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Dive into the research topics where Michal Kunz is active.

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Featured researches published by Michal Kunz.


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2004

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Adult Patients with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): Is ADHD a Vulnerability Factor?.

Lenard A. Adler; Michal Kunz; H. C. Chua; J. Rotrosen; S. G. Resnick

Objective: There is limited evidence suggesting a link between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). This study examined the association between PTSD and ADHD using retrospective and current clinical evaluations. Method: Twenty-five male veterans with PTSD and 22 male veterans with panic disorder were evaluated for ADHD. The data was analyzed using chi-square and student’s t-tests. Results: Thirty-six percent of participants with PTSD and 9% of participants with panic disorder met criteria for childhood ADHD. Twenty-eight percent of participants with PTSD and 5% of participants with panic disorder met criteria for current ADHD. Conclusions : There appears to be a significant association of PTSD with ADHD. ADHD or common predisposing factors may increase the vulnerability for developing PTSD.


Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology | 2010

Psychiatric patients with histories of aggression and crime five years after discharge from a cognitive-behavioral program

Kathy F. Yates; Michal Kunz; Anzalee Khan; Jan Volavka; Steve Rabinowitz

A program evaluation examined a long-term cognitive skills inpatient program (STAIR) in reducing rehospitalization and rearrest rates in mental illness. Psychiatric and criminal histories were obtained. Psychological tests were administered. After discharge, monthly follow-up was obtained. One hundred forty-five patients completed the STAIR program and were followed for a range of six to 60 months after discharge. Thirty-one (21.4%) remained stable, 67 (46.2%) were rehospitalized, and 47 (32.4%) were rearrested and/or rehospitalized. Group membership was predicted by STAIR admission age and outpatient medication compliance. Significantly, fewer arrests, hospitalizations, and days institutionalized occurred post-STAIR. Medication compliance is the single most enduring factor associated with clinical stability and prevention of criminal behavior. Other factors’ impact may vary depending on the length of stay in the community. Long-term inpatient programs (e.g., STAIR) may be helpful to some of these patients.


Behavioral Sciences & The Law | 2014

Factors Associated with Recommitment of NGRI Acquittees to a Forensic Hospital

Debbie Green; Brian Belfi; Hali Griswold; Jeremy Schreiber; Robert A. Prentky; Michal Kunz

The current archival study assesses risk factors associated with recommitment of 142 individuals adjudicated Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) from civil settings to a forensic hospital in New York State. Within 10 years of transfer from a forensic hospital, 40 (28.2%) were recommitted. Using survival analyses to account for the wide range in opportunity for recommitment, period of transfer (i.e., pre versus post the 1995 case of George L, which clarified factors related to assessments of dangerousness) and the Historical scale and specific items of the HCR-20 emerged as important risk factors for recommitment. Specifically, hazard of recommitment was 2.9 times higher for those with high Historical scores as compared to those with low scores. However, few individual risk factors were associated with recommitment. Prior supervision failure, negative attitude, problems with substance use, and absent or less serious major mental illness and relationship problems were informative in predicting recommitment over 10 and 3 year follow-up periods.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1995

Serotonin in violent patients with schizophrenia

Michal Kunz; Jan Sikora; Menahem Krakowski; Antonio Convit; Thomas B. Cooper; Jan Volavka

CSF levels of 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid (5-HIAA), the serotonin metabolite, were assayed in 10 violent and 10 matched nonviolent patients with schizophrenia. Mean group levels of 5-HIAA in cerebrospinal fluid were found to be nearly identical. Possible explanations, including effects of medications, are discussed.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2002

Neurocognitive Effects of Clozapine, Olanzapine, Risperidone, and Haloperidol in Patients With Chronic Schizophrenia or Schizoaffective Disorder

Robert M. Bilder; Robert Goldman; Jan Volavka; Pál Czobor; Matthew J. Hoptman; Brian Sheitman; Jean Pierre Lindenmayer; Leslie Citrome; Joseph P. McEvoy; Michal Kunz; Miranda Chakos; Thomas B. Cooper; Terri L. Horowitz; Jeffrey A. Lieberman


Hospital and community psychiatry | 1993

Long-Term High-Dose Neuroleptic Treatment: Who Gets It and Why?

Menahem Krakowski; Michal Kunz; Pál Czobor; Jan Volavka


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1997

Community violence and inpatient assaults: Neurobiological deficits.

Menahem Krakowski; Pál Czobor; Mary D. Carpenter; Jan Libiger; Michal Kunz; Hana Papezova; Benedicto Parker; Lorraine Schmader; Theresa Abad


The American journal of forensic psychology | 1997

Violence in schizophrenic patients: The role of positive psychotic symptoms and frontal lobe impairment

Menahem Krakowski; Pál Czobor; Jan Libiger; Michal Kunz; Hana Papezova; Benedicto Parker; Lorraine Schmader; Theresa Abad


Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law | 2005

A cognitive, behaviorally based program for patients with persistent mental illness and a history of aggression, crime, or both: structure and correlates of completers of the program.

Kathy Yates; Michal Kunz; Pál Czobor; Steve Rabinowitz; Jean Pierre Lindenmayer; Jan Volavka


The American journal of forensic psychology | 1996

Violent crime in psychiatric patients: Relationship to frontal lobe impairment

Menahem Krakowski; Pál Czobor; Mary D. Carpenter; Karen A. Nolan; Jan Libiger; Michal Kunz; Hana Papezova; Benedicto Parker; Lorraine Schmader; Theresa Abad

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Jan Libiger

Charles University in Prague

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Benedicto Parker

Manhattan Psychiatric Center

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Debbie Green

Fairleigh Dickinson University

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Theresa Abad

Manhattan Psychiatric Center

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Hali Griswold

Fairleigh Dickinson University

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