7 results on '"Sarah R. Andrews"'
Search Results
2. Identifying the Most Important Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry Publications in 2020 Using a Novel Literature Assessment Instrument
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Jai Gandhi, Luis F. Pereira, Jeylan S. Close, John A. Grimaldi, Sahil Munjal, Scott A. Simpson, Walter Luchsinger, Ryan M. Loh, Marie B. Tobin, Nona A. Nichols, R. Garrett Key, Brandon A. Francis, Mary Ann Cohen, O. Joseph Bienvenu, Paula C. Zimbrean, Sarah R. Andrews, Aum Pathare, Elie Isenberg-Grzeda, Liliya Gershengoren, Maalobeeka Gangopadhyay, Timothy Kiong, J. Jewel Shim, Nicholas Kontos, Shehzad K. Niazi, and Carlos Fernandez-Robles
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Standard of Good Practice ,education ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases ,Specialty ,Standardized test ,Scientific literature ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Referral and Consultation ,Cannabis ,Psychiatry ,Medical education ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,COVID-19 ,Delirium ,Reproducibility of Results ,Psychosomatic medicine ,Mental illness ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Inter-rater reliability ,Lithium Compounds ,Liaison psychiatry ,Encephalitis ,business ,Psychology ,Mindfulness - Abstract
Background As the science of consultation-liaison psychiatry advances, the Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry's Guidelines and Evidence-Based Medicine Subcommittee reviews articles of interest to help academy members remain familiar with the latest in evidence-based practice. Objective We identify the 10 most important articles for clinical practice in consultation-liaison psychiatry from 2020 using the new Importance and Quality instrument for assessing scientific literature. Methods The subcommittee published annotated abstracts for 97 articles on the academy website in 2020. Reviewers then rated all articles on clinical importance to practice and quality of scholarship using the Importance and Quality instrument. We describe the 10 articles with the highest aggregate scores and analyze the reliability of Importance and Quality instrument. Results Twenty-four raters identified the top 10 scoring articles of 2020. These articles provide practical guidance on key areas of consultation-liaison psychiatry including management of COVID-19, lithium treatment for complex patients, medical risks among patients with severe mental illness, and substance use disorders in medical settings. The assessment instrument demonstrated good to excellent interrater reliability. Conclusion These articles offer valuable guidance for consultation-liaison psychiatrists regardless of their practice area. Collaborative literature reviews with standardized assessments help clinicians deliver evidence-based care and foster a high standard of practice across the specialty.
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- 2021
3. Cognitive Dysfunction in ARDS Survivors
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Sarah R. Andrews and O. Joseph Bienvenu
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- 2022
4. Depressive Symptoms at Kidney Transplant Evaluation and Access to the Kidney Transplant Waitlist
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Xiaomeng Chen, Nadia M. Chu, Pragyashree Sharma Basyal, Wasurut Vihokrut, Deidra Crews, Daniel C. Brennan, Sarah R. Andrews, Tracy D. Vannorsdall, Dorry L. Segev, and Mara A. McAdams-DeMarco
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Nephrology - Abstract
Depressive symptoms, even without a clinical diagnosis of depression, are common in kidney failure patients and may be a barrier to completing the complex process of kidney transplant (KT) evaluation. We assessed depressive symptom burden and association between depressive symptoms and access to KT waitlist by age.In a prospective cohort of 3728 KT patients (aged 18-88 years), the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression (CES-D) scale was used to measure depressive symptoms at evaluation. Depressive symptom severity was defined as follows: none: 0; minimal: 1 to 15; mild: 16 to 20; moderate: 21 to 25; severe: 26 to 60. Hazard ratios (HRs) of active listing within 1 year after evaluation were estimated using Cox proportional hazards models, adjusted for clinical and social factors.At evaluation, 85.8% of the patients reported at least minimal depressive symptoms; the proportion was lower among older patients: 18 to 29 years = 92.0%; 30 to 39 years = 88.3%; 40 to 49 years = 87.2%; 50 to 59 years = 87.0%; 60 to 69 years = 83.4%; and ≥70 years = 82.0%. Chance of active listing decreased with more severe depressive symptoms (log-rank,Older candidates were less likely to report depressive symptoms at KT evaluation. Regardless of age, candidates who did report depressive symptoms, and even minimal symptoms, had a lower chance of listing. Transplant centers should routinely screen patients for depressive symptoms and refer the affected patients to mental health services to improve access to KT.
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- 2021
5. Cannabinoids and solid organ transplantation: Psychiatric perspectives and recommendations
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Gerald Scott, Winder, Sarah R, Andrews, Arpita Goswami, Banerjee, Filza, Hussain, Ana, Ivkovic, Kristin, Kuntz, Lesley, Omary, Akhil, Shenoy, Thida, Thant, Amy, VandenBerg, and Paula, Zimbrean
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Transplantation ,Cannabinoids ,Humans ,Organ Transplantation ,Kidney Transplantation - Abstract
Cannabinoid use in patients seeking solid organ transplantation (SOT) is an important and unsettled matter which all transplantation clinicians regularly encounter. It is also a multifaceted, interprofessional issue, difficult for any specialty alone to adequately address in a research article or during clinical care. Such uncertainty lends itself to bias for or against cannabinoid use accompanied by inconsistent policies and procedures. Scientific literature in SOT regarding cannabinoids often narrowly examines the issue and exists mostly in liver and kidney transplantation. Published recommendations from professional societies are mosaics of vagueness and specificity mirroring the ongoing dilemma. The cannabinoid information SOT clinicians need for clinical care may require data and perspectives from diverse medical literature which are rarely synthesized. SOT teams may not be adequately staffed or trained to address various neuropsychiatric cannabinoid effects and risks in patients. In this article, authors from US transplantation centers conduct a systematized review of the few existing studies regarding clinician perceptions, use rates, and clinical impact of cannabinoid use in SOT patients; collate representative professional society guidance on the topic; draw from diverse medical literature bases to detail facets of cannabinoid use in psychiatry and addiction pertinent to all transplantation clinicians; provide basic clinical and policy recommendations; and indicate areas of future study.
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- 2022
6. Updates in Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry: 2019
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Andrea DiMartini, Kemuel L. Philbrick, Walter Luchsinger, Paula C. Zimbrean, John A. Grimaldi, O. Joseph Bienvenu, Aum Pathare, Naomi A. Schmelzer, Elie Isenberg-Grzeda, Mary Ann Cohen, Luis F. Pereira, Sahil Munjal, Carlos Fernandez-Robles, Franklin King, Jordan Rosen, Nicholas Kontos, Kelly L. Cozza, Lydia Chwastiak, Scott A. Simpson, and Sarah R. Andrews
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Mental Health Services ,Psychiatry ,Medical education ,Mental Disorders ,education ,Specialty ,Scientific literature ,Mental health ,030227 psychiatry ,Transplantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Scholarship ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Liaison psychiatry ,Humans ,Substance use ,Psychology ,Topic areas ,Referral and Consultation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Background The scientific literature in consultation-liaison psychiatry continually expands, and remaining familiar with the most current literature is challenging for practicing clinicians. The Guidelines and Evidence-Based Medicine Subcommittee of the Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry writes quarterly annotations of articles of interest to help Academy members gain familiarity with the most current evidence-based practices. These annotations are available on the Academy Website. Objective We identify the 10 most important manuscripts for clinical practice in consultation-liaison psychiatry from 2019. Methods Sixty-four abstracts were authored in 2019. Manuscripts were rated on clinical relevance to practice and quality of scholarship. The 10 articles with the highest aggregate scores from 19 raters are described. Results The resulting articles provide practical guidance for consultation psychiatrists on several topic areas including the treatment of substance use disorders. Conclusion We suggest that these clinical findings should be familiar to all consultation-liaison psychiatrists regardless of practice area. Regular article reviews and summaries help busy clinicians deliver cutting-edge care and maintain a high standard of care across the specialty.
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- 2020
7. Clinical studies of neuroinflammatory mechanisms in schizophrenia
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Crystal C. Watkins and Sarah R. Andrews
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Psychosis ,Basic science ,Epigenetics of schizophrenia ,Disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neurodevelopmental disorder ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia ,Biological Psychiatry ,Inflammation ,business.industry ,Thought disorder ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Immunology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Schizophrenia is a pervasive neurodevelopmental disorder that appears to result from genetic and environmental factors. Although the dopamine hypothesis is the driving theory behind the majority of translation research in schizophrenia, emerging evidence suggests that aberrant immune mechanisms in the peripheral and central nervous system influence the etiology of schizophrenia and the pathophysiology of psychotic symptoms that define the illness. The initial interest in inflammatory processes comes from epidemiological data and historical observations, dating back several decades. A growing body of research on developmental exposure to infection, stress-induced inflammatory response, glial cell signaling, structural and functional brain changes and therapeutic trials demonstrates the impact that inflammation has on the onset and progression of schizophrenia. Research in animal models of psychosis has helped to advance clinical and basic science investigations of the immune mechanisms disrupted in schizophrenia. However, they are limited by the inability to recapitulate the human experience of hallucinations, delusions and thought disorder that define psychosis. To date, translational studies of inflammatory mechanisms in human subjects have not been reviewed in great detail. Here, we critically review clinical studies that focus on inflammatory mechanisms in schizophrenia. Understanding the neuroinflammatory mechanisms involved in schizophrenia may be essential in identifying potential therapeutic targets to minimize the morbidity and mortality of schizophrenia by interrupting disease development.
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- 2014
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