SPOTLIGHT -
Sheltered in Place
Deep breaths . . . sing out loud.
Primary Insomnia: A Lifelong Problem
When provided with an array of treatment options, patients tend to feel a sense of ownership by playing a role in their care.
Surviving Coronavirus: A Psychiatrist’s Personal Journey
His symptoms worsened throughout most of his hospitalization, leaving him to ponder a grim reality: “This is it. This is how your story ends.”
A Dose of Much-Needed Medicine
Sometimes, life’s lessons appear unexpectedly.
Transition Care for Transgender Patients With Psychiatric and Substance Use Disorders
Experts in transgender health from around the world are participating in and making more sweeping efforts to streamline mental health care for all sectors of the population.
Bespoke Psychopharmacology for Bipolar Disorder: An Individualized Patient Approach
The author discusses evidence-based treatment, highlighting clinical trials that support specific uses and patterns of efficacy.
Melatonin: The Dark Side of the Hormone
Our own melatonin plays an important role in regulating our sleep-wake cycle. Recent evidence raises questions about whether we should be taking extra doses to try to improve our sleep.
Unmasked: Face to Face with the Trauma Story
While recovering from trauma, survivors have a chance to find a voice, meaning, and even beauty.
Pandemic Deniers: What’s With Them?
Some individuals refuse to wear masks or practice social distancing. Why? And what might change their minds?
Delirium, Encephalopathy, and COVID-19: An Update From the Field
The biggest challenge we have faced thus far has been a three-fold rise in requests for assistance in managing persistent delirium. Needless to say, we are not twiddling our thumbs.
The Medical Model in Theory and Practice: Ahmed Samei Huda, MBChb, MSC
In this interview with Dr Aftab, Dr Huda discusses his views on the medical model in psychiatry, the misconceptions surrounding it, its strengths and limitations, and its relationship with other frameworks.
For Whom the School Bell Tolls: Helping Youth During the COVID-19 Crisis
Younger patients are facing unique psychological challenges during this pandemic.
In Memoriam: The Labors That These Psychiatrists Loved
Our eulogies remind us of how psychiatrists have worked for the underserved and misunderstood.
What I Learned During My Summer Vacation
It has been a tough and unusual summer, but perhaps it is best to focus on gratitude for what we have learned and what we can do with that information.
Pandemics Are Not Partisan
We have been here before. In fact, we have survived more challenging times. The truth serves as the foundational first brick of the edifice of knowledge and problem-solving.
The Ethics of Reopening During the COVID-19 Pandemic
How can we keep the public safe and reopen the economy at the same time?
Looking to the Future and Improving Patient Care
The next several years will present challenges and opportunities for psycho-oncology to improve care for patients.
Case-Based Clinical Approaches for Clinicians
There are myriad nuanced clinical approaches to cancer treatment, and psychosocial factors are no less complex.
Finding Meaning in the Face of Suffering
An added component of cancer treatment is discovering what is most meaningful in the patient’s life and using that to buoy them during difficult moments. That, in a nutshell, is the psychiatrist's role.
New Research Finds Troubling Link Between COVID-19 and Neuropsychiatric Health
British researchers find neuropsychiatric complications associated with COVID-19.
Schizophrenia: Clinical Considerations in Men Versus Women
A nationwide cohort study sought to determine the clinical course of schizophrenia in women and men in order to improve diagnostic accuracy and design guidelines.
To Scan or Not to Scan: Brain Imaging in First-Episode Psychosis
The role of neuroimaging is to rule out medically or surgically treatable causes of illness, such as new-onset psychosis.
An Invitation: Psychiatric Malpractice Grand Rounds
You are cordially invited to submit an article about a “what if” legal dilemma for a series about psychiatry and the law.
Including Racism in a Trauma History: A Clinician’s Reflections
Psychiatry has changed, and we now have an acute awareness of the cost of sexual trauma to patients. When it comes to race, however, we still have a lot to learn.
ACP Releases Ethical Guidance for Electronic Communication With Patients
A position paper presents the best ways to use electronic communication, particularly timely given the pandemic.
A Challenging Psychotherapeutic Journey
One can only hope today's challenges will become a “corrective emotional experience."
Racism, Policing, and COVID-19 Disparities: We Need Action!
This moment in history cannot be lost. When you ask us if we are okay, be prepared to hear us say we are not . . . and never have been. Then be prepared to do more.
Conventional and Integrative Approaches to Treating Anxiety in Pregnancy
Women should be provided with multiple options for treatment if they decide to engage in mental health care during this critical period.
A Double Whammy: Psychosis and Huntington Disease
When the patient has significant comorbid psychiatric problems, high risk of suicide, and Huntington disease, the role of clinician spills over into patient advocate in a complex medical system.
50 Years of Medical Oaths
At one time, most medical school classes took the Hippocratic oath, but that is no longer the case.