Academic literature on the topic 'Cincinnati. General Hospital. Department of Psychiatry'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cincinnati. General Hospital. Department of Psychiatry"

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Kelley, Scott R., and Richard E. Welling. "Good Samaritan Hospital and Its Department of Surgery: A Historical Perspective." American Surgeon 76, no. 5 (May 2010): 470–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000313481007600512.

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At the end of the Revolutionary War, the United States government acquired the Northwest Territory, including the city of Cincinnati. Given the city's position on the Ohio River, and the subsequent development and introduction of steamboats in the early 1800s, Cincinnati became a major center for commerce and trade. With a population of over 115,000 in 1850, Cincinnati was the sixth largest city in the United States—larger even than St. Louis and Chicago—the first major city west of the Allegheny Mountains, and the largest inland city in the nation. The city's growth and importance is mirrored by the history of one if its prized institutions, Good Samaritan Hospital—the oldest, largest, and busiest private teaching and specialty-care hospital in Greater Cincinnati and a national leader in many surgical fields.
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Kline, Stephen A., and Harvey Moldofsky. "Fiscal and Service Analyses in General Hospital Psychiatry." Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 33, no. 4 (May 1988): 279–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/070674378803300409.

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Fiscal matters were analyzed in four specialized programmes of the Department of Psychiatry at the Toronto Western Hospital in order to plan for service and academic activities. The resultant analysis allowed for the establishment of criteria for growth and the evaluation of clinical service performance and goals.
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P�rez, Edgardo. "Quality assurance activities in a Canadian general hospital department of psychiatry." Administration and Policy in Mental Health 18, no. 3 (January 1991): 183–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00713802.

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Waterhouse, John, and Stephen Platt. "General Hospital Admission in the Management of Parasuicide." British Journal of Psychiatry 156, no. 2 (February 1990): 236–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.156.2.236.

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Suitably trained junior doctors selected parasuicides with no immediate medical or psychiatric treatment needs on initial assessment in a casualty department. This group was then randomly allocated to hospital admission (38 cases) or discharge home (39 cases). One week later there were no significant differences between groups on diverse outcome measures, including repetition rate, psychological symptoms, and social functioning. A second follow-up using the same measures at 16 weeks also failed to demonstrate any differences between groups, both of which showed considerable overall improvement. A parasuicide management policy consisting of assessment in a casualty department and selective discharge was appropriate for 15% of a hospital-referred population. This lends support to recent government recommendations, but caution should be exercised before such a result is generalised.
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Lawrence, R. E., S. Cumella, and J. A. Robertson. "Patterns of Care in a District General Hospital Psychiatric Department." British Journal of Psychiatry 152, no. 2 (February 1988): 188–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.152.2.188.

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A survey of all admissions of patients under the age of 65 during the first 6 years of a District General Psychiatric Department without mental-hospital support is reported. Three high-uptake groups of in-patients were defined; the long-stay (12 months or more), the medium-stay (6–12 months), and the revolving-door group (more than three admissions in any period of 12 months). Identifying characteristics which distinguish between these groups were examined. During a 7-year period there was no accumulation of long-stay patients, and a striking lack of schizophrenic patients who remained in hospital for more than 6 months or who had more than three admissions in any twelve-month period. This was not accounted for by drift of the high-uptake groups out of contact with the service, but may be related both to the style of service provision and to the socially cohesive nature of the area under study. Local variation should be given due importance when community services are being developed.
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Mayou, Richard, and Keith Hawton. "Psychiatric Disorder in the General Hospital." British Journal of Psychiatry 149, no. 2 (August 1986): 172–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.149.2.172.

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There have been many reports of psychiatric disorder in medical populations, but few have used standard methods on representative patient groups. Even so, there is consistent evidence for considerable psychiatric morbidity in in-patient, out-patient and casualty department populations, much of which is unrecognised by hospital doctors. We require a better classification of psychiatric disorder in the general hospital, improved research measures, and more evidence about the nature and course of the many different types of problem so that we can provide precise advice for their management of routine clinical practice.
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Goujon, D., R. Muto, C. Vayssier-Belot, H. Masson, and P. Grandin. "Liaison psychiatry as a part of a multifocal treatment in a general hospital." European Psychiatry 33, S1 (March 2016): S389. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.1403.

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We report here three clinical cases as exemples of our rich and frequent collaboration between the department of psychiatry and the department of medecine, nephrology and hemodialysis. This work can serve as a basis for further reflection in order to improve mutual demands. We based our description on three patients chosen for their homogeneity in demand, rapidity of evaluation, the same clinician who evaluated the demand. Either case: a 42-year-old woman, who was admitted for alteration of general state, severe headaches and chronic addiction to alcohool, 71-year-old woman sufferring from recurrent unipolar depression who came for somatic exploration and severe weight loss or 55-year-old man who was transferred from cardio-pulmonary intensive care unit after a volontary ingestion of neuroleptic- were reevaluated by the psychiatrist and the special follow-up was indicated as the patient was discharded from internal medecine department. We were interested in studying how important to the patient this indication turned to be on time.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Florin, Todd Adam, Daniel Joseph Tancredi, Lilliam Ambroggio, Franz E. Babl, Stuart R. Dalziel, Michelle Eckerle, Santiago Mintegi, Mark Neuman, Amy C. Plint, and Nathan Kuppermann. "Predicting severe pneumonia in the emergency department: a global study of the Pediatric Emergency Research Networks (PERN)—study protocol." BMJ Open 10, no. 12 (December 2020): e041093. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-041093.

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IntroductionPneumonia is a frequent and costly cause of emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalisations in children. There are no evidence-based, validated tools to assist physicians in management and disposition decisions for children presenting to the ED with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). The objective of this study is to develop a clinical prediction model to accurately stratify children with CAP who are at risk for low, moderate and severe disease across a global network of EDs.Methods and analysisThis study is a prospective cohort study enrolling up to 4700 children with CAP at EDs at ~80 member sites of the Pediatric Emergency Research Networks (PERN; https://pern-global.com/). We will include children aged 3 months to <14 years with a clinical diagnosis of CAP. We will exclude children with hospital admissions within 7 days prior to the study visit, hospital-acquired pneumonias or chronic complex conditions. Clinical, laboratory and imaging data from the ED visit and hospitalisations within 7 days will be collected. A follow-up telephone or text survey will be completed 7–14 days after the visit. The primary outcome is a three-tier composite of disease severity. Ordinal logistic regression, assuming a partial proportional odds specification, and recursive partitioning will be used to develop the risk stratification models.Ethics and disseminationThis study will result in a clinical prediction model to accurately identify risk of severe disease on presentation to the ED. Ethics approval was obtained for all sites included in the study. Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Institutional Review Board (IRB) serves as the central IRB for most US sites. Informed consent will be obtained from all participants. Results will be disseminated through international conferences and peer-reviewed publications. This study overcomes limitations of prior pneumonia severity scores by allowing for broad generalisability of findings, which can be actively implemented after model development and validation.
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Pridmore, S. "Suicidal Threat in the Casualty/Emergency Department of the General Hospital." Australasian Psychiatry 6, no. 1 (February 1998): 18–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10398569809082303.

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Takizawa, Ibuki, Yuichi Takei, and Masato Fukuda. "Horticultural Therapy in the Department of Psychiatry and Neurology, Gunma University Hospital." Kitakanto Medical Journal 73, no. 3 (August 1, 2023): 229–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.2974/kmj.73.229.

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Books on the topic "Cincinnati. General Hospital. Department of Psychiatry"

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Taylor, Michael Alan. General hospital psychiatry. New York: Free Press, 1985.

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Dowie, Robin. General psychiatry. London: H.M.S.O., 1991.

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Lloyd, Geoffrey Gower. Textbook of general hospital psychiatry. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, 1991.

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1928-, Hackett Thomas P., Weisman Avery D, and Kucharski Anastasia, eds. Psychiatry in a general hospital: The first fifty years. Littleton, Mass: PSG Pub. Co., 1987.

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K, Judd Fiona, Burrows Graham D, and Lipsitt Don R, eds. Handbook of studies on general hospital psychiatry. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1991.

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United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary. Subcommittee on Administrative Law and Governmental Relations. Radiation experiments conducted by the University of Cincinnati Medical School with Department of Defense funding: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Administrative Law and Governmental Relations of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, One Hundred Third Congress, second session, April 11, 1994. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1994.

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National Center for Health Services Research and Health Care Technology Assessment (U.S.), ed. Use of short-term general hospitals by patients with psychiatric diagnoses. Rockville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, National Center for Health Services Research and Health Care Technology Assessment, 1985.

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8

Beverley, Raphael, Burrows Graham D, and Irving, Lori M., former owner., eds. Handbook of studies on preventive psychiatry. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1995.

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9

Hackett, Thomas P., and Avery D. Weisman. Psychiatry in a General Hospital: The First Fifty Years. Year Book Medical Pub, 1987.

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10

US GOVERNMENT. Radiation experiments conducted by the University of Cincinnati Medical School with Department of Defense funding: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Administrative ... Congress, second session, April 11, 1994. For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office, 1994.

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Book chapters on the topic "Cincinnati. General Hospital. Department of Psychiatry"

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McKnight, Rebecca, Jonathan Price, and John Geddes. "Medically unexplained physical symptoms." In Psychiatry. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198754008.003.0033.

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Concern about physical symptoms is a common reason for people to seek medical help. Many of these symptoms, such as headache, chest pain, weakness, dizziness, and fatigue, remain unexplained by identi­fiable disease even after careful medical assessment. Several general terms have been used to describe these types of symptom— somatoform, medically un­explained, and functional. We prefer the terms ‘med­ically unexplained physical symptom’ or ‘functional symptom’, because they imply a disturbance of some kind in bodily functioning without implying that the symptom is psychogenic. Patients and doctors often assume that a physical symptom implies that a phys­ical pathology exists. However, commonly experienced and often severe, distressing, and disabling symp­toms, such as menstrual pain or ‘tension headache’, indicate that this is not always the case. By assuming that a physical symptom is explained by physical dis­ease/ pathology, we may be subjecting the patient to unnecessary tests and hospital visits, adding to pa­tient distress, and failing to deliver the integrated management required. There are many kinds of these symptoms (Box 25.1), presenting across healthcare settings. They are con­sidered in this psychiatry textbook because (1) psy­chological factors (including, at times, psychiatric disorder) are important in aetiology and (2) psycho­logical and behavioural interventions have a funda­mental role in treatment A major obstacle to effective management of pa­tients with functional symptoms is that they feel their doctor does not believe them. They are concerned that they may be thought to be ‘putting it on’. Note that the deliberate manufacture or exaggeration of symptoms or signs (malingering) is quite different (see p. 359). Diagnoses of three kinds may be given: … ● Descriptive physical syndromes. These include fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, non- cardiac chest pain, chronic pain syndrome, and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Although the specific terms are useful in everyday medical practice, there is substantial overlap, and many patients with, for example, fibromyalgia will also have IBS. ● Psychiatric syndromes as the primary cause of the functional symptoms. Psychiatric disorders, such as depression, anxiety, and adjustment, are common primary causes of functional symptoms, and commonly present via the general hospital’s emergency department or cardiology clinic.
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Mollenhauer, Mark N., and Michael J. Kaminsky. "Emergency Services in the Community Psychiatry Network." In Integrated Mental Health Services, 238–51. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195074215.003.0017.

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Abstract The Federal Community Mental Health legislation of the 1960s and 1970s mandated a psychiatry emergency service (PES) as one of the five basic components of the Community Mental Health Center (P.L. 88-164, 1963; P.L. 94-63, 1975), recognizing that hospital emergency departments had not traditionally responded adequately to the emergency mental health needs of communities. Since that time, clinical practice and legislation have further shaped and refined the role of the PES in the community system. The emergency service plays several broad roles: It is a high-volume point of entry into the service system; it is a back-up for other services outside their normal working hours; and it advocates for patients and for the mental health system itself with somatic physicians and other service agencies. All these roles depend on an experienced and well-trained staff that can make accurate psychiatric diagnoses, can understand the whole patient in terms of the social context from which she or he springs, and can use the community service network to develop an effective treatment plan for the patient. The resources needed to meet these requirements are costly and are most efficiently focused at one site rather than being distributed and duplicated throughout the community, especially since the narrowing of the CMHC mission during the 1980s (Hillard, 1994). The PES is where resources such as psychiatric and medical expertise, properly trained security staff, seclusion rooms, and 24-hour staffing are based. With these resources, and a collaborative relationship with a general emergency medicine department, the PES is able to respond instantly to behavioral emergencies of any magnitude. For the responses to be effective in the long term, the PES must be aware of and connected to the rest of the community network and must also be familiar with the life of the community it serves: its culture, its structure, its needs, its resources, and its temperament (Huffine and Craig, 1974).
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Conference papers on the topic "Cincinnati. General Hospital. Department of Psychiatry"

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Rebegea, Laura, Camelia Tarlungianu, Rodica Anghel, Dorel Firescu, Nadejda Corobcean, and Laurentia Gales. "BURNOUT RISK EVALUATION IN MEDICAL ONCOLOGY – RADIOTHERAPY PERSONNEL." In The European Conference of Psychiatry and Mental Health "Galatia". Archiv Euromedica, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.35630/2022/12/psy.ro.5.

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Europäische Wissenschaftliche Gesellschaft Home About the Journal Peer Review Editorial Board For Authors Reviewer Recognition Archiv Kontakt Impressum EWG e.V. indexing in the Clarivate Analytics indexing in the Emerging Sources Citation Index Crossref Member Badge Erfolgreich durch internationale Zusammenarbeit PUBLIC HEALTH DOI 10.35630/2022/12/psy.ro.5 Received 14 December 2022; Published 6 January 2023 BURNOUT RISK EVALUATION IN MEDICAL ONCOLOGY – RADIOTHERAPY PERSONNEL Laura Rebegea1,2 orcid id logo, Camelia Tarlungianu1 , Rodica Anghel3 orcid id logo , Dorel Firescu4,5, Nadejda Corobcean1,6, Laurentia Gales3 orcid id logo 1 Department of Medical Oncology - Radiotherapy, „Sf. Ap. Andrei” Emergency Clinical Hospital, Galati, Romania 2 Medical Clinical Department, Faculty of Medicine, „Dunarea de Jos” University of Galati, Romania 3 „Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy”, Bucharest, Romania 4 IInd Clinic of Surgery, „Sf. Apostol Andrei” Emergency Clinical Hospital, Galati, Romania 5 Surgical Clinical Department, „Dunarea de Jos” University, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, Galati, Romania 6 „Nicolae Testemitanu”State University of Medicine and Pharmacy. Chisinau, Moldova download article (pdf) laura_rebegea@yahoo.com, tarlungianucamelia@yahoo.com ABSTRACT Introduction: Even if, all studies evidenced that Burnout syndrome affects medical personnel from all medical specialties, the highest prevalence is in surgical, oncological and emergency medical specialties. Scope: Burnout syndrome evaluation in Medical Oncology and Radiotherapy personnel. Method and material: This study has involved 50 persons employee in Medical Oncology and Radiotherapy Department, from all categories: 11 superiors personal (medical doctors, physicists, psychologist), 31 nurses, and 8 auxiliary personnel (stretcher-bearer). The following questionnaires were used: professional exhaustion level questionnaire (with 25 items), questionnaire for attitude and adaptation in stressed and difficulties situations, BRIEF COPE and SES scale. Results: After professional exhaustion level questionnaire for superior personnel, emotional exhaustion prevalence, followed by reduced personal achievement and an accentuated increasing of affecting grade after first year of activity, with a pick around 10 years of activity were revealed. For nurses, share of depersonalization is relative homogenous, in moderate - low limits. The results revealed that 56% of personnel from this study have risk for burnout syndrome developing, without any prevention methods and 12% has already burnout syndrome. Conclusions: In general, this syndrome is under-evaluated and under-diagnosed, and its incidence can be diminishing by using the techniques of stress resistance, psychological counseling, cresting a friendly and tolerant professional climate.
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