Consumer strategies for coping with antipsychotic medication side effects.

scientific article published in February 2011

Consumer strategies for coping with antipsychotic medication side effects. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.3109/10398562.2010.539612
P698PubMed publication ID21303281

P2093author name stringTom Meehan
Jane Wallace
Terry Stedman
P2860cites workThe subjective experience of taking antipsychotic medication: a content analysis of Internet dataQ33409973
New antipsychotics, compliance, quality of life, and subjective tolerability--are patients better off?Q35805896
A survey of patient satisfaction with and subjective experiences of treatment with antipsychotic medicationQ40390741
Side effects of second-generation antipsychotics: the experiences, views and monitoring practices of Australian child psychiatristsQ44387572
Stigma as a barrier to recovery: Adverse effects of perceived stigma on social adaptation of persons diagnosed with bipolar affective disorder.Q51961795
P433issue1
P304page(s)74-77
P577publication date2011-02-01
P1433published inAustralasian PsychiatryQ4823454
P1476titleConsumer strategies for coping with antipsychotic medication side effects.
P478volume19

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q58300632Australian mental health staff response to antipsychotic medication side effects – the perceptions of consumers
Q39264607Choosing to use compared to taking medication: the meaning of medication as described by people who experience schizophrenia.
Q37623597Explaining attitudes and adherence to antipsychotic medication: the development of a process model
Q41662678Living with antipsychotic medication side-effects: the experience of Australian mental health consumers
Q39832289Physical health and mental illness: listening to the voice of carers
Q39997777Physical health nurse consultant role to improve physical health in mental health services: A carer's perspective
Q38556463Scoping review of research in Australia on the co-occurrence of physical and serious mental illness and integrated care.

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