Psychiatry Books
Cambridge University Press Antipsychotic Trials in Schizophrenia The CATIE Project Cambridge Medicine Hardcover
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£97.85
Cambridge University Press Principles of Psychiatric Genetics
Principles of Psychiatric Genetics 9780521896498 | BookCurl
£128.25
Cambridge University Press Thinking the Unconscious
Book SynopsisSince Freud, the concept of the unconscious has exerted an enormous influence upon psychoanalysis, psychology, literary, critical and social theory. This volume examines the many theories of the unconscious that existed in nineteenth-century German thought, and the extent to which they may have influenced Freud and the origins of psychoanalysis.Trade ReviewReview of the hardback: 'From 'Discovering' to 'Thinking the Unconscious': this book offers an enlightening contribution to this still demanding and paradoxical task.' Ludger Lütkehaus, University of FreiburgReview of the hardback: 'While the conceit that Freud discovered – or invented – the unconscious, has long been dispatched, this collection explores in fascinating detail the tangled roots of the concept in the works of Leibniz and Kant and traces its surprising ramifications through the thought of the German Romantics and their successors. The authors reveal how the early constructions of the unconscious differ from that of Freud and brilliantly trouble complainant attitudes about figures (e.g., Goethe, Nietzsche) around whom the dust of opinion has long settled.' Robert J. Richards, University of Chicago and author of The Romantic Conception of Life: Science and Philosophy in the Age of GoetheReview of the hardback: 'Focusing on the crucible of German intellectual history in the long nineteenth century, this volume assembles expert accounts of how the concept, or complex, of the unconscious was thought and wrought before Freud. Significant new readings of canonical figures from Goethe to Nietzsche are complemented by judicious assessments of less familiar thinkers who helped shape this key term for modernity. Across the genealogical networks of philosophy, psychology, and literature, the vicissitudes of thinking the unconscious are explored with impressive erudition and an apt sense of the elusive and contested character of the subject.' Andrew Webber, University of CambridgeReview of the hardback: '[This] is a dependable guide to particular historical examples of thinking about the unconscious in their respective contexts: that is its considerable virtue.' David Midgley, Modern Language ReviewTable of ContentsIntroduction: thinking the unconscious Angus Nicholls and Martin Liebscher; 1. The unconscious from the Storm and Stress to Weimar classicism: the dialectic of time and pleasure Paul Bishop; 2. The philosophical significance of Schelling's conception of the unconscious Andrew Bowie; 3. The scientific unconscious: Goethe's post-Kantian epistemology Angus Nicholls; 4. The hidden agent of the self: towards an aesthetic theory of the non-conscious in German romanticism Rüdiger Görner; 5. The real essence of human beings: Schopenhauer and the unconscious will Christopher Janaway; 6. Carl Gustav Carus and the science of the unconscious Matthew Bell; 7. Eduard von Hartmann's Philosophy of the Unconscious Sebastian Gardner; 8. Gustav Theodor Fechner and the unconscious Michael Heidelberger; 9. Friedrich Nietzsche's perspectives on the unconscious Martin Liebscher; 10. Freud and nineteenth-century philosophical sources on the unconscious Günter Gödde; Epilogue: the 'optional' unconscious Sonu Shamdasani.
£95.00
Cambridge University Press Resilience and Mental Health
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£99.75
Cambridge University Press Ghodses Drugs and Addictive Behaviour A Guide to Treatment
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£132.00
Cambridge University Press Doppelgänger
Book Synopsis
£28.49
Cambridge University Press Sociology of Mental Health
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£131.67
Cambridge University Press Textbook of Disaster Psychiatry
Book SynopsisAn overview of a decade of advances in psychological, biological and social responses to disasters, for medical professionals, leaders and disaster responders to prepare, react and aid recovery. This book covers topics including epidemiology of response, neurobiology of exposure, socio-cultural issues, early intervention, consultation-liaison care and public health planning.Trade Review'This book should feature in the library of every ambulance service resilience department and should not gather dust. The long-term mental health impact of disaster is clearly demonstrated and well evidenced throughout this book.' Vincent Romano, Journal of Paramedic PracticeTable of ContentsPart I. Introduction: 1. Individual and community responses to disasters Robert J. Ursano, Carol S. Fullerton, Lars Weisaeth and Beverley Raphael; Part II. Foundations of Disaster Psychiatry: 2. Epidemiology of disaster mental health: the foundation for disaster mental health Carol S. North; 3. Disaster ecology James M. Shultz, Sandro Galea, Zelde Espinel and Dori B. Reissman; 4. Neurobiology of disaster exposure: fear, anxiety, trauma, and resilience Lynnette A. Averill, Rebecca P. Smith, Craig L. Katz, Dennis S. Charney and Steven M. Southwick; 5. Trajectories of health, resilience, and illness Spruha Joshi and Magdalena Cerdá; Part III. Clinical Care and Interventions: 6. Early interventions for trauma-related problems Patricia J. Watson; 7. Acute stress disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder David M. Benedek and Gary H. Wynn; 8. Psychiatric aspects of medical-surgical disaster care Phebe Tucker and Ruchi Aggarwal; 9. Collaborative care interventions for acutely injured survivors of individual and mass trauma Kirsten Sandgren, Ella Jarvik, Doyanne Darnell and Douglas Zatzick; Part IV. Special Topics: 10. International disaster response Virginia Murray, Richard Williams and Sarb Johal; 11. Risk communication in disasters: promoting resilience Daniel Dodgen, William Herbert and Rachel Kaul; 12. The unintended consequences of disaster-related media coverage Pauline Lubens and E. Alison Holman; 13. Terrorism: mass disruption and killing Joshua C. Morganstein, Robert J. Ursano, Carol S. Fullerton and Harry C. Holloway; 14. Children and families responding to disaster and bereavement Gloria J. L. Whaley, William L. Cohen and Stephen J. Cozza; 15. Disaster workers: exposure to mass and traumatic death James E. McCarroll and Quinn Biggs; 16. Health care planning for community disaster care Richard Williams, Jonathan I. Bisson and Verity Kemp; 17. Workplace and organizational disasters: response and planning Lars Weisaeth and Trond Heir; 18. Pandemics: health care emergencies Joshua C. Morganstein, Carol S. Fullerton, Robert J. Ursano, Darrin Donato and Harry C. Holloway; 19. Leadership in disasters Brian W. Flynn, Prudence Bushnell and Nicole Lurie; 20. Nuclear disaster response Jun Shigemura, Nahoko Harada, Masaaki Tanichi, Masanori Nagamine, Kunio Shimizu and Aihide Yoshino; 21. Ethical issues in disaster psychiatry Edmund G. Howe and Elana Newman; Part V. Public Health and Disaster Psychiatry: 22. Public health and disaster mental health: preparing, responding, and recovering Carol S. Fullerton, Robert J. Ursano, Lars Weisaeth and Beverley Raphael; Index.
£99.75
Cambridge University Press Trauma and Grief Component Therapy for Adolescents A Modular Approach to Treating Traumatized and Bereaved Youth
Book SynopsisDeveloped by experts in trauma psychiatry and psychology and grounded in adolescent developmental theory, this is a modular, assessment-driven treatment that addresses the needs of adolescents facing trauma, bereavement, and accompanying developmental disruption. Created by the developers of the University of California, Los Angeles PTSD Reaction Index and the Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder Checklist, the book links clinicians with cutting-edge research in traumatic stress and bereavement, as well as ongoing training opportunities. This innovative guide offers teen-friendly coping skills, handouts, and specialized therapeutic exercises to reduce distress and promote adaptive developmental progression. Sessions can be flexibly tailored for group or individual treatment modalities; school-based, community mental health, or private practice settings; and different timeframes and specific client needs. Drawing on multidimensional grief theory, it offers a valuable toolkit for psyTable of ContentsIntroduction; TGCTA pre-treatment assessment interview: introduction, assessment, and goal setting for individual or group participation; Module 1. Foundational Knowledge and Skills: Introduction; Session 1.1 Welcome and introduction; Session 1.2 Posttraumatic and grief reactions and introduction to coping strategies; Session 1.3 Emotions and feelings; Session 1.4 Learning to cope with trauma and loss reminders; Session 1.5 Learning coping skills; Session 1.6 Sizing up a situation; Session 1.7 Identifying and replacing hurtful thoughts; Session 1.8 Recruiting effective support handouts 1.1–1.53; Module 2. Working Through Traumatic or Loss Experiences: Introduction; Session 2.1 Preparing to share personal trauma or loss experiences (sharing our stories); Session 2.2 Group narrative sharing sessions; Session 2.3 Review of group sharing and exploration of beliefs and expectations; Session 2.4 Guide for conducting individual narrative and pullout sessions; Handouts 2.1–2.15; Module 3. Working Through Grief Experiences: Introduction; Session 3.1 Learning about grief; Session 3.2 Understanding connections between loss reminders, grief reactions, and consequences; Session 3.3 Dealing with distress over the circumstances of tragic deaths; Session 3.4 Identifying positive and negative traits; Session 3.5 Reminiscing together; Session 3.6 Planning for difficult days (relapse prevention); Handouts 3.1–3.34; Module 4. Preparing for the Future: Introduction; Session 4.1 Next steps – promoting developmental progress; Session 4.2 Coping with difficult days; Session 4.3 What is and what is not your job; Session 4.4 Graduation and launching into the future; Handouts 4.1–4.25; Appendices.
£36.09
Cambridge University Press Manual of Inpatient Psychiatry
Book SynopsisInpatient units treat some of the most clinically challenging psychiatric patients. Clinicians must carefully balance patients'' rights with safety concerns of violence and suicide. This updated manual is compact and practical, addressing the common questions and issues clinicians face in day-to-day practice. Chapters are organised around the diagnoses found on inpatient psychiatric units, allowing readers to find their area of interest quickly. A user-friendly question and answer format anticipates commonly asked questions, and tables provide easily accessible information, including diagnostic criteria and medication effects. Incorporating advances in the field over the past decade, chapters review new treatments including ketamine use and chronotherapy, as well as the most recent evidence-based approaches for patients with borderline personality disorder. Drawing on the authors'' wealth of experience, their recommendations for best practice as well as treatment philosophies will be valuable for all healthcare professionals working in mental health.Table of ContentsList of Contributors; Preface; 1. The inpatient with schizophrenia Steven Bartek, Travis Kruger and Michael I. Casher; 2. The inpatient with depression Karina Drake, Joshua D. Bess and Michael I. Casher; 3. The inpatient with mania Nicholas Morcos, Joshua D. Bess and Michael I. Casher; 4. The inpatient with borderline personality disorder Victor Hong and Michael I. Casher; 5. The inpatient with dementia Karina Drake and Michael I. Casher; 6. The inpatient with traumatic brain injury Michael I. Casher; 7. The inpatient with dual diagnosis (co-occurring disorder) Michael I. Casher and Joshua D. Bess; 8. The young adult on the inpatient unit Michael I. Casher; 9. Clinical documentation on the inpatient unit Joshua D. Bess; Index.
£25.99
Cambridge University Press Psychopathology of Rare and Unusual Syndromes
Book SynopsisRare and unusual psychiatric syndromes have fascinated people for centuries due to their complexity and undefined nature. Appreciating their clinical importance and relevance to understanding other conditions and experiences, this book provides an authoritative account of the rarest and most unusual psychiatric syndromes. The author, a leading authority on clinical psychopathology, delves into the history of the description of such syndromes, illustrates conditions with clinical case examples, and discusses the causes as well as the underlying explanatory mechanisms. The syndromes described draw attention to the way in which abnormal subjective experiences reflect the intersection of biomedical science, social anthropology, social sciences, evolutionary biology and the humanities. The book covers abnormalities of belief, abnormalities of perception, unusual experiences of the body and self, rare and bizarre impairments of memory, and behavioural disturbance. This is a valuable resourceTrade Review'Rare and unusual is often precious. So is this book which contains colourful descriptions of psychiatric conditions and phenomena that are not common in everyday clinical practice but when encountered remind us why we chose psychiatry as a profession and why the study of the human mind is so interesting and challenging.' Aleksandar Janca'In Psychopathology of Uncommon Rare and Unusual Syndromes, Professor Oyebode has produced a great masterpiece. Each of the conditions in this book has been comprehensively described and thoroughly researched, each syndrome replete with historical and contemporary case examples, thus enabling vivid impressions to be formed in the minds of the reader. While actual aetiologies are often unclear, the author has integrated philosophical, psychodynamic and biological theories to explain these conditions. What shines through is the author's immense literary talents, his love for writing, teaching, researching and his enthusiasm in sharing his keen observations of the phenomenology of psychiatric disorders with his readers. This book is destined to become a classic. I highly recommend it as a 'must read' for every student and practitioner of psychiatry. I cannot wait to get hold of a copy for myself.' Leslie Lim, Associate Professor, Senior Consultant Psychiatrist, Singapore General HospitalTable of ContentsSection 1. Abnormalities of Belief and Judgment: 1. Delusional misidentification syndromes; 2. Othello syndrome; 3. Folie à deux; 4. Couvade syndrome; Section 2. Abnormalities of Experience of Love: 5. Erotomania (De Clérambault syndrome); Section 3. Abnormalities of Perception: 6. Charles Bonnet syndrome; 7. Musical hallucinosis; 8. Ekbom syndrome; 9. Vulvodynia and penoscrotodynia; 10. Olfactory reference syndrome; 11. Multimodal perceptual syndrome (Synaethesia); Section 4. Abnormalities of the Self: 12. Depersonalization; 13. Autoscopy and related syndromes; 14. Dissociation: possession states and dissociative identity disorder; Section 5. Abnormalities of Experience of the Body: 15. Body integrity identity disorder; 16. Cotard syndrome; Section 6. Abnormalities of Memory Function: 17. Confabulation; 18. Ganser state; Section 7. Abnormalities of Behaviour: 19. Diogenes syndrome.
£35.14
Cambridge University Press Personality Disorder
Book SynopsisPersonality disorder affects more than 10% of the population but is widely ignored by health professionals as it is viewed as a term of stigma. The new classification of personality disorder in the ICD-11 shows that we are all on a spectrum of personality disturbance and that this can change over time. This important new book explains why all health professionals need to be aware of personality disorders in their clinical practice. Abnormal personality, at all levels of severity, should be taken into account when choosing treatment, when predicting outcomes, when anticipating relapse, and when explaining diagnosis. Authored by leading experts in this field, this book explains how the new classification of personality disorders in the ICD-11 helps to select treatment programmes, plan long-term management and avoid adverse consequences in the treatment of this patient group.Trade Review'… a helpful guide to understand and approach clients with personality disorders.' Matthew Koster, Doody's ReviewsTable of ContentsForeword; Acknowledgments; 1. History of Personality and Its Disorders; 2. Assessment of Personality: From Normal to Disorder; 3. Personality Difficulty; 4. Borderline Personality Disorder: A Condition That Appeared Without Trace; 5. Cultural Perspectives: Epidemiology of Personality Disorders; 6. Personality and Health; 7. Personality Disorders and Comorbidity with Other Mental Illness; 8. Treatment and Outcome of Personality Disorder; 9. Moderating the Stigma of Personality Disorder; 10: What Needs To Be Done Now; Appendices.
£29.44
Cambridge University Press Psychiatric Interviewing and Assessment
Book SynopsisRelevant to all postgraduate trainees in psychiatry, this revised and expanded second edition uses case studies and real-world examples to help the reader develop the fundamental interviewing and assessment skills that form the foundation of psychiatry, including new material on neurodevelopmental disorders, fragmented interviews and 'impossible' clinical situations.Trade ReviewReview of previous edition: 'This book contains an abundance of practical advice and clinical practice wisdom … I would wholeheartedly recommend the book to any student or clinician of any experience level in a mental health setting.' Justin J. Trevino, Psychiatric ServicesReview of previous edition: 'This book brings together disparate elements of today's psychiatric practice and provides a real starting point for trainees ... it is an unsurpassed and important work.' John Clifford, The British Journal of PsychiatryReview of previous edition: 'Should be read by every psychiatrist.' David Enoch, BJPsych Bulletin (www.pb.rcpsych.org)Table of ContentsPart I. What Am I Trying to Find Out Here?: 1. Diagnosis; 2. History; 3. Mental state examination and psychopathology; 4. Cognitive state examination and organic disease; Part II. The Main Principles of One-to-One Interviewing: 5. Office-based psychiatric assessment; 6. Understanding and managing relationships with patients; Part III. Difficult Interviews: 7. Difficulties relating to psychosis; 8. Unpopular patients; Part IV. Self-Awareness: 9. Values and beliefs; 10. Culture; 11. Who should I be?; Part V. Complicated Interviews: 12. Interviewing with other team members; 13. Interviewing families and other informants; 14. In the community; 15. Fragmented interviewing and assessment; 16. 'Impossible' assessments; Part VI. Developmental Assessments: 17. Neurodevelopmental assessment; 18. Personality; Part VII. Drawing it All Together: 19. Risk and safety; 20. Record keeping and reports.
£53.19
Cambridge University Press Textbook of Cultural Psychiatry
Book SynopsisCultural psychiatry deals with the impact of culture on causation, perpetuation and treatment of patients suffering with mental illness. The role of culture in mental illness is increasingly being recognised, and the misconceptions that can occur as a result of cultural differences can lead to misdiagnoses, under or over-diagnosis. This second edition of the Textbook of Cultural Psychiatry has been completely updated with additional new chapters on globalisation and mental health, social media and tele-psychiatry. Written by world-leading experts in the field, this new edition provides a framework for the provision of mental health care in an increasingly globalised world. The first edition of the Textbook of Cultural Psychiatry was commended in the BMA Book Awards in 2008 and was the recipient of the 2012 Creative Scholarship Award from the Society for the Study of Psychiatry and Culture.Table of ContentsPart I. Theoretical Background: 1. Cultural psychiatry in historical perspective; 2. Anthropology and psychiatry: a contemporary convergence for global mental health; 3. Suicide, violence and culture; 4. Psychology and cultural psychiatry; 5. Spirituality and cultural psychiatry; 6. Lifestyle medicine in psychiatry; 7. Globalisation; 8. Social media; 9. Telepsychiatry; 10. Ethnic inequalities and cultural capability framework in mental healthcare; Part II. Culture and Mental Health: 11. Psychopathology and the role of culture: an overview; 12. Developmental aspects of cultural psychiatry; 13. Explanatory models in psychiatry; 14. Culture-bound syndromes: past, current status and future; 15. Psychiatric epidemiology and its contributions to cultural psychiatry; 16. Acculturation and identity; 17. Cultural consonance; Part III. Culture and Mental Disorders: 18. Neurotic disorders: anxiety and fear related, dissociative and bodily distress disorders; 19. Schizophrenia and related psychoses; 20. Affective disorders: coloured by culture – why the pigment of depression is more than skin deep; 21. Substance misuse; 22. Culture and mental disorders: suicidal behaviour; 23. Personality disorders and culture; 24. Culture and obsessive-compulsive disorder; 25. Culture and eating disorders; 26. Childhood and adolescent psychiatric disorders; 27. Culture and schizophrenia; 28. Disorders of ageing across culture; Part IV. Theoretical Aspects of Management: 29. Traumascape: an ecological-cultural-historical model for extreme stress; 30. Sexual dysfunction across cultures; 31. Therapist-patient interactions and expectations; 32. Developing effective mental health services for multi-cultural societies; 33. Cross-cultural psychopharmarcotherapy; 34. Psychotherapy across cultures; 35. Psychological interventions; 36. Spiritual aspects of management; 37. Cultural aspects of suicide; Part V. Management with Special Groups: 38. Intellectual disabilities across cultures; 39. Child psychiatry across cultures; 40. Management of sexual dysfunction; 41. Transgenderism: cross cultural perspectives; 42. Refugee mental health: a wicked problem for the world to solve; 43. Working with elderly persons across cultures; 44. Working in liaison psychiatry; Part VI. Cultural Research and Training: 45. Psychiatric conditions embody distinct evolutionary and cultural signatures when compared with general medical conditions; 46. Globalization, social stressors and psychiatry; 47. Cultural psychiatry: past, present and future.
£66.49
RCPsych Publications Advanced Family Work for Schizophrenia: An Evidence-Based Approach
Book SynopsisThis book is a companion volume to Family Work for Schizophrenia, 2nd edition and gives more detailed explanations of how to work with difficult cases. For more than ten years, Professor Leff has been supervising family work for psychosis with mental health teams in North and South London. From comprehensive records of about 150 families discussed during supervision, he has distilled nineteen anonymised case histories illustrating the most difficult problems encountered in such work. Each family is described in detail as presented by the supervisee. Then, the author gives his understanding of the problems in a social and cultural context, and makes recommendations for ongoing family work. Follow-up of the families ranges from three to thirty months, and is charted with further recommendations at each supervision session. A summary is presented of the work with each family, including its successes and failures and the lessons learned. The detailed histories and follow-ups constitute an ideal learning experience for both skilled therapists and novices engaged in family work with patients suffering from psychosis.Table of Contents1. Introduction; 2. Culture clash; 3. People with a psychotic illness and a physical condition; 4. More than one family member with a psychosis; 5. Parents in a conflictual relationship or separated; 6. Dysfunctional families; 7. Unresolved past trauma; 8. Exploitative carer; 9. Postscript.
£21.40
RCPsych/Cambridge University Press The Maudsley Trainee Guide to the CASC: Preparing for the MRCPsych CASC Examination
Book SynopsisWritten by graduates of the internationally renowned Maudsley Training Programme, who have all recently sat the CASC examination, this book provides clear, practical guidance to passing the Royal College of Psychiatrists'' CASC. Divided according to psychiatric subspecialties, each chapter includes practice clinical scenarios. These clinical scenarios are broken down into candidate instructions, actor instructions and constructive candidate feedback. This enables candidates to practice not only with their clinical peers, but with friends and family as well. An additional chapter is dedicated to practical information about the exam and tips for the day to further equip readers in what to expect, and reduce anxieties about the exam itself. Another chapter is specifically devoted to addressing the needs of international and BAME medical graduates. Relevant and reliable throughout, this is a must-have resource for psychiatric trainees looking to improve their clinical skills and gain their MRCPsych qualification.
£29.99
RCPsych/Cambridge University Press Improving University Mental Health
Book Synopsis
£28.49
MIT Press Ltd Asfuriyyeh A History of Madness Modernity and War
Book SynopsisThe development of psychiatry in the Middle East, viewed through the history of one of the first modern mental hospitals in the region.ʿAṣfūriyyeh (formally, the Lebanon Hospital for the Insane) was founded by a Swiss Quaker missionary in 1896, one of the first modern psychiatric hospitals in the Middle East. It closed its doors in 1982, a victim of Lebanon's brutal fifteen-year civil war. In this book, Joelle Abi-Rached uses the rise and fall of ʿAṣfūriyyeh as a lens through which to examine the development of modern psychiatric theory and practice in the region as well as the sociopolitical history of modern Lebanon. Abi-Rached shows how ʿAṣfūriyyeh's role shifted from a missionary enterprise to a national institution with wide regional influence. She offers a gripping chronicle of patients' and staff members' experiences during the Lebanese Civil War and analyzes the hospital's distinctive nonsectarian philosophy. When
£40.85
MIT Press Ltd Break On Through Mit Press Radical Psychiatry and
Book Synopsis“Antipsychiatry,” Esalen, psychedelics, and DSM III: Radical challenges to psychiatry and the conventional treatment of mental health in the 1970s.The upheavals of the 1960s gave way to a decade of disruptions in the 1970s, and among the rattled fixtures of American society was mainstream psychiatry. A “Radical Caucus” formed within the psychiatric profession and the “antipsychiatry” movement arose. Critics charged that the mental health establishment was complicit with the military-industrial complex, patients were released from mental institutions, and powerful antipsychotic drugs became available. Meanwhile, practitioners and patients experimented with new approaches to mental health, from primal screaming and the therapeutic use of psychedelics to a new reliance on quantification. In Break on Through, Lucas Richert investigates the radical challenges to psychiatry and to the conventional treatment of mental health that emerged in
£15.29
Elsevier Health Sciences Massachusetts General Hospital Psychopharmacology
Book SynopsisTrade Review"This is an excellent resource. Chapters are clearly and efficiently written. With the move towards digital communication, access to the website version is very helpful." -Aaron Plattner, MD (Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services) Doody's Score: 96 - 4 Stars!
£56.99
HarperCollins Publishers Inc Committed
Book SynopsisGrey’s Anatomy meets One L in this psychiatrist’s charming and poignant memoir about his residency at Harvard. Adam Stern was a student at a state medical school before being selected to train as a psychiatry resident at one of the most prestigious programs in the country.Trade Review"By turns funny and tragic, Committed pulls back the curtain on what it takes to become a psychiatrist–and how the practitioners, or the good ones, anyway, can put their own sanity on the line in the service of healing others." —People, Book of the Week pick "A mesmerizing memoir...[Stern] paints sensitive and often touching portraits of his patients, who dealt with everything from paranoia to anorexia to severe depression...Compassionate and candid, this is as human as it gets."—Publishers Weekly, STARRED "[A] dynamic debut memoir...As the author vividly captures the urgency, chaos, and eerie fascination involved with the treatment of mental illness, he also candidly shares numerous patient portraits, which provide some of the most moving and disturbing moments in the book...The combination of patient case studies and medical trainee journal creates an intense reading experience and an eye-opening appreciation for medical professionals charged with psychiatric care. Residents and those contemplating a career in mental health will find much to glean from this spirited memoir of dedication and dogged determination...Engrossing, indelible, and brimming with genuine humanity."—Kirkus, STARRED "With high-stakes drama, interesting characters, and a predictably appealing protagonist, it's no wonder that medical memoirs are often compelling reading. Stern's is no exception as he recalls his four years of psychiatric residency training at Harvard...A sensitive chronicle about becoming a doctor and the value of human connection and empathic listening."—Booklist "This book is a fascinating look at the inside of a medical residency, and it offers a glimpse of many of the often-understated personal costs involved...Readers who have also experienced the vigor of professional academic training will find Stern’s account familiar and satisfying, while those who haven’t will get a rare and insightful glimpse into the many potential struggles involved...This well-written, engaging book will have a special appeal to those already in academia and will be of interest to those who are considering it." —Library Journal —
£12.99
WW Norton & Co From Conflict to Resolution Strategies for
Book Synopsis"Heitler has established herself as a leader in what is evolving as an extraordinary, valuable integration of systems perspectives, cognitive and behavioral methodologies, and traditional views of personality and therapy."--Psychotherapy in Private Practice
£15.46
John Wiley & Sons Inc Somatoform Disorders v 9 WPA Series in Evidence
Book SynopsisBe Guided by the Evidence. Somatoform disorders are more common than many clinicians realize and are often underdiagnosed and poorly managed. This practical guide provides a comprehensive overview of all somatoform disorders.Trade Review"…an informative and comprehensive new book on a group of common but difficult disorders. The book should be read by all clinicians. I highly recommend it." (Doody's Health Services)Table of ContentsList of Reveiw Contributors. Preface. CHAPTER 1. SOMATIZATION AND CONVERSON DISORDERS. Somatization and Conversion Disorders: A Reveiw (Harold Merskey and Francois Mai). COMMENTARIES. 1.1 From Hysteria to Somatization Francis Creed. 1.2 Somatoform and Conversion Disorders or Somatic Presentations of Mental Disorders (Javier J. Escobar). 1.3 Are Somatoform Disorders a Distinct Category? (Gregory E. Simon). 1.4 Somatoform Disorders: Deconstructing a Diagnosis (Oye Gureje). 1.5 The Psychbiology of Somatization and Conversion Disorders (C. Robert Cloninger and Mehmet Dokucu). 1.6 Patient or Process (Linda Gask). 1.7 Reading the Body (Leslie Swartz). 1.8 Somatization and Conversion Disorders: A Forgotten Public Health Agenda (Shekhar Saxena). 1.9 A Cognitive Account on Conversion and Somatization Disorders (Karin Roelofs). 1.10 Labelling the Unfathomable (Bart Sheehan). 1.11 Somatization and Conversion: An Ongoing Controversy (Carsten Spitzer and Hans Jorgen Grabe). 1.12 The Mind-Body Dualism and Conversion Disorders (Carlo Faravelli and Massimo Lai). 1.13 Concepts of Medically Unexplained Symptoms in Relation to Mind-Body Dualism (Athula Sumathipala). 1.14 A Challenge for Both Clinicians and Researchers (Antonio Lobo). 1.15 Somatization Disorders in the African Context (Frank G. Njenga, Anna N. Nguithi and Rachel Kang'ethe). 1.16 Somatization and Conversion Disorders: An Arab Perspective 9Tarek A. Okasha). 1.17 Much Theory, but Little Agreement (Alberto Perales and Hector Chue). CHAPTER 2. PAIN DISORDER. Pain Disorder: A Reveiw (Steven A. King). COMMENTARIES. 2.1 The Major Paradigm Shift from the Biomedical Reductionist to the Biopsychosocial Approach to the Assessment and Treatment of Pain (Robert J. Gatchel). 2.2 DSM and Pain: When (if ever) is Pain Truely a Psychiatric Disorder? (Robert Boland). 2.3 Pain Disorder or Just Pain: Can We Escape Dualism? (Robert G. Large and Tipu Aamir). 2.4 The Mind-Body Ditchotomy in the Modern World (Hans Jorgen Grabe and Cartsen Spitzer). 2.5 Chronic Pain: Towards a Biopsychosocial Perspective (Michael Bach and Martin Aigner). 2.6 Pain Disorder: Where's the Utility? (Lance M. McCracken). 2.7 Patients must be at the Centre of Pain Management (Joanna M.Zakrzewska). 2.8 Chronic Pain: the Importance of a Comprehensive History (Gerald M. Aronoff). 2.9 Psychological and Physiological Factors in Pain Disorder (Morten Birket-Smith). 2.10 Does the Somatoform Disorder Approach Broaden Our Perspective on Pain? (Wolfgang Hiller and Paul Nilges). 2.11 Diagnosis and Treatment of Pain: Consultation-Liason Psychiatry Aspects (Albert Diefenbache)r. 2.12 Pain: Suffering, Semantics, and Sensitization (Jeffrey Rome). 2.13 Subjectivity and Communitas: Further Considerations on Pain (Etzel Cardena). 2.14 The Relationship Between Pain and Anxiety Disorders (Antonio Bulbena, Carlos Garcia Ribera and Lili Sperry). 2.15 Gaps in Evidence Base of Pain Disorders (Santosh K. Chaturvedi). 2.16 Pain in Genral Practice (Manual Suarez Richards and Gustavo Alfredo Delucchi). CHAPTER 3. HYPOCHONDRIASIS. Hypochondriasis: A Reveiw (Russell Noyes Jr). COMMENTARIES. 3.1 Hypochondriasis: Future Directions in Classification and Etiology Research (Steven Taylor and Gordon J.G. Asmundson). 3.2 Making Sense of Hypochondriasis (Jonathan S. Abramowitz). 3.3 Hypochndriasis: An Endless Source of Controversies (Vladan Starcevic). 3.4 Hypochondriasis: Defining Boundaries, Exploring Risk Factors and Immunology (Eamonn Ferguson). 3.5 Hypochondriasis, Health Anxiety, and Cognitive-Behavoural Therapy (Patricia Furer and John R. Walker). 3.6 Progress with Hypochondriasis (Theo K. Bouman). 3.7 The Clinical Spectrum of Hypochondriacal Fears (Giovanni A. Fava and Stefania Fabbri). 3.8 A Nosological Nightmare (Geoffrey G. Lloyd). 3.9 Hypochondriacal Syndromes: Where Did They Go? (Driss Mousaoui). 3.10 Dimensional Versus Categorical Approach to Obsessions, Delusions, and Hypochondriasis (Joseph Zohar). 3.11 The Nosographic Complexity of Hypochondriasis and the Ambiguilty of the Bpdy (Hector Perez-Rincon). 3.12 Hypochondriasis: Is There a Promising Treatment? (Tewfik K. Daradkeh). CHAPTER 4. BODY DYSMORPHIC DISORDER. Body Dysmorphic Disorder: A Reveiw (Guilio Perugi and Franco Frare). COMMENTARIES. 4.1 The Complexity of Body Dysmorphic Disorder (Vilma Gabbay and Rachel G. Klein). 4.2 Preoccupation with Appearance: Limitations of Our Understanding and Treatment (Jon E. Grant). 4.3 Translational and Evolutional Models of Body Dysmorphic Disorder (Dan J. Stein). 4.4 Our Evolving Understanding of Body Dysmorphic Disorder (Nancy J. Keuthen and Antje Bohne). 4.5 Is Body Dysmorphic Disorder a Culturally Determined Expression of a Body Image Disorder? (David H. Gleaves and Suman Ambwani). 4.6 Body Dysmorphic Disorder: Awareness Needed (Don E. Jeffreys). 4.7 Recent Findings in Body Dysmorphic Disoder and Future Drections (Sabine Wilhelm and Ulrike Buhlmann). 4.8 Body Dysmorphic Disorder: Some Issues Conserning Classification and Treatment (Fugen Neziroglu). 4.9 Body Dysmorphic Disorder: The Antithesis of Narcissus (Andrew A. Nierenberg). 4.10 Playing the Devil's avocate: Is The Concept of Delusional Disorder, Somatic Type, Condemned to Extiction? (Leonardo F. Fontenelle, Mauro V. Mendlowicz and Marcio Versiani). 4.11 Advancing the Understanding of Dysmorphic Disorder (Eric Hollander and Bernardo Dell'Osso). 4.12 Is Body Dysmorphic Disorder More Than a DSM Construct? (Michel Botbol). 4.13 Body Dysmorphic Disorder and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: More Simularities than Differences (Euripedes C. Miguel, Albina R. Torres and Ygor A. Ferrao). CHAPTER 5. CHRONIC FATIGUE AND NEURASTHENIA. Chronic Fatigue and Neurasthenia: A Reveiw (Michael C. Sharpe and Simon Wessely). COMMENTARIES. 5.1 From Neurasthenia to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Journey, Not a Destination (Kurt Kroenke). 5.2 Tired People Challenge Medicine (Stefan Priebe). 5.3 Disease, Sickness or Illness: Which One Is Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and / or Neurasthenia? (Bedirhan Ustun). 5.4 Constructing Chronic Fatigue: Empiricism, Pyschiatry, and Sociocultural Contexts (Renee R. Taylor). 5.5 Chronic Fatigue Syndrome as a Paradigm for Pyschosomatic Medicine (James L. Levenson). 5.6 Beyond Fashion (Gordon Parker). 5.7 Chronic Fatigue and Disembodied DSM (Sing Lee and Arthur Kleinman). 5.8 Problems of Definition, Etiological Approaches and Issues of Management in Chronic Fatiguing Disorders (Anne Farmer and Tom Fowler). 5.9 Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Time to Concentrate on Fatigue, Not Chronicity (Petros Skapinakis and Venetsanos Mavreas). 5.10 Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Real Disease, A Real Problem (Jonathan R. Price). 5.11 The Specificity of Chronic Fatigue, Neurasthenia, and Somatoform Disorders (Winfried Reif). 5.12 Chronic Fatigue in Developing Countries (Vikram Patel). 5.13 Functional Somatic Syndromes: Many Names for the Same Thing? (Marco Antonio Brasil, Jose Carlos Appolinario and Sandra Fortes). 5.14 Recent Developments in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (Ruud C.W. Vermeulen). 5.15 Does Nuerasthenia Really Exist in this Century? (Edmond Chiu). CHAPTER 6. FACTITIOUS PHYSICAL DISORDERS. Factitious Physical Disorders: A Reveiw (Stuart J. Eisendrath and John Q. Young). COMMENTARIES. 6.1 Wilful Deception as Illness Behavour (Christopher Bass). 6.2 Factitious Disorders: Diagnosis or Misbehavour/ (Charles V. Ford). 6.3 Factitious Disorder and Malingering: The Doctors Dilemma (Stephen M. Lawrie and Michael C. Sharpe). 6.4 Factitious Physical Disorders: The Challenges of Efficient Recognition and Effective Intervention (Lois E. Krahn). 6.5 Some Aspects of Factitious Physical Disorders by Proxy (Christopher Cordes). 6.6 Inventing Illness: The Deviant POatient (Don R. Lipsitt). 6.7 Characterizing Factitious Physical Symptoms (David G. Folks). 6.8 Moral Constraints, Regret, and Remorse in Treating Patients with Factitious Disorder (Ovidio A. De Leon). 6.9 Fact, Fiction, Factitious, or Fractious Disorders (Dinesh Bhugra). 6.10 Factitious Physical Disorders: A Strategy of Survival for Medically Trained Traumatized Borderlines? (Ramon Florenzano). 6.11 Factitious Physical Disorders and Malingering: The Hazardous Link (Saida Douki, Sara Benzineb and Fathy Nacef). Index.
£151.95
John Wiley & Sons Inc Reflective Interpersonal Therapy for Children and
Book SynopsisDisruptive and aggressive behaviour in children causes significant distress to everyone involved. Tradition interventions tend to focus on changing the disruptive behaviour itself, but research shows that it is important to also focus on the underlying anxiety, anger and vulnerability that may have contributed to the child's conduct. In this innovativebook, Hermione Roff introduces Reflective Interpersonal Therapy for Children and Parents (RICAP), a new intervention that looks at the processes underpinning disruptive and aggressive behaviour problems. RICAP was developed specifically to meet the needs of children and their families, and offers a new way to think about and tackle conduct disorders. The intervention explores the relationship between anxiety and anger, the dynamics of threat and fear, and the behavioural interactions within a prime relationship. Taking a practitioner-oriented approach, Roff introduces the theory underpinning RICAP, the evidence base for the approacTable of ContentsAbout the author. List of illustrations. Acknowledgements. An old Jewish tale. Mind that child! Chapter 1: RICAP: A description of the intervention Chapter 2: RICAP and aggression: Sometimes it helps to be bad. Chapter 3: RICAP and reflection: Are these children mindless? Chapter 4: RICAP and attachment: fighting to feel safe. Chapter 5: RICAP and avoidance: A useful defence or a habitual ploy? Chapter 6: RICAP and emotions: Why does everything have to be reduced to anger? Chapter 7: RICAP and memory: What I remember tells me who I am. Chapter 8: RICAP and problem-solving: Do solutions matter? Chapter 9: RICAP and metaphor: The use and usefulness of metaphor. Chapter 10: Marc: A case study. Appendices. References. Index.
£111.10
Penguin Books Ltd Break the Cycle
Book Synopsis***The Instant National Bestseller***A Next Big Idea Club must-read title for January 2024The definitive, paradigm-shifting guide to healing intergenerational trauma?weaving together scientific research with practical exercises and stories from the therapy room?from Dr. Mariel Buqué, PhD, a Columbia University?trained trauma-informed psychologist and practitioner of holistic healingFrom Dr. Mariel Buqué, a leading trauma psychologist, comes this groundbreaking guide to transforming intergenerational pain into intergenerational abundance. With Break the Cycle, she delivers the definitive guide to healing inherited trauma. Weaving together scientific research with practical exercises and stories from the therapy room, Dr. Buqué teaches readers how trauma is transmitted from one generation to the next and how they can break the cycle through tangible therapeutic practices, learning to pass down strength instead of pain to future generations. When a physical wound is left unhealed, it continues to cause pain and can infect the whole body. When emotions are left unhealed, they similarly cause harm that spreads to other parts of our lives, hurting our family, friends, community members, and others. Eventually, this hurt can injure an entire lineage, metastasizing across years and generations. This is intergenerational trauma. This trauma is why some of us become estranged from our families, why some of us are people pleasers, why some of us find ourselves in codependent relationships. This trauma can be rooted in the experiences of ancestors, who may have suffered due to unhealthy family dynamics, and it can be collective, the result of a shared experience like systemic oppression, or harmful ingrained behaviors in a culture like the acceptance of physical discipline of children, or even a natural disaster like a pandemic. These wounds are complex, impacting our minds, bodies, and spirits. Healing requires a holistic approach that has so far been absent from the field of psychology. Until now.
£24.00
Irish Academic Press Ltd Ada English Patriot and Psychiatrist
Book Synopsis
£61.75
Johns Hopkins University Press Diagnosing Literary Genius
Book SynopsisBy examining the psychiatric engagement with the works of Fyodor Dostoevsky, Nikolai Gogol, Leo Tolstoy, and the decadents and revolutionaries, Sirotkina provides a rich account of Russia's medical and literary history during this turbulent revolutionary period.Trade ReviewIrina Sirotkina gives a fascinating account of the growth of psychiatry in Russia through the prism of literature. -- Anne Garside Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease [Sirotkina] has a deep interest in her subject, and she offers a mine of information and commentary about the linked histories of psychiatry and literature in Russia (and in the post-1917 Russian emigre community). The results of her archival research are most rewarding for anyone interested in the history of Russian psychiatry. -- Daniel Rancour-Laferriere Times Literary Supplement In this absorbing work of exemplary scholarship, Irina Sirotkina... convincingly correlates trends in the theory and practice of Russian psychotherapy, during the fifty-year period studied, with changing developments in sociopolitical thought. -- Martin Bidney Slavic Review A worthy and cleverly constructed attempt to redress the excesses of casting psychiatry as a self-interested body. -- Ben Mayhew Medical History 2004 A valuable contribution to our understanding of the history of Russian psychiatry. -- Laura Goering Journal of the History of Medicine 2004 An interesting and respectable history of a critical time in Russia's history. -- Cary Federman European LegacyTable of ContentsContents: Preface On Transliteration and Spelling Introduction 1 Gogol, Moralists, and Nineteenth-Century Psychiatry 2 Dostoevsky: From Epilepsy to Progeneration 3 Tolstoy and the Beginning of Psychotherapy in Russia 4 Decadents, Revolutionaries, and the Nation's Mental Health 5 The Institute of Genius: Psychiatry in the Early Soviet Years Notes Bibliography Index
£45.50
Johns Hopkins University Press Descriptions and Prescriptions
Book Synopsis, University of Louisville.Trade ReviewDescriptions and Prescriptions is one of the best accounts of the intense debates on the values underlying the DSM, the need for accountability in psychiatric diagnosis, and some of the chief philosophical and political issues in psychiatry. -- Steven S. Sharfstein, M.D. New England Journal of Medicine Anyone who believes that developing the best diagnostic manual possible is an important and complicated task, and also wants to contribute to the process in a scholarly and reflective way, is well-advised to study these chapters. -- Peter Zachar Metapsychology This is a stimulating book for healthcare professionals interested in the clarity and development of psychiatric diagnoses, and while most appropriate for the seasoned professional, it can be a useful stimulant to the advanced student in psychiatric healthcare professions. Doody's Health Sciences Review In particular, I believe this volume has explicit value for all who serve on a DSM-V committee, as well as those with an interest in nosology or medical sociology, those with a critical role in psychiatric education, or those who simply have a philosophical bent (a non-DSM character trait). -- Robert J. Van Den Bosch, M.D., Ph.D. American Journal of Psychiatry 2003Table of ContentsContents: List of Contributors Acknowledgments PART ONE: Introduction and Background 1 Introduction 2 The Limits of an Evidence-Based Classification of Mental Disorders 3 Values, Politics, and Science in the Construction of the DSMs PART TWO: Conceptual and Methodological Considerations 4 Values and Objectivity in Psychiatric Nosology 5 Survival of the Fittest? Conceptual Selection in Psychiatric Nosology 6 Technical Reason in the DSM-IV: An Unacknowledged Value 7 Implications of a Pragmatic Theory of Disease for the DSMs 8 Rethinking Normativism in Psychiatric Classification PART THREE: Diagnostic Categories and Values 9 Evaluation and Devaluation in Personality Assessment 10 Values and Validity of Diagnostic Criteria: Disvalued versus Disordered Conditions of Childhood and Adolescence 11 Implications of an Embrace: The DSMs, Happiness, and Capability 12 Why Criteria of Involuntary Action Are Value Laden PART FOUR: Personal and Collective Interests 13 The Hegemony of the DSMs 14 What Patient and Families Look for in Psychiatric Diagnosis 15 Softened Science in the Courtroom: Forensic Implications of a Value-Laden Classification 16 Speaking Across the Border: A Patient Assessment of Located Languages, Values, and Credentials in Psychiatric Classification 17 Psychotherapists as Authors: Microlevel Analysis of Therapists' Written Reports PART FIVE: Visions for the Future 18 Clinical and Etiological Psychiatric Diagnoses: Do Causes Count? 19 Defining Genetically Informed Phenotypes for the DSM-V 20 Values in Developing Psychiatric Classifications: A Proposal for the DSM-V 21 Report to the Chair of the DSM-VI Task Force from the Editors of Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, "Contentious and Noncontentious Evaluative Language in Psychiatric Diagnosis" (Dateline 2010) References Index
£51.50
Johns Hopkins University Press Developmental Disabilities from Childhood to
Book SynopsisS., Maryland Volunteer Lawyers ServiceTrade ReviewThis book is an essential resource to new practitioners but is also useful for experienced psychiatrists. -- Felissa Goldstein Psychiatrist.comTable of ContentsContributorsPart I: The Developmental Disabilities Chapter 1. Overview of Developmental DisabilityChapter 2. A Life Cycle Approach to Developmental DisabilitiesChapter 3. Geropsychiatric Aspects of Mental Retardation and Intellectual DisabilitiesChapter 4. Autism Spectrum DisordersPart II: Etiology and Assessment Chapter 5. Genetic Causes of Mental RetardationChapter 6. Prenatal Exposure to Toxic SubstancesChapter 7. Acquired Brain InjuryChapter 8. Assessment of Developmental DisabilitiesPart III: Community Living Chapter 9. Community Integration, Living Alternatives, and EmploymentChapter 10. Systems ManagementPart IV: Interventions Chapter 11. Legal and Practical Aspects of Special EducationChapter 12. PharmacotherapyChapter 13. Behavioral InterventionsPart V: Special IssuesChapter 14. Ethical and Legal IssuesChapter 15. AdvocacyAppendix: Developmental Disabilities ResourcesGlossaryIndex
£60.50
Johns Hopkins University Press Trouble in Mind
Book SynopsisFor students, the book includes useful guides to psychiatric assessment and diagnosis.Trade ReviewWritten for the medical student and the psychiatric resident and the psychology and social work intern. For those readers, it is a masterly summary of what we know about the normal brain, and how it goes awry. Metapsychology 2011 A masterly summary of what we know about the normal brain, and how it goes awry. -- Nassir Ghaemi Metapsychology 2011Table of ContentsPrefaceAcknowledgments1. Organic Mind1.1. Why Mind Matters1.2. A Brain Primer1.3. Summary: Organic Mind2. Elementary Mind2.1. Not Shaken, Stirred: Inappropriate Arousal2.2. Sate Ain't So: Immoderate Appetites2.3. Sense Insensibility: Misperceptions2.4. Nominal Anomaly: Confounded Cognition2.5. Inaction in Action: Motion Sickness2.6. Order Disorder: Dysregulated Actions2.7. Summary: Elementary Mind3. Integral Mind3.1. Off -Track Vetting: Disrupted Attention3.2. Forget-Me-Not, Not: Faulty Memory3.3. Stark, Craving Mad: Bad Habits3.4. Executive Bummery: Value Misjudgment3.5. You Can't Always Want What You Get: Emotional Miscue3.6. Displeasure Principle: Displaced Desire3.7. Fear Factory: Hyperactive Alarm3.8. Summary: Integral Mind4. Synthetic Mind4.1. Leaning Disability: Unbalanced Bias4.2. Veer Goggles: Personality Non Grata4.3. Cardinal Knowledge: Beyond Belief4.4. No Thyself: Misshapen Identity4.5. Quid Pro Woe: Cooperative Contretemps4.6. Piece of Mind: Communicatino Breakdown4.7. Social Insecurity: Dissaffiliation4.8. Complain Speaking: Help-Seeking Misbehavior4.9. Summary: Synthetic Mind5. Psychiatric Mind5.1. Psychiatry Rebuilt5.2. Mending Mentation5.3. Summary: Psychiatric MindAppendix A: The Official Version: A Guided Tour of the DSMAppendix B: The Novice's Guide to Psychiatric AssessmentGlossaryReferencesAdditional ReadingIndex
£45.50
Johns Hopkins University Press Trouble in Mind An Unorthodox Introduction to
Book SynopsisFor students, the book includes useful guides to psychiatric assessment and diagnosis.Trade ReviewWritten for the medical student and the psychiatric resident and the psychology and social work intern. For those readers, it is a masterly summary of what we know about the normal brain, and how it goes awry. Metapsychology 2011 A masterly summary of what we know about the normal brain, and how it goes awry. -- Nassir Ghaemi Metapsychology 2011Table of ContentsPrefaceAcknowledgments1. Organic Mind1.1. Why Mind Matters1.2. A Brain Primer1.3. Summary: Organic Mind2. Elementary Mind2.1. Not Shaken, Stirred: Inappropriate Arousal2.2. Sate Ain't So: Immoderate Appetites2.3. Sense Insensibility: Misperceptions2.4. Nominal Anomaly: Confounded Cognition2.5. Inaction in Action: Motion Sickness2.6. Order Disorder: Dysregulated Actions2.7. Summary: Elementary Mind3. Integral Mind3.1. Off -Track Vetting: Disrupted Attention3.2. Forget-Me-Not, Not: Faulty Memory3.3. Stark, Craving Mad: Bad Habits3.4. Executive Bummery: Value Misjudgment3.5. You Can't Always Want What You Get: Emotional Miscue3.6. Displeasure Principle: Displaced Desire3.7. Fear Factory: Hyperactive Alarm3.8. Summary: Integral Mind4. Synthetic Mind4.1. Leaning Disability: Unbalanced Bias4.2. Veer Goggles: Personality Non Grata4.3. Cardinal Knowledge: Beyond Belief4.4. No Thyself: Misshapen Identity4.5. Quid Pro Woe: Cooperative Contretemps4.6. Piece of Mind: Communicatino Breakdown4.7. Social Insecurity: Dissaffiliation4.8. Complain Speaking: Help-Seeking Misbehavior4.9. Summary: Synthetic Mind5. Psychiatric Mind5.1. Psychiatry Rebuilt5.2. Mending Mentation5.3. Summary: Psychiatric MindAppendix A: The Official Version: A Guided Tour of the DSMAppendix B: The Novice's Guide to Psychiatric AssessmentGlossaryReferencesAdditional ReadingIndex
£29.99
Johns Hopkins University Press Bodies under Siege Selfmutilation Nonsuicidal
Book SynopsisFavazza critically assesses new and significant biological, ethnological, social, and psychological findings regarding self-injury; presents current understandings of self-injurious acts from cultural and clinical perspectives; and places self-mutilation in historical and contemporary context.Trade Review"The second edition of the fascinating but gruesome Bodies under Siege by Armando R. Favazza explores the various ways in which people mutilate their bodies. Favazza explores the historical background and offers insights into how and why people do truly appalling things to their limbs, heads, and genitals. He pleads for understanding for a group of patients who are often seen as bizarre and repellent." (New Scientist) "The seminal book on [nonsuicidal self-injury]; presents a comprehensive historical, anthropological, and clinical review of the topic." (Current Directions in Psychological Science) "A compendium of cultural and clinical reports of self-mutilation and a summary of what is and what is not known about therapy, the book is a major contribution to both the anthropological and psychiatric literature. I know that having read it I will see my next self-mutilating patient through more insightful and compassionate eyes." (Journal of Nervous and Mental Disorders)"Table of ContentsPreface to the Third EditionPart I: Mutilative Beliefs, Religion, Eating, and Ethology1. Mutilative Beliefs, Attitudes, Practices, and Images2. Self-mutilation in Myths of Creation, Shamanism, and Religion3. Self-injury and Eating Disorders4. Animals and AutomutilationPart II: Mutilation and Self-Injury of Body Parts: Cultural and Clinical Cases5. The Head and Its Parts6. The Limbs7. The Skin8. The GenitalsPart III: Insight and Treatment9. Understanding Self-injury10. The Assessment, Psychology, and Biology of Self-injury11. Treatment12. Personal ReflectionsEpilogue: Body Play: My Journey, Fakir MusafarReferencesIndex
£33.00
Rutgers University Press Psychiatric Malpractice Stories of Patients
Book SynopsisJames Kelley tells the true stories of people who sought help from psychiatrists and ended up suing them for malpractice. These tales are compelling, tragic, and sometimes bizarre. They offer a unique view into a relationship that is normally confidential and caringbut can be catastrophic when it goes wrong.Trade Review"This elegantly written book brings fascinating legal controversies to life. Kelley does a remarkable job of telling vivid stories about actual doctors and patients without sacrificing fairness or depth. Psychiatric Malpractice makes vital contribution to our understanding of the intersection of law and medicine." -- Steven Goldberg * Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center, author of Culture Clash: Law and Science in Amer *"With sensitivity to the plight of both the plaintiff (the patient) and the defendant (the psychiatrist), Mr. Kelley tells what happened in real psychiatric malpractice cases, who won, and the often subtle reasons why. An exceptional and exciting book!" -- Jonas R. Rappeport * M.D., Medical Director (retired), American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law *"Consumers of psychiatric services and professionals in all of the mental health fields will find this fine book extremely useful. It is unique in covering a wide range of malpractice cases." -- Gary R. Schoener * psychologist and author of Psychotherapists' Sexual Involvement with Clients *"Behind the emotionless legal citations, psychiatric malpractice cases hold gripping tales of human tragedy. James Kelley tells it with a heart, also reminding us that the law offers only a paltry remedy for our human condition. Kelley's book makes psychiatric misadventures read like a novel." -- Robert I. Simon * M.D., P.A., Georgetown University School of Medicine *"Kelley recounts the stories of both patients and psychiatrists with the flair of a mystery writer, the compassion of a fellow traveler, and the insight of a seasoned attorney. He is a sensitive observer and a thorough reporter. The tales are engrossing." -- Linda Mabus Jorgenson * Esq., coauthor of Sexual Abuse by Professionals: A Legal Guide *Table of ContentsChapter 1. IntroductionChapter 2. The Law of Psychiatric MalpracticePART I. SuicideChapter 3. The Walking Suicide Time BombChapter 4. Bum Rap in OrlandoChapter 5. Suicide: The Therapist as ScapegoatPART II. Violence Against OthersChapter 6. Man with a MissionChapter 7. Search and DestroyChapter 8. A Danger to OthersPART III. Standards of Psychiatric CareChapter 9. Dr. Osheroff's CaseChapter 10. Dr. Bean-Bayog: The Therapist as MomChapter 11. In Search of a Standard of CarePART IV. Sexual MisconductChapter 12. Mrs. Barkley, Twice a WeekChapter 13. One Doesn't Just Say GoodbyeChapter 14. Sex as "Part of the Therapy"Chapter 15. Afterword
£38.65
Science & Behavior Books Inc.,U.S. Conjoint Family Therapy
Book SynopsisConjoint Family Therapy` has long been universally recognized as a classic in its field. Endorsed by therapists, parents, managers and students, it has been adopted for classroom use.
£33.88
Science & Behavior Books Inc.,U.S. The Satir Model Family Therapy and Beyond
Book SynopsisThe definitive book on the theoretical aspects of Satir's approach to therapy. Comprehensive organization of her concepts, therapeutic applications, and innovative interventions.
£35.16
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Mindfulness
Book SynopsisEmerging from cognitive behavioural traditions, mindfulness and acceptance-based therapies hold promise as new evidence-based approaches for helping people distressed by the symptoms of psychosis. These therapies emphasise changing the relationship with unusual and troublesome experiences through cultivating experiential openness, awareness, and engagement in actions based on personal values. In this volume, leading international researchers and clinicians describe the major treatment models and research background of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and Person-Based Cognitive Therapy (PBCT), as well as the use of mindfulness, in individual and group therapeutic contexts. The book contains discrete chapters on developing experiential interventions for voices and paranoia, conducting assessment and case formulation, and a discussion of ways to work with spirituality from a metacognitive standpoint. Further chapters provide details of how clients view their experiences of ACT aTable of ContentsAbout the Editors xiv List of Contributors xvi Acknowledgements xix Foreword: Acceptance, Mindfulness and Psychotic Disorders: Creating a New Place to Begin xx 1 Introduction to Mindfulness and Acceptance-based Therapies for Psychosis 1 Joseph E. Oliver, Candice Joseph, Majella Byrne, Louise C. Johns and Eric M. J. Morris 1.1 Introduction to Psychosis 1 1.2 Interventions 2 1.2.1 Cognitive Behavioural Therapy 2 1.2.2 Developments in CBT: Contextual Approaches 3 1.2.3 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy 4 1.2.4 Mindfulness and Person-based Cognitive Therapy for Psychosis 7 1.3 Conclusion 8 2 Theory on Voices 12 Fran Shawyer, Neil Thomas, Eric M. J. Morris and John Farhall 2.1 Phenomenology 12 2.2 Mechanisms and Origins of Hearing Voices 13 2.3 Meaning Given to Voice Experience 14 2.4 Responses to Voices 15 2.4.1 Resistance 16 2.4.2 Engagement 17 2.5 Implications for the Role of Acceptance and Mindfulness in Voices 18 3 Emotional Processing and Metacognitive Awareness for Persecutory Delusions 33 Claire Hepworth, Helen Startup and Daniel Freeman 3.1 Introduction 33 3.2 Persecutory Delusions 33 3.3 Improving Treatments for Persecutory Delusions 34 3.4 Development of the Intervention 35 3.5 The EPMA Intervention 38 3.6 The EPMA Pilot Study 40 3.7 Case Study 41 3.8 Conclusion 42 4 Clinical Assessment and Assessment Measures 47 John Farhall, Fran Shawyer, Neil Thomas and Eric M. J. Morris 4.1 Introduction 47 4.2 Clinical Assessment 47 4.2.1 Overview 47 4.2.2 Structure and Methods of Assessment 49 4.2.3 A Guide to Clinical Assessment 51 4.2.4 Assessing and Addressing Potential Barriers to and Risks Arising from Therapy 52 4.3 Assessment Measures 54 4.3.1 Issues in the Use of Self-report Measures 55 4.3.2 Mindfulness Measures 55 4.3.3 Measures of ACT Processes and Constructs 57 4.4 Conclusion 60 5 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Case Formulation 64 Patty Bach 5.1 Introduction 64 5.2 Case Study 64 5.2.1 Avoidance 66 5.2.2 Cognitive Fusion 67 5.2.3 Attachment to Content 67 5.2.4 Weak Self-knowledge, Dominating Concept of the Past or Feared Future 68 5.2.5 Lack of Values Clarity 68 5.2.6 Persistent Inaction, Impulsivity or Avoidance 69 5.3 Case Formulation using the Inflexahex Model 70 5.4 Conclusion 73 6 Engaging People with Psychosis in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Mindfulness 76 Brandon A. Gaudiano and Andrew M. Busch 6.1 Introduction 76 6.1.1 Treatment Adherence and Engagement in Psychosis 76 6.2 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy 77 6.3 Functional Analytic Psychotherapy 78 6.4 Acceptance-based Methods and Techniques for Improving Engagement 79 6.4.1 Workability 81 6.4.2 Values Clarification 81 6.4.3 Acceptance and Mindfulness 82 6.4.4 Committed Action 83 6.4.5 The Therapeutic Relationship 84 6.5 Special Contexts and Issues 85 6.5.1 ACT Made Even Simpler 85 6.5.2 Involuntary Admission and Lack of Insight 86 6.5.3 Other Cognitive Behavioural Approaches for Psychosis 86 6.6 Case Study 88 6.6.1 Early Sessions (1–5) 88 6.6.2 Mid-treatment Sessions (6–15) 89 6.6.3 Late-treatment Sessions (16–20) 89 6.7 Conclusion 90 7 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Voices 95 Neil Thomas, Eric M. J. Morris, Fran Shawyer and John Farhall 7.1 Introduction 95 7.2 Formulating how Voices are a Problem 95 7.3 Overall Considerations in Conducting ACT with Voices 96 7.3.1 Sequence of Therapy 98 7.3.2 Acceptance: Letting Go of Struggle with Voices 98 7.3.3 Defusion 100 7.3.4 Mindfulness: Present Moment and Self as Observer 101 7.3.5 Willingness: Values and Committed Action 103 7.4 Case Study 104 7.4.1 Current Mental-health Problems 104 7.4.2 Mental-health History 105 7.4.3 Relevant Background 105 7.4.4 Assessment and Formulation 105 7.4.5 ACT Case Formulation 106 7.4.6 The ACT Approach 106 7.4.7 Outcomes 108 7.4.8 Discussion 110 8 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Delusions 112 José Manuel García Montes, Marino Pérez Álvarez and Salvador Perona Garcelán 8.1 Introduction 112 8.2 Delusions as Ways of Making Contact with Experience 112 8.2.1 Delusions as Active Forms of Experiential Avoidance 113 8.3 Intervention with ACT 115 8.3.1 Create a State of Creative Hopelessness 115 8.3.2 Clarify and Strengthen the Patient’s Values 117 8.3.3 Suggest the Possibility that the Problem is Control 120 8.3.4 Create a Distance from Language 122 8.3.5 Help Create a Transcendental Sense of Self 123 8.3.6 Developing Willingness 124 8.4 Conclusion 125 9 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Emotional Dysfunction following Psychosis 129 Ross White 9.1 Introduction 129 9.2 Understanding Emotional Dysfunction following Psychosis 129 9.3 Emotional Dysfunction and Experiential Avoidance 130 9.4 An ACT Conceptualisation of Emotional Dysfunction following Psychosis 131 9.5 Treating Emotional Dysfunction following Psychosis 132 9.5.1 Socialising the Individual to the ACT Model 133 9.5.2 Assessment and Formulation 133 9.5.3 Beyond Formulation: Progressing with the ACT Intervention 138 9.5.4 Moving Beyond the ACT Intervention 141 9.6 Conclusion 142 10 Person-based Cognitive Therapy for Distressing Psychosis 146 Lyn Ellett 10.1 Introduction 146 10.2 Zone of Proximal Development 146 10.2.1 Overview of the Zones of Proximal Development 147 10.3 Case Formulation in PBCT 150 10.3.1 Symptomatic Meaning: ABC Formulation 150 10.3.2 Relationship with Internal Experience: Mindfulness-based Formulation of Distress 151 10.3.3 Negative and Positive Self-schema 152 10.4 Experiential Methods of Change 153 10.4.1 Symptomatic Meaning 153 10.4.2 Relationship with Internal Experience 156 10.4.3 Working with Schemata 157 10.4.4 Symbolic Self 158 10.5 Conclusion 159 11 Spirituality: A New Way into Understanding Psychosis 160 Isabel Clarke 11.1 Introduction 160 11.2 Repositioning Psychosis and Spirituality: Recognition of the Two Ways of Knowing 161 11.3 Research Basis 162 11.4 Spirituality and Mental Health 162 11.5 Clinical Approach: The Therapeutic Alliance 164 11.5.1 The What is Real and What is Not Approach 164 11.5.2 Schizotypy and ‘Unshared Reality’ 165 11.5.3 From Conceptualisation to Coping Strategies 166 11.5.4 Role of Mindfulness 167 11.6 Psychosis as a Spiritual Crisis 168 12 The Service User Experience of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Person-based Cognitive Therapy 172 Joseph E. Oliver, Mark Hayward, Helena B. McGuiness and Clara Strauss 12.1 Introduction 172 12.2 An Overview of Service User Involvement 172 12.3 The Importance of a Service User Perspective in Informing ACT and PBCT for Psychosis 174 12.4 A Service User Perspective on the Experience of ACT for Psychosis 175 12.4.1 Background 176 12.4.2 The Therapy 178 12.4.3 How the Therapy Helped 178 12.4.4 Conclusion 179 12.5 Summary of Qualitative Findings from PBCT Groups on Participant Experiences of Mindfulness Practice and What was Learned from these Studies 180 12.5.1 Acceptance of Voices 181 12.5.2 Development of Sense of Self beyond Voices 182 12.5.3 The Value and Challenges of Seeking Service User Views 188 12.6 Conclusion 188 13 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for First-episode Psychosis 190 Joseph E. Oliver and Eric M. J. Morris 13.1 Introduction 190 13.2 Recovery from a First Episode of Psychosis 191 13.2.1 At-risk Mental States 192 13.3 Using ACT to Enhance Recovery from a First Episode of Psychosis 192 13.3.1 Assessment and Formulation 192 13.3.2 Being Aware and Present 194 13.3.3 Opening Up 195 13.3.4 Being Active 197 13.4 ACT in Different Modalities 198 13.4.1 Group Work 198 13.4.2 Working with Families and Carers 199 13.5 Case Study 200 13.6 Conclusion 203 14 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Psychosis in Acute Psychiatric Admission Settings 206 Gordon Mitchell and Amy McArthur 14.1 Introduction 206 14.2 Acute Psychosis and ACT Interventions 206 14.3 ACT in the Acute Psychiatric Admission Ward 209 14.4 Case Study 209 14.5 Convergence of Mindfulness/Metacognitive-based Cognitive Therapy Approaches 214 14.6 Reflections on Developing Systemic Applications of ACT 215 14.7 Conclusion 216 15 Developing Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Psychosis as a Group-based Intervention 219 Amy McArthur, Gordon Mitchell and Louise C. Johns 15.1 Introduction 219 15.2 A Six-session ACT-for-Psychosis Group Protocol 221 15.2.1 Session 1: Introducing the ACT Approach and Exploring the Workability of Current Strategies for Managing Distress 222 15.2.2 Session 2: Exploring the Impact of the Struggle for Control and Introducing Willingness as an Alternative 223 15.2.3 Session 3: Identifying Personal Valued Directions 225 15.2.4 Session 4: Moving in Valued Directions 227 15.2.5 Session 5: Continuing to Develop Self-as-Context and Willingness to Move towards Values 229 15.2.6 Session 6: Summarising the Themes of the Course and Reviewing Experiences of the Work 230 15.2.7 Optional Follow-up Session 230 15.3 Case Study 231 15.4 Reflections on the Experience of Developing and Delivering the Groups 233 15.5 Other Protocols 234 15.5.1 ACT for Life Group 235 15.6 Conclusion 237 16 Group Person-based Cognitive Therapy for Distressing Psychosis 240 Clara Strauss and Mark Hayward 16.1 Introduction 240 16.2 Person-based Cognitive Therapy 240 16.2.1 Group PBCT 242 16.3 The Importance of the Group Process in PBCT 242 16.4 Facilitating a PBCT Group 243 16.4.1 Inclusion Criteria 243 16.4.2 The 12-week Programme 243 16.4.3 Mindfulness Practice in PBCT 244 16.4.4 Cognitive Therapy in PBCT 247 16.5 PBCT: An Integrated Model 252 16.6 Group PBCT: The Evidence 253 16.7 Conclusion 254 Appendix A Chessboard Metaphor 256 Appendix B Leaves-on-the-Stream Metaphor 257 Appendix C Passengers-on-the-Bus Metaphor 259 Appendix D Person-in-the-Hole Metaphor 261 Appendix E Polygraph Metaphor 262 Appendix F See the Wood for the Trees (And Other Helpful Advice for Living Life) 263 Appendix G Skiing Metaphor 270 Appendix H Tug-of-War-with-the-Monster Metaphor 271 Index 272
£83.95
John Wiley and Sons Ltd A Handbook for the Assessment of Childrens
Book SynopsisHandbook for the Assessment of Children's Behaviours with Wiley Desktop Edition This ground-breaking book takes a new approach to the assessment of behaviour in children and adolescents. Written by an expert author team, combining one (Jonathan Williams) with higher qualifications in general practice, child neuropsychiatry, and child and adolescent psychiatry, with one (Peter Hill) with higher qualifications in medicine, paediatrics and child and adolescent psychiatry, the book draws on many thousands of multidisciplinary case discussions, at Great Ormond Street Hospital, in the Children's Multispecialty Assessment Clinic in North London, and in private practice. The book is ideal for the busy mental health professional working in a small team. Organised to allow rapid look-up of behaviours with comprehensive lists of their possible causes, it synthesizes research evidence and clinical experience. The authors interpret behaviour broadly, including not jTrade Review“The addition of the Wiley Desktop edition is an excellent way of making the handbook more portable and accessible. The functionality works on a variety of computers, tablets and phones and this makes this handbook all the more appealing to the modern clinician.” (Child & Adolescent Mental Health, 1 August 2013) “This is a very good resource for professionals working in child and adolescent psychiatry. It provides a very thorough and well-organized guide for the assessment of patients with a wide range of complaints . . . The book offers a unique method to reach an accurate diagnosis, amenable to interventions from a biopsychosocial perspective.” (Doody’s, 1 February 2013) "Overall, this is a fantastic resource for anyone that assesses behaviour in children and adolescents. It is comprehensive and covers an amazing variety of topics in an easy to understand, concise way. This is a handbook that covers the depth and breadth of information that is normally reserved for textbooks and encyclopaedias. A clearly well researched and thought through book that would be valuable on the bookshelf or computer of any health professionals that work with children (the review copy has already been borrowed by colleagues and purchased as a leaving present). In particular the handbook would be relevant for child and adolescent psychiatrists, clinical and educational psychologists, paediatricians and CAMHS professionals both working long-term within the field or whilst still in training. The addition of the Wiley Desktop edition is an excellent way of making the handbook more portable and accessible in any setting. The functionality works on a variety of computers, tablets and phones and this makes this handbook all the more appealing to the modern clinician."(Dr Mark Lovell, Consultant Child and Adolescent Learning Disability Psychiatrist, South Tees LDCAMHS, Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust) “A comprehensive and wide ranging book, exploring children’s behaviours from the routine to the quirky, set within a sound developmental framework. The layout with excellent cross-referencing and explanations is accessible and will be of interest to many clinicians working with children, young people and their families.” (Caryn Onions, Psychotherapist, Oxford, UK) "This is an incredibly useful book. It has a comprehensive list of presentations that frequently leave clinicians wondering what is going on. Beneath each entry lies a treasure trove of sophisticated, up to date evidence about conditions, blended with astute clinical wisdom." (Professor Stephen Scott, Professor of Child Health and Behaviour, Institute of Psychiatry, London)Table of ContentsIntroduction 9 Single Symptoms 11 Multiple symptoms occurring together 21 Cognition 27 General temporal patterns 61 Motor (General) 85 Motor (Specific Behaviours) 101 Sensory 121 Communication 143 Social 167 Home 189 School 215 Play 221 Preferences (General) 227 Preferences (Specific) 243 Breaking rules 249 Anger 285 Anxiety 295 Negativeness 309 Languor 321 Digestive / excretory 327 Bizarre experiences and ideas 343 Contradictions 353 Appendix A: Functional analysis 365 Appendix B: Further investigations / assessments 371 Appendix C: Syndromes and partial syndromes 383 Appendix D: DSM-IV behavioural syndromes 385 Appendix E: Catalogue of causes 393 Appendix F: Forms for assessment or monitoring 399 Appendix G: Mini-physical examination 409 Appendix H: Confidentiality 413 Glossary and index 417 References 577
£62.95
Taylor & Francis Ltd Community Psychology
Book SynopsisCommunity Psychology, 6th Edition offers an easy-to-navigate, clearly organized, and comprehensive overview of the field, with theoretical roots that carry over to practical applications. Presenting the concepts of community psychology and social change, these concepts are then applied to various systems addressing the human condition: mental health, medical, public health, school, legal, and industrial/organizational.Through a unique three-part approach, including concepts, interventions, and applications of the theory, the book opens the field of community psychology to students who are interested in how psychology might help themselves and the systems around them. It then focuses on the prevention of problems, the promotion of well-being, the empowerment of members within a community, the appreciation of diversity, and an ecological model for the understanding of human behavior. Attention is paid to both classic early writings and the most recent journTable of ContentsPart I: Introductory Concepts1. Introduction to Community Psychology2. Scientific Research Methods3. Stress and ResiliencePart II: Social Change and Intervention4. The Importance of Social Change5. Community Intervention StrategiesPart III: Applications6. The Mental Health System7. Social and Human Services in the Community8. Schools, Children, and the Community9. Law, Crime, and the Community10. The Health Care System11. Community Health and Preventive Medicine 12. Community/Organizational PsychologyPart IV: Where to From Here?13. The Future of Community Psychology
£128.25
MacMillan Audio What Happened to You
Book Synopsis
£22.49
Johns Hopkins University Press Borderline Personality Disorder
Book SynopsisWith proper treatment, people with borderline personality disorder can enjoy long remissions and improved quality of life.Trade ReviewThe book is thoughtful, accurate, and user-friendly. -- Joel Paris, MD Psychiatric TimesTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionI. Understanding the Problem1. The Clinical PictureFeatures of the Borderline DiagnosisMaking the Diagnosis of Borderline Personality DisorderThe Borderline Conundrum2. "Personality" and MoreUnderstanding "Personality"What Is a Personality Disorder?When Does "Personality" Become "Disorder"?Mood DisordersSelf-Destructive BehaviorsTraumatic ExperiencesThe Bigger PictureII. Causes3. The Four Faces of Borderline Personality DisorderThe Perspectives of Psychiatry4. What the Person Has: The Disease PerspectiveMood DisordersMajor Depressive DisorderDysthymic DisorderBipolar DisordersBorderline or Bipolar?Picturing Borderline Personality in the BrainGenetics5. The Dimensions of Borderline Personality DisorderMeasuring Personality TraitsThe Five-Factor Model of PersonalityTraits and "States"The "Personality" in Borderline PersonalityWhere Do Personality Traits Come From?Conclusions about Personality and the BorderlineDiagnosis6. Behaviors I: Addiction and Eating DisordersAlcohol and Drug AddictionEating Disorders7. Behaviors II: Self-Harming Behaviors and DissociationCutting and Other Forms of Self-MutilationWhy Do Individuals Self-Harm?Suicidal BehaviorDissociationDissociative "Disorders"Dissociation Symptoms in Borderline Personality Disorder8. The Life Story: Childhood Experiences, Development, TraumaChildhood Experiences and the Borderline DiagnosisBorderline Personality Disorder and PTSDLife Events in AdulthoodIII. Treatment9. Treating the DiseaseWhat Do Medications Treat in Persons with Borderline Personality Disorder?Antidepressant MedicationsMood-Stabilizing MedicationsAtypical Antipsychotic MedicationsAntianxiety Medications: Some Words of Caution10. Treating the BehaviorsStages of ChangeThe Talking Cure: PsychotherapyCognitive Behavioral TherapyCBT: A Closer LookDialectical Behavioral Therapy11. Understanding the Dimensions and Addressing the Life StoryPsychodynamic Therapies for Borderline Personality DisorderPsychotherapy for Borderline Personality Disorder: Summing Up12. Treatment Approaches: Putting It All Together13. Themes and VariationsGender DifferencesBorderline Personality Disorder in AdolescenceInternational and Cross-Cultural ConsiderationsIV. How to Cope, How to Help14. If You've Been Diagnosed with Borderline Personality DisorderDiagnosis, Diagnosis, DiagnosisAssembling Your Treatment TeamAcceptance and Committing to Getting BetterThe Role of HospitalizationThe Costs of AddictionLooking for Happiness in All the Wrong Places15. For Parents, Partners, Friends, and Co-workersGetting Someone into TreatmentSafety IssuesRecognizing and Addressing Abusive BehaviorsBorderline Personality Disorder in the WorkplaceGetting SupportEpilogueAppendix A: Resources and Further ReadingAppendix B: Theory and Development of the BorderlineConcept: A Primer for Students and TherapistsReferencesIndex
£41.50
Johns Hopkins University Press Borderline Personality Disorder
Book SynopsisWith proper treatment, people with borderline personality disorder can enjoy long remissions and improved quality of life.Trade ReviewThe book is thoughtful, accurate, and user-friendly. -- Joel Paris, MD Psychiatric TimesTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionI. Understanding the Problem1. The Clinical PictureFeatures of the Borderline DiagnosisMaking the Diagnosis of Borderline Personality DisorderThe Borderline Conundrum2. "Personality" and MoreUnderstanding "Personality"What Is a Personality Disorder?When Does "Personality" Become "Disorder"?Mood DisordersSelf-Destructive BehaviorsTraumatic ExperiencesThe Bigger PictureII. Causes3. The Four Faces of Borderline Personality DisorderThe Perspectives of Psychiatry4. What the Person Has: The Disease PerspectiveMood DisordersMajor Depressive DisorderDysthymic DisorderBipolar DisordersBorderline or Bipolar?Picturing Borderline Personality in the BrainGenetics5. The Dimensions of Borderline Personality DisorderMeasuring Personality TraitsThe Five-Factor Model of PersonalityTraits and "States"The "Personality" in Borderline PersonalityWhere Do Personality Traits Come From?Conclusions about Personality and the BorderlineDiagnosis6. Behaviors I: Addiction and Eating DisordersAlcohol and Drug AddictionEating Disorders7. Behaviors II: Self-Harming Behaviors and DissociationCutting and Other Forms of Self-MutilationWhy Do Individuals Self-Harm?Suicidal BehaviorDissociationDissociative "Disorders"Dissociation Symptoms in Borderline Personality Disorder8. The Life Story: Childhood Experiences, Development, TraumaChildhood Experiences and the Borderline DiagnosisBorderline Personality Disorder and PTSDLife Events in AdulthoodIII. Treatment9. Treating the DiseaseWhat Do Medications Treat in Persons with Borderline Personality Disorder?Antidepressant MedicationsMood-Stabilizing MedicationsAtypical Antipsychotic MedicationsAntianxiety Medications: Some Words of Caution10. Treating the BehaviorsStages of ChangeThe Talking Cure: PsychotherapyCognitive Behavioral TherapyCBT: A Closer LookDialectical Behavioral Therapy11. Understanding the Dimensions and Addressing the Life StoryPsychodynamic Therapies for Borderline Personality DisorderPsychotherapy for Borderline Personality Disorder: Summing Up12. Treatment Approaches: Putting It All Together13. Themes and VariationsGender DifferencesBorderline Personality Disorder in AdolescenceInternational and Cross-Cultural ConsiderationsIV. How to Cope, How to Help14. If You've Been Diagnosed with Borderline Personality DisorderDiagnosis, Diagnosis, DiagnosisAssembling Your Treatment TeamAcceptance and Committing to Getting BetterThe Role of HospitalizationThe Costs of AddictionLooking for Happiness in All the Wrong Places15. For Parents, Partners, Friends, and Co-workersGetting Someone into TreatmentSafety IssuesRecognizing and Addressing Abusive BehaviorsBorderline Personality Disorder in the WorkplaceGetting SupportEpilogueAppendix A: Resources and Further ReadingAppendix B: Theory and Development of the BorderlineConcept: A Primer for Students and TherapistsReferencesIndex
£25.07
Johns Hopkins University Press On Depression
Book SynopsisHe has seen great achievements arise from great suffering and feels that understanding depression can provide important insights into happiness.Trade ReviewAn informed, challenging, and readable approach to a vital subject. Despair is in the title, but readers will rejoice in the reading. Library Journal Ghaemi is a lucid and eminently reasonable writer. Zocalo Public Square [ On Depression] belongs in libraries serving graduate students of psychiatry, psychology, and, perhaps, philosophy. -- Melissa Nasea Watermark Clearly written, with mercifully short chapters for the uninitiated reader, Ghaemi's book elucidates how many of us already feel about the current construction of mood disorders, without having been able to articulate our misgivings. -- Alexander Langford British Journal of Psychiatry This is a fun and stimulating read for anyone interested in depression and other mood disorders. -- Helga Meier MetapsychologyTable of ContentsPrefacePart I: Entrance1. Lives of Quiet Desperation2. The Varieties of Depressive Experience3. Abnormal Happiness4. The Age of Prozac5. The Unknown HippocratesPart II: Pretenders6. Postmodernism Debunked7. Pharmageddon?8. Creating Major Depressive Disorder9. The DSM WarsPart III: Guides10. Viktor Frankl: Learning to Suffer11. Rollo May and Elvin Semrad: I Am, We Are12. Leston Havens: Holding Opposed Ideas at Once13. Paul Roazen: Being Honest about the Past14. Karl Jaspers: Keeping FaithPart IV: Exit15. The Banality of Normality16. Two O'clock in the MorningAcknowledgmentsAppendix: Listening to Despair: An Interview by Leston HavensNotesBibliographyIndex
£28.96
Guilford Publications Hiperactivo Impulsivo Distrado me Conoces Tercera
Book Synopsis
£16.10
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Life With Lacan
Book Synopsis‘There was a time when I felt that I had grasped Lacan’s essential being from within – that I had gained, as it were, an apperception of his relation to the world, a mysterious access to that intimate place from which sprang his relation to people and things, and even to himself. It was as if I had slipped within him.’ In this short book, Catherine Millot offers a richly evocative reflection on her life as analysand and lover of the greatest psychoanalyst since Freud. Dwelling on their time together in Paris and in Lacan’s country house in Guitrancourt, as well as describing their many travels, Millot provides unparalleled insights into Lacan’s character as well as his encounters with other major European thinkers of the time. She also sheds new light on key themes, including Lacan’s obsession with the Borromean knot and gradual descent into silence, all enlivened by her unique perspective. This beautifully written memoir, awarded the André Gide Prize for Literature, will be of interest to anyone wishing to understand the life and character of a thinker who continues to exert a wide influence in psychoanalysis and across the humanities and social sciences.Trade Review"This beautiful poetic book is not only a unique portrait of Lacan by someone who knew him better than others, but is in itself a remarkable literary and autobiographical work. It draws us into the adventure of psychoanalysis, into a relationship with all its complexities, and into an era, described with an elegance and precision that we find so rarely today. A remarkable work that will find a readership far beyond psychoanalytic circles."Darian Leader, Psychoanalyst and author"Millot’s elegantly written little volume, winner of the Prix de littérature André-Gide, serves as refreshing antidote to those who pigeonhole Lacan as writer of gibberish and irresponsible id."The Spectator "A love letter celebrating someone Millot sees as an extraordinary and implacable genius."Times Higher Education"The portrait of Lacan which Millot offers is of an insatiable mind, always open to the world with the unbounded curiosity of a child.... the reader comes away learning much about what made Lacan tick. Millot is....a fantastic writer, and any reader with even a passing interest in Lacan would do well to pick up a copy of her book."Psychology Today
£15.29
University of Massachusetts Press Cutting and the Pedagogy of Self-disclosure
Book SynopsisThis is a candid look at a form of self-injury that is increasingly prevalent but rarely discussed. Cutting, a form of self-mutilation, is a growing problem in the United States, especially among adolescent females. It is regarded as self-destructive behavior, yet paradoxically, people who cut themselves generally do not wish to die but to find relief from unbearable psychological pain. ""Cutting and the Pedagogy of Self-Disclosure"" is the first book to explore how college students write about their experiences as cutters. The idea behind the book arose when Patricia Hatch Wallace, a high school English teacher, wrote a reader-response diary for a graduate course taught by Professor Jeffrey Berman in which she revealed for the first time that she had cut herself twenty years earlier. At Berman's suggestion, Wallace wrote her Master's thesis on cutting. Not long after she finished her thesis, two students in Berman's expository writing course revealed their own experiences as cutters. Their disclosures encouraged several students in another writing class to share their own cutting stories with classmates. Realizing that so many students were writing about the same phenomenon, Berman and Wallace decided to write a book about a subject that is rarely discussed inside or outside the classroom. In Part 1, Wallace discusses clinical and theoretical aspects of cutting and then applies these insights to several memoirs and novels, including Susanna Kaysen's ""Girl"", ""Interrupted"", Caroline Kettlewell's ""Skin Game"", and Patricia McCormick's ""Cut"". The motivation behind Wallace's research was the desire to learn more about herself, and she reads these stories through her own experience as a cutter. In Part 2, Berman focuses on the pedagogical dynamics of cutting: how undergraduate students write about cutting, how their writings affect classmates and teachers, and how students who cut themselves can educate everyone in the classroom about a problem that has personal, psychological, cultural, and educational significance.Trade ReviewIn addition to its broad appeal to educators, this book will also be of great interest to all people interested in educational issues - students, parents, and administrators. It should join Professor Berman's other books as foundational texts for those educators who wish to help students to mature in literary proficiency and their own emotional growth. - Marvin Krims, M.D., lecturer in psychiatry, Harvard Medical School ""A sensitive and, at times, gripping discussion of an issue not discussed in educational literature.... The book is personal, written with sensitivity and a great deal of hope that thinking and writing about self-destructive behaviors in educational settings allow for catharsis and self-insight."" - Deborah Britzman, author of Novel Education: Psychoanalytic Studies of Learning and Not Learning.
£34.05
Smithsonian Books Cancer in the Community: Class and Medical
Book SynopsisFocusing on deep conflicts between the medical establishment and the working class, Martha Balshem chronicles a health education project in “Tannerstown,” a pseudonym for a blue-collar neighborhood in northeast Philadelphia.
£13.49
Red Wheel/Weiser No More Panic Attacks: A 30 Day Plan for
Book Synopsis
£12.34
Hampton Roads Publishing Co The Natural Medicine Guide to Depression: Healthy
Book Synopsis
£12.34