David A. Stayner
Yale University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by David A. Stayner.
Community Mental Health Journal | 2001
Matthew Chinman; Richard Weingarten; David A. Stayner; Larry Davidson
In the past, the term “chronic” referred to people who had serious mental illness and who typically received long-term care in a state mental hospital. Although this term recently has fallen out of favor, we resurrect the term here, not to revive a demeaning euphemism, but rather to redefine it as the result of a poor person-environment fit between the complex and challenging needs of those with serious psychiatric disorders and a community-based service system that often is ill-equipped to treat them. Previous research indicates that recurrent acute hospitalizations and an inability to establish or maintain tenure in the community may be due to a disconnection from community-based services and supports, social isolation, and demoralization. One promising approach to addressing these issues is that of peer support. To illustrate the potential utility of peer support in improving person-environment fit and decreasing the chronicity of the subsample of people who continue to have difficulty in establishing viable footholds in the community, we describe a peer support-based program, the Welcome Basket, developed, staffed, and managed entirely by mental health consumers. Preliminary analyses that evaluate Welcome Baskets effectiveness are included, and we discuss the implications of these data for future research and program development in this area.
Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings | 2000
Michael A. Hoge; David A. Stayner; Larry Davidson
Despite an increasing focus over the past 2 decades by federal and state governments on the care of persons with severe mental illness, psychologists remain underrepresented among behavioral health professionals working with this population. Within the discipline there is growing concern about the need to adequately train, recruit, and retain psychologists in this specialty. This is a particular concern in academic medical settings where the overall severity of illness among those receiving psychiatric services continues to increase. The purpose of this qualitative research study was to intensively examine the experience of predoctoral interns engaged in treating individuals with severe mental illness in an academic medical center in order to identify the professional developmental experiences and training needs of those learning to care for this population. This analysis, conducted with semistructured interviews at four points during the internship year, yielded a series of recommendations for improving internship training and recruiting psychologists to this specialty.
Clinical Psychology-science and Practice | 2006
Larry Davidson; Matthew Chinman; Bret Kloos; Richard Weingarten; David A. Stayner; Jacob Kraemer Tebes
Journal of Community Psychology | 2004
Larry Davidson; Golan Shahar; David A. Stayner; Matthew Chinman; Jaak Rakfeldt; Jacob Kraemer Tebes
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal | 2001
Larry Davidson; David A. Stayner; Connie Nickou; Thomas Styron; Michael Rowe; Matthew L. Chinman
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal | 2001
Larry Davidson; Karl Haglund; David A. Stayner; Jaak Rakfeldt; Matthew Chinman; Jacob Kraemer Tebes
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal | 1997
Larry Davidson; David A. Stayner
Psychiatric Quarterly | 2004
David Sells; David A. Stayner; Larry Davidson
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2002
Renee D. Goodwin; David A. Stayner; Matthew Chinman; Ping Wu; Jacob Kraemer Tebes; Larry Davidson
Journal of Social Issues | 1997
Larry Davidson; David A. Stayner; Stacey Lambert; Peter J. Smith; William H. Sledge