Eric P. Slade
Johns Hopkins University
75 Papers
290 Citations
Eric P. Slade is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 67 publications. Previous affiliations of Eric P. Slade include United States Department of Veterans Affairs & University of Maryland, Baltimore.
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Papers
The cost of relapse and the predictors of relapse in the treatment of schizophrenia.
Haya Ascher-Svanum,Baojin Zhu,Douglas E. Faries,David S. Salkever,Eric P. Slade,Eric P. Slade,Xiaomei Peng,Robert R. Conley +7 more
TL;DR: Prior relapse was a robust predictor of subsequent relapse, above and beyond information about patients' functioning and symptom levels, as well as the direct cost of relapse and treatment costs for persons with schizophrenia.
The influence of childhood maltreatment on adolescents' academic performance.
Eric P. Slade,Lawrence S. Wissow +1 more
TL;DR: An index measure of the intensity of childhood maltreatment was included as a covariate in multivariate analyses of adolescents' risk for school performance impairments and it was suggested that maltreatment effects are moderated by cognitive deficits related to attention problems.
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Measures and predictors of community-based employment and earnings of persons with schizophrenia in a multisite study.
David S. Salkever,Mustafa C. Karakus,Eric P. Slade,Courtenay M. Harding,Richard L. Hough,Robert A. Rosenheck,Marvin S. Swartz,Concepción Barrio,Anne Marie Yamada +8 more
TL;DR: A national study of persons with schizophrenia-related disorders examined clinical factors and labormarket conditions related to employment outcomes, finding work attachment and earnings were substantially lower than in previous survey data, not very sensitive to labor market conditions, and strongly related to clinical status.
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Association of Electroconvulsive Therapy With Psychiatric Readmissions in US Hospitals.
TL;DR: Electroconvulsive therapy may be associated with reduced short-term psychiatric inpatient readmissions among psychiatric inpatients with severe affective disorders and its association with readmissions was heterogeneous across population subgroups.
113
Effects of School-Based Mental Health Programs on Mental Health Service Use by Adolescents at School and in the Community
TL;DR: Where mental health services were available on-site, students were substantially more likely to see a counselor in the previous year, controlling for mental health status, health insurance coverage, and other factors.
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