Improving Psychiatric Practice (October)

Date of Issue: 10/01/2008 | Volume: 6 | Number: 10

Issue Links:Learning Objectives | Editorial Information

Teaser to be posted soon.

In This Issue

Article

Using Treatment Guidelines

Topics: Practice Tools and Tips

One way to enhance the quality of our care of patients is to learn and implement expert practice guidelines. But there are some problems. First of all, there are so many guidelines out there that it is hard to know which ones to learn.

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Article

Outcome Scales in Psychiatry

Topics: Practice Tools and Tips

Should we use outcome scales in psychiatric practice? If so, which ones? Which are actually feasible in terms of time and utility?

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Expert QA

Using the PHQ-9 in Psychiatric Practice

Topics: Practice Tools and Tips

The PHQ-9 is the Patient Health Questionnaire-9. It was adapted from an instrument originally funded by Pfizer, the PRIME-MD, which was developed as a tool for primary care doctors to screen their patients for psychiatric disorders.

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Research Update

Little guidance provided for second- step antidepressant selection

Topics: Antidepressants

The most recent findings from the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial provided little help regarding which medication to prescribe if an initial SSRI trial failed to result in remission of depressive symptoms.

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Research Update

Viagra reduces SSRI-induced sexual side effects in women

Topics: Antidepressants | Women's Issues in Psychiatry

Sildefanil (Viagra) has been shown helpful in treating antidepressant-induced sexual dysfunction (AISD) in men, but no controlled trials had tested its effectiveness in women. In this trial, 98 women with SSRI associated sexual dysfunction were randomly assigned to either sildefanil or placebo; all participants continued their SSRI, and their sexual functioning was assessed at multiple times.

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Research Update

Psychiatrists providing less psychotherapy

Topics: Psychotherapy

In a nationally representative sample of office-based psychiatrists, the percentage of patient visits involving at least 30 minutes of psychotherapy dropped from 44% in 1996-1997 to 29% in 2004-2005.

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