Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Lisa J. Roberts is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lisa J. Roberts.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1999

Methods for defining and determining the clinical significance of treatment effects: description, application, and alternatives.

Neil S. Jacobson; Lisa J. Roberts; Sara B. Berns; Joseph B. McGlinchey

This article summarizes and scrutinizes the growth of the development of clinically relevant and psychometrically sound approaches for determining the clinical significance of treatment effects in mental health research by tracing its evolution, by examining modifications in the method, and by discussing representative applications. Future directions for this methodology are proposed.


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2002

Test-retest reliability of alcohol measures: is there a difference between internet-based assessment and traditional methods?

Elizabeth T. Miller; Derrick J. Neal; Lisa J. Roberts; John S. Baer; Sally O. Cressler; Jane Metrik; G. Alan Marlatt

This study compared Web-based assessment techniques with traditional paper-based methods of commonly used measures of alcohol use. Test-retest reliabilities were obtained, and tests of validity were conducted. A total of 255 participants were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 conditions: paper-based (P&P), Web-based (Web), or Web-based with interruption (Web-I). Follow-up assessments 1 week later indicated reliabilities ranging from .59 to .93 within all measures and across all assessment methods. Significantly high test-retest reliability coefficients support the use of these measures for research and clinical applications. Furthermore, no significant differences were found between assessment techniques, suggesting that Web-based methods are a suitable alternative to more traditional methods. This cost-efficient alternative has the advantage of minimizing data collection and entry errors while increasing survey accessibility.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1995

Disability income, cocaine use, and repeated hospitalization among schizophrenic cocaine abusers: A government-sponsored revolving door?

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.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2000

Individual drinking changes following a brief intervention among college students: clinical significance in an indicated preventive context.

Lisa J. Roberts; Neal Dj; Daniel R. Kivlahan; John S. Baer; G. A. Marlatt

This study investigated the clinical significance of previously reported statistically significant mean reductions in drinking and related problems among college students in a randomized trial of a brief indicated preventive intervention (G. A. Marlatt et al., 1998). Data were analyzed over a 2-year follow-up for participants from a high-risk intervention group (n = 153), a high-risk control group (n = 160), and a functional comparison group (n = 77). A risk cutpoint for each dependent measure was based on the functional comparison group distribution. Compared with the high-risk controls, more individuals in the high-risk intervention group improved and fewer worsened, especially on alcohol-related problems and, to a lesser extent, on drinking pattern variables. These data from a prevention context clarify the magnitude and direction of individual change obscured by group means.


Military Medicine | 2005

Predicting costs of veterans affairs health care in Gulf War veterans with medically unexplained physical symptoms

Jan Tackett; Matthew L. Maciejewski; Ralph D. Richardson; Stephen C. Hunt; Lisa J. Roberts; Miles McFall

Measures of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression were used to predict Veterans Affairs outpatient treatment costs among Persian Gulf War veterans with medically unexplained physical symptoms. Patients (N = 206) enrolled in a Veterans Affairs primary care clinic for Persian Gulf War veterans completed study assessments at the initial appointment or at a proximal follow-up visit. Costs of care for mental health, medical, and pharmacy services for these veterans were computed for the subsequent 6-month period. Depression and PTSD symptoms explained a significant share of variance in costs of mental health care and pharmacy services, after adjustment for covariates. None of the mental status measures was significantly related to costs of medical care. Models using global measures of mental health status were as robust as models using disorder-specific measures of PTSD and depression in predicting mental health care and pharmacy costs. The implications of these findings for anticipating costs of care for Persian Gulf War veterans are discussed.


Professional Psychology: Research and Practice | 2002

The utility of interdisciplinary training and service: Psychology training on a psychiatry consultation-liaison service

Karen B. Schmaling; Nicholas D. Giardino; Kathryn E. Korslund; Lisa J. Roberts; Sarah Sweeny

Increasing numbers of psychologists work in medical settings because of the growing acceptance of a biopsychosocial approach to illness. Do training programs prepare sufficient numbers of graduates to function effectivelyin medical settings? The authors describe the process of adding an inpatient medical-surgical consultation-liaison (C-L) service to a psychology internships training rotations, the learning objectives used, and issues in the preparation of trainees for work in medical settings. Psychology trainees added significant capacity to the C-L service. These data may help facilitate the development of C-L training experiences for other programs.


Archive | 1992

Schizophrenia: From Institutionalization to Community Reintegration

Jerome V. Vaccaro; Robert Paul Liberman; Lisa J. Roberts

The tragically low priority that society places on the treatment of its most severely mentally disabled individuals makes all too visible the haunting scenes of persons with mental illness foraging for their food and shelter in our cities’ streets. Nevertheless, since the end of World War II, when Louis Jolyon West began his career in psychiatry, important advances have occurred in the professional and public understanding of schizophrenia and in the services provided to its victims. The following case vignette exemplifies some of these advances and serves as a point of departure for an overview of current, state-of-the-art psychosocial treatment of schizophrenia.


Psychiatric Services | 1997

Monetary reinforcement of abstinence from cocaine among mentally ill patients with cocaine dependence

Andrew Shaner; Lisa J. Roberts; Thad A. Eckman; Douglas E. Tucker; John Tsuang; Jeffrey N. Wilkins; Jim Mintz


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2006

A pilot study of behavioral activation for veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder

Matthew Jakupcak; Lisa J. Roberts; Christopher R. Martell; Patrick S. Mulick; Scott Michael; Richard Reed; Kimberly F. Balsam; Dan Yoshimoto; Miles McFall


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 1998

Episodic heavy drinking among college students: Methodological issues and longitudinal perspectives

Kenneth R. Weingardt; John S. Baer; Daniel R. Kivlahan; Lisa J. Roberts; Elizabeth T. Miller; G. Alan Marlatt

Collaboration


Dive into the Lisa J. Roberts's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew Shaner

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thad A. Eckman

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John S. Baer

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jim Mintz

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Tsuang

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge