UC Law’s Center for Practice and Glenn M. Weaver Institute for Law and Psychiatry, which Doug directs, held a day-long CLE, “The Psyche at Work: Help for Lawyers’ Worries About Employee Mental Disorders, Trauma, and Violence,” on December 16, 2011.
Doug completed a manuscript, co-authored with Helen M. Farrell, MD, titled, Facebook: Social Networking Meets Professional Duty.
Doug’s article, Brief Rating of Aggression by Children and Adolescents (BRACHA): A Reliability Study (with Drew Barzman, MD, Loretta Sonnier, MD, and Michael Sorter, MD), was accepted for publication by the Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law.
Doug’s article, Practicing Psychiatry via Skype: Medicolegal Considerations, 10 Current Psych. 30 (2011) (with Helen M. Farrell, MD), is now in print.
Doug’s book, Evaluation for Civil Commitment (Oxford Univ. Press 2011), co-authored with Debra Pinals, MD, is now in print.
Several of Doug’s articles were cited:
- Another Look at Interpreting Risk Categories, 18 Sexual Abuse – J. Res. & Treatment 41 (2006), in Don Grubin, A Large-Scale Evaluation of Risk Matrix 2000 in Scotland, 23 Sexual Abuse – J. Res. & Treatment 419 (2011);
- Critique of Pure Risk Assessment or, Kant Meets Tarasoff, 75 U. Cin. L. Rev. 523 (2006), in Matthew Large, Christopher Ryan, & Olav Nielssen, The Validity and Utility of Risk Assessment for Inpatient Suicide, 19 Australasian Psychiatry 507 (2011);
- The Imperfection of Protection Through Detection and Intervention: Lessons From Three Decades of Research on the Psychiatric Assessment of Violence Risk, 30 J. Legal Med. 109 (2009), in Matthew Large, Christopher Ryan, & Olav Nielssen, The Validity and Utility of Risk Assessment for Inpatient Suicide, 19 Australasian Psychiatry 507 (2011); and
- Three-way ROCs, 19 Med. Decis. Making 78 (1999), in Vanda Inacio, et al., Nonparametric Bayesian Estimation of the Three-Way Receiver Operating Characteristic Surface, 53 Biometrical J. 1011 SI (2011); and in Tuochuan Dong, et al., Parametric and Non-Parametric Confidence Intervals of the Probability of Identifying Early Disease Stage Given Sensitivity to Full Disease and Specificity with Three Ordinal Diagnostic Groups, 30 Stat. in Med. 3532 (2011).