Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Using a database of all Missouri insanity acquittees committed on July 1, 1997 (N = 873) and all insanity acquittees unconditionally released from 1986 through 1997 (N = 193), this study calculated the lengths of commitment and identified variables associated with the unconditional release of insanity acquittees from indefinite commitment by the mental health and criminal justice systems. The study found that 85 percent of insanity acquittees were still under commitment 5 years after acquittal and 76 percent 10 years after acquittal. Factors that decreased the odds of being unconditionally released included never having been married; having a psychotic disorder, a mood disorder, a substance abuse disorder, or mental retardation/borderline intellectual functioning; and having committed a serious crime. These results support achievement of the intended goal of Missouri's insanity acquittee statute, which is to maximize public safety considerations, but have had the unintended effect of increasing the inpatient insanity acquittee population, resulting in fewer resources for voluntary patients.
...
PMID:The unconditional release of mentally ill offenders from indefinite commitment: a study of Missouri insanity acquittees. 1063 84

In this, the 11th Annual Research Review, I have been pleased to work with an outstanding group of contributors. As in past issues of the Annual Research Review the aim is to provide our readers with reviews that update both current knowledge and research findings. Authors are asked to be selective, rather than comprehensive, in their coverage as they identify the issues that they feel are particularly important for future research. I am grateful not only to the authors but to the numerous referees who provided critiques of each paper. In the first paper in this issue David Skuse provides an update on the relevance of behavioural neuroscience to child psychopathology. This paper provides a thoughtful review of the findings of the past decade and outlines possible directions for future research developments; it appears that we are poised for a major explosion of knowledge in this area. In the second paper Robin Chapman provides a very useful review of recent research on language development. This paper provides an update of Dorothy Bishop's earlier review of the topic and illustrates the considerable progress made since the time of that review. In the third paper Eilish Gilvarry summarises recent research on substance abuse in young people. This review covers recent changes in trends and patterns of substance abuse, aspects of risk and comorbidity, and treatment. Brown and colleagues then review recent work on children and adolescents with HIV and AIDS; this global health problem presents unique issues relative both to research and intervention. Danya Glaser then provides an overview of recent work on child abuse and neglect and the brain; the attempt to bring the various perspectives of neuroscience together on this topic is particularly timely and appropriate. Finally, Sparrow and Davis provide an overview of recent advances in the assessment of intelligence. This paper provides a helpful summary of current perspectives on the assessment of intelligence; the review of instruments will be of particular interest to our readers. For the 12th edition of the Annual Research Review we anticipate coverage of the following topics: intersubjectivity, reading disability, longitudinal approaches to developmental data, mental retardation, conduct disorder, and psychopharmacology.
...
PMID:Editorial. 1126 Aug 27

North Carolina has developed coordinated care systems for people dually diagnosed with both a mental retardation and a different major mental illness. In response to a class action lawsuit, the state has become a leader in treatment of this form of dual diagnosis. Systems of care for this "Thomas S class" operate in each of 41 area programs for mental health, developmental disabilities, and substance abuse. Networks of care among leaders in mental health and developmental disability promote the coordination of health, housing, social, and vocational services. A survey of 100 area program leaders finds extensive cooperation and a variety of services provided and contracted for, both within and beyond each area program, particularly among developmental disability specialists. Cooperation among leaders is associated with service variety and inter-organizational linkages. The extent of relationships among provider organizations is associated with better access to care. Best practice includes a single portal of entry and inter-agency councils.
...
PMID:New patterns of community care: coordinated services for dually diagnosed adults in North Carolina. 1126 5

The term dual diagnosis is frequently used by mental health professionals to refer to people who have mental illness complicated by substance abuse. A less commonly recognized population are those individuals who have the dual diagnosis of mental retardation and mental illness. In this paper the author discusses (1) the mental health needs of persons with mental retardation and (2) the current state of services for them. There is a significant lack of appropriately trained professionals to help address the needs of this population. Traditionally, nurses have primarily been identified as providers of physical care. Advanced practice psychiatric nurses, however, are an underutilized group of professionals who have the capacity to assume a leadership role in clinical care, service coordination, and advocacy for individuals and families affected by mental illness and mental retardation.
...
PMID:Mental health services for persons with mental retardation: role of the advanced practice psychiatric nurse. 1188 18

This article presents the evaluation findings of a Kentucky Adoptions Opportunities Project (KAOP), a three-year project funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration on Children, Youth and Families, Children's Bureau. The primary goal of the KAOP was implementation of three permanency planning activities: (1) risk assessment/concurrent planning, (2) one child/one legal voice, and (3) early placement in kinship or foster/adoptive homes. These activities were designed to expedite a permanency placement decision within 12 months for high-risk children. The evaluation of 124 high-risk children in the KAOP revealed that the majority of children had one or both parents coping with multiple risk factors, including mental illness, substance abuse, mental retardation, or family violence. The major barriers to permanency are discussed, as well as the policy and practice implications in the context of Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997.
...
PMID:Expedited permanency planning: evaluation of the Kentucky Adoptions Opportunities Project. 1201 66

The emergency hostel of Tokyo Metropolitan Women's Counseling Center, established in 1957, provides protection and care for about 600 Japanese or foreign women per year. The women housed there need social support for various reasons such as prostitution, poverty, somatic or mental diseases, or domestic violence (DV). We investigated the sociodemographic characteristics, psychiatric diagnoses and social prognoses of 2667 women who consulted the psychiatric clinic in the emergency hostel between 1961 and 1997. Seventy-four women consulted the psychiatric clinic per year, on average. Most were aged between 20 and 49. During the study period, there was a gradual decline in the number referred through the prostitution prevention law. Psychiatric diagnoses at the first visit varied widely. Annual comparison showed a gradual decrease in schizophrenia and manic-depressive illness, but an increase in substance abuse, psychogenic reaction, and personality disorder. Sociodemographically, most subjects appeared to have been children from underprivileged backgrounds. The social prognoses of 930 cases judged in March 1998 were good in 25%, moderate in 23% and poor in 48%. The poor prognosis group contained significantly more women with schizophrenia and personality disorder than the other two groups. The poor prognosis group tended to include more cases of substance abuse, while the good prognosis group contained more cases of depression and mental retardation. Women in the DV group tended to have more children than those in the non-DV group, and to have a higher prevalence of psychogenic reaction and a lower prevalence of schizophrenia. The DV group also tended to include more subjects with a moderate social prognosis and fewer subjects with a poor social prognosis. Specialized treatment should be provided for women after emergency admission to the hostel and this treatment needs to be aimed at improving social adaptation of the hostel residents, especially those with schizophrenia, personality disorders and substance abuse. Victims of DV should receive more conscious attention. In particular, prevention of mental disorders should be aimed not only at the residents but also their children.
...
PMID:[Actual situation and social prognosis of women seeking psychiatric care at the emergency hostel of Tokyo Metropolitan Women's Counseling Center]. 1207 6

Guam has a Children with Special Health Needs (CSHN) Systems Management Project to coordinate different programs and services and to identify and enroll 4 year old children with special health care needs. It also streamlines service linkages and ongoing tracking activities. Children with special health needs include those with actual or potential disabilities and handicaps, actual or potential chronic diseases, actual or potential conditions that do not always cause disability or handicap, and health related educational and behavioral problems. Poverty plays a contributing role to some of these children's special needs. In fact, 25% of Guam's families are at or below the poverty level. Other children have special health care needs due to parental or psychological factors. Further inadequate prenatal care, parental mental retardation, AIDS, parental substance abuse, maternal age, and the inability to parent can all result in special need circumstances. Despite the many and varied needs, services and resources that can best help them are scarce in Guam. Even with optimal use of Guam's resources, many families of such children either do not receive proper care or leave the island to receive the proper care at a sizable cost. Moreover some children are not eligible for public assistance like the Medically Indigent Program, the Catastrophic Illness Program, and Medicaid or for local health insurance plans. The CSHN Systems Management Project uses a collaborative approach involving family, community, and professionals from a variety of disciplines. Parents voice several issues which revolve around health insurance, public assistance, case management, scarcity of professional resources, child care services, information and education, and early identification. The Project hopes to hold a training conference for parents and professionals in January 1992.
...
PMID:New care coordination project targets special needs children under age 4. 1228 32

The parental fitness of psychiatrically diagnosed individuals is often questioned in termination of parental rights cases. The goal of this article is to shift the focus from a predisposing bias of unfitness to a functional-contextual analysis of parenting behavior and competency. Three underlying biased assumptions are relevant for the courts' decision making: (a) that a diagnosis (past or present) predicts inadequate parenting and child risk, (b) that a diagnosis predicts unamenability to parenting interventions, and (c) that a diagnosis means the parent is forever unfit. Each assumption will be considered in light of empirical evidence, with major depression, schizophrenia, substance abuse, and mental retardation provided as examples of diagnostic labels often assumed to render a parent unfit. A research agenda to improve clinicians' ability to assess parental fitness and understanding of how parental mental illness, mental retardation, or substance abuse might compromise parenting capacities is discussed for forensic purposes.
...
PMID:Evaluating the parental fitness of psychiatrically diagnosed individuals: advocating a functional-contextual analysis of parenting. 1282 20

We performed a controlled prospective study of pathologically verified sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) in a coronial setting, to identify risk factors. We prospectively studied coronial deaths of people with epilepsy in Vic., Australia, during a 21-month period. Fifty SUDEP and 50 subjects with epilepsy who died of other causes (controls) were collected sequentially. Clinical data was obtained shortly after death from questionnaires completed by treating doctors, discussion with family members and coronial files, including police reports of death, autopsy and toxicology reports. Factors assessed were age, sex, duration of epilepsy, type of seizure(s), seizure frequency, symptomatic epilepsy, including post-traumatic epilepsy, presence of structural brain lesion, idiopathic epilepsy, mental retardation, psychiatric illness, including dementia, recent stressful life event, particular antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) and AED polytherapy, compliance with AED treatment, psychotropic drug prescription, alcohol and other substance abuse, place of death and evidence of terminal seizure. The SUDEP group was characterised by younger age and higher proportion found dead in bed and with evidence of terminal seizure compared to controls. The profile of patients at risk for SUDEP are young people with epilepsy. They are most likely to die in sleep and our data support the view that SUDEP is a seizure-related event. This, taken in conjunction with the finding that there was no increased risk associated with a particular AED in monotherapy or multiple AEDs suggests that attempts to better treat patients' epilepsy with AEDs might decrease the risk of SUDEP. Although the literature suggests that SUDEP is more frequent in patients with severe epilepsy, we did not find a correlation with seizure frequency suggesting that other clinical indices may be more important.
...
PMID:Risk factors for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: a controlled prospective study based on coroners cases. 1296 73

Prenatal alcohol exposure can result in fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), which may increase the risk of confinement in the corrections system. In the United States each state and four major cities' corrections systems were asked to complete a questionnaire on the prevalence of FAS and alcohol-related neurodevelopmental disorder (ARND) in the offender population, the availability of screening and diagnostic services to identify offenders with FAS and staff training needs related to FAS. The total population in the 54 entities was 3,080,904 inmates. Completed questionnaires were obtained from 42 entities (78%). The mean rate of reported substance abuse in offenders was 60.1%. Specialized programs for persons with mental retardation were reported for 44.4% of corrections facilities and 25.9% of community corrections facilities. Programs for pregnant women were reported for 46.3% of corrections facilities and 29.6% of community facilities. One program (1.9%) reported having a screening program for FAS in the corrections system. Only four programs (7.4%) reported having access to diagnostic services for FAS in the corrections facilities. Of the 3,080,904 offenders, only one offender was reported to have a diagnosis of FAS. Reported staff training needs were very large. In conclusion, corrections systems have high unmet needs to screen, identify, and treat offenders with FAS and ARND. Staff training needs are substantial.
...
PMID:Fetal alcohol syndrome in the United States corrections system. 1522 45


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next >>