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Dive into the research topics where Connie D. Hill is active.

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Featured researches published by Connie D. Hill.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 1986

Cognitive Impairment in late-life depression: Clinical correlates and treatment implications☆

Asenath La Rue; James E. Spar; Connie D. Hill

Elderly depressed inpatients with high vs. low scores on a quantitative mental status examination (the Mini-Mental State (MMS)) were compared with regard to demographic and clinical characteristics, treatment and short-term response, and functional status at 2-year follow-up. Low-MMS patients were less well educated and more likely to be delusional, anxious, and globally impaired than high-MMS patients. The two groups responded equally well to treatment, but the low-MMS group required a lengthier hospital stay and greater use of neuroleptic medications. The two groups also had similar long-term outcomes, although greater attrition was observed among cognitively impaired subjects.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 1998

Lithium Intolerance in a Medical-Psychiatric Population

Alan Stoudemire; Connie D. Hill; Barbara Lewison; Marti Marquardt; Sandy Dalton

This pilot study was designed to explore the tolerance and efficacy of lithium as an adjunctive prophylactic agent when added to maintenance antidepressant regimens following an episode of depression in an older medical-psychiatric population. In a randomized controlled trial, 27 depressed patients had either lithium carbonate or placebo added to their maintenance antidepressant (AD) regimen following an index episode of depression. Of 17 patients who received lithium carbonate, 76% (13/17) were unable to tolerate this agent for the duration of the study because of side effects (e.g., gastrointestinal disturbances or tremor). The four patients who tolerated lithium were monitored for relapse of depression over a 15-month follow-up period, and one relapsed (after a 49-week remission) whereas 60% (6/10) of the placebo patients relapsed. Cognitive functioning was stable in the lithium-treated patients who remained on therapy. The high rate of lithium intolerance in this study indicates that lithium dosing and serum levels must be conservatively managed in this clinical population.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 1998

Recovery and relapse in geriatric depression after treatment with antidepressants and ECT in a medical-psychiatric population.

Alan Stoudemire; Connie D. Hill; Martha Marquardt; Sandy Dalton; Barbara Lewison

The objective of this naturalistic, longitudinal treatment outcome study was to determine relapse rates in geriatric depression following treatment with antidepressants and electroconvulsive therapy in a medical-psychiatric population. Thirty-nine elderly patients (average age 71 years) with unipolar major depression were treated with either antidepressants (AD) or, if resistant to AD treatment, ECT followed by maintenance antidepressants. Patients were monitored over 18 months, and relapse rates were closely determined using the Longitudinal Interval Follow-up Evaluation (LIFE) and the 21-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. Although 90% of patients recovered from their index episode of depression, relapse rates were approximately 29%. These results indicate that in spite of high chances of recovery from geriatric depression, intensive psychopharmacologic and psychotherapeutic strategies are needed to decrease relapse rates in geriatric depression.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1994

Rehospitalization Rates in Older Depressed Adults After Antidepressant and Electroconvulsive Therapy Treatment

Alan Stoudemire; Connie D. Hill; Sandra T. Dalton; Martha Marquardt

OBJECTIVE: To determine (1) if a “high risk” period for rehospitalization can be identified in a population of depressed older adults and (2) if age of onset and previous history of depression is associated with an increased risk of rehospitalization.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 1991

Cognitive outcome following tricyclic and electroconvulsive treatment of major depression in the elderly

Alan Stoudemire; Connie D. Hill; Robin D. Morris; David Martino-Saltzman; Markwalter H; Barbara Lewison


American Journal of Psychiatry | 1993

Long-term affective and cognitive outcome in depressed older adults.

Alan Stoudemire; Connie D. Hill; Robin D. Morris; David Martino-Saltzman; Barbara Lewison


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1995

Improvement in depression-related cognitive dysfunction following ECT.

Alan Stoudemire; Connie D. Hill; Robin D. Morris; Dalton St


Gerontologist | 1988

The Role of Anticipatory Bereavement in Older Women's Adjustment to Widowhood

Connie D. Hill; Larry W. Thompson; Dolores Gallagher


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1989

Neuropsychological and biomedical assessment of depression-dementia syndromes.

Alan Stoudemire; Connie D. Hill; Gulley Lr; Robin D. Morris


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1993

Similarities and differences in memory deficits in patients with primary dementia and depression-related cognitive dysfunction.

Connie D. Hill; Alan Stoudemire; Robin D. Morris; David Martino-Saltzman; Markwalter H

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Asenath La Rue

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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