Publications by authors named "K J Shedlack"

Background: Despite evidence that standard substance use disorder (SUD) treatment may be less effective in people with intellectual disability (ID), there is an absence of appropriate clinical tools with which to support them.

Objectives: This study examined the clinical utility of an alcohol and other drug refusal skills intervention designed to be cognitively accessible to adults with ID METHODS: Thirty individuals at high risk for or in recovery from a SUD in developmental disability services (DDS) community residential and day habilitation settings participated in the two-week refusal skills group. Measures included pretest versus posttest improvement in refusal skill competency and baseline performance on a standardized verbal learning test.

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Background: Although most individuals with intellectual disability (ID) currently reside in the community and receive their health care in general medical settings, there is no specific literature on psychiatric consultation to those requiring inpatient medical or surgical care.

Objective: The authors discuss the specialized features of the consultation-liaison (C-L) evaluation and common requests for psychiatric consultation in the hospitalized ID population.

Method: This article reviews the literature on general psychiatric care in this population and presents the experience of practitioners in the ID-Psychiatry field who have followed their patients through episodes of inpatient non-psychiatric care.

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Psychiatric assessment among individuals with a diagnosis of both mental retardation and mental illness presents a clinical challenge. This retrospective study compared two rating scales--the Aberrant Behavior Checklist (ABC) and the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF)--to determine the scales' utility in a partial hospital setting. Although ABC and GAF ratings were weakly correlated, the ABC revealed symptom patterns consistent with recognizable features of psychiatric syndromes and differential improvement in symptoms within and between diagnostic subgroups.

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Objective: Research on psychiatric outcomes among individuals dually diagnosed with mild mental retardation and co-occurring mental illness who are treated with antipsychotic medication is markedly limited due to difficulties encountered in (1) making valid and reliable psychiatric diagnoses and (2) accurately rating and following psychiatric symptom change over time in this specialty population.

Method: To address these issues, DSM-IV psychiatric diagnoses were made by an experienced dual-diagnosis clinician, and the Aberrant Behavior Checklist (ABC) and the Global Assessment of Functioning were used to assess behavioral and psychiatric features in a psychiatric partial hospital setting. Data were collected by chart review from 72 patients admitted consecutively from January 1998 to December 1999.

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