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Medical outreach to homeless substance users in New York City: preliminary results

Rosenblum, Andrew; Nuttbrock, Larry; McQuistion, Hunter; Magura, Steve; Joseph, Herman
An innovative, experimental, medical out-reach initiative, using a fully-equipped mobile medical van with a staff of 2 part-time physicians, a physician assistant, a social worker, and a driver/medical aid serving the needs of 1048, mostly male, minority group, high-level, homeless New York City substance users with infectious diseases is described. The study sample (N = 250) was divided into experimental S's who received Intensive case management and a control group who could choose to refer themselves to the SW. Biological tests revealed high rates of cocaine use and infectious diseases. Preliminary 4-month outcomes (N = 128) showed reductions in drug use, homelessness and health complaints in both groups; experimental subjects compared with controls received more Public Assistance and had fewer emergency room visits.
PMID: 12180566
ISSN: 1082-6084
CID: 674642

The role of the psychiatrist: job satisfaction of medical directors and staff psychiatrists

Ranz, J; Stueve, A; McQuistion, H L
In a previous survey of Columbia University Public Psychiatry Fellowship alumni, medical directors reported experiencing higher job satisfaction compared to staff psychiatrists. To further this inquiry, the authors conducted an expanded survey among the membership of the American Association of Community Psychiatrists (AACP). We mailed a questionnaire to all AACP members. Respondents categorized their positions as staff psychiatrist, program medical director or agency medical director, and rated their overall job satisfaction. The form also included a number of demographic and job characteristic items. Of 479 questionnaires mailed, a total of 286 individuals returned questionnaires (61%-12 forms were undeliverable). As in our previous survey, medical directors experience significantly higher job satisfaction compared to staff psychiatrists. Program and agency medical directors do not differ significantly. In addition, job satisfaction is strongly and negatively correlated with age for staff psychiatrists but not for medical directors. This survey strengthens the previously reported advantage medical directors have over staff psychiatrists regarding job satisfaction. The finding that job satisfaction decreases with increasing age of staff psychiatrists but not medical directors is particularly interesting, suggesting that staff psychiatrist positions may come to be regarded as "dead-end" over time. Psychiatrists are advised to seek promotions to program medical director positions early in their careers, since these positions are far more available, and provide equal job satisfaction, compared to agency medical director positions.
PMID: 11504145
ISSN: 0010-3853
CID: 674652

Hepatitis C and substance use in a sample of homeless people in New York City

Rosenblum, A; Nuttbrock, L; McQuistion, H L; Magura, S; Joseph, H
This study examined the prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies and its association with substance use and sexual behavior among a sample of 139 persons visiting a mobile medical clinic in Manhattan. Ninety percent were unstably housed or were living on the street. The prevalence of HCV antibodies was 32%. Prevalence was also high for hepatitis B core antibodies (47%), HIV antibodies (15%), and syphilis exposure (14%); 76% tested positive for cocaine. Among subjects who reported ever injecting (20%), 86% were HCV positive; 19% of non-injectors were HCV positive. In separate multivariate logistic regression models (with injection controlled), HCV was predicted by quantitative hair assays for cocaine and self-reported duration of crack-cocaine use. Alcohol dependence and sexual behavior did not predict HCV. Hepatitis C is a significant public health problem among the urban homeless population, with injection drug use and, to a lesser extent, cocaine use implicated as risk factors.
PMID: 11760923
ISSN: 1055-0887
CID: 674662

Psychosocial rehabilitation: issues and answers for psychiatry

McQuistion, H L; Goisman, R M; Tennison, C R Jr
The American Association of Community Psychiatrists has composed a set of principles to guide psychiatry's relationship with psychosocial rehabilitation. They consist of five basic precepts offering the profession an orientation to rehabilitation, accompanied by seven issues that discuss aspects of how psychiatry must finally adopt psychosocial rehabilitation as a model of practice with people who have severe psychiatric disorders. The authors advance the argument that a confluence of developments, both within and beyond psychiatry, has now created an opportunity for psychiatry to build a mutually productive relationship with rehabilitation.
PMID: 11079188
ISSN: 0010-3853
CID: 674672

The association between cocaine use and HIV/STDs among soup kitchen attendees in New York City

Nuttbrock, L; Rosenblum, A; Magura, S; McQuistion, H L; Joseph, H
We examined the associations of cocaine use with HIV/sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in a sample of 184 soup kitchen attendees using a mobile medical van in Manhattan (male = 66%; black or Hispanic = 81%; cocaine use, primarily crack = 75%; ever injected drugs = 22%). In addition to confirming the association between years of cocaine use and HIV antibodies in this sample (odds ratio [OR] = 2.11; p <.05) we examined the pattern of associations of cocaine use and non-HIV STDs under the hypothesis that the strength of an association depends on the efficiency of sexually transmitting a particular STD (high, moderate, and low for syphilis, hepatitis B and hepatitis C, respectively). As predicted, years of cocaine use was strongly associated with syphilis (OR = 2.07; p <.05), moderately associated with hepatitis B core antibodies (OR = 1.50; p <.05), and not significantly associated with hepatitis C antibodies (OR = 1.48; p >.05). A reverse pattern of associations between opiate use (injection drug use) and the three STDs points to the singular significance of cocaine use in the sexual transmission of STDs, and by inference, HIV. This conclusion is further bolstered by correlations of biologic (hair assays) and self-reported measurements of cocaine use (but not opiates) with self-reports of high risk sexual behavior among the women (number of partners and selling sex) and men (number of partners and buying sex). These data underscore the need for effective cocaine treatment and HIV interventions tailored to the large numbers of cocaine users in inner cities.
PMID: 11064509
ISSN: 1525-4135
CID: 674682

The role of the community psychiatrist as medical director: a delineation of job types

Ranz, J; McQuistion, H L; Stueve, A
To examine the variety of roles filled by psychiatrists functioning as medical directors in community settings, a survey of all members of the American Association of Community Psychiatrists was undertaken. A total of 168 respondents classified themselves as agency medical directors or program medical directors. Medical directors also classified their breadth of supervisory responsibility as including medical staff only, medical and other clinical staff, or all staff (including administrative staff). A classification scheme of six types of medical director positions based on level of operation and breadth of supervisory responsibility was created. This classification helps clarify the medical director's role, providing guidance to psychiatrists and agencies negotiating job descriptions for this position.
PMID: 10875962
ISSN: 1075-2730
CID: 674692

Training in community psychiatry: new opportunities

Cohen, N L; McQuistion, H; Albert, G; Edgar, J; Falk, K; Serby, M
The authors describe the impact on training that accompanied an assignment of senior (PGY-4) residents to work one-half day each week for a six month period at a community-based agency concerned with the care of persons with severe and persistent mental illness who were formerly homeless. As the goals and methods of psychiatric training are rethought and adapt to programmatic shifts and economic pressures, new opportunities open up to move treatment and training to the 'front lines' in the community where an innovative therapeutic armamentarium for persons with severe and chronic mental illness is developing
PMID: 9627928
ISSN: 0033-2720
CID: 137042

Tuberculosis infection among people with severe mental illness

McQuistion, H L; Colson, P; Yankowitz, R; Susser, E
In a study of the prevalence of tuberculosis infection and risk factors for infection among people with severe mental illness, 71 participants in a psychiatric day program were given a tuberculin skin test. Twelve of the 71 subjects (17 percent) had positive results. None had active tuberculosis. Those with tuberculosis infection were more likely to be immigrants and to be above the study group's median age of 32. Eleven of the 12 infected subjects had experienced at least one of seven risk factors for tuberculosis infection, which suggests that more clinical attention should be placed on tuberculosis infection in this population.
PMID: 9175195
ISSN: 1075-2730
CID: 674702

Clozapine-induced myotoxicity in patients with chronic psychotic disorders

Scelsa, S N; Simpson, D M; McQuistion, H L; Fineman, A; Ault, K; Reichler, B
Muscle dysfunction related to clozapine treatment is largely unrecognized. We evaluated weekly creatine kinase (CK) levels in 37 consecutive clozapine-treated outpatients with chronic psychotic disorders. Those with CK elevations underwent clinical neurologic evaluation, electromyography (EMG), and nerve conduction studies. Patients with probable myopathy had a quadriceps muscle biopsy. Twenty control patients had a single CK level determination. Twenty-nine of 37 clozapine-treated patients had CK elevations. Three patients had extreme CK elevations (> 20,000 IU/L), without myoglobinuria. Mean CK levels were significantly greater in clozapine patients (194 IU/L) than in control patients (142.3, p = 0.033). Of 18 clozapine-treated patients evaluated clinically, 6 had mild proximal weakness. EMG in 13 patients was myopathic in 5, normal in 5, and neurogenic in 3. Muscle biopsy in 5 patients showed rare regenerating myofibers and mild acute denervation (1), mild type II fiber atrophy (1), minimal acute denervation (1), and normal muscle (2). In conclusion, clozapine therapy may be associated with CK elevations and, rarely, mild myopathy.
PMID: 8960737
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 674712

Clarifying "biological," "natural," and "adoptive" parents [Letter]

McQuistion, H L
PMCID:1380707
PMID: 8916538
ISSN: 0090-0036
CID: 674722