Andrew Shaner
University of California, Los Angeles
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Featured researches published by Andrew Shaner.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1998
Joseph Ventura; Robert Paul Liberman; Michael F. Green; Andrew Shaner; Jim Mintz
Accuracy in psychiatric diagnosis is critical for evaluating the suitability of the subjects for entry into research protocols and for establishing comparability of findings across study sites. However, training programs in the use of diagnostic instruments for research projects are not well systematized. Furthermore, little information has been published on the maintenance of interrater reliability of diagnostic assessments. At the UCLA Research Center for Major Mental Illnesses, a Training and Quality Assurance Program for SCID interviewers was used to evaluate interrater reliability and diagnostic accuracy. Although clinically experienced interviewers achieved better interrater reliability and overall diagnostic accuracy than neophyte interviewers, both groups were able to achieve and maintain high levels of interrater reliability, diagnostic accuracy, and interviewer skill. At the first quality assurance check after training, there were no significant differences between experienced and neophyte interviewers in interrater reliability or diagnostic accuracy. Standardization of training and quality assurance procedures within and across research projects may make research findings from study sites more comparable.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1995
Andrew Shaner; Thad A. Eckman; Lisa J. Roberts; Jeffery N. Wilkins; Douglas E. Tucker; John Tsuang; Jim Mintz
BACKGROUND Many patients with serious mental illness are addicted to drugs and alcohol. This comorbidity creates additional problems for the patients and for the clinicians, health care systems, and social-service agencies that provide services to this population. One problem is that disability income, which many people with serious mental illness receive to pay for basic needs, may facilitate drug abuse. In this study, we assessed the temporal patterns of cocaine use, psychiatric symptoms, and psychiatric hospitalization in a sample of schizophrenic patients receiving disability income. METHODS We evaluated 105 male patients with schizophrenia and cocaine dependence at the time of their admission to the hospital. They had severe mental illness and a long-term dependence on cocaine, with repeated admissions to psychiatric hospitals; many were homeless. The severity of psychiatric symptoms and urinary concentrations of the cocaine metabolite benzoylecgonine were evaluated weekly for 15 weeks. RESULTS Cocaine use, psychiatric symptoms, and hospital admissions all peaked during the first week of the month, shortly after the arrival of the disability payment, on the first day. The average patient spent nearly half his total income on illegal drugs. CONCLUSIONS Among cocaine-abusing schizophrenic persons, the cyclic pattern of drug use strongly suggests that it is influenced by the monthly receipt of disability payments. The consequences of this cycle include the depletion of funds needed for housing and food, exacerbation of psychiatric symptoms, more frequent psychiatric hospitalization, and a high rate of homelessness. The troubling irony is that income intended to compensate for the disabling effects of severe mental illness may have the opposite effect.
Psychopathology | 1990
Arturo Silva; Gregory B. Leong; Andrew Shaner
Misidentification syndromes have traditionally relied upon the patients delusional explanation for their classification. Using 2 cases for illustration, a more systematic classification is proposed for misidentification syndromes. The revised nomenclature has potential use in future research of misidentification syndromes.
Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 1991
Hari Khalsa; Andrew Shaner; M. Douglas Anglin; Jung-chi Wang
The prevalence of substance abuse and psychiatric illness was studied in a Psychiatric Evaluations Unit. Twenty-six percent of the subjects received a psychiatric diagnosis only with no concomitant substance use disorder. Thirty-four percent were diagnosed with a substance use disorder but with no other psychiatric disorders. Thirty-nine percent of the subjects had a history of both psychiatric and substance use disorder; 62% of these substance abusers with a psychiatric illness reported using drugs (including alcohol) the week before the interview; 56% used illicit drugs while 44% used alcohol only. Differences among substance abusers with a psychiatric illness, those with a substance abuse diagnosis alone, and those with a psychiatric diagnosis alone are presented.
Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2002
Marc I. Rosen; Robert A. Rosenheck; Andrew Shaner; Thad A. Eckman; Gail Gamache; Christopher Krebs
Patients who mismanage their funds may benefit from financial advice, case management or the involuntary assignment of a payee who restricts direct access to funds. Data from a survey of psychiatric inpatients at four VA hospitals (N = 236) was used to evaluate the relationship between substance abuse and clinician-rated need for money management assistance. Multivariate analytic techniques were used to control for sociodemographic factors and psychopathology. Alcohol and drug use severity both were modestly associated with need for assistance. The effect of substance use severity was greater in patients who were also diagnosed with a major mental illness. Clinicians indicated that 27 patients (11% of the sample) required an involuntary payee and 21 of the 27 (78%) had a Substance Abuse diagnosis. Only drug use severity was significantly associated with need for a payee. These data describe a substantial unmet need for money management assistance in psychiatric inpatients, particularly among those with substance abuse disorders. There is a need to examine the process by which the Social Security and Veterans Benefits Administrations assign payees to determine whether patients with co-morbid substance abuse are not being assigned a payee in spite of their discernible need for one.
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 1989
J. Arturo Silva; Gregory B. Leong; Andrew Shaner; Christine Y. Chang
Capgras syndrome is an often reported misidentification syndrome. In contrast, the syndrome of intermetamorphosis has been rarely reported. We describe three new cases of the syndrome of intermetamorphosis and propose a new nomenclature that may further systematic study of misidentification syndromes.
Human Nature | 2008
Andrew Shaner; Geoffrey P. Miller; Jim Mintz
Siblings compete for parental care and feeding, while parents must allocate scarce resources to those offspring most likely to survive and reproduce. This could cause offspring to evolve traits that advertise health, and thereby attract parental resources. For example, experimental evidence suggests that bright orange filaments covering the heads of North American coot chicks may have evolved for this fitness-advertising purpose. Could any human mental disorders be the equivalent of dull filaments in coot chicks—low-fitness extremes of mental abilities that evolved as fitness indicators? One possibility is autism. Suppose that the ability of very young children to charm their parents evolved as a parentally selected fitness indicator. Young children would vary greatly in their ability to charm parents, that variation would correlate with underlying fitness, and autism could be the low-fitness extreme of this variation. This view explains many seemingly disparate facts about autism and leads to some surprising and testable predictions.
Schizophrenia Research | 2007
Andrew Shaner; Geoffrey P. Miller; Jim Mintz
Variation in the age at onset of a multifactorial disease often reflects variation in cause. Here we show a linear latitudinal gradient in the mean age at onset of schizophrenia in 13 northern hemisphere cities, ranging from 25 years old in Cali, Columbia (at 4 degrees north) to 35 years old in Moscow, Russia (at 56 degrees north). To our knowledge, this striking association has not been previously reported. We consider several explanations, including the effects of pathogen stress, natural selection, sexual selection, migration, life-history profiles, or some combination of these factors, and we propose a test of competing causal hypotheses.
Psychopathology | 1991
Silva Ja; Gregory B. Leong; Andrew Shaner
A series of 154 patients suffering from the syndrome of intermetamorphosis or its variants is discussed in terms of this misidentification syndromes historical, classification, diagnostic, and psychosocial aspects. One case is presented in detail.
Administration and Policy in Mental Health | 2003
Marc I. Rosen; Robert A. Rosenheck; Andrew Shaner; Thad A. Eckman; Gail Gamache; Christopher Krebs
One rationale for establishing programs that help patients manage their funds is that such patients make extensive use of expensive inpatient services. We surveyed the money management habits of 406 inpatients and determined their use of Veterans Administration (VA) services and related costs over the subsequent year. In multivariate analyses, there was no statistically significant relationship between need for money management and service use or cost. The misspending of funds for drugs may precipitate hospitalization for some outpatients. However, in a sample of hospitalized patients, mismanagement of funds was not associated with longer length of stay or increased service use following discharge.