2020
Increasing the Numbers of Homeless Veterans Served by the Veterans Health Administration from 2008 to 2015: maintaining focus on the intended target population and on sustaining service intensity
Rosenheck R, Sorkin H, Stefanovics E. Increasing the Numbers of Homeless Veterans Served by the Veterans Health Administration from 2008 to 2015: maintaining focus on the intended target population and on sustaining service intensity. Journal Of Social Distress And The Homeless 2020, 30: 66-76. DOI: 10.1080/10530789.2020.1753914.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchIntended target populationHomeless veteransTarget populationVeterans AffairsVeterans Health AdministrationMental health servicesNon-homeless veteransIntensity of servicesHealth AdministrationHealth servicesSociodemographic characteristicsHealth careVeteransSuccessful maintenanceDelivery of servicesPopulationLittle evidenceVeteran homelessnessHigh levelsService intensity
1998
Predictors of differential response to clozapine and haloperidol
Rosenheck R, Lawson W, Crayton J, Cramer J, Xu W, Thomas J, Stolar M, Charney D, Schizophrenia F. Predictors of differential response to clozapine and haloperidol. Biological Psychiatry 1998, 44: 475-482. PMID: 9777179, DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3223(98)00117-6.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAge FactorsAntipsychotic AgentsClozapineDouble-Blind MethodDrug ResistanceFemaleHaloperidolHumansMalePsychiatric Status Rating ScalesQuality of LifeRacial GroupsSchizophreniaSchizophrenic PsychologySocial SupportTreatment OutcomeUnited StatesUnited States Department of Veterans AffairsConceptsQuality of lifeThree-month outcomeOnset of schizophreniaSeverity of symptomsGreater symptom reductionGreater improvementRefractory patientsRefractory schizophreniaClozapine treatmentHospital daysClinical predictorsExtrapyramidal symptomsHospitalized patientsClinical trialsBaseline predictorsSample patientsSide effectsSymptom reductionClozapinePatientsSymptomsHigher symptomsHigh levelsHaloperidolMultiple regression analysis
1997
Social Support and Psychopathology in the War Zone
FONTANA1 2, ROSENHECK1 2, HORVATH2 3. Social Support and Psychopathology in the War Zone. The Journal Of Nervous And Mental Disease 1997, 185: 675-681. PMID: 9368543, DOI: 10.1097/00005053-199711000-00004.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPosttraumatic stress disorderProtective effectMale theater veteransNational Vietnam Veterans Readjustment StudyDetrimental long-term effectsLong-term effectsDirect effectStress disorderTheater veteransHigh levelsWar zone stressSocial supportPsychopathologyUnit cohesionVeteransLow levelsSignificant relationshipLevels