Michael L. Reed
Yeshiva University
7 Papers
11 Citations
Michael L. Reed is an academic researcher from Yeshiva University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bipolar disorder & Mood Disorder Questionnaire. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Chronic migraine in the population: Burden, diagnosis, and satisfaction with treatment
TL;DR: Chronic migraine (CM) is more disabling than episodic migraine in the population, and although most individuals with CM sought medical care for this disorder, the majority did not receive specific acute or preventive medications.
443
Impact of depressive symptoms compared with manic symptoms in bipolar disorder: results of a U.S. community-based sample.
TL;DR: Self-reported depressive symptoms are more frequent than manic symptoms and cause greater disruption of occupational, family, and social functioning, and underscore the need to improve the recognition and management of bipolar depression.
220
Validation of the mood disorder questionnaire for bipolar disorders in adolescents
Karen Dineen Wagner,Robert M. A. Hirschfeld,Graham J. Emslie,Robert L. Findling,Barbara L. Gracious,Michael L. Reed +5 more
TL;DR: The MDQ-A completed by parents about their adolescents' symptoms may be a useful screening instrument for bipolar disorders in an adolescent psychiatric outpatient population.
94
•Journal Article
Predictors of bipolar disorder risk among patients currently treated for major depression
Joseph R. Calabrese,David J. Muzina,David E. Kemp,Gary S. Sachs,Mark A. Frye,Thomas R. Thompson,David Klingman,Michael L. Reed,Robert M. A. Hirschfeld +8 more
TL;DR: Comorbid anxiety, feelings of people being unfriendly, recent depression diagnosis, BPD family history, and legal problems may prove useful indicators of BPD risk among patients who have failed at least 1 antidepressant.
50
Healthcare resource utilization in bipolar depression compared with unipolar depression: results of a United States population-based study.
TL;DR: Subjects withSelf-reported bipolar depression sought care more often from a number of diverse healthcare resources than subjects with self-reported unipolar depression, underscore the morbidity associated with bipolar depression.
11