%0 Journal Article %T A Research Agenda for Assessment and Management of Psychosis in Emergency Department Patients %A Cynthia Singh %A Glenn Currier %A Jennifer Peltzer-Jones %A Jon S. Berlin %A Kimberly Nordstrom %A Sandra Schneider %J Archive of "Western Journal of Emergency Medicine". %D 2019 %R 10.5811/westjem.2019.1.39263 %X Emergency departments (ED) manage a wide variety of critical medical presentations. Traumatic, neurologic, and cardiac crises are among the most prevalent types of emergencies treated in an ED setting. The high volume of presentations has led to collaborative partnerships in research and process development between experts in emergency medicine (EM) and other disciplines. While psychosis is a medical emergency frequently treated in the ED, there remains a paucity of evidence-based literature highlighting best practices for management of psychotic presentations in the ED. In the absence of collaborative research, development of best practice guidelines cannot begin. A working group convened to develop a set of high-priority research questions to address the knowledge gaps in the care of psychotic patients in the ED. This article is the product of a subgroup considering ˇ°Special Populations: Psychotic Spectrum Disorders,ˇ± from the 2016 Coalition on Psychiatric Emergencies first Research Consensus Conference on Acute Mental Illness %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6404717/