Barry Morenz
- Associate Professor, Psychiatry - (Clinical Scholar Track)
Contact
- (520) 626-6325
- Arizona Health Sciences Center, Rm. 007427
- Tucson, AZ 85724
- bmorenz@arizona.edu
Awards
- Career Achievement in Psychiatry Award
- Arizona Psychiatric Society, Spring 2015
Interests
No activities entered.
Courses
2020-21 Courses
-
Forensic Psychiatry
PSYI 850F (Spring 2021)
2019-20 Courses
-
Psychiatry Clerkship
PSYI 813C (Spring 2020) -
Forensic Psychiatry
PSYI 850F (Fall 2019)
2018-19 Courses
-
Forensic Psychiatry
PSYI 850F (Spring 2019) -
Forensic Psychiatry
PSYI 850F (Fall 2018)
2017-18 Courses
-
Forensic Psychiatry
PSYI 850F (Spring 2018) -
Psychiatry Clerkship
PSYI 813C (Spring 2018) -
Research
PSYI 800 (Spring 2018) -
Forensic Psychiatry
PSYI 850F (Fall 2017) -
Psychiatry
PSYI 891A (Fall 2017) -
Psychiatry Clerkship
PSYI 813C (Fall 2017)
2016-17 Courses
-
Research
PSYI 800 (Spring 2017) -
Child Psychiatry
PSYI 850B (Fall 2016) -
Consultation Psychiatry
PSYI 850A (Fall 2016) -
Forensic Psychiatry
PSYI 850F (Fall 2016) -
Independent Study
PSYI 899 (Fall 2016) -
Inpat Expr Adct/Eat/Psyc
PSYI 850D (Fall 2016) -
Outpatient Psychiatry
PSYI 850C (Fall 2016) -
Psychiatry
PSYI 891A (Fall 2016) -
Psychiatry Clerkship
PSYI 813C (Fall 2016)
2015-16 Courses
-
Child Psychiatry
PSYI 850B (Spring 2016) -
Clinic & Commun Psychiatry
PSYI 850G (Spring 2016) -
Forensic Psychiatry
PSYI 850F (Spring 2016) -
Psychiatry
PSYI 891A (Spring 2016) -
Psychiatry Clerkship
PSYI 813C (Spring 2016) -
Research
PSYI 800 (Spring 2016)
Scholarly Contributions
Journals/Publications
- Morenz, B. M. (2000). Bad Men Do What Good Men Dream: A Forensic Psychiatrist Illuminates the Darker Side of Human Behavior. The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 61(8), 604-605. doi:10.4088/jcp.v61n0811b
- Burns, L. R., Denton, M., Goldfein, S., Warrick, L., Morenz, B., & Sales, B. D. (1992). The use of continuous quality improvement methods in the development and dissemination of medical practice guidelines.. QRB. Quality review bulletin, 18(12), 434-9. doi:10.1016/s0097-5990(16)30569-3More infoThe federal government is currently supporting the development and dissemination of clinical practice guidelines. Physicians fear that payers who promote guidelines are more interested in reducing variation to control their behavior and contain health care spending than in improving quality of care. There is also apprehension that guidelines will shift the responsibility for quality to parties external to the physician-patient relationship and the local professional community. Continuous quality improvement (CQI) methods provide an avenue for physician responsibility and participation in guideline development which can alleviate these concerns. This article describes the efforts of one health maintenance organization (HMO) to use CQI techniques to mobilize plan physicians to develop, disseminate, and implement practice guidelines in a manner that satisfies the needs of physicians, patients, and the HMO.