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  • Book
    Maurizio Pompili, Roger McIntyre, Andrea Fiorillo, Norman Sartorius, editors.
    Summary: This book focuses on hot issues faced by clinicians in everyday clinical practice, and provides in-depth analyses of both met and unmet needs in the management of psychiatric disorders. It has been repeatedly shown that the needs of patients, relatives, the community at large and those of the governmental bodies only partially overlap. For instance, patients in their families are more concerned about quality of life, treatment, autonomy, and independent living; whereas governmental stakeholders are typically more concerned about relapse prevention and reduction of hospitalizations. As such, a volume bridging the gap between theoretical notions and practical understanding of patients untreated aspects of their psychiatric disorders is much needed. Instead of focusing on traditional descriptions of psychopathology and diagnostic criteria, the volume guides readers to core problems for each topic, taking into account new approaches in the classification of mental disorders as proposed by DSM-5. It elaborates on much-debated controversial problems such as the assessment and treatment of psychomotor agitation, and non-adherence to treatment that impacts on the psychiatric context. With its unique approach, this volume appeals to anyone with an interest in the field, including researchers, clinicians, and trainees.

    Contents:
    Foreword
    Preface.-1.Unmet needs in modern psychiatric practice.-2.Unmet needs in patients with schizophrenia
    3.The Unmet Needs for Major Depressive Disorder.-4.Unmet Needs in Psychiatry: Bipolar Depression.-5.Unmet needs in mixed-states.-6.Unmet needs in personality disorders.-7.Unmet needs in the assessment and treatment of psychomotor agitation.-8.Unmet needs in the management of suicide risk.-9.Unmet needs in education in psychiatry.-10.Unmet needs of resident's.-11.Unmet needs in youth mental health: transforming models of care to improve outcomes.-12.Classification systems of mental disorders
    where did we go wrong?.-13.Stigma: an old unmet need in psychiatric practice.
    Digital Access Springer 2020
  • Article
    Richardson LS, Yolken RH, Belshe RB, Camargo E, Kim HW, Chanock RM.
    Infect Immun. 1978 Jun;20(3):660-4.
    An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was applied to the detection of serum antibodies against respiratory syncytial virus. The end points of the various sera tested in the assay were approximately 100 times higher than in the complement-fixation test and 2 to 4 times higher than in the plaque reduction test. In addition, the immunosorbent assay appeared to be more efficient than the plaque reduction and complement-fixation techniques for detecting a serological response in young infants (1 to 6 months old) with serous respiratory syncytial virus lower respiratory disease. The simplicity, sensitivity, and rapidity of the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay make it a useful tool for immunological studies with respiratory syncytial virus.
    Digital Access Access Options