Long-Term Mental Health Treatment for Adult Disaster Survivors

2012 ◽  
pp. 301-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Hamblen ◽  
Erin Barnett ◽  
Fran Norris
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S510-S510
Author(s):  
Ryan Kuhn ◽  
Carolyn Green ◽  
Suganthini Krishnan Natesan

Abstract Background Introduction of DAAs has revolutionized HCV therapy. Treatment of HIV/HCV co-infected patients is challenging and HCV treatment data on this group of patients are limited. Aim: To review pre-and post-DAA treatment parameters, identify measures to improve recruitment and improve quality of care in co-infected veterans. A QC/QI project. Methods A retrospective chart review of HIV/HCV co-infected patients treated for HCV with DAA at Detroit VAMC was performed. All patients were on anti-retroviral treatment for HIV with undetectable viral loads. Pre-and post-DAA treatment parameters were compared in patients who completed 12 weeks of treatment. Drug interactions, SVR, CD4+ counts AST, ALT, albumin, INR, platelets, creatinine, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), HCV RNA, and FIB-4 score were recorded. Pearson correlation coefficient was used for data analysis. Results Out of 46 patients, 4 died and 20 were ineligible due to non-compliance, mental illness, or drug use; 22 eligible patients, who had well controlled HIV, received DAAs for 12 weeks. (Genotype was 1a in 14, 1b in 7 and 2b in 1 patient). Compliance rate was 100%, 21 patients were HCV treatment naïve, 1 treated with interferon in the past) and all 22 patients achieved SVR by 12 weeks (in 2 weeks), including patients (n=12) on long term opioids and/or mental health treatment. Among 10/24 patients who showed a significant increase in CD4+ (range > 100 to 400 within 6 months), 8 were cirrhotic and had received DAA + RIB therapy. HIV therapy regimen change to alafenamide combination was required in 7/22 patients, for renal dysfunction. There were decreases in AST/ALT, but no changes in FIB-4 score, platelets, albumin, creatinine, or AFP were noted. Conclusion HIV/HCV Co-infected patients who received DAA + RIB had a significant increase in CD4+ lymphocyte counts (p< 0.05) (unlike interferon-based regimen). Chronic opioid use and mental health treatment were not a hindrance to successful therapy. The clinical impact of our findings on long-term complications including cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, and extra-hepatic manifestations of HCV remain to be seen. Recognition of positive predictive markers will delineate the cohort of co-infected veterans who would benefit from DAA therapy beyond HCV eradication. Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures


2001 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-47
Author(s):  
Jon Mills ◽  

Contrary to current belief among many philosophers, I attempt to show that philosophical counseling is a form of psychotherapy that is in need of structure and guidance in order for it to prosper as a viable approach to mental health treatment. Methodological approaches are examined including dialectical, solution-oriented, and long-term considerations that comprise the nature of meaning analysis and procedural inquiry. If philosophical counseling is to gain recognition among the helping professions, it will need to embrace a philo-psychological paradigm of theory and practice that emphasizes philosophical eclecicism.


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