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The Medication Fact Book is a comprehensive reference guide covering all the important facts, from cost to pharmacokinetics, about the most commonly prescribed medications in psychiatry.Now covering side effects!This new edition includes additional fact sheets covering side effects to give you quick-reference access to understanding the most common side effects your patients experience with practical tips on how to manage them.
This second edition teaches you the key points of 42 of the most clinically relevant studies in psychiatry published over the past two years. This book includes a quick course in how to understand research design and statistics--so that you can be a more informed reader of the medical literature. Studies include: Defining a Role for Nutrition in Managing Children With ADHD Can a 10-Minute Intervention Improve Sleep in Children With ADHD? High-Dose Citalopram and Escitalopram: Undeserved Bad Rap? Youth, Antidepressant Medications, and Type 2 Diabetes Antipsychotic Use During First Trimester Not Associated With Congenital Malformations Cannabis and Psychosis: The Debate Continues Is Minocycline Effective When Added to Risperidone for Autism Spectrum Disorder?
Clinicians need to keep up on the latest developments in psychiatry. But mental health professionals are only human, they can’t possibly read every potentially relevant research study that is published in a given year. Knowing that, at Carlat Publishing we sift through the contents of psychiatric journals to identify the most interesting studies, and then we read them. Only some of them meet our criteria of being of wide relevance for clinical practice (not too obscure), and also having something to conclude that might actually affect our practice decisions. We publish these research updates in a one-page section of our three newsletters. Those updates are compiled in this volume. Dr. Daniel Carlat wanted to make sure readers understand something about how research studies are designed and how you can decide whether to trust the results or not. He wrote a “Quick primer on Study Design and Statistics.” Finally, he also wrote 50 multiple choice questions so clinicians can assess their understanding of these study results and earn CME credits. Does light therapy work for non-seasonal depression?Should you heed the FDA recommendation to use no more than 40 mg of citalopram for your patients? Is regular cannabis use really bad for teenagers? Does antidepressant use in pregnancy increase the risk of autism? What’s a promising new treatment for clozapine induced drooling?Does heavy drinking really imply a drinking problem?Do e-cigarettes help smokers quit?Does Straterra increase suicide risk?Can pets be good for your patient’s mental health? And the list goes on.
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