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Dive into the research topics where Mary Ann Kuzma is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary Ann Kuzma.


Psychosomatics | 1996

Suicide Screening in a Primary Care Setting at a Veterans Affairs Medical Center

Jennifer D. Lish; Mark Zimmerman; Neil J. Farber; David T. Lush; Mary Ann Kuzma; Gary Plescia

Seven-hundred and three patients from a general medical outpatient clinic at a Veterans Affairs hospital completed the SCREENER, a brief self-report questionnaire that screens for psychiatric disorders. The authors found that 7.3% of the patients had suicidal ideation. The younger and white patients were at increased risk. The risk was increased twelvefold in those patients with subjectively fair or poor mental health, sevenfold in the patients with a history of mental health treatment, and fourfold in the patients with fair or poor perceived physical health. When major depression was controlled for, anxiety and substance abuse disorders continued to show an association with suicidal ideation. The suicidal patients made more visits to their primary care physician. Screening patients for anxiety disorders and drug abuse, as well as depression, is a better approach for identifying suicidal ideation in primary care settings than screening for depression alone and may help prevent suicide and suicide attempts.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 1995

Suicidal ideation among urban medical outpatients.

Mark Zimmerman; Jennifer D. Lish; David T. Lush; Neil J. Farber; Gary Plescia; Mary Ann Kuzma

The prevalence of current suicidal ideation among urban primary care outpatients was assessed, and suicidal and non-suicidal patients were compared with regard to their demographic characteristics and their attitudes toward mental health screening. Twenty (3.3%) patients reported having thoughts of killing themselves. The patients who had suicidal ideation were significantly younger and more frequently divorced. Almost all (97.6%) of the patients indicated that their physicians should inquire about emotional health issues at some time, and the suicidal patients were nonsignificantly more likely to recommend inquiry about psychiatric symptoms at every visit (55.0% vs 37.0%, p<0.11). Only half of the suicidal patients reported lifetime histories of mental health treatment. The majority (70.2%) of the patients believed that it would be easy to discuss mental health problems with their medical physicians. Among the patients who had previously received psychiatric treatment, the suicidal patients were nearly three times more likely to anticipate that it would be difficult or very difficult to talk to their physicians about psychiatric problems. In contrast, among the patients who had no history of mental health treatment, there was no association between suicidal ideation and anticipated discomfort in talking with their physicians about emotional health.


Medical Care | 1994

Screening for Psychiatric Disorders in Medical Patients: A Feasibility and Patient Acceptance Study

Mark Zimmerman; Neil J. Farber; Jon Hartung; David T. Lush; Mary Ann Kuzma

This study examines whether medical patients were bothered or upset by being asked to complete a questionnaire about emotional and substance use problems, and whether a newly developed, brief questionnaire that screens for several psychiatric disorders (the SCREENER) was easy for patients to complete. A consecutive series of outpatients attending the General Medical Clinic at the Philadelphia Veterans Affair Medical Center (VAMC) was approached to ask their participation in a research study requiring the completion of a brief questionnaire about their emotions, moods, thoughts, and behaviors, and a second questionnaire that asked their opinion about the first measure. Only 3.1% of the patients indicated that the questions were difficult to answer, whereas 84.6% found the questions easy or very easy to answer. Between 80% to 90% of the patients were not embarrassed, upset, annoyed, or uncomfortable by answering the questions. Individuals with a history of psychiatric treatment and poorer current mental health were the most likely to have a negative reaction to the questionnaire. Thus, the medical patients in this study reacted favorably to the completion of a broad-based questionnaire about emotional problems. The questions were judged easy to answer and rarely aroused significant negative affect.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 1994

Screening for depression in medical patients: Is the focus too narrow?

Mark Zimmerman; Jennifer D. Lish; Neil J. Farber; Jon Hartung; David T. Lush; Mary Ann Kuzma; Gary Plescia

There is growing consensus that depression is a major public health problem causing significant psychosocial morbidity and mortality which should be addressed by case-finding effects in primary care settings. A large amount of literature has examined the ability of self-report questionnaires to detect depression in medical patients and the results have been encouraging. However, studies of general population and psychiatric patient samples indicate that depression is frequently comorbid with other psychiatric disorders, and that psychiatric disorders other than depression are also associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Consequently, we believe that psychiatric screening in primary care should be broad based. We administered a newly developed, multidimensional questionnaire (the SCREENER), that simultaneously screens for a range of DSM-III-R psychiatric disorders, to 508 medical outpatients attending a VA general medical clinic. Compared with nondepressed cases, the depressed patients significantly more often reported all of the nondepressive symptoms. Nine of the ten nondepressive disorders screened for by the SCREENER were significantly more frequent in the depressed group. Most patients who screened positive for depression also screened positive for at least one nondepressive disorder. Compared with patients who only screened positive for depression, those who screened positive for both depression and a nondepressive disorder rated their physical and emotional health more poorly and made more visits to the doctor. Compared with patients who did not screen positive for any disorder, those who only screened positive for a nondepressive disorder rated their physical and emotional health more poorly, and more frequently had a history of mental health treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


The American Journal of Medicine | 2009

The Anticipated Physician Shortage: Meeting the Nation's Need for Physician Services

Gregory C. Kane; Michael R. Grever; John I. Kennedy; Mary Ann Kuzma; Alan R. Saltzman; Peter H. Wiernik; Nicole V. Baptista

he Anticipated Physician Shortage: Meeting the ation’s Need for Physician Services regory C. Kane, MD, Michael R. Grever, MD, John I. Kennedy, MD, Mary Ann Kuzma, MD, lan R. Saltzman, MD, Peter H. Wiernik, MD, Nicole V. Baptista, BS Division of Pulmonary Medicine and Critical Care, Department of Medicine, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pa; Department of Internal Medicine, Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus; Department of Medicine, niversity of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine, Birmingham; Birmingham VA Medical Center; Department of edicine, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pa; Department of Medicine, State University of New York t Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Buffalo; Division of Hematology and Oncology, Department of nternal Medicine, New York Medical College (Our Lady of Mercy), Bronx, NY; Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine, ashington, DC.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 1997

Psychiatric screening in primary care: What do patients really want?

Jennifer D. Lish; Mary Ann Kuzma; David T. Lush; Gary Plescia; Neil J. Farber; Mark Zimmerman

Psychiatric disorders are common in primary care, but underdiagnosed. U.S. physician reluctance to diagnose psychiatric illnesses is partly attributable to the belief that patients do not want their primary care physician to assess mental health. Six hundred one patients in a U.S. general internal medicine practice completed the SCREENER, a self-report questionnaire which screens for 15 psychiatric disorders, and another questionnaire about the SCREENER. Patients were predominantly female, unmarried, black, high school graduates. Only 3% thought that their physician should never evaluate their mental health. More than 60% desired periodic mental health screening, and one third wanted psychiatric assessment only when a problem was suspected. Attitudes toward questionnaire screening were less positive than toward physician interview. Patients were more likely to want screening if they were female, unmarried, young, had a history of mental health treatment, reported psychiatric symptoms, or were in fair-poor subjective physical or mental health.


Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology | 1995

Psychiatric Screening in Geriatric Primary Care: Should It Be for Depression Alone?

Jennifer D. Lish; Mark Zimmerman; Neil J. Farber; David T. Lush; Mary Ann Kuzma; Gary Plescia

Depression in the elderly is highly prevalent, associated with functional disability and increased medical costs, and treatable; however, it is infrequently recognized and treated. The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research has advocated, therefore, increased case-finding efforts for depression in primary geriatric care. Anxiety, substance, and somatoform disorders in the elderly are similarly prevalent, associated with disability and cost, treatable, and also infrequently detected and treated. We believe that psychiatric case-finding in geriatric primary care should attend to these disorders, therefore, as well as to depression. In the present study, we examined whether the association between depressive and nondepressive forms of psychopathology was similar in geriatric and nongeriatric medical patients. We also examined the relationship between each type of pathology and health care utilization and global ratings of physical and mental health. In a VA hospital general medical outpatient clinic, 508 patients completed the SCREENER, which is a brief self-report questionnaire that screens for a range of psychiatric disorders, along with a self-report questionnaire regarding subjective health and medical care utilization. Of these patients, 98% were male, and the median age was 63 years. Patients aged 63 and over were compared to younger patients. In both geriatric and younger adult patients, we found substantial comorbidity between depressive and nondepressive forms of pathology. Moreover, in both age groups, there were significant associations between both depressive and nondepressive symptoms and fair-to-poor self-rated physical and mental health and increased medical care utilization. Approximately half of the cases of nondepressive disorders in the elderly were not comorbid with depression, and thus would not have been detected by screening for depression alone. Therefore, psychiatric case finding in primary care of geriatric males should be directed at anxiety, substance, and somatoform disorders, as well as at depression, for treatment resources to be triaged to maximally decrease morbidity and cost.


International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine | 1996

Primary Care Patients' Reactions to Mental Health Screening

Mark Zimmerman; David T. Lush; Neil J. Farber; Jon Hartung; Gary Plescia; Mary Ann Kuzma; Jennifer D. Lish

Objective: The authors examined whether there is empirical support for the notion that medical patients are upset by being asked questions about psychiatric disorders. Method: Six hundred and one patients attending a primary care clinic completed the SCREENER—a newly developed, brief self-administered questionnaire that surveys a broad range of psychopathology. In addition, they completed a second questionnaire that assessed their attitudes toward the SCREENER. Results: We found a high level of acceptance by patients. The questions were judged easy to answer, and they rarely aroused significant negative affect. Fewer than 2 percent of the patients judged the questions difficult to answer, and fewer than 3 percent were “very much” embarrassed, upset, annoyed, or uncomfortable with the questions. Individuals with a history of psychiatric treatment and poorer current mental health reacted more unfavorably to the questionnaire. Conclusions: From the patients perspective, it is feasible and acceptable to use self-administered questionnaires for routine screening of psychiatric problems in primary care settings.


The American Journal of Medicine | 2006

The Power of Repetition in Mastering Cardiac Auscultation

Michael J. Barrett; Mary Ann Kuzma; Tyler C. Seto; Patrick Richards; Daniel Mason; Dorothy M. Barrett; Edward J. Gracely


Journal of Womens Health | 1997

Designing Evaluations for a Women's Health Education Program

Linda Z. Nieman; Claudia L. Rutenberg; Sandra P. Levison; Mary Ann Kuzma; Gail Rudnitsky; Lucia Beck-Weiss

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Neil J. Farber

University of California

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Joel Appel

Wayne State University

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