Saturday, April 28, 2012

General Psychiatry Review - 4.28.12

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New Psychiatry Research Released
Scoop.co.nz (press release)
The latest issue of Australasian Psychiatry has been released and contains a number of highly interesting articles pertaining to various aspects of the field. These include: • Mental health planning for children and youth: is it developmentally ...

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Army warns doctors against using certain drugs in PTSD treatment // April 25, 2012
Nextgov
An April 10 policy memo that the Army Medical Command released regarding the diagnosis and treatment of PTSD said a class of drugs known as benzodiazepines, which include Xanax and Valium, could intensify rather than reduce combat stress symptoms and ...


Suicides have Greeks on edge before election
WXEL
Attempted suicides and demand for psychiatric help has risen as Greece struggles to cope with the worst economic crisis since World War Two. Nikiforos Angelopoulos, a professor of psychiatry, has a busy psychotherapy practice in an upmarket Athens ...

and more »

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Surviving Relationship Threats: The Role of Emotional Capital.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2012 Apr 24;
Authors: Feeney BC, Lemay EP
Abstract

In this article, a Theory of Emotional Capital is investigated, which stipulates that relationships are able to withstand threats when partners have built “emotional capital” within the relationship (by contributing to positive, shared experiences). Support for this idea was obtained in two studies using two samples (newlywed couples and more established married couples) and two methodologies (daily diary and observational methods). Both studies showed that individuals with high emotional capital were less reactive to relationship threats than those with low emotional capital. The importance of emotional capital for healthy and stable relationships is discussed.
PMID: 22535924 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Culture, Temporal Focus, and Values of the Past and the Future.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2012 Apr 24;
Authors: Guo T, Ji LJ, Spina R, Zhang Z
Abstract

This article examines cultural differences in how people value future and past events. Throughout four studies, the authors found that European Canadians attached more monetary value to an event in the future than to an identical event in the past, whereas Chinese and Chinese Canadians placed more monetary value to a past event than to an identical future event. The authors also showed that temporal focus-thinking about the past or future-explained cultural influences on the temporal value asymmetry effect. Specifically, when induced to think about and focus on the future, Chinese valued the future more than the past, just like Euro-Canadians; when induced to think about and focus on the past, Euro-Canadians valued the past more than the future, just like Chinese.
PMID: 22535925 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Antidepressant Effects of Fibroblast Growth Factor-2 in Behavioral and Cellular Models of Depression.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 16;
Authors: Elsayed M, Banasr M, Duric V, Fournier NM, Licznerski P, Duman RS
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Basic and clinical studies report that the expression of fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) is decreased in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) of depressed subjects or rodents exposed to stress and increased following antidepressant treatment. Here, we aim to determine if 1) FGF-2/fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) signaling is sufficient and required for mediating an antidepressant response behaviorally and cellularly; and 2) if the antidepressant actions of FGF-2 are mediated specifically by the PFC. METHODS: The role of FGF-2 signaling in behavioral models of depression and anxiety was tested using chronic unpredictable stress (CUS)/sucrose consumption test (SCT), forced swim test (FST), and novelty suppressed feeding test (NSFT). We also assessed the number of bromodeoxyuridine labeled dividing glial cells in the PFC as a cellular index relevant to depression (i.e., decreased by stress and increased by antidepressant treatment). RESULTS: Chronic FGF-2 infusions (intracerebroventricular) blocked the deficit in SCT caused by CUS. Moreover, the response to antidepressant treatment in the CUS/SCT and FST was abolished upon administration of an inhibitor of FGFR activity, SU5402. These results are consistent with the regulation of proliferating cells in the PFC, a portion of which are of oligodendrocyte lineage. Lastly, subchronic infusions of FGF-2 into the PFC but not into the dorsal striatum produced antidepressant-like and anxiolytic-like effects on FST and NSFT respectively. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate that FGF-2/FGFR signaling is sufficient and necessary for the behavioral, as well as gliogenic, actions of antidepressants and highlight the PFC as a brain region sensitive to the antidepressant actions of FGF-2.
PMID: 22513055 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Relationship of Ketamine’s Plasma Metabolites with Response, Diagnosis, and Side Effects in Major Depression.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 18;
Authors: Zarate CA, Brutsche N, Laje G, Luckenbaugh DA, Venkata SL, Ramamoorthy A, Moaddel R, Wainer IW
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ketamine has rapid antidepressant effects lasting as long as 1 week in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) and bipolar depression (BD). Ketamine is extensively metabolized. This study examined the relationship between ketamine metabolites and response, diagnosis, and psychotomimetic symptoms in MDD and BD patients. METHODS: Following a 40-minute ketamine infusion (.5 mg/kg), plasma samples were collected at 40, 80, 110, and 230 minutes and day 1 postinfusion in 67 patients currently experiencing a major depressive episode (MDD, n = 45; BD, n = 22). Concentrations of ketamine, norketamine (NK), dehydronorketamine (DHNK), six hydroxynorketamine metabolites (HNK), and hydroxyketamine (HK) were measured. Plasma concentrations were analyzed by diagnostic group and correlated with patients’ depressive, psychotic, and dissociative symptoms. The relationship between cytochrome P450 gene polymorphisms and metabolites, response, and diagnosis was also examined. RESULTS: Ketamine, NK, DHNK, four of six HNKs, and HK were present during the first 230 minutes postinfusion. Patients with BD had higher plasma concentrations of DHNK, (2S,6S;2R,6R)-HNK, (2S,6R;2R,6S)-HNK, and (2S,5S;2R,5R)-HNK than patients with MDD, who, in turn, had higher concentrations of (2S,6S;2R,6R)-HK. Higher (2S,5S;2R,5R)-HNK concentrations were associated with nonresponse to ketamine in BD patients. Dehydronorketamine, HNK4c, and HNK4f levels were significantly negatively correlated with psychotic and dissociative symptoms at 40 minutes. No relationship was found between cytochrome P450 genes and any of the parameters examined. CONCLUSIONS: A diagnostic difference was observed in the metabolism and disposition of ketamine. Concentrations of (2S,5S;2R,5R)-HNK were related to nonresponse to ketamine in BD. Some hydroxylated metabolites of ketamine correlated with psychotic and dissociative symptoms.
PMID: 22516044 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Neuroeconomics and the Study of Addiction.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 19;
Authors: Monterosso J, Piray P, Luo S
Abstract

We review the key findings in the application of neuroeconomics to the study of addiction. Although there are not “bright line” boundaries between neuroeconomics and other areas of behavioral science, neuroeconomics coheres around the topic of the neural representations of “Value” (synonymous with the “decision utility” of behavioral economics). Neuroeconomics parameterizes distinct features of Valuation, going beyond the general construct of “reward sensitivity” widely used in addiction research. We argue that its modeling refinements might facilitate the identification of neural substrates that contribute to addiction. We highlight two areas of neuroeconomics that have been particularly productive. The first is research on neural correlates of delay discounting (reduced Valuation of rewards as a function of their delay). The second is work that models how Value is learned as a function of “prediction-error” signaling. Although both areas are part of the neuroeconomic program, delay discounting research grows directly out of behavioral economics, whereas prediction-error work is grounded in models of learning. We also consider efforts to apply neuroeconomics to the study of self-control and discuss challenges for this area. We argue that neuroeconomic work has the potential to generate breakthrough research in addiction science.
PMID: 22520343 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
A Step-by-Step Guide to Dopamine.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 May 15;71(10):842-3
Authors: Dayan P, Walton ME
PMID: 22520727 [PubMed - in process]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Functional network endophenotypes of psychotic disorders.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 May 15;71(10):844-5
Authors: Bullmore E
PMID: 22520728 [PubMed - in process]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Linkage Analysis Followed by Association Show NRG1 Associated with Cannabis Dependence in African Americans.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 18;
Authors: Han S, Yang BZ, Kranzler HR, Oslin D, Anton R, Farrer LA, Gelernter J
Abstract

BACKGROUND: A genetic contribution to cannabis dependence (CaD) has been established but susceptibility genes for CaD remain largely unknown. METHODS: We employed a multistage design to identify genetic variants underlying CaD. We first performed a genome-wide linkage scan for CaD in 384 African American (AA) and 354 European American families ascertained for genetic studies of cocaine and opioid dependence. We then conducted association analysis under the linkage peak, first using data from a genome-wide association study from the Study of Addiction: Genetics and Environment, followed by replication studies of prioritized single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in independent samples. RESULTS: We identified the strongest linkage evidence with CaD (logarithm of odds = 2.9) on chromosome 8p21.1 in AAs. In the association analysis of the Study of Addiction: Genetics and Environment sample under the linkage peak, we identified one SNP (rs17664708) associated with CaD in both AAs (odds ratio [OR] = 2.93, p = .0022) and European Americans (OR = 1.38, p = .02). This SNP, located at NRG1, a susceptibility gene for schizophrenia, was prioritized for further study. We replicated the association of rs17664708 with CaD in an independent AAs sample (OR = 2.81, p = .0068). The joint analysis of the two AA samples demonstrated highly significant association between rs17664708 and CaD with adjustment for either global (p = .00044) or local ancestry (p = .00075). CONCLUSIONS: Our study shows that NRG1 is probably a susceptibility gene for CaD, based on convergent evidence of linkage and replicated associations in two independent AA samples.
PMID: 22520967 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Estimating the Genetic Variance of Major Depressive Disorder Due to All Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 18;
Authors: Lubke GH, Hottenga JJ, Walters R, Laurin C, de Geus EJ, Willemsen G, Smit JH, Middeldorp CM, Penninx BW, Vink JM, Boomsma DI
Abstract

Genome-wide association studies of psychiatric disorders have been criticized for their lack of explaining a considerable proportion of the heritability established in twin and family studies. Genome-wide association studies of major depressive disorder in particular have so far been unsuccessful in detecting genome-wide significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Using two recently proposed methods designed to estimate the heritability of a phenotype that is attributable to genome-wide SNPs, we show that SNPs on current platforms contain substantial information concerning the additive genetic variance of major depressive disorder. To assess the consistency of these two methods, we analyzed four other complex phenotypes from different domains. The pattern of results is consistent with estimates of heritability obtained in twin studies carried out in the same population.
PMID: 22520966 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Ghrelin Regulates the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis and Restricts Anxiety After Acute Stress.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 20;
Authors: Spencer SJ, Xu L, Clarke MA, Lemus M, Reichenbach A, Geenen B, Kozicz T, Andrews ZB
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ghrelin plays important roles in glucose metabolism, appetite, and body weight regulation, and recent evidence suggests ghrelin prevents excessive anxiety under conditions of chronic stress. METHODS: We used ghrelin knockout (ghr-/-) mice to examine the role of endogenous ghrelin in anxious behavior and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA) responses to acute stress. RESULTS: Ghr-/- mice are more anxious after acute restraint stress, compared with wild-type (WT) mice, with three independent behavioral tests. Acute restraint stress exacerbated neuronal activation in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus and medial nucleus of the amygdala in ghr-/- mice compared with WT, and exogenous ghrelin reversed this effect. Acute stress increased neuronal activation in the centrally projecting Edinger-Westphal nucleus in WT but not ghr-/- mice. Ghr-/- mice exhibited a lower corticosterone response after stress, suggesting dysfunctional glucocorticoid negative feedback in the absence of ghrelin. We found no differences in dexamethasone-induced Fos expression between ghr-/- and WT mice, suggesting central feedback was not impaired. Adrenocorticotropic hormone replacement elevated plasma corticosterone in ghr-/-, compared with WT mice, indicating increased adrenal sensitivity. The adrenocorticotropic hormone response to acute stress was significantly reduced in ghr-/- mice, compared with control subjects. Pro-opiomelanocortin anterior pituitary cells express significant growth hormone secretagogue receptor. CONCLUSIONS: Ghrelin reduces anxiety after acute stress by stimulating the HPA axis at the level of the anterior pituitary. A novel neuronal growth hormone secretagogue receptor circuit involving urocortin 1 neurons in the centrally projecting Edinger-Westphal nucleus promotes an appropriate stress response. Thus, ghrelin regulates acute stress and offers potential therapeutic efficacy in human mood and stress disorders.
PMID: 22521145 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Reducing Behavioral Inhibition to Novelty via Systematic Neonatal Novelty Exposure: The Influence of Maternal Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Regulation.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 20;
Authors: Tang AC, Reeb-Sutherland BC, Romeo RD, McEwen BS
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Behavioral inhibition (BI) to novelty is thought to be a stable temperament type that appears early in life and is a major risk factor for anxiety disorders. In the rat, habituation of such inhibition can be facilitated via neonatal novelty exposure (NNE), thus reducing BI to novelty. Here, we tested the hypothesis that this early intervention effect is modulated by the context of maternal self-stress regulation. METHODS: The NNE was carried out during postnatal days 1-21, in which one half of each litter was exposed to a relatively novel nonhome environment for 3-min daily while the remaining one half stayed in the home cage. After weaning, BI to novelty was assessed in an open field with a measure of disinhibition defined as a greater increase in exploration across two brief trials. Maternal context was characterized by trait measures of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis reactivity, including basal and stress-evoked corticosterone (CORT) responses. RESULTS: Family-to-family variations in the NNE effect were associated with variations in maternal HPA function-a low-basal CORT and high-evoked CORT response profile constituting the context for a novelty-induced facilitation of disinhibition (i.e., a greater increase in exploratory activity over repeated trials) and an opposite HPA profile constituting the context for a novelty-induced reduction of disinhibition. CONCLUSIONS: This result is consistent with the hypothesis that maternal self-stress regulation modulates the effect of early life intervention on BI to novelty and suggests that effective interventions should include strategies to help mothers improve their self-stress regulation.
PMID: 22521147 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Across Two Generations: Concordance and Mechanisms in a Population-Based Sample.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 20;
Authors: Roberts AL, Galea S, Austin SB, Cerda M, Wright RJ, Rich-Edwards JW, Koenen KC
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Research conducted using small samples of persons exposed to extreme stressors has documented an association between parental and offspring posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but it is unknown whether this association exists in the general population and whether trauma exposure mediates this association. We sought to determine whether mothers’ posttraumatic stress symptoms were associated with PTSD in their young adult children and whether this association was mediated by higher trauma exposure in children of women with PTSD. METHODS: Using data from a cohort of mothers (n = 6924) and a cohort of their children (n = 8453), we calculated risk ratios (RR) for child’s PTSD and examined mediation by trauma exposure. RESULTS: Mother’s lifetime posttraumatic stress symptoms were associated with child’s PTSD in dose-response fashion (mother’s 1-3 symptoms, child’s RR = 1.2; mother’s 4-5 symptoms, RR = 1.3; mother’s 6-7 symptoms, RR = 1.6, compared with children of mothers with no symptoms, p < .001 for each). Mother’s lifetime symptoms were also associated with child’s trauma exposure in dose-response fashion. Elevated exposure to trauma substantially mediated elevated risk for PTSD in children of women with symptoms (mediation proportion, 74%, p < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Intergenerational association of PTSD is clearly present in a large population-based sample. Children of women who had PTSD were more likely than children of women without PTSD to experience traumatic events; this suggests, in part, why the disorder is associated across generations. Health care providers who treat mothers with PTSD should be aware of the higher risk for trauma exposure and PTSD in their children.
PMID: 22521146 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Synaptic Potentiation Is Critical for Rapid Antidepressant Response to Ketamine in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 20;
Authors: Cornwell BR, Salvadore G, Furey M, Marquardt CA, Brutsche NE, Grillon C, Zarate CA
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Clinical evidence that ketamine, a nonselective N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) antagonist, has therapeutic effects within hours in people suffering from depression suggests that modulating glutamatergic neurotransmission is a fundamental step in alleviating the debilitating symptoms of mood disorders. Acutely, ketamine increases extracellular glutamate levels, neuronal excitability, and spontaneous γ oscillations, but it is unknown whether these effects are key to the mechanism of antidepressant action of ketamine. METHODS: Twenty drug-free major depressive disorder patients received a single, open-label intravenous infusion of ketamine hydrochloride (.5 mg/kg). Magnetoencephalographic recordings were made approximately 3 days before and approximately 6.5 hours after the infusion, whereas patients passively received tactile stimulation to the right and left index fingers and also while they rested (eyes-closed). Antidepressant response was assessed by percentage change in Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale scores. RESULTS: Patients with robust improvements in depressive symptoms 230 min after infusion (responders) exhibited increased cortical excitability within this antidepressant response window. Specifically, we found that stimulus-evoked somatosensory cortical responses increase after infusion, relative to pretreatment responses in responders but not in treatment nonresponders. Spontaneous somatosensory cortical γ-band activity during rest did not change within the same timeframe after ketamine in either responders or nonresponders. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest NMDAR antagonism does not lead directly to increased cortical excitability hours later and thus might not be sufficient for therapeutic effects of ketamine to take hold. Rather, increased cortical excitability as depressive symptoms improve is consistent with the hypothesis that enhanced non-NMDAR-mediated glutamatergic neurotransmission via synaptic potentiation is central to the antidepressant effect of ketamine.
PMID: 22521148 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Maternal Care Influences Hippocampal N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor Function and Dynamic Regulation by Corticosterone in Adulthood.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 20;
Authors: Bagot RC, Tse YC, Nguyen HB, Wong AS, Meaney MJ, Wong TP
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Variations in maternal care in the rat associate with robust differences in hippocampal development and synaptic plasticity in the offspring. Maternal care also influences pituitary-adrenal stress responses and corticosterone (CORT) regulation of hippocampal plasticity. N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) regulate synaptic plasticity, and NMDAR function is modulated by stress and CORT. We hypothesized that altered NMDAR function underlies the interaction of maternal and stress effects on hippocampal synaptic plasticity. METHODS: We used electrophysiology and western blot to examine NMDAR synaptic function/expression and NMDAR-dependent long-term potentiation (LTP) in adult offspring of mothers that varied in the frequency of pup licking/grooming (LG) (i.e., High or Low LG). RESULTS: Basal NMDAR synaptic function was enhanced in the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) of adult Low LG offspring. Synaptic expression of NMDAR but not α-amino-3-hydroxy-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid receptors was also increased. Stress level CORT (100 nmol/L) rapidly (<20 min) and robustly increased NMDAR function in High LG offspring, eliminating the maternal effect. Corticosterone did not affect NMDAR function in Low LG offspring. Bovine serum albumin-conjugated CORT reproduced the CORT effect in High LG offspring, implicating a membrane-bound corticosteroid receptor. NMDAR hyperfunction might impair synaptic plasticity. Partial NMDAR antagonism by low concentration DL-2-Amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid rescued a basal LTP deficit in Low LG offspring and inhibited LTP in High LG offspring. CONCLUSIONS: Low LG offspring exhibit basally elevated NMDAR function coupled with insensitivity to CORT modulation indicative of a chronic alteration of NMDAR function. Elevated NMDAR function in the hippocampus might underlie impaired LTP in Low LG offspring.
PMID: 22521150 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Early-Life Mental Disorders and Adult Household Income in the World Mental Health Surveys.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 20;
Authors: Kawakami N, Abdulghani EA, Alonso J, Bromet EJ, Bruffaerts R, Caldas-de-Almeida JM, Chiu WT, de Girolamo G, de Graaf R, Fayyad J, Ferry F, Florescu S, Gureje O, Hu C, Lakoma MD, Leblanc W, Lee S, Levinson D, Malhotra S, Matschinger H, Medina-Mora ME, Nakamura Y, Oakley Browne MA, Okoliyski M, Posada-Villa J, Sampson NA, Viana MC, Kessler RC
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Better information on the human capital costs of early-onset mental disorders could increase sensitivity of policy makers to the value of expanding initiatives for early detection and treatment. Data are presented on one important aspect of these costs: the associations of early-onset mental disorders with adult household income. METHODS: Data come from the World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health Surveys in 11 high-income, five upper-middle income, and six low/lower-middle income countries. Information about 15 lifetime DSM-IV mental disorders as of age of completing education, retrospectively assessed with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview, was used to predict current household income among respondents aged 18 to 64 (n = 37,741) controlling for level of education. Gross associations were decomposed to evaluate mediating effects through major components of household income. RESULTS: Early-onset mental disorders are associated with significantly reduced household income in high and upper-middle income countries but not low/lower-middle income countries, with associations consistently stronger among women than men. Total associations are largely due to low personal earnings (increased unemployment, decreased earnings among the employed) and spouse earnings (decreased probabilities of marriage and, if married, spouse employment and low earnings of employed spouses). Individual-level effect sizes are equivalent to 16% to 33% of median within-country household income, and population-level effect sizes are in the range 1.0% to 1.4% of gross household income. CONCLUSIONS: Early mental disorders are associated with substantial decrements in income net of education at both individual and societal levels. Policy makers should take these associations into consideration in making health care research and treatment resource allocation decisions.
PMID: 22521149 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
Ventral Striatum Reactivity to Reward and Recent Life Stress Interact to Predict Positive Affect.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 23;
Authors: Nikolova YS, Bogdan R, Brigidi BD, Hariri AR
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Stressful life events are among the most reliable precipitants of major depressive disorder; yet, not everyone exposed to stress develops depression. It has been hypothesized that robust neural reactivity to reward and associated stable levels of positive affect (PA) may protect against major depressive disorder in the context of environmental adversity. However, little empirical data exist to confirm this postulation. Here, we test the hypothesis that individuals with relatively low ventral striatum (VS) reactivity to reward will show low PA levels in the context of recent life stress, while those with relatively high VS reactivity will be protected against these potentially depressogenic effects. METHODS: Differential VS reactivity to positive feedback was assessed using blood oxygen level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging in a sample of 200 nonpatient young adults. Recent life stress, current depressive symptoms, and PA were assessed via self-report. Linear regression models were used to investigate the moderating effects of VS reactivity on the relationship between recent stress and state PA across participants. RESULTS: Recent life stress interacted with VS reactivity to predict self-reported state PA, such that higher levels of life stress were associated with lower PA for participants with relatively low, but not for those with high, VS reactivity. These effects were independent of age, gender, race/ethnicity, trait PA, and early childhood trauma. CONCLUSIONS: The current results provide empirical evidence for the potentially protective role of robust reward-related neural responsiveness against reductions in PA that may occur in the wake of life stress and possibly vulnerability to depression precipitated by stressful life events.
PMID: 22534456 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

via Medicine JournalFeeds » Psychiatry by admin on 4/27/12
SCN1A Affects Brain Structure and the Neural Activity of the Aging Brain.
Biol Psychiatry. 2012 Apr 23;
Authors: Meier S, Demirakca T, Brusniak W, Wolf I, Liebsch K, Tunc-Skarka N, Nieratschker V, Witt SH, Matthäus F, Ende G, Flor H, Rietschel M, Diener C, Schulze TG
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aging of the human brain is accompanied by changes in cortical structure as well as functional activity and variable degrees of cognitive decline. One-third of the observable inter-individual differences in cognitive decline are thought to be heritable. SCN1A encodes the sodium channel α subunit and is considered to be a susceptibility gene for several neurological disorders with prominent cognitive deficits. In a recent genome-wide association study the C allele of the SCN1A variant rs10930201 was observed to be significantly associated with poor short-term memory performance. rs10930201 was further observed to be related to differences in neural activity during a working memory task. METHODS: The aim of the present study was to explore whether SCN1A modifies the vulnerability to aging processes of the human brain. Therefore we assessed the interacting effects of the SCN1A vulnerability allele rs10930201 and age in terms of brain activity and brain morphology in 62 healthy volunteers between 21 and 82 years of age. RESULTS: In C allele carriers, activity in the right inferior frontal cortex and the posterior cingulate cortex increased with age. Moreover, exploratory analysis revealed regional effects of rs10930201 on brain structure, indicating reduced gray matter densities in the frontal and insular regions in the C allele carriers. CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, the present results suggest that the SCN1A polymorphism has modulatory effects on brain morphology and vulnerability to age-related alterations in brain activity of cortical regions that subserve working memory.
PMID: 22534457 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Behavioral Forensics Review - 4.28.12

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For the first time in her 10 years at La Reina High School, director of forensics Liz Harlacher will be sending two of her students — Katie Gerbasi and Allegra Iezza — to the National Forensics League National Championship.

Computer Forensics Technology. Information On Computer Forensics. Home · Privacy · T&C · Contact · Sitemap · Home > Uncategorized > Forensic Behavioral Services Of Virginia. Forensic Behavioral Services Of Virginia ...


Has the 'G-Spot' Been Confirmed at Last?
The Female Fan
He said he plans to perform similar forensics on the bodies of women of various ages. If Ostrzenski and others can consistently reproduce the discovery, he said, "it may absolutely change our view of how the orgasm is created; it will change the ...

and more »

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by The Huffington Post News Editors on 4/26/12
Georgetown University law student Sandra Fluke responded to Fox News pundit Monica Crowley's tweet on Thursday, saying she was disturbed by the conservative commentator's "blatant homophobia."

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by Renee on 4/27/12
In short, homophobia and transphobia are devastating forces out there and any campaign to battle them (Including this day) is vital and precious and very very important (though we can have debates about the effectiveness of ...

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by Andrew Belonsky on 4/26/12
The latest edition of Academic Pediatrics reprints remarks Dr. Mark A. Schuster, head of general pediatrics at Boston Children's Hospital, made in 2010 about experiencing homophobia during medical school. One story ...

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by Joe on 4/27/12
Budweieser Warns Ultimate Fighting Championship About Homophobia. Anheuser-Busch, the primary sponsor of Ultimate Fighting Championship, is chastising the popular mixed martial arts league for anti-gay remarks made ...

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by yibo1217 on 4/27/12
In 2010, violent crimes against gay, lesbian and transgendered people were up 13 percent over the previous year. Murders increased by 23 percent, according to the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Projects. The problem can start as early ...

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by Jon Brooks on 4/25/12
Last week, A's pitcher Brandon McCarthy caused a brief flurry with a tweet deeming the display of two men kissing on a stadium kiss cam as homophobic.

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by Michael F. Bird on 4/22/12
In my next response to James Crossley's allegations of “homophobia,” I thought I would narrate two stories, two experiences with gay men and women, which have shaped my perceptions and pastoral approach to ...

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by Marc Naimark on 4/27/12
As with Ukraine for the first edition of the tournament, the event was an occasion to meet LGBT football teams from Russia and from Ukraine and to share experiences of initiatives to counter homophobia in Russia, Ukraine ...

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by The Huffington Post News Editors on 4/24/12
Zach Wahls On David Letterman: 'My Two Moms' Author Talks Homophobia, Gay Marriage And Bullying (VIDEO). Posted: 04/24/2012 1:32 pm. reddit stumble · Share on Google+ ...

via homophobia - Google Blog Search by admin on 4/27/12
Today, May 17 is recognized by over 50 countries as the International Day Against Homophobia. It is a day to stand in solidarity with the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGBT) communities in opposition to homophobia and ...


Homophobic? Maybe You're Gay
New York Times
One theory is that homosexual urges, when repressed out of shame or fear, can be expressed as homophobia. Freud famously called this process a “reaction formation” — the angry battle against the outward symbol of feelings that are inwardly being ...

and more »


Daily Beast

Sandra Fluke Says Monica Crowley Insult Was 'Blatant Homophobia'
Huffington Post
Georgetown University law student Sandra Fluke responded to Fox News pundit Monica Crowley's tweet on Thursday, saying she was disturbed by the conservative commentator's "blatant homophobia." “I'm not going to let this kind of thing get to me ...
Sandra Fluke Responsds To Monica Crowley's Obvious HomophobiaLez Get Real
Sandra Fluke: Monica Crowley's Tweet 'Homophobic''TPM
Fox pundit to Sandra Fluke: Im sorrySeattle Post Intelligencer (blog)
Media Matters for America (blog) -The Stir
all 57 news articles »


The Atlantic

Hockey's New Battle Against Homophobia
The Atlantic
He isn't known as just a scout for the Flyers or the son of revered hockey executive, Brian Burke, but rather, as one of the main figures trying to make the culture of casual homophobia within hockey, one he grew up with, a thing of the past.


Teachers Taught to Combat Homophobia
Voice of America
April 25, 2012 Teachers Taught to Combat Homophobia Student actors are part of program to control classroom conduct Anny Celsi | Los Angeles, California In 2010, violent crimes against gay, lesbian and transgendered people were up 13 percent over the ...

and more »


New study suggests gender gap around homophobic bullying
Phys.Org
A new study from Educational and Psychological Measurement (published by SAGE) found that when it comes to homophobic bullying, there could be a gender gap. While male victims are more likely to be bullied by male homophobic bullies, female victims are ...

and more »


ESPN

With A Tweet, A's Player Unleashes Debate: Is 'Kiss Cam' Homophobic?
NPR (blog)
(by hilarity I mean offensive homophobia). Enough with this stupid trend." The tweet is from last week, but it's just now making its way across the country thanks in part to Knapp's column in which McCarthy expanded on his tweet.
A's Brandon McCarthy tweets against Kiss Cam, homophobiaSportingNews.com
A's pitcher inspires new ideas for Kiss CamESPN (blog)
Brandon McCarthy Blasts 'Kiss Cam' Comedic Routine As Anti-GayOn Top Magazine
Outsports.com (blog) -Project Q Atlanta
all 7 news articles »


Dallas Voice

A confederacy of homophobes
Dallas Voice
The resentment and homophobia (and, probably, racism) aren't overt, but underscore the prejudice Joey endures. Still, In the Family's greatest flaw is also its chief asset: It's slow, considered storytelling. You can see places where the point has been ...

and more »

A confederacy of homophobes

A confederacy of homophobes

A confederacy of homophobes

Posted on 26 Apr 2012 at 5:35pm
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Gay drama ‘In the Family’ defies cliches with moving, unusual tale

screen-2-01
FATHER AND SON | A 6-year-old (Sebastian Brodziak) is the subject of a custody battle with his gay dad (Patrick Wang) in the humane and heartfelt drama ‘In the Family,’ playing exclusively at AMC Grapevine Mills.
ARNOLD WAYNE JONES | Life+Style Editor
……………….
4 Stars out of 5
IN THE FAMILY
Patrick Wang, Sebastian Brodziak, Park Overall. Rated R. 170 mins.
Now playing the AMC Grapevine Mills. Director/star Patrick Wang will be in attendance following the 6:50 pm.
screening on April 28 to conduct a Q&A.
……………….
Cody (Trevor St. John) and Joey (Patrick Wang) are an unlikely pair in rural Martin, Tenn.: An interracial couple (Joey is Asian, though both are dyed-in-the-wool Southerners), they’re rearing Cody’s precious 6-year-old son, Chip (Sebastian Brodziak), from a prior marriage. They live openly and comfortably among their friends and family, as idyllic — really, as boring — as most couples are.
Still, it’s not difficult to see the direction the story of In the Family is headed: When Cody is in an accident (we never really learn the nature of it), Joey and Chip face the challenge of putting their lives back together. And this being the South, and the characters being gay … well, the conflict kind of writes itself.
Or does it?
Wang, who wrote, directed and stars as Joey, has crafted a deceptively gorgeous and affecting film, a towering emotional drama that overwhelms you not with a treacly musical underscore or wistful cinematography but with is devotion to the verisimilitude of everyday life. It succeeds precisely because it seems so realistic — you feel every moment as if it is happening to you.
Wang evinces a casual, unrushed, contemplative style as a filmmaker — lots of long, easy shots of people living their lives. And yet, there’s a foreboding to it all; it seems as if there always is when gay folks are involved.
In the Family is profoundly emotional, and captures the horror and frustration of the unfair treatment of gay couples without turning to mawkishness or melodrama. Wang doesn’t short-shrift any of the moments that make up the fine details of a tragedy. He refuses to rush through the things that many filmmakers would tire of easily. The scenes where Joey confronts the hospital staff, trying to find out the status of his partner following the accident, are ones we have seen countless times before, but you’ve probably never seen it presented with such plainspoken, realistic forthrightness. (It’s even better than that great one in Terms of Endearment.)
The centerpiece of the story is Joey’s custody fight for Chip, although unlike in many films like this, for most of the running time he isn’t treated like an object, but as a human being, on the same footing as the adults. We don’t have to imagine that Joey loves Chip like his own flesh; we see it. In that way,
In the Family harkens more to Kramer vs. Kramer with its extended, silent ballet of father and son getting used to the quiet of only them, than it does to an overblown soap opera like the Madonna-Rupert Everett fiasco The Next Best Thing.
Indeed, perhaps what’s most beautiful and heartbreaking is how surreptitiously and seemingly “normal” all the incidents conspire against Joey; a tense conversation here, a pained look there, a phone call there. The resentment and homophobia (and, probably, racism) aren’t overt, but underscore the prejudice Joey endures.
Still, In the Family’s greatest flaw is also its chief asset: It’s slow, considered storytelling. You can see places where the point has been made; not every scene needs to run on as long as they do.
But Wang presents his scenes in the full flower of their significance in our lives with purpose: The long wait in the hospital room, the slow drive home from the funeral, the seemingly endless moment when you first learn your partner has died. If you take out the dull parts from our lives, you’re not left with much. Those are the times we teach our kids patience, or share a meal with our partners, or engage in the pillow talk that differentiates strangers from lovers.
The performances, from a largely unknown cast, are case studies in underplaying. Wang — with an agreeable, placid Tennessee twang that identifies him as “one of y’all” even while his complexion and sexual orientation say the opposite — speaks as much between his lines (with a glance, or a choked-back “hello”) as anyone could. As he convinced Chip to visit Cody in the hospital, you believe their intimacy so thoroughly, you forget you are watching a film.
A lot of the responsibility for the beauty of their relationship rests on the small, hair-brushed shoulders of Brodziak. He’s natural without being cutesy. Everyone else — from Joey’s employer to his in-laws to an especially detestable lawyer — is perfect.
The craftsmanship is equally fine, though, like the acting, not flashy. Revel in the fluid, simple camerawork — long takes with only subtle movement that never suggest something static or awkward.
There’s a tendency to pigeonhole In the Family as “a gay film” or “an Asian film” or “a gay Asian film.” I truly don’t see that. It’s simply the most humane and heartfelt drama I’ve seen in ages.
This article appeared in the Dallas Voice print edition April 27, 2012.

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Norway Muslims question focus on Breivik's sanity - Forensic Psychiatry News

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MiamiHerald.com

Norway Muslims question focus on Breivik's sanity
Atlanta Journal Constitution
By JULIA GRONNEVET AP OSLO, Norway — Muslim leaders in Norway say they are concerned that the anti-Islamic ideology of Anders Behring Breivik, the far-right fanatic now on trial for killing 77 people, is being overshadowed by questions about his ...
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AP | Posted: Saturday, April 28, 2012 7:42 am | (0) Comments Anders Behring Breivik arrives in court in Oslo Friday April 27, 2012 for the continuation of his trial. Since he has admitted his actions, Breivik's mental state is the key issue for the ...
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Salon

Europe's far right marches on
Salon
And in an Oslo courtroom, Anders Behring Breivik fights to prove he was sane last July when he systematically slaughtered 77 innocent people, mostly teenagers, at a summer camp. He was, he explains, simply trying to spark a crusade against ...

and more »


MiamiHerald.com


Norway Muslims question focus on Breivik's sanity
Kansas City Star
By JULIA GRONNEVET AP FILE- This is a April 23, 2012 file photo showing Mehtab Afsar, leader of the Islamic Council in Norway, in the courthouse in Oslo where he attended the proceedings Anders Behring Breivik. Muslim leaders in Norway say they are ...
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“Nothing is known about how potential murderers actually perceive their risk of punishment...” - The Myth of Deterrence - NYTimes.com

The Myth of Deterrence - NYTimes.com

Editorial

The Myth of Deterrence

One of the most frequently made claims about the death penalty is that it deters potential murderers. That was the claim when the Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment in 1976. It is the claim today after a revival of research about the topic in the last decade.
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But a distinguished committee of scholars working for the National Research Council has now reached the striking and convincing conclusion that all of the research about deterrence and the death penalty done in the past generation, including by some first-rank scholars at the most prestigious universities, should be ignored.
The committee found that the research “is not informative about whether capital punishment increases, decreases, or has no effect on homicide rates.” No study looks at what really matters, by comparing the deterrent effects of capital punishment with other penalties, like life without parole. A lot of the research assumes that “potential murderers respond to the objective risk of execution,” but only one in six of the people sentenced to death in the last 35 years have been executed and no study properly took that diminished risk into account.
“Nothing is known about how potential murderers actually perceive their risk of punishment,” said the criminologist Daniel Nagin, chairman of the committee.
The committee was careful to say what it did not examine, including the proven risk that an innocent person could be sentenced to death and the fact that the administration of capital punishment could well be discriminatory.
On Wednesday when Connecticut’s governor, Dannel Malloy, signed the state’s new law abolishing the death penalty, these problems were on his mind. As a former supporter of capital punishment, he said that he “came to believe that doing away with the death penalty was the only way to ensure it would not be unfairly imposed.”
The 33 states that retain the death penalty should follow that lead.

“What passes for science in courtrooms is not always, in fact, science...” - Murder Cases Put Questionable Evidence to Test - NYTimes.com

Murder Cases Put Questionable Evidence to Test - NYTimes.com

The Texas Tribune

Murder Cases Put Questionable Evidence to Test


Undigested bits of mushrooms and tomatoes from Christine Morton’s last meal — a celebratory birthday dinner she had with her husband — were still in her stomach when the medical examiner performed his autopsy in 1986.
Courtesy of the Fort Bend County Sheriff's Department
Dogs are walked through a scent lineup of samples from a suspect and several other people. The reliability of this kind of evidence is being questioned.
The Texas Tribune
Expanded coverage of Texas is produced by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit news organization. To join the conversation about this article, go to texastribune.org.
Those remnants, the prosecutor told the jury during Michael Morton’s trial, “scientifically proved” that Mr. Morton had beaten his wife to death.
Twenty-five years later, DNA science revealed that someone else had actually killed Mrs. Morton and that her husband’s murder conviction and more than two decades in prison were a tragic mistake. His exoneration based on DNA evidence is the 45th in Texas.
Before he dismissed the wrongful murder charges against Mr. Morton last week, Judge Sid Harle recounted the faults the case exposed in the Texas justice system. Among them: the use of so-called junk science in the courtroom.
“The courts and the sitting judges need to be ever mindful about their role as gatekeeper in regard to the admission of science,” Mr. Harle said. “Your case illustrates the best and the worst of what can happen.”
Despite scientific advancements like DNA testing, the use of unreliable scientific techniques in the criminal justice system persists. While some judges say they work to ensure only reliable scientific evidence is presented to juries, criminal justice advocates say that more must be done to root out an array of pseudoscientific practices that can have life-or-death consequences.
“What passes for science in courtrooms is not always, in fact, science,” said Kathryn Kase, interim executive director of the Texas Defender Service, which represents death row inmates.
In recent weeks, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has agreed to review cases that indicate it may also see a need to address the types of evidence that meet scientific standards.
In November, the state’s highest criminal court agreed to review the case of Megan Winfrey, who is serving a life sentence for murder. She was convicted largely on the testimony of a sheriff’s deputy who said his bloodhounds “alerted” to her scent on the murder victim’s clothing. The court has previously ruled that dog-scent evidence, used to convict Ms. Winfrey’s father for the same murder, was insufficient without corroborating evidence. The court acquitted her father on appeal.
This month, the court also agreed to review the cases of two men awaiting execution. Both men, convicted of murder, were sentenced to death after a psychologist who was an expert witness in several death penalty cases told jurors that they were mentally competent to face execution.
Lawyers for the men — Steven Butler and John Matamoros — argue they are mentally handicapped and therefore ineligible for the death penalty. In April, the Texas State Board of Examiners of Psychologists reprimanded the psychologist, Dr. George Denkowski, and he agreed to never again conduct evaluations in criminal cases.
Though Ms. Kase said the court’s willingness to review the cases is a hopeful sign, she and other criminal justice advocates said other relatively simple changes could help prevent the use of such evidence.
Judges, who ultimately decide what is allowed in court, should approve adequate money for indigent defendants to hire experts to refute scientific experts whom prosecutors present at trial, she said. It can cost thousands of dollars to hire experts, and Patrick McCann, a Houston defense lawyer, said judges worry that voters would not take kindly to such expenses.
“They act as if funding each defendant’s efforts to have a fair trial comes out of their own children’s pockets somehow,” Mr. McCann said.
In recent years, Jeff Blackburn, chief counsel at the Innocence Project of Texas, has pushed to ban evidence that does not conform to national scientific standards. He will try again in 2013 when lawmakers reconvene. “These are problems that can be fairly easily solved,” he said.
Senator Rodney Ellis, Democrat of Houston, said another key solution already exists: the Texas Forensic Science Commission. For more than two years, the commission was bogged down in a national political controversy over its investigation of arson science used to convict and execute Cameron Todd Willingham for a 1991 fire that killed his three daughters. That issue was resolved this year with a plan to review past arson cases to see whether similar faulty evidence led to questionable convictions. Now, Mr. Ellis said, he hopes the commission will address other questions of courtroom science.
“To have a justice system we can have faith convicts the guilty and protects the innocent, we need scientific evidence that’s based on real science,” Mr. Ellis said, “not some guy saying he has magic dogs that can solve crimes.”
bgrissom@texastribune.org

Monika Samaan was seven when she suffered salmonella encephalopathy -- a brain injury linked to food poisoning that also left her with a blood infection and septic shock -- in October 2005

KFC ordered to pay $8.3 mln to a girl

27/04 at 06h27 - SYDNEY (AFP)

Fast food giant Kentucky Fried Chicken has been ordered to pay Aus$8 million (US$8.3 million) to an Australian girl who suffered severe brain damage and was paralysed after eating a Twister wrap.

Monika Samaan was seven when she suffered salmonella encephalopathy -- a brain injury linked to food poisoning that also left her with a blood infection and septic shock -- in October 2005.

Several other family members also fell ill and they claimed Samaan's injuries, which include severe cognitive, motor and speech impairment and spastic quadriplegia, were caused by a chicken Twister wrap from a Sydney KFC outlet.

The New South Wales Supreme Court ruled in the family's favour a week ago and on Friday ordered KFC to pay the girl Aus$8 million in damages plus legal costs.

In a statement, the family's lawyer George Vlahakis said they were relieved the battle was over.

"Monika's severe brain damage and severe disability has already exhausted the very limited resources of the family," he said.

"Monika is now a big girl and they are finding it increasingly difficult to lift her and to look after her basic needs as well as look after Monika's younger siblings.

"The compensation ordered is very much needed. KFC have to date been determined that Monika does not receive a cent."

Last week KFC indicated it will appeal the decision but is yet to do so.

During the trial, Justice Stephen Rothman said the chicken became contaminated "because of the failure of one or more employees of KFC" to follow proper preparation rules, which he described as "negligent".

World Videos - Yahoo! News

World Videos - Yahoo! News

KFC to pay Australian family $8m damages

23 hrs ago - Reuters 0:51 | 1,544 views
KFC has been ordered to pay $8 million Australian dollars (8.3 million USD) to a stricken Australian girl's family after she was left severely brain damaged from food poisoning after eating a ...

Response to Dr. Kringlen

Response to Dr. Kringlen


Dr. Kringlen: “My professional experience suggests he is unlikely to have been able to act in such an adequate fashion if he is psychotic, in particular schizophrenic,” he declared, saying it is extremely unlikely Breivik has managed to mislead him in his battle to appear as sane.

 ‘Two days in court changed my opinion of Breivik’, says top psychiatrist / News / The Foreigner — Norwegian News in English.

*
Response: by Michael Novakhov, M.D.
"According to German psychiatrist, Emil Kraepelin, patients with Delusional Disorder, remain coherent, sensible and reasonable[4]. "
...
"The delusions do not interfere with general logical reasoning (although within the delusional system the logic is perverted) and there is usually no general disturbance of behavior. If disturbed behavior does occur, it is directly related to the delusional beliefs."

References and Links

Delusional disorder - Wikipedia

Sharing Clinical Data Electronically, April 25, 2012, Adler-Milstein and Jha 307 (16): 1695 — JAMA

Sharing Clinical Data Electronically, April 25, 2012, Adler-Milstein and Jha 307 (16): 1695 — JAMA


Viewpoint
JAMA. 2012;307(16):1695-1696. doi: 10.1001/jama.2012.525

Sharing Clinical Data Electronically

A Critical Challenge for Fixing the Health Care System

  1. Ashish K. Jha, MD, MPH
[+] Author Affiliations
  1. Author Affiliations: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (Dr Adler-Milstein); and Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard Medical School, and VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, Massachusetts (Dr Jha).
Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text.
The United States is undertaking an ambitious effort to wire the health care system. The goal is to build a nationwide information infrastructure to serve as the foundation for large and sustained improvements in performance. Widespread adoption of health information technology will support new care delivery models, such as patient-centered medical homes, alongside broader initiatives, such as performance reporting and public health surveillance. To enable the health information technology revolution, Congress allocated nearly $30 billion focused on 2 main goals: transitioning physicians and hospitals from paper-based to electronic systems and enabling these systems to interoperate, allowing clinical data to flow between health care organizations.
The vision of complete patient information available across care delivery settings is compelling and central to a high-functioning health care system. However, the vision is deceptively simple: there are enormous challenges to enabling clinical data to flow across organizations. These challenges are substantially greater than those …