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1 of face-to-face contact between patient and psychiatrist.
2 red to all participants by a board-certified psychiatrist.
3 prescriber was a primary care physician or a psychiatrist.
4 oice of individual drug made by the managing psychiatrist.
5 primary care physician with guidance from a psychiatrist.
6 ening criteria for depression were seen by a psychiatrist.
7 trol patients received usual care from their psychiatrist.
8 ic prescriptions from a child and adolescent psychiatrist.
9 ine, and benzodiazepine prescriptions from a psychiatrist.
10 disorder, developmental delay, and seeing a psychiatrist.
11 ing in a mental disorder diagnosis were to a psychiatrist.
12 s, of the neurophysiologist from that of the psychiatrist.
13 ssion care manager, clinical pharmacist, and psychiatrist.
14 toms for which patients are fi rst seen by a psychiatrist.
15 esentative samples of visits to office-based psychiatrists.
16 n with facility-based general physicians and psychiatrists.
17 ionwide cohorts of 45 634 FGI MDs and 64 401 psychiatrists.
18 ing U.S. physicians, with an oversampling of psychiatrists.
19 ceived from primary care physicians and from psychiatrists.
20 s were not elevated in FGI MDs compared with psychiatrists.
21 s were also made by blinded psychologists or psychiatrists.
22 rs are challenging for both neurologists and psychiatrists.
23 l diagnoses were made by two board-certified psychiatrists.
24 t (n = 27) of physicians performing EAS were psychiatrists.
25 be paid to the general medical education of psychiatrists.
26 ns was four times as great as the risk among psychiatrists.
27 committee review by expert neurologists and psychiatrists.
28 t-estimate diagnoses are done by experienced psychiatrists.
29 l medicine subspecialists, neurologists, and psychiatrists.
30 erged in comparing responses of patients and psychiatrists.
31 s frequently stressful for both patients and psychiatrists.
32 involvement, a perspective underestimated by psychiatrists.
33 eral areas of agreement between patients and psychiatrists.
34 ly accepted as standard practice among these psychiatrists.
35 ional sample of 367 board-certified American psychiatrists.
36 rovided useable data for an evaluation by 10 psychiatrists.
37 s were not elevated in FGI MDs compared with psychiatrists.
38 nce to the biomedical perspective brought by psychiatrists.
39 g (GAF) and other consensus ratings of study psychiatrists.
40 iews of capacity interviews by 5 experienced psychiatrists.
41 consenting to the neurosurgical RCT by all 5 psychiatrists.
42 ive samples of 13 079 visits to office-based psychiatrists.
43 tatus was collected and reported by treating psychiatrists.
44 receiving antidepressant prescriptions from psychiatrists (1,124 per 100,000), lower among those sta
45 past 12 months, including 12.3% treated by a psychiatrist, 16.0% treated by a non-psychiatrist mental
46 ducation, an initial visit with a consulting psychiatrist, 2-4 months of shared care by the psychiatr
47 f 43 763 radiologists (20% women) and 64 990 psychiatrists (27% women) (comparison group) who graduat
49 e physician (54%), and than adults seen by a psychiatrist (65%) or a primary care physician (37%).
50 r proportion of pediatric patients seen by a psychiatrist (80%) met the HEDIS criterion than those se
51 espective of whether treatment is given by a psychiatrist, a primary care provider, or an endocrinolo
58 ression care manager who was supervised by a psychiatrist and a primary care expert and who offered e
59 1 or more antipsychotic prescriptions from a psychiatrist and from a child and adolescent psychiatris
60 decision support team, which consisted of a psychiatrist and nurse, provided 1 early patient educati
61 primary care physicians and supervised by a psychiatrist and primary care physician from this study.
62 ychiatrist, 2-4 months of shared care by the psychiatrist and primary care physician, and monitoring
64 on an evaluation with a child and adolescent psychiatrist and scores on the Children's Depression Rat
65 between a philosophically informed attending psychiatrist and three residents, the major philosophica
66 eandered from a high school ambition to be a psychiatrist and understand the "mind" to biochemical st
67 is process using Thomas Clouston, a Scottish Psychiatrist and widely-read textbook author, as a repre
73 her SDS (collaborative care approach between psychiatrists and cognitive behavioural therapists for 1
74 ives) were blinded to group and evaluated by psychiatrists and doctoral-level clinical psychologists
75 loser collaboration between neurologists and psychiatrists and intensified research efforts with pros
77 and highlight an unmet need for education of psychiatrists and other mental health professionals who
78 y assessed within-gender differences between psychiatrists and other physicians by using data taken f
80 ical differences between patients treated by psychiatrists and primary care physicians were modest.
89 nationwide sample of clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, and clinical social workers (N=187 and N=
90 l specialists, such as family practitioners, psychiatrists, and physiatrists, who work with caregiver
91 endorses treatment from providers, including psychiatrists; and 3) reports community acceptance or re
92 his study suggests that the vast majority of psychiatrists appreciate the importance of religion and/
93 psychopathology, where both philosophers and psychiatrists are actively investigating the basic assum
94 whether differences between radiologists and psychiatrists are consistent with known risks of radiati
96 who enter medical school planning to become psychiatrists are likely to do so, but the vast majority
97 delity, threatening the patient's interests, psychiatrists are morally responsible for working to imp
100 oth the people with schizophrenia and by the psychiatrists as positively influencing patients' partic
101 e participants with schizophrenia and by the psychiatrists as protective: on a scale of 1-5 on which
102 tion as care managers, and consultation with psychiatrists as support) or to give enhanced care as us
103 nfirmed cases, an experienced neurologist or psychiatrist ascertained clinical features necessary for
104 ata show how patients with schizophrenia and psychiatrists assess such scientific designs regarding p
105 polar I disorder (BPI) were interviewed by a psychiatrist, assigned an all-sources diagnosis, and gen
107 he limited use of FTLD-related biomarkers by psychiatrists at present, it is very difficult to separa
108 means of structured interviews and views of psychiatrists at two sites with written surveys regardin
109 t psychiatric disorders were assessed by two psychiatrists before puberty (Tanner stage < III) and we
112 scans were rated in random order by research psychiatrists blind to diagnosis; the modified Fazekas h
113 SM-IV consensus diagnoses were formulated by psychiatrists blind to previous research diagnoses.
116 but there is little research on how liaison psychiatrists can engage these patients in appropriate t
117 sychiatric practice; and suggests steps that psychiatrists can take to maintain their patients' priva
121 t for differences in patients, settings, and psychiatrist characteristics, the patients subject to ut
123 ew antidepressant prescription, the treating psychiatrist completed a 43-item questionnaire listing f
124 to the one-person treatment model in which a psychiatrist conducts the psychotherapy and prescribes m
125 s, it is of interest to examine what factors psychiatrists consider when prescribing antidepressants.
126 rapy and medication, combined treatment by a psychiatrist cost about the same or less than split trea
127 eceived a benzodiazepine prescription from a psychiatrist decreased with age from 15.0% (18-35 years)
129 incidence (risk) and risk ratio of new-onset psychiatrist-diagnosed depression or anxiety or prescrip
136 e last third of the 20th century, the German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin (1856-1926) became an icon o
137 roke depression (PSD) has been recognized by psychiatrists for more than 100 years, but controlled sy
138 cific increases in the proportions endorsing psychiatrists for treatment of alcohol dependence (from
148 chizophrenia spectrum disorder assigned by a psychiatrist in a hospital, outpatient clinic, or emerge
149 ime diagnosis of mood disorder assigned by a psychiatrist in a hospital, outpatient clinic, or emerge
150 lative to third-party evaluations can assist psychiatrists in avoiding some of the conflicts that ari
151 lly delivered by a team of cancer nurses and psychiatrists in collaboration with primary care physici
152 ystematically by a team of cancer nurses and psychiatrists in collaboration with primary care physici
154 A postcard questionnaire was mailed to 514 psychiatrists in Minnesota inquiring about their practic
156 ever, there are indications that the role of psychiatrists in providing psychotherapy may have dimini
158 using these instruments vs. that achieved by psychiatrists in the clinical modality threatens the cre
160 thors surveyed a national sample of forensic psychiatrists in the United States regarding the process
163 ative sample of 4,166 visits to office-based psychiatrists in which an anxiety disorder was diagnosed
168 e is recognized not only by philosophers and psychiatrists interested in philosophy, but by investiga
169 increased patient education and integrated a psychiatrist into primary care was associated with impro
170 important to search for and to acquire if a psychiatrist is to work in an informed, safe and helpful
173 ent engagement and familiarity, referrals to psychiatrists, language barriers, and distinguishing bet
174 1939, English mathematician, geneticist, and psychiatrist Lionel Sharples Penrose hypothesized that t
175 design elements, schizophrenia patients and psychiatrists made meaningful and discerning harm assess
176 hat substantially decrease the number of IMG psychiatrists may adversely affect the availability of p
181 ed by a psychiatrist, 16.0% treated by a non-psychiatrist mental health specialist, 22.8% treated by
183 Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), forensic psychiatrists must adjust to changes in the diagnostic p
184 ect are to be viewed from both perspectives, psychiatrists must infer the enduring internal emotional
185 ,368), an antidepressant prescription from a psychiatrist (N=7,297), or an initial psychotherapy visi
186 ng initial antidepressant prescriptions from psychiatrists (n = 165) and primary care physicians (n =
188 3-1994, to compare characteristics of female psychiatrists (N=570) with those of other female physici
190 isciplined physicians, there were 75 (12.8%) psychiatrists, nearly twice the number of psychiatrists
194 estimate diagnoses made by 2 noninterviewing psychiatrists on 524 subjects in a genetic linkage study
195 tudy collected detailed information from 417 psychiatrists on the demographic, diagnostic, clinical,
196 nificantly from a group of 75 nondisciplined psychiatrists on years since medical school graduation,
198 alone, and combined treatment provided by a psychiatrist or split with a psychologist or social work
201 tative data on 1,843 patients treated by 615 psychiatrists participating in the American Psychiatric
202 To summarize recent ethical analyses of psychiatrists' participation in the evaluation and treat
209 er generation of antidepressants, a study of psychiatrists' prescribing practices highlights prioriti
210 Patients were asked about their own views; psychiatrists provided both their personal views and pre
211 ory of clinical syndromes, famous people and psychiatrists, psychiatric institutions, treatments and
212 ric practice and related advocacy efforts of psychiatrists, psychiatric organizations, and other lead
213 suggest how this research could aid forensic psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health pro
216 r study, 60 people with schizophrenia and 69 psychiatrists rated the protectiveness and influence on
218 he risk of discipline by a medical board for psychiatrists relative to other physicians and assessed
219 Many state statutes mandate that treating psychiatrists report such gun possession to state justic
220 xamined, the amount of preventive counseling psychiatrists reported performing, the clinical relevanc
221 rivacy as an ethical norm can be advanced by psychiatrists' requesting patients' consent even when it
223 r death rates (all causes) compared with the psychiatrists (RR = 0.94; 95% CI: 0.90, 0.97), similar c
225 injectable risperidone was not superior to a psychiatrist's choice of oral treatment in patients with
226 ver, little is known about what influences a psychiatrist's decision to offer smoking-cessation couns
231 researchers continue to explore how and when psychiatrists should intervene in matters of faith.
234 attributable to a decrease in the number of psychiatrists specializing in psychotherapy and a corres
235 n when risk is heightened; and help forensic psychiatrists strike a balance between patient care and
237 ishment of a Depression Treatment Clinic and psychiatrist telephone consultation service in the inter
238 es of insurance were significantly lower for psychiatrists than for physicians in other specialties.
239 ght benefit from integrated treatment by one psychiatrist, the authors propose specific clinical situ
240 in some ways more expert in conversion than psychiatrists, their continuing support for the deceptio
243 avioral findings that highlight the need for psychiatrists to be aware of initial presentations of pa
244 percent indicated that it was unethical for psychiatrists to determine competence; however, 61% thou
245 FGI) procedures (referred to as FGI MDs) and psychiatrists to determine if any differences are consis
246 an offer valuable opportunities for academic psychiatrists to gain access to important resources.
247 PRP teams were much more likely than the TAU psychiatrists to identify prodromal episodes before pati
248 ermed telepsychiatry, is a viable option for psychiatrists to provide care to individual patients, po
249 sts may adversely affect the availability of psychiatrists to treat minorities and other underserved
250 this difference disappeared if the costs of psychiatrists' travel to remote clinics more than 22 mil
257 Assessment Method for the ICU and by a child psychiatrist using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
258 an assessment by consultation liaison child psychiatrist using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
259 ompared with delirium diagnosis by pediatric psychiatrists using Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 4
260 Patients' symptoms were rated by research psychiatrists using the Positive and Negative Syndrome S
261 ule (DIS) interview were blindly examined by psychiatrists using the Schedules for Clinical Assessmen
263 individuals with serious mental illness and psychiatrists view ethically important aspects of biomed
265 e serotonin reuptake inhibitor paroxetine; 2 psychiatrist visits and 2 telephone calls in the first 8
266 survey periods, over one-third of the total psychiatrist visits by patients with bipolar disorder di
267 pitated insurance, Medicare, and Medicaid by psychiatrists vs physicians in other specialties and to
268 ics in 2010, receiving a prescription from a psychiatrist was less common among younger children (57.
271 asked to indicate their personal views; the psychiatrists were asked to provide their personal views
272 y both the people with schizophrenia and the psychiatrists were correlated with their ratings of pati
279 pecialties and to compare characteristics of psychiatrists who accepted insurance and those who did n
282 s particular ethical challenges for forensic psychiatrists who are increasingly expected to become in
283 isciplined group included significantly more psychiatrists who claimed child psychiatry as their firs
284 tions in fewer of their visits compared with psychiatrists who provided psychotherapy less often.
286 corresponded with a decline in the number of psychiatrists who provided psychotherapy to all of their
287 es examined time trends in the percentage of psychiatrists who provided psychotherapy to all, some, o
289 ts were rated for birth complications by two psychiatrists who were unaware of group membership.
290 ression clinical specialist (supervised by a psychiatrist) who offered education, structured psychoth
294 This review was intended to familiarize psychiatrists with the implications of the Health Insura
295 onfidence intervals (CIs) for FGI MDs versus psychiatrists, with adjustment (via stratification) for
298 ation and increased frequency of visits by a psychiatrist working with the primary care physician to
300 extensive evaluation recommended by forensic psychiatrists would likely both minimize this bias and a
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