114 results match your criteria: "and Butler Hospital.[Affiliation]"

This paper describes how to use qualitative data for adapting an existing behavioral intervention to a new population using a specific illustration-the adaptation of the Women's CoOp HIV intervention to the needs of women prisoners who have experienced interpersonal violence. We describe and illustrate how we conducted each step in the adaptation process, including (1) choosing a well-matched intervention to adapt, (2) setting specific goals for the adaptation, (3) writing a focus group agenda that will collect the data you need for the adaptation, (4) recruiting participants and conducting the focus groups, (5) using debriefs to assess the data as you gather them, (6) coding, (7) analysis, (8) using the qualitative data to guide the intervention adaptation, (9) conducting additional groups and making final revisions, and (10) pilot testing the intervention. These steps provide an effective model for how to collect and analyze qualitative data that support behavioral intervention development.

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Examining the Feasibility and Acceptability of an Online Yoga Class for Mood Disorders: A MoodNetwork Study.

J Psychiatr Pract

January 2018

UEBELACKER: Alpert Medical School of Brown University and Butler Hospital, Providence, RI DUFOUR, DINERMAN, WALSH: Massachusetts General Hospital, Dauten Family Center for Bipolar Treatment Innovation, Boston, MA HEARING: Columbian College of Arts and Sciences, George Washington University, Washington, DC GILLETTE: Eyes of the World Associates Inc., North Kingston, RI DECKERSBACH, NIERENBERG, and SYLVIA: Massachusetts General Hospital, Dauten Family Center for Bipolar Treatment Innovation, and Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA WEINSTOCK: Butler Hospital and Brown University, Providence, RI.

Background: Despite ongoing advances in the treatment of mood disorders, a substantial proportion of people diagnosed with major depression or bipolar disorder remain symptomatic over time. Yoga, which has been shown to reduce stress and depressive symptoms, as well as to improve overall quality of life, shows promise as an adjunctive treatment. However, dissemination of yoga for clinical populations remains challenging.

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Background: Phosphatidylethanol (PEth) is a direct biomarker for alcohol that is formed shortly after alcohol use and may remain detectable in blood for weeks after alcohol consumption. There is little research on alcohol use factors that influence PEth elimination, especially among women.

Methods: Data were collected from 116 alcohol use-disordered women who were recently incarcerated.

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Öst's (2014) systematic review and meta-analysis of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) has received wide attention. On the basis of his review, Öst argued that ACT research was not increasing in its quality and that, in contradiction to the views of Division 12 of the American Psychological Association (APA), ACT is "not yet well-established for any disorder" (2014, p. 105).

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A Comprehensive Approach to Deep Brain Stimulation for Movement Disorders.

R I Med J (2013)

June 2017

Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery (& Neuroscience), Brown University Alpert Medical School and Director of Functional Neurosurgery, Rhode Island Hospital; member of the Norman Prince Neurosciences Institute of Lifespan.

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a well-established form of neuromodulation, used primarily for movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease (PD) and Essential Tremor (ET). The selection of patients who will benefit most from DBS depends on a team of clinicians from various disciplines, including neurology, neurosurgery, psychiatry, neuropsychology and rehabilitation specialists. The actual surgical procedure can take many forms.

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Identification and management of eating disorders in gynecology: menstrual health as an underutilized screening tool.

Am J Obstet Gynecol

November 2016

Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, and Butler Hospital, Providence, RI. Electronic address:

Eating disorders are life-threatening conditions that disproportionately affect females, often during child-bearing years. Although the endocrinological and reproductive sequelae of these conditions often fall within the treatment purview of obstetrician-gynecologists, the assessment of eating pathology is challenging and often not part of routine clinical care. This commentary focuses on one of the common presenting symptoms of eating disorders in women, menstrual dysfunction, and discusses considerations for its clinical management in gynecology.

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Adjunctive Behavioral Activation for the Treatment of Bipolar Depression: A Proof of Concept Trial.

J Psychiatr Pract

March 2016

WEINSTOCK, MELVIN, and MILLER: Brown University and Butler Hospital, Providence, RIMUNROE: Department of Psychology, Miami University of Ohio, Oxford, OH.

Background: Grounded in a model focused on exposure to response-contingent positive reinforcement, and with evidence supporting its acute treatment effects for unipolar depression, an adjunctive behavioral activation (BA) intervention may be especially well suited to the treatment of bipolar depression. The goal of this study was to modify BA for the adjunctive treatment of bipolar depression and to pilot it in a proof of concept trial to assess its preliminary feasibility and acceptability for this population.

Methods: Twelve adults with bipolar depression were recruited from hospital settings and enrolled in a 20-week open trial of the modified BA, delivered in 16 outpatient sessions, as an adjunct to community pharmacotherapy for bipolar disorder.

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Although research has shown links between family-of-origin violence (FOV), intimate partner violence (IPV), and hostility, research has not examined whether hostility mediates the relationship between FOV and IPV. The current study examined whether hostility mediates FOV and IPV perpetration in 302 men arrested for domestic violence. Results demonstrated that hostility fully mediated the relationship between father-to-participant FOV and physical and psychological IPV, and the relationship between mother-to-participant FOV and physical IPV.

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Longitudinal associations between interpersonal relationship functioning and mood episode severity in youth with bipolar disorder.

J Nerv Ment Dis

March 2015

*Department of Psychiatry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; †Center for Addiction Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Cambridge; ‡Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, and §Butler Hospital, Providence, RI; ∥Department of Psychiatry, Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, PA; ¶Department of Child Psychiatry, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto Medical Center, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; #Emma Pendelton Bradley Hospital, East Providence, RI; **Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles; and ††Nationwide Children's Hospital and The Ohio State College of Medicine, Columbus.

This study examined the longitudinal association between mood episode severity and relationships in youth with bipolar (BP) disorder. Participants were 413 Course and Outcome of Bipolar Youth study youth, aged 12.6 ± 3.

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Atypical Parkinsonian syndromes with very poor striatal uptake on 123I-ioflupane SPECT imaging.

Clin Nucl Med

February 2015

From the *Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Alpert Medical School of Brown University and Rhode Island Hospital; and †Department of Neurology, Alpert Medical School of Brown University and Butler Hospital, Providence, RI.

We report a case series of unusual I-ioflupane SPECT imaging findings. Three patients with atypical parkinsonian symptoms underwent I-ioflupane imaging to assist in diagnosis. The patients had complete or near-complete absence of striatal activity.

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Research has attempted to elucidate men and women's proximal motivations for perpetrating intimate partner violence (IPV). However, previous research has yet to clarify and resolve contention regarding whether motives for IPV are gender-neutral or gender specific. Thus, the purpose of this present study was to compare motives for physical IPV perpetration among a sample of men ( =90) and women ( =87) arrested for domestic violence and court-referred to batterer intervention programs.

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Over the past several decades, nontraditional drugs of abuse, including bath salts, synthetic cannabinoids, and salvia, have increased in popularity and use. Despite this fact, they remain unfamiliar to many healthcare providers. Commonly marketed as "legal highs," these substances are being used for their desired neuropsychiatric effects, taking advantage of their accessibility, low cost, variable legality, and limited detection on traditional urine drug screens.

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Low positive and high negative affect predict low rates of smoking abstinence among smokers making a quit attempt. Positive Psychotherapy can both increase positive affect and decrease negative affect and therefore may be a useful adjunct to behavioral smoking counseling. The purpose of the present study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of a Positive Psychotherapy for Smoking Cessation (PPT-S) intervention that integrates standard smoking cessation counseling with nicotine patch and a package of positive psychology interventions.

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Utilization of evidence-based smoking cessation treatments by psychiatric inpatient smokers with depression.

J Addict Med

January 2015

From the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine (DRS), University of California, San Diego; Alpert Medical School of Brown University (LU, AMA, YS), Providence, RI; and Butler Hospital (LU, KF, JS, SM, AMA, YS), Providence, RI.

Objectives: Although smoking is a major health issue among depressed psychiatric inpatients and interest in quitting is high, successful quit rates remain low among this population. We sought to understand preferences that depressed inpatient smokers may have for cessation treatments.

Methods: Eighty smokers (60% women, mean age 38.

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Individuals with bipolar disorder (BD) often receive complex polypharmacy regimens as part of treatment, yet few studies have sought to evaluate patient characteristics associated with this high medication burden. This retrospective chart review study examined rates of complex polypharmacy (i.e.

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We conducted a secondary analysis of data from a clinical trial to explore the relationship between degree of personality disorder (PD) pathology (i.e., number of subthreshold and threshold PD symptoms) and mood and functioning outcomes in Bipolar I Disorder (BD-I).

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Use of mental health services in transition age youth with bipolar disorder.

J Psychiatr Pract

November 2013

HOWER, YEN, and WEINSTOCK: Brown University and Butler Hospital, Providence, RI; CASE and HUNT: Brown University, and Emma Pendleton Bradley Hospital, East Providence, RI; HOEPPNER: Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA; T. GOLDSTEIN, BIRMAHER, RYAN, and GILL: Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic and University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA; B. GOLDSTEIN: Centre for Youth Bipolar Disorder, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, University of Toronto, Canada; TOPOR: VA Boston Healthcare System and Harvard Medical School; STROBER: University of California, Los Angeles; AXELSON: Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, OH; KELLER: Butler Hospital. For disclosures and acknowledgments see page 474.

Objectives: There is concern that treatment of serious mental illness in the United States declines precipitously following legal emancipation at age 18 years and transition from specialty youth clinical settings. We examined age transition effects on treatment utilization in a sample of youth with bipolar disorder.

Methods: Youth with bipolar disorder (N=413) 7-18 years of age were assessed approximately twice per year (mean interval 8.

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Background And Objectives: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and eating disorders (EDs) show phenotypic similarities and have been independently associated with deficits in decision-making and maladaptive perfectionism. However, research directly comparing the two disorders is sparse and the significance of observed similarities remains in question. Therefore, the present study compared decision-making in OCD and EDs in relationship to perfectionistic personality traits.

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Aims: The efficacy of batterer intervention programs to reduce intimate partner violence (IPV) is questionable, with individuals with alcohol problems particularly unlikely to benefit. We examined whether adding adjunctive alcohol intervention to batterer intervention reduced the likelihood of substance use and violence relative to batterer intervention alone.

Design: Randomized clinical trial.

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