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  Vol. 270 No. 2, July 14, 1993 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Psychiatry

Daniel X. Freedman, MD; Stephen M. Stahl, MD, PhD

JAMA. 1993;270(2):252-254.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

Change! The concern of all US physicians centers on needed health care reforms. Uncertainty is the rule: about modes of practice and reimbursement, ritualized guidelines vs informed clinical judgment, the roles of general and specialized physicians and their "gatekeepers," and more.1 Research is an abiding concern, since the chaotic shift of psychiatric and substance abuse research from the former Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration to the National Institutes of Health incurred a loss of at least $15 million for current basic and clinical research grants and may require shifts of $55 million more from such critical efforts. Such policy worries perturb all of medicine. For psychiatrists, with 40% to 50% of the treated disorders encountered in general medicine, their role as accessible consultants implementing relevant knowledge transfer looms large. For their patients, the prospects of unfair discrimination in health care reform loom larger.

Recent research focuses on . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

UCLA, Calif; University of California School of Medicine, San Diego


Footnotes

{dagger}Dr Freedman died June 2, 1993.



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