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Dive into the research topics where Wendy Muzzy is active.

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Featured researches published by Wendy Muzzy.


American Journal of Public Health | 2010

Prevalence and correlates of emotional, physical, sexual, and financial abuse and potential neglect in the United States: the National Elder Mistreatment Study

Ron Acierno; Melba A. Hernández; Ananda B. Amstadter; Heidi S. Resnick; Kenneth Steve; Wendy Muzzy; Dean G. Kilpatrick

OBJECTIVES We estimated prevalence and assessed correlates of emotional, physical, sexual, and financial mistreatment and potential neglect (defined as an identified need for assistance that no one was actively addressing) of adults aged 60 years or older in a randomly selected national sample. METHODS We compiled a representative sample by random digit dialing across geographic strata. We used computer-assisted telephone interviewing to standardize collection of demographic, risk factor, and mistreatment data. We subjected prevalence estimates and mistreatment correlates to logistic regression. RESULTS We analyzed data from 5777 respondents. One-year prevalence was 4.6% for emotional abuse, 1.6% for physical abuse, 0.6% for sexual abuse, 5.1% for potential neglect, and 5.2% for current financial abuse by a family member. One in 10 respondents reported emotional, physical, or sexual mistreatment or potential neglect in the past year. The most consistent correlates of mistreatment across abuse types were low social support and previous traumatic event exposure. CONCLUSIONS Our data showed that abuse of the elderly is prevalent. Addressing low social support with preventive interventions could have significant public health implications.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2010

Prevalence and Correlates of Poor Self-Rated Health in the United States: The National Elder Mistreatment Study

Ananda B. Amstadter; Angela Moreland Begle; Josh M. Cisler; Melba A. Hernández; Wendy Muzzy; Ron Acierno

OBJECTIVES Despite its subjective nature, self-report of health status is strongly correlated with long-term physical morbidity and mortality. Among the most reliable predictors of self-reported poor health is older age. In younger adult populations, the second reliable predictor of reported poor health is the experience of domestic and other interpersonal violence. However, very little research exits on the connection between elder mistreatment and self-reports of poor health. The aim of this study was to examine the level of, and correlates for, poor self-rated health in a community sample of older adults with particular emphasis on elder mistreatment history, demographics, and social dependency variables. DESIGN Random digit dialing telephone survey methodology. SETTING A national representative phone survey of noninstitutionalized U.S. household population. PARTICIPANTS Five thousand seven hundred seventy-seven U.S. adults, aged 60 years and older. MEASUREMENTS Individuals participated in a structured interview assessing elder mistreatment history, demographics, and social dependency variables. RESULTS Poor self-rated health was endorsed by 22.3% of the sample. Final multivariable logistic regression models showed that poor self-rated health was associated with unemployment, marital status, low income, low social support, use of social services, needing help in activities of daily living, and being bothered by emotional problems. Secondary analyses revealed a mediational role of emotional symptoms in the association between physical maltreatment and poor health. CONCLUSIONS Results suggest that poor health is common among older adults. This study also identified correlates of poor health that may be useful in identification of those in need of intervention.


Journal of Elder Abuse & Neglect | 2010

Do Incident and Perpetrator Characteristics of Elder Mistreatment Differ by Gender of the Victim? Results from the National Elder Mistreatment Study

Ananda B. Amstadter; Josh M. Cisler; Jenna L. McCauley; Melba A. Hernández; Wendy Muzzy; Ron Acierno

Perpetrator and incident characteristics were studied in regard to incidents of emotional, physical, and sexual mistreatment of older adults (age 60+) in a national sample of older men and women. Random digit dialing across geographic strata was used to compile a nationally representative sample; computer assisted telephone interviewing was used to standardize collection of demographic, mistreatment, and perpetrator and incident characteristics data. The final sample size consisted of 5,777 older adults. Approximately one in ten adults reported at least one form of mistreatment, and the majority of incidents were not reported to authorities. Perpetrators of physical mistreatment against men had more “pathological” characteristics compared to perpetrators of physical mistreatment against women. Perpetrators of physical mistreatment (compared to emotional and sexual mistreatment) also evidenced increased likelihood of legal problems, psychological treatment, substance use during incident, living with the victim, and being related to the victim. Implications for future research and social policy are discussed.


American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine | 2012

Behavioral Activation and Therapeutic Exposure for Bereavement in Older Adults

Ron Acierno; Alyssa A. Rheingold; Ananda B. Amstadter; Jerome E. Kurent; Elaine J. Amella; Heidi S. Resnick; Wendy Muzzy; C.W. Lejuez

The development and clinical trial of a 5-session behavioral intervention for complicated bereavement (CB) is presented. We conceptualized CB in terms of Major Depression (MDD) and Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and consequently applied treatment components of Behavioral Activation and Therapeutic Exposure (BA-TE). In order to assure standardization of treatment, control costs, and engage patients, a multi-media, multi-context format was adopted to address avoidance and withdrawal behaviors conceptualized as central pathogenic responses in CB. Participants (N = 26) were assessed before and after BA-TE treatment via structured clinical interview and standardized questionnaires in terms of PTSD, MDD, CB, and health concerns. The number of days since the death of the loved one was widely variable and served as a covariate for all outcome analyses. ANCOVAS revealed statistically significant improvement, irrespective of how many days since death had elapsed prior to initiation of intervention, on structured interviews and self-report measures for most outcome variables.


Depression and Anxiety | 2016

BEHAVIORAL ACTIVATION AND THERAPEUTIC EXPOSURE FOR POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER: A NONINFERIORITY TRIAL OF TREATMENT DELIVERED IN PERSON VERSUS HOME-BASED TELEHEALTH.

Ron Acierno; Daniel F. Gros; Kenneth J. Ruggiero; B. Melba A. Hernandez‐Tejada; Rebecca G. Knapp; C.W. Lejuez; Wendy Muzzy; Christopher B. Frueh; Leonard E. Egede; Peter W. Tuerk

Combat veterans returning to society with impairing mental health conditions such as PTSD and major depression (MD) report significant barriers to care related to aspects of traditional psychotherapy service delivery (e.g., stigma, travel time, and cost). Hence, alternate treatment delivery methods are needed. Home‐based telehealth (HBT) is one such option; however, this delivery mode has not been compared to in person, clinic‐based care for PTSD in adequately powered trials. The present study was designed to compare relative noninferiority of evidence‐based psychotherapies for PTSD and MD, specifically Behavioral Activation and Therapeutic Exposure (BA‐TE), when delivered via HBT versus in person, in clinic delivery.


Journal of Elder Abuse & Neglect | 2013

The national elder mistreatment study: race and ethnicity findings.

Melba A. Hernandez-Tejada; Ananda B. Amstadter; Wendy Muzzy; Ron Acierno

The prevalence of elder mistreatment with respect to race and ethnicity was examined in an unweighted sample of 5,777 participants (5,776 participants in weighted sample). Random Digit Dialing methodology was used to select a representative sample of community-dwelling older adults, and the survey was available in English and Spanish. Mistreatment types included emotional, physical, and sexual abuse. Race- and ethnicity-based differences were largely absent, and the only observed increase was for physical mistreatment among non-White older adults; however, this association was not sustained in multivariate analyses controlling for income, health status, and social support. Findings are in contrast to prior reports of increased risk of mistreatment in minority populations and point to correlated and modifiable factors of social support and poor health as targets for preventive intervention.


Contemporary Clinical Trials | 2015

Bounce Back Now! Protocol of a population-based randomized controlled trial to examine the efficacy of a Web-based intervention with disaster-affected families

Kenneth J. Ruggiero; Tatiana M. Davidson; Jenna L. McCauley; Kirstin Stauffacher Gros; Kyleen E. Welsh; Matthew Price; Heidi S. Resnick; Carla Kmett Danielson; Kathryn E. Soltis; Sandro Galea; Dean G. Kilpatrick; Benjamin E. Saunders; Josh Nissenboim; Wendy Muzzy; Anna Fleeman; Ananda B. Amstadter

Disasters have far-reaching and potentially long-lasting effects on youth and families. Research has consistently shown a clear increase in the prevalence of several mental health disorders after disasters, including depression and posttraumatic stress disorder. Widely accessible evidence-based interventions are needed to address this unmet need for youth and families, who are underrepresented in disaster research. Rapid growth in Internet and Smartphone access, as well as several Web based evaluation studies with various adult populations has shown that Web-based interventions are likely to be feasible in this context and can improve clinical outcomes. Such interventions also are generally cost-effective, can be targeted or personalized, and can easily be integrated in a stepped care approach to screening and intervention delivery. This is a protocol paper that describes an innovative study design in which we evaluate a self-help Web-based resource, Bounce Back Now, with a population-based sample of disaster affected adolescents and families. The paper includes description and justification for sampling selection and procedures, selection of assessment measures and methods, design of the intervention, and statistical evaluation of critical outcomes. Unique features of this study design include the use of address-based sampling to recruit a population-based sample of disaster-affected adolescents and parents, telephone and Web-based assessments, and development and evaluation of a highly individualized Web intervention for adolescents. Challenges related to large-scale evaluation of technology-delivered interventions with high-risk samples in time-sensitive research are discussed, as well as implications for future research and practice.


Clinical Neuropsychologist | 2014

Inadequate Effort on Neuropsychological Evaluation is Associated With Increased Healthcare Utilization

Michael David Horner; Kathryn K. VanKirk; Clara E. Dismuke; Travis H. Turner; Wendy Muzzy

Patients who exert inadequate effort on neuropsychological examination might not receive accurate diagnoses and recommendations, and might not cooperate fully with other aspects of healthcare. This study examined whether inadequate effort is associated with increased healthcare utilization. Of 355 patients seen for routine, clinical neuropsychological examination at a VA Medical Center, 283 (79.7%) showed adequate effort and 72 (20.3%) showed inadequate effort, as determined at time of evaluation using the Word Memory Test and/or Test of Memory Malingering. Utilization data included number of Emergency Department (ED) visits and inpatient hospitalizations in the year following evaluation. Patients who had shown inadequate effort on examination had more Emergency Department visits, more inpatient hospitalizations, and more days of inpatient hospitalization in the year after evaluation, compared to patients who had exerted adequate effort. This finding was not attributable to group differences in age or medical/psychiatric comorbidities. Thus, patients who exerted inadequate effort showed greater healthcare utilization in the year following evaluation. Such patients might use more resources since diagnostic evaluations are inconclusive. Inadequate effort on examination might also serve as a “marker” for more general failure to cooperate fully in one’s healthcare, possibly resulting in greater utilization.


Clinical Neuropsychologist | 2013

Hospital Service Utilization is Reduced Following Neuropsychological Evaluation in a Sample of U.S. Veterans

Kathryn K. VanKirk; Michael David Horner; Travis H. Turner; Clara E. Dismuke; Wendy Muzzy

The aim of this study was to evaluate the objective value of neuropsychological evaluation (NPE) through reduction in Emergency Room (ER) visits and hospitalizations. Retrospective analysis examined trends in ER visits and hospitalizations in 440 U.S. veterans who completed NPE between the years of 2003 and 2010. Within-subjects comparisons showed significant decreases in incidence of hospitalization and length of hospitalization in the year after evaluation compared to the year prior. Mean number of hospitalizations declined from 0.31 (SD = 0.64) pre-NPE to 0.22 (SD = 0.59) post-NPE; there were a total of 41 fewer hospitalizations in the year following NPE. Mean length of hospitalization decreased from 1.9 days (SD = 5.6) pre-NPE to 1.06 days (SD = 3.9) post-NPE; there were a total of 368 fewer days of hospitalization post-NPE. This reduction was not attributable to age or time. Incidence of ER visits also decreased from pre-NPE (M = 0.74, SD = 1.3) to post-evaluation (M = 0.69, SD = 1.3), though this was not significant. These findings provide preliminary evidence of the clinical and potential economic value of neuropsychological services within a medical setting. Follow-up studies should examine individual and exam-specific factors that may contribute to reduced utilization.


Journal of Applied Gerontology | 2018

Relevance of Perpetrator Identity to Reporting Elder Financial and Emotional Mistreatment

Ron Acierno; Mara Steedley; Melba A. Hernandez-Tejada; Gabrielle Frook; Jordan Watkins; Wendy Muzzy

Objective: The National Elder Mistreatment Study (NEMS) found that 5.2% of community older adults experienced financial abuse, and 4.6% experienced emotional mistreatment in the past year. Unfortunately, the majority of abuse was not reported to the authorities. This study investigated reasons for non-reporting. Method: In all, 774 NEMS participants were surveyed 8 years later via telephone to assess past-year financial and emotional mistreatment, perpetrator status, and whether any of these episodes were reported to authorities. Results: In total, 87.5% of financial abuse by family, friends, or acquaintances was not reported versus 33% of that perpetrated by strangers; for emotional mistreatment, 89.9% of that perpetrated by family, friends, and acquaintances was not reported, compared with 83.3% by strangers. Reasons for non-reporting of emotional abuse centered largely around with “not wanting publicity” and “not wanting to get the perpetrator in trouble,” while no consistent reason emerged for failure to report stranger-perpetrated mistreatment.

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Ron Acierno

Medical University of South Carolina

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Heidi S. Resnick

Medical University of South Carolina

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Melba A. Hernandez-Tejada

Medical University of South Carolina

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Kenneth J. Ruggiero

Medical University of South Carolina

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Melba A. Hernández

Medical University of South Carolina

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Dean G. Kilpatrick

Medical University of South Carolina

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Jenna L. McCauley

Medical University of South Carolina

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Peter W. Tuerk

Medical University of South Carolina

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Amanda K. Gilmore

Medical University of South Carolina

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