Thursday, June 21, 2012

Explorations in Criminal Psychopathology: Clinical Syndromes With Forensic Implications, Second Edition - JAAPL

Explorations in Criminal Psychopathology: Clinical Syndromes With Forensic Implications, Second Edition

The book is divided into three sections of five chapters each: “Disorders of Behavior,” “Disorders of Thought,” and “Borderline and Psychotic Disorders.” In each section, the reader will find description and analysis of unusual or uncommonly discussed criminal forensic topics. The first section covers catathymic reactions, pathological gambling and its relationship to crime, idiosyncratic alcohol intoxication, organic brain dysfunction, and sadistic aggression. Section II reviews delusional misidentification syndromes, obsessional following (stalking), factitious disorder (including the by-proxy variant), morbid jealousy, and forensic aspects of pseudologia fantastica, or pathological lying. In Section III are discussions of Ganser's syndrome and other rare dissociative states, conduct disorder history in men with schizophrenia, dissociative identity disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and malingering. As this listing indicates, only a few chapters, such as those on PTSD and on the assessment of malingering, cover ground that is likely to be familiar to many or most forensic practitioners.      
     

J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 40:1:153-154 (January 2012)

Explorations in Criminal Psychopathology: Clinical Syndromes With Forensic Implications, Second Edition

Edited by Louis B. Schlesinger. Springfield, IL: Charles C Thomas Publisher, Ltd., 2007. 394 pp. $79.95 hardcover, $55.95 paperback, $55.95 ebook.
  1. Joseph R. Simpson, MD, PhD
+ Author Affiliations
  1. Long Beach, CA
By design, Explorations in Criminal Psychopathology differs from most books in the fields of forensic psychiatry and forensic psychology. In the Introduction, the Editor, Dr. Louis B. Schlesinger, describes the book's intent: “Practitioners …need to have expertise in a wide range of clinical conditions—beyond those covered in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)—that relate to various forms of criminal conduct ” (p xiii). The Introduction's final paragraph states: “The need for forensic practitioners to understand…the psychodynamics of crime cannot be overemphasized” (p xiv). With these goals in mind, the volume is organized in terms of clinical and psychodynamic concepts, as opposed to specific diagnostic categories (such as psychosis or substance abuse) or medico-legal matters, such as competence to stand trial, diminished capacity, and legal insanity.
The book is divided into three sections of five chapters each: “Disorders of Behavior,” “Disorders of Thought,” and “Borderline and Psychotic Disorders.” In each section, the reader will find description and analysis of unusual or uncommonly discussed criminal forensic topics. The first section covers catathymic reactions, pathological gambling and its relationship to crime, idiosyncratic alcohol intoxication, organic brain dysfunction, and sadistic aggression. Section II reviews delusional misidentification syndromes, obsessional following (stalking), factitious disorder (including the by-proxy variant), morbid jealousy, and forensic aspects of pseudologia fantastica, or pathological lying. In Section III are discussions of Ganser's syndrome and other rare dissociative states, conduct disorder history in men with schizophrenia, dissociative identity disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and malingering. As this listing indicates, only a few chapters, such as those on PTSD and on the assessment of malingering, cover ground that is likely to be familiar to many or most forensic practitioners.
Some might wonder why a book devoted to examining psychodynamic processes and forensic “zebras” is necessary or worthwhile. But anyone who has worked in forensic psychiatry for any length of time realizes that the complexities of human behavior cannot always be easily explained simply by the application of a diagnostic label. Knowledge of psychodynamics can be of great value in assisting the forensic expert to make sense of the unconscious motivations and other antecedents for what may on the surface appear to be a bizarre or senseless crime. In certain cases, familiarity with psychodynamic mechanisms allows the evaluator to provide a more complete picture of the defendant's psychological makeup, emotional reactions, and thought processes, as well as their relationship to the legal question(s) at hand, especially for criminal defendants who have personality disorders or clinically significant maladaptive personality traits, but whose perception of reality in the traditional sense is found to be intact.
In the past few decades, many psychiatry residency programs have de-emphasized the teaching of psychodynamic formulation. In a one-year forensic psychiatry fellowship, there may be little time to explore psychodynamic subjects while learning the basics of the legal system, report writing, correctional mental health, and so forth. This book, which includes concepts with which early-career forensic psychiatrists are only vaguely familiar, should pique their curiosity and motivate them to learn more about how psychodynamic theories of behavior may influence forensic psychiatric practice. While the book does not attempt to provide a comprehensive review of psychodynamic theories, the chapters that discuss these concepts generally do so in a clear and accessible manner.
Many chapters in the volume include illuminating discussions of the unconscious mental processes and motivations thought to drive certain types of criminal conduct. A few examples serve to illustrate this theme. Chapter 1 reviews catathymia, the process by which an unresolved conflict, often centered on feelings of sexual inadequacy, leads to violence toward a victim who is symbolically representative of the conflict and who therefore threatens the perpetrator's psychological integration. The author explains that the violent act resolves the emotional tension and reestablishes internal equilibrium.
The authors use the chapter on delusional misidentification to explain the hypothesized psychological mechanisms underlying aggression in patients with Capgras syndrome, the belief that a person in one's environment has been replaced by an identical-appearing impostor. Symptoms originate when anger toward another person is first defended against by denial. When this is not effective, splitting takes place, such that positive attributes are assigned to the original identity and all negative attributes are assigned to the impostor. Thus the delusional patient is free to experience righteous anger toward the supposed impostor without emotional conflicts. Subsequently, through projection and projective identification, the patient attributes his own hostile impulses to the misidentified object and comes to fear that person's hostility and malevolent intent.
In the chapter on obsessional following, we find a discussion of borderline personality organization in the stalker. The obsessional following typically has its origin in a pathological response to social isolation and social incompetence that challenges a narcissistic fantasy of specialness. Feelings of shame and humiliation are defended against with rage, which also prevents the experience of sadness. As with aggression in the context of a Capgras delusion, obsessional followers frequently employ borderline defense mechanisms such as denial, splitting, and projective identification, as well as idealization and, later, devaluation.
Similar analyses are found in other chapters. In each chapter, practical applications of the psychological explanations are covered in discussions of matters such as epidemiology, risk assessment, treatment, and legal topics, such as insanity and sentencing mitigation. Ultimately, the reader will gain an appreciation of how identifying and understanding unconscious mental processes can translate into an explanation of aberrant behavior that is useful in a forensic context. As mentioned previously, this is likely to be of particular relevance in regard to individuals who do not have psychosis and who may appear relatively “normal” in the eyes of the legal system.
One evident weakness of the book is the outdated nature of the research cited by several of the contributors. This is the second edition; the first was published in 1996. Four of the 15 chapters include no references more recent than that date, and thus it must be assumed that they were not updated for the second edition. One of these chapters describes three references from 1984 as “current opinion” (p 71). In another two chapters, the only post-1996 reference is to the 2000 text revision to the fourth edition of the DSM.
A second weakness is Chapter 12, entitled “The Consequences of Conduct Disorder for Males Who Develop Schizophrenia: Associations With Criminality, Aggressive Behavior, Substance Use, and Psychiatric Services.” This chapter describes the results of a single study examining the prevalence of premorbid conduct disorder in a group of men with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. Although it is interesting in its own right, it does not fit in particularly well with the topics covered elsewhere in the book. It does not discuss psychodynamic processes or provide much in the way of practical information for use in the legal arena.
Despite these problems, Explorations in Criminal Psychopathology clearly would make an excellent addition to the library of any forensic practitioner who evaluates criminal defendants.

11:50 AM 6/21/2012 - Prison Psychiatry News Review

11:50 AM 6/21/2012 - Prison Psychiatry News Review


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Last Update: 12:11 PM 6/21/2012

Congressional Hearing on Solitary Confinement: finally!

via Prison Watch Network by Prison Watch Network on 6/21/12
On June 19th the first Congressional Hearing in the USA on Solitary Confinement took place. Many friends, family, activists and advocats for those held in these torturous conditions sent in their testimony. Solitarywatch has an archive with this testimony here:

http://solitarywatch.com/resources/testimony/

The actual hearing text can be read too in PDF form here:

http://solitarywatch.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/transcript-of-the-hearing.pdf

Here are some more articles about the Hearing:

Mother Jones: Senators Finally Ponder the Question: Is Solitary Confinement Wrong?

The Guardian: Congress unlocks America's hidden shame of solitary confinement.

New York Times Editorial: The Abuse of Solitary Confinement
 
_________________________________

DiMasi faults prison for medical care delay - Boston Globe

via prisons - Google News on 6/21/12

Boston Globe


DiMasi faults prison for medical care delay
Boston Globe
DiMasi, serving an eight-year sentence in a Kentucky prison on a public corruption conviction, said he discovered lumps in his neck in December, but he was not ...
DiMasi faults prison for care delayBoston.com
Lawer: Sal DiMasi denied cancer treatment by fedsBoston Herald
Former Mass. House Speaker diagnosed with Stage 4 cancerNECN
Worcester Telegram -GoErie.com
all 27 news articles »

via prisons - Google News on 6/21/12


Prisoner of the day
Iranian
ICHRC: Upon completion of his three-year prison term, journalist Issa Saharkhiz has been sentenced to an additional 1.5 years in prison, despite a medical ...

via prisons - Google News on 6/21/12


Quinn decides to keep open 3 prison work-release centers
The State Journal-Register
PEORIA — The Peoria Adult Transition Center and two other prison work-release centers will remain open indefinitely, according to a memorandum released by Gov.
Peoria Adult Transition Center to stay openPeoria Journal Star

all 3 news articles »

via prisons - Google Blog Search by Lynnanne Nguyen on 6/20/12
Illinois Governor Pat Quinn announced today seven Illinois facilities are closing to save the state money. The facilities affected got a memo from the state yesterday letting them know employees and p.

via prisons - Google Blog Search by Jake on 6/21/12
Maybe one of the reasons we do so is because we've been privatizing our prisons. As we privatize, prison companies can only grow if we incarcerate more and more people. Are we creating a Prison Industry Complex?

via prisons - Google Blog Search by unknown on 6/17/12
Accra, June 17, GNA The Human Rights Advocacy Centre HRAC of Ghana at the weekend cited the Ghana Prisons Authority for gross violation of the rights of remand prisoners and called for immediate measures to address it ...

via prison mental health - Google Blog Search by alecrosenberg on 6/19/12
Haney, who toured several California prisons to assess overcrowding and staffing, testified that prison mental health workers are too overburdened to provide adequate care to inmates, which not only harms prisoners but also ...

via prison mental health - Google Blog Search by sjennings29 on 5/30/08
Short-changed – Spending on prison mental health care , 30th May 2008, Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health Click on the title above for the full-text of this report Summary Last year, £20.8 million was spent on mental health ...

via prison mental health - Google Blog Search by Views and News staff on 6/21/12
That's because any doubt in the matter of his mental health generally means the law should go in the defendant's favour, allowing him or her to avoid prison and instead be treated for their psychiatric ailment.

By Don Thompson The Associated Press via The San Francisco Chronicle SALINAS VALLEY, Calif. — Six inmates were taken to hospitals after fighting broke out Tuesday among dozens of armed inmates at a maximum-security prison in Central California, corrections officials said. No employees were injured in the morning disturbance at Salinas Valley State Prison in Soledad, about 130 miles southeast of ...

By Brett Hambright Intelligencer Journal/New Era Lancaster, Pa. — Despite urging from prosecutors that George Nichols Sr. is a danger to motorists across Lancaster County, he was allowed Tuesday to stay free on bail. But only under certain conditions. Nichols, charged this month with causing a New Year's Eve crash that killed two people, must wear a bracelet that monitors alcohol intake and ...

via Prison News on 6/21/12
The Supreme Court Justices pose for a picture in 2010. President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and senior staff, react in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, as the House passes the health care reform bill, March 21, 2010.

The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The California Highway Patrol sought help from the public Wednesday as it investigated an online video that appears to show a man being beaten unconscious in a road-rage attack on an East Los Angeles freeway. The video, which has drawn more than 100,000 views on YouTube and other networks, apparently was taken at about 3:30 p.m. June 12 on a transition road to ...

By Henry Bailey The Commercial Appeal DESOTO, Tenn. — A contract for jailhouse video-visitation operations that officials hope will slam the door on forbidden items has gotten the unanimous approval of the DeSoto Board of Supervisors. Best of all - it's at virtually no ongoing cost to taxpayers. "We're not paying anything - they're paying us," board attorney Tony Nowak said ...

The state executed a former grocery store butcher for dismembering a man during a 1996 attack

via prison psychiatry - Google Blog Search by alecrosenberg on 6/19/12
Haney, who toured several California prisons to assess overcrowding and staffing, testified that prison mental health workers are too overburdened to provide adequate care to inmates, which not only harms prisoners but also ...


IceNews


75 percent want Breivik sent to jail
Views and News from Norway
That's because any doubt in the matter of his mental health generally means the law should go in the defendant's favour, allowing him or her to avoid prison and ...
Send Breivik to jail, say most NorwegiansIndependent Online
Breivik to stay in Oslo prison whatever trial outcomeIceNews
Anders Behring Breivik trial nears end with closing argumentsTelegraph.co.uk
Sky News -Wall Street Journal -BBC News
all 479 news articles »


TIME


As Breivik's Trial Nears Its End, Psychiatry Takes a Beating
TIME
Psychiatry is being judged as well. With Mr ... If he is considered sane, the court's five judges will sentence him to 21 years in prison (though he can be detained ...


ForUm


Psychiatrist Vyacheslav Mishiyev: We don't force people into treatment
ForUm
In the post-Soviet space there are enough stereotypes, defining psychiatry .... Allegedly, certain doctors fake diagnoses "insane" to help criminals escape prison.

via candidaabrahamson by rfinkel on 6/21/12
“A mood diary is incredibly helpful, and I always encourage my patients to use them. . .The patients are, on a day-to-day basis, in tune with how they’re doing, and they can take care of themselves.” ~ Adele C. Viguera, MD, Adele C. Viguera, MD, psychiatrist and associate director of the perinatal and reproductive psychiatry program [...]


ForUm


Psychiatrist Vyacheslav Mishiyev: We don't force people into treatment
ForUm
In the post-Soviet space there are enough stereotypes, defining psychiatry .... Allegedly, certain doctors fake diagnoses "insane" to help criminals escape prison.


Interview / 21 June 2012 | 14:34
Psychiatrist Vyacheslav Mishiyev: We don't force people into treatment

Psychiatrist Vyacheslav Mishiyev: We don't force people into treatment


Mental illness is one of the favorite subjects of Hollywood scrip writers. Manias, visions, strait jackets, electroshock - all these attributes help to create dark, spooky, but exciting atmosphere, while doctors and nurses are usually depicted as monsters, who abuse the helplessness of the patients.

In the post-Soviet space there are enough stereotypes, defining psychiatry as closed, corrupted and penal science. ForUm has had an interview with the chief psychiatrist of the Kyiv Pavlov's mental hospital Vyacheslav Mishiyev to clarify the situation and may be to bust some myths.

- What can you say about mental health of the Ukrainian nation? Is it mentally healthy?

- Ukrainians are neither sicker nor healthier than any other world nation. Mental disorders are predetermined by complicated and global factors, let's say something more that a fight with a girlfriend and low salary. There is a common biological pattern, which leads to mental instability. It is determined by the very course of man's life and affects 1-3% of Ukrainian population in particular and the world population in general. Besides, the Ukrainian nation was not born yesterday, but evolved from the common European family. We do not possess something the rest of Europe never had.



- We've learned there is an infant care unit in your hospital. Why would you hospitalize small children of two, three or five years old? And what are the treatment methods exactly?

- A part of little patients has been born with mental disorders, and they need a therapy. A part of children has born disposition and our task is to prevent the illness from development. There are also children affected by external factors, like stress, a family tragedy or fear experience. They all need professional help, otherwise they would not be here.

We apply complex treatment, including medications, psychotherapy, and social rehabilitation therapy. If to speak about children with born mental deficiency, which is incurable, we use therapy to correct psychomotor agitation and behavior of a patient.

- According to some data, 80% of Ukrainians with mental disorders are hospitalized, while in Western countries only 20% are in hospital stay, which is considered more humane. Is it true?

- Don't believe everything you hear. In Kyiv, for example, there are 60 thousand registered patients, but only two thousand hospital beds. As you see, the majority of patients are treated at home.


- In Ukraine compulsory psychiatric care is applied by court decision only. But in the street you may sometimes meet people, who look inadequate. Don't you think such people are like loaded firearms without safety lock?

- I believe that authorities and mental clinics should act within the law and follow court decisions. The law "On psychiatric help" says we cannot force mentally ill person into treatment, unless he poses a threat to himself or to the public.

There are people, who do not like migrants of Caucasia origin and who honestly believe they must be locked up, for example... These are all biased opinions. The only unbiased factor in this question is to determine whether a person poses a threat. You know, it's not amusing to tie somebody to a 16-kilo kettlebell, especially for those tied up.


- Here or there we hear about infamous crimes, like the one on Oksana Makar case. Does it mean the Ukrainian society is becoming more aggressive and cruel, or those are some single cases?

- I would not say there is a pattern or tendency. I believe these are single outbreaks of aggression, which exist in every society of all times. Norwegian Anders Breivik killed 77 people. Some years ago in Germany a schoolboy brought a gun and killed a dozen people in the school. Similar cases happen in the US. All this public reaction is conditioned not by the increase of violence, but by availability of information. 30 or 40 years ago the mass media was not so spread, and people learnt about infamous crimes belatedly or did not learn at all. But similar crimes did happen before. So I don't believe our society is becoming more aggressive and cruel.

- Ukrainians are known for their weakness to self-treatment. They do all by themselves: diagnosis, prescription, treatment. How dangerous can it be?

- If you compare the amount of drugs the Americans consume, our society will appear as an innocent baby. Americans take drugs in every case: fight with a wife, overweight, bad mood...Hence, I don't think we have such a bad situation with groundless medication. Besides, more or less serious drugs cannot be bought without a prescription, only harmless ones.

- The state service on drug control wants to cancel criminal responsibility for possession of drugs for personal use. Do you thin in this case you'll have more patients?

- Abuse of drugs is not common for our culture. Alcohol, on the other hand, is. But if we legalize drugs for personal use we will give birth to a separate group of people who will justify drug abuse following the law. Besides, possession for personal use is already legal for sick people.

- There is a new therapy based on methadone being introduced in Ukraine to treat drug addiction. But methadone is also a drug. Don't you think we will repeat the sad story of the therapy treating opium addiction with cocaine, which was widely used in 19th century?

- Back then they also used heroin to cure opium addiction. But yes, you right, we can easily let out a jinni. Methadone can be applied for heavy addicts, especially for those infected with AIDS, so they don't needle the veins. But the very fact of methadone introduction will foster a group of people, who will use this drug for fun and will eventually get addicted.


- They say that due to the financial crisis in Ukraine the number of alcoholics has increased...

- You know what. We did not start yesterday. It all began three hundred years ago. And if, let's say, our alcoholism had been increasing for all these years, we would have been doing this interview totally wasted. We drank under Peter the First reign, during the war, in 1960ies...Those who declare growth of alcohol addiction just want to promote themselves.

- Have you ever had cases of gambling addiction?

- Yes, I had several cases. In such cases patients need psychological treatment and medications to strengthen their will and reduce the craving to make a bet. We must make such patients to abandon their style of life. By the way, I do welcome the decision to forbid gambling at the legislative level.

- How successful was the treatment?

- Well, one patient recovered in full and never played again, while another one snapped once and came back for the repeated tour of therapy.

- What about internet addiction? Is it wide-spread in Ukraine?

- I believe that all those talks about internet addiction are just the latest thing in mass media world. There are, of course, some single cases, but it's not like mothers standing in line to treat their children.

- In early 60ies there was an anti-psychiatry movement originated in Ukraine. The followers of this movement accuse traditional psychiatry of being penal medicine. What is your opinion on this?

- Nobody forces anybody into treatment. We discussed this at the beginning. If a person does not want profession help, he does not get it. If a person hears voices, but goes to a voodoo-hoodoo doctors to be cured with moonlight or solar energy it is his business. Psychiatry is a medical science with long history. Ukrainian psychiatry is successful enough. Schizophrenia, for example, used to be a fatal disease, but now we can beat it. In 30-50% of mental disorder cases we achieve positive results.

- You mean full recovery?

- I mean positive results. We achieve a high level of remission. You know that gastric ulcer cannot be cured completely, but somehow nobody says that gastroenterology is unsuccessful or even penal medicine...

- There is an opinion that not all psychiatrists are equally honest. Allegedly, certain doctors fake diagnoses "insane" to help criminals escape prison...

- Oh, this is absurd. The institute of legal psychiatry has skilled doctors with many-year experience. If a person tries to fake mental illness he will be discovered very quickly. Speaking about some plots on fake diagnosis, believe me no decent doctor will not go for it. At least, I've never heard about such cases for the whole period of my practice.

Alina Yeremeyeva, author's photos
ForUm

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

12:28 PM 6/20/2012 - Mike Nova's starred items: In This Issue/Abstract Thinking: Game On: Is There a Role for Video Games in Clinical Care? via Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry

via behavioral forensics - Google Blog Search by Mike Nova on 6/9/12
Behavior and Law - General and Forensic Psychiatry News Review ..... Google Reader - Behavioral Forensics Behavioral Forensics "Behavioral Forensics" bundle created by Mike Nova A bundle is a collection of b.

The Associated Press NEW YORK — A woman arrested by New York police in August as her nude body was being painted by an artist in Times Square has filed a civil rights lawsuit against the city. The lawsuit was filed by Zoe West on Tuesday in federal court in Manhattan. It seeks unspecified damages. West alleges she was arrested in violation of her rights while being painted by Andy Golub. The 22-year-old ...

via NYT > Crime and Criminals by By ROCKY CASALE on 6/19/12
As the Mexican authorities and urban planners work to clean up some of the country's most polluted and crime-riddled urban areas, the southern city of Villahermosa is showing how it can be done.


Prison officials challenged to eradicate gangs, contraband, from ...
Bahama Islands Info (blog)
NASSAU, Bahamas -- No effort should be spared in eradicating organised gangs from the penal system, Minister of National Security, Dr. the Hon....

and more »


Norwegian killer slams court for sanity focus
Kansas City Star
Norwegian mass killer Anders Behring Breivik slammed the court Tuesday, saying his trial was centering too much on his mental state and not enough on ...

via Prison News on 6/20/12
Egyptians anxiously awaited the outcome of last weekend's presidential runoff and more clarity about the deteriorating health of ousted strongman Hosni Mubarak on Wednesday.


Mike Nova's starred items

via addiction - Google News on 6/20/12

Heroin addict thanks federal judge for jail sentence
Knoxville News Sentinel
George Kalopitas bit the hand that fed him judicial mercy seven years ago, and now he's headed to federal prison for five years.

via addiction - Google News on 6/20/12

Distinguished Sex, Porn and Relationship Addiction Experts Robert ...
PR Web (press release)
On July 13, 2012, Elements Behavioral Health will host a unique professional training featuring leading sex/tech, addiction and relationship experts Robert ...

and more »

via addiction - Google Blog Search by Bill Ford on 6/15/12
She is a medical doctor with residency in psychiatry and passion for addiction science. Nora is committed to unlocking the mystery of addiction. In 2003, She was appointed the Director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse, ...

While help-seeking and treatment preferences for depression have been assessed in a number of population studies, little is known about the public’s self-help beliefs. To explore public beliefs about self-help actions to be taken in case of depression. In spring 29, a population-based s...

<sec id="section1-2764113994">Assessing attachment style in people with schizophrenia may be important to identify a risk factor in building a strong therapeutic relationship and so indirectly to understand the development of mal-compliance as one of the major obstacles in the treatment of ...

via Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry by Stacy Salomonsen-Sautel, Joseph T. Sakai, Christian Thurstone, Robin Corley, Christian Hopfer on 5/28/12
Objective: To assess the prevalence and frequency of medical marijuana diversion and use among adolescents in substance abuse treatment and to identify factors related to their medical marijuana use. Method: This study calculated the prevalence and frequency of diverted medical marijuana use among adolescents (n = 164), ages 14–18 years (mean age = 16.09, SD = 1.12), in substance abuse treatment in the Denver metropolitan area. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were completed to determine factors related to adolescents' use of medical marijuana. Results: Approximately 74% of the adolescents had used someone else's medical marijuana, and they reported using diverted medical marijuana a median of 50 times. After adjusting for gender and race/ethnicity, adolescents who used medical marijuana had an earlier age of regular marijuana use, more marijuana abuse and dependence symptoms, and more conduct disorder symptoms compared with those who did not use medical marijuana. Conclusions: Medical marijuana use among adolescent patients in substance abuse treatment is very common, implying substantial diversion from registered users. These results support the need for policy changes that protect against diversion of medical marijuana and reduce adolescent access to diverted medical marijuana. Future studies should examine patterns of medical marijuana diversion and use in general population adolescents.

At the start [the child] absolutely needs to live in a circle of love and strength (with consequent tolerance) if he is not to be too fearful of his own thoughts and of his imaginings to make progress in his emotional development.—Donald Winnicott

In the featured article, Salomonsen-Sautel et al. assessed the prevalence and frequency of diverted medical marijuana use in a sample of adolescents recruited for a genetics study at two substance-abuse treatment programs in metropolitan Denver, Colorado. The study idea was stimulated by clinical reports that adolescents were using diverted medical marijuana. Using a simple but scientifically sound design for their study, the investigators hoped to shed light on a potential new threat to adolescent health in a state that was in the first wave to legalize dispensation of marijuana to individuals who registered for medical use after recommendation from a physician. Although their exploratory study has acknowledged limitations, it rises above anecdotal evidence by using a well-defined sample, systematic questioning about medical marijuana experience and risk perception, and assessment of mental health symptoms and disorders with standardized measurements. In the tradition of many important public health discoveries, the investigators made good use of an existing research opportunity to better understand and inform observations made in the treatment setting.

via Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry by Regina Bussing, Faye A. Gary on 7/1/12
This article describes current United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) initiatives to end health disparities and outlines suggestions about how child and adolescent psychiatrists can contribute to the Healthy People 2020 goal of achieving “health equity, eliminate disparities and improve the health of all groups.” In the decade since the Surgeon General's landmark publication, Mental Health: Culture, Race, and Ethnicity, its basic findings of striking disparities for minorities in mental health services have not changed. As shown in the most recent National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Reports, racial and ethnic minorities still have less access to mental health services than whites, and when they receive care, it is more likely to be of poorer quality. Although the exact HHS definitions vary, disparities in health care are in general defined as “racial or ethnic differences in the quality of healthcare that are not due to access-related factors or clinical needs, preferences, and appropriateness of intervention” () and consider minority status based on socioeconomic (poverty) or geographic (e.g., rural) status.


Mike Nova's starred items

There is overwhelming evidence from decades of studies that children abandoned in orphanages and related institutions are at a dramatically higher risk to develop a variety of social and behavioral difficulties. The impact of emotional and social deprivation at very young ages and the low quality of caregiving at such institutions are often long lasting and are correlated to the presence of severe psychopathology in these children. However, the mechanisms linking caregiving quality and risk of psychopathology are still not fully understood. In this issue of the Journal, McGoron and colleagues (p. 683) report intriguing findings from the Bucharest Early Intervention Project (BEIP), the first ever randomized trial of foster care as an intervention for the social deprivation associated with institutionalization in young children. The BEIP study analyzed 136 children 6 to 31 months old at baseline who were randomly assigned to care as usual, i.e., continued institutional placement, or to being transferred to a high-quality foster family. Foster care was nonexistent in Romania in the early 2000s, and the BEIP team indeed created a foster care system designed to facilitate the development of healthy attachment in children. The BEIP findings thus far confirm that children who were placed in foster care developed significantly fewer problems than children in institutional care. However, the precise mechanism responsible for such differences is not clear. Attachment is believed to play a major role in mediating the effects of caregiver quality on childhood psychopathology, and McGoron and colleagues examined the correlations among caregiving quality at 30 months, security of attachment at 42 months, and psychopathology at 54 months. This carefully performed longitudinal study demonstrated that quality of early caregiving experience in these high-risk children is inversely correlated with externalizing and internalizing disorders at an older age. Moreover, higher quality caregiving did associate with more secure attachment, and the attachment quality explained a significant proportion of the variance in psychopathology at an older age. The investigators suggest that interventions focused on developing attachment security in children exposed to caregiving adversity at a very young age can produce long-term benefits and prevent psychopathology.

via Psychiatric News Alert by noreply@blogger.com (Psychiatric News Alert) on 6/20/12

Psychiatrist Jeremy Lazarus, M.D., was inaugurated last night as president of the American Medical Association. Lazarus, pictured in the center taking the oath of office, is a former speaker of the APA Assembly. His wife Deborah is holding the Bible. Administering the oath is Robert Wah, M.D., chair of the AMA Board of Trustees.

In his presidential address, Lazarus drew on his experience as a psychiatrist to emphasize the need for unity among physicians in achieving the goals of the AMA, which include health care reform and universal access to care, malpractice liability reform, and reform of the Medicare payment system.


“In the 21st century we can advance and grow only by incorporating the insights of physicians from all specialties, cultures, practice settings, regions and ideologies,” Lazarus said. “There is a real opportunity, regardless of the political paralysis in Washington, for us to unify and promote the practice of medicine to AMA members and nonmember physicians around the country. But any success will materialize only if we are unified on the issues that matter most to us and to our patients.”

For coverage of the House of Delegates meeting see upcoming editions of Psychiatric News. For information about Lazarus see Psychiatric News here.

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Bill would fix dangerous cracks in Kendra's Law
The Journal News | LoHud.com
On Wednesday, The Journal News and LoHud. .... incompetent to stand trial in the deaths of his parents and remains in a psychiatric facility. ... Email this article ...

via BMC Psychiatry - Latest Articles by Maria Elena Cinti on 6/19/12
Background: This is an update of a previous meta-analysis published in 2005. Methods: It includes the data published up to march 2010 for a total of 247 papers and 18,300 cases. Cognitive deficits are examined in 5 different domains: Memory functioning (128 studies), Global cognitive functioning (131 studies), Language (70 studies), Executive function (67 studies), Attention (76 studies). Only controlled studies were included: patients vs. normal subjects. Results: Results evidence that in all domains and in all different analyses performed within each domain, patients show a significant reduction of cognitive efficiency with respect to normal subjects. The between studies heterogeneity is very high in almost all domains. There are various sources of this heterogeneity (age, sex, sample size, type of patients, and type of measurement) which contribute to the high degree of not-overlapping information offered by the single studies. Conclusions: Our results, based on the current scientific evidence, confirm the previous findings that there is a generalized impairment of various cognitive functions in patients with schizophrenia when compared to normal cases. The modalities with which these results are obtained have not changed over the years and the more recent studies do not modify the high heterogeneity previously found between the studies. This reduces the methodological quality of the results. In order to improve the methodological quality of the studies performed in the field of cognitive deficits of patients with schizophrenia, various factors should be taken into account and better managed in designing future studies.

via NO v. Breivik :: Uncensored by Andrea Muhrrteyn on 6/19/12


Breivik's Correspondence to Russian Nationalists to setup a Pan-European Prison Support Network for ethnic and cultural protectionism

This is why I have spent so much time contributing to create a new ideology, national conservatism. Ethnic and cultural protectionism is the core of this ideology.

Andrea Muhrrteyn | Nicola & RusImperia.Info | 17 June 2012


As for Europe, it is a big problem in western Europe that muslims are dominating in many prisons, especially in France where approximately 70% of the prisoners are Muslim. Many European prisoners are even forcefully converted to Islam against their will, or have had to convert to Islam to stay alive. Other prisoners in a couple of countries are forced to eat halal meat because the prison authorities has decided that serving this is "more economical". Of course this is completely unacceptable. My brother in Denmark has a prize on his head set by muslims so he and other ethnic Danes have been segregated in one wing of the prison in order to prevent violence. you are of course aware of many of these problems and they will increase the next decade because Europe is slowly being drowned to death by especially Islamic Asians and African immigrants.

So yes, my goal is to develop a pan-European prison network consisting of European patriotic martyrs and other politically orientated prisoners. The goal should be to develop a fully operational support organisation for European patriotic martyrs.



Breivik's Correspondence to Russian Nationalists to setup a Pan-European Prison Support Network & detailing the core of national conservatism: ethnic and cultural protectionism


Anders Breivik approved the nomination of Nicholas (Николы Королёва), as head of the department of his organization in Russia, the website DPNI.org. Previously, Breivik said that would create a pan-European network of right-wing radicals of the prisoners by the nationalists in Russia.

Apparently, the Russian representative organizations will be created by Korolev before the Association of White prisoners. Recall that the board of the Association to date, includes representatives of the radical terrorist groups, such as: SPAS, ABTO, VAT-north, and others.

The primary objective of the organization - is providing mutual support among imprisoned nationalists. In the near future the site will earn the Association.

The following is a translation of a letter from Anders Breivik (in a slight reduction) and a photocopy of the original.


************


Dear colleagues from Russia!

Dear Russian brother!

It is true that I am working to create a pan-European prison network. Im in the process of contacting Beate Zschäpe in Germany (she Mundlos Uwe, Uwe Bonhardt NSP created a group, the nationalist underground, which wiped out 12 people from 2002 to 2011) and Peter Mangs in Sweden (who shot 10, killing 1 maybe 3 in Malmo) among several others. Beate and Peter have not been convicted yet so I doubt I will hear from them until after their trial is done, due to the fact that they are both pleading innocent.

I'm already in contact with a couple of Norwegians and a patriotic brother in Denmark. This is a slow process for me as I haven't had much time yet for corresponding due to several critical issues. One positive thing with my case though is that the massive media coverage have resulted in several hundred letters from patriots from more than 24 countries, which has enabled me to get in contact with key individuals across the world. This will make the job of creating the network easier for sure, and I am willing to forward contact details as soon as I have gained permission from them to do so ;-)

I have fought very hard to de-legitimize the first fake psychiatric report and this struggle has taken a lot of time. I have also had to prepare for the ongoing trial that started April 16th and will last until July 20th. After that I will have much more time to spend on the patriotic prison network. I estimate that there are at least up to 3000 patriotic prisoners in western-Europe who will be interested to join but it will take years of work to organize them and unite them all, but this will go much faster if we can work together effectively, and share contact addresses, and recruiting more leaders who are fluent in English and willing to network. I am sorry to hear that your regime disallows contact between prisoners. That is unfortunately an extremely effective and a very crippling policy (;-(). I'm glad you have found a way to bypass this.

As for Europe, it is a big problem in western Europe that muslims are dominating in many prisons, especially in France where approximately 70% of the prisoners are Muslim. Many European prisoners are even forcefully converted to Islam against their will, or have had to convert to Islam to stay alive. Other prisoners in a couple of countries are forced to eat halal meat because the prison authorities has decided that serving this is "more economical". Of course this is completely unacceptable. My brother in Denmark has a prize on his head set by muslims so he and other ethnic Danes have been segregated in one wing of the prison in order to prevent violence. you are of course aware of many of these problems and they will increase the next decade because Europe is slowly being drowned to death by especially Islamic Asians and African immigrants.

So yes, my goal is to develop a pan-European prison network consisting of European patriotic martyrs and other politically orientated prisoners. The goal should be to develop a fully operational support organisation for European patriotic martyrs.

The long term goals of the network/organisation should be to provide the following to our brothers: 1. Creating a brotherhood in several prisons in Europe, which should offer protection against muslim attacks in prisons. 2. To educate our brothers and sisters - focus on general education, to learn english (for cross border communication) and essay writing skills. The pen is in fact just as powerfula s the sword. The last goal of the organisation should be to attempt to create an economical fundament to support the wives and children of our martyrs.