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Interdisciplinary symptom management

Chapter by: Serra, D; Bennett, B; Carper, E; Fox, A; Resnick, Seth A
in: Head and neck cancer : a multidisciplinary approach by Harrison, Louis B; Sessions, Roy B; Kies, Merrill S (Eds)
Philadelphia PA : Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2014
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 1451144873
CID: 3129882

Allodynia and neuronal plasticity

Chapter by: Cruciani, RA; Stacy, CB; Resnick, Seth A; Knotkova, H
in: Neural plasticity in chronic pain by Knotkova, Helena; Cruciani, Ricardo; Merrick, Joav (Eds)
Hauppauge, N.Y. : Nova Science, 2012
pp. 33-47
ISBN: 1613246579
CID: 3069152

Allodynia and neuronal plasticity

Cruciani, Ricardo A; Stacy, Charles B; Resnick, Seth A; Knotkova, Helena;
ORIGINAL:0012571
ISSN: 1939-5914
CID: 3069172

Lack of insight in schizophrenia: impact on treatment adherence

Buckley, Peter F; Wirshing, Donna A; Bhushan, Prameet; Pierre, Joseph M; Resnick, Seth A; Wirshing, William C
People with schizophrenia commonly lack insight, that is, they are unaware of their illness and the consequences thereof. One of the most important consequences of lack of insight is a failure to recognise the need for treatment, leading to treatment nonadherence. With several scales that now enable objective measurement of insight, it is possible to examine correlates of insight change, including course of illness and treatment adherence. Specific interventions, both pharmacological and psychotherapeutic, have been developed to enhance illness insight and treatment adherence. The extent to which second-generation antipsychotic medications, including a recently released long-acting formulation, improve insight and/or enhance treatment adherence remains to be determined.
PMID: 17284095
ISSN: 1172-7047
CID: 178348

Community re-entry program training module for schizophrenic inpatients improves treatment outcomes [Letter]

Wirshing, Donna A; Pierre, Joseph M; Wirshing, William C; Guzik, Lisa H; Resnick, Seth A; Goldstein, Danielle; Zorick, Todd S
PMID: 16844344
ISSN: 0920-9964
CID: 178347

A retrospective case series of artpiprazole augmentation or substitution in six clozapine-treated patients [Meeting Abstract]

Bratti, I; Boyd, J; Resnick, SA; Pierre, JM; Wirshing, DA; Wirshing, WC
ISI:000228241202091
ISSN: 0586-7614
CID: 3069132

The biology of borderline personality disorder: recent findings and future approaches to the study of impulsive aggression and affective instability

Chapter by: Resnick, Seth; Goodman, Marianne; New, Antonia; Siever, IJ
in: Personality disorders : current research and treatments by Reich, J (Ed)
New York : Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, 2005
pp. 43-73
ISBN: 9780415950749
CID: 3069142

Physicians' perceptions of procedural pain and discomfort

Resnick, Seth; Morrison, R Sean
BACKGROUND:Previous studies have demonstrated that patients with end-stage dementia receive a high rate of painful and uncomfortable procedures. This study was undertaken to determine whether this finding might be related to physicians' misperceptions about the burden of common hospital experiences and procedures. METHODS:Physicians were administered a survey asking them to rank on a five-point scale the pain and discomfort they perceived to be associated with 16 common hospital procedures. These ratings were compared to those previously obtained using the same instrument with cognitively intact patients who had actually undergone these procedures. RESULTS:One hundred twenty-three of 123 resident physicians (100%) and 40 of 50 attending physicians (80%) to whom the questionnaire was administered responded. Overall, physicians more often rated both pain and discomfort associated with these procedures/experiences higher than did patients, and residents typically rated pain and discomfort higher than attending physicians. Resident physicians rated 7 procedures/experiences as significantly more painful and 13 as more uncomfortable than did patients. Attending physicians rated 5 procedures/experiences as significantly more painful and 8 more uncomfortable than did patients. Having a nasogastric tube inserted was the only procedure rated more painful by patients as compared to resident or attending physicians. CONCLUSIONS:Physicians have an accurate perception of pain and discomfort associated with common hospital procedures. Further investigation should scrutinize in greater detail the ubiquity and depth of physician knowledge about the issue of procedural burden and should focus on methods and interventions that would allow physicians to consciously weigh the benefits and burdens of routine interventions in the care of persons with serious and life-threatening illness.
PMID: 15588355
ISSN: 1096-6218
CID: 3069102

A comparison of the hallucinations of suicidal and non-suicidal males with schizophrenia: Hallucinatory features as a marker for suicidality [Meeting Abstract]

Resnick, SA; McNally, C; Pashdag, J; Wirshing, DA; Wirshing, WC
ISI:000220755300788
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 3069122

Clinicians' perception of pain and discomfort associated with common hospital preocedures and experiences. [Meeting Abstract]

Resnick, SA; Morrison, R
ISI:000175030500271
ISSN: 0002-8614
CID: 3069112