visits, mental health visits are longer, are more frequently triaged to urgent evaluation, and more likely to result in patient admission or transfer, thereby placing distinctive burdens on US emergency departments.

82 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Previous concerns about feeding behaviour in cocaine exposed infants may reflect the quality of the feeding interaction rather than infant feeding problems related to prenatal exposure, however, opiate exposed infants and their mothers both contributed to increased arousal and heightened feeding behaviour.
Abstract: Objective: To evaluate feeding difficulties and maternal behaviour during a feeding session with 1 month old infants prenatally exposed to cocaine and/or opiates. Methods: The study is part of the maternal lifestyle study, which recruited 11 811 subjects at four urban hospitals, then followed 1388 from 1 to 36 months of age. Exposure to cocaine and opiates was determined by maternal interview and meconium assay. At the 1 month clinic visit, biological mothers were videotaped while bottle feeding their infants. This sample included 364 exposed to cocaine, 45 exposed to opiates, 31 exposed to both drugs, and 588 matched comparison infants. Mothers were mostly black, high school educated, and on public assistance. Videotapes were coded without knowledge of exposure status for frequency, duration and quality of infant sucking, arousal, feeding problems, and maternal feeding activity and interaction. Results: No cocaine effects were found on infant feeding measures, but cocaine-using mothers were less flexible (6.29 v 6.50), less engaged (5.77 v 6.22), and had shorter feeding sessions (638 v 683 seconds). Opiate exposed infants showed prolonged sucking bursts (29 v 20 seconds), fewer pauses (1.6 v 2.2 per minute), more feeding problems (0.55 v 0.38), and increased arousal (2.59 v 2.39). Their mothers showed increased activity (30 v 22), independent of their infants' feeding problems. Conclusions: Previous concerns about feeding behaviour in cocaine exposed infants may reflect the quality of the feeding interaction rather than infant feeding problems related to prenatal exposure. However, opiate exposed infants and their mothers both contributed to increased arousal and heightened feeding behaviour.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 2018-Sleep
TL;DR: The nightly sleep need of human adolescents is estimated, the time course and severity of sleep-related deficits when sleep is reduced below this optimal quantity are determined, and whether sleep restriction perturbs the circadian system as well as the sleep homeostat is determined.
Abstract: Study objectives This study will (1) estimate the nightly sleep need of human adolescents, (2) determine the time course and severity of sleep-related deficits when sleep is reduced below this optimal quantity, and (3) determine whether sleep restriction perturbs the circadian system as well as the sleep homeostat. Methods Thirty-four adolescents aged 15 to 17 years spent 10 days and nine nights in the sleep laboratory. Between two baseline nights and two recovery nights with 10 hours' time in bed (TIB) per night, participants experienced either severe sleep restriction (5-hour TIB), moderate sleep restriction (7.5-hour TIB), or no sleep restriction (10-hour TIB) for five nights. A 10-minute psychomotor vigilance task (PVT; lapse = response after 500 ms) and the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale were administered every 3 hours during wake. Salivary dim-light melatonin onset was calculated at baseline and after four nights of each sleep dose to estimate circadian phase. Results Dose-dependent deficits to sleep duration, circadian phase timing, lapses of attention, and subjective sleepiness occurred. Less TIB resulted in less sleep, more lapses of attention, greater subjective sleepiness, and larger circadian phase delays. Sleep need estimated from 10-hour TIB sleep opportunities was approximately 9 hours, while modeling PVT lapse data suggested that 9.35 hours of sleep is needed to maintain optimal sustained attention performance. Conclusions Sleep restriction perturbs homeostatic and circadian systems, leading to dose-dependent deficits to sustained attention and sleepiness. Adolescents require more sleep for optimal functioning than typically obtained.

73 citations


Authors

Showing all 261 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Mary A. Carskadon8824535740
Barry M. Lester7236817401
Anthony Spirito7234119118
Ronald Seifer6321215702
Barry L. Sharaf5013210834
Michael J. Corwin431096986
Gregory K. Fritz421294815
Eric M. Morrow4111413777
Oskar G. Jenni391747697
Daniel P. Dickstein381217373
Christine Acebo37519512
Dhaval Kolte3617915988
Yifrah Kaminer351555786
Carl Feinstein34705244
J. Dawn Abbott322184639
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20221
202135
202026
201916
201810