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Featured researches published by Samantha M. Hack.


Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal | 2016

Predictors of patient communication in psychiatric medication encounters among veterans with serious mental illnesses.

Samantha M. Hack; Deborah Medoff; Clayton H. Brown; Lijuan Fang; Lisa B. Dixon; Elizabeth A. Klingaman; Stephanie G. Park; Julie Kreyenbuhl

OBJECTIVE Person-centered psychiatric services rely on consumers actively sharing personal information, opinions, and preferences with their providers. This research examined predictors of consumer communication during appointments for psychiatric medication prescriptions. METHODS The Roter Interaction Analysis System was used to code recorded Veterans Affairs psychiatric appointments with 175 consumers and 21 psychiatric medication prescribers and categorize communication by purpose: biomedical, psychosocial, facilitation, or rapport-building. RESULTS Regression analyses found that greater provider communication, symptomology, orientation to psychiatric recovery, and functioning on the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status Attention and Language indices, as well as consumer diagnostic label, were positive predictors of consumer communication, though the types of communication impacted varied. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE Provider communication is the easiest variable to intervene on to create changes in consumer communication. Future research should also consider how cognitive and symptom factors may impact specific types of consumer communication in order to identify subgroups for targeted interventions. (PsycINFO Database Record


Psychiatric Services | 2018

Living Well: An Intervention to Improve Medical Illness Self-Management Among Individuals With Serious Mental Illness

Anjana Muralidharan; Clayton H. Brown; Jason Peer; Elizabeth A. Klingaman; Samantha M. Hack; Lan Li; Mary Brighid Walsh; Richard W. Goldberg

OBJECTIVE: Many adults with serious mental illness have significant medical illness burden and poor illness self-management. In this study, the authors examined Living Well, a group-based illness self-management intervention for adults with serious mental illness that was cofacilitated by two providers, one of whom has lived experience with co-occurring mental health and medical conditions. METHODS: Adults with serious mental illness (N=242) were randomly assigned to Living Well or an active control condition. Participants completed assessments of quality of life; health attitudes; self-management behaviors; and symptoms at baseline, posttreatment, and follow-up. Emergency room use was assessed by means of chart review. Mixed-effects models examined group × time interactions on outcomes. RESULTS: Compared with the control group, adults in Living Well had greater improvements at posttreatment in mental health-related quality of life (t=2.15, p=.032), self-management self-efficacy (t=4.10, p<.001), patient activation (t=2.08, p=.038), internal health locus of control (t=2.01, p=.045), behavioral and cognitive symptom management (t=2.77, p=.006), and overall psychiatric symptoms (t=-2.02, p=.044); they had greater improvements at follow-up in physical activity-related self-management (t=2.55, p=.011) and relationship quality (t=-2.45, p=.015). No effects were found for emergency room use. The control group exhibited greater increases in physical health-related quality of life at posttreatment (t=-2.23, p=.026). Significant group differences in self-management self-efficacy (t=2.86,p=.004) and behavioral and cognitive symptom management (t=2.08, p= .038) were maintained at follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with an active control group, a peer-cofacilitated illness self-management group was more effective in improving quality of life and self-management self-efficacy among adults with serious mental illness.


International Journal of Psychiatry in Clinical Practice | 2018

Consumer satisfaction with antipsychotic medication-monitoring appointments: the role of consumer–prescriber communication patterns

Catherine M. Reich; Samantha M. Hack; Elizabeth A. Klingaman; Clayton H. Brown; Li Juan Fang; Lisa B. Dixon; Danielle R. Jahn; Julie Kreyenbuhl

Abstract Objective: The study was designed to explore patterns of prescriber communication behaviors as they relate to consumer satisfaction among a serious mental illness sample. Methods: Recordings from 175 antipsychotic medication-monitoring appointments between veterans with psychiatric disorders and their prescribers were coded using the Roter Interaction Analysis System (RIAS) for communication behavioral patterns. Results: The frequency of prescriber communication behaviors (i.e., facilitation, rapport, procedural, psychosocial, biomedical, and total utterances) did not reliably predict consumer satisfaction. The ratio of prescriber to consumer utterances did predict consumer satisfaction. Conclusions: Consistent with client-centered care theory, antipsychotic medication consumers were more satisfied with their encounters when their prescriber did not dominate the conversation. Practice implications: Therefore, one potential recommendation from these findings could be for medication prescribers to spend more of their time listening to, rather than speaking with, their SMI consumers.


Social Work in Mental Health | 2017

Mental illness etiology beliefs among African American men with serious mental illness and their social support networks

Samantha M. Hack; Christopher R. Larrison; Melanie E. Bennett; Elizabeth A. Klingaman; Amanda D. Peeples

ABSTRACT Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 26 African American men with serious mental illness who were consumers of community mental health services and 26 members of their social support networks. All participants were asked what they believed had caused the consumers’ mental illness. Consumer participants most commonly identified chronic life stressors as a causal factor, while social supports most often identified intrinsic factors such as genetics or biology as causes of mental illness. Some support participants believed that unintentional drug use had precipitated the onset of mental illness or had no causal theories. The fact that some support participants could not identify a causal explanation may indicate failure on the part of mental health care systems to engage with consumers’ social support networks and provide education about mental illness and its causes. The implications of etiology beliefs on mental health service utilization are discussed.


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2016

Deployment Experiences, Social Support, and Mental Health: Comparison of Black, White, and Hispanic U.S. Veterans Deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq

Anjana Muralidharan; David Austern; Samantha M. Hack; Dawne Vogt

Compared to their White counterparts, Black and Hispanic Vietnam-era, male, combat veterans in the United States have experienced discrimination and increased trauma exposure during deployment and exhibited higher rates of postdeployment mental health disorders. The present study examined differences in deployment experiences and postdeployment mental health among male and female Black, Hispanic, and White veterans deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and Operation Iraqi Freedom in Iraq. Data were drawn from a national survey of veterans (N = 924) who had returned from deployment within the last 2 years. Ethnoracial minority veterans were compared to White veterans of the same gender on deployment experiences and postdeployment mental health. The majority of comparisons did not show significant differences; however, several small group differences did emerge (.02 < η(2) < .04). Ethnoracial minority veterans reported greater perceived threat in the warzone and more family-related concerns and stressors during deployment than White veterans of the same gender. Minority female veterans reported higher levels of postdeployment symptoms of anxiety than their White counterparts, which were accounted for by differences in deployment experience. These differences call for ongoing monitoring.


Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal | 2015

Consumer satisfaction with psychiatric services: The role of shared decision making and the therapeutic relationship.

Elizabeth A. Klingaman; Deborah Medoff; Stephanie G. Park; Clayton H. Brown; Lijuan Fang; Lisa B. Dixon; Samantha M. Hack; Stephanie Tapscott; Mary Brighid Walsh; Julie Kreyenbuhl


Community Mental Health Journal | 2016

Access to and Use of the Internet by Veterans with Serious Mental Illness.

Elizabeth J. Record; Deborah Medoff; Lisa B. Dixon; Elizabeth A. Klingaman; Stephanie G. Park; Samantha M. Hack; Clayton H. Brown; Li Juan Fang; Julie Kreyenbuhl


Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology | 2014

American Indian Identity in Mental Health Services Utilization Data From a Rural Midwestern Sample

Samantha M. Hack; Christopher R. Larrison; Joseph P. Gone


the International Journal of Person-Centered Medicine | 2017

Provider behaviors or consumer participation: How should we measure person-centered care?

Samantha M. Hack; Anjana Muralidharan; Clayton H. Brown; Alicia Lucksted; Jennifer Patterson


Psychiatric Services | 2017

Variation in Veteran Identity as a Factor in Veteran-Targeted Interventions

Samantha M. Hack; Bruce R. DeForge; Alicia Lucksted

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Lisa B. Dixon

Columbia University Medical Center

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Lijuan Fang

University of Maryland

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