Medical + Behavioral

HealthDay

Monday, March 1, 2010
By bwc

Ninety-seven percent of the time, the drug came from a friend or relative, and in most cases the drug was handed over willingly. via HealthDay. »

Liver Transplants That Do Their Job, Then Fade Away – NYTimes.com

Tuesday, February 23, 2010
By bwc

That result, seemingly a disaster, was exactly what his doctors had hoped for. They had deliberately withdrawn Jonathan’s antirejection medicine because he no longer needed the transplant. His own liver had — as planned — regenerated. via Liver Transplants That Do Their Job, Then Fade Away – NYTimes.com. »

DSM-V Draft Includes Major Changes to Addictive Disease Classifications

Tuesday, February 16, 2010
By bwc

“The term dependence is misleading, because people confuse it with addiction, when in fact the tolerance and withdrawal patients experience are very normal responses to prescribed medications that affect the central nervous system,” said Charles O'Brien, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the APA's DSM Substance-Related Disorders Work Group via DSM-V Draft Includes Major Changes to... »

Revising Book on Disorders of the Mind – NYTimes.com

Wednesday, February 10, 2010
By bwc

“Anything you put in that book, any little change you make, has huge implications not only for psychiatry but for pharmaceutical marketing, research, for the legal system, for who’s considered to be normal or not, for who’s considered disabled,” via Revising Book on Disorders of the Mind – NYTimes.com. »

Diagnosis VS Symptoms

Friday, February 5, 2010
By bwc

There is failing in the mental health provider community that in my opinion does more disservice to the clients than most anything else. This error comes when good doctors and therapists start... »

Vital Signs – Strength Training Aids Mental Acuity in Women, Study Finds – NYTimes.com

Friday, February 5, 2010
By bwc

Older women who did an hour or two of strength training exercises each week had improved cognitive function a year later, scoring higher on tests of the brain processes responsible for planning and executing tasks, a new study has found. via Vital Signs – Strength Training Aids Mental Acuity in Women, Study Finds –... »

Managing Heroin Detox Opiate Withdrawal Symptoms Suboxone

Saturday, January 30, 2010
By bwc

Whereas drugs like morphine, heroin and methadone are opioid receptor agonist – meaning they fully bind opioid receptors – Suboxone® (buprenorphine) is a partial opioid receptor agonist. This gives Suboxone® the ability to relieve even the acute symptoms of opiate withdrawal without producing the euphoria (high) of the full agonist drugs like oxycontin, heroin,... »

Rules on Addiction and Mental Health Parity Issued by Obama Administration

Friday, January 29, 2010
By bwc

“Some insurance companies have already put plans in place that fall short of this laws intent, severely restricting patients access to life-saving care,” said Gumbley, who cited United Healthcare and Blue Cross/Blue Shield as examples. “This needs to change, and we encourage individuals and families covered by these plans to ask them to fully... »

BBC News – Dopamine levels in brain influence decision making

Sunday, January 10, 2010
By bwc

Conceptually interesting. Suggests a greater question: if the drugs prescribed to assist with emotional health are affecting decision-making – does that benefit or further hinder the client? What factors lead it in either direction? How does it impact people dually-diagnosed who are also fighting addiction and the decision conflicts therei via BBC News –... »

Bringing Science Policies to Clinical Psychology: Scientific American

Friday, January 8, 2010
By bwc

“Many of the people being trained today aren’t trained to understand and apply science to patients out in the real world, so patients aren’t getting the treatments most likely to help them,” says Timothy Baker, a psychology researcher and professor of medicine at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and co-author of the report. via Bringing... »