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Dive into the research topics where Brent T. Mausbach is active.

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Featured researches published by Brent T. Mausbach.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2010

Prediction of Real World Functional Disability in Chronic Mental Disorders: A Comparison of Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder

Christopher R. Bowie; Colin A. Depp; John A. McGrath; Paula Wolyniec; Brent T. Mausbach; Mary H. Thornquist; James R. Luke; Thomas L. Patterson; Philip D. Harvey; Ann E. Pulver

OBJECTIVE Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are associated with multidimensional disability. This study examined differential predictors of functional deficits in the two disorders. METHOD Community-dwelling individuals with schizophrenia (N=161) or bipolar disorder (N=130) were assessed with neuropsychological tests, symptom measures, and performance-based social and adaptive (i.e., everyday living skills) functional competence measures as well as three domains of real-world functioning: community and household activities; work skills; and interpersonal relationships. The authors used confirmatory path analysis to find the best-fitting models to examine the direct and indirect (as mediated by competence) prediction of the three domains of real-world functioning. RESULTS In all models for both groups, neurocognitions relationship with outcomes was largely mediated by competence. Symptoms were negatively associated with outcomes but unassociated with competence, with the exception of depression, which was a direct and mediated (through social competence) predictor in bipolar disorder. In both groups, neurocognition was related to activities directly and through a mediated relationship with adaptive competence. Work skills were directly and indirectly (through mediation with social competence) predicted by neurocognition in schizophrenia and entirely mediated by adaptive and social competence in bipolar disorder. Neurocognition was associated with interpersonal relationships directly in the schizophrenia group and mediated by social competence in both groups. CONCLUSIONS Although there was greater disability in schizophrenia, neurocognition predicted worse functioning in all outcome domains in both disorders. These results support the shared role of neurocognition in bipolar disorder and schizophrenia in producing disability, with predictive differences between disorders in domain-specific effects of symptoms and social and adaptive competence.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2010

Mobile Interventions for Severe Mental Illness: Design and Preliminary Data from Three Approaches

Colin A. Depp; Brent T. Mausbach; Eric Granholm; Veronica Cardenas; Dror Ben-Zeev; Thomas L. Patterson; Barry D. Lebowitz; Dilip V. Jeste

Mobile devices can be used to deliver psychosocial interventions, yet there is little prior application in severe mental illness. We provide the rationale, design, and preliminary data from 3 ongoing clinical trials of mobile interventions developed for bipolar disorder or schizophrenia. Project 1 used a personal digital assistant to prompt engagement in personalized self-management behaviors based on real-time data. Project 2 employed experience sampling through text messages to facilitate case management. Project 3 was built on group functional skills training for schizophrenia by incorporating between-session mobile phone contacts with therapists. Preliminary findings were of minimal participant attrition, and no broken devices; yet, several operational and technical barriers needed to be addressed. Adherence was similar to that reported in nonpsychiatric populations, with high participant satisfaction. Therefore, mobile devices seem feasible and acceptable in augmenting psychosocial interventions for severe mental illness, with future research in establishing efficacy, cost effectiveness, and ethical and safety protocols.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2012

Combined Cognitive Remediation and Functional Skills Training for Schizophrenia: Effects on Cognition, Functional Competence, and Real-World Behavior

Christopher R. Bowie; Susan R. McGurk; Brent T. Mausbach; Thomas L. Patterson; Philip D. Harvey

OBJECTIVE Cognitive remediation is an efficacious treatment for schizophrenia and, when used within broader psychosocial treatments, improves transfer to real-world behavior change. The authors examined whether cognitive remediation effectively generalizes to functional competence and real-world functioning as a standalone treatment and when combined with a functional skills treatment. METHOD Outpatients with schizophrenia (N=107) were randomly assigned to receive cognitive remediation, functional adaptation skills training, or combined treatment, with cognitive remediation preceding functional skills training. Clinical symptoms, neurocognition, social competence, functional competence, and case-manager-rated real-world behavior were assessed at baseline, at end of treatment, and at a 12-week durability assessment. RESULTS Neurocognition improved, with durable effects, after cognitive remediation but not after functional skills training. Social competence improved both with functional skills training and with combined treatment but not with cognitive remediation alone. Improvements in functional competence were greater and more durable with combined treatment. Cognitive remediation alone did not produce significant improvements in real-world behavior, but when combined with functional skills training, statistically significant improvements from baseline to end of treatment and follow-up were observed in community or household activities and work skills. Number-needed-to-treat analyses suggest that as few as three cases are required for treatment to induce a meaningful improvement in functional skills. CONCLUSIONS In a short intervention, cognitive remediation produced robust improvements in neurocognition. Generalization to functional competence and real-world behavior was more likely when supplemental skills training and cognitive remediation were combined.


Bipolar Disorders | 2012

Meta-Analysis of the Association Between Cognitive Abilities and Everyday Functioning in Bipolar Disorder

Colin A. Depp; Brent T. Mausbach; Alexandrea L. Harmell; Gauri N. Savla; Christopher R. Bowie; Philip D. Harvey; Thomas L. Patterson

Depp CA, Mausbach BT, Harmell AL, Savla GN, Bowie CR, Harvey PD, Patterson TL. Meta‐analysis of the association between cognitive abilities and everyday functioning in bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disord 2012: 14: 217–226.


American Journal of Public Health | 2008

Efficacy of a Brief Behavioral Intervention to Promote Condom Use Among Female Sex Workers in Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico

Thomas L. Patterson; Brent T. Mausbach; Remedios Lozada; Hugo Staines-Orozco; Shirley J. Semple; Miguel Fraga-Vallejo; Prisci Orozovich; Daniela Abramovitz; Adela de la Torre; Hortensia Amaro; Gustavo J. Martinez; Carlos Magis-Rodriguez; Steffanie A. Strathdee

OBJECTIVES We examined the efficacy of a brief behavioral intervention to promote condom use among female sex workers in Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. METHODS We randomized 924 female sex workers 18 years or older without known HIV infection living in Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez who had recently had unprotected sex with clients to a 30-minute behavioral intervention or a didactic control condition. At baseline and 6 months, women underwent interviews and testing for HIV, syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia. RESULTS We observed a 40% decline in cumulative sexually transmitted illness incidence (P = .049) in the intervention group. Incidence density for the intervention versus control groups was 13.8 versus 24.92 per 100 person-years for sexually transmitted illnesses combined (P = .034) and 0 versus 2.01 per 100 person-years for HIV (P < .001). There were concomitant increases in the number and percentage of protected sex acts and decreases in the number of unprotected sex acts with clients (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS This brief behavioral intervention shows promise in reducing HIV and sexually transmitted illness risk behaviors among female sex workers and may be transferable to other resource-constrained settings.


Gerontology | 2008

Increased Framingham Coronary Heart Disease Risk Score in Dementia Caregivers Relative to Non-Caregiving Controls

Roland von Känel; Brent T. Mausbach; Thomas L. Patterson; Joel E. Dimsdale; Kirstin Aschbacher; Paul J. Mills; Michael G. Ziegler; Sonia Ancoli-Israel; Igor Grant

Background: Elderly individuals who provide care to a spouse suffering from dementia bear an increased risk of coronary heart disease (CHD). Objective: To test the hypothesis that the Framingham CHD Risk Score would be higher in dementia caregivers relative to non-caregiving controls. Methods: We investigated 64 caregivers providing in-home care for their spouse with Alzheimer’s disease and 41 gender-matched non-caregiving controls. All subjects (mean age 70 ± 8 years, 75% women, 93% Caucasian) had a negative history of CHD and cerebrovascular disease. The original Framingham CHD Risk Score was computed adding up categorical scores for age, blood lipids, blood pressure, diabetes, and smoking with adjustment made for sex. Results: The average CHD risk score was higher in caregivers than in controls even when co-varying for socioeconomic status, health habits, medication, and psychological distress (8.0 ± 2.9 vs. 6.3 ± 3.0 points, p = 0.013). The difference showed a medium effect size (Cohen’s d = 0.57). A relatively higher blood pressure in caregivers than in controls made the greatest contribution to this difference. The probability (area under the receiver operator curve) that a randomly selected caregiver had a greater CHD risk score than a randomly selected non-caregiver was 65.5%. Conclusions: Based on the Framingham CHD Risk Score, the potential to develop overt CHD in the following 10 years was predicted to be greater in dementia caregivers than in non-caregiving controls. The magnitude of the difference in the CHD risk between caregivers and controls appears to be clinically relevant. Clinicians may want to monitor caregiving status as a routine part of standard evaluation of their elderly patients’ cardiovascular risk.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2008

Measures of endothelial dysfunction in plasma of patients with posttraumatic stress disorder.

Roland von Känel; Urs Hepp; Rafael Traber; Bernd Kraemer; Ladislav Mica; Marius Keel; Brent T. Mausbach; Ulrich Schnyder

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) confers an increased cardiovascular risk. In 14 otherwise healthy patients with PTSD and in 14 age- and gender-matched non-PTSD controls, we investigated whether the categorical diagnosis of PTSD and severity of PTSD symptom clusters (i.e. re-experiencing, avoidance, arousal, and overall score) would be associated with plasma concentrations of three markers of endothelial dysfunction [soluble tissue factor (sTF), von Willebrand factor (VWF), and soluble intercellular adhesion molecule (sICAM)-1]. Compared with controls, patients had significantly higher sTF; this difference became nonsignificant when controlling for psychological distress. VWF and sICAM-1 levels were not significantly different between patients and controls. In the entire sample virtually all PTSD symptom clusters correlated significantly and positively with sTF and VWF but not with sICAM-1. The correlation between symptoms of re-experiencing and sTF was significantly different between patients and controls. Controlling for symptoms of anxiety and depression (i.e. psychological distress) rendered most associations between PTSD symptom clusters and sTF nonsignificant, whereas controlling for age retained significance of associations with VWF. Posttraumatic stress showed a continuous relationship with sTF and VWF, with the former relationship being partly affected by psychological distress. This suggests one mechanism by which posttraumatic stress could contribute to atherosclerosis.


Schizophrenia Research | 2008

Neuropsychological substrates and everyday functioning implications of prospective memory impairment in schizophrenia

Elizabeth W. Twamley; Steven Paul Woods; Cynthia H. Zurhellen; Mary Vertinski; Jenille M. Narvaez; Brent T. Mausbach; Thomas L. Patterson; Dilip V. Jeste

Individuals with schizophrenia demonstrate impairment in prospective memory (ProM), which describes the multifaceted ability to execute a future intention. Despite its clear implications for everyday functioning, the neuropsychological substrates and functional correlates of ProM impairment in schizophrenia remain poorly understood. In this study, the Memory for Intentions Screening Test (MIST), a standardized measure of ProM, was administered to 72 outpatients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder as part of a comprehensive neuropsychological and psychiatric research evaluation. Results showed that ProM was positively correlated with standard clinical tests of attention, working memory, processing speed, learning, and executive functioning, but not delayed recall. In the context of multiple neuropsychological predictors, learning ability was the only domain that independently contributed to ProM. Importantly, better ProM was predictive of higher functional capacity (as measured by the UCSD Performance-Based Skills Assessment-Brief Version), above and beyond the variability explained by demographic and disease factors. Analysis of component processes revealed that event-based ProM, as well as no response (i.e., omission) and task substitution errors were the strongest predictors of everyday functioning. Overall, these findings suggest that ProM impairment in schizophrenia is associated with multiple cognitive substrates, particularly episodic learning deficits, and plays an important role in everyday living skills. Studies regarding the potential effectiveness of ProM-based remediation strategies to improve functional outcomes in schizophrenia are indicated.


Aging & Mental Health | 2007

The attenuating effect of personal mastery on the relations between stress and Alzheimer caregiver health: A five-year longitudinal analysis

Brent T. Mausbach; Thomas L. Patterson; R. Von Känel; Paul J. Mills; Joel E. Dimsdale; Sonia Ancoli-Israel; Igor Grant

The objectives of this study were to evaluate the impact of personal mastery and caregiving stress on caregiver depressive symptoms and health over time and to examine the moderating effect of mastery on the relations between stress and these outcomes. A total of 130 spousal Alzheimer caregivers completed yearly assessments of personal mastery, role overload, health symptoms and depressive symptoms. Random regression was used to evaluate the relations between time-varying values for stress and mastery in predicting depressive and health symptoms. It was found that variation in depressive symptoms over time was significantly related to role overload (p<0.05) and personal mastery (p<0.001). A significant overload-by-mastery interaction was found for predicting depressive symptoms (p=0.002) and caregiver health (p=0.008), whereby mastery attenuated the effect of stress on these outcomes. We conclude that personal mastery appears to reduce the effects of stress on depression and health outcomes over time.


Current Psychiatry Reports | 2011

A Review of the Psychobiology of Dementia Caregiving: A Focus on Resilience Factors

Alexandrea L. Harmell; Elizabeth A. Chattillion; Susan K. Roepke; Brent T. Mausbach

The recent aging trend in the United States has resulted in exponential growth in the number of informal dementia caregivers. Caring for a family member with dementia has been associated with negative health outcomes that are likely related to physiologic changes resulting from stress. However, caregiving is not always associated with health morbidity. In this review, we highlight resilience factors that appear to have a beneficial relationship with health outcomes. Specifically, we highlight 11 studies that examined the relationship of one of three broad resilience domains (personal mastery, self-efficacy, and coping style) to caregiver health outcomes. Our main findings were that higher levels of personal mastery and self-efficacy, and increased use of positive coping strategies appear to have a protective effect on various health outcomes in dementia caregivers. Continued research is warranted to help guide prospective directions for caregiver interventions focusing on increasing caregiver resilience and the corresponding impact on caregiver health.

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Igor Grant

University of California

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Paul J. Mills

University of California

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Colin A. Depp

University of California

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Dilip V. Jeste

University of California

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