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1.
Am J Med ; 134(6): 721-726, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33610522

ABSTRACT

Approximately 1%-2% of hospitalizations in the United States result in an against medical advice discharge. Still, the practice of discharging patients against medical advice is highly subjective and variable. Discharges against medical advice are associated with physician distress, patient stigma, and adverse outcomes, including increased morbidity and mortality. This review summarizes discharge against medical advice research, proposes a definition for against medical advice discharge, and recommends a standard approach to a patient's request for discharge against medical advice.


Subject(s)
Patient Discharge/standards , Treatment Refusal/psychology , Hospitalization/trends , Humans , Patient Discharge/trends , Risk Factors , Treatment Refusal/trends , United States
2.
Addict Biol ; 19(6): 1020-31, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23919443

ABSTRACT

Nicotine dependence is the leading cause of death in the United States. However, research on high rates of nicotine use in mental illness has primarily explained this co-morbidity as reflecting nicotine's therapeutic benefits, especially for cognitive symptoms, equating smoking with 'self-medication'. We used a leading neurodevelopmental model of mental illness in rats to prospectively test the alternative possibility that nicotine dependence pervades mental illness because nicotine is simply more addictive in mentally ill brains that involve developmental hippocampal dysfunction. Neonatal ventral hippocampal lesions (NVHL) have previously been demonstrated to produce post-adolescent-onset, pharmacological, neurobiological and cognitive-deficit features of schizophrenia. Here, we show that NVHLs increase adult nicotine self-administration, potentiating acquisition-intake, total nicotine consumed and drug seeking. Behavioral sensitization to nicotine in adolescence prior to self-administration is not accentuated by NVHLs in contrast to increased nicotine self-administration and behavioral sensitization documented in adult NVHL rats, suggesting periadolescent neurodevelopmental onset of nicotine addiction vulnerability in the NVHL model. Delivering a nicotine regimen approximating the exposure used in the sensitization and self-administration experiments (i.e. as a treatment) to adult rats did not specifically reverse NVHL-induced cortical-hippocampal-dependent cognitive deficits and actually worsened cognitive efficiency after nicotine treatment stopped, generating deficits that resemble those due to NVHLs. These findings represent the first prospective evidence demonstrating a causal link between disease processes in schizophrenia and nicotine addiction. Developmental cortical-temporal limbic dysfunction in mental illness may thus amplify nicotine's reinforcing effects and addiction risk and severity, even while producing cognitive deficits that are not specifically or substantially reversible with nicotine.


Subject(s)
Hippocampus/pathology , Nicotine/pharmacology , Nicotinic Agonists/pharmacology , Schizophrenic Psychology , Tobacco Use Disorder/pathology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Conditioning, Operant/drug effects , Diagnosis, Dual (Psychiatry) , Disease Models, Animal , Drug-Seeking Behavior/drug effects , Male , Maze Learning , Memory Disorders/chemically induced , Memory, Short-Term/drug effects , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Reinforcement Schedule , Self Administration
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