Description

Book Synopsis

Here is the first practical guide for dealing with the moral issues that regularly confront clinicians in their work. Written for all mental health professionals, Doing the Right Thing: An Approach to Moral Issues in Mental Health Treatment offers a framework both for making moral decisions concerning the treatment of patients and for helping patients deal with their own moral concerns.

Drawing on current thinking in several disciplines, Doing the Right Thing introduces the concept of moral functioning as a basis for therapeutic influence. Numerous case examples illustrate how to

Assess patients' ability to function morally—Learn how six basic capacities needed for moral functioning develop, and how identifying problems in an individual's moral functioning can help guide the formulation of a treatment plan.
Treat patients with problems functioning morally—Appreciate when it is time to set aside neutrality as a therapeutic stance in favor of a more direct approach to helping patients make moral commitments, decisions and self-assessments and develop moral character.
Deal with the moral aspects of clinical decision-making—Develop a framework for making moral choices in planning the direction of treatment, confronting resistance and addressing problems in caring effectively.
Help patients address moral challenges—Learn how to take into account your own and the patient's values in reasoning through moral dilemmas. Understand more clearly how to help patients deal with unfair pain caused by others, as well as the guilt and shame caused by their own moral failures.
Employ the therapeutic potential of moral growth, transformation, and integration—Discover the role of a clinician in helping demoralized patients reformulate their ideals for better outcomes. Recognize where a moral paradigm is useful in improving the delivery of mental health care.

Concise, clear, and clinically relevant, Doing the Right Thing is a valuable, thought-provoking guide for both new and seasoned mental health practitioners who live and work in a morally complex environment. It is also an excellent supplementary text for courses dealing with the practice of psychotherapy and the ethical aspects of mental health care.



Trade Review

For those interested in this area or for a supplemental, provocative text, this book is recommended.

* E-Streams *

Dr. Peteet has written a slim, unpretentious volume about moral issues that face most psychiatrists every day. It is a wonderful introduction and a rich book.

* Journal of Clinical Psychology *

Table of Contents

Introduction
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Beyond Neutrality: Moral Functioning as a Basis for Therapeutic Influence
Chapter 2. Shaping the Direction of Treatment
Chapter 3. Caring for Patients
Chapter 4. Moral Dilemmas
Chapter 5. Unfair Pain
Chapter 6. Guilt, Shame, and Moral Failure
Chapter 7. Moral Growth and Transformation
Chapter 8. From Fragmentation to Integration
Index

Doing the Right Thing: An Approach to Moral Issues in Mental Health Treatment

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A Paperback by John R. Peteet

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    View other formats and editions of Doing the Right Thing: An Approach to Moral Issues in Mental Health Treatment by John R. Peteet

    Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
    Publication Date: 02/02/2004
    ISBN13: 9781585620838, 978-1585620838
    ISBN10: 1585620831

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Here is the first practical guide for dealing with the moral issues that regularly confront clinicians in their work. Written for all mental health professionals, Doing the Right Thing: An Approach to Moral Issues in Mental Health Treatment offers a framework both for making moral decisions concerning the treatment of patients and for helping patients deal with their own moral concerns.

    Drawing on current thinking in several disciplines, Doing the Right Thing introduces the concept of moral functioning as a basis for therapeutic influence. Numerous case examples illustrate how to

    Assess patients' ability to function morally—Learn how six basic capacities needed for moral functioning develop, and how identifying problems in an individual's moral functioning can help guide the formulation of a treatment plan.
    Treat patients with problems functioning morally—Appreciate when it is time to set aside neutrality as a therapeutic stance in favor of a more direct approach to helping patients make moral commitments, decisions and self-assessments and develop moral character.
    Deal with the moral aspects of clinical decision-making—Develop a framework for making moral choices in planning the direction of treatment, confronting resistance and addressing problems in caring effectively.
    Help patients address moral challenges—Learn how to take into account your own and the patient's values in reasoning through moral dilemmas. Understand more clearly how to help patients deal with unfair pain caused by others, as well as the guilt and shame caused by their own moral failures.
    Employ the therapeutic potential of moral growth, transformation, and integration—Discover the role of a clinician in helping demoralized patients reformulate their ideals for better outcomes. Recognize where a moral paradigm is useful in improving the delivery of mental health care.

    Concise, clear, and clinically relevant, Doing the Right Thing is a valuable, thought-provoking guide for both new and seasoned mental health practitioners who live and work in a morally complex environment. It is also an excellent supplementary text for courses dealing with the practice of psychotherapy and the ethical aspects of mental health care.



    Trade Review

    For those interested in this area or for a supplemental, provocative text, this book is recommended.

    * E-Streams *

    Dr. Peteet has written a slim, unpretentious volume about moral issues that face most psychiatrists every day. It is a wonderful introduction and a rich book.

    * Journal of Clinical Psychology *

    Table of Contents

    Introduction
    Acknowledgments
    Chapter 1. Beyond Neutrality: Moral Functioning as a Basis for Therapeutic Influence
    Chapter 2. Shaping the Direction of Treatment
    Chapter 3. Caring for Patients
    Chapter 4. Moral Dilemmas
    Chapter 5. Unfair Pain
    Chapter 6. Guilt, Shame, and Moral Failure
    Chapter 7. Moral Growth and Transformation
    Chapter 8. From Fragmentation to Integration
    Index

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