Stephen Noffsinger
Case Western Reserve University
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Featured researches published by Stephen Noffsinger.
Psychiatric Clinics of North America | 2003
Peter F. Buckley; Stephen Noffsinger; Douglas Smith; Debra R. Hrouda; James L. Knoll
Aggression among patients with serious mental illness occurs relatively infrequently, but it is a significant concern for patients, relatives, mental health professionals, and the public. Recognition of this risk and providing access and continuity of appropriate psychiatric care should be major clinical and administrative objectives in the management of violence in psychotic patients. To date, pharmacologic approaches have been unclear and inconsistent. At present, typical antipsychotics continue to have a primary role in acute management and in long-term management, in which noncompliance necessitates the use of long-acting depot neuroleptic preparations. Atypical antipsychotics in acute and long-acting intramuscular forms doubtless will influence and expand the choice for acute management of hostile psychotic patients and the long-term management of poorly compliant patients who are at risk to become violent on relapse. Persistent aggression should be managed by atypical antipsychotics with a preferential indication for clozapine, for which the most data on efficacy are available. The role of adjunctive medications is presently unclear. A major focus of care should be to refine legal processes and to conduct intervention studies aimed at enhancing treatment compliance. Violence risk reduction is not only crucial from a societal perspective, but also it is a humanitarian necessity to alleviate the burden and stigma for patients with serious mental illness.
International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology | 2001
Stephen Noffsinger
Courts frequently adjudicate criminal defendants as incompetent to stand trial and order defendants to psychiatric hospitals for treatment and education designed to restore the defendant to competence. However, little information is available on effective restoration to competency techniques. This article summarizes the existing literature on restoration to competency programs, describes a competency restoration program at one Ohio hospital, and offers basic restoration to competency practice guidelines that may be applied to any facility performing competency restoration.
International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology | 2003
Andrew D. Reisner; Mark Mcgee; Stephen Noffsinger
The authors present the case of a man who was hospitalized after claiming that he was about to become a serial killer. The patient presented with extensive written homicidal fantasies and homicidal intentions without evidence of actual homicidal acts. In addition to routine assessments, hospital staff members used case conferences, psychological testing, outside forensic consultation, and a forensic review process to make decisions regarding diagnosis, treatment planning, and discharge. The patient was discharged after 8 months of inpatient treatment and was apparently free of homicidal impulses or symptoms of severe mental illness. A 2-year court commitment allowed for the enactment and potential enforcement of a discharge plan that was endorsed by the patient, the hospital, and community care providers. The authors review diagnostic and risk management issues. Comparisons with known features of typical serial killers are made.
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law | 2005
Susan Hatters Friedman; Debra R. Hrouda; Carol E. Holden; Stephen Noffsinger; Phillip J. Resnick
American Journal of Psychiatry | 2004
Peter F. Buckley; Debra R. Hrouda; Lee Friedman; Stephen Noffsinger; Philip J. Resnick; Kelly Camlin-Shingler
Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2005
Susan Hatters Friedman; Debra R. Hrouda; Carol E. Holden; Stephen Noffsinger; Phillip J. Resnick
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law | 2015
Cortney Kohberger; Stephen Noffsinger
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law | 2013
Jason Beaman; Stephen Noffsinger
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law | 2012
Joseph Vlaskovits; Stephen Noffsinger
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law | 2009
Sara West; Stephen Noffsinger